| Return the surplus

As B.C.’s Minister of Finance, Premier Bennett, wound.

up his fiscal year of 1964-65 with a budget surplus
of $53.4-million. Not bad at all. In making the announce-
ment the Premier wore his most fetching smile and got in
a good plug for this fine result of his “dynamic society”.

Behind the glamor of this surplus (and largely be-
cause of it), there is not a municipality in British Colum-
bia which is not feeling the pinch of mounting tax bur-
dens, mounting costs, and general financial stringency. A
condition rendered all the more acute by the fact that
per capita grant returns to municipalities by the Socred
government are doled out more in the form of poltical
alms, than as a basic government responsibility.

With this heralded surplus tucked away in his “dy-
“namic”’ jeans, now is an appropriate time to repeat a few
ideas for: its immediate disposal, to return it to the
hard-pressed municipalities to help reduce their tax bur-
dens and enable them to carry forward their most press-
ing social and community needs.

Another idea might include a whacking reduction of
the sales tax gouge. However, since WAC’s surplus is
largely achieved by short-changing the hard-pressed
municipalities, restitution in that context should have
first priority. 3 ~

Our ‘bloody’ imports

pyery so often the half-hearted boycott of South Afri-
» can products is resurrected, and more than every
so often, promptly forgotten.

Most big chain store shelves are literally loaded with
the food products of racist South Africa, as are the
shelves of government liquor stores with its wines, etc.

In its recent Statement of External Trade for 1964
the Socred government shows South Africa third on the
list of origin in its “Food, Feed, Beverages and Tobacco”
imports. Actually S.A. should be second on this list, since
“Central America and the Caribbean”’ trade areas consti-
tute more than one country of origin.

_ Obviously British Columbians have a taste for food
and drinks well spiked with the blood, torture and mis-
ery of millions of African peoples, otherwise these goods
would remain on the chain shelves—and the LCB left to
drink its own bloody “Paarl”.

Tom
~McEWEN

Millions suffered and died in
that war to “make the world
safe, . .,” not for democracy,
but for the international monopoly
cartels of both sides who stood
to win — regardless of which
side ‘lost.’

That was 51 years ago, When
the ‘Big Four’ peacemakers of
World War 1 were emerging from
their labours of concocting a
*‘peace;’ Lloyd George of Bri-
tain, Georges Clemenceau of
France, Woodrow Wilson of the

| U.S. and M, Orlando of Italy,

ifty-one years ago this week,

on August 4, 1914, the guns
of World War 1 proclaimed the
insanity of man with their opening
prelude to four years of death
and destruction,

It was to be a “war to end
war,” to “make the world safe
for democracy,” to create a world
“fit for heroes to live in” and so
forth ad infinitum, From every
poster and billboard, with pointed
finger and steely glare, Lord
Kitchener shouted at every
passerby, “your King and country

need YOU,” caught the essence of their de-

liberations,

Behind one of the stately pil-
lars of Versailles as the ‘Big
Four’ emerged, a little child
hides, weeping, “Me thinks,”
says the old ‘Tigre’ of France,
Potdammer family” from Kaiser “I hear a child weeping.” He
Bill down to the palace dach- ‘did. It was the ‘child’ destined
hund to die 21 years later in its

“Hun atrocities” were ladelled
out by the pageful, and woe be-
tide the *unpatriotic” citizen who
didn’t join in the Hell’s chorus
of damning the whole “damn

an eminent French cartoonist -

Mass demonstrations by tens
of thousands of Grecians are pre-
venting an open takeover by
Fascist forces in that country,
Central issue in the crisis
rocking Greece is whether the
nation’s duly elected Prime
Minister or its King heads the
government,

King Constantine, whose
mother during the thirties was
a member of the Hitler Youth,
arbitrarily ousted mildly liberal
Premier George Papandreou and
replaced him with ultra-rightist
Athanasiadis Novas,

When mass demonstrations
protesting this challenge to
democracy broke out, police in-
tervened and a young student
demonstrator was killed, Des-
pite the threat of further police
brutality more than 150,000
people took part in the student’s
funeral procession,

Since the King’s dictatorial
action on July 15, the Greek
Parliament has been the scene
of almost continual bedlam, with
Novas constantly seeking, but

Dead at 68

PETTIS PERRY, internationally known
Communist and U.S. Negro leader,
passed away in Moscow July 24 at
age 68. At the peak of McCarthyite
repression, he shared with Elizabeth
Gurley Flynn the major leadership of
the U.S. Communist Party. 4

millions in World War 11, be-
cause these same ‘peacemakers’
had already planted the evil seed
of a Hitler, a Mussolini, a Hiro-
hito, which their class suc-
essors were to assiduously cul-
tivate in preparation for a still
greater harvest of death and
destruction,

In one of his recent speeches
on the U,S, war on Vietnam (now
officially declared as such)
President Johnson reminded his
audience that the “U.S, has twice
saved Britain,” and since every-
one knows that the U.S, “won?
both world wars, all that needs
to be recalled on this anniversary
is that both wars had been going
for nearly three years before the
U.S, got around to being not “too
proud to fight,”

Needless to add however, these
years were immensely profitable
to the U.S, merchants of death,
since their ‘neutrality’ permitted

gigantic sales of war material to
‘both sides,’

Almost to the day of this his-
toric anniversary of 51 years
ago, with two world wars and a
lot of ‘brushfire’ warsand killing
in between in an effort to hang
onto an old order, President

"People of Greece protest —
‘grave threat to democracy

Pictured above is a tiny section of a huge throng of 150,000 people who tu!
out to mourn the death of student Petroula Sotiris, killed in a street clash

police.

failing to get a vote of confidence
by Parliament in thenew regime.

As the PT went to press, re-
ports were coming in that fist
fights had broken out in Parlia-
ment, making it necessary for

fidence yote will be held lat

police to enter the chambe f
and quell heated tempers.

It is expected that the co!

on this week, Meanwhile, a
people continue to demonstra

Postal workers must get
union rights, says CPC

Canada’s postal employees
should gét the full wage increase
they are asking for, plus the un-
qualified right of genuine collec-
tive bargaining, says a press re-
lease issued by the national exec-
utive of the Communist Party of

ganized labor movement 3°
whole.” ;

Th¢ postal service picture ee
mains somewhat cloudy. JU?
J.C, Anderson, appointed PY

government to mediate thes

eanada. is now expected to hand ee ‘
: ae preliminary recommen
The statement says; The this’ Week ~ Some ute

right to bargain collectively
through union organization and
its accompanying right to strike
are inseparable, They are an
elementary right, The federal
government has absolutely no
justification for its present denial
of this right to the postal workers,

are forecasting a $550 any
increase for the posties, bY
Judge has failed to verify
prediction,

Meanwhile, ominous sound
are coming out of Ottawa
“drastic action” is beiné a
sidered by the government ¥
attempt to force back tyre
the 4,100 workers in M0
who have remained 0?

“Compelling the government to
concede the right to genuine col-
lective bargaining to the postal
workers will strengthen the or-

a8?
For example, 2 feW a

to be precise, on JUY  rggn
leading Hanoi newSPaP™’ gop:
Dan’ ran a lengthy ee :
gratulating the peoples os"
and heroic defenders ati (ul
Vietnam on the 0 gown ©
25) of their shooting ig ti”
400th U.S, plane Vi0 1 cociah
sovereignty, peace ee. nv
ist construction of the! “—
and people,

Johnson’s confirmation last week
that the U.S. is now making its
murder of Vietnamese, the aged,
the youth and the babe-in-arms,
an “official” war, indicates an
escalated insanity, far in excess
of that proclaimed by the guns of
August 4, 1914,

In military jargon since the
advent of aerial warfare from
World War 1, “all our planes
returned safely” and similar
phoney reassuring formulae,
provides a military censorship
with a ready cover-up of the
grim results of their insanities
from the folks ‘back home,’ But
it only serves to delay, rather
than erase the stark truth,

And
covers the Nor
of the Pentagon’s
returned safely’ yet,
poses an old questi nP
how long before Reaso”
-over madness?

Editor — TOM McEWEN
Associate Editor — MAURICE RUSH
Circulation Manager — JERRY SHACK
Published weekly at St
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