1 AERIs0; ( “SON SAT, ft ‘i the Dace bth, tend the People’s Republie of China are at jogger- Pet Uni ft d ; a bY the Premier Khrush “ ” is § h?. ae chev “ignore” China in his speech: pes of pttary, He said: “We sincerely..wish the military ae depe treaty never find practical application. However, 1 Repubii on how our allies—the Korean People’s Demo- if ey. ¥ the | and the People’s Republic of China—will be fn whan, See the Far East, above all in Say eae , “8g 2% es 2 . . n r mi 5% id ne Ventures at continue hatching: plans to of "h , p Deg ry be fs }9) tag), ice} "] , p iH Ms Ugh Mee 9 qth K Yin Mongolian Pp Bla Bey 8 Blass. Beat meet ; BY THEIR LIES HALL YE KNOW THEM §Uecasce ‘1 Soviet Union is making strenuous —.and appar- ’gime efforts to prevent the principal of Asian Com- housewife’s gattls we from “slipping into. the Peking or! i that iby 45 the dtBiS hn Met leg shown in the coolness towards China display Gagarin’s vau of a single day here. By LESLIE MORRIS SALISBURY, of the New York Times, is setting ‘in a new. préss campaign to “prove” that the h orbit” and that fers in recent days. By JOSEPH NORTH Special to the Pacific Tribune HAVANA — The revolution is as practical.as the need to cook with lard and as winged as d all of it is in the passage snin alist powers. Str Be tke "Sorted qi yay : | im i tie the treaty signed? Was it aimed at Chinese pres- Wot, mes Salisbury charges? Here is the real reason, again - hrushchey; leg, ee gent re F Ay Co w Resign te; are not in favor of military agreements, but we } U treaty of a defensive nature because the govern- Oty iy Repo uf tet the nth of On, 8 eve,e id % % cooperation. and g of a treaty of friendship, 2 A People’s Repub- & ald b Swen) achwWeen the USSR and the Korean : HicqVell as the visit of Mikhail Suslov to the 14th Congress| streets of the noble capital to- Salisbury, Ma8-| gay and you find housewives eople’s Revolutionary Party, # between the to his eyes, finds clues to a rift Walk through the white filing into the magnificent, former Havana Hilton (now the Havana Libre) where les- sons were offered how to cook the copious shipments the so- cialist countries promptly offered. Simultaneously these wo- men may well have been among the thousands who vol- unteered yesterday to pull weeds, clean alleys, tidy up i aaticipate this sort of thing, Premier Khrushchev, 1 ae ee at a meeting celebrating the signing of the| W} 4 lat tt Be Vor, ”2en the ideological influence of the bourgeoisie on i re " eos undermined, or wanes, the bourgéoisie| until the fleets arrive with pte aie resort everywhere and.always to the most | _- Kurt Meyer in key role “W. Germany gives rights to Nazi war criminals Rio, 8h Salisbury conveniently omits this, China and the without lard. gan when Kennedy embargoed the grease and will remain 50 The shortage be-| the metropolis “the cleanest city in the hemi- sphere” in honour of the forth- coming festivities to make it July 26, % x € aty provides for reciprocal military assistance in A., Japan and other powers have turned down Far. East, and. acific area, a zone of peace, and, above all, a Nuclear weapons.” (Our emphasis.) condemned to death b blooded murder of Cana nh armed attack on either of the contracting parties. subsequently granted his fr On June 29, a day before Ts it dissolved, : Sals for the relaxation of tension and ensuring Se-| West -Germany’s yy with oe of the Far East. They did not heed our call t0| with the aid of the parliamen- ! S.Ja War bases and aggressive blocs, not to conclude tary parties, PS i Pahese aggressive military alliance. The imperialist Pee a ineine. tered the proposals to set up in the leaders of the » : ar p cratic Party, took five minutes to pass a bill — by breach of usual parliamentary procedure, By MAX REICH Pacific Tribune Correspondent BERLIN—Kurt Meyer, the Nazi general who was y a Canadian court for his cold- dian prisoners in the last war and eedom, is in the news again. the Bundestag, parliament, including the 90. concluded just such a treaty of mutual assisiance Of attack on either of them. ; ht in North Korea and North Vietna Of the entire socialist commonwea without introduction and. ‘with- out discussion — which. re- versed the judgement of the Allied War Crimes Tribunal S i “4: ee premier went on to say: “The victory of the] o¢ Nuremberg and rehabili- €'s revolution ih China, the establishment of people’s| tated the most notorious units m. and the. growth Ith, have radical-| ;:, of Hitler and Himmler: of: the criminal SS organiza- 1 ge f hh ® the balance of forces in the Far East and created the Death Head Brigade cad ‘al 6 j of y, A + P bs stim “quisit “pha . at \\ ea ‘ N yr Mikhail Sus x NV pTER LIPPMAN st for ; y,,.. Its reporti +0 porting on th fe Ba A all Ounts, of distor Ts in ey ae sis por the conversion of Asia into a zone of peace. edna, ® what bothers the New York Times. p tG ting oat all, the Soviet statesmen w yf Ne in the caty with North Korea, not wi € right place, at the right time. ~* ¥ tt } Olmes smoking his opium or playing His fiddle. Hitler’s Body Guard Brigade. Meyers was the go-between ere signing and|in secret negotiations carried th China. Things on by the Adenauer | govern- ment, the other political par- ties and the HIAG (Associa- tion of Soldiers of the Former W } ry $5 Suslov’s visit to Mongolia, in which Salis-| Watten SS), of which he is E inds more clues than Sherlock Holmes wide awake,| wirman, which resulted in R this decision. KURT MEYER have had, had Hitler won the ‘war. The members of these SS Elite units will be eligible for senior state positions, their seniority countiing rom the day they started serving Hit- ler. If they are too old they will receive fat pensions; if they have died, their families will receive the pensions thier perme again that Suslov was giving greetings from ; what| Germany has openly declared) mitted the memorandum, successor of the! grawn up by members of the In taking this action West Meyer was the one who sub- in which they refer to the “edict of the Fuehrer and Reichschancellor”, organiization, that SS c * * * ttid (6! Union to Mongolia, and not to China, here is ¥ on Jug Peovle’s Revolutionary Party’s Congress in Ulan itself as the ty, The e : nazi state, and. the executor) re-emerged SS tit Men, position of the Mongolian People’s Republic as an! o¢ Hitler’s testament. Mal arene, of the socialist community of peoples in the inter- : the strongly anti-Com- lv, f0ciay;22 18 unshakeable. Situated between two great frat-| Even the Stuttgarter WS. Bepupne Powers. the Soviet Union and the Chinese Peo-| munist newspaper Stuttg Sally fan its boundaries are absolutely safe, and it has| 7 oitung had to write, a week et 8vorable conditions for peaceful creative work. after the event, on sobering up, that what the Bundestag has lost in trustworthiness in un first. came to prominence when, 88 Aj 4. jninutes, will not be re- 8g & man, he painstakingly dissected the New York! © e Russian Revolution. and found it tion and barefaced lying. §8 ang icanada, like the Globe and Mail's, Cy) gained in many years to come. The new law grants some worship 20,000 persons, among them Ss correspondents, should get a copy of Mr. Lipp-| 5,000 of the higher nazi leader- analysis, ship, the rights they would units be entitled to the privi- leges enjoyed by members of the army. The government of the Ger- man Democratic Republic has Cuba's July 26 anniversary draws many world figures commemorating the heroic as- sault on the Moncado barracks by Fidel and his followers in 1953. On tnis commemorative day not only will the first man in outer space be the guest of honor but a roster of earth- bound world’s most celebrat- ed heroes and heroines. like Dolores Ibarruri, the deathless Pasionaria of Spain; like the widow of Julius Fucik, whose “Notes from the Gallows” spoke a hero’s life and death and eternal faith in the peo- ple; like the venerated Cana- dian people’s leader Tim Buck; like Anna Seghers, the great German — anti-fascist - novelist whose ‘Seventh Cross” .is doubtless the foremost. account of the German resistance; like hundreds of topmost figurés in Latin American . labor . and political life as well as Asian and African lands, It is going to be a parlia- ment of man, this July 26; in this Caribbean city. Lard or no lard. ‘Somebody here said, T think it was Fidel, when the latest embargo was declared: ‘No, Mr. Kennedy, we are not Cain, to sell our birthright for a mess of pottage or a can of lard,’ and that is how the overwhelming majority of the people you meet fell about it. And remember, Cuba’was probably the largest consumer of lard, per capita, in the world. Now they are learning, over- night, to do without. Recipes of new ways to cook old dishes were -published above the headlines in this morning’s “Revolucion.” Beneath the. menus. eame the news of the world and Cubans are a nation of real- ists who want to know. They know that plans are They read Khrushchev’s re- peated proposals to negotiate for peaceful ways of settling problems and his terse com- ment that distance will .save no war-maker in a future war. They read that seven more Negroes were arrested in Chic- ago and that the mothers of Minneapolis boys who joined the Freedom Riders wanted to visit their sons in a bleak deep south prison. They read the world’s main budget of news and they asseés- sed it in their typical emphatic way. They are prepared and are preparing — in depth — ‘for anything that may happen. Take away the lard and they protested to the governments of the anti-Hitler coalition against this bill, which is a violation of the Potsdam agree- ment. will cook the stuff. in water but come what may, take it boiled or fried, they will go on building their soeialist revo- lution, July 28, 1961—PACIFIC TRIBUNE—Page 7 jade