(y | [ js his year, SESPITE THE jE WISH LIE NACHINE —- » Rach: tf} oh U4 Princedale Read Lendom, v¥. ii MATIORA ALIST MOVEMENT eke ndiqe tere t shar. Phadienad ITLER WAS RIG HT! Democracy means —tewish Control National Decli ine al Ruin ONLY NATIONAL SOCIALISM CAN. SAVE OUR RACE AND NATION eosiatany |e jeri Sample of the type of literature being spread by Sir Oswald Mosley and. Nion Movement. The British people have turned a series of scheduled fascist ngs into a string of resounding defeats for Mosley and his followers despite “fact that he has been accorded police protection in the name of “free speech.” ovement, sparked by British Communists and some Labor circles, is growing 4ve the propagation of racial hatred banned by law. The law, if enacted, would out me. the difference between free speech and fascist ravings. tj tie Reform Associa- ‘yy, ‘Ubmitted a brief to ig City Council te Tuesday in which it "Bed that any attempt Stitute a system of fp Ng aldermen every bg Years was “designed Sep lela Council from iltiny., ” 4 Monge Suggest that these ‘a S are a direct con- by 5 Se of public reaction “ung nei number of unpopular Actions, particularly eg Erect to the increased, The sharp With both the Board nS ®0l Trustees and the ty | Sf Park Commission- Nong *te actually manifes- Po: Bris. the same policies.” tate ed "Ng out that the esti-. Othe Saving in going over 8 ta Year plan of $45,000 e €conomy, the brief The Sena ps Acting Secretary- Moe ‘ U Thant, has pro- ty an embargo on all a } %iy, [4 financial relations ity ai ee if means of Wit, 2 failed to re-unite hh 1 © rest of the. Congo. ‘Vey eer to all member “tions, €nts of the United fy © appealed to them We ‘verything in their ty ay insure that “every jilta, Military and non- tla ce assistance be with- Re Poy ™ the authorities of i. sai Vince of Katanga,” cay, Ude . UCh efforts should ty 1 possible attempts Ketan trol ¢ sega he entry into ge th at adventurers who vita . fir services to the a &se leg Provincial auth- Ni ae Whose reckless . SPonsible activities ntributed much _ to iy *Sening of the situa- q, pking his appeal, he *Wisheq “to make it matt Ald: «dita rit A stated that “efficiency alone solves nothing. It makes for a tidy pigeon hole.” Mona Morgan “Elected representatives must immediately acquaint themselves with all the com- plexities of office,” the brief clear that the United Nations in the Congo, as in the rest of the world, is particularly anxious to preserve and strengthen the economic life of the country.” The situation became im- mensely complicated in the Congo, he continued, when a “great enterprise’ was found involved “in disruptive poli- tical activities which can be earried on only because of the very large sums of money available.” While U Thant did not name any enterprise he no doubt had in mind especially the Union Miniere du Haut Katanga mining concern, which is financed largely by Brtish and Belgian investors, The Soviet Union and oth- er socialist and neutralist countries have refused to help defray the costs of the UN Congo operation because of the way in which the sit- uation was mismanaged by Dag Hammarskjold. Cote ht tae CRA brief blasts 4-year aldermen plan continued, ‘‘as well as hav- ing some foreknowledge of them. The single most im- portant duty is to know what the majority of citizens want. Sometimes they want new policies- and new people to administer them, rather than undesirable policies — effic- iently administered by ‘vet- erans’.”’ It concluded by proposing: e The holding of a public hearing on the matter of civic government to which all public bodies and organi- zations would be _ invited; and e The rejection of any proposals which would eith- er extend the term of office for aldermen or the length of time between elections, The brief was signed and presented by the Secretary of the CRA, Mona Morgan. Thant.. ‘Cut Katanga trade’ President Kwame Nkrumah survived an attempt on his life on Thursday, August 2. A serach is on for the assas- sins who. hurled what ap- peared to be a hand grenade at Nkrumah, killing four people and injuring fifty-six others, some of them soncol children. Algerian tenders unite Algerian leaders decided last week to shelve their dif- ferences and unite around the seven-man political bureau set up last month by Vice- Premier Ben Bella in Oran. The leaders accepted the political bureau and agreed to hold elections for a con- stituent assembly on August 27. They also agreed to con- voke a meeting of their na- tional council, “in principle” one week after the elections, to examine the composition of the political bureau. The agreement ended the prolonged crisis which had brought Algeria to the verge of civil war. M. Boudiaf, who is considered one of the chief opponents o Ben Bella, join- ed in the agreement ‘for the sake of national unity.” Following the agreement, Ben Bella entered Algiers to the cheers of thousands who had come to greet him at the airport. The city resounded to the joyful shouts of veiled, white- robed women streaming from the Casbah, cars hooted and gleeful guerillas let off their rifles into the air. Two companies of the Al- gerian Liberation Army (ALN) presented a guard of honor for Ben Bella, who will lead the political bureau in running Ageria’s affairs. Clergy seek Kennedy ad More than 150 ministers from New York City and surrounding areas have or- ganized a motorcade to Wash- ington to demand White House intervention in the tense situation in Albany, Georgia, ‘where Dr. Martin Luther King and some 200 other Negroes are in jail.” The announcement was made to a ‘crowd of 500 ata “prayer vigil” held in New York last week. Speakers told the crowd that the Washington march will be only one step in a determined campaign to bring about positive Federal action in the Albany crisis. Negro and _ other civil rights leaders have called’ for a concentrated drive to com- pel the Kennedy administra- tion to act in the integration crisis in Gerogia which has seen pregnant women beaten and kicked, peaceful demon- strators jailed without food and white racists flouting the law and defying court orders which would theoretically -allow Albany Negros to sit at the same lunch counters and enjoy the same service as whites. Jamaica Si; Guiana Waits As the newly independent Caribbean nation of Jamaica celebrated the conclusion of 307 years of British rule on August 6, her sister colony of British Guiana remained as far removed from independ- ence as ever. Britain has firmly refused to set a date for the proclama- tion of Guianian independ- ence, despite the fact that the Committee of Seventeen of the UN has voted overwhelm- ingly to have her do this. In- stead, the British have pro- mised to resume negotiations with Guiana ‘as early as pos- sible.” This latest stall comes after the British have twice post- poned the question of a con- ference on independence -— once from May to July and then from July to September. Dr. Cheddi Jagan, twice elected Premier of Guiana, has called upon the UN Com- mittee of Seventeen (set up to check on the granting of independence to colonies) to take appropriate action in the face of Britain’s breach of promise. Soblen case still unclear The Israeli Cabinet has re- fused to allow El Al Airlines to fly Dr. Robert Soblen to the U.S. A Foreign Ministry spokes- man in Jerusalem said the Cabinet had ordered that El Al must fly Dr. Soblen — who faces a life sentence in America on’a spying charge of which he protests his in nocence — to Israel should Britain place him aboard one of its planes. The Israeli Cabinet felt that, because it was an El] Al plane which first brought Soblen to England, the re- sponsibility for removing Soblen from that country rests with El Al and Israeli authorities. However, the Cabinet state- ment added that: “The Israeli plane will bring Soblen only to Israel and on no account take him en route to the US? The action came after wide- spread protests swept Israel following the highly question- able manner in which Soblen was whisked out of Israel by U.S. Marshals. South America: crisis anew . In a move to strengthen its dictatorship over the people, the military in Argentina has banned both the Communist Party’ and the Peronistas from taking part in elections. Since the ouster of former dictator Juan Peron, a num- ber of changes have taken place in Argentina’s Peronista movement, which gets consid- erable support from trade ‘unions. : And in nearby Brazil, an- other crisis loomed on the. political horizon as President Joa Goulart indicated that he would seek to have the Brazi- lian Congress restore the powers once held by the na- tion’s President. The Con- gress had curbed these pow- ers following the resignation of former President Janio Quadros. August 10, 1962—PACIFIC TRIBUNE—Page 3