The Spirit of Unity

The first thing that struck me almost
gsoon as I set foot on liberated Yugoslay~
fl and came into contact with new Yugo-

sv leaders was that Yugoslavia, during
2 last three years, has passed through a

“ep process of regeneration which was
fron. of the superhuman struggle of its

pple for freedom and victory on the side
mihe Allies and under Tito’s leadership,

thin the- framework of the National

my of Liberation. My emotion knew
s bounds. I have always been a great

mtagonist Of and a fervent believer in

gs regeneration Of my country and, gen-

e lly speaking, of the Balkans. But what

feard and saw during my stay in liber-

jd parts of Yugoslavia surpassed any-

ag that I had ever been able even to im-

pne. (Stoyan Gavrilovitch, assistant for-

ja minister of the former Yugoslay goy-

ment in London, writing in the Infor-

Btion Bulletin of the Council of Cana-

©. South-Slavs. ) ‘

Report From “Socialist”
New Zealand

: every effort must be directed to
& ng that petty annoyances connected with
H control of rationing are removed, that
me control operates better than it is do-
§ and that wage inequalities and other
Riomic injustices under which sections
ythe people are suffering are smoothed
i y speedily. (From editorial in the Feb-
ry 8, 1945, issue of “The Standard,”
cial organ of the N.Z. Labor Party.)

Handbook of the Enemies Of
: Dumbarton Oaks

(1. Holding the coming security con-
nee in San Francisco is an insult to Los
vreles.

|’. Dumbarton Oaks ignores the rights
small nations like the Polish govern-
pit-in-exile and East Prussia.

»3. The draft document doesn't repeat
word injustice’ enough times. It
ild be better to use the word ‘justice’
é often and, if space is a problem, omit
words “Soviet Union.” /

ac |
A MOST

420 West Pender Street
Me [| We | he [ae a [> [3

your toe. (Samuel Grafton in the New
York Post).
ry
Bloc-ing Progress
Moreover, Mr. (Willson) Woodside

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‘acts, Foibles and Fancies

4. The proposed voting procedure is
too complicated. It does not have the
simplicity of the voting procedure in the
United Mine Workers where the absence
of a count precludes the need for any re-
count.

5. The principle of the unanimity of
the big powers is a bad one: unanimity not
only stifles discussion, but makes another
war difficult. (Alan Max in the New York
Worker.)

e

The Poor, Mistreated Fascists

So it was Argentina that bluntly de-
manded a conference. Mistreated by us for
many decades, lately condemned without
a hearing, her reputation blackened by in-
Spired newspaper propaganda, much of it
false, she demanded an open hearing at a
Pan-American conference. (From article
on the recent Pan-American conference, in
the super-radical CCF News.)

Advice to “Kickers”

There couldn’t have been three more
sharply contrasting types at Yalta. if a
Hollywood director had cast the confer-
ence. That there could be a meeting of the
minds among the old-port-and-Havana
Tory, the American democratic politician
and the aging Russian revolutionary indi-
cates to me, not that they were. clever in
finding a solution, but that there is no genu-
ine basis for disagreement. Their countries
need each other more than they fear each
other. The peace of the world rests on that
fact, and if you kick it, you will only break

has now become a neutral. In the last
issue of Saturday Night he has joined the
bioc of Sweden and Switzerland, demand-
ing that these countries be permitted to sell
war materials to Hitler while he sells Hit_
lerism to the Canadian public. (From
“Footprints and Fingerprints’ by Ed in
the Canadian Tribune.)

S ESESE SE SESE SESE

THE CRIMEA —
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AND YOUR FUTURE

by TIM BUCK

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RB. Ac Features, March 31! —— Page 13

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