With the Canadian and Soviet flags forming a backdrop to the discussion, Valeri Chebysenko, secretary of the USSR-Canada Society 'n Moscow, talks with Hannah Polowy, B.C. president of the Canada- R Association at a celebration Nov. 19, organized by the Canada-USSR Association to mark the 60th anniversary of the October evolution. Acting mayor of Vancouver, Warnett Kennedy opened the event, held in the city’s VanDusen Gardens. —Sean Griffin photo (3 3 > Sept. 22 - Dec. 17 target: 1,000 subs 200 new readers This week we have an urgent appeal to all our readers Who have been following the progress of our circulation drive: Please help us reach our target of 200 new readers by December 17., Another 13 new subs came in during the past week, but we need at least 20 per week to come out on top. Let’s take a look at how the Interior and North Coast regions look. Congratulations to our friend Urho Tynjala in Sointula whois responsible for the first 100 percent figure in € province. How about it Prince Rupert, Kamloops and ail: we’resure there are people in those cities looking for @ good labor paper. INTERIOR AND NORTH COAST: SOINTULA 100% NOTCH HILL 72% FERNIE 60% CRESTON 60% VERNON 54% POWELLRIVER 50% PENTICTON 50% TRAIL 32% KAMLOOPS 20% PRINCE RUPERT a We have: 575 subs i122 new readers _) Envoy of Patriotic Front By DAN KEATON The current upheaval in Rhodesia is part of a national struggle for liberation and is not, as Western sources are suggesting, a racial war waged from outside the country, says a representative of the liberation forces. In fact, the Patriotic Front of Zimbabwe — the African name for the former British colony — is fighting an armed struggle against the forces of colonialism and im- perialism according to Joseph Dube, Patriotic Front represen- tative to Latin America and the Caribbean. “We want the immediate transfer of power to the people of Zimbabwe — Blacks, Whites, Coloreds and Indians,” Dube told the Tribune in an interview Nov. 16. Dube, who was stating the Zimbabwe people’s case to audiences across Canada recently, is asking Canadians to play “‘a role in the liberation of Southern Africa. : “We make an appeal to world democratic forces, for medicine, clothing — anything they can af- ford,’’ said Dube who spoke in Vancouver last week at a meeting sponsored by the Southern Africa Action Coalition. “The Zimbabwe liberation struggle is an armed struggle because there is no other way to achieve a better social system, based on an end to recism and exploitation, for Zimbabweans, Dube said. y The current ‘Anglo-American accords” — the result of British and U.S. intervention § as Corrections In the review last week of Silver Donald Cameron’s book, The Education of Everett Richardson, three lines were inadvertently omitted thus altering the meaning considerably. : The quotation beginning, ‘‘When therefore it is a question of in- vestigating the driving powers... .”’ should have been prefaced by the lines, “Frederick Engles put it more profoundly a century ago in~ these words.’’ Our November 4 issue was also in error when it stated in a story headed ‘“‘Zuken, Kardash elected’’ that the NDP representation on the Winnipeg council had been reduced from 29 seats to four. In fact, it should have read, from nine seats to four. The Tribune apologizes for these errors. A New & Available at $6.98 from selected union halls, People’s Co-op Books, Tribune office. Add $1.40 for sales tax, postage and_ packaging for mail orders from the Tribune office. Bargain at Half the Price ‘A New Wind Blowin’ Wind: Blowin’ ‘government is “negotiators’’ in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs — are an attempt to “‘establish a new colonial government,’’ said Dube. The involvement of the American particularly suspicious, because of that country’s recent role in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian coun- tries. The liberation struggle, waged by the Zimbabwe Peoples’ Army (ZIPA) under the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) and the National Union (ZANU), is “the result of the unity of all . democratic forces — the church, intellectuals, workers and Students,” Dube. explained. The Army is made up of mainly peasants (60 per cent) and workers (40 per cent), who have been fighting their colonial masters since 1970, he said. But the history of liberation struggles in Zimbabwe dates back to the first labor movement in 1909, and the Patriotic Front’s leader, Joshua outlines solidarity appeal Nkomo, is a former official of the country’s Railway Worker’s Union. During the last six months, the Peoples’ Army has made con- siderable gains and now controls about 75 per cent of Zimbabwe’s “opressional zones’’ — those areas where Zimbabweans have suffered the worst from Rhodesian military forces. More than 8,000 Zimbabweans in these areas have fled to Mozam- bique, and about 800 have been killed by the Rhodesian colonialist forces, who have also destroyed livestock and crops, Dube said. Approximately 8,000 whites have also left the country since June, 1976, he added. But he emphasized that the liberation struggle in Zimbabwe is not racial war against whites, but a popular fight ‘‘against the colonial system”’. : “It isan armed struggle that will be intensified until victory,” said Patriotic Front representative. CP, Local 35 pressed . Carillo for support Cont'd from pg. 1 Winston, said that Carrillo had “manifested non-interest’’ in the™ fact that the striking maintenance and service workers at Yale “‘are among the most exploited and underpaid workers” and ‘‘a large percentage arefrom the Black and Spanish-speaking community of workers.”’ It declared that, by crossing the picket line and ‘‘scornfully heaping abuse upon the U.S. labor movement, Carrillo has gladdened the hearts of anti-union bosses. “At the same time, he has dramatized which side he is on in elementary and basic terms,” the statement said. ‘‘His act of strikebreaking at Yale cannot be divorced from his notorious revisionism in respect to the theory and practice of Marxism- Leninism.”’ Hall and Winston also stressed that the lengthy campaign to gain the restoration of the rights of Communists ‘‘to exit and enter our country” had been waged at the cost of considerable sacrifices to the CPUSA. “We welcome representatives of the Communist Party of Spain . . . _to our country,’ they said. ‘‘But we expect that they and all other foreign guests come as partisans of the just struggles of the working class 432” CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING COMING EVENTS NOV. 27 — Concert in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Russian Revolution. 2 p.m. Russian People’s Home, 600 Campbell Ave. Sponsored by FRC/AUUC. NOV. 27 — COPE presents an. International Concert Sunday, Nov. 27 at 7:30 p.m., Peretz School, 6184 Ash (behind Oakridge). $4.00 per person, 0.A.P. $3.00. Featuring dancing and singing by Canadian ethnic people. Committee of Progressive Electors. BUSINESS PERSONALS Nand Toe Suellen JEWELLERY . REPAIRS, remodelling, appraisals at reasonable charge. For ap- pointment phone 254-7678. Will pick up and deliver in Vancouver at no extra charge. Se ee ee MOVING? CLEANUP? — Wanted articles for resale. All proceeds to P.T. Phone 526-5226. “The Goodie Bin.” HALLS FOR RENT RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME — Available for rentals. For reservations phone 254-3430. WEBSTER’S CORNERS HALL — Available for banquets, meetings, etc. For rates: Ozzie, 325-4171 or 685-5836. UKRAINIAN CANADIAN CULTURAL CENTRE — 805 East Pender St., Vancouver. Available for banquets, wed- dings, meetings. Ph. 254-3436. LEGALS PROVINCE BRITISH COLUMBIA CHANGE OF NAME ACT (Section 6) Notice of Application for Change of Name NOTICE is hereby given that an application will be made to the Director of Vital Statistics for a change of name, pursuant to the “Change of Name Act’, by me, Sharon Louise Redmond of 2306 W. 6th Ave. in Vancouver, in the Province of British Columbia, as follows: To change my namefrom Sharon Louise Redmond to Buryl Ramsey. * Dated this 18th day of November, A.D. 1977. Sharon Redmond NOTICES FREE GARDEN SOIL — DERA ‘backyard, 616 E. Cordova - 253- 8235. Ask for Keith. Classified rates: 50 cents per line Deadline Monday 5 p.m. week of issue. PACIFIC TRIBUNE—NOVEMBER 25, 1977—Page 11