ete 4 “ . % Ne wey. a7, ACROSS THE Wy NATION Hellyer wrong, say profs Eight University of Alberta Scientists say that Canada’s De- fence Minister Paul Hellyer is wrong when he suggests that the Bomare missile can ‘“‘cook” a hydrogen bomb in an enemy plane, thus making it useless. On the contrary, says D. B. Scott, director of the computer centre at the University of Alberta and one of the eight scientists, - huclear armed Bomare missiles Would set off bomb leads in planes they destroy. : Dr. Scott says “If the attack- ing aircraft were destroyed, the _ bomb load would explode at the Point of interception. The result would be explosion over Canada Nfld. dockers : Automation is cutting deeply Into the jobs of Newfoundland Negro porters _ The Negro integration struggle In the United States has apparent- ly sparked some efforts in Canada to clean up our own cases of rac- lal discrimination. The struggle, not too widespread yet, may pick Up some steam. . _ In Winnipeg, 18 Negro members of the sleeping car porter’s branch of the CBRT have asked the fed. ane government to investigate job discrimination against Negro por-- €rs on the Canadian National Railway, The complaint filed with the fed- €ral labor department accused both the union and railway of Violating the Canada Fair Em. of bombs which have been direct- ed to targets elsewhere.” He adds that he would be will- ing to so testify before the Com- mons defence committee. The ‘‘attractive’’ theory of “cooking”? H-bombs was first put forward by Dr. George Field, chief scientist of the Defence Re- search Beard. He admits that his opinion is based on information furnished by the U.S. and he has not been supplied with the exact details of the process. : The U.S. theory appears to be based on mathematical calucla- tions rather than on actual ex- periments. losing jobs dock workers. William Breen, president of the St. John’s Longshoremen’s Pro- tective Union, has called for the most urgent consideration of this problem now by all three levels of government. The unpleasant possibility of an actual cut in jobs came to light when it was disclosed that the Canadian Shipping Co. was plan- ning to enter the marine transport business from the mainland to St. John’s using side-loading vessels. Side-unloading a vessel means using only 40 longshoremen *”- stead of the regular 130 needed to unload ordinary cargo vessels. hit CNR bias ployment Practices Act. Lee Williams, a spokesman for the 18, said the union’s head of- fice had blocked efforts to change a working agreement preventing the promotion of railway porters. The existing agreement between the union and railway specifically excludes porters from promotion, said the complaint. It added that sleeping car port- ers “had never been given the opportunity by the (CNR) of ob- taining a promotion to that of sleeping car conductor, despite seniority, fitness, ability, apti- tude and any other necessary qualifications.” Wheat ‘embarrassing’ to U.S. An assistant chief commissioner of the Canadian Wheat Board has Suggested that the United States Wheat giveaway program is not SO much a humanitarian act as a _ Measure designed to solve a domestic problem in the U.S. William Riddell, the assistant - Chief commissioner, told the 12th annual Extension Grain Market- Ing Conference in Winnipeg that _ the U.S. wheat giveaway program has tended to enroach on Can- ada’s commercial markets. He said the wheat board. has to be constantly on the alert to en- sure Canada’s markets and to prevent their takeover by the U.S. program. : “Our dissatisfaction stems from the fact that the program is large- ly a stop-gap measure to alleviate an embarrassing domestic prob- lem of excess wheat supplies,”” he said. : Charges Que. police beatin George Schoeters, named by Police as the co-ordinator of the eae Liberation Front (FLQ) 4s charged in court that he was ee during police interrogation oe aS appealed for the interven- n of the International Red Cross, Schoeters, who has repeatedly New magazine aids consumer BE ebsumers have been offered _™ least some hope of evening up % Score with a profit-hungry, Uyer-gouging big business. he Canadian Association of nsumers has launched a pub- On aimed at keeping brand: refused to testify in FLQ cases brought to court, says he consid- ers himself a. political prisoner. He was named by the prosecution as a co-consirator’ in the charge against Gabriel Hudon of conspir- ing to plant dynamite at West- mount city hall. name manufacturers in the price line their product actually de- serves. Called ‘Canadian Consumer”’ it sells for 60 cents on newstands six times a year. By WILLIAM DEVINE In 1952 a document titled “Resources for Freedom” — better known as the Paley Report — made its appear- ance in the United States. This report forecast raw materials needs of the U.S. to 1975 and asserted the need for the U.S. to get much of these supplies from other countries in the “free world.” Special attention was given Canada as the single most im- portant source of the raw ma- terials called for. At the time the Commun- ist Party warned that the re- port’s concepts went in the direction of making Canada a raw materials satellite of the U.S. which would distort Can- ada’s economy and undermine this country’s chance of de- veloping manufacturing in- dustries, essential to any na- tion’s industrial well-being. The party also warned against those anti-national sections of the Canadian rul- ing class who were prepared to sell out Canada’s resources for a fast dollar. It underlined the real sell-. out- nature of the policy of “integration” with the US. announceq by the Liberal government in 1947. * * * The party’s warnings turn- ed out to be abundantly justi- fied. Eleven years later no sane economist of whatever hue will deny that this coun- try’s main trouble is its sub- ordination to the U.S. as a supplier of raw materials. Yet this year another report has appeared in the US. which vastly extends the Paley Report and would lead to virtually total American domination of Canada’s econ- omy. Titled, significantly enough, “Resources in America’s Fut- ure,” it was published by Resources for the Future Inc. and outlines U.S. raw mater- jals needs between now and the year 2000. A summary of the report in a recent issue of the Fin- ancial Post states that “like the Paley Report, the Re- sources for the Future Report points out clearly the need of Canadian raw materials, by U.S. nae Frightening enough in it- self for Canada’s future, the comparison does not end here. The present Liberal govern- ment appears determined to go one better its 1947 prede- cessor, which did so much damage to the economy. * * * Updating its terminology, the Pearson Liberals have re- placed “integration” with “rationalization.” Before the present Parliament even had a chance to meet following the April 8 federal election, the communique from _ the Pearson meeting with U.S. President Kennedy last May - “reaffirmed the desire of the two governmerts to co-opex-: ate in the rational use of the continent‘s resources: oil, gas, electricity, and materials . . In June, Trade Minister Sharp returned from Wash- ington to report to the House ” of Commons he had propos- — contained in the. strategic metals. r Canada U.S. PLANS TO GRAB MORE RESOURCES Frightening future ahead fo —, HARRY READE in Hoy {Havana} DOLLAR* JUGGERNAUT ed that Canada and the USS. “initiate and undertake joint studies concerning the devel- opment of all forms of ener- gy — oil, natural gas, coal, electricity and nuclear pow- er . “ Oil, gas, metals and min- erals are among precisely those raw materials which the latest U.S. report emphasized, as being necessary for ‘““Am- erica’s Future.” * * A The first major step to- ward “rational cooperation” of energy resources was taken by the Pearson government recently when it agreed to the sell-out terms of the Colum- bia River treaty, with ma- chinery enabling British Col- umbia Premier Bennett to negotiate the price of selling downstream power benefits to the U.S. : The underlying Pearson policy of “cooperation” with the U.S.—at the expense of | Canada — is nowhere more evident than in his drive to sign a treaty accepting nuc- lear arms from Washington. The accompanying danger signal entailed in the present U.S. resources report was Financial Post article which stated: “Thus high profits for the rest of the century could He ‘in store for Canadian mining, newsprint, lumber, oil, and cattle industries.” gas, : High profits for the owners SA TRAVEL Buy your air, steamship {including 14 days WRITE or ~ July 26—PACIFI GLOBE. eis 7 Tours to Europe, Mexico, Cuba, planned especially for you. SPECIAL — REST IN LUXURIOUS RESORTS IN YALTA FOR ONLY $6 A DAY INCLUDING MEALS. TOURS TO USSR for as low as $1,150 Jet from Montreal return GLOBE TOURS, 615 Selkirk Ave., Winnipeg, Man. of these industries, who have indeed been making high pro- fits from their sell-out of Can- ada since the Liberals’ 1947 “integration” scheme — but a worsening of Canada‘s lop- sided development with its accompanying miseries of high unemployment. * * * Indications of the extent to which Canada could be insep- arably ensnared by the con- cept of the latest U.S. report is in its estimates of US. needs up to the year 2000; Nearly six times as much plywood, more than twice as much. newsprint more than much oil ang almost as much natural gas and iron ore, al- most five times as much vana- dium, cobalt and copper, and almost 10 times as much alu- minum. The U.S. of course, will seek these resources in other countries as well as Canada. America’s ‘‘needs,”’ inciden- tally help explain why the U.S. is so intent on its drive and _ lead, three times as © to ensure its domination of - the “free world” through the “Kennedy round” of tariff cuts presently being negotiat- ed — with much difficulty — with the European Common Market. The shows that new national poli- cies to serve Canada’s inter- latest U.S. report Be ests first, are no longer sub- _ jects for debate, but are now urgent necessities. ek ee ” -eENOY and rail tickets from us. in the Soviet Union) PHONE to: