Probe Clemens case, unionists demand Story on back page i [ / My, “ UN, iii TY } i 5 / ; Tw IAN TRI EET . 4 tL Thsaes ie i is: é Pees AMMA UAE MOOT EG MATTE AY NMS A ean AL wt, Gis Et er) “4 VOR TD No. 3 : ua: V ne : With -wstidhs Cie See ancouver, British Columbia, January 23, 1953 PRICE TEN CENTS |Mine-Mill parley ie calls for fight on U. S. Pp lans for Bill 93 clauses |. wear extension “cc . . . . the danger is great that chains will be rivetted to speech, press and the right to strike unless we act O Twelve thousand copies of the n @a League for Democratic Rights ce pamphlet Strike Penalty — Ten door. PTT TT Tt OTTAWA where he met with General Eisenhower. In Tokyo he con- ferred with Japanese Premier endorsed + Parliament know where we stand,” the officers’ report British Years in Jail—have been distribut- As the national council of the Canadian Peace Con- Yoshida and General Mark Pender " y delegates to the Mine-Mill district convention held in Uidemoc here this week calling for a fight against the Bill of R oe sections of Bill O (now Bill 93) and for passage of a Will be Be danger is that these amendments to the Criminal Code of Cri. ed through the House of Commons before the people “We Enea fully aware of what is covered,” the report warned. Tepresentati Tequest that before parliament acts on them it hear ‘ instruct ce from all citizens’ organizations, and to ths end we the View, eSates to the union’s national conference to arrange for Point of Mine-Mill to be brought before the House com- mittee which should be established : wil} ee Columbia Peace Council ed by the union committee. torig 5 4 peace mission to Vic- A meeting with -Leo Gauthier, of the mee the coming session Continued on page 6 Moving eure to interview the See MINE-MILL a . “Peag Cabinet and all MLLA’s. PMT MC Me UU LL hs Vita] om Still the first and most e Bitig gg gene the vente of Burns Night : Ment» oes and their govern- Be COuncip. ay Gardner, the S d oe tmnounggeneeutve ‘secretary, in ON NACUTAAY be sent, © '*t the mission would - Tom McEwen, editor of the gress, in session here last weekend, drew up a simple for’ mula for a cease-fire in Korea to be taken to members of | the government and MP’s, ominous reports of U.S. plans : Clark, U.S. Far Eastern Supreme seaborne attack a Chigasaki = Commander. Reports from Lon- Beach in Japan. While U.S. troops. gon stated that the topic of As]. to hear representations. < fue ah iAt Sudbury, Ont., under leader- “We Pacific Tribune, will give. the tra- to extend the war in the Far East were circulating in the train in Japan for amphibious op- jiscussion was the U.S. plan to ship of Mine-Mill’s Civil Liberties and Minority Rights Committee a O 7 strong campaign is under way S against the repressive sections of Cabinet oe to place before the ditional reply to the Toast to the “N@ individual MLA’s the Immortal Memory of Scotland’s capital. Only the previous weekend, George Yeh, Chiang Kai- erations Chiang Kai-shek’s forces use Chiang Kai-shek’s troops in are practising similar large-scale Continued on page 6 Bill 93. Propog a ed : : a War and the won’ t0_ the cold Rite tug aie Siege dee He Ct by the a a Asia put for- 24, 7 p.m. in Hastings ‘Avidseatancs hee a ' pen Btess Shee people at the poe oF Bi te a ” > 4! ie to 5 he saiq eo People’s for The program includes Scottish re a | ang far the he n turn, we wish dancing, readings from Burns’ od Ww the priy t Sof the cabinet oems, and will conclude with a Fal ne hope ae Protas Kunther, Ack Hb oe Private cs ee A limited number of tickets, at eee rs v ‘ v1 mak : y Siege: | V ictorig On peace ate B x $1.25 each, may be obtained ‘at the shek’s ‘foreign minister,’ arrived in Tokyo from the U.S. manoeuvres on Formosa. See CEASE-FIRE @ Here U.S. troops rehearse a