Dirty milk charge assailed STORY ON BACK PAGE Boe Pea eee NE Cnet Radbenacatt an iteailacanensn Meausvis heer MPM naan thetic E gbane PRA Lis caetect: tb eal OL. 14 No. 48 Vancouver, British Columbia, November 25, 1955 > *6 PRICE TEN CENTS Eskimo fans celebrate victory—but this picture was taken last year! WHO WILL BE CELEBRATING ? ak * After the drum majorettes and the bands and the floats have passed comes the event everyone has been Waiting for — the big game. A million dollars or more will be bet and the ques’ tion is, who will take home the bundle—Edmonton fans or Alouette rooters? Pacific Tribune sports columnist Bert 3 wrong in his Grey Cup predictions over the past 10 years since his return from overseas, likes the Als. (see Sportlight, page 11) by a 6-point mar- gin, but admits this tilt is a tough one to call. “T can’t forget I picked Alouettes arker grabbed that loose ball in the dying moments °F the game,’’ says Whyte. “He could cross me up ‘Zain this year, too. “Since tabbing the Dodgers to beat the Yankees in Stven and seeing it happen just that way I’ve been Setting ready to make a king-size blooper and return '© normal. Maybe the Esks are the boys who'll deflate MY ego this Saturday . . . But I still like those Als.”’ See bd ‘l like Als’ -- Whyte Whyte, who has called 7 right and last year—and thought I had a winner until Jackie = Soviet technical aid for India NEW DELHI Friendship expressed through technical assistance, trade and cultural exchanges — this was the offer made to India this week by Soviet Communist party secretary Nikita Krushchev as he and Soviet Premier Nicolai Bulganin continued their 15-day visit to India. Answering those in Western countries who questionéd the purpose of the Soviet leaders’ visit, he told a gathering of Indian officials at Nangal, site of one of India’s new _ power and irrigation projects: “The press and leaders of some of these countries have warned you: Bulganin and Khrushchev are clever people— deal with them cleverly. Ac- cording to them, we are trying to dupe you and exploit you. “I want to tell these people that if you want to compete in friendliness, why don’t you do so; we have come here to strengthen Indo-Soviet friend- ship. We are quite clear about this.” “You want to build and I am very happy that you want to do so. If you want our assistance, say so and we shall definitely help. You want to build elec- tric (power) stations. You want our technical know-how. Tell us and we will help you. “If you want to get training in the Soviet Union—if you want to send people there, by all means do so...if this is cleverness, then we are clever. All we wantiis Indo-Soviet friendship.” Later, Khrushchev told an Indian engineer: “You must learn to do all things yourself and not depend on foreigners.” Bulganin told the gathering that the mountains separating the USSR and India could not stand in the way of the grow- ing friendship between the two countries. Over a million cheering people greeted Bulganin and Krushchev when they drove in an open car into this city last Saturday. ® Crowds lining the streets went wild as the two,Soviet leaders, sitting on either side of Indian Prime Minister Nehru drove into the centre of the capital. They showered the car with flowers and surged into the road to get a better view. Slogans across the roads here, say: “Russians and Indians are brothers,” and “Long live the peace fighters Bulganin and Nehru.” ' PRIME MINISTER BULGEANIN PRIME MINISTER NEHRU LPP declares: A call to the people to “fi bringing pressure on the St. CY Geneva spirit continues on— “its foreign policy in the lig TORONTO ght even harder for peace” by Laurent government to review ht of Geneva” was made this week by the national executive committee for the Labor- Progressive party. Text of the statement read: A deliberate attempt is being made by the press and radio to sow the impression among Canadians that the recent con- ference of ‘foreign® ministers in Geneva “proved” that the “spirit of Geneva is dead” and such meetings “fruitless.” Nothing could be further from the truth, The conference of the four heads of government last July was not a flash-in the pan. It was the beginning of a new stage in world affairs, promising - peaceful coxistence. It was a call to the people of the world to "make sure the cold war would be ended. The LPP said so at the time. It declares now that the foreign ministers’ conference marked another step on the road to peace: through the negotiation. It is clear that the U.S. State Department, assisted by the governments of Britan and France, tried to obstruct fur- ther progress at the foreign ministers’ conference. The press tries to “prove” that it was Molotov who refused to com- promise. : That is not true. The docu ments) (which the Canadian on each point: European secur- press did not print) prove that itv,. disarmament, German and “ast-German exchanges — the Soviet Union hewed to its line of peace and peaceful settle- ment. — But the U.S., France, and Britain still tried to bring a so- called “united Germany” into a military alliance against the Soviet Union, against the wishes of the German people them- selves. Such a manoeuvre will not work. The people are against it. John Foster Dulles will have Continued on back page See GENEVA ee a el