C. S. Jackson, president of the 25,000-member United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers union (UE) has today urged the president of the Canadian Labor Congress, Donald MacDonald; to immediately call a conference in Ottawa of all unions in Canada to deal with this Sovie t "earches no French s k i cientists have completed another stage in their joint *auelen 9netic conjugated points in the Arkhangelsk Region and | Soup, Ss . ‘ fi HY Pounds Gnd in the Indian Ocean. “Kerguelen Island and the testing \, Ar A Zhulin U engelsk are connected by magnetic conjugated points,” Powe, ij 4 SSR Acad . Z 5 . 015 ine in the emy of Sciences explained. “Imagine a magnetic , Tm of a wire. It starts at Kerguelen Island at an altitude ee €arth's magnetic field. The end of this ‘wire’ is in the | Homa ™ from th ; 3 5 H dics CES for © earth, in the inonosphere, where mysterious magnetic ' ele ° f wa” ta i the influence of solar.and space radiation and which- country $ unemployment crisis In BT hijo titorts the ccrcctions, cause the Aurora Borealis, X-ray radiation light of the figures just released by. Dan k . ees ee e ge icles mogp 2°: This is a gigantic bridge along which’ high energy the Dominion Bureau of Statistics {t Pro, St ¢: . fp Ce ria S 4 ° ° ° iy they tig taking sa roll earthwards. They precisely give an account of the that the jobless figure for April had \e Pet Me up Beal in the depths of the Universe. However, on their way : . dditi 19 000 | es St an insurmountable obstacle, our atmosphere, These risen by an a iriona ' . =z =F In a telegram to MacDonald, Congress urged to convene all-Canada meet in unemployment crisis the "crying need of the moment is the total mobilization of labor to confront the federal government with the necessity of changing ‘ts present course and implementing policies to create jobs and markets for Canadian goods in line with labor's stated program." The calling of an all-in confer- ence of labor, Jackson said, "could. be a catalyst at this crucial juncture. The time for action is now. To miss this timing is to permit the govern- ment to continue on its disastrous (Vy aratus,”” US ney. SClentific a reach the earth, This is why we send up our balloons i He 7 Winston Chas Pereman of Mston, national Hf bo Y of € Communist r burg States, was © in Hatties- por iogr. h M Magazine cal sketch in et as a child inst > nie M fro On’s life’s story Hs? Worp: te ‘king "M extreme Dover: 1h j : sae School” 2 shift and at- lay "ring auitting Benes ee 5 et With the an ansas City. In deta uth . Chment of .€n he became hat to 8 Brookiyn, Ge8BUe__or- lp : st 5 Yn. In 1933 he Thee the eaalist Consruc- Nona) Years R Or a year, cational cook 2) cre ary Neb Congre Jr force in the a Yo fou ee and Ut Outhe ayn Mb ponBress, ts h Us, party leader is 60 In a n The March . for the Canadian Tribune) where he was receiving medical treatment in an attempt to re- store his eyesight. I was present when a young Soviet girl flew in from beyond the Urals to offer her bright blue eyes to Henry Winston . . . I wrote that story up for our paper, and it was reprinted in others. It was the nerve, not the eyes, that was damaged, so the beautiful gesture — surely, no greater love has a person than the one who would offer his (or her) eyes for a comrade!—could not have been realized, even if Henry would have consented. The best that could be done was a slight improvement (he can discern shadows), but Hen- ry Winston has worked full steam in the leadership of his own party and people and in his contributions to the world fight for freedom. He has just recent- ly returned from the 24th Con- gress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which he attended as a fraternal delegate from the CPUSA. And while his eyes are dark- ened, Henry Winston is one of the most seeing people in Amer- ica today. GI'S FOR ANGELA LOS ANGELES — Front-line GI’s in Indochina are signing Over their life insurance to the Angela Davis Fund, actress- activist Jane Fonda told a crowd of 3,000 at a Peace and Justice Festival here. Jackson told the CLC leader that. course." VOUUORERUEDGGROURGUEQOCLOGUERGACGREUCROGUREOCRUUOREDROCLERORUEREREENOREOEOROOUEL TUUEEETCCEUUTEEEUESEUUCCUUEAECUULCCUOUCULOUEOCUUOUOELUAUEADUOOEOODURERE Public housing — on the agenda OTTAWA—The first National Conference of Public Housing Tenants is to be held here from May 22-24. Mr. Peter Lawrence, chairman of the Conference Planning Committee, announced that the agenda had been set, and that 120 delegates from across Canada were expected to participate in. the work of the conference. All public housing tenant as- sociations across Canada have been invited. For its three days of delibera- tions, the conference planners have organized a mixture of workshops and plenary sessions _ to enable delegates to exchange information and _ experiences. “The main objectives of the meet- ing are to search for ways to increase tenant: participation in the design, location and manage- ment of public housing, to study methods of tenant organizing, and to develop new policies for housing. It also hopes to come out with a call for a national tenants association. “This will be the first time that the tenant voice will be heard at the national level,” Mr. Lawrence stated. ‘We hope to convince the federal and provin- cial governments and the public that we are responsible people capable of managing our own affairs. We realize that the eyes of the country will be on us.” Among the major speakers ex- pected are Robert Andras, fede- ral minister for housing, and Tony Henry, director of the Na- tional Tenants Organization in the U.S. “1am sorry to hear your ceiling is coming down...You will be sorry to hear that your rent is going UD... "MOSCOW WELCOMES TRUDEAU By BERT WHYTE MOSCOW — Prime Minister Trudeau was given the red car- pet treatment when he arrived at Vnukovo airport in a~-Cana- dian armed forces plane on Mon- day afternoon for the first-ever visit of a Canadian prime min- ister to the Soviet Union. He was warmly greeted by Premier Alexei Kosygin and other high government officials and a military band played the Canadian and Soviet national anthems. The Canadian colony in Mos- cow turned out in full force and greeted Mr. Trudeau and _ his charming young wife with cheers and the waving of small Canadian flags. Banners strung across the highway leading from the air- port to the city proclaimed “Long live friendship between ° the Soviet Union and Canada.” Pravda in a front Page story expressed the hope “that this visit will serve as a further strengthening of good-neighbor relations between the USSR and Canada in the interests of the peoples of both countries and world peace.” The Canadian prime minister will visit Kiev, Samarkand PED Norilsk, *‘Nurmansk and Leningrad durin i in the USSR. Sea ai His schedule in Moscow in- cludes placing a wreath at the grave of the unknown soldier near. the Kremlin wall, talks with Premier Kosygin, a visit to the Bolshoi theatre and a meet- ing with members of the Mos- cow City Council. Mrs. Trudeau will visit a young Pioneer palace and the Bolshoi ballet school. BIG LEFT GAINS IN JAPANESE VOTE TOKYO—In the nation-wide local elections the Communist Par- ty of Japan made big advances in many localities, as did Socialists and unified candidates of the democratic forces Ryokichi Minobi, an economics professor supported by the United Front, won his second four-year term as governor of Tokyo by a 2-1 landslide over the candidate handpicked by Conservative Prime Minister Sato. In the city assembly elections, the CPJ returned 707 candidates (previously 419), and new seats were won in 79 cities of 97 places where the Party had previously held no seais. In the town and vil- lage assembly elections, 543 candidates were elected (previously 364), making a total of 1,250 Communist seats, PACIFIC TRIBUNE—FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1971—PAGE 5 é