SUBS. f= OFFER MONTHLY SOVIET eT SPOR ies JOURNAL. SPECIAL 1 YEAR (12 issues) THIS WORLD RENOWNED MULTI-COLORED PICTORIAL MAGAZINE — BREATHTAKING PICTURES OF SCIENCE — INDUSTRY — SCENERY — TRULY SUBSCRIPTION STYLES — HOME A MAGNIFICENT newal to the PACIFIC rate — plus 50c. OFFER With every 1 year New Subscription or re- Pacific Tribune Soviet Union # VALUE Total Value TRIBUNE at the regular $4.00 FOR $9) $4.50 << + ees 52 Ladner —------------- 10 2 ae 20 North Surrey -------- 30 +o ee 20 South Surrey --------- 20 ee 16 Whalley ------------- 33 Shai 20 OKANAGAN REGION oy 20 CLUB QUOTA Beree aS 50 Kamloops ----------- 20 aera iy Watch! dialed meen eS StF a Vernon —.----------- 30 ee : re VANCOUVER ISLAND raed fi] CLUB QUOTA . ee 48 Albernis ~----------- 50 pee ee 6 Campbell River ------- 30 2 BE AT Cumberland --------- 5D ee ies 10 Cowichan ~---------- 40 Re lias 30 Nanaimo 2 as See ae ae 40 Parksville ~---------- 15 Le pe 50 Victoria ~----------- 30 ee AO Victoria Saanich ----- 30 Sains 20 PROVINCE GENERAL Star a CLUB Quora 4 ey ae a0 Michel-Fernie -------- 20 Nelson -------------- 10 TU oy 39 New Westminster ---- 47 75 Powell ates rele? 4 Be cans Prince Rupert ------- DEWDNEY Sointula ------------- 20 : Trail Rossland ------ = FARGET 2,000 EATER VANCOUVER CLUB Ft. Langley Surrey Industrial ----- Correspondence Province Miscellaneous 75 DELTA It is impossible to read issue of the Pacific Tribune By WILLIAM STEWART — _ Circulation Manager this 16-page ‘New Tabloid? - without reflecting on what — it would mean to the working people of B.C. to have a paper of this size coming out every week, or better still ever day. Just. thumb back through this issue, look at the contents page by page, and ask your- self: How many questions are answered- How many lies are spiked? How much guidance and leadership is given to the working people and their or- ganizations in each issue of the Pacific Tribune? Take -the issue of Berlin. Did you not find yourself eag- erly waiting for your dee tO find the real facts on the Ber- lin Crisis? Did the P.T. not equip you to go amongst your friends work mates, office as- sociates or neighbours and ex- plain the Berlin crisis to them? What about a correct positive position on the New Demo- cratic Party? A working class slant to the daily events of the trade-union and labor move- ment in B.C. What is the real meaning of Great Britain’s joining the European Common Market? What lay behind the Coyne affair? From the Pacific Tribune to you to the working class and peoples movements of B.C. That is the main route that the answers to these important political questions follow in Bice : : Our paper is growing be- cause of the efforts of you, our readers. We have, with, this new tabloid size, in- creased our size by 50% since last fall. ; Along with the increase in the size of the P.T. the costs of printing have grown in proportion. We need, as a minimum, the 2000 new read- ers and renewals sei as the objective in this circulation drive to continue to publish at the present size and not incur financial losses. This drive therefore, is a drive to consolidate the new tabloid size of the P.T. We are confident that the conditions exist for such an accomplish- ment. We are also confident that you will carry through the task. In this column we will an- nounce from week to week the most outstanding efforts for the growth for the P.T. We will share the experiences of various press clubs, on circu- lation, subscription and copy sales. We will put forth ideas, suggested by clubs for increas- ing the sales of the paper. We are waiting to hear from you! Going into the drive we must single out certain clubs which have done an outstand- ing job this year for the P.T. First is SOuth Burnéby, which on a quota of 100 subs for the year has achieved 126 and. ac- cepted an additional quota of 40 for this drive and promises to double it. Next is Advance. club, on an annual quota of 75 they have already hit 80 and accepted a quota of 35 for the drive. Rigid, 20 on a quota of 20, and have accepted a quota of another 10; and Frank Rogers, 40 on 50, and have taken a quota of another 20. In the Province, Trail leads by example; with 66 on an an- nual quota of 70 they have, taken a drive objective of 25. Victoria, 100 on 150 and Nanaimo, 127 on 225. These are the leading clubs, many other clubs have done a good job while some have — legged a little. Every club. how- ever, has accepted its. quota. and we are confident they will make it and go over the top. + Says British fest ban treaty. J.D, Bernal, leading ‘ ee world scientist Amite of the presiden- . €€ of the World 38 “face states. that "Nn treaty could be Srrow, : rent article, Prof. J. Writes: Mament and nu- S remain as the “4 unsettled busi- €ar after year (0) ae the brink of war. e {0 it a ‘S. note and the ®2 th ‘elaine More acute. * contentious Th of Xtrol 9 a he explains the differences ave held up agreement on © Ut Mr. Krushchev“s 4 20th anniversary ae attack of the ee crisis on the y ton has become The _'Sagreement still re- e is of Me One which. takes Rk 8ce in the present ‘ dispute is that of administration of Tganization. If the: Ml dear test ban can scientist Porf. J. D. Soviet proposal on this were ‘accepted the treaty could be signed tomorrow. However, every effort is being made to pin on the Soviet. Union the blame for wrecking the conference by 10 troducing the new demand for the three-man administration. The claim, U.S. Note of June 17, is that: “By insisting on vesting con- trol of the inspection system in an unworkable, three-head- ed administrative council, the Soviet Union has undone all | that had been apparently suc- cessfully achieved during the long series of negotiations to reconcile the requirements of an effective system of inspec- tion with the Soviet concern about security and secrecy-” Now nine people out of ten believe from. this and similar. handouts that the administra- tion has the power to block in- repeated in the} : out by Khrushchev to Kennedy in Vienna, would not be the case: «|. the Soviet Government as early as May 1959, explain- ing its proposal on the estab- lishment of quotas of inspec- tions, emphasized tmat on-the- spot inspections within the limit: of the agreed « quotas must be effected at the request of the side interested in the inspection without any voting in the control, commission oF any other agency -- : “ence, no obstacles to in- spection, to which the United States, representatives refer in speaking of the so-called ‘veto’ can be created by the admin- istrative council.” : e “pe reason for this new dis- ‘ties of inspection, but is a major politica relations from now on. of Trygve Lie an favourable to actions ; side, United States’ spections demanded by the other side. But this, as pointed - he sig agreement really has noth- ing to do with the technicali- 1 difference like- ly to affect all international The loyalty and impartiality skjold have always resulted in the and sO) would be those of any single | ngintgue of the kind likely to be chosen. All UN agencies were oper- ated since the war essentially by the US., at first through its voting power on the Security Council and the Assembly and packed in action by a staff pre- dominantly of U.S. citizens operating from New York. Now that the voting strength js no longer reliable, the U.S. government clings to this pre- dominance to ensure that what- ever the Council and the As- sembly vote, nothing will be done against its interests, “as events in the Congo showed very clearly. An inspection service run on these lines could be relied on to weigh the scales all the time against the Soviet Union. The whole idea of inspection teams, about which the dispute is turning, is objectively a minor part of the main aim of stopping nuclear tests. The important tests—ordin- ary air-burst or ground-burst hydrogen or fission bombs — can easily be detected by the agreed control posts. ned tomorrow... vi teams just because of the in- formation they may bring back and, as they have openly | admitted, because they offer a. prototype of a later arms con-_ trol system. Here, the test ban dispute is merging into the larger dis- pute between limited arms, control favoured by Kennedy, and general and total disarma-- ment demanded by Krushchev. Much play has been made of the apparently new Soviet demand that nuclear test dis- cussions should be linked with those on disarmament. It turns. on the argument used by Gen- eral de Gaulle. objecting to. abandoning tests while the nu- clear countries keep their bombs stocks. Oe Pentagon circle have always. linked a test ban with disarma- ment and still object equally strongly to both. Hence U.S. threats to restart tests. Krush- chev’s blunt statement that if the U.S.. restarts tests, so would the Soviet Union, has been interpreted. most hypo- critically as an attempt to pro- voke the U.S. into testing be- The U.S. Government lays great stress on inspection really want to do it. September 1, 1961—PACIFIC TRIBUNE—Page 15 cause it is the Soviets wha.