Couniries. ‘Kubliisky. to aggressive alliances.” the Secretariat composition. ‘U.N. Sacratatad loaded for West _ Two-thirds of the staff employed by the Jate UN Secretary- eneral Hammarskjold comes. from-the U.S.A,,or its allies. Only seven in every hundred comes from the Socialist This is revealed in a Soviet press article by Groves’: -"The) secretariai’s composition, reflects a. strange, dis- toried political map of the .world,! adds the article. “North America and Western Europe dominate it geo- taphically while politically it is dominated by countries tied The UN charter requires that UN officials be. drawn impartially from all parts of the world as,far, as -possible. In, fact. .says, Kublitsky, Africa jis represented by 36 experts .and -senior officials, Eastern Europe by 68, ‘West. ern Europe by 364 and North America by 295. : Hammarskjold’s .own , office staff is comprised of | 32 ‘ Americans, 11 Frenchmen, eight Britons, five: Chiang! Kai- «| Shek nominees, four Canadians, four Belgians, three, from the | SOcialist countries and two from Africa. The two Africans are from South Africa, a country bioxs lous for its,oppression of Africans. _ Reading the’ list nobody can be surprised atjthe role Played. by.Hammarskjold.in the Congo or jaf the’ demands .of the Soviet Union. and some neutral. countries , fora ale in As Khrushchev has pointed out, a three man_ grand including Hammarskjold, representing the west together with h€@ nominee each from the neutral and socialist eotnItick would see a proper balance mainiained. “Last..Saturday saw the “Muclear weapons for Canada They organized a downtown e€monstration in Vancouver in which 900 marchers: took bart, carrying placards with _ Slogans such as No Nuclear eapons for Canada, Make _ ‘Dief. Listen, There. is Danger, _ ‘8nd one excellent caricature fa dinosaur with the caption. : _ Extinct, All Armour — No Brain. B The demonstration gathered ‘at 10 am. at the H and-K ‘Bookstore on Robson St. and “Moved off in orderly. groups “ef 30, some distributing leaf- ‘lets, calling on the citizens to write to Prime Minister Dief- “enbaker, some carrying plac- ‘ards and still others carrying -ehildren. Petitioners stationed at var- ‘ious points along the four mile ‘route attested to the effective- ness of the demonstration in ‘the way that the people came _ *forward to sign after the group ‘had passed by. ‘During the morning 9 groups ‘No nuclear arms parade draws large city turnout Radiation Hazards” take.a further step in the fight against “Committee for Control -of and for world peace. struggle. by the campaign for Taunched out on the four mile Strek, and morale was high. After the statements made the previous day by -Harkness suggesting that Canadian troops would not be armed with inferior weapons, there was a deep understanding on the part. of the marchers that this was the Ministers’ method of ‘flying a kite.” Trying out public opinion on acquiring nu- clear. weapons for }-Canada;: without actually committing himself. ae The marchers. were demon- strating what their answer was to such a propositign, a very forthright “no.” The oY sharpening of the Nuclear Disarmament in Bri-’ tain, and the call “from” his} prison cell by» BertrandRus-} sell for all such groups around) the world to intensify their campaign against nuclear weapons now, is expected::to F aa |ON PICKET LINE give new spirit and ungency, to: the movement® ine Vancouver} DRANG NACH OSTEN - ---- - 1961 © = OE ou RE “Vieng aya Ge glarisiag international propaganda, campaign has been launched by the West German government to justify its de- mand for the so-called “lost '|ternitories” beyond the Oder- 4} Neisse. border. Advertisements con taining large maps showing the west- ern part of Poland east of the Oder-Neisse line as well as the whole of former East Prussia (partly now in the Soviet Un- ion) as part of Germany, have been published in newspapers VLC PROTESTS POLICE DOGS ‘Delegates to the Vancou- ver Labor Council angrily -protested the presence of police dogs on peaceful picket lines when it was re- ported by the Wholesale Re- tail Union, that police were passing their lines in all parts. of ‘the city on the _average of .once every ten minutes, in many cases with. fearsome police dogs glar- ing’. from police car win- dows. At its meeting the VLC delegates instructed the ex- ecutive to make representa- tions to city council on the matter. and Canada generelat _——,. a HEAR © Ap 9 tel le ie Pe EF 8 p.m. Victoria, Fri., Sep. Nanaimo, Sat., Sep. + ee bP RED SE” Vancouver, Sun., Sep. “No War Over a Important. Statement of Policy on: ae Beriin Crisis . and Nuclear ‘Tests by the eComaramest Party -of: ‘Canada. TM BUCK NATIONAL LEADER — SIROCCO ware —_ — EAGLES HALL — — PENDER pin 50p. 28 cee 99 ' § ~~ 23: ire nue by «the. West German govern- ment. One such map. was included in a two-page advertisement in- serted by the Press and infor- mation office of the West Ger- man government in the Aug. 26 issue of the Financial Posi. The British Daily Worker re- ports that similar full-page ads have appeared in ithe Irish Times, the Irish Press and the the. West German embassy in Dublin. {This map is reproduc- ed on this page.) “From the constitutional poini of view,” these adver- tisemenis claim, “Germany continues to exist as an entity, within its borders of 1937, and they go on to claim that the Kk )\SWEDEN : il ae SEA RUNGARY Irish Independent, put in by} Rr a! 1B} ; ee td 4 ~ BERLIN eaeaaae government; of West Germany “has entered into suc- cession .of the West German. Reich.” : The advertisements therefore not only claim West Germany’‘s right to take over the German Democratic Republic, .buit the | tight to extend the German ~ \frontier beyond the Odere Neisse line. oe The 1945 ©Potsdam Agree- — ment between the Uniied — |States, Britain and the. Soviet Union laid down that the.posi- war German frontier should run along the Oder-Neisse line. The Daily Worker states that West German embassies in many countries are believed to — have received exira large funds to back this campaign. Delegates from 99 nation the 16th regular session of Among 90 items on -the agenda, the issues’ of disarma- ment, seating of the Peoples Government of China, inde- pendence for colonial peoples, the Berlin and German prob- lem, and re-organization of the U.N. apparatus, are expected to receive the greatest attention. The death last weekend of Secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold has brought the whole issue of UN reorganiza- | tion to the fore. . The Western , powers . are | busy organizing support for a _proposal. to name an interim- secretary-general to the post. | The Soviet Union , and other nations are expected. to.press for a Secretariat which will be more representative of the countries making up the U.N. (See — in upper left . -cOr- ner). In view of the tense world situation the Soyiet plan for complete and general disarma- ment is expected to force the Hasse WEST TRADE GROWS A vigorous expansion East West trade in 1960, which “seems to have risen further in the early months of 1961,” was reported by the UN Econo- mic. Commission for Europe. Disarmament top issue as UN Gen. Assembly meets - Assembly opened its, sessions. in. gan. September 22, 1961—P ACIFIC TRIBUNE—Page 3 s were present Tuesday,when, the United Nations: General arms issue to the forefront as the major one before the world : organization. scrap treaty” ‘ --CP urges The Communist Party .callect on the Federal goverpment this week to ‘refuse — _to be bullied-by the Bennett: -govern- ment into agreeing do 52 Ce wholesale «export of B.C -hydro power. Es “We welcome your: acca : tion that export of. power wilt not..be permitted, and. urge that negotiations be immediately with the United States government for new agreement on Columbia water- power, on terms more favor able. to: Canada which will fully protect Canadian sover= eignty and provide for maxi- mum development of the gen- erating potentialities.on the Canadian side in line with the McNaughton Plan”, -deelared — the letter to the Prime Min- ister over the signature of B.C. Communist egies ehnaonantis