| aN ab SR Sane aes St Tal PRINCETON— During the Week events stemming the Doukhobor march, a halted at Bromley camp- 3 €ast of Princeton have ved rapidly. Not only is the legality of a? RCMP roadblock _insti- an by attorney-general a ert Bonner being chal- ee as a gross violation of a Tights, (with a court in- eon being sought for its Oval), but Bonner’s much- eo “plan” to end the ; Ukhobor trek has exploded S face. ‘ ast week part of this *@h” was seen in the action ra Education Minister Peter- me ee advised all Doukho- Sto families encamped at nad by letter that their Ten ‘must attend school. S the law,” pontificated Merson, M ae Doukhobor families, ea by their legal advisors, Dour complied. But when Obor mothers attempt- reist, 80 into Princeton, to ithoot their children for tc as a busload of Oo attend, all were * and turned back by t Thie ee RCMP roadblock. 1S roadblock prohibits Doukhobor adult or child gia and also lays down Varg sestrictions on east- tion Tavel. Even the ques- k th Of food, medicine and cp heeded supplies for the €rs has been ruthlessly a Testy: 3 —tted under the Bonner Proceeding West on the. bonner attack on civil lights being challenged oe roadblock. Even,,school sup- plies were prohibiteg, from entering camp by the RCMP. RESTRICT FREEDOM Dr. Joseph Katz, president of the B.C. Civic Unity Asso- ciation and a number of pro- minent lawyers and other citizens have publicly chal- lenged the legality of the Bonner-RCMP roadblock as a “violation of human rights, restricting freedom of move- ment of the citizens’. Douk- hobor spokesmen have an- nounced they will seek ,an injunction to restrain Bon- ner and the RCMP from denying them “access to the public highways.” Part of Bonner’s “plan” is seen in the “emergency by- law” rushed through the Kent municipal council (which in- cluded Agassiz), aimed at pro- hibiting the Doukhobor marchers from entering the municipality. The Bonner-Peterson ‘“con- tradictions” is now bringing into the open the identity of the real “law breakers”. Their intent stated one Princeton citizen “is not to seek an amicable solution to end a long-standing problem, but to smash this Doukhobor sect by extra-legal and un- democratic trickery.” (At press time Bonner an- nounced that after ‘due con- sideration of the academic question of civil rights’ the RCMP roadblock had been lifted.) tye? hard-hitting leaflet e titleg tc Omb»» Dollar and_ the : Com » the B.C. Women’s Mittee of i i — the Communist rade bill Cont'd from page 1 Pe Support for the 0 | Meet; of the IWA convention Mee © in Vancouver last rb | tian against a cut in Cana- fi Ug Umber exports to the tun Came from A. F. Har- s | 2% IWA International ‘ident, f Ile, 01d the B.C. IWA tinal that the IWA Interna- @ | tenn Office will lobby de- Mgeg UY against the pro- Rig lumber export cut. He “ | thay fe was no evidence ly , © U.S. lumber industry ry 2g hurt by Canadian tition, lime ee charged that U.S. y | hig ®t companies are using Ug “TY to get control of Rational forest resources. p PEACE RALLY | HEAR : DR. J. ENDICOTT | + Report on “The World Congress For ; Disarmament & Peace” : Held in Moscow 1 / Sunday, October 7 - 8 p.m. | Everyone Welcome WOMEN DEMAND ACTION JON HIGH PRICES, PEACE Party this week called for parliament to adopt the fol- lowing three-point program: e Institute laws curbing profiteers and so stop price increases; e Cut military spending by 50 percent and _ continue every effort toward disarma- ment; e Adopt a policy of neu- trality, thereby creating new confidence in Canada’s ef- forts for peace. Charging that Canadian . working class and farm fami- lies are hardest hit by the. government’s austerity pro- gram, the leaflet says: “We pay sky high prices to make big profits bigger; we pay sky high prices for arms and bases that endanger our survival as a people, as a nation. We women, particu- larly we mothers, are deeply concerned about providing daily needs, about fear of radiation. of war.” ture shows the extent to which automation loading moves into position. The automatic is coming to Canada’s longshore industry. unloader was built in Montreal. , tee eens ee “If Britain joins the Eu- da, said in Vancouver last of the Canadian Chamber of ropean Common Market, Sunday. Commerce, which met in the lets for trade will have about 250 people at a public seapcasiee integration” with been lost,” William Kash- meeting held in the Hastings e U.S., and the Vancouver the party’s city committee. advocated the same course of Communist Party of Cana- He scored the recent call action in its issue of Sat., “It must be obvious to more and more people,” he Dr. James Endicott is touring Canada with a report of strange time to pose the the recent Moscow. Peace Congress, the B.C. Peace Council question: ‘Can Canada Afford province in Victoria, Nanaimo, Surrey, Haney, the UBC and are approaching our 100th Victoria College. He will conclude the B.C. portion of his tour birthday as a nation, and this at 8 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 7th. has witnessed dozens of na- Prior to this rally, Endicott, who is an ordained minister tions fighting for (and thou- versary celebrations of the founding of People’s China. The tional independence.” celebraticns will take place at the Marco Polo restaurant, 90 Kashtan condemned the Endicott is regarded by many as the leading peace figure "Ot to expand trade, but to in Canada. He is the president of the Canadian Peace Con- TeStrict it,” and emphasized Peace. policies of big business gov- ernments and its spokesmen finished goods under the guise of free trade, customs “fewer and fewer jobs for more and more people.” ECM or not, it was time for Canada to start developing its breaking new trails in the field of international trade. gressive forces and the Can- adian labor movement could to start raising some of these fundamental issues a hearing on gas The Public Utilities Com- on September 26, conducted ‘a hearing on whether Magna a pipeline to Vancouver Is- land should stand or be SELF-UNLOADING FREIGHTER. This pic- aia port as the 200-foot boom for self-un- This is the freighter MV Halifax in a Cana- C a a anadian jobs says Kashtan Canada’s - traditional] out- Kashtan was addressing City last week, for “further i aE eee Auditorium, sponsored by Province, which editorially Sept. 22. Endicott to tour B.C : = sg said, “that this is rather a announced this week. His first meetings will be held in this Independence?’ After all, we with a big rally at the Pender Auditorium, 39 W. Pender St. particular period of history of the United Church of Canada, will speak at the 13th anni: Sands of people dying for) na- E. Pender St., on Saturday, Sept. 29, at 6:30 p.m. ECM as being an instrument gress and one of the vice-presidents of the World Council for ‘hat pursuing the present —further opening of doors to union, etc. — will mean Whether Britain joins the secondary industries and “Enough pressure by pro- force members of the NDP PUC conducts mission, sitting in Victoria Pipeline Co.’s plan to build rescinded. SLUMS IN ECUADOR. About three quarters of the popula- tion of Quayaquil, second larges city of Ecuador, live in slum areas like the one shown above. The two Indian women, like Ernie Knott, Victoria and thousends cthers, live by scavenging. The people of Ecuador, Island organizer for the Com- are suffering under feudal exploitation and U.S. domination, Munist Party, appeared be- of their country. fore the PUC for the party: Sept. 29, 1962—PACIFIC TRIBUNE—Page 3.