¢ wy! NI 7) a i A Ei i} | FRIDAY, O ae ASD A a SMe Ls eb, a ILL YY eh teen rome CTOBER 1, 1971 Vol. 32, No. 39 . 32, No. wee cae RS RN eh end ae ee aE a eefoneatas! paige tes AER TE Re! ke a eae a : } . =: : q 4 Tribun TAI ETAT 50 cs G CTRADES| UN ONTCOUNCIL > rics 15° President Nixon There can b ay Nixon’s hand is playing a cat-and-mouse game with world public opinion. e no doubt that overwhelming opinion everywhere — including the U.S. — is _against the Amchitka test. The direct responsibility for the test rests on the shoulders of the U.S. president. He alone has be world opini It is already kn Originally the test w in October.” en given the power to decide whether it goes ahead or not. But despite on he is continuing to stall. What is “Tricky-Dicky” up to? own that the bomb has been placed in the hole dug for it. as to take place this weekend. Now it has been postponed until “later What is Nixon waiting for? Is it a more opportune time when, he hopes, protest would have exhausted humanity? Public opinion w have not been. Neither s it a thousand-fold, is now. The Communist P © stop the test. This unity must now be carried forward in the joined in the demand t remaining days to compe Speak out now itself. thus freeing him to go ahead with this crime against ill not be misled by such duplicity. The men of the Greenpeace hould the public. The time to keep up the pressure, and escalate arty in B.C. in common with all sections of the community have | Nixon to call off the test. | Keep the pressure Up and intensify it! Nixon’s hand must be stopped from pressing the trigger.