“AND How DEMONSTRATING HOW THE CO-OPERATING EMPLOYEE ASSUMES HIS COMPETITIVE POSITION... % ‘PUT BRITAIN FIRST’ : British Communists call ECM talks as ‘betrayal’ The Communist Party of Britain last week issued a call for the widest possible movement to protest the clearly indicated sellout of national interests which the Macmillan government is per- petrating in its negotiations with the European Common Market. The call reads in part: “The British people must challenge the policy of na- tional betrayal embodied in the Tories decision to enter the.Common Market. The course of negotiations reveals beyond the shadow of a doubt that the Tories are bartering away the right of a British government to control its own economic, political and foreign policy. In foreign policy Britain would be subordinate to de Gaulle and Adenauer with their policy of*no agreement on Berlin and their demands for nuclear arms for the West Germans. e British Parliamentary in- dependence is being betrayed. The government is deliber- ately concealing the facts about European wages as compared with British. PRIOR GARAGE & SERVICE 219 Prior Si. MU 3-2926 COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE & REPAIRS Auto Body Work LEE, Proprietor ROOFING & SHEET METAL REPAIRS ; Reasonable Gutters and Downpipes Duroid, Tar and Gravel NICK BITZ BR 17-6722 The government has _ not bothered to investigate the effects of this low wage com- petition on British industry or living standards. The Brit- ish people are being deceiv- ed. @ The British Common- wealth is being betrayed. The agreements which the government is negotiating ac- cept that at the end of a few years all Commonwealth agri- cultural products will be tax- ed and all Common Market agricultural products will be admitted free. Australians, New Zealan- ders, Canadians will be cast out, while West Germans will be embraced. ® The British consumer is being betrayed. Food has always been cheaper in Britain than in Europe because of Common- wealth food imports. Now this system is. being scrapped, and food prices will rise. e The underde veloped countries of the Common- wealth are being betrayed. Indian textiles entering Britain will be taxed, but Italian textiles, a more dan- gerous competitor, will be ad- mitted free. The government statement that Britain’s membership in the Common Market is com- patible with the Common- wealth is a brazen lie.” The call goes on to point out that the Labor Party’s right wing leadership has adopted a ‘‘wait and see’ pol- icy. towards this vital ques- tion, and calls on the British people to fight in a united way against joining the ECM. The first Soviet citizens to visit Vancouver as_ tourists will arrive on Monday, June 25. There will be a group of about 15 tourists including prominent personalities in the fieldsof art, education and science from many parts of the USSR. Among the group will be Igor Zabordin, General Sec- retary of the USSR-Canada Society, working through Friendship House in Moscow, which greets Canadian visi- tors to that city. The tourists will be enter- tained by the B.C. Branch of the Canada-USSR Association at a reception on Monday evening, June 25. The recep- tion will be held in the Ter- race Cafe in the B.C. Build- ing at the Pacific National Exhibition. 3 The group will be bringing with them an exhibition of Russian books in both Eng- lish and French, as well as a variety of records produced in their country. These will be on display at the recep- tion. Though many Canadians have visited the USSR as tourists this is the first time that a group of tourists have come from the USSR _ to About 400,000 men come to South Africa’s wealthy gold mines; | SOVIET TOURISTS TO VISIT IN CITY travel across Canada. The Canada-USSR Associa- tion has stated that it wel- comes this interchange of people between our two countries, as we need to get to know each other better. “This type of exchange of peoples will do a great deal to consolidate the peaceful and friendly. relations be- tween our tw@ countries.” UPSET VICTORY In an upset victory, John Morgan has defeated MPP Reginald Gisborn (NDP) for the position of president of Local 1005 (Hamilton), Can- ada’s_ biggest Steelworkers local. Morgan has been linked with the anti-raiding move- ment in the 8,500-member local, which has twice declin- ed to endorse Steel’s raiding of Mine Mill. A number of other candi- dates elected to union posts were also identified with the anti-raiding sentiment, and their victory was seen as a clear cut rejection by the workers of policies of raid- ing and division, and _ indi- cates a desire for unity with- in the trade union movement. every year to earn a few pennies a day for 12 to 18 months before they return to the hungry reserves. They are housed. like animals in squalid compounds. Above photo shows Negro boys, who have walked many miles, lined up for work at the mine office. Dressed in rags, these boys, like other workers, will be sweated by the rich mine owners, whose government recently introduced “anti-subversive”’ legislation aimed at silencing protests against apartheid policies. See Englant before it's too late — The following lettet © Ivor Montagu, a leader in th British peace movement ® peared recently in a Lon® paper. (Editor). e I am just starting a 10 agency. I expect to clea? Will you help me by P& is cizing one of my leaflet VISIT ENGLAND FOR XMAS Tight little, Bright, li Quaint little, Historic Poetical, Expendable England. : See its Beauty Spots, | famous Monuments, unrivalled Art Collect® Meet the Natives FOR THE LAST TIME e H-Bombs are circling ove’ head, but do not let tha worry you. Except in Cc ‘ of accident, you should safe. U.S. hands are the trigger. Your secu will be guaranteed by brains, U.S. workmansht U.S. calm, U.S. sobri Statistics show theré a good chance all will well long enough for yo to make your trip if do it soon, but NEXT SUMMER MAY ® TOO LATE. Now is the time for British holiday you alW promised yourself. DON’T DELAY — VISIT BRITAIN BEFORE IT’S EXPENDED! -_ On second thoughts: — willing to sell my lea!” | the British Travel AS® tion. It’s going to need all help it can get—and pray” SO ARE WE! G IVOR MONTA® Garston, Herts. . Accra Conferenc® Over 100 eminent 7 sonalities from most parts the world will meet i? * 44 Ghana, for a week, va on June 21, for the © Without the Bomb” °% ence. It has been stated t assembly is not intende “protest meeting”, 29° 49 aim is ‘‘to avoid any itl i condemnatory resolutio® instead to make prac commendations.” It is hoped that at te of the assembly a Pl# disarmament and slag sues would emergé, ing various: features vious plans and PFO for disengagement. pat 3s tice Classified Advertising 2 __NOTICES DEADLINE FOR COMING EVENTS COLUMN — All copy must be in the Pacific. Tribune office no later than -"prGENT TAILORS LTD. — Monday, 12 noon. PENDER LUGGAGE 541 West Pender St. MU 2-1017 Enjoy good home-cooked meals at JENNIE’S COFFEE SHOP Ford Bldg. East Hastings St. QOMING EVENTS; June 24 — Soviet Film “TWO CAP- TAINS” will be shown at the RUSSIAN PEOPLE’S HOME — 600 CAMPBELL AVE.—SUN. JUNE 24 at 8 P.M. Russian dialogue— English sub-titles. Every- one welcome. At the end of April, 1962, the population of Saskatoon passed the 100,000 mark. _ BUSINESS PERSONALS % TRANSFER — 1424 Com-: mercial Drive. Call Nick — AL 3-0727. Custom Tailors & Ready- to-wear. For personal’ ser- vice see Henry Rankin at 324 W. Hastings St., Van- couver 3. MU 1-8456. WEST END RADIO—Special- izing in TV Repairs. Latest precision equipment used. (Formerly OK Radio Ser- vice). Now at 1721 Robson St. MU 3-2618. SASAMAT SHOES & RE- PAIRS — 4463 West 10th Ave. Phone CA 4-1017. June 22, 1962—PACIFIC TRIBUNE HALLS FOR REY CLINTON HALL, 260° Pender, Available inf! quets, weddings, ™ 44, _ ete. Phone AL 33-9 b, RUSSIAN PEOPLES’ “ — Available for ™ weddings & band reasonable rate® og Campbell Ave. / é Yon: MU 1-97 Large & Smail H for Rentals, <~