18 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 11, 1966 NEWS IN BRIEF OUT TO GET CATS and commodity companies on VENICE, Italy (AP) -- Two)|both sides of the Atlantic. women returned city's cat were awaiting the ens Sanders and' informed |, Polan the penalties for harm-|°@! Sunday « -Of an esumated 25,000). th" t roam Venice. Giu- acea, chief veterinar- provincial govern- the two women prosecution if they i court officials uvt Ralender 54 8a ge : ; ut aaEe i GAYS HESS SANE, NOW BONN (Reuters)--Baldur von freed from Spandau war crimes jail a week ago, says Rudolph Hess is still per- fectly sane but might turn in- sane in his solitary confine- ment. The 72-year-old Hess, Hit- ler's former deputy, now is the ro prisoner in Berlin's Span- u. ie Fe BATMAN A DANDY NEW YORK (AP)--Television actor Adam (Batman) West and Arthur J. Goldberg, U.S. am- bassador to the United Nations, jare listed among the 10 best- dicsoans surront aac 0 men in the U.S. by the ustom Tailors Guild of Amer- BERLIN (Reuters) -- East/ica. German Leader Walter Ul-| bricht Monday promised contin-| TAKE CHINA POST ued "all-around" support to|. HONG KONG (Reuters)--The "the people of Viet Nam" as|Canadian government trade his regime and a North Vietna-| Commission in Hong Kong Mon- mese delegation signed new|@ay announced the arrival of trade and assistance agree-|Charles R. Gallow to take up ments. his new post as senior trade commissioner here. Gallow has MAKE BIG HAUL jserved in Bombay, Rio de Ja- MILAN, Italy (AP) -- Police | neiro, New York and Johannes- announced two arrests Monday| burg. im an operation against an in-| ternational narcotics ring with a base in the Middle East and tentacles reaching into Europe and the United States. Seven kilograms of pure morphine were seized and two Iranians were arrested Sunday after a eloak-and-dagger pursuit from Istanbul through France and/ a" ™** Stratford Season SEES DIFFICULTY | Ends With Profit Ps ous meen ----- eens) ry - Gene Thant warned Monday the United Na-|. STRATFORD (CP) -- The tions' financial crisis may con- Stratford Shakespearean Festi- tinue into 1967. He told the gen-|V@! ended its 1966 season inthe eral assembly's budgetary com- lack today after indications mittee that unless more yolun-|P00r attendance in the first tary contributions are made or|"&eks would leave it with a def. the regular contributions of all|icit- : member states are raised, "we| GT0ss season ticket sales will a total more than $1,200,000 about $27,000 less than last year-- May expect to see in 1967 an which was considered success- ful. nally were valued at $100,000, but an inventory now indicates worth at $1,000,000, police said. PHILIP HONORED LONDON (Reuters) -- Prince Philip has been chosen "public relations man of the year." Britain's Institute of Public Re- lations plans to give him a medal for what it called his magnificent service." unhappy renewal of the finan- cial strains and stresses of past years." SMITH THREATENED SALISBURY (Reuters) -- Piime Minister ian Smith of Rhodesia, his wife and five cab- inet ministers hurriedly left a movie theatre Monday night after an anonymous warning that a bomb had been planted there. The warning turned out to be a hoax. Eight hundred Movie-goers left the building with the government leaders. REVIEW REFUSED WASHINGTON (AP) -- An- thony De Angelis, central figure in a $150,000,000 salad oil scan- dal was refused a review by the U.S..Supreme Court Mon- day of a 20-year prison sen- tence. De Angelis was sen- tenced Aug. 17, 1965 on three counts of fraud and one of con- spiracy. The former butcher built a vegetable oil refining empire that collapsed in 1963 with a crash that resounded through banks, brokerage firms During the first weeks of the season, attendance was down 31 per cent from the same neriod in 1965, when 91 per cent of the theatre's seats were filled. Victor Polley, administrator and director of the festival, blamed critics for turning aud- iences away. would need 90-per-cent-attend- ance for the remainder of the season to finish with a profit. figures for the season were not released, but the festival produced Henry V, Henry VI and Twelfth Night at the Festival Theatre. FIND PILOT'S BODY WHITEHORSE, Y.T. (CP)-- The body of pilot Frank Hern of Fairbanks, Alaska, killed last spring on a flight to Tallahas- see, Fla., was brought to White- horse Wednesday. His plane, which crashed April 28, was found Sunday. He said in July the festival : Liberals By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--Liberals re- kindied their old free-trade fire Monday in a policy debate that tugged hard at North Atlantic and North American ties. They his|finally decided in favor of a North American-Caribbean free- trade sven ae national nariv policy. After a rousing debate on frec trade, they called on the minor- ity Liberal administration to start negotiations to form such a free-trade area. The recommendation became a policy plank only after a stiff rear-guard action by exponents of a North Atlantic free-trade community. The move was spearheaded by western Liberals, backed by Maritimers, who claimed sup- port for the plan by Trade Min- ister Winters. The battle completely over- shadowed an anticipated debate on medical care insurance in which the cabinet won reluctant agreement by the party to de- lay beyond ne A 1, 1987. the start of a federal medicare program. Delegates made it plain they regretted the cabinet's delaying decision and attached a rider to their endorsation that July 1, 1968, be the latest date for im- plementing the long - promised federal program. {CNawie BU Cais. Diese 4 LYE Endorse Policy At Ottawa Convention Health Minister MacEachen, who had been the strongest ex- ponent of a July 1, 1967, starting date, expressed his "'pain" at the cabinet decision, but added that 1968 "'is a certainty" for implementation. The resolution, he said, pro- vided the flexibility that would worshop that a leadership con- test be held within two years of a general election. Defence Minister Hellyer"s policy of putting navy, army and air force into a single serv- ice was overwhelmingly en- dorsed in a committee session. But no resolution referring spe- cilcally 10 uniicalon was piaced before pienaty sessions. Instead the delegates adopted a resolution calling for "an in- dependent defence policy tail- ored to further Canadian politi- cal and military objectives at home and abroad." Foreign affairs planks calling for diplomatic recognition of Communist China and a UN seat for China on the UN's teams were adopted after a sec- ond round of earlier workshop battles by opponents. Also in foreign affairs, the convention set foreign aid tar- gets of one per cent of the gross national product by 1970 and two per cent by 1980. On the domestic front, the government was urged in an- other resolution approved in plenary session to set up a fed- eral consumer affairs depart- ment with jurisdiction over product standards, packaging, labelling, credit buying, war- ranties and consumer educa- tion. ditions permit. The decision in plenary ses- sion of the Liberal Federation of Canada was a foregone conclu- sion after Finance Minister Sharp defended the delay suc- cessfully in a preliminary de- 'bate and Prime Minister Pear- son endorsed it. But many delegates still grumbled aloud that they failed to accept Mr. Sharp's argument that it was an anti-inflationary step. Mr. Pearson was given a ring- ing vote of confidence as party leader and endorsed the idea that this become a regular fea- ture of conventions every two years. He flatly rejected the idea of a full leadership convention as frequently as that, telling dele- gates he considers his first re- sponsibility is to Parliament and the people of Canada, not to the Liberal party. The issue comes to the plen- ary sessions again today, how- ever, when delegates debate the Delegates endorsed full dis- recommendation of a_ policy , closure of credit costs in terms By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson intervened Mon- day in his party's squabble over medical care insurance in an attempt to head off trouble that some informants said in- volved a resignation threat by Manpower Minister Jean Mar- chand. As of Monday night Mr. Mar- chand was still in the federal cabinet and was reported to be "less unhappy" since a decision by the Liberal national conven- tion to put some flexibility into the starting date for medicare. Finance Minister Sharp an- nounced last month in an infla- tion - curbing speech that the starting date would be post- poned to July 1, 1968, from the same date in 1967. The resolution that passed Monday evening says medicare should start 'certainly not later" than July 1, 1968. This would leave the so-called lef wing of the party free to pres- sure the government to start it earlier if economic conditions change. This compromise is expected o be reflected in an amend- ment to the medicare legisla- tion which Health Minister MacEachen is to move for sec- ond reading--approval in prin- ciple--in the Commons, prob- ably later today. Mr. Marchand, a former la- bor leader who now is one of tlie + t- Pearson Helps Thwart Internal Cabinet Rift = =: first elected to Parliament last most popular members of the Liberals' Quebec caucus, was PAT & MIKE FISH & CHIPS "Generous Servings" HALIBUT, SHRIMPS, SCALLOPS 723-1951 688 HORTOP of dollars and cents and simple linterest and establishment of lcompulsory standards for con- sumer goods. The closest division of opinion resolution to approve supervised abor- tions. The only stand-up vote of the day was held to resolve a doubt about two voice votes be- fore the resolution was declared approved. The delegates called on the government to pass laws to widen the grounds for divorce, now generally restrictéd to adultery, without specifying what other grounds. They also endorsed distribution of birth control information and devices, now banned under the Crimina} Code. BALLROOM year. His star has risen so quickly that one informant said a com- promise had to be found be- cause the government couldn't afford to lose him. An informant said the trouble developed at the opening of tne national convention because Mr. Marchand and his supporters found that the compromise they thought had been obtained Fri- day had become uncertain over the weekend. As rumors that Mr. Marchand was considering quitting were circulating through the Chateau Laurier,. where the convention is being held, Mr. Pearson sum- moned Mr. Marchand to his DANCING we etter na] INSTRUCTION Mr. MacEachen. | The medicare issue was de-| GROUP CLASSES PRIVATE LESSONS bated at a workshop of the con- vention during the afternoon CLUB. GROUP and the absence of Mr. Mac) Pate Eachen, who strongly favored) starting the program next year, raised speculation whether he ATIN too was considering quitting. ri Informants said later the| Instructors : health minister wanted to wait |*LES and DOT RUDKIN to find out what Mr. Marchand 728-8439 INTERNATIONAL STYLE was going to do but that he was not considering resigning. ' cy @ OSHAWA BOBBY DUVAL - THE REGENTS INN The Starlites Famous Two Missionaries Support U.S. On Its Stand In Viet Nam War LONDON, Ont. (CP)--A, Ca- preciate what the Americans nadian husband - and wife «mis-|are doing, although they don't anh gai 7 returned|like the war or the army. rom t- Nam four months) "The Americans could de- ago, feel the United States/stroy the North (Viet Cong) must succeed in Viet Nam or|now," Mr. Jeffrey said. "But the world faces the possibility| that would be to lose the war. of a third war. There would be absolute ge sl ' Jeffrey | chaos." spoke in wholehearted support) 'The political battle is more of U.S. action in Viet Nam Sun- theariest than the militarv hat- day night. Mr. Jeffrey pre-|tje." dicted the pace of war in that) "] think the Americans have country will increase after elec-|done the only thing that could tions in the U.S. this fall. be done," he said. "The Amer- Mr. and Mrs. Jeff * havejicans are after a stalemate. spent 48 years in N. th and/The U.S. is trying to contain South Viet Nam as missionar-|them (the Viet Cong). I think ies and the Jeffreys plan to golit's a very wise policy." back in about a year. They have experienced life in South- East Asia under four govern- ments and during the Second World War. Mr. Jeffrey said they "think and talk" as do the Viet Nam people. They spoke at an annual mis- sionary convention. "The Communists are hoping Johnson will be kicked out," Mr. Jeffrey said, adding that the secret hope is the successor will pull the troops out of Viet Nam. HAS TO SUCCEED } "The U.S. has got to succeed | in Viet Nam, I feel the greatest | danger, in the long run, is if the | Americans back out." Mr, Jeffrey said that would/ allow communism: to "suck in") all of Southeast Asia. | The Vietnamese people, he| said, are beginning to realize} this, They are beginning to ap-| he KIDS UNDER 12 FREE PREE IN-CAR HEATERS Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 EPI'S SEEK GIBRALTAR RULING LONDON (AP)--Britain an- nounced Thursday night it will propose that the International \Court of Justice at The Hague rule on legal aspects of its dis- pute with Spain over the future of Gibraltar, , THE WIRISCH CORPORATION Prosems "THE AUSSIAHS ARF COMING | THE AUSSIAHS ARE COMING | Am fy OL Pa UNITED ATT James SiDNeY GaRNeR PoTeR w RALPH NELSON DWEL AT DiaBLO COLOR BY DELUXE UNITED ARTIST 668-2692 839.3621 SCHOOLS LOOK BACK REGINA (CP) -- The Sas- katchewan Jubilee and Centen-|Health officials say the insecti- nial Corp. has presented 1,600\cide DDT was responsible for schools with a new source pKa yep al death of thou- 'book on provincial history, Writ- Okanagan Lake ten by Dr. J. H. Archer ana|Sst,Week, An ipermenew ie dead trout and C. B. Koester of the legislature|were washed beaches : staff, it tells the history of Sas- i os 4.4 official said people du "i oscil with rm big yarsags into the creek o. oe and excerpts from im-jlying areas caus portant old documents. the trouble aad -- ae THE BLUE HORSE LOUNGE Presents This Week THE ECHOES A new musical act which is one which should please Blue Horse patrons. I ett Mem HOTEL LANCASTER "The Friendly Spot" ee sceaneemmmenmeaema © SPECIAL! PAT & MIKE'S FISH & CHIPS "GENEROUS SERVINGS" Halibut -- Shrimps -- Scallops, Ete. For the Fastest Service please Phone in Your Order Before You Leave Home. COUPON save 2 5c On aff orders $1 or over when this coupon is presented. Limit One Per Customer, =eee A FAMOUS PLAYERS 4 FEATURE AT: 2:25 - 4:45 ~ 7:05 - 9:25 | 20) Ceiling DRIVE-INS SORRY!... 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