Liberals Back Entry OTTAWA (CP)--The national Liberal party conference Mon- day night approved resolutions to recognize Communist China and admit her to the United Na- tions providing Nationalist }|China retains membership. 4 ; Ck LABOR MEDIATOR H. Cari Goldenberg, 58, a Montreal lawyer known as ful The resolutions, which came out of an external affairs policy B | workshop that met in the after- noon, passed the full session with little debate. The convention also passed resolutions favoring increased foreign aid, a study into conti- nental resources policy aimed at advancing the national inter- est and endorsing UN Secretary- General U Thant's proposals for ding the Viet Nam war. a diator, has been appointed by the fed- eral government to mediate. - a contract dispute between . the railways and their non- operating employees. --CP Photo Bishop Says ; y Laws tdated , N.C. (AP)--Many med at controlling homo- i\man and wife and abor- unenforceable and changed, Episcopal auxiliary Bishop gages. in charg@g at the Duke Uni- hop described as non- "general assumption mething is naughty id be a law against he is opposed to laws regulating persctal and practices al relations be- consenting adults. He th are nobody's business @ individuals concerned. said Roman Catholic law denies there is any til the fetus asserts itself rtions could not be termed rder, as some Roman Cath- /Aic leaders had charged. A general resolution on de- fence policy was also adopted. It made no mention of a resolu- tion passed earlier in the day in another policy workshop that soundly endorsed Defence Min- ister Hellyer's armed forces in- tegration and unification pro- ram. smaller workshops. Most debate on both external! affairs and defence came in the Maxwell Cohen, dean of the McGill University law school who wrote a position paper for the conference on foreign policy, said it might be too nigh a price to pay if Red China's en- iry would mean a ioss oi siaius for the Formosa regime. _An outspoken opponeni of rec- ognition was Harry Litt Lam, 62, a Chinese delegate from Tor- onto, who said Mao Tse-tung had killed, looted and destroyed 5,000 years of Chinese culture. Would the Liberal party have condoned Hitler's regime, which killed 6,000,000 Jews? John Palmer, Liberal candi- date in Grenville-Dundas in the 1965 election and now living in Orillia, said it was ridiculous to follow the U.S. attitude that $00,000,000 people don't exist. Mr. Palmer also withdrew a motion proposing "sympathetic| understanding" of the U.S. in- volvement in Viet Nam after some noisy debate. He said he is sympathetic, al- though it is "the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong) time with the wrong enemy." NDP To Ask Amnesty For 26 Convicted Men NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) The Ontario New Democratic Party will seek a royal amnesty for 26 men convicted of criminal contempt of court after they de- fied 'a court injunction limiting the number of pickets at a strikebound Peterborough plas- tics plant. A petition was circulated at the provincial NDP convention during the weekend after a mo- tion from Fred Young, the party's legislature member for orkview. It will be circulated among party members for signatures and then will be presented to the lieutenant - governor - in- council, the Ontario cabinet. Action against the 26 Peter- borough men was lodged by At- torney-General Arthur Wishart after picket-line demonstrations at Tileo Plastics Ltd. in Peter- borough last February. The strike which began nearly a year ago has not been settled. |, STUDIES LABOR LAW The contempt trial focused at- tention on the granting on in- junctions in labor disputes and / He chided those who have 'been concerned with the taking of life in cases of abortion, say-| ing they have displayed no con- cern in cases of capital punish- ment and war. ii the tetas does noi nave iiie anti] it asserts If, abortion is nobody else's business, he said. If life does exist from the moment ef conception, the eth- feal pros and cons of each in- dividual case must be weighed to determine whether an abor- tion is desirable. FOOT KISSING'S ASSAULT TORONTO (CP)--Myron W. Derkach, 35, who kissed a wom- an's feet in a coin laundry, was convicted of assault Wednesday. He was given two years proba- tion. Derkach approached the 'woman, told her she had lovely feet and asked her if he could kiss them. She refused, and Derkach fell to the floor, kiss- fig her shoes and feet." The woman called police. Premier Robarts subsequently named retired Supreme Court 4 justice Ivan Rand a one-man royal commission to study the whole field of labor law in On- tario, James Renwick, NDP mem- ber of the legislature for Tor- onto Riverdale and a corpora- tion lawyer, said if clemency is granted, an appeal now under way against the contempt con- victions and sentences ranging up to three months would be dropped. David Lewis, member of Par- Hiament for York South and chairman of the convention that ended Sunday night, said cir- culating a petition for clemency should not be considered an NDP admission that the Tiico pickets were at fault. "We, as citizens, have a right to our opinion," Mr. Lewis said. "This kind of justice in this sort of situation does not do the system of administration of jus- tice any credit." CENTENNIA CONCERTS Phone 728-4968 THE ULTimare 124 PARK ROAD Underground and Level G@ORGIAN mansions 'Red China To UN But recent elections showed the ae has considerable. support ere. SEES ESCALATION Tony Pearson, président of the Canadian University Tih. eral Federation, said unless U Thant's peace proposals aré ac- cepted the war will escalate even more, Gerard Pelletier, MP for Montreal Hochelaga, said Can- ada should consider supplying medical aid to both sides Viet Nam, Mr. Pelletier said he was "sick and tired" of hearing Prime Minister Pearson or Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Martin saying a certain action was re- grettable. Canada should not be limited to commenting on the actions of others, The foreign aid resolution called for Canada to boost aid to one per cent of the gross na- tional product by 1970 and to two per cent by 1980. The GNP is the total value of goods and services produced in the coun- try. New Role Is Proposed TORONTO (CP)--A ploneer in experiments with the halluci- nation-producing drug LSD who has begun a religion based on its use says his lawyers are seeking a licence that would permit the drug's distribution for sacramental purposes, Timothy Leary, a doctor of philosophy and former in- structor at Harvard University, said in an interview Sunday li- censing the drug would be the same as the prohibition - era practice of issuing permits to clergy for sacramental wine. He said there is a growing in- terest in his new religion, the League of Spiritual Discovery, and that sell-out crowds of 2,500 have been attending public meetings in New York although no drugs have been used at the sessions, ee 'Members of the religion would be licensed to use these drugs in the shrine of their own homes as man has worshipped from the beginning of time," Dr. Leary said. "The drugs would only be administered by guides or priests. Closer Ties With Russ By CARL HARTMAN BONN (AP)--West Germany is trying to improve its rela- tions with the Soviet Union and the East bloc. A high-level West German mission is coming back from Moscow this week after com- pieting the first phase of an ef-j. fort to get the first trade agree- ment with the Soviet Union since 1963. Some West German officials predict that by next year full diplomatic relations will be set up with Romania. Foreign Min- ister Cornelieu Manescu of Ro- mania is due in Bonn in the next few months, and final ar- rangements are expected to be made then, Foreign ministry officials hope that similar arrangements will soon follow with Bulgaria and Hungary. Traditionally Germany has been a bridge between Eastern and Western Europe, and West Germany is already the East bloc's biggest western trading partner, But competition is tough, and West German bus- inessmen want all the official help they can get. Improving relations between West Germany and the East bloc is a hard job. Memories of the Second World War. still stand in the way, and the cold war carries them on. Poland is suspicious of West Germany because of disagree- ment over the German-Polish Sora Ceschssiovskis Sant: West Germany to denounce the 1928 Munich agreement under which Hitler occupied the Su- detenland. The West Germans refuse though they insist they do not claim the Sudetenland, Yugoslavia offended West Germany a decade ago by set- ting up diplomatic relations DEALING YOUR CAR ? 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