Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Barrie Examiner, 23 Jan 1968, p. 1

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EXAMINER TELEPHONES inmost neutron IIHIII AII 0th Departmmta mean WEATHER Mainly Simny cold Wednwday thgh tomorrow Low tonight hill details on Page 11 Clint Therm Examiner With You No I9 Barrio Ontario Canada Tuesday January 23 I968 Not More Than In For Copy 12 Page SEEK HBDMBS OFF GREENLAND SIGNCARRYING named as left wing fraction stages minor demonstration lIonday in Copenhagen Den mark alter announcement that nuclear armed 115 352 bomber bad crashed off Green land Sunday This scene took place on the eve of Danish national elections Some of the posters read Vote for new trolity and disarmament and Now there are nucleic wea pans in Danish territory AP Vircplroto via cable from Copenhagen House Group Studies Changes In Tariffs OTTAWA CF The Com mons finance and trade commit tee today launches its biggest Enost detailed examination since Parliaments massive revision of the Bank Act two years ago The first of nearly 1000 pro posed changes in the customs tariffs setting new roles of duty on imports will be studied The first area to be covered is im yrt duties on agricultural prod ets The tariff revision arises out of Canadas participation for nearly four years in the Kenne rly Itound of negotiations in Ge have under the General Agree ment on Tariffs and Trade ini liated by president John Ken nedy Must Canadian ratcs of duty are being cut progressively until 1972 by onequarter to onethird Similar and in some cases greater cuts are being made by other countries opening new markets for Canadian products while enabling some imports to compete more strongly with Ca nons Tremblay Dies In QUEBEC corRenerrem hlny 45 former immigration minister in Ihe federal cabinet hose political career was arked by troubles and accusa tions died Monday in hospital of an apparent heart attack fr Tremle was taken to has tal Saturday after meeting with several Ottawa friends who had found him in what appeared to be good health Funcrnl arrangements were not completed Mr Tremblay resigned from the Liberal cabinet following his regelection in November i965 general election but retained his seat as member for Matape elialtfatan girls was first elected to the Commons in 1963 and became ininister without portfolio in the initial Pearson cabinet ieh took office in April of that ye He became immigration min ister in February 1554 and was switched to postmastergeneral in the summer of 1955 lie ned from the cabinet in December 1965 saying be suffering from hyperten The resignation came after he had been in hospital for several weeks eariiorin the 31 His death leaves party stand ipg in thezssseat Commons Liberals 130 Conservatives 95 Cre NEEDSIDW P3 12 aster de pendent vacant Quebec ItENETflEMBLAE Mr Tremblay returned to the political spotlight briefly last September by calling on the Liberal party to advocate aboli tion of the monarchy in canada and the establishment of re public Born in Lucevzlle was an economist by professi educated at the Rimous lion etlJnions top leader today for than scheduleth British spokesmen sa otructrve VietnamTroopsLeaveValleyV macaroniSouth Vietnamese troopsch git of Vecond district townluthe cnflamedjihefianhvValley Monday as the us command rushed tbwsands of reinforcemean in South Vietnam threatened northern sector Police line has Gun mamas icPifStraflord police new use ga student the hilly The policeman inst points small eylinderat Qh iso ers face presses vaiveand squirt or tear gas does tter and anfai jobthan abloW iconic at nmeetfng Thur didfli¢ PI Martin the head from the it nadian products on the domcsfic market Annis director of ERIE in the finance depertmcnl will load the committee through the intricate changes in the Cana dian tariff He said in an opcning slate mcnt on agricultural products distributed to committee mem bers Monday that Canada is making only minor reductions in duties on imported farm products that compete with Ca narlian production This was in response to pleading by Cana dian farm organizations Significanl reductions are beingrmade however on im ports that Canadian farmcss must buy to maintain produclt tionhay and straw dairy cat tie and field seeds principally Mr Annis also said that Can ada and Britain tried to get the developed countriB belonging to GATT In grant free entry of most Lropical farm products This would have been of panic ular help to the Commonwealth countries in the Cnribbean More Money For Farmers Liberal Plan WlNNfPEG CF Policies designed to make housingavail able to all and to putinora moneyin farmers pockets were approved Monday as the west ern Liber gt policy conference ended Agriculture stirred the most debate during the twoday meet ing committee was criticized for missing basic problems and told to try again In response the commi produced and won support for plan on provide farmers with in comesreflecting true return for their labor Delegates lea dorsed floor price of $2 busth for wheat and two dris proposed plan is was soimd and tea mp Liberal members nfPar liamsnt on the Prairies Leticia To Papers fire not Libellous mucous or appefli eourt in called memorable press hasVruVled that lettersto newspaperson publicfssues are not libellous even if they contain defam ory taiemnnts when rtlzen is tro 17 things gohig wrong heisbould bé freetb write to thermis paper and the nevvs per ho tor MP5 RENEW CHARGES Govt Broadcast Bill Sounds Like ReRun OTTAWA CPI The com mon came back from its Christmas recess Monday and picked upjust where it left off with more complaints on brand casting and the CBC Resumed clausehyclnuse dc batc on the governments broad casting bill sounded much like IllIll Harold Stafford tLElginl rc neWSd his diarftethaf the CBC has an antiAmerican slant He also said it is antiGerman and antibusiness Robert Thompson SCRed Deer repeated that CBC pro gramming is dominated by minorlt at uses it to spread pmpng and perversion un dermining family life Gilles Gregoire tindLapoiufci picked up his campaign to change the bill and provide that broadcasting must1 be effec tively owned by Canadians Ralph Cowan tLYork Humbcr condoned hs attempt to keep cableTV systemsout of the control of the new regula tory agency the bill will set up SENATE IN SESSION The senate also went back into sossionthmdiW resuming debate on the divorce bili ai readyrpamcd by the Commons Senator RhanlEelisle PC Ontario suggested that the new and broadened divorce system be tried for fiveyear period on the pattern of the new laws limiting capital punishment The Commons opened on sombre note with tributes to two MPs who died during the recess Maurice Itinfret mem ber for Montreal St Jacques and deputy speaker and Rene Tremblay Liberal member for The Ekaminer TODAY Ann Lenders6 city Newsz Classifiedl0 11 Comics1 Deaths10 District5 antenna Sportsl Theatre1 av mamas7 MMl1 hiampcdiaMatanr and for mer cabinet minister With the tributes finished NDP Leader Douglas asked about conflicting reports on medical care and for assurance that the program will start on schedule this summer External Affairs Minister Martin acting prime minister in air Pearsons absence with the flu said the pro ram Is the law of the land not also said some provinces have asked that attention be given to their views about the July starting date Sharp Pledges Dollar Support UfIAWA CPI The govern ment began buying rather than selling 115 dollars ltlonday in bid to moderate the strengthen ing position of the Canadian dol lor in foreign exchange mar kets Finnnce pledging an allout effort to maintain the Canadian dollar within the limits of its WEEed exchange rate told the Com mons it was too soon to draw definite conclusions But the change is distinctly encouraging he said lIe lold Pagllpmautxtha Conn dlan dollar came under pres sure to days ago when sales fit US dollars boomed The gov cmment through the bank of Canada and activity of the ex change fund account sold as dollars from official reserves to maintain the value of the Cana dian dollar The dollar is pegged at 929 cents in US funds and under International Monetary hind Minister rules can move one per ccnt higher or lower lt reached near bottom last week when Wash ington nnd Ottnwa moved to re store confidence in it ltfr Sharp said be endorsed the action taken by the Bank of Canoda Tailed To Recognize Symptoms PETEEEOEOUGH iCP coroners iury ruled Monday that organic symptoms should have been recognized and acted upon in the case of Terence Greenlaw 12 who died of brain tumor Sept afterbeing diagnosed as suffering from psychiatric disorder The cltyyouth died 10 days after being released from Peter borough Civic Hospital where he had been under surveillance for 24 days Th ury ruled that physicians bad alrdreasons to suspect the boys symptoms had psychia tric or emotional origin but that these symptoms could also presuit iothe election of what said wasgood Kitt told press conference In Washington the White House reported it had re ved somel900 letters comerre ting on the innidentnlidost of these Were said to deplore Miss Kitts conduct Miss run so she called the conference to answer crit who bad ternicd barf re marks at aWhite Hoe eon last Th sda do and ill InPeterborough Boys Death apply to the presence of brain tumor The inquest ordered by Dr Colnam Ontario supervislt ing coroner was conducted by Dr Fred Oruickshank acting chief coroner for Metropolitan Toronto Earlier Dr William Forster psychiatrist testified there was no evidence of an organic ailment affecting the boy He said all of his leslsrpointed to functional psychiatric disorder and on that basis he had racomA mended outpatient treatment Search Icv Polar Darkness For Devices Lost In Crash It Denmark forbids flights of Searchers using dogsleds and helicopters today continue hunt ing in the icy polar daranus seven miles off Thulc Green land for perhaps as many as four LLS hydrogen bombs lost in the fiery crash of 352 bomber The U5 defence department wouidmot say how many nu clear bombs were aboard the plane uhen it crashed Sunday But sources said there were probably four of the L1 mega ton type with total explosive force equivalent to more than 4400000 tons of dynamitea force thousands of times greater than diet which incinerated iii roshlma in die Second World War megaton is equal to 000000 tons of dynamite The Hiroshima bornb packed the force of 20000 tons of dynamite The Pentagon said the devices werent armed so there is no danger of nuclear explosion at the crash site DEMANDS EXPLANATION Sources said recoveryof the bombs was doubtful Denmark which owns Grccn land asked the United States Eur an explanation of the incl enf planes hearing nuclcar bombs over her territory Dut Premier Jens Otto Krag said it was im possible to prevent cmcrgency landings such as the plane was attempting uhcn it hurlcd into the thick ice of North Star Day In Copenhagen Danes staged moles demonstration at the US Embassy The Soviet ncus agcncy Tass said in Moscow the crash was dangerous accident One crew member was killed in the crash Six others para chuted to safety Searchers unrkcd uith light prov cd by flares in temporaa lures well below zero and head ed across lhc ice six to nine feet hick in the bay where some wrckage find been sighted Tire Pentagon said some parls of the plane heated in the fire of the crash may have burned into or through the ice and dis oppcured in the milfool water depth of the sea floor The plane based at the Plattsburgh NY Air Force Base 2000 miles away was on patrol duty that is part of the continuing US bomber flights along the northern route in readiness for possible war Montreal Surgeon Plans Transplant MONTREAL CPI Dr Lloyd surgeonin chief of the Royal Victoria Hos pital said Monday night he plans human heart transplant operation before the end of the year Dr hincican whe received his medical training at the same centres as two other noted heart transplant surgeons Drs christiaan Barnard and Nor man Shumwav indicated his at tempt would wait until two problems have been overcome One is perfection of an anti reiection drug knownas anti lymphocyte serum and the other is perfection of tissuciyping which is the matching of the do ms and recipientsjtissue com patibility Dr MatLean sad the tart fhatDr Barnards second transplant patient Dr Philip Blaiberg has survived so long without any signs of rejection is very very encouraging Meanwhile Dr Normand Eclv iveau president of the Canadian Medical Association said he feels heart transplants have not been done prematurely heart transplants arent prema ture Id be very optimistic In Dr Philip Blaibcrgs case ills chances of survival are pretty good The critical period is very much over now Dr Beliveau said Dr Elaiberg 58 received the transplant in Cape Town South Africa Jan Shumway performed Howevcr Mr Sunday l5 days after the opera tion It is important to realize that many patients couidwnot have gone through the number perations that Kasperak Eciiveau said And his heart was still func tioning Dr Deli ausaid if Dr Blai berg survives for10 days his chances for full survival were good In animal transplants this period has often been taken as the test for rejection filiut Ithink hes going tolive much longer than it days think hes going to live six tIcast think 22 going fTheevidenee seems to show veau said and eounselling wfimrwamamm

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