GOOD-BYE Prince Philip waves god- bye as he prepares to enter aircraft on leaving Ottawa Thursday after a two -day visit. He is flying to Goose Bay, Labrador, where he will stay overnight before going on to Britain. (CP Wirephoto) Horsepower Lures Man VANCOUVER (CP)--No mat- ter how you look at it, Ewan (Pipy Graham of Calgary is all wrapped up in horsepower. When Graham is at work the horsepower is the real thing. He owns a 1,890-acre ranch with 90 horses near Calgary. When he's relaxing the horse- power is the kind you find under the hood of a car. He's a driver in this year's 4,000-mile cross- Canada auto rally. "I think the best way to ex- plain it is that horses are a re- laxation to most people who are riding them today,". Graham says. "But horses--raising them and selling equipment for them --are my business. So rallying is a means by which I can relax and -get away from them." He'll get away from his horses during the Anvril 30-May 6 rally, starting in Vancouver and end- ing in Quebec City, the farthest east the route has gone in six years. Graham's work involves stock horses, show horses and even thoroughbreds, He also has an English-riding - equipment busi- ness and is well enough off to POPE PAUL'S GREETINGS VATICAN CITY (AP)--The English text of Pope Paul's greetings to Archbishop Mich- ael Ramsey: We greet with emotion, with iov and with hope, your most welcome visit. With a sincere heart we thank you and we re- ciprocate the Christian salu- tation: The peace of the Lerd be with you, with the worthy personages who accompany you and with all those whom you gather about you, and represent. In the light of Christ, we ad- vert to the singular impor- tance of this encounter be- tween the Roman Catholic Church, and the Church of England together with the other churches of the Angli- can communion: Believers in Christ are spiritually present, the world observes, history will remember. You are re- peating the act of great cour- tesy performed by your illus- trious and reverend predeces- sor, His Grace Doctor Fisher, in regard to our predecessor, the lamented Pope John XXIII of happy memory; and you re- build a bridge, which for cen- turies has lain fallen between the church of Rome and the church of Canterbury: A bridge of respect, of esteem and of charity. You cross over | this yet unstable viaduct, still under construction, with spon- taneous initiative and safe confidence -- may God bless this courage and this piety of yours. 'ENTER YOUR HOME' We would wish that your first impression, upon crossing over the threshold of our resi- dence, should be this: Your steps do not resound in a strange house; they come to a home which you, for ever valid reasons, can call your own. We are happy to open its doors to you and, together with its doors, our heart; for, applying to this event the words of Saint Paul, we are both happy and honored to welcome you not as "stran- gers and sojourners, but... | fellow citizens with the saints and members of the house- hold of God." (Cf. Eph. 2, 19-20) surely, from heaven, Saint Gregory the Great and Saint Augustine look down and bless. Hence we are well aware of the various aspects of this event and, in the first place, we do not hesitate to note the historical value of this hour. It appears to us great, almost dramatic, and fortunate, if we think of the long and sorrow- ful story which it intends to bring tc an end, and of the new developments which this hour can inagurate in the re- lations between Rome and Canterbury -- from now on, friendship must inspire and guide them. We see also the civil impor- tance which this example of well-initiated concord, and this proposal of practical collabor- ation, can have, for peace among the nations of the world, and for the promo- tion of Christian brotherhood among men, --_-- Moreover, we see the ecu- menical value of this our meeting. We do not forget the grave and complex problems which i¢ raised, and which it is not intended now to re- solve; Aout these problems are here presented in their essen- tial terms, which are always very difficult, formulated, however, in such a way as to be studied and meditated to- gether -- henceforth, without any resentment of human pride, without any shadow of earthly interests, in accor- dance with the word of Christ and the assistance of the holy spirit "EXERCISE CHARITY' Finally, we see the truly spiritual and religious value of our common quest for a com- mon profession of fidelity to Christ, and of a prayer, old and new, which may harmon- ize minds and voices in cele- brating the greatness of God, and his plan of salvation in Christ for all mankind. In the field of doctrine and ecclesias- tical, we are still respectively distinct and distant; and for now, it must be so, for the reverence due to truth and to freedom; until such time as we may merit the supreme -grace of-true and perfect unity in faith and communion. But charity can, and must, from now on be exercised between us, and show forth its myster- ious and prodigious strength: "Where there is charity and love, there is God." This, then, is a great day, this day which, through the divine goodness, you enable us to live: "Exultemus et laete- mur in al"--Let us on this day rejoice and be glad together. Slices Policy WASHINGTON United States debate on China policy, while offering something to both the pros and the cons, has cut across longheld policy lines. President Jonnson and iis aa- visers say they take comfort from the refusal of any of the prominent academic authorities heard so far by a Senate com- mittee to propose abandoning South Viet Nam. They claim to follow the formula of Chincse "containment without isolation," outlined early in the congres- sional testimony. But the onus is clear on the Chinese, the Johnson group says. And the president says China "hangs up the phone." Policy critics, denied much support on Viet Nam, have had the satisfaction of seeing some basic props of official policy to ward China badly battered. (CP) -- The| U.S. Debate On China Lines Defence Secretary McNamara claimed to see a similarity to Hitler's Mein Kampf in a China "people's wars" eventually will liberate the world. Scholars ap- praise this as a grossly - exag- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, Merch 25,'1966 ]9 agrees with the Communist claim. As for North Korea, said the general, China attacked there North Viet Nam threatened. chill. Rut the experts say the U.S. it actually was a warning to North Viet Nam it must fight alone. CITE AGGRESSION McNamara, Rusk and others have claimed Chinese expansionism is repre- sented by the takeover of Tibet, attacks on the Indian frontier and threats to some Soviet-held territory, Hong Kong and For- mosa. The reply, veiced by various witness including a retired ma- rine brigadier-general, Samuel Griffith, is that each constitutes |part of the old Chinese empire |and that even Nationalist China State Secretary gerated interpretation. Perhaps;can go a long way to get ready because it was threatened and the same thing could happen if; is further None of the witnesses pre- tends anything the U.S. does now will soften the Chinese for any policy switch--by with- drawing opposition to China's United Nations membership end- ing a trade embargo which is useless and irritates Allies and taking various other conciliatory courses which now will cost the USS. little. 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This will be Graham's third Cambridge University, where he|_ He's a member of the Caigary|try at the 4,000, a tough test of studied modern languages: and Sports Car Club and estimates | driving and navigational skill in economics, but didn't become| he has driven in about 30 events.|which speed trials are inter- deeply interested in rallying pert "T haven't ridden for some/|SPersed with stretches where til three years ago. years now," he says, "but with|€ach car must pass checkpoints 85 to 90 horses around the place|#t specified times. SELDOM RIDES : I'm never really away from| He placed fourth over all last Graham does a lot of driving |them." : year, was first in the private-| we're kidding a little, since it's around Alberta, commuting to} He'll leave wife Nicky in| car category and third in class, : his equipment firm in Calgary|charge of the ranch while he and|a big improvement over 1964| not for sale -- and a good thing from the ranch southwest of the! navigator Henry Acteson, a con-'! when he finished 18th over ail. | scehcalN too! To make BODIAN habitable, any new owner would have te Picture, with THE OSHAWA TIMES very much in foreground, taken at BODIAN CASTLE near Hastings, England. 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