TWO HEADS ARE BETTER THAN ONE Two Unity Institute stu- dents . appeared to have beaten the old, story about the headless horseman when 'they paraded down the main street of Unity, Maine, one of them carry- ing a house mirror which they had purchased, back to their living quarters. Thomas Blanchard of Breezy Point, N.Y., belongs U.K. Diplomats. Study Soviet Leaders Views LONDON (AP)--British diplo- mats have the impression Euro- pean Communists want im- proved relations with the West --but not at the expense of their North Vietnamese friends. This view smerged from a study of public and private statements by Soviet and East European leaders since the summer. The study also sug- gested; --Unue: pressure from East European allies, the Russians seemingly nave decided not to let the Viet Nam war go on interfering with the search for agreement on other world issues, such as nuclear arms control, Under cover of the upheav als within China, the Russians appear willing for the first time to discuss ways of pro- moting peace in Viet Nam But there have been no hints of softer Communist terms for a settlement. The appraisal by British ex perts got some implicit backing Asian countries which sympa- thize with North Viet Nam. With European Communist leaders discussing the possibil- ity of a world munist congress, the Russians not want to convey an impres- sion of going soft on Viet Nam,|- te : mia Foreign Mi ister Andrei this week two Communist) - ore inister capitals al - in Vieuna' faut A. Gromyko of the Soviet Union Communist leaders, told Foreign Secretary George In Moscow, Premier Alexei/Brown of Britain in New York N. Kosygin said the way to| last month that Russia is not peace in Asia "les through re- bom aed influence 2 gg He pulsing U.S. aggression" and he|Said any approach to peace pl os continued Sovieh aid for|must be preceded by a halt North Viet Nam. ' in American bombing of North | In Sofia, Secretary - General|Viet Nam, When Brown asked Leonid I. Brezhnev of the So-|him what would happen if the) (9% viet Communist party was re-/bombing stopped, Gromyko| (J ported to have taken the same/Would go no further, line in an address to the Bul-| Brown fliés to Moscow Mon-|4 garian party congress. day to resume prodding and In enna, visiting | Soviet|probing on Viet Nam, disarma- to the two legs at right, and the two heads at left belong to Mike Allen of New York City. (AP Wirephoto) Canada-US. Free Trade Backed By Economists SEIGNIORY CLUB, Que. (CP) -- Canadian industries Would not only survive but thrive in 'conditions of free trade with the United States, economists predicted Thursday Before an international confer- ence on trade policies. - They said their studies sug- st that none of the 15 manu- eturing 'sectors of the Cana- dian economy would collapse or go under in tariff-free competi- tion for continent-wide markets. Even the most painful adjust- ments for now-competitive in- dustries such as furniture-mak- ing would be worthwhile in the long run. Although some businessmen did not share in the optimism, these were the conclusions that the Private Planning Associa- tion of Canada examined in a high-power forum of trade ex- perts. The voluntary association of trade-oriented men in labor, in- Civil Servants Withdraw Queen's Park Picketers "TORONTO (CP) -- The Civil Servants' Association of On- tario. yoted Thursday to with- draw members who have been tia legislature build- Negotiations will also start on a one-year contract commenc- ing Jan. 1, 1967, when the new offer dated Oct. 1 terminates. If the 6,000 hospital workers reject the short-term offer, then dustry, government andthe) universities is spending $300,-| 000 to study the ways, means) and effects of pulling down| trade barriers throughout the world but more specifically in the Atlantic community and be- tween the U.S. and Canada. A conference this week is put- ting much of the research to the test of free - swinging debate before final reports are pre- pared for publishing next year, Some of. Canada's top indus- trialists and government. offi- cials gave their views Thurs- day on the understanding that! their opinions but not their! names could be reported. In free trade, they all saw clear advantages to Canadians in general: A higher standard of living, cutting sharply into a 10-per-cent difference in in- come that the average Ameri- can enjoys over the average Canadian. | The existing U.S, - Canada auto pact was cited as an area MIDWIFE'S HEX COMES TRUE IN WOMAN'S VOODOO DEATH BALTIMORE, Md. (AP)---A Baltimore woman, who _be- lieved her life was doomed by a hex, told her doctors at City Hospital here she would Gs wien Ss Two days later, she was dead, The woman told her doc- tors that she was born on a Friday the 13th in the Okefe- nokee Swamp area of Flor- ida, one of three children de- livered by a midwife, According to the woman's story, the midwife told the babies' mother that the three were hexed and the first would die before her 16th birthday, the second before her 2ist birthday and the third before her 23rd birth- day. Doctors said the patient told them the first girl was killed in an. automobile acci- dent the day before her 16th birthday, The second girl, the woman said, went out to celebrate on her 2lst birthday and was killed by a stray bullet as she entered a tavern, \ Doctors said the patient "firmly believed she was doomed" and would die be- fore her 23rd birthday. She died the day before the birthday. FEAR MAY HAVE HELPED Doctors said an shawad savaral serious phvsid- logical disorders, but they agreed that terror may have hastened her death, Immediate cause of death was cited as primary pulmon- ary hypertension, which is de- scribed by one doctor as a 'fairly rare vascular disorder in the lungs." Dr. John C, Harvey, a pro- fessor of. medicine at Johns Hopkins Medical School here, presented the case to some 200 medical students at a clinical pathology conference Wednesday. He pointed out that eminent physicians have demon- strated that a patient's state of mind can be translated by the body into physiological disorders. Dr. Harvey studied native voodoo while on a teaching assignment in Nigeria. He said the woman's case had all the elements of voodoo deaths in Africa, Dr. Harvey was unable to check the woman's story to see if it was correct, autopsy President Nikolai' V. Podgorny|ment and European security accused the United States of| matters. "oriminal aggression" in Viet | sccm Nam and said this is to blame for East-West tensions. External Affairs Minister Paul Martin visited Moscow and Warsaw recently and came) away with the impression Rus-| sia and Poland want to reach a peaceful settlement on Viet Nam, | Rut he said in the Commons| Thursday he toid ieaders oijj both countries forcefully that over-simplified suggestions for ending the war are not realistic. | He cited as one unrealistic suggestion the proposal for the Americans to stop bombing North Viet Nam unconditionally and permanently without any indication as to what conces-| sions Hanoi might make in re-| turn, | Canada, India and Poland are the members of the Interna- tional Control Commission in Viet Nam, established in Ge- neva in 1954, Russia and Brit- ain are the Geneva conference co-chairmen, All these statements together indicate Moscow is not going to do or say anything that could be construed as a surrender of| Hanoi's. interests. To do so would be to jeopardize Russia's | standing. among African and) See the NEW "67" Model Spartan Home POOL TABLES MANY NEVER SUSPECT CAUSE MADE RIGHT HERE IN OSHAWA 'Controversial Parchment Scrutinized By Scholars WASHINGTON (CP) --The controversial Vinland Map, pur- porting to be conclusive evi- dence that Leif Ericson and company found North America long before Christopher Colum- bus, has been subjected to two days of professional scrutiny here. The little that has emerged from the closed discussions, iwhich ended Wednesday, sug- gests Italian-Americams, Span- iards and other skeptics will ing the political and academic No new opinions or in the brief communique issued conflict, conclusions were revealed Thursday. However, the map itself wen' on public display at the Smith sonian for a month, ' vefore Colu vankrolled by Que: set sail It is a parchment 11 by 12 inches, now in possession of Yale Univers- ity and attributed to a Swiss monk about 1440--or a full 50 isabella off by Major Pool Equipment (Can,) Ltd. Now you can own your own home ol table for a little as 97¢ down and English woollen cloth 0.37 a month, used in all pool tables. MAJOR POOL EQUIPMENT cmt Limited 690 DRAKE ST. 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Serres ce a ot - the loyees of Ontario's 22 men- Wednesday night asking them to accept an im- mediate raise of six per cent. Minister Urges Church Change LLOYDMINSTER, Sask. (CP) The church has "come to be known as an institution of the middle class" and has lost con- tact with the labor movement and intellectuals, Dr. Jeffrey Johnston of Brantford, Moder- ator of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, said Thursday. "This has got to be changed," he said. "The church is trying to find its relevance in the 20th éentury, and intellectuals from various churches should work to find out "what God is saying in this country." | "The church is not a place for good people," he said, "but for people who want to be bet-/ ter." Dr. Johnston spoke before the | the annual meeting of the CSA, already under way, will have to decide whether to resume pick- eting. The offer covers all non-pro- fessional workers besides the attendants and aides, who have been the leading agitators. The six-per-cent offer means that male aides, who now start at $3,360 annually, rising to $3,900, will start at $3,562 rising | to $4,134, The rate for male at- tendants, which has been $3,750 rising to $4,400, will now be $3,975 rising to $4,664. where it will be important to bring car prices into line, the first goal of the agreement be- fore unions set out to bargain for wage parity between work- ers of U.S. and Canadian as- sembly plants. Spain. The map shows a slice of land west of Iceland and Green- land which bears a resem: blance to Labrador, Newfound- land, the Gulf of St. Lawrence and some points farther south, continue to argue that the whole thing is a savage and fraudulent attack on the Colum- bus record, The discussions were spon- sored by the Smithsonian Insti- tute in an atmosphere reflect- | The world's most successful idea in brewing comes to Canada. ris Inere§ Just a few years ago six of the world's leading brewers ... 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