% 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, Januery 9, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Dallas Trip By JFK Opposed By Connally DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--Gover nor John B.Conally has indi cated he did not want John F. Kennedy to take the trip to Dal- las in November, 1963, when the president was assassinated and the governor wounded. "I reminded him he had not made a political appearance in Texas since the 1960 campaign fund-raising dinners, he be ac- cused of coming to Texas just to take back a lot of money," Connally says in a copyright interview in the Dallas Times "Herald. The visit to Texas was of the president's own making, Con- nally says. Connally made the statement in-reaction to Look magazine's first instalment of a four-part, 60,000-word serialization of Wil- liam Manchester's controversial account of the assassination The Death of a President. Manchester reports in the book that five prominent Dem- ocrats strongly urged Kennedy} to keep Dallas off his Texas itinerary in November, 1963, be- cause of what they felt was a highly charged atmosphere of antagonism toward him in the city. | GOVERNOR CONALLY ..+ Reminded JFK His One Regret TORONTO (CP) Thompson said Saturday ther Andrew| The unusual Monday meeting e|was attended by several min- jwas only one way he wanted to . MH lresign as Liberal opposition u Trio Killed leader--to. become the premier | Commons at re age of recess i |which began Dec. 21. STOCKHOLM (AP)--Two po- 8 ae ke ill health forcea| The bulky transportation bill licemen and a night watchman were shot dead with a burst from a sub-machine-gun by band of thieves in a Stockholm suburb early today. nel for pedestrians in the centre) of Handen, a suburb about 18) miles south of Stockholm. Late Saturday night a series of burglaries hit several shops in Handen. | A night watchman late Sun-) day discovered stolen goods hid-/ den at a place in the Handen centre. Two policemen were sent to take cover in the vicinity, in the hope the thieves would return to collect their booty. Deep Sea Trip WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.|# (AP) -- An underwater adven- ture involving a 1,500-mile, six- week journey beneath the Gulf Stream was outlined Saturday by Dr. Jacques Piccard, they Swiss oceanographer. Piccard said in an interview the unprecedented mission 1 tentatively set for the summer) of 1968, He said he will be ac companied by three scientist and two technicians aboard a battery-powered, 120-ton vessel now under construction in) Switzerland. Known as the PX-15, the un- dersea vessel is 10 feet in diam- eter and 46 feet long, he said. It will be equipped with 25 port- holes, five directed toward the surface, and 20 searchlights. Nixon Left-Wing TORONTO (CP) -- Robert Nixon, Ontario Liberal leader, doesn't mind being called a left- wing" Liberal, but Prime Min- ister Pearson says there is no such thing. Mr. Nixon told reporters cov- ering his election as leader by acclamation Friday night that he would not object to being called a "left-wing" Liberal. But Mr. Pearson, who read the description in a newspaper en route to Toronto. after at- tending the international hockey tournament in Winni- peg, said, Saturday: : i] "There is no left-wing or; right-wing in the Liberal party. | There is just reform and prog-| Tress."" Equipment Seized LONDON (Reuters) -- The Chinese have seized advanced Soviet equipment on its way overland to North Vietnam and used it to help their own ballis- tic missile program, The Sun- day Telegraph reports. An article from a special cor- Tespondent in Vienna quotes East European sources as say- ing China's medium-range nu- clear ballistic missile, fired Oct. 27, owed a debt to Soviet technical knowledge acquired in this way. The paper says the Chinese seized two Russian SAM II him to resign last Nov. 16 the|Was expected to be the major alposition he won in a_ hard- fought leadership race in 1964. Now he planned to work hard The bodies of the three vic-|to make sure Robert Nixon, un- tims were discovered in a tun-/opposed in his bid to assume the would not hav to become premier. Mr. Thompson, tired and gaunt, form of an party." .conventio after making his brief remarks leadership Friday night. £ ANDREW THOMPSON ..- Health Failed 4] Persons Die BANGKOK, Thailand (Reut- ers)--At least 41 persons died in floods extending over large areas of southern Thailand and neighboring Malaysia, Thai showed peg ee The death toll in Thailand was/cys government k put at 20 but it was thought the iforina, " omy final figures might be much bee ra ;q, PLAN LEAGUE FUTURE official and Malaysian reports At least 21 persons have die and hundreds are faced with starvation in northern and east- ern Malaya after 10 days of monsoon storms. Flood waters began to recede | week to shape the future course today in the Malayan flood) areas where last week an estim- ated 100,000 people fled for their ives. Human Torch NEW YORK (AP) -- Four muggers apparently unsatisfied with mere robbery blindfolded their victim Sunday, drenched him in a flammable liquid, set him afire and left him a human torch. 33, of Brooklyn, his clothes still flaming, staggered several blocks to hospital. He was in critical condition. Police said Prochilo had left when the four men _ grabbed him to their car and robbed him of $100. Then they tied on a blindfold, doused him, set him afire and tossed him from their car. anti-aircraft guided missile un- 7,000,000 by 1981 its in transit to Hanoi last) spring and used or copied some of the sophisticated electronic | guidance equipment. HERE AND THERE MOTORIST HURT | PICKERING (Staff) -- Will-| | in Metro --Partner wanted to help ac- quire 100 acre farm --in King Township with front- age on 400 and Jane Street. \f --Tremendous future growth potential, iam Tataryn, 27, of 299 Banff! Avenue, Oshawa, received a cut | lip and abrasions to his fore- head when his car was in col- lision with a salt truck Satur- --Reply in confidence to Box §! D1331 OSHAWA TIMES day morning on Highway 401, west of Church Street, Pick- ering. His car received $800. damage. The truck driver, Wal- ter Wood Williams, of Hamil- ton, was unhurt. CAR HITS FENCE, POLE UXBRIDGE (Staff) -- A car driven by a 22-year-old' Uxbridge woman, Doris Margaret Clark, of RR 2, skidded on a patch of ice, hit a fence and a hydro pole on Highway 47, east. of Fourth] Avenue, Uxbridge, Saturday af- ternoon. She suffered bruises to} her leg and the car sustained 6800 *, n good names to remember If you have a Commercial Property To Sell or Lease REG AKER, pres. BILL McFEETERS, vice-pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER 723-2265 Over 33 years in Business A The victim, Joseph Prochilo, a Brooklyn social club for home | e to resign except|Who were in American hands who looked a 1 ! left the plat-|copies of Quotations from Chair- Ontario Liberal)/man Mao Tse-tung. immediatety Americans after they ran into 4;man said Sunday + |of Galilee. |crew members were seen run- | | | jtives are expected to name a ' President Replies TORONTO (CP) --A recom- mendation in a program pre- pared by the Canadian Union of Students that students riot to attain power' in university af- fairs was a joke, a spokesman said Sunday. "I'm amazed at the paranoia of any administration that would think CUS would want to incite a riot,' said Douglas Ward, CUS president, after a complaint from a student as council member at the Univer- sity of Western Ontario. "A riot isn't possible." The program, aimed at show-/| ing the Canadian taxpayer what CUS calls the highly unrepre- sentative nature of most uni- versity boards of governors, was mailed to hundreds of per- MANAGEMENT LAUDS WORKERS BIRKENHEAD, En g land (AP)--The managers of Cam- mell Lairds Shipyard saluted the workers today for making the supreme sacrifice to com- plete' a £25,000 ($750,000) job ahead of time. The men gave up their tra- ditional tea break. Norman Vave, head of the shipyard, said the 270 work- men- agreed after he ex- plained: "We got this job at a fixed price in the face of fierce competition." The men found it took eight minutes to walk to the can- teen for a tea break, and eight minutes to walk back. They agreed to "have our tea where we work instead." A 100-day target was set in the contract for overhauling the tanker Athelcrest, but the work was completed in 86. U.S. Forces Reach Total sons in October from CUS head- Fiquarters in Ottawa. | | Cabinet Meets | OTTAWA (CP) |met today at 9:30 a.m. EST to| }make final plans for the re-| jsumption of the parliamentary | jsession at 2:30 p.m. isters who have just returned from brief holidays during the jtopic of debate this week. Fishermen Free HONG KONG (Reuters) \Forty-eight Chinese fishermen for more than a month left here today for China--armed with The 48 persons, including chil- e Of 473,000 Americans are waging war} Fatalities Total Hits 33 In Canada Over Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 33 persons died in accidents across Canada during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday, local times, showed 23 killed in traffic mishaps, five in fires, two in hunting acci- dents and three in miscellane- ous mishaps, In Quebec, six persons were killed in traffic accidents, two in fires, one in a hunting acci- deaths, one hunting fatality and a man who bled to death after he cut his arm on window glass. There were six road deaths reported in British Columbia and one in each of Alberta, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Three persons died in fires in Saskat- chewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island reported no accidental deaths. The survey does not include natural or industrial deaths, nown suicides or slayings. dent, one in a fall and a boy was killed when struck by a} train. The Ontario: dead: SUNDAY Ontario reported eight road| John Edward Cameron, 56, WEATHER FORECAST Occasional Snowflurries With Milder TORONTO (CP) -- Official EST.: Synopsis:. A storm centre near Winnipeg early this morn- today and Tuesday. Snow has Weather ;with occasional snow today and |forecast issued at 5:30 a.m.|tonight. Tuesday cloudy with snowflurries and blowing snow and turning colder. Winds south- east 15 to 20 today becoming hie cabinet! WASHINGTON (AP) --More|ing will cross Northern Ontario|north to northwest 30 Tuesday. Timagami, Cochrane, western than at any time during the|already spread across the Lake|James Bay regions: Clouding Korean conflict. Pentagon figures showed to- day that at least 473,000 Ameri- cans either are serving in South Vietnam or in support of ele- ments nearby. At its peak, the over-all U.S. commitment in Korea was 472,000. Latest U.S. reports place about 390,000 men inside Viet- nam--245,000 army, 23,000 navy, 68,000 marine corps and 54,000 jair force. An additional 50,000 {men are assigned to the U.S. 7th Fleet off shore of the South- east Asian country and there are at least 25,000 'soldiers 'in Thailand and 8,000 in Guam aiding the Vietnam effort. | These figures do not include more than 50,000 military men Stationed in Okinawa and the Philippines. dren, were repatriated her \from Nha Trang, South Viet- They were picked up by the) difficulties in heavy seas in the Gulf of Tonkin early last month. U.S. consulate-general spokes- they all wanted to return to their homes on Hainan Island. Syrian Raid TEL AVIV (AP) -- Israel claimed that two Syrian tanks were destroyed and another damaged in a tank battle at noon today southeast of the Sea An army spokesman said ning from two more Syrian tanks and it was believed that these had also been hit. The spokesman said the brisk armored engagement was pre- ceded by two exchanges of small-arms fire to the east of the lake and in the Huleh area farther north where the Syrians Sunday fired 20 shells and di- rected machine-gun fire into Is- raeli territory. Israeli sources said the flare- up of attacks from Syria ap- pears to be a planned effort to stir up tension, with the Damas- ATLANTA (AP) Repre- sentatives of the 10 - member National Professional Soccer League will meet here next of the league. The representa- commissioner to lead the league into its first season of operation, which begins in April. The schedule for the sea- son will be announced at the two - day meeting beginning Monday and the possibility of setting up a draft of college players will be discussed. hag get od United = British Control conspiracy. s Or Genocide? LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The world faces a choice of birth control now, or genocide later, Dr. Hugh L. Keenleyside of Vancouver told the Unitarian Fellowship of London congrega- tion Sunday. Other answers to "the over- tinued state of conventional war or use of the hydrogen bomb, he said. Dr. Keenleyside, former di- rector of technical assistance administration to the United Nations, said the sensible thing to do is provide birth control devices and persuade people to use them. Religion is the 'least impor- tant aspect" in the persuasion because of a "change in the major religious organization Superior region ahead of this disturbance and will reach all of northern and central Ontario by late today. Around the lower lakes only snowflurry activity is expected for most communities. However, moderate south to southwest winds crossing Lakes Erie, Huron and Ontario are expected to develop local snowsqualls to- night and Tuesday. Tempera- tures will be a little milder as winds strengthen from the south. Lake St. Clair, southern Lake Huron, western Lake Ontario, southern Georgian Bay, Killa- loe, Haliburton regions, Wind- sor, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Variable cloudiness with a few snowflurries today. Tuesday cloudy, windy and milder with occasional snowflurries. Winds |south to southwesterly 20 today, increasing to 30 Tuesday. Lake Erie, northern Lake Huron, eastern Lake Ontario, Niagara, North Bay, Sudbury: Variable cloudiness with snow-|Kingston .......... flurries today. Cloudy, windy|Trenton ........... and milder with occasional snow] Killaloe .. Tuesday. Snowsqualls develop-| Muskoka ..... ing tonight and Tuesday morn-|North Bay ......... ing along the lee shores of the lower Great Lakes. Winds south) to southwestekly 20 today in-| creasing to 30 tonight and Tues- active womb" could be a con-|4 lay. Algoma, White River, Sault Ste. Marie: Cloudy and: milder jover this morning with snow |beginning this afternoon con- tinuing tonight"and tapering off jto snowflurries Tuesday even- jing. Milder today and tonight turning colder again Tuesday jevening. 'Winds southeast 15 to 25 becoming east 20 to 30 to- |night and northerly 30 Tuesday evening. Ottawa and region: jwith a few snowflurries becom- |ing mainly sunny today. Tues- day cloudy with occasional light |snow. Colder tonight and Tues- day. Winds light. | Forecast Temperatures | Low tonight, high Tuesday | Windsor ........... 25 30 St. Thomas .. oe 5 30 London ....... 30 | Kitchener .... 30 {Mount Forest 20 30 | Wingham . 20 30 Hamilton .......... 22 32 St. Catharines ..... 25 32 Toronto ....... tee 2D 32 Peterborough ..... 20 30 25 30 25 32 coe 10 25 < 1s 25 10 25 Sudbury .... - I 25 Earlton .... 8 15 Sault Ste. Marie ... 22 30 Kapuskasing ...... 10 15 White River ....+.. 5 10 Moosonee .. 5 10 Timmins .......... 10 15 Morgue In Toronto Comlaenned | As Possible Threat To Health TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Morton Shulman, Metropolitan Tor-| 10,000 people," he wrote. onto's chief coroner, has con-| demned Toronto's city morgue as a possible public health that has opposed the use Of|threat, birth control," he said. "We have to overcome social inhibitions," to distribute effec- tive means of birth control, he said. Bobby Baker Goes To Trial arable with the Noronic warm weather, there would be a drastic public health threat which wé would be' unable to handle, he wrote Metro council. burned | September, 1949, killing 119) persons. | If there was a disaster comp- in The cruiseship Noronic in Toronto harbor in "These facilities were pos-| sibly adequate when first built WASHINGTON (AP) -- Bobby|in 1907 but today would be an Baker, who built a fortune while he worked as secretary to the U.S. Senate's Democratic ma- jority, goes to trial Monday on charges of tax evasion, theft and The possible consequences of conviction--48 years in prison and $47,000 in fines--are far = BUINESSMEN'S LUNCHEONS 95¢ -- 1.35 DINNER 5:30 to 8:00 P.M. , G00d Food ble Pric greater than the d iation the Senate rules committee gave him in 1965. es Parking Rear of Hotel HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. W. Guesses on the length of the Baker trial run to three months. CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF OSHAWA NOTICE TO ALL DOG OWNERS No person shall keep or maintain any dog in the City of Oshawa unless such dog has been licensed and registered under By-law No. 3418 of The Corporation of the City of Oshowa, es amended, and subject to the provisions of Section 4 (4) of the Dog Tox ond The Cattle, Sheep and Poultry Protection Act has on @ collar to which is affixed @ dog tag issued for the current yeor for the said dog. The 1967 dog licences ere now available and moy be purchased at the City Clerk's Office, 3rd Hoor, City Hall, and the Dog Control Department, Dean Avenue (east off Ritson Road South). 1967 LICENCES MUST BE PURCHASED BY FEBRUARY Ist No dog shall run et lerge and no person shall permit e dog owned by him to run at large in the City of Oshawa at any time. A dog shall be deemed to be at large when it is off the property of the owner and is not under the control of a competent person either by means of a leash not more than 10 feet in length or by virtue of being found not more than 10 feet form the person supervising the dog. Every dog found running et large contrary to the provisions of the by-laws of the Corporation shall be taken up by the Dog Control Officer and impounded in the City Dog Pound and held for @ period of not less than 48 hours and, if not redeemed at the expiration of 48 hours, may be sold or destroyed. The owner of an impounded di hi. log shall be entitled, on proof of ip, to regain p of the dog on application to the Dog Pound and payment of the following pound fees: FIRST DAY OR PART OF DAY ............ EIR EACH ADDITIONAL DAY OR PART OF DAY crexexexexexexe All li ded ond ind d and every effort is d dogs cre 5.00 2.00 made to notify the owners immediately after dogs are picked up by the Dog Control Department. L. R. BARRAND, City Clerk. > embarrassment for a town of| Dr. Shulman also criticized a lack of equipment and facilities in ficult for pathologists to make proper diagnosis. Cloudy; when struck by a car as he got off a bus in Hamilton. SATURDAY Joseph Michel, 32, bled to death after he cut his arm on window glass at his Strathroy home. Robert James Reid, 21, when he accidentally shot himself while hunting a farm in the Hyde Park area near. London. Rae Gordon McClennan, 21, Guelph, in a collision between a car and a milk tank-truck near Palmerston. Marvin Jacobs, 17, Curve Lake Indian reserve, when a car struck a tree about 20 miles north of Peterborough. George J. Therrien, 30, RR1 Cyrville, when his mail truck collided withh a hay truck in a heavy snowstorm 30 miles east jof Ottawa. Wilfred Matacheski, 30, |Clyne, in a two-car collision at Kaladar, 40 miles northeast of Belleville. FRIDAY Roman Catholics, Anglicans Open Talks On By JOHN EARLE ROME (Reuters) -- The first formal talks since the reforma- tion aimed at reuniting the world's 550,000,000 Roman Cath- olics and 45,000,000 Anglicans will begin Monday at an Italian religious retreat house. Ten Roman Catholic and 11) Anglican theologians will talk and live for five days at Gaz- zada in Lombardy. They will draw up a list of what divides them d which gaps should first be bridged. The talks, scheduled to end Friday, will produce a con- fidential report for Pope Paul and Dr. Michael Ramsey, Arch- bishop of Canterbury. The two groups then will decide how the dialogue should proceed. The ice was broken for con- tact between the two churches when Geoffrey Fisher, then Archbishop of Canterbury vis- ited the late Pope John in No- vember, 1961. MET LAST MARCH q The coming meeting springs directly from Archbishop Ram- Peter Marshall, a 59-year-old deaf mute, when struck by a car in Toronto. Mrs. Marvin Smyth, 33, Port Burwell, in a two-car collision at Mount Salem, 15 miles east of St. Thomas. Joseph A. Beauchamps, 27, Ottawa, when struck by a car as he was walking along a Street in Ottawa. Liberals Favored By 30 Percent TORONTO (CP) Gordon Blair, president of the Ontario Liberal party, told a leadership convention Saturday that an opinion poll shows the party | with the support of 30 per cent of the voters. He said the poll, conducted for and published by The Star, indicated the Conservative gov- ernment of Premier Robarts is supported by 26 per cent, and the New Democratic Party by 19 per cent of the voters. The other 25 per cent were unde- | cided. | | the morgue as making it dif- | "This is what the people of Ontario are thinking now," Mr. IT WASN'T OUT POSSILPARK, Scotland (CP) A pipe smoker caused the first fire alarm at the world's Jarg- | est factory for blind workers in this Glasgow suburb. His pipe} was still alight when he put it | in his jacket pocket in a locker. | Smoke filled the workshops and out. | Reunity Soon March. |sey's visit to Pope Paul last PLANNING A.>. © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 It seems that almost eve the blind. BEWARE OF AMATEUR MEDICAL ADVISERS medicine, Mention having an ailment of any kind and everyone from helpful friends to advertising medicine men offer @ treatment They ore like the blind leading The fallacy of amateurs 1s that they only treat symptoms of sickness, not the couse. Oniy a physicion HOTEL 400 blind employees were led to| athe safety while the fire was put) rybody is eager to practice what is g the medicines. We can fill any Blair said. "We can win the next election." City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 REGISTER NOW of full cl Avoid being refused b Are you getting restless, now that the festive sea- son is over? Here are some opportuniti | your spare time until that Spring wea FANCY FOOD DECORATING and BUFFET PLANNING Instructress -- MRS. J. E. HAMACHER * at -- St. Thomas Aquinas Separate School 400 Pacific Avenue. Commencing -- WED., JAN. 18th., 1967 -- 7:30 P.M. for 10 consecutive weeks. MILLINERY Instructress -- MRS. R. LOCKE at -- Sir Albert Love Separate School 465 Wilson Rd. N. Commencing -- TUES., JAN. 17, 1967 -- 7:30 P.M. for 8 consecutive weeks. Fee -- $10.00. Fee -- $8.00. Fee -- $10.00. Fee -- $5.00. son begins. GOLF CLASSES: your own clubs, LADIES KEEP TRIM GLASSES Instructress -- MRS. DONNA DAVIDSON. at -- St. Thomas Aquinas Separate School 400 Pacific Avenue Commencing -- MON., JAN. 16, 1967 -- 8:00 P.M. for 10 consecutive weeks. Instructress -- MRS. ROSS DREW. at -- Sir Albert Love Separate School 465 Wilson Rd. N. Commencing -- WED., JAN. 18, 1967 -- 8:00 P.M. for 10 consecutive weeks. GOLFERS Here's an opportunity to warm up before the sea- Qualified P.G.A. Instruction Instructor -- MR. HAL BUTLER at -- St. Thomas Aquinas School 400 Pacific Avenue. Commencing -- TUES., JAN. 17, WED., JAN. 18, THURS., JAN. 19, 1967. 1 hour sessons -- from 7:30 - 8:30/8:30 - 9:30/9:30 - 10.30 P.M. Supply Registration To Take Place At Locations FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Oshawa Recree'*n Department Intermediate Bridge Instruction great many people entrust 573 P. B. Francis, Phm.B. -- has the 4 ledge to 9 trouble. Once this is known, @ cure more often results. The physician prescribes the particular medicine his long studies and experience decides is best. That is why prescriptions are more effective than patent YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need @ medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A May we compound and dispense yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY PHONE 725-3594 Fast -- Free ----- Motorized Delivery prescription. us with their prescriptions. King Street East Oshawa eS) aR | Sw Ir BNL J. R, Steffen, B.Sc. Phm. pa or MOS. Co --T ee 4 a AY KRYPTOK ALL GLASSES 0 18 of all times. For THIS Choose the bifocals that you want and on! ments. Select from @ wide assortment of fi your taste, personality and facial contour. Highest Quality at one low price, Won't SALE POSITIVELY ENDS SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1967 GLASSES WITH SINGLE VISION LENSES. . NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY 17 Bond Street, _ East 2nd Floor WE FILL ALL PSI, asd AND OPTOMETRISTS PRESCRIPTIONS HE SAME ULTEX $18.50 $18.50 $18 30 THIS WEEK ONLY 12! THE MOST OUTSTANDING OFFER IN OPTICAL HISTORY Te everyone and anyone who needs or wears Bifocal Gla: randed first quality Bifocal lenses complete with the frame of your choice at the ONE LOW PRICE of $18. 5' 65 STYLES, SHAPES AND COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM FLAT-TOP .50 NE LOW PRICE | COMPLETE WITH FRAMES AND BIFOCAL LENSES here is the most WEEK ONLY you can buy the finest ly you need for YOUR special require> rames, the one designe: ecially for King offers the Lowest Prices and the you compare.... comparison, proves. Stunt ony $1295 \ le SATISFIED CUSTOMERS. HOURS: 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. Daily Close All Day Wednesday PHONE: 728-1261 LOW PRICES, Pretty blon feld smiles as Claude R. Ki MANY V Sir | Poss By THE CAN: The federal c: last Thursday te Day came too lz nadians to be gi A cross - Cal The Canadian that Nova Scot province in whi to be closed fo Students in Ont Edward Island half-holidays. The federal or fell short of ma bank holiday, a province or m proclaimed the ¢ or civic holiday. Quebec, Mani Brunswick -- sche open and the s be true in Britis: Winters On Walt TORONTO (C! ister Winters sa consulted on W appointment to | week. In an intervie on the CBC-TV day, Mr. Winter lic announcemen he knew of the minister's return Asked where h More Wh In Arctic EDMONTON white whales hat at an ice hole in where 17 of the trapped by ice | Only three whi ted earlier this v feared the other P. J. Benson, resentative for N.W.T. save-the paign, said Satu ing was reported Rusnak, presider Lions Club. The herd was kimo Lakes, 301 east of Inuvik northwest of E were not able to through a maze the Beaufort Se wintering ground Ocean, Mr. Benson sa continuing to fe but operations \ by lack of funds NEED FUI CAl PER 723-3 DAY OR