The Gue.s Who, a four- member musical group well known to teeny boppers ac- ross Canada, are shown as "LOOKING FOR NEW CONQUESTS 11966 Winners Announced For Top Newspaper Awards National Newspaper Awards for|synchronized swimming routine. 1966 were an-| Crtooning--Robert W. Cham- nounced Sunday. bers, Halifax Chronicle-Herald, The awards: for an Oct. 3 cartoon depicting Editorial writing--Ralph Han-|the quality of survival of John cox, Peterborough Examiner, |Diefenbaker, leader of the Pro- Spot news reporting--Robert |Sressive Conservative party. Reguly and Robert McKenzie,| Sport Writing--James Kear- TORONTO (CP)--Winners scleral from the water in a work done in : Toronto Star, for. their discov- |ney, Vancouver Sun, for two ery in Munich last March of columns dealing with use of Gerda Munsinger. jstimulants and drugs by ath- | Feature writing--Betty Lee, letes. Toronto Globe and Mail, for a| William Gold of the Hamilton series of articles analysing the|Spectator received a_ citation problems of the Canadian insur-|for editorial writing. EPEAT WINNERS ance business. | Staff corresponding -- David| Reguly and Chambers are jrepeat winners in NNA compe- Oancia, Toronto Globe and tition. Reguly won the spot Mail, for articles from China 'apne al ae of the Red news reporting prize in 1964 "} when he found Hal Banks, fu- Spot news photography--Nor- | gitive boss of the Seafarers' In- man James, Toronto Star, for|jernational Union, on a yacht coverage of a jet crashing atlin Brooklyn, N.Y. Chambers the Canadian International Air|won the cartooning award in Show in Toronto in September. | 1953. Feature photography--David| 'Miss Lee is the third woman Paterson, Vancouver Province,| winner in 18 years of competi- for a picture in March of a girlltion. Previous winners were Dorothy Howarth for feature writing in 1949 and the late Judith Robinson for spot news reporting in 1953. Both worked for the Toronto Telegram at the time. The 1966 awards will be pre- sented at a dinner in Toronto Saturday, April 1, given by the Toronto Men's Press Club which established the annual competition in achievement and to encourage jexcellence in. the newspaper !work of this country. Margaret (Ma) Murray, col- orful and controversial pub- lisher of the Bridge River--Lil- looet News in Lillooet, B.C., will be the speaker. Award winners receive, $400 and a certificate. Citation win- ners receive a certificate. The following newspapers and groups contribute to. the awards fund: Montreal Ga- zette, Montreal Star, Toronto Telegram, London Free Press, Windsor Star, Regina Leader- Post, Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, Vancouver Sun, FP Publica- tions, Southam News papers, Thomson Newspapers and the French-language dailies. | Two French - 1949 to' reward! By THE CANADIAN PRESS language dramas were picked as the best of plays entered in two sepa- rate regional drama festivals Saturday. Le Pendu--The Hanging--by Robert Gurik, won the Western Quebec Regional Drama Festi- val's top award when it was judged the best over-all produc- tion by adjudicator Albert Mil- laire. | Le Pendu, the only French- 'language play entered' in the festival, was directed by Ro- land Laroche and staged by Theatre de la Mandragore. The play revolved around Yonel,.a young miner who turns beggar after being blinded in a mining jaccident. Bousille et les Justes, (Clod- hopper and the Just), the only French entry in the Manitoba regional drama festival was named the best production. Sat- urday. Performed by the Le Cercle Moliere, a French - Canadian amateur theatre group, the play was judged by adjudica- tor Paxton Whitehead as the best production as well as hav- ing the best actor and best sup- porting actress. they left Winnipeg on what was to be a nine - month European tour. But their recording contract fell left Burton Cummings, Ran- dy Bachman, Jim Kale and Gary Peterson. through, and two weeks lat- er they were back in Winn- nipeg looking for new fields to conquer. They are, from Inquiry Due On Judiciary In Quebec MONTREAL (CP)--The Que- bec judicial t which opens Tuesday. The inquiry was ordered bylinterview Saturday the province the Union Nationale government} «pa. accepted the concept," but following representations by the/it has not actually selected any provincial bar and other organ-|, izations. "It will hear testimony from all sections of the community, Scotia government's aim of en- couraging industrial "growth centres" in the province appears system, policejto have concentrated industrial ¢ t | methods and organized crime in|growth in certain areas while|ing departments and at the lo-|Will continue to meet a vital the province are the subjects of|other areas serve as service and a royal commission inquiry|dormitory centres. "encourage spontaneous de- Industrial "Growth Centres" Win Approval In Nova Scotia HALIFAX (CP) -- The Nova © be paying off. The idea behind the centres is Premier Stanfield said in anjhas been in reversing the trend where everyone was clamoring for diversification." | uch areas. The government proposed to proached the planning board|more rapidly," he told the coal and "said they feel their role|division of the Canadian Insti- aecept briefs from organizations! onl bitra and individuals, and consider|POS® @9y more-or sapien ae the advice of experts in crime-- arrangement in the province. fighting such as J. Edgar| 'It is too soon yet to do much Hoover, Federal tion. any particular section of the province, are going ahead pretty well." Bureau of Investiga- velopment rather than to im-|Will be as a service centre." make specific proposals for in-|through thermal electricity, dividual a. said Mr. Har-|coal, I think, will always have , sess ; rington, but the board will des-/a substantial share of the mar- director of the U.S,|in the way of forecasting for ignate areas in the future. ket." although a number/CANSD LOOKS GOOD Coal Use Increases Nova Scotia Light and Power Co. Ltd., said at a recent news conference he is satisfied with In Canada progress so far toward the goal of economic concentration. OTTAWA (CP) -- Consump- The idea was being accepted|tion of coal in Canada is rising more readily, both by govern-| Slowly but steadily and probably part of Canada's future energy needs, J. Watson MacNaught, chairman of the Dominion Coal Board said today. "For industry, there is no A dramatic example was when|doubt that the use of more the Truro Board of Trade ap-|convenient fuels will increase cal level. "The most dramatic progress tute of Mining and Metallurgy. "We are not yet prepared to! "But directly or indirectly Mr. MacNaught, federal mines Of the areas which are visibly|™inister until his defeat in the The commission will be pre- Sided over by Yves Prevost, a Quebec City lawyer. The other four members will be Guy Merrill-Desaulniers and Paul Martineau, both lawyers; Laurent Laplante, editor of the Quebec City daily l'action, and Harry Gould, director general of la Chambre de commerce de Montreal. GIVEN SIX MONTHS d e tration in fact, have become evi- The Halifax-Dartmouth politan area, the New Glasgow- Stellarton-Trenton area of north- Strait area between Cape Bre- ton Island and the mainland, taking in the towns of Mulgrave and Port Hawkesbury. Three main areas of concen- ent within the last five years: metro- tm Nova Scotia and the Canso developing into growt 1965 general election, said there the Cae Strait oe Ce still is a good chance that Can- haps the most striking. ada will find substantial foreign The construction of the Canso markets for coal, particularly in causeway 15 years ago was the|JaPan and the western U.S. for original factor in making the coal from Western Canada. development possible. The|: Japan's steel industry already Man Says He Has Proof WALNUT, Calif. (AP) -- A philosophy professor says he has documented the existence of the human soul and hopes it qualifies for the $200,000 es- tate left by an eccentric Ari- zona miner. Dr. Richard Spurney of Mount San Antonio Junior Col- lege, a Roman Catholic lay- man, says his mass of evi- dence "lays 2,000 years of Catholic thinking on the line." He is one of 39 claimants for the estate of James Kidd, a New York prospector who vanished in central Arizona nearly 17 years ago leaving only a handwritten will. It directed that his money "go into a research or some scientific proof of a soul of the human body which leaves at death." Word of the unusual request has attracted hundreds of let- ters. Superior Court Judge Robert Myers of Phoenix, Ariz., has set a pre-trial hearing into the will for May 8 and has set a tentative trial date for June 5. Spurney notes the will stipu- lates that the $200,000 estate be used only for research into the existence of the human soul. "You do not have to prove that the soul is immortal, ce Proto) | Existence Of Human Soul which might be more diffi- cult," he said, 'nor do you even have to demonstrate the existence of the soul." Nevertheless, says Spurney, "I prove the existence--the very existence -- of a soul which survives the body after the body's decomposition or disintegration, or death." He included three still-un- published books to support his case, which is generally based on the concept that the soul is the thinking life of a person. CAN'T DIVIDE, DECOMPOSE Spurney's main thesis: "Death is decomposi- tion. Hence, what cannot de- compose cannot die. But de- composition requires divisibil- ity into parts. Thus what is not divisible into parts cannot die. But divisibility into parts | EDITORIAL WRITING GUYOT GIVEN PRIZE Ralph Hancox, 37, is editor of| _ Gilles, Guyot was awarded The Examiner and was Can-|the prize as best actor for his ada's Nieman fellow for 1965-66, | role of a man with a gift for A native of London, England, | Wry humor in the four-act play and a former Royal Air Force|by author Gratien Gelinas. pilot, Mr. Hancox took up jour-| These plays along with win- Two French - language Dramas Win Region Drama Festivals and its production of 4 Equals 1, by Jack Hamilton of Sault Ste. Marie, was selected at the Quonta regional drama festival in Sault Ste. Marie by adjudi- cator Ann Wickham to join the winners of the eastern Quebec region and the Eastern On- tario Drama League in compe- tition for the right to represent Zone 2 in the finals at St. John's. In the Nova Scotia finals, St. Francis Xavier University of Antigonish, N.S.. with its pres¢ entation of Leonard Pluta's Squint captured six awards-- including the best production. James Reed directed the play. EEE 21 YEARS OLD? nalism in 1953 as news editor|ners in other regional festivals of a group of weekly papers in|will compete in St. John's, London's suburbs. He worked!Nfld., in May in the Dominion} for two years as reporter with;Drama Festival. This year all; the Kingston Whig--Standard|the DDF's plays, 65 in the first) before moving to The Examiner/round, are Canadian. | where he has been editor four, Martin Hunter's Out Flew the years. Web and Floated Wide won top William Gold, 30, was born|honors in the Central Ontario in Saskatoon and began his|Drama League. |newspaper career with the Ot-| Adjudicator Robertson |tawa Journal at the age of 16.|Davies, awarded the 34-year- |He subsequently worked with|old Toronto playwright, the jthe Calgary Herald and with|Lieutenant - Governor's Medal Southam News Services in Lon-|for the best Canadian play and don, England, before joining/a centennial commission prize The Spectator in 1965. He was|of $1,000, Pamela Terry Beck- awarded a Southam Fellowship|with directed the production. in 1962. The Soo Theatre Workshop NOW IS THE TIME requires matter. Hence, what has no matter in it is not divis- ible into parts and so cannot decompose, and so is neces- | sarily immortal." One of Spurney's three books records an imaginary conversation b e tw ee n Kidd TO CALL Take advantage of it! 24 hour ser- vice; and radio dispatched trucks olways ready to serve you. Fuel Oil Budget Plan Available OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! er Ty and Socrates. The Greek phi- losopher asks the miner whether there is a question in | his mind about whether or not | he has a soul. | "T told you there was," Kidd replies, - COAL & SUPPLIES McLAUGHLIN 723-3481 acs, w. causeway blocked the iceflow|uses Canadian coal "and the through the strait and caused a|Japanese want large tonnages if year-round deep water harbor|they can get it at competitive The government is promoting The government has given the|a fourth area embracing Cape commission six months to carry|Breton's Sydney . New Water- out its task, but Jean Sirois,|/ford-Glace Bay triangle which, sécretary to the commission,|despite its basic industrial na- says it will take at least a year,|ture, has run into hard times if not longer, to hear all the/with the closure of coal mines witnesses and consider the var-|and the uncertainty of the world ious briefs. steel market affecting Dominion Among the first witnesses to|Steel and Coal Corp's Sydney be heard will be Jean Paul/Plant. Gilbert, director of the Montreal BOARD LOOKS AHEAD Mice, i ' pe --. Paige The concept of growth centres ie. ths EFDY: Phas been advocated by the Nova ; Scotia Voluntary Planning Mr. Laplante said in an inter (Board, a quasi-official body of view ' e i Se thet ear6 persons from various fields who Geerave hm we have examined different seg- fashion as did the Kefauver ments of the economy, recom- and Katzenback commissions ON| mended targets and policies and cfime in the United States. how to implement them 'We will try, among other : of organized crime in Quebec. "We will try to find out what|tent_and_general connections there are with the ; SSE Mafia and the Cosa Nostra, the|the period of their inquiry. They two most powerful crime organ-|Will be able to convict persons izations in the world." who refuse to testify or who in any other way show contempt SEEK CRIME TENTACLES for the royal commission as a The commission will also try|court of law. to establish what connections) Some of the inquiry is ex- exist between organized crime|pected to be held in camera, to and politics, finance, bankrupt-| protect witnesses, such as police volved cies and real tions. estate transac-|informers, who fear reprisals. might be done to improve it. It}adding that anyone named in A. R. Harrington, chairman|convincing 6-3, 6-3 victory overjindustry. in Canada expects to things, to uncover the structures | 4¢ the planning board and presi-|Spain's Andres Gimeno Sunday|be using in the future more coal manager of|to take the singles title in the|than this country consumed for $15,000 Planters Challenge Cup. The southpaw's|consumption in 1948--and this in powerful well-placed volleys earned him|a leader in the development of $3,000 top prize money and his|nuclear power plants." fourth consecutive title on this year's American circuit. "Every citizen who wishes to Sa ghee crag we ee EIEN aah avers 4 yho wishes tOjcent after the cit | The province's judicial system |be heard by the commission will| «mer the Safety ant | will be reviewed to see what/be heard," said Mr. Laplante,| program, | ee side. laid-down prices in Japan." nl ova Scotia Pulp Ltd. built a mill at Port Hawkesbury HAS TO IMPORT and a fish pl But he noted that Canada has Mulerare, Pant has gone up'at|,o4 to import about half its coal However, the most dramatic|needs since 1867, due mainly to developments have come within|¢0Sts of transporting coal from the last year with the construc- A tion of the Canadian General|tic provinces to the heavy indus- Electric heavy water plant at|'Ty of Ontario and Quebec. Point Tupper and the announce-| Even so, Canada's coal fields a $50,000,000 refinery in the/in the last 100 years and experts area. estimate there is enough left in The CGE plant follows the|the ground for the next 6,500 of Canada Ltd. plant at Glace|at the present level. Bay. This is an important safety factor in case supplies of petro- LAVER WINS TITLE leum and natural gas become MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--/exhausted, he said. Australian Rod Laver scored a| "The thermal electric power pro. tennis/all purposes at the peak of past ground strokes and|spite of the fact that Canada is ELMER SAVES LIVES NEED FUEL OIL ? The number of children in- " in road accidents in| PERRY 723-3443 DAY OR NIGHT will study methods of investiga-| testimony who feels he has been| tion used by police forces in|wronged will have the right to Quebec and try to establish just}come before the commission] how suspects and prisoners are|and defend himself. | treated by police. The commissioners will enjoy|held in Montreal, but some will| the privileges and powers of| probably be held in Quebec City) Superior Court justices duringiand other provincial centres. | SUPERIOR SECOND MORTGAGES } © Terms up to 10 years @ No brokerage fees © No hidden charges e All or part can be prepaid at any e No bonuses time without notice or penalty For a FREE brochure on SUPERIOR mortgages, write, phone or visit the SUPERIOR office nearest you THE REALTY DIVISION OF SUPERIOR CREDIT CORPORATION LTD. 31% Simcoe St. South, 725-6541 Don Rees, Manager Daily to 5:30 p,m.;_ Friday to 8.00 p.m.3 Other evenings by appointment. 31 SUPERIOR offices to serve you Most of the hearings will be}. Beau Valley "THE MOST PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE" by Kassinger The Location The Setting The advanced method of construction The Quality and The Beauty of the Homes Are Unquestionable Without Comparison In Oshawa 10 different Model Homes with Delightful Styling and Breathtaking Interior are on display now. TO KEEP BEAU VALLEY HOMES SPARKLING CLEAN, THESE HOMES ARE SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY SCHOFIELD-AKER LTD. -- 1723-2265 Western Canada and the Atlan-| # ment that BA Oil Co. will build/have produced 1,001,000,000 tons} % provincially - owned Deuterium|years--if consumption remains] i SKOL' International BEER Say SKOL...and quench your thirst with the new International Beer, now brewed to the same exacting standards all round the world. top seller in 31 countries. Say SKOL...and discover the satisfying flavour, sparkling lightness and true Spain: One of the 31 countries where Skol is a top seller, It's a refreshing world with SKOL Brewed in Canada .. and already a Say SKOL today! refreshment of a really good beer. Say SKOL -- the International Beer. under licence granted to Labatt's Ontario Breweries Limited by SKOL International Limited. At regular prices wherever beer is sold. When you turn 21 you are no longer covered by your parents' Hospital Insurance. You must take out' individual membership within 30 days. Get your ap- plication form at a bank, a hospital, or the Commission. ft NEW JOB? To keep insured fol- low the instructions on the Hospital In- surance "Certificate of Payment--Form 104"' that your present employer is required to give you on leaving. NEWLY WED? The "family" Hospital Insurance premium must now be paid to cover husband and wife. Notify your "group" without de- lay or if you both pay premiums direct, no- tify the Commission. Your _ ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE Plan @ Ontario Hospital Services Commission, Toronto 7, Ontario, Moi famili Dutch awa comp! B R An ar' a Whitt rehire s fired Js plant no to a cor The ¢ Steel, n their di commun homes : compan} the noti: change mented. The volves 2 seven dé two days Keith | resentati workers' he recei today. PAY RU He sai headed | Brampto pany to without | the men wages re allowing work un¢ discharge surance time. The n Local 657 retired. | bers mai at Parkv late G George