BOMBER F ¢ Jinnipeg Blue Bomber fans didn't appear to be too dis- "gpointed that their team lost the Grey Cup Saturday in Toronto by a 22-16 decision to Hamilton NS NOT TOO DISAPPOINTED Tiger-Cats. . another influential friend in the United Nations. A serious crisis in China's relations with Tunisia has '|prought the two countries to the verge of a diplomatic break and has cost China's Communist regime the prestige victory of recognition by a. simple majer- ity of the UN General Assem- bly. Tunisia's outspokenly pr o- Western president, Habib Bour- guiba, for years demanded Pek- ing's admission to the world body. In 1963, Chinese Premier Chou En-lai visited Tunis and jobtained Bourguiba's a gree- |ment \relations. ship, Bourguiba became creasingly alarmed by penetration attempts i the dominate all world, non alignment, changed | of abruptly About 1,500 enthusiastic fans attended a welcome home reception at the Win- noon. (See stories on page nine) | most alone among African lead- ASK LB] SEEK WORLD AGREEMENT Moon Pact Urged or Peaceful Use the,meet the unmet social and €C0-|pook showed the Russians were nited|nomic needs of mankind." | WASHINGTON military base for any country. The proposal for a (AP)--Presi- committee dent Johnson was advised today|space race between the U té seek international agreement/States and t on '"'a code for human activity|said on the moon" to prevent the|/manned lan earth satellite from becoming a in prospect wi eral years,' rules for its use could be negotiated through the moon ; committee for eode, made by a citizens com- mittee of scientists, space ex-| perts and educationists, was one; of several put before House conference on a White|treaty, interna-|Would be 'suspension of sover-| eignty claims, access by all for tional co - operation opening) here today Another panel proposed that s eo} 4ha Linited States undertake al tlree-year program costing up)"""~" took note of that United Nations peaceful uses of outer space. Essential provisions of such a) said,| the committee a he Soviet Union and ' "with multip1e|mendations in reports presented dings on the moon for discussion at today's open-| ithin the next sev-|ing session were: cientific purposes, exclusion of| military manoeuvres and weap- onry and a verification proce- Bice 12. | ers, he blamed the Viet Nam : | war on Chinese ambitions, 2 In an interview with 'Russ Seen Tunisian Break TUNIS (AP)--China's heavy-|were leading the countries into handed diplomacy has lost her'a third world war. \French magazine Realites @ar-|beauty jlier this month, Bourguiba de-|ago, she has had more than China Now Near | | "a "Any concessions to them Africa and helped defeat the/would only raise their unlimited latest move to bring Peking into|ambitions still further," the Tunisian leader declared. On the day of the vote in the UN assembly on: China's ad- mission, Chinese Ambassador Yao Mien delivered a_ bitter note of protest against Bourgui- ba's interview to the Tunisian foreign ministry. The note ac- cused Tunisia of taking an anti- Chinese stand to please its "neo-colonialist masters' and demanded a disavowal of the Realites interview, - Three days later, the Tunis: ian government declared Yao's note unacceptable and sent it facceptable terms 'reminiscent to Bourguiba now is on a month- has \been warning his hosts against After long taking a position|China. Bourguiba) -- | course and) nipeg arena Sunday after- {came out in favor of the Ameri-) €0UTH REDBRIDGE, jean position in Viet Nam. Al-jjand NEEDS A RECEPTIONIST Eng- (CP)--Essex hairdresser |Gladys Buck has more than her share of wrong numbers on the |telephone. Since a new auto- the |mobile factory opened near her parlor some months jnounced Chinese leaders as/12,400 calls meant for the fac- Far Ahead ster sembly iter wiles sae _ LONDON (Reuters)--A Brit-| fish space expert today said jdata supplied by the Soviet Un- jion for the new edition of an jauthoritative British reference man even farther ahead in the rocket| Among the principal recom-jfield than they claimed. be identified, also said the Rus-|ffice at 5:30 a.m. jsians might be planning a space --The president should create} a commission of government officials and private citizens) (from colleges, research in- situtlons and the general Pub material the 'Tusslans. released lon, can be expected. |for the 1966 edition of Jane's All| Lake St. Clair, duct better research and} . : scting|the World's Aircraft,' published S make the best use of existing} Lando. today. I knowledge for the develop-| se 6 ; ite 41. ment of foreign policy and Previous editions of Jane's|!aloe, Windsor, London, Hamil vik revolution. ta $100,000,000 a year to help|APPLAUDS UN CALL other nations develop and carry eat birth control programs to| Humphrey, |man, an-|bring the nuclear arms race un-| der control and applauded a) check population expansion. 'In a related proposal, | othet group said world food) production the year Vice - conference urged early action must~ be tripled by|United Nations call last week) 2000 to feed an ex-|for a world disarmament con- pected 7,000,000,000 people on|ference to be held by 1967. earth. It urged the rapidly as possible. In proposing a moon pact, theirace, United} Humphrey revived a proposal States to assist other countries|advanced in 1959 by former in-increasing food production as/president Eisenhower that re- sources diverted from the arms "could be set aside to HERE and THERE were involved in a collision at | Apple growers in Northum- | bérland and Durham Coun- ties will cast their ballots, between 12 noon and 12:30 pm. Dec. 9 at Newcastle, to elect a district representative te the newly formed Ontario ABple Producers' Marketing Boerd. Garmen Boadway, of "Mouni Adbert, was the winner of ie Ontario County 109-bushel | th Club this year. He had | avyield of 137.3. bushels of shelled 15 per cent corn per acre. In second place was ¢ Donald Alves, RR 1, Brooklin, | with a yield of 125.1 bushels per acre. R. H. Hunter, Brook- lin, was third with a yield of 122.8 bushels pct acre. Thirty- four farmers took part. Walter Kerry, RR Port Perry, was the winner of the Ontario County 500-bushel Potato Club this year. His estimated yield in bushels per acre was 814. Ches Lunny, Zephyr, was second with 743 hiishels per acre Harrison, Zephyr, 671 bushels per acre Eighteen growers in the competition. The aver- age yield was 525 bushels, Four people were at 10 am. Saturday | fF overtime than the chief. This was the | and Don | third, with | took part injured | when | autos driven by William Henry | Moir, Uxbridge and Smitherman, Port Mae Perry, the intersection of Highway 12 and Yoles corners, Officers of the Whitby Detachment of the OPP investigated 10 acci- dents during the weekend, Whitby police said this morning there would be no inquest into the sudden death Thursday_cf-the four and a half month old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Cowling, 105 Dundas st. w. The -salary of Pickering Toévnship _ Fire Chief Don Lynde was increased by council this week from $5,800 to $6,300. Department salaries were revised recently which meant a fire fighter with could earn more reason for the increase. President Hubert H. chair- to} : i nternational ; | " the resolution of int rnationa" on information about Soviet avi-/2€S$ and not much change in 4 eRe ' ation developments: -Fer--the;temperature. Winds light. --The United States should) new edition the Moncow authori! expand its social welfare|ties have furnished details of/@™ Georgian Bay: work in South Viet Nam by|soviet aero-space technology for|© ee xr eg child|the first time. ries and little change in tem- and family welfare services,) The British j perature. Winds light. using U.S. and South Viet-\<tudying the eee = geet Northern Georgien Bay, Ti- namese personnel, to reunite|the new Russian rocket equip-|magami, Algoma, Sault Ste. warbroken families or other-|ment was approaching a size| | wise provide for homelessithat would provide enough|Sudbury: Variable cloudiness | children. The social welfareithrust for a journey to the/With a few scattered snowflur- | committee also urged wider moon, +f ries. Little change in tempera- social welfare programs in The Russis ioe hae ture. Winds northwest 20. other countries where such/..) \to4 rage an edition of! Cochrane, Western James work is needed. ...,.,|\Jane's the first reasonably com- --Creation through the United/pjete details of the 1,55)-mile- ita a get an-hour Tupolev-144 supersonic} , § 'airliner. Some aircraft industry} Forecast Temperatures gram in order to developiofficials believe the Pao tilel PR tonight, high "Tuesday: worldwide interest in interna-|may get it into the air before|Windsor .... 0 tional co-operation for Pre-ithe Anglo-French Concorde, St. Thomas....... light snow. Little change in tem- perature. Winds northwest 20: 30 30 sevens 20 TORONTO (CP) -- OfficialjLondon ..., The expert, who declined to|forecasts issued by the weather|Kitchener Synopsis: Slightly warmer air|Wingham ......... lsensation for 1967 to mark the|Will begin moving into North-|Hamilton 50th anniversary of the Bolshe-|western Ontario Tuesday. Some)St. Catharines. jlight snow is forecast for north-|Toronto He said his deductions were etm aveas while elsewhere in the|Peterborough . based on an examination of the|Province partly cloudy condi-/Trenton Lake Erie,|/Muskoka ... outhern Lake Huron, Niagara,/North Bay. zake Ontario, Haliburton, Kil-|sudbury . lhave been far from complete|ton, Toronto: Variable cloudi-| Marie, White River, North Bay,| |Bay: Cloudy with occasional| In Rockets | WEATHER FORECAST | Variable Cloudiness Temperature Unchanged is: sstis< ann 20 20 18 18 30 30 28 28 30 30 30 25 28 25 28 Mount Forest.... Killaloe .. |Earlton Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing .. Northern Lake Huron, South-| White River....... Variable|Moosonee .. loudiness with a few snowflur-|Timmins ......... 3 back to the Chinese embassy,| to establish diplomatic|saying it was phrased in UN-|i1, Roach commission, he said Peterborough Alderméin Dies PETERBOROUGH (CP) | Geoffrey Joseph Feeley, 50, city jalderman .who -in his younger idays was convicted of several icharges of bootlegging, died of a heart attack Saturday. | He was nearing the end of his second two-year term as a city 'alderman. His 17-year bootlegging career that egan in 1939 resulted in 17 convictions--the most serious a six-month jail term--on 28 charges. He said he quit in 1955. Dana Porter, then attorney- general, reduced a jail term for Feeley to a $100 fine in 1955 be- cause he had given assistance in arresting two bank robbers. | He appeared before the inves- jtigation into the Peterborough |police department in 1957 and |the Roach commission on crime lin Ontario in 1962. During his testimony before that Inspector Allan Stringer, But as the Chinese sought tojof the tone employed by colon- 'rire: 8 exploit the newly-found friend-lialist countries seeking head of district 8 of the provin cial police, had once offered to in-\spread their domination over|hige him in his attic while the their others." Africa} and their blustering -efforts tojlong, eight-country tour of West Afro-Asian| Africa, At every stop, be jattorney - general's department jwas reviewing one of his boot- legging convictions. 'Urges Probe 'On Pollution | | TORONTO (CP) Vernon |Singer, Liberal member of the \legislature for suburban Downs- lview, Saturday. demanded the /Ontario government examine Elliot Lake and Bancroft resi- dents to see if they have been harmed by drinking water pol- |luted by radioactive wastes. | Mr. Singer said a report by four deputy ministers of exces- sive radiation levels in the areas' waterways was "shock- ing."' The committee, in a report Friday to Premier Robarts, waters over a short term. No 'amplification was given to the words '"'short term." "Peace" Demonstrations Ineffective -- Gottlieb WASHINGTON (AP) A the' Viet Cong banners. Despite leader of the weekend peace|this, some of tie i3 arresis Gur march on Washington, in whichjing the march were prompted thousands protested American|by the Communist flags. involvement in the Viet Nam| Hanoj radio announced that war, said today that "a demon-|the Viet Cong has liberated two stration doesn't convince any-|U.S. military prisoners to show body."' its good will toward the peace Despite this, Sanford Gottlieb|demonstrators. added in a telephone interview,, Governor Carl Sanders of more demonstrations are being|Georgia attacked the peace considered by the National Com-|marchers Sunday on ABC's ra- . mittee for a Sane Nuclear Pol-|di0-television program, Issues icy (SANE). and Answers, Gottlieb is political action di-| "I can't understand any one rector of SANE, which spon-|in America who would rally sored Saturday's march and|around the flag and -- our picketing of the White House in|boys in Viet Nam," Sanders told protest of U.S. policies in Viet|S0Cialist leader Norman Nam. March officials estimated|Thomas and Dr. Benjamin the turnout at 40,000 to 50,000; Spock, two leaders of Satur- jday's march. police placed it at 25,000. About 150 Canadians, mostly acta eae po aed: students, took part in the ' ; _jpated in yesterday are doing march, About 100 were from On. more to help Communists," the tario and 50 from Montreal. Like the rest of the demonstra-|°V°™ added. : Spock and Thomas, while de- tors, the Canadians, in small) >P° isolated groups, circled slowly|S¢tibing the Viet Nam war as for two hours around the White|immoral, emphasized that they were not advocating withdrawal House and then in orderly files i flowed to the adjacent park area|°f American troops until there: is a stable situation. around the Washington Monu- |ment to hear speeches, | Gottlieb said future marches \are being considered because |\"at a time when a dramatic jevent is needed to publicize your point of view, there's noth- ing like a large demonstration." VIET CONG FLAG FLEW The SANE marchers carried signs urging an end to bombing in Viet Nam and negotiated set- tlement of the war. They were joined by more dissident groups, including one carrying the gold-starred flag of the Viet Cong. March leaders had arranged for protesters carrying Amer- ican flags to quickly surround WELonvON Tausty Canadian Port Nf WINE LIM | Fresh Christmas NUTS Delivered to Your Door HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS ON PREMIUM QUALIT FUEL OIL Why Pay More.. 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