Hi ; VANCOUVER BIRDS FACE BLEAK PROSPECTS this week because of heavy snowfalls. With berries gone and other sources of food Thousands of birds in Vancouver's Stanley Park have to rely on handouts PM Presses For Parley -- buried under a blanket of snow, the birds face bleak 'PEACE MOVES PUSHED AHEAD: Continued From Page 1 Nevertheless they refused to accept the public North Vietna- prospects in their never- ending search for food. |However, Washington sources jdeclined to relate this directly ito the current manoeuvring By WILLIAM L. RYAN The key to success or failure of Viet Nam peace bids may rest in the fragile hands of an old revolutionary caught in a struggle for power between the world's two Communist giants, Ho Chi Minh, 75, has worked half a century for international communism as a tactician of revolution, Today, as president of North Viet Nam, he con: fronts a situation that seem insoluble. As -an_ internationalist, Ho probably is inclined to follow Moscow's lead, But Ho has a huge neighbor on his northern frontier: China, He seems captive of @ majority faction of his own politburo which follows Peking's lead. This factionheaded by Tru- ong Chinh, chairman of the North Viet Nam National As- sembly--evidently took over in Hanoi last April in a sudden shakeup of the North Vietnam- ese hierarchy, It evidently sub- scribes to the Chinese formula of violent "people's war" as the only effective road to world communism, From time to time there had been evidence that Ho was will- may a free agent. His current state- ments reflect the granite + hard line. They also reflect the So- viet-Chinese struggle. Moscow is sending its Com- munist party leader, Alexander N. Shelepin, to Hanoi, His mis- sion undoubtedly is to make So- viet influence paramount. If he succeeds it could lead eventu- ally to some sort of accommo- dation with the United States, since the U.8.8.R, regards the Southeast Asia situation as highly dangerous. The Chinese accuse the Rus- sians of '"'behind-scenes bargain- ing' with the Americans on Viet Nam. But Russia, evidently content with a longer-range view of rev- olution which might be less dan- gerous to Soviet security, is promising North Viet Nam mas- sive economic, technical and military aid which the Chinese cannot match. March 29, the opening of the 23rd Soviet Communist party congress, the Soviet leadership is expected to reaffirm practi- cally every policy developed since 1956. The break with China will then be just about un- bridgeable. The Russians hope to have the North Viet Nam ing to listen to some sort of for- mula to end the bloodletting Viet Nam faces the dubious) choice of progressive destruc-| tion from U.S. bombing or mas-| | party and most others of im- portance on their side in the world Communist dispute. Then Ho Chi Minh may be i »-jover negotiations to end the mee a ge ev ges . . sive influx of Chinese who could| better able to come forward sponse to U.S. diplomatic efforts | war. , a be a now under way. Some U.S.| According to U.S. authorities, forever kill off any trace of Vi-| with some sort of offer which sources figure that in private|the Sovine might come to | etnamese basroghong sin oe j could end the Viet Nam shoot- |soundings, Hanoi might be more|neace conference on Viet Nam| But Ho does not appear to be!ing. -- likely to come through with a|because they are less interested] jreply which could lead to ne-|in pushing the conflict than their| Securities Legislation By STEWART MacLEOD |minister said "some very im- OTTAWA (CP)--Looking to-|portant legislative pro grams ward a busy 1966, Prime Min-|will be put forward," but he ister Pearson said Wednesday|said details would have to Mariner IV and which he says support his contention there are canals and oases This is the hand-drawn map by Dr. Clyde W. Tom- baugh Which shows lines and Mexico State University ob- servatoty, displayed this map at the AAAS annual me NOM LOPES he has proposed a federal-|await the throne speech open- provincial conference on secur-|ing Parliament Jan. 18, ities legislation and that the! : parliamentary program. indi- eates "we could easily be here all year." Mr. Pearson, in probably his final press conference of 1965, e : la a copy of the letter he the abolition of capital punish- wrote to provincial premiers|ment, Mr. Pearson said he suggesting a mecting of offi-|would carry through with his cials to look into "'all areas of|commitment to let Parliament securities and exchange legis-|debate the question. He hoped lation." He hoped such a meet-|this could be done early in the ing could be held before spring. |session, probably through a pri- The prime minister held the| vate member's bill. conference during the noon) Mr. Pearson said he is still break from an all-day cabinet) basing his own plans on the meeting, which discussed the|assumption that a Common- legislative program for the|wealth conference on Rhodesia forthcoming session of Parlia-|will be held in Lagos Jan. 10, ment. jalthough no final decision has He said that while the pro-jyet been reached. gram indicates a long session,| The conference, proposed by he hoped it would be possible|the Nigerian prime minis- to have Easter and summer re-|ter,, has been approved. by cesses. This could be achieved | most Commonwealth govern- with 'good parliamentary bus-|ment heads--the exceptions are iness on our side and construc-/Prime Minister Men ties of tive co-operation by the oppo- Australia and President sition." Nkhruma of Ghana. QUEBEC PLANS STUDY Mr. Pearson also told the re- His letter to the premiers on| porters that he expects the re- the proposed securities study port of the royal commission on comes after Quebec Premier|taxation in the next two or Lesage has announced a pro-|three months; that Robert H. vincial study of "near banks" | Winters will be sworn in as min- --finance companies--which he|ister of trade and commerce says are under provincial juris- "early next week," and that no diction. Mr. Pearson declined|Senate appointments will be to comment on this question,;made until the government un- but he said his government|dergoes a confidence test in the plans to ed 'as quickly as|throne speech debate. possible" with its Bank Act re-| vee auld the édministration of| Rhodesian PM Has Cycle Ride securities is a 'pretty compli- cated matter' and "I think that federal, and provincial authorities should co - operate SALISBURY (Reuters)-- very closely if the administra:| Jan Smith, the prime min- tion is going to be effective. ister of breakaway Rhode- In his letter to the premiers) ia got on a bicycle outside he said that a planned federal-| js office here Wednesday, provincial-conference.on_organ-| __waved-eheerily to watching ized crime may. indirectly as-| renorters and passersby, sist the securities Pe se and pedalled away. may provide "usefu ack- i : ee ground through its discussions ge. Soak wagiapae eae e of some criminal aspects of the parked the machine and went back into his office, without comment. Many Rhodesians have subject." Looking ahead to a "most bought bicycles since gaso- line rationing was intro- Asked to comment on a sug- gestion by Quebec Justice Min- ister Claude Wagner that a na- tional referendum be held on interesting, stimulating and challenging year," the prime | CITES COMMITMENT | gotiations. Johnson promised in a Dec. 9 speech to exhaust every |peace effort "before other hard jsteps are taken." Under the strict secrecy im- posed from the White House straight day. Critics in the past --particularly in European Communist capitals called for a halt in the bomb- tiations. Nor were those U.S. officials who knew allowed to tell why Harriman and Goldberg showed up suddenly in Europe or where they were going next. Harriman arrived unan- nounced in Warsaw. Poland has relations with North Viet Nam and is on the three-nation inter- national control commission dealing with Viet Nam. Canada and India are the other mem- bers. Informed sources here ex- pected that Harriman might go on to Hungary, another third- party channel to Hanoi, and perhaps to Yugoslavia, leader of a group of non-aligned coun- tries favoring Viet Nam nego- tiations, 'before returning to Washington. It was anticipated that Gold- berg too might do some further travelling. In Moscow, U.S. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler paid what was described as a courtesy call on the new Soviet president, Niko- lai V. Podgorny. Russian Party Leader Alexander N. Shelepin is slated to visit Hanoi shortly. Judgment Reserved In Police Case | CHATHAM (CP) -- Judgment was reserved Wednesday to | Jan 6 inthe case of Gordon J. McEllistrum, 49, of nearby Merlin, charged. with the Oct. 12 wounding of a provincial po- liceman. McEllistrum is scheduled to be sentenced on the same date ings to pave the way for nego- \Communist rival, China. But! |they would not attend unless| |North Viet Nam does. | | These U.S. authorities stated| ithat while parts of Hanoi's four-| {point proposal for a settlement, | lreaffirmed by Ho Wednesday, nothing can be done about a jgotiating the individual points | | negotiations. Ho's statement called} for withdrawal of U.S. troops} from the south--which is Wash- lington's avowed aim following a jsettlement--but also demanded |what U.S. diplomats said would jbe American endorsement the Communist program in the south. Meanwhile the guerrilla com- bat in South Viet Nam _ con- tinued and the Johnson admin- istration was preparing for the possibility--some called it the probability--that the Reds will choose to fight on. Congressional leaders voiced little optimism that the bomb- ing suspension would produce peace feelers from Hanoi. Some said they are afraid they would use the pause to move fresh supplies to the Viet Cong guer- rillas. Wife Displays Change Of Heart TORONTO (CP) -- A woman |who wanted her husband de- ported appears today at his habeas corpus hearing to argue that he should be allowed to \stay in Canada. | | Three months -after arriving | in Toronto from Greece, George} Diamantis, 20, married Alexa {Kosma, 24. The couple separ- ated in few months and Alexa jasked immigration authorities) to deport her husband. The immigration department "Prissy Attitudes" Seen Big Handicap To Church NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP)| I ; | "Prissy attitudes" are prevent-| Federation. since the peace campaign be-| would be negotiable, the over-|ing the Christian church from gan, the administration has re-| 41) effect would be to turn over|making a worthwhile contribu-| fused to say why the lull in air) gouth Viet Nam to the Commu-/tion toward creating a better! raids on North Viet Nam has/nicts) They said the Unite d|world, says the founder and ex-| extended into a record seventh) tates wili not accept this andjecutive director of Operation: Crossroads Africa. Dr. James H. Robinson of have|intil North Viet Nam agrees to| New York said Wednesday at a youth. conference on alcohol) problems that some Christians practise their religion in such a way as to give the impression it could 'freeze ice cream' in the church." | Every local congregation) of|should try something new each|should make breath analysis} year, "something really bold, | adventurous and courageous,"| he said. | And no student should be al-| lowed to graduate from univer- sity "until they spend one year in service in an underdeveloped country." Earlier, Donald Parsons, a 23- year-old first-year student at Queen's Theological College, Kingston, told the 600 delegates that teen-agers should blame themselves if they feel bored. "There is so much to do that we don't know where to start,"| he said. "We can't make up our minds to go bowling, to a party or to a show, so we stay at home and say, 'What is there to-do?' HAVE NO CAUSE "We prefer to remain rebels without a cause. We prefer to stand on a cliff and watch ra- ther than scramble down and get our clothes dirty. So we re-| main where we think we can} be secure and happy and keep| our clothes clean." | Mr. Parsons is a former pres-| ident of toc alpha, the group meeting here for an annual con- vention. The group is sponsored jone was injured. by the Ontario Temperance Rev. A. C. Forrest, editor of the United Church Observer, ac- smudges he has found in the area covered by spacecraft cused brewers and distillers of having a "strangle hold" in of-| | ficial quarters. | "Apparently no political party | can afford to enter the fight! against this fearful waste," he| said, noting Canadians spent 12) times more on alcohol and to-| bacco last year than was spent) on pensions for Canadian vet-| erans of both world wars. Toronto's police chief, James Mackey, said the legislature tests compulsory in Ontario for drivers suspected of being im-|cjation for the Advancement of paired. 8 Cars Derailed Near Comber, Ont. COMBER, Ont. (CP)--Hight}| cars of a 58-car New York Cen-| tral system. train were de-!| railed early Wednesday at this) midway point between Windsor! and Chatham, blocking both) New York Central tracks. No} NYC trains began using Ches-| apeake and Ohio Railway tracks between St. Thomas and Pelton, Ont..Derricks from St. Thomas and Detroit began| clearing the tracks. | At Toronto a New York Cen- tral spokesman said the train was bound for Syracuse, N.Y. TIMES ARE. CHANGING GUILDFORD, England (CP) Fox-hunting isn't what it used) lto be, say members of the Sur-| Sangsters in the U.S., retires to- rey Union Hunt. The annual re-| port says of the biggest hunt of) 1965: "There svere many foot followers--mostly in cars." WEATHER FORECAST took no action until this month iwhen they had Diamantis ar- rested. Now the young wife says she Colder Air Expected u By RALPH DIGHTON BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)--A noted astronomer said Wednes- day he has found evidence of canals and oases in seven of the 22 pictures taken of Mars by the Mariner IV spacecraft ear- ler this year. Dr. Clyde W. Tombaugh of the New Mexico State Univer- sity observatory told the annual meeting of the American Asso- Science that heretofore unex- plained dark streaks in the Mariner IV pictures coincide with markings he has seen in telescopic studies of the planet. "I know there are others who sev they can't see canals on Mars," he said at a briefing prior to his talk, "but I'd like| to see them have their eyes tested." Tombaugh said he believes the so-called canals are faults or fractures in the planet's crust, several miles wide. Their darkening and fading may be due, he said, to escape of hot on Mars. Dr. Tombaugh, noted astronomer from New Canals, Oases Detected In 7 Pictures Of Mars gases which melt a thin layer of frost and feed vegetation. The oases or dark smudges where the lines intersect, he speculated, may be asteroid-im- pact craters in which moisture gathers and promotes growth of some hardy plant, such as moss. Tombaugh displayed a hand- drawn map showing lines and smudges he has found in the area covered by Mariner IV, and gave a rundown on the markings in various frames. Many of them coincided with markings previously recorded through earth-based telescopes. Dr. John A. Ryan, Douglas Aircraft Co. research physicist, advanced a theory that the yel- low clouds in Mars' thin atmos- phere may be dust stirred up by whirlwinds such as the dust devils seen on earth's deserts. He said the dust devils may be formed by winds up to 500 miles an hour and, if so, could severely scour men and equip- ment landing in those areas. Samuel W. Hardy Quits FBI Post MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Samuel W. Hardy, who shot it out with some of the toughest NEED... Fuel Oil | | CALL PERRY Day er Night 723-3443 meeting in Berkeley today. --(AP Wirephoto) Auto Makers Near Record Year TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian automotive manufacturers are closing in on the 850,000 unit mark for the year, easily at- taining their fourth consecutive production record. To Dec. 25 a totl of 837,497 cars and trucks have rolled off the assembly lines, compared with 657,056 for the same pe- riod last year, Anumber to remember... day after 41 years as an agent of--the--Federal_ Bureau _of _In-| vestigation. Of the more than 6,000. agents | now in the FBI, the seniority: of | Hardy was second only to that} of the chief, J. Edgar Hoover. | Hardy, now 65,- gave up al promising law career and the) life of a gentleman rancher at) Casper, Wyo., to become a spe-| cial agent of the then embry-| ENJOY ATTENTION BUSINESSMEN... ! We serve « special businessmen's lunch, on a charge of attempted-armed robbery of the Tilbury Hotel,| is sorry--"the first year of mar- which occurred on the same day|riage everyone has problems Constable John Fitzgerald. was|and I want George to stay in bread, butter, duced Tuesday, following ¢ ond up. Tea the oil embargo imposed by Britain and supported by many other countries. HERE and THERE Two babies were born at the onic FBI in 1925. But he had no idea then that he would lay his life on the line including main. course, ~ vegetables and desert, for 0, or coffee 5c extra. TRY US TODAY! In South Area Overnight Bowmanville Hospital on Toronto." ' wounded. Christmas Day. The first baby was the son of Mr, and Mrs, John Hancock, Sunnicrest | bivd., Bowmanville, who |? arrived at 10:05 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Posthumus, Lib- erty st., Bowmanville, wel- comed their son at 11:42 p.m. Oshawa Board of education | 7 last night tentatively approved | a $300,000 budget for the build- | ing of a seven-room addition to O'Neill Collegiate and Vo- cational Institute. City trustees decided last night to promote Education Week this year -- March 6 to 13 -- to a greater extend. Trustee T. D. Thomas said one of the reasons for last year's lack of promotion was the expense involved. 'It would be most helpful to get the message across to the parents," he said. Dr. C. M. Elliott, superintendent of pub- lic' schools, suggested open houses at the city's public schools and _ educational speakers at service clubs. Oshawa Board of Education last night at a special meet- ing, set Jan. 4 as the date for its inaugural meeting. Irwin A. Hamilton, 17; a Grade 12 student at Courtice | District High School, is rep: | resenting Durham County at the Ontario Older Boys' Par- liament being held at Queen's University, Kingston, this week. . Ole Sholberg, 103, sits in his cozy home at Fergus Falls, Minn., holding hands with his wife, Otila, 101, The two will observe their 80th wedding anniversary The medical staff of the Bowmanville Memorial Hospi- | tal has donated $2,000 for the purchase of capital equipment for the hospital, ' i COUPLE MARRIED FOR 80 YEARS next week. "We have never had a serious quarrel," said Mrs. Sholberg 'He has been' a good man, and we have had a happy life. We stil have a happy life." sunny periods and mild today, Friday cloudy and colder. Winds southwest 20 today and light northeasterly Friday. Bay, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy and mild today. A few snowflurries and turning colder this evening. Friday cloudy with seasonal temperatures. southwest 20 today and light easterly Friday. White River, Cochrane, Tima- gami: Cloudy. A few snowflur- ries and turning colder this afternoon. Clearing tonight. Fri- peratures. Winds becoming north 15 this afternoon. TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts | issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: arrive in southern Ontario over- night. A sharp drop in tempe- rature into the 20s is forecast for southern areas tonight and | in the north some localities will report below zero readings. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On- Colder air should) ton, Toronto: Cloudy with a few Haliburton, Killaloe, Georgian Winds Lake Erie, |} Toronto tario, Windsor, London, Hamil-| Kingston .....+ Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday: Windsor '....csse0 28 40 St. Thomas. LONdON ...ccccesee Kitchener ....++05 Mount Forest..... Wingham Hamilton ... ° St. Catharines.... Peterborough . Earlton ...seseese Sault Ste. Marie.. Kapuskasing ..+. White River...++- MOOSONCE ..seeeses Timmins ...s+000+ Algoma, Sault Ste. 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