BIRTHS OBITUARIES aonnes - tage and rary oe (ner ibson) are fo announce the bi . Specter thanks to Or, E. fourth floor staff. id today in the Oshawa General CLARENCE EARL DAYNARD Clarence Eearl Daynard died Hospital after a long illness. He was 63, Mr. Daynard formerly resid- ed at 465 Beverley St., Osh- DEATHS awa. He later lived at the #o- tel Genosha where he was re- Wilhelmina General Hospital on Fri- 1966, Wwilneinsine Basker- of Newca sker-ithe son of the late Mames and .| Eleanor Daynard. He was mar- 4 ried to the former Winnifred esting at ,. Funeral pag Bowmanville. Service in * the at 2 o'clock. Inter- ment ite Cometery. DAYNARD, Clarence Gari ji "At Oshawa General Ho: # ~ eidey, 8p) July 15, 1966, Monga E. > loved husband the Hoos Yinnitred Leona Tane and nen father of Mrs, Garry E. Vaughan pov kU Oshawa, gets of Tracy and Robert; in his . Resting at Mcintosh-Anderson Funeral Home, 152 King Street hae} "ed interment Port Hope Union GREEN, Lorne A. Mered irto rest in the Oshawa General Hospital, on Friday, July 15, 1966, Lorne A. Green bel husband of Elleen loved Merrill and brother of Gordon Green of Trenton in his 62nd year. Reviing at the Srmnirone Funeral Home, Oshawa. With Funeral service in the chapel, Monday, July 18, 1966 af 3:15 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. HOLMAN, Patricia Jeanne (nee Myi- at Alax-Pickering General Hos- 15, 1966, -beloved wife Douglas Holman of Dun- barton, Ont., mother of Peter, Mary and Tom of Dunbarton, Bill of Pickering, dim, John and Diane of Oshawa; in her ». 43rd year, Resting at The Reynolds Fu- nerel Home in Bracebridge. Funeral ser- vice on Monday, 2 p.m. interment at Port Sydney Cemetery. TAYLOR, Charies «, Entered into rest in Kingston, Optario, on "Friday, July 15, 1966, Charles Taylor, beloved sband of Edith Richardson, father of Mrs, Lillian Wringe, Marysvilic, Mrs, Harry Weber (Charlene), Scarbor- ough and Charles Eric Taylor, Oshawa, ® "4 is 77th yeer., Resting at the Arm- strong Funeral Home, Oshawa, with } funeral service In the chapel Monday, July 18 at 2 p.m, Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery, Oshawa. Kindness beyond Price, yet within reach of all, ~ FUNERAL CHAPEL! GERROW 390 KING STREET WEST Telephone 728-6226 IN MEMORIAM DERVENT -- In loving memory of 2 dear husband and father, Wallace R. (Walter) Dervent, who passed away July 16, 1983, | He suffered with courage, | We knew not. his pain, He fought hard to get well, But all was in vain, sident at the time of his ad- mission to hospital five weeks ago with a hip injury. Born in Port Hope, he was L. Tane in Toronto, Aug. 20, 1935, who predeceased him sev- eral months ago. sident of Oshawa for the past 20 years. He was a salesman but resigned his position five years ago because of ill health He was a member of the King St. United Church. The fuuneral service will be held Monday, July 18, in the chapel of McIntosh - Anderson Funeral Home at 2 p.m. with the Rev. L. W. Herbert offic- jating. Interment will follow int the Port Hope Union Cemetery, FUNERAL OF JOHN EDYVEAN Funeral services were held Friday for John Edyvean, who died July 12 in the Oshawa Genera! Hospital, of Armstrong Funeral Hom with Rev. A. Woolcock, padre of Branch 43, Royal Canadian Le- gion, Mr. Edyvean was buried with an honor guard from. the le- gion. Pall - bearers were Ja- mes Weir, Peter Simundson, er- ic Simundson, Alfred Brisbois, Beck, Mr. Edyvean was buried in a section of the Union emetery reserved for members of the Ontario Regiment. in the chapel] } --Mir- Daynard has-been---a--re-|-2 Z THE SLENDER THREAD For some 245,000 Arab out by the United Nations supply of rations, He gets 11 FUNERAL OF MRS. LUCAS NICHOLLS The funeral service for Mrs.| Lucas Nicholls, a resident of| Hillsdale Manor, who died July 12, at the Oshawa General! Hospital, was held at 2 p.m.,| July 15, at .the MclIntosh- Anderson Funeral Home. | Rev, L. W. Herbert, minister} of King Street United Church,| conducted the service, Inter-| ment was in Mount Lawn} Cemetery. The pallbearers were: Wil-| liam Tane, Paul Tane, Douglas Terwillegar, Roy Hartley, Jack So treasure him, Lord, in Your garden of rest, For on earth He was one of the bes Always remembered y 'wife Mabel and family, Lorne, Herb, Alice and Dorothy GIBSON -- in loving memory of our dear husband and father, Edward F. Gibson, who passed away suddenly July Babbington and Gary Vaughan. In a home that is lonesome today sony, remembered by daventer Edith, jaw Caryl and gr | |ter Laurie, WOODCOCK -- In loving memory of dear brother, Roger, who passed awa' 16, 1963. duly 17, 1963, Forever lovingly tomerouerot by his wite, Florence and children. MeGHEE -- In ever loving memory of| my dear husband, Tom, who passed away July 16, 196). Away in the beautiful hills of God By the valiey of rest so fair, Some day,-some time, we know not when, | We ane nett our loved one there. | --Sadly sed and ever lovingly remem- * dered YY" his wife Elizabeth McGhee, SANDERS -- in loving | memory of) ® dear father, Frederick Sanders, who passed orey July 16, 1961, God called him home, it was His will, But In our hearts we love him stilly His memory is as dear today As In the hour he passed away. We often sit and think of him Fes we ere ali alone, For memory is the only thing Thet aged can call Its own. pe) son- Ine jaw Lloyd. SAWYER -- In loving memory of our dear friend, Marguerite Sawyer, who de- hy this life two years ago on July 16. --Sadly missed and lovingly remembered by Dorothy and John Kelly and family. VILLENEUVE -- In loving memory of @ deer father and grandfather, Edward| were who passed away July 14, MNothing Could ever take away love a heart holds dear; Fond memories linger every Gee Remembrance keeps him nea Sadly missed by son Bob, daughter. n- taw Shiela and grandchildren. WHITE -- In loving memory of a dear mother and grandmother, Seen White, | who passed away July 17, 1963. Our flips cannot tell how we miss her, Our hearts cannot tell what to say Gos aione Knows how we miss" ier, j--Sadly missed by brother Ken, God saw him getting weary, So he did what he thought best, He came and stood beside my brother,| And whispered, "Come and rest'. He had no time og last farewells, | Not even a gcod-b He had fo go suddenly Away up in the sky. Our hearts still ache with sadness, | And secret tears still flow, The bond that held us closely, No one shail ever know. sister-| In-law Marie and children Roxanne and) Steve. LOCKE'S FLORIST Funeral arrangements and floral arrangements for all occasions. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 A_ LASTING TRIBUTE For Permanence and dignity we. suggest MOUNT LAWN MEMORIAL PARK BRONZE MEMORIALS Four courteous cdvice please visit the Park Office, 723-2633 'CARD OF THANKS DOUGLAS -- Mr. and Mrs. D Douglas and McDonald Douglas wish & thank their neighbors. and friends for jexpressions of sympathy in the passing Ronald Lb jof their son and brother, Dougias et Beiieviiie, Oniaris, refugees crowded into the Gaza Strip life depends on the -slender rations doled Relief and Works Agency. The Palestinian refugee (left) is receivng a 15-day pounds of Canadian flour, a glassful of soybean oil, a bit less than a pound of beans and about a cupful each of rice and sugar, The cake of soap is for one month, --CP Photo SPORTS BRIEFS The average age of the nine trotters and pacers that won the 11 harness races worth $100,000 or more in 1965 was exactly four years, Nine of the races were won by seven American- breds averaging 3 and two- covanth yeare Rwadan'e Plu. vier Ill, aged six, winner of the Roosevelt International Trot, and New Zealand's Smoke Cloud N. Aged seven, winner of the Yonkers International Pace, raised the overall figure. ANOTHER FIRST Another "first" for which the great pacer Bret Hanover is evidently headed is that he'll probably be the first to average +more' thai $200,000-a-year-earn- ings in a racing career, When, this June, he became the top money winning pacer of all time, at $712,132, he was aver- aging $287,377 per. annum, with his third year in competition barely begun, Nearest to Bret Hanover among .the top ten money-makers, on the average, is trotter Speedy Scot, which earned at a rate of $162,727, in a four-year career from 1962-65. Five. yearling trotters and pacers sold for $50,000 or more at auction last year. The highest priced colt -- Speedy Streak, a full brother to the great trotting champion Speedy Scot -- was purchased by C, F. and John Gaines of Lexington, Ky., and K. D. Owen of Houston, Texas, for $113,000, : Famed pro basketball star Wilt Chamberlain is an avid harness horse owner, He is a partner in ownership of the pacing star Rivaltime and went to $61,000 in partnership with the Silverbrook Farm in pur- chasing the yearling pacing colt Toledo Hanover at auction last fall. Signs Of Impending Crisis Many In Tense Arab World Rivalries in the Arab world focus on President Nasser of Egypt and King Feisal of Saudi Arabia. A Canadian Press reporter who visited the Middle East finds current tensions remi- niscent of the situation a decade ago when the area was im turmoil for three years, By CARL MOLLINS BEIRUT, Lebanon (CP)-- | Signs of impending crisis abound in the Arab world like telltale eddies of dust be- fore a desert sandstorm, On a six-week tour through | seven Arab territories early this summer, tiny cups of. vel- | vet Turkish coffee and jars of sweet, clear tea lubricated talk of abrasive rivalries and sour relations in the Middle East. Antagonism between Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser and King Feisal of Saudi Arabia disturbs the careful coexistence of the last few years. Arms are flowing into the area from East and West. Feisal's campaign for a re- troops have been fighting for the Republican cause against Saudi - backed Royalists for most of four years. FEAR NASSER PLOT In Aden, Feisal-style lead- ers of the South Arabian Fed- eration speak darkly of a Nasserite scheme to pounce from neighboring Yemen -- after the British leave Aden in 1968--as the first step in a plot to pick off the Persian Gulf sheikhdoms, Across the Gulf of Aden in Djibouti, the French talk phil- osophically of powerful Soviet and Egyptian influence in neighboring Somalia and pre- dict their own departure from French Somaliland under pressure in five or six years. The tension is palpable in places -- among the riflemen on the streets of Aden; talk- ing to a Yemen army officer in Jeddah; in a_ cheering Egyptian crowd that hails Nasser's threat to attack Saudi cities; among Aden rev- olutionaries in their Cairo headquarters; even hearing the restrained suggestion of front" in concert with Egypt, Algeria and "raq against Saudi Arabia's "imperialist and re- actionary"' conspiracy, RUSSIANS ACTIVE The move to confront Feisal is motivated in part by domes- tic difficulties in the four "front" countries. An external threat may divert attention from their precarious econo- mies and political instability. Whatever the motive, the result could calm quarrels be- tween Egypt and Syria, Egypt and Algeria, Syria and Iraq. The Middle East would be left divided between conservative and radical blocs. The Russians, engaged on what one Canadian envoy in the area called "a quiet but effective diplomatic of- fensive," have declared for the revolutionaries, Soviet Premier Alexei Kos- ygin gave Nasser at least moral support during his visit | to Egypt in May. Soviet arms are flowing to Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Republican Yemen, So- malia and the Palestine Liber- ation Army. Syria is getting | P | losophies collide most sharply vival of pure Islamic princi- ples throughout the Moslem world implies criticism of Nasser's socialism and ex- plicitly rejects. dealings with Communists. Nasser replies that Feisal is a feudalistic front man for another imperi- alist plot against the Arabs, The Nasser and Feisal phi- iness in sula. cussions some eagerly. subtleties alignments. The fervent in the Arabian peninsula itself --today in Yemen, tomorrow no doubt in Aden and the next day perhaps among the oil sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf In Yomen Syria last Feisal. The y, 70,000. Eevntian promoting a SLOGANS SUPERFLUOUS Feisal that Egypt has no bus- the Arabian penin- But the quarrel has reper- elsewhere. Middle East governments are being drawn into the dispute reluctantly, Behind them, the big powers grope among the of shifting Other others Arab young Baath socialists who seized power in February joined in the polemics against actively "rev oluoionary have are much Soviet economi¢ aid and has permitted Khaled Bak- fash, the Middle East's top Communist, to return from exile. The Russian activity is said to be intended in part to keep out the Chinese--once busy in Syria, Yemen and Somalia. But Western diplomats are edgy. The Americans and the Brit- ish are hesitant about siding wholeheartedly -with Feisal, although both governments wear the pro-Saudi lable as far as most Arabs are con- cerned. COMMUNIST HELP SOUGHT | Arab Chiefs Embarrassed By Brainchild Art: Combo, head-shoulde Hussein, Shukairy; newsma refugee area. Mailed 29-6-66, The Palestine Liber- repre- senting 1,300,000 Arab refu- become an em- ation Organization, gees, has barrassment for some the Arab leaders who helped The political establish it. Ts Pp in Jerusalem resentatives governments and of Gaza Strip. stremgth of the group is dis- cussed in this story by Canadian Press reporter. By CARL MOLLINS GAZA (CP) -- The young man who joined the tour Gaza refugee centres would have been barely old enough to walk when Palestine Arabs fled to this coastal enclave during the 1948 'Arab-Israeli war. He. seemed to embarr, the matter-of-fact Palestin from the Gaza office of United Nations Relief Works Agency. The youth bleated fie slogans in good English ab injustice, poverty and neglect. embar- The slogans were rassing because comment v superfluous in the dingy ware- house where fortnight UNRWA rations were be: Spooned out, among crowded hovels of a refugee village or in the Canadi donated maternal and infz welfare clinic at Khan Yunis. The uninvited commentator, one guessed, was an activist of the Palestine Liberat Organization, a body that ment to some of its origi sponsors among Arab lead as well as to UNRWA. and a LED BY LAWYER The Palestinians proclaimed "the inevitability of the battle to liberate the homeland"--Is- rael -- and elected of Ahmed Shukairy state, 'ass ian the ree out andria and agreed was ly ing the countries where try an- ant- at least a sure group that ion wing, the. Palestine nal Army. ers The PLO was established two years ago at a congress attended by King Hussein of Jordan, rep- of other delegates of the 1,300,000 Pal- estine refugees living in Jor- dan, Syria, Lebanon and the Arabia's former minister of to lead them, They approved a constitu- tion that places the PLO in the vanguard of the battle, al- though responsibility for the recovery of lost lands '"'falls upon the entire Arab nation, governments and people." Arab heads of government approved the establishment of the PLO at a summit meeting in September, 1964, at Alex- the organization with funds The PLO was not intended to be a gopernment-in-exile and the governments of the it operates to keep the PLO on a tight rein. But Shukairy's or- ganization has developed into formidable Is causing alarm among moderates like Jordan's Hussein and perhaps among other Arab leaders. is The PLO has a military proving to be an embarrass- It has a seat on the Arab League and representa- tives have been permitted to address the UN special politi- cal committee on Palestinian refugee questions, The Palestinians have been seeking help directly from the Communists, engaging in the current fashion of playing off Russians against Chinese and getting aid from both, The PLO maintains an office in Peking. DENOUNCED BY KING Jordan's Hussein, for one, has made it clear he believes the Arab government leaders behaved like Frankensteins in creating the PLO. He finally broke publicly with Shukairy in June, denouncing the PLO in its present form as "a tool of destruction," Shukairy reported in Cairo that Hussein has consistently withheld co - operation, re- fusing to allow compulsory military service for Pales- tinians in Jordan and. barring PLA units from training on Jordan territory. Shukairy blamed Hussein for encour- aging the increasingly fre- quent Israeli raids across the Jordan armistic line by failing to establish defences Jordan members of the PLA 'have joined training pro- grams in the Egyptian-admin- istered Gaza Strip. Conscrip- tion regulations introduced in Gaza last year provide for two years of military service for young men, 18 months for students, Hussein is .clearly worried that the PLO activity in Jor- dan could be, turned against his own government. The 700,- 000 Palestine refugees ,in Jor- Arab about 400 lawyer 60, Saudi to provide pres- Liberation dan constitute 60 per cent of the kingdom's population, AMERICANS PROTEST With Egypt and Syria rally- ing allies against Arab con- servatism as represented in King Faisal of Saudi Arabia-- and by implication in Hussein --pressure could be exerted on the Jordan ruler through hostile activity among Jordan refugees. PLO militarism also is causing anguish in UNRWA, a body that already treads a wary path among Middle East and international politi- cal pressures. UN members, notably the the United States, have pro- tested against UNRWA aid going to members of the PLA on the ground that this amounts to assisting a group dedicated to the destruction of another UN member, Is- rae! American objections are especially important because U.S. contributions te UNRWA account for about 70 per cent of its budget--$23,800,000 out o° total government contribu- tions of $34,071,000 in U.S, funds last year. By contrast, Canada last year contributed $1,111,000 in U.S, funds, third most generous after the United States and Britain's $5,400,000 The U.S. objections to UNRWA aid for PLA mem- bers are a further twist to a long - standing argument in- volving Palestine refugees about where humanitarian help ends and aid to warlike ambitions begins. 4 'Bank Act Revision Plan Jper-cent limit go, By GORDON GRANT There were few surprises in the proposed revisions to the Bank Act introduced by Fi- nance Minister Sharp but there was plenty of criticism, a little praise and some uncertainty, As expected, the finance minister proposed changes in the controversial six-per-cent ceiling allowed on bank loans, Banks will be allowed to charge seven-per-cent interest until Jan. 1, 1967, if. the pro- posals become.law--probably in the fall--then they will be al- lowed to charge a maximum of 1% per cent above the average yield on short - term Canada bonds. Eventually, the ceiling will be removed, Mr, Sharp said. He didn't seem to please any- one with these proposals Bankers say it is unfortunate |the ceiling was not eliminated; trust company spokesmen say jthey are glad to see the six- but tfiat the removal of a maximum is an- other question. NEW FIELD FOR BANKS Allowing the banks to make conventional mortgage loans earned Mr, Sharp applause from all sides, S. T. Paton, president of the Canadian Bankers' Association, said he was pleased with this provision but he hoped it wouldn't be circumscribed by onerous provisions. Jean-Yves Gelinas, president of the National House Builders Association, said the proposed legislation could be "'of great assistance to the residential housing industry in establishing another badly needed source of mortgage funds," 'We have been asking for ac- tion by the government on this matter for some time now, and I am pleased finally to see that action is being taken, If the legislation is passed in the fall this should brighten the hous- ing picture in 1967." D. L. Clayton, president of Coronation Credit, said that al- lowing banks into the mortgage field is 'an excellent idea." However, he doesn't think the Stirs Plenty Criticism banks will move in too heavily since they haven't the funds. INSURANCE SCHEME Mr. Sharp proposed a schome of insurance on deposits which the established banks weren't too happy about. Said Mr, Paton: "It would appear to be a meas* ure that would force the char- tered banks to contribute to a fund to improve the security of deposits of competing institu- tions." But banker Sinclair Stevens, a director of the Bank of West- ern Canada which was granted a charter Thursday, said he thinks the idea is "terrific." "Deposit insurance is very much needed, Without it it is difficult to get competition for deposits between trust and loan companies and chartered banks. The larger institutions are able to sell security--the deposit insurance will remove doubts from depositors' minds." With all the proposed changes, however, the images of banks are not expected to change, One spokesman said; 'My assessment is that we shouldn't go into riskier areas than we're in now," ASKED FOR BACK TAXES Elsewhere on the busitiess scene, Hiram Walker - Goocer- ham and Worts, Canadian-con- trolled distiller, ran afoul of an agent of the United States in- ternal revenue service. The agent, after completing an audit of books of Walkers affiliates in the U.S., said the internal revenue service will claim $26,000,000 in additional taxes, Walkers said it will "vigor- ously contest' the alleged lia- bility. The company, meanwhile, re- ported nine-month earnings of $26,983,200 or $1.57 a share, compared with $24,699,134 or $1.44 in the same period last year. A. E. Osler and Co., Toronto- based investment dealer, says the claim creates uncertainty for the market for Walker's shares, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturdoy, July 16, 1966 17 SIZES 10-20 By ANNE ADAMS WRAP UP summer socials with a cool, cool coatdress but- toned and bow-ed on the side, Joy to wear from rieckline's sweep to skirt's swing, Printed Pattern 4906; Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 14 requires 8% yards 45 - inch fabric, FIFTY CENTS (50c) in coins (no stamps, please) for each pattern, Ontario residents add 3c sales tax, Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of The Oshawa Times, Pattern Dept,, 60 Front Street West, Toronto 1, Ontario. Summer Fashion Festival 350 design ideas packed Catalog, Fun, play, work, travel clothes--all sizes, Clip coupon in Catalog--choose one free pattern, Hurry, send 50c for Catalog. in pattern- Times, TERN NUMBER, OSHAWA TIMES PATTERNS By ALICE BROOKS Crochet this elegantly desipns ed jacket to wear on cool sums mer evenings, Light, lacy, elegant, Pine- apples stand out against shell- stitch, Very easy to crochet with 8-ply fingering yarn, Pat- tern 7082: sizes 32 to 46 incl, THIRTY - FIVE CENTS (coins) for each pattern (no stamps, please) to Alice Brooks, care of The Oshawa Needlecraft 60 Front Street West, Toronto 1, Ontario, Ontario residents add 2c sales tax, Print plainly PAT- NAME, AD- DRESS. GIANT 1966 Needlecraft Cat- alog stars knit, crochet--many more needlecraft designs. 3 free patterns printed in cata- log. Send 25c. NEW! 12 Collectors' Quilt Dept., --|Patterns for you in color, with quilting motifs. Finest patterns ever collected from famous museums. Send 60c for new Museum Quilt Book No, 2. Dee luxe Quilt Book No, 1 -- sixteen complete patterns, 60c, By RUSSELL ELMAN SAN MARINO (CP)--Extract from the San Marino consular list: "Canada--Seat Vacant." Nearly six years after the world's oldest and tiniest repub- lic designated its consul in Montreal, it awaits a reciprocal appointment by Canada, "In 1960 we asked the Cana- dian government to have some- one accredited here," a San Marino external affairs spokes- man said in a recent interview. "So far Canada has not met our request but we have hope it will do so." Links between Canada and San Marino are minimal, but for a state only 22 square miles in area with a total population of 17,000 official diplomatic ex- changes are important. The ex- tent of the recognition afforded to San Marino by the rest of the world is a measure of guaran- tee for the tiny state's sover- eignty. Since the Communists fell from power in San Marino in 1957, the Christian Democrat- Social Democrat coalition has undertaken an energetic cam- paign to widen and improve diplomatic contacts based on a policy of neutrality. SIGNED TREATIES San Marino, aiiiiough nota member of the United Nations, belongs to some of its special- ized agencies and in 1958 re- opened a permanent observer mission at the UN's Geneva of- fice. In recent years the repub- lic has 'signed various interna- tional accords including an In- ternational Postal Agreement in Ottawa in 1957 and the Partial Canadian Consul Awaited By Tiniest, Oldest Republic Moscow in 1963, Surrounded by Italian terri tory, San Marino's most vital continuing relations are with Italy, It has a consulate-general in Rome and consulates in most important provincial cities, while Italy is the only country with a permanent office (con> sulate-general) in San Marino, Other countries are officially represented by consulates: lo- cated in Italian cities such as Florence (Britain, France, United States) or Rome (Soviet Union, India), Outside the Italian peninsula, San Marino has extended its consular network to cities ine cluding Montreal, Washington, Bonn, Caracas and Tokyo, The Montreal representative is Ray+ mond Lette, a lawyer from Out- remont, Que. (There are about a dozen San Marino citizens in Canada.) NO VISA NEEDED To date the most significant diplomatic business bet ween Canada and San Marino has been an exchange of notes on tourist traffic Oct, 16, 1962, re- sulting in the waiver of visas for tourists, From the point of view of the visiting Canadians--76 cars with Canadian registration plates en- tered San Marino "in i965--the passport agreement does not add up to much since there are no formalities at the San Marino-Italian frontier, If the tourist wants a stamp in his passport as a memento of his visit, he must seek out officials located at strategic points in the mountaintop capital who will gladly oblige for a fee of 100 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty in Lire (17 cents), The staid look in men's fashions is on its way out. Vancouver fashion editor Betty Runcie says men are not getting as "kooky" as STYLE 'BUSTING the kids but "are busting out all over in color and style. A real status symbol is the sports jacket (left) in cavalty twill with welt OUT ALL OVER' seaming detail and _ inset buckle on the back. The eve- ning jacket (centre) is made of hand-painted Italian tie silk, the doublexbreasted suit is an old favorite but this mode! is neater, trimmer and slimmer, (CP Phote)