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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Nov 1967, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, November 24, 1967 A GLANCE AROUND THE GLOBE Martin Assures Commons) Medicar OTTAWA (CP) External Affairs Minister Martin fielded Commons questions on the fu- ture of medical care Thursday by repeating assurances of the absent Prime Minister Pearson that no change was planned in federal legislation setting up the program. New Democratic Leader Douglas had repeated his re- quest for assurances that the program will go ahead as scheduled next July 1 with any province willing to join. Mr. Martin quoted statements by the prime minister of Oct. 25, Nov. 13 and Nov. 14 and said he was repeating the position of the government. Calcutta Riot CALCUTTA (Reuters) -- One person was killed and several were injured when police opened fire on a procession of university students in central Calcutta today. Sporadic violence against the dismissal of the leftist West Bengal government continued for the third day. e Date Stands \North Vietnam Hit Hard - UNITED NATIONS (AP) Australian journalist Wilfred \Burchett said in a letter made |public Thursday night that "'all lindustries and virtually all ipower stations" in North Viet- jnam and a third of Haiphong's miresidential, commercial and in- 'Wii dustrial sections had been de- jstroyed by U.S. bombing. Burchett, who often reports 'for Communist newspapers 'from Communist countries, wrote the letter from Phnom 'Penh, Cambodia, Oct. 27, to Report, jleased it te UN correspondents and others. Appeal Court Ruling TORONTO (CP) Ontario Court of Appeal ruled Thursday {Ontario courts cannot impose a Contract Awarded jsentence to be served in addi- i tion to ali i i | TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontar-|term, ac hene Riccar jio government awarded a con- The tract Thursday that will lead to!.. HON. PAUL MARTIN ... Acting Premier appeal court ruled a nine-year sentence imposed in today|removal of surface parking inioiawa on Patrick Gerald Mc- Police opened fire twice kc |front of the legislative buildings | PENNY SANDERSON, 14 . «+ Last seen, Monday Port Hope Teenager Missing PORT HOPE (Staff) -- Penny| Sanderson, 14, daughter of Mr.) and Mrs. 54 Brown St., been missing from her home Arnold Sanderson Port Hc. pe, since Monday. | BY FEDERAL DEPARTMENT Ten-Year Financial Study Reports, 'Never So Good duced goods and services worth $57,781,000,000. | GNP IS HIGHER : The mid-year population esti- By JAMES NELSON |sis for the past 10 years shows: OTTAWA (CP)--While every-| --Personal po pong nad taxes Fi lon a per capital basis has risen jone compains about Paying|faster than the consumer price jtaxes, and there will be higher|index each year, taxes announced by Finance} --Last year, the federal gov- Minister Sharp Nov. 30, the fi-lernment's budgetary revenues nance department can prove|were almost at the lowest point you never had it so good. as a percentage of gross nation- Well, perhaps, hardly everjal product. since the income tax was intro-| The 19,919,000 people in Can- *iduced as a temporary wartimelada last year, using the Domin- measure 50 years ago this year./ion Bureau of Statistics' mid- A finance department analy-'year population estimate, pro- or $1,921.68 per capita. Low-Wage Workers Fall Further Behind Colleagues | OTTAWA (CP) -- Workers in|British Columbia, compared low-wage industries and low-|with a national average of 114 wage provinces have fallen|per cent. progressively further behind) The rate of growth for Mani- their better-placed colleagues in|toba was 99 per cent, for New 'the 1950s and 1960s. Brunswick 100 per cent and for A new labor department study| Nova Scotia 101 per cent. shows that the widening income) Among the manufacturing in- gaps hit hardest_in the Atlantic|dustries, most of those paying which is based on prices inclu- sive of federal and provincial sales and excise taxes, is run- ning about four per cent higher than last year. Out of Jast year's gross nation- al product of $57,781,000,000, the federal government took §$8,- 118,000,000 in budgetary reve- nues, or 14 per cent. The only time this percentage was lower in the past 10 years was in 1963, when it was 13.9. It was 16.4 per of} has|Provinces, but extend as well to|below-average wages in 1949 fell|cent in 1957. industry, \the Prairie provinces and Que-jeven further below average by 'bec. |1965. Those with earnings above the average increased their when they came under attac by students hurling stones and brick bats. The student violence came after a two-day orgy of rioting, Jooting and arson throughout the city. Trade Secretary Named GENEVA (AP) Olivier Long,'Swiss ambassador to Brit-/Ray Connell said the entire robbing a trust company in Otta-|2N4 the other a ain, today was named secre-| building will be underground. tary-general of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade to succeed Eric Wyndham White of Britain, retiring at the end of the year. Long formerly was director of the trade agreements section of the Swiss foreign ministry. Commons Approves OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons gave approval in principle Thursday to a bill authorizing Trans-Canada Pipe Lines Ltd. to increase its capital to 25,- 000,000 common shares from 10,000,000 and to 5,000,000 pre- ferred shares from 1,000,000. Among its other provisions, the bill, which now goes to the Commons committee on trans- portation and communications, would grant clear authority to company directors to declare stock dividends. The company would also be able to subdivide or consolidate its common shares and its is- sued preferred shares, as it does its unissued preferred shares. | Gold Rush Hits -- The gold rush hit the Jo- hannesburg stock exchange in South Africa today. Dealers described the scram- ble to buy gold as "wild," "chaotic" and "near pandemo- nium." Dealers attributed the tre-) menous buoyancy to a strength- ening belief that an increase in the world gold price was around the corner. JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) | land give Queen's Park civil ser- Kuhen, 46, who was on parole at vants all-weather access jronto's subway system. | The $3,348,000 contract \lis-Don Ltd, of London, calls for construction of | car underground garage and a/repted the nine-year sentence be} |"supermarket-type" central sta- Served consecutive to the life | to To to EF]. currently. Ont., tionery and office supplies Sentence against McKuhen. |Freeway and convicted of|tW boys. One was jdepot. Public Works Minister' McKuhen was Gold Sales Susneided [served nearly eight years of a| life imprisonment term imposed | ZURICH (Reuters) The|in Montreal October, 1954, for a jfive major Swiss banks today bludgeon slaying. agreed to suspend all forward S lli or 'short' sales of gold until eiling Insurance further notice to avoid excessive) OTTAWA (CP) -- Selling in- speculation, banking said here, tive activities of life, a member) Forward sales are made by\of Parliament said. Thursday! speculators who do not actually|night. possess gold, but promise to de- 1 7 . liver it at an agreed date--say numasionly bait SFe ie te one, two or three months from| improductive body during al now. Commons debate. -- . s U "Just six months ago I joined Holy Saints the parasitic side and I sit here! CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- tonight feeding on the people Women of St. Gabriel's Roman|qywn in the mines," Mr Catholic Church and B'naijGerma, elected earlier this B'rith women have joined forces|year_ said. to raise money and provide a : " holiday gift wrapping service at ane ne at ae ee ja Charlotte shopping centre.|,,,. ; oa They call it the St. Binal gin none sone who are carrying | wrap booth. : | Bank Earnings | MONTREAL (CP) -- The Bank of Montreal Thursday re- : ported net earnings after iaxes|Cal of Canada Ltd. lof a record $20,720,444, an in-\WhO was the subject of crease of 4.1 per cent over 1966. dent demonstration on the Uni- The 1967 earnings were equiv- alent to 68 cents on each par-$2 jshare compared with 66 cents for the same period last year. Assets showed "the largest) growth in the bank's history" as they reached $6,132,452,838,|versity's placement office for up 11.7 per cent from the 1966/more than two hours Monday figure of $5,422,750,949. keels the demonstration. eposits totalled $5,-| The letter followed a St 608,489,590, compared with $4,-|Council vote which eet ae 995,368,152 for the same period Faulkner to apologize for "any last year. jinconvenience"' the blockade Apology recruiter|' Faulkner. Dow official William White was forced to stay in the uni- HERE an RECREATION Two girls' gym class for 7 to| 13-year-olds will start Saturday|peal by Bowbrook Investments|instrument store and social club|rights of their at the Bowmanville High School|Limited for a Darlington town-|following an early morning fire|ada, but, estimated achieved. at 9 a.m. The boys' bantam and| midget basketball leagues, for) 13- to 18-year-olds will also start} Saturday at the high school atjton council chambers at Hamp-/ed in the basement of Pilgrim's|) PETERBOROUGH, the|Musical Instruments Ltd., and|(CP)--Sidney Yeldham, 9 a.m. Registration will be at the school EMPLOYEE VOTE Board has directed that a rep- resentation vote be hel for all employees of Murphy Oil Co Ltd. working at or out of Osh- awa, except office staff and some others. The employees will be entitled to vote for or against representation by Fuel, Bus, Limousine, Petroleum Drivers and Allied Employees Local 352 affiliated with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. CHEST INCREASE Frank Shine, business admin- istrator of the Oshawa separate school board, says teachers and trustees contributed 37 per cent more money this year to the Greater Oshawa Commun ity Chest than in previous years SAFETY LEAGUE Gerald Rolph, immediate past president of St. Francis Catholic Parents - Teachers Association, has been appointed representa- tive on the Oshawa Safety League by trustees of the -Osh- awa separate school board. Mr. Roiph replaces John Konarow ski who resigned for personal reasons, MIDGETS WIN PETERBOROUGH -- Pete Boswell tallied two goals in leading Oshawa to a 3-1 victory over Peterborough in a Lake- shore Midget game played here last night. ------ ;may have caused Mr. White. d THERE | auitton rire DARLINGTON ZONING squad detectives today probed TORONTO (Special) -- An ap- the ruins of a downtown musical ship zoning change will be heard|Which caused an by the Ontario Municipal| $300,000 damage. Board Dec. 20 in the Darling-| Firemen believe the fire start- fon. The company wants After dinner Monday night,| By the growth of lead. WILL ADD TO REVENUE This year, Finance Minister Sharp estimates his budgetary sources!surance is among the unproduc-|beige jeans and de. |to the conclusion that Ino responsibility in this world,| that we really do not amount to) TORONTO (CP) -- A letter/much, and that nothing much apologizing to the Dow Chemi-|matters because in the vital . we are provid- a stu-\ed for by the Americans." Mr. Camp told about 350 per- versity of Toronto campus was|Sons that Canadians can choose drafted Thursday by Student|between becoming a creative Council President Thomas|contemporary society or a car- bon copy of another society. "The question of Canadian in- dividuality and distinctiveness will not be answered ... by confronting our French-speak- ing compatriots with the choice lof either forced integration or! forced isolation. surely middle} 'yield own," he said. friend who says they planned a 400-|ton County court last Feb. 21 di-/way to Port Hope High School. no. the time from a life term for|Penny went to several places|wages and salaries has lagged thanslatghter, be served con-|downtown and met a_ school|for workers in food and bever- to|ages, leather, textiles, clothing Judge C, C. Gibson of Carle-/meet Tuesday morning on the|and wood products, At the same time, it has paid Police say the girl was given|well to be working in Ontario a ride to the Macdonald-Cartier|and British Columbia, turning ma i Mr. Sanderson. "The boys say wa in October, 1965. He had| Mr. gave them the impression ers the period 1949-65 and occa- she was going to Yorkville," |sionally extends its 'findings to says Penny's father. The girl is five feet, ski ert boots. wearing a_ black Canadians Apathetic Highway 28 byjout iron and steel, transporta- : a friend|tion equipment, "hippie," says | chemicals. petroleum or The comprehensive study cov- 1966 when data is available. ; : five B.C, IS BEST jinches, weighs about 120 pounds and has short brown hair and/pritish Columbia r brown eyes. She was last seen jacket,| salaries there in 1965 for all in- By almost any comparison, ks richest. Average weekly fwages and _ |dutries were $101.26, against a jnational average of $91.23. The average in the Atlantic region |was $75.56, in Quebec $88.77; in |Ontario $94.58 and across the Prairies $86.80. In terms of their growth since 1949, hourly wages in manufac- EDMONTON (CP) -- Dalton|turing were up 120 per cent in Camp, president of the national) -- Progressive Conservative Asso- ciation, said Thursday that Can- ada is in danger of reverting to 'psychological colonialism." DIFFERENCE SHOWS | The study also shows that the difference between wage rates of skilled and unskilled workers --narrowing slowly in the five years to 1965--may now be re- versing itself. But this trend is subject to sharp variation when it is put to |eity-by-city analysis. During the 1961-65 period, in- creasing premiums for skilled work were being paid in Winni- peg, Calgary, Montreal and To- ronto. Unskilled workers were im- proving their relative wage po- sition in Ottawa, Regina, Hamil- ton, Edmonton and Vancouver. Executive salaries in industry increased by an average of 27 per cent between 1961 and 1965. Below the job of general mana- ger, the average salary went to $15,254 from $11,725. The boss doubled that improvement, moving to $30,000 from $23,050. says. revenues will amount to about | $9,094,000,000. This is 14.8 'per! cent of the estimated GNP of $61,516,000,000. Whatever new)! taxes he announces next Thurs- day and collects before the ond] of the year will raise the reve- nue figure. The 10-year analysis by the fi- nance department shows that from 1957 to 1966, per capital in- come after direct taxes rose 50 per cent, while the consumer price index rose 18 per cent. This is an indication of the in- creased purchasing power of af- ter-tax income in the average case in Canada, exclusive of the value of increased services such as education, health, transpora- _| WEATHER FORECAST Mostly Cloudy Skies And Milder Saturday Official little warmer Saturday. Winds \light today and southerly 15 Sat. TORONTO (CP) forecasts issued at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Unsettled westies continues across all of Ontario as a series of disturbances) burton: Cloudy today and Satur- day, snowflurries -- tonight and Saturday morning. A little warmer Saturday, winds light. Northern Lake Huron, south- ern Georgian Bay: Mostly cloudy today and Saturday, snowflurries this afternoon and evening. A little warmer Satur- day, winds light. Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- magami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy today and Bake urday. Snow beginning this 'af-! ternoon and becoming light in- termittent on Saturday, little) warmer Saturday. Winds light) today and southerly 15 Satur-) day. Algoma, White River: Snow, tapering off to flurries tonight. Saturday mostly cloudy with a few showers or snowflurries, a mate for 1967 is 20,405,000 and|moyes through the province.|Windsor ..... Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high Saturday 30° 45 the gross national product at!Prospects for Saturday are for)st. Thomas . 40 mid-year was estimated as run-|mostly cloudy skies and a little|London .. 40 ning at #61,516,000,000. This is al warmer. "siesta 2 Population growth of 2.4 per Regional forecasts: ;Mount Fores 40 hey eyelid GNP gain of saad | Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- oe ss " "After-tax personal incomes 484ra, southern Lake Huron, ee Cathation . 2 last year totalled $38,278,000,000| western Lake Ontario, Windsor, lide 2 nite, The|London, Ha milton, Toronto: Steyn : 4 mid-year estimate for 1967 is|Mostly cloudy today and Satur- Kineston . : * that per capital incomes after|4ay, a few showers or snow iar ee on . . all direct income taxes will run|ties this afternoon and evening, ° Fo to $2,020.48. This is an increase|a little warmer Saturday, winds ee askoKa'. of 5.1 per cent in the year. 'light. : On Bis ° But the consumer price index, Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- 35° HONEY WINE It's simple how quickly one may lose pounds of unsightly fat right in your own home. Make this home recipe yourself. It's easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a tion, incentives to industry, and the many other services provid- ed by government. "In general, the consumer is relatively better off today than| Pl he was in each of the earlier years," the finance department pint bottle and add enough grapefruit juice to fill the Kottle, Take two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran jan, If your first purchase does not show you simple easy way to New Home Recipe Reducing Plan lose bulky fat and help regain slender more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don't disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and graceful slenderness. Note how quickly bloat disappears--how much bet- ter you feel. More alive, youthful appearing and active, Labor Party Speaking to a party banquet, I came here was to help| mr. Camp said: Walloped 'nom (use ct! lin British Byelection e ha hings of life. . "There is ground, and to find it, all must| their de of | Labor to Conservatives--enough some ground of "T believe 'it is the attitu the Conservative party that i HAMILTON (CP) -- Arson may not be a question as to |whether French-speaking Cana- dians may or may not enjoy the} in Can-} , be|from the 13,791 it polled last language but how this may WANTS TO UNDERSTAND 87, England e DERBY, England (AP) The Opposition Conservatives today delivered another stinging blow at Prime Minister Wilson's embattled Labor government by more than doubling their win- ning plurality in the first by- election since Britain devalued the pound, Conservative James Scoit- Hopkins held the West Derby seat with 16,319 votes against by|>»284 for Labor candidate Robin Corbett. Labor dropped to third place in the poll, behind the Liberal party's Aza Pinney, who got 5,- 696 votes. The Tory plurality jwas 10,623. The byelection showed a vot- ing swing of 13 per cent from {to give the Tories a massive governing majority in the House jof Commons in a general elec- on. Labor had 8,507 votes slashed year when it finished second for the seat. |MAKES COMMENT Anthony Barber, Conservative is\party chairman commented in OMB to issue an order direct-|spread to the upstairs facilities|taking Italian lessons so he can|London: ing an amendment to township of the De La Salle, a French-Ca-junderstand his new Italian "This magnificent result is bylaw 2111 to change from agri- nadian social club. A theatre at/neighbors. 'I haven't been near|the people's verdict on the deci- The Ontafio Labor Relations Cultural to highway commercial the rear of the building suffered|a school since I left school in'sion of the government to de- the zoning of | southerly limit of Base Line/pected to open today. Road and bounded on the east by the westerly limit of Waver- learn Snake Handler Bitten jm it's too late But never a land on the,smoke damage and was not ex-'1891 at the age of 11," he said. value. to. "The voters of West Derby have given the answer the whole electorate would give if they got the chance--Wilson out." Today's result cut Wilson's over-all majority in the House of Commons to 83, with the two main parties shaping up this way: Labor 354 members, Con- servatives 255. Labor loser Corbett told re- porters: "The result is of course disappointing, but the Labor government will stay in office and will go on." Wilson's government can stay in office until the spring of 197! --but he can call an election at any time. Four other byelections are pending, three of them for La- bor-held seats. Most byelections have a lower turnout of voters than national polls, and today's was a predict- able 64.5 per cent compared 'with 83.4 per cent in the 1966 general election. DOWNTOWN DELIGHTFUL INFORMAL DINING ROOM GOOD FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Special Noon Luncheons Hotel Lancaster | 27 KING ST. WEST | | | | jley Road. On the following day, in the same place, the OMB will hear Darlington's -applica- tion for approval of its restrict- ed area bylaw 2362. COUNTRY MUSIC Another country and western jamboree, -sponsored by the Bowmanville recreation depart- ment, will be held Sunday start-| 7 ; jing at 8 p.m. at the town hal} | being | handled for the first| jauditorium. Guest artist will be) time, said Clarita Haast |June Eikhard of Oshawa on| Thursday. She is the wife of the fiddle with several other groups | 68-year-old herpetologist and his participating partner in the Miami Serptenta- jrium, a tourist attraction | CONFERENCE CANCELLED) yaast claims he has built: up! Constable Gary Chapman,|immunity from snakebites| spokesman for the Whitby On- through injecting himself during! |tario Provincia] Police detach-|the Jast 19 years with a potion| jment, has been informed by the mixed from the venom of cob-| \Breckin OPP detachment that! ras, the green mamba, the coral the Youth Traffic Safety Con-|snake and the Indian blue krait. ference scheduled for the Can-} --------------_--______-___-- jnington High School all day Sat- Safety Problems? MIAMI, Fla, (AP) -- While 50 tourists watched, a deadly Aus-| jtralian tiger snake plunged its! |fangs into the hand of Bill) Haast, a professional snake han-| dier. He is reported in serious condition in hospital, suffering from his 102nd and most dan- gerous snakebite. | "It was a brand new snake) 1 urday, has been cancelled in- idefinitely. Students from high : 'schools in Durham and On- Call J. Feltis jtario Counties had been expect-| jed to attend'the conference, the| first of its type to be held, in the area. 728-6414 CHAIRMAN OSHAWA SAFETY LEAGUE VOLKSWAGEN _ Se uate Mark Blanchard scored the other Oshawa goal while Dave! Kemp potted the lone goal for AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE the losers. The Best Fuel Oil For Less WESTERN OSHAWA OIL LTD, 725-1212 PICKERING CAR CENTRE On Boseline 2 Mile East of Harwood. Ajex, Ont. Offers Some AMERICAN USED CARS At Wholesole Price. All cars in A-1 condition Open Till 9 P.M., Saturday 6 P.M. | TELEPHONE 942-1881 See for yourself... just drive our 68 Plymouth Fury! Get a Winning Deal 1968 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY 2-Door Fast Top on the "WINNING CAR!" YNN MOTOR --. the Plymouth Win-You-Over Beat Goes On 331 PARK RD. S. 15% DISCOUNT ON ALL NEW CARS or @ "$500, minimum trade allow- ence on your cer regardiess ef yeer or condition. 723-2284 SERRE with Belvedere Instant Gift Coupon Insists: "| smoke them because | like them" Remember, every hour.of every day, two Canadians find Belvedere Instant Gift Coupons in their packs of Belvedere | Fat & BJ KING SIZB OR REGULAR cigarettes. You could be the next winner of an RCA Victor Color T.V., Schick Electric Toothbrush, a Ronson table lighter, or one of thousands of other valuable Instant Gifts. HERE ARE SOME RECENT WINNERS: a Mrs. Emma O'Brien, Port Credit; Kent Richardson, OHtawa 3; Goldie McGinnis, Cobo- eonk; Mrs. A. McAleavey, Willowdale; Doug Richardson, Manotick; Mrs. R. Leger, Toronto 2; Robert R. Watson, Heron Bay South; Mrs. Rose Truster, Downsview; Mrs. E, Fuglestad, Hamilton; Agnes Reynolds, Willowdale; Lillian L. Beattie, West Hill; R. J. Hooker, Brockville; Mrs. A. Hume, Islington; Mrs. L. Nihls, Kitchener; W. H. Mason, Toronto; Mr. Mills, Ingersell; Mrs. W. W. Hutchins, Scarborough. oe ie WALTER PARKS MAR Should Oshawa have sepa rate court facilities or shoul the courtrooms remain par of the police station?A sur vey of six persons by Th Times indicated an equa split in opinion, Milton Oster 6/) Bond St. EF. "I think the: should have separate build ings. Oshawa is hig enoug for that. The taxpayers won' like to pay for it but in th long run it will save money (Qotnetacegtecr Hs New Mi Then Pu TORONTO (CP) -- Premi Robarts named a new cabin minister Thursday, gave ty others new duties and put the right to work. Fern Guindon, chairman the St. Lawrence commissic became minister without port! lio; Darch McKeough, minist without portfolio, became m nicipal affairs minister ai Rene Brunelle took over t mines department in addition his lands and forests portfolio. The changes followed the O 17 provincial election defeat Municipal Affairs Minister W frid Spooner (Cochrane Sout and Mines Minister Geor Wardrope (Port Arthur), After the ministers we tworn in by Lieutenant-Gove nor Earl Rowe, they took p: in a day-long cabinet meeting. Thorough } For Quebec TORONTO (CP) -- Quebe problems will get a thorou airing here in the next sev days--first at a college semir and then at Premier John I barts' Confederation of Tom row Conference. The three-day seminar t opens tonight at York Univ sity's Glendon College will hi prominent Quebec speakers v will not be héard at the Conf eration conference of fede and provincial representative Gilles Gregoire, president Ralliement nationale, is exp ed to be one of the most vo speakers at the seminar. The dependent MP for Lapointe cently tried to raise $100,000 France to finance a separa campaign in Canada. Rene Levesque, welfare nm ister in Quebec's last Libe government who would m his province an associate st is also expected to attend. PROMINENT NAMES Others expected: --Eric Kierans, president the Quebec Liberal Federa' and the man behind Mr. Le que's recent ouster from Liberal party. --Frank Scott, former dea law at McGill University an member of the Royal com: sion on Bilingualism and Bi turalism. Michael' Oliver, McGill | versity professor and the ¢ mission's former research rector. --Jean-Luc Pepin, fed "\ minister of energy, mines resources. _--Robert Cliche, leader Quebec's New Democra Party. --Claude Ryan, publishe: Montreal's Le Devoir, who American wives and ¢ dren gather at Nicosia port today as they lea Cyprus in an evacuation

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