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Edmonton Journal from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada • 23

Publication:
Edmonton Journali
Location:
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Pioneering spirit still needed, church is told THE EDMONTON JOURNAL, Monday, Nov. 30, lii70 23 Soviet boss pledges military aid to Hanoi Soviet writer won't collect Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM (Reuter) Soviet novelist Alexander Solzhen-itsyn has personally confirmed that he decided not to come to Stockholm to collect his Nobel Prize for literature because he feared he would not be allowed I Israel offers new talks with Arabs TEL AVIV (AP) Defence Minister Moshe Dayan says Israel is ready for unconditional peace talks with the Arabs, but it is not going to give up the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip and command of the Strait of and challenges" pioneer clergymen in Western Canada accepted. The challenge today, he said, is mental, rather than physical. "Are we really contacling mod against an enemy radar-con- Tiran. Speaking to a Labor party rally Sunday night, Dayan listed these territorial goals as Israel's "guidelines" for MOSCOW (AP) Leonid I.

Brezhnev, boss of the Soviet Communist parly, pledged con tinuuig Soviet military aid to Hanoi Sunday and said United States efforts in North Vietnam increase the will of the North Vietnamese tenfold. U.S. air and commando raids into North Vietnam last weekend were attempts to "seize some so-called 'rights' for the U.S. in the airspace of another country," the party's general secretary said in a speech in Yerevan, the capital of Soviet Armenia. Breznev also d'scussed Southeast Asia, European problems trolled anti-aircraft position land that "protective reaction is the inherent right of self-de fence.

But after the raids last week end, Defence Secretary Melvin Laird broadened protective re action to include protection for Cargo jets collide; 2 lolled negotiations, along with a demand for an agreement that pilots flying strikes against North Vietnamese supply routes through Laos to Cambodia and Sou.h Vietnam. The F-105 that made the attack today was on such an Attack mission and was not 'escorting a reconnaissance plane, informed sources said. The attack was the third in three months by a U.S. plane against radar-controlled guns in North Vietnam before the North Vietnamese fired. Such attacks also were reported Aug.

28 and Sept. 5. The U.S. Navy today announced another raid on a PoW camp Nov. 2, this one in South Vietnam and this one successful.

The navy said a team of.15 Americans and 19 South Vietnamese militiamen raided a Viet Cong camp in a dense bamboo grove in the southern Mekong Delta and freed Vietnamese. PHNOM PENH (Reuter)--- Students will aid consumer by Soviet authorities to re-enter the country. The 51-year-old author outlined his position in a letter to the Nobel foundation and the Swedish Academy which ar rived today, three days after he told the Swedish embassy in Moscow that he would not come here for the awards ceremony The director of the foundation, Nils Staahle, said that Solzhenit-syn had explained that "he felt his situation was a bit too risky" to leave the Soviet Union. Solzhenitsyn left open the question of how the academy could get the $76,800 prize to him. Staahle said.

Reports from Moscow and from literary sources here all indicate that Solzhenitsyn investigated the prospects of being able to collect the prize personally without facing banishment, and directly or indirectly was given to understand that the chances were slim. MacEwan opens Scottish centre Lt. Gov. Grant MacEwan of ficially onened the Edmonton Scottish Society's cultural and recreational centre near Etler-slie Saturday. The society has just completed the centre on the 20 acre park, which stands as a tribute to Scottish pioneers in Northern Alberta.

The centre, which bears the name Grant MacEwan Park, was opened during the St. An drew's dinner and ball. and the Middle East. He said: I "There is no doubt that the11' AV (A) cause of the Vietnamese people Af'mes eth will triumph. Its people can relyiJ with full confidence on the sup- cr? I port of the Soviet Union." other tP01 Pane on the -j tu ir- 'same runway at Lod Interna-He said the Soviet-North Viet-tional Airport before dawn namese agreement on military Sunday, killing two ground crew and economic aid signed nimembers injuring two oth-Moscow last month "is con-iers viln'cilnl Wh6re the Both planes caught fire and Soviet Union stands.

burned, scattering wreckage along the main runway. SAIGON (AP) A U.S. police said the TAW Boeing fighter-bomber made another 707 had barely got its wheels off "self-defence attack" on North the runway when an Israeli Vietnam early today, hitting an Stratocruiser appeared in the anti-aircraft position bVz miles darkness in front of the cargo north of the demilitarized zone plane. The Israeli aircraft was before the gun emplacement being towed by two men on a could fire on the plane. tractor.

Informed sources said the The American captain tried to pilot of the F-105 Thunderchief 1 avoid a collision but the learned from his electronic det-i Boeing's left wing hit the strato-ection gear that he was being cruiser, tracked by ground radar and; Both men on the tractor were that it had begun computing the killed. point at which to fire. I The three-man crew aboard' A U.S. communique said the the TWA aircraft escaped un-attack was "protective reaction harmed. North Vietnamese and Cong forces holding Pass, 62 miles southwest of this-Cambodian capital, have beheaded some of their dead conv rades to prevent identification, Cambodian field officers said" Sunday.

The officers said they saw several guerrillas carrying the heads of comrades slain in the. battlefield and speculated that; those decapitated could be Chinese, North Korean or Laotian' Pathet Lao Communists. There was no official confir-r mation of this. One officer said he saw more -than 100 Viet Cong bodies east; of Pich Nil Pass Friday. Some, of the bodies were headlessr 4 Days Starting Tues.

Dec. 1 The pioneering spirit which established McDougall United Church must live on to meet today's challenges, the church's congregation was told Sunday. In a service marking the 99th anniversary of the founding of Alberta's oldest Protestant congregation, Western Catholic Reporter editor Douglas Roche paid tribute to the "hardships He made $1,000,000 in 3 days CANBERRA (CP) William Singline was not oarticu-'arly a well-educated man. He had the characteristics of a rough-and-ready country man from Australia's island state of Tasmania. But the 58-year-old Singline thought up a scheme to make a million dollars in three days.

What's more, it worked. He made many stock exchange gamblers angry and much poorer. He caused three state governments to set up an inquiry. But today William Singline is as free as ever, no better educated, yet considerably richer. Singline was for years a small-time prospector, searching for minerals in Australia's cutback.

He set up a comoany with his wife and family called Tasminex and took Out leases in remote areas. At the beginning of this year Australians were starry-eyed over the nickel discoveries made by a firm called Poseidon. The value of this film's shares raced up to more than 200 in a mad buying frenzy. $688 no Arab army ever cross the River Jordan to advance on Israel. But these are not pre-conditions, Dayan asserted, because the Arabs would not "have to sign their agreement in ad vance." "We will sit together and discuss these matters," he said.

All the territory listed by Dayan was captured 'in the 1967 war; along with the Old City of Jerusalem, Jordanian territory on tne west bank of the Jordan River, and the rest of the Sinai Peninsula west and northwest of the Strait of Tiran. israers determination to re tain the Golan Heights, the Gaza Strip and the western shore of the Tiran Strait, be tween the Gulf of Aqaba and the Red Sea, has been repeatedly stated. Dayan made no mention of Uld Jerusalem, but the Israeli government has said a number of times that it would not give that up. Dayan said Israel wants to negotiate "to examine ways to end the fighting because there is no point in war." He told his party, however, that "if the war is resumed, we will fight." Israel broke off indirect nego tiations with Egypt and Jordan at the United Nations on Sept. 6, charging that Egyptian move ments of anti-aircraft missiles toward the Suez canal had vio lated the ceasefire which was preliminary to the talks.

Deputy Premier Yigal Allon told another Labor party meeting Sunday that the Israeli gov- ernment has "moral, political and military justification" to go back to the talks. Otherwise, he said, the world would blame Is rael for the failure to achieve peace. The deputy premier said the Israeli cabinet would decide in a few days what conditions are necessary before the talks can be resumed. These will involve the Egyptian missile buildup along the Suez canal, he said, but he gave no indication what modification Israel would make in its demand that the missiles be returned to their disposition before the ceasefire. Egypt has said repeatedly it will move no missiles back.

The Israeli government today accused Egypt of building more new anti-aircraft missile sites in the 30-mile standstill zone along the canal. It was the 24th Israeli complaint of missile activity since the ceasefire went into effect Aug. 7 and the fourth since renewal of the agreement on Nov. 6. Toronto probe TORONTO (CP) Toronto board of health will investigate the problem of cockroaches in apartment buildings.

Alderman John Sewell, a board member, said that some apartment buildings are havens for cockroaches that can travel freely along water pipes. ern man? Many people in the churches fear we are not. He said the modern church must move in two directions. It must be a sanctuary where the gospel is taught and, at the same time, it must extend its work into the community to reach modern men dominated by technology. "The cross has two directions vertical and horizontal," and the church should use this as an analogy for dual spheres of interest and work.

Mr, Roche, a Roman Catholic layman, told the congregation there are risks involved in such a course of action. "We might lose the people we've had all along and still not win over the new generation," he said. But it is a risk the church must take to ensure its survival. Crew member dies in barge explosion WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) A docked barge loaded with gallons of gasoline ex ploded today on Seneca Lake killing one crew member.

Two others were missing. The barge and its tug were tied up in Watkins Glen harbor at terminal facilities of the Southern Oil just off shore. Officials identified the dead man as Peder Pedersen, 53, a deckhand. His body was recovered by divers. The missing crewmen were identified es Charles Wellington, 42.

acting barge captain; and Edward Bixby, 57, a pumpman. NATIONAL Hockey Game $16.98 Volut Sol Sft 81 s16 18 Set 99 0 1307 CFl Foothill 14.98 Sale Hot Dual "i Mrs. Whuzers 1.79 Sale IDEAL'S Ants 1 KlEL TM $1088 PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Dr. Adolph S. Butkys, a crippled Villanova University professor, wants to use consumer protection "to make this world of ours a better if not groovier place to live in." Severely handicapped and confined to a wheelchair since a childhood accident, Butkys teaches business is called by his friends "a happy, garrulous guy who has a super brain." He hopes to use his thinking powers to help the poor, the exploited and the uneducated to budget their money and get better a perhaps out-Nader Ralph Nader, his idol and inspiration.

That's why Butkys organized the National Student Consumer Protection Council, which moves into high gear at Villanova Friday when some 3,000 students from colleges and universities across the U.S. get campus charters. Specifically, the idea is to have students go into the slums and help families design a weekly budget by setting up a single bookkeeping system. Or help them choose the TV set, furniture, even groceries which are the best deal for their money. Butkys calls this "consumerism," and defines it broadly as "any legal but effective activity carried out by all who oppose and object to any and all business operations which profit the businessman at the undeniable expense of their respective customers regardless of the political, social, or economic powers of the customers." Couple wed 50 years Mr.

and Mrs. Jack Gallagher, former long-time residents of Edmonton, recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary. The couple, now retired and living in Eugene, Oregon, lived here 47 years. Mr. (jailagher operated a barber shop for 40 years until his retirement 1967.

Mr. and Mrs. Gallagher, who were married in Vermillion have two children, six grandchildren and one great-grand child. Congratulatory messages were received from Premier Strom land Grant MacEwan, By Dorothy Gregory. Elcctrdofitt COMPARE: 1.

Frankness about rejrowtli 2. Method of epilation used 3. Modtrnness of equipment 4. Specialization of clinic 5. Exclusive treatment aids S.

Responsible organization 7. Guaranteed results Then you see the special two-way epilators used by Gregory technicians, and a number cf exclusive treatment aids that help make Gregory thermolysis faster, more comfortable, and less expensive. These improvements, these "extras' are benefits you get from an international organization that has specialized in thermolysis for IS years, that keeps its specialists in constant training, that sponsors research in both private and public laboratories. Why don't you "sample" Gregory thermolysis this week, to see what it's like? Your Gregory Clinic is in the Cambridge Building Suite 708 Open Week Davs 10 A.M. to 7 P.M.

Saturday 9 to 12. Phone 429- 7696. MATTEIS Hot Wheels Sprint Set 15.98 Value Sale 4 K-' Sale 14c Each 3 Blind Mice Nervous Breakdown Kookie Spookie Betsy Teen IT5 "Dolls Electric Clothes Game 00 OOl Value lA 1.39 Value. iHiH VlUU Sale Each UU MATTEL'S MATTEt'S Hot Wheel Wheel Rod UBlS $8.88 5 J49 HASBRO'S ELu0N'S Aft Munchie OO OO Hfl 00.00 vLoo AURORA Models-Cars MATTEL'S Tanks OflC 130 QQl Valu HV 150 Valu lrlV LiS Sale VU Cherry in The Pants VO QQ PieGame OO 00.00 irt 1.00 98 Value When you "shop" for permanent hair removal, use this check-list Malt It Hot Wheel s2 88 Grand Prix 39.98 Valu Sale I Car 6.98 Value Sale rs. Hot Wheels Rod Runner Set 8.98 Value Sale Doll Train Case $4 1.98 Value DEC'70 P.

42 TWO out of five Gregory clients try permanent hair removal at some other establishment before coming to us. What about "reverse traffic" from Gregory to others? Almost none. And we'd know. I think, because we keep in touch with most of our clients for years. This is one way Gregory is different.

We don't care to give you a few minutes treatment and forget you. Our goal is to solve your hair problems permanently. And we guarantee to do just that if you help us. You may be surprised at the frankness of your Gregory clinic Director. After examination, she tries to answer all questions plainly and honestly.

She even goes beyond your questions to tell you what not to expect from thermolysis. What Causes For instance, you're shown why there may be some "misses" in long-tweezed areas of your skin, because of hair roots pulled out of position. This is why the Director will insist you give us time to go back over some areas to complete the clearance. You're also shown the differences between Gregory thermolysis and older methods and why medical writers generally say not that "electrocoagulation" (thermolysis) "is the method of choice todav." AVAILABLE AT TH FOLLOWING STORE Sale Stony Plain Rd. 4 CLOCK VARIETY STORE SPRAGUE DRUGS CAPILAN0 DRUGS CAPILANO MALL SHOPPING CENTRE GRIESBACH DRUGS 13550-97 St.

VSl 155 Sr..

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