If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It The Guardian = bers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew De Gaulle’s Re-Election Assured In New Vote United Nations Decision Due On Financing Of Peace Force vavele “eee entevan 220N3S eee oe GOES TO ENGLAND U.K. Prime Minister Har- turn to England Sunday. did Wilson (RIGHT) and Prime Minister Pearson Mrs. Wilson (CENTRE) ac- (LEFT) looks on as Mr. Wil- cept miniature editions of - admires a giant version Canada’s unofficial good-will of the owl. Lionel Chevrier, ambassador Ookpik, the Arc-~ Canadian high commissioner tic owl, just Before the couple to Cg ont We. » Peete boarded their aircraft to re‘ can ground. The miniature owls were gifts of the Fort Chime Eskimo Co-operative Aassocia- tion, who make the Ookpiks from seal skins. Mr. Wilsof spent Sunday in conference with Mr. Pearson. (CP Wirephote) Four Children Lose Lives ; In Toronto Dwelli .TORONTO (CP) — Fire {which Mr. and Mrs. Walter Son- | claimed the lives ‘of three of Mr. jier, their three children, and Mrs, William Wilkins’ four Mr. Sonier’s brother, and Stanley, children -at their suburban ‘East died in their Toronto tome last |kins was driven to Toronto In- enemy York home Saturday «and the |Tuesday. fourth died in ‘hospital 4} On Saturday, A grieving Mrs. Wilkins Mrs. Wilkins’ children, John, 4; Mark, x and iher sister, ing Fire Both Mr. and Mrs. Wilkias jwere originally from Saint Joha, pce age ig Pra Saggy 2 Sn rag legs © 5 Gt [Pettie, ho. Sea Wee Be) family but I didn't think at their home. would ever “t& me."*“/Matthéw 2, died in - rence Se cneny See fee ee ee British PM Has Hope = For Peace In Viet Nam By DAVE McINTOSH.. \Rhodesia would turn itself into OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Min- a return te constitutional gov- (ster Wilson said Sunday he ‘ernment. hopes that “before iong’’ there | Wilson arrived” at noon can be some joint action by | for a six-hour visit. He Britain and Russia on getting jis-en route home after talks in negotiations started on Viet Washington with president Jonhn- Gen’ ' WEATHER Cloudy with a few snowflurries and very cold; winds 5 and 20. : wot MORE SEVEN CENTS northwesterly 20. Low-high 18 PAGES By BORIS UNITED NATIONS (CP) | The United Nations ee eae rule | today on a Canadian designed to put the UN ted gency Force — which includes | nearly 950 Canadians—in the | Middie East on a more stable | financial footing. The current session of the | 20th General Assembly is sched- uled to wind up Tuesday and the. 117-nation. organization has yet to give Secretary-General | U_Thant.. authorization to ¢on- tinue in operation the first UN peacekeeping force, set up nine New Surge Of Fighting ‘In Viet Nam ot aed Ay i. ~~ te a South viet Nam Sunday. On three fronts, U.S. marines and atmy forces clashed with sizable numbers of ee cs ead sneak ing nearly 200 of them. | Just 30 miles east of Saigon, army troops, several jyears ago as & result = the Suez crisis. Introducing the Canadia draft resolution — co - sored by Brazil, Denmark, Li beria, The Netherlands, Nor- way, the Philippines and Sweden — in- the assembly’s | | budgetary committee late Sat- urday, Canadian delegate Stuart Hemsley said: “It is a se and as compromi. such it is not completely ™ the’ itaste of any of us, but ‘it is our be able to support it as the best answer that can be obtained under the. _ difficult circum- RUSSIA AGAINST IT The Soviet Union said shortly after the draft was introduced a it could not support the because the entire ‘of the assembly. hope that--most delegations will | question of daduatinag’ peace ‘and security can only be de. cided in the 1l-nation Security Council and not in a committee The United States and France are expected to abstain and Britain may vote in favor of the ‘draft. Canada and the co-spon- sors hope that despite lack of big-power support enough mem- ber countries will throw their weight in favor of the proposal | to put it over. have the developed nations con- tribute a total of $14,200,000 to- ward the operation of the Emer- \gency Force in 1965, with the junderdeveloped nations paying ;$800,000—for a total of $15,000,- ‘000. The remaining $3.911,0 of the 1965 budget would come from the $21,00,000 in voluntary ‘contributions already made. ASTRONAUTS WELCOMED Poor Weather Disrupts Colorful Cape Ceremony \when the record-setting space tions," The Canadian draft would | | DIES SUDDENLY Kondendera Subayya Thimayya, Indian commander | - Gen. of the UN Peace Force in Cyprus, died of heart failure at his Nicosia home early Satur- day, a UN mn an- nounced. He was 60. His body is being sent to India for burial. (AP Wirepheote). said astronaut Donald Victory By PETER BUCKLEY PARIS~“(CP) = Charies de Gaulle was re-elected to the French presidency for a second seven-year term Sunday with a comfortable but not overpower- ing majority. With 23,076,966 of the esti- mated 2,500,000 votes counted inthe second ballot for the presidency, the 75-year-old gen- eral had approximately 5% per cent of the valid votes, com- pared with 45 per cent for his left-wing rival, Feaaan Mitter- rand. The .latest count gave de Gaulle.-12,610,049 votes and Mit- terrand 10,466,916. Again the French voters | flocked to the polls. The final | ‘figures were .expected to show |that the number who voted ap- | | proached the nearly 85 per cent | of those eligible who cast bal- lots two weeks ago in the first | vote for the presidency. There was no immediate com ment from de Gaulle, at hs | country home in Col Deux-Ezglises, in the east: LOOKED DRAWN Mitterrand, a 49-year-old law- yer posts in Ses old fourth republic, | jlooked drawn when he met re- |porters in Paris after conceding | Vietory, one hour and 80 min- jutes after the polls closed. He refused to congratulate de | \ Gaulle on the grounds he does Is Comf who held several cabinet day Margin ortable yat least a two-year breathing -spell, untit the next parliamen- tary elections; to push through his main objectives: A reform lof the European Common Mar- ket to make sure that individ. jual member countries keep ‘veto power on policy decisions, and a révision of the North | Atlantic Treaty Organization to leliminate the present integra- ition of forces. | British Prime Minister Wil ison, ¢ommenting in Ottawa jafter talks with Prime Minister \Pearson, said he looks forward to a period of close co-oper- Lation_with de Gaulle. Britain lstill hoped to make .a viable |success of NATO and hoped de iGaulle ‘‘will ‘be as anxious as lwe are to do so.’ Only Shuffle, Dief’s View NEW YORK (CP) — Progres- \sive Conservative Leader John \Diefenbaker said Saturday the many changes announced Fri- in Prime Minister Pear- son’s cabinet “were not of any lsignificance, except for one ef two additions.” |. The opposition leader declined to discuss names during a radio- \telephone interview with a re 'N.B. Sunday afternoon Mrs. Wil- ‘By JIM STROTHMAN company after pounding | CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) travellers landed at “Skid Slayton, director of the Gemint jnot regard the result ae being lporter of The C oe ternational Airport to meet-her aout, San 1 create | ea at Se RS Cape Seemed’. roe. '7 crew. in the best interests of France. pictemmeler- 068-0 svete mother Mrs. Mona Walker, and |@Ttillery. shells. mutual congratula- | Instead, Schirra was lurking LLED WAGER He vowed to start right away \aboard the aan Mrs. _iameee seoamped ooetars amit ae ee US. ereiele. | mrad Seiler wee _lrkig canes \im preparing for the 1967 parlia~ jof Canada. en route to New troops in Death Valley fit uly be Flere on { - One of the first things the four | nary elections, to make |York after a Caribbean voyage. a was e. — south of Da Nang, 380 miles | nore Sy oi Me : Ap Barman and.2™ did was call of thelr feta the “decisive... encounter tw more...of a shuffle Soe _ ee Accs of here. sida = the — licized bet over [that will save the republic. from than anythifig else, he teid-of The fire destroyed mash of Members of the U.S. lst Cav- |aq poeering {Lavell ‘aed Gown he. Daley nid land cones to te which a |the shakeup in the cabinet. the Watkins’ tented som - - primary recovery hip, Whe a | igised Gouliem wil pIUNE® The former prime’ minister ick and frame $ astronauts Walter | swinging his arms wildly, as if j craft carrier Wasp. .- jit.” lenid he might comment after into action against a Viet Cong ttalion 265 miles northeast of diate’ ‘ iechiy asoceron. be Wain ee eee: een ee a Schirra un Thomas Stafford i Gemini 7 astronauts were not on hand to greet their landing instructions. Gemini 7 counterparts, Frank’! “There was 2 lot of hand- | Borman and James A. Lovell, \shaking. and mutual congratula-.| Slayton said Schirra insisted! that an accelerameter, an in- oS Division (airmobile) went istrument used in landing; was Amert- campaign Sept. 9 but he quickly attracted official | Mitterrand a. entered the \the Empress of. Canada docks ia his OWS. iNew York Wednesday. from both Socialists and | | Nam. However, he told a press con- _ ference after four hours of talks | jauntily swinging - was vicked up along the way by Trade Minister Sharp who - e with Prime Minister Pearson, | [Pearson would like Mr. Wilson | the key to negotiations lies in Communist North Viet Nam. Mr. Wilson said his ‘‘sensitive entannaé” have detected ~a “slight whisper, @ marginal | change" in Hanoi attitade on | talks. peace But he is not aware, he said, of any clear evidence that Hano! | as to_ negotiate. Mr. Wilson said serious’ nomic difficulties already are son’ and an address to the | |United Nations in New York. He left at 6:08 p.m. Informed sources said Mfr. ito call an extraordinary meet- ing of iministers to deal-with the Rho- desian problem. However, aides to Mr, Wilson | ~\said-such~“a° move now ~appears~/° ‘unlikely. The British prime ~ minister said his government is “‘willing ealth prime | “Mrs —W-i+-k-+-n-s---had-—fallen- jasleep on a couch in the Ii iSeoen at. watching. television. Upstairs in the froot. bedroom, \the two youngest chijdren were fneseng. seeker arenes 900, = and Mark wefe playing in the | seiaeiant seenadlinr aoa. |. The police arson squad said ‘Sunday they believed the fire started in the basement. can “casualties as light. tailed U.S. aif raids on North Viet” Nam,= U.S: ~ officials” ‘re ported. U.S. Air Force planes flew only visual missions there, they said. Action im, the field contrasted to relative quiet in this South Vietnamese capital where U.S. officials feared Viet Cong agents planned terrorist attacks | against U.S. installations to | celebrate today's. fifth anniver- Cong movement. Zambia Seeks sri" © ‘Canadian Aid OTTAWA (CP) — The Cana- \dian government. is giving “‘ur- igent consideration” to a request. ‘from Zambia for some transport iplanes to assist in the airlift of il. to_that_land-locked African jcountry, a ‘neighbor of Rhode- sia, informed sources said Sun- | day. the Rhodesian question, lto consider”. going to a'Com-;| They added that Prime Min- eco- |monwealth prime ministers’ jister Wilson in his talks with ¢_- Minister —Pearson--sup-- developing in Rhodesia tccoual to ‘be held in Lagos, Nigeria, ported: the Zambian request: of sanctions. But it was impossible to form | \Jan. 10. ~ But .informants said it | It is not known here how now |many planes or of what a view on the exact time when does not appear that this con- Zambia has asked Canada to the economic disclocation ia iference will take place. \provide. Swearing-In Ceremonies Held For Federal Cabinet By JAMES* OTTAWA (CP) NELSON The firm ator reprvieattily the Ottawa Valley constituency of Renfrew cabinet, representing Mont- real'’s St. Lawrence-St. George, | phase of Prime Minister Pear-| South in the Commons, as min- as a minister without portfolio. son’s new-look cabinet shuffle poor of agriculture, succeeding was completed Saturday with the swearing-in of four new ministers and new oaths of of- fice taken by four others. The next sten will be re-as signinent of cabinet portfolio re- ape sibilities: by order-in-counci and the addition of Robert H - Winters as trade minister early in the New’ ¥ear. Then Parlia ment will be asked at the ses sion opening Jan. 18 to revise cabinet vortfolio legislation. Prime Minister Pearson was in 2 lightrearted mood when he presenied his new ministers to Governor - General Van'er 2nd attended mony Saturday- at Government Heuse. the swearing-in cef- }. Warry Hays of Calgary. Jean Marchand, 47, articulate, ‘ormer labor leader represent- ing Quebec West, as minister of | citizenship a’nd immigration who later will become minister | of manpower in the newly aligned cabinet. Jean-Pierre Cote, %. ‘quiet He started out to walk aiden across Sussex Street and up the lone driveway to Rideau Hall. a cane, but drove his own car to Govern- tent House and was sworn in | finance minister. “Hew ‘Tininisters installed were: J. J. (Soe) Greene, 4%, mp. | and soft-spoken’ MP for Long- centuries mentary ueuil, son of a postmaster, 88 \tory. Soca vot poastmaster-general. Sworn inte new portfolios ta |’ Jobn Turner, 36, the ge oy | addition to Mr. Sharp, were: ; and “nice-guy” member of Al MacEachen, 44, former | ~~ \Yabor ‘minister, as minister of eee. o oar health - = health mi 41, former ONLY 5 Er wiaister as secretary of e state SHOPPING eo) Sean Lee Pepin, 41, former : -minister— —— ‘DAYS TILL Pie a TO SECRECY The new ministers took oaths lot allegiance,- oaths of Privy ‘Council membership and ‘of office in their new _portf |The Privy Council oath swears ja member to traditional cabinet isecrecy and to defend the Crown ‘against any plots, a venerable pledge’ war ah down. through mines minister. Under statutory provisions, there will be a reshuffle of cab- inet responsibilities looking to wards a new lineup of portfolios which oa parliamentary parliamentary typ |turned to her hotel about 1 a.m. Brigitte Bardot Has Eye Injury NEW YORK (AP)=A_ press agent said Brigitte Bardot suf- fered an eye injury early Sun- | day when a _ photographer's camera flashed close to her. Publicist John Dartique said the French actress' eye was in- flamed and slightly swollen. He’ said she saw a. ee ‘bet 9 Once more bad weather cur] | other, HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) Gemini 7, with a strong assist from Gemini 6, established 11 records for manned space Here are the new marks re- t gg manned space- flight—330 hours, 35 minutes, by US. Air Force ‘Lt.-Col. Frank Borman and Navy Cmdr. imi 7, exceeding the mark of 190 hours, 55. minutes by Gem- ini 5 astronauts L- Gordon Cooper Jr. and Charles Con- rad Aug. 21-29. 2. First’ rendezvous of twe eraft—As Gemini 7 and Gem- ini 6 flew 20 hours, 22_mis- utes, within 62 miles of each including a minimum The incident occurred, Date que said, as Miss Bardot re- after attending a party follow- ing the premiere of her new movie. Dartique said if™stil) was to be determined ‘whether Miss Bardot will fly to Los Angeles today as scheduled. She arrived distance of six to 10 feet. Rus- sia twice had two spacecraft within four’ miles of each other but ‘the ships apparently were not manoeuvrable and are. not believed to have flown in formation. . 3. Total man hours in space for one country—1.352 hours, 42 minutes by the United here Thursday from Paris. States, compared with 507 hours, 16 minutes - — oo James Lovell of Gem- | GEMINI 7 ESTABLISHES TF RECORDS IN SPACE. 4. Individuals with most space-flight time — Borman minutes, hours, 15 minutes, held by Cooper for his Mercury 9 and_ Gemini 5: flights. -5. Longest multi - manned spaceflight—Gemini’7, surpass | ing the 190 hours, 56 minutes by Gemini 5. | 6. Most orbits for a manned | space flight—206 by Gemini 7, exceeding 120 by Gemini 5. 7.-Most miles travelled ona mapned space flight—5,129,400 | by Gemini 7, surpassing the 3,338.200 by Gemini 5. 8 Most manned _ flights— | United States 11, Russia 8. | 9. Most men sent into space | —16 by the Unifed States (13 | astronauts, with three of them ‘making two flights), 11. 10. Most manned flights is ene year by one country—5 by the United States, exceeding | old record of 3 Mercury flights | by, U.S. in 1962. 1i. ‘Most men sent into space in one year by one country— 10 by the United States in | 1965, exceeding 3 US...in.. 1962 and 3 by Russia in 1964: | and Love with 330 hours, 35. | exceeding the 25 | ee ee as for. Schirra bringing Gemini 6 down slightly farther away from this..target. than. Borman, a Weather disrupted what was to be a colorful cere- j;mony for the astronauts on the irunway. Their welcome’ was ab- |breviated by an on - again, off- lagain rain. Florida Governor Haydon | ‘Burns, who planned to be on hand to give the astronauts an \ofticial seal of statel could not fly to the cape because of the | weather, officials said. Gemini ispace with Gemini 7 last week, coming as close as six feet te \the Borman-Lovell spaceship. | Borman and Lovell .—. along iwith 11 officials. of the National listration and. medical experts— 6 rendezvoused io | | Aeronautics and Space Admin* \Communists. When he finished ‘a strong , second on the first ballot. Dec. 5, he compeigned bn the ecnlidtie of all republi- cans,"” and succeeded in ‘getting support from about half of those who had voted for other opposi- ition candidates in the iround. | Phe easy victory restored at Jeast some of the austere de | Gaulle’s political prestige. GETS BREATHING SPELL - | The victory gives de Gaulle | Language Riots Erupt In Belgium _ BRUSSELS (Reuters) — Fitty persons were injured Sunday when language riots erupted is ‘the Belgian region of Fourons, on the Dutch border. | | Police had to break up clashes lbetween Flemish nationalists land French-speaking Walloons, ithe Belgian news agency te ‘ported. First Zambia Oil-Lift Aircraft Narrowly Misses Disaster LUSAKA (AP) — The first |jacked up. and pulled clear. arrived at 1:48 p.m., each co \British airlift plane bringing oil | But fears that Zambia's two ipiloting separate eight-passen- | ip g Pp: iger navy aircraft which | (Contioned on page 3, col. 4) \to Zambia to beat Rhodesian blockade arrived here Sunday and tore 12-inch-deep furrow in ‘the eirporé, tarmac as it taxied | INSIDE TODAY Russia hele a a Lovell, of Gemini 7. At RIGHT és fellow astronaut Denatd Slayion (AP Wirephote) i'to- an. unloading - bay. The plane, an RAF Britannia loaded with 2,370 - gallons of leaned - over~-dan- its wheels “Idiesel fuel; igerously as muddy gfound beneauth for a distance of 10 feet. + An inquirys by .RAF officers showed the plane had followed a white guiding line instead of a yellow line and had it tarmac only an eighth of an inch thick. The drama was watched by President Zambia and Britain's Common- |wealth relations minister of \state, Cledwyn Hughes, on hand to. welcome the first airlift plane: | While RAF men quickly, un- loaded the 54-drums_ of. fuel. to -jease the strain on ‘the aircraft, ‘others dug around the wheel, to ‘enable the Britannia to be s8T. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)- .jexpanding winter tered Newfoundland Sunday, jwith northern andy western sec- tions of the provi feeling the effects of. heavy snow and strong winds. si Close to 10 inches of snow ern parts of the province dur- ing the night. By mid-afternoon many sections of highway in the eastern sections were still blocked but the precipitation had changed to a mixture [snow andyrain or drizale. _ A 15mile section of _ the |Trans Canada Highway from bit | » through the tar surface into the Kenneth Kaunda of storm oe § felt over—eastern—and—santheast-— imajor airfields, at Lusaka ‘at Ndola in the copperbelt miles to the north, would crack up under the strain of a sus itained._ airlift were discounted ‘RUNWAYS OK. coMapse of:-the runways under the stress of aircraft Nanding,”” he “said. ‘The run lways are specially stressed to take the extra weight.” Another senior RAF officer said: “This accident is just a bit of a. boob.” Oil-is on the way to Zambia on other routes also, by road, rail and lake. Heavy trucks are still moving south from Tan- zania’s southernmost raithead at Mikumi with fuel “brought down “from. Mombasa by rail and other supplies ‘are being to transferred to vessels on Lake Tanganyika to join up— with ‘Zambian trucks on ‘he southern border of Tawzania ED jeral % Expanding Storm. . ~ Lashes At Nfld. Whitbourne north to Sidi was reported blocked Central and western sections began to feel the effec's by late morning with St Anthony on the northern peninsula reporting heavy. snow and northerly winds of 4 miles an hour ‘vith gusts to 70 miles an hour. Snow” was Port aux Basques area. Air traffic in and out of Gander was disrupted, Ships east anc south of the - of island province were reporting gales of 60 knots and high séas. Two hunters lost_overnight i= woods south of here made their iway to safety Sunday by the RAF force commander, -Jan-MeDougal. . “There os agen heavy in the Corner Brook and