i St BECAME Garwoute | . . Acommitted Christion for _moré™ than) 20°, years; a melancholy :. “about,” the ~ prospect of'dying.". an ‘Mwge@eertdge’ 8 trademarks have been wit, ' the:demise | of. Western , against’ ~~ establishment disaster | = he: failed. to ‘was over,” he says; John. 7 Kennédy — fraud" of all.” The United 4 : Nations — ‘f : nonsense; : brings on wars.” = 7 - journalist ‘and ‘author, / reviewing: turning working on the third volume | ofthis biography, Chronicles | of Wasted Time, | . But’ the struggle with. ‘Christlanityfor: ‘whose $088 - Muggeridge, JASPER, Alta, (CP). — The: Liberal government is - .. the first to have ‘the guts to * ead ‘the historic Crowsnest : Pau: freight tate and. : charge | Prairie . farmers : micro to ship ‘thelr grain, | ime Minister Trudeau’~ sald vt Banta. o a - “Everybody: wants the, Crow changed but no one’s ever had the guta," Trudeau . - : Old raporterng( WR DANR t i a t tent A... f ‘Trudeau was at the -posh RE eee an J Sanpers Park Lode, 980 they also. said Trudeiu Edmonton, to meet Western, farm leaders who agree on now before Parliament. ° Crow. rate to twice its _times that level by 1991. - ‘Farmers now pay about - _-I8per cent of the actual cost — goof shipping grain. By 1961, “ARE Z| ‘most: “published “religious odyaseys of modern times, ‘; communist, @ man whose ‘i most Jponstant. ‘fascination : poe? Anglican Churet — \ “whitewashed” : ‘the edge of this. - “Sussex Village, Muggeridge, ~ can't be very hen » don't want to live to 400. I've never been ° . against ‘contraception, -- pornography and drugs, m @g0; apocalyptic visions of — : civilleatlon and ‘invective - heroes. All are undimmed. _ Winston Churchill was “a. -Muggeridge, , for . Christlanity: was -not' the. notice. the British ‘Empire ~ “the biggest - . withered desires, leat. the.. ’ “a complete if anything it. '” Muggeridge is. still a: out --. newspaper: articles and” a would between The bill would raise the ‘farmers. ~ present level of $4.69 a ‘tonne a ; E- _by 1906. and raise. it five The form leaders : aid. teacher, Secind World. Wok ep: Ai, “Britain's -: M6 “nominallya member of the ~.célabrits doing. .T:-couldn't: take . it ‘setlously”” — he, became: ao ” Roman ” ‘Catholic: ....leat *.’, November, along -w th. his. wife of 84 yeara,Jitty,-” Paul . whose . Hgld; views abortion) | . divorce, rror. his own. _ It was a crusade he took up in middle life, London Times columnist Bernard. “commented acldly that only .. love . affair,.., was "begging. the world to stop trying. to - inflame’ his attempt.” should successful. mo ‘Aman.of great personal _ Prove charm but regularly. voted" ; hated “ commentator . in- the 1960s and: 08 -for.-his television . appearances, Britain’s..- most Muggeridge ‘gave: up smoking ' and -'drinkino 20 years. ago.” “beeause, the’ old mist “choose between sainthood” andauielde.. wl He's also a > they would pay about 60 per cent of the'real cost. -The: federal government ‘would. pay: a. $681-million “annual grain trarisportation: subsidy to thie railways. In a” ‘good-natured exchange. -with reporters who wanted to know what he would téll farm leaders, “Trudeau” said: "I. always. listen,” Pa 1: frequently described . Transport Minister: Jean-Luc Pepin’s : YE ale 2 halt: -belleves. in what. it's” '~ Levin. once m . : him * began March'24, 1008. Croydon: His father, Henry, wangton, , wan ne Se eves cy bm a “FATHER WAS-MP =... “The third of five sons of a: a “lower middle-class family, . Muggeridge was raised in © ' the South London dlatrict of ~A’ major attraction for. “Muggeridge is, Pope: John | welch ita fle of birt» lifetime : soclallat "ad for “two “years a “member: Ob Parliament. After. a..state school and Cambridge father's‘ Labor party and never espoused another. . “What's the matter with me is‘T’'m on no. side,” he once wrote.- | 2° ‘It's the exercise of power ‘him. ‘The . quest for sensual pleasure and the queat for . wealth, they're dangetous, but’ the ‘mbst - dangerous Bi Univeraity, | ., .Myggeridge abandoned his paasion'in ‘man is the quest” Manufacturers,” ; a os ji ‘Daily iy Telograph 1 1950-83 a and: “well as: editing the ‘satirical ’ sétyltig as ‘deputy: -editor. of ‘tnonthly. Punch. the - > conserva it “was od ‘ss end. . ROPE ‘Kasuhlro. ‘Kotmuuil, the” new: ‘director of the Winnipeg | s : ‘About Symphory. Orchestra, is about. to, trade his batori for a bat. 4 With the symphony season erided, Kolzumi sald he plans. to establish a symphony baseball team, provided he cen © find B Sponsor. °. . No stranger to orcheatras or ‘baseball [fie formed a team - ‘when He was with ‘the New Japan Philharmonic: Koizumi -. " promises not to pull rank when it comes time to pick'a team. . 7 “We. -have to- audition everybody,” " pald the: third-base - that - fascinates and repels ; for power, "heeays. “We've - had a basinful of it — we've . had” Hitler, © Mussollal, * Stalin, Roosevelt, Churchill. What a prime collection. " Muggeridge wae a foreign ‘correspondent in Moscow in 1932-88, which eae _ for, / ; _ bout ~~ Trudeau shows his grit. ; ‘Trudeau said the Prairie | Wheat Pools and the Quebec Farm Coalition made a Btronger pitch for all of the subsldy to go to the railways - . than other- groups did for splitting the payment. He also told. the. farm leaders the atrong Quebec ‘opposition td’ paying money to Western farmers had a " etrong . influence | on the cabinet.: Lime a otlginal plan as better than “FF riots " end the Se year the current legislation. - old Crow rate but-do not Pepin originally p 7 _ completely endorse-the bill, ¢ °F roposed the subsidy be ‘split ‘60-60. _ railvays and-- ; : > A A Photogenic Lick to SHOW & SELL your. Car—Van—Camper— Motoreycle~Tralr—Boat. Trudeau told them. the — “essence of the current bill ” Staying in bed | to avoid bad luck on Friday the 13th didn't. - help a Milwaukee couple. Misfortune, in the form of a ‘apeeding car, followed them into their bedroom. . Richard Clemmensen, 23, lost control of his ‘car as he . tried to pass another car.;He made a crashing entrance inks * the home of Douglas and Susan Locdcke. - televinio’, a. medium | he. says he despises. — -He: leaders... attacked oe politicians, ‘remiided ‘ibe s - British they.no longer had. ~ _an-empire and was. banned =" * temporarily by the British Soring 8 an n outety, over what “LSD. alliance struggling ~ “Lonpow’ (Reuter) ithe: " Liberal-Soctal Democratic - alliance, which boasted it - would smash the two-party “mould in Britlah politics by seizing the. middle ground, “enters. the campaign for _ ext’ “month's election struggling to survive. L. It emerged two years ago offering a-freah alterriative No one was injured, but the bottom of the Luedckes” to the right-wing. policies of - bedroom wall has a 60-centimetre dent and some furniture ‘pririe Minister Margaret was damaged. Clemmensen was charged with speeding. _ Luedcke nald he wasn’t superatitous — until now,” ~ Sentiment counts tor. ‘more than money? Ask Lenny Moore.: -. i The National Football: League ‘Hall of Farner says. “nD ‘money could replace” his world championship ring that . ‘was ‘stolen, along--with thousands. of dollars. worth of ‘household effects, from his Baltimore home.” -~*There is nothing like the original,” said Moore, an” Thatcher and the leftward- . moving Labor opposition, ’ topping public opinion polls - and looking set to form the ‘next, government. oO But’ how, °. with’. ‘the campaign under way forthe - election, it is trailing badly, ‘with less‘than 25 per cent backing In ‘public. opinion ~ plltstanding running back with Baltimore Colts during his polls. . leyear career. Moore, 51, received the ring when the Colts — "won the 1968 NFL ‘championship, ; 4 “You have guys today making $200,000 to $300,000 a year, | and yet they know that getting that ring ii more important. {want that ring bee." . . _ ‘Was that. a swift Kick to Mikhail Baryshntkov's rear? or-. ‘was the audience at New York’ ‘5 Metropolitan Opera house. ~ seeing. thinga? - ' Imagined. or not, the audience hooted ‘gleefully when -- ballerina Gelsey Kirkland — perhaps accidentally. —- gaye ‘ant Soviet-born ballet star a quick slipper an they: danced’ Giselle. Kirkland was temporarily dismissed from the Amerlean we 1 - Bookmakers giveit only a 66-to-1 ctance of winning the most seats in the election on” June. Some analysts say it” ” da in danger.of slumping to . fewer than 20 seata from its - “tally of 42 seats out of a total 635 . in _the - outgoing _ Parliament. - Roy Jenkins, leader of the ‘Social ‘Democratic party, rejects _ gloomy. + forecasts, But the cards are : thg © fantasy and if’ ‘destroys a though!" thet adele 8 ein ‘and che ro rca The Herald, Monday, am 16, 1963,. Page 7 Was seen as his attacks on. ‘the monareby, ene Muggeridge ” says. “he abhora hero -worship, ‘but 7 «newspapers distorted bis _— me : yyw of | bis biographer“ Tan‘ aoe Hunter, a Muggeridge. who . ; after ‘decades of railing has. ~ vlan of: dhe’ monarchy. It's, better, ‘than oe electing presidegts.” Weeds In 1981,:in san‘ ‘elght-part, ‘with’ new” comnientary. by: “never won more ‘than. 15: The: “Liberals, a “main force until, ‘Labor. emerged: in the 19206, have since seen | ‘several false dawns, when - _thelr “support . boomed -. between elections only to -bust-at the first big.test: Independent - computer. surveys suggest the alliance * ts in danger of following.the - same boom-and-bust pattern... Even it. it ‘pleks up a _ quarter of the natfonal vote, ‘it may slip into obscurity because the winner-take-all ; i voting. system - ineach — ‘netituency. “The computers. indicate. “that if thenewcomers win 25 per cent of the votes, they . will‘end up . with only 25 seats in the new 680-seat “parliament, of four per cent » of the. membership. To break. “through - decisively - with’ 100 seats, _ the alliance will need 35-per- cent support across ‘the: country. But its standing In opinion polls has slipped below 20 percent in-the last. week, The alliance can field a “team of leaders who are . both - _. stacked against: its bid‘ to . popular and enced in government Ballet. Theatre company. nearly three years ago by. overturn ‘voting ‘patterns. apart giset the Liberals, Baryshnikov, the company’s artistic director, During final bows, Kirkland, armed with a bouquet of : roses from an admirer, plucked one and held it invitingly to: Baryshnikov, But when he tried to take it, she backed away: and threw the flower to the floor... - ‘A spokesman for: the. company disrissed a newspaper rt of the kick as ‘just a total, absolute fabrication.” andthe floral tenga? “Spontancota horseplay;"* : Labor-and Conservatives have been swapplig power gince the Second World “War, never holding fewer “ethan 600 parliamentary” | seats “between them. The _ Liberals; long established at the ‘polltical centre, have tberet on. their” own, a ately lacked in the © ' past. Liberal | Leader “David Stee] is consistently voted one of the country’s moet popular —séwpiiticians. Jenkins, the probable prime The Rate i is. LOW & the Results are HIGH In the “middle course. It supports asted tims -l new deneration. . 7 . a a aaw was, in thie “What they, now learned ‘‘to see beyond, © “thé world, inclined ‘neither ©’ ; Ww rage with ‘impotent: fury - : “BBC rerun ‘of his TV years.‘ "Broadcasting Corp, ‘in’ 1987.-" with Muggeridge, bl his: ‘pink: face,” *thiniaber Ifthe alliance wins : power, ‘is a former Labor. © f party. deputy < leader, finance . minister . and - interlor x minister. : . er The alliance leaders ‘are. - -offering ‘policies they think... provide a clear ali tive . to the big parties, they portray as class-based and old-fashioned. : - On unemployment, likely to be the dominant election issue, they propose to cut | the jobless total, now. 3.17 | million, or 13.3 percent of - the workforce, by one. " million in two years. - This would add &3 billion — ‘to &4@ billion ($8,7.billion to . $7'6. billion). to the . government's ‘borrowing needs, the kind of reflationary package “hateher has. refused to. adopt. . Labor also wants to inject money Into the. economy, but the alliaiiee gays the. ‘Labor plan is overambitious _ and inflationary. . The alliance opposes Labor's “program fo “nationalize a numbéer. of. major industries and pull Britain out of the Zuropean | Economic.Community. ~ Ondefence, it opte for the © multilateral _disarament, ‘and. would cancel the. ‘Trident missile system a5 Britain's independent nuclear deterrent in favor of retaining the aging Polaris submarines, _— : will be pasted and | farmers ft should accept it. | _ Farm: recovary . _ delayed a year “WINNIPEG (cP) — —- The farm economy won't fee] the ’ ‘effects of econdmic upturnuntil 1984, a year later than most industries, the chief executive afficer of Co-op Implements says. . ee | believe the recession has bottomed-out, but there’s -guially about a year lag time. in working through to ~ agriculture,” Vic E. Kuffner gaid in an interview. “We're hopeful of major’ improvement In demand In late * 1984 and early 1965 when our objective Is to bring the Plant _ a préduction capacity. n . Comp,a farm implenient maker and distributor, cut staff’ to-649 from 950 a year ago. However, Kuffner sald the firm expects to rehire 280 workers in the fiscal year beginning In November and to beat full strength in two years. “Kuffner, who has spent 17 years with the company, moat recently as director of marketing, was named chief "** gxecutive ‘officer late last month. - ‘We may have to get back to, full ‘production because ‘inventories haya been depleted," he said. “There's ' potential to add 360 or more plant workers. BUILD ON SOLID BASE Kuffner said the firm's move to trim fat from ite. operations means it will never climb back up to 1976 “employment levels of 1,150. _ “But with solid supervisory and middle base to build on, we hope by fiscal 1985 to hjt the total of about 1,000 that we had in 1981-Kefore the slump set in.” _ ‘The. recovery. won't be. entirely smooth, Kuffner sald, . | there may still-be bottlenecks. int the system because | 5 suppliers of eH ds falling interest rates have helped companies _ and farmers operating on credit, and commoilty prices are < expected to-increase a4 8 result of the U.S. program to hold ; raw materials have ‘also trimmed theli: grain and oilseed iand out of production this year. : There is huge pent-up demand for farm machinery after ee two years of limited purchanes.of big-ticket items, Kuffner 9}: °° increased cash flow will eventually miake it. anid, Therefore, “possible for farmers to place machinery orders. "He sald the company got Into financial difficulty-as a : result of too much high-cost, short -term debt. Co-op now is planning to Increase capitalization with an equity issue of sad million to its 90,000 members, meanagement : _terrace-kitimat daily herald AF be ae Se a | Low Rates for PICTURE Your CAR, BOAT, RV IN ANY ‘ONE OF THESE SPACES High Results | Bring in your own picture or drive to our office at 3010 Kalum St., Motz Piaza, Terrace, B. Cc. We will take a photo between 1 & 5 pm dally. ONLY *30°° For 5 INSERTIONS Including a 25-word description Remember “a picture i is worth 1000 words” SHOW & SELL ORDER FORM - ~ Write One Word: Per Space we es ee ae me al i OS ee ‘ee et eee ee ee ad om me Cede ioe aoe a - os ~ PUBLISH-DATE ‘This business is very capital intedalvo, ind we have to’ “ - have that in equity and operate on mu less. borrowed | Yo money than in the pat.” | "ai i ie gm re on 2 ote ion ad ae Hf : -_ oe sa, ee oh ee lea oral wetter CITY es ae PHONE Bae