ACTUALLY WE, AH. ARE LOOKING FOR SOMETHING IN RUNNING SHOES/ TESTE AT A Children of Hanoi. | be the year when the force)” an end to the aggression # that is the road to an en@. the possibility of growing! SSS > als S>>>5 >> ay Ce eT reese SSS os CRUES With the race on for the leadership of the Liberal Party, the refurbishing plan of monopoly of its political spokesmen is moving into stage two. The first having been the replacement of John Diefenbaker by Robert Stanfield. Speculation about the possible choice for the April convention ranges be- tween the old veterans like Paul Martin and Mitchell Sharp and and new comers like John Turner. It would certainly not be surprising that the third stage, a new federal election, will be hard on the heels of the Liberal convention. Between the worsening economic situation, the deepening crisis over the future of relations between the two nations of Canada, and the demands for a new Canadian foreign policy, a 1968 election would have more to it than just which new leader is the best. There can be no doubt though that the hope of monopoly is to keep the voters thinking about the personalities, and not the issues. For labor the election of 1968 can be the time for greater advance, for policies which will genuinely be in the people’s interest. In all le 1968 proMng sharp str¥ ing tion and P With more than 10,000 refugees in Jordan and thousands more in Egypt ‘as a result of the June aggression by Israel the question of the Middle East will continue to be a hot one in 1968. A recent meeting in Warsaw of the socialist countries of Europe called for the pull-back of Israel to her pre-June 5 borders