Word: heaths
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...decision on Common Market entry may be imminent. This week Britain's Chief Negotiator Edward Heath returns to Brussels for a crucial round of negotiations with Europe's Six-the "crunch" talks in which Britain will have to agree to dismantle its own elaborate agricultural-subsidy system or persuade the Europeans to ease their terms for entry...
...antenna that reaches no higher than 20 ft. above the structure on which it is mounted. Adequate CB equipment, consisting basically of two transceivers (combination transmitter and receiver) and antenna, is marketed by a long list of reputable manufacturers, including Lafayette, Hammarlund, Halli-crafters, RCA and Heath, averages out at a cost of about $300. A typical, medium-priced transceiver operates on eight crystal-controlled channels providing locked-in transmitting frequencies in much the same manner as pushbuttons work on any radio. In addition, receivers have tuning dials that cover the whole spectrum of the 23 channels, just...
Pessimism was voiced over British entry into the Common Market; as bargaining resumed in Brussels, Negotiator Ted Heath made new demands, including a swifter conference schedule, which the six were in no mood to grant. De Gaulle did not seem any more cordial than before, and Adenauer remarked ironically that they were not exactly exchanging "declarations of love" at Brussels. Yet the relentless logic of profit as well as progress made it virtually certain that Britain will enter...
Plea for Wealth. Government big guns blasted the antiMarket forces. Said Heath in a solidly professional, fact-filled speech: "Europe is incomplete without Britain, and we in Britain are incomplete without Europe." Savagely, Deputy Prime Minister Rab Butler tore into the Labor Party's antiMarket position, called Hugh Gaitskell's antiMarket address at the recent Labor Party conference "a passionately backward-looking speech." The Socialists. Butler said, "have decided to look backward. For them, 1,000 years of history books; for us, the future." Foreign Secretary Lord Home eloquently tied economics to world politics: "With every restrictive practice...
...workers distributed among the delegates hundreds of five-inch lapel badges that bore only one word: "Yes."' Belatedly. anti-Marketeers copied the ploy, but their "No" buttons were overwhelmingly outnumbered. To provide the facts and figures about the Market, Britain's chief negotiator, Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath, interrupted meetings with the Six in Brussels and flew to Wales. Exhibiting all the charm, patience and tenacity that made him a successful chief whip in Commons. Heath spent three hours briefing 350 party agents on how to answer specific questions from farmers, housewives and small businessmen in their constituencies...