This program is a year-end review of 1966. Knowlton Nash and Stanley Burke introduce audience groups from the University of Toronto, Ryerson Institute, University of Western Ontario, Canadian Association for Adult Education, the Canadian Institute of International Affairs, and the United Nations, who will put questions to the panel, who are also introduced. Panellists respond to a request to recall the most important story they covered in 1966. David Levy, CBC's Moscow correspondent, names the "serious arrival" of General Charles de Gaulle form the West and the "rowdy departure" of Chinese students from the East. Tim Ralfe, Vietnam correspondent, names the escalation of the war by both sides. David Halton, Paris correspondent, highlights General de Gaulle's pulling French forces out of NATO and ousting NATO from France. Phil Calder, correspondent in London and West Germany, names the dumping of Ludwig Erhard by his own Party and the formation of a grand coalition in West Germany of both major parties. Michael Maclear, London correspondent, covers two areas: the Chinese Cultural Revolution, or the "great remolding", and the Rhodesian Unilateral Declaration of Independence amid Britain's economic twists and turns. Tom Leach, UN correspondent, choose as his top story UN Secretary General U Thant's staying on. Tom Gould, Ottawa correspondent, picks the Progressive Conservative Party leadership struggle swirling around John Diefenbaker. Norman Depoe, National Affairs correspondent, highlights strikes and inflation. James M. "Don" Minifie, Washington correspondent, notes the conservative trend in the Congressional elections. The panel and hosts discuss questions raised by the audience: Questions about Vietnam: how serious was the U.S. in asking U Thant to help bring about a ceasefire?; is impartial reporting possible there?; why are the protesters all incited against South Vietnam and its allies; what about the economic effects of the war?; is South Vietnam democratic?; what is the Canadian policy?; and is Harrison Salisbury, New York Times correspondent, a reliable source of information? (the answer to this last question is yes). Questions related to Canada, specifically about: the Progressive Conservative Party leadership prospects; Canada's two-China policy at the United Nations; and whether Canada will establish diplomatic relations with Peking; and Expo 67 and its aftermath economically. Questions on the U.S. about: presidential candidates; news reporting (Tim Ralfe says that at one Vietnam briefing the journalists all wore labels "ambushed at Credibility Gap"; draft dodgers; and Canadian-U.S. relations, which were good between Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson and President John F. Kennedy, but not between Pearson and Lyndon B. Johnson (Minifie says "but Mr. Johnson, as Johnson once said, is 'a little chimney, hot in a moment'."; etc. Questions on Europe and the Middle East: was the UN unjust to censure Israel for a raid into Syria?; is Charles de Gaulle affecting Anglo-U.S. friendship?; are neo-Nazis a real threat in West Germany?; and can King Hussein of Jordan withstand socialist-Arab opposition? Questions about Africa focus on Rhodesia, UDI and economic sanction. Each panellist makes predictions for his region for 1967. <60mn>