Thought For Today It was Menchen who said that injustice is easy to bear -- what stings is justice. Price Not. Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 120 'Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1964 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Ottawa ond for poyment * Weather Report Heat wave predibted. Mostly sunny and very warm today and Saturday. Winds south-west 15 to 20, Department of Postage in Cash. TWENTY-SIX PAGES - Vietnam Favors _ Stevenson Idea Of Peace Force UNITED NATIONS (CP)--A|until Monday when Quat is ex-|namese on one of the three bor- United Nations presence along|pected to take part in the coun-|der crossings Cambodia cited to the troubled border between) cil debate. of a complaint by) the council, Pham Khac Rau of Cambodia and South Viet Nam|Cambodia of 'repeated acts of| South Viet Nam said his coun- was singled out today as the|aggression" by American and/try's troops had made an "oc-| major point of UN Ambassador! South Vietnamese forces. casional inadvertent crossing | Adlai Stevenson's policy speech) Cambodia has charged that). . in pursuit of their ene- before the Security Council|South Vietnamese troops, ac-| mies." Thursday and it brought favor-|companied by U.S. officers, stevenson made three altern- able reaction from the So uth have been crossing into Cambo- ative 'dubecstions: Vietnamese. DILEMMA AT INVESTIGATION 800 BATTLE THROUGH RED POSITIONS IN LAOS | Retreat-Trapped Troops Rejoin Neutralist Fight ja and killing villagers. Sojn Par ese Sonn, p to the council that Com-| (1) That the council ask Cam-| the| bédia and South Viet Nam to és-) military force to) Ambassador Voeunsai Cambodia's representative at)munists fighting against : vo the UN, said in an interview-South Vietnamese government tablish a joint 1 that the suggestions for a UN/are using Cambodia as a sanc-| Patrol the frontier and report to watch on the border was "the)tuary. |UN Secretary-General U Thant; really important part'? of Ste-| Stevenson said the Commu-|(2) that the force be given UN Members Evidence Conflicts At Probe venson's address to the 1l-mem-| nists are and said "this is the|observers or a UN command, ber Security Council. In Saigon, the South Viet Nam capital, Foreign Minister Phan Huy Quat said a UN pres-|viser was with the South Viet-' the cost of a UN. force. ence "'comes within the frame- work of our own views on solv- ing the situation." real reason for-troubles on the! or (3) that it be "an all = UN), Cambodian border." He ad- |force."" He said the United mitted that an American ad-|States would contribute part of) va | %| OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com-|Mr. Girouard hadn't seemed|join the Liberals, but argued) "|mons privileges committee has|happy about his stated intention| that Mr. Girouard's interest in| \been left to ponder for a few|of becoming a Conservative. the proposition to investigate) dys on a major dilemma--con-| Mr, Girouard has testified his|Liberal membership and _ his tradictory sworn testimony by|mind was firmly made up to| subsequent actions amounted to 4\two MPs. {join the Conservatives, he told/a bid for membership. This was '| With a number of expressions|the Liberal so and hadn't indi-| rejected as unacceptable by the VIENTIANE (AP) -- Gen.| flew to Vag Vieng Thursday at Kong Le, hard. pressed com-|Souvanna's request. They said mander of the Laotian neutral the town seemed quiet. ist army, has been reinforced; Commission sources said, by 800 troops who fought|however, that neutralist com- through Communist lines+to re-| manders in Vang Vieng told of join him southwest of the Plaine) seeing two cargo planes believed Stevenson outlined the United) States position in Southeast Asia} New Men Take Thursday adjourned until next of misgiving, the committee) cated any desire to join the Lib-| Quehec Liberals. | erals. in a speech labelled as a guide- post statement of American in- tentions in the area. The chief US. delegate said the U.S. would push ahead with the war "against the Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam. The American position was placed before the Security Council only a few hours after France reiterated her position that only neutrality for all of Southeast Asia can guarantee peace there. Tody the Security Council Reins In Regina REGINA (CP) Thirteen| The deputy provincial Liberal jmen, all new to the task of ad-jleader, A. H .(Hammy) McDon-| |ministering a provincial govern-|ald, 45, will be deputy premier) jment, take over today as Sas-|and minister of agriculture. |katchewan's Liberal cabinet) Mr. Thatcher, who will be 47 ifrom,a CCF administration| years old Sunday, cut his cabi- which *has been in power 20\net to 13 men from the CCF's lyears. |15 by assuming the treasury du- Premier-elect Ross Thatcher,|ties himself and assigning the who toppled the CCF govern-| ministries of labor and co-oper-| |ment in the April 22 provincial|atives to one man. week after hearing the second; 3 Mr, Moreau told the com-| witness in an inquiry into alle-| mittee that at no time at the! gations that Gerard Girouard/ meeting with Mr. Davey--to} |(PC--Labelle) was offered elec-| which he and three Liberal MPs| tion funds and other benefits t0| were witnesses--was any men- |switch to the Liberal ranks in/ tion made of a fat election fund) |the Commons. or benefits of membership in a} | On_ several key points, Maw-| party in power to Mr. Girouard) rice Moreau (L--York-Scarbor-|py Mr. Davey or anyone else.| ough) gave testimony which) '\. Girouard's testimony was| contradicted that of Mr. Gir-| tind! quard, who» quit the Social] hat Mr. Davey offered the fund} " *\and mentioned the other bene-| Credit party last month to join fits at a meeting which took the Progressive Conservatives. place Feb. 18 in Mr. Moreau's| The points of disagreement: | office here. | ficials say, if only he climbs studied U.S. proposals for UNjelection, announced the cabinet] Three portfolios have new involvement in the Cambodia-|members Thursday and said he|names which will be officially Viet Nam troubles. himself would act as provincial|put into effect at the next legis- The council itself is in recess'treasurer for about a year. lature session, The former health department becomes health and youth; in- dustry and information becomes industry and economic develop- ment; and natural resources be- comes natural resources and in- - 'The cabinets" 0 Mr. Thatcher, member of the legislature for Morse constitu- question of Mr. MacArthur's re-|ency, premier and treasurer. ppointment. | Mr. McDonald, member for Prime Minister Pearson Prom-|Moosomin, deputy premier and) ised to check with his labor min-/minister of agriculture. A) ister and indicated he may/jfarmer and businessman. | make an announcement today or) D. G. Stuart, 48, member for) Monday. |Prince Albert, health and youth. FURORE CAME Former Prince Albert mayor. | V. Heald, member for AB egy Ml cod Ribot Lamsden, attorney-general and) + Ly CLC And Liberals , <rying Relations OTTAWA (OP)--The Liberal government is heading toward its first major test in its rela- tions with the 1,000,000-member Canadian Labor Congress. The test is shaping up over the reappointhent or A. F. Mac- Arthur, former Canadian head of the Office Employees Inter- national Union, to the Usem- - Communist Viet Cong 1. Mr. Moreau said Mr. Gir- ouard consented to Mr. Moreau @\arranging a meeting with Lib- leral Ntional .Organizer Keith Davey to explore. a Girouard move into Liberal ranks. Mr. Girouard has testified he did not consent to Mr. Moreau's action although he did agree to attend the meeting to-please his tglend,, Mr. Morea oo. GIVES IMPRESSION 2. Mr. Moreau testified he got jthe impression that if the door |was open to Mr. Girouard "he'd leross the threshold," and that "RED TORTURED Vietriamese soldiers hitch a prisoner to anmored truck carrier prior to dragging him through stream today in ef- fort to make him talk. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Sai- gon). Experts Frowning 4. Mr. Moreau said he did not tell Mr. Girouard tht the nego-| tiation was stopped by Prime} Minister Pearson for fear of} losing the voting. support in the} Commons of the Social Credit) group to which Mr. Girouard be-| longed at the time. He said this theory was ad-| vaneed by Mr. he yo stv the Labelle MP. was. that a 'move by him Bir Mh verate would be uncceptable to the Quebec Liberals. | FEARED LOSS Mr. Girouard testified to the |committee--and stated also in the Commons--that Mr. Moreau had told him Mr. Pearson stopped the negotiation for fear of losing Social Credit support. Mr. Moreau, called as the committee's second witness | Wednesday ployment Insurance Commis- sion. Mr. MacArthur was named to the $13,000-a-year job by the previous Conservative govern-| ment in 1959--over the loud and} outraged protests of the CIL.| when the Conservative govern- ment ignored the CL(C's nomi- nations for th UIC post and jchose Mr. MacArthur as the la-|for Hanley, indu bor member of the commission. CLC President Claude Jodoin charged political 'implications lprovincial secretary, a lawyer.| | Herb C. Pinder, 40, member| stry and eco- jnomic development. President \provincial Liberal party. | jnight that the government's pro-/view. after vigorous Conservative pro-| tests that Mr. Davey should be/ heard first, spent more than five! hours on the witness stand} Thursday being grilled by com-} mittee members. On Leaf, Stripes OTTAWA (CP)--Ihere were|blue design, although it is not strong indications Thursday|correct from a heraldic point of posed flag will consist of three MAYOR BACKS PANT FIGHTER HAMILTON (CP) -- Mayor Vic Copps has announced he's ready to fight to keep long pants off Percy. The myor said he is in- trigued by the banning of Percy Leggett, Hamilton's self-styled oldest beatnik from the Midtown Senior Centre. Percy can stay, centre of- into long pants -- and tosses aside his flapping shorts, hi yellow underhirt and his big black boots. Percy, 72, says he's too old to change his ways. He called on the mayor to protest. but Mayor Copps was at a meet- ing. Thursday, however, Mayor Copps said. he'll be in touch with centre officials to see if Percy can be re-instated --shorts, shirt and all. "I'm sympathetic," said the mayor. "After all, Percy is one of our better tourist at- tractions."' des Jarres. Military sources said the 800 had been cut off southeast of Kong Le's abandoned command} post at Muong Phanh last| weekend when the Pathet Lao launched an offensive that |swept the neutralists from the |strategic plateau 110 miles northeast of Vientiane. Breaking out of the trap, they| made their way to Ba Na, where Kong Le's retreat was) last reported to have halted about 10 miles south of Muong Phanh. Informants who saw Kong Le Thursday said he was in good spirits and intended to remain with his battered forces. There had been speculation that he might come to the capital of Vientiane. He was said to have to be from Communist North Viet Nam in the area. The Com- munists hold the town of Muong Kassy, 25 miles north of Vang Vieng, which has an airstrip. Souvanna has accused North Viet Nam of supplying troops for the Pathet Lao offensive. Informed sources said U.S. Ambassador Leonard Unger and the British charge d'af faires, John Denson, told Sou- vanna their governments favor a meeting of envoys in Vien- tiane representing the 14 coun. tries which took part in the 1962 Geneva conference guarantee ing the neutrality and independ- ence of Laos. Souvanna then summoned So- viet Ambassador Sergei Affan- assiev to find out how the Krem- lin stands. retreated with omy remnants of four battalions, which originally totalled about 1,600 men, A government spokesman said two armored battalions dug in on the northwest fringe of the plain at Muong Kheung had counterattacked the Pathet Lao. Military sources believed Koos Le might try to withdraw to Van Vieng, a highway cen- tre 530 miles.to.the " Neutralist jer Souvanna Phouma has expressed fear that Vang Vieng, only 60 miles north of the capital, would be the next target of the Pathet Lao. Canadian and Indian _rep- resentatives of the International Control Commission for Laos Vets Meet Ends With Unity Plea WINNIPEG (CP)--The Royal] Delegates gave unanimous) were involved. His term expired at the end. of Mr, Starr denied this and con- April, but he continues in office tended that the CLC chief had} States Synod ' Canada's official colors are red maple leaves on a white|white and red. background with a blue bar at Mr. Pearson was known to He conceded under cross-ex-| Canadian Ine gion convention| shouted approval to their stand. amination that Mr. Girouard| breaks up today in the wake of|Under it, only the Red Ensign made no formal applications to) a plea to lead in the fight for} can be flown above legion until replaced or reappointed. Indications are Mr. MacArthur tried to dictate the appointment) to a key post on the Unemploy- | each side. _ |lean strongly toward the blue| A design was. chosen unani-)bars--and sources say there| may not get the backing of the) ment Insurance Commission. CLC for the job. The OL Prime Minister Pearson, at which has not made up its mind' that time leader of the Liberal| ' Picks Negro | Minister Hints jmously by the Liberal cabinet/was encouraging response to |Canadian unity. Manitoba Premier Duff Rob-; lin told delegates at a Thursday] branches and the legion head- quarters in Ottawa. Fred O'Brecht of Durham, Thursday morning and Prime|these additions when they were Minister' Pearson told the Com-|r entioned as a possibility in a night banquet the legion must|/Qnt., the new president, said, lead in the search for a fuller/ however, that he expected le- yet, is expected to submit its nominees for the position within a week--at the request of Labor Minister MacEachen. Mr. MacEachen was out of the Commons Thursday when for- mer. Conservacve labor minis-) ter Michael Starr raised the) Auto Hits, Kills opposition, called the appoint- ment "shocking" and said it! Moderator was government "bungling." | By law, the government is ob-} OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)--The liged to consult with labor|United Presbyterian Church groups before appointing the La-|U.S.A. elected Thursday the} bor member of the three-man| first Negro moderator in_ its) g |commission, By tradition, the|history, Rev. Edler G. Hawkins, | government has picked one of the CLC's nominees -- usually two or three prominent labor) The voting commissioners} from 194 presbyteries gave the| 55-year-old New York City min-/ mons later that it would be re-/newspaper story some time ago. vealed in "a few days. Heraldry experts oppose the Meanwhile, all indications|addition of blué on several pointed to the red, white and/ grounds--that it departs from the official colors, that it doesn't Fuel Tank Fire to sea" motto and that it would ponenterse, with use of the flag correctly epict the "from sea 5 as part of larger navy, army Burns Airman jand air force flags. Law To Curb Moonlighters KINGSTON (OP)--Labor Min- ister MacEachen said Thursday | night legislation may be needed) to impose closer regulation on| hours of work and overtime in| nationhood. "Tt led in war, It must lead in peace," the Progressive Con- servative leader said. The vet- erans organization must be a| major unifying force in the land. Mr. Roblin said "part. of the} inheritance of all of us" is the! province of Quebec, an area of political unrest. But "'many cultures can flour- gion members would act as good citizens and acquiesce even- tually to the new flag when and if it is adopted by Parliament. New Work Hinted For Elliot Lake Prime: Let eaveae te oe pected to make an announce- ment today concerning the pos- sibility of new industry being established in Elliot Lake, W. J. Reinards, president of the El- liot Lake Chamber of Com- merce, said Thursday night. Two producing mines in the area are faced with the threat of shutdown when the govern- ment's $25,000,000, one year stockpiling program ends July 1. The depleted Gunnar Mines in Elliot Lake still holds an un. filed contract to suppy 1,200, 000 pounds of uranium oxide to Britain. Mr. Reinards said in an in- terview the prime minister in- formed Ted Futterer, chairman of the Elliot Lake Impovement District board last Tuesday that he would make an announcement Friday. Mr, Futterer said Tharsday night the prime minister's an- nouncement would almost cér- tainly be partly involved with the prolonging of uranium con- tracts for some of the three mines due to close. trustees, ister a 465-to-368 margin over} TRENTON, Ont. (CP)--Cor-| But flags of nations don't al- Rev. Alva Ray Cartlidge of| poral G. Menard of Trenton was|Ways include the correct heral- leaders. order to spread employment injish in the bosom of a single an era of automation. | state." Boy On Bicycle | When Mr. MacArthur was igiven the job over the CLC's MCKELLER, Ont, (OP)--Ed-' candidates, the CLC members of ward Bruce Smith, 6, was-killed| the UIC advisory moderator underlines the mili- Thursday when he rode his tri-| promptly quit tant role the church's leaders cycle into the path of a truck) When the smoke died down/have taken against racial dis- on Highway 124. later, the CLC nominees re|crimination. He is pastor of St.) McKeller is 80 miles north-\turned to the advisory commit-| Augustine Presbyterian Church west of Orillia. tee. Z in the Bronx Erie, Pa. The election of the Negro committed LEAVES AND STRIPES A FAVORITE BUT NO CONFIRMATION burned severely here Thursday|dry, say these experts. And Par- when a fire started in a fuel|liament is free to pick any de- tank on which he was working|sign it wants. The fire crew at Trenton RCAF, Mr. Pearson took several pos- Station put out the fire, which|sible gesigns before his cabinet caused little damage, Tuesday, and a unanimous de- Trenton is 10 miles west of|cision was reached at its next Belleville. meeting Thursday. Reliance may be placed on | legislative provisions for longer| anual vecations, statutory hol-| }idays and other forms of leave,| jhe told a symposium of 75 | industrial relations executives |from Canada and the United States. , Chosen Fla OTTAWA (CP)--The' cabinet|blank during the House ques- -"77# ae " approved a maple leaf flag for|tion period for. the details. ay 4 Canada Thursday but the House! Instead, Opposition Leader of Commons was left no wiser Diefenbaker quizzed the prime about its detailed design. minister about the circum- Prime Minister Pearson told stances surrounding. a dinner reporters after a three - hour party Mr. Pearson gave last morning cabinet meeting the week for some journalists, at ; cabinet had unanimously agreed which the Liberal leader's per-| on a design, which will be am-|sonal preference for the flag bodied in a resolution to ba sub-/was displayed and discussed. | mitted to the Commons next! Mt. Diefenbaker called it Mr.|i, say the Red Ensign would no week Pearson's personal flag, and| oe ii ee longer be flown in Canada. Pearson said that wasn't) ? ; e he were asked in the Commons|S°., The cabinet had decided on Paul Martineau (PC--Pontiac- Thursday to describe the de- a design, he added, which would) Temise r i s by t 3 Cline » flag design endorsed by the sign, he would do so in general b submitted to the Commons) 'ie 114 € terms. eddn jcabinet was the one Mr. Pear: But no one asked him point- FAVORITE | Mr. Pearson said his preview|5°" P' rsonally favored, for some reporters was just a}. Mr. Pearson suggested Mr.| social occasion, and he hoped|Martineau and the rest of the the reporters had as good a time|Commons '"'wait for a few days jat his house as they did when-jand they will see the design of ever they. visited Mr. 'Diefen-|the flag." baker At the Thursday morning cab- | ' there were three | ldesigns under study. All had jcussion' about flags and em-|three designs under study. All jblems did come up." had three red maple leaves 'on He denied a newspaper reporta single stem as the principal CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 had W a cup of tea," Mr meeting, iPe id and some dis net on a esign Still Secret feature. The difference was in ' a pe the backgrounds--one all white, another all pale blue, and the third white with blue borders to symbolize Canada's sea-to-sea national motto. A spokesman for Mr. Pearson said that the desigti having been decided on by the cabinet, noth- ' ' ing more could be said about it} SCRATCHED ment. |Edythe Dowd of Montreal, who However, it was reasonable to said she came to Ottawa for the assume that the maple leaf mo-| specific purpose of waving the amingue) asked whether|tif was approved since it was|Red Ensign at Mr. Pearson, Canadians common to the three designs, he added. ; 1 i T. : ting w said his new flag is.for a na- The cabinet meeting WAS tional purpose. She insisted the marked by a Vigil maintained'ypion Jack was the best flag n . wee for every purpose, and clutched|would reject the Red Ensign with re C ~~) her Red Ensign with-her.purse.|and.adopt the.new flag-for. all] yunter | purposes, She said she would put it with the Union Jacks ia her hallway at home, and that she chose the! ensign instead of the jack for her .one-woman demonstration "because my brother fought un- der it." In the Commons, Mr. Pearson RUNNER-UP - Said. again rejected requests that the flag issue be submitted to the provinces and to a national ref- erendum. "This is a responsibility for the Canadian Parliament,' he Robert C. Coates (PC--Cum- |berland), an advocate of retain- jing the ensign, said it was "'of that he had cabled the Queen|"ntil it was put before Parlia- | outside the room by Miss|the utmost importance to hear} |the views of all provincial gov-! lernments."" | "T would hope the views of alll are represented in| Louis-Joseph Pigeon (PC--Jol-| iette-L'Assomption - Montcalm) asked whether the government When Mr. Pearson did not re-| ply, Mr Pigeon shouted indig-| nantly that "'the government re- fuses 10 answer because it em | barrasses t said he would try to raise the question later. | publications. He said the first principle of "one motherland, one citizen- ship must bind us all together." If this first principle is aban-| doned "English Canada may disappear and Quebec become a) ghetto." MUST SEEK The legion must seek the strengthening of the nation. "The watchword is comrade- ship. We must write it large on the face of Canada in 1964." Rejecting the maple leaf de- sign approved Thursday by the federal cabinet, the convention agreed to recognize only the Red Ensign as the official flag of the 267,000-member group. | Magazine Tax Move Goes On -House Learns OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson said in the Com-) mons Thursday the government) intends to proceed with parlia- mentary action on its proposal He spoke to her briefly and/this House," Mr. Pearson said.|t0 apply tax and. tariff restric- tions on foreign publications. Mr. 'Pearson told Douglas Fisher (NDP--Port Arthur) he discusse presentatives of Maclean-| Publishing Company, | and added: "We will proceed} with, it." The 'proposals would hit for- eign publications with special editions for the Canadian mar- petitive Canadian position of a * d the proposal recently} & wes NUDE BLONDE IN blonde without any three-year-old Lorrie he government," and) ket and is to bolster the com-| Hamilton, fell into a tar pud- die yesterday near her Balti- more home and was thigh BLACK AND WHITE deep 'when rescued py. her mother and two boys. She was not hurt.-The cleanup opera- tion was still going on when her picture was taken, r