operon ae THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, June 12, 1965 a pn my ag ay NS RCAC ER GAS EEE SE DISTRICT, SECTIONALISM, PAROCHIALISM LM W. BROWNE -- Behind the Vii government lies a g sectionalism that has disunity among men who' might otherwise be united against the Communist foe. The 'central figures in the latest political drama were Chief of State Phan Khac Suu, whose origins are in the south- ern section of the country, and Premier Phan Huy Quat, who = from the central high- ional differences run deep in Viet Nam. Customs, man- ners, food and even language differ in north, central and south Viet Nam. fall of the four-month-old South|the jetnamese | Divided-We-Stand Policy | Foments Viet Nam Chaos Suu, 60, was named chief of state last Oct. 24. It seemed at time he would not make difficulties for politicians who wanted him as a mere figure- head. : He had spent most of his life as a revolutionary and the poli- ticians thought he would be con- tent to play the role of elder statesman. : Suu was an anti-French guer- rilla in 1939 and 1940 and spent the next five years in a French penal colony. He became guerrilla again from 1945 to 1948 and later opposed Presi- dent Ngo Dinh Diem, Diem jailed him in 1960 and Suu re- mained in custody until Diem's assassination in 1963. WEATHER FORECAST Mainly Sunny And Cool Today Through Sunday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at! 5:30 a.m.: | Synopsis: For most of South- Windsor .....+s+0.. 52 72 | ern Ontario sunny cooler weather is expected Sunday. AjSt. Thomas . 50 72 return flow of warmer air is|London ..... 45 70 expected to develop over North-|Kitchener .... 45 70 ern Ontario late Sunday. Mount Forest ...... 45 70 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie,|Wingham ......... 45 70 Niagara, Lake Ontario, Lake/Hamilton ......... 50 68 Huron, Windsor, London, Ham-/St. Catharines .... 52 68 ilton, Toronto: Mainly sunny/Toronto ... is 32 72 and cooler. Winds north 15. Peterborough ..... 45 68 Haliburton, Killaloe, southern|Trenton ........... 50 70 Georgian Bay: Mainly sunny|Killaloe ... 40 65 and cool. Winds. north 20. Muskoka ...- - 42 65 Northern Georgian Bay, Al-|North Bay ., 42 65 goma, North Bay, Sudbury: /Sudbury 42 65 Mainly sunny amd cool. Winds|Earlton ....,...-.. 40 65 light. Sault Ste. Marie ... 40 65 White River, Cochrane, Tim-|Kapuskasing . 35 65 agami: Mainly sunny and cool.|White River 35 70 Western James Bay: Mainly|Moosonee ... 33 60 sunny and not so cool. Winds/Timmins .... 35 65 light. Kingston ....+-.--- 50 7 | Forecast Temperatures 'Low tonight, High Sunday r Quat, 55, belonged to the same anti-Diem group as Suu, When Suu was arrested by. Diem, Quat was. detained briefly but released under surveillance, A practising physician for most of his life, Quat was leader of the nationalist Dai Viet party in the early 1950s. His revolutionary background is far less spectacu- lar than Suu's. Both Quat and Suu are Bud- dhists, although neither is par- ticularly devout. There had been growing com- plaints in recent months that Quat, a Central Vietnamese, had been eiscrnnerne against South Vietnamese in filling im- portant government posts. Suu, la. southerner, was particularly whsitive to charges of this lind. Both men had tried to keep their deep political rift from the public until Quat broke it in a press conference this week. head three weeks ago when |Quat announced he was reshuf- fling his cabinet, ousting six of lits members. Two ministers, \those for education and interior, lrefused to resign and charged 'that Quat had no power under the. temporary constitution \fire anyone. e The constitution is vague on the point. But Quat contended that since he clearly has the power to appoint, he also must) have the power to fire. ACTION SURPRISES Suu jolted the capital's politi- cians by abandoning his passive role and announcing he agreed with those who said Quat was going beyond his mandate. Overnight, Suu became 4 rallying point of all opponents of the Quat regime. First and most important were the '"Sud- ists'--South Vietnamese politi- cal factions arguing that the government should be run ex- clusively by South Vietnamese. Included in this group are The summer season of sports, festivals and par- ades was approved by the Police Commission yester- day. Parade permits were issued to Thornton's Sports Committee, the Apso _ lenium Committee Dominion Day Oshawa Yolk Festival. Early this after- noon. Thornton's paraded from Thornton's and Ross- land rds. to Thornton's. Road North Community Park. On June 20 the Polish Millen- ium Committee of Oshawa will parade on Central Park blvd. s., Crerar st., LaSalle av, and Olive av. The Do- minion Day Oshawa Folk Festival parade will leave the Oshawa Shopping Centre . at 10 a.m. for Alexandra Park via King st. and Sim- coe sts, Evelyn M. Found, retir- -Ing deputy city clerk, has agreed to remain secretary of the Board of Commissions of Police at the board's re- quest yesterday. Although construction of a 48-hour basis contravenes a Pickering Township bylaw, council this week agreed to permit a contracting firm to work around the clock at the site of the new Ontario Hydro Nuclear Power plant. The members inserted a pro- viso that should one legiti- mate complaint be received from a resident in the area the practice would be dis- allowed. Five Oshawa men were initiated into Kiwanis Inter- national, as members of The Oshawa Kiwanis Club, at that club's luncheon meeting this week. Kiwanion Lloyd Metcalf introduced Dave Bowman, local bassister; past-presi- dent Ken Smyth introduced Gordon Coulter, the charter president of the Uxbridge Club; past - president Harry Gay introduced Don Mal- colm, manager of the Osh- awa branch, National Trust; Gerald Meredith, City of Oshawa assessment com- missioner, was introduced by Eldon Kerr and Joe Vic- tor introduced Bill Kurelo, manager of the Oshawa Civic Auditorium. Walter Howell, QC, of Peterborough, a past Gover- nor of 0-Q-M Kiwanis Dist- rict, extended an official wel- come to the five.new Kiwan- ians, told of the early history of Kiwanis International and of its gradual expansion in a variety of community proj- ects and citizenship pro- grams. Club president Bob Broadbent presented each new member with his lapel pin, after committee chair- man Ken Smyth had given each the usual brochure, containing the bylaws, Ki- wanis Objectives, etc. Fred Kirby, a former Osh- awa alderman in the 1930s, celebrates his 85th birthday Sunday. He now lives per- iodically with a son. in Co- bourg and a daughter in Oshawa. Mr. Kirby is also a former president of the Osh- awa Golden Age Club, 4 At a special session of the Ontario County Council in August Reeve Charles Lay- cox of Pickering Township will present a motion asking that 'all municipalities be placed under county assess- ment control. He said this week it would be in the best interests of the town- ship for all municiplaities to be included. Grant subsid- ies could mean a saving to Pickering Township of $6,000 per year. William Joyce and Isabel Grodge, both of Oshawa, were admitted to the Ross Memorial Hospital, Lindsay, following a one-car accident at the intersection of High- | ways 7 and 35 Wednesday night. Mr, and Mrs. Mervin Brock, of Bowmanville, won the O'Keefe Trophy in a mixed doubles lawn bowling tourna- ment Wednesday at Peter- borough. They had a score of 53 for their three wins, | DESIGNS FOR EXPO | Sir Basil Spence, distinguished English architect, will design real's Expo 67. : THUNDER NEVER STOPS are free of thunderstorms, 1,800 where at all times. |bined following of about 2,000,-| HERE and THERE nents of Quat. Suu argued gov- Only the earth's polar regions 1,500 many leaders of the militant, semi-religious Cao Dai and Hoa Hao sects, which claim a com- 000. Suu also became the rallying point of Roman Catholic oppo- ernment' posts should be dis- tributed more or less evenly among the different sects, reli- gions, political factions and re- gional groups. Quat. tried to pick people more on the basis of individual competence than as representatives of any group. The Catholics thus saw in Suu a potential champion of their charges...that. Quat, was, Pro- Buddhist and anti-Catholic, and was leading South Viet Nam to- ward neutralism or commu- Their differences came to a| % to}, was not he they were fellow employees of The Oshawa Daily the predecessor of The Times changed its name but on the| PEE EEE EWS fall See ie x *. FLASH-FLOOD WIPES OUT MOST gether, destroying vehicles and buildings and _ scatter- ed debris for miles down normally dry Sanderson Flood waters, sweeping through the West Texas town of Sanderson Friday morning, pushed homes to- LOST ZING: MP | OTTAWA (Special) The} Oshawa Times does not express LONDON (Reuters) dnc: itself as freely and forcibly noW|<ign of Britain's rock 'n' roll as it did in the old days,'Beatles in the Queen's birthday Ralph Cowan, MP for York-|honors list was called every- Humber, commented in the/thing from "whimsy" to "ma- hk ein nia" today. eo , , ' Even Beatle George Harrison} r. Cowan e Mis remarkisaid: 'I didn't think ..you got after Ontario MP Michael Starr|this sort of thing for slavinel said he had an affection for/rock and roll." | Ms. nat dasa" atin' te Each of the mop-haired sing-| bounds of the debate on changes|i"& Wwartet was named a Mem- in. the Parliaentary rules ber of the Order of the British "ea a gs 4,..(Empire in the honors list issued Mr. Cowan said the first time|on the Queen's official birthday] met Mr. Starr was whenitoday. The actual birthday of |the Queen, now 39, was April 121, Their names appeared one Reformer, "I regret very much that it i tors, industrialists and publish- other hand it changed its namel ers. ' | When it changed its purpose in| The Beatles themselves were| life," Mr. Cowan said. "Under|toyched and surprised by the the Munday Estate which em-| honor. real reform paper. Today under) were |argely aghast. + The a Corlservative owner whom I)Beaties are the first such group will-net name at the moment/ever to recéiye such an honor, it has changed its purpose. The!and among the youngest ever to Times is a much better name|phe members of the order, cre- nism. 4 Most of the Catholics in South) Viet. 'Nam are North Vietna-| mese refugees. | CATHOLICS PROTEST Catholic demonstrators soon} took to the streets with anti- Quat banners, feeling certain) Suu would at least dampen any efforts to squelch them. Quat, normally an astute po-| litical operator, failed to do the| necessary behind - the - scenes) spadework before attempting to reorganize his government, and} this helped his downfall. This week, in apparent -des-| peration, he announced he was turning the whole problem over| |to the military to settle. ,. | The generals met Friday} the British pavilion for Mont-|morning to discuss the problem.| sharply on the week. | The situation was considered dangerous enough that three battalions of marines -- some 1, men--were brought into the capital to guard the gen- erals' conference. | of which are occurring some-| Roth Quat and Suu resigned|" itoday. rs CALL "PRESCRIPTIO OSHAWA for Prompt PRESCRIPTION 723-2245 - "COMPOUNDING YOUR PHYSICIAN'S PRESCRIPTION IS OUR PROFESSION" gwuy & Lovell WHITBY "WE.SEND MEDICINE TO EUROPE" N CHEMISTS BOWMANVILLE exchange trading. |changes. for it as it does not express it-|ateq by King George V in 1917. self as freely and as forcibly as} : | it did when the member for On-|'BEATLE MANIA' tario and I had a little influence} The Sun calls the -award on the organization. \"Beatle mania." Industrials Shoved Up | As Bargain-Hunters Buy By JOHN BELANGER Canadian Press Staff Writer |Was a continuation of the pre- vious week's trend. The indus- Bargain hunters took advan-| trja) index at Toronto hit a 1965 out gains made thus far in 1965, | tage of lower stock prices late} jow of 165.48 Wednesday. Slight this week and helped bring in-| advances were made Thursday dustrial values up in light stock!anq better jumps Friday. The index closed Friday at |168.24 down 2.26 from the pre- {| Vious week. . The decline this week was spared through all major sec- However, prices were off The rebound followed almos two weeks of sharply lower) prices on Canadian stock ex- And stock markets had been soft for the two weeks| Steels, foods and metal work- rior to the slide. ing issues bore the brunt of the Prices began to level out then} drop. dipped just after the 87-stock in-| Actively - traded issues in- dustrial index of the Toronto} cluded CPR, Stelco, Consumers' Stock Exchange hit a 1965 high}Gas, Cominco, Massey-Fergu- of 178.32 May 14, |son, Aluminium and Interpro- Prices also fell' on the Mont-/Vincial Steel and Pipe. real and Canadian Stock Ex-| 'Ray Nosé, a securities ana- changes. Trading was light tojlyst with A. E. Osler and Co.,| moderate and speculative ac-|stockbrokers, said in discussing tion on the TSE, MSE and CSE/the market situation, 'it ap-| was at a minimum. pears the worst is over for the The. lower move, which wipeditime being." DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M; to 6:00 P.M. 241 KING ST, EAST 725-1169 MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 SIMCOE ST. NORTH 723-3431 TAMBLYN DRUG STORE _ SHOPPING CENTRE 728-5101 ATTENTION GENERAL MOTORS EMPLOYEES Save Your Prescription Receipts Commencing March 1, 1965, Blue Cross Prescription Drug Benetit Plan will honor receipts for prescriptions from quelified and h for under the terms of the Save the receipts issued by the pharmacist of your choice: gladly assist you in making ion for b es you become eligible. 'THE OSHAWA PHARMACISTS ASSOCIATION | 'TIMES' POLICY | K Papers Not Ecstatic Over 0.B.E. To Mopheads columnist bluntly that it was "hilarious, bordering on the absurd. . . .| What criterion can. there be for this screeching long - wagon? side those of diplomats, sculp-|superficial tions. of the market. Banks, oils, | 4" BRUCE'S WHITE ROSE | 480 PARK ROAD SOUTH iv JAMIESON DRUGS |' OF TEXAS TOWN Canyon. The flash flood, at present count, has claimed 13 lives, with many others still missing. --AP Wirephoto The Daily Telegraph says the muses had "acquired in mod- ern times some curious adop- jtive members." The mass - circulation Daily Mirror says the award was al- most certainly the most contro- versial ever and would run into stiff criticism from the die- hards. The paper's entertainment Donald Zec says chummy leap by the royStM or its advisers onto the haired band- This shifting, world' propped up by the charts. or the top 20 rat- ings, is not a world which Her Majesty or her advsers should dignify with royal awards." '| cross - legged 'and chanting 4 Ferlinghetti _ BEATNIKS WOW LONDON CROWD. LONDON (AP)--Beat poets outpoured for. the fat cats in rhymes that ranged from four-letter terms to flowers, and man it was like out- wardly. It was like profitable too. An audience of 5,000 shelled out an estimated $5900 for Friday night's way-out per- formance at London's staid Albert Hall. Jill Triebner, 25 - year - old English girl, gambled her $1,736 savings to rent the hall so her friend, New York beat poet Daniel Richter, could read his creations in public, together with 16 other beat poets. Alien Ginsberg, the addy of them all, was there sitting away while he palyed the Tibetan. finger-cymbals. San Francisco's Lawrence proferred an ode ode to sex, repeating one un- printable word 50 times. "When do we get the naked ladies," somebody yelled. Others shouted: "Give us some poetry and stop raving" and, "sober up." | | | John-Lennon never dreamed he land his three mop-haired part- The Beatles Think 0.B.E. 'Marvellous' LONDON (Reuters) -- Beatle ners would sing their way to the Queen's honors list. "T thought you had to drive tanks and win wars," said the 244year-old rock n' roll singer when told the Beatles had been made members of the Order of the British Empire. : "] didn't think you got- this short of thing for playing rock and roll music," agreed lead guitarist George Harrison, 22. Drummer Ringo Starr, 24, was worried about the tangible evidence of the honor. "There's a proper medal as well as the letters, isn't there?"' he asked. "I will keep it to wear when I'm old. It's the sort of thing you want to keep, isn' it?" The Beatles, accustomed to holding down top spot on the pop charts, took a minor plac- ing on the honors list. Their M.B.E. is the lowest grade in an order of chivalry founded in 1917 by King George V. SS Sr eee ear nng BARRIE (CP)--Former Oril- lia mayor William Cramp claimed in 1962 that he alone was. responsible for getting Northern' Ontario Natural Gas Co., into Orillia, Simcoe County court was told Friday at Cramp's trial on charges of municipal corruption. "If I hadn't investigated the situation and discovered the true facts, then Consumers' Gas would undoubtedly have come to Orillia," Cramp said. The statement was part of an Ontario Securities Commission transcript of a 1962 questioning of Cramp by a commission in- vestigator. d The transcript was admitted as evidence on the fourth day of the trial Thursday and the reading was completed Friday. In the transcript it was dis- closed that Cramp told the commission many members of the Orillia town council were) opposed to a franchise with NONG and he undertook an in- vestigation to "find out the real facts." Cramp has pleaded not guilty to three charges of municipal corruption. Cramp Put NONG In Orillia In The Face Of Adversity © 7 They afte: --That he accepted NONG shares for a consideration for ery the Orillia franchise n 1956. --That he accepted NonG shares to block Consumers' Gas Co. franchise application. --That he conspired with NONG president Ralph K,. Farris of Vancouver in these dealings. Cramp told the commission that he was not offered any in- ducements or any benefits in exchange for his efforts to pro- mote NONG in the region, the transcript disclosed. It further showed that Cramp asked an unidentified NONG of- ficial to "'see what he could do" about buying stock in the company, although shares were not being ~%ld publicly at the time. " He reiterated his stand that he gave the man $300 or $400 in cash and received 150 shares of NONG stock at a later date. He later used the 150 shares as collaterial to purchase 200 units of public issue shares and de- bentures, Cramp had told the Suspect Caught In Gun Battle | TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) Quebec provincial police re- ported early today a man de- tained after a gun battle Thurs- day is Henri Vaillancourt of com Glen §S. Coates, former mayor of Bracebyidge, testified that he had received 150 shares of stock but denied any conspir- acy between himself and Cramp. Mr, Coates was acquitted on similar charges at a prelimin- ary hearing last year. The trial will resume Tues- day. Montreal, wanted in tion with a recent bank holdup in Batiscan, Que., 20 miles north- east of here, A running gun battle began Thursday afternoon when police tried to halt three suspicious- looking men walking along rail- road tracks five miles north- east of here. The men ran into the bush when police chal- lenged them. "We took off after them and fired a warning shot in the air," Rene Roy, special QPP officer, said. "Much to our sur- prise the trio' wheeled around and started shooting in our direction." Sporadic firing continued as police quickly surrounded the area and launched an aerial search, The two other suspects were still at large early today. Policé said they have re- ceived information that one of the two bandits is armed with a machine-gun while the other. carries a revolver. said to have spare ammunition. Although the value of an M.B.E. means nothing in the competitive world of pop sing- jers where millionaires are Two other popular papers,|made overnight, its prestige far Daily awards. Express, The honors list also included|Beatle, ployed the two of us. It was a) put Britain's editorial writers|however, The Daily Mail and|outweighs any number of chart- approve the topping records, Paul McCartney, the fourth said on arrival here OBE awards--one notch higher|from Portugal: "I think it is than those awarded the Beatles|marvellous. What a great sur-} --for singer Frankie Vaughan|prise to come home to. and a number of other perform-} ers and actors. He added with a grin: does this make my dad?" SERVICE STATIONS | OPEN THIS SUNDAY | 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. HOUSTON'S SERVICE STATION 67 KING STREET WEST, 723-7822 | CLEMENTS SUPPERTEST STATION 102 SIMCOE STREET NORTH LAWLESS SHELL STATION 227 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH MEADES SUNOCO 588 KING STREET EAST, 725-8161 "what! Vaillancourt was unarmed. Both are} Se! ON THE"BLOCK An estimated $30,000,000 worth of art treasures are sold an- nually at Sotheby and Co., the London auction house, BIG WINDS Early in the century an Aus- tralian forecaster named hurri- canes in his area after political figures he disliked. FEET HURT? Cut this cushioning Foot Plaster to right size and shape for fast relief EXTRA PROTECTION WHEREVER FEET HURT! When shoes pinch or rub, cushion feet with Dr. Scholl's Kurotex foot plaster. Thicker, softer, more pi ive than ordinary mole skin--yet costs no more. Easy to cut to size, Fast relief for i 8, callouses, tender spots. el iB. 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