Quebec Tiff Rallies Tories | Behind Diefenbaker Again By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP)--The constitu- tional wrangle over the Quebec legislative council appears to have united the Conservative party behind Opposition Leader Diefenbaker more than any sin- gle issue in two years. "Did you see the applause he got from all of us when he fin- ished speaking on the issue last Wednesday?"' asked a front- bench member of the party. "Everybody was right behind him." : A veteran New. Democratic Party member also remarked about this. "The party seems united on this," he said. In recent months, particularly in the great flag debate and sub-|of both English- and French- sequent internal strife; Mr. Die- fenbaker has seldom received unanimous desk-thumping § sup- port from all his colleagues when he spoke on major issues. It has been apparent that ma- jor disagreements , existed on party strategy. The recent de- bate on Commons procedural changes was one case in which many party members disagreed with front-bench strategy for a lengthy row on the issue. Party sources said there were several occasions during this debate when different groups of backbenchers | sought to have the measure disposed of with- out further talk. Soon after- wards, the contentious points were settled by a committee. But it appears there will be little disagreement over Mr. Diefenbaker's stand against the government's method of. han: dling the Quebec cabinet re- quest for changes in the legis- lative council--the upper house. On this issue, say sources, the leader enjoys the full backing speaking members, ADVISED THE QUEEN Through an address to the Queen, the Quebec government is asking that the powers of the upper house be limited. The leg- islative council, dominated by Union Nationale members, re- BOB THOMAS IN HOLLYWOOD | Mort Sahl Loses Weapon That 'Made By BOB THOMAS | jfor the operation. jected the plan. So the federal government was asked to advise the Queen on the address which had only the approval of the leg- islative assembly, the elected lower house. The government's decision, as announced Wednesday by Act- ing Prime Minister Martin, was that the Queen approve the re- quest. Mr. Martin said it was a purely provincial matter, not affecting the federal government 'or any other province. The ad- vice had come from the respon- sible provincial ministers. While the government intends to stand by its decision, said Mr. Martin, the Commons would be given an opportunity to debate the matter during a supply motion. He said this would be done Monday, but at the request jof Mr. Diefenbaker this is be- ing postponed until he returns from a western trip. When the debate is held, Con- servative members are expect- ing a loud one. Mr, Diefenbaker has already charged the govern- ment with playing "ducks and drakes with the constitution" and with bringing the Queen nounced the government for \failing to bring the matter be-|storm--the headquarters of the fore Parliament. Party sources say there will be no scarcity of speakers from their ranks. HOLLYWOOD (AP)--A_ sta-|taking exercises to regain his|able that the government will tuesque brunette stopped by| ivoice; in four weeks he expects Mort Sahl's table in the Beverly|to be pursuing once more his Hills Hotel polo lounge and crusade 'to save America." et 4 ling! Here FEELS CUT OFF gushed Mort, darling ere EELS CUT OFF xpresses|Leader 'Thompson appeared to himself, both onstage and pri-|have left the door open for sup- we are neighbors, and I haven't seen you in ages. How are you?" Sahl, ordinarily the most lo- quacious of citizens, didn't re- vately, in spates of monologue his plight is indeed difficult. "I'm cut off at the source," he pe over it. While the New Dem- jocratic Party takes a strong |stand beside the. Conservatives on the issue, Social Credit porting the government in a show-down vote Although protesting that Par- ply. He made a scissors ges-| wrote desperately. "Bad town to ture toward his throat, then|cogitate in." pointed to his mouth and shook his head. what he sees in the newspapers "Oh, dear," said the brunette.jand on television appals him as "You've had a throat operation|is usual. As he pondered con- and can't talk? Well, if you need|temporary- American he scrib- anything, just holler. Er--Ijbled comments: mean, wave a flag. Or some-| 'I hope when I get back peo- thing!" iple have stopped talking about She flitted off, leaving Sahi|teen-agers. Symptom of national) to his unaccustomed silence. It}nervous breakdown." was enforced by his doctor after) Lest anyone think that his in- removal of a benign polypoidal|disposition has mellowed Sahl, tumor from his throat two|I will quote his evaluation of weeks ago. \the United States today: Sahil had had throat trouble} 'Everybody alientation . for five months. rae gagement hemorrhag-'end (to cold war). ing. Afterward he went into Ce-| "No God, no people. No hope. dars of Lebanon Hospital here|Leave me alo-o-0-one." Retardate Colony Concept despite Advocated By Psychiatrist) 3-10" i'r." HALIFAX (CP)--A new con-jretardation. He suggested dip- cept of caring for moderately |lomas in mental retardation retarded persons, from youth|work at junior and senior lev- throughout their lives, has beenjels. The senior diplomas would proposed by Dr. G. H. Lowther require university status. : of Portage la Prairie, Man. He also suggested that associ- In a paper delivered to the ations for retarded children Canadian Psychiatric Associa-|Stadually contract out of being tion convention Saturday, Dr. Service facility organizations Lowther suggested that moder- ately retarded persons be°*" placed in special foster homes ery. j i In this way y to- 3 pon out their lives wha wide wae eee "iagaear i] y? ahead of time for the Blo Bagh pada fe guardianship of their retarded "maintain most of the accus- tomed trappings of gracious liv- ing, while at the same time be- after this obligation. Against doc-|years of paranoia--Korea--Rus-| tor's orders, he fulfilled an en-|sia--Cuba--China--FBI, etc. No \liament had. been bypassed, he said the matter was provincial But cogitate Sahl must, and|and the responsibility rests with| 8roes who support |the elécted representatives of |the province A CAUSE TO LEAD By DON McKEE ATLANTA (AP) -- comfortably down in his swivel let the revolution run itself. a Georgia drawl. not know if they are all the right decisions." the views of his own staff. s s ®\creation and explosure of ten-|comply with civil rights law, he} Rev. Martin Luther Kings |: 2 exe & *!gaay.n got geen te 1 ® VY jand Thoreau, King -- preaches It Is Not An Easy Thing' {irre seme! cua ee a = avs and uit Sliding|Stroy his effectiveness. chair behind a wooden desklease, make $100,000 to $200,000\T0 the degree that I harm my|™MOony with the, moral laws of piled with: papers, Martin Lu-ja year," King said. "I have|brother, to that extent I am the universe. ther King Jr. hung up the tele-|consciously avoided making|harming myself." phone and for a few minutes|money." "Tt t .' He spoke injnights a week at home with his}; sat : " fed techenern "y ores I fantiy, his wife, Coretta, mer filled jails at Albany, Ga., they|unjust and willingly accepts the have a movement to lead and|four children. And his wife nas I have to make decisions. I do|begun travelling. A certs for the movement. Mrs.,ECONOMIC BOYCOTTS King talked of the pressures./King, 38, is a native of Ala- Aside from criticism and oppo-|bama. She met King while he|nomically under a boycott. So Confrontation is the key word,| These tactics stir the hottest PE DER MERI NS he says, and nothing changes|controversies. For, while King in the social order without the|has pushed for white persons to ence campaigns--has violated Influenced heavily by Gandhi other laws on the grounds that this concept: ey F "All humanity is caught in an| "I think a law is just which Wealth, he feels, would de-jinescapable network of mutual-/Squares with. the moral law, ity, tied in a single garment of|King said: "and I think a law "{ could legitimately, with\destiny. All life is interrelated,|i8 unjust which ts out of har- And what is the basis of de- ' te his. crusades have left/termination? ie te ; failures and ruin in some in-| "'Any man who breaks the King spends 'tnly about: two stances. Though his marches/law that conscience tells him is left segregation undented and a|penalty by staying in jail in or- boycott destroyed the city bus|der to arouse the conscience of| line. the community on the injustice of the law is at that moment expressing the very highest re- suffered eco- gard for law." UNWILLING TO SUFFER A soprano, she sings in con- Selma, Ala., Their children are left much "Some of these fellows want\of the time with a housekeeper. he said. He was self serious. to wreck the world some time,"|The older two, Yolanda, 9, and/| Marty 7, go to a Negro school | If King, with his casual air,|because they were turned down contradicts the stereotype of ajat two private schools. The revolutionary, his small office other children are Dexter, 4, on. grimy Auburn Avenue, with But this is the eye of the Christian Leadership | Southern | The storm. swirls | Conference. in the Negro Masonic Building|and Bernice, 2. King pushes for concrete its dingy green walls and bare/ gains in civil rights. He is often floor, is even less like a COM-\g diplomat; jinto party politics." And he de-| mand post. he will negotiate and compromise. "We say we want all our free- dom and we want it now," he said. "But realistically we know we aren't going to get it all . | . laround Martin Luther King, 36, now. We have these slogans." Him a Voice Non - confidence motions are|ordained Baptist minister, doc-| : 8 \likely to be introduced on the|tor of philosophy in theology, POLITICAL PRESSURE He now is|Matter, although it is improb-|civil rights leader' pastor, hus- band and father. Political pressure has _ be- come a key part of his civil rights drive. |\CALLED A LIAR | rious liar in the country; former |president Harry Truman has 1a-/resistance, the \belled him a trouble - maker. "It is a political fact that FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover) politicians respond to pressure" once called him the most noto- aa has said. i i King contends his nonviolent marches and demonstrations that sometimes And many of his methods--in-lincyr violence, are the only al- jcluding deliberate violation Of|ternative outlet to Negro frus- existing laws--have been criti-tration which otherwise would cized by both whites and Ne-| explode violently. the civil sition from outside the Negro|was studying at Boston Univer-/have other communities. movement, King said, he alsojsity and she at the New Eng- has to keep a balance between/land Conservatory of Music. St. Augustine, Fla., refused to accede to King's demands last year and watched much of its tourist lifeblood drain away. King argues that "non-co-op- eration with evil is as. necessary as co-operation with good. . . ."!jail." 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But he has also been hailed} around the world as a great ONTARIO LACKS TOP BARBECUER ORANGE VILLE, Ont. (CP)--R. E, Goodin, secre- tary of the Ontario Food Council, said Friday the On- tario department of agricul- ture and the food council are looking for beef barbe- cue operators. Attending a beef barbecue in this community 40 miles northwest of Toronto, Mr. Goodin said: "The problem is there just aren't enough big-scale barbecuers." Oakville's Tom Hays, who prepared 2,500 pounds of beef in charcoal ovens, is ble, but he says: booked until 1970." The department of agri- culture is offering a course to train operators. | "Tm | SAYS RECORD TOPPED BERLIN (AP) -- The East |Germany news agency ADN jsaid Saturday that Frank Wie- and become involved mostly in| gand, a triple silver medal win-jand he supplements this with setting up guardianship machin-|ner at the Tokyo Olympics, bet-|$5,000 to $6000 from some of tered the listed world record for parents of re-|the 220-yard freestyle swim by|ments. going the distance in 1:59.9 legal) ADN said Wiegand swam in the|for the movement," King said. Leipzig Stadium pool. The listed lchild on into the future when world record is 2:1.10 by Bob/goes for the they are no longer able to look| Windle of Australia, on Jan. 19,|SCLC, the church and More- 1963. leader of his people and he has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Privately, King is sensitive to the derogatory names. He says |he is also embarrassed by pub- jlic praise. But--"'if I have to go through this to give the people ja symbol, I am resigned to tee He is not an imposing figure. King is about five feet, six inches and weighs about 160. He dresses trimly, usually in a |dark suit. He is light-skinned-- "it seems-my paternal grand- |mother was part Irish." But the striking feature, and jperhaps the major factor in |King's success, is not seen but |heard. It is his oratory. This is jwhat stirs the mass meetings-- jand the staid university halls. | King says he identifies with the masses. He marches with them, and goes to jail. He lives in-a lower-middle income Ne- gro area of Atlanta, and he \lives modestly. 'My basic income is $10,000 to $12,000 a year," he said. SCLC pays him no salary be- cause he will not accept it, he added. His income is $4,000 a lyear from the church, $2,000 |more for parsonage allowance, |his numerous speaking engage- "But 90 per cent of these are Income from his writings most part into 'house College, he said. ing large enough to facilitate) group recreational activities." The concept originated, he said, bécause a retarded child living with and growing up in a normal family was detrimen- tal to both the retardate and the family. "| . . To force a moderately retarded adult to live indefin- itely in an otherwise normal family circle, is not only fre- quently destructive to the fam- ily but can be grossly unfair to the retardate himself." "Such an arrangement sim- ply does not meet his realistic, on-going needs. . . . The same may be said for a substantial proportion of moderately re- tarded children at or approach- ing puberty." | The retardate could never at-| tain the normal family expec-| tation of growing up physically,| intellectually, emotionally and! socially; attend school, select a'- vocation, marry and. estabish a family. LOVE CAN HURT If he remained indefinitely within the original family unit, he was deprived of the normal fellowship of his peers, stunted by being held constantly in the attitude of a child, and when the parents died he was shoved into the alien environment of an _ institution when he was too old to adapt. Proposed retardate families would be housed near institu- tions for access to treatment of -- illness or a period of retraining H in vocational and social skills. ' The retardate would be NY pene Bank or Mo Puts the things you want within your reach *~ \ NTREAL } ie | weaned away from total de- pendence on his own family from the teen years onwards,| perhaps spending summer va-} cations at a residential institu- tion for a year or two. He would then go through a period of evaluation and vocational training lasting up to three years. Then the family, congenial} groupings of retarded young adults, would be established. Foster parents of the family} might change many times dur-) ing the life of the group, but caution would be exercised to reduce the traumatic effect Dr. Lowther called for pro- fessional training in work with ww Family Finance Plan Bring all your personal credit needs t under one root "LOW-COST LIFE-INSURED LOANS Main Office, 38 Simcoe St.South: James McCansh, Mgr. Oshawa Shopping Centre, King St. West: Naerman McAlpine, Mgr. 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