PACEMAKER RUNS HEART Little Yvette Marie Mc- birthday in San Diego, Calif. ter Mary Raphael of Mercy Farlin, whose heart is gov- hospital. Doctors say she is Hospital joins in celebra- erned by an electronic pace- the youngest person to have tion. --AP Wirephoto maker, celebrates her first heart device installed. Sis- Mum's The Word In Cheating Probe telephone by the Denver Post.jdal last Saturday, placed the He said his son has been forced|blame on an organized rink of of a court-martial and a more|to sign a pledge not to say ail0 or 12 cadets. severe penalty, has been|word until until officially sep-| Later it was learned that a clamped on resigning cadets injarated from the service. the U.S. Air Force Academy) Thirty football players, aide sce cheating scandal which may not\cream of the academy team/4 locker containing examinatio be cleaned up for weeks. that had a 4-5-1 record last fall,|Papers, copied the papers and The academy superintendent,|are reported in the large group|then solicited 10 classmates, Maj.-Gen. Robert H. Warren, in|implicated in an "exams-for-/Some of them football players, announcing six more withdraw-|sale" racket that operated on|to. sell them. als of the more than 100 cadets|the campus before the final] The salesmen are said to have involved, said the painstaking/tests of the pre-Christmas se-|got only 10 per cent of the go probe by a special officers'/mester. : ing price, which hasn't been panel may extend to Feb. 10.| Zuckert, in breaking the. scan-'disclosed. be forwarded to the secretary Sick Ruse By Prisoner Just Like James Bond COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP)--A tight gag, with threat the of the air force, Eugene M. Zuckert, for personal review) and any further action the sec-' retary may feel is needed. | This could take anywhere | Another academy spokesman} said, "it is just a ee | TORONTO (CP) -- Peniten-\but McConnell said that instead counting heads as they fall. tiary guard Edward McConnell|they went to a hotel to eat, al- During a 30-to-60-day period @|qescribed Tuesday how a pris-|though both had eaten supper cadet under investigation, al-\oner he escorted here for his\and had a snack on the train. though he may have quit the| mother's funeral escaped from| McConnell said they were in the air force. compiained that he was ill and He has been warned that if, McConnell, a guard at the et tor the washroom. he discusses the case, even) 7) ceville ai cenit ' rat ihe He followed Morin seconds with his parents, he is subject nisdysitaeds heating v7 Rickard later, could 'not find him, then to having his discharge re-/y 30 of Torente, charged|S2¥ him walking outside, the viewed and downgraded, with a|Morin, 32, of Toronto, charge 1 phoned Toronto polite tence possible. ej doer ie Morin was found later and The father of a football The hearing was adjourned un-itaken next day to the funeral player, one of 29 who left the til Friday parlour, McConnell said he took academy last week, was in . Morin was supposed to be)Morin back to prison, hand- tears when interviewed on the lodged overnight in police cells,jcuffed all the way TORONTO (CP) -- Three members of the Ontario legis- lature said Tuesday that prison- ers at Mercer Reformatory for Women claim they were pun- ished because they gave infor- mation to grand jury members. The jury, after conversations with the prisoners, issued a highly critical report on the in- stitution last November. Vernon Singer, James Trotter and L. A. Braithwaite, all from Toronto-area ridings, repeated the prisoners' charges at a press conference. The men said they had interviewed Mercer girls for five hours. Mr. Singer said some girls told him Christmas parties and tea breaks had been cancelled. The girls had told him a ma- tron came into. their room, slammed Her fist on the table and ordered the disciplinary measures for those suspected of having talked to grand jury members. The three Liberals said every charge made in the grand jury Mother Acquitted Of Murder Charge | TORONTO (CP) -- Mrs. |Marion Clunes, 26-year-old Tor- jonto mother of four, was ac- auitted Tuesday of a charge of non-capital murder in the June 5 fatal stabbing of her hus- band, Robert. A 12-man Ontario Supreme Court jury delivered its verdict after deliberating two hours and 45. minutes. Mr. Justice A. R. Jessup said told the jury '"'in my opinion your verdict was justified by the evidence. said: "You have been very ably de- fended and you are a very for- tunate woman. You are dis- charged." Mrs. Clunes breathed a deep lsigh of relief and smiled. Some of her relatives in court {for the trial NO HALF MAST AFTER STORM BELLEVILLE (CP)--The City hall Red Ensign couldn't be flown at hailf- staff Monday or Tuesday in memory of Sir Winston Churchill. After city officials had re- ceived numerous phone calls from annoyed citizens, Mayor Jack Ellis broadcast an explanation on the local radio station. A rope used to hoist and lower the flag had been snapped by a snow and sleet storm during the weekend, the mayor explained. And because of ice on the city hall roof, workmen were unable to make re- pairs. But, he said, the flag would be hoisted to half- staff as soon as workmen were able to get footing on the roof he agreed with the verdict. He} PM Declares Moratorium On Comment About Dupuis Turning to Mrs, Clunes, he! report was true and that the in- stitution should be "torn down." AREN'T ENOUGH EGGS Complaints ranged from in- frequency of eggs served a meals to a self - induced abor- tion five months ago for which the girl claimed not to have had proper medical treatment. Mr. Singer said girls hate to go on the Mercer "sick parade"' because usually the most they can hope for is a laxative. One girl, he said, had migraine headaches and was given a lax- ative to cure them. Mr. Trotter said chamber |pots are emptied once a day and cleaned once a week in the same bathtub girls use for bathing. He said Mercer is completely outdated. "It is a slum," he said. "I think the chamber - pot approach to reform institutions must go." The three Liberals said the Conservative government should replace Mercer as quickly as possible. LIST COMPLAINTS Among other complaints made by prisoners were: Newspapers allowed into the reformatory are always Punished For Talking, Say Mercer Prisoners at least a day old; and con- troversial items have been clipped out. --Tea is provided in the even-' ing but prisoners must stand up when they drink it, lest they spill tea on furniture. --Only Protestant and Catho- lic church services are pro- vided. If a member of one church attends the service of| another, she is punished. The legislature members said they had intended to visit other provincial reformatories, but they were so amazed at what they found at Mercer that they didn't continue, | MONTREAL (CP)--The Gaz- ette says in a story from Que- bec City that "the RCMP inves- tigation into the mysterious case of Yvon Dupuis was or- dered as a direct result of in- formation supplied to the fed- eral department of justice by the Quebec department of rev- enue." In Quebec City, a revenue de- partment spokesman said he kad '"'no comment to make" on the Gazette story. The newspaper says it learned from "reliable sources" | | | | | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson, saying a police in- vestigation is under way, de- jclared a moratorium Tuesday lon comment about the abrupt third-year cadet stole a key to|cried, including her mother and|¢eparture of Yvon Dupuis from n\father who came from Scotland|the federa' cabinet. "An investigation is going on now into a matter which oc- curred. some years ago, before he (Mr. Dupuis) became a member of any cabinet," the prime minister told reporters following a three-hour cabinet meeting. The investigation was being carried out '"'by the department of justice, through the usual in- vestigating body." That is the RCMP. Meanwhile, in a telephone in- terview from St. Johns, Que., Roch Desiauriers described as correct press reports that he turned over $10,000 in cash to Mr. Dupuis while trying to ob- tain a racetrack franchise from Quebec authorities. The 31 - year - old St. Johns the entire affair to Justice Min- ister Guy Favreau during the latter part of December." Mr. Dupuis was dismissed by Prime Minister Pearson last Friday as minister without portfolio in the federal cabinet. The Gazette says it also learned that "the revenue de- partment ordered a complete re-examination of Mr. Dupuis' income tax records, as well as those of everyone involved in \the case, on the strength of its findings." The department began its in- that Eric Kierans, Quebec rev-| vestigation more than a year enue minister, "personally for-|ago, into "'manoeuvres by two warded a complete dossier of|groups to obtain a race track chiropractor referred specific- ally to the following informa- tion published by Montreal Le Devoir Monday: --That Mr. Deslauriers was in Mr. Dupuis' office at Ot- tawa when he handed him $10,000 during efforts started in November, 1960, to get authority to build a racetrack with pari-mutuel betting at St. Luc, in St. Johns County; --That the money in bills of $10, $20 and $100 supposedly was to go to "Mr. Paul Earl, then provincial revenue min- ister, as evidence of the solv- ency of the financial group Mr. Deslauriers repre- sented;"' --That Mr. Deslauriers lost $74,000 in the enterprise. Le Devoir said the payment was agreed upon late in June, 1961. Mr. Dupuis, Commons mem- ber for St. Jean - Iberville- Napiervilie, has been unavail- able for comment since a state- ment denying any wrongdoing. | MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The leading Russian representative at Sir Winston Churchill's fun- from 30 to 60 days. academy, remains a member Of him in a dining lounge. ithe dining lourige when Morin court-martial and prison sen-\With escaping lawful custody|Suard | said. oo SIR WINSTON'S GENIUS A Legacy To Fight Inertia? By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer complacent people into a power-|difference that threatens Brit- The genius of Sir Winston/ful fighting machine. ain's future Churchill struck a responsive. Now in death can his memory, Baroness Asquith, one of his chord during the Second World 'again transmit a legacy of bat-iclose friends and great admir- i LADY CHURCHILL WAITS AT WESTMINSTER HALL Heavily veiled and in deep emourning, Lady Churchill peers from window of her car at London's Westminster Hall as she awaits the ar- rival of her husband's coffin for the lying-in-state. -She, her -son, Randolph, and other members of the fam- ily waited in the frigid weather as the hearse arrived and the body was received at the entrance of Westminster Hall by the Archbishop of Canterbury. --AP- Wirephoto via cable from London rd victory broadcast when "he jurged us not to fall back into) the rut of inertia and the craven fear of being great." In paying tribute to him in the House of Lords, the daugh- /quat ter of the late prime minister Herbert Henry Asquith added: "I knew that the 'pattern of, greatness which he (Churchill) impressed upon the spirit of the nation is what he would ask from us." Perhaps said in plainer words is the statement attributed to Lord Bowden, a_ minister in prime minister Wilson's govern- ment, who suggested "Mr. Wil- son needs to give Britain a kick in the backside. If he cannot do it, nobody can.' The splendor of Britain's rit-| ual as it pays homage to the} great warrior - statesman con- trasts to what describes as a tawdry country,| getting more tawdry. The society's journal suggests| Britain is a country "where | people are unreasonably con-| tent with the second or even} third best because it does not} seem to them that it would be practicable or even equitable to ask for more," "This dull acceptance of the status quo is a more serious system of malaise than any War when he sought to weld a,tle against the inertia and in-jers, says she recalls Churchill's tangible embodiment of out- datedness." Britain needs "not just a rev- olution but a revolution marked by all kinds of subtleties." |Roads and housing were inade- e; ports were clogged; |manufacturing tended to be un- limaginative. As Bfitons prepared to file by |Churchill's bier, Baroness As- lquith suggests they keep his |words in mind. If there is any- thing they now can do for him, it is to recall his plea against jinertia. "Winnie" To Be Launched? LIVERPOOL (Reuters)-- r late Sir Winston Churchill. The possibility is being con- sidered by the Cunard line, a company spokesman said Tues- day. The new 58,000-ton liner will take the place of the 81,000-ton Queen Mary. It will link the old and new worlds by sailing be- tween Southampton and New \York starting in about three lyears. Why Pay More... SAVE! PREMIUM QUALITY FUEL OIL 16: Phone 668-3341 DX FU Serving Osha EL OIL wa & District | |POT ROAST |SHOULDER |PRIME RIB Three Soviets To Attend Funeral eral Saturday will be Konstan- tin Rudnev, a deputy premier, the Soviet foreign ministry an- nounced today. With him will be Marshal Ivan Koniev, the first Russian army leader to make contact with the Americans in Germany in 1945, and Alexandr Soldatov, Soviet ambassador in London. A British embassy spokes- man said Rudnev and Koniev would leave for London by air Thursday. Rudnev, who is chairman of the state committee for co-ordi- nation of scientific research, has visited Britain before. Revenue Department Began Dupuis Investigation: Paper franchise, first in St. Luc, then in St. Hubert," The Gazette says "The inquiry was accelerated Jast year when new representa- tions were made to the depart- ment, and the final evidence was accumulated in early De- cember. "It was at this point that Mr. Kierans determined that the case could only properly be handled in Ottawa, and for- warded a copy of his report, together with accumulated evi- dence, to Mr. Favreau. At the same time, the investigation into income tax files was or- dered." Mr. Pearson said Tuesday he had seen many press stories he would not comment on them. And he would have no com- ment before leaving tonight for London to attend the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill. He said it was not customary in the pasc to discuss resigna- tions from the cabinet, Even while adopting a no comment attitude, the prime minister said more publicly about the case Tuesday than he had since Mr. Dupuis, the cab- inet's youngest member with a reputation as a rousing polit- ical orator, resigned Friday under unusual circumstances. Parliament has traditionally maintained a right to inquire into ministerial changes and Stanley Knowles (NDP -- Win- nipeg North Centre) has said Parliament .should be called to- gether immediately to discuss the Dupuis affair. Mr. Pearson said he has no intention of changing the previ- ously - announced Feb. 16 date for resuming Commons work. about his cabinet troubles, but], THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, January 27,1965 3 In Bloodless By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet Nam's generals returned Lt.- Gen. Nguyen Khanh to power in a bloodless military coup to- day, and the Buddhist opposition to the civilian government be- gan jubilant celebrations. Khanh charged Premier Tran Van Huong's three - month - old government had failed to stabil- ize the chaotic situation in the country's major cities. He said the chaos was impeding the war against the Communist Viet Cong. The coup posed new problems for the United States, which had hoped civilian government could rally the populace behind the war effort. The U.S, embassy said in a statement: "Until we can assess more clearly the nature and extent of the important events set in mo- tion this morning, it would be premature for the U.S. mission to comment or render a judg- ment." Reliable sources said Khanh and the military council he heads had planned the coup for Feb. 2 but decided to pull it off today because U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor was on a trip to Laos and Thailand. TAYLOR RETURNS Taylor-left Bangkok hurriedly to return to Saigon. Five leading Buddhist monks who had been making a '"'fast to the death" to bring down Premier Huong officially began eating late this afternoon. An estimated 4,000 supporters flocked into the Buddhist head- quarters, which previously had been barred to them by para- troopers, and dragged the beds the monks had been resting on into the streets. The Buddhist hierarchy broadcast an appeal "to all chapters throughout the coun- try" to cease the anti-govern- Khanh Returned To Power Army Coup agen official Viet Nam. press, e Bed nr P sag = status uong and Suu, ev- idently were deposed. interned sources "ee Khanh ge would reappoint Suu as_ figurehead chief of state. "Now it's Taylor or Khanh," a Vietnamese officer said. "One or the other has to go." Khanh is understood to have made the recall of the ambas- -- one of his prime objec- ves. Khanh said his general staff would name a 20-member mili- tary-civilian council to advise the government on important decisions, The coup took place without violence. Huong and his cabinet were free and apparently under no duress except that they were out of jobs. No arrests were re- ported and there was no unusual military activity in the capital. While the coup generated the usual tension among politically- minded circles in Saigon, most of the city's residents displayed their usual disinterest. It was the seventh major gov- ernment upheaval since the as- sassination of president Ngo Dinh Diem Nov. 1, 1963. With each change has come more chaos and a deterioration in the war against the Communists. The communique from Khanh and his armed forces council re- vealed that it had begun meet- ing last Saturday, the day Budd- hists sacked a U.S. Information Service library in Hue and four days after Thich Tri Quang and other monks announced they had begun a fast to the death against the Huong government, TWO CONGOS The former Belgian Congo now is called the Republic of Congo and its neighbor, once a French colony, is known as the Congo Republic. ment campaign. Authorities prepared for trou- ble as reports circulated that Buddhist mobs would sack papers which opposed the hist campaign against Hu- Budd g. Police had orders to use tear gas to disperse them. Need Mortgage Money? a Real Estate | McGILL *:..: Day or Night - 728-4285 Khanh called in Deputy U.S. Ambassador U. Alexis Johnson to tell him of the military take- over. ISSUES COMMUNIQUE Khanh issued a communique saying he was taking charge "to resolve the political situa- tion at the present time." 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