GUERRILLAS IMPROVISE is made from plastic bags have confirmed non-lethal commercially available in gas has been used in some Vietnamese cities. A hole is tactical situations against cut and filled with gauze the Viet Cong. bandage material contain- --(AP Wirephoto by radio ing charcoal. U.S. officials from Saigon) A Vietnamese soldier mod- els a home-made Viet Cong gas mask captured during a battle in a guerrilla head- quarters 15 miles west of Saigon on April 3. The mask Audrey Hepburn To Sub | Use Primitive For Neal At Oscar Show as Masks SAIGON (AP) -- rie By BOB THOMAS | Her husband rushed her tolcone hon startet supphving its rw ;<| UCLA Hospital, where a second be atria eigen ye. 2 HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- It is) 'cokm tade her unconscious troops with primitive -- but ap- the custom of the Motion Pic- While emergency measures parently effective -- gas masks. ture Academy for the best-|were being taken, the third and). A dozen of the masks actor Oscar to be presented by|jargest of the strokes made found hidden in a Communist the previous year's winner forjcurgery imperative. Dr. regimental headquarters over- best actress. Tonight, due t0/Charles Carton removed clots,"U by South Vietnamese troops the illness of Patricia Neal,|created by hemorrhaging. Com-|in a cane field region about 15 that tradition will be broken. plicating factor: Miss Neal was|miles west of Saigon. Audrey Hepburn, who won/pregnant with her fourth child.| U.S. authorities disclosed two oe -- Wr enn for, Roman} For days she showed no sign weeks ago that non-lethal gas oliday, will substitute for Miss| Neal. The event has this added! significance: Miss Hepburn|motor responses so improved) The Viet Cong gas masks are came here from Europe even|that she was allowed to go made from large plastic bags though she was snubbed by/home from the hospital after)commercially available in Viet- academy voters, who failed tojfour weeks. Her condition to-/namese cities, -- her for My Fair/day? A piece the size of a small ~ ee "Everything is going as well envelope is cut from each, This § ght havejas expected -- perhaps even|hole was lined with several overtones of sorrow except fOr hetter," Dahl reported. 'Pat|/ayers of gauze bandages the fact that Miss Neal, win-|) a ; ¥ \Crumbled charcoal is inserted : as made. amazing progress, |: ner of an Oscar last year fOr! nut of course it will be a long|!" the. bandages, Hud, is making a remarkable|time before we'll be able to| "It would have the same ef- a for her af or recovery -- ae strokes! judge the final result, fect as a charcoal filter in ee "Right now she is learning to|"igarette," | one U.S. adviser Feb. 17, the actress finished walk again, and she is doing commented, her second day's work ON/fing She has a brace on her, The gas mask presumably is Seven Women and returned to},ight leg, but there: is every (Pulled over the head and tied i ie ' with her two children and hus-| able to walk without it in time,\comes- A Vietnamese soldier band Roald Dahl, noted British) cy. is also learning to use her experimented by placing one author of short stories. She suf- right arm " : on his head while his com- fered the first, disabling stroke. ' rades blew smoke in his face. RIGHT SIDE HIT | The strokes had left her para- smoke. U Thant Seen iysen on the right side: The, CCC SCS functions of her left side were ss . : unimpeded Civil Rights "As to:Pat's speech, no one UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- added, Secretary General U Thant| What can account was reported appreciative Sat-|surprising recovery? MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Civil urday of a suggestion by Prime) «{'m not sure.' said Dahi,\and Political rights cannot be Minister Pearson of Canada| she is a very cheerful|fully implemented unless hu-| east Asia to set up a UN con-lof difference. She works at/¢conomic and social rights, Mui- ference on regional economic!eyerything she does." ford Q: Sibley told the Amer- development. As for the expected baby, he 8" Humanist Association Sat- A spokesman for the secre-|\said there seems to be no phys- urday, tary - general told reporters: ical reason at this time why it y, professor of. political tive. For the time being, hela decision that will await con-|Minnesota, spoke in a panel has no indication of the reac-|sultation with Mrs. Dahl's doc- discussion of human rights at tion of the different parties|tor in England. The family ex.|the_ association conference, concerned, He will follow it!nects to return to their English|, Sibley was refused entrance very closely." home before the baby is born.|° Canada last month when he ys abet : ; public meeting sponsored by the gested might provide the enter-/able to walk on the airplane|yoice f Women. The as ing wedge for getting Thantland walk off," said Dahl. "Ilment later annougced heowil! he into Peking and Hanoi, where|would imagine that would be an boy we Rookie ag hi ae? i he could seek negotiations to!about five weeks." . a sowed cotranne sy oe ag _ abou plans are being made for him 3 A U.S, source said the United) "That is impossible to pre- A constitutional guarantee of States would not object toidict," he said. "I'd say it was equality before the law doesn't Thant going to those capitals'eyen money at this time. But/hold for a man who can't get for that purpose ask me in six months and Ia good lawyer because of lack anna can give a better answer." of money, Sibley said. Pressmen TORONTO (CP) --The Tor | onto local of the International Printing Pressmen and Assist ants Union of North America (CLC) ratified Sunday a new Toronto's three daily newspa- pers. } The contract, covering 230 employees, provides for wage increases of $13 a week and an to $40 a week from $38. The new minimum weekly. salary will be $159. The agreement includes a sick benefit and disability plan newspapers The Star, The Telegram The Globe and Mail -- and the employees each contributing half of the pre- miums. oe the. rented. home she shared! xpectation that she will be|@t the neck when a gas attack He said he could not smell the Appreciati pp ve can tell z R \"But that he go to China and South-|woman, and that makes a lot}man beings also are guaranteed "He appreciates the initia-lshould not survive. But that is/Sclence at the University A trip such as Pearson sug-| "{ want to wait until Pat isle, ghitie han gps Mad aserytongten end the war in Viet Nam. Will she be able to act again? to speak in Winnipeg. Sign Pact aac three year agreement with increase in company pensions on an insurance basis, with the and PLEAD FOR POCKETS MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)-- Shirts worn by prisoners at the Shelby county penal.farm are made by women prisoners--who seen.ingly are inexperienced disinterested or dis gruntled Male prisoners printed this plea in the prison _ néwspaper "Please, jadies, could you relo cate the pockets so we could find them without taking off our pants?" Ww were i, COMING WED The Oshawa Kiwanis Club MONSTER RADIO AUCTION | WATCH & FOR TUESDAY'S PAPER See the List of Articles to be Auctioned By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP)--Through joint production with France, Rritain eventually may be able to edge into the European Com- mon Market without taking out Common Market membership. This appears to be the prin- cipal possibility arising from Prime Minister Wilson's two- day Paris meeting with Presi- dent de Gaulle. The meeting has been hailed both in the British and French press as the beginning of a new era of friendship between the two countries. In a joint communigqie, Wil- son and de Gaulle said there had been British-French agree- ment on extensive co-operation in military and civil aviation construction and other "sophis-| ticated technol ogies." The} meetig was the first between) France and Britain at the top) level since France vetoed Brit- ish membership in the Com-) mon Market in 1963. The meeting is to be followed} |by a rapid flow of cross-chan-| nel minis how the new '"'entente cordiale' is to be expanded. Any expan- sion is likely to be mainly in |the economics field. The two leaders indicated they still are as far apart as ever on such sensitive foreign policies as the war in South Viet Nam and the nuclear force for the North |Atlantie Alliance as well as the future of the alliance itself. WILSON IS HAPPY Nevertheless, Wilson was happy, claiming at a Saturday jnight speech at Southport, Lan-; |cashire, that "the world is look- jing to us for a lead." | To provide this lead, the Brit-| ish people would have to "streamline our economy and fibres,' and, added Wilson in a possible reference to next Tues- day's budget, "that is what we're going to do." Wilson's trip to Paris had been preceded in the British press by gloomy forecasts that the prime minister today would! announce the death of the con- troversial 1,400 - mile - an- hour TSR-2 strike reconnais- sance aircraft. Cessation jcraft industry. The deal with de Gaulle may mean eventual job replacements, with the prospect of creating a big open- ing in the Common Market by tunnelling under its tariff wall. Britain and France are co-| U.K. May Get Slice Of European Mart ings into gold, This, said Wil- son, had "led to counter-meas- ures being taken by the U.S." Anglo-French finance minis- MONTREAL (CP)--'I would rather be the 'puppet' of the workers of Quebec than the 'puppet' of Noranda Mines, which other governments. were "Puppet" For Workers Preferable - Levesque which he had become a "pup- pet." FIRM RETRACTS The Thursday release, re- before us,' Rene Levesque said|tracted by the company the Saturday. next day, said the source of operating in development of|'ers now will meet to explore the supersonic Concorde trans- port. plane and Wilson said in a Saturday night television. in- terview that two countries now will explore further co- operation, such as on a strike reconnaissance plane and a variable - wing aircraft for the 1970s, HAS SALES POTENTIAL France, a top member of the six.- country Common Market, has the sales potential. Britain has high - performance engine skills. Wilson stepped away from signing a joint production' qe Gaulle had agreed on a new|release last Thursday which ac- overture to the Soviet Union onjcused the minister of making|ers) It was evident that if France|German reunification. He gave|"vague to gain from this co-opera-|no details but said the matter|tions" and added that he had/else." jhad been put to a committee of been fed information from = treaty with de Gaulle. is tion, it may have to ease its pressure on the British pound which, Wilson again, will not be devalued, emphasized) | | ideas for expanding world fi- nancial credit or liquidity and here again the new spirit of friendship may reduce French pressures on declining Brit- ish and American gold reserves. HOPES TO SEE KOSYGIN Wilson said he very much hoped to see Soviet Prime Min- inister Alexei Kosygin soon. Kosygin has accepted an invi- tation to visit London and Wil- The statement is the Jatest! development in a verbal battle! between the Quebec resources! minister and the mining com-; pany. ; | The squabble began when Mr. | Levesque made a speech during) a tour of Northern Quebec, mines last week in which he said "intolerable things are tak-| ing place in Noranda" and Sug-| gested that Noranda Mines "learn to civilize themselves} son has agreed to a return visit to the Soviet Union, the prime} minister said. | Wilson also disclosed he and} western ambassadors in Wash- ington. The committee includes|~ U.S., British, French and West Before going to Paris, Wilson| German representatives. has spoken in the Commons of etary field." cated a return to the ard and also had turned more of its United States currency hold- Outb "This will take a great deal terial talks to explore| what almost seemed to him asj|of patience, time and perhaps *!an undeclared war in the mon-|some dissappointment, Wilson France had advo-|said. "But the question is be- gold stand-|ing discussed with a view to making a new approach to the lSoviet Union on the subject." reak Of Education Fever In Adult Maori Community AUCKLAND (CP)--A remark-|take well-paid but dead-end jobs able and welcome outbreak of/in unskilled labor. education fever has struck adult Suddenly, without special Maoris in New Zealand's Auck-|campaigns or awards, the edu- land area. All over the district|cation : night/among adult Maoris. they are enrolling in classes with the aim of taking school graduation examinations. All authorities agree that edu- 4 idea has caught on PASSED EXAM The spark was the success of 25-year-old laborer, Robert cation is the key to the future Mahuta, in passing the school progress of the Maoris, New certificate examination at the Zealand's native race. Individ- end of last year after study at ual Maoris have won high a- night school while working dur- demic regard and have filled|ing the day. School certificate posts as professors. But far too js the national examination usu- few have gained advance? qual-| ally ifications. involving three or four years of secondary education. The proportion attending uni-| Mahuta spent seven years in versities is still far below thaticoal ofjof the white population, despite|soldier with New Zealand forces of movement. Then slowly, her|!S being used '"'in certain tac-/TSR-2 production would cripple}a widespread campaign and the|in Malaysia, and one year in consciousness returned, Her/tical situations" in Viet Nam.jq big part of the British air-|creation of many special bur-| building labor before sitting for saries and scholarships. Too many leave school at the at minimum legal age of 15 and Gas Station Closure Ends PARRY SOUND, Ont. (CP)--, About 125 service station oper-| ators in this area 60 miles} northwest of Orillia voted Sun-| day to end a week-long shut-; down of stations because of hardships on some operators. All but one station here and along a 150 - mile stretch of Highways 103 and 69 to Sud- bury closed Monday to back demands from oil companies. After being told at a meeting ing on bankruptcy, tions today and continue negoti- ations with the companies. THE ULTIMATE IN SPACIOUS 1-2-3 BEDROOM SUITES * PENTHOUSE * * ADULT BUILDING G@ORGIAN I 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA bela APRIL 7th / They also decided to ask the provincial government to con-| trol wholesale and retail gaso-| line prices. They want their profit margin to be increased to 8.5 cents from 6.5 cents on a gallon of gas without an in- crease in the retail price. Some motorists, using the mines, two years as a the examination, He left school 15. He passed with good marks and now hopes to qualify as a school teacher. |. His success appealed to the jimagination of other Maoris. They began to form groups to study for the same exemination. Some are mothers of eight or nine children, The education department is providing all the help it can in tutors, supervisors, special highways affected were forced) for a higher profit|to abandon their cars and hitch- hike when they ran out of gas. One station was left open Children's eal , the oper i Si rs said. paign LUXURY LIVING!! CEILING ELECTRIC CABLE RADIANT HEATING * } MODEL SUITE * By Appointment Only 723-1712 mansions os Na jthat some operators were verg- during the weekend. It pumped} the oper-|5,000 gallons and the profit was about it yet," Dahl 7 ] | a Heard ators agreed to open their sta-|contributed to the Crippled ] JUST RICHT 25 MODELS during Whatever remaining) time is left to them." Noranda replied with a press | unsupported declara-| a very questionable source of courses and correspondence. lessons. A major cause of Maoris leaving school early has been lack of parental encouragement to children to continue their studies. Now it is hoped -parents| will insist on their children staying longer at school. this information was the United Steelworkers of America | Mr. Levesque said Saturday that Noranda, which operated a number of mines in northern Quebec from its head office in Toronto, has 'complete con- tempt for Quebec society."' Speaking to the Liberal Asso- ciation of Montreal Maison- neuve riding, he said Noranda Mines' policy is "that of quash- ing the workers by any means, infiltrating unions, sabotaging bargaining units and systemat- ically refusing them (the work- that which was granted them 10 years ago everywhere Helps You Overcome FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No longer be annoyed or fee! il! -at- ease because of lonse, wobbly faise teeth FASTEETH an improved alka- line inon-actd) powder, sprinkled on | your plates holds them firmer ee they | fee! more comfortable Avoid embar- | rassment caused by innse plates Get | FASTEETH today at any drug counter | 0 ALUMINUM OSHAWA FREE PARKING ALUMINUM AWNINGS PORCH ENCLOSURES STORM-SCREEN DOORS-WINDOWS PRIME WINDOWS CMHC ACCEPTED FLEXALUM SIDING JALOUSIES ALUMATOPS FOR PICK-UP TRUCKS up HOOLVENT AWNIN paoRWway windows Colorful KoolVents keep rooms damage to furnishings... give your home new beauty and alle weather protection. SEE THEM TODAY! GENUINE, LIFETIME Ventilated, Aluminum G to 20° cooler... prevent sun Showroom & Factory PHONE 728-1633 95 ATHOL ST. EAST---OSHAWA | - 4 SERIES List Shares On Exchange TORONTO (CP) -- Simpsons- Sears Ltd. announced Sunday that its class A shares will be listed on the Toronto and Mont- real stock exchanges today for the first time. Of the 1,800,000 non - voting class A shares, 1,504,410 have been issued t o employees of Simpsons - Sears Ltd. and as- sociated companies and to the company's profit - sharing re- tirement fund. The balance of 295,590 shares are available for issue to the fund and to em- ployees. LISTEN HERE: Wally Crouter "YOU MEET THE NICEST PEOPLE..." Wake up grumpy, still tired, listless and unwilling to face the world? Don't bite the children. Thousands of CFRB listeners start the day with a smile on their face because of The Old Crout. A capable con- versationalist on any subject from egg plants to dirigibies, that's CFRB's Wally Crouter and the sound from the Music Room is designed not to jar your nerves. Start your day the right way with ha Crouter, gre: mornings from 6:00 to 10:00. CFRB 21010 ONTARIO'S FAMILY STATION Reward!! He Just Bought a New 65 Buick How About You! Why Not See Your Mills Best Buick Yet . . There's o world of newness in the 1965 Buick. A larger, more owner satisfaction. Why not Buy Buick today... Man Today! comfortable. world, with exciting new lines, new dimensions in at Mills. 46 It offers so many rewards to the discriminating driver. The CLIFF MILLS MOTORS 266 King St. West Downtown Oshawa Phone 723-4634 YOUR PONTIAC -- BUICK -- VAUXHALL -- VIVA -- ACADIAN -- GMC -- BEDFORD DEALER.