INTERPRETING THE NEWS Madame Nhu Frail But Still Powerful By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer Nobody could claim that United States policy in Asia is a many-splendcred thing, but the humiliations of Viet Nam may ultimately serve a useful London's New Statesman-a new book by John Mander. Great Britain or Little England? One of Mander's themes ts the need for British and French nuclear: deterrents in view of the "co-ordinated strategy" of UNWANTED POOL IN~ Heavy rains Thursday seep- ed through outer walls and turned a number of basement apartments in Eastview into unwanted wading pools. Shown here is four-year-old Perry Keitel who makes the' best of it by sailing his boat in six inches of water, Mrs. Erie Kind, a next-door neigh- bor whose apartment was sim- SEMENT APARTMENT ilarly flooded, soaks her feet and watches television. --CP Wirephoto MEDICARE PLAN TO REMAIN IN COMMITTEE 'Nobody Pushes Me Robarts Maintains By JOHN LeBLANC SARNIA (CP) -- Premier Ro- barts said Friday night he will not be pushed around by anyone, including the federal govern- ment and "two-bit politicians,' in reaching Ontario's final deci- sion on its entry into a federa old-age pension plan. Mr. Robarts, car,vaigning for the Sept. 25 provincial general election, was replying to accus- ations by Liberal Leader John Wintermeyer that he is trying to sabotage the Canada Pension) Plan and is a_stooge of private) insurance companies. | He repeated his willingness to co-operate in the federal plan but said he intends to make sure | Ontario are protected. |trust companies and I will not be pushed around by any two- ibit politicians, ; | "There is no doubt in my mind that we can work out a satis- factory plan when I am satis- fied that Ontario's rights ave 1/been protected," he added. "But)tended the introduction of Sas- have no intention of being pushed around or chivvied or hustled by anyone until I am satisfied, because this is my re-| sponsibility.' Mr. Robarts said he had hoped|sponsibilities to the people we|when Sgt. Andre |that the pension question could) represent. be kept o ut of the field of parti- san politics so that the federal| proposal could be examined] with the single objective of de-| veloping the best possible plan in the light of the Ontario legis-iment. The money must come/21. o that the rights of the people of/jatyre's own new portable pen-/from the people in taxes and we| The victims were, in addition | jfeel, at least at this stage ofjto the Luckenuck boy, Michel "I won't be pushed around by} 'But this has not been so sim-/the game, the government Morel, 9; Alain Carrier, 11, and the federal government and Iiple to achieve, with everyone/should restrict its activities to|Pierre Marquis, 13, all of Que- sion scheme. jexisting non-profit plans, al- Ithough some people were con-| \tending that these would be de-| |stroyed. It would be put into effect without the "'catastrophe"| which, Mr. Robarts said at-) | | | | compulsory plan} | |katchewan's jlast. year. "If we were to have that re- sult,' he said, would nct be discharging our re- 'We believe we can give med- ical care without social chaos. "To argué meet the costs for all these peo- ple is, I think a fallacious argu- | 110 "IT believe wejhad no statement to make. t |witness, producved the clothing |worn by 12-year-old Guy Luc- that we should|keuck of Jonquiere, one of the boys killed. Faces Trial Over Death Of 4 Boys QUEBEC (CP) - Leopold Dion, 43, charged with capital murder in the slaying of four young boys, was committed for trial when he appeared at pre- liminary hearing Friday. The next term of the criminal assizes is. scheduled to open Oct. Dion, after the reading of each of the four charges, said he He broke' down and sobbed Ste. Marie of he Quebec Provincial Police, a Dion was arrested last May won't be pushed around by the/trying to get into the act,"' he|the area we have marked out." 'bec City. insurance companies or the} Pearson To Confer With Kennedy 4 OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson and President Ken- nedy may confer in New York next week, it was learned Fri- day night. Mr. Pearson addresses the, United Nations 18th general as-| sembly Thursday and Mr. Ken- nedy speaks next Friday. It is understood that no ; t ajnow under study by a commit-|tion fields, Th ¢ i mal ee i altes of experts following its in-|the fall dominion-provincial con-\the 1966-67 fiscal year, March) hey will get to-|troduction into the last legisla-/fe rence which probably will/31, 1967. meeting a fair prospect t gether privately sometime on Friday. Both also are expected to b luncheon guests of UN Secre- tary-General U T Originally, Mr. been expected to a Friday but he made arrange- ments to speak a day earlier fol- lowing a telephone conversation with President Kennedy. Mr. Pearson will be accompa- nied by External Affairs Minis- I ter Martin and Mrs. Pearson.|partially. Other citizens would} jcompanies was "forming up to hgnt bey, § al earson ha i i Fras the UN|ment run to about $30,000,000|Personal and corporation said. Mr. Robarts said he had noticed an Ottawa report Fri- day. to the effect that a large lobby of insurance and trust get into the act' concerning the federal proposal That was their own business. (The Ontario portable pension scheme is to be operated through private firms while the federal plan would be run by the government). Mr. Robarts made his only! the years of containment, that purpose. They may underline the les- son, already dimly absorbed in automatic anti-communism is not necessarily the only crite- rion for supporting a particular regime. However desperate the strategic situation, some thought should be paid to what the people of the country want. For years, critics have found fault with the leadership of Ngo Dinh Diem, not so much be- cause this lonely, monastic man happens to be aloof and unpop- ular, however impeccable his integrity may be; but because of the influence exerted by his brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, and his beautiful sister-in-law. Madame Nhu. Mme, Nhu, seen in French and English television inter- views, emerges fascinatingly as both frail and_ self-confident, charming and possibly danger- ous. She says looking after her four children, including one only four years old, precludes her from intervening in politics; but her decisive statements leave little doubt that this is just what she cannot resist. With her striking oriental fea- tures, like some villain in a comic strip, she has been called the dragon lady, and likened to Lucrezia Borgia. By coincidence, the risks of unsubtle anti- communism are currently emphasized by Conor Cruise O'Brien in reviewing for Italy Considers Control On Press ROME (AP)--A bill has been introduced in the Italian Parlia- ment proposing drastic govern- ment controls on press cover- age of crime news. It would forbid publication of information and photos in such cases as killings and robberies unless the stories were released in communiques by police or} court officials Nothing could be published) about the first stage of court proceedings and newspapers and magazines would be barred! from printing anything learned through private investigation. | Provinces To Demand By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA (CP) In about nine weeks the minority Liberal {demands each year "without | tangible results." And Premier. Robarts has speech of Friday in this Lamb-/government will be put in the/been campaigning in the Sept. ton County centre, speaking to|same agonizing position that the|25 Ontario election for @ man-|want to return to the old sys- about 450 persons on behalf of|former Conservative adminis-jdate to the dominion - provin- in| tration occupied with a big ma-jcial conference. Conservative candi dates Lambton East and West constit- uencies, | ture--Mr. Robarts said the pro-| posed voluntary plan is as far! this time. e said that current mates of the cost to the govern- jority in 1960. It will be faced with whop-jcial tax cc Discussing his government's|ping demands by the provinces/now is in its second full year, for-/medical care insurance plan--jfor a bigger share of the taxa-|with three. more years to run These will come at} open Monday, Nov, 18. | It was at the conference three Conservatives did it in 1958. e|as the government should go at|years ago that Premier Lesage,| only a month after he won Que-! esti-/bec from the Union Nationale,|turned to the provinces 10 per insisted on 25 per. cent of the| in-| The existing federal - provin- tax collections agreement before it expires at the end of But it can be changed; the They had inherited an agree- ment under which Ottawa re- cent of personal income tax nine percentage points -- as Bigger Federal Share average yield of the three taxes and 50 per cent of resources revenue. While the | federal Liberals tem, Mr. Lesage also wants a change--but of a different kind. He has advocated equalization based on the yield of income highest province, namely On-|. tario. | Over - all equalization pay-| jments for the current : fiscal year are estimated at $157,000,- 000. The Canadian Tax Foun- dation recently estimated that! Mr. Lesage's proposal would} sell this figure by $118,000,000| "'I believe the people of White|lisher, said he was also charged ' to $275,000,000, |Wintermeyer, | and corporation taxes in the/said was sent to Municipal Af- international communism to de- stroy the free world. Mander seeks to show that such a co- ordinated campaign was partic- ularly acute from 1957 to 1962; O'Brien denies the validity of the specific points Mander aj- duces to support his thesis. O'Brien, the controversial Irishman who was in charge of the United Nations operation in the Congo, writes that Mander is so preoccupied with the "great game of international strategy" that he fails to take into account such factors as the feelings of peoples, classes and sects. Communism spreads, argues O'Brien, not because Khrush- chey or Stalin presses a button but because of Western insist- ence on propping up unrepre- sentative ruling classes. "When the West pins its faith to a Bao Dai or a Madame Nhu the Kremlin needs no strategy-- just time." _O'Brien's indictment of over- simplified anti-communism em- braces two other books, Ran dom Thoughts of a Fascist Hyena, by Constantine Fitz Gibbon and Britain and the Beast by Peter Howard, now re- garded as the leader of the Moral Re-Armament movement founded by the late Frank Buch- man, Everett 'Red' Knowles, reattached to his body 15% months ago, gets help from Sister Janet at St. Mary of the Annunciation High School whose severed right arm was, in Cambridge, Mass., Friday. Everett, 14, 1s just starting high school, Massachusetts General Hospital doctors said REJOINED ARM GETS STRONGER nerves in hand are progress- ing at a satisfactory rate. The boy's arm was severed by. train May 23, 1962. --AP Wirephoto Liberal Party Chief Blasts Bracci Again FORT WILLIAM (CP) -- Lib- eral Leader John Wintermeyer began an abbreviated tour of northwestern Ontario Friday night by again condemning the Progressive Conservative gov- ernment over the affairs of the community of White River. Largely repeating what he said about two weeks ago, Mr. speaking to a rally here in support of John Chapple, attacked the dealings of Naldo Bracci as being too connected with the Progressive Conservative party for which he is an official in White River. Mr. Wintermeyer said his questions about the town '"'wijl not be answered because this Tory regime cannot afford the White River story exposed to the light of day." He rejected Conservative crit- icism of his allegations saying: "One minister in the Tory clique has said I have been go- ing around lifting the lids off garbage cans in this campaign. | Well, it is a rather odd thing for la Tory minister to say, because they are Tory garbage cans and they have Tory garbage inside them," QUOTES LETTER The Liberal quoted a letter he are entitled to know why no Crown land was made available for residents to buy it and build homes." The Liberal Jeader flew here Friday. During the trip his plane re- fused to go at a stopover. The. chartered DC-3 aircraft carry- ing the Liberal party landed at Sault Ste. Marie to refuel on the flight from Massena, N.Y, The pilot could not get one of the engines started to take off The Liberal leader cut short his stay in northwestern Onta- rio to keep a reckrding with other party leade He, Premier Robarts and NDP Leader Donald MacDonald are taping a television debate to be shown sometime next week. Mr. Wintermeyer plans to leave here today, cancelling a speech he was to have made in Fort Frances tonight. He had been scheduled to remain in the | again. An RCAF DC-3 happened to land at the time and a man in uniform got out, came over and diagnosed the trouble. It was minor and the Liberal plane took off again. Earlier Friday, Mr. Winter- meyer visited the city hall at Cornwall, where he met civic of- ficials and shook hands * with municipal employees. Then caught his plane at Massena across the St. Lawrence River from Cornwall. Nude Model 'Happening' fairs Minister Spooner on Sept. 110; signed by a Mr. D. R. Ber- trand who was not identified fur- ther. The letter was said to have reported that a request for Crown land to help alleviate a housing shortage was refused, Mr. Wintermeyer said: River and the voters of Ontario ldistinct from nine per cent--of ce, |corporation taxable income, and He didn't get it. 50 per cent of succession dut- per year, involving some 600,-|come tax fields for his prov- 000 people whose coverage costs|!" iwould be met wholly from the| WEATHER FORECA \ ) ST And Leslie Frost, who had not(ies. treasury and about the same it stepped aside for John Ro- number of 'marginal' persons for whom the cost would be met He will fly to New York Monday) pay their own way with the gov- night, returning to Ottawa Sun- day afternoon, Sept. 22. His schedule includes a meet- ing with the Canadian delega- tion at the UN Tuesday. Mr. Pearson is expected to speak to the assembly about) 10:30 a.m. EDT Thursday as the second speaker following Brazil Police Find Woman In Bedroom Wall fernment supervising. standards of service and the ceiling jcharges. | The plan would not disrupt Sleeping Sickness Peak Passed - MDs REGINA (CP)--The Saskatch- ewan health department said Friday it believes the peak may |have been passed in an outbreak of sleeping sickness among resi- LOS ANGELES (AP)--Police|dents of the province. searching for 70-year-old Mrs Anna Lewis found her--sealed behind a bedroom wall of her home--dead. Now they're looking for Mrs Lewis' husband, Joseph, 72. Police said he told them Wed- nesday he had not seen his wife since last June when she left to visit a daughter, Mrs. Jacque- line Stitts, in Dayton, Ohio, and a brother in Chicago. Lewis told police his wife had not returned from Chicago. He passed a lie detector test Wed- nesday, officers said, but has not, been seen since then. Officers searching for clues at the Lewis home Thursday noted a freshly painted panel in a sec- ond-floor room, They removed it and found Mrs, Lewis' body on a folding bed in a hidden recess. tory tests now have confirmed that 10 Saskatchewan persons have contacted the disease while nine other suspected sleeping sickness cases were actually other virus diseases. The provincial laboratory here still is checking on other sus- pected cases of sleeping sick- ness. "Although new cases of west- ern equine encephalitis (sleep- ing sickness) are still being ad- mitted to hospitals, the admis- sions are fewer and we believe the peak of the outbreak may have been passed, Dr. V. L. Matthews, associate deputy health minister, said. The department said labora-|" didn't intend to repeat the same barts as Ontario Premier, then demanded an-even bigger cut-- |50 per cent, He said Ontario {needed the money and that if {Ottawa didn't provide it, the province would have to raise |money by imposing a sales tax. Mr. Frost didn't get his way, jeither. His word was képt; the |provincial government imposed ja three-per-cent sales tax the jfollowing year. | The Liberal government can! jexpect no less. Mr. Lesage has since repeated his demand, this time putting teeth into it, In his budget speech prior to the federal general election of |April 8, Mr. ~ Lesage' said in |part: | "Either the central - govern-| |ment, whichewer party is elected April 8, and I repeat whichever party is elected April 8, will have profited from the jnext 12 months to take account jof the demands of Quebec or we in Quebec will have seen to it, during the same period, that necessary decisions in fiscal matters will have been taken. "And these decisions will be those dictated to us by the ob- jectives of economic, social and cultural affirmation which we have fixed for ourselves at the mi demand of the Quebec peo- ple." . Mr. Lesage warned that he | RAISE PERCENTAGE The Conservatives raised the 10 per cent to.13, producing the so-called 13-9-50 formula. In 1961, following the 1960 conference, they abandoned the tax-rental system and turned in- stead to "tax collections" shar- ing. The rebates of corporation and succession taxes were left unchanged, The key difference is that Ot- tawa decided to progressively retreat: from the personal in- come tax field --withdrawing 16 per cent in the first year, 17 per cent this year, and there- after pulling out by one point a year until 20 per cent in the fi- nal year, 1966-67, The provinces were free to en- ter the personal income tax field to that extent, or more if they wished, Neither in opposition nor in the last election campaign did the Liberals have much com- Plaint about this revised method. But they opposed the revised system of equalization, pledging during the election campaign to return to the old one. Until the 1961 agreement, equalization was based on the yield of the three "standard" taxes in the two highest proy- inces, The Conservatives changed this, basing equaliza- tion payments on the national Sunday Little Warmer Official forecasts issued by the Toronto weather office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Gradually increas-| ing southerly winds will bring steadily rising temperatures to- day and Sunday, first to North- ern Ontario and then gradually to the south, Lake St. Clair region, Wind- sor, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ni- agara, Lake Ontario, Halibur- ton, Georgian Bay regions, Lon- don, Hamilton, Toronto: Clear today and tonight, not quite so cold, Sunday sunny and warmer. | Winds becoming south 15 -Sun-|% day. Timagami region, North Bay, Sudbury: Clear today and to- night. Sunny with cloudy inter- vals Sunday. Warmer today and warmer again Sunday: Winds betoming south 15 to 20 Sunday. Algoma, Cochrane, White River regions, Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny and warmer today. In- creasing 'cloudiness tonight fol- lowed by a few scattered show- ers toward morning. Sunday va- triable cloudiness with. possibly a few isolated showers. Winds becoming south 15 to 25 Sunday. {Wndsor: siscesesses | Kitchener |Ktchener .. Sunny; Forecast temperatures: Low tongt, Hgh Sunday: 48 48 42 42 40 40 32 40 50 St. Thomas eens Mount Forest ..... Peterborough .... .« Moosonee ... Timmins .... Dawson ... Victoria. ... Lakehead ... White River .... Sault Ste. Mari Kapukasing . North Bay Sudbury: ... Muskoka .. Toronto ° Killaloe sescseseees Ottawa Montreal Quebec Halifax CALL OR SEE | DIXON'S "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF AliL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 290 King W. 728-6226 | FOR OIL FURNACES SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 OSHAWA"S BIGGEST REAL ESTATE MOVE SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and -+ SOON! | Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol). 728-9441 | | Monteith, Monteith, Riehl & Co. Chartered Accountants 135 SIMCOE ST. NORTH @ RESIDENT PARTNERS Gordon W. Riehl, C.A., R.A. Burt R. Waters, C.A, PARTNERS; Hon. J. W. Monteith, F.C.A,, M.P. A. Brock Monteith, 8. Comm.; C.A. Gordon W. Riehl, C.A., R.LA, George E. Trethway, €.A; Robert W. Lightfoot, C.A. | Burt R. Waters, C.A. OSHAWA, ONTARIO @ TELEPHONE: Oshawa-Bowmanville 728-7527 Ajax 942-0890 Whitby 668-4131 Faces Charge EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- A 19 - year - old model has been charged by police with inde- cency for appearing in a '"'nude happening' at the Edinburgh festival drama conference last week, the organizer said Friday. John Calder, a British pub- over the nude incident at the final session when the model was wheeled naked under a spot- light on, a trolley across @ thea- tre balcony. Calder said Miss Anna Kessel- aar was accused of acting '"'in a shameless and indecent manner in respect that . . . she did in full view of those present allow herself to be wheeled across the organ gallery on a trolley while in a state of nudity." Calder was accused of allow- ing the. incident to take place and with failing "to exercise the authority as organizer and per- son responsible for the conduct of the said conference to pre- vent the same." Amefican film director Ken- neth Dewey said last week he arranged the "event' and named playwright Charles Lew- son and artist Martin Boyle as his collaborators "in the enter- he} northwest until Sunday, | Man, 40, Draws Life Term For Strangling Wife PORT ARTHUR (CP)--A 40; year-old Port Arthur Man Frt- day was sentenced to life im- prisonment for strangling his wife. ; Arthur Frank Smith, being tried on a charge of capital mur+ der in the death April 5 of hi 39-year-old wife, Billie, entere a plea of guilty to a reduced charge of. non-capital murder., The all-male jury accepted the plea after deliberating five minutes and Smith was sente enced by Mr, Justice D. P. J. Kelly, : Evidence at the trial, which began Thursday, revealed Smith strangled his wife with three pieces of electric cord and had planned to kill himself and: hig Man Without Country On 'Move InCanada ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)-- George Christian Hanna, the so- called man without a country, is on the move again but still within Canada, Hanna was taken from his penitentiary cell by the immi- gration department and placed aboard a plane for Montreal at noon Friday. It had been expected he would be deported aboard the Egyp- tian freighter Star of Suez when it called at nearby Bay Roberts to pick up cargo. However, the Suez now is two weeks late and not expected at Bay Roberts for another 10 days. Hanna arrived in Mont- real two months ago aboard the same ship and was arrested, The immigration department said he would be taken to Que- bec City from Montreal and placed on a ship. Opposition Member Sues Premier Jagan GEORGETOWN, British Gui- ana (CP)--An opposition sena- tor, Anne: Jardim, has taken court action against Premier thorities Park sou® bear came in® the vicinity of his campsite (Xe first time. two daughters, aged 9 and 11; Smith admitted killing his wife to his family . doctor, »C. -Es Baker, the following 'morning, Dr. Baker notified police. Tourist Faces Charge After ; Shooting Bear | ATIKOKAN, Ont. (@) -- Af American tourist was charged with discharging a firearm in a provincial park Friday after he shot a bear which had slas| his tent with its claws. Wolfgang Schleu of Bound Brook, N.J., said he advised au- °t Quetico Ptovincial of here after thé The second time he went to his car, parked outside the park entrance, got his gun and shpt the bear because he feared for t d he. safety of his wife and chil- ren, In edition to charging Schleu, who left for home after postmg bail, authorities confiscated his rifle, Quetico Park is a bout 100 miles west of Fort William. Cheddi Jagan, his wife Janet and two other persons, for libel and slander. Miss Jardim, a member of suit Thursday in connection with| statements made by Mrs. Jagan) at a press conference Aug, 22) regarding aid to British Guiana) from the Soviet Union, Miss Jardim is also suing) John Brian Kelshall, a public) prise." The birthday - suit shock! |brought im me diate criticism|Party, and Albert Mehan Man, a |bank manager, from Edinburgh Mayor Duncan| she ria and other offi-| Clals. "Happenings," which have be- "{come _ increasingly popular in the United States in recent years, are theatrical events de- Signed to surprise an audience || NEED AN relations officer for Premier Ja- gan's Peoples' Progressive the United Force Party, filed). | 3 WEEKS OVERSEAS LOW AIR FARES "© BRITAIN xo \. EUROPE! WE OFFER AT SAVINGS UP TO $150 VIA TCA, BOAC, KLM and all scheduled Airlines. 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