epee Rerre . its entry * New Brunswick * burned and ransacked by Bud-! a penta intl Seal al tale Fad P RE MIER ROBICHAUD of New Brunswick gestures as he predicts other prov- inces will follow New Bruns- wick's reform in several fields. He was guest speaker Sunday at the closing ban- quet of the Young Liberal Federation of Canada. (CP Wirephoto) Young 'Libs' Seek New Youth Look By DENNIS ORCHARD OTTAWA (CP) -- The Young! Liberal Federation of Canada will sport a younger look from now on, mainly to fight inroads} by the New Democratic Party. | The federation knocked five) years off its upper age limit Sunday and elected a 24-year- old president dedicated to beat- ing back "the new challenge from the left."' The new maximum age for Young Liberals will be 30 in stead of 35, their national con- vention decided, The federation will hardest for members at high school level, where politi- cal clubs are spreading up.! There's no minimum age for membership. New Democrat activity among teens, especially in On- tario, was a lever that forced the age-change through the con-| vention despite strong opposi- tion. | The change was voted down) in full plenary session Saturday i but the 170-strong Ontario dele- gation reintroduced the issue Sunday and in a second ballot, cleared the necessary two- thirds majority by two votes. Clyde Wells of Corner Brook, Nfld., warned that the federa- tion was driving out the New Brunswick and Newfoundland provincial associations with the change. work the | a Toronto law student, Young Liberals have two big NDP, the other to help choose} a new Liberal party leader "within two years," time Young Liberal organizer, | and promised to promote re-| gional thinkers' conferences. In a two-way fight for the! presidency Mr. Smith defeated Frank Shunock, Sault Ste. Marie lawyer, 138 votes to 93. The convention asked for greater government plunges into the economy. isffective economic planning meant a "directed economy," not the existing "mixed econ- omy," delegates resolved. The government should create) Crown corporations to run utili- ties extending across provincial borders--such as pipelines and railways. The Young Liberals want a) national board to conserve water, a national commission to set and implement planning guidelines, a royal commission to investigate marriage and di- | yorce, and a national agricul- tural committee of their own federation to formulate long- term farm policy The convention declined sup- port of United States policy in Viet Nam, advised against join- ing the Organization of Ameri- can States just now, and urged recognition of China--but not into the United Na- tions The Young Liberals' policy on bilingualism asked Ontario and to give the French language official legal status and recommended full education for French- and Eng- lish-speaking Canadians in their own language where possible With a crack. at the party's "appointive or ruling elite' in Ottawa, the convention called for party reorganization into re- gional power centres. PUBLISHER WOUNDED SAIGON (Reuters)--The pub- lisher of a South Vietnamese newspaper that has strongly criticized the recent anti-gov- ernment agitation was shot and) seriously wounded Saturday by| an unknown gunman, a police spokesman said. Chu Van Binh, | publisher of the newspaper | Song, was shot as he stepped| into his car on his way to work. | The newspaper's office was dhist demonstrators Thursday | after it came out against the) demonstrations. ! Good Nemes To Remem! 1916 EASTER UPRISING RECALLED By GODFREY ANDERSON s ireland-returned to normal to- day after a tense weekend spent. virtually under siege dur- ing commemoration of the 1916 Easter uprising in Dublin, can demonstrators, 12,000 anthem of the Irish Republic in Casement Park Sunday, About ja mile away, 5,000 Protestant Queen outside Ulster Hall. Union Jacks were paraded with bands through the centre of the city to the war memor- lic also flew, though only in city, : Leaders of the Easter upris- ing were honored as heroes back. Somewhere, uneasily in the middle, large police forces Roman Catholic and Republi-| | ip {sought to keep the two groups to the Irish Republican of non-Catholic areas. Violence flared when color rosettes through the Protestant demon- The crowd attacked and pur-| sued them, Two were rescued | |quickly by police, but the third and pro-British counter-demon-|was besieged in a house while |tremists planted a timebomb in strators sang God Save the|the mob smashed its windows. a telephone exchange Sunday took the three girls|Sunday but a caretaker found into! it before it exploded, and police \defused it. Apart from another window-|tremists want all.of Ireland lial. But the green, white and|smashing episode and the burn- united, at all costs, under the orange flag of the Irish Repub-jing of St. Theresa's Romen republic. | Police and a flag-waving youth rotective custody. |Catholic school, a temporary Outbreaks Averted In North Ireland BELFAST (AP) -- Northern|apart. They turned a blind eye|prevented the big influx of Re- tri-|/publican sympathizers from {color 80 long as it was kept-out}seuth of the herder that had | Zig been feared. Border crossings three | were so slight that many police | girls wearing Republican tri-|patrols were withdrawn ahead wandered of schedule. strong, lustily sang the national | stration as it was breaking up.|memoration of the 1916 uprising weekend, Roman Catholic districts of the} wooden building, the heavy po-|a main telephone cable was cut| This tough security curtain The Republic held its com- yp PREMIER WALTER Shaw of Prince Edward Island announced a general elec- tion for the Maritime prov- ince during a_ television speech Saturday night. Mr. Shaw, at 78, is Canada's oldest premier, He has a son in Oshawa, Dr. W. M. Shaw, who is also a direc- tor of the Oshawa Generals' hockey team, (CP Wirephoto) week ago, during the Easter In Dublin, Republican ex- Republican ex- In Clondalkin, County Dublin, | /lice precautions apparently pre-|by an ax, disrupting lines to the| |vented major trouble. Northern Ireland was_ virtu- machine - guns checked traffic. 'MAN WEIGHS 600 POUNDS HE'S ALSO A LIGHT EATER PHOENIX, Ariz, (AP)-- Something started to happen to Raphael Apodaca in 1952, the year he weighed 290, "i started to gain," he re- calls. Since he is a comparatively light eater, doctors want to know why he keeps getting bigger. Apodaca says he tips the scales at 600. That is, when such scales can be found. At the Maricopa County General Hos pital, officials couldn't find anything Saturday 'on which to weigh Apodaca when he arrived for a checkup. No wheel chair or strecher could move him to his ward. He finally was mounted on to two mattresses and carried to the ward by forklift. The 61-year-old patient was deposited in two beds welded together especially for him A native of Mexico, Apod- aca lives in Peoria, Ariz., and worked as a truck driver un- til his weight began balloon- ing in 1952. He has seven chil- dren but can't find work now that his bulk permits him to do Apodaca will undergo tests for a while, a hospital spokes- man said, while doctors try to figure out what to do about his weight problem. Record Nuclea 4 Times As Big CHICAGO (AP) -- The mos' massive nuclear particle ye known--nearly four times massive as the proton -- has been discovered by the Argonne National. Laboratory scientists. The team of physicists who made the discovery call the new particle N-asterisk-3245. tron volts. Its. discoverers John O'Fallon, ~Alan Krusch as r Particle | As Proton | | published their discovery in| Physical Review Letters, a sci-! entific journal. They said N-asterisk-3245 is a proton in an energized state, It belongs to a family of particles called nucleon resonances, they said, | t t south of the Republic. with a minute's silence at Case-jally sealed off from the Repub-|can Army announced it was ment Park. They were con-|lic throughout the critical per-|planning a campaign of vio- demned at Ulster Hall as reb-|iod of the demonstrations. All| lence to protest against jail sen- els who stabbed Britain in the |trains across the 182-mile bor-|tences on some of its members \der were halted. Police with) and against the Republican gov- road ernment's ties with Britain. 'Bilingual PM 'Seen Big Need By Mr. Hellye Minister newly learned French Yy The outlawed Irish Republi- Election In PEL ™ May 30 strengthened CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) remier Walter R. Shaw Satur. day announced Prince Edward Islanders will vote in a general election May 30, but the news came as no surprise to most r residents, The 78-year-old Progressive Defence Conservative premier said in speaking in|" interview from his home at to. the nearby New Haven Sunday he oung Liberal convention Sat-|WaS not planning an_ election OTTAWA (CP) Hellyer, urday, said he believes the next Until "the opposition very vig: prime minister should be bilin-}OTously attacked our resources jgual. president development program." The "Oui," he replied to outgoing Liberals had criticized the gov- Michel Robert who |ernmment for bailing out new put the question in a '"'hot-seat" industries, especially fish pro interview. any asda | vorce laws to make the grounds_ difficulties. |for divorce "adequately broad." The defence minister said he these is France's decision to withdraw election on cessing and shipbuilding indus- He also said he will support tries in the Georgetown area, legislation to change di-|whenever they got in financial firms was wrong," the concerned about)premier said, so he called an the government's not too from the integrated command record on industrial develop- | of. NATO. ment and prosperity. "They insisted our assisting | Strike Act -- Threatened By Mailmen | s| PRESTON, Ont. (CP)--The executives of letter carriers' as- |sociations in Ontario, Quebec jand British Columbia met Sun- Z Z\day and unanimously adopted a |'no-fooling-around"' approach to wage demands, Charles Maguire, president of the Hamilton branch of the Fed- erated Association of Letter Carriers (CLC), threatened strike action. "We are going to go on strike, if our demands are not met, "This time we are not going to be the victim of uncertainty. There will be no claims. of in- flation to stop us. "We feel that we are being short-changed on the superannu- ation plan because of the: inte- jgration of the Canada Pension Plan." Roger Decarie, president of the Montreal branch, called for the ousting of 12 of the 13 offi- cers, who, he claimed, had let the association down in last summer's strike of postal work- ers in Quebec, Ontario and Brit- ish Columbia. "We want a contract with the jright to strike," Mr, Decarie jsaid. "The demands all over Can- ada are the same. We don't want compulsory arbitration. It is up to us to take it into our own hands and to go on strike, if our demands are not met." Mr. Decarie suggested that letter carriers seek a $50-a-week increase instead of the $120 monthly raise now sought. The top salary for carriers is $4,905 They received a $525 raise after the 1965 strike Robert Hamilton, business agent for the Vancouver branch, promised the full support of his group TROUD' <u TUES. and WED. SPECIALS NEW YORK (AP) -- Matt Meyer, president of the corpor- ation formed by three merging New York City . newspapers, says "We will either publish our two daily papers on April 25, or we will publish no papers jat all." | | The corporation, the World Journal Tribune Inc., is to pub- lish a morning, an evening and a Sunday paper, Meyer, who made the. state- ment Sunday, had this state- ment for the 10 newspaper un- ions, none of which has reached an agreement with the new cor- poration: "The April 25th date for start- ing our new newspapers is firm, and unless the unions rec- ognize that this calls for some production work early this 'PRIVATE ARMY GETS RECRUITS BLAIR ATHOLL, Scot- New Corporation Plans 2. Papers Or None On 25th THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, April 18, 1966 3 week, a situation tantamount to a strike is inevitable... ." The Herald Tribune, a morn- ing paper, is scheduled to be publish xt Monday, April 25, as first edition of the new corporation. TWO PAPERS COMBINE The other two papers in the merger--The Journal American and The World-Telegram and Sun--are scheduled to appear that afternoon combined as The World Journal. The Sunday edi- tions of The Herald Tribune and The Journal American are to be combined. Following Meyer's statement, a spokesman for the new cor- poration explained that any de- lay in the start of the two pa- pers would not delay the clos- that the three separate corpora- tions will be out of business §n Sunday, the 24th," the spokes- man said. ' Spokesmen for the unions have said their members would not work without agreements with the new corporation. Con- tract negotiations are going on, The justice department has not yet announced approval pf the merger. ' Bertram Powers. president bf New York Typographical Local 6, said he interpreted Meyer's statement as an indication that the city's newspapers planned' a mass shutdown, Helps You Overcome: FALSE TEETH Looseness and Worry No longer be annoyed or feel ease because of loose, wobb! teeth. FAS' aD im} line (non-acid) powder, sprinkled your plates holds them firmer so feel more comfortable. Avoid em! ' ling' of the three newspapers, rassment caused by loose plates. ASTEETH at any drug counter |now being published. "It means pil i land (Reuters) -- Britain's only private army--it never goes into battle and never pays or retires any of its 30. members -- today got seven recruits, The recruits--two tracior drivers, a deerstalker, three farm workers and a game- keeper--were offered mem- bership by the army's leader, the Duke of Atholl. 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One was to combat the|of its energy, 3,245,000,000 elec- Keith Ruddick He wanted a share in the sen- and Steven Kormanyos, all of - for party's free-time political the University of Michigan, and! telecasts, appointment of a full-|Lazarus Ratner of Argonne--!nucleus -- or neutrous. | Its life is only 'one-ten thou- sandth of a millionth of a mil-| lionth of a millionth of a sec- ond. 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