K Prof. Fox said most English Canadians have never been I ready to accept the French-Ca- lnadan demand for recognit n s first-class citizens. to con- I tinue their allegiance to their own ethnic group while still be- street baturday night 10 min-l utes be Revolution ‘ fore a Viet Cong t rr i list riding a bicycle iobbeedora‘ Began In Que. . homemade grenade ‘ r I Lodge drove along the Saigoni New Viet Cong Terrorism ~ :3 Jit ' C cup of strolling Americani Four Years ‘- i may . \Pi Viouiiting i rilias ambushed a jeep and in- i SOWCFS- Ladge “'35 0" his “'33” BANFF Alia into a @1106 Onaxdimt ’W—Chaiidi‘iaoiinm. Tut-{Ma373,w 1964. PAGE 9 .. . . _ . _ . _ r ' _ i . _ . . ., ‘— "w—‘rm; —“""‘—‘“ .‘ mimmist \iel (on: terrorismi Jured slightly 3 Polish major llo ‘nsl’em “‘9 damang mm“ Canadian llathlllallifillnger'lltl" ‘ mg accepted as “wens M can. SECOND thTION . “his Vietnamese capital attached to the International] “Thls is typical or ill“ ml” by a m cm revolution Slut-13‘ adiai‘ ‘ h C d-. m h - [I 0 es. ania ia-ns Indians} 0 a, all ""15 “9”” four years ago after the dean,‘ . . . Th. t Cras Hear'ng [I ii)“ Lilac ilciiuuncco The white-painted commission] utterly reiolting to t:l\'lllzed of premier “aurice Du less! inad‘amsm ms" ‘5 ".1115 m- m. \‘iet Cong tactics as ‘niur . vehicles have come under Viet People 9 V8 r y W he re " said‘ pawl Fox pgmcal scienge mg" or he “'1? be .Tbsorbed mm an. Due To Resume . v (1 p ‘ ' . i "i ccruus and remltino to ClVlllZEd‘ along. fir: before but this was LOdge- . fess“. at the University of Tm_ 01%? “suitable adjusb p(Twice mode the statement' reiedEStivlemtiaas rep. Hundes or tenor!“ anaCks omo' sald here. "lems" are “Oi made canada MONTREAL [CPI—The for- ..oi’S, ‘ . _ t r . i - i - iiTi' , - n . u ’ r . . alter narrowly missmg invove-I n the continuing warfare :- l {late gccurred m salgon m the semin‘zl: riimuiilil‘aycgi [Old 8 “"11 break 893" and Quebec mal mqueSt "Ito thegdeaths 9! mm: in a grenade attack that south Viemamese unit walked; as ‘ 3/931'5- but there was meme Studemg‘at ~ become in effect. sepai 118 persons killed Nov. ‘38 in liijurctl eight Americans and into an ambush on a secondary Erowmg concern the comm”? sitv of Alberta. 3‘99] from the res" of “5' 3" Canada‘s Worst air disaster. is one \'i(‘lnan:(‘hC—n0;io Severely maid 120 miles west of Saigon nists would use the. month of' most ’ econom i pen] to many of “5‘ expected to resume about June ..oii a stree near tie ommu- i an ost 17 infantrymen and May which contains several ' ' affairs church‘ VOICE RANGE l ' - " _ g . i. . . . i . _ . i . it has disclosed here. nist -"sab‘:taged U.S. aircraftl ClVlil dguardsmen killed and 31 Communist and Vietnamese! lations, in politics—inc. The normal intelligible out- investigators are finishing off {ol'i‘y saitur ay iwoun ELI—30 per cent of the en- holidays. for an all-out terror fight for their national ideri-1 door range of the male humanl‘ their search of the site in Ste. campaign tity." ‘voice in still air is 150 yards.;’l‘hei-cse where a Trans-Canada r. tv‘rlsiv L Niv r] States. Aiiihassador be filled in this week. But investigators H- 08 \lcanwhilc. Viet. Cong gut‘r ‘tire outfit. voun PouriAc-BmcK-AcAniAu VAOXHALL DEALER INVITES YOU in His . “ V ‘ I \ l i i'i.v ~| "if. III I l 8 \ l [ starring (38 models in 11 series) (26 models in 7 series) 9’7: « Buick Wildcat 2-DOOr Spait Coupe Buick Special 2-Door Coupe ir (6 models in 2 series) SPECIAL Ann VI 50 ATTRACTION out qumont Sport Deluxe Cowl Acadian Canso 2-Door Sedan RECORD NEW-OAR SALES BRING YOU SPEOIAL “CELEBRATION” DEALS! than 80 choices—and a wide selection of models available for immediate delivery. 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Dial 2-1243 Be sure to watch “Telescope” on CFCY-TV Friday at 10:30 pm. and “Zero One” on CFCY-TV Tuesday 8 w“- R ‘ D Air Lines DC-tl crashed shortly after takeoff Just north of Mont- re Police said a 35-foot-deep hole dug by investigators to retrieve bodies and bits of wreckage will will con- tinue searching the crash site for other pieces of the plane. The swampy area is to be drained so that a search for the plane's tail stabiliur can go on Explodes Into VIENNA iAPi——A gathering, of 3000 students in Prague for traditional May _ poclrv reading exploded into wild anti< government rioting. DlDlOllliil.t' sources said in Austria the out— burst bordered on open revolt. Shouts of “Long live trcc- dom" and "Down down with the Gestapo" came from students. and at least 15 were arrested as club-swinging police aided by dogs quelled the outburst. «aid informants who quoted Western reports relayed from Czech capital. CTK. official Czech new; agency, said there was a dis iiirbance but denied student; were involved. There was no po— litical demonstration but. only 'an act of a small group of oodlunis," said CTK. It said the ringleaders face charges of isturbing public or er. it was the third student out- burst. in the last three years on the traditional Communist, lin‘ii- day in the Czech capital. On the. basis of available reports it was the most violent. PRESSURE 0N ECONOMY ‘ Target. of the demonstrators was the Communist. regime headed by President Antonin 5'- to 9.: Prague Poetry Conference Violence Noiotm. There has been a gradual liberaliZation in the countrv the last four years of the p()\‘-Slltllfl era, but '0- nomic pl‘l‘sstll‘oi have been in- ci'eiising recent y. The informants gave this ac- count of the disturbance 'l'iic riot broke out right at hinskv Park. students from Charles Univer- sity and \‘8l‘lf‘ili:s high schools had gathered for the traditional Singing and poetry reading. This is an old custom by stu- dents dating back to pre-Com- munist times The crowd w a s clustered around llltht’ r e c i ti ii g when about. «100 [)(Jlit‘t‘lllell surrounded the park A police officer told he student: the “meeting was closed ' and demanded that they ispcrse students started chanting anti - government slogans, re- riding the rcginc for poor liv- ing conditiom and lack of free- dom of slicccl When the students refused to leave the park special units of Friday where "3. r? V armed riot police moved in. The sources described the incident as. the closest to open revolt in Czechoslovakia} 18 years of Communist rule Teamster Union Official ' Charged With Blocklisting l WASHLNG'L‘UN‘ IAP‘i « F.3- iward G Partin. the Teemstc: ‘ who helped convict union P est— dent names R. Hot a of federal jury -tampering. has been chaig ' a government action with ‘hiacklrisring a rebel union mem- labor said A national board examiner ariin. .hla ic Teamstcr truck. ,driver who challenged his han- dling of union funds and ac- }cused Partin of “ill treatment of union members" in a Louis- } iana Teamsters' local. Meanwhile, Hoffa was re- ported laying the groundwork for trustecship action to seize Partin‘s Baton Rouge local. Once close friends the two . have been bitter enemies since P a r t i n's surprise testimony helped the government win an eight-year jury-tampering sen- tence against Hoffa. ‘ The ruling of NLRB examiner George A. Downing said Partin refused to aet‘epi the dues of Teamster Calvin C. Clary as a relations i get him r . “The evidence‘shows 4 . . that r Milan was in fact. in disfavor, ‘fl‘lih Partin because Clary had openly aligned himself with other members of Local 5 in opposition to Farm and to his l subterfuge to blacklist him and hi ed The examiner said the evi- dence showed also "that Partin repeatedly sought to have Clary withdraw from such opposition. both by promises to straighten out his dues arrearages and by threats made to Clary‘s wife of blacklisting and other harm to befall Clary, meanwhile. refus- ing to accept Clary‘s tender to his back dues." D o w n i n g said Clary had signed a petition asking investi- gation of “Partin's allcged mis~ handing of union funds and iii treatment of union members." These are the grounds on which Hoffa is reported using to try to wrest Partin's local from him. although the action is not. based on Saturday's NLRB finding. Downin: recommended that Partin be ordered to stop coercing (‘lary 0 ans,' other local Teamsler and to notify (‘lai‘_\"s employer to reinstate YD Downing recommended 31;. ‘Partin be ordered to compen- sate Clarv for any loss of pay since July 30. 1962. Downlnfl's ruling becomes final in 20 days unless then b an appeal to the NLRB Education Problems Involve I Emerging Teen-Agers’ Role I MONTREAL i'CPi—The prob? lems of education today centre around the emergence of the teen-ager as a"powerful , vocif- , citrus and influential segment of joiir society." Arthur '(ilasliaii. director of Montreal's Association of Roman Catholic iSchool Principals, l “The emergence of the tecnw rager is not in itself disquieting." er. Glashan told the Federation .of Parent-Teacher Associations I of Quebec. “but it has been syn- onymous with a general abdica- l tion of parental privileges The two nether have produced a sttua~ tion which is both frightening and ominous." . . Glashan said education~ tsts "generally failed towhet the youngster's appetite for any. independent reading, and so. today we have many youngsters in high school who will admit that they never hnic opened a book unless they had to. "Young people conform rot because they have not been taught to be independent. but rather because they have been taught enough of anvthing. it is their uncertainty that, imakcs ilicm huddle together in [i faceless anonymiiv " and E r . a 3 . 0 r. Sir Alec Hopes Commonwealth l Can Be Example LONDON i.-\Pi ~ Prime, M ulster Alec Illelasvl has evpresscd that llllf‘ British Ct'nl'fllilll- wealth can become an example to the world of how nations with varying news and inter-. est. can still live together. Sir Alec salt: in a message to the aminal Ciiiscnativc ('om- monwealth Ciiuiicii contercnce: “The cold war and the coin- nial era is passuig Together we now can make the Common- wealth an embodiment of the illlt_'l‘d(‘pt"n(lt‘ll('(‘ lo uli'ch the whole world cvciuualh must come" Sir \titcomlv Humr. chair- man of a (‘Oliilt‘il economic sub- committee warned overseas delegates to rite meeting Ihcrr countries must make a zeal effort to :ttract capital and administrative talent r om abroad Said Sir Sizlioinho "(‘apital null not tlnw uiln your (‘Olllllllt‘fi unlcs: YOU ('10- ati the right climate to make it pay. It is no good penalizing the expatriate manager who 1 comes over to stht the ball rolling." Mr. Glashan said the (eon- ager faces “ unreasonable and often frantic pressure from parents to force their childlren into early dating. “Why can't we allow them to ' a period of natural growth?" Statistics showed there was a direct relationship between a student's use of a car and his failure iii school. "The use or ownership of the car provides greater opportuni- ties tor dating. It usually means that the youngster. in order to maintain the can and his girl friends. gets a part-time job." Pressure: to keep up the can th girl friends. the part-time job and school become lntoler. able. he said, and the student becomes a dropout. Parents must “be bold enough make unpopular decisions uphold them." he said. “it, N useless to wait. for the PTA to hold a conference to decide on acceptable standards of dress lll' behavior. Parents must liaie the courage of their own coii\"ctions." BING CROSBY REACHES 60 H U l. I. Y WOOD at?) -— Bing Crosby was 60 Satub iav. He is illll keeping up with the younger set pretty well. in mm, at 57. he became a father for the sixth time. when his second wife. ac- to B ,. and ‘rt‘ss hatiirvn Grant. 30. had a son She'd presented him with a daughter two years before that. To what does he attribute Alix enduring slimncss and filliOSS. time when manv of his contemporaries arc Sll0\\lnE all 60 of their years. Says 3“ 7I\' tcc " R-"R: from "just those hack grocer- m (EL'NFTRE MARKS VOTING BE I R LT 'AP l ——A 14-year-old girl was killed by gunfire Sun- dav wounded in the final round of elections for parliament, The four Sundays 11' \i1t1nz gave Lebanon 8 new 994nm! parliament which is to meet this month. Premier nus- sein Oweini's provisional cab- and ab out on persons Lebanon‘s new net is expected to resign to make way for a new govern- .ment. l fireman-a. —-A.-