Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Oct 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy VOL. 93 -- NO. 238 She Oshawa Times OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964 Weather Report Scattered showers tonight. Sunny, turn- ing cloudy and cool Saturday. High-45, low-82, Department In Cash. TWENTY PAGES Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office | Ottawa and for poyment of Postage QUEEN'S VISIT NEAR MAY QUIT UN, HINTS SOVIET US. To Get Tough U.S. position on the UN finan- cial crisis in a long memoran- dum to Secretary-General U Thant for circulation as an of- ficial document. Stevenson expressed willing- ness of the United States to ac- cept any reasonable solution for|payments should be made. breaking the deadlock over fi-| 'The only vitally essential in- Car Checks Clog Roads In Quebec QUEBEC (CP)--Old Quebec) cian, is acting attorney-general. UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- The United States gave notice Thursday it will demand that voting rights be taken away from the Soviet Union the day the UN Generai Assembly opens--Noy. 10--unless the Rus- sians pay up for- peacekeeping operations. . reluctance to pay anything on its $55,000,000 debt deeply af- fected the constitutional struc- ture of the world onganization. The memorandum said ail UN members must be prepared to be flexible on how the back sion of the charter, | The Soviet Union and nine other countries are | finds itself practically sealed off|He met with Premier Jean Le-" today as security measures for|sage Thursday and later with the royal visit this weekend be-| the police security committee. gin to make themselves felt. | 'I'm completely satisfied we | The feeling isn't pleasant for|are ready for any eventuality," this city, which is known for its|he said in an interview. hospitality. The cloak of secur-| Police have indicated they ity is not tight, but itchy. will keep a close eye on events Traffic became clogged|such as tonight's downtown Thursday at entrances to the/rally of le Rassemblement pour city as police stopped incoming /|l'Independance Nationale, a cars, searchin g some, This/spearatist group which plans a measure, which stirred a good! "passive demonstration" Satur- deal of grumbling, will continue | day. oe until midnight Sunday, after) Students of Laval University's Queen Elizabeth and. Prince|suburban campus have Philip. have left for Ottawa. scratched plans for a demdon- Some rifles have been seized) stration and instead will mock from persons not having. hunt-|the visit, choosing a "queen'"' ing licences or lacking 'a good|today and scheduling speeches reason" for carrying the weap-|by students dressed up as the i | Fathers of Confederation; Yellow wooden barricades al-| Mr. Wagner eaid there will be ready are in evidence on routes|no 'unjustified arrests" but po- the royal party will follow--|lice "are proceeding with the mostly across the Plain of;utmost co-ordination and are Abraham--and strollers on the| fully aware of relevant articles plains find themselves giving al of the Criminal -Code, particu- wide berth to police dogs on'larly in relation to sedition and, short leashes. inciting to riot." During the weekend, more | | wa, has prepared a than 1,000 police, backed up by| 10 USE RIOT TRUCKS Alex Wagner, pastry cook at the Chateau Laurier in Otta- set of soldiers and fire brigades on| Quebec City's 400 police, us- standby, will be on duty. jing 50 vehicles, including four }new riot trucks, will be on duty TO SEARCH SERVANTS |during the weekend as well as Civil servants have been told| more than 400 provincial police to leave the legislature build-|and hundreds of Mounties, ings by noon today. They will] Routes the Queen will be thoroughly searched, and 800|will be lined with soldiers. Police and soldiers will ring the/ Buses are ready to move po-| legislature when the Queen goes/lice about quickly and fire bri- there Saturday morning. |gades have been placed on Lieutenant - Governor Paul |standby. | Comtois' official residence at! Frogmen will keep an eye on Bois de Coulonge, on the Plains,|the hull of the royal yacht Bri- was evacuated because of a/tannia while it is berthed here. bomb threat last Sunday. It has| Pierre Boungault, president of been under close guard since.|le Rassemblement, has de- The Queen will lunch there Sat-|scribed the visit as a "now or urda: never situation" for separatists! ow. Britannia sailed into a Te Chateau Front {to ti t show the! - where Hy ge mn ont oe beautiful sunset Thursday night , the St. Jean-Bap-|as she moved between the has take) ON BOARD HMCS NIPIGON (CP) --. The royal yacht Brit- annia steamed into the St. Law-| rence River early today carry-| ing Queen Elizabeth and Prince} Philip to Quebec City, the sec- ond stop on their Canadian visit. white sugar crowns for the reception in honor of Queen Elizabeth. The crowns will ails For Quebec 'Second Stop Of Visit lottetown Wednesday night when the Queen ended her three-day visit to Prince Ed- ward Island. | As, she prepared to board the Britannia in Charlottetown for the cruise up the St. Lawrence to Quebec, a gangplank slipped, The incident was greeted by the Queen and Prince Philip with good humor, but royal party officials shuddered at the thought of what could have hap- will give dinner criticized the|Gaspe coast and. Anticosti Is- . visit as "'political one" and has land, ending a cetul day's Claude Wagner, the tough|urged Quebecers to stay home! ey ran Montreal judge turned politi-!and ignore it. | journey from Charlottetown. The day's events inclided a BEN BELLA FURIOUS see eles Soe We Bee annia and her destroyer escorts to give a tiny fishing vessel the right-of-way, and an official Tshombe Stomps Home statement from the yacht on the "gangplank incident" in Char- After Stealing Shc 3 er otealing »how CPR Asked To CAIRO (AP) Congolese! In Leopoldville, 24 Egyptians i j Premier Moise Tshombe left/and four Algerians from the} Review Service for home today after stealing|two embassies left the Congo-| TORONTO (CP) --. Ontario the show from the conference of| lese capital Thursday night and| Highways Minister Charles non-aligned nations he was not|crossed the Congo River to}MacNaughton has asked Cana- allowed to attend. | Brazzaville, capital of theldian Pacific Railway President | The Congo's 44-year-old pre-| neighboring Congo republic. IN. R. Crump to reconsider| mier took a commercial air-| U.A.R. Ambassador Moham-/plans to withdraw two , Peter-| liner to Athens and then Paris.|med Ibrahim Kamel said the |borough - Toronto commuter! In Paris he was to take a char-|hasty departure did not meanjtrains from service until the re- tered plane back to Leopold-|a break in diplomatic relations|port of a government study of ville, | with The Congo but he had been|transportation in the Toronto! President: Gamal Abdel Nas-| instructed to close the embassy! region is complete ser, who had held Tshombe un-| temporarily. der house arrest since his ar-| -Tshombe had come to Cairo,he expects a study by the Met-| rival Tuesday, freed him after|for the non-aligned conference|ropolitan Toronto and area| the premier ordered his govern-'despite a telegram that' he|transportation committee will ment to lift the retaliatory; would not be welcome. Nasser|be completed "within the next blockade it had put on the em-| clapped him into Aruba Palace|few weeks." He said he hopes bassies of the United Arab Re-|on the outskirts of Cairo and|a government decision, baised public and Algeria in Leopold-|the conference voted not to ad-|on the study, will be made be-| mit him. ifore Christmas. ] MATCH MATTER CATCHES FIRE LONDON (AP)--A_ British tobacco, firm tossed this ques- tion to Mr. Justice Sir Archie Marshall in the high court Thursday: Is a cigarette with built-in ignition a match? The Autolite Cigarette Com- pany Limited and the British customs .and excise authori- ties both want an answer Because if a cigarette with built-in ignition is a match, the company has to pay a decorate the main table in reception room. (CP Wirephoto) pened a few minutes later while| Her Majesty was embarking. ISSUES STATEMENT A statement from the Britan- nia said: "When. nonmal preparations were being made for departure just prior to Her Majesty's re- turn on board, a slight move- ment of the ship, due to the stretch of a nylon rope, brought the end of the brow (gang- plank) to the edge of the plat- form on which it rested. ° "Normal traffic on the brow was stopped until the ship was breasted in again, but not be- fore the brow slipped off the platform. The brow was imme- diately replaced by men on board assisted by those ashore and Her Majesty's embarkation was delayed about two minutes. The royal yacht sailed as planned," "Breasted in' means the yacht was moved closer to the pier by tightening her line. A naval spokesman in Lon- |don- said the matter would be | investigated, match tax 2f 195 11d ($2.85) per 10,000 cigarettes, or matches, or cigarette- matches, or whatever they are. If it isn't a match it doesn't. The tobacco firm said the The minister said Thursday cigarettes have a combustible| substance on their tips. When rubbed against a spot on the cigarette packet this combus- tible material] ignites, the to- bacco catches fire and all the smoker has to do is start puffing. Obviously, the company as- | serted, the cigarette is not a | match. The commissioners of cus- |.toms and excise angued that | something you rub against "SET OUT TO SEE WORLD, NOT BEATLES ter being picked up by British anice Hawkins, left, and siaethe Schendel, both 16, are shown during stopover at Ke n: nedy Airport, New York City, tonight on their way to their police in London, . yesterdas Girls disappeared from Cleve land Sept. 17, a' day after Beatles had performed there, and it was assumed they were making pilgrimage to the Brit- ish singing group's home city of Liverpool. said it wasn't so, they just wanted to "see aomething of the world". Girls homes in Cleveland. Ohio. af- ¢ " | something else so that readily lights-is, by common | definition, a match, Mr. Justice Marshall, hav- ing examined a pack of the cigarettes, or cigarette- matches, or matches, took the matter under advisement, Teenage Ma's Are Paying Parents Back obstetrician said Thursday that some teen --age girls become | pregnant deliberately as a it | TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto Can't Get Into UK University 'Says Chevrier | | | LONDON (CP)--Lionel Chev- jrier, Canadian high commis- jsioner in Britain, says he is having trouble getting his daughter into a British univer- |sity because Canadian educa- |tional standards are lower than | Standards here: Chevrier, interviewed Thurs- day night on the BBC radio | Show, People Today, said his daughter Marie, 19, is coming to England soon from Canada where she was a student at the |University of Ottawa, He con- | tinued: "I say this with some hesita- tion to Canadian listeners--be- cause of the higher standard of jeducation in the United King- dom I'm having some difficulty in getting Marie into a proper university but I do hope it will |work out within the next few weeks." Chevrier also talked of his birth and upbringing in Corn- wall, Ont., and his career in Canada before becoming high | commissioner last February. The step was taken amid hints from the Soviet Union that it will quit the UN if it ee Assembly vote. Ambassador Adiai E. Steven- son spelled out in detail the nances -- provided it payment of money to the UN by the Soviet Union and other debtor nations. as State Secretary Dean Rusk) charter any member two years raine, Byelorussia includes |gnedient in eny solution is that the funds be made available to the United Nations," it added. The United States. contends|the list may be Stevenson took the step here | that under Article 19 of the UN|the Soviet Union, Uk , Czechosiova- Romania. aid in Washington that Soviet|in arrears on its financial con-|kia, Poland and UDGE CLEARED IN NONG CASE GM-UAW Reuther Expects 'Thaw' I DETROIT (AP)--A U.S.-wide strike against General Motors entered its third week today with an optimistic note being sounded for a speedup in solv- ing local plant problems. inited "very eubstantial movement" this weekend in local negotia- tions. Despite Reuther's prediction of a thaw in the negotiations e, more than 100 local freez UAW bargaining units have| Ford Not Enough Evidence Rules Magistrate SUDBURY (CP)--Mr. Justice Leo Landreville of the Ontario Supreme Court had of municipal corruption and con- | spiracy against him dismissed ; jat i n Talks quarter - million workers to strike Sept. 25. Ford Motor Comp 1065- model production is expected to climb to 342,000 this week. Thé figures do not include early prs sea Hamilton said in his Its ated prod n of 1065 odels will tot: 000. this|Thursday: 'A : m is 'otal 185, $s not feat Ge week, jury All és not clear sailing for|guilty and I cannot. find suffi , however, ° lelent 'evidence to place him on The UAW's Ford council rati-/trial." failed to resolve their differ- ences with individual pliant management. Latest reports only 20 of 130 local units ha reached agreements. With its assembly lines si-| lenced, GM fell behind the 1965 car production race. | The giant automaker had showed that d rolets, Buicks, Pontiacs, Olds- mobiles and Cadillacs when the UAW ordered more than a | turned out about 285,000 Chev-jany strike action against Ford eral Motors situation is cleared up. fied by a substantial majority} Mr. Justice Landreville was thé agreement on national con-;mayor of Sudbury from Janu- tract terms Thursday night, but/ary, 1955, t0 September, 1956, a strike still could come over|when he was appointed to the failure to settle local problems. |bench. Reuther said he hoped the un-| pe and three other former ion would not find it necessary|Ontario mayors were changed to set a strike deadline for re-jjact Aug. 4 with accepting solving local demands at Ford.|NONG shares as a considera- In any event, Reuther said,|/tion for getting the company's|similar municipal corruption franchises through their coun-|and conspiracy charges involy- cills and with agreeing to ac-jing NONG stock, cept NONG shares for signing the agneement. They were also 4 IEO LANDREVILLE } bridge Oct. 14, and will be fol- lowed by former Gravenhurst mayor Wanda Miller. Both face would be delayed until the Gen- Ih a seven - page judgment handed down after Mr. Justice LANSING, Mich, (AP) -- A land, money and liquor scan- |dal in the Michigan National |Guard was bared when Gov- |ernor George Romney --dis- missed the state's adjutant gen- | eral and two top officers Thurs- | day. Romney ordered retirement of Maj.-Gen, Ronald D. McDon- Little "Blowing" More "Stringing" TORONTO (CP)--Strings will be featured for the first time in Canadian Jazz Festival history tonight when seven bands swing out at the first Canadian Jazz Festival at Toronto 's Casa Loma. Al Stanwyck's Band will use six violins, two cellos and two violas in a special jazz suite for brass and strings. | i Money And Booze Scandal Ousts Romney Officials accused of conspiring with NONG President Ralph K. Far- ris of Vancouver to further the company's cause at that time. |MUM ON FUTURE | Mr, Justice Landreville had |been granted leave of absence ifrom his judicial duties pend- 1 ing the outcome of the prelim-|@ heaming and subsequent trial inary hearing, He declined to of Farris, who was sentenced whether he would): Two_weeks ago _Miagistrate| Marck committed former Landreviille's hearing, Magis- trate Marck asked: "Where is the influence used by the ac- cused? Where is the criminal act by the accused mayor? On the evidence before me I can- not find any criminal act." The magistrate said that at ald, the adjutant general. He removed from active duty Brig. Gen. Carson R. Neifert, quar- termaster general, and Lt.-Col. Versel--Case--Jr--_the--quarter- master's éxecutive officer. Acting on a report of 11 state law violations and 32 errors in auditing by the guard, Romney called for a reorganization of the military establishment. McDonald said he was shocked by his dismissal and asserted:' "My conscience is clear." State Auditor Gen. Billie Farnum reported irregularities to Romney. Farnum said thou- sands of dollars were involved but it could not yet be stated how much money, if any, the State had lost. The irregulari- ties dated back to the 1950s. 'at does not appear at this time that the three officers re- lieved of duty are guilty of criminal actions," Romney said, "It is clear, t have garded the statues, and been however, that continually disre-| mayor Wilbur Cramp of Orillia changes. Cramp's hearing |stanted out as a magistrate's court trial, but Magistrate Marck turned+it into a prelim- inary hearing under a seldom- used section of the Criminal Code at the request of Cramp's lawyer. Former Bracebridge mayor Gien S. Coates appears before Magistrate Marck in Brace- Twice Asked | SUDBURY (CP)--Mr. Justice Leo Landreville of the Ontario to stand trial on the three/gQ stock which at the time was of a nominal value because Nomth- ern Ontario Natural Gas at that time was litthe more than a pa- per chises."" entity with some fran Ministers For NONG Inquiry -- Judge matter is settled I hope once and for all gas will be strictly NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Supreme Court said Thursday |a utility and not a cause for he had twice asked federal jus-| scandal." tice ministers to appoint inquir-| Mir. Justice Landreville told | guilty of serious and continuing | practices of bad management means of "getting back at their parents for, real or imagined grievances." Dr. J. Drew Allin was speak-| ing. on sex education to the| nursing division of the Ameri-| can College of Obstetricians and |Gynecologists here. "The girl who wants her par- jents to pay more attention to jher and her problem may not |realize it but she has a sub- |conscious wish to become preg- nant," he said. | Dr. Allin said the best place | tor a téen-ager to obtain infor-| |mation about sex is in the home| but. many parents are afraid to} bring up the subject and are lacking in knowledge The value of method »f teach ing sex in, the schools is still) an unknown quantity, he said. Crown Calls Minister 'Unusual' CHATAM (CP) -- Crown Atto' seribed Rev. Russell D. Horsburgh as a "personality that is unusual, to the say the least' as he made his summation to a juvenile court trying the minist tributing to juvenile delinquency. Newspaper Strike Talks Adjourn TORONTO (CP) -- Explorator chief Ontario government concili gaining committee of Local 91, I Union CLS, adjourned -Thursday. MacDonald Urges Trial For Judge TORONTO (CP) -- Donald C Democratic Party leader, calle general's department to "'exercis: case of Mr. Justice Leo Landreville before a grand jury. and poor administration," | or a a lies into corruption allegations|reporters his first request for concerning his share dealings)an inquiry into his acquisition of 10,000 shares was mores Hi rbor Violence with Northern Ontario Natural) % é Gas Company Limited. -- ;a telephone conversation | Under Scrutin | But, he said, the Ontario at-\fonmer justice minister Lionel Y ltonney - general's department|/Ohevrier, now Canadian high TORONTO (CP) -- A Cana-|laid charges of municipal cor-|commissioner to Britain, dian Port and Harbor Associa-|ruption against him before such} The second was in June when tion committee will meet in/an inquiry could be launched. jhe called on Justice Minister several weeks to discuss the} Mr. Justice Landreville made|Guy Favreau in Ottawa. : problems of pilfering, intimida-|the disclosure minutes after) "All I aimed at was to vindi- tion and physical violence in|charges that he had accepted | cate my name," Mr, Justice ports with representatives of|NONG shares while mayor of Landreville said. og shipping and dock firms|Sudbury in 1956 as an induce-|- "But before the minister of +and government departments,;ment to persuade the city to| justice made the appointment lit was announced here Thurs-|grant NONG a' gas fwanchise|for inquiry I was rather dis-, | day. were dismissed at a prelimi-| pleased, to say the least, that The committee was formed|nary hearing because of insuf-|the Attorney-General of Ontario at the 'association's any ual|ficient evidence, (Arthur Wishart) saw fit to lay meeting last month in Quebec] Smiling broadly, the 54-year the charges in the middle of City to investigate such prob-jold justice, appointed to the August during the summer lems. lbench an' 1956, said: "Now that| (count) vacation. rney Blake Ward today de- er on eight charges of con- y talks between Louis Fine, ation officer, and the bar- nternational Typographical . MacDonald, Ontario New d today on the attorney- e° their right of taking the #

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