Oshawa Times (1958-), 3 Nov 1964, p. 1

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The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres; VOL. 93--NO. 258 She Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy Seo OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1964 shawa Cimes Weather Report Cloudy Later Today Turning 'To Showers -- Tonight. High-62, Low-43. Authorized os Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, TWENTY PAGES PRESIDENT CASTS BALLOT President Lyndon B. John- box at his polling place in son drops his bailot in the Johnson City this morning. TORONTO |Pearson government jnight . for what he termed its'so short in office. disruption of Canadian unity. And he stayed relatively clear|eral government of attempting of the controversial flag issue. Mr. Diefenbaker told the Ontario Progressive Con- servative Association that the Pearson government has given rise to greater uncertainty about the fate of the nation than has existed at any time since Confederation. He made no comment on his jmeeting in Ottawa earlier Mon- day with other party leaders to discuss House procedure on a proposed flag. But he said he would not be thwarted in his crusade against the maple leaf design by accusations from the Pearson government that he (AP Wirephoto) | son | n ; was injuring Canadian unity. THRONE SPEECH HEARD UK Labor Unveils #22" Dramatic Changes Radio Tower LO) (CP) -- Britain's was advised today that Prime Minister Wil- son's Labor government will re-| the iron and steel industry." This policy is expected to industry, restore rent controls|tary battle. early action to re-establish the for a free decision by Parlia- necessary public ownership of ment, on. the issue. of capital punishment,"' the Queen said. | Mr. Diefenbaker said he was not unaware of criticism made of him. "But there is one thing that 4 Toppled By This means every Labor Conseryatives- and Liberals as oe nationalize the country's--steel|touch off a major parliamen-|member--and presumably the -Separatists? and open the way for the abo-|. Wilson's government has only well--will be allowed to vote a five-vote majority in Com-|according to their personal be- Queen Elizabeth formally|mons. Sir Alec Douglas-Home's|liefs rather than the dictates of lition of capita] punishment. opened the Parliament elected|Conservatives and the small Oct. 15 by reading the first|Liberal. party. oppose nationali- speech from the throne written|zation of the steel industry. | for her by Wilson and his cabi-| Clement Attlee's Labor gov-| net; The speech outlined the|ernment took the steel industry | government's legislative pro-|under. state control ip 1951 after | gram. jnationalizing the coal, gas and! In international. affairs, the|electric power industries, the speech promised the govern-jrailways, the airlines and the ment's support of the United/Bank of England. Nations and the North Atlantic| Other nationalization meas- alliance and other collective de-;ures of the Attlee regime con- MONTREAL (CP) -- A 400- foot transmitting tower of Mont- real English - language radio station CFCF was toppled Mon- day night when two. one-inch - |euy wires were cut deliberat- ely. A piece of cardboard with the initials FLQ written on it with la ballpoint pen was found at the scene-in suburban Caugh- nawaga, across busy Highway 3 from the Indian reserve. The initials originally were used by the terrorist Front de Libera- party policy. Abolition of cap- ital punishment is expected to result. Plane Crash Suit Wants $1,098,000 Wont Hurt Country: Dief (CP)--Opposition|lenge his party has ever had Leader Diefenbaker rapped the/is to "heal the wounds inflicted| Monday |by a government that has been! dele- |gates to the annual meeting of|say no. | inte WILL NOT BE Ontario County's 250-man be. disbanded. Defence Minister Paul Hell- yer in Ottawa today announc- ed the disbandment of 58 major uniis in a militia re- | organization which will save He further accused the fed-| about $8,700,000 annually but the county unit was not included. Lt. Col. J. R. Warnica, CD, | commanding officer of the regiment, said today he would have been surprised if the regiment had been disbanded. "The Ontario Regiment has more equipment, more facili- ties and more trained per- sonnel than other major units in the Central Ontario area," : | he sajd. He said a Conservative gov-| Mr. Hellyer also told the jeramtent would call a national] Commons' defence commit- jconference on the constitution,) tee that there would also be to examine all areas of dis-) q reduction of 15 in the num- | agreement _ to find a 1 ber of minor units. }sensus on what changes might q He ain z |be made in Canadian Confeder- Picorliwarrery cog nqsin pala \ation, pg { Ait | Earlier in the day, Dr. Phyl- ean ty bee eh |lis Hanley of Toronto told the Suttie. The comatission. re policy. research council of the commended that the Ontario Ontario Young Progressive Con- Regiment "remains in order iservatives that poorly planned of battle " end the Commons jand inadequate hospitals are the defence committee agreed. Col. Warnica said the regi- ment parades twice each week and one weekend every month, The regiment has fa- cilities at the airport. the armory and 200 training area near Raglan. Besides a tightening up in adniinistration, there will be a streamlining of : aa and |to be all things to all people-- a government that could not | A series of associate states with their own tariff laws, im- migration laws and monetary |policies could emerge in Can- ada, Mr. Diefenbaker said. .He looked: toward Premier Robarts of Ontario, however, and said lhe had no criticism of the prov- jinces, fault of architects and doctors. | She said some new wards at |the Toronto General Hospital |have so few tubs and showers that the nursing staff has to |draw up a schedule of appoint- |ments. There was also difficulty in linking patients to oxygen and suction equipment as a re- sult of poorly designed cup- boards and washrooms. acres of ONTARIO COUNTY REGIMENT DISBANDED (armored) regiment. will not COL. WARNICA Service units. Many service units will be merged into ser- vice battalions as is being done in the regular army, As announced previously by Mr. Hellyer, the strength of the militia wil be reduced to about 30,000 from the cur- rent, 47,000. The militia, which now has nearly 400 units, has been costing around $35;000,000 a year. This allotment will be reduced to nearly $26,000,000 a year. Authorities |have said that the cost per man in some militia units has been "out of this world'. American voters, an esti- en', 71,000,000 strong, make their choice today. with election campaign thunder still echoing in their ears. The public opinion polls all pointed at President Johnson as a landslide winner over Repub- lican Barry Goldwater, But the Arizona senator drew first blood. Both men made their last ap- peals in home territory Monday night--Johnson calling for an "overwhelming repudiation of the small minority which has seized the Republican party." Goldwater, with a final stop at little Fredonia in the butte country of Arizona, again de- nounced big government as a menace and said "my whole campaign... has been directed to warning Americans of the \dangers that lie in this philos- lophy." The little mountain hamlet of Dixville, N.H., all of whose eight voters: are Republicans, voted unanimously for Goldwa- ter a minute after polls opened at midnight Monday night--just as it did for Republican presi- dential candidate Richard Nixon in 1960. BARRY CONFIDENT Goldwater, | belief that he was a loser. Army Revolt In Bolivia, Fighting In Four Cities The rebel broadcast, LA PAZ (AP) -- A military La Paz today and the Bolivian|La Paz had bee : government announced it was rebels had seized Cochabama stamped out. But a revolt had broken out in four /Sucre and Potosi. provincial cities, The broadcast was heard regiment staged an uprising in|shortly after the army revolt in been put down, said trans-7} Polls Conspiracy Found In Houston HOUSTON, Texas. (AP) Attorney Wooddrow Seals has asked the FBI to investigate handbills which were distri- buted Monday in all Negro vot- ing precincts in Houston. voter who: had committed a traffic or other offence in the rested after voting. The handbills were signed Informed sources said about | mitted by the radio station of |«Yarris County Negro Protec- to which/tinue in force, but the steel in- Britain belongs. It said the gov-|dustry went back into private MONTREAL (CP)--Damage vebe ; ernment would attempt to re-|hands after the Conservative |claims totalling $1,098,000 were Provincial police said they duce East-West tensions and "to party won the 1951 election. lfiled in Quebec Superior Court |Were able to find no witnesses encourage further progress to-, The speech from the Throne | yonday against Air Canada by | Who actually saw the tower fall. ward disarmament." said the Wilson government will |ihe ¢amily of a Montreal couple Damage was estimated at $12,- The Queen .delivered the|"restore control of rents" and|yiljed last fall in Canada's worst 000 in the police report. Ear- speech from the throne in the|added: "They will establish as |,j, disaster. . " |lier estimates had placed the to-| House of Lords after driving|rapidly as possible a Crown) 'The actions were taken on be-|a! value of the tower at $80,-) through London in a coach ac-|lands commission with~ wide |nait of the family % Sian . : ' wT | > fe y of Saul Pan : : companied by a glittering ca- powers to acquire land from |{e], 41-year-old executive, and| The radio station first became valry escort. the. community. his wife Tillie. They were among|aware something was wrong _Members of the House of 9 CHECK SPECULATION _|the 118 persons killed in the|when the control room jin. its Commons, summoned with; This measure, Labor minis-|crash of an Air Canada jet last|Montreal plant got the signatl| great ceremony, stood around|ters have said, is designed to|Nov. 29 at nearby St. Therese |thgt one of its transmitters was| the edges of the chamber as|check land speculation and to|de Blainville. |not working. 'The station's' sec- the Queen read the speech. put land to the best use. A par-|: The Toronto - bound jetliner|ond transmitter at Caughna- KEY PASSAG lNamentary fight is expected on|crashed a few minutes after|waga was immediately A key passage of the speech: | that also. taking off from Montreal Inter-|switched on and the station did "My government will initiate) 'Facilities will be provided national Airport. |not go off the air. . ' | 'fence organizations : tion Quebecois. a dozen junior officers were ar- | the Bolivian airline Lloyd Aereo |tive Association," which Bill rested after the Ingavi' Regi- mnet of La Paz rose in arms and held the chief of the armed forces' captive for a time be- fore surrendering. Justice ; Back In urt LINDSAY, Ont. Justice Leo Landreville, (CP) -- Mr. who has been on leave of absence |tration camps or political police | \the vice-president, nt at Boliviano Cochabama, which the rebels had seized. ASKS RESIGN? Another oadcast indicated Gen, Rene |Barxientos, had asked Presi- jdent; Victor Paz Estenssoro to |resign and hand power over to ja_ military junta. Barrientos, \who split with Paz Estenssoro [last month, has made his head- |quarters at Cochabamba. He is an air force general. The Cochabamba _ broadcast said the right - wing Socialist Falange had joined the rebels. | The broadcast said "the coun- itry will have no more c6ncen- NOV. 10 DEADLINE FOR MONEY : eon the Ontario Peete by mercenary forces." | Collision Course Ahead n Flag, Money Issues? OTTAWA (CP)--Will they col-|mittee recommended last week.|approve the request would * lide or won't they? The question maw was an election, " lette called for an immediate de- 'This remained the big ques-|whether Mr. Pearson, who has) The Progressive Conserva-|bate with use of debate-limit- tion of #4fliament Hill Monday|forecast there will be a new/\tives, apparently with one eye|ing closure, if necessary, as Prime Minister Pearson met|flag by Christmas, planned tojon the flag proposal, have been| Mr..Diefenbaker gave report the other party leaders, After|push for a decision on the flag! debating this request for interim)ers no hint of his intentions as 40 minutes, the talks broke up| by then or give priority to such supply for seven days with|he wert to the party leaders' to permit the leaders to find|/major legislative items as the|some help from other parties. | conference or afterwards. out what their followers figure|Canada Pension Plan, redistri-| Spokesmen for two of the| Mr. Pearson called the talks Parliament should be doing in| bution, new transportation Jeg-)smaller parties -- New Demo-| 'interesting' and "useful" the coming weeks. Tne leaders |islation, a proposed labor code'cratic Leader T. C. Douglas and| when questioned about them in meet again Friday. and the like. Bert Leboe (SC--Cariboo) who|the Commons by Leon Balcer The central issue was the} The governing factor in a con-|was standing in for his absent| (PC --. Trois-Rivierés). He re flag design--rejected by Oppo-|fused political situation was the|leader, Robert Thompson --| vealed nothing mote in a brief sition Leader Diefenbaker but|government's need of money by|pressed Mr. Pearson to post-|incident which seemed to illus- accepted by some of his follow-jabout Nov. 10 to pay November| pone the flag debate in favor of| trate t' + problems of the Op- Creditiste Leader Real Caou- Court for about three months, returned to court Monday. In a brief statement before the court session began, the 54- year-old Supreme Court justice said he is happy to be back in Lindsay for the second time in eight years. Mr. Justice Landreville last month was cleared of charges of municipal corruption and conspiracy at hearing in Sudbury. The possibility of a military revolt had been discussed in jpolitical circles for several }months. Discussion increased after Pa oo, nssoro fell out with Barriéntos. Army circles have said that a military regime was the only jsolution for Bolivia since none |at the opposition parties is in a |position to govern a country a_ preliminary |whose economy is in virtual | 'chaos. Civic Auditorium To Open THE TIMES today... Dec. 15--Page 9 Bowmanville Retains Angle Parking--Page 4 Whitby To Press For Traffic Aid--Page 5 Ann Landers--8 City News--9 Classified--16-18 Comics--12 District Reports--4 Editorial--6 Financial--19 Obits--19 Sports--10, 11 Teen Talk--14, 15 Television--12 Whitby News--5 Women's--7, 8 Weather--2 ers -- which a Cummons com-'and December bills. Refusal to'the legislative program. 'position. On The Roa d To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNIT Y CHEST Quota Of $275,900 Kilgarlin, county Democratic jexecutive committee chairfhan, |said is non-existent. | Kilgarlin filed a protest with) Seals. | "This appears to be a conspir- acy to keep people away from |the polls," Seals said. | | '44 Cubans | 'Defect From Airliner OTTAWA (CP) -- The larg-| est mass defection of Cubans |into Canada occurred Sunday at Gander, Nfld., the immigration |department' said Monday. A total of 44 Cubans defected | from a Cubana airliner after it jlanded at Gander for refuelling sg minor repairs on a flight jt0 Prague from Havana. This brings to more than 200 ithe number of Cubans who have used the org ey airport jas an escape routé to join Cu- |ban exiles in the United States. An immigration department official said the Cubans have jbeen granted temporary asylum jin Canada to permit them to |make arrangements to enter the |U.S. This is normal procedure |with Cuban defectors. The Cubans now are being |processed for temporary admis- sion to Canada. They will be | moved to immigration depart- | Dent quarters in Halifax from |where they will later move to '| The handbills said that any|§ rebel radio |350 miles scutheast of La Paz, 3 y station in Cochabamba in the|and that army units also had | rior said a widespread army |risen in revolt in Santa Cruz, | past five years would be ar- (isd athie and remilig as late as 2 a.m. Wednesday in western Alaska. Generally fair, was the |weathér forecast, strengthening predictions of a record vote. Some indications pointed to- the Western de- partment store businessman who became the yoice of the American right, went down to the wire rejecting the general The answer was due at poll- ing booths opening as early as a jminute after midnight Monday TO LBJ OR GOLDWATER THAT IS THE QUESTION Barry Still Says Hes A Winner ward a popular vote higher than the 60.8 per cent captured by Democrat Franklin .D.. Roose- velt in 1936 when he routed Alf Landon, The Republicans then got only eight electoral college votes--Vermont and Maine. The campaign itself es om officially in early Sep r went down as one of the most vituperative in modern .Ameri- can history but one shy.of de- bate on concrete platform planks. For Johnson, the pitch was peace, prudence at the nuclear trigger, prosperity and national unity. His weak spot was hon- esty in government. For Goldwater, the big issue, he said frequently, was to stop the advance of socialism at home and communism abroad. He protested against being la- belled as trigger - happy and plumped for military strength as a wise course to avoid war. He banged hard at moral cor- ruption, particularly at the White House level. He: had trouble in the. reaction caused by his views on agriculture-- gradual end to multiple sup- ports, and social security, which he insisted he wanted to expand rather than cut. While the popular. vote today will undoubtedly tell the story here, the 538-member college of presidential electors -- an ar- chaic device established by the founding U.S. fathers--will for- mally pick either Johnson or Goldwater Dec, 14... gressmen, will be elected by the popular vote today. Johnson needs at least 270 electoral votes to win and, if the polls are right, may sweep all but a handful of states. Queen Elizabeth II sits on throne in the House of Lords for her speech formally open- ing the new Parliament in London today, Her Majesty's |the U.S. speech, written for her by QUEEN ON THRONE AT OPENING Prime Minister Wilson and his cabinet, outlined the new Labor government's legislative program. (See story on this page.) (AP Wirephoto) sittevo | |si28o00l | | | sisters! | | | siz%o0ol | 1 | szodo00l | | | s22€oool | 1 | sastoool | | | $2730 Stale. party slates of college SN I TE BP a ae A SN

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