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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 May 1963, p. 1

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City Takes First Step To Possible Liquor Vote -- P. 13 he Oshawa Gime THOUGHT FOR TODAY Everything's simpler now; in- stead of solving problems, you subsidize them. yo ad ww ig WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and very cold to- night. Mostly sunny and milder Thur sday. VOL, 92--NO. 119 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1963 Class Mail Ottewe and otros ee Cane FLQ Drive Producing No Results QUEB! CP) -- A total of,reached at the conference were $60,000 o Prick money nas| disclosed, Mr, Lesage said po- not yet produced any obviousjlice are doing everything in results, but Premier Jean Le-|their power to find the terror- sage says police now have ajists, and told Quebecers theze "specific plan' of action against|is no reason to get panicky. % terrorist activity. | Later, in a televised press/ i He made the statement Tues-| conference carried by the CBC $|| day following a meeting of top-|French - language network, he ranking police, army and civil-|said the $50,000 reward offered ian authorities in the Quebec|by the government for informa- cabinet chambers. jtion on the terrorists is simply The 90-minute meeting was|"an encouragement to the peo- called by Mr. Lesage to co-or-/Ple of Quebec to do their duty. dinate efforts to track down| "It is the duty of all citizens those responsible for time-bomb)to denounce those in the ter- 4 , blasts, mainly in the Montrea!|rorist organization. | area, over the last 11 weeks. The wave of bombings has |been attributed by authorities to M d |Le Front de Liberation Quebe- ttempt ade |eois, a group pledged to win in- |dependence for Quebec by force s land devoted particularly to the} At Blocking destruction of such "colonial"| (federal]) institutions as the D ti |RCMP and armed forces. | esegrega 10n SHOW RELUCTANCE | In his TV appearance, Mr. Le- cami ne _ sR sage said he knows of "two con-| Governor George C. Wallace,|irote cases" of reluctance to in- ger perpen sa nel vest in Quebec as a result of{ th of federal authority, has) ' shad wag | Set out to block court-ordered a ih esd ge desegregation of the University) ¢ DR. STIKKER AT PRESS TALK of Alabama. He said during a televised e e Stikker Denying The Alabama governor piticeean' ected) Gk ane od his authority on the line Tues-/Furopean industrialists he met| Russian Charge | day after the university board| questioned him about terrorist of trustees had agreed to admit) activity during his recent 10-day} -. Negroes Pal Te Dees vielt to England, Belgium and e oH, "| France. fused to delay the June 10 en-/ The premier reiterated a t, : . . ; ise by President de Gaulie i the sovereignty of|P7°™ this state,' said Wallace, a vet- of France to do all he could to tain political issues dividing the| two camps are settled. Pre-conference reports were that there already had been agreement among NATO mem- bers for creation of the U.S.- OTTAWA (CP)--NATO Secre- tary-General Dirk Stikker has emphatically denied 'that pro- posals for an inter-allied nu- clear force are intended as a means of getting nuclear arms wv The City of Montreal has of-| ' |John was reliably reported to- No details of decisions/fered a similar, $10,000 reward. Soe lday to have suffered a new and | % . eran of battles with the s soeeeet government, and Iwill pres- ent to bar the entrance of any Negro. who weeks to enrol at the university... ," Thus, Wallace embarked upon help Quebec get Renault and Ppa auto assembly plants. "Mr. Lesage said Renault, pub- licly-owned French auto manu- facturer, has completed a mar- ket research report in Canada and will submit it to French into the hands of West German fighting men. ; Charges to this effect have been made by Soviet Russia. The nuclear force plan, ex- pected to be endorsed in gen- proposed inter - allied nuclear striking force under the com. mand of a new deputy to U.S. Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer, NATO's supreme commander. These re- ports said the post of deputy commander likely would be filled by an officer from one of the smaller European NATO countries, such as Holland, Bel- gium or Italy. The foreign ministers of NATO's big four--the U.S., Brit- Every country will contribute|ain, France and Germany--got what it wants to the allied|together Tuesday night at the Shotgun Blast s ffi Hits 0 1cer force, said the secretary-gen-|home of the U.S. ambassador jeral. There had never been any|here to discuss the Berlin situ- eral terms at the NATO minis- terial meeting opening here to- day, has "nothing to do" with either satisfying or . pacifying West German demands, Mr. Stikker told a press conference Tuesday night. the same course followed last fall by Governor Ross Barnett of Mississippi who greeted Ne- gro James H. Meredith with an interposition statute and barred him from the University of Mississippi. Meredith later en- rolied behind federal. forces. Attorney -General Richmond Flowers, a political opponent of Wallace, warned defiance of authorities within 15 days. He did not elaborate. OFF BRO VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope severe setback in his illness. One of Italy's leading surgeons was said to have spent the night at his bedside. The 8l-year-old ruler of the Roman Catholic Church can- celled his regular -weekly gen- eral audience in St, Peter's Ba- silica but appeared at his apart- ment window to bless a crowd of 15,000 in St. Peter's Square below. The Pope stood at the third- floor window about three min- utes. Seen through binoculars, he appeared very pale. But his voice, carried through micro- phones, was vibrant and strong as he gave his blessing. The audience in the Basilica was cancelled 40 minutes be- fore it was to have started, In his brief appearance at the window, the Pope made only one reference to cancellation of his auidence in the Basilica. "But inside St. Peter's or out- side, it is always good," he said, An informed source said Pro- fessor Pietro Valdoni, a leading Rome surgeon, had remained at the Vatican through the night. Cancellation of the audience was the first since last Novem- ber, when the Pope became gravely ill, The Vatican an- nounced then that the Pope was suffering from a stomach dis. order and anemia, but there have been persistent uncon- firmed reports that he has sto- mach cancer or an ulcer. During the winter, the pontiff appeared to recover and re- federal court orders may lead| HAMILTON (CP)--A police-| within the NATO\ation. sumed his busy schedule. But .. | discussion i i jman was in critical condtiion| -oimcil on preventing Germany| to violence, He said those WhO | today following an emergency|;oun hice casa a M sei tgert Ioan rene eraton aera shogun bis e - s ; » into his right side as he in Alabama as they were tare | ae G in|; Nisha pn jtried to arrest a man @ halfiwectern alliance eight years Mississippi. ,,,(block from the central police|.., sti stand, said Mr. Stik- Brewer Dixon, a university|station, | ' ? trustee, rai_| er, Under these agreements} said he admired Wal-| Const. Lawrence Pearce, fede forswore en intavens | lace for sticking to his convic-|was found in a puol of blood bY | cae nucleons cole. i vit .| poli y . : : tions and sympathized with him.| policemen who ran from the sta Mr. Stikker said there is no) ew yoRK et a ial "But we have exhausted our|tion just to see a man disap-| yet legal means," Dixon said. "'The|pearing up the street. chance that one country Will' Gordon Cooper gets New York trustees have no control over; John McDonald, alias. Fredj¢ver decide by itself whether/cit.+. biggest welcome today-- Wallace. The university is our|Coates and John Raymond,|the weapons assigned to an al-\. ticker tape parade up lower responsibility. But beyond that|about 46, of Newmarket was ar-jlied nuclear force are to be Broadway, named Mercury Way we are not law enforcement of-|rested five hours after the shoot.|USed. The decision always would) ro, the occasion. - ficers."" ling and charged with attempted, b€ 4 multilateral one. | The slim, quiet-spoken space- A sampling of sentiment of|murder. | The alliance is carefully stud-/man comes fresh from the students and faculty members| Deputy Police Chief Howard)ying the possibility of a non-ag-'cheers of thousands in Washing- at the university campus at|Moreau said Pearce told detec-/gression pact between NATO)ton, the praise of President Ken- Tuscaloosa indicates that while|tives he fired three shots at the| and the Warsaw pact, he told nedy and the thunderous ap- white students may not like the/fleeing assailant as he crum-jreporters. However, it would/plause of a joint session of Con- idea, they are willing to accept/pled to 'the ground after thelonly "complicate"' matters to| gress, Negro classmates peacefully. | shotgun blast. leonclude such a pact before cer-| Vice - President Lyndon B. Johnson rides next to Cooper in |the traditional parade to city Non-Confidence Vote %""""°~ \skies for the parade, starting jat noon EDT. Survived By Liberals 2sscc0 jor, who blasted off to fame last |week with his 22 - orbit space flight, concluded his eight-min- OTTAWA (CP) -- The young/gressive Conservative votes, 17\ing party members in support ute address to the joint meet- minority Liberal government|Social Credit, 16 NDP and onejof the government. Deputy|ing of the Senate and House of cman en bourne BIG N.Y. Welcome Faces Astronaut tional Aeronautics and Space Administration, the same award the other astronauts received. Then Kennedy noted that Coo- per's space voyage came within a few days of being exactly 36 years after Charles A. Lind- bergh's flight across the Atlan- tic to Paris. In fact, Tuesday was the 'an- niversary of Lindbergh's arrival in Paris. : The president predicted that the United States will reach the moon in this decade and said the country "is interested in demonstrating a dominance of this sea (space), making sure that in this new great adven- turous period that Americans are playing their great role." Cooper, a man of few words, was true to form. "I didn't re- the Oklahoman, "and after all that, all I can say is it certainly hurdied its first and probably Independent Social Credit. |Leader Real Caouette and 16)Representatives Tuesday with a highest obstacle of the immedi-| Backing the government were|Quebec followers supported the|Prayer he composed on his 17th| ate future Tuesday night when/118 Liberals, two Conservatives!) NDP motion. jorbit, spinning high over the In-| it survived by 11 votes a non-/and four Social Crediters. | One Liberal was paired with) dian ncn and recited into a confidence motion based on its) ._ a Conservative absentee, as was|tape recorder. decision to acquire nuclear war-|ONE IS DELAYED -lone Conservative. | It was a prayer of thanks for} heads. | This made a total of 237 votes The House of Commons, after|in the 265-member easy scheduled for Thursday night a day-long throne speech debate MP, Eugene Rheaume (PC--) m es on a motion moved by Oppo- reviving all of the nuclear ar- Northwest Territories) has NOt sition Leader Diefenbaker. In m the April 8 election|yet taken his seat because of} ; a é psn th por oar the New/technical delays in preparing| Addition, a ace "by the Sociai| 2nd "that we may show the Democratic Party non + confi-| his election writ. \Credit group. This also would world that a democracy really dence motion 124 votes to 113.| The 27 other uncast votesine voted on Thursday night, |°4" compete and still is able to| The. motion expressed regret|were accounted for by 12 ab-| Pascage of any non - confi-|? things in-a big way . . . at the government's decision to|sent Conservatives, nine Mi8S-'dence motion during the throne|_ Cooper's first stop was at the acquire nuclear arms on Cana-jing Liberals, two absent Social| speech debate means the defeat|White House, where Kennedy dian soil, "thereby lessening|Crediters, one NDP membcriof the government and a new/Pinned on his lapel the Disting- the chances of nuclear disarm-|unavailable, two MPs who were! election uished Service Medal of the Na-| ament and increasing the dan-j/paired with absent opposites; past Feb. 5 the Diefenbaker) | ger of nuclear war." and the Speaker, who votes only! government fell on a non-con-| | The vote scrambled some in case.of a tie. fidence motion moved during a| REGS Put Another | party lines The two Conservative votes money supply debate. That mo-| ; ss Satellite In Orbit The lineup. against the gov-\for the government were those|tion was based mainly on an ernment consisted of 79 Pro-jof former defence minisier|ajieged lack of a clear defence MOSCOW (AP )-- The Soviet To many observers Tuesday,|Union put another unmanned} |Douglas Harkness, who re-! nolicy. signed from the cabinet before} ! CITY EMERGENCY ithe election on grounds the/night's vote comprised the|satellite in its Cosmos scientific! Conservative government had|toughest test the new goverh-|series into orbit around the| PHONE NUMBERS jbroken a commitment to ac-|ment will face for a while atlearth today, Tass news agency beta -- rag age ss least. It came on only the fourth| announced. |McIntosh, from Swift Current-\day of the 26th Parli ; acct sat pes POLICE 725-1133 day o e h Parliament: The satellite is named Cos FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ated" and a prayer for help| "that. we may shape our lives to be much better Christians" |Maple Creek. It brought both Prime Minis-|mos 17, National Leader Robert ter Pearson and Mr, Diefen-\Tass said all, scientific instru- | Thompson of Social Credit I\}d/baker back into the debate for|ments on bé@ard the satellite| the other three English-spedk-\the second day running. were functio: normally. | |much. Mey |"'all these startling and wonder-| | A second non-confidence vote ful things that you have cre.| US., Euromart jround of tariff cuts in history. is great honor to be invited here and to be presented this award and to thank you all very Set Guidelines GENEVA (AP)--The United States and the European Com- mon Market nailed down today the guiding principles for what they hope will be the biggest The world's two biggest trad- ing units ended six days of tense bargaining with a compromise agreement on how to get the negotiations started. Their compromise will permit the 'Kennedy round" of tariff negotiations to begin May 4, 1964, although much prepara- tory work remains to be done. Ministers and. negotiators of 50 nations belonging to the Gen- eral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade unanimously endorsed an| agreement reached 'earlier in private meetings between the United Statés and the Six na- tions of the Common Market, ally have much to say," said); Pope Suffers Major Setback there have been reports of re- lapses from time to time, One source reported that regular blood transfusions were needed to maintain the Pontiff's strength. During the winter the Pope's personal physician, Professor Alberto Gasbarrini of Milan, de- nied the Pope had cancer. But when the reports revived two weeks ago, the doctor declined to comment, Besides his stomach disorder, the Pope is known to suffer from a chronic prostate condi- tion, miloss of life could be heavy. a) POPE JOHN XXIII | Wheat Growers Oppose Ccentrols WASHINGTON (CP - AP) -- U.S. wheat growers have voted strongly against stricter govern- ment controls on their crops and their decision likely will affect Canada's future wheat. exports. Their decision to eliminate al! Wheat acreage and marketing controls for the 1964 crop year means that there will be no re- strictions on growing wheat un- less Congress passes a new wheat program. Unhampered production means that more U.S, wheat wil be competing with Canadian wheat on world markets, creat- ing heavy downward pressures on prices through U.S. efforts to dispose of surplus stocks, For the first time since the U.S. government went into the agriculture business in 1933 un- der the "new deal" administra- tion of the late Franklin D. Roosevelt, the farmers rejected wheat controls, In the 13th referendum held, complete returns showed 596,943 votes against the Kennedy ad- ministration plan and 547,151 for it. The vote in favor was 47.8 of the total--far short of that re- quired, DEFEAT FOR POLICIES The vote, capping the biggest campaign ever waged in U.S. farmlands, was a stinging de- feat for the administration and its farm policies. The administration had thrown its prestige and strength behina its program in a battle against farm groups demanding less ra- ther than more government in agriculture. Agriculture Secretary Orville L, Freeman had predicted that defeat of the plan would result in "chaotic" wheat market con- ditions, The plan would have required plantings 10 per cent from 'his year. It would have supported 80 per cent of the normal pro- duction on allotted acres at $2 a bushel and the remainder at! $1.30. Farmers would have got payments totalling around $300,- 000,000 for idle wheat land. The effect of the referendum is to reduce price supports -- now at $2--to about $1.25. But supports would be limited to growers making the 10 per cent reduction in plantings. The defeat gave credence to administration critics that farm- ers want less government inter- ference rather than more, Free- man had staked his pestige on the contention that farmrs were willing to accept more effective controls to halt over-production and stabilize prices. It could mean that President Kennedy will change his farm policies. and move now in the direction of reducing govern- ment's role in agriculture. Op- ponents had campaigned on the contention that approval of the wheat plan would open the door to quotas on livestock, milk, poultry and crops not now sub- Needed: PM THIRTY PAGES. Heavy Death Toll Feared By Police MURDOCHVILLE, Que. (CP) Police reported today that at least four, automobiles plunged into the York River during the night at a point about 30 miles east of this Gaspe Peninsula mining town, Police 'said they believe the One Atlantic Community OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson, opening the NATO ministerial conference, said to- day it is an absurdity to think "that we can protect ourselves by individual action based on national power alone." He told delegates of the 15 NATO countries: "In 1963, 'each nation for it- self and God for us all' is not only silly; it could be suicidal, "So the Atlantic community! must om together in one At- lantie "Community. "The 'West cannot afford two such commu- nities, a European one and a North American one, each con- trolling its own policies and each moving away from the other as a common menace recedes, . , .. "A United Europe should play, and can play if it desires, an equal part with North Amer- ica in the direction and develop- ment of the Atlantic Alliance. "It would, however, be a sad day for peace and security if a united Europe played a separ- ate role." Speaking in the Commons, Mr, Pearson said it is folly to expect the awful dangers of the nuclear age to go away "while we merely sit back, answer mis- sile with missile and charge with charge, orbit with orbit." "Rather, in dealing with the Communist world, the NATO partners must keep on trying to solve political problems, one ject to: them. by one, stage by stage." a_ bridge, break, The concrete bridge is 60 feet long. A flood on the York River smashed one of the supports of causing a 30-foot Three youths reached Mur- dochville early today and re- ported that they managed to es- cape from their car, when it plunged into about is feet of water, and swam ashore, Police said the flood was caused by a heavy rainfall and melting snow. They said it was impossible to see the break in the bridge from the approaches. Police said they figured out from tire marks on the pave- ment that at least four cars plunged into the river. Water under the bridge \is about 25 feet. The road has been closed. Driver Missing With $300,000 _VANCOUVER (CP) -- An in- egg pe I manbunt is under hee an armored car.driver and $300,000 in small bills miss- ing from his company. The $300,000, police said, is mostly in denominations of $5, $10 and $20, Another $220,000 in cheques was recovered from a parked car, Also found in the car was $5,000 in cash, including a bun- die of $20 bills and a large amount of silver. A warrant was issued charg- ing Douglas Brown, 36, nearby Surrey, an employee with Loomis Armored Car Serv ice for about 10 years, with "theft over $50." Police said the robbery oc curred Saturday night but went undiscovered until Tuesday. When he finished his Saturday shift, Brown was off duty until Tuesday, A check was made when he did not arrive. Police said the thief must have packed the money into a large suitcase, leaving behind the cheques and such cash as he could not carry, Barbot Plans Death Of Haitian Dictator | PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti tian dictator. Asked whether he "T have many friends who say (AP)--The door opened and ajhas enough men and weapons,|they are with Duvalier now, but slight man in underwear held out his hand, "I am Barhbot," e said. Barbot replied '"'oh, yes." Barbot, a wiry man with a hairline moustache, was inter- inside they are with Barbot," he said. Barbot said if he succeeds in He was Clement Barbot, the|/viewed in his hideout by twojoverthrowing Duvalier, he will most hunted man in Haiti. Once the No. 2 man under President Francois Duvalier, he farmers to reduce 1964 crop American newspaper men. He expressed confidence tha the army and many others will has sworn he will kill the Hai-jside with him. hold free elections within six months and will be a candidate for president if the people want h ABOLISH MILITIA He said he will abolish the militia, reorganize the army and restore law and order. Barbot put little faith in the OT (RIGHT) WITH BROTHER Ek \ (RY Haitian government in exile re- cently formed in Puerto Rico. He said everything will be done through his group, with help from anyone who offers it. Barbot, a Negro in a French- speaking Negro republic, said he holds no grude against the wihte man but does not agree with everything the United States does. An ex-farmer, Barbot became Duvalier's personal secretary and organized his dreaded per- sonal militia. But Barbot said he began to disagree with the dictator after his first six months in office. Describing Duvalier as an op- portunist but not a Communist, he said the president does not islike the United States but. be- lieves the United States "should just keep giving him money." He said Duvalier once told him: "Let's start making mo- ney for ourselves. I will make you a rich man." He claimed the president repeatedly told him he wanted to start killing 300 persons a year"not 150 or 250 but 300." Duvalier is a madmaty' Bar- bot. said,

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