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Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Nov 1965, p. 23

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22 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, 'Thursday, November 11, 1965 | Stars Of Election, 1965 With An Accent On Youth By THE CANADIAN PRESS The accent was on youth among the 42 candidates who starred in Monday's election by winning seats held by other political parties in the last. Parliament. Among the giant-killers was Rev. David MacDonald, 29- year-old United Church minister who defeated Mines Minister J. Watson MacNaught in Prince, = © vega Prince Edward Is- Mr.. MacDonald native of Charlottetown, was the first clergyman ever to run for fed- eral or provincial office on the island. Mr. MacNaught was one pf two cabinet ministers de- ited. These are the others who re- versed the political decisions of 1963 in their ridings: ; P.E.L Melvin McQuaid, 54, P.E.I. attorney-general 1960-1962 and member of the Atlantic Devel- opment Board, who replaced Liberal John Mullally in Kings. 7 is a lawyer with three chil- ren. NOVA SCOTIA D. Hugh Gillis, 47, doctor of economics and political science who. upset another political sci- entists, Liberal John B. Stew- art in Antigonish-Guysborough. Robert McCleave, 43, lawyer and broadcaster who won one of the two Halifax seats in 1958 and 1962 for the Conservatives and was parliamentary secre- tary to the public works ;min- ister before defeat in 1963. " Michael Forestall, 33, Mr. McCleave's Conservative run- ning-mate in Halifax, like him a former newspaper man who recently has been manager of @ Halifax aviation firm. John Bower, 64, retired oil company executive, PC victor over Liberal Fred T. Armstrong in Shelburne-Yarmouth-Clare. QUEBEC Roger Regimbal, 44, father of six and director of an indus- trial relations firm who ousted Liberal Vincent Drouin in Ar- genteuil-Deux-Montagnes. Jean-Paul Racine, 37, former mayor of St. Honore and Lib- eral MP 1958-1962. He defeated Creditiste Gerard Perron in Beauce. Antonio Yanakis, 43 indus- trialist who ran twice unsuc- cessfully for the provincial leg- islature and scored this time as a Liberal in Berthier - Maski- monge-Delaneudiere, a Conserv- ative seat in 1963. Martial Asselin, 41, lawyer who served a 1958-62 term in the Commons and briefly in 1963 was minister without port- folio in the Diefenbaker cabinet. He won Charlevoix from the Creditistes. Paul Langlois, 39, manager of a Chicoutimi manufacturing plant and Liberal winner in Chicoutimi, formerly held by Social Credit's Maurice Cote. Gustave Cote, 52, Liberal, a a plastics engineer who took Dorchester from the Creditistes. Russell Keays, 52, onetime mayor of Gaspe and former MP for Iles - de - la - Mad- eleine; Conservative winner in Gaspe over Liberal Alexandre - OT pian Comtois, 36, com- pany director now Liberal MP for dJoliette - l'Assomption- Montcalm, formerly Conserva- tive. Gaston Cars. 52, gg treasurer of the town jt former Liberal victor in two elections who staged a suc- cessful comeback over Social Credit in~ Labelle. Alcide Simard, standing for Parliament for the first time, made one of the only two gains for the Creditistes by winning ¢ St. Jean from Marcel Les- oe 39, a Social Credit MP in the last Parliament who . turned independent. Tom Lefebvre, 38, service sta- tion manager and town coun- cillor in Temiskaming; Liberal victor in Pontiac pcan we 8 ingue over former servative snes minister Paul Martineau. Roland Godin, standing as & Creditiste won the Portneuf seat held by Jean-Louis Frenette, 44, an architectural draughtsman elected as-a Socred in 1962 and "again in 1963, but standing on this occasion as an independent. Gerard Duquet, 56, sales man- ager, former executive of the Quebec Liberal Federation, who defeated Creditiste Robert Beaule in Quebec East. Ovide Laflamme, 40, lawyer with two previous terms in the Commons; Liberal winner this time in Quebec Montmorency over Guy Marcoux of Social Credit. i Jean Marchand, 47, ex-presi- dent of the Confederation of Na- tional Trade Unions, bright hope of the iberal new guard in Quebec. He. scored easily in Quebec West over Lucien ourde, Creditiste. "oy Leblanc, 44, land sur- veyor and forester, who scored a Liberal landslide in Rimouski over Gerard Ouellet who was elected as\a Social Credit can- didate in ye va ran as a servative this time. eal Beaulieu, 63 minister of industry in the Duplessis prov- incial government, Conserva- tive winner by a walkaway in St: Jean - Iberville - Napier- ville, seat of Yvon Dupuis who had to resign as Liberal min- ister without portfolio. Paul 0. higgrg = t, mayor 9° Ta 1964; PC ener over Creditiste Gilbert Rondeau by a whisker. Maurice Allard, 42, archi- pc member as independent. PC defeated Gerard Chapdelaine, a Social Credit member in last Parlia- ment, but running as an inde- pendent in this election, in Sher- brooke, Mr. Chapdelaine was one of seven SC members who stayed faithful to party Leader Robert Thompson in the 1963 party split, but he later de- fected, Former mayor of Trois-Ri- |vieres J, A. Mongrain, an ex- Liberal, standing as a independ- ent, took the Trois - Rivieres seat held in last Parliament by former deputy SC leader Leon Balcer, who broke with the party over Mr. Diefenbaker's leadership. Mr. Balcer did not stand in this election. ONTARIO Richard A. Bell, 52, former Conservative immigration min- ister, a comeback winner in Carleton over Liberal Liloyd Francis. Harold Stafford, 44 lawyer, successful for the Liberals in Conservative-held Elgin. Lee Grills, 61, dairy farmer elected to the Commons as a PC in 1957, 1958 and 1962 in Hastings South; winner over Liberal Robert Temple who un- lseated him in 1963. James Lind, 52, township reeve, manager of a building supply firm in London and Lib- eral choice over Conservative C. E. Miller in Middlesex East. Norman Faweett, 55, a CNR WHO LOST THE BATTLE? AND WHO WON THE WAR? By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- The tally of members is clear, but no one in Ottawa political cir- cles seems to know who won Monday's general election. It doesn't do much good to ask. A Liberal official said his party lost the battle but won the war. A Conservative affi- cial said his party won the battle but lost the war. The trick is to establish whether a general election is a battle or a war. While the Liberals claim victory on the grounds of win- ning the most seats: the Con- servatives claim they win by preventing the Liberals from achieving their objective of a majority government. It doesn't end there, CLAIM VICTORY The New Democrats claim a victory in increasing their number of seats to 21: from 18, and their percentage of the party vote to 18 from 13 The Social Credit party claims some measure of victory be- cause they won five seats de- spite widespread forecasts that they would win only two at most. The Creditiste party was missed by the pundits. It re- turned nine members. Another victory. Even the two independents | can claim a slice of victory. | get | Not many independents elected. Unlike most elections, from which a winner emerges along with a loser or two, Monday's results didn't work that way. The Liberals got the biggest block of seats and they were clearly depressed. The Con- servatives got fewer seats than the Liberals yet their workers appeared elated. NO COMPLAINTS Apart from the usual it- would - be - nice - to -get- more, the other parties didn't voice loud complaints. Social Credit Leader Thompson ap- peared as happy with five seats as Mr. Pearson with 129. Mr. Diefenbaker, who said during the campaign he ex- | pected to head a majority government, was "deeply gratified' with the results which placed him well behind minority Liberals. Mr. Pear- son was disappointed. And the confusion grew if anyone paused to listen in on election conversations around Parliament Hill. conductor who high-balied to an NDP victory in Nickel Belt in a tight race with Lib- eral veteran Osias J. Godin. George Hees, 55, former Con- servative trade minister; after a ding-dong battle with Liberai Pauline Jewett in Northumber- land. Hugh Faulkner, 30, a high school teacher who made it on his second run in Peterborough for the Liberals; his victim, Conservative MP Fred Stenson. Robert , 44, car dealer, Liberal winner in Port Arthur where the NDP's Doug Fisher had retired after four. straight wins, John Gilbert, 44, lawyer who upset Liberal David G. Hahn in Toronto Broadview. K. R. Hymmen, 52° mayor of Kitchener; for the Liberals in Waterloo North where Conserv- ative Mike Weichel had retired. David Lewis, 56, labor lawyer and national NDP figure who recaptured his old seat of York South from Liberal Marvin Gel- ber. MANITOBA | Ed Schreyer, 29, NDP mem- iber of the Manitoba Legislature for seven years until he re- signed and beat Conservative Joseph Slogan in Springfield. Bud Sherman, 39, news com- mentator, conservative . winner over Liberal Mrs. Margaret |Konantz in Winnipeg South. ALBERTA Ray Ballard, 47, Calgary alderman and accountant, who knocked off Agriculture Min ister Harry Hays in Calgary South. BRITISH COLUMBIA Howard Johnston, 37, Salmon Arm. school teacher, Social Credit's winner in Okanagan- Revelstoke, where Conservative Stuart Fleming did not seek re- election. EXTRA MONEY A selected number of steadily employed people ere turning spare time hours into cash in- come replenishing light merch- andise accounts established lo- cally by prominent Canadian manufacturer. Constant repeat turnover and de- finitely no soliciting can provide o reliable second income to sincere persons with sound job history. Write Today -- Oshawa Times Box 1021 J EARN N.W.T. Bud Orange, 39, father of seven, former federal civil servant, who upset Conserva- mi Gene Rheaume for the Lib- erals. i teir own census, whereas American Jews don't know their birth and death rates, the num- ber they are gaining or losing through intermarriage, or ex- actly how many Jews there are Jews Begin Self-Study In America MONTREAL (CP) The Council of Jewish Federations and Welfare Funds will make a three-year study of Jews in the United States, at a cost of $650,000, council president Louis Stern of Newark, N.J., said to- day. Mr. Stern said the study was necessary because Jews in the U.S. knew little about them- selves. | He told the 1,000 Jewish lead- 'ers attending the five-day gen- in the U.S. The total is esti- mated to be 5,350,000. He said the study will provide the first accurate facts on age patterns, geographic distribu- tion, economic status, family size, the inter-marriage rate of Jews, education, occupations: synagogue affiliations and par- ticipation in organized Jewish communal group's and activi- ties. Saul Hayes, executive vice- president of the Canadian Jew- ish Congress, said the Jewish population breakdown by areas in Canada is: Montreal 40.4 per cent; Toronto 34.8 per cent; Winnipeg 7.6 per cent and seven other cities accounting for an- other 10 per cent, so that 93 per cent of Canadian Jewry lives in no more than 10 communities. RUSSIANS LIKE FANTASY More than 500 science fiction novels and stories have been jeral assembly of the CJFWF that Canada's 250,000 Jews have MILLIONS MUST DIE CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- Delegates at a fisheries confer- ence here were told govern- ment scientists are trying to increase oyster production. Each female oyster can pro- duce about 20,000,000 eggs but mortality under natural condi- tions is about 99 per cent. published in Russia since 1958. | | | i 1957 TO 1964 | VOLKSWAGEN Tight MUFFLER EXPERTS 1957 TO 1964° with Gas Heater 11.95 INSTALLATION 6.00 | \\\ ASSOCIATE STORE FRED A, SMITH CO. LTD. Coupons ton all Parts) 115 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA PHONE -- 728-6272 FROM THE BEST MILLS IN THE FAR EAST TOP QUALITY UNGROOVED SANDED LABAN MAHOGANY PLYWOOD $ 4x8's $2.59 sheet in crate lets RANDOM "VEED" PANELLING 4 x 7's $2.39 -- 4 x8's $2.74 in Crates: Less than crate lots add 20c per sheet to cover handling costs. VERY LARGE STOCKS ON HAND! FULLY PRE- in North America is known. 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