Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jan 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Fat for the fire: to reducing, most women are poor losers. When it comes he Oshawa Zine WEATHER REPORT Partly Cloudy today and most of Thursday. Snowflurries Thurs- day evening, milder, Becoming colder Thursday night. iby VOL. 9I--NO. 20 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of. Postage in Cash. THIRTY PAGES U.S. Criticism Of Diefenbaker Magazine Move WASHINGTON (CP) -- The state department charged Tues- day that Prime Minister Die- fenbaker's proposed action against non - Canadian maga- zines is as restrictive as the re- pealed tax of the former Lib- eral administration. It .aid it was sympathetic to the idea of fostering a anadian publishing industry reflecting Canadian cultural aims, but it maintained the Die fen baker move "'is neither the proper nor practical method to reach this end." The department's spokesman observed also that the prime minister proposed banning en- try of foreign publications con- taining advertising aimed prim- arily at the Canadian market and said the U.S. government will seek "an early opportun- ity" to present its views as soon as it studies the full Ca- nadian announcement ! €RITICIZE MOVE United States criticism flowed quickly as the prime minister announced his government will implement two proposals of the royal commission on _publica-| tions with one modification. In- Stead of disallowing for tax purposes all anadian advertis- ing expenditures in non - Cana- dian magazines -- as the com- mission recommended -- the government proposed disallow- ing only one-half the expendi- tures Horace Hart, publica tions chief in the U.S. commerce-de- partment, said that as a re- strictive device, disallowing one-half the expenditures "'is al-| most as bad as a_complete dis- allowance." He described the Canadian proposal as_ unfortunate and) Mass Escape From | E. German Sector BERLIN (Reuters)--Twenty- eight men, women and children from East Germany made al mass escape into the French| sector of West Berlin early to-| day after cutting through] barbed wire fences, police re-| ported. | They said the refugees, aged between eight and 71, must have prepared their escape carefully. Police said the mass escapees included 18 female and 10 male East Germans. previously expected but ne-er- theless it is still harsh.' MAY ASK COMPENSATION In U.S. diplomatic quarters, BIG NARCOTIC ARREST ON TORONTO RCMP TIP the suggestion was raised that!-- the U.S. might seek some trade compensation from Canada for the possible loss of trade if the Canadian proposals are im- plemented. One official seized on the point that Diefenbaker proposed to consult with the U.S. and other countries affected. The U.S. contends that re- strictive Canadian action against American magazines would be a breach of Canada's obligtions under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. In Ottawa there was no im- | Agueci Murder | Questions Seen | TORONTO (CP)--An under-jof Toronto accused Albert world tip received by the|Agueci, whose burned body was RCMP in Toronto led to the!/found outside Rochester, N.Y. arrest in Spain of alleged lead-|last November. ers of an international drug} Agueci's brother Vito and an- smuggling ring, RCMP Super-/other Toronto man, Rocco Sco- bes |intendent F. B. Woods-Johnson|pellitti, were found guilty of said here today. |drug smuggling charges along |. The U.S. Federal Bureau of|with nine others in New York |Narcotics Tuesday announced|Dec. 27. They are due to be mediate comment from the gov-| g** ernment. Qualified sources said the government would await an JOHN DIEFENBAKER |apprcach from the state depart- ment for an opportunity to pre- suggested it might have some!|sent its views. impact on U.S. friendship ae A spokesman for U.S. maga- aid Ditenbaters sctos| Oshawa Counl would be discriminatory and re. WOAAWA VOUPLE ' rn . * strictive 2 Robert Kenyon, executive Files $150,000 S. Ma- vice-president of the U azine Rublishers Associa- 4 tae, said the ont inane Damages Suit policy "is only half as harsh as GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP). # A Canadian couple has filed suit OFFICER SAVES in U.S. District Court seeking WRONG WOMAN %,,2", 30 ceas'roter, 32h $150,000 damages as the result SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-- | Mrs. Carol VanDyk and her Painter John King perched jhusband, Sidney, of Oshawa,| tifies' before State ' provle | : : : high atop a tower on the |Ont., named Charles Pierson of, Advisory Council during pub- | necticut. Listening are Rob- | Connecticut State Police. Wit- conducted Tues- | ert C. Grieb, center, chief of | ness told council how Masked woman witness tes- | part of an overall study of , State Health Department, and | gave testimony regarding her Narcotics | narcotics problems in Con- | e = u é or Golden Gate bridge, gazed |Pontiac, Mich., as defendant in| lic hearing Tuesday at crowds lining both |the action. day in Bridgeport, Conn., as a | narcotics contro! section, | 'kicked' the drug habit and | |the arrest of Frank Caruson, 50, |Vincent Mauro, 45. and Salva-| jtore Maneri. 49, who jumped) jbail in the United States last] September while awaiting trial) on drug smuggling charges. Caruso and Mauri described) sentenced Feb. 1. The Toronto men were said by police to have arranged shipments of narcotics from Italy into the United, States. by police as kingpins in thel State Medical by Paice se ena i tl Ica before it was smashed last May, were arrested in Barcel-| Plan Rapped ona. Maneri was picked up in} the nearby Mediterranean is- land of Majorca. All three carried falsely- obtained Canadian passports, police said. A U.S. narcotics agent and Spanish police made the arrests. The three will be questioned in connection with the murder MASKED WOMAN TESTIFIES Maj. Leslie Williams of the | activities as a former drug ae | addict. --ar weno | Negro State sides of the bridge while a | 'Their suits contend Pierson troop transport put out to sea jcrossed the centreline of the for Japan and Korea. highway causing his auto to col- Then he saw a woman act- |iide with one driven by Van- ing as though she might jump s s Dyk. The plaintiffs seek dam- off the bridge. He telephoned jaoe< for alleged injuries suf- Police. \fered in the crash. Patrolman Wallace Erskine | raced to the scene, saw a | girl scribbling a note and de- | S Se cided she must be the one. up en He was wrong. She was | writing a love note, intending F P rtu ] to drop it on the Gen. W. A. or 0 ga Mann passing under the | s bridge with 500 military per- | FRESO ution sonnel and dependents. } While Erskine engaged the Cc girl in conversation an uni- | ~ dentified young woman leaped over the railing to her death. |independence. Prolonged--often repetitive-- debate resumes today over' the Said Hope For Canada For New Trial | BANFF, Alta. (CP) -- Brit) "If we hope for a defensive|ties that what we have to gain|the current issue of Encounter] first state set up under his gov- ain's entry into the European|response to changes in the|would more than make up for Common Market was described|world around us, we are very|what we have to lose." at the annual convention of the/likely to have a soggy Canadian) He said the CFA looks on the} |Canadian Federation of Agri-jeconomy that will find itself|qeyelopment of the ECM US acann.. ob LAN: Boule» Oxford iculture Tuesday as more prom-|being dragged complaining and being, in principle; a policy of| University examines re detail a UNITED NATION (CP) --jsing than threatening, | he. fir anada is expected to support) pr, a 40-country Afro-Asian resolu-| Montreal, director of the Pri-|1960s."" tion calling on Portugal to un-\yate Planning Association of} Mr. Hannam said the interest|protectionist turn Canadian high court trial for obscenity in| dertake political, economic and/Canada, and H. H. Hannam of|of Canadian farmers could be|markets in some commodities! 99, social reforms in Angola and|ottawa, CFA president, see the|gravely injured by Britain's en-|could be jeopardized. So set its people on the road to\mcM as a challenge to Cana-|\try into the ECM but "we Mr. Hannam said the federal|the book's "sexual" passages| will remain in the hands of the dian agriculture to improve its|should not overlook the fact houtd. tak very| Lawrence is describing and in aj all-whit South Afri i position in international|that drastic changes are un-|80vernment should take every | e@ sou rican govern- market. Arthur J. R. Smith of|changing world economy of the|as agricultural policies of Com-|rence's book and which was not! education | | CAPE TOWN (AP) -- Prime L d Ch tt 1 Minister Hendrik Verwoerd has a y a er y | announced his white supremacy regime plans to give internal M a Return self-government next year to a y segregated state of 2,000,000 Ne- groés in the Transkei area 'on the Indian Ocean. ' Verwoerd told Parliament LONDON (CP)--An article in)Tuesday Transkei would be the jhas roused Lady Chatterly from)ernment's program of separate her restless bed and may lead| development for Bantu (Negro) her into the dock again. states. within a Svuth . African Zohn Sparrow, a barrister and| commonweaith. Transkei will have "a wholly black parliament and cabinet" with authority over agriculture, € n lands, roads an discussed during the famous] other internal matters, Ver- woerd said External affairs, | defence, and '"'certain aspects of |whimpering through the rapidly! wisdom. But it recognized that/theme he Hinds in DH. Law- mon Market countries took a REGINA (CP) -- Spokesmen for the Saskatchewan medical profession said Tuesday a com- pulsory, state medical care plan would breed government con- trol of doctors and destroy the intimate relationship between patient and physician. It was the profession's turn to face probing questions of the Royal Commission on Health Services, which earlier in the day finished giving provincial government officials the same treatment. The medical profession--rep- resented by the Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Sur- geons and the Saskatchewan di- vision of the Canadian Medical Association--is at loggerheads with the CCF government over the province's medical insur- ance plan. It is to go into effect April'1 "but. the doctors vow they will not co-operate in the plan. Commissioner 0. J. Firestone asked Dr. H. D. Dalgleish why doctors do not favor extension of 'principles embodied in the federal-provincial hospital in- > a program to the medical eld. 'RAISED QUALITY' Dr. Dalgleish, president of the college, had stated in reply to Sparrow argues that in one of|the administration of justice" ; | they 6 ;,.|sense glorifying unnatural prac-| " A Peat} likely to be made quickly, more| opportunity "to inform organiz-| (i... st wnich the soto A beore'g for the time being," he a previous question that "in jgeneral" the profession supports {the hospital plan--"we believe jit has raised the quality of care |for our patients." Liberals Prepare Portuguese West African terri-| pb» smith said "Canada's best|likely over a period of somelations like ours of difficulties English law is life imprison-| tory and will continue through hope for maintaining and devel-| years and problems we may have to | Verwoerd's announcement] 'The relationship between a "During those years the dy-|face" because of ECM develop-| promptly drew fire from Dr.|doctor and his patient cannot be Bernard Friedman, leader of|compared to buildings, furni- s ] the week but the Afro-Asi be Medica Pro ram resoltion cae Y aasared wer et ee i fah thrivi d|ments "'and of the alternatives! Sparrow's discovery is not s Sass 'vig: itain' i of a huge, thriving and|m S| new 7 iti ; g \lie in Britain's entry into the/namics 8 ig new. Several authorities have' the Transvaal Progressive TORONTO (CP) -- Within a| few weeks the Liberal party hopes to announce plans for a medical aid program acceptable to the whole country, Walter L.| Gordon said Tuesday night. Mr. Gordon, 55, was nomi- nated without opposition as Lib- eral candidate in Toronto Dav- enport in the next federal gen- eral election. The seat is held by Progressive Conservative Murray Morton. Mr. Gordon, Toronto econo- mist and management consult- ant, was chairman of the 1956 roval commission which inves- tigated Canada's economic fu- ture Standing beneath a_ red-on- white banner reading Canada needs the Pearson team, Mr Gordon emphasized that his own endeavor would be to see more done "in fields of social secur- ity." About 600 persons at the nom- inating convention heard Mr Gordon promise the Liberal party will work for the new medical plan, higher unemploy- ment insurance benefits, greater benefits for persons tak- ing vocational training or in-job retraining, a better old age pen- sion scheme, portable pensions and a better old age assistance program. The medical plan was not elaborated upon Mr. Gordon spoke briefly of a free university education, pro- gram the Liberals are working on, adding that there 'is some- thing wrong when a university is not free' as are primary and secondary educations His party, he said. has com mitted itself to implement all the programs he mentioned Lester B. Pearson, national against Cuba. }/ECM " prosperous community could s0| But he said that even underjexpand our market opportuni-| | Passage. 2 Submitted Tuesday in the 104- don't want security without| member United Nations Gen- that may seem open to us for d |spotted the implications inher- meeting them. tare and other such things that jent in the passage and most| party. He termed it "window|go to make up a hospital pro- dressing" to disarm foreign|gram," Dr. Dalgleish said. favorable conditions Canada freedom." eral Assembly, the draft asks Mr. Pearson said he does not| a1) UN members to deny Por-|SHould expect moderate rather want to be told the only choice t or assistance "which , ; ati , : se ' work hilation.' may be used by it for the sup- We therefore need to "I don't believe that. It is not i t _|aggressively, both to achieve a choice between freedom or ae of the people of An further major gains in agricul- In Secret peace. We can--and will--have ' tural productivity and to de- TO Be oat grag member sates tly Dew oppure for ae "But we must have power on compliance of Portugal with ricultural export in other direc- ROME (AP) -- Italian and our side so long as the other this resolution." tions NATO officials today clamped} side has power. To be defence- It also appeals to Portugal to, Dr. Smith said Canada can\tight secrecy around their in-| less is to be destroyed. It some- release all political prisoners in achieve bright economic and| vestigation of a Communist Bul-| times is necessary to have'Angola trade future only if "we are garian jet that crashed Satur-| power." The resolution in addition)prepared to be active partici-/day in Italy near an Atlantic) Mr. Pearson said Mr. Gordon would add three members to|pants in the change now devel-| Alliance missile base. | would have "'a big part to play the five-country Angola investi-\oping in the international scene The Italian defence ministry| in the next Liberal administra- gating committee set up last rather than stout defenders of said Monday night there were | tion." year. an eroding status quo. "indications of a true and| " ; ' Te ~ |proper case of aerial espio-| nage" and that an investigation} P ostponement Pressed 2 ce ther substantiated." | A defence ministry spokes-! nd man added that investigators} Or C 10n n u ans are anxious to see what was on} motion picture and _ still film| : found aboard the _ camera-} PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay|pressure' from the seven coun-| The Associated Press re-|equipped plane. (Reuters)--The Organization' of tries, whose memorandum was ported meanwyile that the con-; Officers of the North Atlantic American States today resumed reported to condemn the idea|ference continued to produce Treaty Organization are proces- | its hearing on Cuba with seven of sanctions against the Castro|public violence at Latin-Ameri-| sing the film at Bari. countries reported to be press- regime. can points. é But ing for a postponement of any, Rene Be Thousands of pro-Castro dem- action against the pro-Commu, SEK "TOUGHER LINE onstrators rarchad through the nist regime of Premier Fidel The U.S. earlier was reported|main street of Montevideo ' Canes: seeking drastic action, includ- shouting "Cuba si! Yankees been silent. Conference sources said the M8 the possible expulsion Of| no!" The plane, a Russian-built) proposed potsponement was Cuba from the OAS, a diplo- jp Venezuela, a country that | contained in a memorandum|™A@tic quarantine, strong eco-\has broken with Cuba, the toll backed by Brazil, Argentina, NOMIC sanctions and establish-\frgm two days of clashes in e Fre Chile, Mexico, Bolivia, Ecuador|™€nt of a common anti-Com- Caracas climbed to 13 dead and Alleg ed Spy ed 2nd Time In Year and Haiti munist defence organization. (more than 30. wounded. The memorandum came up The position of the influential In Maracaibo, Venezuela, for discussion by the foreign Brazilian delegation was be- evangelist Billy Graham was MONTREAL (CP) -- Tomasz ministers as chances faded for lieved to be far from fixed de- hustled out the back door of the Biernacki, 37, landed immigrant strong collective measures SPite its support for the memo- state legislative hall after a from Poland, today was freed, randum crowd. shouting "Yankee non! |for fhe second time within a The Organization of American , Reports Tuesday night said Castro si!" pounded on the|Ye@%_on a charge of spying for since Monday night's communique and reports, ltal-) ian and NATO officials have Liberal leader, warned against/giates with headquarters in|'he delegation had received in- front door during a speech he|the Polish intelligence service. Socialist and dictator states with the admonition that "we CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS Washington, grew out of the Structions from its capital of was making to the assembly. Biernacki, who was out on Pan American Union and com- Brazilia to take a "tougher the |@8ainst Cuba street fighting between pro-Cas- trial POLICE 725-1133 |Colombia, in 1948 with 21 coun-|lieved to leave the U.S. short/demonstration by pro-Castro. The preferred indictment was FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 tries from the hemisphere sign- of the minimum majority of 14) students in Lima, Peru. A car signed by Attorney ing it. Canada did not join votes required to make any was overturned and set on fire, Georges Lapalme of Quebec shifting to a "softer line' under | obligatory. The>U.S. was believed to be serious measures against Cuba and dozens of demonstrators after |were detained by police. ; ade éirst time last summer. 3 One man was killed and 30 in-/$6,000 bail, 'was' freed of the/ernment official said: bined other agencies working ine' favoring stronger action jured in La Paz, Bolivia, in Charges before he ever came to for co-operation among jstates of the western hemis-| Previously the Brazilian dele-|tro and anti-Castro demonstra- Judge Emile Trottier granted/craft was unfriendly. We expect} ; iltv phere and for their mutual wel-|gation was adopted a "'live-and-|tors ae i ae a ee fare and security. The OAS/let-live" attitude toward Cuba |charter was adopted at Bogota,|) The current lineup was be-\night to break up a two-hour Biernacki a defence motion to quash ajto state flatly in the next feW|the robbery charge. Poirier, Police used tear gas Tuesday preferred indictment against/days that the plane was flying|Martel and Jean - Claude La- a spy mission." - General/would be put on trial by the|len cars, resisting arrest by Powers was by the Russians (mer, cottage. pact : : jeritics think the case is conclu- critics of South Africa's apar-| Earlier in the day, Commis- é e ° ¥ sive. theid policy of strict racial seg-| si r s : ; | ial 8|sioner M. W. McCutcheon and : _|than dynamic growth in agricul-| A r al E Sg on '@ | e But why, asks Sparrow, did ; | Rh i is between 'freedom and anni-|support oe ae ae tural exports to Europe. e l 1 none of the 25 expert witnesses | "°2ation. the commission chairman, Chief ea th f Eng-|. The Transkei is an area. of|Justice Emmett Hall of Sask- eit iaiecmel mae pe 16,000 square miles on the In- atchewan, clashed with Health no explanation of the passage in|@ian Ocean south of Durban. Minister W. G. Davies. |the defence which ultimately| | vindicated the book? | MiG-17, crash-landed a few hun-|_ Why did the prosecution not dred yards from the NATO mis-|™ake use of it? -- oo ver-| sile base of Giola del Colle, out-|dict in the case have been a) side Bari in southern Italy, The) 'ifferent one? | 22-year-old pilot, Lieut. Milusc)sgMEmTHING SACRED? Solakov, suffered fractures of} The repeated claim of the de- the left collarbone and left arm) fence in the trial was that Law-| and a head concussion. lrence, in the words of a bishop He is in-hospital at Acqua-jon the witness stand, repre-| | viva, near Bari. po ie rg Re a NB al als rening real sense somethin: red; as} Telesera, a Rome eveninglin's real sense an act of holy | newspaper, said Tuesday a spe- communion." | seins te aeake tae ag Zat|_ Sparrow says that if Law tides to Ell hin. jrence's apparent panegyric on i : . |perversion had been squarely| i The right-wing newspaper|put to the jury "the verdict] | hinted that someone might want | might well have been a differ- to keep him from talking with|ent one." | investigators. | An editorial in the Yorkshire A defence ministry spokes-| Post speculates on the possibil- man in Rome confirmed thatjity of the case being reopened.| : Solakov is under guard but de-} | clined to say whether there is itn any fear for his life. | W 1 T ll The most talkative persons in, : SS e s the case were two Bulgarian! ()f Bi ll | = diplomats--military attache Col. | u ets : Ivan Ivanoff and Consul Christo) EER e ee ; (cP) =| . i F .|Three or four bullets cut) * Tenev. They were in Bari, try |through the air a few feet from ing without success to see Sola-| him during a car chase follow-| kov. ling a bank robbery at Have-| At an impromptu press con-|lock, Const. John McKendry| ference Tuesday they reiterated told a court Tuesday. the Bulgarian claim that the) Testifying at the trial of four) pilot had lost his way in bad| Montreal men charged with the weather. Italians point out that|$282,000 armed robbery of the southern Italy had clear skies|TOronto-Dominion Bank branch| when the MIG crashed. = Aug. So Sr provincial po-| While the defence ministry|/iceman said his cruiser earlier! be dite HPht ; ;|had been bounced out of the maintained silence, a high gov- way by a fleeing car. aah Roger Martel, 41, Roger Poi- We can say now that the/rjer, 31, and brothers Jean- mission of the Bulgarian air-|cjaude and Yvon Lalonde, 23) § > ees esos csemaceee | : londe also pleded not guilt yto It was predicted that the pilot/two charges of possessing sto-! COLD WEATHER SWIMMER Temperatures that sank as | ham, 72, as she took her Italians for espionage as Amer-|shooting at a policeman, and| low as eight degrees above daily dip in English Bay, She Biernacki was freed ajican U-2 pilot Francis Gary|breaking and entering a sum-| zero in Vancouver were no | found the water warmer than | deterrent to Mrs,»Jean Gra-| the air, --(CP Wirepheto)

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