Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 4 Jul 1962, p. 1

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See ganas ees a - Rezoning THOUGHT FOR TODAY If you're parent, by the time you're experienced your unem- ployable. Opens Door Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Sunny and warm today and Thursday. Winds southerly 15, aye VOL. 91--NO, 155 10 conte' Fer Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Ottewa and f of for ~=payment Office Department, Postage in Cash. TWENTY-SIX PAGES , Blockade Against SIU! E Predicted In Seaway | | | OTTAWA (CP) -- A seaway i |blockade against ships manned by Canadian crews belonging to} the maverick Seafarers Interna-| 4 tional Union may be imminent,| . i ie reliable sources mad" : . The threatened boycott was eing watched by federal jus-| U.S. ARMY PARADE IN BERLIN being watched by federal jus- local troop commander. Clay |said Tuesday night they would was in Berlin on a three-day |seek a court injunction to keep) visit as President Kennedy's the St. Lawrence Seaway and| consultant (AP Wirephoto via radio from Berlin) cars in West Berlin. Flanking is shown on reviewing stand | Clay are Maj. Gen. Albert | as guest of honor during | Watson Il, left, U.S. comman- Fourth of July parade of U.S. | dant in the city, and Brig troops, tanks, and aeneree| Gen. Frederick O. Hartel,. the | In the uncertain situation,; Gen. Lucius D. Clay, center, | to all ships The nossibility of a seaway) blockade mounted as the con-| |tinuing waterfront war between! | |Canadian Maritime Union, |headed for what seemed to be jan international showdown Threat Of Civil War Mounting In Algeria 70" ris cus s formally asked the United] States government to investi-) the dissidents. Col, Tahar|gate reported incidents of vio- of Ben Bella's call for radical/Sbiri, commander of easternjlence in US. ports against Ca- leftist revolution in the new na-'Algeria's Willaya No. 1, de-jnadian ships and their CMU} tion. scribed Ben Khedda as a "'coun-jcrews. The request, made in a From eastern Algeria came|ter - revolutionary' and ex-|note delivered in Washington reports of new armed suppert|pressed support for Ben Bella.|last moath, asked the U.S. gov-| In western Algeria, the offic-jernment to take action within jers of Willaya No. 5 aroundjits powers to protect Canadian |Oran and Ben Bella's home yil-|property and safeguard Cana. jlage of Marnia were reported|dian lives |wavering between the two fac- ALGIERS (AP)--The threat of civil war mounted in newly independent Algeria today amid reports of growing . opposition among nationalist army com- manders to Premier Youssef Ben Khedda's regime. Bolstered by a_ tumultuous} Mosiem welcome for himself} and his ministers, Ben Khedda) set up headquarters in Algiers| zone) No. 4 in apparent support for |Welland Canal in full operation ------ 2. In Washington, an official' said the U.S. government is ex-|when U.S, federal ploring possible ways of halting|consulted with state and local! an extension of the seamen'sjofficials in the areas affected,| authorities! § jurisdictional dispute into Amer-|they found the states don't like! ; ican ports but so far has found|too much interference from no acceptahle solution Washington A U.S. labor department offi-; 3. A justice department) cial said the U.S. courts don't|spokesman here said Toronto} like issuing injunctions when a'lawyer Sam Grange has been jurisdictional dispute is evident.;appointed agent of the justice A Canadian official had a dif-|minister to see& a court injunc-| ferent version. He said thatjtion in Toronto if seaway work-| Jers show their support for the CMU by refusing to handle SIU-| manned ships | | TO SEEK INJUNCTION The spokesman, said an Brewery Union Talks Planned oxon wou cot tp cera TORONTO (CP) -- Concilia-/i0m, the Canadian Brotherhood tion talks between spokesmen ot yg we bapa and ih for about 3,000 Ontario brewery ag A fete 7th cs it | workers and their employers|{0© of 'ne SIU, from boycotting) will resume here Saturday fol-| any ships lowing sessions Monday and| The CMU was formed with Tuesday. the help of the Canadian Labor 4 } "We are optimistic that Congress to try to oust the SIU basis for settlement may have} |from the lakes. The Seafarers been reached and that a strike| 20m. headed by Hal C. Banks can be avoided," an employer lof Montreal, was expelled two representative said today years ago from the 1,070,000- : : ymember CLC for raiding an- Details of the meetings ear-jother union. lier in the week were not dis-| It has been fighting off. at-| coed They lag iempts ever .since..to . whittle with a provincial conciliation away its labor strength. board headed by Judge Hugh| The B Arrell of Hamilton. jtory against tHe SIU in April| Passenger Train Delayed By Blaze (2: Still the unknown factor--and PEMBROKE (CP) The ; > 4 |the key to any Algerian power CNR's Supercontinental PASSEN-| truggie -- was the 40,000-man and, with the discreet assist- ance of the French, consoli-| dated his hold on the govern-| FIVE SHRINERS DI jing rights for 450 seamen on the} |25-ship fleet of Upper Lakes) Shipping Company, one of. the! jwhen it won collective bargain-| ment apparatus | But Ben Khedda apparently could not command the loyal ties of Moslem military units in the interior, and rebellious Dep-' uty Premier Ahmed Ben Bella renewed his defiance from abroad In the hills south of Algiers 1,800 deserters from the French- equipped local security force joined 4,000 former Moslem guerrillas of Willaya (military mined train w t| : ig oheng «on yy po nationalist army in exile, which ' . was preparing to march into fire broke out in one of the two a diesel units on the westhound "'er@ from Morocco and Tu- train. Nobody was injured e Ee Bell The damaged unit was uncou n Bella apparently can pled and the train continued as\C°UNt 90 strong loyalties among far as Capreol, near Sudbury,|{1@S® troops whom he. molded on the single engine, A CNR/into the fighting machine that a official said the fire broke out in 407,000-man French army could a traction motor but the extent "0! defeat. But Ben Khedda has of the loss was not: yet deter- °xPressed no fear of their re- 2 t TORONTO (CP) -- Prancing |Shriners set Toronto on its ear! urn | Tuesday with a fantastic parade ; /of 10,000 marchers, 800 horses President Nasser of thel/ang donkeys, 300 motorcycles {United Arab Republic labored| anq thousands of other vehicles to heal the split in the Algerian| an even bigger blowout is set leadership, but his efforts thus|¢o; Thursday night f ar have failed. Upwards of 100,000 spectators ' | Ben Bella flew into Cairo/took in Tuesday's five-hour pa : tl ht N jfrom Libya Tuesday night to\rade staged by 50 Shrine tem- po 1g S jconfer with Nasser and on his} ples in North America. Another, jarrival again denounced Ben|more elaborate, parade is Khedda for dismissing the three| scheduled Thursday night when PARIS (Reuters) Presi- Adenauer, replying to dejsenior nationalist army com- the Shriners wind up their an- dent de Gaulle and Chanceilor|Gaulle's toast, said he saw in|manders Saturday for allegedly! nual convention, Adenauer today turned their at-jthe president's speech 'a con-|planning a military coup to in- The festivities tention to NATO and defence firmation of my hope for. an/stall Ben Bella in power. \their toll. Three nobles died of policy as part of their wide- ever stronger. development of; Ben Khedda appeared in com- heart attacks while parading ranging talks during the West)the ties which bind France and/mand in Algiers, at least for the through downtown streets Tues- German leader's four-day state|Germany and for the develop-| moment, and his regime imme-| day and two others died of heart visit to France jment of a great and Strongidiately set about taking the|failure in their hotel rooms. At The two leaders arranged to|Europe. jreins of the government. The/least 25 parade spectators) confer with only their interpret-/ "A united Europe, whatcver|transition from French to Al-|fainted in weather that was a ers present. They will talk for|form it may take, cannot exist/gerian rule proceeded smoothly.| perfect 77 degrees and sunny another two hours Thursday be-| without the closest ties, friend Algiers' public buildings func- The colorful parade was a fore Adenauer returns to Bonn. ship and solidarity of the twojtioned uninterrupted during the prelude to a three-day carnival The ties which have beenjneighboring states, France and changeover. Only the flags and of fun put on by the fez-topped growing up between France and|Germany." uniforms were new. and brightly - costumed Shrin- -- ncceempig ns | Adenauer's Visit have taken Bigger Blowout Seen Thursday jantics would earn a fast trip to jlarger Canadian lake operators | Since then, ships of the Upper) Lakes iine have met delaying) tactics :n U.S. ports and their! crews have been intimidated by, what CLC President Claude Jo-| doin calls a "reign of terror."'| ers. Tonight they invade the Canadian National Exhibition grounds with a Shrinerama va- riety show and a huge fire- works display Curbs Against | | | | Anti-Jew Acts | INSTALL POTENTATE An estimated 50,000 nobles and their wives are attending the convention and get down to a serious business today. with the pegged: tga spe gr installation of George Klepper|{%€ government moved todey of Memphis, Tenn., as imperial|!9, disband anti-Jewish organiz-| potentate : jations in the wake of a series A 700-man emergency police| of outrages against the Jewish| force, mainly of Shriners, has|Community. been indulgent with celebrants.|, Catlos Androgue, the new in Policeman even looked on|tetior minister, said orders will with smiles as some Shriners|P@ issued for_disbanding the drank beer on city streets--il-|@nti - Jewish organizations and lea in Oars pa acne wil Be ed t 7 t : s rade. At any other tme such sparked by a series of outrages the clink jthat culminated 10 days ago in Police Chief George Crisler of|the branding of a Jewish girl Henderson, Ney., also a Shriner| With swastikas aS said Toronto policemen are! Other anti - Jewish acts in- probably the best he has seen.|Cluded the burning and bomb- "They're so neat, efficient|ing of er pie , can't get over it,"/Smearing of Jewish buildings ot ee ices jwith swastikas. Jewish busi- In Argentina | West Germany since the end of the war were stressed by both| de Gaulle and Adenauer at a} $100 000 BANK ROBBERY glittering banquet in honor of} f the chancellor at the Elysee Palace Tuesday night | De Gaulle pictured the two! countries as the cornerstones of a European organization which will ultimately embrace "poli tics, economics, culture and de-| fence." MONTREAL (CP)--Two sus-|ployees at bay, he scooped thelof the men were shot down in| He said the present Common;pected bandits are dead, an-|money into a large cardboard/a nearby clearing and a third! Market grouping of West Ger-|other is in police cells and albox man, identified as Roland Ber | many, France, Italy, Holiand,|fourth .s believed hiding out in) The pair then jumped into ajthiaume, 24, threw up his hands Belgium and Luxembourg was|dense bushland some 30 milesjcar, in which two other menjin surrender making others -- and particu-|northeast of Montreal today|are believed to have been wait-| The fourth man, identified as larly Britain--eager to 'come|following a split-second robbery|ing, and drove off. \Jacques Lahaie, 31, escaped| and join us one day." jat_a northend branch of the} "It didn't take longer than| shirtless into the dense wood! De Gaulle said such a group-|2@0k of Montreal jone minute," said Mr. Ander-/surrounding the area ce 3 Dalma Perrault, 29, and Jean/son ing would "considerably rein-| 5. cques Cournoyer, 35, both ex-| The bandits evaded a Mont-/INCLUDES SECURITY MAN | force the free world and the A 'Iconvicts, died Tuesday in a hailjreal roadblock and the next; The police stakeout included) lantic alliance, offer powerful) qr police bullets when they tried|break came when Terrebonne|Joe Bedard, who last weekend assistance to the progress of un-|,, escape from a one - storey|police spotted an automobilejretired as chief of the Montreal derdeveloped regions and even|<hack in the tiny hamlet of|bearing the same licence plates|police criminal investigation open up future prospects for the|Greenwhich Village, Que as the escape car and detained/bureau and now is security equilibrium and co-operation of) ttnder Cournoyer's body, poja man identified as Jacques|head for the Bank of Montreal the entire continent once thejtice found a bag containing part!Genereux, 26 and the Royal Bank of Can-| spirit of eased tension) and oflof the 'oot. The total amount) Genereux told them he hadiada peace has finally triumphed" in| was estimated by one officer at\been sent to buy beer for aj The incident brought to seven European Communist nations. |$100.000 group of men at a shack injinciuding one constable, the} The robbery was plannediGreenwich Village and within| Capt. Mare Maurice, a long-| with almost military precision.|minutes,-the building was SUl-ltime troubleshooter for. the| At 9:23 a.m., when the night)rounded by 26 Montreal police! 7 , deposits from: the long holiday|and six provincial police offi [Montreal Dolce, Wax: seriously weekend were being counted, alcers. |wounded in the battle and now) hooded handit smashed the; Afler police fired a warning|'S convalescing at his home front window and jumped in-|shof, four men ran from under| Raymond Rouleau, 28 "ide the cottage. They had smashed|felled by a fusilade of shots While a armed the floor and jumped the three|when tranped by police Jan. 9 with a Sten ground jon a balcony at the rear of an IGordon Anderson and 14 em-! A short chase followed. Twoleastend flat after a stakeout! CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 a was econd handit gun kept Managerifeet to rhe "< Police Kill Suspects ique, jnesses, restaurants and a aews- in-| § CMU gained its first vic-|. Trois-Rivieres, 150 miles south. GIRL STABBED State Police at Silverdale, Pa., said 12-year-old Charles F. Clarkson 3rd, Bucks coun- ty, Pa., schoolboy, had admit- ted stabbing to death a 10- year-old girl playmate, Ther- esa M. Cahill, with a pen- knife, State Police Sgt. James J. Shovelin said the boy told him he killed the girl in an argument over kittens , they had found in a wooded sec- tion ~-(AP Wirephoto) normally could. Fatigue REGINA (CP) -- The strike of Saskatchewan doctors moved into its fourth day today with- out signs of settlement over the government's medical care in- surance plan. With major clinics and many doctors' offices closed in pro- test against the plan, emer gency service provided free at 34 hospitals by volunteer 'doc- tors was meeting no major ;| problems Both Regina hospitals. said they were "a bit busier than ;|usual,"' treating about 300 out- patient cases Tuesday. Doctors at the Regina hospi- tals said they were able to pro- vide as good treatment as they At Saskatoon, Dr. J. E. Leddy, emergency care co-ordi- nator, said about three times the average volume of patients was handled at city hospitals. He said a doctor working at one of the hospitals delivered 11 babies in 48 hours. He had no sleep during that time. Another doctor worked steadily for 22 hours. "The fatigue is starting to show," Dr. Leddy said. "And we are dealing with men (the doctors) who aren't very happy."' There were reports of indivi- duals having to go to hospitals Quebec Holocaust Worst Since 1955 ROBERVAL, Que (CP)--The north woods flickered and crackled with fire today and a forestry department. official said the situation is the worst since 1955 Georges Bernier, assistant di- rector of services, said Tuesday night the situation "has become really serious in the last 24 hours." Twenty square miles. of logged-over forest in the richly- wooded Roberval region 150 miles north of Quebec City were burning without much prospect of this blaze being controlled unless heavy rain falls The fire, burning since last Friday, is so hot it has been forming cumulus clouds seen in running through the heart of Quebec, roughly 500 miles north of Montreal -- beyond roads and most trails, other fires were racing unchecked through| the forests. | And in Abitibi County, around) Val d'Or 210 miles northwest of Ottawa, a source said 125 fires are burning in non-commercial brush surrounding the. farm- lands. Forestry Minister Bona Arse- nault said the whole timber line is in a state of emergency as a result of a dry spring wind ard hot weather. He said Quebec Provincial Police have been told to pro- vide "severe penalties" against farmers burning waste without permission. This was believed the source of many Val d'Or North of the 5ist parallel -- region fires. NO SETTLEMENT SEEN FOR MEDICARE STRIKE Emergency Care Sets In some distance from their home districts to obtain treatment. Mrs. Ted Sedgwick drove 80° miles to Regina from Govan, Sask., to get treatment for her daughter Patricia. The child had a suspected skull fracture after an eight-foot fall from a crib. Mrs. Sedgwick was re- ferred to Regina General Hos- pital by a doctor at Watrous. At Saskatoon, Mrs. Al Nagy said a relative, suffering a se- rious heart condition, was trans- ferred from a hospital 100 miles southeast of Saskatoon. The hospital was elosed because of a lack of doctors. She said Earl McDougall, 48, of Nokomis was moved to the hospital at Watrous, 31 miles away. A nurse at Nokomis vol. unteered to accompany Mr. McDougall on the trip. "Tt was terrible,' Mrs. Nagy said. "Any bump could have been fatal. We never wept so much as we did. last week. end." Her 90-year-old father, also a patient in the Nokomis hospital, was carried on a stretcher to his home. Meanwhile, two doctors launched a court action at Sas- kawon seeking an injungtion against the Medical Care In- surance Act and a déclaration that the plan is beyond. the powers of the provincial gov ernment. In a statement of claim filed in Court of Queen's Bench, for- mer premier T. C. Douglas, na- tional leader of the New Demo- cratic Party, and 11 of the 18 members of the provincial cab- inet were named as defendants. Dr. W. J. Cranley of Prince Albert and Dr. M. H. Macdon- ald of Saskatoon sought the court ruling and damages of $20,000 each Group Planning Auto Cavalcade REGINA (CP)--A_ cavalcade of cars to Regina, renewing pleas for a delay in Saskatche- wan's controversial medical care plan, is to be organized tonight at meetings in Regina and Saskatoon, Hans Taal, chairman of the Saskatoon Keep - Our - Doctors Commit, tee, announced today. Date of the cavalcade will ba announced following the meet- ing. It is expected to take place later this week. |paper office were sprayed with] . |machine-gun fire and a racist jgang kidnapped but later re- leased some Jewish students. | In a. broadcast speech And- jrogue said Argentina is suffer- ing from "uprisings of anti- Nazis." He appealed for community responsibility and said the Com- Rouleau was an escaped con- munists are taking advantage of) vict. jthe situation. , | A provincial police detective,| Robert Robidoux, was: killed by;Nahum Goldman, president of for him in a used car lot failed Rouleau while trying to make|the World Jewish Congress, said ik the arrest that anti-semitic acts in Argen- Roger Ducharme, 25, another|tina had caused "the gravest} escaped convict, was shot down/disquiet in Jewish communities} by police May 3 after he heldjthroughout the world." several of 'his relatives as hos-|-----H-----__--_ tages in an eastend flat DIES IN ATTEMPT $25,000,000 Loan Revealed For B.C. Campbell Ashton, 33, who earlier failed to show for trial on another offence, was killed) 7, | sa | VICTORIA (CP)--The British} in ane, abortive bank/cqiimbia government has bor-| , : jrowed $25,000,000 on a_ short-) Ashton's death resulted in ajterm basis, Premier W. A. C public ogutery against the prac iannett said Tuesday tice of releasing hardened crim-| The premier, who doubles as inals on bail, thereby enabling/finance minister, said the 'bor-| them 'o endanger 'lives while/rowing was routine and that the committing new crimes. |province is in good financial! On May 23, at Ste. Scholasti-|shape despite the move. Que., a police stakeout| The reason for the borrowing foiled a major bank robbery|was that Social Credit govern-| attempt and the ensuing guniment spending was higher than| hattle resulted in the death ofjincome so far this vear and it Jean - Paul Giroux, 25, one of|would all be settled in the com- the bandits. ling months, Mr. Bennett said. jdemocratic groups, heirs of the| ; In Geneva Tuesday night, Dr.! © Spanish matador Manuel Rodriguez grimaces as he is ' ? 3 bull in Madrid ring Friday. Rodriguez was badly injured tossed into the air by enraged ' He was one of three matadors | ' EL TORO SCORES WIN tossed durin a day of events during St. Peter and St. Paul holiday events --(AP Wirephoto)

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