WEATHER REPORT Considerable cloudiness with scattered showers and a few thunderstorms Wednesday. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Love is what makes you think you are stealing a kiss when it's forced on you. SIXTEEN PAGES Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1962 Seanad "le tame at lene a ae VOL. 91--NO. 172 10 Conte Per Copy 4 DOCTORS WORK AGAIN AS SASK. FIGHT ENDS MDs Can Work Outside Plan SASKATOON (CP)--Saskatch-| ment) than to the wishes of the ewan doctors begin reopening] people of the province." office doors today following). "It could happen that an settlement of their three-week|individual patient or i family boycott of the province's med-|wanting to resume relationships ical care plan. with their previous family doc- Algerian Leader Said 4 To Relinquish Power oF | d tlive i -Ben Bella and two pro-Ben ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Pro-|that the main objective is to|pro vosional Premier Ben Youssef|"restore by all means our na- | Khedda members, should hold Ben Khedda today was re-|tional unity," Krim said. power for a year and step down ported conditionally willing to| Ben Khedda proposed that|when a National Liberation + ame a up .of five|Front (FLN) congress elects a The end of the dispute came tee DR. HARRY PORTNEUF of } says farewell to fellow college | Monday. They are seen in | relinquish power to dissident|the bureau, made Vice-Premier Mohammed Ben) ~~ Bella's political power . Ben Khedda's condition was) t said to be that the seven-man| Peru Jun a bureau headed by Ber Bella} must be approvd by the 70- member sevontonary cone! "TE Release supreme instrument of the rev- Ex-Leader successor bureau. Ben Khedda's move followed the resignation Monday of his foreign minister, Saad Dahlab, |and an open declaration for Ben Bella by Rabah Bitat, another minister of state. In another development, four Christians were killed and three Christians and a Moslem were; wounded Monday night in the} first serious shooting event since} olution. On Monday, Ben Khedda sent shortly after noon Monday 'with signing of a doctor-government ical Care Act to allow doctors to practise outside the plan. Premier Woodrow Lioyd is to call a special session of the legislature shortly to make the amendments law. Meanwhile, the Saskatchewan College of Physicians and Sur- geons, governing body of the agreement to amend the Med-|wishes tor, might find their wishes as to the method of payment might not correspond to the doctor's "And the famliy' might have to hunt for a doctor who will fit their desires as to method of payment for his services.' Rodney Thomson, acting chairman of the provincial Keep Our Doctors Committee, said he was "elated." He said a meeting of the Yorkton (right), vice-president | council member Dr, Beatty | front of Saskatoon's Medical |Minister of State Mohamedi of the Saskatchewan College | Wallace after the medical | Arts building. of Physicians and Surgeons, | care settlement in Saskatoon '! Said to Ben Bella's headquar-) tina (ap)--peru's week-old ters at Tlemcen in western Al-| military junta plans to release -/geria to lay his proposals be-|\denosed presi dent Manuel fore the dissident vice-premier.| prado and set up a government | Another vice-premier, Belka-| acceptable to the United States jem Krim, one of Ben Kheddz's/and other nations hostile to the ee uro ep W | strongest supporters, said today/ regime, muilitary sources said . 2 jhe is "confident that we are/ today, ' July 28, the --CP Wirephoto jheading towards a happy solu-| "After even tion of the Algerian crisis." | United States cannot refuse to Krim told reporters the pro-| recognize the new regime," the visional government has "set|sources said. | unity as its supreme objective') They declintd to say what "ON AP) -- Excitedjnication can draw people closer! With the banner headline Said's mission to Tlemcen. | other than to release Prado, bene baeeiaagand rave no-|together as an instrument of "Wonderful Telstar--biggest TV oo member of the Ben|who is being held prisoner tices today hailed the first for-jcivilization that overcomes ev-|triumph," The Daily Mirror de-|Khedda government now agrees| aboard a navy transport. Pra- "mal exchange of live television|ery contrast, every bitterness,/scribed the exchange as "'the| -- }do's term expires July 28, btween North America andjevery misunderstanding." jmost fabulous TV spectacular of | The report came on the heels Europe as "the greatest show; The Vatican radio said the all time. China Claimed lof the junta's clearcut victory Independent and now is awaiting the results|measures the junta would take on arth and in space." communication satellite "men-| 'The American program was over the Peruvian Labor Con- An estimated 200,000,000 view-/aces no one, carries no poten-| momentous, exciting, it was his-| federation in the first major ers watched the two 20-minute|tiality for destruction, but/tory being made--a once in a} challenge to the military rule. programs relayed both ways|means instead union and com-|lifetime moment as thrilling as The largest of Peru's. unions, committee's provincial execu- tive will be held in Regina Wednesday to decide its future. WILL DISBAND Grant Armstrong of the Save Our Saskatchewan organization said the group probably will be disbanded. Two pending court cases arising from the medical care controversy apparently were unaffected by the settlement. Dr. M. H. MacDonald, who with a Prince Albert doctor has launched a suit against the Saskatchewan cabinet and for- mer premier T. C. Douglas, 'A GREAT RELIEF' claiming damage of professional Mayor Roy Dean of North|reputation, said the action will Battleford, president of the Sas-|P 7 katchewan Urban Municipalities), Hans Taal, one of three per- Association, said it is "'a great|Sons who applied for a tempo- relief" to have the dispute|rary injunction to suspend the settled. act until its validity could be Liberal Leader Ross Thatcher|tested in court, said ne will province's doctors, will begin dismantling its hospital-based emergency care service. College officials said it will take about 10 days to return things to normal. Doctors on emergency service plan to re- turn patients to their family doctors in a gradual transition. Most of Saskatchewan's 625 private practitioners had closed their doors rather than work under the compulsory prepaid plan, implemented July 1. About 200 doctors remained on duty at 41 of the province's 154 hospitals to provide free emergency care. DONALD FLEMING independence was proclaimed) earlier this month. | s . . Civil Service Panic - stricken passersby m ens mec! Salary Hk 'lem coldiers fired bursts of ma.| NALLY SILKE jchine - gun fire. The shooting, | |which broke out after two ex-| Pl D { d plosions that sounded like gre-| an e erre nades, lasted off and on for . more than an hour. OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal -- -------| government has decided to de- jfer consideration of civil serv- Notice Of Appeal jice salary increases "durin In Bribery Case the present emergency period," Finance Minister Fleming an- OTTAWA (CP) -- Notice has been served on former MP Ray- |nounced today. r. Fleming said the decision mond Bruneau that the Crown intends to appeal his two-year is in line with the "substantial |suspended sentence for a brib- reduction" in government ex- penditure as part of the emer- ery conviction, it was disclosed |today, gency program announced June The crown attorney's office 24 to curb a heavy outflow of foreign exchange reserves. "While this emergency con- tinues the government considers i across the Atlantic, Monday. byjprehension." the first. transatlantic flight. Telstar satellite. 0 "Gat Yugoslavia of the Com-)Moscow radio, which said pres-| munist nations was officially in-\ident Kennedy used the trans- cluded in the hookup. But manyjatlantic hookup to further the East Germans are believed to|"same cold war spirit as be-| have tuned their sets to the fore." West Berlin channel. _ |BASEBALL IS HIGHLIGHT |. | Reception in the 16 countries) The shots of Chicago Cubs-| of the Eurovision network was) Philadelphia baseball game loud and clear as an action-|were described in Britain as packed sequence from Wrigleyjone of the highlights of the Field, Ohicago, brought base-|North American show. ball through space to open the) But the televising of President show. The program actually|/Kennedy's press conference reached three continents, for it}was seen as foreshadowing the could also be watched in Al-'greatest advance in interna- geria. tior-' understanding. HAILED IN ROME "The. coming of world-wide In Rome, Telstar was hailed| television will put a still greater by the influential Il Messaggero|premium on the clarity with as an "instrument of brother- which ministers and others can hood." present themselyes,"" said the "This new means of commu-iManchester Guardian. JFK Vows No Cut In Dollar Value WASHINGTON (AP) -- Withy The oceanspanning segment Europeans watching and listen-|of the conference began as Ken- ing as he spoke, President Ken- nedy was summing up his view nedy rebuked Russia for testing of current prospects for a Ber- nuclear weapons, reported no lin settlement: recent progress on Berlin and) ."We hope that an accord can promised not to reduce the be reached. We continue to try value of the dollar. to reach one. But we have not As the president answered made progress recently for- reporters' questions Monday, ward." some of his comments were' 1 closed as he was in the beamed to the telstar commu- migst of contending refusal to| nications satellite. From its Or cach dollars for gold "would be| bit the telstar provided the first the most backward step the) simultaneous telecast of 4 pres- United States has taken since| idential press conference forthe end of the Second World| viewers on both sides of the At- war Ye predicted the inflow) lantic. : : and outgo of gold would be bal-| For nearly five minutes, be- anced next year and guaranteed| fore 'the North American por- the United States would not de-| tion of the program exchange value the dollar. | jumped to another spot, Euro- 'cad Se peans joined the American aud- ience- : : They did not hear Kennedy 8| opening statement, when he} took note of the occasion and described Telstar's capacity for speedy communications as tty ;while hurtling along at 87 miles|one directs China,' he declared.| vo eae cn FOr Nuclear Testing can cultivate, he said, is gent to enhance the security and) GrnEvA (CP - AP) -- Ex. well - being of people every-|+ ina) Affairs Minister Howard where. -eoeivine| areen of Canada said today he They were on -- whe. caig| deplores the Soviet, decisior. to be Guar changes deeper into said his 'eveucest @ aowen ertainty" with the new So-l1) an nuclear weapons hood vat round of nuclear tests. The) G@ peep addressing the re- United States is "'very reluctant) i164 session of the 17-nation to test" again and will not Un-|Gi-armament conference, ac: less the Russian series ar 3 pre cused the three nuclear powers what he considers a further' Russia the United States and threat to Allied security. Britain -- of blocking progress | with. "'a largtly fruitless debate" ; over interpretation of a neutral- ist compromise formula which jthe two sides read in different Ways. Green said he detects a spirit of resignation in the talks and added: "This conference - must *!not simply mark time." He said "there is an urgency CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 A dissenting note came from/This was tingling television." The Daily Sketch called it the| greatest show on earth--and in space. Said The Daily Express: 'The Western world shrank to the| size of a television screen." | Death Toll Up As Workers Probe Wreck DIJON, France (Reuters) -- Rescuers toiled through the night under floodlights at the scene of a train wreck in which officials said more than 40 per- sons were killed and at least 52 were injured. The 16-car Paris - Marseille express was derailed Monday at nearby Velars - sur - Ouche an hour. Five coaches ran off| |the rails and one of them|REJECTS 'BULLYING' plunged 160 feet down a ravine.| Urgent calls went out for! blood donors from Dijon hospi- tals, where the injured were ta- ken. A hospital official who arrived at the crash scene with the first ambulances said today '"'prob- ably the most frightening thing on' first sight of the fallen car was the complete and utter si- lence--not a sound, not a cry, as if it had already become the tomb of all its passengers." The death toll was the high. est in a French rail crash since 1949 when 43 persons were killed at Port Datelier in east- ern France. About 900 passengers, many) of them vacationers, were aboard the train headed for the! Mediterranean coast: Green Raps Russians day by day, spirals on." He called on the delegates to resist "a growing tendency .. . to accept a return to the Gen- eral Assembly with virtually no progress .to report." Hee also warned against "a temptation' to spend the intervening weeks in building up a case for blam- ing others for failure to achieve results here in Geneva." He appealed to the delegates to get things going by concen- trating on areas where progress could be achieved. Wefence Minister V. K Krishna Menon of India also said he, too, deeply regretted the Soviet decision to test again Menon said the Soviet an- nouncement last week was as the arms race 'about our work which growsi'bicof that the arms race is|part since it opened last |the confederation ordered a na-/said notice has been served on 'tion - wide strike Monday but! Bruneau prior to an application that it cannot consistently bring have no comment to make until ~~ | gotiates jter."" of Saskatchewan said his party, official opposition in the legis- lature, will give proposed amendments to the act '"'the closest possible scrutiny" in the forthcoming special session. Earlier he had indicated the Liberals would not oppose amendments introduced by the CCF government to meet the doctors' demands. Permier Lloyd and Dr. H. D. Dalgleish, president of the col- lege, said in a formal 3,500- word memorandum of agree- ment: into effect increases in salaries at substantial cost to the treas- ury,"" Mr. Fleming said in a let- ter to heads of civil 'service| staff associations. | "Consequently, it has de-| ferred consideration of the sal- ary recommendations of the ci- "aes (uy service commission." Increases were recommended by the Civil Service Commis- sion earlier this year for 50,000 civil servants whose salaries were due for regular review. About 20,000 of the government employees are in Ottawa. The groups involved are cler-| "The medical care program ical, administrative and semi-|is, we believe, a workable one. the court rules on the applica- tion. Community Health Services Incorporated, a citizens - spon- sored clinic, will continue as before said one of its member doctors, Dr. Sam Wolfe. A product of the medical care dispute, it was formed as a non- profit clinic operating under the Saskatchewan Medical Care Insurance Act. ENDS LONG BATTLE The agreement climaxed 2 battle that began 2% years ago when the government bgan to organize the first compulsory prepaid medical care plan in North America. It originally called for the government to operate the insu- rance scheme with all doctors in it. The government was to be the sole insuring agency. The amended act will allow private insurance agencies to operate in co-operation and competition with the Medical called it off Monday night after|for leave to appeal. ! most workers showed up for} Bruneau, 45, was found guilty \their jobs and picket lines!of accepting $10,000 for the use failed to materialize. of his influence as a aoe A : . Only minor incidents were re-- MP--for eastern Ontario's Glen- munist China says os st setae as troops in battle dress| garry-Prescott riding--in arran- orders from: no country and ne-\ trolled Lima's industrial sec-|ging government purchase of differences on ani. property six years ago. From Russia GENEVA (Reuters) -- For- eign Minister Chen Yi of Com- administrators of the gové ment plan. A refund system allows doctors to practise out- side the act even though their patients might be insured by the commission. "equal partners" basis with the! ---- an Soviet Union. H The marshal was_ speaking Monday night to reporters at sl JURY VISITS BEAC impromptu press Y clapeate . is during a reception to celebrate Ch ld S the East-West agreement on! Laos, signed earlier. | 1 ren Wim Asked about reported eo . ences between China and Rus- Wh 5 D d professional, Inevitably it will have its teth- eg! anid have @ we, ere 1e Last pay increase in the civilling troubls. The government does er pi West cous differ-| i service was last fall to profes-/and the college' will deal with ences But these are settled be-) PORT ROWAN, Ont. (CP)--/late. The inquest was told that)sional groups. It was intended) these troubles as they arise by tween equal partners." A coroner's jury visited the|no one saw the drownings. |mainly to offset the attractions|frank and friendly discussion aise lm a ..|scene of recent drowning of five) Glenn Owen, a graduate stud-|0f higher salaries in industry. | together." He objected to Western Press! Hamilton children in Lake Erie|ent making a study of the wa-|" The government and the doc- descriptions of his country as : < ; | g e doc: S -- Monday and found seven chil-| ters off Long Point, about 35) F Ab d Pl ltors agreed to make no further a satellite. 4 dren swimming at the spot of|miles south of Brantford, said| our Oar ANE) ublic comment for at least a "China directs no one and n0|the tragedy. four-foot waves on the day of week to allow things to settle A sign at the South Walsing-| the or eigen Pg Crashed On Peak |down, ' ham Township beach--on the|'0 Knock over child. He! TIVINGSTON, Mont. (AP)--A| : : Asked about the present state| boundary of Long Point Provin-|said vega was ¢ sone nee: military plane, apparently a be verry ei pie 2g of of Sino-American relations, par-\Cial Park--warned that no life|!OW a . re ee h eetlu.s. air Force B-47 jet bomber}, ), or spbyge Fh sen Eh. ticularly. in the light of re-|suards were on duty. No adults|@ Minute paraiel to the shore.| vith four crew members aboard 7 va tha ated ported "Chinese massing of|Were on hand to watch oyer the} Meanwhile, in Toronto, .offi-| crashed Monday night into a|?? i page A pepe Bes forces on the mainland opposite SWimmers. = cials of the lands and forest|10,960-foot 'peak in the rugged|©°" a ; aa hee different Nationalist Formosa, Chen said| The jury then visited a suner-/department announced that col- Rocky Mountains of south-cen- bate ie a en ie cal cae: China "will not be bullied.' |Vised beach a quarter - mile] ored warning flags have been|tral Montana. ie tar as igen ig anc pay : "China will have her territory|@W@y within the park and found/set up at the beach on an ex-| Rescuers were kept back|!98 tor my ca see: The doctor bills the patient restored by any means, and)0 one swimming in the storm-|perimental basis. Red, amber|from the wreckage all night by| He said the 29-point agree-|and the patient pays the doctor. these are not limited. "On in-|tossed water. and green flags, amber warning] intense flames of the crumpled|ment "paid more attention to/The patient would then obtain ternational matters, China docs) The children who drowned|f undertow, green indicating a|plane and a resulting forest|the wishes of these two groups|reimbursement- from the com- not want war, but on internal|July 10 after being caught in| guard on duty and red no guard,|fire. No bodies were seen. (the doctors and the govern- mission. questions, that is another mat-|an undertow were: Harold Wil-|ad been planned for some P liams, 9, his sisters Catherine,|time, a spokesman said, but the ... Chen said that if U.S. forces/8, and Jayne, 11; Kenneth Val-|ttagedy speeded up the project.| were withdrawn, the Formosa|chuk, a cousin, and Robert El- geo by issue could be settled imme: lis, both 9. " U.S.-Donaied diately, Doctor H. B. Cotnam, super- "We can give very lenient; vising coroner of Ontario, is as- treatment to Chiang-kai Shek./sisting the five-man jury led by We did not kill the Manchu Em-|Dr. D. A, Archibald 'of Port F d C peror. He is studying garden-| Rowan. 00 auses "ibs _| Clifford Williams, father of . ~~ | three of the drowned children, P ly jwas asked by the jury later| ara SIS biggie ~ ee ong sd SHILLONG, India (Reuters)-- Gade cos Ligeni Dye gi they/U.s.-donated wheat flour, con- ant and were afraid of waler./taining a poisonous chemical, ARRIVED TOO LATE |Was the cause of an outbreak .Mr. Williams said he left for/f Paralysis last month among the beach 15 minutes after the|ASsam State school children. children left but he arrived too}, B. L. Choudhuri, director of " |Assam's health services, said |Monday laboratory tests here and at Calcutta' revealed the spiralling." He. said it under- lined an urgent need for a test ban. Without mentioning the U.S. nuclear tests specifically, he sharply condemned all atomic weapons tests. He also empha- sized that steps must be taken to prevent wider distribution of nuclear weapons. But Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko told the con- c ference that U.S. nuclear tests a in the Pacific increased the nu- Plans To Oppose De Gaulle Ended PARIS (Reuters) -- Parlia- ;presence of the chemical tri ortho - cresyl phosphate in the} \flour, given through the Amer-| ican Friendship Society. | ite 4 Food poisoning affected 180 to mentary opposition to President 193 pupils of a Roman Catholic! 3 de Gaulle's plans for an inde-\school at Sutopukhuri last! & pendent French atomic strike month after they had eaten 'force collapsed today. bread made from the flour The Socialists quietly' aband- said wes atti ! any attempt to introduce| "|." jie : angare> motion» againet the! Flaccid paralysis of the lower} government on the second read-|!imbs that later affected the} clear arms race "to a hitherto ing of the 1962 supplementary | hand muscles of some victims unparallelled scale."' estimates. jwas one of the symptoms,| # ® The conference resumed with) 'The estimates include 200,000,-| Choudhuri said. e estimates include INTERVIEW ON BERLIN Gromyko, U.S. State Secretary|000 new francs (about $40,000,-| Tri - ortho - cresyl Phosphate, | Rusk and British Foreign Sec-|000) of extra credits for an iso-|Known commercially a s TCP, ; retary Lord Home all present--/tope separation plant at Pierre-|Was responsible for the partial) Walker Stone, left, editor- Gannett Newspapers, _inter-; rated on an open letter on the first time the Big Three|latte on the River Rhone which/Paralysis of thousands of mo-| in-chief of the Scrippe - How- | view West Berlin police at'| Berlin to Soviet Premier foreign ministers had taken|has been the bone of contention|roccans who consumed it in 1959} ard Newspapers, and Paul | the Brandenburg Gate yester- | Khrushchev, (See story Page March.'in the debate. in cooking oil, | Miller, right, president of the | day. Stone and Miller collabo- | 4.) --(AP Wirephoto) ' Care Insurance Commissior "