Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Nov 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Fat people don't live as long a8 thin ones, but they have a better time doing it. She Oshawa Fimes WEATHER REPORT Sunny with afew cloudy periods today and Wednesday, continu- ing mild. VOL. 91 -- NO, 277 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1962 Class Ma Authorized as Second for payment Ottawa and il Post Office of Postage in Cash TWENTY PAGES MISS Pert Linda Patton, Miss Toronto Argonaut, would like to see the Grey Cup come back east but admits she's a Winnipeg fan. Linda will be China Answers Indian Request NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Com-} ' With 80 People Fa 4 { TORONTO ARGONAUT in the Miss Grey Cup com- petition with the winner to be announced Friday night. Hamilton Tiger-Cats, cham- pions of the Eastern Football Conference, and Winnipeg Blue Bombers, the Western Conference champs, meet for the Grey Cup Saturday in Toronto. (CP Wirephoto) On Proposals The agreement, signed by,as United States observers now munist China has replied to an|Britain's Commonwealth Secre-|are doing with American arms. Indian request for clarification|tary Duncan Sandys and Indian of Chinese proposals last week) for a cease-fire on the Chinese-|c Under the agreement, efence Minister Y. B. Chavanjwill not. transfer the arms ot alls for Britain to 'supply India|another country without British :| :|Varig is a Brazilian airline. India} RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)--Varig Airlines said one of its Boeing 707 jetliners with |\80 passengers was missing to- |day over Peru on a flight from |Rio de Janeiro to Los Angeles. The plane was carrying a crew of 17. Varig is one of South Amer- jica's most progressive airlines, |with a fleet of $5,000,000 Boeing 707s, It operates flights between New York and Brazil, as well as in Brazil. The missing airliner was flight 810, originating in Porto Alegre, the southern Brazil city where Varig has its main head- quarters. The airline said 37 of the pas- sengers were bound for Lima, 13 for Bogota, three for Pan- ama, 18 for Mexico City and nine for Los Angeles. A spokesman for the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization said Raul Cepero Bonilla, president of the Cuban National Bank, was aboard. He |had headed a 10 - man Cuban |delegation to a regional confer- ence of the FAO, The Peruvian agriculture minister, Jesus Mel-| gar, also was reported on the Indian border and the reply is|with arms and military equip-| under consideration, an ex-|ment "for the purpose of de-| ternal affairs ministry spokes-/fending India against Chinese) man announced here today. | aggression." | India had requested the clar-| Few details on the scope of ification on points in the propos-|the agreement were immedi- ais tiat were said to be as-|ately available, but it calls for sertedly obscure. British observers to watch the China last week declared g|USe Of British arms in action-- der fighting and said it would withdraw its troops 1214-miles from the line of control that ex- on a withdrawal from the line To Host Kennedy of last September. -- | LONDON (AP)--Prime Minis- Earlier today, Britain and In-|ter Macmillan is expected to be agreement "as India continued|Nassau in The Bahamas Dec. its military buildup despite the|19-20, government sources re- six-day lull in the border war, 'ported today. unilateral cease-fire in the bor- U.K. PM Expected isted in 1959. India has insisted dia signed a lend-lease armsjhost to President Kennedy at Cuban Problems Cited By Mikoyan Apiary te cla (CP)--So-)cott of Cuba. But Stevenson said viet First Deputy Premier Anas-|the Castro demands were not| tas I, Mikoyan said Monday] discussed at the dinner. | night that sharp. differences i 3 ; . Pn Cuba stil | exist between Pegg gar Maggy Me ro econ wage and Russia.|qay to allow UN inspection of ee ae f Fid Cane no Soviet withdrawal of offensive $0 4 ening of Fidel Castro's! weapons from: Cua in return "The for the dismantling--under UN , inspection -- of bases in the talked to reporters after at-i17,4., * bak tending a dinner that Acting canee chegy set hrgline ies ica and Sandateee General 'U Than elsewhere from which anti-Cas-| ae any - oo Rovint eco - sel are operating against) : aha agg elgg We Cc egime. tiators on the Cuban crisis. Mi- We eee tee koyan returned to New York ,!he.state department brushed Monday after a 24-day visit to ff the Cuban proposal. U.S. of-| Havane r ficials said privately the Ken- eps ge 1o: gy nedy administration would _US ; Ambassador Adlai E. make no such concessions to get S:evenson, who also atlended/ fyitijiment of Soviet Premier the dinner, said he expects '0 Khrushchev's agreement for on Cuba'uN inspection of Cuba. SECOND GLASSCO Kremlin trouble-shooter Wednesday with Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuz- netsov. Stevenson said he ex- pected the meeting to be 'quite consent and will offer to return them to Britain when they are no longer needed. The wording of the agreement was evidently designed to allay Pakistan's fears that Anglo- American military aid to India will be turned against Pakistan in the dispute over Kashmir. Sandys was to fly to Rawal- pindi, Pakistan, today for talks with government leaders and Averell Harriman, U.S. assist- ant secretary of state for far eastern affairs, in India with an American aid mission, is to go there Wednesday. Harriman's decision to fly to Pakistan in an effort to ease tension between the two coun- tries was announced Monday. The U.S. and Britain have been attempting to improve Indo-Pakistani relations so that India will be able to use an es- timated 500,000 troops stationed along the Pakistan border in ' Kashmir: against the Chinese,|acclamation. but their efforts are severely| Final results at the town- hampered by Pakistan fears/ship's qualification deadline yes- about Wesetrn arms aid to In-|terday showed: dia. Reeve--Anson Gerrow. Council (four positions) Clarence Carter, Victor Aldred, |Joseph Dowsan, and Chauncy |Hoult. vA | School Board (two positions); |-- Anton Krieg, and Mervin} | Appleton. | There will be an election on} Dec, 4, results at the qualifica-| ition deadline showed yesterday. | Candidates are: Reeve--Edward Oyler, Martyn. Deputy Reeve -- Allan Crosier| (acclamation). | Cohncil (three positions) William Wozney, Chester Greer, Lawrence. Doble, and Morley| Bruce. | School Board (three positions) | plane. Varig said the plane reported to a station that it was 20 min- utes' flying time out of Lima, and then a few minutes later came on the aimaw gency call. The 707 was over a desert are at the time. The Boeing 707s went into op- eration October, 1958. There now are about 300 in operation. An Air France 707 crashed at Guadeloupe in the Leeward is- lands June 22 last killing 103. On June 3 of this year an Air No Election In | |Scugog Twp. No election will be held in| Scugog Township this year. All| posts have been filled by| } YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Civic Candidates Present Platforms .. Page 9 Board Promises Footpath Solution .... Page ; Earl Cannington Reeve Acclaimed PUC Explains Rates Structure .... Rev William Aitken Dies . Page | Page a Page 2-Way Race For Whitby Twp. Reeve , Page 5 !by acclamation. France 707 crashed at Orly air- port, Paris, killing 130 persons in the worst commercial single- plane accident. On March 1, an American air- lines Boeing 707 faltered on takeoff from New York on a flight to Los Angeles and killed 95 persons. On May 23, a Continental Air- lines 707 disintegrated in the air near Unionville, Mo., killing 45. The Federal Bureau of Inves- tigation said the disaster was caused by explosives in the plane. | Labor, Ind Co-operation Seen HALIFAX (CP)--A joint la- bor-management study confer- ence has called for a morato- rium on further appeals to the Legislature for amendments to the Nova Scotia Trade Union Act. Agreement on the moratorium was reached by Nova Scotia union and management officials at a meeting sponsored by -the Dalhousie Institute of Public Affairs. ie Judge A. H. McKinnon of An- jouN.S., who. récently headed a provincial royal com- mission into labor-management relations, described the agree- ment as a "giant step for- ward" toward closer co-opera- J. KEILLER MacKAY ustry nize the contribution that organ- ized jabor can make to the econ- omy." Union representatives agreed jto recognize that management| improvements is entitled to a fair return on its investment, while management officials condemned instances of unfair labor practices by em- ployers when workers are try- ing to organize. Judge McKinnon said this was the first. time in Canada that labor and management had agreed on these points. Germany Opens tion. Union officials attending represented 35,000 workers and management representa- tives were from firms employ- ing 25,000 Nova Scotians. In a second point, manage- ment and labor representatives agreed to recognize the right of all workers "to organize for col- lective bargaining and to recog- U.K. Woman Said Gave Information LONDON (Reuters)--A senior woman official of the British Central office of Information has been summoned to appear in court here Wednesday on a charge of wrongfully disclosing} information, it was announced} here today. | The announcement named her as Miss Barbara Fell, 44-year- old overseas controller of the government information agency. She was charged under sec- tion two of the Official Secreis Act, which deals with wrongful cominunication of information. Any person found guilty of an offence under this section is li- | | | | | able to imprisonment not eX-|Strauss responsible because ding two years, or to a fine,| to both. Miss Fell is a holder of the cee or -- Byron Holtby, Neil Hunter,|Order of the British Empire--| federal prosecutor's plans last jand Earl Wilson. Position filled|an honor granted for meritori-|month to raid the offices of the 'ous service to the country. Coalition Talk BONN (Reuters) -- Chancel- lor Adenauer today prepared to open coalition negotiations with Free Democratic Party leader Erich Mende that may decide whether Defence Minister Franz- Josef Strauss will be a mem- ber of a new reshuffled West German cabinet. | The reshuffle has been made} necessary by the resignation a week ago of five Free Demo- cratic cabinet ministers in pro- test over Strauss's roie in the controversial Der Spiegel maga- zine case. Strauss last week appeared on the verge of being ousted from the cabinet as the price for continued participation by the Free Democrats as junior partners with Adenauer's Chris- tian Democrats in the coalition government, But Strauss byunced -- back with new political strength Mon- day as a result of a victory by his Christian Social Union party (CSU) in the Bavarian state elections, The Free Democrats hold Free Democratic Justice Minis- ter Wolfgang Stammberger was not informed in advance of the MEDICARE LEGISLATION PROMISED TO ONTARIO Ontario Bill Planned On Portable Pensions TORONTO (CP) -- Medicaliinsunance from insurers, by ar- health insurance legislation, a 7 portable pensions bill and es- @ tablishment of a provincial eco- nomic development agency were among measures prom- ised by the Ontario government at the opening of the fourth ses- sion of the 26th legislature to- day. In a 7,500-word speech from the throne, read by Leiutenant- Governor J. Keiller Mackay, the Progressive Conservative government also pledged itself to set up a provincial council of the arts, a civil service ar- bitration board and a food ad- visory council, The speech cited a need for 'orderly and dynamic change" in a period when "world trade patterns and industrial methods are shifting in ways whose full import is not yet clear and whose complete effect may take some time to work out." It expressed the belief that 000, the government agency would provide managerial, tech- nical and other assistance to enterprises and communities in the province "that can qualify for such assistance and can rangement with the govorn- ment, will be available to all our people, regardless of age or physical condition." In addition the government would accept responsibility. for providing covenage for those persons who "may be deemed not to be able to provide for themselves."' ".. . Before any considera- tion can be given to benefits broader than those mentioned, the report of the (federal) royal commission on health .. . and any recommendations it may contain, particularly in regard to participation by the federal governmem, must be ex- amined." Before the provisions of the medical insurance bill go into effect, the speech said, the leg- islation will be examined by a committee of medical, hospital, labor and other representatives. The committee would receive Community development cor- would be sncouraged to assist in local or regional de- evlopment, and would be sup- ported by the provincial agency where warranted. In a brief reference 'to port- able pensions, the speech de- clared that the House will be asked to pass the Ontario Port- able Pensions bill, embodying the results of suggestions ihado to hearings of a committee ap- pointed to study the subject. The report of the committee thas not yet been made public, following a summer of study of representations on the draft but tabled in the House last winter: To support cultural advances "with the conti present growth policies, we jmay look forward to further in production, sales, employment and incume in all sectors of the economy." On the proposed medical care insurance of our the repres: from any inter- ested party, The speech also announced that the government will pro- pose continuance, for a third year, of a $50,000,000 grant to stabilize premiums for the ex- isting hospita! care plan at their in the province "and in order to ensure that our smaller cen- tres of population will benefit from these developments," the government plans to set up a provincial council for the arts, legislation, speech said, the government recognized the '"'present - day concern of our people about the crippling financial costs of ill- ness and their desire to be able |to obtain proper medical treat- jment when required... . " ENDORSES PRINCIPLE The government 'endorses the principle of medical health insurance," and legislation would be introduced "which will ensure that medical health P Ss TORONTO (CP) -- Highlights) of the speech from the throne, read today at the opening of the fourth session of the 26th On- tario legislature by Leiutenant- Governor J. Keiller Mackay: Legislation to be introduced to make médical health insur- ance from insurers available to all. Ontario development agency, to provide assistance to enter- prise and communities qualify- ing, to be created. | Junior Farmer Establishment Loans Act, to be reinstated. Fair wages to be required to be paid on all government high- ways and buildings contracts, with study of the need of a min- imum wage for all. House to be asked to pass On- tario Portable Pensions bill. a TO AID GROWTH RATE opment important: part of the: govern-}, ment's economic policy, in- tended to achieve a growth rate growing labor force and, '"'at the same time, increase our in- comes. and living standards." Throne Speechs Main Highlights Great Lakes shorelines and other ernment of marine resources for the tourist industry to be undertaken. and Development Act to be in- troduced. sure | poultry. consumers food council to be established. program. promised, be built at Sudbury. sidies to municipal roads sys- tems, o administer government grants: f A. producers, S 4 rid' devel-|Comsumers food .council . cy was termed an), resent rates. The ufficient to provide jobs for a le SEES NEW PROGRAMS The speech indicated a host of new measures and programs involving almost eyery govern- ment department would crop up during the coming. session--ex- pected to be the last for the present government, now near- ing the end of the fourth year of its five-year mandate. 'The labor department, it said, "is assessing the need, with a view to bringing into effect, where necessary, minimum wages for the protection of the workers of the province." The government '"'believes that fair wages are essential to a healthy economy. In order to provide leadership in the first instance, we will require fair wages to be paid on all govern- ment contracts for the construc- tion of highways and buildings," The government promised several measures will be intro- duced to provide greater assis- tance to "'less seriously re- tarded children who do not re- quire care in an Ontairo hospi- tal," A Homes for Retarded Children Act to be introduced would enable grants of $2,500 per bed to local associations which provide residential facil- ities to such children, as well as maintenance assistance. In addition to guaranteeing Plans to acquire parts of lands for future parks nd recreational facilities. Joint survey with federal gov- Agricultural R e ha bilitation A bill to be introduced to en- inspection of meat and A Producers, processors and Expanded physical fitness Bilingual teachers' college to Increased and extended sub- Greater assistance for less seriously retarded children. Legislation to be introduced on negotiation with civil serv- ice. Creation of Ontario council Der Spiegel magazine, for the arts. REPORT ON GOVERNMENT \important."' Mikoyan said '"'very sharp questions" were discussed at} the dinner with Stevenson and) John J: McCloy, head of Pres-} ident Kennedy's Cuban co-ordi- nating committee. "But there was no quarre!l- 3 ; ing,' the Soviet leader said OTTAWA (CP) -- Creation of} two central organizations to) NOT DISCUSSED handle purchasing and to man-| Mikoyan said the possibility age property for the federal] of his going to Washington for|government is recommended in| a meeting with Kennedy was|the second report of the Glassco| not discussed. The Russians'royal commission on govern-| earlier were said to have put|ment organization, issued today| out feelers concerning a White|by Prime Minister Diefenbaker. House visit for Mikoyan, and) The 200,000-word report takes Stevenson had indicated he\a careful and sometimes critical would bring the matter up at\look at seven fields in which the the dinner. government. provides itself with In his talk with reporters Mi-| goods and services itself divided) koyan came out strongly for/into sections dealing with real! Castro's five-point demands, in-|property, purchasing and sup-| cluding U.S, withdrawal from|ply, transportation, telecomma- Guantanamo naval base and anjnications, printing and pubtish- end to the U.S. economic boy-|ing, the "make or buy" prob- lem, and legal services. ere CRORNCE uy cunctetstan ors ewe PHONE NUMBERS than two years of study by |likely there will be any action teams of experts, goes into de-until after the commission's tail on how the government/final report is in. spends nearly $3,000,000 a year; One of the main targets of to- on supplies and services. hese iaey # report, second of five, range from shoes to ships andjagain is costly red tape. It from lawyers to charwome' |stresses that many of the jobs Its authors are J. Graty|being done by government can Glassco, 57, Toronto chartered}be handled at less cost by pri- accountant and business execu-|Vate industry, -- tive who heads the commission; | But this vime it suggests a Watson Sellar, 68, of Ottawa, re-|SOlution of the problem lies in tired auditor -. general of Can-/more, not less, centralization. It ada, and Eugene Therrien; 56,/argues that department hads of Montreal insurance company|Should be freed of the respon- executive and lawyer.. They re-|Sibility for many. supporting cruited 197 specialists to make|Services which are secondary to detailed studies of government! the main job of government. operations. ; On construction, for instance, Their initial report in: Sep-\there are discernible tendencies tember dealt with the broad|to get into the business them- issues of financial and person-|Selves."" This criticism also is nel management. It set out a/ directed against government ac- tivity in transport, printing, der, Ii would manage all civil- ian federal property, now val- ued at $4,000,000,000 and grow- ing at a rate of $300,000,000 a year. It also would direct civil. ian construction, most of which now is handled by the using de- partments and agencies, | ing, and consequently expen- sive." CRITICAL OF BIDS The report has some harsh words for the government's sys- tem of inviting bids on supplies, contending it too often is over- done. As an example, it lists a _ One of the department's big/case in which auto firms were jobs would be to keep an inven-|a;keq to bid on an order for tory of government property| one horn button, four windshield and dispose of surplus land, The wipers and three carburetor report says almost no attention' parts, The paperwork for this is paid. to surplus land disposal/cogt more than the retail price now and this could be a good/of ¢he goods. source of federal revenue. There was.a complete lack of ue 'pathmont of purchasing) oniformity in buying practices. and supply, the commissiog | Suppliers often were so bewil- says: dered "at the inconsistency of "The purchasing function injpractices and the elaborate for- the civil departments and agen-/malities observed by different cies is so dispersed and frag-| " mented that it is too often left departments" that they refused Purchasing, Property Agencies Urged ernment pays $200,000,000 a year to move its employees and ma- terials, no including defence vehicles. It argues that big sav- ings can be made by proper traffic management and calls 'for a traffic management group within the proposed purchasing department. : The review work done on travel expense statements was "detailed to the point: of ab- surdity."" In the defence depart- ment alone it cost $1,600,000 a year in salaries for the time spent reviewing every detail of such accounts. Other depart- ments spent an average of $100 in clerical work on review. of each account for moving a transferred worker's household goods, The commission was critical charge of property and that alred tape and putting each gov-|™aintenance work and _ other department of purchasing and| ernment department on its own,| fields. supply be fashioned out of the free of cumbersome central con- present defence production de- tro partment " i The report, result of Moy [in the hands of individuals with|*Ven to bid on some items. jinadequate knowledge and Departments bought items The royal commission recom-|skills,"' that were surplus in another de- mends a new role for the pub-} It found that purchasing pro-|Partment or agency. The first report is still under |lic works department as the) cesses "are often unnecessarily) Studying transportation, the 'study and it is considered un-!government's fgndlord and buil-'complicated and time-consum-' report estimated that the gov- of vehicle maintenance wor k, urging that most of it be shifted to private firms. Workshops were' overstaffed, sometimes \badly located and. inefficiently used, of recommendations are that the} POLICE. 725-1133 |public works department be re- shaped as the central body in| plan for stripping away much FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 J. GRANT GLASSCO WITH REPORT !

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