Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 12 May 1965, p. 1

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emma The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 94 -- NO, 111 Soe Per ion Horse Geliverod , She Oshawa Fi OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1965 Authorized os Second Cless 1) Post Ottews and for econ eS "ee 'Weather Report Sunny and mild today. Becoming cloudy and cooler tonight. High tomorrow, 62, Department In Cash, Low tonight, 45, THIRTY PAGES » imedical care bill Tuesda "\which would provide govern- ment - paid health insurance premiums for low - income res- idents of the province. It would also set standards and prices for the insurance that private companies make available to those who can af- ford premiums. In neither case would the insurance be compul- sory. . The government would pay all premiums for persons with no taxable income. Premiums -|would be subsidized for per- sons with small incomes. If the bill passes, it would take effect June 1, 1966. Health Minister Matthew Dy- mond, who introduced the bill, estimated the cost of the pro- gram to the government would be $70,000,000 in its first full year of operation. Asked about a possible tax increase, he said: "I let the provincial treasurer iworny about that." SEES $175 COST Mr. Dymond said the premi- ums haven't been set but it ap- peared family coverage would cost about $175 a year. He estimated there are about 1,000,000 persons in Ontario with Ino taxable income and about 800,000 that would qualify for subsidized premiums. , Insurance would cover phys- icians' and surgeons' care, ma- ternity benefits, annual check- ups and psychiatric treatment, The government's decision to offer a publicly-operated med- ical care plan for low-income families appeared to be a vast change in its thinking since No- vember, 1962, It was then that Premier Ro- barts first announced that a medical insurance bill would be put before the house. The bill introduced in April, 1963, proposed only to force pri- | Rebel Commander Plane Crash Meets US. E Burns, Kills eets U.S. Envoy standard insurance contracts to From Reuters-AP {did not represent any modifica-| Area Farmer: = tephra - SANTO DOMINGO (CP) --'tion of the U.S. view that the) U.S. officials today headed into/rebel movement is Communist- : lels. further exploratory talks with|controlled. | A two-seater airplane crashed| fyactly the same policy was rebel leader Col. Francisco Caa-| (State Secretary Dean Ruskjand burned near Claremont yes-|advocated by the Hagey com- mano Deno in an effort to set-|said in London today: "We|terday afternoon taking the life|mittee on medical services in- tle the confused political situa-|think there are still Communist/of the pilot, 35 - year - old|/Surance in a government-spon- tion arising from the existencejelements downtown in Santo}, la R dist ict t sored study that arose from the of two regimes in the country. Domingo." sige sicisacied aad rict farmer.|1963 draft legislation. Caamano Tuesday met a U.S.- (Rusk, who arrived in Lon-| Ross was believed to have; y representative for the first time|don to attend the NATO minis-|been headed for the nearby|GOES PART WAY since the Dominican rebels'terial council meeting, said|G00dwood Airport where he , named him provisional presi-|U.S. troops would remain in the|Kept his. plane. Witnesses said disregard the Hagey commit- dent, then vowed he would not|Dominican Republic until a pan-|he flew low over his farm at)tee s report and to venture part "take a step backward." American force was set up|Altona, about 10 miles northwest|way into pu blicl y-operated Caamano conferred with for- there.) of Claremont, struck a_ tree,jhealth insurance, mer ambassador John Bartlow somersaulted into another tree, Partial premium subsidies Martin, President Johnson's|LITTLE PROGRESS landed on its nose on the ground|will be offered to single persons and caught fire. The pilot, Ronald Ross, 35, an Ux- bridge area farmer, was trapped in the cockpit. --Oshawa Times Photo provincial police officers carry out their investigation. The plane crashed into a tree, somersaulted into an- other tree landed on its nose CHARRED WRECKAGE of the two-seater aircraft that took the life of its pilot, hangs from the tree: tops as But Premier Robarts chose to) Medicare Bill Unfolded 4At$70 Milli TORONTO (CP) -- The On-|taxable income of just over $100|about $1,200 would pay the full/Thompson said outside the Itario government introduced aja year will pay only $16 to-)premium it y|wards the cost of medical care|ceive no subsidy, insurance, As the taxable income rises \to $300, the premium cost will ibe $46, with the government |paying the rest. At $90 taxable lincome the premium cost to the |family becomes $136, and at labout $1,200 family income it |becomes $179. | Dr. Dymond pointed out, how- jever, that when the premium rate is finally set it may be less than $179. In this case the family with taxable income of' Liberal Leader Andrew on Expense cost and would re-/house the government was 'timid' and the plan "deplora- |\WON'T BE ELIGIBLE ible.' He complained the plan No family with taxable in-|does not provide for dental and come of more than $1,200 willjeye care, drug costs and special be eligible for a government|care for elderly persons. subsidy, or will be insured by) Donald Macdonald, New| the government, But these fam-|Democratic Party leader, said) ilies may obtain insurance from|"the field is still going to be| lany private carrier. jwide open for exploitation of | Leaders of the two opposition jhealth needs for profit by pri- parties in the legislature said|vate insurance carriers." | ey will fight the bill clause) Douglas Hamilton, secretany- |by clause no matter how long|treasurer 'of the Ontario Feder- it takes, ation of Labor, said the bill was far from the universal, compul- An old Vietnamese man lifts the burned body of his son from the ruins of a de- fence position in Song Be, provincial capital 74 miles north of Saigon. He found his son's body when he re- sory, all-inclusive, government- operated medical care scheme urged by the federation, MUST MAKE OFFER | The private insurance compa- nies will be obliged to offer standard contracts to all in- dividuals or families in the province, regardless of age or state of health. One contract will be the same as that provided under the pub- licly-operated plan, The second will be a "co-insurance"' con- tract in which the insured fam- ily pays the first $50 of medical costs during the year, plus 20 per cent of the remainder. Its premium costs will be lower. The government will establish a new division within the de- persons, The division will be lo- cated in the Ontario Hospital Services Commission building so it can use the commission's administrative machinery in its operation. A nine-man medical services insurance council will be estab- lished to administer the medical care legislation. It will be ad- vised by an association of pri- vate insurance companies, to be i |known as Medical Carriers Inc. The carrier corporation will recommend the level for premi- ums initially, and thereafter ad- vise on any changes in pre- mium costs, WILL BE FROZEN For the first two years of the scheme's operation, the pre- mium costs will be frozen. The corporation will also ad- vise the council regarding the benefits to be offered, and the dates of open enrolment pe- riods, To guard against persons try- ing to buy medical insurance only after illness has struck, enrolment periods will be held only once a year. After enrol- ment there will be a waiting liga for coverage to take ef- ect. turned after government Rangers reoccupied the city which was overrun by Viet Cong guerrillas May 11. A Viet Cong fire grenade had demolished the post. (Photo by AP Photographer Horst Faas. -- AP Wirephoto) CANADIAN FACES CHARGES IN SEX-SECRETS SPY CASE Civil Servant 'Involved' With Expelled Russians _ OTTAWA (CP)--The RCMP is pressing forward with an in- vestigation which could produce the first prosecution of a Cana- dian for attempted espionage since the famed Gouzenko case 20 years ago. Its findings, to be- submitted to Justice Minister Favreau, will help the federal cabinet de- cide whether to lay criminal charges against a junior civil servant for his part in a sex- and-secrets plot which already has produced the expulsion, of two Soviet embassy officials. Prime Minister Pearson said in a Commons statement Tues- day that consideration is being given to prosecuting the un- named government employee, who accepted "thousands of dol- lars" from the Russian spies over several months and con- fessed to his sins only when confronted by. the Mounties jearly last week. The civil servant, employed in a 'non-sensitive" job and de- partment outside Ottawa, cur- rently is 'gravely ill" and on sy leave, the prime minister said. LIMITS QUESTIONS His illness, which Mr. Pear- son said was due to natural and not self-imposed causes, is lim- iting police in their interrogation of him, With this and other factors outstanding, both Mr. Favreau and RCMP sources said they could not estimate when the in- vestigation might be completed and a report handed the justice minister, Among the other factors a parently is the scope of the stilt active probe. Mr. Pearson told the Com- mons it might be advisable "as the investigation continues" to provide other party leaders with confidential briefings on it. Some observers took this as an indication that more than the question of prosecuting the civil servant is involved. PM Praises Second Canadian Whose Actions Shattered Plot While raising the possibility of criminal charges against the civil servant, the prime minis- ter had warm praise for a sec- ond Canadian directly involved in the espionage plot, first un- veiled Saturday in an external affairs department announce- ment_ that Soviet Commercial Attache A. E. Bytchkov and embassy clerk V. N. Poluchkin had been expelled from the country. This individual, identified onl; as a naturalized citizen, ha come to the RCMP from_ the very first approach by the Rus- sians and co-operated with se- curity officers throughout the case, This, said Mr, Pearson, was the action of a 'conscientious and patriotic Canadian" and was "certainly to be praised, not censured." Deaf-Mute Jamie Goes To Milton TORONTO (CP) -- Jamie, an eight - year - old emotionally- disturbed boy and focal point of controversy for a month while a ward of the juvenile court, will attend a school for the deaf at Milton, Ont., a judge said Tuesday. Jamie was taken before Judge William Little April 13 by his mother, who said she needed help. She said the only way she could get it was by bringing him into juvenile court as an incorrigible child, SUES In the case of the civil serv- ant, '"'the circumstances unfore tunately were different." Although under RCMP sur- veillance for many months, he made no effort to report to or co-operate with security officers until they went to him last week, Only then did he provide them with "some useful infore mation." With evidence from the natue ralized Canadian, the civil serve ant, and a "number" of Canadians involved in the 6 ring on a second-line basis, government confronted Soviet Ambassador Ivan Shpedko last Tuesday and told him Bytchkov and Poluchkin had become "per+ sona non grata" in Canada, They left for home Friday. Their -departure raised to seven the number of Iron Cur- tain diplomats ousted from this country for espionage activity by the Gouzenko affair in 45, Two of the previous cases, a Soviet attache in 1959 and a Czechoslovakian secretary a year later, were brought to light for the first time in the prime minister's statement Tuesday, As far as Canadian citizens are concerned, however, there have been no prosecutions in relation to espionage cases jsince 10 individuals were con- victed of various offences aris- ing out of testimony by former embassy cipher clerk Igor Gou- zenko two decades ago. SEE DEEPEST SPYING (Continued on Page 2) special envoy. The talk aroused Diplomatic sources said that/and caught fire. |with taxable income of less than speculation that the rebel leader|despite the mediation efforts of| would meet soon with Brig.- Gen. Antonio Imbert Barreras, president of the rival civilian- military junta. Officials emphasized that the contact made by Martin, sent) to Santo Domingo as the special Msgr. Emmanuel Clarizio, pa-| pal nuncio of the Dominican! Republic, there appeared to be no progress toward a political settlement of the Caribbean re- public's civil: strife. Caamano in an address over the rebel-held Radio Santo Do- " n | Police said Ross was trapped the United States, the Organi-|in the cockpit. His watch stopp- zation of American States and/eq at 3.07 p.m. Corp, W. J. Fitzsimmons of) OPP Whitby said there was no evidence as} to why the plane crashed and}: the investigation. Ross had logged 200 hours of} detachment, | jthat the matter is still under! $500, couples with taxable in- come of less than $1,000, and| families with taxable income of| Hless than $1,200. The last figure so far is only an estimate. the graduated scale of} subsidies for the 847,000 persons! Martin Sees Efforts Pay By DAVE McINTOSH LONDON (CP) -- The efforts of Canada's Paul Martin to get More US. Troops Land In Viet Nam From AP-Reuters in these groups, a family with the provincial capital of Song Be appeared over as an esti- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Nova Scotia Newest Rights Target | TORONTO (CP) -- Two civil rights workers at the University of Toronto plan a campaign against racial dis- crimination in Nova Scotia. Burnley Rockey Jones, & Negro from Halifax, and Gary Perly, 21, of Toronto, said Tuesday they expect to take more than a dozen civil least five Nova Scotia com- mingo said: : "T will not take a step back-/ness of growing blue grass turf| ward in spite of the enormous {or lawns and golf clubs. = | emissary of President Johnson, s . No Recognition e}e s U.S. force." An investigait s al ar|(( ] t He derided the junta as "anlcledsond-by atticinls ak tee 'On| oncl la 10 TORONTO (CP) -- The three By Canada: P . Y inoperative force' and charged!tario department of transport. A} OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana-janew that President Johnson'coroner's inquest will be held. t dian government has rejected ajsent 20,000 soldiers and marines| "~~~ --------|Toronto daily newspapers request by rebel forces led by/to the Dominican Republic on) mm. jasked the Ontario labor depart- Col. Francisco Caamano Deno|the false assumption that the Rivard Lema ;ment Tuesday to appoint a con- to be recognized as the officialjcountry was threatened by a J Y satin officer to help resolve government of the Dominican|Communist takeover. 1 , |their contract dispute with the Republic, Prime Minister Pear-| Caamano has refused to meet Are Not Pals Toronto Mailers Union, an affil- son said Tuesday. with Imbert until he purges sev- iate of the International Typo- He told the Commons the re-eral leading officers from the' yyjami, Fla. (CP-AP) -- A graphical Union (CLC). He told the Commons the re-jarmed forces. His chief oppon- woman identifying herself as' presentative of Col. Caamano, ent is Brig.-Gen. Elias Wessin|tne wife of Canadien Georges! at The Star, The Telegram and elected provisions! president by|y Wessin, commander of thelr emay, arrested here last week| ine Globe and Mail since mem- the rebel group to succeed the|San Isidro training base, whO|hank robbery, denied Tuesday] ers of the ITU went: on strike deposed Juan Bosch, had ap-|directed the forces that opposedithat her husband and fugitive) @@ainst the papers last July 9 t and the mailers respected the proached the government re- Caamano's rebel forces Luci te ' " cently for diplomatic recogni-) Wessin has been charged a aes e* Naig 5 . ITU picket lines. The newspa- tion Caamano- with having ordered|,.Rivatd, who broke jail in| ners have continued to publish. "We did not fect, however,|the hombing of rebel-held areas| Montreal two months ago, Was! The papers' current move. fol- that he has established a legit-following the outbreak of a re- reported seen in Fort gauces | tows repudiation by the mailers imate claim to recognition at/volt on April 24 against the gov-| dale, Fla., about the time Le-'o¢ an agreement signed last this point,' Mr. Pearson said.jernment of Donald Reid Ca-/8Y Ws arrested there. | | week to end the dispute. The Questioned by New Democrat|bral. FBI officials declined com- mailers were threatened with Three American paratroopers|ment on the case. expulsion from. the ITU if they ridge (NDP -- Kootenay West),|were being held in custody to-| Lemay's wife, Lise, said she|went through with the agree- the prime minister said the|day following the fatal shootinglis certain her husband had/ment.-. government has evidence thatiof a 17-year-old Dominican boy nothing to do with the Montreal|SEES ANOTHER INSTANCE Leader Douglas and H. W. Her-| The mailers have not worked) other combat battalion of 1,400 |U,S. marines landed in South | Viet Nam today. | The paratroopers are mem- bers of the 173rd Airborne Brig- ade who came by boat from Okinawa members of the brigade already in South Viet Nam. A US. : ) | SAIGON (CP)--Nearly 1,000 flying time. He was in the busi-| Papers Ask U.S. Army paratroopers and an- | defend American installations at the Bien Hoa air base, 20 miles north of Saigon. The marines landed at Chu Lai, 52 miles southeast of the strategic U.S. air base at Da Nang. They boosted to 14,000 the force of marines thrown into the war against the Viet Cong. Before the. landing, one mar- ine was wounded as the Viet Cong 'harassed the marine posi- tions, The Chu Lai marines, now up to regimental strength, are ex- pected to begin ranging the countryside in search of Com- munists. |ASSIGN TERRITORY to join about 2,000/seven hours spokesman said they would help Megotiations moving on the Cy- prus problem finally bore fruit oday. Greek Foreign Minister Cos- topoulos and Turkish Foreign Minister Ishik told the NATO council in session here that they will continue to meet here or elsewhere to discuss Cyprus. Martin, Canada's external af- fairs minister who saw the two ministers Tuesday for private talks, expressed his satisfaction to the council. The Greek and Turkish min- isters made statements at the opening of today's session say- ing they were pleased and sa- tisfied with their meetings, the first in some 16 months. mated 1,500 guerrillas slipped away to thickly-wooded rubber plantations after a fierce day- long struggle. The Viet Cong overran Song |Be, 74 miles north of Saigon, early Tuesday and held it for until U.S. air strikes opened the way for South Vietnamese troops to re- take the town of 15,000 people. Thirteen Americans and 66 South Vietnamese were |wounded. Viet Cong losses were lestimated at up to 170 killed. There was speculation that the attack on Song Be signalled the start of a major Viet Cong offensive during the monsoon) rainy season, which severely rights campaigners into at munities next month. Explosions Rock Home; Baby Missing " MANIWAKI, Que. (CP) -- Two explosions followed by fire rocked an apartment building here this morning and police of the child was not said a small child was reported missing. immediately known, Six families lived Identity in the building on Main Street in the town's north end, Richard Caron was taken to hospital with serious burns, France Stays Close' To Caamano PARIS (AP) -- France has authorized its diplomatic representative in the Dominican Republic to maintain con- tact with rebel leader Col. pending formation of Francisco Caamano Deno, a government based on the "free will of the Dominican people," a French cabinet spokes- man said today. They said there were still many points to clear up but that they are hopeful they can) make progress in their further meetings so that some solution hampers air operations. In Saigon, Deputy U.S. Am- bassador U. Alexis Johnson had a narrow escape when a load of ammunition blew up in aj - movie studio adjoining his res-|Might be possible. idence. | Martin has said repeatedly) | lsince his visit to Cyprus last |\NO ONE INJURED week that the situation there) Johnson was standing in his jyard about 45 feet from the cen- tre of the blast, which virtu- It is understood he was deeply| worried that there might be a SRE TR ...In THE | Ann Landers--16 1 City News+--13 Communists have infiltrated'late Monday night frobbery that led to his arrest.| Earle B. Richards, general) The marines at Da Nang,lally destroyed the envoy's ga-|recurrence of the situation in|) Classified --26, 27, 28 the "directing group" heading) A U.S. military spokesman He was arrested last Thursday|manager of The Globe and| who now total about 9,000 men,|rage and servants' quarters.' No| Egypt where the United Nations : het the rebel forces. caid a full investigation hadlafter a boat repairman recog-|Mail, described the repudiation|/have been assigned more than!one was injured. Emergency Force operates. Comics--25 He declined, however, to of- been ordered of the incident,nized a mug shot displayed by|as "just another instance of the|100 square miles of additional' A U.S. military spokesman/There have been no negotia-|° . Editorial--4 fer, an assessment of whether\and added the soldiers would bean RCMP officer on the inaug-|interference of the international|territory west of the air base|said the explosion apparenily|tions between Israel and the), Financial--29 theee Communists controlled|punished if the facts warrantedjural television program of the)union with settlements reached/to be cleared of Viet Cong. was an accident, not a Viet|Arab states since the UN force! | went into Suez in 1956. panics it, Early Bird satellite. 'at the local level." To the south, the battle for |Cong terrorist attack. TIMES t School Board Opposes Oshawa Beer Licence--P, 13 Seperate Schoo! Board Objects To Tax Delineator--P. 5 THust het" be*alibwed' ta vanitt, || ' Memorial Cup Finals Continue On Schedule--P. 10 SARE oday... Obits--29 Sports--10, 11 Television--25 Theatre--18 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2

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