Oshawa Times (1958-), 11 Jun 1962, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

1800 Brave Rain At Samac Church Parade -- P. 9 WEATHER REPORT Showers this evening. Tuesday mainly sunny and a little cooler. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Most motorists of their cars, and" keep pedes- trians in good tion, too. take good care running condi- She Oshawa Times VOL. 91--NO. 136 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1962 Authorized Ottewa and as Second Class Mail Post Office t, for payment" of "Postage in." Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES Three Die In Algiers Gun Fight ALGIERS (AP) Moslem auxiliary policemen today fired on Europeans near the Al- giers dockyards, killing three and wounding six. The uniformed Moslem police- men said Europeans attacked them and they shot back. Two Europeans riding in a_ truck near the scene of the shooting were seized and held as hos- tages. A European police official said the Moslems, who were} guarding a dockworkers' hiring point, opened fire without provo- |cation on Europeans passing by. | Secret Army commandos GAMBLER MUST GIVE E struck in a Sahara oil field Sun- day in their "scorched earth" warfare but a Moslem national-| ist leader said the terrorist fire} |power is fading. | Terrorist saboteurs blasted aj § well being drilled in the Sahara,} about 60 miles south of the big) |Hassi M d oil field, and Franco Grabs Dissidents In Spain MADRID (AP -- Hundreds of opponents of Generalissimo Francisco Franco's dicta- torship have been reported ar- rested in a sweeping round-up of dissidents of all political shades. Five leading Monarchists were caught in the dragnet as they returned from a meeting of Spanish oppositionists in Mu- nich, Germany. Three of them refused an offer of exile and were flown today to forced resi- dence in the Canary Islands, Two went into exile in Paris. Those flown to Fuerte Ven-| fura, second largest of the Canaries, were Joaquin de Sat- rustegui, an executive of the Spanish affiliate of the Amer- ican-owned Minnesota Mining and M: facturing Company; Fernando Alvarez de Miranda, 40, nephew of the Marquis of Valdivia and a Madrid city em- ployee, and Jaime Miralles, member of a prominent old family. HELD INCOMMUNICADO Families of the three men said they were not allowed to visit them or speak to them after they were arrested during the weekend. Under a new de- cree they can be kept in forced] residence for two years. The Monarchist leaders who chose exile were Jose Maria Gil Robles and Jesus Prados Ar- rarte, a noted economist and |set off a spectacular gas fire. | French officials expressed! jfears that the Secret Army, |whose hard core now is be- lieved to be largely French | Army deserters, would attempt |to blow up dams, railroads and| j0il installations in their cam-| paign to leave the country in} ruins for the future Moslem rulers, | | Chawki Mostefai, a spokes-| jman for the Moslem National Liberation Front, told reporters Algeria's Europeans are turning against the Secret Army fanat- ics. "It would not be rash to foresee a halt in the presen events,"' he said. ARMY WEAKENING The European settlers were) CALGARY (CP--A Officer's Act 219 People Hurt, Described AS Crash Kills Child 'Sheer Guts eer u s MISSOULA, Mont. (AP -- Ajmother. Another child was) Calgary|Northern Pacific luxury train|buried in mud in the same car! the backbone of the Secret policema: t three times in/Shot off a mountain curve in/but was rescued. Army in an attempt to block/the leg, subdued a gunman in a|western Montana Sunday, kill-/ One of the four diesel engines Algerian independence but)Red Cross blood transfusion ing one child and injuring 219) broke in two. All of them spilled there have been increasing! centre Sunday night in an act a/Of its 350 passengers. off the tracks, signs they now realize the fight|/fellow officer described as__Among the injured were W.) fEngineer E. E. Lynn and fire- is hopeless. "sheer guts." W. Kennedy of Vancouver and)man Jerry Haines suffered They still hold bargaining) Const, J. B. Isaacs, 19, was inhis wife, Kathleen, They were! minor cuts. Lynn was quoted by |powers, however, because aisatisfactory condition in hospi- taken to hospital with undeter-4 railroad spokesman as saying mass exodus of skilled Euro-|tg). mined injuries, the train lost air pressure as it peans would cripple the econ-| Joseph Millard, 24,| Only two of the 17 cars re-| started downhill. omy of the independent nation|was charged attempted| mained on the rails in the dawn| Of the 219 persons received at that will emerge. ____|murder. derailment that may cost the|the hospitals, 151 were treated New explosions and fires; Const. Isaacs was wounded) railroad $1,000,000 in claims and leased. Sixty-ei raged in Algiers Sunday butlwhen he altemoted ty subd ps aif and released, Sixty-eight were when he attempted to subdue a) damages. jheld for further treatment and Bernard with U.S. Readies Big Pacific A-Blast HONOLULU (AP -- Exten- sion of the high altitude danger area around Johnston Island was seen today as a prelimin- ary to the firing of the biggest nuclear blast in the current United States test series in the Pacific. There was no official com- ment on the precise altitude and size of the detonation, but unof- ficial sources said it will be from 50 to 500 times as power- ful as the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. There have been reports it will be of several megatons in force. A megaton blast is the equivalent of the explosion of 1,000,000 tons of TNT. The big blast will be set off about 200 miles high, the sources said. It will be the high- est and biggest U.S. nuclear shot and will be seen in Hawaii, 000 feet in altitude to a height of 40,000 feet, where the radius will be 1,050 miles. At 30,000 feet the zone will cover the en- tire Hawaiian Island chain, The zone is being extended to mark the "eye burn" area in which there could be a hazard from looking directly at the blast through binoculars, peri- scopes or other optical instru- ments. The spokesman said it could lead to permanent eye damage or possible blindness. But he said, there will be no hazard to Hawaii residents who view the fireball with the naked eye from surface levels. The extension announcement indicated the shot will not come before Thursday because of the) four-day warning that is given| air lines. A military spokesman) indicated a possible firing next} weekend. 750 miles northeast of Johnst The Atomic Energy Commis- sion and the defence depart- ment announced Saturday that the nuclear danger area sur- rounding Johnston Island will be extended 60 miles, to a ra- dius of 530. nautical miles at sea level. It will be increased 290 nautical miles at 30,000 feet, to a radius of 990 iniles. crowds powred out to the gunman after he had taken off| Tye other 15 cars of the Seat-|observation. The zone \will be extended 10,- The detonation is expected to disrupt radio communications in the Pacific. The Federal Aviation Agency said it may be necessary to ground aircraft for as much as 24 hours after the blast. A low-megaton device--one of the largest in the current series --was exploded Sunday aver Christmas Island. It was 'the IDENCE ' Feeley Claim Rejected By Appeal Court Ruling TORONTO (CP) -- Ontario Court of Appeal ruled today that gambler Vincent Feeley need not be excused from providing the royal commission on crime with possibly self - incriminat- ing evidence or with his income tax returns. The court unexpectedly deliv- ered the abrupt oral decision in the middle of a hearing on the issue which had resulted Thurs- day in the indefinite postpone- Laos Princes In Agreement On Coalition KHANG KHAY, Laos -- Neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma: announced today that Laos' three rival princes have reached agreement on a list of cabinet members of the coali- tion government he is to head. Souvanna made the announce- ment after a meeting of an hour with pro - Communist Prince Souphanouvong and royalist Premier Prince Boun Oum. Immediately after the an- 17th shot in the series. jnouncement, the three princes beaches as usual, his own gun and confronted the apes 7 : ; yc Secret Army bomb and arson|man unarmed, Two slugs| jog ee ee eae eo commandos destroyed three|passed through the fleshy part|/amhankaent 18 miles northwest| more schools, an agricultural] of the officer's leg and the other OF wianette. y , ¥ co-operative, a tax office and an| struck the knee. OF, RArenne, Algiers hydraulics centre. Thou-| The constable was one of} ,PWO Of the passenger cars sands of records were burned. |three ofifcers who entered the|Plunged all the way to the bot- Gunmen staged four holdups,|centre through a window after|t0™, coming to rest in a diteh including the municipal gamb-|12 officers had responded to a alongside U.S. Highway 93 and ling casino in the capital's big-/cali for help. The three men gest hotel. ltried to reason with the gun-| The nose of one of these cars Machine-gunners shot up a|man, who was on the other side|Smashed deep into the ditch, : bus carrying Moslem hospital|of a. closed door. scooping up mud that buried; REGINA (CP)--A_neighbor- employees and fired on a truck-| Const. Isaacs then took off Terese Ann Dooms of Ekalaka, | hood campaign by four Regina load of French gendarmes, who|his own gun, pushed open the| Mont. Terese, who would have/housewives to try to avert a fired back. Casualties were not|door and confronted the man in been three. years old June 30,|showdown between the province professor at Madrid university. reported. the corridor. was the first North Coast Lim-|and doctors over a compulsory, ited passenger to be killed in 62'prepaid medical care plan has Naked Fire Do TRAIL, B.C. (CP) -- Naked and hymn-singing Freedomite Doukhobor women set fire to the home of Orthodox Doukho- bor Leader John Verigin Sunday and threw kerosene and matches under the feet of his wife when she called for help. Thirteen women were later arested and charged with arson in the burning of the Verigin|7 home at Grank Forks, 30 miles)" west of here in the British Co-| ' lumbia Kootenay country. The women burst into the home a few minutes after the Verigins had left to attend a Doukhobor prayer meeting at a nearby community hall. A maid, Lucy Kinakin, was alone in the big, white frame house when the women poured kerosene in four rooms and set jyears snowballed into a Saskatche- Investigators are looking into|wan-wide movement. e in |the possibility of air brake fail-| Petitions from almost every ) jure. Reports from passengers|corner of Saskatchewan, asking and train personnel suggested|the government to delay the the train was exceeding the 35-|July 1 start of the plan until mile-an-hour speed limit for the|jagreement is reached with the While 79 men fought the fire,|the Kootenays. It started at the the Freedomite women stood on|colonies of Krestova, Gilpin and curve. |doctors, were presented to CCF sviote es Beye Ove Premier Woodrow Lloyd May CHECK TRAIN'S SPEED _/30. The petitions also asked for The train's speed recorder, plebiscite on the question. tape will be given to Interstate] yore than 46,000 names were P le 7 Commerce Commission investi- ' itio i a rear lawn singing hymns un-|Shore-Acres Friday when more! ~, '3 : Sa hon the petitions, given Mr. til RCMP officers took them to|than 50 tarpaper shacks went rogeny Northern Pacific offi-) --------------__-_-- Grand Forks Jail and chargedup in flames. That incident M ee tt = ea them with arson. landed seven women 'in jail on| "OSt Of the passengers were K d U 5 charges of conspiring to com-|Sleeping or just awakening at enne y rges It was the third straight day| is oycon. 4:40 a.m. as the train crashed| of burnings and nude parading) Five more dwellings went up|one mile short of a trestle that D Ld Of by women of the radical sect in'in smoke at Glade Saturday. (Spans a 300-foot canyon. | ropping = RAIN: NSN > a Saw ~| The body of the Dooms child) 4 |\was clawed out of the mud by) bl %~ la frantic woman, possibly her| Trade Barrier | WASHINGTON (AP -- Presi- Rumor In Laos |dent Kennedy said today the j United States and Europe must 9 \throw off "the false protection j Not Supported of trade barriers" to develop a | B Di lomats In a foreword written for spe- | y Dp. cial issue of The Forum, a quar- | \terly magazine published by la lasting and prospering free |world partnership, it ablaze. Miss Kinakin tried to) telephone for help but the) ® women shoved her away. | A minute later Mrs. Verigin| " drove up to the home, left her three young children in the car and ran into the burning house.| / The arsonists tried to keep her away but she went to the telephone and called the com- munity hall. ; Mrs, Verigin's call to the} ; community centre two miles away brought her husband and about 100 members of the con- gregation to the blazing home in a convoy of cars. They were able to beat out the flames with rugs and mats, but damage to the home was extensive. Earlier Sunday 12 Freedomite homes were destroyed by fires set by their owners at Kres- tova and nearby Goose Creek in a three-day rampage of ar- son and nude demonstrations. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 WINS 200-MILE RACE ond Saturday Masten Gregory relaxes af- ter winning the Players 200 at Mosport Park, north of Bowmanville, Saturday. Greg- ory, an American living in Europe, won the race in the same Lotus that Stirling Moss drove in the 'Players' | ing the second last year. Roger Penske, an- | story Page 9) other American, placed sec: | world-famous Dan 200-mile race, but half. i | BANGKOK (Reuters) -- Dip- in a Cooper Monaco. Gregory was led by |present. | Gurney | But they considered a move) TOKYO (Reuters)--Abnormal during the first heat of the Gurney developed engine trouble and |Communist forces that any fail-\were recorded early today was forced to drop back dur- ure by the three rival Laotian) throughout Japan following a (See |leaders to agree on a coalition|United States nuclear explosion jlomats hers today gave no sup- {port to reports that U.S. Ma- , rines were preparing to move jup to the Laos border if fighting between pro - Communist and sumes. But diplomatic observers here believed some important new move was imminent and atten- tion turned on the possibility of a visit to Thaiiand by a Western statesman, probably a senior member of the United States or British cabinet. Reports here today said the \first military units--likely to be jamong the 2,000 Marines sta- jtioned at Udorn about 30 miles from Laos--are preparing to {move up to the Mekong River boundary within two or three | days. Western diplomatic source thought it unlikely that inte vention by the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization in Laos was beng contemplated at -- to the border by SEATO contingents might warn pro- government should not signal --Oshawa Times Photo ja resumption of civil war. Laotian government forces re-) top) | Japanese Record Lloyd by spokesmen for the Save-Our-Doctors Committee. The campaign was started 40 days earlier by housewives, who obtained 156 signatures on the first petition during a three-hour canvass of a local shopping cen- tre. Since then, signatures have been collected on the street, in stores and businesses and from house-to-house calls and at spe- cial meetings. The College of Physicians and Surgeons, which represents the province's 900 doctors, has given the committee its sup- port. Reports that doctors would not work under the plan prompted the women to launch their drive. The decision was made "over a cup of coffee' and after the wives talked to their family doctors and Mr. Lloyd. Mrs. Dorothy Cross, spokes- man for the original group said the women were alarmed about future medical service. Doctors in several areas had said they would leave the prov- ince rather than work under the program. "We contacted our family doctors to see if they still would look after us if the medical care plan came into effect," Mrs. Cross said. 'The doctors said they wouldn't if we were mem- bers of the plan." Province-Wide Move To Delay Medical Plan Premier Lloyd suggested the women circulate a petition and give it to a Regina member of the legislature. Within days petitions ap- peared in more than 30 commu- nities. Others, holding the oppo- site, view also circulated peti- tions. Mrs. Cross said the original aim was to prevent a clash be- tween doctors and the govern- ment by delaying implementa- tion of the program until both sides could reach agreement. However, it developed into a political movement when CCF supporters and sympathizers opposed the plan and wouldn't sign, while opposition party sup- porters did, she said. The four wives now work with the Regina committee, which became part of a province-wide body April 27 at a meeting in Grenfell, Sask., attended by representatives from 36 commu- nities. About 1,000 committee mem- bers travelled in a cavalcade to Regina May 30 to present the petitions to Mr. Lloyd. The pre- mier told the group the govern- ment would not withhold the plan, but still was ready to make amendments to assure doctors the government planned no interference with the profes- sion, signed the cabinet list. Sou- vanna, however, said the three will meet again Tuesday to sign a formal agreement on forma- tion of the coalition. Souvanna said he hopes to take his ministers to Luang Prabang, the royal capital, by next Monday to present them to King Savang Vathana. The question of who would get the defence (armed forces) and interior (police) ministries had been one of the toughest points blocking an agreement. The royalist government had ex- pressed fear that turning these posts over to the Communists would mean seizure of power through a takeover of the armed forces and police. Under today's agreement, Souvanna wil! be premier, de- fence minister and veterans and social affairs minister. The interior ministry went to one of Souvanna's close asso- ciates, Pheng Phongsavan, who will also be social welfare min- ister. Gen. Phoumi Nosavan, strong man of the Vientiane royalist regime, and Souphanouvong will be deputy premiers. In addition, Phoumi will be finance minis- ter, and Souphanouvong will hold the economy and planning portfolio. 18 People Killed In Crossing Crash JAIPUR, India (Reuters-- Eighteen persons were killed and 22 were injured when a passenger train crashed into a bus at a level crossing near this northern city today. ment of royal commission hear- ings, As a result of the ruling, com- mission sittings were resched- uled for Tuesday morning with Mr. Justice W. D. Roach, the commissioner, empowered to overcome Feeley's objections to giving certain evidence. But the possibility of an ap- peal to the Supreme Court of Canada by Feeley's lawyer left resumption not fully certain for the moment. A decision on the move was expected later today. A three - man panel of the court rendered its decision with- in an hour of the opening of the court hearing, just after lawyer Walton C. Rose had de- livered argument on behalf of Feeley and before counsel op- posing him got to their feet. Mr. Justice Robert Laidlaw said the court was satisfied there is no substance to Feel- ey's claim that it was "crystal clear" that two questions pro- posed to the court by the royal commission should be answered in the negative. These were: 1. Should a commission wit- ness be excused from giving evidence that could be used against him in a later prosecu- tion or civil action. 2. Should a witness be ex- cused from producing copies of his income tax returns when asked for them by the commis- sion. TAX WAS NUB It was in connection with the requested production of Feeley's tax returns since 1953 that the question of whether he could be forced to give evidence devel- oped into a legal battle. After today's abbreviated hearing, Mr. Rose told report- ers he would consult during the day with Feeley on the question of a possible appeal to the Su- préeme Court of Canada. that federal and provincial law will not protect the gambler should be face criminal charges because of his evidence before the commission. He asked the court to rule that Feeley should be excused from giving evidence that could in- criminate him and also that he be permitted to keep secret his income tax returns. Mr. Rose opened argument on an issue which has held up commission hearings since Thursday, when Feeley balked at giving evidence that could tend to be self-incriminating. Feeley's lawyer argued the Canada and Ontario Evidence Acts -- normally invoked to pro- tect witnesses who fear use of their evidence in possible later prosecution -- do not apply to a provincial commission such as the crime inquiry. As a result, he said, Feeley is entitled to call on the com- mon law principle that no per- son may be made to give evi- dence against himself. General! Electric Company, Kennedy said "'broad economic horizons" must be developed at home, regardless of the adjust- |reduced or eliminated. diversified mass market outside of our own, makes possible an |world co-operation. "Growing together, the two great markets astride the At- lantic, containing as they will |90 per cent of the free world's jindustrial strength and 500,000,- |000 customers, can generate the |resources and skills to guaran- see the economic progress of free peoples everywhere."' 'Blast Vibrations atmospheric vibrations lasting from 20 minutes to an hour near Christmas Island in the ments needed when tariffs are|* "The formation of the Com- i mon Market in Europe, the first) # entirely new dimension in free} § His Honor J. Keiller Mac- Kay, lieutenant-governor of Ontario, was the speaker Pacifie Sunday. when Branch 43, Royal Cana- dian Legion, honored its 25- year members Saturday night. This group includes some of the head table guests. From left are Maurice Proctor, Le- gion first vice-president, and Mrs. Proctor; the 'lieutenant- governor and Mrs. Mackay; ONTARIO LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR AT OSHAWA DINNER Dr. M. B. Dymond, Ontario minister of health and Mrs, Dymond. --Oshawa Times Photo yY Mr. Rose had argued earlier

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy