UAW, Houdaille 3-Year Contract Ratified -- Page ll Oshawa Gime THOUGHT FOR TODAY A career woman is someone who gets a man's pay in the office instead of at home. WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny today and Friday, a little warmer. Winds light. VOL. 9I--NO. 145 Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Ottawa and for payment of Office Department, Cash, Postage in TWENTY PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy Medicare VIOLENCE FLARES IN TRUCK STRIKE Act Delay - Requested. REGINA (CP) -- Saskatche-junder this act," Dr, Hazen sald. | wan's second largest hospital/They would serve without pay) asked the Saskatchewan gov-|and serve the community as a) ernment Wednesday not to im-|whole. They would receive no} plement its Medical Care in-|personal calls and didn't want surance Act until agreement onto be thought of as individuals. its legislation is reached with! 'The doctors could not go on the province's doctors. |providing treatment without The act was scheduled t0/charge indefinitely, Dr. Hazen take effect July 1. ; said. Provisions for emergency The request was contained in| t eatment had been made for a telegram received by Pre-|the first two weeks of July. mier Woodrow Lloyd and) after that the hospital would phan the Saeed wr bevercory of| rie, May it by. eae." rom the board 0! yer" | é woe Saskatoon City Hospital. | Many of the younger doctors At Winnipeg Wednesday, Dr.| would leave the province unless H. D. Dalgheish, president of|a settlement was reached with the a peng ig College Of/the government by July 15. He Physicians and Surgeons, an-| _,. : é pe der that the college will|S#!@ there would be 14 general meet the government Friday to/ Practitioners serving Saska- discuss terms of reference oe . 92,000 people starting the act. | . "There appears to be a dit-| Dr. Hazen said it is difficult ference of opinion as to whatito obtain doctors for emer- these terms mean," he said.jgency service because many "At this meeting we will be/will be out of the city in July more explicit in stating the|Some would be on_ holiday, views of the (medical) profes-/some would be looking for a sion." Inew place to practise and Premier Lloyd and Health|"many are sick and tired of the Minister Davies have said that|atmosphere now in Saskatche- the doctors failed to make their|W". tent zoster "act"| ANTS KILL FOUR, WRECK VILLAGE tion since it was passed in April. Government spokesmen have frequently said they are willing to make changes in the act if the doctors would pin- point the clauses to which they object. Saskatoon City Hospital's re- quest for a delay in implement- ing the plan was the suggestion of the hospital's chief of staff, Dr. G. E. M. Hazen. jes of white ants invading villages in lower Egypt have killed four children and de- | stroyed a number of houses, | the newspaper Al Ahram re- ported today. | The ants are causing panic | CAIRO (Reuters) -- Arm- | among the 5,000 persons He told the board of gover- five threatened villages nors.the hospital can be sure of in Beheira province, it said, of being able to provide emer- CAR WRECKAGE AFTER FATAL CRASH Tyrone Man Dies (Cubans Battle In Highw A 58-year-old Tyrone man who! was heading back to work after taking a sick leave died instant-| The body is at the Armstrong Castro, battled sporadically for|Canadian Labor Congress, said ly this morning when his car|Fyuneral Home in Oshawa for|three hours outside a meeting/he agreed it would be legal. slammed into a concrete abut- !ment on Highway 401 at Simcoe street Donald Alexander MacGregor was killed when his westbound car swung into the centre boule- vard and hit the bridge abut- ment. He was alone in the car at the time. WATCH STOPPED His wrist-watch was stopped at 6:40 a.m., Provincial Police! at Whitby stated. Mr. MacGregor, a general) Against TWA 'Settled Today ay Crash. Over Castro NEW YORK (AP) -- Several Stratford and Merdock MacDon- hundred Cubans, for and ald of Ripley. against Cuban Premier Fidel |hall Wednesday night. Two | Molotov cocktails were tossed but did no damage. During the melee, a dummy likeness of Castro was trampled and burned. Six men were arrested. One service in the Chapel on Satur- day, June 23. Interment will be at Mount Lawn Cemetery. Strike Threat man was tabbed but he fled the scene in a taxi. The disturbance began after the "Cuban American civil |rights committee" met at Palm Gardens on West 52nd Street | "'to protest against the persecu- | Db i WASHINGTON (AP) -- Set- tion of Cuban Americans who Renewed Feud Canal Threat | --- sentative from Toronto, said after the meeting no details or description of the retaliatory action was available at present. However, Henry G. Rhodes, assistant director of organiza- tion for the Canadian Labor Congress, who attended the meeting as an adviser, empha- sized that the action would be legal. | Mr. Carson said the meeting was not a direct result of Mc- Namara's beating, but the beat- ing was probably a direct re- jsult of advance notice of the meeting. Earlier Wednesday in Ottawa, Elroy Robson, vice-president of the CBRT sent telegrams to Prime Minister Diefenbaker, Labor Minister Starr and Im- migration Minister Fairclough calling for a judicial inquiry into criminal activity among marine workers on the Great Lakes. ST. CATHARINES (CP) Possibility of a tieup of ship- ping through the Welland Canal was raised today as the result of renewed feuding between the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- way, Transport and General Workers (CLC) and the Seafar- ers' International Union (Ind.). The brotherhood's. local 212 here, whose 500 members are employed on the canal linking lakes Ontario and Erie, voted Wednesday to retaliate against "harassment" by the seafarers. M. K. Carson, CBRT repre- sentative from Toronto, said to- \day no details of retaliatory ac- tion were available but a boy- cott of canal shipping was both possible and legal. | Henry Rhodes, assistant dir-| lector of organization for the | Most of the Canadian lake |shipping passing through the canal is manned by the SIU, in} a battle with the Canadian Mar- itime Union (CLC), hich has! [J § W hi ee ee its ad il a We ng | brotherhood. | s Coast Buildup Local President John McNa- mara, 41, who was to have pre- |sided at the meeting, was ibeaten up Tuesday night by two Police Increase Patrols On Transport Terminals TORONTO (CP) -- Provin- cial police throughout south- western Ontario stepped up pa- trolling of transport terminals today in the wake of renewed lawlessness in Ontario's prov- ince-wide trucking strike. A police spokesman at Lon-|London; Local 880, Windsor, don said today all available] and Local 879. cruisers were either being} Hutton recently signed an in- posted at or near the termin-|terim contract with the London als or providing escort services|local on the basis of a concilia- where requested. tion board report rejected by Latest scene of violence in|Teamster negotiators. The con- the strike by five locals/tract was later repudiated by the parent Teamster body. Teasers in) wan at 3 Socred Leader Plans Meeting With Caouette a trailer unit were set afire. Firemen found gasoline cans nearby. The trailer was owned by Mc- Nally Freightways, one of more than 60 firms being struck by the Teamsters. The McNally drivers are members of the Hamilton-based Teamster Local 879. Hutton Transport Company of tasder Weal Cobette" ae te Social Credit to 26 of Quebec's 75 federal seats in Monday's elections, and National Leader Robert N. Thompson will meet privately here today. Mr. Thompson will fly here from Ottawa. This northwestern Quebec mining town is Mr, Caouette's stronghold. Uniondale Wednesday filed Meanwhile, the deputy leader din said the injunction was granted in Middlesex county court, The claim results from inci- dents the company says took place at three sites. The defend- ants are members of Local 141, claim for unspecified damages against 13 members of three London - district Teamster lo-) cals. The company also ob-| tained an eight-day interim in- junction prohibiting pickets at its Uniondale terminal, the St. Marys Cement Company, and Hind and Dauch Limited in St. Marys. assailants who jumped him out- side his home as he left for By Red China WASHINGTON (AP) -- The | work. The attackers fled by car. Mr. McNamara required 32|White House acknowledged con- gency treatment facilities for only two weeks after the medi- cal care plan goes into opera-| tion, The emergency service, pro- | | The newspaper quoted Ab- , aa at General Motors was| del Meguid Zanghali, village foreman at General Motors | é \starting his first day at work tlement of the engineers strike planning director at the fener & sick leave, Police said,|threat against Trans World) ministry of housing, as say- | County Coroner Dr. F. A.,Attlines was announced today| ng: Cuddy pronounced MacGregor|by Labor Secretary Goldberg) vided for by the college as an alternative to practising under) "Annihilation of the ants |qead at the scene of the accid-|@fter an all - night bargaining) 1s not possible until their |ent. The accident was investiga-|Session in his office, favor the Castro government."| | Anti-Castro Cubans gathered|stitches to close a head wound outside. The riot started whenlinflicted by his own garden several men left the hall to re-|shears. He was reported in sat- buke the crowd for shoutinglisfactory condition at home. "down with Castro!" M. K. Carson, CBRT repre- Cc ern today. over a buildup of Communist Chinese forces the mainland opposite the is-| lands of Quemoy and Matsu, held by Nationalist China. ger said on Press Secretary Pierre Salin- "the administration Hutton solicitor O. W. Dur- | Queen, Philip Plan New Zealand Visit! -- The/He said "as long as we co-op- LONDON (Reuters) Queen and Prince Philip will said a party caucus scheduled in Quebec City this weekend has been postponed to next Wednes- day. Wednesday, in Ottawa, Mr. Thompson was asked for his opinion on how long the Con- servatives might stay in power. , erate.' the provincial plan, was to be given without charge. "Doctors don't dare charge) Douglas Ponders | NDP Leadership | OTTAWA (CP)--T. C. Doug-|reason alone the session must las says he will "'have to con-/not be delayed until fall." sider' whether he will remain) Mr. Douglas said he has no as national leader of the Newjplans for seeking the opening Democratic Party. of an NDP seat to gain a by- "That is something I want to/election entry to the Commons. think about and discuss with) He said he knew nothing my friends before making any|about reports that either Murdo decision," he told an _ inter-/Martin (Timmins) or. H. W queen is found." ted by Cpl. William Warner and Constable Clifford P. INQUEST PLANNED An inquest will be held. "wg egg. | Mr. MacGregor lived in Ty- reduction of jet plane crews to | rone for two years after residing 'three men from four. | in Oshawa for 33 years. He was born in Ripley, Ontario and had 35 years seniority at General Motors. | He is survived by his wife} Hilda Brooks; son Donald, of Newcastle; sisters, Mrs. Gladys Housten, of Ripley and Mrs. Cassie Price, of Detroit; broth- ers, Duncan, of Detroit and Nor- man, of Stratford Two half-brothers survive him; Roderick MacDonald of The settlement, a victory for President Kennedy who had termed the threatened shutdown a menace to the United States economy, provides for orderly U.S. FACES FACT That had been the crux of the! dispute, with the engineers in- sisting on terms which would maintain their cockpit job) rights. WASHINGTON (AP)--U.S. of-; The TWA agreement is ex-|ficials are beginning to face up| pected to lift the threat of|to the hard reality that France| grounding the planes of two] is determined to build its own other major airlines, Pan Amer-|nuclear weapons force whether ican World Airways and East-|they like it or not. ern Airlines, which face the| They are, therefore, becom-| same problem of reducing crew!ing increasingly concerned with} numbers. ways of eventually diverting the} Goldberg told reporters the)! rench effort into a new NATO pact protects the jobs of the 609\2UClear weapons _partner- visit New Zealand and Austra- Mr. Thompson said the Social France Planning To Have A-Force has been watching with concern the buildup of (Red) Chinese air and ground troops." Other officials had said ear- lier that intelligence reports suggest the massing of troops is on the largest scale since the war in Korea, Government sources de- scribed forces in the area as greater than the buildup at the speech on nuclear weapons stra-|time of the 1958 crisis when tegy which Defence Secretary|COmmunist artillery bombarded McNamara made last Saturday|Quemoy and Matsu day after at the University of Michigan. a McNamara said it is an ur- gent need,' possibly involving the survival vf Western civiliza- tion, that NATO countries agree on the co-ordination of target- ing plans--the selection of tar- ets against which a nuclear ay. While it !s possible that the Communist Chinese are reas- sembling forces. for defensive purposes, these sources said, the size and character of the ;movement also indicates they could be used for offensive pur- poses. lia nouced today. The Queen and Philip will spend about two weeks in New Zealand before going to Aus- tralia for about four weeks, vis- iting each Australian state. No plans were known at pres- ent for Prince Charles or Prin- cess Anne to accompany their parents. in February and March, 1963, Buckingham. Palace an- Credit party is interested only in co-operating to give Canada some stability. The Social Credit leader was asked to comment on the grow- ing popularity of Mr. Caouette, "We have a perfect under- standing," he said. He added that support by French-Cana. dian members of the Social Credit party had given him the leadership. 12-Hour Railway viewer after flying here from|Herridge (Kootenay West) Regina for television appear-|might withdraw to make way TWA members of the Flight En-|S%ip for which the United States|attack would be directed in itself would have to make someleyent of all-out war--and the it. was President Kennedy, Associa-| ance. for him. gineers International concessions. circumsatnces under which nu- learned, has not expressed per- Mr. Douglas said he agrees! "It's an awful lot to expect with Liberal Leader Pearson|of a man to give up a seat in that Prime Minister Diefen-\the House. I don't know if I baker should call a new ses-|would accept such a generous sion of Parliament as soon as offer." possible. ---- "There is a lot of business; In Nakusp, B.C., Mr. Her- left over from the last Parlia- ridge said reports that he might ment which has to be tackled/ be asked to resign his seat were quickly,"' Mr, Douglas said. pure fantasy. : "And the government itself Mr. Herridge, 67, said he had should want to seek a vote of|Deen re. - elected to use his, confidence. The budget is still knowledge of the complicated| The employees are seeking|whatever wage and working|lem. hanging and some of the esti-|COlumbia power controversy! higher pay, shorter working| conditions terms are fixed in ne- mates for last year haven't/4nd would be needed, been approved. They will be wanting to spend some of that| money long before Parliament can approve it." Strike In France PARIS. (AP) -- Railwaymen went.on strike through much of France for 12 hours today, ty-| ing up many suburban and long- line trains It was the third consecutive day of walkouts by employees as non - inflationary and said/ers in Paris. If de Gaulle and/t0 considerable counter criti- of government-operated indus-|that by providing for orderly|President Kennedy meet later|¢ism to the effect that the U.S. tries. Tuesday and Wednesday crew reduction they will pro-|this year, as Paris reports sug-|is trying to dictate to its allies. gas and electrical workers staged 12-hour strikes. hours and other benefits DEMANDS ON DOLLAR 'CRISIS' CLAIMS SUPPORT | In a speech to a welcoming} crowd the NDP leader said that} the party has a good cross- section of ad support across Can-| can call an election any time.|pects for Prime Minister Dief- We'll put up a good fight and|enbaker's minortiy Conserva-| we'll do even better the next|tive government remained in time." doubt today. Mr. Douglas told reporters) He was to meet again with there is a "great deal of appre-|his ministers amid demands by hension'"' over the stability of|the three opposition leaders for the Canadian dollar. an early session of Parliament He said there has been at0 cope with what they have crisis in the dollar market ever|4escribed, in varying terms, as since the government acted to|@ CTisis surrounding the dollar peg the exchange rate at 92%4| devaluation. cents in U.S. funds. It was not made clear what "This would be one of the ction would be acceptable to first matters for a new Parlia- the opposition as a whole, which ment to deal with. For that would have to vote as one in order to defear the government on the floor of the Commons CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS and thus force a new election. And, significantly, there was la difference of opinion on how POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 {long the minority government could last with 118 of the 265 |seats in the House. Liberal Leader Pearson said Mr. Diefenbaker should cal! Parliament into session as soon s \ Doug-| Party| vote of confidence. T. C. las, New Democratic leader, agreed. HOLDS 'BIG BROOM' But Social Credit Leader Rob- ert Thompson, representing 30 seats, said his party would not touch off another election this) year. "At least we should wait until next year,"' he said, Nev- etrheless he warned that his party holds a "big broom." Starting date of the next ses- sion unodubtedly is a key topic at the cabinet sessions, which began Wednesday with a 4%- hour meeting. The prime min- ister so far has said only that the possibility of a September session "always remains."' Seventeen of his 23 ministers} went into Wednesday's session. They included three of the four who were beaten in Monday's general election--Works Minis- ter Walker, Postmaster - Gen- eral William Hamilton, and | ferred with key party men Wed- |nesday at Stornoway, the offi- | Rouyn, | |the deputy Social Credit leader,/doilars" have been used re-| : | tion and assures the continued) identity of their union. The agreement .is subject to The problem of breaking the| nuclear weapons deadlock acatn yt caer| ita Gmina in 2 Approval is taken for granted DY dtations held by State Secre- eee officers. : itary Rusk with President de} Goldberg described the terms|Gaulle and other French lead-| duce "many for the airline/ gest is possible, it will be to try| greater" than|to find a solution to this vrob-| savings times Indications of the new U.S.| gotiations still to come. approach were disclosed in PC Prospects Still In Doubt a. | "They (the Conservatives)) OTTAWA (CP) -- The pros-|liest possible date--and seek ajfourth, State Secretary Dorion,|gency in connection with the} {flight of capital from Canada |and the pressure on the Cana- dian dollar." He said the gov- ernment should reveal all the cial residence of the opposition|facts of the situation. | leader. Mr. Douglas arrived) Mr. Pearson, leading a party} here Wednesday night for talks|with 97 seats in the Commons, with his party officials and Mr.|said--as he did late in the elec- Thompson was to fly today to|tion campaign--that he under- Que., to confer with|stands "hundreds of millions of did not attend. Liberal Leader Pearson con- cently from the exchange fund! Real Caouette. | to maintain the dollar at GIVES NO NAMES Mr. Douglas, defeated Mon- day in Regina City constitu- its) pegged rate of 925. American' cents internationally. alamong nations. | |sonal opinion on the question of defence of the offshore islands. There was no immediate indi- cation as to whether the United States was considering any moves as a result of the build- clear weapons would be em- ployed. McNamara's speech was sharply critical of the French plan to create a national nu- clear force. This led in Europe|up. Intelligence reports flowing into Washington tell of a big movement of Communist ground forces into the coastal area of Fukien province. The buildup, U.S. officials said Wednesday, has been go- ing on for months but has ac- ;celerated in recent weeks. Some officials viewed the si- tuation as a defensive rather than an offensive move by Pe- king. However, Chinese Nationalist sources here said garrisons on Quemoy and Matsu have been placed on a doubled alert. There has been speculation that Peking may be concerned that Nationalist President Chi- ang Kai-shek might take ad- vantages of the mainland's food shortages to launch an attack from Formosa. McNamara argued that devel- opment of a national nuclear force would encourage the spread of nuclear weapons} than an did." He added there is '"'no crisis that anyone can point a finger F | eg Speaking on the same pro- gram, Mr. Thompson referred to an "economic crisis'? and Toronto Plasterer faces "a series of crves | Beaten By 4 Men The NDP leader said that the) TORONTO (CP)--James Cas- government should get opposi-|tello, 60, a plastering contractor, tion support if it grapples with)was lured to a basement in these prolbems but if it didn't,)downtown Toronto Wednesday the opposition would have nojand beaten with baseball bats choice "but to join hands to de-'by four men. He received 100 ything the government} ency, revealed Wednesday night that three of the party's 19 elected members hvae '"al- ready indicated their willing- ness" to give up their seats so he could contest a byelection. He did not name them. "This is something I want to give some thought to," he said. Mr. Pearson, in calling for the eariy session, told a press conference Wednesday that 'as possible--July 18 is the ear-|Mines Minister Fl ynn. Thei"there is a developing emer-! Later, he appeared on a CBC television program with Mr, | Thompson, Mr. Douglas and Agriculture Minister Alvin | Hamilton. 'NO CRISIS' Mr. Hamilton said "never| good." Attacks on the govern-| have conditions looked so good." Attacks on the. govern-| said they would co-operate with/to the basement of a vacant ment by the opposition during|the government on any meas-|store after the men "'did| ures. they feel would. be in the|they wanted a quotation on ren- ovations. the election campaign -- more to undermine confidence feat it." expect the government will] not be in office very long." His|by the attack. Mr. Castello, party was under no obligation'owner of Castello plasterers, |to support it, except for action|claims to have no labor prob- to}lems and no attempt was made toe rob him. in the national interest strengthen Canada's currency. All three opposition leaders| (national interest, |stitches to close wounds on his Mr. Pearson said the Liberals head. Police said they are baffled He told police he was lured told him GIVES AWAY MONEY Jack Hayes (left), gives a $100 bill to Leslie Morgan, 13, of Toronto for being good at school and keeping up a bank account started for him last year by Mr. Hayes. The presentation was 'made at the 26th annual picnic for boys given by Mr. Hayes who is honorary president of the Toronto Kiwanis Club. Each year he sets up his own branch of a bank and starts 300 boys with accounts. Young Morgan strung his original dollar aecount up te $84.17. by delivering news- papers and carrying parcels. He is also an honor student and medal winner at his school, (CP Wirephoto)