Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Jun 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Just how do a fool and his money get together in the first place? Pag ep ES NG ag A TS Mt he Oshawa Time Sea Note lanl Se ace eh 2 oa, WEATHER REPORT Sunny and cooler today. Wednes- day sunny and with light winds. a little warmer i' Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1962 Authorized as Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 149 TWO ESCAPE DEATH | Invasion Feared By Red China LONDON (AP) -- USS. State Secretary Dean Rusk and Lord Home, British foreign secret- ary, are reported to believe Communist China's military buildup in Fukien province does not foreshadow an attempt on the Nationalist-held offshore is- lands. They think it may be meant to silence Chiang Kai- Shek's threats to invade the mainland. Spokesmen said Rusk and Home reached this conclusion} Monday in talks that paid much| attention to the Communist buildup opposite the Nationalist islands of Quemoy and Matsu. In Peking, China's Foreign| Minister Chen Yi said the Na-| tionalists are preparing with U.S. help for a large-scale in- vasion of the southeast China The talks followed Rusk's meetings with President de Gaulle in Paris and Chancellor Adenauer in Bonn, CALL FOR TALKS The three Western allies sent notes. to Moscow Monday call- ing on the Soviet Union to join four-power talks in Berlin to end violence along the Berlin| wall and try to bring peace to) the divided city. Rusk and Home agreed to at-| tend the signing next month of a 14-power pact being written| at Geneva to guarantee the neu- trality of Laos. If Soviet For- eign Minister Andrei Gromyko also attends, it would provide an opportunity to confer anew) on Berlin, disarmament, nu* clear tests and other East-West A caulkers' scaffold dangles by rope from the 18th floor of New York's Empire State Building after two caulkers escaped death and were haul- ed to safety. Michael Merren, ing to the swaying scaffold. Walter Palmer, 60, plunged 80 feet before safety rope stopped him. He was pulled in through window (arrow) on 11th floor. Both suffered minor injuries but went back to work. problems. Rusk told Home that de Gaulle and Adenauer had as- sured him Britain's bid for en-| try into the European Common Market would not be vetoed for political reasons. U.S. diplo- coast. 'RCMP Reainve SHOC Refugee Bottleneck Closes ORAN, Algeria (Reuters) --! |Oran's seaport and airport were|change cut off all telephones in|Oran were Europeans from the closed by authorities today be-| cause of a bottleneck of 8,000 persons waiting (o join a mass exodus fron. Algeria. Three thousand _ persons|porary and would last only un-|the fuel storage dump in Or- the buildings of Oran/til the ports could be cleared to/an's port area. Eight British with 2,000 more wait-|make room for more refugees.|Petroleum Company oil tanks jammed Airport, ing outside, and some 3,000 other Europeans waited at the port for ships bound for France. Oran Exits An explosion in a telephone ex-;who have left Algeria through the 16 - storey French govern-| interior of the North African ment headquarters here. | territory. Officials said the closing of; Monday's oil fire, brought un- the air and sea ports was tem-|der control early today, was at 56, was pulled through the 18th floor window after cling- --(AP Wirephoto) Premier Proposes Medicare Change REGINA (CP) av ammatesy| "However, '"'this hasn't. been ewan Doctors today awaited a government statement that could throw a new complexion|our legal interpretation of the on the controversial. medical/act. . . . We have asked for care insurance program to start}more information on this as- next Sunday. pect."" The statement was tobe made; Dr. Dalgleish said "'it will be by the CCF government of Pre-/ difficult to convince our doctors mier Woodrow Lloyd in a for-/of this (ability to practise pri- mal document of intent'to the)vately) without the legislature governing council of the Saskat-| making the changes." | chewan College of Physicians}, Mr. Lloyd said in an inter- and Surgeons. ,|view there is no consideration) Word of the impending state-|being given to a special session} ment came after the doctors] of the legislature. He said if the} and govennment representa-|government promises to make tives, including Mr. Lioyd, Mon-|certain changes and to allow} day ended 18 hours of talks| private practise, 'we should be} aimed at solving their impasse! believed." | on the medical care plan. Dr. Dalgleish said it is im- No clear-cut agreement came! possible to go back to the mem-| from the sessions, but the gov-|bers of his profession and pre-| ernment made concessions on|jsent documentary changes by} several sections of the Saskat-|July 1. leish of Saskatoon, college pres- Dynamite From Relay Tower Explosions continued to rock mats feel Britain's entry into j Oran today as a huge black the European Economic Com-' |munity could provide the basis cloud of smoke, nearly eclip-} for setting up an American-|sing the sun, poured from oil backed nuclear strike force|storage tanks set ablaze Mon- NELSON, B.C. (CP)--RCMP\within the framework of the officers Monday removed 4) NATO alliance. terrorists' 30 - stick dynamite; The U.S. position that the bomb from beneath a micro-|wWest needs a multilateral nu-| wave tower at the isolated min-|clear deterrent, operated on a ing ghost town of Phoenix near single common policy, has oa sail ton Weih did wok raised a stir in British political Sa Ss. explode even though the fuse and Agen piel _ had been ignited. They said they believed the bomb had been! scheduled to explode last March! at the same time a massive blast toppled a giant power py- lon into Kootenay Lake. The Kootenay Lake blast| forced Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company to lay off; i about 1,000 men and limit its) HONG KONG (AP)--Tension operations untli repairs were(mounted over the Formosa made almost a month later. Straits today amid reports that Seven members of the Sonsi\Ccommunist and National- of Freedom Doukhobor sect|ist China were pushing military were sentenced to long prison|preparations for what could be terms for the Pylon blast. me invasion attempt by either The microwave tower relays|5!@°- ' | Canadian Broadcasting Corpo-| Propaganda campaigns were ration. signals across Canada|! full swing both in Commun-| and carries a number of long|ist China and on the Nationalist distance telephone circuits. The|Chinese stronghold of Formosa. i i ide, Can- disco te Sun-| On the Communist side, bomb was discovered late Sun lon vadee Mandar ae oar a Formos chewan Medical Care Insur- ance Act. The doctors, maintainitg they would be unable to continue pri- vate practice under the act after July 1, have made ar- rangements to close offices and} normal practices and provide! only hospital-based emergency care after that date . Mr. Lioyd said he and his 12, .L-EOPOLDVILLE, The Congo| cabinet have made a proposal] (AP)--Premier Cyrille Adoula to allow doctors to practise|Said today peaceful negotiations) within the plan or outside it. |had proved futile for ending the He said the cabinet would|two-year-old secession of Ka- give the college council "'a fur-|tanga province. ther and more precise statement) proposed" in the act. Congo Unification Talks Break Down. ito refuse any accord, no mat- : lnounced "voluntary mobiliza- tion" of all workers in that South China city. It said thous- jands attended mass rallies and pledged to lay down their lives \"if Chiang's invading forces dare set. foot" on the China mainland. Convoys of troops and milit- ary vehicles have been passing through Canton en route to Fu- sant ikien province opposite Formosa ge! ge have proof that|and the Nationalist offshore is- is i lands of Quemoy and Matsu, Reet tae ng app decided visitors from Canton reported. met 41 times, under Gardiner's Tension Mounts « He called on the United Na- regarding several changes we\tions for more effective meas- u lures to restore unity to The aged us to enter these negotia- |ter what terms were discussed," Adoula said. "It was the UN which encour- tions. We made our effort, now Communist China's Foreign Minister Chen Yi told a rally of 20,000 the United States is day by European Secret Army! Organization terrorists. The fire and explosions were blamed on die - hard Secret Army terrorists here, who. have} been waging a "'scorched earth") campaign against independence for Algeria. Straits Be land would fight to the end. On the nationalist side, Chi- ang Kai-shek's forces were re- ported to have stepped up drops of propaganda leaflets and un- derground activities on the mainiand. FEAR LONE ATTEMPT The U.S. government was re- ported to have warned Chiang) against any attempt to invade! China. However, many observ- ers in Hong Kong feared the Nationalists might attempt an invasion alone and expect the United States to come to their rescue if they bogged down. (The Soviet. news agency Tass, reporting on American 7th Fleet movements in the For- mosa area, said: "The United States began another provoca- tive show of military strength off the shores of the People's; Republic of China.) | ~~ Officials said about 70,000 per- sons, most of them Europeans, have left Oran in the last three) weeks. A total of 75,000 left ear- lier this year. Many of the 145,000 persons Enemy Satellite Threat Worries NORAD Chief OTTAWA (CP) -- The chief of North American Air Defence Command says there are five big gaps in the air defence sys- tem and they must be filled. U.S. Air Force Gen.*Laurence S. Kuter, boss of the joint Can- ada-U.S. command, listed these ineeds in a speech, the text of which has just been made available here: A new supersonic long- range fighter capable' of inter. cepting hostile bombers which now can loose air-to-surface missiles outside the present |range of interceptors and anti- aircraft missiles. Cost -- more than $2,000,000,000. 2. Construction of the U.S. Army's Nike-Zeus counter-mis- sile system to intercept inter- continental rockets. Cost--about $10,000,000,000. 3. Extension of the ballistic missile warning system and space detection and tracking system with an orbiting missile detection system. 4. A defence against Russian submarine-launched missiles. 5. "Net too far distant," a defence against possible hostile satellites. | pressing Nationalist China to at- jtack the China mainland. He "We're interested. in the pro-| Congo. position by the government that| Adoula told reporters "1 it is possible to practise outside|tanga President Moise Tshom- the act," said Dr. H. D. Dalg-|be's resistance to reunification| ity. --\hardened -- rather than weak-| Adoula declined to lll Oy Will Explode ened -- during the last three|What steps he thought the UN toatl of on-again, off-again| Should now take. 'Bombs Over Nevada WASHINGTON (AP) -- The ' Europe s Tallest negotiations. Adoula said Tshombe asked) cept provisionally Katanga's in-|United States plans to explode |said the Chinese on the main- Ka. it is up to the UN to take the re- |sponsibility of restoring our un- . " ' that the central government ac-) de be's refusal to sign 2 Volcano Erupting |, rr! ee ees rmal communique had fatal 4 = AP)--N results," he said. "'It throws in Pisin gre prod smoke doubt the results of our: entire and hurled hunks of molten lava last round of talks." almost 2,500 feet into the air to. The premier met reporters at day in its, latest eruption. WASHINGTON (AP)--A U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down the saying of official pray- ers in public schools has stirred a cauldron of criticism from churchmen and members of Congress. The court ruled Monday it i | | dependence and that it recog-|two small atomic devices in the), yiolation of the Constitution nize Katanga's: right to keep an|atmosphere over Nevada in the|fo. New' York State to author- jindependent gendarmerie, in- lcluding foreign mercenaries. Before leaving, Tshombe told near future, the Washington |Post said today. White House approval has a press conference after Tsho-| reporters "much remains to be|been given for the tests and| The new outbreak of Europe's|mbe left for his capital of Elisa-|qgne" and that the' negotiations| other Nevada atmospheric tests tallest volcano began Monday) bethville. night and put on a spectacular; Adoula echoed UN Chief Ro- show of flame and explosions|bert Gardiner in saying noth- for tourists crowding vacation|ing has been accomplished dur- resorts along this island's east |ing the last six. weeks of con- coast. 'tinuous talks. The two leaders DIEF EXPLAINS AUSTERITY PROGRAM would continue. He said he had every intention of meeting again. with Adoula in Leopold-| jville or "some other |But he .gave no when are under consideration, in- formed sources were quoted as saying. | | since 1958. Call Parliament In Fall By JAMES NELSON {the knowledge that each of us OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min-j|has added to the lustre of the ister Diefenbaker has appealed|Canada we love." to the country to set aside | Mr. Diefenbaker addressed litical passions and support fhe|the nation by radio and tele- government's new financial|vision to explain the belt-tight- measures with confidence. ening measures he announced "We have faced great diffi-/Sunday to jack up foreign con- culties in the past,' he said|fidence in the Canadian dollar Monday night. "'We met them|by reducing the budget deficit by substituting courage andjand correcting the imbalance confidence for fear, and I ask of international payments. you to banish fear and false} He said. the surcharges on pessimism. -|customs duties--amounting to "We will then come through|five, 10 and 15 per cent on a this emergency with a new/wide variety of non-essential pride of accomplishment, a new/luxury imports--would have a strength in our economy, and double effect. They would dis- jcourage imports and thus im- CITY EMERGENCY prove the balance, and they PHONE NUMBERS would bring in more tax money ' |to help balance the budget. POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 CONTINUES OFHER IDEAS HOSRITAL 723-2211 | He also said the government would continue its other mea- sures to goad the economy-- through export financing, trade |missions, small business loans, jsion and research, and expan- sion of the Industrial Develop- ment Bank. "Projected measures of tax reform to promote greater ef- |ficiency and competitiveness in Canadian. business" would be |pressed forward. He announced in the election campaign a royal commission would be set up to study the burden of tax- ation on various . segments of the economy. Restrictions on the duty-free goods that Canadian travellers abroad might bring back would prompt more Canadians to tra- vel in Canada, he said. He nfade no reference to' the Bank of Canada's announce- ment, 'also made Sunday, fixing the bank discount rate at six per cent--a signal for tighter control of credit. MEETS IN SEPTEMBER Parliament will be called in September, as. originally |planned. |the measures taken will be dis- jcussed by Parliament when it jmeets,"" he said. "During the election I announced that the next Parliament 'would be sum- monded in September, and I see no reason to change that deci- sion." To answer opposition party leaders who urged him to call Parliament as soon as possible so his minority government could test its strength in the Commons, he said: "Tt is well that Parliament should not meet until after a cooling-off period so that time will be given for political pas- sions to subside and be fol- lowed by calm reason which, I have -always found, is the basis of effective discussion and con- sideration." Liberal Leader Pearson had no immediate comment. Sources close to him, however, q said he was still of the opinion) gotiations have been in process! Libera's |Parliament should meet as soon 'tax incentives for sales expian-! "It is natural to expect that'as possible fis summer. lize the saying of the following prayer in public schools: "Almighty God, we acknowl- jedge our dependence upon Thee jand we beg Thy blessings upon jus, our parents, our teachers jand our country." | In a 6-to-1 decision, the court place."| The tests would be the first|.aiq «jt is no part of the busi- indication|in the atmosphere over Nevada) po ' ss of government to compose \official prayers for any group of American people to recite as part of a. religious program carried on by government." The decision was written by Justice Hugo L.: Black. Some states require public schools to begin each day with the Lord's Prayer. The wording of Black's opinion indicated these state laws also violate the first amendment. WAS ONE DISSENTER Justice Potter Stewart, dis-| senting, noted that the Supreme Court's own sessions are opened with the words 'God save the United States and this honor- able court." Churchmen Bitter Over Prayer Ban gress were bitter in denuncia- tion of the ruling. "They put the Negroes in the schools and now they've driven God out," declared Represen- tative George Andrews (Dem. Ala.). jand another: firm were reported |destroyed. | Tanks exploded one after an- jother with shattering violence. They shot out streams of liquid |fire that set nearby warehouses jand other buildings aflame. | There were furniture trucks on almost ever ystreet loading household goods today although no one knew when these could be shipped: The exodus was prompted by an appeal of the Secret Army for complete evacuation in the face of the July 1 self-determin- ation referendum leading to in- dependence for Algeria. Local Europeans complained the French Army had requisi- tioned all furniture - removing vehicles in town to ship out the goods of soldiers and officials. UNDERCOVER AGENT KED BY ORDER Officer Gives Reasons For Lack Of Confidence TORONTO (CP) undercover man evidence of a tieup between po- lice and gamblers was "'shocked'"" when superiors ter- minated the investigation in 1960, the royal commission on crime was told today. Const. John W. Moore, of the Ontario Provincial Police, gave this evidence as one of the rea- sons why he expressed lack of confidence in the attorney gen- eral department's administra- tion of gambling laws when asked for his views last year. Const. Moore said the expres- sion of shock had come from Const. George Scott, of the OPP, who had been acting as a double agent for the police in efforts to plug leakages of in- formation from police head- quarters to gamblers. . Const. Moore gave several reasons why he refused in 1961 to accede to what he described as an "or else" ultimatum that he express confidence in the de- partment following a request to this effect from Attorney Gen- eral Kelso Roberts. The reasons he gave included, 1, Over a period of years he had wondered why large gambl- --A police dug up 'Recently OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker declined com- ment today on a report that the overnment notified the United tates before the June 18 elec- tion that Canada would take emergency measures to meet its financial crisis. Before a 'morning cabinet meeting, Finance Minister Fleming at first replied with a flat "no' to reporters who asked whether the emergency program announced Sunday had been planned before the elec- tion, But when the reporters ques- |tioned Mr, Fleming about a re- Port from Washington that the |United States had advance no- tice, the finance minister said: Crisis Hit Peak ' -- Dief which the emergency reached crisis proportion. He said he had spoken of it as "in recent days" and "I can't put any date on things." Mr. Fleming said the emer- gency program "was planned requiring it," and the crisis "reached its threatening propor- tion in recent days." The cabinet went into what apparently was a regular, ra- ther than special session. Mr. Diefenbaker said he had a meeting with Governor-General jogs scheduled for later to- ay. 70 Truck Tires "You'll have to ask the prime | minister." WOULDN'T COMMENT Mr. Diefenbaker said he would rot comment ona re-| port he had not seen. | The prime minister was eaked! if he could specify the date on | Slashed In Yard KITCHENER (CP)--Some 70 tires on 15 trailers. owned by Husband Transport Limited were punctured during the night, The trailers were parked in the company yard. ing clubs could continue to op- erate in Ontario and when he asked his superiors on occasion why they were not closed up, he had been told "'we've had or- ders from the attorney general not to raid them." -- 2. The department had not been tough enough in enforcing the law against illegal pinball machines. On one occasion in 1955, he said, he and Scott had obtained evidence against some pinball operators in Essex County, but had to follow instructions not to lay charges "until after the election." He could not specify what election was referred to. He, said that successful prosecu- tions were undertaken after the election. He said he had been "'dumb- founded and shocked'"' when his superior, Sergeant John M. An- derson, told him last year that he was to answer this question at the request of the attorney general. "Do I have confidence in the department of the Attorney General of Ontario, or else?" (Sergeant Anderson testified Monday that he himself an- swered the confidence question affirmatively, but reluctantly, ina belief that he would be transferred off the OPP anti- gambling squad if he. did not.) Const. Moore said he asked Anderson what was meant by "or else' and Anderson had ply would bring about Moore's "downfall" or at least "some- thing that wouldn't be too good for me." Scientist Says ECM Cure For Atom Neurosis LINDAU, West Germany (AP) --An American nuclear scientist said today he believes the Common Market and evens tual political union of Western Europe is a step toward re- moving the fear of nuclear war for all times. Prof. Harold C. Urey of the University of California said the Common Market should serve as a model for a "super gov- trnment" of the West which could oppose the Soviet bloe without resorting to the threat of nuclear weapons. In New York, Francis Car- dinal Spellman said he was "shocked: and frightened." "The decision strikes at the very heart of the godly tradition in which America's children have so long been raised." Lawyer Given Father's Seat In Senate OTTAWA (CP) Appoint- ment of Winnipeg lawyer aap. bell Haig to the Senate seat va- cated by the resignation of his father, John Haig, was con- firmed today by Prime Minis- ter Diefenbaker. The prime ministey made the statement as he entéred a ca- binet meeting when asked to confirm a report published in Winnipeg that the appointment went to Campbell Haig, a prom- Southern. members of Con- Galt Steelworker: Vote For Strike GALT (CP) -- Officials of Lo-| cal 2871, United Steelwerkers of |America (CLC) announced to- day that their members, all em-| ployees of Joy Manufacturing! Company, (Canada) Limited, haye voted 93 per cent in favor of strike action. | A contract with the company. expired Dec. 15, 1961, and ne- 7 since last November 2 | . No date} has been set for the strike. ee ee an ss a eee nr ere eee ee ee inent Conservative party worker in Manitoba. It was one of three appoint- ments made during a cabinet meeting held June 15 on a Tor- onto-Hamilton train three days before the election. Nature of the other two ap- pointments has not been dis- closed. Senator John signed last Jan. ill health. : Appointment of his son brought to 25 the Progressive Actress Stella Stevens mod- Conservative membership in the} els the latest high fashion 102-seat Senate. There aré 64, gown, a $250 dress made of two indepencent mem-| black transparent paper which bers, one Independent Liberal] js supposed to be worn once, and 10 vacancies. . then tossed in the wastebasket. Haig, 84, re- 17 because of Designer Louis Margliano says you can't see through the: ma- terial as long as it retains folds which Margliano calls "sculpture." The paper can be WEAR IT ONCE, THROW IT AWAY cleaned but if it's pressed the sculpture comes out and it be- comes transparent cellophane. .So you just throw it away. --(AP. Wirllphoto); said in effect that the wrong:re-

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