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

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY How to get in bad with a person? Tell him something for his own good. She Oshawa Times southerly at 15 hour. WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny and a little warmer today and Thursday. Winds to 20 miles per VOL. 91--NO. 150 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1962 Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa ond for payment of" Postage in Cash. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES i Physicians Reject | Lloyd's Proposals & hi Be OTTAWA (CP) A large GOVERNMENT CANCEL PUBLIC WORKS PLAN Contract Work To Be Reviewed projects will be reviewed "and REGINA (CP)--The Saskat- The college has opposed the number of planned construction a large number will have to be projects by federal government }cut out as a result of the de- departments will be cancelled cision of the prime minister.to because of the austerity pro-jcut government spending by gram announced by Prime Min-/ $250,000,000 in a full year." ister Diefenbaker, public works}; The government moves fol- department officials said today.|lowed a meeting Tuesday of the The officials said orders have|treasury board attended by been sent to all departments to| Works Minister Walker, de- jhold up work on all projects on|feated in Toronto Rosedale con- |whioh contracts have not been|stituency in last week's federal | awarded. jelection. lchewan Coliege of Physicians medical care plan since it first jand Surgeons' governing coun- was proposed 2% years ago.| icil says it cannot recommend to| They oppose what they call gOv-| its members that they makejernment control of _ medical) jany change in plans to provide!services and the medical pro! only emergency medical serv-'fession. ice after July 1 During the series of meetings, The council said in a press|Premier Lloyd said the govern- release the government should) ment will allow doctors to prac-| withdraw the July 1 starting)tise outside the plan if they| jdate for the act setting up the) wish, Mr. Lloyd also agreed to) y HEAD-ON COLLISION CRU Whitby Teenager Dies MPLES MOTORCYCLE jae In Motorcycle Crash WHITBY (Staff)--A Whitby girl was killed and her com- panion sent to hospital with serious injuries late Tuesday night in the first fatal traffic accident in Whitby in more than 13 months Rebecca Edwards, 19, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ed- wards, 517 Perry St., died in St Michael's Hospital _ this morning from injuries received when the motorcycle on which she was riding collided head-on with a car at the intersection of Victoria St. and Gordon St The other person on the mo- torcycle, believed to have been the driver, Alex. Chambers, 26, The accident was investigated by Cpl. Morley Nicholson, of - the Whitby Police Department The last fatal traffic aceident occurred on May 5, 1961. JUNE GRADUATE Rebecca was a June gradu ate of Anderson St. High School. completing Grade 12 Special Commercial. She is survived by her parents, three brothers and five sisters, They are Joseph, & of Oakwood; Herbert, of Whit- of RR 2, Whitby, is in the Osh- ; awa General Hospital ,suffering a broken pelvis, a broken right arm and multiple lacerations. STRUCK WINDSHIELD Whitby Police reported that the motorcycle had been pro- ceeding east on Victoria St. W./the Tengesdal car rm at 11:03 p.m, when the accident|two struck the windshield of the| Cemet occurred. Proceeding' west on! Victoria St., and about to make) a left turn onto Gordon St., was a car driven by Ommund Ten gesdal, 60, of Oakwood. He was on his way to work at the On- tario Hospital. The impact hurled both occu pants off the motorcycle over the car, police said. Both landed on the asphalt, east of' REBECCA EDWARDS One of the} ear, puncturing the glass The front whee! of the motor cycle was flattened back to the axle and the force of the ma chine striking the car drove the engine backwards three inches Miss Edwards was first taken to the Oshawa General Hospital and later was transferred to St. Michael's Hospital where she died US. Plans Next Orbital Flight WASHINGTON (AP) The United States announced today that the next manned flight will be planned "for many as six orbits," some time ate this summer i astroy naut Walter Schirra the pilot D. Brianerd Holmes, manned space flight. director of the Ci vilian Space Agency said the de- on as to the specific mission that is, how many orbits will actually be made--will depend on many technical factors which will be evaluated constantly up to the time of flight and even during the first turns around the earth If the mission goes tO Six or- bits it would involve a_nine- hour flight, compared with the 419 hours of three - orbit mis- sions. The two U.S. orbital flights so far have been for three turns The flight plan will call for considerable 'drifting' flight to conserve fuel for re - entry manoeuvring If the flight Brake Applied By Mrs. Frost LINDSAY, Ont. (CP) hs won't let him," Mrs. Leslie Frost, wife of Ontario's former premier, said Tuesday night Mrs. Frost was commenting on speculation that her husband might figure in Prime Minister Diefenbaker's cabinet reorgani- zation plans The name of Mr. Frost, who will he 67 Sept. 20, has been r goes to five or with the federal finance port folio, now held by Donald Flem- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-11 FIRE DEPT. HOSPITAL 723- 20 oo 725-6574 2211 % orbital] eal jnormal harvest mentioned in some speculation! | n gross national product -- jnot jis expected to appear in court jsix. orbits it would mean land ing about 300 miles northeast of Midway Island in the Pacific although the space, craft would be launched from Cape Canavy eral, Fla. That is because. of the rotation of the earth during the extra flight time 4 four - orbit mission would bring the craft down about 200 miles east of Midway Landing points for one, two or three orbits would' remain the same as in earlier Mercury Atlas missions, off the south- eastern coast of the United States Income, Spending Up And So Is Productio OTTAWA (CP)---Canada's na tional output, pushed mainly. by} sharp increases in consumer spending and labor income rose. to an annual rate of $38,- 616,000,000 in the first quarter of the year, up 1.8 per cent from the last quarter of 1961 This estimate of the gross na- tional product, made today by the. Dominion Bureau of Statis- ties, compares with an annual rate er-December of last year The bureau noted, however that about half of the increase resulted from the statistical as sumption that there will be a in 1962, which would mean some $360,000,000 more than last year when there was a poor grain crop farm the Ruling out output rest of the economy chalked up! fourth one per the under gain from of just a quar- cent to- value of goods and services produced His ter fo or m ounted aint cap ace about ne-quarte tota output leaving a ga in ume of 1.4 per cent. Expressed of the gain n vo. by; George, with the Canadian Army at Gagetown, N.B.; Florence, of Whitby: Rose (Mrs. Gerald Fudge), of Whit-| ~ by; Joan (Mrs. Ted DeGeer),| of Oshawa; Linda and Ruth at home. The funeral will be held at the: W. C. Town Funeral Chapel in Whitby on Friday, June 29, at 2:30 p.m. Rev. M. Fostry, pas- tor of the Whitby tre, will conduct the Interment will be in Groveside ery, Brooklin. Abican Barty Leader Jailed JOHANNESBURG, South: Af- rica (Reuters)\--Duma Nokwe, former secretary general of the banned African National Congress, was arrested at his | office here today by security po- lice The reason for his arrest was immediately disclosed. He Friday. Nokwe was acquitted last year at the conclusion of a trea- son trial He was one of 12 Negroes who won an appeal against a 12-month jail term imposed by a Johannesburg court last Oc- tober on charges under the Sup pression of Communism = and unlawful Organizations Act Nokwe, a -year-old former teacher, in 1956, became the first Negro advocate of the Su- preme Court in Transvaal. In 1954, and again in 1959, he was served with orders under the Suppression of Communism Act, prohibiting him for a five- year period from attending any gathering in IGNP was estimated at $35,980 000,000 compared with $35,472,- 000,000 in the last quarter of 1961. RISES 8.6 PER CENT The first - quarter GNP, ad- justed to discount seasonal fluc- tuations, was 8.6 per -- cent higher than the $35,560,000,000 |rate in the first quarter of last of $37.932.000,000 for Octo-| Year -- low point of the business! sumer spending higher, the rate recession In his April nance Minister Fleming - fore- cast an over-all rise of seven per cent in GNP for 1962, which jwould push national output for the year as a whole to $39,- 423,000,000 from last year's $36,- $44,000,000. The report said the major fac- tor behind the first-quarter ex pansion was consumer spend- ig, Which rose to:an annual jrate of $25,312,000.000 in the first quarter: from $24,600,000,000 in the. previous quarter, The 2.9- ner-cont of the 10 budget, Fi- rise was "one arg quarterly gains in re ent There were "only "in the vear ona ce changes things consumers bought | Behind the spending rise was Revival Cen) service.| province's compulsory medical| delete or repeal sections of the} care insurance program. act to which the doctors ob- The statement appeared to be jected. ja flat rejection of proposals and) 'phe doctors' statement said a concessions made by the gov- proposal by Mr. Lloyd that al ernment during a series of three/ nublic statement on his propos- closed meetings Friday, Satur-) 21. would be sufficient to allow| day and Monday. doctors to practise privately out- Commenting in a telephone sidé the act is not enough. interview on the college's state : ment, Premier Woodrow Lloyd said the government will not consider delaying the plan or calling a special session of the legislature to put its proposals into legislation He said the concessions the Offer Of Seat | government hdd made were 'hav, t ve) VANCOUVER (CP) -- Burn- ee bea fo -- aby-Coquitlam New Democratic concessions were difficult to|Party.members voted 165-11 to te"? Tuesday night in favor of allow- essai __.ing their member of Parlia- ment, Erhart. Regier, to resign} his seat to allow defeated na-| tional NDP Leader T. C. Doug-| las to stand for election in the Fresh Peace Try In Truck Strike | 'sins. vote from less than a TORONTO (€P)--In another|quarter of the constituency as- attempt to end the province-|sociation's 800 members gave |wide. highway truckers' strike, Mr. Regier authority to resign now in its sixth week, concilia-|his seat 'at such time as he) tien officers have called a. un-ithinks it necessary." jion-management meeting for to-| The meeting was ca |day, first since the companiesimr, Regier offered to stand| reverted to their original 15-\qown to allow Mr. Douglas to! cent-an-hour offer Friday, seek a seat in a byelection fol-; The Motor Transport Indus- jqwing his defeat in Regina City) |trial Relations Bureau, repre- in the June 18 federal election. | senting some 600 strike-bound| «161 can help it, Tommy (Mr.| transport companies, said Fri- Douglas)will be in the House day the companies could N° when Parliament opens for the! longer afford an earlier offer tO ,oyt session," Mr. Regier told comply with a conciliation the meeting at nearby Port board's recommended 24% Moody. The next session Is ex- cents pected in. September Local 938 of the .Interna- : tional Brotherhood of Teamsters) He told reporters his next (Ind.) confirmed Tuesday that/move would be to go to Ottawa it will continue to hold out for today to discuss his resignation 30 cents. with NDP officials. | Bumaby Okays | led after) 30 Inmates Per In Tower Protest PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Thir-;the tower shortly after dinner teen prisoners were perched on|Tuesday night to join a fellow a water tower at Western State|convict who had been on the Penitentiary today ina protest/ tower -since Monday. They had conditions at the institu-'stuffed their pockets with food. Then, with' buckshot flying, how six more prisoners dashed ri-|across the prison ward and up son officials have decided to|the tower a short time later. | wait them out, They were on a} The events began Monday af-) catwalk about 100 feet above|ternoon when Robert Payne, 29, | ground climbed the tower, protesting " Six prisoners scrambled up|treatment of prisoners in solit- ------ - -- ary confinement. He said he wouldn't come down until he was assured a chance to speak with a state of-} ficial. Once on the tower, the 13) 'prisoners displayed some bed-| sheets sewed together with this message written on them: "We are protesting brutality.) |Our presents (presence) is to} 'support Payne's allegations and over tion It was anyone's guess long they would stay there. Pi constant 1957 dollars, the|an increase of nearby two per'dispute the claim of the war- |p cent in labor income to $19,-!/ gon." 692,000,000 from the previous! Warden James Maroney saidj quarterly rate. of $19,328,000,000. that three guards fired two shot- SAVINGS DECLINE gun volleys into the air when) Total personal income -- in- the second group of six dashed) cluding an assumed rise in for the tower. He said the shots farmers' income -- advanced ue intended athe Bile ho = \2.1 ver cent to $29,404,000,000|, For a time, prison offictals| from $28,792,000,000. But with/feared a rio. might 'develop direct taxes as well as con-|2™0ns some 750 prisoners in a {recreational area. of personal savings declined Amazing as a may Maroney said, "they Government expenditures and|\"" + home building provided the only} very quiet , jother elements of support be- ge Blithe expansion Viet Nam Troops Track Down Reds | Spending by all governments SAIGON,' South Viet Nam advanced 1.5 per cent to an an-} nual rate of $7,496,000,000 and residential construction rose 4.9) (AP)--More than a regiment! per cent to a rate of $1,548,000,-' 95° Vietnamese troops supported 000 : by marines, air force nad naval A share of the econ-| units continued slogging through omy's demands were met by! swamps today in the fourth day imports. Imports of goods and!of a massive hunt for Com- services rose 1.9 per cent to an!munist Viet Cong guerrillas. annual rate of $8,976,000.000, The task force made its first| from 000,000, with mosticontact with the enemy today of gal n payment for.One government soldier - was for tourist expengjtures. inter- killed in a 10-minute exchange est and dividends and freight of fire befcre the Communist} costs / guerrillas faded into the swamp. seem, were all larger $8 the 'Scorched Earth' +») ernment |day recommended that the pub-|the quality of broadcasting were set up Britain's third television}ment, with the accent on the | All such projects will be re-) |viewed to determine whether} |they should proceed. Sources) said they were unable to fore-| cast how long ti would take to} complete the review. i The officials said there is "no likelihood" of cancellation of) projects where contracts have been awarded. They said this would apply even if work on such a project had not started.) Contracts which have been awarded after approval of treasury board will not be af-) fected by the retrenchment pro- gram, the officials said | However, they said all other U.S. Won't Back» | Nationalist Plans' to) | WASHINGTON (CP) -- The --.|United States has told Commun-} ist China the U.S. will not sup-| port any attempt by the Chi- nese nationalists to invade the imainiand. , : | At the same time, the Chinese' e 'were warned at a Warsaw am- Cam cil n Halte \bassadorial meeting last Satur- |day that the U.S. is pledged to a . {support the nationalists against ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Thejarmed forces commander - in-/2ny invasion of Formosa. CHAMP BUILDS FENCE stretches about 90 feet and separates the back lawns, was built to keep children from playing with the Patterson children. Patterson will build 6-foot-high fence which will extend 70 feet to street be- tween front lawns. --(AP Wirepho Heavyweight champion | Floyd Patterson and Harry P. Miltner, inspect site today where Patterson will have fence built outside his home in Yonkers, N.Y. Six-foot high redwood basket-weave fence at left was built by Patter- son's neighbor. Patterson | charged the fence, which Burglar Kills Comic's Faith NEW YORK (AP)--The hotel suite of comedian Jerry Lewis and his wife Patti was looted of $185,000 in jewels: while they were at a studio' taping a tele- vision show. "I've just lost a little faith in human nature,' the comedian said after his wife discovered the loss. "Give me 15 minutes with the thieves and they can keep the stuff." Lewis, who arrived in town Saturday for a week as host of the television program Tonight, was at the studio with his wife for about four hours. Police said there was no sign of a forced entry into the apartment, which had been ransacked. The stolen gems ranged in va jlue up to $35,000. The jewelry was partially covered by insur- ance. Police records" indicated" an» estimated $300,000 worth of jew- elry had been stolen from ho- jtels within the last two months. |There have been no recoveries 'in any of the cases. European terrorist Secret Army/chief, left Algiers by air for) Organization has called off its Oran this morning last - ditch "scorched earth') The Secret Army in Oran has destruction campaign in Oran been the most uncompromising and terrorist" leader ex-Gen.|of the European terrorists units Paul Gardy has fled that city,!in Algeria. It has 'refused to it was disclosed today, jfollow a cease-fire agreed upon The developments came only) June 17 by Secret Army in Al- four days before a~self-deter-|giers and Moslem nationailsts. mination vote certain to call for) the decision to halt the the independence of Algeria. («scorched earth' campaign Ending of the '"scorched|came only four days before a earth" campaign in the western/self - determination referendumig aking a private investigation His Own TORONTO (CP) -- Lawyer |Eric Scott had told Metropoli- |tan Toronto police that he was Lawyer Started Enquiry charges. The investigation of Mr. Scott, which showed him to be 'above approach," wes ordered after the trial. LETTER WAS LATE The Scott investigation devel- oped after the lawyer com- plained to the OPP about late delivery of a letter to him from Ontario Liberal Leader John Wintermeyer and asked the po- lice to determine whether it may have been tampered with. Inspector Graham said today the envelope contained a copy of a brief by Mr. Scott con- cerning the aileged corrupti which had been left earlier wit the Liberal leader. ry The inspector said Mr. Scot had originally complained to the Metro police and expressed the opinion that his mail "might have been intercepted by game blers or other persons" after it was mailed from the legisla- ture building to his office. port city of Oran was first dis-lin Algeria that is certain to|it, "corruption" i po ; : ption'" in the Onta- closed in an announcement from! jead to Moslem-dominated inde- rio attorney - 'general's depatt- Goris at uRnet NO Re ey ee |Kelso Roberts obtained a Scot- . abe : j\land Yard investigation into the It said the order came in a Welland MLA |lawyer last year, the royal com- pirate broadcast in Oarn Tues- jmission on crime was told to- day night by the local branch Called Before day, |chief of the Ontario Provincial Official sources said Gardy, . sy jouer Abe : vine |Police's criminal investigation titular head of the Secret Army C E | : in Oran, had left the city for rime nquiry er as Bed pegging known destination. bet pe ttagel ati a eee ea French TORONTO (CP) -- Ellis P.jness stand why Scotland Yard he 9 5 |member of the Legislature for|Mr. Scott's background in the and Gen. Michel _Fourquet,) weifand, today was summoned|United Kingdom to appear before the royal com-| Mr. Scott was junior Crown mission on crime to explain ajattorney at the 1961 prosecution testimonial letter from him onjof. gamblers Joseph McDermott Of Over $100,000 ibler and bookmaker. err cess tab A Robert L Bes : 5 Commission counsel Roland|*'® : riddles lee % WELLAND (CP) -- The) 5, Wil secteuctid that th widows and children of two Wel-|*» "son instructe at, Ue land truck drivers, killed in an|MLA be telephoned after the accident in Hamilton Jan. 19, | 1954 letter was read as evid- s of t 100,000, by ; x ; ve pH ovions ge | ig pa of| Morningstar will be a witness the Ontario Supreme Court. | Thursday. j Philca Augustino, widow of) The letter, vouching for Bert} Frank Augustino, was awarded|Nero of the Welland - Niagara) child, $14,000, plus $2,000 inja gaming house at Cornwall) roperty damages. several years ago. é C ittee Urges LONDON the administrative centre of Al- pendence, _ | maint: when' Attommay + General of the Secret Army. Inspector Harold Graham, : ge A ©.' Morningstar, Conservative|had been called to investigate high commissioner in. Algeria,} Awarded Damages |behalf of a Niagara area gam- and Vincent Feeley and former Tuesday were awarded dama-\ence and said he expects Mr. $36,000 and her seven-year-old| district, was seized in a raid on} committee (Reuters)--A gov-, Committee members indi- report to-}cated their main yardsticks for licly-owned BBC be allowed to|public service and entertain- channel "as soon as possible." |former, The report to the govern-| With London and provincial ment expected to stir up con-|stations, the advertising - free siderable controversy, criticized | BBC and commercial TV's In- British commercial television, | dependent Television Authority alleging poor broadcasting and|put ut all the "telly" in Brit- declaring it should be 'reorgan-/ain. Their channels compete in ized along less advertising-con-|most areas. scious lines Both BBC and ITA have gov- The 11 member Pilkingtonjernment - named ruling bodies committee -- headed by indus-|but operate as independent or- trialist-public servant Sir Harry| ganizations. Pilkington--said that if com-} Today's report, not binding on mercial TV "proved its capa-|the government, also contained! city real the purposes of|bad news for advocates of set broadcasting after the reor-\ting up local commercial radio ganization. it also should be/stations.. The BBC has a radio permitted by the government to|broadcasting monopoly in Brit- provide another channel 4 CHARLOTTE - Mayor Charlotte Whitton who earlier had threatened to boycott a garden party in honor of the Princess Royal during a rip-roaring argument in board of control, turned up | and looks like she enjoyed her- | self in this photo with the | Queen's aunt..The argument ' to 16 MAKES UP was over parking for the royal event and the mayor wished she were a man so she could © clobber two male members of the board -- '"'a clop on one check and then the other," was the way she put it. (CP "

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