eran" ~~ ena eR NRG nepnapes aire THE. OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, July 12, 1962 Good-Humored Crowd Hears Medicare Duel REGINA (CP) -- The Sas-!of the physical impossibility of |katchewan government st0o d/notifying and bringing together" firm in its attitude towards|members from all over the medical care insurance Wednes- province, day as thousands rallied to pro-| 'The premier reiterated the test the government plan. government stand that a spe- In a picnic atmosphere, the cial session will be called when good-humored crowd estimated] jt js reasonably certain that a about 4,000, listened to speeches) session might contribute to the for two hours while a 12-man|solution of the present prob- ceeetin of fhe a wee lems. Keep - Our .- Doctors Commit- ; has asked wed met for 10 minutes with the aie celine: ob the a cabinet. i : "in, The rally, which brought hun- ae eke Pa eal dreds from far-flung points in| vere made at meetings last the province, was called to seek week by Rev, Athol Murray of {withdrawal of the CCF gorers- Wileox " geak. ei gre ng id heleaghed A spokesman for the group medical care insurance plan " which went into effect July 1. |said later the premier produced Most of the province's 700|a copy of a newspaper in which practising doctors have refused|Father Murray was quoted in to work under the plan andjreference to the dispute and in withdrew. normal medical ser-|Which the premier said he re- vices in protest, About 200 mem-| ferred to violence, service at 35 designated hos- pitals since the plan went into -- Given Odds To * . sition members marched down Win Byelection the legislative chamber, They found it locked. LONDON (CP)--The results * > APOLLO REUNION ber's pg iets swung open at Leicester North-East, the fi this N . In re-ontry |28ain fOr tourists. nal one of the series of 12 dating This NASA photo of models | return to earth. In re-entry etimates on the site of the|ttlone of the series join service unit of Apollo | phere. For purposes of illus- cated this might be high. ) 'while in orbit around the | tration models set on racks. | police Chien Arthur G. Cook-|t0 retain the seat for the Labor moon after their explorations | In actual moon shot, reioin- con said, "I'd estimate a crowd|Party: j i yi fire- ing." ri captain, and Liberal tank-like part. This would | (NASA Photo via AP Wire- ing. cricket cap! ; rome a moon orbit and |. photo) Premier Woodrow Lloyd said|David Bond, a 34-year-old his-| cel ----~ his estimate was 2,500 to 3,000--|tory teacher. Puts Off Cabinet u Ss He said a CCF-NDP constitu-/Thomas who won in the 1959 ency picnic at Buffalo Pondigeneral election with a 1,431 Lake east of Regina on a recent|majority over the Conservative nesday reviewing plans to cutlgr whom were present Wednes- (0 Claims of overwhelming op-|ting effect on the outcome. federal expenditures by $250,- 4 : : di "their, Position to the government," ; 000,000 and considering pros-\¢4Y -- were winding up thelr CRITICIZES THATCHER spending cuts, but Prime Min-|come of a recount in St. John's} 18 of the 19 Liberal members Drive Expanded ister Diefenbaker announced hot _ he on oe by r to the locked chamber, LONDON (CP) -- London that Gordon W. Hunter, 48, as-/Predominantly - Liberal armed} He called the action a theat- agents of the Saskatchewan : ; The question of granting payjof the legislature at 2:30 p.m. : wy suceed_ David. olen incregey 1050.0 vl sre Mr Lloyd sald the oposion stn eice (ae apok be reid tg ? ants in the clerical, administra-|leader was well aware that alman, said Wednesday, bers of the Saskatchewan Col-| "Not having seen the news- As 25 uniformed and _plain- CROWD ESTIMATES VARY of recent British byelections shows manner in which two | service portion would be drop- gai . : crowd varied widely. Reporters) Hut moat obenmvars sucks ip on the surface.: The unit at | ing would be in space. Both | of 12,000 to 15,000 milling around) The other candidates \"'much less than what people) The seat was made vacant by e ® Service Pay Hike wavie niscane'y "re wae sce wooay cal care plan. Liberal party is in the battle pective appointments. work and woul? soon resign' The premier criticized the ac- sistant deputy minister of de-|forces vote. rical gesture' and said Mr.| medical care insurance com- tive and semi-professional clas-|special session cannot be called| The prime minister also an- lege of Physicians and Surgeons; es have been providing emergency) Union Official \clothed police patrolled the leg- islative grounds, Liberal oppo- Shortly after the crowd had make the political pundits shy dispersed quietly, the cham-|trom predicting today's contest astronauts in their excursion | ped away and only nose "one j P generally agreed on 4,000.) . i side, would re- | would pass through atmos- 4). Pte i. a: give the edge to Tom Bradley, pir gga diver Assiat patios viewed jater ind! a National Trade Union official, right includes the re-entry | units have small steering roc- |and an actual 6,500 to 7,000 in servative Robin Marlar, a ae cone and service unit, | kets (cross-like protrusions). /front of the legislative build- journalist and former Sussex were led to believe could easily|the appointment to the High bé gathered." Court of Sir Lynn Ungoed 3,000, all in favor of the medi-|fight. But now the resurgent OTTAWA (CP)--The cabinet ter-General William Hamilton, Mr, Lloyd said: the size ofjand recent experience showed spent a busy five hours Wed-jand Works Minister Walker, all|the crowd "doesn't lend support'that this could have an upset- There was no statement of|formally. Solicitor - General|tions of Liberal Opposition government action on the|Brownie is awaiting the out-\Leader Ross Thatcher, who led fence production since 1954, has|(pEFERS PAY BOWSTS' Thatcher had at noon Wednes-| mission have been instructed to been appointed deputy minister day asked for a special session expand their 'recruiting efforts ses--to be made retroactive to|with two hours' notice "because|, /H¢ original plan was to bring nounced the resignation from 'lin between 50 and 100 British the cabinet of Noel Dorion, 58, secretary of state, who was de- feated June 18 in Bellechasse constituency of Quebec. Trans- port Minister Balcer was named acting secretary of state. Mr. Diefenbaker said other defeated Ministers Mines Minister Flynn, Postmas- Regina Infant Dies Wednesday WINNIPEG (CP)--A six-day- old Regina baby died Wednes- day, 20 minutes before a sched- uled operation to try to correct a congenital heart condition. Brent Obuck, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Roman Obuck, was flown here Monday on a regular Trans-Canada Air Lines flight the A spokesman for Children's) » Hospital said babies requiring) surgery usually) § here from Regina| ; facilities} / "open heart are sent where there are no for this type of operation." "This type of heart defect is severe and serious," the spokes- man said. "Half of the babies born this way die within one year." Monday, the baby's physician, Dr. Barrie Duncan said flight would have been neces- sary even if normal medical services were available in Sas- katchewan. "We could not have treated the baby in Regina at any time --even before medicare came in," Dr, Duncan said. The baby's parents remained in Regina. W. Germany Fires Attorney-General BONN (AP)--The West Ger man cabinet decided Wednes- day to retire Attorney-General Wolfgang Fraenkel, for failing to report he once was a Nazi prosecutor. Communist East Germany initiated the Fraenkel case by presenting documents indicating that while a member of the Nazi prosecutor's office at Leip- zig he changed 34 hard labor sentences into death sentences. Government press chief Karl- Guenther von Hase told a press conference the grounds for re- tiring the S7.yeat-ol prosecutor were political and no disciplin-|cyrred this morning over the|afternoon. ary action will be taken against him. He will receive his pen- sion. Von Hase said Fraenkel had|the regions. Elsewhere in the'gian Bay, Algoma, Sault Ste|Muskoka...... 45 the} ¢ servants were given increases --was put over to next week. Finance Minister Fleming, holi- daying in Ontario, is expected to return to his desk and the cabinet council table next week. Mr. Diefenbaker, questioned by reporters before and after the two cabinet meetings, said again that Parliament would open as planned in September. He would not say, however, whether this would be after the Commonwealth prime ministers conference in London. expected to open Sept. 10, He declined comment on a Stormont elect tion campaign minister said he had not seen. Mr, Martin said the govern- fidence from the Commons be- fore Mr. London j | 1% | j Diefenbaker goes to} Jast October when other civil! me | Child, 3, Found 15 Miles From Toronto Home TORONTO (CP)--Police are looking for a woman in an orange-colored car who picked up a three-year-old girl Wednes- { before or|day night and let the child out! 15 miles from home. The girl, Janet Marie Alexander, wan- dered from her downtown home about midnight and didn't turn up until eight hours later, speech by Paul Martin (L--Es-|knocking on the back door of ajance of over 300 applicants," sex East), which the prime|house in suburban North York,|the spokesman said. "They are She suffered no ill-effects. Deputy Chief George Elliot ment must have a vote of con-said the woman might have in. Of all classes." tended to abduct the girl but a police search for her. SCATTERED THUNDERSHOWERS IN EAST CANADA WEATHER FORECAST Synopsis: Thundershowers oc- | southern sections of the prov- jince as another weak disturb- jance moved southeastward over Friday Clear, Humidity Down Forecasts issued by the Tor-jiburton regions, London: Vari-|Wingham . . onto. weather office at 5 a.m.:\able cloudiness with scattered|Hamilton . . thundershowers, clearing this Friday, sunny with |lower humidity, little change in temperature, winds light. Northern Lake Huron, Geor- doctors to replace local physi- cians who have withdrawn serv- ices in protest against the prov- ince's medical scheme, George Taylor, a lawyer and member of the commission, ar-| rived in London Tuesday with paper report, a position to comment on it," said Rod Thompson of Prince Albert, Mr. Thompson said the pre- mier asked if the KOD repu- made by Father Murray, the fiery priest who founded Notre southeastern Saskatchewan. Mr. Thompson's statement tinue to respect Father Murray and his long record of service to people of all denominations in the province" but if it was true that he had made state- ments referring to violence "we dissociate ourselves from such statements." During the rally, only. re- ported incident was when po- lice stepped in to break up a threatened scrap between two youths carrying pro-government placards, and KOD demonstra- tors, Five KOD supporters grabbed the placards and ripped them up. The picnic flavor of the gath- ering was apparent as some munched funch, others relaxed on blankets spread on the grass and mothers pushing babies in carts strolled around the tree- shaded grounds. ay members of the citizens' committee were not in| diated the statements allegedly! new medical Dame College at Wilcox in'qeath can be traced to the de- said the committee "shall con- INTERPRETING THE NEWS Newspaper Guild | Denourices MDs BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--The American Newspaper Guild's convention has adopted resolu- tions denouncing the withdrawal of services by doctors in Saskat- chewan. A | The more-than-200 delegates to the convention voted unani- mously Wednesday for a resolu- tion which described as "shameful and inhuman" the |Saskatchewan doctors' refusal }to comply with the province's care insurance | |plan. | "If anyone dies, and that sertion of a doctor from his post, then I charge that the doc- tor is . . . guilty of murder just as if he had committed that act with his own hand," said Mur-| ray Tate of Toronto in support of the resolution. His remarks were greeted by vigorous ap- plause. The convention also urged that the U.S. Congress pass the administration - backed King- Anderson bill for medical care to the aged under social secur- ity. . The delegates also passed a resolution urging Congress to jpass legislation to halt what |they termed monopoly and mer- gers in the newspaper industry. The resolution proposed court appointments of appraisers to value newspapers about to be} sold, so that fair bids by pros-| pective purchasers -- willing to) continue publication would have to be accepted over bids offered by competing newspapers. HANGING DOLLS DURING MEDICARE PROTEST RALLY ' 4,000 persons gathered at the rally in front of the legisla- Two young girls in the Re- | organization, carried sticks gina demonstration of the | with hanging dolls saying Guiding wee Hurt By By JOSEPH H. MacSWEEN Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet Premier Khrushchev's speech in Moscow Tuesday and abrupt reaction in Washington add nothing to hopes for prog- ress at the 17-nation disarma- ment conference scheduled to re- sume in Geneva next Monday. Behind the diplomatic moves observers see the Soviet Union and the United States engaged in all - out competition for de- velopment of anti-missile sys- tems, now that each claims suf- ficient hydrogen - bomb power |to wreck the other -- if not all demonstrated dramatically how) sue jcivilization. MD Recruiting | There appears little prospect jof an end to spiralling thermo-|electronic guiding nuclear tests while this com- petition continues, and still less chance of progress on general and complete disarmament un- less agreement is reached on a cessation of tests. The claim by Khrushchev and his military chiefs that Russia already has the anti - missile missile is discounted by the U.S., but not entirely. Negro Violence Worries Chief ALBANY, Ga. (AP)----The po- orders for the stepped-up cam-)i-6 chief of this racially trou- S A Saskatchewan government spokesman said Wednesday that \23 British qualified doctors had flew the Atlantic Tuesday night, The 60th doctor now has been bled south Georgia city made a personal appeal to Negroes to refrain from violence after stones and clods of dirt were already left, including 10 who | hurled at some of his officers.| tension Racial unrest and gripped Albany anew after Dr. signed and will leave with oth-/\gartin Luther King Jr. of At- ers in the next few days. "We are processing the bal- lanta, a passive resistance inte- gration leader, began serving a jail sentence' resulting from demonstrations against segre- rolling in very nicely, but we need more, including specialists The British practitioners have} ing from one to three months. : day to refrain from applause he} gation here last December: King's jailing set off protest demonstrations by Negroes, re- sulting in the arrest of 32 Wed- probably heard radio reports of been signed on for periods rang-|nesday and Police Chief Laurie/gether rules on how it should be|Club of St. Andrews, Scotland,/on Canadians and, in particu- Pritchett's appeal for calm.| More protest marches are ex-/ pected. Pianist Deplores | Audience Applause STRATFORD (CP) -- When| pianist Glenn Gould asked his} audience at a Bach recital Sun- won a polite silence. But the audience hasn't been! so amenable to a second re-| quest by Mr. Gould--that they, write him giving their views on} applause, which the Toronto} pianist termed an ugly sound,' easily induced by tricks. Applause, he said, was not a true indication of sincere appre- ciation. A Stratford festival official) said Wednesday only 25 letters} sihave been received. Most of them defended applause. ness. Scattered afternoon show-) ers today and Friday, a little} cooler. Winds southwest 15 both! lafternoons, light tonight. | Forecast temperatures: |Low tonight High Friday Windsor. ..2.. 60 St. Thomas... . .60 | London . » a 380 | Kitchener . +35 | Pa: | oo 6 100 | St, Catharines... . | Toronto Peterborough . TPOUUOD 6 6k 8 6 8 Killaloe .... 6 3 3 6 4! demonstrated he was not "ajprovince, the weather will be Marie, southern White River,|North Bay .... .50 suitable personality" to hold such high office by not making) Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Sudbury: Sunny today and Fri-/Earlton...... a clean breast of his past before| Niagara, eastern. Lake Ontario'day, not much change in tem-|Kapuskasing .... mainly clear. Timagami regions, North Bay, joining the West.German legal/regions, Windsor, Toronto, perature, winds light system after the Second World War. |Hamilton: Southern Lake Hu- iron, wena are Ontario, Hal-'rane regions: Variable cloudi-|Timmins . .... .45 ry Northern White River, Coch- Sudbury ..... ..50 50 45 40 5 White River: ... Moosonee...... Acquit Pilot In Cable Car Deaths DIJON, France (AP) -- A French military court Wednes- day acquitted Air Force Capt. Bernard Ziegler on a charge of involuntary homicide in the Al- pine cable car tragedy last sum-| *imer which took the lives of six tourists. Ziegler, 29, flying an F-84 jet) fighter, cut the cable on the|-- Alpine line across the Vallee) Blanche on the French-ltalian border while on a low reconnaissance mission Aug. 29. Four Germans and two Ital- ians died when the cars they were riding fc" into the valley. level | last JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL 8 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 }} } s State department spokesman Ch L d luancoln White noted Tuesday arge al provincial Keep Our Doctors | "Down with dictators." About | ture. --(CP Wirephoto) Systems Teamsters-CNR Algonquin Lakes © Secret Deal' Yield Ocean Life | HUNTSVILLE, Ont. Shrimp ; and -- Ph . rapa a a i , jocean life have been discovere aymond Freeman of the MONTREAL (CP) -- Charges|thriving in 'small Algonquin|Ontario Research Foundation fall, although none so high as|that a "'secret deal" was made|park Jakes -- remnants of life|discovered the shrimps in Ho- the megaton 'explosion con-/be tween the International|in a glacial sea 15,000 years\gan Lake, Before the find |ducted 200 miles up by the U.S,/Brotherhood of Teamster s\ago, jtraces of shrimps were noted |Monday. |(ind.) and the CNR during ne- "4 three - year study by. geol-jonly in the Great Lakes and | Those were "probably the/Stiations to end Montreal's ogists and biologists of the de-/western Canadian lakes, most significant tests from the|/¢hsthy, trucking strike were/partment of lands and forests) Spurred on by the initial find, point of view of U.S, security,"|V1ced here Wednesday. found species of ocean life or-|searchers discovered another White said. ". . . The possibility John A. Magee of Ottawa, €X-liginating in a huge sea which|form of ocean crustacean, scud. " exists that the Soviet Union|Gullve secretary of the Cana.) covered central Ontario. whenjZWo. forms of plankton and } jgained considerable knowledge dian TEUCKINE APSOCIMDN sald the glaciers retreated across three species of fish -- herring, lof the effects of such tests" | @ statement the Teamsters) central North America. trout-perch or silver chud and? The U.S. high-altitude blast agreed to pull out of two court). eas sculpin -- were also found. actions opposing CNR purchase} The find is of interest to scien- of truck lines as a hidden condi- itists mainly because it supplies - @aver TOO. |clues about the flow of glacial * waters, Blasts (CP)-- dians including Lord Beaver- that Russia conducted a number of tests at varying altitudes last communications can be jrupted, and presumably how the jon el ay ae sa made system 0) : i! | imissiles could be oes oe A CNR spokesman refused to s s FLOW TO SEA Ff It is thought the Russians made|Comment. Rod Hayes, president Ed t W When 'the weight of: the re- |progress in this field last fall |of Teamsters Local 106, could ] ors in jtreating ice-cap ~was removed © with their tests at different alti-/n0t be reached. jfrom the land, the earth bulged * tudes, One of the eight companies . e and water flowed out.to the sea On another topic, Khrushchev|involved in the 12-week strike| Libel Suits jalong certain routes. The Algon- jseems to have caught Defence} 1,400 drivers and helpers was) quin Lakes have now been iden- \Secretary Robert McNamara of|Husband Transport Limited ; _' |tified as one of these channels |the U.S. off base in the continu-| Whose sale to the CNR has been, !ONDON (CP)--Eight senior of glacial waters. ' : ling propaganda duel over ther-|approved by the Quebec trans-\¢ditors of the Beaverbrook) The Algonquin Lakes are part, monuclear war. |portation board. The ruling is/newspapers received apologies|of the Petawawa, outlet, Other, SEIZES STATEMENT being contested in two lawsuits|and "substantial damages" injoutlets were along the Ottawa now before Superior Court, filed|a high court libel action settled by the Teamsters and other in- Wednesday. -- terested bodies. The action was brought, "The. secret condition most against the BBC and two mem-) regrettably was insisted upon ead 3 Big pave aifaiss| i ' ./panel -- L oothby,. former Namara to back up his thesis. vd ead ae Wat Conservative member of Par- McNamara had _ suggested| most regrettably because of our|liament, and civil servant Jack that perhaps an agreement/peliet that any interference|Longland. could be reached under which) i Pelenus Milmo, Khrushchev has always main- tained that the West wants con-| trol over armaments rather than disarmament and he seized upon a recent statement by Mc- valley. and the Trent' River, - Nigel Martin, who started the: project under the lands and for- est department, reports that some forms of ocean life are. thriving in the bottom muds of lakes as small as 100 acres, He is preparing a paper on the gub-> 'ject. {OY | pees Y -" whatever with those court ac- counsel pp pet a 1y| Hons is detrimental to the pub-|the editors, said the action) pula atehed ferean and net lic interest and to the interests) arose out of remarks made by Veaulust cities ' nO!) of the trucking industry and its|Lord Boothby and Longland on) ake fs. employees." ' jthe program Any Questions?) Khrushchev notes the U.S. He 'said Husband Transport| broadcast March 23, press said McNamara's state-|nad refused to join the other| "During his answers Lord, ment had clearance from the|companies in signing an agree-|Boothby delivered a_ scathing White House and he saw it asiment with Local 106 of the|and completely unjustified. at-| a "sort of proposal to the Soviet/Teamsters unless the entire|{ack upon the personal integrity) Union on 'rules' of conducting a! group insisted on the union's|and professional standards of |nuclear war. |withdrawal from the two cases,|the plaintiffs as journalists," | Khrushchev said this proves ------- --------- |Milmo said. |Western leaders have dropped| the idea that nuclear war is un-| thinkable and are putting to-| pacha as Last week the BBC broadcast GOLF SHRINE an apology from Lord Boothby) The Royal and Ancient Golfjfor a 'serious personal attack! | Patios our Specialty CEMENT WORK @ WALKS =e STEPS e@ CURBS Free Estimates--Work Guerenteed Recommendations Supplied CALL BERT McLEAN 723-2867 conducted, He added: jwas founded in 1774. lar, a number of eminent Cana-| "It is a monstrous proposal, | filled from beginning to end/ with a disdain for mankind, because it seeks to legalize nuclear war and thereby the murder of millions upon mil-| ih | Committee Set Up . To Study Tourism TORONTO (CP) -- The On- tario Economic Council an- nounced Wednesday the crea. tion of a five member commit-| tee to assess the role of the tourist industry in the provin-| cial economy, The first meeting of the com- mittee wii! meet July 18 to con-| sider the appointments of con. | sultants from various branches) of the tourist industry, | of the tourist industry. i Members of the committee! are: William H. Cranston. of| Midland, chairman, Mrs, R. w.| Morningstor of Toronto, James) R. Meakes. of Sudbury, G. B.| Rumble of Orillia, R. N. Bubbs of Toronto and T. C. Clarke, executive officer in the pre. mier's department, who will! act as secretary. 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