Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jul 1962, p. 1

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Details Of Sklar L THOUGHT FOR TODAY Some women speak at the rate of 150 words a minute with gusts up to 180. Oshawa Time and Deal Examined -- Page 3 WEATHER REPORT Mainly sunny today and Satur- day. Slightly: cooler, winds light, VOL. 91--NO. 163 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Ottawa and for payment Post Office Department, of Postage in Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES Three Dead In Wake Of Storm side the car until police pried open a door. Chatham's two' hospitals were without electricity for an hour |because of power failures 'blamed on the storms. Luink Luinge, a farmer in the Beamsville area, was knocked unconscious when lightning: struck a barn in which he was storing hay. Lightning was blamed for a fire that did an estimated $50,- 000 damage to the St. Cathar- ines Curling Club. | Nine persons were injured at a Hamilton intersection in a two-car crash when a power failure shut off traffic signals. Canadian UAW Chief Raps Thatcher WINDSOR, Ont. (cP)--|~ George Burt, Canadian director eof the United Auto Workers TORONTO (CP)--A series of powerful thunderstorms that moved through parts of eastern and southern Ontario Thursday left a trail of death, injury and destruction. At least three persons, all young boys, died in mishaps at- tributed to the storms. Several others were injured by lightning bolts. Robert Oxtoby, 15, of Toronto, died today in hospital of injuries suffered when he and two friends were knocked uncon- scious as they stood under a tree during one of the storms. The others were only dazed. Christopher Bailey, 15, died in Ottawa when he and a young companion were also standing under a large tree seeking shel- ter from heavy rains. They Bailey boy and Randy Moore, also 15, were both struck by the bolt which accord- ing to an eyewitness pressed their bodies together for a few moments. Both boys then slumped to the ground. Bailey was dead, and Moore suffered minor burns. Louis Carneiro, 10, of Tor-| DON JACKSON MAKES DEBUT Palmer 'Breaks TROON, Scotland (AP) -- Arnold Palmer virtually wrapped up his second straight British Open golf championship today with a record-shattering performance which sent him nine strokes ahead of his nearest rival, Australia's Kel Nagle, with nine holes to play in the final round. After shooting a record five- under-par 67 in the morning round, the muscular pro from Latrobe, Pa., chopped three more strokes off par with a 33 the outgoing nine of the him, had a 37. Palmer needed only a 37 on the incoming nine to break all scoring records of this cham- Victory Record MD COMPLAINTS PROBE LAUNCHED MDs Not Backing Strike Said Being Harrassed REGINA (CP) -- The Sas- lafternoon, Nagle, playing with) jin 1958, and by Nagle, Andrews in 1960. by 500 yards, back in 1923. who rang up the score in beating Palmer by a stroke in the 100th anniversary British Open at St. Palmer is shooting some 20 strokes lower than the famed Walter Hagen did in finishing second over the same course, which since has been lengthened U.S. Prepared For Test-Ban Concessions katchewan government said Thursday an investigation will be made cf complaints against doctors "who are not supporting the walkout of the Saskatche- wan College of Physicians and Surgeons in the medical care dispute. The government said a one- man royal commission will in- vestigate complaints made against doctors recruited to help fill gaps left when most of the practising doctors withdrew service July 1 to protest against the CCF. governments compul- sory prepaid medical care plan. Fewer than 200 doctors have been providing emergency ser- vice at designated hospitals. The service is being provided by the college and co-ordinated by the Canadian Medical Asso- Premier Woodrow Lloyd said in a statement evidence has ac- cumulated that the college, res- ponsible for licensing doctors in the province, i sseeking to use policing powers as "an offen- sive weapon against doctors who are not supporting the col- leges walkout. The college said in a state- ment the charges are '"com- pletely without foundation." The college said under the provinces Medical Professions Act it is empowered to investi- gate any charges against its registrants and that it was the duty of the college registrar to do so. It denied any part in the re- cent dismissals from two hos- pitals of doctors who had been recruited from the United King- onto, died under the wheels Of/t,i5,° accused Saskatchewan| Don Jackson, World Cham-1 Shipstad and Johnson Ice | won him the world champion- |pionship, more than 100 years dom. It said they were recalled eee wece iro 'altitude shot a car when he raced across a crosswalk to get home and out of the rain. : Some tobacco crops in the Simcoe area of southwestern) Ontario were considered a total loss from hail damage. | Weather office officials said the storms, harbingers of cooler weather, first hit the Ottawa) area, then moved westward! along the north shore. of Lake} Ontario, Elsewhere in the prov-/ ince there was little or no rain. Winds reached 52 miles an hour at Malton weajher office 8 F in some parts of the province. At Ottawa, two storms came half an hour apart and dropped 1.8 inches of rain in a four-hour period. Three Ottawans besides the Bailey boy were struck by lightning but none was severely injured, Several cars were flattened| by falling trees and poles. At Brantford, heavy rain flooded underpasses and low-| lying streets, tying up traffic, while at Chatham two elderly persons had a lucky escape when a tree crashed on their moving car. | John Teeple, 81, and Mrs. | Laura Cantlay were trapped in-! A-Test Series WASHINGTON (AP United States gover ended nucledr tes Christmas Island Pacific after 26 2% months. But it was i plosions in cated that high- in the Johnston Island area,.Were still being con- my ate" Only one of the thrée' planned tests has been made, and that after two abor- tive attempts because of me- chanical bugs. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion said that at midnight Ha- waii time Thursday night (6) a.m. EDT today), the Christ-| mas Island test area set up) April 4 would be "dis - estab-| lished.' This lifts the ban on! U.S. citiezns or those under) | af ores were higher res care dispute. Mr. Burt said the doctors' partial withdrawal of services was being prolonged by Mr. Thatcher's actions and by at- tempts by the Keep Our Doc- tors Committee to recruit "re- actionary elements in the United States." "The doctors are in clear de- fiance of the law," he. said. "They age aided Pi abetted by both the Liberal op- and the KOD commit- e which . . . is seeking to enlist the support of two of the foremost reactionary members of the U.S. Congress, Senator James O. Eastland and Repre- sentative Francis E. Walter, chairman of the notorious House UN-American activities committee." |Liberal Leader Ross Thatcher| pion Figure Skater from Osh- Thursday of trying to make po-| awa is shown litical capital out of the medi-| making his professionl debut with the Follies in San _ Francisco, Calif., last night. Jackson re- peated the performance that ship at Prague, Czechoslova- kia. --(AP Wirephoto) House Allows Kennedy To Aid Red Countries WASHINGTON (AP) -- 'The House' of Representatives has voted to allow President Ken. nedy to aid Communist coun- tries if he sees a chance to pry them from Kremlin domina- tion. After giving the president this major victory Thursday the |House went on to pass a_ bill 'authorizing him to spend $4,- Austerity Plan Talks Deferred GENEVA (Reuters) -- The council of the General Agree- nt on Tariffs and Trade has referred consideration of Can- adas new austerity measures to the next session of its contract- ing parties in October. A GATT communique Thurs-; ,|day said Canada explained the) the S/council the government is work- new measures and told ing on longer-term measures of a positive and constructive na- ture for improving Canadas ex- ternal financial position. "The council agreed that the matter was important and war- ranted a further comprehensive examination at the 20th session of the contracting parties, which is scheduled to' take place in the fairly near future,' communique said. "It was agreed that the In- ternational Monetary Fund should be invited to consult again with the contracting par- ties in this connection. "The council considered that, in the light -of the circum- the} whatever action might be re- quired."' Canadas chief representative at the meeting was James F. Grandy, director of interna- jtional economic relations in the finance department. Several member countries ex- pressed concern at the private council meeting over what they called Canada's breach of GATT rules by. extra import duties under its new austerity program. (In Ottawa, a finance depart- ment official said the tempor- ary tariff charges are not de- signed to protect Canadian in- dustry. They were designed to conserve Canadas foreign ex- change position and raise new government revenue. (He said the new surcharges jare less harmful to Canada's trading partners than other measures open to Canada and took issue with reports that jsome countries had described the surcharges as a breach of GATT rules. The Canadian methods had been used in the American jurisdiction from en-|stances at that time, the con-jpast by a number of smaller tering the area. itracting parties might take| countries.) Algerian Split Seems | Wider After Speeches LATE NEWS FLASHES ALGIERS (Reuters) -- The)mountain split in Algerian nationalist' giers, leadership apparently persisted) stronghold of Belkacem Kri today after speeches Thursday staunch night by the leaders of the two!one of region east of Al- This is considered a m, a "Ben Kheddist" and the five ministers at the |give way before the majority," japparently meaning that the |Ben Khedda forces must yield. The dissident vice - premier called for "sacred unity" and (668,500,000 for military aid bas | economic assigjance thi yéar. The roll-call vofe was 250 to 164. Kennedy did/ not get every- thing he wanted from the House and got, in fact, some things he'd rather not have. The authorization is $210-000,- 000 below his original request and it carries two amendments he considers noxious: A ban on loans or grants to the United Nations until other members pay their back assess- ments; a requirement that he stop aid to nations that seize American property. unless ap- propriate steps are taken within six months to make fair pay- ment. The shape the foreign aid |measure finally will take de- pends on how a Senate-House conference committee resolves the House version and one passed earlier by the Senate. The tough fight on money will jcome later in the session when appropriations bills to provide foreign. aid money are debated and voted on by both chambers. In its bill the Senate voted to authorize foreign aid spending | Lottery Counts Face Moriarty JERSEY CITY, N..J (AP)-- Joseph (Newsboy) Moriarty, named by police as owner of a $2,590,000 gambling hoard, was| indicted Thursday on 44 counts} of lottery operation. | The 52-year-old gambler has maintained silence in his Tren- ton prison cell about the big money caches. | But the Hudson County grand |jury linked a second find--$168,- /675. directly to Moriarty by |charging him with engaging in a lottery and having lottery slips in his possession at a gar- age where the second cache [Was found July 6. | of $4,662,000,000--$6,500.000 less} than thé House. 'Phe Senate also acted contrary to Kennedy's wishes 'by barring all assistance to Communist countries with the exception of surplus food. If the House approach pre- vails in conference the oresi- dent could provide aid to Yu- goslavia and Poland under broad guidelines. These include a presidential finding that the aid would advance U.S. secur- ity,.that the aided country is not dominated by international jcommunism and that the help would promote the -independ- ence of the assisted state. old. | A final round 70 would give him a score of 277, not only a | second for the Old Troon course |but also a record for the cham- |pionship which has been won by jsuch immortals as Bob Jones, | Walter Hagen, Gene Sarazen jand Ben Hogan. | Palnfer was giving the record | gallery of 30,000 one of the most overpowering displays ever seen in British golf. Through 63 holes, the 32-year- old champion from the mining areas of western Pennsylvania was 12 under par. ' His sensational string of bird- ies--four out of six holes on the finishing holes of the morning round after he had temporarily dropped back of Nagle--sent the gallery into wild ecstacy. The crowd stampeded over the old Troon course like a herd of buffaloes, refusing to be re- strained by ropes or marshals. Palmer asked officials to try to restrain the unruly crowd. The best 72-hole score ever shot in the British Open was 278, shared by Bobby Thomson of Australia, who registered it at Royal Lytham and St. Anne's COMPLICATIONS MOUNT Restful Night For Chu LONDON (AP)--Sir Winston Churchill, beset by mounting complications in his fight to re- cover from a thigh fracture, "had a comfortable night and all is .well,' a hospital source said today. Doctors at Middlesex Hospital planned to issue a medical bul- letin later in the day after an- other examination of the 87- year-old war-time prime minis- tet. They were plainly worried Thursday when they announced Churchill had come down with a bronchial infection and fever. His recovery already had been complicated by a vein inflam- mation and a blood clot in the left leg he injured in a fall a a Monte Carlo hotel June 28. Word of the latest complica- tion came in an unscheduled mid-afternoon medical bulletin. It said that in the prévious 24 'Scattered Forest Fires Discovered MANIWAKI, Que. (CP) -- nine widely scattered forest plane operated by the Canad area by electrical storms Wednesday. Scout planes have discovered fires believed caused in this A water-dropping ian International Paper Com- rival factions. premier's side Thursday night.|/pledged security for Jews and Speaking to an enthusiastic! The premier repeated his ear-|Europeans as laid down in the crowd of 100,000 in eastern Al-|lier assurances that Europeans|Franco - Algerian agreements geria, Premier Ben Youssef/have a place in an independent} signed in March ending the 'Ben Khedda appealed for unity| Algeria. He described the pres-|seven-year Moslem nationalist) to build a democratic and socialient as "only a stage, a step|insurrection. state. toward the aims of the revolu-| Despite the apparent clash He spoke in the town of Tizi/tion." jamong the leaders, Algerian of- Ouzou, capital of the Kabylia} "Our aim," he said, "is the|ficials and the man in the street formation of a state for the ben-| both rejected any idea of armed! tefit of the people." force to back the split. eae . Authoritative sources in Al- BEN BELLA. DEFIANT giers said Thursday night that But Ben Khedda's rival, Vice-|the councils of the country's six | Premier Mohammed Ben Bella,|willayas, (military districts) | speaking to a large crowd in the| which at present hold effective western port city of Oran,| power in Algeria, already had| vowed that "the army will de-|secret contacts last week and} feat the revolutionary forces."|were expected to meet again) | "The minority," he told the|soon in efforts to form a united iwildly cheering crowd, "mbat front before Aug. 12 elections. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 pany is keeping the minor blazes in check. Britain, $. America Trade Urged LONDON (AP) -- Prince Philip called today for more trade between Britain and South America. Philip, who returned last April from a tour of 11 Latin American coun- tries, told British and South American business men: 'A serious criticism is that the economic policies pursued by most of: the South American countries discourage trade and commerce with this country." Short-Term Prison Planned HANOVER, Ont. (CP) -- A prison to ac¢ommodate 450 short-term penitentiary prisoners will be constructed five miles west of Flesherton between Ceylon and Princeville, Eric Winkler, Progressive Conservative member of Parlia- ment for Grey Bruce, told a press conference here Thurs- day night, rchill hours Churchill "had a slight rise in temperature due to bron- some decrease of the leg. orate, not even to say how high Churchill's temperature had risen.. But a hospital source noted that the bronchial infec- tion was "of sufficient conse- quence for the doctors to issue a bulletin 'after previous plan- ning not to do so." Red Security Guards Grab Banners ; MOSCOW (AP) Russian |security men seized "ban the |bomb" banners today when two jdozen young Westerners un- \furled them in Red Square. | The demonstrators, mostly \Britons with a sprinkling of |Americans and Scandinavians, jhad been warned earlier they | would be deported if they went through with their plans to de- nounce nuclear testing just be- neath the Kremlin walls. | The Russians told the West- lerners they were being "'provo- cative."' Leaders of the demonstration told reporters earlier they had jbeen informed by Alexander |Korneichuk, Soviet author and ja leader of the 'Soviet-spon- | sored peace congress: now going jon in the Kremlin: , | "The congress was held here under the condition that there would be free speech inside the hall but no demonstrations out-} \side."" Philip Seed, 32, a British so- cial worker, said his group had joffered to give up early plans jto demonstrate in front of the} U.S. embassy, if only they could) stand silently in Red Square. This was refused, he said. chial infection.' There had been| > in th swelling|& The doctors declined to elab-|@ WASHINGTON (CP) --The |United States has indicated |Teadiness to offer some new jconcessions to break a dead- lock on a long-sought nuclear test ban treaty and has sug- |gested Russia now should offer |some concessions of her own. State Secretary Rusk told a |press conference Thursday pre- \liminary U.S. reports of im- |Proved seismic detection tech- niques may reduce the number jof control posts and on-site in- spections required to make a permanent ban work. But the improvements won't |provide a complete substitution |for inspection and controls, he jsaid, and a treaty won't be at- tainable if Russia continues to reject all Western demands for! some inspection of her territory. | .The U.S. and Britain have |proposed a: detection system of DUNLOP SIGNS UNION CONTRACT WHITBY (Staff) -- Dunlop Canada Limited and Local 494 of the United Rubber Workers of America, CLC, signed an agreement Thurs- day providing for a 5\%4- cent-an-hour package in- crease, In the one-year contract, retroactive to May 31, hougly rated employees were given a five-cent-an> hour increase. Incentive paid employees received a 3%4-cent-an-hour boost and skilled tradesmen received nine cents. |180 world control posts includ- jing about 30 in Russia. They at the request of the local hos- pital boards, The college confirmed that registrar Dr. George Peacock investigated the work of Dr. Gerhard Beck of Jacksonville, Fla., who flew to Saskatchewan after the doctors withdrew nor- mal services. He has been working as an intern on an 18 - hour - a - day basis at the Leader, Sask., hos- pital. A college spokesman refused to. comment on the matter and said its investigation is contin- uing. Deputy Premier J .H. Brockel- bank told a press conference the government has advised the Sask ewan Hospital Associa- tion it is disturbed by the dis- missals and complaints about doctors brought in to help pro- vide medical services. jalso have requested that Russia jallow between 12 and 20 annual jinspections of her territery to make sure suspicious explosions are not nuclear blasts. Russia jhas rejected this saying the West merely wants to spy: on |Soviet military installations. Shortly after meeting with re- porters, Rusk conferred with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Do- brynin for 1% hours on disarm- ament and Berlin but informed quarters said later "the situa- tion remains unchanged." Nuclear test ban treaty talks likely will form a vital part of the general disarmament nego- tiations to be resumed at Ge- neva Monday. j Ss t NEW YORK (AP) -- Britain umped the gun Thursday night and put through the first trans- atlantic telephone call via Tel- tar. The space commmunica- ions satellite thus generated an out-of-this-world rivalry be- tween French. the English and the France made an unscheduled Macel Wilson, of Honolulu, Hawaii, wears the crown of Miss U.S.A. after winning the title last night at the Muss Universe Beauty Pageant. She "MISS U.S.A. _ {agreement provided that U.K. Joins Fray For Telstar Use start on transatlantic'telecast- ing Wednesday night. Britain called it a "clear breach of faith' and, in apparent retalia- tion, beat the French to the draw on international phone calls via space. The call between scientists in Britain and the United States lasted about 10 minutes and concerned mainly technical matters, A spokesman for the British post office, which controls broadcasting in England, termed the experiment a suc- cess. The London spokesman said the test "suggests that tele- phonic speech circuits of first- class quality will be possible via satellites.' French spokesmen denied they broke an agreement which called for the first European television program to be re- ceived in the U.S. July 23. Cit- ing a technicality, they said the the joint European telecast would be live, while theirs was per- recorded. The French program included songs by actor Yes Montand and other entertainecs. It wws seen in American homes, as was a_ live British telecast |bounced off the satellite a few WINNER will represent the United States in the Miss Universe semi-finals tonight competing against contestants from all parts of the world. --(AP Wirephoto) s\The first s\tween the United ; |France. hours later, 'The European Broadcasting §/Union, in a communique issued # |in Geneva, said the French tele- cast violated the international agreement "that no TV mate- rial of entertainment or inform- ative character be transmitted in advance of the joint Euro- vision project. . Thursday night the British caught the French off guard. formal transatlantic telephone call via Telstar had been scheduled for tonight be- States and Instead, the British completed the first such call. It was placed by scientists at the Goon- hilly Downs tracking station in Cornwall, to fellow engineers at American Telephone and Teie- graph Companys ground sta- tion at Andover, Me. "A. T. and T. designed and built the 170-pound Telstar at a cost of $50,000,000, and paid the government nearly $4,000,000 to lunch it from Cape Canaveral Tuesday. dn

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