THOUGHT FOR TODAY A lot of people who don't put anything into it are surprised to find life empty. She Oshawa Times -- WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy tonight and Satur- day with scattered showers or thunderstorms. 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. TWENTY PAGES VOL, 91--NO. 169 Missile Killer Test Accurate At 4500 Miles WASHINGTON (AP) -- Con-;Zeus did not actually strike its) sition of long standing: Until a gressional supporters of the ar-| warhead target, but came close complete series of tests has my's Nike Zeus anti - missile} enough to have destroyed it if/been conducted there should be missile today hailed its first suc-/armed, Neither the Nike Zeusjno start of production on hard- cessful test as a major weap-jnor the test warhead carried a/ware for the anti-missile sys- ons. breakthrough. But the de-|nuclear charge. ep ; mae fence department maintained a | The successful test rsday let's wait and see attitude. PROGRAM COSTLY |provided something tangi- Thursday's success was the) }) hich the United States Pentagon announced : ., ,\ble which the United States The -€| major development to date in a} 2 s Thursday that a 48 - foot Nike). hint has could use in answer to Soviet Zeus missile killer fired under |S°ven-year program which has! Premier Khrushchev's re.ce nt SS 4 controlled conditions from Kwa-|COSt about $1,200,000,000 and) that Russia had global claim pie pir wag > yo} ;- |could cost as much as $15,000,-| jalein in the mid-Pacific had in-| 999 999 if the Nike Zeus ever is tercepted a target vehicle lobbed) nit into production more than 4,500 miles from Van- . Pig a However, there was nothing to freuen Air Force Base in Ca-\vaicate that Defence Secretary i : |range missiles and anti-missiles which could hit a fly in the sky But the fact remained that | this was only one test, with others more severe to come. Norstad Resigns |McNamara had changed his po- The target vehicle launched by a an Atlas intercontinental ballis-| tic missile from the west coast had flown in high trajectory at speeds up to 16,000 miles an hour. | Sources uw" As NATO Leader WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-)of Gen, Maxwell D. Taylor, now Arab Airli a It ine jident Kennedy accepted today| presidential military adviser. D With |the resignation of Gen. Lauris; Norstad has held the supreme Norstad as supreme allied com-|commander position with head-| mander in Europe and chief of| quarters in Paris since 1956. He NATO forces. jis known as a strong advocate The White House had nothing!of increasing unity among the |to say immediately as to a suc-| Western European allies and be- BANGKOK (AP) -- A United Arab Airlines jet with 26 per- sons aboard crashed into a jun- gle-covered mountain in central | cessor. jtween them and the United Thailand Thursday night and an Reports were circulating that/ States. |Gen. Lyman L, Lemnitzer,) Word that the general has sub- American military search party} reported its first check today in- chairman of the U.S. joint/mitted his resignation came chiefs of staff, might replace|first from the newspaper Le Norstad. But there also was talk/ Monde in Paris. dicated there were no survivors. Three of the 18 passengers aboard the British-built Comet ES EES | 'CONTINUING CRISIS' IV were Americans--Mrs. Vir- Norstad said in a | Kennedy: "We live in a time of continu- ginia Gilbertson of Bradford Woods, Pittsburgh, Pa., her daughter Christine and her son Jagan Charges U K Delaying jing a vr for the oo {at least, there is no unusua . . | Eric. The American family was en letter to |street clashes erupted in Lima pressure on my office. I request} Independence route to the United States from Larry" letter, expressing regret at Norstad's decision to step out Officers of the Ghanian army study electronics equip- ment at the Canadian Army RCEME school at Kingston, HA s 3 Os Ont. The Ghanians are here | to discuss and observe Cana- dian training methods. Left to right are: Capt. A. M. Mac- NIANS STUDY HERE cai Bally Donald of the Canadian Army, Lt.-Col. M. Sanni-Thomas, Lt.- Col. C, C. Bruce. --CP Wirephoto | Pressure Still Rising Against Junta In Peru LIMA (AP)--Workers went on strike in the interior and more Thursday night as _ pressure mounted on Peru's military junta at home and abroad. The United States dealt the military chiefs a blow by cut- ting off millions of dollars in U.S. aid. Speculation arose that under the barrage of foreign official said 75 per cent of his firm's plantations were shut down Thursday by a waikout of workers loyal to victor Raul Haya. de la Torre, leftist but avowed anti - Communist presi- dential aspirant who was the principal target of the military takeover. Jack Duncan, executive -vice- try," said Duncan, referring to Haya's popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA). So far, he said, the walkouts have been quiet. For SASKATOON (CP) -- Hopes have brightened for a solution to Saskatchewan's medical care dispute. | Health Minister W. G. Davies} said in a television broadcast Thursday night the CCF gov- ernment will "bend every ef-/ Solution estimated 200 private practi- tioners have left or are plan- ning to leave the province since the act came into operation. GIVES FIGURES The Medical Care Insurance Commission, which administers olutions on the medical care in- surance plan today. In other developments Thurs- day, Dr. Dalgleish said the col- lege has started to assist doc- tors in need of money because of the boycott. Dr. A. D. Kelly, executive secretary of the Canadian Med- ical Association, has said the province's doctors have lost an estimated $600,000 in fees since the boycott began. fort" to reach agreement with) doctors boycotting the govern- ment's compulsory, prepaid medical care insurance plan. Dr. H. D. Dalgleish, president the government act, said 80 doc- tors, including 69 from Britain, are practising in the province for limited periods on contract. Another 12 British doctors hired of the Saskatchewan College of [Physicians and Surgeons, said talks between the two sides |'wouldn't be very long in com- jing' if the government accepts |proposals he outlined Wednes- |day. | He told the provincial CCF convention--to which the col- lege had asked to be invited-- doctors would go back to nor- |mal practice after the legisla- ture passes proposed amend- jments at a special session. Doctors withdrew normal ser- vice with the July 1 start of the government plan. About one-third of the college's 625 private practitioners are prov- iding free emergency servic at 41 of the province's 154 hos- pitals. EXPECTS BACKING Harry Link, president of the CCF Saskatchewan branch of the New Democratic Party, said he expected solid backing from convention delegates for the government's stand. The convention was to debate res- Workers in Lima generally ig- nored the anti - junta protest strike called by the APRA-dom- inated Peruvian Confederation of Workers. But violence flared at night as police clashed with hun- Three Injured by the commission are expected to arrive here by tonight. An unofficial boxscore com- piled following a college press conference and a commission statement indicated about 357 doctors are working or are on call, This figure includes 190 work- ing under the emergency ser- vice program, the 80 hired on short-term contracts, 21 doctors practising under the act and some 66 believed to be giving some kind of service outside the act. Dr. Dalgleish said the col- lege's total membership of about 900 included some 625 doctors who were in private practice before July 1. The bal- ance included 200 salaried doc- tors and about 75 who were re- tired, on graduate study or out of the province for other rea- sons. Dr. Peart said a "'conserva- tive estimate" was that the province might lose one-third of its .private practitioners. CONTINUE INTERVIEWS In London, Saskatchewan gov- ernment representatives con- tinued to interview applicants He said the medical profes- sion is prepared to subsidize doctors who need it. Dr. Dalgleish said '"'we've had some donations from friends, chiefly doctors," to help finance the program. Meanwhile, Dr. Arthur Peart of Toronto, assistant general secretary of the CMA, said an Gaming House Charge Laid At Whitby Park WHITBY (Staff) Three men have been charged with keeping a common gaming house following a police raid on the Peter March Midway show in Whitby last night. Charged and being held in custody are -- Robert Hunter, 18, of St. Catharines; Ralph W: Hazelton,. 19, of Elgin and William Hubbard, 29 of Toronto. The raid 'on the Centennial Park .show on Brock road south, sponsored by the Whitby Kinsmen Club, was led. by Sgt. for short-term practice in the Higher Hopes Of MD Fight therefore that I be relieved of! my assignment... on or about! Nov. 1, 1962." GEORGETOWN, British Gui-|, Kennedy replied in a "Dear ana (CP)--Premier Cheddi Ja Tokyo, where Mrs. Gilbertson's| gan Thursday night accused the) 4 Dennis, represents. the|British government of trying to Blaw - Knox Steel Company of|delay independence of British Pittsburgh. They had booked/Guiana by proposing to submit passage on the U.A.R. plane at the last minute when their flight president of W. R, Grace and province. It is also reported for permanent positions in the province. In Saskatoon, Dr. Richard Nolimeyer of Bozemand, Mont., of uniform after 36 years and also javishing high. praise. om-2- man he said has had military assignment of unaprallelled im- portance to the defence of the free world. John Anderson and 'thembers| the OPP §anti-gambling squad. Ten members of the Whitby police force assisted in the raid. Police seized a quantity ' of In Attempted Canteen Theft KINGSTON (CP)--Three per- | A ee ae \riticism the, iunta, mirht, install a figurehead civilian president, as the military did in Argen- tina. | An American sugar company Company, said workers.on #fsjdreds of students shouting '"'lib- firm's other plantations in the|erty! liberty!" rich northern farming area} The students and others gath- would strike today. ered in downtown streets and "That's heavy Aprista coun-/Plaza San Martin to taunt po- a report on the Georgetown riots to the United Nations. with another airline was can-| He said "'such delaying tactics celled. : can have fateful consequences" Three Asian newspaper men| and "further delay will not only were reported aboard the/create conditions for disorder| crashed Comet, on their way to| within this territory but will also Cairo as guests of the U.A.R.!cast doubts in the minds of the government. Several other To-|neople about the value of Com- kyo and Hong Kong newspaper men who were scheduled to monwealth connection." | make the trip to Cairo post- British Guiana became a self- overning colony last year. Dr.| poned their departure at the last f a 4 | minute. Jagan now demands complete} independence. The eight crew members were| Last February, violent demon-| U.S.R. nationals. The jetliner flight originated strations against some of the) in Tokyo with Cairo the final left-wing Dr. Jagan's tax poli- cies broke out and Georgetown destination after stopovers in Hong Kong, Bangkok, Bombay was severely 'damaged by fires. and Kuwait. Kennedy said he knew of no one who has been better able to bear the burdens and that Nor- stad had become "'a living sym- bol of the United States commit-| ment to the Allianee and of the strength of the Alliance itself."| Union Got Keys SUDBURY (CP) -- The tem- porary executive of Local 598 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.) almost suffered defeat in vic- tory here Thursday. A Toronto court order Wed- nesday instructed Sheriff Larry Lamoureux to give keys to the} j/union headquarters to newly | elected president Tom Taylor of |Local 598. Outgoing President Don Gillis had given the keys to the sheriff when his term ex- pired. | Sheriff Lamoureux handed) over a box of keys Thursday-- about 200 of them. | Then, with supporters looking) on, Mr. Taylor tried to get the! British troops had to be called in to quell the riots. UK. Doctors Kill Debate On Sask. BELFAST (CP)--The British Medical Association on a tech- nicality voted Thursday against) In his speech, he said he had a full-dress debate on the role/ng doubt that political expedi- of British doctors involved in| ency had played a major part in Northern Ireland capital Thurs-| day morning Foreign Minister Talks Prepared GENEVA (Reuters)--The Big Three foreign ministers headed} here today for top-level talks in minder from Russia that Berlin still is the big thorn in' Fast- West relations. The reminder came in the} form of renewed Soviet harass- ment of allied planes last Tues- day in the East-West corridors linking West Berlin and West} Germany. | The incident and other: devel-; opments relating to the divided city were expected to form the} core of discussions between) State Secretary Rusk of the} |United States, Foreign Minister] Gromyko of Russia and Foreign Secretary Lord Home of Brit- ain, | Fereign Minister Maurice} Couve de Murville of France } the dispute of Saskatchewanithe decision of the Saskatche- front door opened. He got it un-|also was scheduled to be on clear weapons tests and disarm- ament. The Signing of the Laotian ill Shut. Door Sti l 5 ut |the wake of another pointed re-jagreements was due to take o place Monday with each of the 14 countries represented at the Laotian conference taking part in the official ceremony. The agreéments have cli- maxed 15 months of off-and-on negotiations by the 14 states aimed at removing Laos from the cold war theatre. : Pass At Venus Seen a 30-Minute CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--The planet Venus beck- ons and the United States is ready to launch a Mariner I spacecraft in her direction to lice with shouts of "down with military dictatorship" and "we want freedom." Youths set a bus and several automobiles afire. Several store windows were smashed before merchants could slam down steel shutters. The demonstrations thus far |have not represented a serious challenge to the junta headed by 56-year-old Gen. Ricardo Perez odoy, commandr-in-chief of the military high command. But sources in and out of the government said the junta was feeling the pressure of the United States and other Amer- ican nations for a return to con- stitutional government. Mexico Thursday night joined |the growing list of nations which |have suspended relations with Peru. The others include Colom- jbia, Venezuela, Costa Rica, the /Dominican Republic and Hon |duras. New Babies Sold For Human Food HONOLULU (AP) -- Rev. sons were taken to hospital and a fourth to jail Thursday fol- lowing an attempted theft at the canteen in Lake Ontario Park. In satisfactory condition in hospital are Park Superinten- dent Hiram S. Revell, with a stab wound in the stomach; and Winston Townes and John Wis- kin, both about 20. The youths are suffering from head wounds. In jail is Alfred Pepiait, also about 20. The three youths, all from Kingston, have been charged with assault. When Mr. Revell questioned three youths at the canteen, they attacked him, police said one of them with a knife. Mr. Revell grabbed a wrench and struck two of the youths on cheir heads. Two broke away from him but he managed to hold the third. Mrs, Revell saw the fight from a distance and drove in a car towards the canteen. The two who broke away flagged her down and asked to be driven to hospital. She agreed, but said she would have to tell her hus-| band where she was going. | The youths became suspicious |ture of an international agree- yrs age there might be whole- recruitment of the Univer- sity of Saskatchwan medical faculty for a United States in- stitution. equipment and prizes from two of the midway booths. Both booths offered the same game, police stated. The booths raided were games in which the customer threw three balls at three cats on a shelf. Stuffed animals and dolls were awarded to prize- winners, Town of Whitby Police taking part in the raid were: Sgt. Ger- ald Robinson; Col. James Bar- ter; Cpl. Ernest Stoneman; Cpl. Morley Nicholson and Con- stables Kenneth Edwards, Rich- ard Sandford, Donald Williams, Fred Baker, Ernest Shepperd- son and James Wilson. the three-man executive at Montana State College / here to tour the universi j pital and college of mediCine: He said there has been.active consideration in the U.S. of a 'plan to build a three-state med- 7 tana and Wyoming and "the present situation gives us an ideal opportunity to bargain with the entire medical staff (at the university)." Dr. Nollmeyer, a membep-af : ical school serving Idaho, Mon- ~ aa Laos Deal May , Trigger Crisis .. The Communists have taken no trouble to hide plans that a campaign is about to begin to SAIGON (Reuters) -- Signa- ment on neighboring Laos is and jumped from the car. The { bring about South Viet Nam's "neutralization-" The campaign of stepped-up, major guerrilla activities was expected to be accompanied by international pressure. It will be aimed as much against the Kennedy administra. tion as against the regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem, ac- likely to trigger a crucial phase in the fight against Communist guerrillas, an informed consen- sus showed today. Many government officials and diplomats in Saigon think the signature of the Laotian agreement, expected to take place Monday in Geneva, will trigger a new effort to "'neutral- women chased them in the car, got in front of one and' forced him to stop. Then, pointing the Claude H. Curtis said Thursday the food shortage in Communist China is so acute that some of : the people are reported practis-|Cat_at him, she shouted: ing cannibalism. | 'Move and I'll kill you." Just returned from Asia, Cur-| The youth fell to the ground tis, president of Gospel Mis-|and Mrs, Revell jumped out and |space messenger on a 140-day|sions, told reporters: held him in an armlock until trip to the cloud - shrouded! "It is common practice in|police came. The third youth planet. {west China to sell newborn ba.| was arrested about a mile from meyeiciens who ane , com-)wan government. aged but it was hooked _ hand for the meeting, ostensibly pulsory, pre-paid medical msur ; im ithe inside. He tried another|called to sign final agree ts | The delegates received him| : S18 ao a ance, |door, but couldn't find the ke s p The annual congress of t he Warmly and afterwards one del.| (0 fit it, , ' div ™ apd meee United Kingdom's 67,000 doctors,|egate began collecting signa-| Other bunches of keys were} represented by 550 delegates,|tures for an expression of sym-| produced from the box and/expected to take part in the dis- defeated a Scottish motion|pathy irom the delegates to the|members circled the building,|/cussions among Rusk, Gromyko aimed at clearing the way for| Saskatchewan College of Physi-|trying various keys in various |and Home on Berlin and other such a debate. jcians and Surgeons. doors with no success. }major East-West issues like nu- A group of Scottish delegates) probe mysteries that have puz- \zled astronomers and scientists for centuries, Before dawn Saturday an At- jlas-Agena B is scheduled to jblaze skyward to start a 446- jpound gold - and - silver plated But Couve de Murville was not had sought the adoption of a mo- tion "deploring the intervention"| of British doctors in the dispute. | The Scots also wanted the BMA} to proclaim its official support! for the Saskatchewan doctors) who have curtailed their serv-| ices in protest against the pro-| vineial government's compuls-| ory medical care program. | But congress rules did not al- low the Seotich motion because TORONTO (CP)--The Ontariv/ate a certification vote cast be- it came too late for proper de-|/@bor Relations Board has re-|tween Feb. 27 and March 1 this) bate, and the conference re-| Served judgment concerning the year. Steel won the v fused to change them. bargaining agent for the 15,000/slim 15 votes. British doctors have become @MPloyees of the International) Malcolm Robb, counsel forjidence of fraud, and therefore|---------- Nickel Company of Canada Lim-|Mine-Mill, asked the board to/ ited at Sudbury. |declare the vote invalid because The last arguments on the|(1) 71 ballots counted were not! fights between two unions to| stamped by the returning officer| : represent the workers camejand (2) Steel violated the 72- PRESENTS VIEW some three years after the bat-|hour no-propaganda period. Shortly after the vote, Dr,|tle began. Mr. Robb said copies of the| Jack Anderson of Saskatoon, a| Fighting for the rights are the daily Sudbury Star and the past president of the Canadian|International Union of Mine, weekly Sudbury Sun, both car-| Medical Association, addressed! Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.)jrying advertisements by Steel, the congress 'and said he had|present bargaining agents, and/reached some readers during come here '"'to tell the Saskat-|the United Steelworkers ofthe silent period. He said leaf- chewan story." America (CLC), lets printed by Steelworkers! Dr: Anderson There was no immediate in-| reached some h | jdication as to when the board same period. }would hand down judgment. He maintained t hat because A side battle still to be de-'71 of the ballots were not . EMERGENCY jcided concerns an action by a) stamped by the returning officer PHONE NUMBERS |pro-Steel faction within Local 598/a cloud of doubt was cast over j of the Mine-Mill to gain control/the entire vote and asked the| of some $3,000,000 assets in|board to order a new vote to POLICE 725-1133 cash and p-merty. "disperse the clouds." FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 ASKS INY | ' DOESN'T AFFECT IT "99 6 f* Tyas HOSPITAL 723-2211 alid-icounsel, said courts had ruled! involved in the dispute since more than 50 of them have ac cepted temporary posts in Sas-| katchewan. flew to 'this o> "0° | Mine-M John Osler, Steelworkers' 'bor Rela oard Defers Ruling | On INCo Labor Fight e past inat failure to com-! ith administrative proce- in ply 3 Ww of a vote in the absence of ev-| the 71 unstamped ballots. were! not of prime importance. Referring to the silent period, / Mr. Osler said that fewer than/ three per cent of the Star's read-| ers received the newspaper by mail and that only a fraction of these would have had their pa-| per delivered during that pe-| riod. | He said copies of the Sun, dis-) tributed on Thursday--the silent} period became effective at Mid-) a week, Steel should not be responsi- ble for the few copies that re- }mained on the racks after the| immediate peried of the news- paper's impact. | The. leaflets, he said, were piaced in the mail three days prior to the start of the ban on| dissemination of propaganda. | If all goes right, Mariner I will sweep within 10,000 miles of Venus' sunlit side Dec. 8. In a brief 30-minute pass, snesitive instruments will reach their elec- tronic tingers into the planet's heavy cloud mantle and relay what they find to earth in a se- ries of blips and beeps. Scientists will be able to trans- late these radio signals into con- crete information about some ote by a/dure did not affect the outcome! of the secrets masked by Venus' cloud layers. rain Surgery For Boy TORONTO (CP) -- A 14-year- old American boy arrived here in an RCAF plane early today from North Bay. for emergency brain surgery Danny Mclntosh was picked up by a two-engined Expeditor Emergency B omes during the! night, Friday, Feb. 23--would be/aircraft at North Bay after the |available on the newsstands for, RCAF received a plea for a life-or-death flight. Dr. Fornier of Timiskaming where the boy is staying, had diagnosed spontaneous brain hemmorrhage and called the! RCAF. The s¢xpeditor left North Bay about 20 minutes after midnight| Thursday night. It arrived here an hour later. bies for human consumption." the park. | ize" South Viet Nam. cording te some government MONACO WATER GIRL Princess Caroline, five-year- Prince Rainier and Princess | Monte Carlo Monday. | old daughter of Monaco's Grace is shown in the pool at | officials. TRY APPLY PRESSURE These officials, speaking priv- ately, said they believed the Communists will aim by inflict- ing well-planned assaults on key targets at trying to force Wash- intgon to abandon its plan of keeping South Viet Nam in the anti-Communist camp. The lives of some U.S. milit- ary advisers in South Viet Nam may be taken during the new campaign, adding to the pres- sure, the officials said. Recent intelligence reports have indicated that the Commu- nist Viet Cong are preparing a fresh uffensive. ports of increased infiltration of troops, weapons and political agents into South Viet Nam in the last six weeks. . Many South Vietnamese lead- ers have been openly sceptical of the Laotian settlement, m°>- taining it already has resulted in reopening of the route for transference of arms from Com- munist North 'Viet Nam to the south through Laos These leaders are | virtually sure. the big guerrilla offensive will be aimed at the mountain- lous central provinces of Kontum |Quang Nam and Quang Ngai, where incidents already are be- ing reported. * ---AP Wirephoto There have been numerous re- «