Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Jul 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The hotdog is the only kind of dog that feeds the hand that bites it. The Oshawa Times Price Not Over WEATHER REPORT Clearing tonight. Thursday mainly sunny, not much change in temperature. "OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1962 Authorized os Second Ottawa and for payment Class Mail Feet Office Department, Postage in Cash. FORTY PAGES VOL, 91--NO. 173 Deputy remiuer 10 Cents Per Copy e Jury Blames 5 Drownings | Claims Control Over Al TIARET, Algeria -- Dissi-)named chairman of the polit- dent deputy Premier Ahmed|ical bureau and possibly take on Ben Bella rode into Tiaret to-|the premiership as well, day with a show of military) Ben Bella's imminent take- might and told cheering crowds! over of power raised the pros- that he and his supporters! nect of strife in the newly inde- have taken over power in Al-|nendent nation with reports of geria. |mounting restlessness among Moslem troops supporting Ben'herber tribesmen. Bella meanwhile were reported!' pivairy between Algerias Ar- to have taken over Constantine) .5,. and the Berber minority has in eastern Algeria and to have been long - standing. and the arrested a loyalist cabinet miN-| tribesmen particularly hate Ben ister. Bella Usually well-informed Nation- x ° alist sources in Algiers gave the| In Paris, a French govern- report to Reuters news agency|ment spokesman said France as Ben Bella made hiS trium-|Will "intervene to protect her phal entry into Tiaret, a typic-| nationals' if the confused situa- ally Moslem town of about 40,-|tion in Algeria deteriorates in 000 on the fringe of the Sahara|the power struggle between Ben Desert in West-Central Algeria.| Bella and Ben Khedda. Another report said the Con- stantine Ben Bellists had kid-| erians napped a top military man also responsible to provisional gov- ernment Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khedda, Ben Bella's adver- sary in the current power strug- gle. The Algiers sources said the Ben Bellist forces, including troops formerly stationed in Tu-| nisia, took command of Cons- tantine today after a night of confusion there during which three persons were killed and) several wounded by gunfire. | The arrested cabinet minister| loyal to Ben Khedda was iden- tified as Minister of State Lakh-| dar Ben Tubbail. Ben Bella declared in a brief speech that he and other mem-) bers of his political bureau} "have given ourselves author-! ity.' "The country is going to re- alize an era of peace, prosper- ity and fraternity. I want to make this clear to everyone, in- ns, Ben Kh@d@a, who favors closer ties with France than Ben Bella wants, yielded to the po- litical bureau in face of threats of revolt by Ben Bella's army- backed leftist faction. The radical deputy premier|toward the deep end. pledged: PET PACHYDERM 'PACKS ITIN' | SKEGNESS, England (AP) A four-ton elephant named Gertie was drowned here Tuesday when she went for a dip in a holiday camp swim- ming pool. Gertie, mascot of the camp, suddenly broke loose from her trainer during a lunch - time stroll. She headed straight for the water Holidaymakers thought it was a joke as the 28-year-old elephant jumped into the shal- low end of the pool, empty of bathers at the time. | Gertie thrashed about, blow- | ing fountains of water over | herself with her trunk. Then she trundled off In eight feet of water she | suddenly keeled over and went | under. And that was the end | of Gertie. A crane took four hours to | get her body out of the pool. Said trainer Steve Stephens: "She 'was determined to get into the water. There was no holding her. I believe she must have had attack." | a heart | Steelworkers of America (CLC) | Ben Bella drove here by way 'of Oran from his temporary |headquarters in Tlemcen in far western Algeria to attend a |meeting of his new political bu- reau with which he hopes to rule the country. Ben Bella was accompanied iad jby three other members of the) sevenman bureau, Hadj Ben) |Alla, Mohammed Khider and Mohamedi Said, as. well as for-| mer insurgent premier Ferhat Abbas. | He also was accompanied by) \Col. Houari Boumedienne, | |whom . Premier |Ben 'Khedda tried unsuccess-| |fully a month ago to dismiss jas chief of staff of the Algerian! } Ben Youssef} { Shegeittets oe |Liberation Army ALN), » ALN troops armed with ma-| |chine-guns lined the flag - be-| decked streets and hundreds of cheering Algerians stood in boil- ing sunshine as Ben Bella's 25- car motorcade drove to the lo- cal prefecture building. Two French officers and local Alge- rian authorities greeted him. MR. X I Alan Pomeranz, 33, left, the Mr- X in the $1.3 million theft of blue chip stocks from the Wall street vaults of Bache and Co., is shown yesterday | at police station in New York where he was booked on a charge of criminally receiving stolen property. With him is oerecroe Bernard Herzfeld. | } Pomeranz, described as the | PORT ROWAN, Ont, (CP)-- A coroners jury ruled the drowning of Robert Ellis, 9, of Hamilton was due to parental neglect. : The jury, after hearing 24 N CUSTODY man who contracted to dis- pose of the Bache loot, sur- rendered earlier to the dis- trict attorney. (AP Wirephoto) Tuesday night, he and his fol- lowers got a heroes 'welcome in Oran. Ben Bella and his entourage of some 25 cars, including sen- ior Officers of "the liberation army, were greeted in Oran as conquering heroes. Ben Bella was reported plan- ning to go no further east than Orleansville, midway between Oran and the Algiers base of the provisional government of Ben Youssef Ben Khedda, with whom Ben Bella is feuding. Union Gives Up Battle For Falconbridge -- TORONTO (CP)--The United has given up its fight to wrest U.S. Flight Engineers Settle Labor Dispute WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pan American World Airways and its flight engineers settled their labor dispute today on terms proposed by Labor Secretary Goldberg. The agreement,announced by Goldberg following a six-hour negotiating session, calls for binding arbitration of economic issues and settlement of the jet crew problem along lines he proposed earlier in the week, To a great extent, the Flight |Engineers International Associ- ation will be getting what it, wanted. When the airlines cut their jet crews to three men Ben Bella is expected to be| ;control of employees of Falcon- bridge Nickel Company, Sud- Two Fined After Election Uproar SUDBURY (CP) Magis-| Magistrate Falzetta dismissed trate Anthony Falzetta has|charges creating a distur- fined two men on charges aris-/bance against Andre Duguay of ing from a disturbance in|/Larchwood, Joseph .Mullaly of nearby Chelmsford during a|Dowling 'Township, Victor Bur- visit June 2 to Nickel Belt rid-\deny of Val Caron, John Lev- ing by Prime Minister Diefen-|esque of Chelmsford and Sud- baker in his federal election bury residents William Braun,| campaign. : Joseph McIntaggart and Harold Charges against seven other/Kostka. persons were dismissed, two were withdrawn by the Crown, CHARGES WITHDRAWN one case was adjourned and} The Crown withdrew similar two others. were remanded un-|charges against David Williams til Aug. 21, The court sat fromjof Sudbury and Mrs. Peggy 10 a.m. until 11:30 p.m. and/Bertrand of Chelmsford. Neil heard 140,000 words in evi-) dence. Michael Kuc of Sudbury Tues- Groves of Sudbury and Stanley) McLean of Chelmsford were) remanded until Aug. 21. on| bury, from: its bitter rival, the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.). William Mahoney, Steel's na- tional director for Canada, said in a statement to the press to- |day the union admits that some | of the application cards it sub- jmitted for a certification vote) were forged. | ifr. Mahoney said: "Our union's application, filed at the end of February, was made in good faith. We be- j\lieved we had bona fide appli- }cations representing more than 145 per cent of the employees |required to secure a vote." REVIEWS EVIDENCE Mr. Mahony said that upon) review of evidence before the) board, "it is now clear to us| that some of the applications) filed by our staff bear simulated signatures of employees." "The evidence of handwriting experts retained by ourselves} from four, currently employed engineers will have priority for the third spot. Even as the negotiators were meeting, a new strike threat was posed by the Transport Workers Union against Pan American and Northeast Air- lines. ~ COULD HAVE BEARING The Pan American settlement had no direct relation to 'the engineers 33 - day - long strike against Eastern Airlines. But since the terms were identical to those rejected for the sec- ond time Tuesday by Eastern after acceptance by the union, it appeared the agreement might have a bearing on the Eastern strike. Goldberg said Allied Commander Okayed By Frenc PARIS (Reuters) -- The that Eastern had considered his proposals acceptable earlier in the dis- pute. A labor department spokesman said no new meet- ings were planned in the East- ern strike, adding "the next move is up to them. Easterns offer to hire its 575 engineers on an individual basis expired at midnight. The offer had been. accompanied by the threat that engineers not report- ing for work would lose their Fleming Denies Civil Servants Vi s s ' ictimized | OTTAWA (CP)--Finance Min- ister Fleming today denied cri- epi that the government de- jcision to defer consideration of pay increases for 50,000 federal civil servants makes its em- ployees the victims of political | football. | | He made the statement to re-| |porters as he arrived at Prime Minister Diefenbaker's resi- dence to attend a regular weekly cabinet meeting. The meeting, attended by Mr. Diefenbaker and 15 cabinet min- jisters, is being held at 24 Sus- |sex Drive where the prime min. jister is confined because of a fractured bone in his left an- kle. Mr. Fleming was asked to comment on a statement in Vic- 'toria by G, K. Sammon, presi- dent of the National Association rights to jet flight engineer jobs. The company did not say how many had returned. Eastern resumed limited op- erations Monday. Both Pan American and East- ern went on strike June 23. But within four hours Pan Ameri- can, the biggest United States overseas carrier, had obiained a federal court restraining or- der against the union. The or- der later was extended to Aug. 1 "Eastern made no attempt to get a legal ban or postpone- ment of the strike. JET CREW IS ISSUE Throughout the dispute, and in similar negotiations with Trens World Airlines and Amer- ican Airlines, the jet crew issue has been foremost. The airlines are expected to announce shortly reduction of jet cockpit crews to three from four. The flight engineers want the third job. The-airlines want men trained as pilots to hold it. Goldbergs proposal, to which Pan American and the union agreed, was: Engineers currently working for the ainline would get the job, until attrition gradually cuts their ranks, at which time pilot- trained men also would be em- ployed in the third slot. The en- gineers agree to take pilot train- ing, and give up their demand that engineers be qualified me- check the condition of the swim- |ming area before allowing him \to go to the beach unattended. witnesses, said Tuesday the boys parents had neglected to The Ellis boy, along with four other Hamilton children, was drowned off Long Point Beach July 10. The jury recommended steps under such conditions children at the beach would be at the mercy of the waves, currents and a severe undertow. In his summation the chief coroner said the Ontario de- partment of lands and forests had been dragged into the case although the drownings appar- ently took place on a beach out- side the department's jurisdic- tion. "They should not be used as a goat,"' he said. "Lifesaving is only an incidental duty for de- n Parents partment employees." Rather, he said, the depart- ment should be complimented. They made equipment and per- sonnel available and helped owt in every manner possible.' Mr, Arthur Ellis told the jury his son, Robert, had been sched- uled to start swimming lessons the day after he was drowned. "Normally, he wouldn't go over his waist," he said. "He wasn't chicken, but he had been told. I had taught him to be careful." to warn persons in beach areas of the danger of swimming un- der adverse weather. It recommended warning flags be flown to designate swimming conditions and that legislation be introduced to pro- mote safe bathing practices. The new chief coroner of On- \tario, Dr. M. V. Cotnam, told) the jury that its findings would) apply to the four other children) drowned--Harvia Williams, 9, his sisters Catharine, 8, and Jayne, 11, and their cousin, Kenneth Valchuk, 10. CITES NEGLECT Dr. Cotnam told the jurors be- fore they retired that the field of public swimming was ne- glected in provincial regula- tions. "TI guarantee that if you bring in reasonable things we will get something done.' | Legislation recommended by \the jury included a_ proposal that persons in authority at beaches be given power to en- force regulations. Dr. Cotnam said earlier that lifeguards have no right in law to enforce safety measures. "In 'the final analysis this thing boils down to a lack of parental supervision," Dr. Cot- nam said. The coroner said he was not condemning the parents of the drowned children. 'I wouldn't want to bring any extra heart- ache or pain to them. It could happen to any one of us if we slip for a moment." Witnesses said that at the time of the drownings a 17- mile - an - hour southwest wind faded blowing. Experts said that | Guards Open Fire On East Germans BERLIN (Reuters). -- East German border guards today opened fire on three fleeing East Germans, killing or wound- ing one of them. Only one of the three, a 24- year - old man, managed to reach West Berlin after climb- ing several barbed wire fences. The other two were arrested by Communist guards, and one was hit by a bullet, the successful chanics. escapee said. Negroes May Halt Congo UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Acting Secretary - General U Thant has asked the UN advis- ory committee--of which Can- ada is a member--whether mil- itary force should be used as a last resort to end the secession of The Congo's Katanga prov- ince. Committee members said Thant asked the 19-nation group during a private meeting Tues- day their opinion of a military operation if economic pressure cannot end President. Moise Tshombe's defiance of the cen- tral Congo government. Thant told a press conference in London July 7 that the United Nations was planning new action against mineral: rich Katanga. But he added: . "It has never been my inten- tion--and never will be my in- tention--to use any military ini- tiative." He noted that UN troops had authority to fight only in self- defence. FIGHT TO STANDSTILL Katangan troops fought UN forces to a standstill last Sep- tember. New fighting broke out in December and the UN won control of the centre of Elisa- bethville, Katanga's capital. Since then the United Nations has tried to negotiate a settle- ment between Tshombe and Premier Cyrille Adoula of the central government. Negotia- tions were broken off in June, and Tshombe told a press con- ference Monday he no longer considers Adoula a "valid spokesman'"' for the central gov- ernment. Members of The Congo com- mittee said Thant also raised U Thant Seeks Advice the possibility of an economic blockage against Katanga and asked whether the committee thought the security council should be called soon to con- sider the situation. Informants said the commit- tee promised to act on the sug- gestions by next Tuesday, giv- ing members time to consult their governments, who have or once had troops in The Congo force. They said Thant told the group the United Nations is spending so much money on its Congo operation that by early 1963 even the proceeds of the $200,000,000 emergency bond is- sue would be used up. State Medicine 'Inevitable' BELFAST (AP) -- The pres!i- dent of the British Medical As- sociation said Tuesday~ night that some form of state - run medicine is inevitable in Can- ada and the United States. Speaking at the association's annual convention dinner, Dr. Ian Fraser said Saskatchewan's compulsory government insur- ance plan pointed the way to the future for North America. "There is simply no alterna. tive to state medicine in Sas- katchewan, I believe, and in America either, in the fairly near future," Fraser said. He added that people simply cannot afford to carry on with the systems now in operation and have to have some form of state service. AONE ne day was fined $50 for assaulting/charges of creating a distur-| establishes that our staff|French cabinet today gave its|o¢ pe i ont bis + Of shes noe) | partment of Veterans Af. Don gory ghee ah al bance. lrepresentatives had no connec-| approval to the nomination of|rairs Employees, that civil ser. ative ce gph ad ale jail Gillis) _1€ magistrate reserved deci-|tion with the simulation." |U.S. Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer @S/vants are victims of political was peak melled-and struck with|sion until Aug. 21 on an argu-| Mr. Mahoney said Steel staff|allied supreme commander in foothall being played in Ottawa. placard sticks. Clarance A.|Mment over the wording of a received cards from many peo-| Europe. TO ent coun.| The finance minister said the Swift of Sudbury was fined $25 Charge against Robert Miller of|Ple under difficult preys 4 Pape He yyy decision to defer consideration a charge of creating a dis-\Chelmsford. The wording re- and accepted them at their face|cil meanwhile held its weekly) : 3 to ance Bitside the Chelms- (ferred to use of "abusive lang-| value. |meeting but the question of Gen.jof pay increases was "a gov- are Tad hall where the Con-|uage" and Mr. Sopha said this| He said Steel unquestionably|Lauris Norstad's replacement/ernment decision." o ' has the support of a '"very|did not come up. Sources said) «1 fai) to see what relevance Racial Protests ALBANY, Ga. (AP) -- Negro|integration leader who preaches leaders weighed today a possi-/non-violence and passive resist- ble suspension of mass racialiance in the Negro's fight for demonstrations after violence/equal rights, termed the inci- climaxed a protest march indent regrettable. He said he i arty rally was held.|Was not contained in the. rele- widihcba cael . vant section of the Criminal PLEAD NOT GUILTY ------_--_(Code. The Crown sought to Lawyer Elmer Sopha, Liberal/change the words to "'insulting member of the Ontario Legisla- Janguage." iz large proportion" bridge workers" and the union is confident it could win,a certi- fication vote."" H of Falcon-|Lemnitzer's nomination will be|<uch assertions have to the this uneasy southwest Georgia|/would halt demonstrations tem- considered by the council when |facts," he said. all 15 member countries have) 47. meming said the decision iews. ; : made known their vie taken was in keeping with other ture for Sudbury, appeared for, the defendants, all of whom) pleaded not guilty. Crown At-| torney A. G. Burbidge prose-| cuted. Mr. Sopha argued that the) section of the Criminal Code un-| der which the defendants were) accused was never intended to) apply to a political meeting. | 'It runs smack into the Bill) of Rights, which gives freedom of assembly." Mr. Burbidge replied in ref- SASKATOON (CP) -- Doctors, that is the way protests are to profession ity, we might as well abolish| ment's medical care insurance) the vote." : " : Mr. Sopha suggested during|program in North America. the trial of Swift, held first, that' The saskatchewan College o convictions might be appealed physicians and Surgeons said to higher courts. When Mr. Bur-|moct doctors who boycotted the bidge expressed concern that prepaid medical insurance plan evidence in the first case toOk/ since it went into effec tJuly 1 all day, Mr. Sopha said evi-|wili be back at work by the end dence should be recorded in alllo¢ tha week. the cases because "I have no idea which case will go to the Supreme Court of Canada." their offices. But for the sake jof uniformity the college said Iboycott today \charging for services. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 jprovided free emergency med- jical treatment at 41 of the prov- ince's 154 hospitals. Many of these doctors will take a few sormal practice. f 4 MDs Reopen Offices After Ending Boycott 'Tate yews FLASHES Dr. Sam Landa, co-ordinator private practitioners would be) plan--the first such government/at work by Thursday. It was/health plan. expected to take a week to 10 ¢ days to return services to nor-'earlier this month as an adviser mal. WIN KEY POINTS While doctors said they had to give way on a key principle-- acceptance of universal, com- pulsory medical care -- they} Some have already reopened added they had won victories|principles on other key points. These included the right to it advised doctors to end their practise outside the act and the/plan. Both: (the college and the and beginioperation of voluntary, private) government) jhealth insurance agencies/basic principle and when they During the three-week boycott|within the framework of the|sit down and work it out in jof the plan about 200 doctors|legislation- | Lord Taylor, instrumental in bringing about the settlement, said the amended act might serve as a model for. public idays. rest before returning to health plans throughout North|--there wouldn't great monope'v." America. | elements of the government's| jausterity program. The only ac-| tion taken was to defer consid- eration of salary increases dur- ing the foreign exchange emer- gency. City. The violence, in which two of- ficers received minor hurts, came Tuesday night just a few hours after a federal judge's action cleared the way for Ne- groes to renew their antt-segre- gation activities. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,| Dr. H. N. Watson, president, offices reopened throughout Sas-jof the emergency service estab-|of the B.C. division of the CMA, . * . erence to Swift's case that "if katchewan today as the medical|lished by the college and the|agreed with the prominent Brit 'Bail Denied In Abortion officially ended a/Canadian Medical Association,|ish physician, one of the Labor be made to any body of author-|/boycott of the CCF govern-|said about half the college's 625|party group that drew up the) 57, of Pickering, charged wi United Kingdom's national) Lord Taylor was called in) to Premier Woodrow Liloyd's! provincial government. E LIKES THE AGREEMENT | Dr. Watson said in Vancouver, | police investigation could be Case Application for bail for Mrs. Thelma Eloise Blackburn, th procuring an abortion, was denied by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in Oshawa Court today. The accused woman was remanded in custody to Tuesday, July 31 in the Whitby court. Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck told the court that if Mrs, Blackburn was released on bail hampered. Defence Attorney is John A. Sproule, a Toronto lawyer. "it's a very good agreement and Canadian Ship Subsidy Urged will work very well. The general/ P we've been t alking! OTTAWA (OED sue Ue | today urged the federal gov about in the medical profession Bes ; languishing merchant marine in Canada seem outlined in the have agreed on detail' they'll have a good scheme." Masters, 45, of Canton, Ohio, Dr. Watson said the plan has left enough competition so med- ical plans would work efficiently) ° be just one of his son, James. Mr. Mas & nadian Maritime Union (CLC) ernment to support Canada's with subsidies aimed at mak- ing Canadian ships competitive with overseas rivals. Body Recovered From Buckhorn PETERBOROUGH (CP). -- The body of Harold C. was recovered from Buckhorn Lake, 35 miles north of here, today -- but there was no sign ters and James, 21, were re- ported missing after they did not return from a Monday night fishing trip aboard a 16-foot boat. |porarily if he feels Albany Ne- groes cannot stick to a strict |non-violent campaign. | The trouble developed when |about 170 officers moved into \the Negro section .to disperse |about. 2,000 Negroes in the vic- jinity of a bus terminal. State Trooper Claude Hill was [struck by a rock, bruising his face and knocking out a tooth. Bottles and frocks rained onto the pavement as two lines of jofficers broke up the milling jcrowds of Negroes. The missiles flew after 39 Ne-|_ groes and one- white man! |marched irom a church to the! downtown area and were jailed for parading without a permit. \Several hundred had started the march put most dropped out before reaching the area where} police had warned demonstrat-) » ors would be arrested. Police Chief Laurie Pritchett] * said 'there was no violence on) four part -- the' officers never] ' jtook their night sticks from \their belts." He said one of his own officers was hit by a bot-| tle but wasn't hurt seriously. | © Shortly before the march be-; gan, Negroes filed federal court| action to desegregate all public facilities and to prevent police} interference with anti-segrega- tion demonstrations. Dr. King, who had urged at a} mass rally that the Negroes) march, said the violence "de-| veloped apparently from some} oglookers who were not part of lof movement." | acterized the pageant in Miami Beach, Fla., as '"'more like a cattle contest than a beauty competitiqn". She also' said that "ther gre so many "CATTLE CONTEST' Lynette Gamble, Miss South Africa in the Miss Universe Beauty Pageant, today char- wolves about, these contests girls have to fight to keep away from them'. The South African beauty, shown at Miami Beach, July 18, made the statements upon her re- turn to Johannesburg. (AP. WirGfnoto)

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