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

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Se 'feated an opposition Labor THOUGHT FOR TODAY Firmness is that lity in you which admirable qua- is merely bull- headedness in others. Oshawa Zines WEATHER REPORT Saturday mostly sunny with scattered thundershowers during the late afternoon and evening. YOL. 9I--NO. 175 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1962 Authorized Ottawa Class Mail es Second for payment of Office Department, gg si in Cath, SIXTEEN PAGES Cool On Macs Plan To Boost U.K. LONDON (Reuters) -- Prime Minister Macmillan's plans to lead Britain out of its economic difficulties were dismissed by most political observers today as ill-formed and feeble. Even normally Conservative aewspapers found it difficult to muster enthusiasm for Macmil- lan's projects, on which he de- party censure motion in the House of Commons Thursday on strictly party-line voting. Conservative legislators were cool to the proposals, foremost Response by muddling the issues andjreaction his proposals would causing resentment. He called|give rise to, speculated that the it "childish, arrogant, conceited|prime minister might be plan- and foolish." ng to retire soon. - | The proposals were put forth, a4 gegen obséry. |i Teality, to answer isbor de. , A number that Macmillan|™ands that he--and his entire nk awe Neen aware of the | 20vemnment--do just that. The mu ve socialists had introduced a cen- |ment and call new elections Toronto Woman There was never any ques- |sure motion calling for Macmil- MH Iti , ho , Jhat the Conserv- Dies In Wreck (sp. #2- comer lan to resign and advise Queen Elizabeth to dissolve Panlia- ] Algiers Grab Bella's forces today to divided Algerian nation. Troops nominally loyal Ben Khedda's crumbling gime guarded the approaches to|d whether they would resist the! ALGIERS, (AP) -- Radicaljreported moving in from t he Deputy Premier A' Ben/| west. Algiers, but it was uncertain | take control of the government. Former deputy premier Mo- prepared take over Algeria's capital and/hammed Khider was scheduled|charged impose their authority on the|to arrive in Algiers today from |Ben to|}Oran, to set up the National moderate Premier Ben Youssef) Liberation Front's seven - man re-| political bureau, the Ben Bella- Belia's headquarters, in jominated body which plans to Ben Khedda was almost alone By Ben Bella Feared Near Bella "to the last.drop of our blood," toured the Kabylie area to whip up support. They again that. Ben Bella plans to impose a personal dic- tatorship on all Algeria. In. Oran, Khider described the Krim-Boudiaf appeal as "a call for murder, a reaction of despair and of a lost cause." He said steps eventually would be taken against the two dep- of which was the formation of motion to canry, and in fact they advance of the Ben Bella forces|in the government building in|uty premiers. a national incomes commission that would have a purely advi- sory role--and hence no real power to enforce the wage re- Of Airplane MEAFORD, Ont. (CP) -- A eae Macmillan the maximum vote possible--a margin of 98. The vote was 351 to 253, straint policy the government claims is the backbone of wise Toronto woman died Thursday, ATTACKS SHUFFLE in the wave-swept wreckage of| Opposition Leader Hugh Gait- a seaplane that cracked up and/Skell centred his attack on Mac- |He and his armaments minis- jter, Abdel Hafid Boussouf, ex- |pressed confidence that '"every- | Algiers, but he appeared calm. Blast Leaves READY TO FIGHT Despite this threat of a clash, there were few signs of milit- ary activity around the Kabylie . \thing will be arranged." . a Three Dead | Boussouf left poet briefly |C@Pital of Tizi Ouzou. But of- Thursday, possibly on a peace-|ficers of the Kabylie command . |making mission, and on his re.|insisted that "'if we are ordered In Berlin N Y jtunn declared, "the crisis willl Rnedde segngy ee eae, an r] . als 4 " ip .c 3 it. other passenger were rescued.|Chequer Selwyr Lloyd--the man soon be over | The odds looked overwhelm- Dead is Ingrid Zum Tobel, 34,|With whom the public associates ! i mares, lh Biol ates 2 he |SEE CONCILIATION jingly im favor of Ben Bella. He wife of the pilot, Wolfgang Zum|the "pay pause" policy, : é j a l ed wake Gt tt ree val From Ben Bella's side came|is backed by the regular 45,- Tobel, also 34. The other pas-| Gaitskell said the drastic shuf- ay or e ola ae le _ | what looked like a ec ili tory |000 - man National Liberation senger was identified as Rudy|fl@ was "'the most convincing Po 8 ue ee destroetiye| move. State Minister Lakhdar|Atmy and at least half the for- Herbst, 39. jconfession of fatlure which ad that ong Pe ine Tobbal, seized in Constan-|mer guerrilla units. Ben Bella Waves 10 feet high lashed the| could have been offered by the/® "re sg a Sg? ge Of | tine when Ben Bella forces took|supporters control most of east- single - engine Cessna as it|S0vem™mment." It was the "des this rural, eastern New York/over that East Algerian city|ern and westem Algeria and the touched down outside the har.|Perate act of a desperate man.' aye berg" night. neq| Veanesday, was released and|Saharan interior. bor wall. Macmillan replied that the _ Nine rother Mei 4 Sate returned to Algiers. |. The only force apparently The pontoons snapped off and| Pay soy had been accepted | hes ag Bia 8 ig Seay But two of Ben Khedda's min-| capable of blocking a Ben Bellla the fuselage had started to slip 24 that a new man was needed} 2 mionae, "4 ig 9 isters, backed by thousands of|takeover was the 400,000 - man below the surface by the time)? Canty it forward trom this were levelled About 30 neva. (former guernillas in the Kaby-|French Army an Algeria, and boatbuilder Cliff Richardson: of|P0Sition were levelled. About 30 PeTSONS|jie mountains east of Algiers, |for the moment at least it re- Meaford arrived in a 30-foot| He then raised the measures} were made oe continued to call for widespread|mained on the sidelines. Gov- cake puiaae, {he claimed would thelp do so. Mrs. Rosalie Loker, 80, Of|recictance to Ben Bella. jemment sources in Paris said e national incomes com- FUSELAGE GOES DOWN mission, he said, would exam- Berlin, was among 19 persons; Deputy premiers Belkacem|the French Army would inter. in hospital with burns after the | Korie and Mohammed Boudiaff SAIGON (AP) -- South Viet/ Mr. Richardson got the twoline wage boosts deemed to pre- Nam has lodged one of itsimen into the boat but before|sent a threat to the pay re-| : ' vene to ect any. French. blast and fire, died early today. who have vowed to fight Ben a 'é strongest protests to date about|they could reach the pilot's wife|straint policv--and then make men who were endangered: Two daughters and a son-in-law | - sh. Sse Communist infiltration fr 0mM|the fuselage went down public its findings. It would dea ; ed Laos, the government disclosed) Zum 'Tobel said later he|with increases in key industries ore OI icesslol l |were among those in critica)| ; condition, Mrs. Mabel H, Wager, 77,| today. : }thought his wife was following)that might touch off general de- died of a heart attack after oo sh aetioar cine him out of the plane. mands for raises. fleeing from her burning home. iro Consmeiiion ed_ that| d he left Toronto for the| By thus placing the increases The truck-driver, Robert J. groups of between 150 and 200/90-wule flight to his town 25|"before the bar of public opin- McLucas, 39, of Pomeroy, Pa., guerrillas from North Viet Nam|Miles east of Owen Sound ---- Macmilian said, yr died shortly after the explosion, have b ing with increas-|@ 800d weather report, Hejand unions would think twice moaning: "Why did I go so : ' q ing omen tate Booth: Vint passed over the bay once and/before Ly ching any wage far? Why did I go so far?" pe ype pear cadendya' on : page .jagreement, - - munition made in" Coameuaist| cet he could land safely ou; But im tact, he acknowledged His words may have been yet Greer cetewen m, side the harbor wall. -- ithe commission would be entir. the Commonweaitii. igen ani RECEIVE COOLLY But, though this represents a concession from Britain, Heath last night made two demands on the six that received a cool reception. The British minister asked for another indigation thai le was "eo p st cee os sae on the wrong road when his © ver-| Residents said storm was , from the worst of the summer. Rain| Point of view- a continuation during the tran- sitional period ending in 1970 of D i A i d i N i ye o enies 1 ing azZis tractor-trailer raced out of con- -"wrietmed frontier outposts and 1 trol down a treacherous hill und attacked villages before moving| was whipped by 35-mile-an-hour northwest winds and at one Commonwealth preferences for coarse grains, such as barley, ; i TORONTO (CP)--Dr. Joseph|weekly newspaper published in|cil in Prague,' which contended|crashed in flames. Or, he may into Communist-controlled areas| nor s A Saeas macan Toronto in psig ben Dr. Kirschbaum "was secre-|have meant that he should have of South Viet Nam, the govern-| point emergency moorings were Two Convicts 4 put on all craft in the harbor. which now enjoy a preference in the British market. economic policy. The powerful Trades Union dismissed the com- mission idea as utterly useless even before Macmillan rose to speak. At best, said the TUC. general secretary, George Woodcock, it would have no effect at all, and at worst, it would bhock discus- sion of national economic policy Red Guerillas Draw Protest In S. Viet Nam sank in the wind-tossed waters|millan's cabinet shuffle of a of Georgian Bay outside Mea-|week ago, in which Macmillan ford harbor. The pilot and an-|dumped Chancellor of the Ex- ae ee Bee BME ES: re. é ADVICE FROM COACH 280 children from vised playgrounds pated in the Rodeo. story Page 9.) --Times Photo by Joe Serge 24 super- partici- (See listens earnestly to instruc- tions from coach Terry Jalasjaa, 19. Miss Jalasjaa | Brian Hicks, 11, a contest- | ant in the annual Bicycle | Rodeo held by the Oshawa | Recreation Centre Committee at Alexandra Park, Thursday, is playground supervisor at Northway Park. More than BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Ne- gotiations for Britain's . entry into the Eurepean Common Market resumed today in a marathon session aimed at set- tling the question of temperate agricultural products. Edward Heath, British deputy foreign secretary, and ministers of the six Common Market na- tions planned to meet until late jin the evening, if necessary, to -- the problems connected with the British demand fer al- ternate markets for the temper- ate foodstuffs exported by Can- ada, Australia and New Zea- t said jance executive, Thursday night} Dr. Kirschbaum, who came to|tary-general of "people's party,;crashed the truck before it infiltration hasincreased | jdenied a published report that|Canada about 10 years ago and|the Slovak Hitler panty, the po-|reached such a heavily popul- since mid-May, the government The Zum Tobels came to Can-| 2 jhe aided Adolf Eichmann in the|now is a Canadian citizen, said litical instrument of the Slovak/ated area. said, in preparation for imple- ada nine years ago from Ger-| Hurt In Fight jpersecution of Jews in Slova-jallegations that. he met Eich- Quisling government established mentation of the new Geneva|™any. They were childless. kia. ; |mann in 1928 with other Slovaks pay" eo A slit tus aba . sateen, 0 lists, eri Oons) . ioe Viet, ® refrigeration: spe! KINGSTON (CP) --Two curios AT ry Shen tame eee ne fone ore a) |r Parectouin end eaty in| Toronto Explosion for removal of all foreign troops|cialist, had flown here to in-\viets were in hospital today|\°27@dtan Jewish News, a/pure lie ; S panty : Hits Parked Truck within 75 days. Canada, India|spect an installation his com-|with knife wounds and a ¢hird| | "I never saw (Bich-|1940 because I was opposed to ham . <li " 4 +. (national socialism. Kirschbaum said.| x and Poland are members of the commission. pany had made in a Meaford was in solitary confinement fol- store. lowing a brawl Thursday night Australia Cabinet sit!' 22.282 two minutes after it) Minister SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters), Air Minister Leslie Bury re- signed from the cabinet today in the wake of a political storm involving Britain's negotiations} for entry into the European) Common Market. | The resignation has been ac- cepted by Premier Robert Men | zies, it..was announced in gcan-) berra, the capital. | The political storm blew up) Thursday. over a statement by} Bury on possible British entry into the six-nation Common Ma ket John McEwen, trade minister and deputy prime minister, said} he was shocked that a minis- terial colleague "should pub- licly undercut the strength of Australia's negotiating position by declaring that she had little to fear from Britain's entry." His statement "will inevitably be quoted against us to weaken our negotiating -position," Mc- Ewen added. REAFFIRMS STAND Bury had told an Australian Institute of Management meet- ing Wednesday that if Britain entered the Market, the effect on Australia would be "limited and minor." He reaffirmed this Thursday in an address to the national committee of the Inter- national Chamber of Commerce in Melbourne. Menzies said Thursday he wanted "no misunderstanding either at home or abroad.' "I want to make it quite clear that Mr. MeEwen's work over- and my own later visit sfas both to the United Kingdom and|§ the United States were clearly based upon our conviction -- a Y i CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 | tolay jin Collins Bay penitentiary, four jmiles east of here, in used, " |Started. Authorities said five jmen were involved, Resigns Norbert Lemieux, 24, of Ot- jtawa, was under guard in King- ston hospital and Robert Mat- conviction shared by the cabi-\thew Huff, 24, of London, Ont-, net -- that the economic prob-|was in the prison hospital, both lems which would be presented|with stab wounds in the stom- to Australia by Britain's entry|ach. They were in satisfactory on terms which did not reason-| condition ably protect our export trade| The name of the convict would. be on very serious mo-|placed in solitary confinement ment." 'was not released. PYTHAGOREAN PUZZLE Linda Renfew Parker Cobb | Cobb. Cobb, of Morganton, is shown talking on the tele. | N.C., has admitted the double life. This photo by Raleigh News and Observer Chief pl one at her home in Roanoke where she isin se- giaccepted evidence from Eleni} Hospital Faces Second Probe In One Year | QUEBEC (CP) -- The Que- bec government has suspended the board of management of Fleury. Genera! Hospital in Montreal and ordered the sec- ond public inquiry in a year into the institution. The inquiry will seek to de- |termine whether Dr. J. A. Di- onne, the 48-bed hospital's foun- der and chairman of its board of management, has been in- volved in "embezzlement of public funds paid for hospitaliz- ation purposes." Making the announcement after a cabinet meeting Thurs- day: Premier Lesage said the hospital ignored an inquiry com- mission's recommendation May 2 that Dr. Dionne and the en- Travel Agent Fined $250 Over 'Bribes' TORONTO (CP) Travel agent Constantinos (Gus) Mina- kakis, 48, was fined $250 Thurs- day for telling Greek immi- grants that money they paid 4\him went to bribe immigration g\department workers. He was charged with fnaud. Magistrate Joseph Addison) Kondiils that she paid Minaka-| kis $150 to get her husband into} H i menn),"' Dr He said a German directive at the time threatened suspen- "pa sion of any Slovak publication | The newspaper said it learned that dare to print his name, |"'that several weeks ago the Ca-| po said he has taken a lead- jnadian Jewish Congress asked|ing part in anti-Communism or- |the RCMP to investigate the! canizations and that as presi- jpart Dr. Kirschbaum played in|dent of the Slovak libenation Czechoslovakia under the Nazi|council has been attacked by weceaseees ns the local Communist press. : "I didn't do anything about it, -- INTERESTED \(the Communist attacks) but | RCMP in Toronto said they|now that it has come out in the jhad no interest in Dr. Kimsch- English press I am going to con: |baum and had no official com- sult my lawyers and govern- {mepracetion from anyone re-|ment officials to see what I can garding him do about it," Dr, Kirschbaum | The paper printed exerpts|said. "I have children and a job from a document sent to it by|and "the Jewish Community Coun-' tect. Kennedy Confers On A-Ban Demand WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- |\"I have never met him and |never worked with him." tion which Russia would have to ident Kennedy conferred with) agree to should be reduced sub- his top disarmament advisers stantially. today on how far to scale down|. there the United States demands for anti-cheating safeguards in a jnuclear test » ban treaty with | Russia. State Secretary Rusk, Defence Secretary McNamara and other| was for permanent, internationally- territory could be abandoned, dropping the control - quirement at this time, | Brewery Talks 'Resume Today | TORONTO (CP) -- Talks to) Stag } prevent a repeat of the 1958 On- guaranteed right of on-site in-| tario-iwde beer strike were ca ne pied in Abide ta 0 resume today between brewery|*ussia where secret atomic workers and Louis Fine, Onta-|'@:- might -be held and inter- | reported favoring such action. It was also reported that the | president's advisers agreed that inspection arrangements at: this stage should include both the my name and honor to pro-| § disagreement! ; among the policymakers, how-| § ever, about whether the demand |manned control posts on Soviet! § ageing Peay rerio conciliation officer. yer who would turn it over to| Mr. Fine, chief negotiator for someone in the immigration de-|the department of labor, has not partment. Both Crown Prosecutor John|Closed meetings, but it was un- Hilton and Defence Counsel Ar-|derstood the main obstacles to \thur Maloney emphasized that|a settlement have not been over no official of the immigration) come. | department had accepted bribes.| Five major Ontario breweries |. Magistrate Addison said the} will be affected if the Interna- jProfessional lobbyist has be-jtional Brotherhood of United come a way of life in Canada/Brewe r, Flour, Cereal, Soft and that Minakakis had a right/Drink and Distillery Workers of to act as between|America (CLC) walks out to }commented on the two days of} nationally manned control posts! on Soviet territory, | | | Murder Charged In Fatal Stabbing CORNWALL (CP) -- Betty MacDonald, 29, }was charged with murder in connection with the fatal stab- jing Thursday night of her hus- tband, Cifford, 37 Mrs. today! 3 | clision after being linked as the second party in the doubi life of North Carolina Stafe GOP Chairman William E. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 Photographer Lawrence Wof- ford was released exclusively to the Associated Press --AP Wirephoto an agent Greeks and the immigration de- partment, prévided that he state the exact extent of his services. press its demand for a 10-cent-|* Police said the stabbing oc- an-hour wage increase and $75|/curred at a cottage in Lan-| 'weekly unemployment wage. 'casier, 14 miles east of here, | TORONTO (CP) -- An explo- |sion in Toronto's northwestern outskirts Thursday night No was injured by the blast and police said they have no clues as to who caused it or)s why. f land The negotiations reached a key point of agreement Thurs- wrecked the front end of a/day, but serious problems re- parked panel truck and blew out/mained, The nine windows in a nearby house.| screed seven ministers in principle that, if world agreements had not been igned by 1970, Commonwealth and other non-market member Geoffredo DiLordto, owner of|countries would be consuited by vehicle home only once every|V three weeks. the truck, said he brought the the enlarged community with a yiew to reaching special . ar- rangements, sources close to the He has also asked for a com- mitment that Canada, Australia and New Zealand will be able to export the same quantities of these products to the market during this period as now are taken in by the British market. The six, however, are in fa- vor of a gradual withering away of Commonwealth preferences by 1970 and are opposed to giv- ing quantitative assurances. Informarts said that the ma-| cabinet-level advisers were re-|jority opinion in a meeting of! § ported recommending to Ken-|policymakers at the state de-| ee |nedy that the amount of inspec-| p; ment Thursday was against! § ost re-| F Ithough| § : some presidential advisers were| @a a. | | parts of] @ | | | It's not so bad being shot | ,when you can relax with such a recreational pursuit as Donna Denisavitch. Feeling protective is. "sheriff' Bob Wilner of Timmins, Ont., and the pair are heady for the town's Golden' Jubilee cele- brations that start tomorrow. | same TIMMINS' GOLDEN JUBILEE Donna is in a French Can- Can number at thp Last Chance Saloon, Whoc #-de-doe runs through Aug. 6.

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