Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jul 1962, p. 2

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2. THE OSHAWA TIMMS, Pridey, July 27, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN URGES PLEBISCITE ON BILINGUAL SCHOOL Oshawa's Separate School Board has a thorny problem to decide at its next open meeting August 7, as follows: Should the Board abandon its attempts to settle the ques- tion of whether or not it should build a French Bilingual School and put the matter to Separate School supporters by plebiscite. at the next Municipal election? A notice of motion regarding the plebiscite vote was made at the July 3 meeting by Trustee Michael Rudka, a staunch opponent to the Bilingual School plan who has this to say about the controversy: "It does not seem right that (trustees should continue to reach a settlement on this important matter when they have failed constantly during the past three or four years -- if a plebiscite is held, I will be quite willing to abide by the vote of the majority of the electorate, no matter what it may be. This seems like the most reasonable and democratic solution to the problem." CITY'S LETTER IRKS COUNTY COUNCIL Ontario County Council.is in a red-hot rage. It claims that Oshawa's City Council is stalling on the proposed new County and Justice Administration Building. It has issued a strongly-worded ukimatum to the City to get down to brass tacks and deal with its special property committee (appointed by the County with full authority to act) on the matter -- otherwise the County will institute arbitration proceedings under Section 368 of the Municipal Act. What irked County Council no end was a recent letter from the City which stated, in part: '"There was also the feeling that the County Council might not be fully informed" on the matter," City Council (after negotiating for more than one year with the County Council committee on the matter) recently declined to meet further with the County committee. The information was contained in a letter from the City that disturbed County Council so much it called a special meeting this week (at a cost of $700.95) to discuss the matter fully and take the above stand -- at the meeting, County Council gave a unanimous vote of confidence to the committee which was authorized to obtain an option on a 10-15 acre site and to negotiate with the City, and all parties concern- ed, for the completion of the project. City Council representative agreed to meet with the committee last June 19 and later postponed this meet until June 21 -- when City Council representatives failed to show up, the committee again wrote to the City with requests for a get-together. This was followed by a letter from the City in which Council complained that it felt that City councillors were not being informed of the plans and actions of the County com- mittee -- the opinion was expressed by the City, therefore, that any request for a meeting should come from County Council, not the committee, Reeve Cyril Morley said that the County could proceed under the Arbitration Act and settle the dispute, but he was not willing to embark on such a procedure because of what he called "past harmonious relations with the City Council." Deputy-Reeve George Brooks of Whitby felt certain that the City was stalling ('I don't think they have any intention of going through with this," he said). Reeve Heber Down felt that the 'attending publicity'? on the matter may give City Council a change of heart. Family Doctor [Back To Work SASKATOON (CP)The Sas-\for a special session of the|f katchewan family doctor is back legislature to amend the act so|? in business, doctors can practice outside of A week ago most of the/it. |province's 625 private doctors} The new legislation will also|7 jwere boycotting the socialist) allow private non-profit medical \government's compulsory med-|insurance agencies to remain. lical care plan, the first such| Under the original act the prov- |government-sponsored plan injince's Medical Care Insurance |North America. | Commission was the sole insur- They closed their offices July|ing agency. 1 when the plan was imple-| ecrRoys FREEDOM' mented, claiming it threatened The doctors charged the actlt their freedom. . Pe: : Three weeks later, last. Mon-| 48 state medicine, compulsion, lday, the doctors signed an|8"d would result in loss of free- agreement with the government|40m and destruction of the|® lending the boycott. doctor-patient relationship. " ' nS The proposed amendments They immediately began dis-/have softened the opposition, |mantling their emergency serv-| put. not eliminated it. jsce er agg gtd Some doctors say bitterly they emcee 150 Peonithts a had to sacrifice a long-standing eo |principal and ept a univer- | All the doctors who boycotted P pote dag . ; Paget |the plan are not back at work./though it will be kept at arms- Many are taking vacations. | length. Some left the province for) "Under the new plan the doctor good early in the strike. It has has the option of having a | been reliably estimated 100 doc-| ,ivate insurance agency handle|> | tors took jobs elsewhere rather|)i. pins or the government | | than work under the medical agency. 3 COTO Re i His patients have a similar : The Monday agreement calls option, But officials say if als patient chooses to deal directly F «ss with the government this will)? Lack Decision have little effect on the doctor. On Bomb Type In Next Test involved. But the province will collect! BILLS THE PATIENT He will just bill the patient |:. for his services and the patient |} will pay him. The patient sends/j_ the bill to the government for|** a refund, The doctor is not! |wants to fire four of his eight New Crisis Rises For Halifax Jail HALIFA (CP)--If it isn't one crisis it's another for the ancient Halifax. county jail, which now finds its foundations rocked by another controversy. The latest storm follows a report that security is so lax at the downtown Halifax jail that Jailer Joseph Anthony too much horseplay among the guards and prisoners, guards were buying clothes ai cut-rate prices from prisoners being sent to penitentiary, some guards had liquor in the jail, two guards were living in the jail and getting free room and board, and guards allowed trus- tees to stay up late to watch television. He said many of his regula- tions are treated with contempt by guards who feel they can't guards. At a special meeting of the county welfare committee, which administers the jail, Mr. Anthony outlined some recent/be fired. examples of his problems: | The committee decided to A guard saw a prisoner try-| give the guards another chance, ing to pick the lock on his|but ordered an end to TV- handcuffs with a comb but did/ watching and free lodging plus nothing about it; a tightening of security. Guards heard two prisoner} The over-crowded and out- break through the ceiling of|moded jail, financially sup- their cells into the attic, but|/ported by the cities of Halifax didn't investigate: jand Dartmouth and Halifax Guards declined to attend. se-|County, is scheduled for re- curity lectures by the deputy | placement. | He also complained there PORTRAIT OF A PRINCESS -- This camera study of Eng- | Antony Armstrong-Jones, was , et will leave England Aug. | baby, born after the 19-year-old | Sheriff; Two years ago the jail burst Guards neglected to keep rec-|into prominence with -disclos- ords which show which prison-| ures of sexual relations between ers are in jail and which ones}male and female prisoners. A are out on bail. |provincial inquiry reported the as|keys to the women's section "--!|were kept in the matron's kit- chen bupboard, readily acces- sible to trustees. The jailer was later dismissed and female prisoners quartered in the Halifax city prison. Since then there have been frequent escapes. One escapec, later recaptured, boasted it was To Give Child | Chance At Life possible to get anything in the |jail, including files, hacksaws SARNIA (CP) -- The young/|and liquor. parents of a badly deformed|---------- Young Parents |been watching this series very} WASHINGTON (AP) -- De- all the premiums and taxes to| fence department and Atomic /|finance the plan and reimburse |E nergy Commission officials|the insurance agencies and the |were reported to have met/patients, if not the doctors, for Thursday to decide what kind! medical bills. of a nuclear device should be; And the Saskatchewan College) | tested next high over the Paci-'of Physicians and Surgeons, | fic. governing body of the doctors,} An informed source said he|will have to negotiate changes doubts the meetings were heldjin its fee schedule with the to decide whether to cut off the | government. test series in the wake of the in-| Some doctors say it's not the tentional destruction of a Thor) money that matters, it's loss of rocket on its launching pad at/responsibility for setting rates Johnston Island. that hurts. Others say biuntly The Thor, which was to have|they don't like anybody telling jcarried a nuclear devide to a\them what to do. high altitude, developed a so- The college called and far-undisclosed malfunction. directed the boycott and ar- The pad was understood to ranged the emergency care pro- have sustained considerable|gram. Oniy a smattering of its damage. There is only one|members refused to go along rocket launching pad on John-| with it. ston Island. iin savin "Any decision to halt the se-/ DIDN'T ASSESS PLAN ries would have to come from| After it was over the college the White House." the source | Made no. formal assessment of said. "President Kennedy has|t"® new Plan, although it was \learned that some members of its. governing council were American scientists have fired| Othe to go along with it, one high altitude burst success-| But its unofficial viewpoint jfully, Three other attempts) W@S summed up by a prominent failed because of trouble with| Saskatoon surgeon, Dr. James closly."" land's Princess Margaret by | released in connection: with her husband, Lord Snowdon, | the couple's forthcoming visit former society photographer | to Jamaica. Princess Margar- Dragnet Found Norris For Lake Labor Probe OTTAWA (CP). -- Thomasjand labor unrest on the Great Grantham Norris was_ holiday-| Lakes. ing happily in Britain when he| 'The assignment meant a hur- was caught in an international) rjieq flight to Canada and an dragnet. immediate start on what prom- He and his wife, driving in ajises to be a turbulent investi- rented car to Canterbury, sud-|gation into a violent war be- denly saw his name scrawled in| teen two sailors' unions. chalk on a roadside blackboard.; A rugged six-footer weighing Ottawa wanted him urgently,|just under 200 pounds, the sil- So urgently that the Royal|Ver-haired jurist says: Automobile Club, the automo-| 'Right now, the main job is) bile association, Scotland Yard,|t0 get started--to appoint com- Interpol and others were look-|™ission counsel, to get a staff, ing for him hold an organization meeting The blackboard notice, put with the parties and settle down) up by the automobile associa-|*° work. tion, was a long-distance sum-| FACED BY TANGLE mons from Labor Minister Starr) He faces a tangled web of in- 2 to represent the Queen at |mother had taken the sedative Jamaica's independence cele- | thalidomide during early preg- bration. ©--(AP Wirenhoto) |nancy, say they will spend "'ev- - ery last penny" to give their son a "'fighting chance for life." The baby, their first, was born armless and legless here May 18. Four fingers grow out of each shoulder and two: tiny feet, one with four toes and the other with six, protrude from the hips. The child, born with a double hernia and believed mentally retarded, will be taken to Tor- closed down the vital Welland|onto this weekend for examina- Canal between Lakes Ontario}tion and, if possible, corrective and Erie. | surgery. _ His terms of reference are} Thalidomide has been blamed just about as wide-open as he|for at least 30 other deformed chooses to make them as he! births, including five in Ontario, grapples with the long-brewing|13 in British Columbia and 12 feud between the Seafarers In-|jn Alberta. The drug was or- ternational Union of Canada| dered off the Canadian market (ind.) and the newly-formed) six months ago. i Canadian Maritime Union| pry, G. L, Anderson, medical (CLC), | Officer of health, said Thursday e As a lawyer practising in Ke- lowna and Vancouver, he is re-| membered as a fierce court-! room fighter with a whip-crack mind and a superb memory. As a man, he ts regarded as warm and affable. In his 40 years as a lawyer, the baby was the first thalidom- ide birth here, but warned other cases may appear, In Toronto, health minister Dymond said a "'leading pedia- trician" believes there will be nothing wrong mentally with Pork Embarys Plan Doubted After Cholera OTTAWA (CP) -- Doubt is xpressed here that the govern ment will slap an embargo on imported American raw pork because uf the current hog cho- lera outbreak in central Canada. So far, compensation for more than 10,000 Ontario and Quebec hogs slaughtered in the disease- control roughly $236,000 officials said Thursday. program has cost So far, government compensa- tion based on the current mar- ket value for each slain animal S a far cry from the $1750.00 paid im the 1961-62 outbreak in Ontario and Quebec, when 57,- 000 animals were destroyed and a severe quarantine placed on four Quebec counties. That outbreak, like the cur- rent one, was blamed on raw rs ae American pork being in garbage to Canadian hogs. It was the worst since the early 1940s, although there were others in 1947 and 1953, EARL STROUgI has been piv tit the past to an embargo comparable to the seven-year import ban, lifted early in 1°°0. for a dif- ferent virus disease emong American hogs. It was called vesicular exanthema amd the import embargo was ordered against both the doctors who| because the disease was diffi- administered thalidomide and|cult to diagnose and handle firms which marked it. generally, ai careers -| Canada already limits imporis of live American hogs to a trickle of breeding stock, which babies deformed after pre-natal use of thalidomide. Ontario's fifth report of a thalidomide baby came Thurs- day when it 'was learned the |Wife of an Ottawa doctor had |given birth to a deformed baby _ |after taking the drug. In London, Ont., where one thalidomide baby has been born, a city doctor said he believes legal action is being considered the Thor or its system. Campbell. oe ? : a tar ) The AEC said ithe missile's| '"'It's not a plan the doctors 10 Mr. eg T, cs a" - ter-union rivalries, of violence he acted for both unions and jdestruction caused no injuries| want," he said. "It's not a plan|{'Sttict Judge in admiralty for) and skullduggery, of interna-|management in labor disputes laaplivi lthe gé t ts, But it|/ British Columbia and a mem-|tional power plays' involving the\and on several occasions as ar- and no radioactivity hazards. | government wants, But i ber of the B.C. Court of Appeal.| j ° fc. t There was no nuclear detona-|is saisfactory compromise." | ie Ppeal./ Canadian and American govern-|bitrator. le served as counsel tion and fires that started when| Privately some doctors say/TO PROBE UNREST Ce a ele: ee eee the missile was destroyed were) they are hoping for an unseating) He was: wanted as a one-man) ee ; bs u 3 he ae evan bennk bid : extinguished quickly, a spokes-/of the CCF government in the|industrial commission on in--We®kS 19 V.». P Bp etait . man said. inext election, iquiry into shipping disruptions} INTERPRETING THE NEWS Back To Chaos REALTOR PASSES FIRST YEAR "U" EXAMS Douglas J. M. Bullied of 333 King street west has been successful in his first year exams in the new Professional Real Estate Course at the University of Toronto. Mr. Bullied, a native of Oshawa, is employed by 8. D. Hyman Realtor. He is a director on the Union Cemetery Board of Governors; chairman of the finance committee of the offi- cial board of Westmount Police Commission! United Church; on the execu- tive committee of the Osh- awa Presbytery Church Ex- tension Council. He is also an associate member of the Osh- awa and District Real Estate Board and the Ontario Real Estate Board. Five Canadian Universities joined forces re- i bi cently to assist in the educa- DOUGLAS BUL tion of Canadian real estate esa personnel. U of T., original hub of the course when it started in 1955, had 329 students registered in 1961. IN THE WORLD OF THE OSHAWA C OF C The Board of directors of the Oshawa C of C heid their regular monthly meeting this week at the picturesque Sum- mer home of J. L, "Lou" Beaton, northwest of Whitby. "Leu", an ardent fisherman-curler-hunter, has an artificial lake on the grounds -- Jack Mann, membership manager of the Chamber, finished fifth in a class of 32 at a recent Summer course conducted by the Canadian Institite for Chamber of Commerce Management at Western University. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE Herman Goldstein is unhappy with the City over recent floodings in his basement at 15-19 Bond street east -- he blames the situation on "faulty sewers and underground con- nections" and says that he has asked the City engineering de- partment to do something about the matter for the past two years, but that his pleas have fallen on '"'deaf ears" thus far. . . « President Fred J. Dionne of the Oshawa Police Asso- ciation has released copies of the program for the 30th Annual Convention of the Police Association of Ontario, which is to be held in Oshawa September 3-7, inclusive. His Honor Judge John S. Latchford will be the guest speaker at the open- ing ceremonies in St. Gregory's Auditorium September 4. The OPA will be hosts. ; JAYCEES WIN PLAQUE AT CALGARY Oshawa's Jaycees deserve another bouquet. They won a Leadership Training Award plaque (for the second consecutive year) at the Jaycee National Convention in Calgary recently for cities of over 50,000 population. The Jaycee program was organized by Jayceen Interna- tional Senator Don Brown and featured three departments -- Investment, Business Management and Effective Speaking. He was assisted in the program by Jerry Rutherford, Wil- liam.G. Edwards, William Girling and Henry "Chick" Hewitt. The Jaycees, incidentally, are making plans for the ob- servance of Jaycee International Week, September 16-22 whenwne of their visitors will be Val Swain of Kingston, proviytial president of Jaycees who is recognized as being. one of the best speakers today on the Ontario banquet circuit. BEE EAs THUNDERSHOWERS IL. WEATHER FORECAST | Will Continue 4 St. Thomas London Kitchener Wingham ... Hamilton St. Catharines. Toronto Peterborough ... Trenton Forecasts issued by the wea- \ther office at 5 a.m.: Synopsis: Thutsday was an exceptionally cool day, but skies will be. generally sunny and winds lighter 'today. The trend) upward in temperatures -- will continue Saturday, but some! shower activity is expected over| most of northern Ontario and Killaloe ... the western portions of South-|Muskoka .. Ontario. {North Bay. Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron, Sudbury .. |Lake Erie, Georgian Bay, Tor-|Earlton jonto, Windsor, London: Sunny|Kapuskasing .. and warmer today. Saturday|White River... mostly sunny with scattered) Moosonee thundershowers during the late|Sault Ste. Marie... afternoon .and evening. Winds|Mount Forest...... westerly 15 today, light tonight,| Timmins southerly 15 Saturday. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- CE) (ENT burton, Hamilton: Mainly sunny and warmer today and Satur- Patios Our Specialty ° WALKS Th ated B day. Winds westerly 15 to 25 to- day, light tonight, southerly 15 ® CU * BLOCK LAYING Saturday. Algoma, Cochrane, 'Timag- Free Estimates -- Work Guoranteed Recommendations Supplied jami, North Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: Sunny and warmer) ¢ CALL BERT McLEAN 723-2867 today. Partly cloudy Saturday jwith scattered showers or thun- |dershowers. Winds westerly 15 today, shifting to northwest 20 late Saturday 4 Forecast Temperatures Tow overnight, High Saturday | Windsor 5 82 | 55 ATE SATURDAY Warming Trend 2: By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer Chaos has come again to Algeria and observers fear the newly - independent nation is dangerously close to civil war. *| The forces of dissident deputy +|Premier Ahmed Ben Bella now control three - quarters of the country while soldiers boyal to the provisional government of Ben Youssef Ben Khedda pre- pare to defend Algiers, the cap- ital. In the Kabylie Mountains east of Algiers Deputy Premier Bel- kacem Krim has denounced Ben Bella's followers as "fas- f : cists and irresponsibles" and C : called for a massive rally in support cf the provisional gov- jennment- | Meanwhile in Algeria terri- fied European nationals are flocking .to the airport and the harbor. Kidnappings and mur- ders have been mounting omi- nously. Much now hinges on whether Ben Bella can consolidate his victories throughout the coun-| try. If he wins over - all con-} ltrol Algeria is likely to become} a rigid one-party state within the influence of Nasser's| | Egypt. | At the same time Krim is the undisputed leader of the tough Berber population in the Kaby- lie Mountains. This area was |the strongest bastion of resis- tance during the rebellion. A |clash between Krim and Ben ;Bella would be lethal. A third factor is the 400,000- Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Thursday Dawson 54 65 54 75 51 78 51 88 59 77 34 75 Edmonton . Regina Winnipeg .. Lakehead ........ White River....... Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing North Bay Sudbury . |Muskoka . Windsor . London .. Toronto Killaloe Ottawa Montreal | uebec |\Fredericton .. Saint John.... Moncton ... Halifax gerian soil. Sources in Paris-say France 61 'has no intention of intervening] AUTO INSURANCE For Under 25 Age Group required at special lot AND... easy monthly payments spread over SCHOFIELD-AKER LIMITED 4 360 KING ST. WEST PHONE "723-2265 * Don Ellison @ Gerry Osborne © Ralph Schofield @ Reg Aker rovide coverage 9 months ' For Algerians man French army still on Al-| to restore order. But the troops} may well take action if it be- comes necessary to protect French citizens. Armed intervention, no mat- ter how interpreted, would give Ben Bella all the pretext he needs for tearing up last March's Evian agreement and ending co . operation with France. At the moment, despite in- flammatory anti-French senti- ment amomg his followers, he has promised to honor the agreement and severely punish Moslem kidnappers of Europe- ans and Jews. Several observers in London point to the parallel between Views RCMP Means REGINA (CP) -- Four mem- bers of the Ontario police com. mission were here Thursday studying police training methods and facilities at the RCMP headquarters. Judge B. J. Macdonald, chair. man of the commission, said the delegation came here to study facilities before setting up a a has to go through 30-day quar- antine. An embargo on fresh pork would be a complicated matter. American pork prices have a steadying effect on Canadian prices, and there might also be question of reciprocal Ameri- can action and general trade complications. Canada sold the U.S, $13,650,000 worth of fresh pork last year and imported $9,365,000 worth, police training collegé at Aylmer, Ont. Other members were Maj.- Gen. H. A. Sparling of Oakville, Joseph Mennill of Toronto, who | will be director of the college, |. and Police Chief Earl Knight of London, Ont. the present Algerian situation and the chaos that reigned in The Congo a week after the Belgians pulled out. Like The Congo, the Algerian dispute seems less a conflict of principle and more a struggle for power between rival forces who distrust each other's inten- tions. | The wounds of 744 years of ruthless terrorism have hardly healed in Algeria. Civil war would destroy all that President | de Gaulle has sought to gain and the injuries this time could prove fatal. | SHORGAS || HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. 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