Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Aug 1962, p. 1

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Oe et cya tee wig hen THOUGHT F Always do as y OR TODAY ou please and you'll soon find you don't please anyone else. * TIA SSE A TNE GMT NADU ate cg = a i AG BE ARE a OOF She Oshawa WEATHER REPORT Sunny today and Sunday. Warmer Sunday. Winds light. VOL. 91--NO. 193 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1962 SIXTEEN PAGES VIET NAM U.S. Army Gen. Paul D, Harkins, centre, is shown in helicopter with Gen. Duong Van Minh, commander of Vietnamese forces, as_ they By N TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice T. G. Norris has cracked down on the maverick Seafarers In- ternational Union of Canada in his bid to win a truce in inter- union warfare that is disrupt- ing Canadian shipping in Ameri- can lakeports. Faced Friday with a refusal Seafarers Criticized Orris in Chicago, Cleveland, Duluth and Milwaukee, In each case, the ships are either being boycotted by long- shoremen or picketed by men carrying signs protesting against a "lock-out" of SIU crews by the company. However, some of the ships are being handled by the SIU to use its influence to end American union harass- ment of Canadian ships, the 68- year-old jurist demanded a per-) sonal appearance and explana-| tion from SIU President Hal C.) Banks. He summoned Mr, Banks to by shore crews. SUPPORTS SIU SIU lawyer Bruce. Thomas telephoned Mr. Banks in Mont-| + real and then told the commis-| ; sion that the Maritime Trades Department of the AFL-CIO in appear Aug. 28 when his one-|the United States is supporting aoe investigation resumes into|the SIU in its dispute with the waterfront labor violence and|Upper Lakes line. e shipping disruptions. | He said the SIU could not-- Mr. Justice Norris accused| and would not--use its influ-| 7 the SIU of trying to use his one-|ence to stop this support. man federal inquiry as a prop-| "Jt is the intent of the SIU aganda forum in violation of his\tg co - operate fully in this order against such activities. |inquiry," said Mr, Thomas. UNION 'IMPERTINENT' But the judge took a differ- "He also told SIU lawyer|ent view and ordered SIU Pres- Bruce Thomas that he consid-|ident Banks. to appear in per- ered the union impertinent in|$0n to explain the situation. expressing regret about his "'at-| He also ordered SIU AGE titude" on shipping disruptions.| William Glasgow to appear. at right is not identified. The touch - minded judge is} Mr, Glasgow was identified as --(AP Wirephoto via radio |trying to get to the bottom of!one of the pickets in a photo- from Saigon). ja long - brewing, violent union| graph taken Thursday in Cleve- OBSERVERS observed a large military op- | eration in the southern tip of South Viet Nam today. Man MM's Death Ruled Probable HOLLYWOOD (AP)--The of- ficial file on the death of Mari-| lyn Monroe was closed Friday with a coroner's ruling it was a probable suicide. Coroner Theodore Curphey said the blonde movie star could have died from either of two lethal drug doses found dur- ing an autopsy. A team of doctors said that | Brentwood home, Miss Monroe, known to have at-! tempted suicide "before, could s jlast time. M rtle Girl |HAS LONG HISTORY | The coroner's report, Missing Three Weeks: WHITBY (Staff) -- Provin- cial Police at Whitby are seek- ing assistance from the public} in their hunt for a 14-year-old) Myrtle district girl missing from her home. for the past three weeks. The girl is Janet} Ann Manderson, daughter of| Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Man-| derson, of Reach Township. | The girl is described as be-| ing 5 feet 5% inches tall, weigh-| ing 115 pounds. She has black) curly hair, cut in medium length, brown eyes, slim build,| and when last seen was wearing black shorts and a red and white blouse. The girl's mother said that Janet disappeared on July 28. Qn that occasion, she said, her daughter was selling raspber-| ries at a roadside stand near| their farm home when her par-| ents came to Whitby to pur- chase groceries. When they returned at 6.30 p.m., the girl was gone. She} took only the clothing she wore. She had a black purse contain- ing approximately $16 at the time of her disappearance Anyone knowing anything about thé girl's whereabouts is asked to contact PC Sel Hol- royd, of the Whitby Detach-; ment of the Ontario Provincial) Police, at MO 8-3388. jreport stated, without going fur- same familiar pattern--even to a hand clutching the phone. ------|struggle between the SIU and/land of a picket line protesting |two rival bodies, the Canadian|the unloading of Upper Lakes |Maritime Union and the Cana-|freighter Seaway Queen -- an |dian Brotherhood of Railway,| identification hotly disputed by /Transport and General Work-/the SIU, Ce a ers, both affiliates of the Cana- The inquiry was told by SIU dian Labor Congress. : officials that Mr, Glasgow was baer ad ao waged)at the Lakehead when the around the ships of the oronto- | photograph was taken. Mr. Jus- Suicid based Upper Lakes Shipping|tice Norris ordered Mr. Glas- have been killed by either nem-|Company. | 1 a butal, a barbiturate, or cloral Me Justice Norris heard fur-/2°% '© appear himself to testify -- a common knockout/ther evidence of shipping delays| "here he was. rop. The pattern of an _ undeter- mined number of previous sui- cide attempts, the .team_ re- ported, had always been halted . s by an urgent call for rescue. | Italian Police Her death, discovered Aug. 5 in the locked bedroom of her Arrest French OAS Leader simmer a In a hushed voice, she said|eral-provincial conference here involved the MILAN, Italy (AP)--Jacques| the assailants slugged her hus-| Friday, said he believes most heavy|Soustelle, a former French cab-/band, an employee of Upper| provinces will accept the offer. on psychiatric investiga-|inet officer and a figure in the Lakes line of Port Arthur, over!' Reports have indicated 56 or tion, showed a long history of|2bortive right-wing movement/the head and all over his body) more babies were born in Can- psychotic disturbances. \to block Algerian independence,|with an axe handle. : She long had suffered from|has been arrested by Italian po-) She testified the men kicked|ike limbs, since thalidomide \lice and ordered deported as anjher four - year - old daughter,| went on sale in Canada April 1, fears and d ssions-- "| rs : F ten 'ca iardeed « be "(| undesirable alien. smashed dishes, broke the wy 50-year-old|kitchen ceiling and beat. her| with y i Police said the n Paar ee eins con-|Soustelle, travelling on a false/husband so unmercifully that the} |passport would not be expelled|kitchen floor was covered in happy and had too much to live t® France, but would be taken' blood, nia for. to the-frontier of his choice. | "They just beat the hell out of| Jater used against morning sick- But the psychiatrists said fu- There was no immediate offi-'me,"' said Alfred Scavarelli,]ness in pregnant women, was ture plans or hopes meant lit-/cia! reaction from the French|when he took the stand to tell) withdrawn from sale in Canada tle or nothing to one in Mari-/80vernment. i |about the incident. lyn's state of mind. Soustelle took part in the 1958) They gave me the boots and| ment's request. : Money troubles didn't figure |Algerian military revolt that re-/ everything." | William S. Merrell Company either. Her will, filed Friday jn| turned Fresident: de Gaulle to|)----------------- vs inky ey g New York, showed assets of/POwer- He later became a bit-| . | Upper Lakes line in recent days| The inquiry also heard new, oe ee ee ~|direct evidence of violence stemming from the waterfront | struggle. | Mrs. Stella Scavarelli, a Fort |William._ housewife, jthat_ two unknown men|ment and maintenance of thali- savagedly beat wp her™husband|domide deformity cases. in the kitchen of her home this) wealth Minister Monteith, an- representatives have agreed to learry back to But rescue never came the up to 7,000 such births in the world, ine Abortion more than $500,000. iter opponent of de Gaulle, who} Marilyn left no note by her|Cotrary to the insurgents' ex-| bedside but, said psychiatrists,|Pectations, pushed for Algerian suicides seldom do. independence. : Was Marilyn a drug addict?) Italian police said Soustelle "Among addicts, she was not ., a patiar hayes TE eee enemeree: Oe Dey French passport made out. to chiatrist. 'She had no physical Jean Albert Seneque, Officers CP from Reuters-AP want to do is to have a de- Was there a remote possibil- nal where he ate and made a\domide" mother, underwent ajri's mental health and for the conscious state? the foetus was deformed. took 45 minutes and his wife s - ~|Ariz., told reporters the opera-|three hours later. But Dr. Robert Litman, a a aie & ace < 0 1 Picketed Vessel lweak and feeling a little pain,/ing she now is resting in a pri- cated case; since our studies _ didn six to eight days, depending on know what they were doing. CLEVELAND (AP)--The Sea-|she feared that her taking the | "There were no complica- probably gulped within a few\ore was being unloaded here,|being deformed. cessful."' room, also played a key role|T rades Department picketed|the baby to be was in fact de- when the operation was __ per- Seafarers' International Union/our heart was correct long ago. dependence on drugs, only psy- said he rented a car, drove to. STOCKHOLM -- Mrs. Sherrijfonmed baby. It was better to ity that she could have taken telephone call and then drove|legal abortion here today and|baby itself." "That's the $64,000 question," Milan, where he spent of the anesthetic ; : s : te s ss and| He was at' her bedside when psychiatrist, interrupted: SS \though this was normal. {vate room at the hospital, where began in 1960, that a person was Left Early Today | Mrs. Finkbine came to Swe- 4 how she recovers from the op- The report stated that the|way Queen, a Canadian vessel) tranquilizer drug thalidomide tions, the doctors said, and the seconds. left before dawn Friday. Her husband said: "she feels I d a | Mrs. Finkbine was in about in the coroner's finding. the ship Thursday protesting)formed has confirmed the deci- formed. She was taken to hos- (Ind.) of Canada. "The last thing we would ther. Complete Success : aa lle ae | 4 Whitby Boys Among Injured tec CRASH VICTIM AT DISASTER SCENE Deformed Babies Cost <ucyiitmerme: Plan Lo Get Hearing OTTAWA (CP) -- Provincial; of Cincinnati put it on the Cana-} dian market first under the their govern-| name Kevadon. Frank W.|teith issued a formal statement i ments a federal offer to pay|Horner Limited of Montrealjsaying it was the géneral view testified) half the cost of diagnosis. treat-;marketed it as Talimol from|that the thalidomide problem 1Oet,. 23, 1961. Following reports of birth de- formities in children whose |nouncing this result of a fed-|mothers had taken thalidomide,| handicaps in children. |the drug was withdrawn volun- tarily by the manufacturers in West Germany, Britain and one by Dec. 3, 1961. It had been sold in Europe since ada with phocomelia, or seal-|late 1957 or early 1958--without|and it was indicated that this ja prescription in West Ger- many. 1961. Authorities have estimated) 4 federal document supplied|federal proposals," to the closed conference ef fed- eral and provincial government The drug, recommended as a) representatives said Merrell |sedative against insomnia but asked the Federal Food and Drug Directorate Nov. 30, 1960, to reconsider a requirement that thalidomide could be sold March 2, 1962, at the govern-| only on a doctor's prescription. | |The directorate declined. The document also showed that: between Dec. 1, 1961, and Feb, 28, 1962--after thalidomide had been withdrawn from sale {abroad--the companies main- tained that a connection be- tween the drug and birth de- |formities' was not proved. Doc. |tors were warned against using t in pregnancy Dec. 5 and 7. |NOTIFY DOCTORS | The companies notified doc- jtors March 5, 1962, that they were withdrawing thalido- mide from sale, the document said, but it was available as late as April 12 from doctors and hospitals, | On April 10, the Federal Drug Directorate enlisted profes- sional organizations in an effort to track down and destroy re- maining thalidomide stocks and ordered inspectors to check 5,000 drug stores and seize any found. The federal-provincial confer- ence agreed that committees be formed under the Dominior Council of Health to study metn- lods of reporing live births. availability of medical and sur- gical skills for rehabilitation and the provision of such pros- thetic devices as artificia' limbs. At his press conference fol- lowing the meeting, Mr. Mon- |was only a small part Of..the WHITBY (Staff) -- Two men were killed and six others in- jured in a three-car collision at Myrtle Station shortly before midnight Friday. Four of the injured were Whitby school boys. Found dead, trapped in one of the cars was John Maitland, 28, of Beaverton. The driver of another of the cars in the collision, Thomas Singer, 20, of Willowdale, died six hours after the accident in the Oshawa General Hospital. TAKEN TO HOSPITAL Also taken to the Oshawa Gen- 'ral Hospital were: Bauke Huitema, 37, of 357 Dovedale drive, Whitby, with facial lacerations and internal injuries. He was admitted. His son, Bauke, 15, treated for a leg injury, was released early this morning. Another son, Sjouke, 14, was given emergency treatment at the Oshawa General Hospital and later removed to the Hos- pital for Sick Children, Toronto, with undetermined. injuries. A third son, Johannes, 11, was also given emergency treatment at the Oshawa hospital and later removed to the Hospital for Sick Children. Michael Volker, 13, of 1104 Green. street, Whitby, a friend of the Huitemas, was treated at Oshawa hospital for facial lacer- ations and other minor injuries and released early this morn- ing. much larger problem. of con genital disabilities and severe The advisability of separating |thalidomide cases from other |disabilities and handicaps was |questioned but the "immediate |situation was fully recognized would figure prominenly in |provincial consideration of the 1 Dead, 5 Hurt As Dump Truck Crashes Bus MONTREAL (CP) -- A run- away five - ton -dump truc! crashed into a bus queue after sideswiping two taxi cabs at a busy street intersection Friday, killing one person and injuring five others. Hundreds of horrified pedes- trians and motorists watched the truck zigzag through mid- afternoon 'traffic and overturn several times before coming to rest on the St. Catherine and Guy streets intersection in the city's west-central district. truck, loaded with shale and rock, apparently failed. John Drury, about 50, of Ste. Therese - en - Haut, Que., was killed when he was pinned by bank, John Martin, 38, a Bell Tele- brain concussion. Two other pedestrians, Yvon Daigle, 30, of suburban St. Michel, and Miss Marguerite Desjardins, 53, suf- 'ered lacerations and bruises. Slightly hurt were the driver of the truck, Wilfrid Lemire, 42, and Miss Giselle' Vinette, 26, a chological." (Milan's central railway termi-\Finkbine, the American "thali-|have an abortion, both for Sher- the overdose while in a Semi: a hotel at Brescia, east of/her husband said the removed) Finkbine said the operation ini | Robert Finkbine of Phoenix,|came out answered Coroner Curphey. night, és : it | rf that his wife was tired andjshe awoke, Finkbine said, add- We have found no authenti- 4 4 she is expected to remain for so drugged that they didn't) \den for a legal abortion because eration. lethal dosage--or dosages--was| picketed while her cargo of iron|would result in her unborn baby Operation was completely suc- The locked door, to her bed-| The AFL - CIO Maritime very good now. The news that : the 14th week 'of pregnancy 'It was most unusual," the|what it termed a lockout of the|sion which we already knew in pital a A HUG AND A KISS FROM K CP from AP-Reuters MOSCOW -- Premier Khrush- chev hugged and kissed the Soviet space twins and ushered them to honors atop Lenin's the celebration by announcing|that they were ready to carry the lofting of another instru-jout any further missions ment-bearing satellite, presum-| Then Popovich kiss and/her on the right route. ably unmanned, in a space re-|embraced his seven - year \old) The cosmonauts' plane landed search program launched five|daughter Natasha and took hehjust after Khrushchev arrived Tomb today while scores of|months ago. It is named Cos-|by the hand as he and Nikola-|ig another plane from Sochi. thousands of Muscovites roared/mos VIII. lyev waved with the welcoming|The Soviet premier was sun- congratulations for their orbital) DAY TURNS GREY party to the huge crowd gath-/tanned and apparently rested exploits. | The day dawned bright and/ered to greet them. from his holiday in the Crimea |Premier had to give her a lit- jtle tug now and again to keep JANET ANN MANDERSON CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ¢ A tumultuous. heroes' wel-|sunny. Low clouds moved in,} on the Black Sea. come--complete with red car-| however, and by the time the| WAVES FLOWERS | The cosmonauts arrival was pet, traditional bouquets and|Ccosmonauts arrived the capital) Khrushchev led the astronauts|televised and transmitted live Red Square ceremony--marked Was grey as winter. jand the Soviet officials on alto television screens in West- the capital's reception of Maj.| The latest Soviet heroes ex-/happy march around in front of/ern Europe. Andrian Nikolayev and Lt.-Col.|changed embraces with mem-|the welcoming crowd. The So- RSCORTED BY JETS Pavel Popovich. bers of top Soviet officials, | viet premier was waving a; The cosmonauts arrived at Khrushchev said the two, bothimembers of their families andj bunch of flowers in acknowledg-|the Airport in a four-engined avowedly ready for any new as-|their Russian predecessors injment of the cheers of the|turboprop IL-18 airliner, es- signment, had performed "a space crowd, courted by seven jet fighters pi- wonderful feat of science, tech-- Nikolayev and Popovich first) Khrushchev suddenly took Na-|loted by air force comrades nique, economy and culture."' reported to Khrushchev, salut-|tsaha Popovich's hand and she} It brought the cosmonauts The Soviet Union punctugtedjing him smartly and Pledging} relinquished. her father's, The'from the undisclosed town on Spacemen Greeted As Heroes the Volga where they rested and were quizzed by doctors and scientists after their simul- taneous flights around the | world. | A band struck up as the door of the giant aircraft slid open land Nikolayey. and Popovich walked down the steps to the \tarmac together. Thousands of red flags and excited crowds lined the 15-mile route from the airport to the {capital which the spacemen |were taking. Soviet Premier Khrushchev, wearing a straw hat and a light jsummer suit, the cosmonauts' [families and members of the Soviet government were on the! reception stand to greet the} |spacemen. The two marched in step across a ceremonial red carpet to the flower-decked stand. The space twins stood at at- tention at the top of the steps to the stand in front of Khrushchev saluted and reported on their]; record-breaking space flights. Nikolayev said he had suc- cessfully completed a four-day flight in his spacecraft Vostok Il and that continued radio communication had been main- tained with Vostok IV carrying Popovich. He said all systems aboard the Vostok III functioned nor- mally, and he was ready to carry out any further assign- ment. Police said the brakes of the) the truck against the wall of a/@ phone Company foreman,. was|® the most severely hurt with a}; SERIOUS CONDITION James H. Maitland, 26, of Port Severn and Toronto, who was travelling in the car in which his brother died, was admitted to the Oshawa General Hospital in serious condition with facial injuries and shock. The collision of the three cars occurred around 11.15 p.m., about 100 feet south of the CPR crossing on Highways 7 and 12 at Myrile. Police believe the car in which the Maitlands were travelling was proceeding north while the Singer and Huitema cars were southbound. They were told that Singer was preceding Huitema down the highway, on his way home from a day at Lake Scugog, when his car was struck on the left front by the northbound car. The northbound car rolled on the highway and struck the Huitema car head on. - The impact was so harsh that three wheels were torn from the Singer car and the whole left front was driven back to the driver's seat. The northbound car came to rest on its roof on the west the wiring. The Whitby Town- ship Fire Brigade, from Brook- lin, was summoned to. extin- guish the fire while passing motorists and a tow truck work- ed frantically to free the car's two occupants. CALLED FOR HELP Persons who arrived on 'the scene before the two men were removed said that James Mait- land could be heard calling for help. He was freed when the car was raised slightly by a tow truck and the dead man was pulled. out the open side of the car. Three ambulances --Robin- son's from Brooklin, Town's from Whitby, and the Oshawa city ambulance -- were called to carry the injured to the Osh- awa hospital. The dead man was removed by the Oshawa Fire Department's emergency truck. PC Arnold Summers, of the Whitby Detachment of the OPP, who investigated, had his own problems getting to the accident scene. In Whitby, his cruiser was involved in a two-car crash at Brock and Ontario streets. Nickel Probe Cooling-Oft Period Starts -- | WASHINGTON (AP)--George M. Humphrey's defence of a multi-million dollar nickel deal with the government will be re- sumed 'in the Senate after an indefinite cooling-off ; period. The 72-year-old Cleveland m- dustrialist's hearing before Sen- ate investigators ended abruptly Friday after a -shouting match between Humphrey and Sena- or Stuart Symington, Missouri Democrat. But Symington, chairman of the Senate's special stockpile investigation, promised that Humphrey 'or any other wit- ness will be called to testify if this is requested by counsel or any member of the subcommit- tee." But before than Symington said, subcommittee investiga- tors and auditors will re-exam- ine Humphrey's testimony and records of the Hanna mining complex on the much - disputed $98,000,000 nickel stockpile con- tracts. Senator Bush, Connecticut Re- publican, who sharply protested Symington's refusal to let Hum- phrey and a squad of Hanna associates continue their tsti- mony Friday, said in an inter- Shoulder and immediately caught fire, presumably from view he will inist they be re- called later, passenger in one of the taxis.| (me Australian Murray Rose leaps out of water after he set a new world record of 4:13.4 in the 400-meter free style Friday. He wis swimming EAKS RECORD against Alan Somers of In- diana University in a special swim-off of the International invitation men's meet at Chit cago, --(AP Wirepaoto).

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