Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jun 1964, p. 1

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ne ate SR aera on Sennen = Thought For Today - Every man is hero in his own home -- at least until the guests have gone, : dow VOL. 93 -- NO. 144 oe a ah Price Ni ' 10 Cents per Copy bd OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1964 Oshawa Times Authorized os Second Class Mall Pout: Oities Department o' Ottawa and for payment Weather Report Threat of showers tonight. Sunny and cooler humid. Postage in Saturday. Less TWENTY PAGES PM To Ask CBC Film Be Shown OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- ter Pearson promised today during an angry House of Com- mons row with Opposition Leader Diefenbaker to ask the CBC to show on television the controversial film Mr. Pearson. It should include matter cut from the original film, which the OBC has declined to pre- sent, Mr. Pearson told Mr. Dief- enbaker and Alvin Hamilton (PC--Qu' Appelle). |time. Later, he indicated cam- Speaker Alan Macnaughton,jeras recorded discus sions who kept trying to halt angry|jamong a number of ministers shouts and interjections, took|just before cabinet went into under advisement Mr. Pear-|session. son's request that Mr. Hamil-| Mr. Hamilton said Mr. Pear- ton withdraw an allegation that|son's statement, repeated for the prime minister had failed|the third time, showed ° the to tell the 'complete truth"| prime minister had tried to mis- about the actual filming. cil president, George Mcllraith, cabinet room with political mat- ters under discussion when se- quences of the TV documentary were made. Mr. Pearson intervened to re. net or cabinet committe meeting had been filmed at any Hamilton asked the Privy Coun-|> whether the minister was in the peat what he had said twice previously--no cabinet or cabi-|' Garman UNIVERSAL HEALT SERVICE PROPOSE |should be brought under the e ing only $1, the royal commis-| Drugs Included In Health Plan \ OTTAWA (CP) -- Drugs roposed national health serv- es program with the pur- [chaser of each prescription pay- |sion on health services said to-| day. "Althouguh we accept that the manufacture and distribution of MAJOR ITEMS HEALTH REPORT OTTAWA (CP)--Major rec- ommendations today of the royal commission on health by an. information service to, Services: ; supply doctors, druggists and] . Comprehensive health-serv- hospitals with the latest infor-| 1¢es PTO Tam financed by mation on drugs. The report! '@X¢s, ee Fe - says this would tend to reduce) Provinces wish--lotteries. the cost of prescribed drugs. The 11-per-cent federal sales tax should be removed from prescribed drugs, the commis-| sion said, and the Patent Act Everyone gets' benefits. No means test, No extra charges. System based on free choice by patients of doctors and lead the Commons. He asked At one point Mr, Pearson and Mr.' Diefenbaker stood for a minute or more competing for the floor as Liberal and Con- servative backbenchers beat out noisy support with their hands! and desk lids. | The film in question -was| made at a cost of $35,000 for the CBC but rejected by the publicly-owned corporation on the grounds that it failed to meet CBC television standards. Since then, the Commons op- position has hammered almost daily at the circumstances of its rejection, demanding that it be shown The battle started when Mr. Mr. Mcllraith again whether he had been present while political matters were discussed during} filming. | Mr. Pearson said heatedly his! replies had been "strictly and absolutely true." Soviet-Danish | Premiers Agree Expand Trade BOHEMIAN COPENHAGEN (AP) -- Pre-| Yorkville Village, Toronto's mier Jens Otto Krag said today| mid-town bohemia, has been he and Premier Khrushchey| showing the colors recently f|drugs in this country is a pri-|should be extended so provin-| vate enterprise venture, wejcial governments and their have no hestiation in stating/agencies can patent drugs and/ that the public interest is dom-|collect fees. inant," the commission said in) For corporation tax purposes, its report to the government. |manufacturers, importers and dentists, who are free to ac- cept or reject patients and choose place and nature of practice. Provinces launch and ad- minister program. Ottawa pays half. Federal - provincial confer- | ence within six months to be- gin program without delay. -- Scheme includes all medi- | cal services -- diagnosis and treatment of all physical and psychiatric conditions in home, hospital, office. panel Includes prescribed drugs, BUSINESS student, two years out of Brit- ain, handles sales, His friends are responsible for silk-screen production and stitching and Monday meeting board of have agreed on expansion of Soviet-Danish trade, but remain divided on all main issues of international politics. Khrushchev and Krag met for nearly two hours at the Danish foreign office in their second round of talks of the Soviet leader's goodwill visit, prepar- atory to issuing a joint com- munique Saturday. Krag said Soviet-Danish com- mittees appointed Tuesday to La Presse Strike Talks Continuing MONTREAL (CP)--Mr. Jus- tice Roger Ouimet is scheduled to meet today with the manage- ment of La Presse and union representatives of the printers and journalists for negotiations aimed at settling the dispute at study trade and economic ques- the French - language daily coe nearly have finished their work. The communique will say i K 4 the Soviet, : have on trade ex-| 4 to report|pansion, he said, without men- on negotiations to ajtioning monetary values. Dan- of the newspaper's|ish exports are to include ships directors. and. farm produce. Jury Urges Supervision Drugs At Universities | and four city youths have been making a small profit at it. Here Malcolm Batey, 20. makes a $1 sale to Adele Busby. Malcolm, a former art Japan Rocked Second Quake ' "i me | feet into: the air, as his ecbthgtane Meuex Age a pedaling a pass over the erh Japanese port city tonight|stricken city. as it struggled with the after- few minutes before the math of Tuesday's quake--Ja-|new quake, Niigata's fire. chief pan's most violent in 40 years./said the fire was being con- Buildings already weakened|tained in the ocean-front refin- on Tuesday suffered damage.|ery area where more than 90 But there were no immediate] storage tanks went up in flames reports of new deaths or-inju-| after Tuesday's quake. ries. The quake Tuesday ripped The Central Meteorological|2cross an 11-prefecture (state) Agen said the new quake, a, Bu aera in the Sea of io off| 29; injuring more than 400, and Niigata, struck the port on the|!eaving thousands homeless. northwest coast with a force of, mail-orders. Since business started June 11, records show a profit of $2.10. --CP Wirephoto Ie Drug Directorate of the area, killing a known total of | i |bute to the provinces half the/than 15 per cent of total sales cost of a prescription drug bene-|for advertising. fit program within the over-all; --------_----__-__--- s gests a $1 payment by each pre- Turkish scription purchaser, it says that} if the druggist wishes to Pr oie The program should include a "multi - pronged approach" by both levels of government to| in 1961--latest year for which figures are available--amounted to 43 per cent of total medical Ine ; s ihis standard price, and deduct} Premier the question of reducing drug expenditures. The report recommends that/distributors of drugs should not health program. | the amount from the $1 fee, he| costs. Among the suggestions on * ithe federal government conte | be permitted to spend more | When the commission sug- should be free to do so. The cost of prescribed drugs |drugs was one that the Food federal health department pre- pare_a national. drug formulary, {listing all the drugs which meet ithe specifications of the direc- 'torate for inclusion under the | plan. This should be accompanied | | West Suffers ' Laos Setback WASHINGTON (AP) -- The |United States and Britain ap- pear to have suffered a setback in their efforts to find a diplo- |votes against 195 for the com- bined opposition, with two ab- but patients pay first $1 on | each prescription; federal sales tax removed from drugs. Resigning ANARA (AP) Turkish Premier Ismet Inonu announced) today his intention to resign} after he failed to obtain clear-| cut parliamentary support of! = ie a handling of} Eye care and eye glasses the thorny Cyprus issue. | gg OF Inonu, who formed a minor-! for children, water +, ity government at Christmas time last year, had been sched- uled to go to Washington this weekend to confer with Presi- dent Johnson on the Cyprus crisis, which involves commu- nal fighting between Cypriots of Turkish descent and those of Greek descent. The latter far| outnumber the Turkish - Cyp- patients under existing act. riots, de Inonu could only muster 199) Experiment: Give drug ad- dicts narcotics under supervi- |. s10n. Free dental service for chil- dren under 18, expectant mothers, welfare. cases. on Fluoridation of all commu- nity water systems in Canada to prevent tooth decay. Organized care of crippled and retarded children. Hospital insurance coverage for mental and tuberculosis stentions. WARNS HOUSE The veteran Turkish leader,| when asking for a confidence} vote, had warned legislators he| Air ambulances, medicine depots, nursing stations in re- mote areas, his| TORONTO (CP)--A coroner's, jury has recommended closer supervision of persons traffick- ing in and using drugs at uni- versities. The jury, inquiring into the May 7 death of 23 - year:- old) Wayne Bruce MacKenzie of Burlington, Ont., said universi- ties should improve counselling services on the use of drugs and should warn students of the po-| tential danger involved in their} use. It found that MacKenzie died of heart failure brought on by dence at the University of Tor- onto and the jury was told that he, and at least five others in the residence house, had been taking the drug while studying for final examinations. Students testified that Mac- Kenzie also had taken pills dur- ing March and April while Studying for exams. Roger S. Bodkin, a Toronto druggist, said a University of Toronto student had bought drugs from him without a pre- scription by claiming to be a medical student. He: said arts three on the Japanese scale, | which has a maximum of seven.| Tuesday's disastrous -quake | which spread death and destruc-| tion over 200 miles of Japan's | northwest coast, was rated at five. The new quake hit as Niigata firemen were bringing under} control a raging oil fire, set ablaze by the earlier tremor. | FIRE STILL RAGES U.S. Air Force planes Para-| chuted another 14 tons of fire-| Crash training program for specialists aided by federal grants. would resign and cancel | Washington trip if he did not re ceive solid backing from parlia-| ment. He said this support would 'strengthen his hand" in| dealing with the crisis. After the vote Inonu told re- porters he considered the mar- eoepeSTA gin in his favor too slim to stay) Nurses' training cut ta two on. The cabinet met in special] years from three; 10 new uni- session to discuss the situation.| versity nursing schools; Inonu's resignation is ex-; grants and bursaries to send pected to plunge this NATO na-| Sraduate nurses to university. tion into a government crisis. | matic, solution for the crisis in Laos. 8 Russia has cooled off on a Polish proposal for an urgent 'international conference to deal with threats to the Southeast Asian country's neutrality, Washington officials report. The Russians have raised some ob- jections to the way the confer- ence was to be set up and the 'result is seen here as slowing! down the diplomatic approach to a solution. What effect this development will have on further U.S. milit- UN Seeks Force End Apartheid UNITED NATIONS The United Nations Security Council condemned South Af- rica's policy of race separation Six new university medical schools and expansion of ex- isting ones, (AP) -- extreme fatigue resulting from excessive use of 'wyamine sul-|student John Penman "told me phate, a stimulant. jhe was a medical student and Mackenzie's body was foundjhe had a prescription from his fighting chemical foam to Nii-| A ie : gata's weary firemen at dusk. | (@Partheid) once again Thurs- A pilot said a block - square |4#Y and decided on an 8\4- jmonth study of possible meas- storage tank complex on the) sres + fore an end to. it. on the floor of his room in resi-|father who was a doctor." Mngt still was burning) A Bolivian - Norwegian' com- fiercely, 'shooting' flames 300 to! promise resolution against EDITORIAL CRITICIZED Commons A Summons Motion OTTAWA (CP) -- The Com- mons voted 107 to 94 Thursday lation of Progressive Conserva- against a motion to summon the tives, Social Credit, Creditistes editor of the Ottawa Citizen or/and four other New Democrats his editorial writer before the|--H. W. Herridge (Kootenay Commons privileges committee.) West); Harold Winch (Vancou- The motion was moved byjver East), Frank Howard Terry Nugent (PC -- Edmon-|(Skeena) and Arnold Peters ton-Strathcona) who complained! (Timiskaming), that a Citizen editorial Wednes-- Mr. Nugent noted that day contained deliberate lies|committee, after an investiga- and a scurrilous and unfounded|tion of the allegation by Ger- attack on members of Parlia-|arq Girouard (PC -- Labelle), ment. had reported to the Commons He was complaining about an that it found no evidence of editorial headed 'The End of Bribery = no breach of Com- the Affair?" which commented} S privileges, on the privileges committee's} Mt. Nugent, a member of the inquiry into an MP's allegations uae quoted the Citizen he was offered a fat election|°dltorial. as stating that Mr. fund to join the Liberal party,|@irouard accused the director In the formal vote, 99 Liber-| 0! ge Drona of bide ais and eight New Democrats» ore ride mine the He said this statement; in the face ,of the committee's report, "is a deliberate. lie by the edi-| torial writer." There had never been such a. statement by- Mr. Girouard, who had, in fact, told the committee there was no at-! tempt to bribe him. Mr. Nugent said the only al- legation of bribery was made iby Stanley Knowles (NDP CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 teamed up to defeat a combin-]Winnipeg North Centre) in pro- the} apartheid was adopted 8 to 0. France, Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union abstained. } Africans and Asians jasked in a two-week debate td , |that the council immediately qains jimpose economic penalties on South Africa. The resolution set up a coun- cil study "as to the feasibility, effectiveness -and of measures" that. could. be taken by the council. | In voting for it, the United States and Britain specified that they were not committing them- selves in advance to support economic penalties after. the tud had |posing the committee's inquiry into Mr. Girouard's allegations about electoral funds, study Mr. Nugent said the editorial A kala; also made the statement that/ et meee eal | T. - "te "pt «p(Fedorenko said they Liberal National Director Keith| cain showed. their true ne- Davey was "vindicated" by the ture as colonialists." He said |comnittee. lthe resolution "bypasses the But, said Mr. Nugent, thelquestion of the application of privileges committee made no|sanctions .. . and for this rea- finding regarding Mr. Davey.|son jg extremely weak." Mr. Girouard had protested that' French delegate Roger Seyd- Mr. Davey called him a "Lib- oyy said he abstained because eral: reject" when the Labelle|the resolution meant UN. inter- MP switched to the Progressive|yention in South Africa's af- Conservatives from' the Social fairs. Credit party. | Mr. Nugent said the commit-| oS ie quan er mecaeeet Derailed Train Blocks Main Line Girouard had applied to join the) TORONTO (CP)--A Canadian Liberals but its report had| made no reference to this as- pect of the matter. | Pacific Railway passenger train Therefore, he said,. the SU8-| bound for Detroit from Toronto gestion that Mr. Davey was vin-| was derailed on the western out- dicated constituted a second skirts of Toronto Thursday "deliberate lie" by the editor-| night, . blocking the railway's ial writer. : }main line for more than three Douglas Fisher (NDP -- Port} hours. Arthur) said the matter should None of the 100 passengers be left until the report of the} was injured and all. remained privileges committee is brought|on the train during the delay. up for adoption by the House.| The train remained upright. implications} thus | ary intervention in Laos on be- half of the neutralist govern- }ment is unclear at the moment. Whites Angered But the United States has com- mitted itself to a policy of roll- ing back Communist forces from territory they recently) jconquered in the strategic) |Plaine des Jarres, | If this objective cannot be ac- |complished eventually by -diplo- jmatic means, the Johnson ad- |ministration presumably -- will |have to consider expanding mil-; litary operations. Controversial Priest Moved To New Parish LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The young priest who tried to get) the Pope to remove his cardi- By Negro Action ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP)--, Brock brought out containers Negro integration leaders, re-|of muriatic acid, a cleansing jecting an offer of a truce on/fluid fyor pools, and dumped it the heels of renewed racial vi-|into the water. It was not said they would offer|strong enough to cause burns their own truce terms today. |when diluted by the water, However, an aroused white| Police used their clubs to population, angered by an at-|strike at some of the bathers, tempt of Negroes to integrate|who were yanked from the pool a posh white motel swimming|and shoved into a police car olence, pool, indicated they might not) while dozens of irate white spec-| ' tators yelled. to officers 'Kill " be willing to listen. "We will make a counterpro- | them fae gp lrgedl nd jr =i tor Four Striking Females Freed grand jury presentment Thurs- day calling for a 30-day truce. State Senator Verle Pope, a spokesman for the business-} men's group, said the demon-| nal is going on a retreat, a va- cation, and to a new parish, says a chancery spokes-| man, adding: | "So far as we are concerned, | the case is resolved." Rev. William H. DuBay, 29,| }had written the Pope accusing| |Los Angeles Archbishop James Francis Cardinal McIntyre of "gross malfeasance in office'! for failing to speak out on ra-| cial matters. | Father DuBay was summoned) to the chancery of the Los An- geles archdiocese Thursday -- for the second time since he made his. letter public at aj June 11 press-conference. | Since the original: announce- |ment, Father DuBay has said he could make no further state- ment on the matter, But spokes- men for him have done so. After the first conference, they said| [Be would continue his cam-| paign. strations Wednesday night and| Thursday indicate, a lack "4 good faith among the integra-|o¢ Sprague Tool (Canada) Lim- tionists. ited were released from jail on He said the total disregard of |$500 bail each Thursday after the demonstrators for the rights|they were charged with wilful of private property shows there |damage. is aosolutely no sincerity in| The women their desires, -- the word ARREST 57 Fifty-seven more demonstrat- ors including 16 Jewish rabbis and a Jewish layman, went to Four striking female employees "scab" was 'house of a | said. It was the third incident since non-striker, police jail Thursday--bringing the to-|the strike at the electronic com- tal arrests this week to about|Ponent plant which began two 250. hard a ag a te . -eday|Was hit by eggs thrown ick- A melee erupted Thursday] as' and bottles were tossed at after five Negroes and tW0| non-strikers white integrationists jumped in| Dorothy Marie MeWhinney a swimming pool at Monson Mo-/o1 Madelino Karen Lougheed, tor Lodge. |18, Mrs. Hazel' Jacob, 23, and Manager James Brock, ang-|Caroline Zettler, 19, all from ered at the continued demon-|nearby communities, will ap- stratins at his motel, pushed'pear in court June 22 on the wil- jand pulled some of the rabbis./ful damage charges. WALKERTON, Ont. (CP) -- were arrested] | painted across the front of the : OTTAWA (CP) -- A prepaid comprehensive, universal health services program for Canadians was recommended today by the royal commission on health services. Unveiling a broad 'Health charter for Canadians," the seven-member commission re- jected the idea of "state med- icine" for Canada. The dominant theme is a forceful, 914 page-report, tabled in the Commons, is that the fed- eral and provincial gov- ernments must co - operate to provide the highest pos sible health standards for all Cana- dians regardless of age, condi- tion, place of residence or abil- ity to pay. "That less than half of our population has some degree of reasonably adequate health in- surance coverage for medical services is a matter of grave national concern," says the commission, set up three years ago Saturday under the chair- manship of Supreme Court Jus- tice Emmett Hall. CITES DENTAL, OTHERS "Of greater concern is the fact that few organized insur- ance programs worth mention- ing -exist in equally. important areas such as mental illness, dental, and optical care, drug requirements, retarded and crippled children." The commission 'called for a federal «. . provincial conference within six months to work out its sweeping health program and stressed the urgeney for government leadership. . The. 500,000 - word report; weighing 4% pounds, advocates virtually - free prescription drugs, fluoridation of all com- Report Outlines 'Health Charter' . tal care and eyeglasses for chil- dren up to 18, expansion of the hospital insurance scheme to include out-patient services and more emphasis on home care. It calls for placing mental ill- ness in the same category as any other health ailment and recommends special measures to deal with drug addiction and alcoholism, The entire program, to be ef- fective, would have to be: rein- forced by accelerated tra' of doctors and nurses--inclu ing establishment of new uni- versity medical schools. across the country. ESTIMATES COST The commission's price tag for the individual Canadian would be $20 a year above the $178 it forecasts he willspend under the existing health setup in 1971. The over-all cost would be $466,000,000 a year more than the present health bill es- timate of $4,015,000,000 for 1071. But the commission argues that the cost should be well within Canada's capacity in view of its 'prospective. eco- nomic growth, nance health services by oper- ating a lottery--at present ou' vd under the Crimina aot Set indiesten. te: pip tor cated its : implementation of the rep which has been 1% years i writing with the last polished off just a ion sources is no. truth in repo: ernment asked for the be revised but admitted t commission had been pressed to munity 'water supplies, free den- Blessing OTTAWA (CP) -- Fluorida- tion of all community water systems in Canada to prevent tooth decay was recommended today by the royal commission on health services. The commission's proposal in this controversial health area also recommended federal-pro- vincial co-operation in the in- stallation of fluoridation sys- tems. It said Ottawa should provide, under the commission's pro- posed health facilities develop- ment fund, grants to the prov- inces of 75 per cent of the cost of equipment and _ installation for fluoridating community wa- ter' supplies. "The evidence, now garnered over 30 years, is that the tech- nique of fluoridation properly controlled is effective, inexpen- sive and safe," the commission said. ; "Wherever it has been adopted the savings in dental costs have been impressive; and the reduction of human suf- complete the job. Given To Fluoridation The commission said dental Personnel are in such short sup- ply that there will not be suffi- cient dental resources in the present generation to meet to- tal needs. CAN HALT CARIES : "The only possible effective solution is to reduce our needs, as well as to enhance our re- sources, Fortunately, the now- proven method of fluoridation by the use of a controlled quan- pen of fluoride in community water resources s beyond a remedy; it does yen by pre- venting a high proportion of dental caries (cavities) ever appearing at all." The federal government should provide for fluoridation of water supplies in areas or institutions under its jurisdic- tion, including the Northwest Territories and armed services establishments. In rural areas where commu. nity water systems are non-ex- istent, public health authorities should adopt other methods of fering equally great BEE fluoridation.

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