Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Jun 1964, p. 1

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e Thought For Today If there's plenty of room at the top, why all the showing up there? "VOL. 93 -- NO; 147 Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy - OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1964 shawa Cines -- Authorized os Second Clos Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment _ Weather Reporh. Chance of thundershowers overs night. Mostly cloudy and a little cooler dnesday, EIGHTEEN PAGES slninihe Postage in Cash, Smash Plot 'To Kidnap Khrushchev STOCKHOLM (AP)---Swedish|organization which fought for police have smashed a plot to|the Nazis during the Second kidnap Soviet Premier Khrush-| World War. chev and hold him hostage for| The Ustashi has a_ strong the release of political prisoners) membership in Sweden, which behind the Iron Curtain. is haven for about 30,000 refu- Police confirmed that at least/ gees from Communist countries. one man, described only as a) Two weeks before Khrush- | 30-year-old foreigner, was ar-|chev's arrival in Sweden, the | newspaper |rested Monday near Haga Cas- Expressen said the BULLET HITS MA BY-ELECTION RESULTS ' IN OSHAWA HOTE Man Accused CITY LIMITS ee a ~ tle, where the Soviet leader is| Ustashi had threatened openly} staying during his five-day state visit. The man was reported to have confessed that he and sev- eral other men had planned to smash their way through the castle gates in a truck armed with sub-machine-guns. hg rent Aftonbladet, wh has close connections with the Swedish government, said the man in custody was a Hungarian. Police declined to confirm this. There also was speculation that the plot was hatched by members of the Ustashi, a fa- natic Croatian- anti-Communist to kill the Soviet leader. "Khrushchey will die in Swe- den," Expressen quoted a Usta- shi leader as saying. County Police Supt. Aake Magnusson signed the. charge 'sheet against the arrested man. "It is correct that yesterday I arrested a man_ suspected of preparing dangerous activi- ties," the superintendent said. Magnusson described a report by a Stockholm newspaper that the plotters were armed with sub machine guns as a "dreamed up story', He said more arrests were "not likely 'under present circumstances." | Pontiff Orders Clergy WATERPROOF WOODWORKER lumber plant. He borrowed a piece of his firm's product | and water-skied in --(CP Wirephoto) Jim: Sincock of New .West- minster, "B.C. wasn't going to let a shallow flood keep him from getting to work atNthe Rights Workers Vanish In Dixie PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (AP); Officers stopped the three Mystery deepened today into|Sunday and charged them with} the strange disappearance of|speeding. They were let go after three young civil rights work-|being held in jail several hours./he had found no reason to ap-' ers. They were last heard from!Cheney paid a $20 fine. Sunday night after paying a Sheriff's deputies said they speeding fine in this east cen-jreleased them about 10:30 p.m. tral Mississippi town. A spokesman for the Neshoba The Federal Bureau of Inves-|County sheriff's office said a tigation and the state highway|patro) car followed the workers patrol pressed a search for the|"'several blocks to make sure two white persons and a Negro,|they got out of town all right.' part of the first wave of sum-) mer volunteers seeking to re-'any sign of the trio, concern} form this. state politically. lrose. Cries came from = civil Missing were Andy Goodman,|rights groups for a search. 20, and Mickey Schwerner, 24,) FBI agents arrived in Phila- both of New York. With them delphia Monday night. In Wash- was James Cheney, 22-year-ldjington, Edwin 0. Guthman, jus- Negro member of the Congress|tice department information of-| of Racial Equality from Meri-|ficer, said the FBI was making) dian. a. full probe of the "possibility | They came here Saturday,that they are being held against) after a week's. orientation|their will... or that they are course for the Mississippi Free-jotherwise being deprived of dom Summer Project in Ox-heir civil rights." ford, Ohio. Other workers Nearly 200 students have ar- spread over the state during the|rived in Mississippi to open the weekend to launch voter regis-/summer. project with a second tration drives and advise_Negro|group pf volunteers due next citizens of their rights. week. 'Lazy Coun illors | Get Slum Slap SUDBURY (CP) -- Lo'rnejareas close to slum conditions, Cumming, Ontario deputy min-'he said. It now has been ex- ister of municipal affairs, Mon- tended. day blamed indifference and |az-- In reviewing the 17 amend- inses among elected municipal ments to the act passed during leaders as the major cause of,the second session of the 27th urban blight. legislature, Mr. Cummings He told second day sessions called for more assistance from of the Ontario Association of municipal officials in suggesting Mayors-and Reeves that lack of future changes in the law. willingness to make use of ex- 'This is not a body of dead isting legislation is more than rules and regulations,' he said, half the cause of the trouble. "Local legislation must be com- Mr. Cumming suggested that plex and must be a growin recent amendments to the Mu- thing." nicipal Act give municipalities In. other business, delegates even more authority than before passed with an 80-to-46 vote a to arrest blight and improve the resolution asking the senior lev- physical appearance of their els of government to provide 80 areas per cent of elementary and sec- "The worst fault of all is laz- ondary school costs in Ontario.| iness,"' he said. 'It is an un- - Soentt ~ willingness to" study the prob- lem,. an unwillingness to enforce standards of fire and health g VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope Paul VI said today that the Ro- man Catholic Church is study- ing the birth control problem in the light of new developments, presumably contraceptive pills. But he 'barred™their use by Catholics for the present. He also admonished Roman Catholic prelates to stop. dis- cussing the new pills publicly, and he promised that church studies on the subject would be published as soon as possible. But he indicated that so far prove general use of the pills. The Roman Catholic yaler discussed the birth control prob- lem in~a speech that also in-|, cluded merition. of the Interna- tional Eucharistic Congress to 'ibe held in Bombay in Novem- ber and Christian unity. Indian As the hours passed without | sources have said he has agreed) to visit India for that event. On birth. control, the Pope Doctor Backs Birth Pill In Dispute VANCOUVER (CP)--A_ Van- couver doctor has come out in defence of a birth control pill. Dr. J. H. Dickinson told dele- gates to the convention of the Society of Obstetricians and gynecologists of Canada here Monday that '"'orthonoyum is truly another wonder drug;" Ortho-novum is a widely-used birth control pill. His opinion was in sharp con- trast to that of Dr. Beryl Cher- nick of London, Ont., who ear'l- ier told a meeting of the Cana- dian Society for the Study of Fertility hére that she had found a high incidence of weight gain, high blood pressure, headaches and depression in patients using the pills. ' - Dr. Dickinson said a study of almost 300 women over an aVer- age period of a year showed up no serious side effects. Questioned about Dr. Cher- nick's statement in, an_ inter- view, Dr. Dickinson said: "Some of her subjects would have had headaches and depres- sion even without taking . the pills." He added there was no indica- tion that the contraceptive pills cause cancer or circulatory troubles as some people had claimed. PAY SOMETHING EVEN IF PUBLIC SCHEME Cut Birth Control Talk did not specifically mention con- jtraceptive pills, But his refer- ence seemed clear. It was the first time he had spoken in such terms. The Pope declared the church must face this "'very complex" question of birth control and is in fact doing so. The question is being jected to a_ profound "which we hope to conclude soon with the co-operation sub- the pontiff declared. The pontiff discussed birth control in a general speech on church and world affairs to a group of cardinals / - His words came. Amid gre. jing discussion among. Romar |Catholics about the use of con- jtraceptive pills. There have |been suggestions that might be used to regulate the menstrual cycle su the rhythm method could be used with greater precision. The | rejejcts contraceptive devices but permits the rhythm system. | Pope Paul said he hoped the) # | studies cluded. ; "But let us say frankly that we have not yet sufficient rea- | sons to consider overcome, and therefore not obligatory, the rules, given by Pope Pius XII in this connection." Pius in a 1958 speech said pills should not be used to pre- vent pregnancy, But he added that they could be used to check uterine ailments if they were prescribed by a doctor without the intention of preventing preg- nancy. Pope Paul's 'references to Pope Pius' pronouncement, to new developments in the birth jcontrol field and his emphasis on birth control at this time in a general speech made clear that he was. speaking of the pills. "The problem, everyone |speaks of it, is that of the so- called control of births; that of the increase of populations on one side, and of family morality on the other." he said. . . LODGE RESIGNS VIETNAM POST WASHING TON (AP)-- Henry Cabot Lodge has_ re- signed as U.S, ambassador to South Viet Nam and will be succeeded by Gen. Max- well D. Taylor, President Johnson announced today. would soon be con- | study |< of © many and outstanding experts," PCs, Libs. Retain Seats In Voting OTTAWA (CP)--Monday's by-;Falls, Ont., furniture store elections left the balance of owner, held the Northern On- power in the House of Commons tario riding of Nipissing. It for- unchanged but all the politicians|merly was represented by the happy late John Garland, revenue min- Prime Minister Pearson foun ister «in va the results "a gratifying e@ A.Liberal dorsement 'of. government poi- Mr. Legdult"won majorities in icy,' according to one Liberal both the English and French- party source, Opposition Leader|speaking parts of the riding, and Diefenbaker said he was happy that Nipissing can be considered with the outcome. a typical Northern Ontario con- Carl Legault, 41, a Sturgeon stituency. ' ' As he assessed it:-"'The flag issue is not going to hurt us, but is going to help us." In Saskatoon, .Mrs. Eloise Jones, widow of the late Con- servative MP Harry Jones, held the seat against a much stronger vote for Sid Buckwold, former mayor of Saskatoon who had been promised a cabinet post if elected. Mr. Diefenbaker said ~Mrs. Jones--a mother of four and a : psychiatrist--will be a worth- while addition to the House of Commons. A Liberal source said Mr. Buckwold's showing was "quite impressive."' 'The Liberals re- . gard the riding as "traditionally the toughest seat in. Saskatche- wan."' Mr. Buckwold was, a su- perior candidate and the byelec- | * tion demonstrated a resurgence of Liberal power in Saskatche- wan, 'he. said. The results showed impressive gains, too, for the New Demo- cratic Party: In Nipissing, the DP vote was 50 per cent * stronger than it was a year ago in the general election. Political pundits were unable to say where the Social Credit vote wet in the byelections The Social Crediters ran candi- dates in both ridings in last § year's contest, but did not con- test the byelections. j offteial said MRS, ELOISE JONES Pearson's cabinet.| _ MANOR COST Expenditures above $556,- 000 for the 100-bed Hillsdale Manor addition will have to be approved by city council, Oshawa's city fathers agreed Monday night. Council approved Fidelity Construction Limited's bid of $485,000 to build the addi- | tion last night. | Furnishings, at $40,000, amd the architect's fee, at $28,000, will push the cost to $553,000. The province will, pay | half the total cost. The city will ask the On- tario Municipal Board for authority to levy (in 1965) for an extra $50,000. Coun- cil had put away. $240,000 as its share of the project and Of Murder Bid. .. By GEOFF HUSSEY (Times Staff) An Oshawa man was shot in the stomach and __ seriously wounded by a gunman who walked into the Queen's Hotel last night and pumped two rifle bullets through a beverage room door, The rampaging gunman let off 4 another shot in the crowded bev-| FIGHT FOR LIFE 4 erage room that had customers; Meanwhile, a crack medical screaming and stampeding tojjeam led by Dr. Doug as Millg the doors. was waging an operating room | In satisfactory condition to-|pattle at the Oshawa Generak day following emergency sur-/Hospital to save Kloster's life.? gery in Oshawa General Hos-| Jt js not known whether thé" |pital -is Joseph Kloster, 32, a ae was removed during t \dition at noon today was |17 Quebec street, lengthy operation but 'his ¢ ; ; NO BAIL 'enti ee will need more to meet its ca pager ee " |ported to be "satisfactory. ° share of the total cost. Bb sab Seren Se. = Kloster, a truck driver fot | When the city found that |% Z mere com vas c a e| McLaughlin Coal and: Suppli costs were $70,000 to-$75,000 Wil a Saaae a CGH al aa Ltd, for seven years, is marri above estimates they met in |@Ppear Friday in Oshawa Mag-|_ 1a has two children -- Michage | I took charge of #nother manj# jreported the officer. * Inspector Ernest Barker and Detective Sergeant J. K. Young. arrived and drove the cule and witnesses to the Oshawa, Police Station for questioning. The charge was laid early this. morning and the accused mair lodged in the cells. ; one- | & " | pare costs. without bail. a Rifle Thiev S) yas ed after po- the architect indicated about Sudbury was charged after p only a $13,500 saving for curred in the ladies' beverage) A man wielding a .22 semi-au- threat of violence arose agaim | At Poll Rumor Kloster, apparently seated in| Friday. thought of 'an early general) The gunman got off two shots/by two youths who later f as Fisher "(NDP--Port/|strike K : ( Douglas Fisher ( strike Kloster, reportedly lode ontario Police: thats ten Ta vestigate methods of limiting po- s |the beverage room and fired/the rifle out to where he was 1 Minister Le End To Old Jails SUDBURY (CP) -- Reforms Minister Grossman today out- lined a program to rid Ontario of what he described as '"'black hole of Calcutta' city and county jails, In a speech to the Ontario As sociation of Mayors and Reeves \Mr. Grossman said the prov- jince's county jails and some \city jails are overcrowded, anti- |quated and do not have proper jrehabilitation programs, | He said his department will jestablish a special new grant to aid counties in co-operating in TORONTO (CP) Sour construction of regional jails. nieces, the only known relatives) Although the grant formula is of a millionaire recluse who|not yet established, Mr.Gross- lived in abject p*verty while he, Man said the provincial govern- amassed his fortune, will have Ment will guarantee no county to. wait until at least the end of or city will pay more for the July to learn the value of the|new institution than was spent estate left by their eccentric un-/9n the presen dilapidated jail. cle. | Criticizing the existing sys- Berard McGraw, the lawyer tem, the minister said: "In handling the estate of John!some of our present jails it is Michael O'Dea, 83, of Toronto,|impossible to maintain the de- who died last April, said Mon-|sirable segregation so that the day he is unable to disclose the old and the young, the sophisti- names of the four possible heir-\cated and 'the unsophisticated, lesses, | CARL LEGAULT Nieces Await Millionaire Hermit's Will inspectors and an unwillingness to interfere with what are con- sidered to be private. property rights. "Urban blight just doesn't fall from the sky." He suggested that implemen--- VANCOUVER (CP) -- The tation of new and existing regu-jleaders of. Canada's medical lations could prevent slum con-|profession say that patients who ditions from developing. Exten-|can should pay at least part of sive andfexpensive urban rede-|the cost of the services they re- velopment schemes now under! Ceive from their doctors -way in cities such as Toronto, They without this "pa- Windsor, Ottawa and. Hamilton|tient participation" in medical could have been prevented. insurance plans, whether Pub- The Municipal Act gives,lic or doctor sponsored, the clear-cut authority to a muni- medical services of the country| cipality to redevelop slums or will suffer because doctors will be overworked The principle, described as similar to the deductible clause} in an automobile insurance pol-| ic¥Y, would be aimed at curbing pressure on the doctor by the patient to provide services he does not need he "philosophy participation in CITY EMERGENCY NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 of patient spon- was defended Men day by members he anel»)! doctor sored plar committee which drew up a re- port on the matter for the gen- eral council of the Canadian Medica! Association And earlier the general coun- cil--the "parliament of medi- cine"--approved an_ executive committee statement which vir- tually rejected: the medical in- surance recommendations of the Hall royal commission on health, The statement insurance, as advocated by the commission, 'will in» the' long run impair the quality of medi- cal care' in Canada, "The people of Canada should be aware that similar plans which. are operative in other countries have led to excessive demands for services which have overtaxed the ability of health workers to vrovide. said medical | service."* MDs Urge Patient "The consequence has been to substitute quantity for quality and has sacrificed, in many in- stances, the interest of the sick patient." The committee presented its report to the 180-member gen- ral council in summaty form. The council voted to send the report to all Canadian doctors for study. The matter will be dealt with again at an extraor- dinary council meeting next yea Pg The Simmary said:"We be- lieve that to maintain the qual- ity of medical care the doctor- sponsored plans should evolve from their present concept of! total prepayment to the soun- der, more economical and more logical one of patient participa- tion at the level of the item of ' Participation The summary, and committee) matter of philosophy" and a members who attended a press|'philosophical document." conference ex plaine d that Dr, Patrick Bruce-Lockhart those who could. should pay of Sudbury, Ont., Dr. Ken Tru- some of the cost of doctor serv-/man of Winnipeg, Dr. Victor ices at the time they receive/Goldbloom of Montreal' and them, Indigents should be|others said patiént participation looked after. by .arrangements|is essential because of "over- made by the. medical profes-| use" of medical plans, over- sion and government. Govern-| working doctors and affecting ment could also pay a subsidy|the quality of service they could for marginal cases--between in-| give. Doctors cannot limit their digents and those who are self-| services so the limitarion must supporting. The self-supporting be sought through the patient. group would be those who pay Dr. Truman said doctor-spon- income tax, sored plans were conceived or- Meanwhile, governmentiiginally for low and perhaps should stay away from adminis-|moderate imcome groups, But tration of medical insurance! eventually citizens from all in- plans come 'availed themselves. of it. Committee members said the 'Should the process continue sumimary is a condensation of the doctors will not be able to a 39-page document variously provide adequate seryice to pa- described as-a "rather profound! tients." the sick and the well, the per-) committee June 17 to try to |istrate's Court. He is being held), and "aul « ¢ : ; : The accused man, who is be-| md | _W. Douglas Johns, super- jjieveq to have arrived here Ng visor to Hillsdale Manor, re- ypongay from. Hanmer (near ported that discussions with : : : nag lice questioned eight witnesses > ge ney egy: dba cost- we or hin ohnodl 2 Threaten an: | sharing this would mean olice said the shooting oc-) 4 the city and leave: some (room of the Simcoe street north) In Colum us > rf hotel just after 10 p.m. : $23,000 to be found. boy ai «55 | WIELDING RIFLE COLUMBUS (Staff) -- The i ie: a inikad' here Monday in this quiet hams iberals Shru tomatic rifle walked into the 3 : pie g hotel lobby and started toward |let which was rocked by a-gua the beverage room door. |shooting, - fire-raising _ rampage OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min. |the ladies' room, saw the man' A local resident claimed he ister Pearson and one of his|and dashed over and slammed|was threatened with his own |chief lieutenants disclaimed any|the beverage room door. 'rifle at his home Monday night election in Commons remarks through the door -- one lodging with the 'weapon. Monday. in it, the other going through to} Edward Hermington told the Arthur) noted there has been aji in the | intestine. m rend delay. in implement- ee eee lyouths came to his home and ing a goverment promise to in- SHOTS IN BAR later an argument developed, The gunman then got inside|His daughter-in-law brought - litical party election expenses. room a 1 - " another shot which, it is belived| arguing with the two boys and Pl { smashed a picture on the walll after a scuffle the weapon was -- lodging in re basebvard. wrenched from his grasp, e man was. then overpow-| : ' ered by customers until the ar-| Mr. Hermington told police |rival of police. that he was threatened by, the Oshawa Constable John Shep-|boys who then drove away in herd was standing at the inter-the direction of Oshawa. The rection of King and, Simcoe incident is. being investigated the shooting by an unidentified/by Constable David Kernohan man. of the OPP Whitby -Detach- } * ~ ment, we ge ce gy PM and| Mr, Hermington refused 'to usefub work for prisoners," he|saw a man slumped in a chair|comment on the incident today aid, bleeding Some-one was|When contacted by The Oshawa "In consequence, they spend standing holding a rifle . . . and Times. a great deal of time in soul-|-- Be destroying idleness," he said. "We need positive, purposeful institutions. No one would see our present jails as fitting into this picture." : Mr. Grossman said _profes-} sional treatment personnel will| tbe provided for the new re- gional jails along with an over- all therapeutic program . de- signed to help each prisoner as} an individual. | vert and the normal, the-addict and 'the dangerous, can be' ade- quately segregated and classi- fied.' Present jails provide little in} | i Grivas' Return Spells Trouble | Turks Say NICOSIA (AP) Turkish- Cypriot officials and United Na- tions officers said today >the return of Greek underground leader George Grivas to Cyprus spelled trouble for the tension- ri island. Ae rivas' return means things from bad to worse," said a worried Turkish-Cypriot au- thority attached to the staff of Dr. Fazil Kuchuk, Turkish vice- president. Glafkos Clerides, president. of the Cyprus House of Represent- atives, said Monday night the Greek general returned from Greece '"'several days ago" to see what 'the sitpation is like on the island,"' Grivas led the Greek-Cypriot EOKA underground against the British in-the fight for independ- ence of the island. EOKA stands ér Ethniki Organosis Kyprion Agoniston (national organiza- tion of Cypriot fighters), Informed sources said he had jcome back in an advisory capa- city on the military question concerning the Turkish-Cypriot community. A stronger line was expected during the next few Peeks. aa e LA . "-- THEY LL TALK OF CYPRUS .; of crucial talks on the Cyprué, situation. The 80-year-olf Turkish leader will visit, two day in Washington. pris --(AP Wirepho President Johnson stands with his guest, Prime, Minister Ismet Inonu of Turkey, at a White House welcoming cere- mony today before the start to} as

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