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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Oct 1964, p. 1

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i The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby. , Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 93 --.NO. 253 he Oshaw Price Not Over 10 Cents per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1964 a Cimes Weather Cooler Report Tonight Followed By . "Cloudy Periods Tomorrow. High-55, Low-42. Authorized as Second Class Mall Post OF partment Ottewa and ean of ben = Cash. Postage PUT TOGETHER THEY'RE 208, AND FEELING GREAT "Whiskey, cigarets and women never hurt me," says Frank Bogue, left, as he tells of plans to "go out to a bar and have a drink and a glass of beer' tb celebrate his 105th birthday anniversary Satur- day. Posing with Bogue is his 403-year-old Seattle convales- cent centre roommate, Char- lie White, who says there "isn't a man in Seattle who can say he's seen me drink" and plans -to jet Bogue go it alone. (AP Wirephoto) COMMITTEE REPORT UNFINISHED Voluntary Health Plan In The Works TORONTO (CP)--Dr. J. C. Hagey, chairman of the com- mittee appointed by the Ontario Ae Png a health for the province, fay night the is: being © has not He added that the report should be ready by the end of the year. The Globe and Mail says the 14-member committee -will rec ommend a voluntary scheme with govertiment subsidies for those who cannot meet the pre- miums. . The newspaper says coverage will be provided through pri- vate carriers--insurance com- panies and doctor - sponsdred groups. It says the recom- mendations are within the terms of Bill 163, Ontario's proposed Medical Services Insurance Act, and follow the pattern of medi- cal insurance legislation intro- duced by Alberta last year. Dr. Hagey declined to con- firm or deny The Globe and} Mail report. But Dr. Arthur Kelly, general secretary of the Canadian Medi- cal Association, said the report as outlined is consistent with CMA policy. The newspaper also' says the recommendations being framed by the Ontario committee dif- fer from those of a federal com-' mittee on health services under Mr, Justice Emmett Hall. The Hail proposals are for compulsory coverage of all Ca-|59 nadians without a means test under a government-fun plan, 'whereas the Ontario committee is recommending a scheme un- der which coverage will be vol- untary and through the private means test continue to receive} free care. The Alberta government pays 50 per cent of the premium for persons whose income is below a. taxable level and 25 per cent of the premium for those whose taxable income does not ex- ceed $500. Other residents pay |to see. whether it _|fore Flood and his wife moved guns at ' Missing ALAMO, Calif. (AP)--Negro baseball star Curt Flood and his family settled into their leased $35,000 house today after a 'warm greeting from their white neighbors instead of the loaded) shotgun _-- had been way to expect. The St. Louis Cardinals cen- tre fielder was all smiles. His pregnant wife wept for joy. "We think it's so fine you are here," said Mrs. Joseph Cone of Alamo, 15 miles east of Oak- land, Calif, as the Floods moved in with the aid of a court order Tuesday. 'We live just around the corner." "I hope you like it here just as well as we do" said another welcoming neighbor; Mrs. Jean Richmond. The welcomes and waiting, | prepared meal reduced Flood's| 25-year-old: wife, Beverly, to} 'tears. *YOU"RE WONDERFUL' "We hope to add something to your neighborhood,". Flood told his new neighbors. "Bless derful."' Flood is a native of the area. Moving day for the Floods in- cluded assistance from a lock- smith and the sheriff of Contra Costa County. The sheriff and 11 deputies searched the house, presumably was safe, be- in. The locksmith opened the locked house by drilling a hole in the back door, then changed all the locks for the Floods. The Floods planned to stay with their children, Debbie, 7; Gary, 6; Curtis Jr., 4, and Shel- ley, 3, in an Oakland motel un- til furniture arrives and utilities are turned cn. Flood, 26, obtained a court temporary restraining order Monday to be able to occupy the three-bedroom ranch-style house at Alamo, a quiet suburb of 1,791 persons, The Floods' lawyer said in a suit that George Finn and an unnamed man brandished shot- the home Saturday night and told Mrs. Phyllis Schofield, a real estate agent, that they would shoot any Ne- gro who tried to move into)! their own premiums. the neighborhood. carriers, it says. The Ontario government com- mittee, under the chairmanship of Dr. Hagey, president of the ;| University of Waterloo, was set up last year. It held hearings from last December to mid- |February. The Alberta plan divides. res-| idents of the province into four) groups for insurance purposes. Persons who received free med- ical care.in the past under a} | France To Leave | Common Market? BONN (AP) many's opposition Socialist lident de Gaulle has long been| the Common Market. |Commo what was. preparing to pull France out of|nation-wide employment ket--that might take a gradu- The party press service said|ate from the Maritimes to a job sive reduction of its share of.in-| A 59-page booklet cautioned de Gaulle has been working out|in Toronto. Canada was not big}come taxes, jan alternative to the six-nation|enough to have advanced work arket, It did not sayjof the highest standard avail- jable in several universities at} you all. You're very, very won-| Abortion Charges Laid TORONTO (CP)--A Toronto doctor and a Hamilton woman face multiple charges in con- nection with an alleged abortion ring centred in southwestern Ontario, morality squad detec- tives said today. Arrested in Hamilton today was Joanna Harrigan, 26. She was charged with attempting to procure an abortion, Mike Burack, 41, a suburban ecScarborough doctor, was charged with two counts of at- tempting to procure, two counts of conspiring to procure, and several charges connected with administration of drugs. Police said the ring has been in operation for about three years. but declined to say where. They said there may be more arrests. Court Rules No Equal Time For Goldwater WASHINGTON (AP) -- An evenly divided federal appeals court refused Tuesday to rule that Senator Barry Goldwater is entitled to equal radio-tele- vision time to reply to Presi- dent Johnson's address to. the 'nation on world affairs, By splitting 3 to 3 on the case, the U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- als let stand a Federal Com- Advanced Studies Centres =i: common rine Suggested By Pearson OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis-] institutes for advanced and Col- lin a greater degree of specili- party claimed today that Pres-| [zation in post-graduate studies. tive agreement to establish an fer Pearson suggested Tuesday tinstitute for advanced studies \that istudies in a variety of fields be |. established across Canada. He told the annual dinner of|... the National Conference of Ca- nadian Universities leges that all parts of Canada -- West Ger-| | would have a common interest in, say, economics in Montreal . physics in Toronto... public administration in Ottawa chemistry in Vancouver... . agriculture in Saskatoon... po- litical science in Quebec City." CONCERNS OTTAWA TOO Education was a matter of} provincial jurisdiction but there was an act of office and there- ore a news event, exempt from f . |the equal-time law. Spy Book Issued LONDON (AP)--The treasury jsaid Tuesday it has warned |650,000 civil servants that the Russians are out to recruit three kinds of spies in Britain: At present 'graduates faced a| were ways it concerned the fed-|The ideological one, the money- mar; The statement said de Gaulle once. "I wonder, therefore, whether |cier, director of the University | thinks the enemy's cause is bet- is using the grain price issue as a _ Pretext. SCENE OF DESTRUCTION time students. eral The federal government, government. would turn over $80,000,000 to the provinces this | year. Earlier the conference heard| ja plea from Rev. Gerard For- for government aid for part- Jet Smash Kills Nine EL CENTRO, Calif. (AP)--A jet bomber skimmed low over a crowded reviewing stand, then faltered, hit a power pole, and smashed in flaming pieces across the centre of a mavy| base, killing nine men Tuesday. Among those who died were the three members of the crew of the A-3D twin-jet bomber. The other six victims were men in buildings near the.run- way of the El Centro naval air facility, where the plane crashed during a parachuting demonstration. Thirty - five persons were in- jured, six critically. The 70-pound jet came apart in the air after one wing snagged the power line. The shower of blazing wreckage scattered 400 yards across build- ings and parking lots, setting two major fires, smashing build- | ings, -- autos afire. through progres-| _.|Treachery, |hungry one and the one who can be blackmailed. ithe civil servants against being |trapped into spying for the Kremlin. The booklet explained an ide- jological spy as a person who 'there could not be a co-opera- of Ottawa's extensisn program, |ter than that of his own coun- try. Entitled Their Trade is the booklet is crammed with data and exam- ples. The treasury which distrib- uted it is responsible for-Brit- ain's' civil-service and. the se- curity surrounding it. ; | 300,000 U.S. workers, GM STARTS WORK MONDAY U.S. PARTS ARRIVE TODAY General Motors of Canada, Oshawa Division, will resume full production Monday, a GM spokesman Said this morn- ing. This will mean a return to work of about 11,500 hourly- rated employees who were laid off following the nation- wide strike against General Motors in the United States. The strike, affecting some began Sept. 25 when contract negoti- ations between the United Automobile Workers and the world's largest automotive company broke down. Production at the Oshawa plant, which employs about 13,500 hourly-rated - workers, was suspended in stages dur- ing 'the week following the U.S. walkout. About 2,000 maintenance and assembly workers remained on the job. The national contract set- tlement was effected Oct. 5, but plant-level negotiations have. continued the produc- tion stoppage for the 1965 | cars and trucks. Lack of parts from GM sub- sidiaries in the United States caused the layoffs here, as the last car went across the assembly lines Oct. 14. Up to that date, the Osh-, awa plants had produced about 30,000 vehicles for the 1965 model year. No figures on sales dropoffs in Canada were available from General Motors today, the spokesman said. He said that parts from the United States were expected this afternoon, ani that the laid-off workers would be noti- fied of the work-resumption by registered mail. Many of the workers, ac- cording to UAW Local 222 Vice-President Ted O'Connor, have returned to their homes, as far away as Nova Scotia. CBC SHELLACKING Nazi Show Yellow TV vant ad ge Beved -- The OBC ther shellacking in the Commons , bat un- like the previous day. wien. it) was given undivided attention, the. conporation was forced to share Tuesday's spotlight with eastern farm problems, As the Commons paced itself toward another date with the flag issue Thursday, the CBC was charged with violating broadcasting regulations and ig- noring the views of Parliament- and between such blasts, the Commons was told that eastern farmers are in a terrible state. The heaviest criticism against}: - the CBC Tuesday came from Milton Klein (L--Montreal Car- tier) who changed that the cor- poration broke broadcasting regulations by interviewing the American Nazi Interest Rates Must Be Shown Experts Say TORONTO (CP) -- Despite claims to the contrary, finance compahies could--and should-- disclose interest rates on instal-| ment plan purchases, two ex-; perts told Ontario's select com- mittee on consumer credit Tues- day. Douglas D. Irwin, a chartered) accountant and financial con- sultant to the committee, said such disclosures in percentages would present no major prob- lems. party leader hi ohnson U.K. WON'T STALL ON NUCLEAR FORC Deadline End Of Year © WASHINGTON (AP)--United| tion of such a force has' beelt States officials hope Prime Min- ister Harold Wilson will be ready to make concrete pro- posals for organizing a NATO nuclear weapons force when he |}comes from Britain for talks with President Johnson in about six weeks. The NATO nuclear problem was the major issue posed in conferences with Johnson ad- ministration leaders Monday anf Tuesday by the foreign sec- retary of Britain's new Labor government, Patrick Gordon Whiker. Gordon Walker told a press conference Tuesday the British government needs time in which to formulate specific plans in the NATO nuclear weapons field. He also assured US. officials that his government toes not intend to stall on the problem for the sake of delaying indef- initely action within NATO on a U.S. proposal for a nuclear armed force of 25 surface ships (known ed the MLF) which would: be jointly owned and manned by participating coun- tries. Johnson's deadline for getting basic agreement on the forma- the end of this year. It now is unlikely that this deadline caij be met although U.S. officials made clear it has not been ae mally abandoned. The Labor party's coil seems to be that a broader cots cept for a NATO nuclear force is necessary--some kind of plan which would cover not only ai seaborne force but also lan based nuclear weapons in: the NATO"area of Western eri GERMANY WANTS ACTION > While Britain has stressed this need for delay, the United States has been under pressuré fronr West Germany to act on the MLF with all possible speed. West German leaders ré- cently suggested that if boy | NATO allies were unwilling to participate, West Germany and fhe United States should act alone to conclude an MLP agreement by the end of the year. The, U.S. is reluctant to make such an agreement with "West Germany alone, since the U.S, aim in *the MLF has' been te enlist. the participation "of-.ag7 a: allied countries as pos> sible. Seven Days. Broadcasting regulations pro- hibit any offensive resaan likely to create any public dis- turbance or disorder, said Mr. Klein. They also prohibit any abusive comment on any race, religion or creed. The Rockwell interview had violated these regulations. "It Rockwell had applied to the immigration authorities of any port of entry in Canada in an attempt to make a speech . in some beer hall .. . he would not have been permitted to enter Canada... . "Here' we have the CBC bringing Rockwell into every living room throughout the length and breadth of Canada completely in violation of the immigration regulations of this country." Mr. Klein cailed it 'yellow television." Robert Prittie (NDP--Bru- naby-Richmond) said relatively little time is devoted by the OBC to controversial programs "and if people are shocked now and then, what of it? You can- not please all the people all the | ti me. Two Cones Picked Up Near LBJ PITTSBURGH (AP)--A sub- NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Royal Observatory south-central British Columbia beth IL Observatory, Prime today. periment. this morning. charged with contributing to tieton has been selected as the site for the To Be In B.C. OTTAWA (CP) -- A rugged, flat-topped mountain in about 25 miles south of Pen- Queen Eliza- Minister Pearson announced Another Soviet Space Shot? BONN (Reuters) -- The West German space tracking station at Bochum Observatory today reported receiving signals from what appeared to be a new Soviet space ex- The observatory said it picked up the signals No Decision In Horsburgh Case CHATHAM (CP) -- Juvenile Court Judge W. H. Fox of London, Ont., said today he:has not been able to come to a décision yet in the case of Rev. Russell D. Horsburgh, juvenile delinquency. jurban Pittsburgh man, arrested {Tuesday night in his car along jthe route of President Jone, |son's' motorcade, was held for a hearing today on charges. of |sdolating the Uniform Firearms "slate police said they found two rifles and a pistol in the car. The man was identified as William "E. Fisher Jr., 24, of Bellevue. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)-- A young steelworker who was carrying two guns when he was arrested a few blocks from iwhere President Johnson was speaking Monday, has been freed. Police Tuesday dropped a va- grancy charge against Bruce Lee Cornell, 23, of Wyandotte, Mich. They said it was deter- mined he was innocently pass- Fill-In Mail OTTAWA (CP) -- Postmas- fer-General Nicholson Tuesday' halted a Victori¢ woman from delivering letters for the time neing at least. A spokesman said Mr. Nichol- son gave the order after learn- ing that Mrs. Norah Stackard had been hired on a fill-in basis to deliver mail in Esqui- malt, B.C., a Victoria suburb. The Civil Servicé Commission ---- Woman | = Taken Off Route and the department have: Ss for some feasibility of empl letter carriers, the said, but until a decision is made the job will be reserved for men. The spokesman said that the commission: hired the woman as an experiment and department headquarters was not notified of the action. 'ime the ing through Jacksonville when the incident occurred. NORAH STACKARD On The Road To GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST Quota Of $275,900: siobeis | | Isr2%000] | - | | sisfoool | | I str8loo0l «| | | s2o8oool | 1 | sz2$oool | | | s2sdoool | | | s27¥s00 3 AAS Neb RI HCIn ie aT

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