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The Oshawa Times, 25 Jan 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's sometimes wondered which has the poorer distribution sys tem--the weather or the stork. dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Variable cloudiness with occas. fonal snowflurries tonight. Tues day partly cloudy, little change in temperature. Vol. 89--No. 19 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, MONDAY, JANUARY 25, 1960 SIXTEEN PAGES Authorized ap Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa ---- pst snr .S. Liner rashes il Tanker Eng. (AP)-- torn in her port side and her "" The 20 sailors of the American foredeck was awash. i passenger liner Santa Alicia] A hole was torn.in the bow of "4 were taken off by a rescue ship the Santa Alicia. | today after the liner collided HEAD-ON COLLISION | with an oil-laden tanker near the "wpa Santa Alicia, owned by | Isle of Wight Grace Lines of New York, was| The 6,125-ton liner, carrying no|sailing out of Southampton for| { passengers, and the 11,000-ton New York when she collided Norwegian tanker Gorm locked | head on with the Gorm, out of] { firmly together after the collision|Qglo, before dawn and tugmen feared sparks from! The ships. were moving at i an about six knots in a choppy sea cargo. There was no fog. There were no four sualties from the collision and started I'he admiralty spokesman said anker to the Santa Alcia's crew was rent was| taken off by a boat from the frigate HMS Jaguar The admiralty got line PORTSMOUTH, metal would set off in the { grating i explosion tanker's After a struggle arated the t te A tugs sep- ce vo ships ow the huge triangu a race i port ar | URW Leader Calls For | Bargaining CP)--United resident tug Swarthy on the tangled Although the Gorm was seriously damaged, her remained aboard SANTA CLAUS LIVES IN N.S. BRIDGEWATER, N.S. (CP A letter to Santa Claus dated ov. 23 turned up at radio tation CKBW here recently- soon ships more crew a Auto Walter WINDSOR Worker tnd wen - HEROIC ACTION Irish - born RCAF sergeant Tony Watters is credited with saving the lives of 19 crew members an Argus anti- submarine aircraft Jan. 22, when the plane developed land- ing gear trouble 2000 feet above the Greenwood' N.S. RCAF base. Born in Dundalk, Ire- land, he made emergency re- pairs with nothing between him and the ground but ropes slung under his arms --CP 'Wirephoto of Massacre '0f Police At Durban Bitter Fight Still Rages In Algiers ALGIERS, Algeria (AP)--| Eight policemen were killed Susini, leader of right-wing stu. |Armed. diehard French rightists'and 80 wounded, the army re-|dent organizations--seized a cor. Iheld out today behind makeshift! ported. ner bank building. barricades in the heart of Al: Leaders of the rebellious In the band with Ortiz and giers Frenchmen, who had counted on|Susini were several uniformed Dawn found the capital quiet army sympathy and support, ad-/officers of the Algerian Home but tense in the wake of Sunday mitted they were fighting a los- Guard. night's fighting and panic that ing battle. The supreme com-| French troops who have been left 19 persons dead and 153 mander of the French forces in!fighting Algerian nationalists in wounded Algeria stood stoutly behind de the interior were being sent to The army seemed firmly in/Gaulle and warned: "The mu- Algiers to help police restore or- control except for two pockets|tiny will not win." der. where a Vhete 2 bout 1900: insurgents HUNDREDS HOLD OUT ~ |IMASSU FIRING LIT SPARK The uprising against President] A band of several hundred in- The resentment of European Charles de.Gaulle's self-determi-|Surgents held out on the grounds settlers against de Gaulle's Al nation policy pitted Frenchman °f Algiers University in the gerian policy was sparked into against Frenchman in Algeria, centre of the capital and in the revolt by his firing of Gen, lve: dy bleeding from a five-year adjacent Rue Michelet for a last- Jacques Massu as military and aireacy lee : ¢ ditch stand after police and civilian commander of the Al- revolt of nationalists [troops broke up mobs of demon-|giers area. CENSORSHIP IMPOSEI Istrators that swelled to 20,000. Massu, the hero of the French A stiff military censorship was, The diehards defied an appeal settlers who are determined to posed on outgoing news dis- from de Gaulle to lay down their [keep Algeria French was ome of io ) es arms for between ement as a means of avoiding a breakdown of the col lective bargaining process Mr. Reuther also told a meet ing at Assumption University he favors holding labor-management talks in public. He said the. pres- ent system of private negotia- creates 'too much eco- propaganda and not facts" from manage- Reuther nday vear bar labor round A HUGE wedge-shaped gash | liner Santa Alicia near the Isle extends deep in the side of the | of Wight, off Portsmouth, Eng- Norwegian tanker Gorm as a | land. The crew members of the | it into port. The foredeck of result of a pre-dawn collision | liner, which was carr ing no | the tanker is awash with the American passenger | passengers were taken off 'the | --AP Wirephoto Malaya Revels In Honeymoon | enough ment . | 'In times of strikes," he said | 'industry will take full page KUALA LUMP UR, Malaya authority, a minority of older diens, entered hospital today suf- (AP)--Malaya is the Southeast Chinese and a few Indians, fering from gastric influenza. Asian country where things look] But there have been signs of, A spokesman for the club said too good. weakness in this honeymoon the illness is not considered seri-| 'Atomic power will revolution- equator. Secondary industry (paints, tires ship. Tugs stand by on the side of the crippled tanker to guide Canadiens Star Enters Hospital MONTREAL (Boom Boom) Geoffrion, {rightwinter of Montreal Cana- (CP advertisements in newspapers to Bernie say any wage increase would burly necessitate an increase in the price of cars, even when record profits are being reported." On automation, he said indus- try and labor know its effects on Like a honeymoon that keeps group. A loss of some Malay ous. . pert sas indicated hy the sRekgamEn 49d Geoffrion's ju the country end. leave thou- wi Ship [leper ture Tose to ore that conde of gost towns unless Some 29 months after indepen.| There is also basis for an oppo.|102 Sunday night and early this| something is done," he said. 'We dence from Britain, Malay's mul-|Sition movement among younger morning he called in his nearby|must start to do something now. ti-racial people can tick off an Chinese resentful of the 4-to-1 personal doctor. The 28-year-old| This is a good time to publicly impressive list of blessings that/Preference given Malays in schol-| National Hockey League star was| discuss labor-management rela- have come to their.rich penin- arships and government jobs. advised to enter hospital. | tions." Among them: A booming economy supports Southeast Asia's highest standard of living after the nearby city- state of Singapore. Rubber es. tates are pouring out record] yields. Tin, the country's other themselves 'but no one knows sula which stretches from the = ---- : Old major export, coming back] Uiggings the impact on total society." Asian mainland almost to the after two years in the doldrums.! RESCUE ROUTE Surface are ----y " 18 HS PROPOSED "BOREHOLE 5 Loved in Ground drugs) is making a boom town of this once sleepy capital. Foreign investment coming under | some of most in-1 ducementis The emergency of a civil war which once 10.000 Commun ist guerrillas terrorizing the couniry--has been reduced to a police action. Some 600 guerri las remain but all but a dozen or so are said to be lurking] quietly across the northern bor der in Thailand's jungles The government by one of Asia's remarkable men, Tunku Abdul Rahman, a oneiime playboy prince who guided his people to freedom. The tunku (it means prince) led his multi racial alliance party to a strong election victory last August, winning 73 of the 104 parliament seats for a four- year term The tunku balances groups in his alliance in liberal is Asia's | RAPP D fil ceenenens $18 FRET Ssannnea saw Tu THESE DIAGRAMMED and side views of the interior of Clydesdale Colliery at Coal- brook, South Africa, show how attempts are being made to reach and get air and food to s trapped for three Father Barred Heiress' Home NEW YORK Ne... BLOCKED ia is stable, led hole today to carry air and food to the .entombed miners. | Diagrams are based on draw- ings received in New York, by radio from Johannesburg to- day top | days at an estimated 515 feet below the surface. Dotted sec- tions indicate the approximate locations of the rescue routes Diagram at right also approxi- mately indicates spot where a high speed drill began boring a AP Wirephoto Giant Drill May Reach 440 Miners COALBROOK, South Africa Reuters)--A giant drill was used again today to sink a 600-foot hole to 440 coal miners entombed for four days in a colliery But dangerous conditions still prevented underground rescuers three racia! the Malay i { { | | Top Salesman For GM Dies DETROIT (AP) -- Chevrolet supersalesman is dead, three weeks after a heart condition forced his retirement as the au- AP)--Dr, James| "My sister does says he Il talk to my father on if necessary tolthat as emphatically r, Gamble Bene- She doesn't , 19, the heiress who has been her turned here after running away wanted with a married chauffeur privilege Sharpe Vermont fg trist, was turned away CHANGED MIND Mrs. Sharpe took an to me as possible I from not does not deserve that not She want told want father 'his h H psychia twice, a overdose a little late, but only 10 miles from its destination The letter, which asked Santa for a doll's pram, was signed by Margaret, and was postmarked Hong Kong. The | letter was addressed to 'Hon | Sania Claaus, Lapland." Pen- | cilled beneath by some dili- gent postal employee was the notation 'Nova Scotia, Can- ada." | Lapland is a small farming | community 10 miles from this south shore Nova Scotia town. DURBAN, South Africa (Reut cks of paratroopers lined Gen. Maurice Challe, supreme ers) {patrolled nearby Cato Manor day as South African author |issued grisly Some men wére seen leavingthe capital and ordered censor s | deta |enraged | policemen | Nine policemen were {and hacked to death and three others seemed to have joined the|Algiers. stoned |hold-outs, : | Despite a military order ban- public meetings escaped by ripping off his uni. persons, groups of people gath- in : public places" to ered around the barricaded area {form and fleeing, demonstrations by supporters ol |were killed--an African woman |gents who had hoisted tattered mainland.) lg ' when she went | French tricolors. | {shot in the mouth when she went HREE-MAN JUNTA |outside her home to see what was STORES REOPEN |happening and an African man|® ay EX |shot in the back as he walked} |T Nursing College | For Ontario Seen | away from the fighting. | TORONTO (CP)--An Ontario] It was the second bloody dis- {department of health conference |turbance in Cato Manor in eight {studying a shortage of nurses in|{months--both sparked by police {tha province was told Saturday!raids om illicit stills operated by that a college of nursing should{African women in the township. be ablished govern-| . {ment charter |POLICE' OVERCOME | Miss Nettie Fidler, director of| Sunday r {the University of Toronto School curred after the arrival of a 26-|corridors. lof Nursing, told more than 90|man police party. Half the de-| delegates at the two-day confer- tachment was taking 32 prisoners | lence that such a college would|back to jail when the remaining Be : raise nursing standards on every|l3 were overwhelmed by mobs. 3 % . ; " 3 «dn Hod level and would be able to assist|/Some of the officers hid in shan- on, EY i all nursing schools regarding ties but were dragged out and training and research {killed - | Miss Fidler also suggested that A detachment of five policemen ar Ontario nursing school found-|tried to come to their rescue but ation be set up to assist prospec-|turned back after radioing: tive nurses with scholarships, | "They are going to stone us to! bursaries and grants death." Heated Struggle ros By U.S.Democrats "si% 4 & WASHINGTON (AP) Demo- peared to be an indirect swipe eon $ 4 leaders controlling major at Adlai Stevenson, the man he: blocs of party power remained wanted as a candidate in 1952/} Sneomiisl on a nominee teday and didn't want in 1956. Steven. after a weN®nd parade of pres- son won the nomination but lost|i idential hopefuls the election both times H With former president Harry, Truman said that, in addition } {Truman setting a "give-'em-hell" {to having the necessary qualifica- pace, four major and several tions for office, the man he sup- minor contenders for top place in|ports is going to have "the abil. |} the November presidential elec- ity as well to arouse the support tion tried out their personalities of the people to vote him into and oratorical persuasion onl office." | 2,500 Democrats at a $100-a-plate {fund-raising dinner here. {POLITE APPLAUSE The upshot of the performance| Stevenson, who did not attend {seemed to be that nobody started the dinner, sent a message in any bandwagons rolling. This/Which he called for maintenance was confirmed by a check of the of military strength, controlled men in a position to control the disarmament, wider research, big - vote delegations likely to|better education and '"'a greater {have the final say at the Los thrust into outer space." It pro- Angeles convention in July, {voked only routine applause New York leaders gave no evi-| |BLOW TO SYMINGTON dence of unity behind any single| shuttered their windows when [agaillarde, a parliamentary de the rioting broke out night began to open their stores. | The government building on Forum Hill, night's clash, armed camp. Sieel-helmeted po-| followers. with a lice and riot squads spread our {tional French Front, and Jacque i cratic » 0) 3 # DEMONSTRATORS ADD | city in a bloody clash that left stones ripped from pavement | 153 wounded by official count. | Truman, who retains strong in-|candidate. Mayor Richard Daley| 0 barricade they built Dutsice | Blues. oulpreat game sitet all. fluence with a minority segment of Chicago and Col. Jacob Arvey, central post office in 4 glers. | day Hg bi eons a ong of the party, dealt something of|Illinois national committeemen,| today. Rioting Frenchmen bat- | against De Gaulle Algerian poli- tled police in the heart of the | cies. --AP Wirephoto a blow tf the incipient candidacy conspicuously gave equal ap-| of Senator Stuart Symington of! plause to senators John Kennedy| Missouri when he told the groupof Massachussets, Lyndan John-| he has no commitments on any|son of Texas and Hubert Humph- {presidential aspirant. Symington,'rey of Minnesota when they who has said he would like to|spoke at the dinner. Kennedy and Reinforced police squads|Avenue Pasteur along the west- prench military commander in to-|ern flank of the barricaded areas.| Algeria, imposed martial law in s of a '"'mas-|the barricades on the grounds of ship of all outgoing news dis- sacre" Sunday night when 1,000/Algiers University and the Ruepatches. There were no reports Africans hunted down 13 Michelet and sneaking away--but|of trouble outside the city of 3 a ie a3 i 1 Y Ir | Authorities said two natives/and stared grimly at the insur-the Algerian right-wingers on thes | The French rightists set up a Here and there merchants who|three-man junta led by Pierre Sunday |puty. Wearing the uniform of a reserve paratroop lieutenant, the bearded six-foot Lagaillarde bar- scene of Sunday|ricaded himself in the university Jooked like an|with several hundred youthful The two others in the junta--| night's massacre oc- army rations in the lobbies and|Joseph Ortiz, leader of the Na- k. hat led to the overthrow of the Fourth Republic and paved the way for de Gaulle to assume power. Philippe Marais, -a deputy in ithe Algerian parliament, told a reporter | "This situation has not been |provoked by a desire to riot, but (The Paris government banned |p, despair. The population ean. 3 throughout|not retre:at unless the goverme {were injured. The 13th policeman ning assembly of more than three prance and 'all manifestations {ment guarantees a French Al- prevent| gepia fl" De Gaulle has reused to budge rom his offer to the Algerians lof the chance to vote on three [alternatives once the nationalists' revolt is ended--affilation with {France, home rule under France {or independence. he 1,000,000 French settlers fear that they will be outvoted by the 9,000,000 Moslems, troop reinforcements were moving into Algiers from outly- ing areas, Reuters news agency said. New disturbances were re ported today in the West Algerian city of Oran, where police had 51 "% sealed off an estimated 2,000 3 demonstrators in one of the main squares, 1 French sources said the num- "™ ber of rioters in Algiers had _ ® dwindled to a "hard core" of be- 4% tween 900 and 1,000, from about * 20,000 Sunday. Eyewitness Algier Riot ALGIERS (AP) -- The broad Boulevard Laferriere was jam- med by crowds shouting slogans when the first shots were fired. A cry of panic went up. Men and women screamed, eeing blindly away from a bare ricade flying a tattered tricolor, away from armed. men who P threatened to march on the gov- ernment buildings. Someone fired a tommygun to- ard steel-helmeted gendarmes. Someone shouted, "Forward, forward!" Others screamed, "Take cover, they're shooting!" MANY SPECTATORS Besides men with tricolor arm. bands and uniformed national guardsmen summoned by their w : leaders for the rising, many of those in the crowd were Sunday strollers, They came to watch the show. To them it was another political demonstration a popular picnic. | They had seen many and wanted to see one more. There were girls in high heels with their young men and moth- ers with children. There were people in their Sun. day best who joked all day long tomobile division's advertising di- rector, In his 32 years with Chevrolet William (Bill) Power preached salesmanship with an evangelis tic fervor. He was known through the auto industry as "the Billy Sunday of salesmanship." Power had even more gim mick as a pubic speaker than evangelist Billy Sunday who hit the sawdust new lives Power had a fantastic to influence salesmen more cars--and people them The salesman died Saturday night in hospital. Pneumonia the immediate cause of death retired Jan. 1 because of heart. He was 63 CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 trail and lead ability to sell to bur va He his L aer generation ago swayed people to fle Sunday from the east side sion of Miss Benedict's mother, Mrs. Katherine Bendict. This is typical," Sharpe com mented after the rebuff Miss Benedict's brother, Doug- las, 21, and Mrs. Benedict's law- yer, Robert Hoffman returned the debutante to grandmoth- home Saturda They her home on a orde man grand- Gedes her night fro Paris court from French author ities CHAUFFEUR IN PARIS The Romanian-born chauffeur Andre Porumbeanu with Ben f 4 Pari nfu had said after edict sailed on a ned He wanted get mar could divorce Sharpe, who the girl and her brother to Mrs Benedict after the 1946 suicide of the children's mother, Mrs. Jose- phine Benedict Sharpe, insisted t he 'every right" to see he gave custod fl tha as daughter After e -and | present 1 Mar vere ti Ben his son told reporters: rned the door of the of sleeping pills after a with Sharpe. Following her death, the psychiatrist waived his one-third interest, estimated at $350,000, in her estate. Later, Sharpe changed his mind and sought to get his share. But he lost to Mrs. Benedict, and the children changed their names to Benedict quarrel Sharpe al means Miss nedict wa when she arrived at Idlewild air port Saturday night. She hurried to the home of Mrs edict, heiress of the typewriter fortune discussing le daughter veeping was Ben Remington Aneurin Bevan Suffers Relapse LONDON (AP A medical bulletin today indicated that Aneurin Bevan, deputy leader of the Labor party, has suffered other relapse following a major The has had a poor atio bulletir M and Bevan no! 'so well." from trying to reach the men. be president, has been counting [Humphrey are announced candi Mine officials did not say when heavily on Truman's support. dates. Johnson is unavowed but their attempt might be resumed. Truman also took what ap-'obviously available. South Africa's biggest diamond | drill was brought from 300 miles| away Sunday but broke down at| the 100-foot mark, It began drill-| ing again today and there were | { hopes of reaching the spot where the men were trapped. within 17 wurs. Food, water and medical] supplies could be lowered through the 13'%2 inch borehole The 400 miners were trapped| by a large rockfall Thursday Re-| newed rockfalls, 'flooding and] deadly methane gas halted un-| "ground rescue operations Sat night of the Africans whites Rainfall Floods English Counties LONDON Reuters -- Swans were swimming down the main street of Worcester today after one of the heaviest recorded January rainfalls flooded 15 English counties. Floodwaters in n England subsided after a night without. rain. But in industrial Midlands conditions still were bad, the result of 1.38 inches of rain in 15 hours the North souihe the that nto but gone President conferred w Debre and up, vet vaiting relatives C six and Sun 1 garishly-garbed witch doc ir arrived at the mine Two grimy rescuers who were among the last to leave the mine| Saturday night indicated there is little hope for the trapped min- ers 'We haven't ing them," t falls Colombian Airline Crash Victim KINGSTON, Jamaica AP -- Authorities said today one of 37 victims of a Colombian airliner crash last week was travelling on the passport a friend, who erroneously was reported killed in the crackup. The man actually killed was Mario Cam- pusano of Bogota, who boarded the plane in New York. Prime Minister Causes Dilemma LONDGN CP -- The Times says Prime Minister Diefenbaker's promise oi action to amend the British North America Act reopened a dilemma that has perplexed Canadian jur for In an editorial, the newspaper says the object is to give Canada the sole power, in form as well as substance, to amend her own constitution. were only of the miners vere + of settler gime a said one of sav ve dig chance a planned to visi uled Feb. 5 The has ists The tubes other rescuer said inner years had to be used for support because of six feet of water. By French Chief PARIS (CP)--The French gov-jsurrection and 'rejoin the na ernment announced that surgents groups were still holding| out in embattled Algiers today|ihe riot leaders abandoned their, and that the population was "'gen- erally following" a general strike|possible that no further action] against the Paris regime | : The announcement said troop|if they persisted, any taken Pris-| square--waiting. [reinforcements had been sent tojoner would find themselves fac- African about 1,000 insurgents were holed | | VISIT STILL ON | De Gaulle's office said that de- persons dead and 153 wounded. riot police. {spite the uprising, de Gaulle still|The fighting broke out when po-| president |sioned radio appe (eagly today to give up their in-'fighting a losing b#tle. while heated appeals came one by one from loudspeakers. Within minutes after the shoot. ing this crowd dispersed. Heavy army trucks began arriving om nearby streets. Ambulances whiz. zed by with their sirens scream. Officials here indicated that if|ing, Sporadic shooting continued for Was|10 minutes. Then it died out. 1 The crowd lingered on the side. |would be taken against them but walks away from the bloody two in- {tion n ttempt at insurrection, it city where|ing charges of high treason. | WOMAN HYSTERICAL Authorities said the insurgents| A hysterial woman screamed were operating in two main/that it was an infamous day, that groups headed by right-wingers/she never thought Frenchmen Gaulle Pierre Lagaillarde and Joseph|Would shoot at Frenchmen in Al he troops had not action harles de th Premier Michel|Ortiz. They added that the situa-| giers. called a his council of ministers to discussithat the insurgents held part of ways of putting down Algerian | the city uprisings Dusk fell on the city. Men rushed in and out of the government headquarters build. his re-| ing |BLOODY CLASHES | The modernistic building over. The word came after bloody looking the city was surrounded [clashes Sunday night that left 19\by hundreds of gendarmes and meeting ofjtion was calm despite the fact against Barbed wire roadblocks were as sched-|lice tried to disperse a stubborn'thrown around the approaches to crowd of about 20,000 Forum Square. made an impas-; Leac of the rebellious Scores of policemen camped in- 1 to the rioters French group admitted they were side the building on stretchers tand makeshift beds. t Algeria ers

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