Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 24 Mar 1960, p. 2

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 24, 1960 PRISON RIOT IN TENNESSEE INTERPRETING THE NEWS By ED SIMON Canadian Press Staff Writer {| Nikita Khrushchev, a man with 'a fondness for time limits, has offered the world a four-year 'schedule for ridding itself of the /|means of self-destruction. The West prefers to move more 4 cautiously, without pressure of deadlines, and with emphasis on the thorough eradication of sui- |cidal tendencies with no chance lof a relapse. At Geneva's 10- |power disarmament conference, | Eastern delegates constantly urge the West to get a move on. West- {erners try to persuade the East ito get things organized first. | Given goodwill, as Czech dele- gate Jiri Nosek told a press con- ference, all things are possible. Despite the basic difference in approach, the early stages of the talks offer ample evidence that the delegates, unlike their prede- |cessors at most earlier disarma- ment conferences, are anxious to {come to grips with their prob- |lems. The West's response to an offer lof a less exacting schedule would idepend on Russia's rejlies to a |string of Western questions on Geneva Conference May Solve Problem disagreement on its expressed ob-| jectives but considerable confus-| ion on how it is intended to be| put into service. EAST SYMPATHETIC The Easterners, for their part, have been equally eager for clar- ification of the Western proposals, a number of which appear to have been sympathetically re- ceived. Both sides appear to be edging towards agreement on the thorny question of control machinery, al- though Eastern delegates con- tinue to express apprehension lest the West apply controls too early and too intrusively while the West is equally fearful that the Rus- sians will apply them too late and too half-heartedly. Two clear points of substantial disagreement have emerged. The West wants Russia to agree to an international authority capable fuses to abandon its overseas Roy Thomson Donates Sum EDINBURGH (CP)--Edinburgh University announced Wednesday night that publisher Roy Thom- son has donated £25,000 ($66,500) to the university appeal fund. The gift brings the total now bases before the completion of|Subscribed to the fund to £322,724 disarmament for fear of Com-|($858,445) munist aggression. In London, Thomson said he is glad to play a part in providing funds to give the university 'the extension it vitally needs if it is to fulfil its part in Scottish uni- versity education and research." He recalled that though his headquarters now are in London, his first home in Scotland was Edinburgh where he lived for six years. A Canadian of Scots origin, Thomson has contributed to sev- eral Scottish causes and institu- tions. Among other things, he re- stored Panmure House, historic home of Adam Smith, author of The Wealth of Nations and handed it over to a boys' club. "I can genuinely say that Seot- tish interests and the interests of Edinburgh University are close to my heart," Thomson said. DRIVEN TO SMOKING LONDON (AP)--Husbands who drink in pubs when they ought te be home drive their wives to smoking, says a social service review. A three-city survey indi cated that 49 per cent of the wives of pub-crawlers smoke a lot. Only 32 per cent of the wives of men who don't frequent pubs are smokers. of keeping the peace when dis- armament measures are com- plete. The East demands a spec-| ific clause in the Western plan guaranteeing the liquidation of} Western bases on foreign soil, | | Russia opposes a truly supra- national authority because it fears TROUD' Soe 1. won | ® HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS eo RED & BLUE BRAND ROUND SIRLOIN GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS how the Khrushchev plan is in-|to renounce the veto it enjoys in T-BONE EXTRA EARS is Ibs. J Ye {tended to work. There is little the United Nations, The West re- WING FEATURE . CANADA PACKERS Family Plan | Gii0ERoAST oor iw mer | MABGENE4 ..°1 'Christian Duty' fuassit ws Shoriening .. 23* SHOULDER J u BROOKSIDE | LONDON (Reuters)--The Arch-.stances when it was right and! 3 ¢ bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Geof-|proper that the size of the Sen STANDING (6 or 7th) BREAD 2 24-01. . 3 re] LOAVES frey Fisher, says family planning should be restricted. PRIME RIB -- DOORWAY SECOND from left (top picture) is the office * prison at Nashville, Tennessee, where two armed convicts are holding nine hostages including an assistant deputy warden, two women prison employees and a woman visitor as hos- age. They have demanded their freedom and an automobile. In lower picture Lynn Bomar (left), Tennessee State Prison warden .at Nashville, Father Charles O'Donnell (centre), a Catholic priest who was admit- ted to the prison office by the two armed convicts, and Nash- ville Police Inspector Carrey Patterson leave the warden's office just before O'Donnell is "a positive Christian duty." | In his diocesan notes Wednes- day, the archbishop added that "If it be thus recognized that| there is a proper place for family| planning, then it is necessary | FRESH PORK Delivery Service of a deputy warden of the state | some of the pronouncements on family planning made by repre- | |sentatives of the Roman Catholic © (Church seemed "likely to have 4 caused misunderstanding as to |the general Christian attitude to it." He said: "For some time past, |it has been seen to be an evident |Christian duty in England, as |elsewhere, that parents should be wise and controlled in the plan- ning of a family in order to avoid ¢ (as far as possible putting an un- |fair physical burden on the {mother or any unfair handicap fi (upon the children, or any unrea- |sonable liability upon society. 4 CHRISTIAN DUTY "Roman Catholic pronounce- 'iments very rarely recognize that family planning may be, and in fact is, a positive Christian duty. "| "They tend to suggest rather that it springs only from fears of overpopulation or in this country only from prudential and selfish |desires. pi however, a Roman [Catholic bishop was reported as | saying that the church of Rome did not demand that parents should have the largest family possible and there were circum. 2 Newsmen Fight Over also to say that it is a Christian] duty for parents to discover con- scientiously before God what in| their own family life that place| is," the archbishop added. | He said there need be no dif- | ference among Christians as to| | SPARE RIBS FRESH PORK LEG HALF or WHOLE 49 Shop for vour $20 and over FREE end have it delivered anywhere in Oshawa $10 to $20 -- 25¢ $5 to $10 --35¢ Under $5. -- 45¢ the policy. Go a long, long way to keep you comfortable aa and smart talked with the convicts, They | Editorial threatened 'wholesale murder' CHARLOTTETOWN (CP)--Two | if their demands weren't met. Mariti At left, Robert Rivera, was Maritime newspapermen got into Stylish All Wool Topcoats . . . a Joy to Wear! listed as one of the 2 prison. ers. Both prisoners had pistols, Warden Lynn Bomar said. |a warm verbal exchange Wednes- | |day, spiced by reports of af threatened punch in the nose. | ® Admire these boldly-blended shades . . . these beautifully- In the background of the dis- pute is a difference of opinion {over the merit of two current TRAPPED IN TUNNEL | Maritime proposals: The Chig- INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Three necto Canal and the Prince Ed- sewer diggers were killed and Ward Island Causeway. three were overcome in a gas| Ihe sequence: . main explosion which trapped| The Charlottetown Guardian, them in a tunnel 35 feet under- in an editorial March 19, quoted |ground Wednesday. Killed were NeW Brunswick Premier Hugh (Ralph Severino, about 40, Dick John Flemming as saying the Leisere and Robert McCormick,|canal "should have and must Sent to hospital were Bobby have top priority on the national Stamp. Harold Gough and Eu-afenda' although he and the |gene Warner. other Atlantic premiers had agreed earlier the causeway --AP Wirephoto "LOSS OF DIGNITY" Coroners Beef Over Inquest Call "He is trained in the law as it;cepting authority but also re CHATHAM (CP)--A Lambton, the 1 } County coroner said Wednesday a relates to your function, he said. 1939 amendment to the Coroner's|' 'Don't resent him. Be glad he is Act giving crown attorneys power there to help you." to call an inquest resulted in a| Coroners from Kent and Essex loss of dignity for coroners. |counties, satisfied with the exist- Dr. Robert MacKinley said ing system, pointed out that many of the coroners in his crown attorneys were not only ac- county resented that they are no! a TE -- free to make their own decisions and that the Crown has the power| R ] to call an inquest whether the ury u es eoroner agrees or net. He made the statement during » - a six-hour conference of coroners| S d from Kent, Essex and Lambton] uicCl e counties. About 80 pathologists. | coroners, crown attorneys and police officials appeared before a In Hespeler three-man panel appointed to rec-| ommend changes in the Coroners' HESPELER (CP)--An all-male Act, |coroner's jury ruled Wednesday The panel consists of Eric Silk,[that Mrs. Edna Kinzel, 44, of assistant deputy attorney gen- Hespeler died of self - inflicted eral, Dr. David Gemmel, chair. bullet wounds, man of the coroners' section of Mrs, Kinzel, wife of the town the Ontario Medical Association,|assessor, was found dead in her and Dr. H, Ward Smith, director|2partment last Feb. 4 with two of the provincial erime labora. | bullet wounds in her chest 'and tory. one in her head. A pistol was found under the body, AMITY NOT NEEDED | Her husband, William, 56, who Mr. Silk said a good relation found her body, agreed with po-| ship between Crown and coroner lice that suicide was the cause is not really Important. What of death but town rumors hinted matters is that the crown attor-/at foul play. These reached such ney is the chief representative of a height that Ontario Attorney- the- attorney-general in a given General Roberts ordered an in aren Iquest, ¢ sons, should come first. The paper said Michael War- dell, publisher of the Fredericton Gleaner and the Atlantic Advo- cate, "is preaching this Gospel up and down the land. , . . Our causeway . . , must be torpedoed at all costs. And Mr, Wardell has been busy on this job for some months past." woven imported and domestic fabrics for Spring '60 . . . styled with a feeling of freedom, a look of distinction. ® See the neat Shepherd Check Topcoats, with comfortable rag- lan sleeves, slash pockets, the new notched lapel. Magnificent in heather greys and beige. ® Dignified slip-on style in neat checks and traditional plain shades. ® Harris Tweed Topcoats. So ruggedly handsome with Balmacaan collar, raglan sleeves. Heather tone fabrics by Kenneth Mc- These 3 styles are in sizes 34 to 46 in short, regular, and tall models. | sponsibility, | Bruce MacDonald, Essex crown attorney, said he knew of in- stances where doctors did not conduct a proper inquest. "An inquest is not held to satisfy the medical profession as | to the cause of death but as an! § |aid to the administration of jus- tice," he said. Mr, Silk said revisions to the Coroners' Act will probably be made within a year. Heart Disease As | Cause Of Death | TORONTO (CP)--An autopsy performed Wednesday on the body of Mrs, Hilda Rosser, about 65, who died at Bala March 15, showed rheumatic heart disease as the apparent cause of death. The autopsy was ordered after reports about a changed will. Pro- AR yiscial pathologist Dr. Hugh Van . 7 atter said further tests will be held and a complete report avail DEAD AT 78 able for an inquest scheduled to| Franklin P. Adams, ahove, be held in Bala. i of newspaper column and radio Originally, it was believed the fame, died in a New York City woman's estate was to go to a| nursing home today at the age | sister in England, but examina-| of 78. He had been confined tion of her will showed it "~¢! five years 'F.P.A', as he was been changed shortly before known, wrote the 'Conning death, benefitting two og per Tower' column for many years, | now only Kenzie. 50 ® OTHER TOPCOATS STYLES INCLUDE... the elegant all-wool gabardines in heather greys or beige. Note that these are reversed-check fabrics--always a sign of top quality. Famous ENGLISH DRUMMOND gabardines and elegant ITALIAN MARZOTTO gabar- dines in sizes 34 to 46 in regular, short, and tall models. Your Nearest Jack Fraser Siorer CSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE ~AP Wirephoto

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