Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 29 Apr 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR People who try to devise fool- proof things know that at least in one respect fools ingenious. TODAY are highly fe Oshawa Time WEATHER REPORT Showers beginning Friday night, chance of thundershowers Sate urday afternoon and evening, a little higher temperature. VOL. 89--NO. 100 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1960 Post Office ly Authorized os Second Ciass Mall Department, Ottawa THIRTY PAGES Turkish Riots Spreadin To Ankara ANKARA, Turkey (AP)--Stu- dent demonstrations against the strong-man government of Pre- mier Adnan Menderes spread to Ankara today. At least 30 persons were injured in a violent clash between university students and the police, Spurred by the example Korean students who led successful revolt against Presi- dent Syngman Rheg, some 10,000 students and others rioted Thurs- day in Istanbul, Turkey's largest| city. Unofficial reports said po-| lice fire killed four persons, but the military commander of Istan-| bul denied this. Although martial law was pro-| claimed in both Istanbul and An-| kara, some 4,000 students singing Turkey's independence anthem assembled on the Ankara Uni- versity grounds today to demon- strate in support of the Istanbul rioters. CHARGE STUDENTS Three hundred mounted police charged into the students as they started to march away from the university grounds, singing in praise of ex - president Ismet Inonu, the leader of Menderes' chief opposition. In the melee that followed, 30 persons were hurt and all the windows in one wing of the uni- versity law building were smashed. The students retreated into the building and threw pieces ofl | of broken window glass down on the|bul Thursday. Menderes reacted mounted police. with typical speed, force and di- Two Turkish newspaper photog-|rectness. He imposed martial raphers and a Turkish reporter|law, were arrested as they covered] Menderes was born in Aydin, the fracas. southwestern Turkey, io I when the country was still the BOO COMMANDER a old Ottoman Empire that Ankara's military commander| : World aled to the students to go|Crumbled in the First Worl appe War. He went to the American i strat booed | : ome ue Somousira ors build-| college in Izmir, then to Ankara ! i i University's law school. In school ing. The police then set up al y's | } cordon around the building, tofhe excelled in soccer and swim- keep the students from gefting | ming and learned English. oat is rally others to their sup- HELPED PEASANTS Poft- | Returning to his family's 30,- At least eight ambulances| voit 3 i {000-acre wheat and cotton farm moved into the university en i i din rounds to pick up the injured.|near Aydin, i troops also blocked off|3,000 acres fo peasants and Inonu's home and the approaches|turned the remaining acreage into a model farm. 5 FELLOW STUDENTS carry an injured comrade from the fray in Istanbul today after clashing with the police in an to government buildings. If you want to know how many| He rose daily at 6 am. and * bags of cement are going into a|worked 12 to 18 hours supervis- project in Turkey's development|ing everything himself. He has program, or even the telephone kept this habit as head of the number of the construction super-|government. intendent, ask Premier Adnan| ge entered politics under Ke- anti - government demonstra- tion reminiscent of the South Korea uprising. Thousands of Turkish troops patrolled Istan- bul to curb the demonstrations | Beverley's || Mother To WASHINGTON (CP) -- A key Congressional committee today r ded elimination of all Bomare-B missile production with the exception of a small dcvelop- ment program and suggested some of the funds be used to pur. chase two squadrons of super- sonic F-106 fighters, Following this recommendation by the powerful House of Repre- 'Stand Trial LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The mother of the late Errol Flynn's teen-age paramour Thursday was she contributed to her daughter's delinquency. Mrs. Florence Aadland, 53- year-old platinum blonde, will be arraigned May 12 on five counts. One count, charging lack of parental supervision while the which were sparked by a ban on political activity instituted | by the strongman government | of Premier Adnan Menderes. --AP Wirephoto. Menderes. mal Ataturk, the dictator-presi- The dark-eyed, sharp-featured|jeni who set the strongman pat- premier is known as 'Adnan the|tery by tolerating no opposition Builder" and his building 1s aloft his" plans to modernize and one-man show. That's one thing| oyre Turkey--*"the sick man of his opponents are complaining gyrope about. Menderes, soon recognized as A ki riticism of his| X ee re insult. He 8 dynamic political organizer, en- stifles his political opposition and Sr lamen Liter 1as jailed scores of newspaper| | men for criticizing him. All this|the Democratic party. He be why saw a Venezuelan airliner sparked demonstrations in Istan- |came premier in 1950 on a pro-| explode in flight said today a gram of free enterprise. survivor told them an apparently Pearkes Banks On Deterrent OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min- miles from their targets might be He boldly rewrote the laws to|demented White Russian blew up invite foreign investment, With |the plane with a bomb, S. aid--it eventually amounted| They said the pilot grappled to more than !2,000,000,000--he|with the passenger before the imported tractors and boosted blast that sent the plane plumet- farm subsidies, opened new coai| ting Thursday, carrying 11 of the and ore mines, sugar beet fac-|13 aboard to their deaths. tories, textile and steel mills,| The two survivors are a Span- high ish grocer and a Venezuelan Bugs Ways, POWET| oman. The woman is not ex- | CARACAS (AP)--Road workers ister Pearkes all defence--|a serious threat some five years eat well as the/from now--though there were no West ~way rest eventually onfirm inteligence spares to idl power is the, means Baatnes. sans, ed. th th |" On the other hand, he said, the 3 Setiver_ a guerwheilig mi, Shh have abandoned the long-| lines and irrigation projects. Ir- : tent rigation increased 953 Turkey began wheat. In The result was new sal when he took office, ue Streak rocket vulnerability of its fixed bases to missile attack. A bomb- ber on the ground would be just as vulnerable. Missile launching bombers Mr. Pearkes of late has been dwelling on the theme that the means of retaliation is the only real defence of the West and he brought up the subject again in might require a new manned in- an interview, |terceptor as a counter-measure. Though Mr. Pearkes didn't say But no interceptor with sufficient so, he apparently was hintingirange now was under develop- that Canada will eventually re-\ment since cancellation last year tire from the air defence busi-|of the American F-108. The Cana- ness altogether except, perhaps, dian Arrow interceptor, also can- for helping the United States with|celled last year, would have had development of a counter-missile| much too short a range, he said. system, if an effective one can| Mr. Pearkes said the west's be devised. retaliatory capacity will not be Mr. Pearkes said bombers ca-/ confined to intercontinental ballis- pable of launching missiles 1,000/tic missiles based in the U.S. Seafarers Ousted, But by the end of 1957, the spending program produced ser- fous inflation. Foreign credit nearly collapsed, but Menderes refused to slow down. pected to live. Authorities pin hopes of t 'Mad Russ Bomber Chessman Blows Up Airliner co-pilot fold the passengers over the plane's loudspeaker system theat the man carried a bomb that was going to explode any minute. There were discrepancies in the survivor's story as reported by the road workers. One asked Chacin where the explosion occurred and he re- plied "in back of the plane-- maybe in the baggage." This dif- fered from his previous account putting the blast in the pilot's ou story on vival Fo the grocer, wi unconscious. The road workers said the for Turkey's 20,000,000 people, #5' han em of or $s 20,000, J "arin, told th f » rocer, Jose n, ti «he struggle air before he passed out. iuey said Chacin re- ported the passenger went into the pilot's cabin, locked the door and threatened to blow up the plane. While they were struggling, the renacien 1 tot hen Sh up on a , he or no Russian, bui oi th Store Jai PASSENGERS STUDIED Government intelligence agents, who Thursday night Margaret Target , LONDON (CP) -- No doubt Antony Armstrong-Jones have been getting a rough time since their engagement was announced two months ago. Scarcely a day has passed without some British newspaper, columnist or commentator firing a volley of criticism in the gen- eral direction of Clarence House. Teamsters Wait MONTREAL (CP)--With some| But the Teamsters, found grave misgivings the Canadian|guilty of raiding members of the Labor Congress Thursday ex-|{Brotherhood of Railway Clerks in pelled the Seafarers International{the CPR"s new merchandising Union and warned the powerful|service at Vancouver, brought Teamsters Union to get in line their fight to the convention floor | And whether its true or not, it must be borne in regal silence. Although most newspapers have expressed warm approval for the romance, it hasn't pre- vented them from dabbling in gossip that probably has made the young couple cringe. "A Of Pointed Barbs | "royalty boycotts"--the fact that {about it, Princess Margaret and/few European royal houses will attend the wedding. Few are, but officials say short notice is the main reason. One newspaper sug- | gests it's because the princess is marrying a commoner; another calls it retaliation for the fact that British royalty has attended few royal events in Europe. Meanwhile, Armstrong-Jones is being criticized for copying Prince Philip 'in holding his hands behind his back, driving a German car while living at Buck- ingham Palace and wearing or- dinary street shoes with full even- ing dress. "He's a chain -'smoker," one within 30 days or be automatic-lafter five days of behind-the-/friend of Antony Armstrong- one new sp ap er disclosed tri- scenes talks. CLC officers tried to avert a convention - floor battle in the| hope of achieving a compromise on the Vancouver situation. ally ousted. | Both unions were hauled on the CLC carpet for raiding other con- gress affiliates. The SIU was ejected without ceremony for trespassing on the jurisdiction of the National Asso- ciation of Marine Engineers The Teamsters, a 40,000-mem ber brofherhood with allies in the place when one union signs up| hope of getting a majority and thus winning bargaining rights. | Jones" has become one of the familiar bylines in Britain, It started with the announce- ment a month ago that Jeremy Fry would not be best man, In union parlance, a raid takes| Jaundice was the reason offered, Abbey when a longer one would but the country buzzed with members of another union in the|rumors that this was merely the|and he's been reproached for not front for other reasons. Then ¢ame the story of umphantly. | The princess has received her {share of barbs, too. She was up- | braided by the press for approv- |ing a short route to Westminster enable more people to see her, inviting old-age pensioners into the abbey. building trades and other unions, forced a trial before 1,600 CLC delégates--and then was ordered! automatically expelled by May 28 if it doesn't abide with the con- gress constitution rules against; raiding. The two moves promised an that the plane had been blown apart by a bomb, meanwhile looked into the history of each passenger. With tension still high as a re- sult of last week's unsuccessful revolt led by former Gen. Jesus Maria Castro Leon and reported threats of a new invasion, local newspapers speculate that the bomb was set by political terror- ists. One rumor attributed it to a White Russian passenger, Vya- cheslav Lavinski, who apparently was a resident of Venezuela. Nothing from official sources, however, indicated support for these theories. Lavinski was one of four passengers listed as for- eigners. Two others were listed as Poles and the fourth was the Spanish survivor. mother was confined to a hospi- tal, was dropped but Judge Allen Miller added a more serious one. It accuses Mrs, Aadland of per- mitting her daughter Beverly, 17, to have sexual intercourse with Billy Stanciu. Stanciu, 21-year-old actor, was fcund fatally wounded earlier this month in the one-room apart- Execution Set Monday SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (AP)--| |Caryl Chessman prepared for a, | "final" talk with two of his law- yers today on what more can be done to prevent his execution in the gas chamber, scheduled for 10 a.m. Monday. The lawyers, A. L. Wirin and Rosalie Asher, got nowhere with | that he was, shot accidentally during a struggle for a gun. The other counts: That the liquor; appeared drunk in her daughter's presence. ordered held for trial on charges| ment occupied by Beverly and her mother, Beverly told police |mother allowed Beverly to oc- cupy a bed with an unidentified male; permitted Beverly to drink in the daughter's presence; engaged in sexual intercourse with a sailor Beverly was detained in a nearby anteroom. Her own future sentatives appropriations commit- tee, Brig.-Gen. Robert F. Fried- man, U.S. Air Force budget di- {rector, told The Canadian Press |that if this proposal is approved by the House and Senate it will mean Canada will not get her two Bomarc-B missile squadrons. The committee said it is obvi- ous that the Bomarc-8 anti-air- craft missile, which failed in eight of nine flight tests, is "a very questionable weapon system and therefore a majority of the com- mittee considered it inadvisable to place any reliance at this time upon such a weapon." MANNED PLANES BETTER "In lieu of the Bomarc-B mis- sile, the committee has recom- {mended $215,000,000 for the pro- curement of an additional two squadrons of F-106 fighter air- craft fully euipped and ready for operation," the committee said. "The manned aircraft will {have advantages over the Bo- mare missile which will make them very much more desirable from the standpoint of an over- all defence posture." The committee had been con- sidering the U.S. defence appro- priations for the next fiscal year opening July 1. The U.S. Air Force had agreed to reduce its Congress May Scrap Bomarc B 000 originally requested, but the committee rejected this proposal eliminating not only the $40,400, 000 but also $253,600,000 apropri- ated to the Air Force for Bomare production in previous fiscal years. OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Min- ister Pearkes said today in the Commons that any scrapping of the Bomarc-B anti-aircraft mis- sile would "not be in keeping" with air defence arrangements made more than a year ago be- tween the Canadian and United States governments, He said in reply to Opposition Leader Pearson that the U.S. Senate and Ami ration still have to approve the recom- mendation of the U.S. House of Representatives defence appro- priations committee that Bo marc-B production be eliminated, "If the recommendation is ap- proved and finalized, it will net in keeping with arr t made over a year ago by our two governments for the air defence plan," Mr. Pearkes said. The U.S. had been scheduled to supply the Bomarc missile for two bases in Canada--at North Bay and Mont Laurier, Que, About $500,000 has already been spent on preparation of the sites and another $8,000,000 was ear. |marked for this purpose this year. As the Commons began its sit- ting today Mr, Pearson asked for Mr. Pearkes' comment on the Washington report that the House ittee had r ded ter mindation of the Bomarc pro gram and its "replacement ia mention of any struggle or of the nly spoke of an ex- a plosion." Chacin also called for a new plea to Governor Edmund G. Brown Thursday. Brown told them that he stands on his state. |1961 Bomare appropriation re-\part with more fighter intercep- court will be determined at a juvenile hearing next quest to $40,400,000 from $421,500,-'tors." ment of last Tue: --that he is) powerless to act ess there is some unexpected development of critical nature. None is in sight. Plans for the execution went ahead. Warden Fred Dickson of San Quentin said no visitors other than lawyers of record for Chess- man will be allowed on the prison grounds Sunday night, eve of the execution. Reporters have been admitted in the past. WILL FLASH WORD The governor's office an- nounced that it will flash the word when the death-dealing cya- nide pellets are dropped in the gas chamber. Reporters at the viewing area in the prison aren't permitted to leave until the ex- ecution is over. Chessman was sentenced to death in 1948 for kidnapping for robbery with bodily harm.' He was convicted of being Los An- geles' Red Light Bandit. Since then he has been in San Quen- tin's death row for nearly 12 years, successfully fighting off eight execution dates. TORONTO (CP) -- Reports of progress in research to prevent mental retardation were coupled Thursday with criticisms of pres- ent-day medical care. A report on the research, being done at a new psychiatrics insti- tute at London, Ont., was given at a Hamilton conference of the Ontario Association for Retarded Children. Criticism of mental care was made .in an article by Dr. E. F. .W Baker of Toronto in the | [Canadian Medical Association Mental Patients' Care Neglected' In contrast, a local municipal housing bylaw requires one flush toilet for every 10 adults. "Patients who could be reha- bilitated if given proper treat- ment remain in such a ward in- definitely -- unwept, unhonored and unknown," Dr. Baker said. CITES PROGRESS Health Minister Dymond also agreed there was a long way to go in solving Canada's mental health problem, but said some, progress is being made. He urged THE DIEFENBAKERS IN LONDON "NO CONCILIATION Diefenbaker Raps Journal. He said Ontario mental| persons within travelling distance, patients receive $2 a day less for|of an Ontario Hospital to visit it their care than prisoners in fed-| "not out of curiosity, but out of era of uneasiness for Canadian labor--particularly because the 1,150,000 trade union movement has decided wholeheartedly to step into direct party politics with a2 new reform party. There were signs of a prompt alliance being formed between) the Teamsters on the highways| and the Seafarers on the seaway| and Great Lakes. Once outside the congress, both unions face organizational attacks from CLC unions. There were fears of a bitter civil war within Canada's labor movement if the breaches are not healed quickly. The 10,000 - member SIU, in-| volved in a conciliation hassle| with the lake carriers over higher | wages and other demands, were expelled without any debate--be-| cause the union failed to appeal | against a CLC suspension order| during the convention. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 This twosome could be called VIP's--Very Informal Prome- naders. They're Christopher 'ollins, six, and his two-year- old sister, Julia, who appear to be inspecting crew mem- 3 'INSPECTION' TIME IN ENGLAND bers aboard the British air- craft carrier Centaur at Daven- port, England. The youngsters, who come from Tavistock, England, came aboard to greet their father, Sub-Lieutenant i | escent hospital, $5.66 for a federal § |with 144 chronic male patients, Ronald Collins. The 22,000-ton Centaur returned to Britain af- ter steaming 75,000 miles dur- ing a visit to 20 ports in four { | costs of daily care at several in- eral penitentiaries. Other criticism and reports of progress came Thursday in inter- views in Toronto of Ontario Health Minister Dymond and Dr. C. H. Moorehouse, medical super- intendent at the Ontario Hospital, New Toronto. MENTAL HEALTH WEEK The remarks carry special sig- nificance this week because it is Mental Health Week in Canada. Dr. Baker quoted figures from the Dominion Bureau of Statis- tics to show the comparative stitutions: $15.11 for a general hospital, $8.54 for a tuberculosis sanitorium, $5.77 for a conval- penitentiary and only $3.69 for a mental hospital. He said a corridor-like mental hospital he visited was crowded suffering from all kinds of men- tal problems, including. schizo- phrenics and manic-depressives. The ward was staffed by shifts of between two and five attend- ants, There were only two bath- re , three showers, two urin- als, four wash basins for 144 pa- continents, --AP Wirephoto, tients. interest for the patients." In the last 10 years 13 new men- tal hospitals with 6,561 beds have been set up in Canada together, with five training schools and hospitals for the retarded and 65 mental health clinics. At Hamilton, Dr. S. J. Koegler of Kitchener told the Ontario As- sociation for Retarded Children|ference, said the meeting should that research into causes and|2V0id putting South Africa on possible prevention of mental re.|trial for its race segregation tardation has begun at the Lon-|Policies. don Psychiatrics Research Insti- tute. AIDS MOTHERS He said the institute, opened in February by the Ontario health tal retardation by special medical care for expectant mothers. The inctitute, first of its kind in Canada, serves 13 southwest- ern Ontario counties west of Brantford. Delegates represent about 6,000 members of the association in 63 Ontario communities. The associ- ation operates 66 schools, pro- vides recreation and sheltered workshops and gives parent guid- ance in aiding some 150,000 men- tally retarded persons in Ontario.| t w Prime Minister Diefenbaker, ar- riving by air today for the Com- in from Ottawa for the conference which opens Tuesday, told re- porters at the airport that "harsh words cannot bring about a spirit of department, was particularly in-|t terested in the prevention of men-|the problem would be through in- formal discussions with External Affairs Minister Eric Louw South Africa, who will attend the talks in place of the wounded Prime woerd. said the spirit of the Common- wealth denied that the conference of its prime ministers should be- come in effect 'a judge and jury on the actions of other Common-| wealth members. LONDON (CP) Canada's monwealth prime minister's con- The Canadian leader, who flew conciliation." He suggested hat the best way to deal with of] Minister Hendrik Ver- The Canadian prime minister Commonwealth "should indulge in collective condemnation would, I think, bring an end to the whole conception of the Common- wealth." The appropriate course to take toward the racial situation in South Africa would be informal discussions among individual prime ministers rather than mak- ing the subject one for general discussion. The prime ministers could make their views known through informal talks and meetings, and Diefenbaker hoped that in this way there would be an improve- ment in the situation. Britain's Harold Macmillan and Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies have expressed the same views, but other leads in the multi-racial Commonwealth have proposed that the South African issue be formally placed on the conference table. Arriving with the prime minis- ter aboard the RCAF C-5 aircraft ere na! Affairs Minister Green, who goes on Saturday to He said acceptance that the Istanbul for a NATO meeting 'Trial Of S. Africa' starting Monday, and a group of officials from the prime minis. ter's office and the external af- fairs department. ; Diefenbaker was greeted by Lord Hailsham, Britain's lord privy seal 'and minister of science and technology. Canadian High Commissioner George Drew and Mrs. Drew were also in the welcoming party. TREMENDOUS CHANGE In a general statement, the prime minisier said here has been a "tremendous change" in the internationa! imate since 1957, when he last came to Lon. don for a prime ministers' con ference, While he did not necessarily look forward to spectacular re- sults immediately, there was a "new attitude of negotiation," particularly on the part of Rus- sia, whose state of mind had changec m the days when it was "periodically indulging im threats."

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