2 he OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Mey 10, 1760 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN 4 MATT BUSBY HAS UNIQUE RECORD Scotiish-born Matt Busby, the famous soccer per- sonality who will be in Oshawa for a day-long visit next Friday, is generally regarded as being the best manager-coach the British Isles has produced in the past 30 years. He will be here with about 40 members of two overseas teams, Heart of Midlothian and Manchester United (he is manager of the latter team) on the eve of the opening of their Canadian-U.S. tour in Toronto the following day. Manchester United is one of the best known sports organizations in the world and is on a par with the New York Yankees of baseball fame as far as crowd appeal is concerned. Busby and the team, together with officials and several newspapermen, had a harrowing experience in February, 1958, on returning from a European Cup game in Belgrade--that was when the airplane carrying the party crashed on takeoff from Munich following a re- fuelling stop. The disaster cast pall over the British sports world for several months as eight of United's star play- ers were killed in the accident, together with several officials and reporters. Manchester United, despite this reverse, immediate- ly started a rebuilding program and the following year was in the final of the English Cup. At Wembly that year the team dropped a 2-0 decision to Bolton Wander- ers in the final. Manchester United has one of the best records of any soccer team in England. Since taking command of the team, Busby has piloted it to many titles with his best seasons being 1952, 195€ and 1957, when United finished atop the First Division. The team will Canada in Oshawa LIONS CLUB STATES CASE RE. POOLS City Council recently turned down an application from the.Oshawa Lions Club to build a public swim- ming pool with the city's assistance, John Anderson, club president is the author of the following letter which deals with the subject: Dear Mr, Gearin: Due to many enquiries concerning City Councils' refusal to assist us in erecting a public swimming pool, we feel we should present the facts of our proposal to the public. Our proposal was made to Council several months ago, when it was announced that the two existing pools could not be put into oper- ating condition due to lack of funds, and when no announcement had been made of any pro- posal for the City to erect a new pool. There followed a meeting with the property Com- mittee to further explain our proposal, and many communications were sent to.the com- mittee in answer to queries received. The Lions Club requested the dondtion of a suitable piece of land, plus $20,000 with the pledge to open a pool before July 1st. The pro- posed pool was to be of about 140,000 gallon capacity and was to be complete with all facil- ities, An estimate from a local contractor of $30,000 for the complete project was submit- ted We also offered to sign legal documents to protect the city from any financial involve- ment in the project, other than the money requested, We agreed to donate the pool to the city after it was completely paid, and to donate an annual sum towards paying oper- ating expenses. We also offered to close-in the pool when money became available. We were of the opinion that a pool of the calibre we suggested would cost the City great deal more than $30,000 to build. Our costs were low because the contractor agreed to accept absolutely no profit, because we could purchase materials at cost and below, and because Lion Tradesmen would donate. their services. Thus taxpayers would be saved many thousands of dollars There can be no criticism of Councils' de= cision to refuse acceptance of our proposal, for we know they have acted as they thought was in the best interest of the citizens of Oshawa. The club, however, were disappointd in the undue delay in their reaching a decision, and in reasons offered for not accepting our proposal The entire cost of the pool could have been readily handled with our present funds plus an appeal to the public, had Council seen fit to grant us $20,000. We were never notified as to what structural deficiencies in our pre- liminary plans the City Engineer had objec- tions, and had we been, these would have been corrected. The legality of Council donating money to a Service Club could have been over- come in the method of handling the transaction. It is also to be remembered that the City were elighble for a Provincial grant of up to $5.000 had the pool been built, so that the actual cost to the taxpayer might have been as low as $15,000. Because of the restrictions in this area concerning raffles (which don't exist in other areas) we are unable to pay the complete cost of a pool and we regret that we are unable to aseist in providing this project for the people of Oshawa. The Lions Club hope that the above will answer queries of all interested parties as to our proposals made in the matter of a swim- ming pool. post-war be guests of General Motors of a Per John Anderson PRESIDENT, Oshawa Lions Clubs BROKEN HOMES BOOST HS FALLOUTS One of the biggest problems in curbing high school dropouts--900,000 U.S. students will leave high school before graduation this year--is the broken home, also the home where both parents work. Mr. George Roberts, OCVI principal, ex-president of the Canadian Teachers' Association, and now an ex- ecutive on the Canadian Conference on Education, is authority for the above statement. Sometimes, when both parents work, one or both is clever enough to compensate for the above deficiency by keeping their offspring interested in school, said Mr. Roberts, but such cases are not common "It's alarming to find the number of boys and girls in the dropout class from these homes," he said. Harrison E. Murphy, OCCI principal, agrees with Mr. Roberts. He says that. "indifferent parents" are also responsible for many fallouts. The average pupil must feel that his parents want him to continue at school, that his parents have a sincere interest in his cholastic achievements Says Mr. Murphy: "I know students who take home an excellent re- port card only to be greeted by silence and indifference on the part of their parents. This can be damaging to morale Each was commenting on an article in a recent . 4 ~.|groes, but escaped into the brush | Fisher (CCF--Port | {debates in the Commons shouldtawa West), who said Mf. Diefen- changes in voting procedure and | be broadcast periodically. pressed Monday as imons discussed ways fo expedite its lo of |"trivialities for hour alter |and then at the end of the ses- lions of dollars in estimates with- 0 a 0) |® ing every word of his speech and n | |leader-- 'When we have a fixed {debate of one day on something, | 0 {throne speech or eight days on |the budget, the debates are dead, | they |@ Iu FORN. COMMITTEE {the Commons debated, then ap- pi to establish a committee to comb through mine what steps can be taken to EDUCATION DOLLAR was raised by the university in a national campaign for funds cy Davidson, third year phy- | which went over the 15 million siotherapy student at the Uni- | mark, Looking on are Univer. versity of Toronto. The money | sity President Dr. Claude Bis- |@ (n ie sell (left) and Canadian Bank of Commerce President Neil McKinnon 15 million Nan- Bundles of dollars of them--are admired by S | INTERPRETING THE NEWS Wily Khrushchev Put US. To Shame Eisenhower will go the sum- For the moral * has been © s li t d a th 8 t By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet Premier Khrushchev ha outfoxed and trapped the United ; States into telling such a whopper SELF PRESERVATION 3 lof a lie that it may test the readi But plane pilot Francis Powers MASTER STROKE Iness of suspecting nations to be- 1s not dead. According to Khrush How did Khrushchev so llieve the United States for some chev. Powers looked after his own fully manage to trap the U.S.? time to come safety first, parachuted from his|He merely related only part of | That, it appears, is perhaps one plane and did some talking to So-|the story when he announced last of the most damaging aspects of viet interrogators. This made a|Friday that an enemy plane [the U.S. U2 spy plane incident. mess of U.S. explanations and|"bandit" had been caught violat-| The fact that both East and West| forced an immediate aboutface by ing Soviet air space. He ap- conduct large-scale spy opera-|/the state department, virtually | peared to have an uncanny hunch) | tions is no secret. And any coun-| confirming K hr us h chev's spy|of how the U.S. would react. Only try conducting such operations) charges. after the U.S. had let out a roar | does so with full knowledge of the, The incident does not end there, of indignation and pretended in- irisk and results of discovery Congress is starting to ask ques- jury did he disclose all the es- | Where the U.S. appears to have tions about the efficiency and sential details including the fact miscalculated and thereby blun-|strategy of U.S. spy operations. the pilot was alive. dered diplomatically is to have Even newspapers which normally Khrushchev now feels he may jumped to the conclusion that the support the Republican adminis- get what he wants from the sum- | plane pilot, supposedly trained to| tration have become critical. mit--the agreement of the West- |destroy his plane and himself if] Labor Leader Walter Reuther ern powers to recognize the East | caught, would not be taken alive. says of the fact that the U.S. had German Red regime and to get Therefore it would be safe to|been trapped into telling a lie: "'If| Western troops out of Berlin. Un- claim that the plane was merely you check back into American doubtedly in believing this, he is on a high altitude weather test: history 1 don't think you could|wrong. But in the eyes of much of ing mission near the Turkish bor- find a more stupid blunder If we|the world, including the uncom- continue making these mistakes, mitted nations of the Far East, we are in serious trouble." President Eisenhower's argument Negro Mob The Washington Star. which of why he cannot agree with Violence In Rhodesia usually supports the government, | Khrushchev may lack some of the! comments editorially: 'Obviously,' lustre of innocence SALISBURY, Southern Rho desia (AP)--Negro mob violence py Cases zane On Both Sides Britain's Central African Federa tion Police held 127 Negroes anc der and that it strayed or was Mr lured into Soviet territory when a mit under a cloud Soviet rocket shot it down position of the U.S prejudiced." | Reuters)--Since the lum in 1946 with information that) cold war began scores of persons|led to the uncovering of a Sov iet| been accused of spying on|spy ring in Canada | LONDON have 1 both sides of the Iron Curtain Last October the Soviet Union | sought others Monday for a series than {wo months ago charged an American Embassy of arson and stoning attacks in Communist China jailed Ameri-| security officer in Moscow, Rus- the Northern Rhodesian copper can Bishop James Walsh, 68, for sell Langelle, with spying and ex- Several 20 years as a Spy pelled him from the country. persons were injured A Russian colonel, Rudolf Abel,| In May, 1954 Russia: accused |" The outburst led to speculation was sentenced to 30 years for the British assistant military at- that a scheduled visit by the conspiring to steal American mil- tache in Moscow, Major Charles | Queen to the federation--a union itary secrets in New York in 1957. Landon, of espionage activities" | of the Rhodesias and Nyasaland and declared him "persona non in which 282,000 whites dominate hy Ata grata.' a ssociat > correspondent a . a population of 7,500,000--will be A; "4 : 1a I oa D 1951! Eastern E uro pean countries | cancelled. She is due in Salisbury if SOvhid for the United States. | Such as Poland, Romania, Bul- 3 + a 20-da r \ 3 : >| garia a sary have p Wednesday for a 20-day tour He was pardoned and released in|garia and Hungary have : many A white woman 'and her 1953 after serving 25 months times reported the capture and |daughters were among victims 'W0° @71€T SCI "April. 1954. Sentencing of persons spying for | 5 Mr a In Canberra in pril, 1954, ow ariicalariv the Unite of Negro bands Ars. Lillian Viadimir Petrov. 46. head of the the West, particularly the United |Burton, 38, was driving a car|Y'adimir Yeu Tn Australia. | States and Britain carrying her daughters Rose. Soviet secret police in Australia, = Ynay | 3 In August, 1953, Hungary "par- Y | : as granted ical asylum and| mary, 12, and Debbie, 4 when a WV? anted political asyl 3 2 "Roar Qs |band of about 30 Negroes stoned Drought documents detailing two/doned and expelled" Edgar San- [ 30 Neg 8 the car, doused it with gasoline SPY rings which operated in the gers, 99. yesr.ol) Rusgian > horn |and set it afire country since 1943 under the/British Dusinessman, after he Mrs. Burton was severely cloak of the Soviet Embassy served 3% years of a 13-year {burned. The two girls The Petrov case paralleled that sentence for spying {slapped and kicked by the Igor Gouzenko, cipher clerk Robert Vogeler, an American the Russian Embassy in Ot-/tried and sentenced with San- ders, was released in April, 1951, after 14 months imprisonment Julius Rosenberg, 32, and his wife Ethel, 35, were sentenced fo death in New York in April, 1951, for giving secrets to Russia. They were electrocuted in June, 1953 Less [ belt during the weekend William Oatis, an American two were Ne- of nL All three are in hospital tawa, who sought Canadian asy- editon of Life Magazine Problem But Ignored, Dropout Tragedie | In a decade, the a radically changed, an appaling one dents will not finish high Many dropouts lack sufficient intelligence to do work. But, here lies the real tragedy--70 per cent have at least normal IQs {Still the dropout remains the most .ignored problem in U.S. education Both principals agree that many Oshawa stu- dents are attracted by what seems like "big money" in "the working world" Mr, Murphy said dropouts at OCCI this year were "slightly higher" than he couldn't explain why. Last year they were between 5 and 6 percent Mr. Roberts said some dropouts from {homes are not willing to work hard when the going gets |tough; also that they feel the world will look after them somehow "Too many school Huge, unle the trend third of U.S. stu- ays ticle 1g chool the RELAX FROM THE PRESSURES IN THE COMFORT OF THE TALLY-HO ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER too normal, but FRIGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONING SALES & SERVICE Fred's Refrigeration RA 5.6335 "comfortable" should "and this it is best to reach a certain stage-- a part of education." that their students dropout people nk that all .youngsters: from 'high school." said Mi simplv not true: For youngsters get out and get a job when they lafter all, schooling 1 Both educationists spend considerable By 1965 two unskilled graduate Roberts 1s many only Did You Know . . . In the main Dining Room of the GENOSHA HOTEL you can have o Full-course Dinner ONLY 95¢c. emphasized schools time will counselling three jobs, contint he article | there be for and foi every every five high school | for seven killed Job graduates, nly [¢ members' legislation --CP Wigephoto |{, get any radio station to take the terest | their be enforced Minister by skil- ment in the 1956 pipeline debate he said. 2 Mermaids Disturh ~ 'The Curious SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-- Once there were two mermaids on the flat rock of a headland defining Bondi Beach Now there is only one, though she is brazen as ever, For four weeks the mer-* maids sat together as if bolted * to the rock (which in fact they = were), braving high tides< stares of the curious and a pub- '» lic debate over their nudity. "With too much of this sort of thing," a Roman Catholie xs church spokesman said, "we: can hardly complain if young:" men, their passions inflamed, commit sex offences." ad A beach inspector complained' that people might fall over the" cliff trying to get a closer view of the mermaids, 2 Sculptor Lyall Randolph had made and installed them in his spare time as a contribution to: Sydney's art and culture. Hes valued them at $4,700. His models were Mrs. Peter Carmody, a former Miss Surf, and Lyneite Whillier, a 1958+ Olympic swimmer. Both said they saw nothing vulgar about the figures. The Carmody figure vanished" on university commemoration sz day, when students have fumsc and dream up practical jokes: = It was found scratched ands with the tail and an arm;? broken off in Sydney Univer- sity's engineering school Randolph, declaring the da~ mage beyond repair, was quite upset. . Commons Rules To Be Reviewed By TOM MITCHELL which raised the hackles of thenot be "impeded" by discussion Canadian Press Staff Writer |Progressive Conservatives of this controversial matter. OTTAWA (CP) Douglas| But this suggestion drew fire, Mr. Fleming also suggested the Arthur) says|/from George Mcliraith (L--Ot- committee could consider} baker had taken a stand on thisnoted Mr. Diefenbaker had. said Here, according to opinions ex-|matter--an apparent reference to/in the House that an electronic the Com-|~lection campaign statements vote-counter is used in India. that a Pmegressive Conservative Present roll-call methods take 20- government would abolish!3¢ minutes. closure. There also might be discussion Mr. Mcliraith said Mr. Diefen- ot party agreements to limit de- baker "made a definite commit- bates ' ment on the question of the ARGUE DISAGREES closure rule, indicating that the ¢ ! : " government would deal with it." Wi aig si debgies wit itur il-| The w the ¢ e § 1 s ar ally the expenditure of mi he work of the committee should form of clostire. The debates developed when MPs were not 1 . limited to a specific time Fluorine Dangers operations, are some things iewers might see on television r hear on radio: Ernest Broome ouver South) (PC Van- Discussion of hour fon . . ut due consideration to what we re doing." J. M.: Macdonnell (PC--Tor- nto Greenwood) "A member tanding up unashamedly read- well." CCF ot even reading it Hazen Argue, House 1 two days, or 10 days on the are inconsequential, and veryone is just waiting around ntil the vote is called." These views were expressed as roved, a government resolution House rules and deter- xpedite handling of public busi- ess, Mr. Fisher asts start overage of There were suggestions for smaller committees, pointing up the fact that many of the large committees 50-60 members-- have trouble obtaining a quorum. Mr. Argue said they should be -. allowed to sit between sessions to tl d continue their work Ou ne The last committee to study the rules, formed in 1951, sat through TORONTO (CP) Fluoridated six sessions, delivering a report water can cause damage to thei; 1955. It resulted in changed brain, premature births, paraly-'rules concerning sitting hours, sis of the nerve ends and com-!fixing the number of government plications of diabetes, a royall supply motions on which mo- commission on fluoridation was|tjons of non-confidence are made told Monday at six, and setting limits of 10 Dr. Charles A. Brusch of the days for the throne speech de- Brusch Medical Centre in Cam-\pate and eight days for the bridge, Mass., said he could pro- budget debate. . duce evidence by medical author-|~ ar. Fleming said the new com- ities to back his charges. He told i100 would not deliver a report Mr. Justice K. G. Morden of the this session but be re-formed to Ontarto Court of Appeal, who is continue study at the next. conducting the hearings now in| ---------- i ---- their second week, that he would send him the information Dr. Brusch said the Nazis ad- ministered fluorine to prisoners in German concentration camps as part of a "brainwashing pro- cess." Canada Worried Another opponent of fluoridated Over Spy Plane water, Dr. W. A. Costain of Tor- OTTAWA (CP)--The destruc: (to work out an agreement on dis onto, said sodium fluoride In tion of an American Feeoinals | arshament " drinking water lowers the cal-sance plane over Russia May 1| 3 SEAR] cium level of the blood and the Sante Pine anxiety in the Com- AMBASSADOR LISTENS a tissues mons Monday, with External Af- Listening atenily to the tisctir, Earlier, a University of Tor-|fairs Minister Green declaring slop from 4 wir a 2 Ip onto professor said proposals to|that such an incident could trig- a Ee ras) T asash add one part fluorine to 1,000,000|ger a nuclear war. Canad Ait ; parts water are perfectly safe Spokesmen for all three patties|lo Canada. a question by Lionel. and beneficial ta the teeth. Dr.| expressed concern. CCF speakers Ch swe ng b, atreal ous Edward A. Sellers, a professor of suggested Canada should protest M ey ~~ d or ea i y 1 35 pharmacology, said the human against such U.S. spying mis-| Vr. Green saic no Soviel planes, body has jts own ways of dealing! gions. have been identified flying over with a high consumption of fluo = gle : py ' the Canadian Arctic. However, ine, either from water or foods Mr. Green said The Cana- some unidentified planes have everal things the committee| It can be absorbed in the bones|dian government regards this asiheen spotted ould consider where only extraordinarily large 3 Very serious incident and we Both Mr. Herridge and Mr. He topped this list with closure quantities are harmful; excreted | ink it points up clearly the vi- Martin suggested the incident the debate-limiting device used through the kidneys, or excreted|tdl need for a disarmament emphasizes the need for a more the former Liberal govern-|through the pores in hot weather, |28reement If incidents of this|independent Canadian approach: kind are to go on, one of these jn foreign poli days such an incident might trig- ere |ger a nuclear war." Mr. Green said such incidents would not oecur if there were an adequate system of reciprocal | aerial inspection between Russia |and the West | TERMED STUPID suggested broad- with an-hour-a-week debate on private "Of course, with the present tandards the difficulty would be broadcasts," he said. But uch broadcasts would bring Par- ament more to the attention of he people and improve the in- of private members in duties. Both Mr. Fisher and Mr. Mac- onnell agreed that the rule gainst reading speeches should Mr. Macdonnell said "stultify" Parliament UGGESTS DUTIES Mr Fleming, who introduced he resolution on behalf of Prime Diefenbaker, suggested hey Controversial OTTAWA (CP)--A thick file of' H. W. Herridge (CCF--Koote- correspondence between officials' nay West) termed the episode |of Prairie farm organizations and' "stupid," "irresponsible" and a|federal cabinet ministers on the "great blunder" on the part et {question of Sports nh Japan US military authorities. He|was ta ay Come hoped Canada would protest "in MODS. the strongest terms" to the The file reflects the deep cong United States. cern of the Prairie groups thats Mr, Green replied the Ameri-|8"Y restriction on Japanese goods: can government was well aware|Will have an adverse effect on, of Canada's feeling on the mat- Canadian exports of wheat to Ja-' Ado . pan. S ter Boghw as that of the rest In a letter to Prime Minister J . | Diefenbaker Feb. 12, president W. Paul Martin (L--Essex East) ; parker of Manitoba Pool Elev- said he hoped the incident would (440g asked for assurance that not prejudice the coming summit| japanese exports in 1960 wold Runjereiice: me {not be less than those permitted: Mr. Green said: 'I am surelin 1959. 2 the House will join with me in| It was the farmers' "confirméd expressing the hope that now that |conviction" that domestic manu both sides have seen just how facturers even of sensitive tex: serious incidents of this kind can|tile items, were "adequately shel- be and just how little it might tered by tariff from world com- take to start a world disaster, petition apd ought not at the ex- the nations of both sides will get/pense of our exports be afforded down to business and really try'additional shelter." FOOD Oy VV 12] 3 Se 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. o) SEARET: FREEZERS FROM . . . $239 For Information call RA 8-5358 THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF News Toni | with professionally pre-mixed neutralizer! 2. EASY! 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