Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 19 May 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The person who says he hates to talk about himself never hates it enough to refrain from doing 80. 4 Partly cloudy and continuing warm on Friday with chance of a thundershower in the after : noon, winds light. WEATHER REPORT VOL. 89--NO. 116 Authorized as Second Cass Mall THIRTY-FOUR PAGES Price Net Over OSHAWA, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1960 juthorized_os Second Cums, Man 10 Cents Per Copy Reds Ask Spy Plane UN Meet UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)[*declared these actions . .. which The Russians pressed today for violate the frontiers of other sov i 'a speedy United Nations Security ereign states to be its state pol- Council meeting on American spy icy." flights over Russia to get the] "The Soviet government," the jump on a United States proposal telegram said, "'expects that the for international aerial inspection Security Council . . . will take against surprise attack. e necessary. measures to halt | mit conference, Russia's Foreign lions gency session of the ¢ 4 MOURNS ALY KHAN French model Bet tina | Bettina, frequent companion of watches with grief - stricken the late sportsman - diplomat, expression as the coffin of the | was with Aly Khan in his car at late Aly Khan is taken from | the time of the fatal crash near his Paris home today for inter- | Paris a week ago ment on the French Riviera. | AP Wirephoto Floods Lap ioe At Peterbell With the collapse of the sum- the unheard-of provocative ac-| of the United States of Minister Andrei A. Gromyko America." rushed a cablegram from Paris' The § rei ister ig n Wednesday night asking an emer 10 ed P noiincement Monday's B Russians charged summit session that Amer Force with a ive fligh can f ts over Soviet territory against the Soviet Union, creat- had been pped and would no ing a threat to universal Sir Claude Corea of council president for May, t reporters he would decic to when to schedule the meetir WANT QUICK ACTION he resumed, A council delegate s he ) Russians wanted the mec i b | day or Saturday, obviously to hold the propaganda stage with out competition from » "open PARIS (AP ! skies" proposal Pre en- face a dangerously uncertain fu hower said the U.S. wou mit to the world organization ture today : stile chiefs of the United States and the Soviet Un- ion turned away. fror he E summit eir strategies for cold wat ing would be 1 Monday. It was announced Grom AL hope of 4 qUlER eno 1 New York Friday to attend Al hoy f a quick fy ¥ York Vriday to tempers and slow rebuildir the meeting in person. lite - relations between US. delegate Henry Cabot|: °° Moscow | . Lodge planned to go to Washing- DS i poy ar of ONE STE : buried u 1 consult By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Two work trains were standing/P for weekend Slinsults hurle d by Peterbell, Northern Ontario's by should new flooding develop latest water-ravaged village, to- uipment from as far away as day faced hastening floods of the Fort William was being moved in pod said the U.S. made no effort tc Missinabi River. and 300 employees were engaged The 47 residents of the railway '® ™OPPIng-up operations. with Eisenhower and State Sec- gphrushchev at President Eisen retary Christian Herter, OM Sources in a position to know estern diplomats survey: hid ing e of the Big Four} beat Russia to the punch befor . and the violence of the UN. These sources said the viet leader's press confe Sattusy 30 12 los Sos! o Ein FLOOD CREST MOVES ON U.S. wants to avoid any spirit of opee Wednesday, the future . ' re evacuated by train] Further south, Lake Timiska- altercation. appears Ominous. Tuesday. A p w 3 or . 4 pilot who flew overiming's flood crest was rolling Diplomats here expressed doub A breakdown of disarmament the area W »sday night sa > y 1 a Wednesday night said the slowly down the Ottawa Valley. that the Soviet Union could get), .. iiations, a new crisis over water, from a dam break in Mis- sinabi Lake 18 miles south of Peterbell, was lapping the out be ie : . of '"|various points along the river.|t Sine 5 He Silage: No homes Sixty families were still isolated i 4 ® from their homes at Fort Cou- |i CNR officials said the flooding 'longe, Que. was likely to continue for another y |either ote against it or ab At Collingw: L o {either to vote against it or a h hr aha gwood, on Georgian| oi mhoce nine are Britain, (ply at onte to Khrushchev's gay jf 'did progress one stage fur- | two days. i (S Bay, heavy rains drained off the ss nce, Nationalist China, Argen- Slash It did little damage but precau- the seven votes negded to push a Berlin, a return to bitter propa- tionary evacuations were made at resolution condemning the U.S./ an4." warfare, a Red China s expected to join Russia in vol-|;ooarded as possible. ng for the resolution, and the lother nine members are expected PLANS TV REPORT Eisenhower, who scorned fo r ing assault, plans to make REMOVE GENERATORS blue mouth tains and flooded 4; Ceylon, Ecuador, italy, Tu-la TV-radio réport on the summit The railway removed vital gen. Streets and cellars. Truck gar- || fort from the district, evo dens were severely damaged. command centres with field ra oi al al dios and Detlooplorpamire estab {veto any American proposal fo hE cb SAFETY MONTH gerial dnspect ion Premios his homeward Parmey hy Cd | Khrushchev rejected the proposal through East Berlin. The German lished on the main line from Pet ie U.S. disaster soon after he gets home a and the oi Friday, He is returning by way Russia in turn seem: sure to { | erbell to watch the situation | i i iY during the abortive summit con-| i gime planned a At Foleyet, 60 miles southeast SCORE BOARD {ference in Paris. sinc ig TR eo Ay of Peterbell, the Ivanhoe River Gromyko's telegram to Corea| mhe French capital was still continued to drop. The area was May (did not specifically mention the! .noing w 1 angry tirade partly submerged by a 13-foot Wednesday Total [American U-2 spy plane the Rus-|gaainst the West when he took flood crest last weekend |sians brought down on May Dx: off today. As his plane left, the CNR work crews were sent into| Accidents 3 Instead, the Soviet fore nini 1 Western foreign min- the area to repair washed-out sec-| Injuries 2 ter charged that Am nor is wer fore a tions of roadbed. Regular trains Fatalities tary aircraft had repeated n- the T ament council to have been rerouted around Fol Charges laid for croached on Soviet air space and report to 1 eyet. traffic offences 5 [that the U.S. governmen ad | widespread meeting' of 1 and discus apprehension of an mpending freezeup in the cold U.S. TO USE SATELLITES FOR RE The United States soon will | vealed today. The officer said | begin reconnaissance over the Samps satellites, which are entire world by satellites simi- * Agena vehicles fitted with lar to the Agena-B (above), a photographic and television high « ranking force officer re- | equipment, should be circling Herter Presents Case To NATO PARIS (Reuters)--State Secre- ported the western stand at the tary Christian Herter "told the still-born summit talks and ex- NATO permanent council today peessed regret Knhrusheliev had A v - 4 ade *pouations impos e the United States has "consider- American officials JH Yer. able evidence" that some Soviet ter as telling the council that the quarters opposed Soviet Premier U-2 flights over Russia had pro- Khrushchev's policy of easing duced "information of great:im- East-West tension. portance' from the viewpoint of He added that Communist protecting the free world against China had violently criticized the & sneak attack. Soviet premier"s policy toward WRECKED CONFERENCE the West SC a The 15-nation council fully sup- Herter Geclared Kirushehey made a calculated effort to wreck summit conference because CITY EMERGENCY |i knew he could not gain suff wnt CONC OSS t satisf i PHONE NUMBERS fics i Moscow: ~ *** "1 The council gave full support to Tuefday might's statement of the POLICE RA 5-1133 western Big Three that all out- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 standing international questions should be settled not by the use HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 of threat of force but by peaceful | Imeans through negotiations, wa Russia's Foreign Minister An- drei Gr sd off a cable demand £ urgent meeting of the United Nations Security Coun NEW BISHOP Rev. William Edward Power, pastor of St. Barbara's parish in the Montreal suburb of La- S all alle, has been. named the Roman Catholic Bishop of A Antago nish, N.S.,, the aposiolic delegation announced today. armament negotiations an pase breaku will ave & ffec | nits i. i 2 oi i" A i ea e Bre agup wl ay ny oiient on clear definition among those "But the questions which were| ' tens g o sxactly 3 > ve or electio! E: i rld tension e got exactly the the November ction, queried, | to have been discussed there have of for posit Khru the | refu --CP Wirephoto > Bleak Future A nervous world among the leaders, advance dis- resuit ichev heaped all blame iilure on Eisenhower and al to publicly condemn ted States spy flights over the Soviet Union, Khrushchev, adding: crisis as a political issue. Hate Ike Rally In East Berlin USS. People Agree Soviet Premier Renews On Summit Issue | Attack On Eisenhower oe i BERLIN (CP) -- Nikita S.|munist East German Premier WASHINGTON (AP)--Average; "But our handling of the spy|Khrushchev flew into East Berlin) Otto Grotewohl and Communist Americans seem in near accord plane was partly responsible. It'today from the wrecked Paris|leader Walter Ulbricht, Khrush- in blaming Nikita Khrushchev for was stupid and unfortunate and summit talks, saying the Soviet]chev continued: the breakup of the summit meet- gave K an out. . . . It's bound te, Union will stick to a policy off "In view of the new situation, ing. They are uneasy but by no hurt the Republicans." seeking "peaceful coexistence." [we have to talk with comrades means panicky about its portent! jonathan Slott, a San Francisco| But the Soviet premier returned | Ulbricht and Grotewohl. I think for the future. author and television writer, to the attack on the United States that the coming exchange of The test area of disagree: hlamed Khrushchev, but said *1|in an airport speech. He declared Views will be useful for the peace ment ars to be the effect, don't think op i » any ef- circles that wanted to apply the Of Ilurope. any, the summit breakup may (eet ho IR there Will he 30) of law of the jungle had regained | Khrushchev made no new have on ne November's na:-| However, San Francisco printer | the upper hand in the US. threats against West Berlin, but tional elec A few think it willl 4 Avery thought the crisis) "The important negotiations in he said he was going to talk the help the Republicans, others the may have some adverse effect on Paris did not take place because Delin problem over with East Democrats. Some. think it won't|genublican chances, adding: "I the U.S. made this impossible," (xerman Communist leaders. make any difference. Tea aan oS ong: .- he charged. ~ While Khrushchev was receiv In a random Associated Press Yui ol di ago gale s _"Obviously those circles in the bg 2 Drasg band welcome from mpling of opinions in various) war They k os a € 2/U.S. have had the upper hand :88 erman leaders, Mayor i war, ey now. what retaliation) again who do not want an under- Willy Brandt of West Berlin ex- | Wie 15.16 blame. for. the would mean. a standing. Obviously there were pressed '"'unshakeable confidence Prokrs Nine of 10 Chicagoans 'blamed | people in the U.S. who wanted to that the Western powers would Z Dn you think the UZ spy Khrushchev for the crisis, with|torpedo the summit for which the protect his government from < t SPY one holding the cause debatable. | peoples had waited and on which Khrushchev's threat of a Commu- plane incident and the summitiyis affect on the election found no they had put their hopes. nist takeover of the city. Brandt told his legislature: "we |all have to stand closer by each what? not lost their significance. These|other in the future not only here What is your personal re- DANGEROUS ISSUE include the conclusion of a peace in Berlin but in the whole of free action to the crisis--fear, calm? In Atlanta, Ga., bank president|treaty with the Germans and a Germany. We must -stand toge- In San Francisco, musician Bob Gordon Jones said he doesn't be-| solution of the problem of Berlin [ther as one in the fight against Grant blamed the breakup on lieve politicians will dare use the which is connected therewith." |threats to freedom and peace. Referring to his talks with Com-| "We have unshakeable confi. dence in our allies and in our |guarantees and help for Berlin. LJ PY fr P CLOSER Chute uA Lo J03¢ OUY pAbenee ang determination." Berlin, he added, remains "the shawa Harbor Bill Ri Disappointed Kicks Up Political Storm ike Amives OTTAWA (Special) -- The bill] hrough the council. Only Poland eup in the Far East are all to incorporate a harbor commis-| sion mn capable of being discussed in the Commons without provoking a political Oshawa appears in- row. However, yester-| ther toward completion. When the bill was up for de [bate Tuesday night it sparked off | a storm in which Transport Minis- ter George Hees, former Li Transport Minister Lionel Chev- rie and Labor Minister Michael|} Starr were the main participants, Yesten Mr. Chevrier were absent part of the time from the House but] th e eir pl al fro aces were taken by Lib- nt-bencher Paul Martin and CCFer Douglas Fisher. Once again the point of contro- Ve ac M or rsy h ad little to do with the tual bill itself but concerned| r. Chevrier's charge that the government should immediately nize an economic survey of the effe Seaway on the Great Lakes and He criticized the government for| ot Lawr cts of the St. Lawrence rence River communities cil to 'halt the unheard-of pro QUESTIONS ASKED vocative action of the United States" in flying espionage fligh sr Russia. He was to fly to " York for the meeting. Prime Minister Macmillan, last of the visiting government head to say farewell to Pr t de Gaulle, reports to the Commons Friday on of his summit p worked for se the Big Four together ag they had met at Geneva in CONTRARY RESULT Macmillan's confident hope was that at the summit, even without concrete results would improve personal relation Russian Delegate cll," Reported Refugee EDINBURGH (Reuters) -- The h home artment said CONNAISSANCE iors ivy fist» oomhee of nd has asked for political Seat the earth by September. The °C! Samos would fly at altitudes of asylum. 100 to 400 miles, but could A spokesman for the depart- focus cameras on small areas ment said that Edinburgh police such as missile launching pads, 'Were dealing with the matter and -- he could give no further details LATE NEWS FLASHES Last Section Of Death Pipe Welded TORONTO (CP) Workmen® today welded the last se tunnel. tion of 36-inch watermain pipes in a r oronto where five immigrant workers died two mor ago following a fire. Although the tunnel work is completed, it will take another twe weeks before the watermain can go into operation Japan Ratifies Security Treaty TOKYO (AP) The House of Representatives tonight ratified its new security treaty with the United States after Fisher. opened by asking why mainly of government MP's. Oshawa needed a harbor commis. ent harbor was a mile and a half ister without portfolio, J. M. Mac- from the railway tracks and sev- donnell, from Toronto, said that er ac n. H ai" mil What pointed out that the pres es from the city centre f "There does not seem to be muchipalities would be led into believ- harbor at the present time," he ing they could rely on the fed ided He asked for more information of the burden instead of tackling S sth issi 2 ade : he AL able Michael Starr's state- i § r . why the commission was needed their own problems themselves. Tent in a amar? har jhe a, 2 smsually lage rh er for what was expec o be was the expectation for ocean-going ships to come in to automobiles for exports? Ww hat w ere the prospects for ex nansion? 0 0 m be S hey bes tarr, speaking briefly be y had to leave the Cham san. by calling Oshawa] ie Motor City of Canada" which provoked a rebuttal from Mr. Martin who represents Wind r He th 1 edia en pointed out that the Industrial Commission 1 aside many acres im vy north of the "harbor industrial development and of am advised that a num-| industries from outside] Canada are particularly interest-| ed in locating here providing they have proper harbor facilities." JC tre JINT SURV re sults of a joint survey by| Tl insport and public works de-| partment 1 into Oshawal had been *'v favorable for the fn Starr concluded that for mmis de Next ( ind other ports could be ex ded provided in 1957 for Hamil. ton in order to expand port and] a violent demonstration by leftist members opposed to the [dock fa pact. The pact, which authorizes U.S. bases to--remain in Japan at least 10 more years; now. goes to the upper house It has 30 days in which to act or let the measure become law automatically. Cyrus Eaton May Be Prosecuted WASHINGTON (AP Senator Thomas Dodd Dem Conn, called in a Senate speech today for prosecution of Cyrus Eaton, Cleveland industrialist, for his dealings with the Soviet Union. Dodd said Eaton flew to Paris to talk with Premier Khrushchev after the' collapse of the summit con- ference. ta area would be extended to three ports 'in, his own riding: Brighi- on, Colborne and Cabourg derly but it began to hot up. when inl Martin tbse to speak. P nee Ben Thompspn (PC:Northum berland) 'rose to support 'the bill and said he hoped the interest ken b; So far He i { for wise housekeeping' ty Council and busi- id decided 'a harbor vould be best for or- opment of the harbor speaker was Dr. W. H I-Welland); who asked )shawa Harbor Commiss the same low credit fa- y the government in the the debate had been or- jay both Mr. Starr and| the government had in fact sent hd w» a joint team of experts from the +4 In Lisbon transport and public works de- " 7 partments to make spot sur- ne oy ' LISBON (AP)--President Eis. veys of 29 central Canada har- . ! 'enho bors, including Oshawa. NOT ACADEMIC A Portugal i . These surveys, he said, were Portugal and. Premier Antosiy practical investigations and not The A r ; the demic survey r d « Pe. of thé force of the tr : , ; "Port minister's reply was taken . feheered him. y out by CCF-er Fisher who point On leaving Paris Eisenhower ed out that none of the spot sur- 4 declared he is convinced that the { veys had ever been made pub- && ? Western allies are joined closer lic and that therefore they were i than ever in their common effort of limited value to the communi- . to keep peace in the world. ties concerned. a He expressed his disappoint- ment that the summit conference never got started in its projected 'MAYOR GIFFORD | mission of easing international 8 hi ensions. 'GIVES COMMENT Be apes | PAUL lic not: h ki its fai PAUL MARTIN Mayor Lyman Gifford to- He 2s e he has 1a} en of its failure day termed the current fed- a | +] share the disappointment of eral government debate, call- : 55 a my colleagues that, because of ny for the Sting wo 20 % | our inability to convene the sume shawa Harbor Commission; i : -- ; " shan I DOUGLAS FISHER mit conference we could make no as "routine and "standard * progress for easing the tensions procedure, At one point in the minister's which so plague mankind," he : i : The Bill has stirred up un- [speech he was interrupted by said. Before Mr. Hee 20) by i 3 | t ; N " : " to pil ox ces Sowid ) reply expected political bickering |J. W. Pickersgill, a Liberal] "But I fully share their confi ar in the House of Commons in |front-bencher who threw doubts dence that because of this set- Ottawa. on the value of these spot sur-|back bi of the Western allies and Fe wat 8. dancer thi in Mayor Gifford said gov- |veys. Mr. Hees fired back that Particularly France, Britain and there was a danger that munici- ernment parties have inspect- |the Liberal former cabinet minis- | the. United States, both through ed the harbor on two occa- |ter should "stop looking around|their governments and through sions. land smiling like a Cheshire cat", [their people, are joined even eral government to carry the bulk H " : 'loser than bef in determi : d e backed up the Honor- all . eprk closer than before in determined In all nine members spoke on pursuit of peace with justice in the world," Mr. Hees, in his closing re-| economic survey has been | . hide None of the "disgust" he had { g a non-controversial measure, expressed. through press secre- marks, immediately attacked the| a f Oshaw y | : Tacs Tor To own Fe to] Shag, ava NSOOF 80d | esrenker Roland Michouer bad)iary James Hagerty at the Sovie Tuatitile. ab eeonomic sasvev ofl. te «, (several times to call MP's to/gattitude toward the summit con- institute an economic survey of The mayor added that, "a : 3 i ; : v ha d akeal order but finally the bill was ference showed at the airport. He port development while the St.| contract for dredging the [given second reading and now : Lawrence Seaway was sti | harbor hasnt' b 1 but |S § 8 now was his usual genial self, but Lawrence Seaway was still under| harbor hasn een let, bu t | n construct | one is being called now." [goes to the Commons committee there was little doubt that the ns Tue ion. : S . lon railways, canals and telegraph| American president was a deeply He followed this up by saying {lines for a clause-by-clause study.' disappointed man. could be planned in co-operation its failure to implement such a survey as recommended by a Commons committee composed Fo Gl ¥ wg Eh a --_.. TOP CHEWED OUT. OF ' TRANSPORT PLANE mmediately tackled the an overall economic sur. A French airliner, a 'twin-jet | air' 'collision with tight plane, | about seven feet long and three [from Pad Pha A Caravelle, is shown on ramp at | Some of the 50 passengers in | feet wide in top of transport's | the light plane wal demolished Orly Field, Paris, today, after | the airliner were injured when | fuselage. The collision occurred | and the pilot killed. vey so that harbor developments! its safe landing following mid- | smaller plane chewed a hole | at 6000 feet, about five miles P Wirepholp £2 ¢ 4

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