Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 11 Jun 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY One big drawback to having an open mind is that so many people plant propaganda in it. The Oshawa Snes Sunny with cloudy intervals Sunday, chance of showers fo- night, eontinuing warm. VOL. 89--NO. 135 OSHAWA, SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1960 Authorized as Second Cioss Mall Post Department, Ottowe EIGHTEEN PAGES. { ' ~ Strong Killer, Jap Premier's Home Beseiged TOKYO (AP) -- More than 150,- celling of a golf match with Kishi,' Sharp Knife TORONTO (CP) -- A sharp Police questioned 60 persons knife wielded with savage, brutal and checked scores of tips to fury killed Mrs. Margaret Ben-|trace her movements until the nett 36-year-old Toronto mother time she arrived at the hotel. At of two, senior police officials said no time was she with a man who Friday night. could be regarded as a suspect. The woman's body was found Police are baffled as to her Friday morning lying in a pool movements after leaving the ho- of blood on a suburban Scarbor-/tel. An autopsy indicated death ough service-station lot. She had occurred about 2 a.m. been stabbed 16 times. The dead woman's estranged] "I don't think this was the husband, Joseph, was released work 'of a sex maniac," said|by police after 10 hours of ques- James Mackey, Metropolitan tioning, Detectives said they are 000 demonstrators stormed un-|A press conference also was re checked through Tokyo tonight in/ported out and the president's rowdy, snake-dancing parades de- [speech at Parliament is expected nouncing the United States, Prime to be cancelled. Minister Kishi and President] Today's protest began near Eisenhower's June 19-22 trip to|Parliament with a clash between Japan. 500 Suess ob Zanga rene a" 1» same organiza Yankee ireren, So some? I aa] a DusHod of Kishi's conservative Liberal Some 10,000 radical students Democrats, laid siege to Kishi's private resi- N dence, sealing him inside. They stoned the home and smeared paint on the fence. Even as tlhiey demanded that / | Toronto police chief, after a day-| satisfied Mr. Bennett spent Thurs- "Wa Three barefoot children hur- dle under cover in rain as they await evacuation from Valdivia, Chile, which is threatened with CHILEAN FLOOD THREAT flood resulting from the .coun- | barriers will crumble before the try's recent earthquakes. Riv- | mounting pressure of lakes and | ers were dammed by landslides | rivers swollen by recent rains. | and officials fear that these new (AP Wirephoto) Queen's Birthday |Ben-Gurion Honors Awarded [Requests LONDON (AP) The Queen today made Field Marshal "Sir William Slim a viscount and ac- tress Flora Robson a dame com- mander of the Order of the Brit- ish Empire, The two were among 2,200 Brit- Coventry cathedral, knighted. ish subjects honored for their| Ernest Thesiger, 81 - year-old services to Britain. Their names actor, and Michael Benthall, di- Queen Mary, made a comman- der of the Order of the British Empire, | Basil Spence, president of the, | Royal Society of British Archi- |tects and designer of the new Sympathy BUENOS AIRES (AP)--"I am certain that only a very few per- sons in the world will fail to un- |derstand the profound motivation {and supreme moral justification | |of this act." {long investigation |day night with friends. The cou- | "There is no evidence of a|ple separated in March, meng" ee cox « e| POLIO Rate Far Ahead 0f 1959 | Inspector Charles Cook of the) OTTAWA (CP) over| homicide squad said police now | believe the woman was stabbed) in a car and pushed on to the lot. | | WAS STRONG "He must have been a strong individual and it must have been an extremely sharp knife," In. | spector Cook said. "She could not| have lived more than 30 seconds after the stabbing." . ra Mrs. Bennett left the home of| her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Falls, "dressed as if she were going to a party." She was last seen in a hotel at 9:30 p.m. Teamsters' parable period of 1959 vaccinated. -- The polio te in Canada so far this year is rumning far ahead of the on the second worst year on record. But| health officials here do not ex- pect the over-all record to be .s bad. Kishi appear, White House press secretary James C. Hagerty-- whom they mobbed and impris- oned in his car Friday upon ar- rival in Tokyo--took off from Tachikawa. Air Base w Ei est of Tokyo to join President Ei er's Far Eastern tour party in Anchorage, Alaske, Sunday. Only 300 police guards were present to deal with the ugly crowd. STREETS PACKED The streets around Japan's Parliament and the American Embassy were a sea of red flags. The surging mob sang songs and They do urge all persons to be The national health department reported Friday that 107 cases ere veported from the be- STUDENT LEADER NOBORU KATO ° at times listened to harangués by Socialist members of Parliament and representatives of Japan's leftist Anti-Nuclear Bomb Coun- cil, ; 'BEER FOR PHILIP The mob around Kishi's home | roared for Kishi to resign and|ered around Parliament's Others were posted at the U.S. Embassy. Search Ships Find Bodies _ ers)--Search "ships from the sea nine the 29 Corrects Ideas new U.S.-Japan- Security alliance dissolve Parliament to void the two appeared on the birthday hon- rector of the Qld Vic Theatre, | ors Jist, issued annually to mark both mamed eommanders of the X the official . observation of the OBE, gph} i |1sraeli Prime Minister David Ben- een's , Everton Weekes, West Indian Gurion called on Argentine Ad th the Queen's birthday cricketer, given tne OBE. lident Arturo Frondizi Friday was A 21, when she became! Veteran oarsman Jack Beres-|night to show sympathy for the 34, she chooses a June day for|ford, retired rugby star Ken motives that inspired Jewish com- the official observance because Jones, and Tommy Walker, for-|mandos to capture Nazi Adolf the weather usually is better or mer Jocour great, given medals. | Bichmann in Buenos Aires. eelebrations. | e Queen also remembered] z Slim is a hero of the Burma|her personal detective, Chief| get bas sceusid lured 4 eampaign in the Second World Supt. Albert Perkins and F.F.|V! ing iting ere gu ty War and a former governor-gen-|Herapth, a steeplejack for 3030 has as at Eichmann eral of Australia. His was the year. Perkins was made ajreturned. : first award on the list member of the Victorian Order| Ben-Gurion declared in a mes- Miss Robson fs a veteran star|(fourth class), an award usually sage to Frondizi that Eichmann of stage, screen and television. made for personal servicse to the|must stand trial in Israel on Thus, in an unusual appeal w= Election Under Way WINDSOR (CP) -- The 5,600- member Local 830 of the Inter- national Brotherhood of Team- sters ends a three-year fight this weekend with its first full-scale election of officers in 14 years. The election will end the trus- teeship of Teamsters President| James Hoffa and may oust I. M.| (Casey) Dodds, Canadian Team-| wi ginning of 1960 to June 4. In the same, period lost, yegr, Hise - Dr, 'David Kubryk, medical NEW YORK (CP) -- consultant to the department's|Philip was served a beer by. the epidemiology division, said that|red-haired queen of the barmaids while this shapes up as a high-|to celebrate his busy 39th birth incidence year, he expects the/day today. Princdibearskin caps and spend their the ' benefit of visitors abroad. from | > revisions in Eisenh time marching up and down for ese schedule June 19-22, with emphasis on providing more se-| Search ships located curity for the president. Ch 0) a inal pan (pan coast for the here. akin ower's Ja) the wreck- the plane Y age five hours after ean-lwas reported rate to level out relative to 1959. The husband of Queen Elizabeth| AS FOR SCOTS Last year there were 1870|opened a British exhibition and| "Scotland is not entirely peo- cases, second only to 1958 when then toured the more interesting |Pled by huge red-headed men in| there were more than 4,000, parts of the show where he was|kilts and hairy legs who drink worst on record. greeted with a foaming mug by|Whisky when they are not playing Jean Morton, a lass whose smile|lie pipes or tossing the caber. | "There are certainly knocks down any protocol. | r several| All this happened during a|barps in Wales and many fine packed schedule before Prince Singers too but the eisteddfods are Science Training Civil Servants Given Pay Boost " monarch. Herapth was given the|charges of helping direct Hitler's NG Ly red included |extermination of millions of Jews. ers honor > lM Admiral Sir Caspar John, Brit- ain's new first sea lord, awarded a Knight Grand Cross of the Or- British Empire Medal. TORPID TORONTO der of the Bath Capt. George Morris, 63, for- mer commodore of the Cunard| fleet and former commander of| both the Queen Elizabeth and| iE Everybody Else Gravel Trucks | Making Money Suffer Damage By JOHN PICTON premium on the Canadian dollar, Canadian Press Staff Writer and the withdrawl of American | ST. THOMAS (CP)--The radi-| New York stock brokers sit in| investors who are finding quicker | ators of four trucks, part of a their counting - houses, counting rewards on Wall Street. growing fleet being used by non- out their money TEMPORARILY SUNK union operators to haul gravel to, West German and Japanese fi- Briefly, Toronto--essentially a a construction project at the west- nance houses never had it so|mining market--temporarily is ern entrance to the city, were good : sunk, pierced Friday night And London, with its interna-| And industrials, too, are hav- sters director, from his Hoffa-| appointed post as the local's pres-| ident. | The local has grown from a| membership of 270 and fanned out across the province. However, recent wildcat strikes in this area have shown there is an independent spirit among members Mr. Dodds, appointed president seven years ago on the recom- mendation of the local's executive board, is seeking re-election. For Arts Students KINGSTON (CP) -- A, R. C. Duncan, philosopher and linguist, suggested Friday night that seci- ence courses given arts students at universities vamped to prevent a deepening schism between science and the humanities. "The spectre of two cultures" looms unless communication is improved between scientists and laymen, said Dean Duncan, phil- Philip--who arrived from Canada|obly a relaxation from work in Thursday night--left for London|Coal mines and some of the most where today he will be present|modern steel mills in the world." OTTAWA (CP) -- Civil service pay increases -- ranging from |about $200 annually at the lower levels to $2,500 for senior officials civil service salaries was he largest item. Most of the increases nounced retroactive an to should be re-| color in honor of her 34th birth- day. At a luncheon 'the handsome visitor maintained his role of tongue-in-cheek ambassador when he told his American listeners: "Whatever 'tourists or tourist| guides may tell you, Britain is not| just an old country of tottering ruins inhabited by idle roues in | --were announced today by the|June 1, range between $300 and osophy professor and dean of arts and science at Queen's Univer- sity here. He addressed the an-|2i€ nual banquet of the Canadian As- | pubs, sociation of Physicists. {dressed eye-glasses, where yokels quaff ale by the tankard outside rickety where all soldiers are in scarlet tunics and] Production | Castro Charges Techniques with the Queen at trooping the PIGEON TAKES civil service commission. i They affect 7,200 professional or related classification employ- ees--3,700 of them in Ottawa--| and appear aimed directly at easing the drift of scientists, eco-| nomists, doctors, foreign service officers and comparable classes to industry or other work. | They were immediat HAWAII TRIP NE SQU E HONING, Pa. (AP) -- A Pennsylvania pig- eon picked up in Honolulu Thursday didn't get there on its own wing power, that's for sure. But a tag on one of the | ely wel: | $1,000 a year. The commission statement said sglaries adjusted in the last few months affect 69,000 employees or about half those subject to the Civil Service Act. Other classes would be reviewed before the of the summer. The' federal budget March 31 d an comed by the Pr i - stitute of the Public Service of Canada, which represents most of the personnel affected. M. Marshall, institute presi- dent, called them a long step forward to the objectives advo- cated for years. The government bird's legs bore the name and address of Patsy Fauzio, a coal contractor in eastern Pennsylvania. "I haven't the faintest no- tion how this one. wound up in Honolulu," he said. It couldn't fly the 5000 air immediate $15, 000,000 salary boost to be spread among 60,000 civil servants-- mainly clerks and stenographers with a few professional classes. Still to be considered are lower classifications such as mainten. ance staff in public buildings. Some of the biggest increases It is also believed sugar was put in the gas tanks of the trucks. All of the trucks will be out of eommission until their tanks can be drained and the radiators re- tionally strong currency and a|ing their problems. Although Ca- booming economy, is playing a|nadian business activity is being profitable game . | maintained at high levels, gen- But the Toronto stock market erally, there is little or no evi- continues to trip the light fan-|dence of any substantial upward paired tastic in the opposite direction-- movement in the economy. Wom po py down, down, down with daily vol-| On index, industrials were tion project after members of VMe just making the 1,500,000 ahead 1.19 at 500.25 over. the Local 675, International Brother. mark week compared to a 28 -point hood of Teamsters (Ind.) walked| The reasons gain on Wall Street or with base off their jobs June 3 to back up| Brokers say: Tight money, de- metals up 73 at 156.65 and west. | their demands for higher hauling[spite government denials; low|ern oils up .27 at 86.11. Golds | rates. \prices on the metal market, the were off .56 at 78.33. Quebec Battle Moves To Slambang Finish | QUEBEC (C¥)--After a quiet achievement tart a month ago, Quebec's/ment eral Leader Lesage, once cab- ol campaign seems to be| Liberals, led by Jean Lesage, inet minister in the St. Laurent ection Te by the same channels are trying federal administration, who has moving to a slambang finish. to drive across the idea it's/been whipping up enthusiasm in There's no red hot issue in the "time for a change." Quebec Liberal ranks since he contest, carried on by the Union| In the various ridings local sit-| became leader in 1958. Nationale and Liberal leaders in|uations are at the core of the| He has called Mr, Barreite gruelling travel across the bigelection fight. In rural constitu-|"ignoramus" and an province, unless 'it's the obvious encies and in the smaller. towns, |petent. one whether the government de-|ihe individual popularity. of a| Mr. Barrette, for some time serves re-election June 22 for acandidate has a bearing in the now, has been calling Mr. Lesage fifth consecutive term campaign. In' one town the issue 'a traitor to his province and The Union Nationale under may be construction of a bridge his people" because he was in a Premier Antonio Barrelte is and in another, construction of federal government which pro- preaching from platforms, plac-'a hospital or a road. posed measures fought for years ards and in broadcasts the idea) The presence of many inde. by the late Maurice Duplessis, of "new summits" of Quebecpendent Liberal and independent premier Quebec for 18 years. |Union Nationale candidates is! Now, as the election campaign CITY EMERGENCY {more a sign of campaign tactics|roars into the final days epithets PHONE NUMBERS than anything else but in some are apt to fly more widly from areas it indicates party disagree |each side. | ments. POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 Religious advice, HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 incom- favoring high oned generalities about customed to, government policies to biting at- of a brake. Some are wondering tacks and name-calling whether the brake will hold | Some of the most violent lan-|much longer. (4 'expand still further the ranges with its govern-guage has come lately from Lib, At leadership level the tone of more restrained campaign- | he campaign has changed from|ing than Quebec normally is ac.| has acted as a bit| 'Red Answer OTTAWA (CP)--Russia's econ: | omic offensive against the West | can be partly stemmed by| greater standardization of pro- duction techniques in Canada, the United States and Britain. This conclusion was reached here this week at a conference of 75 engineering exec- utives from the three western countries who discussed ways to of mechnical engineering stand- ards common among the three countries. Their views were set out Friday night at a press com- ference. A. N. Huddleston, director of engineering studies and specif- ications for the Canadian Navy, said greater standardization would result in more efficient production methods. | now could hope to retain com- iles to Hawaii. Th st Ties 0 Wal © best a petent professional staffs. pigeon can do at a stretch is a couple of hundred miles. in the latest raises go to senior officials immediately below the U.S. Espionage HAVANA (AP)--Premier Fidel Castro said Friday night a U.S. military plane took "movie films and photographs' of a Soviet ship off Cuba's coast and denounced it as "an act of espionage." In his third blast against the United States in 36 hours, Castro rejected two U.S. protests re- ceived by his government. He countered with the 'pirate plane' disclosure and an attack on foreign oil companies in Cuba. The Cuban leader showed a TV audience pictures of a twin- engined plane that appeared to be a U.S. navy patrol craft flying near a ship he identified as Rus- sian. LATE NEW S FLASHES | LONDON (Reuters) -- Ru | | under Soviet law. Efforts will | him. ao| Spy Plane Pilot To Stand Trial ssia disclosed today that cap- tive American spy plate pilot Francis Powers will stand trial be made to let his father visit Start Trans-Atlantic Yacht Race | | set sail separately from Plymc PLYMOUTH, England (Reuters) -- Four lone yachtsmen outh Sound today to race 3,000 miles to New York on the first single-handed transatlantic yacht race. Leading the fleet past Plymouth breakwater was 58-year-old London map publisher Francis 'Chichester--with a dinner jacket aboard his 39-foot sloop. believe three itinerant farm la are involv ed in the disappearanc Police . Chief Alvin Watson sai 6 Police Hunt Itinerant Laborers DRESDEN, Ont. (CP) -- Dresden police said today they borers from the Dresden area re of 15-year-old Lorrie Schram. d a warrant was issued this morning charging one of the three men with false pretences involving a cheque cashed im Dresden. So the best guess is that the pigeon hiteh-hiked on a boat $25,000,000 EARMARKED Wednesday, Finance Minister Fleming tabled in the Commons The Soviet ship was 10 miles off the north coast of Cuba, leaving the west coast. supplementary spending esti- Castro said. The plane hovered mates in which $25,000,000 for rank of deputy minister. Grade 10 foreign service officers with external affairs, for example, Jimp to $18,000 a year from $16, over the vessel so long, he added, that the Soviet crew had time to} row out and take the pictures. Castro rejected as violent and| virulent the two U.S. protests and declared they 'reveal the spirit of aggression" by the United States against Cuba. Washington said in. a sharp note Friday that Cuba was mak- | ing false and offensive charges| against the United States. An earlier note accused the Castro] government of an "intense offi-| cial campaign of slander"| against the U.S, government. | Castro declared his govern-| ment would never reply to Wash-| ington's demand for an explana-| tion of the shooting at a U.S. sub-| marine in Cuban waters last month. He referred to the inci-| dent of the sub Sea Poacher, fired on by a Cuban frigate. ° Switching to the petroleum is-| sue, Castro charged that refusal| of foreign oil firms to refine So-|®. viet crude oil was an 'act of treachery" oriented by the U.S. § state department. The refusal was part of a plot 88 to destroy his revolution by leav- 2 ing Cuba without oil, he said, : and warned that the companies should '"'rectify their decision or accept the consequences." Castro protested that the Amer- ican Esso and Texaco and the British Shell companies were re- tiring their personuel, technicians land funds."in total disrespect for! {the laws of the nation." But he indicated his government might not resort at once to seizure. | owner found his vehicle in to- HIGH TIDES SINK AUTO A youngster surveys the pre- dicament an unidentified car day at Atlantic Beach. Abnor- mally high tides pushed by a strong northeast wind caught 3 \ & the auto some time last night or early this morning and al most buried it under the sand. 3

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