THOUGHT FOR TODAY The honeymoon is over when, instead of helping with the dishes, he does them all himself. The Oshawa Sines WEATHER REPORT Sunny with afternoon cloudi- ness today and Friday, a little warmer Friday, winds light. Authorized as Second Class Mail Price Not Over OSHAWA, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960 Post Office Department, Ottawa TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 156 UAW PENSIONERS LEAVE FOR PICNIC AT OR More than 250 UAW pen- | leg of an outing in Orillia. The tute boat 1¥ipe OW Lgke Coutie sloners boarded five charter | picnic, which is being paid for ching 2. pet Pl buses at the Oshawa Union | by the local, will be held in | J Fuxillary of fhe. uuion, Hall this morning for the first | Champlain Park and will fea- Riots' Wake ILLIA picnickers are Malcolm Smit (left), president of - Local 222 and Russell McNeil (. ht), secretary-treasurer of the local. --Oshawa Times Photo Cuban Sanctions Clear Ajax Man Hold Up Charge STRATFORD (CP) -- Robert Mock, 19, of Stratford, one of four persons charged with break- Gripping Rome | ROME (AP) -- Italy's rioting leftist leadership today threat-| ered to plunge the nation into civil war, | The threat came as police in| this ancient capital braced for| after a night of rioting in the streets and fist fights in Parlia- | ment. | In the worst week of disorders| since early post-war days, nearly |500 demonstrators have been in-| | jured in fighting from Genoa to| | Sicily. More than 200 police have| |been hurt--135 ot them in Rome] | Wednesday night. | [ Senator Emilio Lussu, a pro-| {Communist socialist -leader, told | |a tumultuous Senate session that | lif Premier Fernando Tambroni's| Christian Democrat government |strategic squares. | Police headquarters banned al! public meetings in Rome Prov- ince in an attempt to forestall rallies planned today by the| Fascists in Rome and the Com-| munists in the port city of Civita- p |more leftist - vs. - fascist trouble vecchia north of the capital. | Truckloads of police were sta- tioned on side streets near all| In the bloodiest rioting Romc| has had in years, 135 police and| 150 demonstrators were injured Wednesday night. More than 50,| including two leftist members of parliament, were in hospital. The | street battle set off fist fights in| the Chamber of Deputies. HOWLS OF PROTEST The rioting preduced another turbulent 'parliamentary session today, in the Senate, as Socialists and Communists howled protests ONTARIO PON | | ie | NEW BARONET Robert Williams, 35, of Kam- sack, Sask., has heir to the estate of Sir Wil- been named DERS PROBE OF JOBLESS Study Advised B TORONTO (CP)---Laber Minis- ter Daley said today the Ontario government is considering setting up a commission to study unem. ployment, He made the announcement following a cabinet meeting Wed- nesday at which the Ontario council of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and' Joiners of America (CLC) presented a 39- page brief to Premier Frost. Mr. Daley said the idea of a commission was proposed by one of the cabinet members "while we were discussing the un- employment situation" with the carpenters' council, v Commission The council, in their brief, said a survey of affiliated locals indie cales that in almost every case officers and members believe the government is not doing {enough to relieve unemployment, George McCurdy, secretarys treasurer of the 45,000-member council, said today the cabinet at first was '"'cool to the idea" of a commissién but "we argued the seriousness of the (unemploye ment) problem across the prove ince." The council represents trades. men in many Ontario communis ties as well as businessmen in Northern Ontario. Planned By lke |zrma a= Actually, American authorities, in Brazil and The Philippines, and|Bank of Canada here last month, ¢ )0 neither a shortage nor an increase | does not resign it will ts Jue 'a government of civil war." | A wave of general strikes was sentenced Wednesday to one!called by left-wing leaders began WASHINGTON (AP) The| liam Law Williams, an English against police intervention in the baronet who died Saturday Red-led deinonstrations, United States is considering new| moves against Cuba's Castro gov- ernment to follow up cuts ordered by President Eisenhower in Cu- ban sugar sales to the U.S. Eisenhower decreed Wednesday a reduction of 700,000 tons in the| Cuba sugar quota, thereby al- most ehminating it for the rest said, the cut amounts to 856, tons, because the law under in which Eisenhower acted also takes from Cuba a 156,000-ton extra quota Cuba would have got under the old law. e Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft|% Benson was ordered to buy sugar de from other sources to make up| W ment price is expected. IKE RAPS CASTRO the Eisen! er said th overn-| : 8 Risemlower od tie 2 Fidel| (Chuck) Burns, 21, of Whitby, /to join them. "has embarked upon a|Who was sentenced June 22 to rate policy of hostility to- five years in penitentiary. States." { able supplier land, 23, of Ajax was withdrawn, iro ard the United This| + 1 ade (1 reli the deficit. Officials. said there made Cuba an nnreli are ample supplies of raw sugar 0 io lly | wi " d itting val "hase, especially With Cuba commi lavailable for purchase, es 3 ing amounts of its sugar crop to trade with the Communist bloc." | The reason given for Eisenhow- er"s action was primarily .eco- nomic--that 1s, the uncertainty of the U.S. sugar supply from Cuba. To take such action for a political purpose would constitute an eco- nomic sanction which by treaty Castro Feels "Wild Rage EN -! U.S. cut; He asserted the U.S. would gain ican countries, iy by desig sent | nothing by cutting Cuba's sugar | Such 'sanctions, however, are Fidel Castro into a rage today quota to "ingratiate" herself with considered entirely possible as- but the prime ministef ip not {other countries. |suming that, as U.S. authorities) se immediately what Amer- : i a he intends to seize|away Cuba's quota to give to follow a course of increasing hos- next in retaliation, someone else you are telling them tility toward neighboring states. Castro appealed to other Latin-|that you want them enslaved and| New moves under consideration of this year. The estimated loss to Cuba in U.S. sugar subsidy is around $35,000,000, "at the same time you take here expect, Castro continues to| year in reformatory. Mock had pleaded guilty charge aleng with to The charge against Noel Row- committed for trial by judge without a jury. {to hit every major city in Italy. Non-Communist unions labelled Gary [the strikes political and refused munist party had planned and Rome looked like an armed | camp. | Rome's Chamber of Labor, pro- |testing police action against the led an a major food pr specially| the fourth man, George Communist-led rioters, cal {up 0 f.8 majes fol muuel Sheviallyiond i A - Stratford hay been|11-hour general strike in the cap- partisans and their Supporiprs |C , 23, ital and surrounding province beginning at 1 p.m. QUEBEC (CP)--Quebec's new Liberal government, which made education a key issue in cam- | paigning to topple the Union Na- tionale government before the June 22 election, has announced American nations to rally behind that when they want to be free at the state department include: his "fight against American and defend their interests, you'll '1, A request to other Latin oligarchy." He told a workers'|take the quota away from them| American countries for concerted meeting the cuts ordered by Pres- as you did with Cuba.' |action against 'Castro, perhaps ident Eisenhower would not halt] Despite Castro's appeal for sup-| through a meeting of foreign min- his revolution and charged Eisen-| port, Mexico and The Philippines|isters of the Organization of hower acted in a "moment of| already were casting longing eyes| American States. | : hate, degradation, insanity and at the opening of the U.S. sugar | 2. New congressional action on stupidity." market. Mexican suppliers said| the sugar quota allocation which A giant labor rally has been|they could fill the entire 700.000 could have the effect of perman- tre for Sunday in the vast|tons of sugar lopped off the Cuban ently reducing Cuba's position in a before the "presidential pal-|quota and at cheaper prices. the U.S. sugar market, ace in Havana to demonsirate "the Cuban peoples' unity in the i face of Yankee aggression." Cas-| tro is expected fo use this meeting to dramatize his announcement gd how he intends to strike back at the United States with his new power to seize any American property in the 'national inter-| est." Castro appeared at a post midnight closing session of the Metallurgical Workers Congress) only a few hours after Eisen- hower had slashed 700,000 tons off Cuba's sugar qucta. VOICE HOARSE : Thundering in a hoarse voice, eclared; Re ba will show the rest of the exploited Latin-American people i that Cuba can march alone--that| it is possible to march ahead without you (the United States)."| Small Plane | Found Safe | In Michigan Nn viciigan TRENTON (CP) -- The RCAF said today a small amphibious type plane, reported missing on a flight over Lake Superior Wed nesday night, landed safely to- day in northern Michigan after refgelling from a fishing boat. The nilot and owner was identi fied as W. W. Moffat, 40, of Willowdale, a Toronto suburb. He was accompanied by Clark Tompkins of Fredericton. The single-engine Seabee van- ished on a four-hour flight from Gore Bay, on the northern shorc of Manitoulin Island, to Port Arthur, Michigan state police said the] LAKEHURST, N.J. (AP)--A| aircraft landed and was refuelled huge $12,000,000 airship used for by a fishing boat, then proceeded radar patrol crumpled in air. on to. Rapid Bay, 10 miles east o!|a search mission Wednesday and Houghton, Mich., about 300 miles| crashed "like a sagging banana west of Sault Ste. Marie. eto the Atlantic off the New "It looked like a sagging ba-| Hersey coast n nana, then it crumpled and vame| ne airman was killed and 17/down in a hurry," said Frank CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS are feared lost in the sunken | Mikuletzky 19, of Barnegat] wreckage Light, a mate aboard the fishing | POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | " 'A SAGGING BANANA' scene three minutes after the 400- foot blimp fell limply into the water. Three men were picked up by ve fishing boats. | The ravy said cause of crash was a mystery. One of the survivors said helium line may have ru ed causing the 'sausage-like bag to collapse. 55e He jumped overboard with a ife ring and pulled wrvivors from the floating wreck The blimp had been searching rv the 40-foot sloop Vt &9, re- phted missing with a crew of the ts first major change in that | field. Premier Jean Lesage's first cabinet meeting since the swear- ing-in ceremonies Tuesday ran | through the day and into the eve- {ning Wednesday. At a supper- [time break, Mr. Lesage an- | nounced the department of public instruction has been transferred to the department of youth from I " bility of the provincial secretary | [sale of the Montreal gas system ; | of the publicly-owned Quebec Hy- BLIMP WRECKAGE TAKEN FROM SEA Navy Blimp Crashes The Doris May III reached the|from the Newport, R.I.-to-3er-]in the "dcean muda sailboat race last month, Ironically the yacht was found safe by a. navy submarine at al- {most the same moment the huge| blimp radioed the international distress call "May day, may day." Those were the only words heard from the blimp, one of four of its class and the largest air- ship in the world. TO SEEK WRECKAGE Grappling efforts are to begin today to retrieve, the wreckage which sank in undetermined Iseven or eight on her way home |depth after bobbing for a time! Free Schools For Quebec asleep, he said. | the jurisdiction of the provincial secretary. a | The move put Youth Minister | Paul Gerin-Lajoic, 40, in charge | Charges by Interior Minister Giuseppe Srataro that the Com- | provoked the disorders brought a |rising, angry clamor from the | |leftist senators. | The street fighting started in Rome when police tried to break up an estimated 10,000 wartime who massed in defiance of a police ban. A Communist-led par- tisan organization called the rally leaving hundreds of acres of farmland, 12 farms, three manor houses and half a vil- lage in North Devon. But the new | baronet will have to prove his | lineage before the inheritance | will be nis. The 35-year-old rail- road brakeman, a father of four, says he can't afford to go overseas fo establish his case as Sir William's second cousin. --CP Wirephoto to protest plans of the Italian Social Movement, Italy's Fascist party, to hold a national congress. Fighting raged along a mile long southern district between the Gate of Paul and the Tiber River, Wearing helmets and car- rying machine-guns, the police charged with clubs and fire hoses and finally used tear gas. 4 HIGH SCHOOL RESULTS GIVEN nm 2 full list of standings fc Pickering High School and Ajax Hi gh School appears on Page DARJEELING, India (AP)--A grim story of life in a Chinese concentration camp near Lhasa has been told by one of the most important religious figures to escape from Tibet. He says the thousands of Ti- betans in Mahchen Tang con- centration camp carry heavy rocks 17 hours a day. They are fed two meals of bad rice, boiled wild roots and sometimes roasted barley that Tibetans used to use only as fodder, Laggards are warned twice and then dis- appear. rising in March, 1959. The t came from a pos- Mounted police brandishing swords and long rubber clubs 4 1s considered here] to be authentic. Forced labor camps were opened after the Chinese crushed the Lhasa up- Refugee Tells Tibet Horror sible incarnation of the Panchen Lama, second most important religious figure in Tibet. That Panchen Lama who is a Chinese puppet in Lhasa--now distrusted by his masters and under close guard--has never been accepted by many Tibetans as the true incarnation, Y| THIS ONE FAVORED The claimant, born in eastern Tibet 23 years ago, was favored by the Dalai Lama's circle of advisers for selection a% the true incarnation but the giingas seated a more youth Drepung, one of the three es monasteries surrounding Lhasa, when the uprising occurred, Chi- nese officers arrested him, bound his hands behind his back and paraded him through the Lhasa bazaar, rushed the mob of rioters, who | of all phases of Quebec education. | The transfer includes the] | branches of fine arts, music, post-| | graduate education and artistic contests, Grants and scholarships| come under Mr. Gerin-Lajoie's| jurisdiction, The rapid decision, observers | say, indicates the Liberal admin- | istration will act quickly to apply its program for education. |PLAN BROAD INQUIRY | It includes a royal commission |of inquiry into the whole educa- | tion situation in the province, free schooling at all levels, free | school books in all institutions [under the jurisdiction of the edu- | cation department and the crea- tion of a provincial commission | on universities tc act as official liaison body between universities and the provincial administration. | Another transfer was announced by Mr, Lesage. The provincial tourist bureau and some related branches have been placed under the nrovincial secretary. The cab- {inet formerly had jurisdiction. | This takes in the provincial pub- |licity bureau. | The rent control board has also been placed under the responsi- | instead of the cabinet. NAMED VICE-CHAIRMAN Attorney-General Georges La- {three hours. At least 350 rioters fought back with stones and fence posts ripped from a children's park. LATE NEWS FLASHES Order finally was restored after were arrested, police said. When news of the rioting reached parliament, Communist and Socialist deputies squared off against Christian Democrat sup- porters of Premier Fernando Tambroni's government. Scuffling went on until after: midnight. Briefcases, papers and inkwells flew along with fists amid the din of riot sirens summoning more ushers to restore order. Four deputies required medica! attention and six ushers were in- jured, two severely, UAW Bosses Charged In Federal Suit DETROIT (CP) Walter Reuther of the United . Auto Workers (AFL - CIO) and | Secretary Treasurer Emil Mazey| ' were charged Wednesday in a palme was named vice-chairman of the cabinet, Mr. Lesage an- nounced. This means Mr. La-| palme may preside at cabinet meetings in the absence of the| premier. The pos! was left vacant {under the Union Nationale admin- istration. Mr. Lesage also announced his administration soon will set up two royal commissions of inquiry. { One will investigate the admin- |istration of the Union Nationale {which ruled the province for 16 years until defeated by the Lib- erals. The other will look into the dro Commission to the privately- [owned Quebec Natural Gas Cor-| poration. . 4 swells like a huge| | silver jelly fish. | A naval board will investigate. | Survivor Joseph Culligan, 20, | said he had been sleeping and| woke to find the gondola filling| with water. "I stood up, picke up a piece of jagged metal, cut] a hole in the fabric of the balloon] and got into the water." | About 10 other men were of! gat southeast of New York Cicy, {unaudited union secretary of 'Local 12 in 1950 [following a feud with a UAW| The blimp, which carried eight | vice-president. He sued for re | ficers and 13 men, hit ihe water |instatement, about 15 miles southeast of Barne- | accounting of Local 12 finances Inlet and some 115 wmiles|The case was dismissed by fed- leral court. federal suit by diverting millions of dollars of dues money. The suit, brought by two To- le", Ohio UAW members, asks a court audit of the international union's books. The bill of complaint by Ran- dolph Gray, 52, former executive board member and financial sec- retary of Local 12, and Harold Billheimer, 54, a member of Le ° 773 charges: The spending of millions of dollars falsely described as ex- penses when in fact it was used as salary; The spending of thousands of do'lars camoflaged as expenses when in fact it was spent for political purposes; The use of union funds for : illegal purposes; : | Expenditures of union funds for political purposes; The use of union officials and members for political purposes: |: The endorsement of political candidates in the name of the international pnion; False recording of expenditures of union money; The ereation of second - class union memberships; Other broad charges are aimed at alleged union misconduct on grievance" procedure; collections "under duress and coercion" for funds: and maintenance of "political funds" by forced collection from union H members. Gray was fired as finanafa damages, and an Ss $4 -- President] ---- | Mexican Maintains Open Lead ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (CP) -- Roberto de Vicenzo of Mexico shot his second consecutive 67 today to maintain his lead in the British open golf tournament. De Vicenzo, who upset the early predictions with his sizzling round Wednesday, carded a 34-33 to take an early two-stroke lead over the rest of the field with a 134 total. No Report On CBC Interview OTTAWA (CP) -- Revenue Minister Nowlan said he has not yet received a report from the CBC on the television inter- view with an alleged professional divorce co-respondent. He was replying in the Commons to Douglas Fisher CCF-Port Arthur who asked whether a report on the '"'phoney interview' had yet been received. U.S. Delivers Protest To Austria VIENNA (AP) -- The United States protested to Austria today that Soviet Premier Khrushchev has been allowed to use his visit to this neutral country for attacks on the United tates. 3 Gunmen Hold Up State Bank ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -- Three gunmen dressed as house- painters held up the Cherokee State Bank today and fled with cash estimated by the bank president at between $30,000 and 40,000 According to an account in the exiled Tibetans' journal Free. dom, he was assigned to earry ing heavy rocks for construction of a dam to produce hydro- electric power for Lhasa. In a 17-hour day each man had to carry more than 100 loads about 500 yards. This man and a companion escaped May 14. They met a monk and the group crossed south Tibet to Bhutan. No Russian Cars Imported OTTAWA (CP)--Not a gallon of Russian oll or a single Russian automobile has been imported into Canada for domestic use] revenue Minister Nowlan said"in the Commons Wednesday, ; He said there have beén offi- ,|cial discussions between Russia and Canada on wha! method would be followed to determine the fair market value' of Russian imports but so far no values for duty purposes. have been fixed. # 4 ) 2» 4 3 One of these 15 pretty girls will Lak' City be named Miss USA to- night an? will represent the US. in the Miss Universe beau- ty pageant. They are from left, wront row. Linda Bement, Salt Utah; Corrine Huff, Youngstown, Ohio; Sandy Judy, Boun? Rrook, N.J.;' Nancy Wakeficld, Winter Haven, Flor- ida; and Ten Janssen, Los An- geles, Calf Middle row: Bar- bara Feldman, Natick, Mass.; Joyce Trautwig, Fairfield, Conn; Margaret Gardon, Bir- mingham, Ala.; Lyadia Tarl- ton, Wingate, N.C., and Garnett Pugh, Queen Shoals, W, Va. Back row: Judy Fletcher, Alexandria, La.; Marilyn Stal- cup, 8. Louis, Mo.; Trudy Shulkin 'Sioux City, Iowa; Ju- cith Richards Lansing, Mich.; and Mary Rodites, Port Jeffer- son, Long Island, N.Y, + ~A PWirephoto