cussion @ "If we er be if or in the I think § schools TIMES-GAZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS WClassified Advertising. . All Other Calls RA 3-3492 RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Weather Forecast Light snow, clearing late today. Colder. Light winds. Cold Sunday. High today 30, low tonight 15. OSHAWA-WHITBY, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1956 SIXTEEN PAGES , 85--NO. 35 Pretty Diane Hubell was chos- en Queen of Hearts last night at the annual dance staged by the | Girl's Athletic Association of the Oshawa Central Collegiate In- LL stitute. Twenty attractive OCCI | students, each representing a class, competed for the coveted | title in the school -awditorium. | Diane is the daughter, of Mr. | ERS Ku Klux Klan Fights Labor -- AFL-CIO MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)--The AFL-CIO's executive council says | that "white citizens' councils" have | (in the South to preserve racial seg| regation and fight labor unions. | The council Friday approved al report from its civil rights com-| mittee which said that since the| United States Supreme Court de-| cision outlawing segregation in public schools, the white citizens! councils have organized more than| 500 local units in 44 states with a| paid membership of more than 208,000. | | "The pattern followed by this {new Ku Klux Klan without hoods is ominous in its resemblance to; the pattern of the growth of Nazi- ism and other totalitarian move- ments which have fed on hatred and defied constitutional democ- acy," the report said. It said the local white citizens' councils had combined into an or-| ganization '"'with the delberately misleading name of Federation for Constitutional Government." and Mrs. Clarke Hubell, of 18 | Cadillac avenue south. Bonnie Long was second and Shirley Shelenkoff third in the contest. --Times-Gazette Photo ™ is wt aren' thous pear n Att mentary and secondary schoo registered this morning aachars sacaers for a social studies seminar at Cen- tral Collegiate Institute here. arfiliates of the Ontario Teachers'|the seminar," The teachers represented all five Federation, W.A. Parish of Pickering District|more closely what we mean I High School. He is chairman of!social studies and to make its Chairman for the meeting was end Sem Close to 125 Eastern Ontario ele-|the Ontario Teachers' Federation teaching as effective as possible." || social studies committee which re-|IN at is HE |cenily pies€iiteu a iEpuiv On |teaching of social studies. a Nar ne |tabli tad C its sp s, the report said, are governors, mem- bers of congress, lawyers, bankers and industrialists. Here CHARGE The seminar. he felt. would es-! sh the fact that both Secondary elementary sehool feachers Entombment and {sprung up as a new Ku Klux Klan| # THE WORLD'S FINEST SHIP-BORNE FIGHTER 'The Royal Canadian Navy's | latest addition to its air arm is | the twin-jet Banshee (above) now | being flown by 870 Fighter Squad- ron at HMCS Shearwater, Dart- mouth, Nova Scotia, The Ban- shee, among the 's fin- est single-seat all-weath¢r ship- borne fighters, will operate from HMCS Bonaventure, scheduled to be leted at Belf North- authorities say the Banshee is "weli- capable of carrying out the | air-defence task in the broad ern Ireland, late this year. Naval | (National Defence Photo) FACE PUC CUT-OFF Payments' ~ Deadline - Tuesday A threat to cut off light and | water for about 1,000 striking CIO United Auto Workers has been re- ceived from the Oshawa. public utilities commission, it was gu- nounced today by a spokesman for Local 222 UAW-CIO. Clifford Pilkey, financial secre- tary of the local union, said a Tuesday deadline for payment of | arrears was contained in a letter sent by G. F. Shreve, public utili- ties manager, to .GM strikers. GET LETTER The letter from the commis- sion read: "At an emergency meeting held today, Feb. 10, at 3.30 p.m., our commission consid- ered the reply of Feb. 10 from your Local 222 international union and signed by your act presi- dent, Mr. William Rutherford, as entirely unsatisfactory. "Therefore, this commission feels they nave no alternative but to proceed with disconnecting of the utilities services .of General Motors employees on strike and i SiTears as of Tuesday, Feb. 14, "One of the important aims of have a common ground #hd com- said Mr. Parish, "is! mon problems which can Pe solved teaching and | together. to define| The teachers were divided into by groups of 20 at today's seminar, with each group in charge of a dis- cussion team from the OTF so- to coordinate the {study of this subject, as WR ih HAPPY Five-year-old Christine Goodes is all set for Valentine's Day as she displays a very special card cial studies committee, The groups later reported their findings to the whole assembly. . H. Broadbent, principal of E. A. Lovell Public School, was in charge of local arrangements. Among the outside centres repre- sented at the similar were: Agin- court, Scarboro, Toronto, Cornwall, Ottawa, Belleville, Napanee, Bow- manville, Bancroft, Mallorytown and Peterborough. 'May Discuss Pay Inequities Negotiators in the 147 day strike at General Motors of Can- ada Limited settled down today to { What may prove to be an all-week- lend series of discussions on wage | inequity problems at Oshawa and VIRGINIATOWN, Ont. (CP) -- A 33-year-old miner rescued from the Kerr-Addison gold mine here after being trapped for 15 hours, died Friday in hospital. Kalman Szucs, father of three children, was taken to hospital in Kirkland Lake, 23 miles west of here, with a broken leg and hand. Hospital officials said then his con- | dition was satisfactory. An autopsy was performed Fri- day night by Dr. A. W. Souter of Kirkland Lake, but the results will not be known until an inquest, prob- ably Wednesday. Szucs was trapped in a. stope a the 2,300-foot level of this town's only gold mine. He was working with Franz Sachs driving iron rods into rock when some loose rock below him gave way, carrying him through a mill hole. Szucs was buried in the loose rock. 15-HOUR RESCUE Rescuers, working in teams of from 10 to 30, toiled through the night to get at the trapped miner. They sank a shaft down the side of the mill hole, then drove an- As 2 Lo | | | Three Hamilton youths a Rutos Collide Jail today facing car-theft SUDBURY, Ont. (CP)--A sta yesterday in a-stolen autom tion wagon loaded with young hockey fans Solliacd Jit a gat on! a snow-covere ighway Friday : 8 night, killing three youths, Six hatellain, William Krozek "|John Walker, all aged 16. other persons were hurt. Arrest of the youths followed re- Seven teen-agers were in the sta-| ported thefts of three automobiles, tion wagon as it headed along high-|at Toronto, Bowmanville and New- way 17 toward Espanola. Three of castle. them died in the smash-up eight| FIRST CAR miles west of here. | The first car, stolen at Toronto, and | of nearby Lively, and Wayne John- at Bowmanville Their names, released by Bow- manville police today, are: Jerry|Bowmanville, was later recovered| re lodged in Cobourg County charges, after their arrest obile by Port Hope police. Another automobile, stolen at at Newcastle. A third car, reported missing from Newcastle, contained the three suspects when they were arrested at Port Hope. Constable' William Dryden, of the Bowmanville OPP, is investi- gating the thefts, in conjuction The dead: John Montgomery, 18,| Was found by police abandoned with police at Toronto and New-| | castle. gh i Bl 253 ARE DEAD both of nearby Copper 'Cliff. One of the injured, David Crouse 16, of Copper Cliff, was in eriti- cal condition with internal and back injuries. Bruce McKay, Thomas Crother and Thomas Hem- bley, all 16 and from Copper CHff, were not severely injured. All were in the station wagon. BROTHERS ESCAPE LIGHTLY In the car were Robert Ostrom, 33, of nearby Levack Station and Airlift Mr. being di s k at international union headquarters in Detroit, and a decision may be ay Flops Hoidup : sent to A | ARLINGTON, Ky. (AP) --- An|little better." {attempt to rob the Citizens De-| The letters, he said, were to posit Bank Friday, serious busi-|vise the strikers of the results of \ Bess a the Hine, was good for recent discussions with the union. chuckles lay among abou : 100 persons who waiched its comic PUG 'that the nian, wiuld- assume . T ibility for pay t of all Two women hostages -- one of electric and water accounts during them carrying the bank's esti-|the period from Sept. 19 to the end mated $55,000 -- ran off 30d lek of the strike, said Nir. Shreve. - H | Herman (Chick) Maxey, 52, hold "Bus they have now made it crystal clear that they won't do that, and they will wash their hands of the whole thing after the ing a gun that wouldn't shoot and confronted by a mob of 20 ready citizens, jo ickly, seized him. | a axey didn' ow was " |that his getaway car was useless. | Strike, stated the superintendent. It was towed away afterwards 'When the strike ends, they have because the motor wouldn't start, | indicated they will be all through, other horizontal shaft inte the hole above Szucs. They shored up the | Windsor plants. | Wage inequity difficulties at London, St. Catharines and Scar-| his 23-year-old brother, Jeffrey. They escaped with minor injruies. LONDON (AP)--Europe's mercy, The tug, the 592-ton Rumania, | airlift gathered speed today as ran aground and keeled over try-! was held under $10,000 bond on a bank robbery charge. At Paducah Friday night, Maxey| whether the men's accounts have been paid for the strike period or not. It will then fall back on the The entered the bank in midafternoon carrying a box and a pistol. Ex- perts said later the pistol was loaded with wrong-size cartridges that never would have fired. men th Ives." The letter to the strikers was de- signed to clear up the question, indicated Mr. Shreve. It came as a result of discussion between the commission and the union. helicopters and cargo planes drop- boro were cleaned up during the | week. GM officials agreed yesterday that a further monetary offer had been made to CIO United Auto Workers, but no details were available from either side. Major bargaining on monetary issues is not expected before next | week. Police Probe . City Break-in Police are investigating a break- {in at Gilmore's coffee shop on |King street west early today. |About $6 in change was taken {from the cash regigter, ing else was touched i gained entry by fgrcing the rear | door of the shop ling on Page 2.) ! | but noth- The burglar (See police warn- space above the miner with wooden timbers, removed the shoring. and freed him. It took them 15 hours. Szues was carried to the surface and immediately given a blood transfusion to lessen the affects of shock. During his entombment he had been fed soup and hot drinks through pipes driven into the loose rock to him. Szucs arrived in Canada with his family four years ago from Germany. He was a native of Sol- nok, Hungary, | | SURPRISE CATCH | NORTH BAY, Ont. (CP)--Fred | Commanda of the Garden Village Indian reserve found a young bald eagle when he inspected his mink trap line. Mr. Commanda said he planned to build a cage for the bird, which should have wing- spread of seven feet when fully grown. | "LATE NEWS FLASHES ped food and fuel to thousands of snowbound villages. Icy Siberian blasts brought deep snow, frozen seas and rivers, hun- ger and hardship to hundreds of thousands of persons in 20 coun- tries. The shivering continent counted Hunt Boantiful Indian Bandit GWALIOR, India (Reuters) -- Armed police today combed the 253 dead. jungle around here for India's most| [atest figures showed France wanted bandit -- a beautiful one:|was still the hardest hit with 66 time dancing girl, now believed 0) dead, Italy was next with 42; Bri- be seven months pregnant. tain 40; Greece 26; Germany 18; She is Putli, a black-haired, 25-| Turkey 16; Denmark 14; Nether- year-old bandit queen wanted for| lands 10; Austria six; Switzerland murder and robbery. She rides be-| four; Sweden four; Yugoslavia side her lover at the head of a|two; Spain two; Cyprus two; Bel- gang, a rifle strapped to her sad-|gium one. |dle and a .45-calibre revolver at| Two helicopters fought through a | her belt, | blizzard today and rescued the 10- | A police patrol clashed with Put-/man crew. of a stranded ocean |li's gang of 14 Thursday. Police (ug, ing to get the Brazilian freighter Loide-Honduras off a North sea sandbank in a vicious storm. The in immediate danger. More .than 100 ships were ice- bound in the famed Kattegat be- tween Sweden and Denmark as air- craft from both nations joined forces im directing icebreakers churning a path through the ice. Ice floes sank a gondola in the canals of Venice. In France, Mediterranean Mar- seille chalked up its lowest tem- perature in 50 years -- 20 degrees above zero -- as 75-mile gales sent ships scuttling for port. 1 [the riot-torn Cyprus. A 500-ton coastal vessel foundered off Turkey. -kill- ing two crew members, snow-covered mountains of say that Putli -- dressed in the - same khaki men's garb as the oth- ers -- fired two revolver shots he- | fore retreating ipto the jungle with | her lover, Kalla, the gang leader. | The inspector-general of police lin Gwalior, Kripal Singh, said it |was reliably reported that Putli| lis expecting a child in about two OTTAWA (CP)--A Liberal mem- | | GM.UAW Teams Stand By VALENTINES DAY Fast movement,on wag e inequity problems today in the 147-day strike at General Motors indicates bar- gaining on major moneta weekend. Negotiators are standi ry issues may resume this tional table at any moment, 2 U.K. Servicemen Shot In Cyprus ber's suggestion that Canadian cit- izenship be made mandatory for immigrants has received no early support in the Commons. Immigration Minister Pickersgill said he capnot support the bill put {forward Friday by Hugh A. Mac- | Kenzie (L---Lambton-Kent). So did John Decote (L---Vegreville). De- bate on the bill was adjourned. "I feel this is perhaps the most olemn voluntary act--excepting | months. 5 London Men 'On Rape Count STRATFORD (CP)--Five London and district men ranging from 19 to 26 years old were charged with rape Friday night in a case in-|® volving a 17-year-old Stratford girl. take," said Mr. Pickersgill. "'And The inedent is said to have oc-| therefore it ought to be vested with curred last week-eng. a certain solemnity 'and it ought | ng by for recall to the na- Suggestion On Immigrants' Citizenship Is Unsupported |marriage--that any individual can| a n for somebody nice. Christine is | student at Holy Cross School ol | Simcoe Street south. | ~Times-Gazette Phot { NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) -- Two British ser- vicemen were shot dead by terrorists in a Nicosia o | street this afternoon. The five, John Collar, his brother |to be taken seriously and certainly! than one-third--116,375--applied for |George, Jack Millar, his brother| voluntarily." Robert, and Walter Brooks were] Mr. MacKenzie's hill would remafded in custody until Feb. 13.'amend the Immigration Act to re- quire that immigrants apply for citizenship | within a year after | completing their first five years of | Canadian residence. At present, | immigrants can apply for citizen- | ship certificates any time after five | years' Canadian residence. | WOULD INSERT PENALTY Under the private bill, if an' im- migrant did not apply for citizen- {ship within a year after his first {five years in Canada, he could not quality for citizenship again until | qualify for citizenship again until the country. | Mr. MacKenzie said that 430,000 {immigrants entered Canada be- {tween 1946 and 1950. But fewer | citizenship papers in the next five- Two British soldiers perished in| | { MONTGOMERY, Ala. further violence climaxed a roar- ing pro-segregation rally here Fri- day night that drew a crowd esti- mated at 15,000. Senator James (Dem. Miss.) challenged the rebel- yelling throng to fight racial inte- gration with massive resistance but without lawlessness. Eastiand made only an indirect reference to recent rioting at the University of Alabama, where he once attended school. ACTION PROMISED A mob at times numbering 3,000 lor more threw eggs and rocks at Negro student 0. Eastland| Autherine Lucy, admit her are when she sought to attend class!ranted and outrageous." Aids Europe pleads Halt In Violence Climaxes Race-Mad Rally (AP)--A | at the university Monday. She had 5,408-ton freighter was not believed plea for the South to refrain from|won admittance under a federal court order, but was barred by the university board 'for her own safety" after the outbreak. Dr. Oliver C. Carmichael, uni- versity president, said at a press conference Friday in Tuscaloosa that "disciplinary action will be taken in the cases of those students who are known to have engaged in actual violence." He denied charges by Miss Lucy that the mob action here was a "clever strategem' to get her out of school. He said the charges made in her federal court petition to force school authorities to re- "untrue, unwar- GM Offers Dealers 3 New Franchises DETROIT (AP) -- General Mo-, The impartial umpire replaces fors Corp. will offer its dealers a dealer relations board, made up three different types of franchises of top GM executives, which has next month, with a provision that ruled on disputes an franchise an impartial umpire shall rule on! cancellations sincee 1938. disputes. GM, which now grants franchises The new contracts will span one,| % only five or an indefinite number of years. GM's old one-year dealer con- tracts came under fire in Senate committee hearings last mont Some dealers complained that GM had acted arbitrarily and cancel- led franchises unfairly. In ali, GM listed changes, including a help a dealer get rid of his build-| | ginning "on or about March | or by the | without ¢ {lable by GM for cause, or by the one year, said that be. it will offer dealers these three types: 1. A five-year. contract cancel- lable by the corporation for cause, dealer on 30 days notice ause. 2. A one-year contract cancel- 13 contract| dealer on 30 days notice without promise to| cause. 3 3. A contract for an indefinite ings in case of a franchise can- term, cancellable by the company cellation and a larger allowance on 90 days notice without cause, year period when they qualified for citizenship papers. | on new cars in stock when a Tew | or by the dealer on 30 days notice model is announced. without cause.