The Oshawa Times, 6 Feb 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY Sooner or later a person's sins will find him out and the bill collector will find him in. The Oshawa Some WEATHER REPORT Snow end ing late this after. noon, cloudy and somewhat colder tonight and Sunday. Vol. 89--No. 30 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottowa EIGHTEEN PAGES # aa MR. HEES SHOOTS THE WORKS Transport Minister Hees de- picts one of the *'rough custo- mers" who upset the back woods slumber of Bottleneck-- Ottawa--in the cabaret show called "Shoot The Works", a spoof on Ottawa life. The cab- aret was the highlight of Pri- day night's annual May Court Ball, sponsored by a women's charity club. MP's, diplomats and society figures stage the | show. Surrounding Hees are, left to right, Patty Bailey, Laurel Witty, Diane Manion and Louise Bramah. The girls are shady ladies in the cabaret, --CP Wirephoto President's Advisers Think Russia Sincere WASHINGTON not Russia may be mainly re- sponsible for a near-collapse in the current East-West negotia- tions for 2 permanent ban on atomic tests. President Eisenhower's own scientific advisers--members 3 'technical group who with the Soviet last yes --agreed before a Senate subcommittee on} negotiated |---this (CP) -- Evi-|nical studies showing that under-|The tost? dence before the United States, ground blasts Congress indicates the U.S. and and therefore are difficult to de- would it take to dig it? Between can be muffled teet. | The scientists seem to suggest the importance of the U.S. argu-| 1 hy iment is not as great as somejasked why the government had American diplomats have main- 'ained- To muffle an explosion equivalent to 50,000 tons of TNT would be relatively small bomb compared = with missile! warheads--would require a hole] | Between $10,000,000 and $30,000,000. And how long two and four years, depending on how much rock was encounteréd. Senator Hubert M. Humphrey been $0 eager to emphasize the difficulties of detecting under- ground explosions and had not AGREEMEN CUTS LAYOFF THREAT AT FLINT Court Witnesses Measure Argued TORONTO (CP)--Only one out{legal bills committee for further of 2¢ government measures to study. charge existing legislation was 2 % Ore Xe les.slature Fri.|LANDS, FORESTS REPORT | The 1958-59 report of the de- {partment of lands and forests oberts and given|Was tabled. It showed cash re- Gener) Kelso B Bens 2 eriticism| ceipts of $20,237,507 as compared from. CCF members who objected to disbursements of $24,427,298. to the new $6 and $15 fees to be| The lands and forests report paid to court witnesses. |said that the decrease of receipts The bill to amend the Crown|frcm the previous year was Witnesses Act states an ordinary caused in part by a cutback in witness will be paid $6 a day wood operations with a resulting while professional people called decrease In 'stumpage revenue. to testify will get $15. The sharp increase in expendi- {tures was caused by the develop- SEES DISCRIMINATION ment of new provincial parks. CCF Leader Donald C. Mac-| The report warns that Ontario, Donald called the bill discrimin-|/through its rapid population in- atory. He said a working manjcrease and industrial expansion, would lose money by being away|is becoming a backward area in from his job all day- |fish and wildlife management. Mr. Roberts replied that aj Monday, two bills respecting court appearance might take ajenergy are to appear on the or- man from his work for only ander paper for second reading. day. A bill introduced by Attorney- U.S. Titan Program In Trouble CAPE CANAVERA, Fla. (AP)| The United States Titan program | again is in trouble following the in-flight explosion of one of the big intercontinental-range mis-| siles. | The 98-foot rocket blew apart | 57 seconds after launching Fri-| |day. The explosion, several thou-| |sand feet in the air, resembled a| nuclear blast. Informed sources said the sec- ond stage apparently separated prematurely, sending the missile out of control. The Martin-made Titan is being developed as the biggest U.S, mil-| itary rocket, with a range of up| to 9,000 miles. | The failure followed the suc-| cessful firing of another Titan) last Tuesday. hour or two. A working man, said Ken Bry- den (CCF--Woodbine), would be more likely to stay away from PREFERRED TREATMENT work all day if he had to attend court. The fee should be' in- creased, he said. A bill to amend the Devolution of Estates Act was also given second reading. It stipulates that a husband of a deceased wife be considered the same as the wife of a deceased husband, and be given the first $5,000 of an estate when there is no will. All 24 bills were referred to the $6 Million farmers get better treatment {from the federal government than |other farm groups in Canada? There are growing indications in the Commons that mon-prairie been so eager to spend money! on improving detection devices. "We hear all about the prob-| disarmament this week that Rus-/dug a half-mile down in some|lems. Why don't we also hear| salty area. COSTLY PRECAUTION about possible solutions?" (CP) -- Clarifica-| Anthony Vannini of Sault Ste. members think so- | None objects to any federal ald the government may give west- ern farmers because most realize the need resulting from hail ruined, snowed-in, rain-beaten or drought-destroyed grain crops. uebec Idea But for the first time in. years Inon-prairie MPs are beginning . openly to point to the lack of aid QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier Bar-|¢. oiher farmers. rette has proposed that the Do-| minion Textile Company offer its PEACH GROWERS HURT employees a $6,000,000 wage H W. Herridge (CCF--Koote- package to end a lengthy labor|nay West) asked Friday what is dispute the government thinking behind The draft collective agreement|aid for some farmers and not for he recommended Friday night to|others. He said peach and cherry the company and the two unions growers in his area had lost 90 bargaining for its 7,000 employ-|per cent of their crops but had ees provides for a wage increase received no federal financial as- estimated at 33 1-3 per cent sistance Pay Packet Prairie Farmer Aid Questioned OTTAWA (CP) -- Do prairiefree to apply to the federal gov-| NEW MINISTER Pierre Messmer, new French defence minister, leaves Elysee Palace in Paris after the first meeting of the new cabinet. President de Gaulle shook up the cabinet following the col- lapse of the Algerian revolt of rightists. --AP Wirephoto City Housing Crisis Seen ernment for aid. FISHERY FAILURE J. W. Pickersgill (L--Bona- vista-Twillingate) again brought up the subject of failure of the Newfoundland herring fishery last year. The Newfoundland MP said he was glad to support aid for west- ern farmers but he wished that|cent of the city's total housing decide their fate. | In Toronto | TORONTO (CP) -- A Toronto {Planning Board publication has {forecast a crisis in city housing, {but also a brighter and Detter jcity ! The board's new publication, |The Changing City, says that {1980, 85 per cent of all dwellings {now occupied in Toronto will be still in use. At that time 42 per bylday as supportes of the abortive he had received equal support stock will be more than 60 years {last year from prairie MPs when old. More than 50 per cent will {he appealed for help for his prov-|he 50 years old: ince's fishermen. | The slum blot would grow as Several days ago, Jean - Paul(the city grows, from fhe centre Racine (L--Beauce) said farmers|io the rim. in his Quebec district had suf-|'THE BRIGHTER SIDE fered severe crop losses but had| The planning board, however, received no federal aid. also says that by 1980 the city will have more skyscrapers, more night clubs, more theatres, more restaurants, more apartment buildings, more young couples, Canadian Order more immigrants, more pension- For Soviet Cars lers, more business and more TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian power. FINT, Mich. (AP)--Members of the United Auto Workers were to vote today on a settlement aimed at ending a Chevrolet strike here which threatened pro- {duction at plants throughout the| | United States and in Canada. In Oshawa, a company spokes- man said Saturday morning that a settlement would mean that there would be no interruption in production. On Friday it was announced that the plant would be forced to close down in a week if the strike continued in Flint. No plans were made to cut overtime, it was said Friday, be- cause it was not definite that the strike would continue. | In the U. 8., Saturday overtime at eight Chevrolet and Fisher body plants was cancelled. Spoke- sman said it was done to con- serve parts made by the strike- bound plant. The strike threatened a shut- down in Oshawa because a num- ber of essential parts for Chev- rolet and Pontiac cars are made in Flint and shipped to Oshawa. Among them are fender skirts, a variety of braces and fender mouldings Union Members Must Approve ed an agr t Friday night, but it must be approved by the members of UAW Local 659. However, plant manager Grosvenor Swift said he expected all operations .at the plant to re- sume on regular shifts Monday. E. S. Patterson, UAW regional director, said the union's bar- gaining team would recommend that the workers accept the agreement, The strike shut down the plant Wednesday. The plant makes six- cylinder engines for standard Chevrolets and produces other parts for cars and trucks. The UAW called out some 10, 000 workers in a dispute over pro- duction standards. Chevrolet said operation changes had been made in the crankshaft grinding depart- ment and work standards were changed for fewer than 20 men. The union called it a speedup. Neither side would reveal the terms of agreement. Ward's Automotive Reports, an industry reporting agency, said the strike was reflected in a de- cline of about 7,000 units in U.S. passenger car production this week, Chevrolet, which had plan. ned overtime operations at sev. General Motors and the UAW eral plants, cut back to five days. Gripping ALGIERS (Reuters)--A politi- cal paralysis numbed Algiers to- settlers' revolt waited nervously {to see how three top members of {the new French cabinet would The city was calm, but an un- dercurrent of apprehension was |evident as the new ministers-- Pierre Messner, defence, Edmond Michelet, justice, and Pierre| chatenet, interior -- flew here from Paris. President de Gaulle ordered |the ministers to fly here today to study measures for "putting | things back in order" after the | nine<day insurrection against his| self-determination policy for Al- geria, Sweeping changes in adminis- {trative posts and the army are sia sincerely wants a tests-ban| pact, ; : | | Humphrey said the U.S. gov- And Russia seems willing to| How big 2 hole? About the size erhments, by its actions, was] accept a certain degree of inspec-lof two city blocks, sald the sci-|running the risk of a breakdown tion and control to police the|entists, Dr. James B. Fisk and/in negotiations and a piling up of ban, with a limitation on the Dr. Wolfgang K. M. Panofsky.(world criticism against the U.S, number of foreign tions on| Russian soil . DIFFER ON BAN EXTENT But Russia wants a complete , ScCel 11 Y ssue ban on explosions above and be-| low ground. US., on the me other hand, seems to favor a partial ban, excluding under-| (0) e aril ie ground tests on the basis of tech-| : ' D h TORONTO LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- The death toll in Bolivia's worst avia- tion disaster reached 59 today as the lone survivor succumbed to injuries. | Jenny Escobar, two - year - old Bolivian child, was the only per-| son found alive when rescuers| reached the wreckage Friday. The child died several hours later| while being taken to a hospital. | The scene of the accident was| tion of the legal definition of ob-|Marie proposed as an alternative greater than the company's top| scenity in printed matter is one!that county or district judges be offer. of several amendments to the empowered to hear legal motions] Company spokesmen in Mont- fi statutes to be put before the leg- and other arguments preliminary real said the proposal would be|cial n agreement would |d $1,750,000---about islature, Attorney - General Ro-|/to Supreme Court actions. | studied. berts said Friday. The meeting supported a resol-| The draft Mr. Roberts told Ontario divi-|ution calling for reintroduction of|give employees sion of the Canadian Bar Associ-|the dangerous driving charge,|$240 each--in back pay retroac-|capability of the province, it was!about $1,500. Agriculture Minister Harkness |said that where crop loss is con- ned to a small area the provin- and municipal governments ave primary responsibility for isaster relief If this relief were beyond the agents for the Russian-made Mos-| Toronto's population will in-|axpected to be recommended by kovitch car have ordered 1,000 crease no more than 25,000 above the ministers: They are to report cars from the Moscow plant, it|the 1956 level of 667,706, the board | wednesday to the cabinet in was announced Friday. Modern| predicts. | Paris : Motors Limited of nearby Agin-| population of Metro Toronto, Soldier-administrator Messmer, court, sole agents, expect the which includes the city and 43 was named to the cabinet Fri- {four-cylinder car to sell here for|12 adjacent municipalities, was day in a reshuffle in which de nearly 1,500,000 last year Gaulle eliminated dissenters to ation the Evidence Act may be!dropped in 1955, to fill the gap|tive to June and July 1958 when | amended to allow a judge to per-|between "the minor charge ofthe old contracts expired. The re- mit expert witnesses to be intro-| careless driving and the major|troactive increase is eight cents duced at any time in a trial and|charge of criminal negligence." [hourly g : to allow testimony for more than| Members agreed magistrates] Employees would receive an. the number stipulated should be allowed to hear cases|additional $4,250,000 duricg the In 'a panel discussion, mem-|of motor manslaughter or crim-|tWo-year contract period. bers urged the setting up of|inal negligence involving death, RECOMMENDATIONS weekly courts to hear motions|which are at present heard only| Mr. Barrette said: "The com- |pany offered eight cents for the Silence Cloaking Mikoyan Moves | The planning board says it is|pis Algeria policy. aren improvement. aud sug | ARMY'S MENUS 'TO HELP WIFE gests financial assistance be| given home owners to carry out] SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) A former army private added repairs Police Checking Nervous Tension Algiers He was recalled from fighting the Moslem nationalist rebels in |eastern Algeria to replace Pierre Guillaumat, who was given an- other cabinet post. Main feature of the shakeup was the dismissal of Jacques Soustelle, a de Gaulle stalwart for 20 years and one- time hero of Algerian settlers. QUIET ON SURFACE Algiers seemed on the surface today to be back to normal fol- lowing the collapse of the revolt Monday. But demonstrators were lying low, many of their leaders had been rounded up, and strict cen sorship was still being enforced. Several leaders of the demon- strators are under arrest or assigned to forced residence--and unofficial reports say policemen as well as civilians are being rounded up. Official sources said many of those on an original list of about 40 persons wanted by the author- ities had slipped away. Twenty Detroitiers In Hoffa Hearing DETROIT (CP) -- Twenty De- troit bankers, businessmen and union officials were subpoenaed Friday to give depositions in the case being built against Interna- tional Teamster President James Hoffa. Herbert Miller Jr., a Washing- ton attorney for the court - ap- high in the Andes. Lack of com-| outside Toronto for the conveni-|in the Supreme Court. | ; 5 . aD foe and the confusion|ente of barristers practising in| Elliott Pepper of the attorney-|first year of the new contract 1] HAVANA (AP)--A curtain of following the crash prevented re-|other parts of the province. general's department, opposed ajrecommend 10 cents hourly {official silence fell on Soviet De- new seasoning to an old story today . He wrote to the cook at The red-carpet reception given Mikoyan by Castro set off heated pointed Teamster monitors, filed notice of his intent to take state- Arson Possibility Ha- porters from obtaining accurate Meyer Lerner of London, Ont. |suggestion that lawyers giving] information immediately. The of-|suggested courts in Chatham,|free services as legal aid should ficial passenger list still has not/ Windsor, Sudbury, St. Cathar- get compensating income tax re-| been made public. ines and Kingston. {lief "The company offered 12 cents|puty Premier Anastas Mikoyan's hourly increase for the second movements today following the year of the duation of the con-|outburst of gunfire that threw tract- I recommend 13 cents. . ." into turmoil Friday's opening of street debates throughout HAMILTON (CP)--Police are vana. A conflict between COMMU- |i octigating the possibility of ar- nism and anti-communism may : : o |son in a $1,000,000 fire that de- be seething close to the surface. | coved a warehouse here Friday. Brooke Army Medical Train- ing Centre's mess hall here, where he used to eat. He asked for a week's menu, ments in compliance with federal law. Miller's team is seeking to evict Hoffa from his $50,000-a- the new Russian cultural exposi- Quebec Bridge Tolls To Be Probed By MP's OTTAWA (CP)--Friday's Com- mons weather summary: Stormy, very windy. Accomplishments: The Co m- mons railway committee will delve into tolls on Montreal's fed- erally-operated Jacques Cartier and Victoria bridges; two minor supplementary spending estim- ates were approved. i Transport Minister Hees called for the inquiry into Jacques Car- tier bridge tolls up sharply since September after an auto- matic collecting system replaced the ma one Lione hevrier Laurie aid the also should take h tions or we adjace, bridge LONG DISCUSSION Afte Ar Mr. He with commit to cover Vic CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5.1133 FIRE DEPT. RA BOSPITAL RA 3-2211 ( f..-Montreal tigation collec- Victoria extended discussion, motion was passed ee powers extended ria bridge { 4 The committee held an organ-| ization meeting Friday and elected as chairman Gordon K. Fraser (PC--Peterborough), who headed it last year. It is expected to start bridge hearings Tuesday. The Commons then moved to consideration of supplementary estimates, The first two--$830,000 com- pensation for animals slaughtered after contracting brucellosis and $3,500,000 for freight assistance payments on prairie feed grains shipped to the west coast, central Canada and the Maritimes-- passed relatively easily. NESBITT PLEA FAILS Wallace Nesbitt (PC--Oxford), parliamentary assistant to Exter- nal Affairs Minister Green, made a plea for more money for some farmers in his Ontario area whose cattle were killed before the compensation program went into effect last April 1. Agricul- ture Minister Harkness said there had to be a cutoff period some where and the government could not change the date. 'hen the measure for emer- aid to prairie farmers grain was buried 'under 1 sr ame up. The timate of Ot wa's share of the » Z t is to split the cost with inces--is $6,000,000. the prov- The issue was debated to the adjournment hour without deci- sion, MANY DELAYS During the 5%-hour sitting no fewer than 90 points of order were called bv Speaker Roland Michener or his deputy, 16 identi- fied members and others not identified. At one point, Prime Minister Diefenbaker reacted in anger at persistent questioning by the Lib- erals on points previously cov- ered. Two days before the Soviet ex-| position ends Feb. 26, a giant| anti - Communist rally is sched-| uled in Havana. | The Cuban government an-| nounced Friday that the Soviet Union has bought $21,500,000 worth of Cuban sugar. Mr. Diefenbaker accused the opposition of wasting the Com-| mons' time by asking *"frivo-| lous, unnecessary and wunjusti-| fied" questions. | The Speaker or his deputy, Jac-| ques nn, had to call for order | 35 times during the day because members were asking questions out- of turn, were straying away from the subject at hand or because there was too muh noise to pe t a»vbedy at all to heard Unidentified members for order 14 times These m»v nal he actual points of or neh the MPs| sually fol- | "or any rude be celled low « remark which might come to Imind. | + HAVE DIFFERENT DATA The performers quest figures. "The corporation has state that from October to Decemt 1959, there were oniy 18 act and variety performers impor to Toronto program g association said. **" } show |tion in Havana. P { { The mystery shots came on the er ormers {heels of an anti-Communist stu- den! demonstration in a nearby - |park that confronted Premier Fi- uestion del Castro with the first open de- {fiance of his be-kind-to-the-Reds a | policies. : | The shooting failed to shake or igure |silence Mikoyan. The veteran {Kremlin salesman told the Cub- TORONTO (CP) -- A spokes-|ans the secret of Soviet. Russia's man for English-language tel iccess lay in "'establishing the vision performers took issue Fri-power of the workers and peas- day with some figures used by|ants -- and confiscating without the CBC to counter charges itlany compensation all means of was cutting use of Canadian pro-| production "i ductions and performers. Castro has called his revolution The original accusations were a revolution of workers, pegsants made Thursday night by the As- land students. He has seized sociation of Canadian Radio and sugar plantations and cattle Television Artists. The perform-|ranches but has promised com- ers said a cutback is threatening pensation to owners. Canadian film output and reduc- ing employment opportunities for FIRST STUDENT VIOLENCE Canadian performers in drama, The violence marked the first ballet and opera. {open sign of unrest among the H. G. Walker, general manager | students, backers of most of Cas- of the CBC's English network, | tro's program. ; said the accusations were untrue.| Official silence on Mikoyan's He cited figures purporting to|plans for today was seen as a show the number of imported per-|move to avoid repetition of any formers was not large and said|further embarrassing anti - Red the CBC plans to reduce their demonstrations. numbers further The rattle of gunfire echoed |over a two-hlock area for about ve minutes as Mikoyan stood oned his|calmly on the open platform wait- ing to make his ceremonial eech 1at the shooting was an assassin- tion attempt against the Soviet rade A number of students were ar- ords|rest but police declined to say vhere they were taken or give |any official version of the night events. that in tha there were 76 imported perform- "" period > es There was no indication ? pe CUBAN ARMY CHIEF LEADS Officers of the fire depart- ment's arson division are seeking a person believed to have set fire to a pile of cardboard boxes out- side the Ideal Furniture Com- pany's warehouse. The flames spread from the boxes to furni- ture piled in the building. adding: year job on the grounds that he "I want to show my wife, and maybe I can get her to cook a man-size meal." His name was withheld for obvious reasons. misused $600,000 in funds from Detroit Local 299 in a thwarted bid to buy a union retirement re- sort in Florida. A civil trial on the ouster charges has been set for Feb. 23 by federal Judge Dickinson Letts. a ne % SECURITY FORCES AFTER SHOOTING

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