THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's a good idea, when someone starts flattering you, to begin working up courage to say no. he Oshawa Sines WEATHER REPORT Snowflurries, cloudy and cold Friday with & few sunny intervals. colder tonights Price Not Over 'Vol. 89--No. 34 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1960 Authorized as Second Class Mell Post Office Department, Otfawe TWENTY-SIX PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy it FOAM COV ERED AIRLINER AFTER CRASH-LANDING Oshawa Couple Aboard } | Crash-Landed Airh An Oshawa couple, Mr. and|nipeg. It was almost two hours; As Mr. Hickey told his story| Mrs. Michael Hickey, and their overdue. |this morning, at the home of his 10-month old ghter Michaela, arents, 198 Verdun road. his were among passengers on EMBARKATION LEAVE Joaze Norma was giving break- a TCA Super Constellation air-| The Hickeys had boarded the|ast to their daughter, who seem- liner which overshot the runway Plane at Winnip Mr. Hickey, eq completely oblivious of the ex- at Malton airport late Wednes-|an airframe mecha the citement around. day. ; Rear, was rel the! wr pad Michaela on my lap," The TCA plane came in through! OC e wid Basi barkation| Mr. Hickey said. "She wasn't foggy weather, overshot the run- Base, for two Wee XS embariation even shaken up, but the first way- skidded on its belly and tore leave, hotore faving ie IS thing when the plane stopped, through a fence, as the pilot, unit for Marville, France, everyone rushed to us to see if Capt. Douglas Holland, attempt; "I've done quite a bit of fly-/she was all right, | ed an instrument landing, at 9-03/ing," Mr. Hickey said, "and 1 i pan. . knew right away there was some- LUGGAGE LEFT None of the passeggers and six/ hing wrong with the landing, "We were ordered to leave the erew members was injured. The] "The pilot circled the field, plane as quickly as possible," he etcupants filed quietly from the then came in to land. There was|said, '""and had no chance to get plane, as gasoline gushed from'a heavy bump, the plane seemed our luggage. I came to Oshawa| @ ruptured fuel system to take to the air again, then in my shirtsleeves, since I The plane was on a flight from there was a lot more bumping|couldn't carry the baby and my] Vancouver to Montreal, and had before the plane stopped," he coat as well: We hope to get our| previously touched down at Win-|said. 5 luggage today." | with pry q ner The Hickeys were still badly ¥# shaken this morning. Mrs. Hickey © had only made one previous flight in an airplane "We leave for France on the: 25th of February," Mr. Hickey i said, "and the RCAF, bless em, § are sending us by boat." If the Hickeys were shaken up by the crash, then Mr. Hickey's | brother-in-law; Bill Edwards of 1095 Rossland road west, was ' really rattled He went to Malton to meet the plane at 6.45 p.m. As plane after plane arrived, he kept asking of- ficials if they were the Winnipeg } flight Finally, at about 9.30, he asked a man at the terminal when the Winnipeg flight was expected. "Oh that one," came the re- i ply. "It crashed at the end of the runway." "FIT TO BE TIED" 4 2 EW U.S. CONTROL PLAN FOR A-TESTS Break Deadlock Ike's Intention United States today formally pre-| [sented a plan for a limited ban | on nuclear weapons tests. It was| immediately rejected by Russia. { |] WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi-| dent Eisenhower today an-| nounced a new four - point U.S. plan for international restrictions on nuclear tests, Aimed to break the deadlock with Russia, it would exempt low- power underground test explos- ions from the proposed ban. Eisenhower told a press confer- fou the plan was being intro- lduced immediately at Geneva where the United States, Russia Conviction Asked But Death Vague BOSTON (AP)---The state to- dav pressed for the conviction of a Dutch ship radio operator ac, cused of killing a Chicago di- vorcee, but it admitted it does GENEVA (Reuters) -- The and Britain have been negotiating over a test prohibition for more than 15 months. In 3 statement Eisenhower said the new proposal "would end forthwith, under assured come trols" the following types of ex plosion: 1. All nuclear weapons tests. in the atmosphere. 2. All nuclear weapons tests in the ocean. 3. All such tests "in those reg- ions in space where effective con- trols can now be agreed to." 4, All tests 'beneath the surface of the earth which can be mon- itored." Low-powered underground tests would thus be exempted as not subject to effective monitoring. "These are steps which offer an opportunity to consolidate the im portant progress made in the ne gotiations thus far," the president said. "It is our hope that the So- viet Union will join with us in this constructive beginning." In effect, this means that the United States is abandoning af least temporarily the quest for a total ban on all nuclear weapons tests because government offi cials believe there is no way to police the smaller explosions--reported to be those below 20 kilotons (the size of the | not know what weapon, if any, was used. As the trial of Willem Van Rie, 4 181, neared the end of the first { |day Wednesday, his lawyers re- : |quested that the prosecution des- leribe the manner of the alleged y crime and the weapon. wii i I A The state replied that it could { In Mr. Hickey's words, Ed- # wards was "fit to bé tied" by the not "specify at this time whether any weapon or other instrument time the family was reunited § Poor a used ean- celinfion of i oh Mat= | ton» and severdl incoming air- i craft were diverted to Buffalo. i Most of the passengers in the i crashed plane were bound for To- 5 ronto, Others were heading for : Montreal, Ottawa, New York and i Cleveland: The crew members : are based at Montreal. First Of- ficer was Wayne Kirby, Flight ; Engineer was J. W. Reid, and stewardesses Jill Bowerman,| # Marjorie Stephens and Frances! . Crosby. | Photographers were barred : from the area for the first few hours after the crash. Officials said they feared exploding flash- bulbs might touch off the spilled Mystery Object Circling Earth WASHINGTON teribus satellite that (AP)--A mys- the United States defence department said may be of Russian origin tum bled through space today. Moscow has said nothing about it. Here's all that the defence de- partment knows about the object: LA {was used in the commission~ef the crime." | The state contends Van Rie beat re Thieves Attack fos i Toronto Maid |x shiphoard romance during a slow boat trip from the Orient. TORONTO (CP)--A 30-year-old] Miss Kauffman's body was housemaid was beaten and raped found on the rocky shore of a today by two men who broke into! Boston Harbor island in mid- U. 8. Navy tracking stations/a house in the Hillcrest Park| September, the day after the 8.8. Ifirst spotted the object about area of northwest Toronto. {Utrecht sailed from Boston to Hiroshima bomb). Dymond Asked To Probe Death After Accident' TORONTO (CP)---Health Mine ister Dymond has hon 7 to order an death Wounetny of Mts. Mary Rich- ardson, 46, of Toronto, seven hours after she was released from hospital. She was released from St. Mi chael's Hospital following exams ination after being struck by a car. An autopsy showed she had a ruptured spleen and massive three weeks ' ago. Nothing was| Police said the woman was New York on its 44-day voyage abdominal hemorrhage. said about it until Wednesday {alone in the house when she|from Singapore. mt ?* |heard glass breaking. The men | Scientists tended to rule out|ontered by removing a storm) [the possibility that it could be a window and smashing an inside| part of Russia's Lunik III that|gwindow. They were in the act of| took a picture of the far side of ransacking the house when the | the moon last October. woman surprised them. Dispute Delays 3 said the plane appeared to be "jinxed." pipes froze, trical fault lay," aid CRUMP Help For Castro Offer By Mr. K NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- Pre-|Africa and Latin America is the mier Khrushchev today offered reason why some Wes.ern coun- Russia's "friendly and selfless as- tries succeeded in their develop- sistance" to Cuba in its struggle ment." BUENOS AIRES (AP) -- The! for independence. : {HAS HIS SUPPORT Argentine news agency Telam| Khrushchev was addressing & Referring to Premier Fidel Cas- said unofficial sources reported| joint session of India's Parlia-itro's climb to power, Khrushchev|that a mysterv submarine sur-| ment shortly after his arrivalicaid. "Our sympathy has always|faced in the Golfo Nuevo today, bere on a five-day visit. been and will always be with|and was engaged in combat with| A large portion of his address gch states as Cuba which up-|Argentine warships that Have was devoted to an attack on West- holds in active struggle her na-|been hunting it for 12 days. ern nations for oppressing and|ijonal and economic independ-| THere was no official confirma- | | | LED PROP OF SUPER-CONSTELLATION Report Suh Engaging Warships gasoline. {day was to deliberate a charge of criminal Frank Baker, 35, accused after the death of his three children in s a fire which swept the Baker| home last November. It appears to be in a near-polar orbit. It is dark and is probably less than 15 feet long. It is si- |lent, as far as U.S. monitors are " inni ing | COncerned. y Vinlipeg the yaiol coving! American space scientists have caused further de-|Pot ruled out the possibility that Mr. Payne, a passenger, said. "We took one pass at Malton and then went down again for a second try.' Among others aboard was J. S. White, Stratford. Tragic Fire Story Told By Father KINGSTON (CP)--A jury to- Frank Payne, 41, of Ottawa messages when triggered by a remote receiving station in Rus- |sia. However, these scientists |have learned from experience |that it is difficult to receive sig- {nals from a space vehicle tum- bling in orbit, as this one ap- pears to be doing. At Jodrell Bank in England, scientists at the radio telescope said they knew of no satellite sent aloft by the Russians re- cently and that they have no in- formation on any new satellite around the poles. | Worst Snowstorm Eases In Midwest CHICAGO (AP)--Winter's most evere snowstorm diminished in {most of the Midwest today but {the crippling effects were felt in {many areas. More heavy snow continued negligence against | Baker was charged after in- vestigation into the fire which claimed the lives of Rita Mae, 5, during the night in Michigan as Joanne, 2 and Carolyn, six|the storm centre moved north- months. The firé started when an|eastward into Canada. oil space heater was knocked] The blizzard like storms, r sweeping out of the great plains Highlight of Wednesday's pro-| Tuesday, were the worst in some ceedings was the admission as|midwest areas in many years. evidence of a statement Baker|Many communities were isolated, made to police shortly after the ire. marooned. | Six U. 8S. satellites have been (fired into polar orbits. The only fone still circling is Discoverer VIII, launched last Nov. 20 from | California. Navy trackers said {they knew the whereabouts of| | {the Discoverer rocket casings-- the satellite could be sendinglang that this object was not one|th |of them. | | Police said the intruders ripped | {off her clothes and punched her about the head and body before [raping her. She was treated at : [hospital and released. | OTTAWA (CP)----A dispute over The men stole $500 in cash. |Subconiracts between the defence Inspector Arthur Walmer said|production department and Cana- e owner of the house and his/dair Limited, Montreal, is. hold- wife were away. {ing up signing of the main con- 'ON WARPATH OTTAWA (CP)--Rebellious Six, Nations Indians have gone on the| warpath against the Canadian government. But their threats to sell a chunk of Canada twice the size of Luxembourg to a foreign power aren't causing any chills in Ottawa. The Six Nations confederacy of chiefs claims a hereditary right [to govern the Six Nations reserv- |ation near Brantford. On Monday ithe rebellious chiefs passed a re- solution offering to sell about 2, 000 acres of Southern Ontario to any foreign power. The offer ex- cluded Canada and the United States. a The chiefs say the Six Nations confederacy was deeded the land by the British Crown in the Haldi- hundreds of motorists were mand Treaty of 1784. However, ! Indian Threats Cause No Chills tract for production of the super- sonic CF-104 jet plane for the RCAF, it is learned reliably. Canadair had expected that the $90,500,000 contract for CF-104 airframes would have been signed last September. There is still no signed agreement though it should not be inferred that the CF-104 program will fall through. The problem arises from the fact the defence production de- partment set a $90,500,000 ceiling elected council system is illegal on the airframe contract--Cana- and that the reserve should be|dair's low bid for the airframe run by the descendants of early|job, chiefs. They took their case to the| But Canadair made this bid on Ontario Supreme Court last fall the understanding it would be and lost. |able to subcontract a lot of the work to firms which could supply CLAIM BIG AREA {components at the lowest cost. Irvin Logan, spokesman for the| hereditary chiefs. said Monday | U.S. PRICES LOWER that in the Haldimand Treaty the] These firms happen to be Six Nations Indians were granted| American companies already all the land for six miles on|manufacturing parts for the same either side of the Grand River,|plane--the Lockheed Starfighter-- from its mouth to its source. in the United States. Jet Plane Deal Canadair has subcontracted about_$25,000,000 worth of CF-104 airfr work to Canadian come panies, But the defence produe- tion department feels it should subcontract even more to Cana- dian companies to make work for them. Canadair is understood to be balking at this because the more it has to pay for parts the léss chance it will have of breaking even or making a profit. The same situation may apply to the engine contract going te Orenda Engines, Downsview, Ont., and the armament control system going to Canadian Wi inghouse, Hamilton. Gat As far as can be learned there was a misunderstanding in the first place between the defence production department and the contractors on how much work Soule be subcontracted in the If the Canadian prime contraet- ors--Canedair, Orenda and West inghouse--have to pay more for components than they bargained for, the $420,000.000 CF-104 pro- gram may be delayed. *plundering" the peoples of Latin|ence, America, Asia and Africa. | "The Soviet Union has always He declared: rendered and is willing to render "It would only be fair if West- ern countries now returned to the|g nce and support to all coun- peoples held: in colonial depend-/ipjes in their struggle for freedom ence in the past at least part of ang independence and in their the wealth appropriated by them. strygale against age-old economic "One must take into account phackwardness." that it is through oppression andl (1p Havana Wednesday night, plundering of colonial that the economic welfare and|Copero Bonilla said Cuba and the high living standards were at-iS5yict Union are "not far" from tained by a number of highly-de-|sioning a trade agreement assur- veloped ies. ing steady Soviet purchases "Indeed: the lack of develop- Cuban sugar. The Associated ment in the countries of Asia, | press also reported that Cepero |Bonilla hinted that diplomatic re- {lations, broken off under the Ba- tista regime, may be resumed.) In contrast with the West's col- onial policy, KHrushchev © said, Russia gets no profit out of help- {ing backward countries. IMENTIONS COLD WAR Khrushchev condemned "still active influential forces' who are trying to continue the arms race and kindle the cold war anew. of CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 A | in the future friendly, selfless as-| + peoples. Cyhan Commerce Minister Raul! lice while playing. {tion of the report. Telam said its correspondent at the Indian affairs branch of the| federal government says all the| Puerto Madryn reported that un- official sources said the sub sur- faced at 6 a.m. _ The navy withheld all informa- LATE NEWS FLASHES tion, - The Telam report described the situation as "extremely con- fused." Lindsay Child's Body Recovered LINDSAY (CP)--The body ofl four-year-old Derrick Hinton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Hinton, was recovered Wednesday night after .56 hours of dra"ain¢ overa- tions on the Scugog River here, The body of a companion, Peter Wilson, three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Wilson, was recovered Monday. Apparently the boys wandered out onto the Lakehead Teachers' Col Teachers' College at Port Arthu permit, Public Works FELTWELL, England (Rev operational Thor ballistic missil The 1,700-mile range missiles minutes. LONDON (Reuters) - session The branches through Britain. Minister Connell Tenders for the two-storey building are being called. Thor Missiles In Britain are all capable of being fpelled and lege TORONTO (CP) -- Construction will start on the $1,000,000 r as soon as ground conditions announced today. iters) Britain now has 45 es, the RAF announced today. under Anglo-American control launched within 15 Urgent U.K. Cabinet Session cabinet today held an urgent to prepare emergency measures for a threatened nation-wide strike on the nationalized railroads at' midnight Sunday. The 355,000-member National Union of Railwaymen began mailing cheques for the first week's strike pay to 1,410 land, except the Six Nations re-| serva'ion, has been surrendered | or sold with the consent of the] OTTAWA (CP)--What disarma- Indians. - {ment proposals has Canada up its sleeve? | RUN BY COUNCIL The reserve has heen run since This is the mystery tossed into| Ci ore 1924 by an elected council which |B mons foreign policy debate i y Wednesday by External Affairs is the only governing body recog" | vrinister ro The debate con- nized by the Indian affairs) oy des tonight branch. Mr. Green said Canada is put- The council system Was ting forward proposals in prepar- adopted at the request of a ma-|ation for the 10-nation East-West jority of the Six Nations Indians. |jicarmament committee negotia- The council has never made any tions scheduled to begin in Ge- claim to land other than that oc-|peus about March 15. Canada is cupied by the reservation. |a member of the committee. Last year the hereditary chiefs He said he wasn't at liberty to proposals it has in mind should| be aired in the Commons. It could not be argued that the proposals are secret, he said. Britain and Russia had already made specific proposals to the UN and France had announced a summary of her suggestions, Parliament now should have a chance to learn what principles Canada intends to follow as well as the specific proposals it plans to make. Mr. Martin continues his speech today. proclaimed the reserve an inde-/that if the negotiating countrie A pendent nation. A supporter of|felt the same way as Canadal@ Vital part the elected council s) about 'disarmament there would /tha! played by arrested by a so-called ice be benefits to mankind "The time has come to take an force and convicted of treason be- ASKS MPs BE TOLD | fore police stepped in and re- Paul Martin stored order. The chiefs claim perhaps as vital as vsterr as ther country (L--Essex East) Green said to 'loud applause. that theldisarmament so important the|enemies." Mysterious Proposal On Disarming Hinted It was time to drop the idea that Canada's role should be that of the honest broker. Instead, Canada should determjne the right stand on world problems and use "Canadian common sense." This country would, gain mere respect and exert more influence if it forgot the role of the middle man. Mr. Green said he didn't want to give the impression that the former Liberal government hadn't taken an independent ape Mr. Green said the next decade proach. But Canadians had been deposed the elected council and|divulge the proposals now, utyeould be Canada's year is warig gold ou the idea gi this sou. s| Ss. Si g p ¥itry's role was to interpret the United States to Britain and the United Kingdom to the U.S. "This used to appeal to me," independent approach," Mr. Mr. Green said. But Britain and the US. now were as as |said that if the government thinks "Canada has only friends and nojany two nations could be and didn't need an interpreter.