The Oshawa Times, 7 Mar 1960, p. 2

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Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, March 7, 1960 AMERICAN RELEASED BY CUBAN Don Chapman, 26, North Bend, Neb., was released today by Cuban authorities who had detained him for questioning in the explosion of a munitions WEEKEND FATALITY ROUNDUP ship in Havana harbor Friday. Here he relates details of his 72-hour detention to U.S. news- men at the American embas~ | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS Quebec recorded 11 accidental dea"hs during the weekend, most | of any province, and raised the : [national total to 30 Seventeen traffic deaths was counted in a survey by The Canadian Press from 6 p.m. local : [time Friday to midnight Sunday. Of these, six occurred in Quebec, four of them in a level-crossing death, Five died on Ontario roads, two each in Nova Scotia © land British Columbia and one "leach in Saskatchewan and New | Brunswick. '| Six persons died in fires--four . lin Quebec, one in Manitoba and | lone in British Cclumbia. +. |B.C. PLANE CRASH "1 | Plane crashes took two lives in | British Columbia and one in On- tario. The B.C, victims were ight-plane owner Richard Clark, # |25, and his passenger, C. Roger Gore, 24, both of Vancouver. | Two persons were asphyxiated ' lin a car in Ontario and a British Columbia man wae Killed under a car that slipped off a jack. 11 Die In Q Through Accidents light aircraft he was piloting Jean Wrightson, 23, both of Kitch- ener died of asphyxiation Satur- day night in the vouth's ear out- side the Wrightson home. Police said the vehicle had no tailpipe and several holes in the muffler. George Smith, 12, Pickering, and Mrs, Harry Smith, 57, his grandmother, of New Toronto, Friday night in a car crash near Woodstock. Mrs, Mayme Crockford, 36, Val Caron, Saturday night when struck by a car near her home. Basil Safroniuk, 30, Port Arthur, Saturday evening when a crashed on Squeer's Lake, 56 miles west of Fort William. gebec when a car collided with a CPR passenger train at a level-cross-| ing near this community 50 miles west of Montreal, The dead, all of Montreal, are: Louis Charbonneau, about y Francois Caya, Mrs. Albertine Caya and Mrs. A, Monette. The injured, all passengers in the car, were also of Montreal. Most severly hurt was five-year- old Ghislain Caya, in critical con- dition in hospital in Buckingham, ue. The others, all released from hospital in Hawkesbury, after treatment, are Mrs, Caya, 23, Wilfrid Charbonneau and Rejean Savignac. Joseph Lavoie, 10, Cochrane, Sunday when struck by a car on Highway 11 near Cochrane. Stanley David Hughes, 25, Brampton, Sunday in a two-car collision near Milton, Three other Toronto-area people were injured. POINTE AU CHENE, Que. (CP)--Four persons, two of them women, were killed Sunday night|apparently hid the train from the| and four others were injured Provincial police were also try- ing to trace a report that a nine- month-old baby in the wrecked car had been taken to Monte- bello, Que. The relationships between the dead and injured were mot yet known. Police said a high snowbank occupants of the car. Edu g a | A young Montreal boy was ac- i ih. ...u |Cidentally strangled with a rope, AUTHORITIES [i boys. survey included traffic sy, Havana, At his side, em- The and deaihs connected bassy guard Marine Sgt. Tom | fatalities with normal weekend activities. Butler of Jim Thorpe, Pa. g --AP Wirephoto | {DOUBLE FATALITIES he Ontario dead: arl J. Snider, 26, and Lois a Presse Quits Montreal TV Bid By DON HANRIGHT MONTREAI (CP)--The contes for the licence to set up Mont. television station has been re- | duced to three private groups|Lewis of Montreal. Earlier, Sov-/power increases by with the withdrawal of La Presse. |ereign Film Distributors Limited stations including CJSS Cornwall An official of the Board of|of Toronto withdrew its Englishland CKPR-FM Fort William, U.S. Installs Bomb Alarm Broadcast Governors, Presse Limitee The newspaper had sent its formal application to the trans- port department before the gov- ernors last January recom- mended second TV station li- censes for Winnipeg and Van-|Mmatic bomb alarm system de-reach and crush them. couver. NEWSPAPERS LOST OUT Those licenses went to Ralph S. Misener and Associates in Winni- peg and Vantel Broadcasting Company Limited in Vancouver. Applications who lost out included some incorporating newspaper and broadcasting interests. The board has said that its recommendations did not hinge entirely on the applicants' tie-in with other ¢o mm un ic ations media. La presse officials declined eomment on the withdrawal. However it was understood the cost of the newspapers plant ex- pansion was a factor in the de- cision to withdraw. Remaining applicants for the Prenchiapsuage TV license are Raymond Crepault, who operates io station CJMS Montreal, on alf of a company yet to be fncorporated; radio station CKVL Montreal combined with United Amusement Cor por ation, and Paul I'Anglais and Associates. All three propose to broadcast on channel 10 in competition with the CBC's French-language sta- tion, CBFT. ENGLISH APPLICANTS Seeking the license for the which to- day will open public hearings that include the TV applications, | said Sunday night no reason for| the withdrawal was given by La| Compagnie de Publication de la |city's 'second English - language|station bid because of *'alter Canadian Press Staff Writer |TV outlet are Canadian Marconi t| Company, which operates radio] station CFCF Montreal, and| i real's second French language|Mount Royal Independant Televi-|P.m. EST. First to be heard by) hop sion Limited, headed by Crosby|the board will be applications for{ government. Sukarno Rules In Indonesia JAKARTA (Reuters)--Indones- ian President Sukarno today was the absolute ruler of Southeast |Asia's biggest neutralist state. ed. The 58-year-old revolutionary leader dismissed ile country's parliament Saturday night on the The BBG hearings open at 2:30| ground that it had not fulfilled {hopes for co-operation with the |ercumstances." fi -adio| The present structure of parlia- ous radio} vent he said, also endangered |the unity of the state, fatherland | and people. | WASHINGTON (AP)--An auto- | signed to flash instant information |to Washington and other centres on cities hit in a nuclear attack is being installed throughout the United States. The air force says the system --which will report nuclear hits rather than serve as an advance warning setup -- is destruction- proof and can be triggered only by a nuclear blast. The system will report an at- tack in the few seconds' interval between a nuclear bomb burst and the crushing blow of the fol- lowing shock wave. The air force is beginning to install the first few of 100 "sen- sor" stations which will be in operation in the next few months, TESTIMONY DISCLOSED The plan for this "atomic strike recording system" was disclosed in testimony given before a House of Representatives military ap- propriations sub committee by Brig.-Gen. J.B. Bestic A tran- script of testimony was published Sunday night. Each sensing unit operates in- dependently. If a bomb or missile impacts on one and knocks it out instantaneously, others spaced out at a distance of 10 or 12 miles survive for the several sec- onds or perhaps full minute i AID TO This Red Cross medical team leaves Montreal to assist vie- tims in the earthquake-shatter- ed Moroccan city of Agadir, Left to right, from the bottom are: Leona Witts, Lea Paulus- sed, Carol Enid Petch and f which is a modified version of|plans at this time," he said. "I AGADIR Marjorie Baxter, all of Toron- to; Helen Marois, Ottawa; Marcelle Maille, Montreal and Dr. Jean Jacques Laurier, Trois-Rivieres. ~CP Wirephote But he pledged that parliament would be "renewed" as soon as possible. The 258-member House, elected in 1955, was the first fully-elected parliament in the 15-year-old re- public's history. Its authority has BRIGHTON, England (AP)-- An Oxford zoologist says 30 years of research have con- vinced him man is descended directly from a hairless ape who lived in the sea. Sir Alister Hardy outlined his theory on man's origin at a conference of marine scientists in Brighton Saturday. At one point in the dawn of Jhistory, he said, some land- based apes too to the sea in search of food. Their life in shallow offshore waters ac- counts for the differences in body shape between humans and apes now, the 64-year-old professor said. "Many apes were driven to hunt in the sea by fierce com- petition for food in the forests, At first they waded and groped in the water but gradually learned how to swim , . . "Over a period of several hundred thousand years, the species lost its hair as it car- ried on its marine life. The only hair left was on the very top of the head to help protect the ereature from the sun. OXFORD EXPERT'S THEORY SAYS MAN "HAIRLESS APE' "The sea ape learned to stand upright because water helped support the body. It developed longer legs than its land- based brother ape for swim- ming. "Its hands became sensitively shaped to allow it to feel along the sea bed for shellfish and oper crabs. It learned to use tools by picking up stones to crack open sea urchins. It would be only a step for man to discover that flints chipped into sharper and more useful tools, knives and arrows. "Then, armed with such equipment and his erect pos- ture, he was all set for the chase. He could now reconguer the continents, running and hunting the animals of the plains. "I estimate that apes were driven into shallow sea waters a million years ago. They emerged as men about 500,000 years ago." He said he had discussed his theory with many other scien- tists and they had been unable to find a flaw in it. gradually passed to the president under his "guided democracy." | Opts | haired mistress, Carole Tregoff, Jury Will Re-examine Finch Case Evidence LOS ANGELES (AP)---Jurors,80,000 words should take well into| who want their memories re-|Tuesday. On Saturday the first reshed have asked to hear again|63 pages went at the rate of 30 today Dr. R. Bernard Finch's de-|pages an hour, scriptions of his wife's slaying The jurors appeared to be pay- | The 400 pages of Finch testim-|ing particular attention to state- ony they asked to have read/ments made by Finch at various aloud goes to the heart of the|times. {case--the actual shooting of Bar-| Thy pondered the case in se- bara Jean Finch last July 18. [clusion for several hours Satur- Somewhere in it the jury may day. Then they specifically asked find its answer to the trial's only|to hear for a second time every- big question: thing Finch had said "about the day of the shooting: Did the rich suburban physician shoot his wife in the back by ac.| California law does not permit | GET THE BEST For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING 926%2 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA RA 8-6451 or RA 3.4131 cident as they fought over a pis-|® Jury to have the transcript in a a ug on jon 07, the jury room while considering ? as the prosecution t a verdict. TWO CHARGES EACH On the jury's answer hinge the lives of Finch, 42, and his red- 7 PAYOLA CHARGES WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ten more record companies were ac- cused Sunday by the federal trade commission of getting plugs for their records by giving illegal payola to disc jockeys. The FTC has now brought charges of payola -- under-the-table pay- ments for plugging records-- against about 70 companies. 23. They are charged with mur- der and conspiracy to murder. Reading of the approximately Regiment's ed Nip London Mother Dies GORLESTON, England (Reut- ers) -- Miss Jenny MacGregor Morris, who was "adopted" by the Princess Patricia's Canadian FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL EE -- RABE -- | J RUGS CLEANED - REPAIRED AT LOW COST We are experts in preserving the color and beouty of your finest rugs, wh in neturel or synthetic fibres. NU-WAY Light Infantry and was known as the regiment's London Mother, died at her home here Saturday. She was about 80. Men of the regiment gave her | the title London Mother in the] First World War, when the hotel | she helped her mother to run in London, became a favorite leave centre for the regiment. She was the guest of honor at a banquet given by the then prime minister, Mackenzie King, | was made a life member of the| Canadian Legion, and was| granted the freedom of Ottawa. While in Canada, she'was the first white woman to be made an Indian princess--by members of the Sarcee tribe, who live near Calgary. Several years ago the regiment granted her an annuity. Brig. Cameron Ware, colonel of the regiment and now taking a course in England, will represent the regiment at the funeral Wed- nesday. In 1938 she visited all the PPCLI associations in Canada, renewing friendships from the First World War. In 1957 she was guest of the 1st Battalion of the Patricias in Ger- many during the regiment's birthday celebrations March 17. Introducing our new ORGANIST From a long successful engagement in Toronto NIGHTLY 9 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT HOTEL LANCASTER J] CHILDREN DO At its dissolution, parliament was exercising one of its remain- ing major powers--eriticism of | | The air force insists that the|the 1960 budget, which came] under fire from all quarters. | Rumors of arrests which swept | (would take the shock wave to |system is "fail-safe," that only a nuclear blast can trigger it. Jakarta Sunday were officially | WHY NEEDED denied. | Why is an alarm system needed | | Te teal of approscn of enems| BLOWING TUBA TIRING WORK bombers is in operation and the ballistic missile early warning PITTSBURGH (AP)--A Re- tired city policeman has ap- system is being built in the Arc- plied for $20,000 in workmen's tie? A missile warning system will t rating fully for at least 50 1% operating y | compensation, claiming he de- Although the DEW line can veloped a heart ailment from rovide between 1% and three playing a tuba in the police prov warning on the approach and fireman's band. Salvatore of pal b A (th pry de.| Richetti, 57, claims that blow- Sani OUSPS 1118 Wm ing the tuba, marching in parades and playing at of- ficial functions weakened his pending on whether the planes are heart. He retired in 1956. jet-powered), some bombers in large attack are almost certain to penetrate the interception sys- tem and hit targets. ,_- "GROWING PAINS" Bomarc Flops Seventh Time OTTAWA (CP)--Defence Minis- [They are designed for use of the ter Pearkes said Sunday the| Bomarc-B, although Canada has|/ seventh consecutive failure. in h | United States attempts to launch not yet committed itself to buy any missiles. {the Bomarc-B interceptor missile ods not affect Canada's plans to| The government has said it ex- |obtain the weapon. pects to have the missile bases] | He said in an interview the/in operation by next year. | missile "is going through the or-| Mr. Pearkes said Sunday that |dinary growing pains necessary Canada is "watching with the in any such development." | closest interest developments that The U.S. Air Force announced are taking place so far as the Saturday a Bomare burned on its|Bomarc-B is concerned." launching pad at Cape Canaveral,| "From sll information I re- Fla, when 'a malfunction de-|ceive I have faith in the ability veloped" during an attempt to of those responsible for the mis- fire the missile. |sile's development--that they will This was the seventh unsuccess- overcome the difficulties. ful attempt to launch the missile] "I see no reason to change our the Bomarc-A. The B-version is|think the situation is unchanged. designed to have double the/I am confident these difficulties at a cost of somc $30,000,000. FOUR BROTHERS DIE Smoke billows from three. storey building housing manu- facturing firm, restaurant and home of Mr. and Mrs. Phillipe Quirion in Quebec City, whose four youngest song were killed Ever sines Grandmother's day rents have relied on "Mother Gra to give relief from Easy sad BAFE children from 1 year A EL wo give to SE A CIEL LA tfHfective Use y ves Mother Gra Io WORM EXTERM RUG end UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS RA 5-0433 174 MARY STREET SAVE §-5-$ ON SKIM MILK IN THE _ PERSONAL TAX SERVICES LTD. "The Largest Bookkeeping Firm in Canada" ® Complete Bookkeeping System ® Inclusive Income Tax Preparation | @ Quarterly Statements of Operations ® For 1.25 Per Week Call Your District Agent ATlantic 4-5415 in fire. Dead are Pierre, 8 months, Mario, 1%, Phillipe 3, and Michael 5. Parents were injured when they jumped. «CP Wirephoto Employment CIVIL AVIAT range of the 200-mile-range A-|will be overcome." version and to be effective right| Total cost to Canada of the down to ground level. | Bomare-B installations, including | Canada is in the process of missiles, has been estimated at {building two Bomarc bases, one|$123,000,000. This is one-third of {near North Bay and the other in|the actual cost, with the U.S. {the area of Mont Laurier, Que. |paying the balance. A long, hard heating season is hard on furnaces, too. It's at this point a tired furnace is apt to be- come troublesome, expensive to operate--or even dangerous. Now is the time to PLAN FOR COMFORT NEXT WINTER Let us check your furnace. We'll make repairs at reasonable cost--or help you choose the new ANTHES furnace best suited to youi-needs. AUTHORIZED LOW DOWN PAYMENTS, EASY TERMS © DIXON'S 313 ALBERT ST. OSHAWA -- RA 3-4663 Tuesday and Wednesday Only ! Sensational Meat Features ! LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS SLICED Breakfast BACON 1b LEAN MINCED BEEF THIN SLICED PORK LIVER Opportunities with the ION BRANCH AIRPORT AND: PROPERTY MANAGEMENT DIVISION Department of Transport at the following centres OTTAWA Superintendent, Building and Maintenance, $7,98 Supervisor, Mechanical $7,140-$8,220. $7,140-$8,220. s and Utilities Operation 0-$9,060. Equipment Requirements, Supervisor, Airport Operations and Standards, - Supervisor, Building Utilities, $7,140-$8,220. Mechanical Equipment $6,480-$7,200. n. 49 3% ms. §] 23 Airport Operations and $6,480-$7,200, For detail Supervisor, Airfield Maintenance, $7,140-$8,220. Specifications Officer, Airfield Maintenance Officer, $6,480-$7,200. Standards Officers (2), MONCTON AND VANCOUVER Supervisors of Airport Operations, $6,480-$7,200. s, write to CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION, OTTAWA and ask for Circular 60-492A. Half Gallon CONTAINER FOR THE SUGGESTED PRICE Of Only 26 AT YOUR LOCAL STORE ONLY WHY Use substitutes when fresh skim milk is only 13¢ qt. (suggested) and requires no fuss er bether of mixing, ete. TRY THIS SKIM TODAY! STA- FRESH LTD. 390 RITSON RD. NORTH PHONE RA 8-5165 HALF Cc GALLON

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