The Oshawa Times, 9 Mar 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The marks a person receives in the school of experience are mostly black and blue. She Oshawa Tones WEATHER REPORT Sunny with cloudy periods today and Thursday, not much change in temperature, winds light. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 89--NO. 57 OSHAWA, WEDNESDTY, MARCH 9, 1960 Authorized es Second C Post Office Department, lass Mail Ottawe TWENTY PAGES 1 OTTAWA (CP)--An RCAF of- ficer will command the largest Canadian Air Area ommand (tario, up-state New York, Penn- |sylvania and part of Virginia. FLYING BOXCAR WRECKAGE GUARDED it An [Italian policeman stands guard over wreckage of U.S. Air Force C-119 Flying Boxcar as off Botricello in southern Italy. The after crash landing on beach. | fire. plane skidded into the sea rests nose-down in sea | and possibly most vital of the 1n{ A SAGE control unit will be regions through wiich North contained in each of these re- American Air Defence Command gions. Only one is planned for will exercise operational control|Canada. over combat forces. | . Air force authorities say five of | ALL-DATA FUNNELLED a the 11 NORAD regions will be in-| The region commanders wil |conduct their air battles from the | Sage centres because it will be at ternational--that is, they will in-| cluge both Canadian an Ameri | points that all information |will be collected from warning . [can air space, forces and person- {radars and orders issued to com- |nel. i vill ave I BI Mg ice va bat squadrons of jet interceptors land American officers ver the|OF anti-aircraft missiles. _ lother four. But in each of these| NORAD has been broken down * |four, the deputy commander will|into 11 regions because there is : |be Canadian. |a limit to the amount of informa- | |tion that can be gathered, stored HQ AT NORTH BAY land disseminated by a SAGE | It is likely that the Canadian computer. This dictates the area | commander will have hic head-{over which control can be exer- {quarters in an underground com-cised through use of any one |bat centre being built near North|computer. : |Bay. This centre will house the] The commander of each region |SAGE -- semi-automatic ground|will be able to call on combat lenvironment -- eiectronic system |units in his area no matter what which will control the operations|their nationality. . lof both manned and unmanned] For instance, the Canadian : |interceptors. {chief of the Quebec-Maritimes| { The NORAD region over which region--or his American deputy | a Canadian will exercise com-|--will have operational control| ¢ mand includes the Atlaniic Prov- over U.S, squadrons in Maine and |inces, Labrador, Quebec, Eastern Labrador. The 19 aboard the plane, flying [Ontario and the state of Maine. | STARTS NEW Kennedy's Drive Citizenship Gets Big Boost MANCHESTER, N.H. Senator John F. Kennedy (AP)--|substantial support in any of has|them would make his convention] packed new power into his drive chances dim. for the Democratic presidential The New Hampshire primary, nomination with a record-smash- ing vote in Tuesday's New Hamp- shire primary election. (not [Nixon and Kennedy, sinc He battered down the Repub- must register for licans' traditional 2-to-1 margin vote only on a of superiority in the state--and ballot. even received several hundred ballot. all no . Viee-President Richard Nixon, | running unopposed on the Repub- lican ballet, also gave his admir- ers cause for excitement. His vote in the presidential prefer- ence poll was rolling close to the 56,464 tally backed up by Presi- dent Eisenhower in the 1956 primary. With 251 polls of 300 unofficially tabulated, the vote for Kennedy was 38,012. The vote for Nixon from 257 polls was 52,045. FIRST OF SEVERAL This was the first of several primaries to be held in the com- ing months before the party nomination conventions choose the presidential dential candidates this summer, Failure of any candidate to win efter b 0 Aircraft Continue Hunt For Two Men EAR FALLS, Ont. (CP)--Civil- fan and RCAF planes were to press the search today for two men who disappeared in north-| # western Omtario Sunday while hunting wolves from the air. They were Maurice J. (Pat) Merickel Jr. of Litchfield, Minn., and Shorty Langford of Ear Falls, No sign of their ski-equipped Piper Cub was spotted Tuesday! |to As expected, Nixon and Ken-| write-in votes on the Republican nedy scooped up all the delegates their respective nominating ppeared that the Republidan|conventions--14 Republicans each ever, as in the case in most states, was to Dr. Milko Skofic in New Yor! between | that the son born to him and Ital- \ e votersijan film star Gina Lollobrigida either party and two years ago is stateless. their own .party direct contest the delegations are not | Louis Lourmais, 39, French | frogman known throughout Canada for his marathon swims went into the Rhine river at Schaffhausen, Switzerland to | Hassle Over ' Peerage | For Her LONDON (CP)--Princess Mar- © garet will be married at West- : minster Abbey on May 6 with the Archbishop of Canterbury of- ficiating, Buckingham Palace an- nounced today. Prince Philip, husband of the Queen and Margaret's brother-in- law, will give the bride away. It has been generally expected that Margaret's fiance, former society photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, will be elevated to the peerage before the wed- ding takes place. The palace announcement did not touch on this point, however. {QUEEN MARRIED THERE The Queen, then Princess Eliz- abeth, also was married at the abbey--on Nov. 20, 1947. The § |archbighop, Most Rev. Geoffrey ? Fisher, start a swim of 800 miles to the North Sea. He plans to make the distance in 17 days. He is shown in this photo testing his equipment in Montreal harbor. (CP Wirephoto) Gina's Son | ROME (CP)--Italian officials today denied assertions attributed k from Athenas to Naples, es- | The other four international re-| S ] H d & [the remainder of Alberta, part of {North Dakota and Montana. |] {Supplies Limited, was found |dead in his auto near the Lansing {Cutoff early this morning. | emoIrr. age | Mr. Black, who had been in To-} Takes Lif caped after an engine caught |gions are: ; J (AP Wirephoto) | One including British Columbia, |part of Alberta, Idaho, Washing- [ton and part of Oregon, | ea | One including Saskatchewan,| Foun One including Manitoba, north- . | western Ontario, Wisconsin, Min- In His I |nesota, part of Michigan and the| | {remainder of North Dakota. George Black, 47, sales man-| One including southwestern On-|ager for McLaughlin Coal and| Resc rs | 1 2 |ronto on business, pulled his auto| Ito the side of the road and turned | |off the ignition, He is believed to have suffered a heart attack. | ° ih hel its wer Tonio Both Skofic and the lovely Gina A native of Toronto, Mr. Black Crew has wor its way behin were quoted as saying that was a major reason for their decision to ena or | PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)--Death establish residence in Toronto and seek Canadian citizenship. [had been an employee of the] Oshawa firm for 11 years and! was active in a number of com-|more than 24 hours. munity projects. b m an) [early today. It wae an ironic fate ville a d had been a member o and by means of a tunnel would "like to keep my (tali |the fire that has trapped 18 men| four miles in a coal mine for|broken out on both sides of the slate fall. A team of 40 men bat- How they did it wasn't known,|tled in smoke and fumes to put ory. [but a mine spokesman said thejout Battle Smoke And Fumes LOGAN, W.Va. (AP--A rescue ence with this sort of emer- |gency," said Johnson, ; parallel fo/and a mucky floor hampered The manager said flames had the smouldering blaze that bound to support either if con-/natio and vice-presi-| ° for the 47-year-old Oregon Demo-|the Rotary Club of Oshawa since st. {erat who had just won a fight 1959. : : switch. Officials both here and in the|with cancer, | He is survived by his wife, Au- {nearby town of Sabaudia, how-| Stricken suddenly at his home drey, and two daughters, Lynda ROCKEFELLER SITUATION |ever, said that the child, born in| Tuesday afternoon, he lapsed into/and Janice, who live on the Maple Efforts on the part of admirers Rome, by Italian law is an Italiana coma and gradually became Grove road north, in Darlington of New York's Goyernor Nelson! citizen. weaker. Death came at 1:30 a.m. township. Rockefeller to roll up a sizeable PST (4:30 p.m. EST). | The remains will rest at the vote for him failed to bear fruit. REFER TO LAW Neuberger had been home since Northcutt and Smith Funeral Rockefeller, who did not enter| They referred to a law which january "trying to shake off a|Home, Bowmanville. Funeral ar- the race and therefore was not Specifically provides that on the ballot, received 2,512 write-|child of a stateless person and|,¢ an attack of shingles. lin votes for president in 257 of/an Italian mother automatically - Ithe 300 precincts. Another 1,700 acquires Italian citizenship. | write-in votes were cast for him! Italian immigration authorities for vice-president. {noted that Skofic had never ap-| CANADIAN COMPLAINS plied for Italian citizenship for| DE Hitler's Critic Given Beating FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)|great German and that was Adolf {to pay about $80 to get this city|The Frankfurt chief prosecutor | Hitler." of 28,000 persons out of its final anvounced today that he is inves-| Kuflik, whose father, brother, {eial difficultes, Mayor A. McLean |tigating charges made by a Ca- wife and child were killed by the +; Haig said Tuesday. Inadian Jew who complained he/Nazis in Poland, replied that he Financial troubles arose partly was beaten up by a German for thought Hitler was a "scoundrel from aid given to the Belleville calling Hitler a *'scoudrel and and a criminal." The German as- '|McFarlands, winner of the 1959| criminal". |saulted him and mauled him world hockey championship. | Chief Prosecutor Heinz Wolf hadly. | : 3 Mayor Haig, elected after the said he is also looking into] Two police officers who arrived |debt was incurred, said the exact|charges that police had refused after the German had left by the {amount of indebtedness will not|to come to the aid of the Jew and back door told Kuflik it was his nality, but my son comes vention developments warrant a first." pleted. a gory " Home Owner's Bill 'At Belleville $80 | BELLEVILLE (CP)--The aver- |age home owner here will have! the series of virus infections as well rangements have not been com. | : lind fume-filled section of their efforts, the hi neti # The slate fall that triggered the "The crew should be within 500(200-foot blockade broke a trolley {feet" of where the trapped men Wire which apprently ignited coal are believed to have barricaded and timbers, themselves," the spoksman said. The word raised hopes again that the miners will be rescued) | alive. "We're very hopeful," sai N. T. Camicia, vice-president of| operations. Outside the mine, eight miles coal and dirt in a 14-inch ventila- tion. passage, Willis Carter, 46, and Kyle Blair, 29, told how the: d/crawled on their bellies for near] three hours to escape. Carter, whose brother James| was one of those trapped, said| southwest of here, near the Ken-| SIEnt x 10 Other workers. could tucky border, men manning the| apd. 100, crews and marshalling materials WOULDN'T COME outnuifiBered the crowd of rela-| "I tried to get them to, follow| tives 'amd others which was me, but they wouldn't listen,"| thinned by the bitter weather. said Carter, who is responsible] "We assume that the trapped|for ventilation at the mine. "I men have barricaded themselves knew I eould take them out." | off," said Robert M. Johnson,| "He did it all," said Blair, manager of Island Creek. The praising his begrimed compan- company's Holden 22 mine here|ion. "I knew he could get me out is eight miles from this southerniand he did." | West Virginia city. | Carter figured the two crawled] | Johnson pointed out that one of 2,240 feet through the narrow tun-| |those trapped was William K.|nel. He said some of the men re-| |Donaldson, mine safety director, | ) » mained behind on orders from| {who could guide the {vival tactics. "He's had experi-| 'Gold Rush For a time after the accident happened the trapped men w safe in a well - ventilated area. They talked by telephone with those on the outside. Then the phone went dead, presumably be- head of the Church of England, also officiated at that wedding. Today's brief palace announce- ment was dated from Clarence House, London home of the prin- cess and Queen Mother Elizabeth. Accredited court correspond- ents at Buckingham Palace were officially informed of the addi- tional details, including the role to be played by Prince Philip and the archbishop. The bridesmaids and best man were not named. The marriage will take place 2% months short of Margaret's 30th birthday, which falls on Aug. 21 Armstrong-Jones reached his 30th birthday two days ago. [STATESMEN GUESTS | The wedding will take place only three days after the begif- (ning of the Commonwealth prime Margaret Sets | Wedding Date Likely Fiance ministers' conference in London, s0 it is assumed that the visiting Commonwealth statesmen, in- cluding Canada's Prime Minister Diefenbaker, will be among the guests. { The court correspondents were fold that Prime Minister Macmil- lan was given the wedding date when he paid his regular weekly visit to the Queen at Buckingham Palace Tuesday night. The Daily Mail, which correctly predicted the date in this morn !ing's editions, says Princess Alex. |andra and little Princess Anne are certain to be bridesmaids, and that Prince Charles, heir-ap- parent to the throne, might be a page. May 6 is a date of family sig- |nificance. It will mark the 50th {anniversary of the death of King | Edward VII, great-grandfather of the princess. It is also the anni. versary of the accession to the throne of King George V. EXPECT HUGE CROWDS | The wedding is likely to jam {London with the biggest crowds |since Elizabeth's Coronation in 1953. The engagement of Margaret and Armstrong-Jones was an- nounced Feb. 26. Armstrong-Jones has closed out his photographic studio in the {Pimlico district of London and {moved into an apartment at Buckingham Palace to await the wedding. Plans for the ceremony are going forward at top speed at the palace, Clarence House and at the office of the lord chamber. lain, who is responsible to the Queen for royal ceremonial. L JC A | hd AS o Saag ) w In Hospital Care Black from burrowing through| OTTAWA (CP)--A full - scale |state medicine program should not be considered until the hos- | teith said Tuesday. + view of national health and wel- fare services. The health depart. {ment will spend $1,400,000,000 in Y| pital insurance plan is fully de-/the fiscal year starting April 1, ¥|veloped, Health Minister Mon- an increase of $38,600,000 from the current year. A est He told the C Mr. Monteith also told the com- committee that hospital out-pa- tient and home care services should be expanded in the present federal-provincial program and state medicine -- government- sponsored medical care insurance --kept in "proper perspective." The present hospital insurance program, in effect in nine of the| 10 provinces, was still "far from complete." "Should this process not be al- lowed to take its course before consideration is given to embark- ing on a whole new field of en- deavor--a field, moreover, that poses questions of a far more basic nature in our society than does hospital insurance?" Mr. onteith asked. "I believe it should." DETAILED STUDY He appeared before the com- be known until an audit is com-|{had refused to book the com- own fault that he was beaten up, pleted, but it will probably be be-|plaint against the unknown Ger- according to the Canadian's state- cause a cable burned. |mittee as it began a detailed re- mittee: 1. Introducing old age pensions in Canada on the scale of cur- rent U.S. pensions would be ex- pensive but this would be studied further by the government. 2. Quebec is showing encourag- ing interest in joining the hospital insurance plan, and the Yukon and Northwest Territories prob- |ably will be covered in 1960. 3. The government plans to have a $10,000,000 stockpile of medicines and medical equip- ment for national emergencies by March 81, 1961. DIFFICULT TO ADAPT Mr. Monteith said the govern. ment has studied closely the re- port on U.S. retirement pensions prepared by Dr. Robert M. Clark, It had found difficulties in adapt- ing the American plan to Cana- dian use. tween $500,000 and $600,000. | man. - A bill now before the legisla-| Chaim Kuflik, 57, a small, grey ture, provides citizens with the haired Polish-born Canadian Jew option of paying the entire $80 in/from Toronto, said the aileged in- {1960 or in instalments within five|cident took place in a Frankfurt ' as 16 planes--four RCAF, four Ca- nadian civilian aircraft and eight United States civilian planes-- swept more than 11,000 square miles of bush some 190 miles ~ northeast of Winnipeg. SENATOR KENNEDY | ment. Officers at the police station| - Festival where Kuflik tried to agi sure rede Seer! Por Yukon force, the Canadian said. | : Wolf confirmed that police had| STRATFORD (CP)--The first acted "at least incorrectly" and steps will be taken this summer added that he regarded the as-|to stage a gold rush festival at sault against the Jew as a serious, Dawson City in the Yukon Terri- incident which he would investi-|tory in the summer of 1962. gate "down to the bottom." Canadia Theatre Exchange planning consultant of the Strat- ford Shakespearean festival, has | been retained by the federal gov- jernment to study prospects of the S FLASHES = Driver Buried in Coal, Jack A. Dove, in a 40-foot high pile of coal by a fellow employee, Art Whit: |years. | statement, praised Chancellor Ad- lowering of trade and tariff bar-|this trade on all fronts and in all problem into the world context, president of the Canadian Pulp Fowler and the two other panel-|trial *pinnacles and diminishing import trade, Mr. Fowler also minister, and businessman Mitch-| «yp 4p, ; : . 8 the United States and Can. buried when a section of the pi |restaurant where a tall German [started to talk to him. When Fukflik, according to his [1 ' y i | i I WwW enauer as a 'real great states-| F man" the German allegedly re-| hg torted: "There has only been one| Advice To C di MONTREAL (CP)--A selective manufactures. We should develop] Mr. Deutsch, putting Canada's riers between Canada and the directions." {said war-shattered nations of the| United States was advocated CHRONIC DIFFICULTY |world have made a remarkable Tuesday night by R. M. Fowler,| As economic doctors, Mr. recovery, climbing to new indus- and Paper Association. + |ists--economist John J. Deutsch, [the trading importance of North! In a panel discussion on export- former assistant deputy finance America. | | urged Canada and the United ell W. Sharp, former deputy trade ada we are no longer shielded by States to work jointly to induce minister -- diagnosed Canada's the greater Saar: priomirteed Europe's two common marketi/trade and payments ailment as! | : )} »" i before 1:30 p.m. groups to achieve a world - wide serious and chronic. (We eon oo indulge in| lowering of tariffs. They sounded a war nin g|inflationary fiscal and monetary | "A policy of self - sufficiency against doing too much too experiments on the assumption] with high protection is economic quickly -- cautioning the country|that we will be saved by the ex-| suicide," said Mr. Fowler, criti- against trying to grow so fast|cesses of other countries. If we cizing "more vocal" and grow- that outside, foreign capital has do this we would be likely to ing pleas for trade protectionism to help with massive infusions. price ourselves out of the world| in Canada. "The point that bears empha-/market." "We must export to live, and sis is that our trade and pay- what the world wants from us are ments deficit is the result of our OTTAW/ UNDER FIRE | our raw materials and basic attempt to expand so rapidly and, Under questioning by some of| |at the same time to raise our/the 500 exporters and business-| {standard of living" said Mr, men assembled, Mr. Deutsch |Sharp, vice-president of Brazilian|chided the federal government] | Traction, Light and Power Com. | for taking 'too much of our (pany, Toronto. available savings" to finance its a: | deficits. | |EXPORTS MUST RISE | He urged the government to] If Canada wants to remain adopt taxation policies aimed at| prosperous, imports can not be|increasing savings, reducing Can-| [expected to fall enough to restore ada's dependence on foreign cap] HALIFAX (CP) -- A howl the Maritime provinces out of foundland was disrupted. U.S. Calls Off Flights CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 4' A. Herter disclosed today. i at the central Ottawa Bank of [the trade balance, he said. As ajital and helping to lower the rosa, Canada '*'urgently needs high premium on the Canadian greater export markets." , Idollar, A / two men held up Mr. Howey } near the Oshawa Harbor about 12:45 p.m. 1 : driver for the company, was reported missing minutes earlier first aid at the yard, but Dove was pronounced dead shortly Blizzard Hits Maritimes ting communications and halting traffic. Telephone, telegraph and cable communications between Nova Scotia 'and New- WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Eisenhower has decided against having U.S. planes make high-level flights to Berlin in defiance of Russian objections, State Secretary Christian Bank Manager Foils Holdup OTTAWA (CP) -- Bank manager Marvin Howey foiled a holdup attempt today by tripping an alarm under his desk Somerset Streets. Police captured one suspect minutes after make him cash a cheque for $7,800. northern festival. The project was announced Tuesday. In Ottawa, Northern Affairs Minister Hamilton said a start| ? would .be made this summer in|: refitting river boats used during] | gold rush days. The ships are beached at Whitehorse and the theatre company hopes to get at| : least one of them back to Daw-| : son City. Angered Pilot 'Blasts Palace | SINGAPORE (Reuters)--A dis- gruntled jet pilot today strafed President Sukarno's palace in Jakarta, reports reaching here from the Indonesian capital stated. | & Indonesian diplomatic sources| said there were no reports of cas-| ualties. | They said a young pilot took | off from Jakarta airport in a Rus-| sian-built MiG fighter, flew over the presidential palace and! opened fire with a machine-gun. | The sources said the pilot's father] Red Adair, left, and Coot had been arrested recently for un-| Matthews, Texas oil well fight- | lawful possession of arms, | ers, attach a drag line to a car | I by Tom Patterson, founder and Dies was found unconscious at the McLaughlin coal yards today. Dove, a e and is believed to have been le collapsed. City firemen gave ing snow. storm funnelled into the Atlantic Ocean today cut- Montreal branch at Bank and with toy pistols and tried to that was destroyed at the oil well fire near Homer, 19 miles west of Jackson, Mich. The fire 2 EC) . DRAGLINE TO RESCUE CAR can be seen as far as 50 miles away at night. =AP Wirephoto A

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