The Oshawa Times, 21 Mar 1960, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, March 27 140 Security For Mr. K. Air-Tight In Paris PARIS (AP) -- France is ar-|visit two years ago prompled) Wherever Khrushchev travels, -anging an unprecedented secur-|security measures approaching by car, he will be accompanied] lity screen to insure that Soviet|those being prepared to protect by 120 motorcycle policemen. {Premier Nikita 8. Khrushchev is the Soviet leader. French newspapers have re-| {hit by nothing heavier than con-| Mindful of Khrushchev's com- ported that Khrushchev also will Ifetti during his visit starting Wed- plaints that he was kept away be guarded by Communist milit- |nesday. from the people during his United ants who have been told to scat- "Only Yugoslav: President Tito's States tour, the French are try-/ter through the crowds and keep ing to be as discreet as possible. their eyes open. The Communist But the curtain. will be there] |party newspaper shrugged off Mine. Boss |every time Khrushchev steps out such repots. It said the party Union Battle jpolajeal refugees, mostly from he Iron Curtain countries. [in public. {members in the crowd would only Postponement of the visit, orig- be shouting "long live Khrush- SUDBURY (CP) -- Don Gillis, RECALLS TITO VISIT president of the 16,000-member They were picked up two weeks 'inally scheduled to start a week chev," like eyeryoye else. | Local 598, International Union of ago and sent to Corsica and other ago, and then shortening of the ------ -- | latest oo Te 14 Fatalities In Canada meant an extension of forced va- cations being given some 800 islands. French officers went Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.), Saturday backed trustee W. P. Stewart as president of the union's new District 2. Mr. Stewart will run against local left-wing leader Mike Solski in the June 1 elections for the new executive. The district, formed in the national union's re- organization last December, held its first convention meeting Sat- urday. | The election will be a test of strength for Mr. Gillis, who took over Local 598 two years ago from a group supported by Mine- Mill's national executive. The convention, which also nominated men for. six other of fices on the new district's execu- ve hoard, was divided on every issue. Mr, Gillis was supported by 17 delegates against 45 represenfa- {tives who rallied to the cause of former national presidents Nels Thibault, In the day's only refer- endum, the Gillis forces mustered 2.2 convention votes against the earth- apposition" s 120.8. Japan WI ONE POINT Gillis forces won a minor however, when they chal- ENGULFED IN FLAMES IN VANCOUVER cream of Vancouver | Friday morning. The was reduced to rubble by described by Vancouver most spectacular 1936 as the since fire was fire men | blaze Earthquake { Rocks Japan Early Today : TOKYO (AP--A mild quake shook Northern early today, sending residents| scufrying for high ground in front|tory, of a small tidal wave. No major lenged national president Ken damage was reported Smith to prove that the newly The Central Meteorological chartered Local 1025 at the Fal- Agency here said it was fortunate conbridge nickel mines is legiti- the epicentre was in the Pacific mate. Ocean, about 350 miles northeast] Mr. Gillis maintained that all of Tokyo. "If the centre of the Falconbridge workers are still financial auake had been on land, it might/ members of Local 598 until the Canada have caused considerable dam.'labor relations board removes society, fire once the Armory, place for Stanley Park gathering POTPOURRI COMMITMENTS Rebuttal Argumen By TV Applicants ONE NOT AVAILABLE { Not available to the press was Wednesday. The governors' rec- he brief of Maclean-Hunter Pub-/ommendation of a licencee of financial and program com- lishing Company, whose api a- which is subject to federal cab- mitments faces the Board of tion inclides a minor n net approval--is expected to be Broadcast Governors in its task by Associated Television of E announced later month or of choosing the private licencee land early in April for a second Toronto television' Detailed financial estimates for, At the peak station Toronto Telecasters Syndicate, estimates is Upper 55, Among the nine licence applic- which includes the Southam Com-| Broadcasting Limited, a group age," it added Local 598's bargaining rights at ants there is a $3,600,000 spread pany Limited, were not included including the Granada Television. In Miyako eity in Northern Falconbridge. between the highest and lowest in its brief. The syndicate had Network of England and headed Japan, a police officer reported Of four delegates nominated for estimates of first-year operating asked the board to treat this as by Stuart Griffiths, an official of electric power was cut off for a| the Falconbridge seat, three de- eosts, Forecast hourly costs confident al, Granada and a former CBC Tor- brief period and about 600 people {clined on the grounds they are LJ vie- By DON HANRIGHT The hearing is expecled (6 end Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP A potpourri est ng- this of the On Weekend through the dossiers of some 189,- 000 refugees to pull out the 800} for special treatment. They did] By THE CANADIAN PRESS the same for Tite but there were| Fires and traffic accidents took, fewer then and almost all were /the lives of 14 Canadians during Yugoslavs. the weekend. A group of 32 was permitied to; A mother and two children| return from Corsica Sunday be-|died in a Nova Scotia fire and| cause of illness or urgent family (two bachelors died in a fire in reasons. : J {Napanee, Ont. Nova Scotia re- The arrangements for Khrush-| port led one other fire death. chey are complicated by his 1,-| Ontario had three traffic fatal-| 800-mile trip through France. ities, two in a four-car collision] Wherever he travels by train, the|19 miles east of Oshawa. Quebec, tracks will be guarded hours in Manitoba, Saskatchewan. Alberta advance and a policeman posted and British Columbia reported every half-mile. A security train one traffic death each will precede Khrushchev's. These A Canadian Press survey from arrangements were tightened upg p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday | after a Paris-Marseille train was |p Ue a total of 16 accidental Serailey recently, apparently by|geaths across the country. Fatal In Paris, Khrushchev will get| veeupational As igent 4 nd roughly the same treatment given!© survey. any other visiting chief of state.| Police and plainclothesmen will} Albena hed ose diowning ul line routes through the city, and| |down'a flight of stairs. | p 11" be ed the lHitemen wi be. Placed on Newfoundland, New Brunswick pe and Prince Edward Island re-| THIEVES STEAL | var des c= POLICE CRUISER "a Fred Neelands and Garfield in the Napanee fire. Patrick Keating, 74, of Hamil- > pRLFean : fon, when struck by a car in , KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) |g 0niown Hamilton Friday. Thieves stole police chief | Fernand Boivin, 19, of Whitby Lawrence Browning's automo- land John MacDonald: of Oshawa. | bile Sunday, refuelled it at a |; "2" 45, car collision Sunday | nearby filling station, and night en Highway 2 near New-| used il as a getaway car for |.,cile : il a burglary in a village 60 William Mervin Sutherland, 68, miles away. They escaped |of Oshawa, when he fell down a with about £500 worth of flight of stairs near his home goods and abandoned the chief's car about four miles Saturday. from his home. The galling thing for the bride, North after London, secretary Vanier ant Queen. The company 'DODGING ISSUES Under pressure, Mr. Smith WEDDING DAY Esmond Butler walks the former Mar. 19. Mr. press secretary their wedding Butler, to Governor-General was for a time, assist- to with | Georgina wl Bl FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL 57 KING STE, OSHAWA ONT the -CP Wirephotn cop in the village is that he spotted the car, saluted and was saluted in return. $400 forecasting first-year operating | The tidal wave was said to have There costs at $5,749,000--or $1,260 an!been about five feet high around ruled the fourth would not be in the hour--and revenue at $5,260,000. Miyako. eligible to hold office if he was mates pe a member of Local 1025 at loss after A British the time of his nomination. = 1 .- s a $2,000,000 difference highest and lowest esti- of operating surplus or three years of broad- range from $1,260 to less than onto executive is|were evacuated from their homes. still members of Local 598 French Urged TALLY-HO ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER LONDON (AP) easting. Live studio production plans range from nearly 56 per eent of total air time to a low of 31 per cent. Canadian - content pledges vary from just over 45 per cent to slightly more than 64 per cent Some of these and other sharp variations probably will be ex ploited today as the nine applic- ants begin re-appearing before the gover nors with arguments in rebuttal--the second and conclud- ing the BBG's Toronto hearin Detailed comparisons by the applicants became possible dur ing the weekend with the general release of all briefs, treated by the BBG as confidential until Sat WINDSOR (CP)--Leopold La- croix of Chatham Sunday night urged French-Canadians to re- vive family life as a means of safeguarding their heritage of language and religion. Mr. Lacroix, who will assume duties next year as bilingual in- spector of Essex County separate schools, addressed the annual banquet of the St. Jean Baptiste Society of Western Ontario. Some 500 persons attended from wvari- ¢ ous Western Ontario centres, in cluding Sarnia and London. Speaking in French, Mr. La- croix also suggested establish- ment of classical colleges, junior urday when all nine groups|colleges usually operated by re- | finally completed their original|ligious orders, in Southwestern oral submissions to the board. 'Ontarid, pr =-- a EE | | lin Vancouver BIG TROUBLE Pretty Sandy Cherniss, 21- | ed to be 'as incon year-old sophomore at San | nocsible' when on the Francisco City College, poses A college in San Francisco yesterday. Her 41-inch bust is giving offi- eials at the school a big head- | ache. Sandy's amazing develop- ment is so disturbing to boy PICUOLW as campus spokesman said she asked 008e has been te please, please ot maybe dress vear omething Ke ¥ BIG DIFFERENCE 'Stick Together' Summit Telev i sion Limited, | which includes the one-quarter Mail and the J. ganization of Canada, its first-year 272,200, Limited, whose directors operate CFRB. This hourly $810 for a first-year total of $3,- 881,500. 000 hour over broadcasting schedule. onto radio station CKEY, placed - $440, groups whose figures were avail- - -| able be be years $1,500 surplus. TOPS CANADIAN CONTENT es by the board---64.4 per cent. in terest of each of The Globe and Arthur Rank Or-| estimated costs would be $3,- about $730 hourly. Rogers Radio Broadcasting istering an earthquake times the size of Agadir." corded more than an hour but had passed their maximum intensity and were dying down," said seismologist E. W, Pollard at Dorking, near London. He said he presumed it was one reported in the Pacific off Japan. Radio Moscow also reported *"'a very intense earthquake' was re- corded by the Moscow Central Seismic Station "It is tentatively estimated to have occurred in the Pacific, east of Japan," the broadcast said. nie Eroup proposes operating costs of about The Toronto Star's first-year yperating expenditures of $3,145, would equal about $600 an a 87%-hour weekly Jack Kent Cooke, owner of Tor- hourly operating expenditures at the lowest of the seven SWALLOWS RETURN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, Calif. (AP)--Hordes of swallows kept their annual St . Joseph's Day rendezvous 'with this quaint mission village Saturday as tower chimes pealed a happy welcome. On hand to greet the swallows was silver-haired Paul Arbiso, who has spent 65 years as mis- sion caretaker. The first year's cost would $2,407,900 and after three! his station would have a the high- heard Mr. Cooke proposed Canadian-content level 'Bus Stop' Wins Calvert Trophy DEEP RIVER (CP---Ottawa Robert Gardiner, who also earned Little Theatre's production of Bus an honorable mention in the best Stop swept the field at the East- actor race. ern Ontario Regional Drama Fes-| The director tival Saturday night. The group Gardiner, became sick while| {won the Calvert Trophy for the |driving to the performance from) best full-length play and awards| Kingston and was taken to hos- for the best actress, actor and pital. supporting actor. The best Director Anthony Tyler re- went to ceived the trophy from Richard Group's production of Macdonald, national director of classic in the festival, the Dominion Drama Festival. Chekhov's The Boor Adjudicator Guy Beaulne The three one-act entries were stressed that this was only one performed Saturday afternoon. region in the zone and that two The best supporting other trophies would be awarded, award was won by Val Maekin- award Theatre the only Anton oneract play the Trenton One of the three will be invited tosh, whose part as Miss Railton: | produc-| to the Dominion Drama Festival Bell in the Deep River in May. Best actress and actor went to Louise Gibbes, as Cherie Mr. Beaulne described World and Richard Little, as Bo Decker. Worth My Winning, performed Tom Dunleavy was the best sup- Saturday night, as "most original porting actor. and having some very good mo- BEST CANADIAN PLAY ments." Buf he pointed out tech-| The Kingston Trophy for the nical errors and flaws in por- foest Canadian play went to the irayal. He described Mr. Gard- [production of World Worth My/iner as an author and actor of {Winning by Kingston journalist!* 'definite merits." awards! highly praised TENDERS For Construction of New Senior Public School Board of Education, City of Oshawa Separate sealed general contract mechanical and electrical tenders, will be received by the business administrator, Board of Education of the City of Oshawa, and by the Architect, until 12 o'clock noon, E.5.T. on Tuesday, April 5th, 1960, for the construction of a senior public school consisting of fourteen ond ditorium, et Wilson Road South, Oshawa. Drawings and specifications will be eveilable on or after 10 a.m. March 21st, 1960, at the office of the Architect upon deposit of certified cheque in the amount of $50.00 made pay- oble: to the Architect. Tenders will be accepted subject te the approval of the Oshawa City Council and the Ontarie Municipal Board. The lowest or any tender will not neccessarily be accepted. CLIFFORD & LAWRIE, Architects, 19990 Avenue Rd. Torente 12, Ontario. students that she has been ask- ' ~AP Wirephote | LJ » seismologist Sunday reported reg-| "four | 'The oscillations produced by | 4 the quake were still being re-| later, | of the play, Mrs. | actress tion of Separate Tables had been| NIAGARA FALLS (CP accused Premier Frost and the Progressive Conservative govern- ment of 'dodging issues by launching nasty personal attacks against members of the opposi- tion." He told the Southern Ontario ! 4 To Women's Liberal Association that 4 h "in this week's liquor debate, Mr. Frost did not explain his policy on the mockery that parades as a set of laws to regulate the use| of liquor. Insttad he made per-| sonal attacks on members of the| legislature and quoted newspaper | Liberal MPP Raps Frost The party is in ridings municipal labor, organizing a| | Vernon Singer Liberal member of | framework of 12 standing com-| Ithe Ontario legislature, Saturday mittees to see that ideas of in-| GET THE BEST dividuals through to party policy . makers, he said. The committees are or- ganization, citizenship and hous- ing, energy, highways, agriculture, education, fiscal policy, sources, education. He urged the women to extend a welcome to new Canadians and |} RA 8-6457 or RA 3-4131 invite them to join in party ac- | tivities. are natural re welfare and political A RENDEZVOUS FOR DISCERNING PEOPLE sent For Less At MODERN UPHOLSTERING i} 926Y2 SIMCOE ST. N. OSHAWA affairs, and magazine articles. Referring to the recent Niagara | Parks Commission investigation the member for York Centre said| there was little evidence to point to any personal wrongdoings, but if the committee had been given the power to investigate more throughly other facts might have| been revealed. "The government refused bo subpoena a witness who might | have pointed to irregularities in| the commission and with its large majority stifled the discussion," Mr. Singer said. [DISCUSSES HOUSING . : | Hyliard Chappell, president of | : ; {the Southern Ontario Liberal As- . oy A 3 !socation, stressed the need for a| . 4 [sound Liberal platform in hous. | ing, natural resources and muni- | cipal affairs. He told the meeting |*'it is impossible to bear the cost of a new home, paying interest] rates of eight or nine per cent." | "As long as the Conservatives continue to borrow money to keep | {the election promises with which| they bought votes, the rates will | continue to increase and it will be| almost impossible for citizens to| {purchase new homes," Mr. Chap-| | STATELESS TODDLER their son is considered 'state- less," according to Dr. Skofie. Skofic says he was refused Italian citizenship when he ap- plied and that the child was Milko Skofie, two-year-old son of Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida, sits in toy auto in of his Rome home | garden awaiting arrival of Thursday, 54 SIMCOE NORTH Tuesday and Wednesday Only! Sensational Meat Features! LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS SLICED Breakfast BACON LEAN MINCED BEEF SKINLESS WIENERS Ih. 49. 1b. 29. Jus 5] b 29: also considered stateless by [pell said. Jtalian authorities because from Paris. Gina Yugoslav-born hus- his parents and her Milko Skofie, are | Skofic was. Canada because band, Dr moving ~-AP Wirephoto to $50 to $5,000 Mo Pio Without Endorsers or Bankable Security Loans Life Insured and repayment schedules to suit your budget, RISTOW & OLSEN, REALTORS RA 5.6165 PON HOWE, REALTOR RA 5.7732 RA 53-6541 ONTARIO 17 Simcoe St. North OFFICES THROUGHOUT IN CALL DREAM-HOME SITES ARE SELLING FAST SELECT YOURS NOW YOUR HOME PROFESSIONALLY DESIGNED N.H.A, MORTGAGES ARRANGED HARRY MILLEN, REALTOR RA 8.1679 SCHOFIELD INSURANCE ASSOG, RA 3.2265

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