The Oshawa Times, 14 Apr 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY When temptation knocks, ime agination generally answers. dhe Oshawa Ses WEATHER REPORT Mostly cloudy and warm with a few showers, Friday mainly sunny and continuing warm, winds southerly. VOL. 89--NO. 88 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1960 os Second Class Mail Aubrized o Secend Close Mil TWENTY-TWO PAGES BEVERLY IN SCUFFLE » » ee » » fd | 4 ; i attack on Caryl Chessman's death|mitted when the hospital has SOVIET ACCEPTS WEST ATOM TEST PROPOSAL Bed Priority In Hospitals .By THE CANADIAN PRESS Methods of admitting patients to hospital differ widely across| Canada, but hospital and medical authorities deny there is a sys- tem of some doctors having pri- ority on a number of beds. William Payne, Progressive Conservative member of Parlia- | | i 3 i 01d . C [couver Fast, complained in the |Commons Tuesday that patients ----|were refused admission becaus their doctors were not on a select | list. They said the practice is common across Canada. In some centres admission is controlled by a group of staff doc- |tors and this is strongly defended by 'hospitals where it is in force. In all instances emergency cases are admitted immediately with- oT wile. Chessman Kicks Out His Lawyer NY cases fall into SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- An several categories and are ad-| sentence will be carried to the space and Sepending on the seri- United States Supreme Court this|ousness of the illness. week--for the 16th time in 12 CONTROL ADMISSION years. i - y An Ontario Hospital Commis But the lawyer won't be George gon" spokesman said Wednesday T. Davis, accused by the convict-| to pe doctors controlling * admis- author of always grabbing star gon assures the patient of the billig, treatment he needs. el pital. On a non-cinergency case [priority goes to the atiending doctor, them the associate and courtesy. Manitoba hospitals have active and courtesy staffs. Active mem- bers generally have priority on beds though both can admit Hector Bertra Cron cmt ttee, said doctor control o admission is the exception rather than rule in Quebee. Court Order 'Halts Smith Picketing | nd, director- | Alex H. Turner, 49, (left), of Ottawa, has been appointed director of the economics divi- | sion of the federal agriculture department. Mr. Turner has been vice-chairman of the agri- cultural stabilization board and chief of the economics division Marketing section. He is re- WINDSOR (CP)--Smith Trans- NEW POSITION Treaty Possible In Three Months proposed that informal meetings of the scientists on underground | GENEVA (Reuters)--Russia to- day accepted a Western proposal that experts from the United|explosions should start May 11. States, Britain and Russia should] In the companion disarmament begin informal meetings in Gen-|conference today the United eva soon to discuss co-ordination|States offered to negotiate an im- of their national programs for|mediate agreement to ban the {further research into under-|production of fissionable mate- {ground explosions. |rials for military purposes. The Russian acceptance came| as the 17-month-old conference of {the three nuclear powers on pro- TD) ES La Ae L BT a A -- ca} Increased In Canada TORONTO (CP)--To bring an 2's Easter recess until April 25 | Heads of all three delegations | |spoke optimistically at the 40-| |minute session about the pros-| pects of agreeing on a test ban| treaty. Western officials said if| negotiations went ahead without hitches a treaty might be signed in three to six months. . : |old son up to date: You earn a WILL CONTINUE » (full week's pay and what do you The three nations agreed today get? More than likely a company {to keep up negotiations during cheque. {the summit conference in Paris| Industry sources estimate more [next month unless they 'are spe-|than half Canada's wage earners cifically asked to recess. will receive payment in cheques placing retiring Dr. J. F. Booth, 65, (right). Dr. Booth organized the division in 1929 with a staff of three. He has accepted 'an extension beyond retirement age to work as a | special adviser-to the depart- | ment, | CP Wirephoto port won an interim injunction here Wednesday against striking members of the Brotherhood of| Teamsters (CLC). The injunction, naming 29 employees and two (union officials, halts picketing of Smith property at Windsor and | Chatham. RCAF In Fix Earlier this week, the West|this week. Ten years ago nearly ------]] 'of 'them collected a weekly Injunction mim Main re: for the change apparently is automation in office procedures, making a simpler and faster system for employers. No figures were readily avail- able on the pay cheque increase rms irre eo Judge Joseph A. Legris issued Over Bomazrc Halts Poll | | Dominion {but Bureau of Statis- {tics reports show the monthly average value of all cheques cashed in Canadian clearing Of Teamsters houses rcse to $17,130,000.000 in TORONTO (CP) -- An Ontario!1957 compared with $6,208,000,000 ithe supreme court ex parte in- Chessman requested Davis, vet- R. Peart, administrator of T junction. Motion for a permanent eran San Francisco criminal law-| ottawa Civie Hospital, said a pa- yer, to withdraw from the caseltjont requiring attention must be {in a bitter 10-page letter made|ajiowed in and the decision is / public Wednesday by the Califor-|made by a licenced practitioner, OTTAWA (CP)--The RCAF is down and chances of obtaining a injunction is set for April 20 at in a fix. manned interceptor go up Toronto, It wants both the Bomare anti-| If the Bomare flies--as it did In "ex parte" proceedings, |aircraft missile and a new|wednesday for the first time in § sentence for the original charges with a right to the jaw and head. He said an argument had begun over a loud televi- BEVERLY AADLAND, 17- year-old former sweetheart of Errol Flynn, and her. 53-year- nia Supreme Court. Chessman, who has survived nearly 12 years in San Quentin prison's death row and escaped eight previous execution dates, now Is scheduled to die May 2. Ee 'was condemned for kidnap- {ping and sexually abusing two {Los Angeles women in 1948. | The state supreme court brusquely announced Wednesday the third rejection of the conten- tions framed by Davis that Chess- man's 12 years under death sen- tence constitute cruel and un- usual punishment, and that life imprisonment was the maximum against him. California law pro- {vides for the death sentence in |kidnap cases where bodily harm| is involved, The court labelled its ruling, Pp 'erent [ose dosti has control. A patient may be ad- doctor. division of the Canadian Medical attending privileges he must be Most doctors were on staff at one or two and sometimes three hos- itals. University hospitals fall into a category. The tutions where the staff mitted but is under care of a staff Dr. G. G. Ferguson, executive- secretary of the British Columbia Association, said doctors in that province have attending priv- ileges at certain hospitals. If the patient wishes to enter a hospital where his doctor does not have referred to a doctor in the area who has. ONLY NON-EMERGENCY There is a system of priority old mother, Mrs. Florence Aad- land, scuffle in the Aadland Hollywood apartment three weeks ago in these pictures taken by a friend of the girl's, Bob Profeta. Profeta said the top picture shows Beverly drop- ping her mother to the bed | $100-A-DATE sion set. In lower picture Mrs. Aadland started a counter- attack, belting Beverly across the mouth. An unidentified guest, seen in lower picture | was busy hiding behind Bever- ly. --AP Wirephotos Flynn's Protege Problem HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- "If only Errol Flynn were still alive m little girl wouldn't be in this mess," says the mother of 17- year-old Beverly Aadland. The late actor's teen - age ex- mistress was described Wednes- day by juvenile authorities a $100-a-date prostitute who, the age of 12, had numerous acts of sexu course." Authorities filed a petition seek- ing to make Beverly a ward of juvenile court, She faces a hear- ing May 2, BOYFRIEND SHOT Beverly has been held in cus tody since William Stanciu, an aspiring actor, was shot fatally ve sed in inter- Child chorus of a Hollywood musical when she was 15. They travelled about the world together, includ- ing to Cuba where they co-starred in a movie produced by Flynn She was with him when he died Oct. 14 in the British Columbia city. Mrs. Aadland said she was dis turbed that at the May hearing Beverly could be placed under court supervision until she turns 18 next Sept. 16. "This could ruin her night club career, and just when some really good offers were coming in," Mrs. Aadland said. Beverly has been singing at a Hollywood nightspot. Bomb Threat Mere Hoax in her apartment last Saturday. Homicide detectives say they are satisfied with her story that Stan- eiu was shot during a nude strug- gle for his revolver. | "final forthwith," banning further|'® Alberta, but it applies only to hearing on the issues. jnon-emergency cases. A doctor |may be an attending, associate ud courtesy physician at a hos- INO PUBLICATION Scholarships To 64 Canad | onan cana x ON GOOD FRIDAY |to 64 Canadian university gradu-| ates to enable them to continue] The Oshawa Times will not their work in the humanities| be published on Good Friday were announced Wednesday by| to give staff members a the Canada Council. | chance to spend the holiday The awards, with an average] With their families. Satur- value of $2,000 plus travel ex-| day's Oshawa Times will be penses, are to cover post-gradu-| Published as usual. The ate work toward a doctorate in| Times will also print an edi- tion on Easter Monday, ob- literature, philosophy, history a : and languages. All winners hold| served as a Bank Holiday in Oshawa. a master's degree or the equival-| | through which only an interim or/manned intercepior to replace temporary order can be granted,|the CF-100 jet. : the defendants are not repre-| Every time the Bomarc fails a jeight attempts he RCAF's A . {Supreme Court hearing on a mo- in 1947, chances of geiting it increase and ok of Betti he tab t tion for an injunction to block the! The main increases are re- chances of getting the interceptor gjection of officers in Local 938) flected in the major business cen Tight Security On DeGaulle Visit ended the Second World War and the heady tang of victory was still in the air. The French leader had also visited Ottawa in July, 1944, as head of the Free French move- ment. This was about a month before the liberation of Paris. For the coming visit three other Canadian cities -- Quebec City, |Montreal and Toronto--are on his itinerary in addition to Ottawa. He will be here until Wednesday morning when he flies to Quebec. | OTTAWA (CP)--Tight security arrangements have been made for the state visit of French President Charles de Gaulle next week. ; RCMP and local police are not leaving anything to chance de- spite the widespread admiration and esteem in which the 69-year- old statesman is held in this country. An RCMP spokesman estimated that altogether 2,000 to 3,000 po- licemen -- plainclothes and uni- formed--will be involved with se- curity either directly or indirectly during de Gaulle's four-day Ca- nadian visit. Indirect security measures would include traffic and crowd control. The French head of state and his wife arrive here at Uplands airport at 6 p.m. EST Easter Monday to be greeted by a 21- gun salute. Memories of Ottawa residents) will turn back to the time when Gen. de Gaulle was last here, Aug. 28-29, 1945, as provisional president of the Fourth Republic. This was just a few weeks after Reporter Keeps 'Mum In London porter Norman Phillips, jailed for three days in Durban and then expelled from South Africa, said today he is under orders from his newspaper not to dis- cuss his experiences for the time being. ent, | the capitulation of Japan had| Phillips, foreign editor of the 50 MILLION FRANCS Contact The only clue police had was have made contact with two men |pers' letter to Peugeot, left near who kidnapped the boy from athe spot where little Eric was playground two days ago. |snatched up and driven off--in the 2 Peugeot car. Mme. Giselle Banzet, Reported With Kidnappers PARIS (Reuters)--The million-| aire family of four-year-old Eric/a red smudge on the back of an Peugeot was believed today to|envelope containing the kidnap- Toronto Daily Star, arrived by plane from Johannesburg vie Brussels. "I am under strict orders from my editor not to say anything until I have been able to contact my office in Toronto," he told reporters at London Airport. "I don't even know what my immediate plans are." him as saying he had no idea why/| he had been singled out for ar-| rest, and that he did not think| the article he had written about South Africa's troubled racial sit- {uation had been unfair or "any worse than those filed by some, other correspondents." began a search which recalled the manhunt in the United States almost 30 years ago for the kid- decrease. of the International Brotherhood|tres of Montreal and Toront There's no way the RCAF canlof Teamsters (CLC) was ad- y Prog Ce figure out how *r get both, {Journed Wednesday for a week. MIXED BLE Authorities have said the-gov-| The outcome of the hearing SS2adian workers have found ernment plans to dismantle the will decide whether the votes wil! the cheque system hi bless- nine CF-100 squadrons in Canada/be counted. ing. ey are probably saving if and when the Bomarc comes|. An interim injunction was ob- into service as scheduled in late tained Saturday by Local 938/ |1961. | President Kenneth McDougall but was too late to stop balloting U.S. SUGGESTION { which will close here tonight. Is New York fhere are tr Tile United States Air Force| Mr McDougall is one of three| Centres licensed cheque-cashing has proposed that the Canadian candidates for president. His|yye ura, Sonisk busivess after {government acquire three super-/presidency was suspended when | e hanks : ior 7 aining | worki {sonic F-101 squadrons to replacé|the local was placed under sp Deratols: 2 aining ok oe the subsonic CF-100 units. No de- \trusteeship, following dissension capa El val 0. Dans, cision on this is likely until the among members. His term Was| Pa Re? ad cht n cheques Bomarc proves out, fails or isnot due to expire until Dece upto I ae Of one per cancelled by the U.S. Congress. per. more money. 'But the major drawback is the lack of a well developed cashing service such as in the United States. 161 LONDON (CP)--Canadian re-| Reuters news agency quoted| =| cent on the face amount plus five : i = 2 cents on cheques exceeding $40. Defence Minister Pearkes inter-| He was disqualified from run-| That old song? It goes back to rupted regular Commons busi- ning for re-election by the local'sisadder days when companies ness Wednesday to announce the |trusteeship manager, I. J. (Duke) |sometimes forgot both cash and successful 170-mile flight of the Thomson, on the grounds that he|cheques and awarded credit: Bomare from Eglin Air Force/was behind with his dues ome| "You load 16 tons, and what Base in Florida. (month. Mr. McDougall claims/do you get? Liberal Paul Hellyer, former |the other two candidates were, Another day older and deeper associate defence minister, said | also late with their dues. St. Peter, don't you call me, Mr. Pearkes shouldn't let ome| vO!HDg is being supervised by 'cause ¥ can't go, success go to his head and that provincial labor department offi-| 1 owe my soul to the company Canada should pull out of the|cials at Mr. Thomson's request. 'store." Bomare program altogether. t= Gen. Thomas D. White, chief of| the U.S. Air Force, said recently | |that rocket - carrying bombers would have to be shot down be-| fore they released their loads.| The only way this could be done| was with manned interceptors. | The Bomarc couldn't perform this job, he said. | _-- | S. African Secret Club Discovered TORONTO (CP)--Norman Phil- lips, Canadian newspaper man jailed for three days in Durban and then expelled from South Af- rica, says in a dispatch from |London there are three possible |reasons for his arrest without warrant or charge: | | | | * nappers of Charles Lindbergh's son. The case has shocked France, where kidnappings are rare. The i Phillips was released from jail mn Durban Tuesday, on the con- dition that he leave the country| as soon as possible. Fe left Jo- "It was a warning to all for- foie correspondents and a threat to their sources of information; "It was a vindictive action re- MONTREAL (CP) "Errol Flynn was a real gentle- man," said Mrs. Florence Aad- land, who approved of her daugh- ter's relationship with the dash- ing actor who died in Vancouver last October of a heart attack at -- A man identified by police as Alistai Mackay of Toronto was arre early today after telling a ste ardess aboard a TCA plane that there was a bomb in his brief case. Police said Mackay was one of 59 passengers aboard a pl had taken off from M eal air- port at suburban Dorval for Tor- onto. A stewardess told police the air. craft was only minutes out from the airport when she reached for a briefcase and was told by man sitting nearby * 'Don't ouch the briefcase--it contains a bomb.' The stewardess pilot whe decided to return to Dorval. Provincial police were {called and the man was arrested No bomb was found in the 'brief case Police said Mac} salesman, will be ch ably later today, with public mis chief, 'Y "It's these young Hollywood men who can get a girl in trou- ble," Mrs, Aadland said. "Why, 'Errol Flynn loved Bev- erly and she loved him--it was a thing of beauty, real beauty," said Mrs Aadland, a former showgirl. "It's sure too bad he ad to die like that." Flynn picked the girl out of the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 notified the a Toronto - Peugeot home early today carry- blonde youngster's aunt, left the ng a briefcase, giving rise to the selief that the family had ar- anged a meeting with the kid- nappers. The boy's captors are demand- ing 50,000,000 old francs (about The envelope was sent to the police laboratory to determine whether tho smudge was red ink, or whether a woman was per- haps involved in the kidnapping and had left traces of her lip- stick on the envelope when she sealed it. The kidn oN A s tele {vealing the jittery state of the ed, prob-it $98,000) for the return of Eric, | Erie's father twice Wednesday, the grandson of miilionaire car repeating their ransom demands. magnate Jean-Pierre Peugeot. |The calls were made from public As Mme, Banzet left the Peu-|telephone booths and could not geot home, Eric's father, Roland be traced. Peugeot, appealed to police and reporters a to follow. her. The/ WATCH 2N TV aunt also told reporters: "Don't| Millions of Frenchmen watched follow the car. You will ruin/the 34:year-old father appear be- everything." fore television cameras and plead : for Eric's release. POLICE HOLD OFF "It. is a father whose son has More than 3,000 n men have just been taken from him who been armed with emergency pow- speaks tc you tonight," he said. ers allow'ng them to tonduct on-|*I am sure everyone who has the-spot sec hes in an attempt to children and loves them will un- find the k But the pub- derstand me. lic prose dered them not] 'My only worry is to find Eric| i io ransom nego- safe and sound as soon as possi-| ring the ble." | | Meanwjgile, French police! » ice nant to avoid endange iboy's life. last known case was in 1949. hannesburg by plane Wednesday. LATE NEWS FLASHES Seaway Starts Ships On Monday MONTREAL (CP) -- The St. Lawrence Seaway is to start handling ships early Monday morning--three days behind its original target date because of ice troubles in laying navigation aids in the river, it was learned today. How- ever, ships may be restricted to daytime sailing at first. Port Perry Causeway Flooded WHITBY -- The Ontario Provincial Police report that Highway 7A is covered by one foot of water at the cause- way east of Port Perry today. The flooding is caused by the rising waters of Lake Scugog. Armed Hold-Up In Hamilton HAMILTON (CP) -- Three men, reported to be armed, held up Hoffman and Sons, scrap iron dealers shortly before noon. They escaped in a car which was found abandoned a few minutes later. Police said the car bore licence markers stolen last month in Woodstock. { | 1 ,! white-supremacy government; "It was because of the investi- gation I had commenced into a sinister society called the Broed- erbond 'that represents the elite essence of racialism." Phillips, foreign editor of the Toronto Star, arrived in London today by plane from Johannes- burg via Brussels. He was ar- rested Saturday when South Af- rican authorities alleged a report he tried to send The Star about racial disturbances in Capetown was prejudiced and inaccurate. A KU KLUX KLAN "The Broederbond is a sort of |South African Ku Klux Klan," he cabled his paper from London. "When I was questioned by |Capt. Van der Westhuisen of the police special branch, he was particularly anxious to know my sources of information about the Broederbond." Phillips said he will assess the importance of the Broederbond in a subsequent article, NORMAN PHILLIPS

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