The Oshawa Times, 19 Apr 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The person most worried about the state of the world is the modest one who believes that even he could run it better than it's being run. Fhe Oshawa Sime; WEATHER REPORT Sunny with a few cloudy pere fods and warmer, Wednesday partly cloudy and warmer, winds light becoming south. Authorized os Second Ciass Mail SIXTEEN PAGES VOL. 89--NO. 91 Price Not Over OSHAWA, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1960 Post Office Department, Ottawe 10 Cents Per Copy Man Auto Flees On Cabinet Talks With DeGaulle | Algeria, Disarmament, Causeway lee drifting across Highway, Locking their hands together, 7A near Port Perry on Monday the iwo men reached out and #= afternoon very nearly swept aipulled Hunt from the water, He Scugog Island man to his death|was then rushed io the hospit» and left his car stranded in water|for treatment. AGAINST CHOU EN-LAJ 41, was pulled to safety by two his car, which had drifted an- & tow-truck operators after hejother 100 feet out into the lake. struggled from his drifting car|At dark, the car had submerged and is now in the Port Perry|all but the roof. Community Hospital, suffering| from shock and exposure. District residents report that, Hunt was driving across the] causeway, east of Port Perry, in| his small Eureopean model car| which was swept to the south of the highway by drifting ice. The| road has been flooded by the| high waters of Lake Scugog for the past week and on Monda ice in the lake started to break) up and drift across the highway | an d pearly 18| yan Deportee Obtains Top Lawyer --Dr. Mor- Hunt escaped from his car when, .,minenf civil rights lawyer it had drifted about 50 feet away , from the road and scrambling agreed to act as head counsel ehalf of University of British | 18 over ice and wading through thelr) nia Jecturer Irene Rebrin, icy waters, he managed to reach it was announced Monday night,| rescue Miss Rebrin is facing deportation a telephone pole about eight feet| from the edge of the road. 5 He clung to the pole until two tow-truck operators, Donald Wal-| lace, 24, and Robert Duff, 20, of? Port Perry, arrived on the scene. Someone had told them of the car| being in difficulty and they had | gone to the scene. | Claim Kickbac On Subway Jobs Furic: TORQNTO (CP) -- | Frank Clifton today asked Toronto Transit Commission investigate reports that twolh truckers had to pay money to get np way. after truckers Giovanni Tozzi, 25 and Fulvia D'Aloisio, 27, said each of them paid $150 to an ex-| cavating sub-contractor for wor "If other new Canadians are c being, swindled I wish they would Dag Hammarskjold. me," Alderman Clifton _ dou'! fo a applied April 11 for hauling worl with Allenby-Crawford, a sub contractor for McNamara Con struction Company. "We were told by the foreman we could work steady for a yea if we paid $150 each," D'Aloisir said. "We told this man that w needed work but he wanted th money before we started haulinr "We were promised a lot and looked so good that we pai him." th |Shumiatcher was expected to ar- |rive from Regina Wednesday. He said | pressed interest in the case as a |matter of civil liberty Alderman ference to a letter the|Rebrin toltaken up by P estigation He demanded the investiga REPLY TO LETTER [lecturer was informed of the UN k. (move in reply to a letter she vrote to UN Sacretary - General 1 {in am effort to put down rioting security risk. w Making the announcement, law- Lake Scugog are, Duff, SHOWN FOLLOWING their of Lorne Hunt from left, Donald right, Perry. allace, and frora Port They Robert | | In New Delhi (CP)--Red Chi-|Indian air force plane prought him from Rangoon. Nehru, who is under sharp fi NEW DELHI nese Premier Chou En-lai a ived in New Delhi today with declaration that China and India should heir border dispute "in accord-{Chou he ance with the principles of co- properly. existence." Al 3 eh Ne wds met by smiling Prime NEHRU DETERMINED Minister Nehru who warned that| seitle!seemed to be trying to rea would be border has been a "shock to al . our people . . . and our relations 51.000 out of his car and make his t way to a telephone pole, eight feet from the submerged road, Anti-Communist demonstrators | from where he was rescued, [clashed with police soon after| jap ol --Oshawa Times Photo [Chou arrived. dian About 100 members of the right-|imperilled | formed a chain to pull Hunt ] out of the ice-clogged water | when nis car was washed off the causeway into ten feet of water. Hunt managed to get 1} future.' 3 ent and for the future. ruled Tibet. While ere killed last year ha India-China er Gordon Dowding said Dr. "MARTIAL LAW DECLARED wing Hindu Mahasabha party|for were arrested when they tried to Chou replied: break through cordons to the Dr. Shumiatcher had ex-| During a hearing scheduled to- |day, the immigration department |will be required to show why a | writ of habeas corpus should not issued to provide for Miss Referring during a press con- informing Miss case would be United Nations for stateless her the 1 commissioner ersons, Mr that he Canadian government. The 33-year-old Slavonic studies in SEOUL Dowding said this|strators defied martial law in|set on fire in the northeastern) work on Toronto's second sub-|could lead to representations to Seoul tonight and attacked two|sector of the city. | police stations. Three policemen) {were reported killed and "many|pifles. roamed about after imposi- |others™ I The new violence flared after|law. President Syagman Rhee called] Riots Rock Korea, Army By GENE KRAMER 'aP)--Armed demon- wounded. troops and imposed martial in this South Korean capital Mr. Dowding said this could be|that hit Seoul and four other eit significant in view of ips, ah ets growing out of Sioase' (i 'he Canadian government would| At Yeast 2% ee d persons had been like this particular case to br sidered hol conteabmiion to Filled and hundreds injured in thelof the is staying. x {to come . . . our great solidarit OFFERED HAND TWICE |cannot be shaken by any fore As Chou stepped off his plane, ion earth." to which re ' pe inviting him in the fi lace, |: v & rn Communist |for inviting him in the first places liament Hill for the meeting with re tr Aled! privy Council chamber of the But Nehru also seemed deter- ipod a. pons a a six days of negotiations over the) Bve Daa. § Ted for os. square miles of disputed |have been imperilled for the pres territory between India and Red: Nehru warned that bor- hes in which a dozen In- relations the present and the future, ) 1 4 Our two peoples shall continue House, Gen. de Gaulle planted a presidential palace, where Choulto remain friendly for thousands| A rt i o a coo ...|red oak on the lawn, and tens of thousands of years OTTAWA (CP) President Charles de Gaulle, after a privatc hour-long chat with Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker, conferred with the Canadian cabinet today. | The general, on his third vis to Canada, talked with the prime minister in the governor-general's {study "at Government House and {then they drove together to Par- visited here as provisional presi. dent of the Fourth Republic. 'As a 21 « gun artillery salute cracked out, Gen. de Gaulle walked smartly down the ramp icllowed by Mme. de Gaulle and rench Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville, Waiting on the tarmac was Gen, Vanier and Mr, Diefen- baker, who escorted him along a red carpet into the main RCAF hangar, where President de Gaulle stood bareheaded on a dais as the RCAF central band BP Erith I i we re > oT . N\A AniiRed Riot NATO As Main Topics ithe full Canadian cabinet in the |East Block. | Neither leader made any state- {ment immediately after their pri- |vate talk, but it was understood |sions Monday night that the main| WARM WELCOME [topics to be canvassed were Al- | Gen. Vanier then officially wel- geria, nuclear disarmament and |NATO consultative machinery. comed the president *'in the name In the talk at Government of Her Majesty the Queen of Can- House, and later in the cabinet|ada." He referred to him as "the meeting, a Canadian Privy Coun-|great leader who, in 1940, saved |eil secretary acted as interpreter.|the honor of France." ' {RED OAK PLANTED "All those who love France, Before 1e av ing Government|and with even more reason, those like myself who have French blood, express their great pride in you." Mr. Diefenbaker greeted the president as "the illustrious leader of one of our mother coun. tries who has become a legend of d e carrying on a tradition "for distinguished guests at the governor-general's residence, Gen. de Gaulle and Mr. Diefen- v e ap- peared ol to noce." °° py TRIGT PLAYS TUNE ON VIOLIN peared not to notice. Nehru finally shook hands with HONG KONG (AP) -- The orchestra in Hong Kong's I akes Over {Chou after photographers shouted popular Marco Polo restau- \and asked him to. Chou, while grim-faced, spoke of peace and friendship. Nehru, | See (ial. law. commander, wile smiling, talked tough and| i ta. A ¥ OI 8 arp. 4 % ir . "» Lt.- -cha . rant played "Love in Bloom. chief of oe Yosh for i They offered a study in con-| A tourist left his table, took {trasts on several levels as Chou! tne violin from the violinist and finished the tune with the band. "1 hate that song," he said. Then Jack Benny went back He told citizens that "'communist| a i began one of the most contro-| to his table. {continuing demonstrations. (ditional violence. No mention was Two police sentry boxes were made of censorship of outgoing dispatches Demonstrators, armed with tion of a curfew under martial : ET i r00PS sed in North Korea ; ten s : a ne for a return ta | versial visits in Indian history. strife." | Chou, whose visit is opposed by Martial law was clamped on|all the opposition parties except the Communists, appeared appre- the capital and its suburbs--and then pwd to Pusan, Taegu,|hensive as he stepped from the TRUCE FRONTIER QUIET The United Nations command reported all quiet at the truce f 25 |baker had an informal 20-minute talk before a state dinner Mon- day night. Officials today described the conversation as "entirely friendly." The conversation was understood to be limited to re- viewing the acquaintance of the two leaders, who first met offi- cially in November, 1958, in Paris. World problems were only touched on. Gen. Vanier, an old friend of the six - foot - four statesman, sounded the keynote in proposing a-champagne toast Monday night at Government House, where the president was honored at a glit- his nation while still alive," The prime minister coupled his tribute with a call for "the fullest of consultation" within NATO--a point he was expected to pursue in talks with the French president today. Canadian officials remember with dismay Gen. de Gaulle's suggestion of more than a year ago that France, Britain and the United States should form a sort of directorate to steer the Atlan< tic alliance. The idea was never officially put into effect. LOFTY PRAISES miles north of Seoul. Tae; and Kwangu--after thou- a s and other anti- "Ships Crowd was 8 on ublCAtioN in a ont move| 8 " p a over most of downtown Seoul in by 118 oye Fament to keep pews an uprising protesting the March rioting from sparking ad-/15 presidential election. Police fired volley after volley at program. |to repulse a mob of 5,000 trying to storm Rhee's presidential pal- Governor-General Vanier saved 1. "Twenty years- ago, In ment of physical spoke out to save France's honor, then again two years ago you answered the call of your people. For this you will be honored 4 one of the great men of his- ory. ARTILLERY SALUTE it a ng in nglish 'and' French--as he and Mr, Diefenbaker had done earlier at the airport--Gen. Va- vier raised his glass "to the |greatness and happiness of France." Both Gen. de Gaulle and Gen. played La Marseillaise and an oronto Telegram for a story she :aid they published about her and hich she claims was defamatory Tr. Dowding said: "Whatever the court's decision n the deportation issue, we can till go ahead with this action." Negro Work Boycott JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- The Congress started Monday. But | one-week strike called by the out- lawed African National Congress to protest the white government's strict racial laws failed to achieve| its aim today. Police . in all major South Africa reported cities of that Ne-| Fails the day was a national Easter holiday, and this postponed the real test of the strike call until today. Most of those scheduled to work Monday apparently were on the job. groes showed up in normal num-| bers and without hindrance by alleged intimidators. No major violence was re- ported. The only police action an- nounced at noon was a raid on a Negro settlement near the Indian Ocean city of Port Elizabeth, where police rounded up "unde- sirables,"' questioned 200 Negroes and detained many of them. A former congress official said Negroes went back to work for one reason -- broke." He said the was badly timed because "after a holiday and free and easy spending of money, nobody was prepared to lose pay.' In Johannesburg, South Af- rica's largest city, buses and trains from Negro settlements were crowded with workers. Reports from Capetown, Dur- campaign "the people were| 7 ban and elsewhere said the situa-| ? tion was quiel there also and Ne- groes were streaming to work. Troops were standing by at| / such trouble spots as the Nyanga| Z and Langa townships near Cape- town and Cato Manor near Dur: ban, Police riot cars cruised slowly among the houses but found mo response to the strike cali. PATROL NEGRO AREAS Powerful police and white civil- ian defence forces, supported by| soldiers in armored cars, pa-| trolled Negro settlements sur- rounding Johannesburg on the lookout for agitators who might try to prevent Negroes from going to work and to keep them from retaliating when the work- ers returned home tonight, The work stoppage called by| ? the outlawed African National CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS ace. Later demonstrators got hold Into Seaway Referring to Miss Rebrin's in| ended libel action against the) lof rifles or carbines, and firing became general in the downtown . . ' | Timmins Schoolboy Remanded |r government late tonight TIMMINS (CR) The 13-year-old Timmins schoolboy [announced that 21 persons had charged with the murder of Mrs. Valeda Laurin, 62, appear- [been killed and 172 wounded, 27 jed in juvenile court and Juvenile Judge W. S. Gardner ad- |of them critically. journed the case for 30 days. There was no evidence given. The court was held in camera. | AMERICANS HURT | Two Americans were among New Budget To Promote Savings |the injured. James Wilcox, an ~ TORONTO (CP) -- Finance Minister Fleming said today £1port import man Jom Quidey: his new balanced budget should promote savings by Cana- |wounds as.he watched the riot- dians and reduce Canada's dependence on foreign capital. |ing from the roof of his nine-story At the same time he cautioned that Canada .can not expect | : Mii ' hotel. Hugh Blaney, a civilian | to turn the inflow of foreign capital '"'on and off like a tap [employee ER the United States | just when it suits our convenience." | 4 |Army, was hit by a rock, but not Monty Takes Swipe At West {hurt seriously. Shooting continued into MONTREAL (CP) -- Field Marshall Viscount Montgomery {night as the police tried to clear | launched a Canadian tour today with a verbal swipe at the |the streets of demonstrators and West for refusing to recognize Red China. "I don't think you {onlookers can ignore fhe largest nation in the world--It's not common sense," he said in an interview shortly after his arrival by ar from Lond Race Brawl With Knives In Savannah ATLANTA (AP) -- A savage| fight between Negroes and white youths climaxed weeks of racial % tension in Savannah, Ga., where § Negroes have been staging sit- down demonstrations and boycot- ting stores with segregated lunch! E counters, | Axe handles, pipes, knives and| other weapons were swung in the| brief but vicious clash in a quiet| park Monday night. A white] youth was taken to hospital with a serious knile wound in the neck. Two other white youths and a Negro were treated in hospital] and released. | Police jailed two Negroes and seven while persons and began| an extensive search of the area for some 20 others believed to| have taken part in the fight in the| coasial Georgia city. | Cause of the burst of violence| was not determined. | | { LUNCH COUNTER INCIDENT | The battle in the park occurred | a few hours after police reported | a white man struck a Negro stu-| dent during a lunch counter sit-| down demonstration at a store] lunch counter in Savannah, It was| the second such incident in three! days. $8 A white man knocked a Negro demonstrat' r from a lunch coun- ter stool in the same store Satur- day. The Negro's jaw was broken. Savannah was the scene of the only violence reported during a day marked by several unusual developments in the Negro cam- paign against segregated lunch counters. Former president Harry S. Tru- the | Tons of ice piled up in the Niag- ported in Vanier, who had been Canada ini in' Paris, d from the German armies rolled in nearly 20 years ago. ocean-going vessels were sched-(Seaway officials said today it{100 persons, began two hours France as uled to pass inbound through the(will probably be at least twolafter Gen. de Gaulle's Air France St. Lawrence Seaway today on|/more days before night naviga-|jetliner touched down at Uplands ier 1i ] the second day of its second sea-|tion begins, because drifting ice/following an 8%-hour, non-stop Mi ig od "2 Hn son, |in Lac St, Louis was hampering |flight from Paris. saviour of France rallied her Stiff winds--sometimes reach-|the placing of lighted buoys. A stiff northwest wind was|country against the English. You, great inland water route between | just above freezing as he stepped [your appeal to the indominitable here and Lake Ontario--held up| onto Canadian soil for the first spirit of France from London it- the ocean freighters Monday but | time since August, 1945, when he 'self."" . 15 lake vessels went through to| open navigation. | The Sunny Girl, of Norwegian | mp oyment water vessel into St. Lambert Lock at the Montreal end of the . seaway today. 1Ce 0SS Lined up behind her were the | |Seadrake, Transquebec, Clemens| The manager of the National |Sartori, Trish Oak, Magdeburg, Employment Service in Sudbury, Federal Voyager, Virgilia, Harp- manager in Oshawa, it was an-|[ |efiell, 'Transmichigan, Prins 49 nounced Tuesday morning han Willem Friso, BroompafK| Mr. Maher succeeds Nor and Dagfred. {Hodgson who tendered his r In addition, more lakers were nation eight months ago. He wi |expected to join them in a steady begin work in Oshawa Monday For the past year Mr. | LEMOYNE 1S FIRST fos Tork bee i Srey First ship into the seaway this Previously he was manager in season was the Canada Steam-|Pembroke, supervisor of employ- [ship Lines freighter Lemoyne, ment in London and previously {which entered the lock Monday worked for the service in Sudbury at 8:27 a.m., bound for Ashta- {with the service for 11 years. Nine lake vessels cleared the! According to Mr. Maher, the lock by 4 p.m., when passage was|Oshawa and Sudbury branches of halted temporarily because ofthe service are similar in size and winds. he also expects to find employ- Ocean-going captains, perhaps/ment conditions similar, ences with gales on the inland | employment centres but the win- waters, decided to wait until to-| ter in Sudbury is more extreme day before attempting passage and there is less winter employ- through the seaway. [Tian than in Oshawa. ] ts ae . Maher spent four vears| Ocean ships, with high super-| TF Spenl AOI, Years structures, are affected more by|JUriP€ the war with the RCAF| A tug cleared downstream into 21d has five children. | Montreal harbor Monday was the) Mr. Hodgson tendered his resig-| first vessel to pass through the nation eight months ago. The date | lock outbound. {was accelerated when he learned |that the service's new two-storey FIRST AT IROQUOIS | building in Oshawa would have through the western gate at Iro-|a heart condition for some time. quois, Ont., was the ore carrier] He agreed to see the service's] Menihek Lake. She was cleared move into the new building com-| at 8:45 a.m. Ten other ships fol-|pleted. It was made in March. | Jowed her throughout the day. Mr. Hodgson has been. with th The Menihck Lake was delayed| Oshawa branch of the service fo a heavy wind slammed her -- against a lock, denting and scrap- . ing her hull. QOuebe At present ships going through! ™ c Sights the seaway can count on only 10 . . be SeAvaY San ovum: wn oy 3 Flooding Relief . QUEBEC (CP)--A forecast of Tons Of Ice Fill clear skies and cooler tempera- - Itures today: offered relief from Niagara Gorge NIAGARA FALLS, ?nt. (CP)-- MONTREAL (CP)--At least 16)to 12 hours of navigation a day.| The dinner, attended by about| ing 52 miles-an-hour along the) blowing and the temperature was|{monsieur le president, launched New Oshawa registry, was to be the first salt-| Herald, Deerpool, Rookwood, john Maher, has been appointed procession. May 2. hit Py @nd Owen Sound, -He has been mindful of last year's experi-| Both cities, he said, are large winds than the low-lying lakers. |3S 2 bomber pilot. He is married First ship to enter the seaway no elevator. He has suffered from slightly at Massena, N.Y., when|18 years. | floading of rivers north and south |of Quebec City | Extensive damage was re- some areas. ara River below the ee Conditions were particularly Falls today forming a new gigan-| tic ice bridge 50 feet thick in| bad in Beauce County as waters from the tricky Chaudiere River spots. Today's ice is building upland the Ruisseau de la Station FRENCH PRESIDENT POLICE RA 5-1133 AN EXPLOSION early today | in sit-down demonstrations. | bomb apparently. was dyna- man told reporters at Ithica, at a rate considered more haz spread over roads and .seeped ardous than five years ago whenlinto basements. Charles deGaulle today planted tossed one shovelful of earth into the ditch surrounding the FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 |, HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 | ripped into the home of Z. Alex- nder Looby, Negro member of the Nashville City Council and | the Meharry attorney for Negroes arrested | Medical Centre. Police said the This was the scene inside the Looby house, looking across street toward mite thrown from a passing |N-Y., that he wouldn't be sur- oar. ~ |prised" if the sitdowns in the southern United States were in- spired by Communists. an ice jam caused nearly! Some 17 inches of water cov- $1,000,000 damage to water frontlered paris of Main Sireet at Ste. property on both sides of the/Marie for a few hours Monday lower river. might. --AP Wirephoto a 10-foot red oak tree on the grounds of Government House in Ottawa to commemorate his visit te Canada. Gen. deGaulle tree. Prime Minister Diefen- baker is on the right, while the third person was not identified, --CP Wirephoto

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