The Oshawa Times, 25 Apr 1960, p. 1

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WEATHER REPORT Mainly cloudy with showers tonight and Tuesday, a few thunderstorms beginning Tues« day afternoon, winds light. THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a woman refuses to give her husband a little rope for fear he might skip. The Oshawa Times Authorized es Second Ciass Mail Post Office Department, Ottawe TWENTY PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Tear Gas, Tanks In S. Korea SEOUL (AP) -- Army troops| The crowd cheered the troops, |with gas masks, fixed bayonets sang military songs and some land tanks tonight fired tear gas| yelled for the resignation of Rhee, into a crowd of nearly 5,000 Kor- whose government today bowed ! leans demonstrating in Seoulto a demand of the mational as- " |against Syngman Rhee's govern-| sembly and eased martial law ment. throughout the tense nation, Led by 200 college professors,| Rhee, 85, also promised to run the crowd of students and civil- South Korea as a non-partisan fans marched to the National As-| president but showed no inclina- {sembly Building and demanded [tion to give up his autocratic Ithe resignation of Rhee, all su-|powers. Opposition assemblymen! preme court justices and mem- and newspapers sharply criticized | bers of the assembly, | Rhee for failing to call new elec- It was the first such street|tions for president and vice demonstration in the Korean cap-| president, ital since martial law was| pilitary rule in Seoul was|® clamped down after the bloody stepped down from "emergency ' riots last Tuesday and demon-| martial law to "security" martial|® strations were banned: law after the assembly adopted a|¥® Crowds in the street cheered as| resolution stating the more se & y the professors started theiriyere form was illegal, The same #5. march, their ranks swelling on reduction in the four other cites) gh Y -- | MRS. BARBARA Table, 18, is shown arriving In Nassau, Ba- the way to the parliament grounds ynder military control -- Pusan, | hamas, Sunday, aboard a coast guard plane which brought her OSHAWA, MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1960 2 Quakes Kill 3000 In Iran : Hundreds Of Children i Backing Asked | poi tn Schools For New Party TEHRAN (AP)--Estimates of buildings at the time were killed. the earthquake death toll in i A second uake hit a oy th Irani it; Lai ater an estroyed MONTREAL (CP) -- Claude|mon a conference of federal pro- bo or Wo A oe ut been left standing. _ |Jodoin, pr t of the Canadian vincial and municipal govern-| between 1,500 and 3,000. Rescue teams which reached |Labor Congress, today called for|ments along with representatives| Hundreds of the dead were chil- Tag ts Sading aid two Sk "resounding support" of a new |of labor and management so that den, gathered in two schools for rid od liv ears ing Shim left-wing pojitical reform party|an "intensified . attack" on un.|8 "children's day" celebration ber or the Tuias {from Canada's labor mov i |employment may be launched, |When the first shock struck Sun- ve Bei A . that {| "Launching a week-long national «1 again suggest to the govern. day shernvon. The twe bulidings', Ol mer survivors would be |convention of the 1,150,000-mem- men at such a conference, =: ing had overed those who were in |ber parent body of Canadian la- would indicate a real desire {0/230 Mg he Fh hg and away from buildings when !|bor, Mr, Jodoin said the union explore every possibility and the first quake struck. movement cannot divorce itself/could well lead to definite and| The governor of Lar, Nosrat from direct political action in|long-overdue action." Qarib, reported the entire city of SHAH ORDERS FOOD public affairs, " n 17,000 had been destroyed. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi "|" While maintaining CLC inde VICIOUS ATRACR? me oLc| The village of Gerash, 15 miles|ordered food, medicine and tents " , ame pendence from the proposed la-| president at its founding conven- south of Lar, also was destroyed. (flown to the city. The Iranian air |bor-CCF-farm alliance, individual tion in Toronto four years ago, {unions across Canada "must face said that in the last two years the lup to the realities and obligations (1ahor movement has been made VOL. 89--NO, 96 | 1d | i ol | or ER AND RESCUED The soldiers continued to fire TROOPS MOVED IN just before dark. Taegu, Kwangju and Taejon--be-| "e " " i irlif . Go back to headquarters, the oi fade into the background but The village had a population of|force set up an airlift and para | , bu " rs fn / El- t tat at the assembly building re-|' sonia Fill no Tonger be tried in| 0d five others from tiny El. | aed mast Lar is 550 miles south of Teh-|skirts of the devastated city for moved up and fired tear gas, |... f :| Alvin, 23, and William Sees, organizer for the International | the threat of disease. revoli--will resume many of their and slanders," he said, "We have| The first shock struck about death and his four passengers |that direct participation in politi- instruments stronger than the occasional tear gas shells over| Troops moved into the cites are here to assert our right to ex- down. A billowing cloud of dust Police and troops looked on and came effective earlier today, al first did not interfere, The change means the military crowd shouted, and several jeep-| about 1,000 and. "only a few hun-|chuted food into the area. loads of armed soldiers on guard S41 retain og Sd dred survived," authorities said.| Tents were set up on the out- | treated, : E bow Cay, 106 miles south of [Of life in a political democracy. | iraz [the - survivors. The government Then 100 or so infantrymen |} ar courts, The police. One| niami, Mrs. Table's husband, { Mr. Jodoin, 47-year-old former type of attack." [ras and 170 miles south of Shiraz. assembled medical teams to fight {of the targets of last week's near: n "We reject these accusations TWO QUAKES IN DAY The crowd fell back in confu- former duties 23, fled with a cabin cruiser Ladies' Garment Workers Union, Seismologists in Norway said "7, |slon but did not disperse, ! § : after the captain was shot to |nit out at labor leaders who say not come here in convention to|4:15 p.m., sending most of the|the Lar quake registered on their apologize for our existence. We|buildings in the city crashing robbed of their belongings. [cal issues through a particular : quake which shattered the Mor- Table and Sees eluded capture [party is "something foreign" to|pand, to play our role in the obscured the entire area. Officials|occan town of Agadir, in Febru. RESCU Constable Robert Laurin shown with blanket-wrapped Yvon Daignault, (left), 18, and the youth's brother Guy, 28, after rescuing the pair from Is | Montreal, The brothers, cling- ing to their overturned canoe, | were being swept toward rapids when they were hauled from the water by the policeman and a citizen in a rowboat, the crowd but seemed to be exer- after the riots actually were used |cising great caution not to anger | mostly for guard duty around] | aboard the yacht, public buildings. {the demonstrators, 'EVERYONE MAY | and fled into Cuban waters !the labor movement, community." reported most persons inside ary, killing some 12,000 persons, Muriel IIL | "Nothing could be further from the truth," he said, "For the unions that make up KHRUSHCHEV SPEECH this congress to associate them- selves freely with the party of Castaways Kill Florida Skipper NASSAU, Bahamas (AP)--Two|lfl's office said Tables and Sees| shipwreck ed Americans plun-| had been sought for a week since dered their rescuers, shot a cha yacht they had negotiated to ter boat skipper to death and buy disappeared from Key West. made 'off with his boat in a) Flown here with the woman iratical exploit at a lonely Ba- and Hokanson were the four a island Sunday. Pennsylv an ians, identified as CHOOSE HIS OWN TORONTO (CP) -- A clergy- man suggested Saturday that legalizing vice would be a ma- | jor step in reducing erime, Rev. Donald Stout, minister of South Peel Unitarian Church in nearby Port Credit, sald prostitution, gambling and dope sales should be licenced by the government to remove the profit element and the gang. who thrive on it, ake the Sout ~CP Wirephoto their choice is consistent with the role that unions, as a social force working for the betterment of all mankind, have to play. UNIONS' RIGHT "Not only have unions a right to undertake political activities and to try to elect a government the Mille Isles River north of | PM Will Report On Mexico Visit OTTAWA (CP)--Parliament is|a' deal reported to involve close expected to receive a report to-/to $10,000,000. day from Prime Minister Distal Ea N mph visit to 3 i Russia Threatens To Cut Off Berlin of their liking, but they have a ( )--Russia to-| Early iu his' two-hour speech, |cilitating a further relaxation of responaibility fo help provide the! O00 LC ATH to cut at internationai international tension and. of solv- Be te exorcise a mean.| Western access to Berlin if the |n8 intemmational disputes through Th fled into Cuban waters|Stanton C. Fogue, East McKees-|OPPOrtutt ox West refuses to sign a peace negotiations and not through while 'an anarmed U.S. Coast{port; Chester . Haroop, Wilkins. In6f}, hoje as to their aty with Communist East Ger- war," he sald. iPoweriess to Interfe J Sev Senco ts losislatuves In his wide-r Mr, Jodoin also uns employment in Canada, antl union legislation, Canada's de- fence policy and the current South African racial situation. Text of his speech was released to the press in advance of de- livery. Pointing to the Wastefulness and needless suffering' involved in unemployment, he warned that labor must begin thinking about coun. ¥ 4 5 Soviet P re m {er Khrushchev made one of his sternest threats over Berlin in a speech in Russia quoted by Moscow Radio and the Soviet news agency Tass. Khrushchev said: "West Berlin is situated inside the territory of the G. D. R. (East Germany). Naturally, with the signing of a peace treaty, the G. D. R. will exercise sovereign rights over the whole of its territory. "Therefore, if the Western pow- ers refuse to sign a peace treaty with the G. D- R. this will not reserve for them the rights they want preserved. "They will then naturally lose the right of access to West Ber- lin on land, water and by air."| HERTER CRITICIZED Khrushchev criticized U.S, State Secretary Christian Herter for having a "far from realistic un- derstanding of the situation that had taken shape." | He said Herter was one of the persons who wanted to avoid de- cisions at the summit meeting May 16 on disarmament and a German peace treaty. Khrushchev said Herter had shown his "unrealistic approach" in a speech April 4 in Chicago in which Herter referred to the pos- sibility of plebiscites on the re. unification of Germany. The Soviet leader said the| speech could "'only be regretted." | He said the leaders' meeting in| | Paris would not be competent to {take such decisions which were | the concern of the Germans them- Tr and other leaders signify a relaxation of world tension, "We gained the impression that they understand the need of fa- Teamsters Found Guilty 0f Raiding TORONTO (CP)--A Montreal dispatch says the executive coun. cil of the Canadian Labgr Con. gress, in a Montreal meeting Sunday, found the International Brotherhood of Teamsters guilty of raiding the Brotherhood {of Railway and Steamship Clerks. The committee called its Teamsters' affiliate into session to hear the finding, and adds that the union faces the alterna- tive of backing down or being ex- pelled from the congress. The conflict arose out of a move by the Teamsters to take over the membership of the rail way clerks' union employed by the Canadian Pacific Railway's freight, express and highway transport. The CLC's top officers earlier had ordered the Teamsters to va- cate the jurisdiction of the rail- way unions, The Canada Labor Relations Board has thrown out an application by the Teamsters for certification as bargaining agents for the Vancouver mer- chandise service employees. i plane res-| burgh. cust Te wife e of the Joe gitives as well w metubet Water Floo ding Trans-Canada Way of the stolen cabin cruise 111 and four Pennsylvania sports SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) Waters of the Goulais fishermen who told of being te rorized by the desperadoes' d bate over whether to kill all wit-| nesses to the slaying of Capt. Angus Boswell Soe as | River, about 15 miles north of the |Barbara Table, 18, and said she ® ault, continue to rise as rain and | melting snow combine to add to the burden, Water covered a 500-foot stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway | near the Goulais River bridge at| {was shipwrecked with her hus-| the "trend of this so-called sea- [Kirby's Corner and reached| onal ical pressure," he told an alumni meeting of the School of Fconomic Science. "I'm not saying these things eho Khrushchev was at a session of the as SDC of Azerbaijan, marking the 40th a fe ke IT retterate " " brief television inter-|nunaber of Canadian scholars are br I) on his return by alr|80ing to Mexico each year. He Sunday night: That he was im. [sald he would like to see a step- pressed by Mexico's friendliness UP in such student exchanges and towards Canada and her desire| Would do everything in his power| should be indulged in, but I to increase cultural and trade re.|to encourage this. | think everybody has the right lations, The Canadian prime minister to go to hell in his own way." In Mexico City, Mr. Diefen- ®nd his wife were warmly re- g address, block in the way to ened peace on this planet Snow Storm Hits Alberta EDMONTON (CP)--Spring fin- ery gave way to snow boots and overcoats Sunday in the face of a storm that hit southern Alberta with up to 12 inches of snow. Snow was still falling early to. day over much of southern Al berta and the southeastern part of Saskatch Some d tion was expected by noon. Traffic was forced almost to a standstill but no serious accidents were reported. About 10 inches of snow fell on Lethbridge and Medicine Hat, Calgary got more than five inches. The storm extended north almost to Edmonton and east to Swift Current, Sask., which re. ported nearly two inches, The weather office said the snow was caused by a ragged storm over the United States midwest. Winds of 25 to 30 miles an hour piled up big drifts. A temperature of between 25 and 30 degrees above zero made roads treacherous with freezing slush. | | band, Alvin, 23, and William | unemployment" becoming alias Johnson, 23, Tuesday boat the three took from |Key West, Fla, bumper depth Sunday. Reports|Year-round unemployment. were water across the highway| He renewed the CLC suggestion today reached a depth of two feet, (that the federal government sum- MISSISSIPPI'S WORST 10 Wounded In Race Riots la boat, |" "The skipper was pretty leery lof going in close," said Kent Hokanson, 21, mate of the Muriel III, "We thought they might be gun smugglers or Cubans." "Then this guy (Sees) swam out to us. We let him aboard and [rifle and Sees shot him twice, [nF ut ih Tor 10" wounded block from where four Negroes once between the eyes and once ang at jeast four hurt in fights-- and one white man were shot at in the chest, bl [patrolled this gulf coast resort 11:50 p.m. | The other man, Table, Svan ety today. a iestitic Paihia out next. They Stentoned 0 KI Pension lined faces of both Ne- wounded two Negro men sitting YEE Y KNOW "Us [aro and white residents. inside a Negro club when shot "Table said 'We can't let these| , The white sand beaches--where gun pellets crashed through M [he wanted us to go in closer and : |the trouble started Sunday over ayy! guys stick around. They know| ) window, oy when Boatwright spied mirror| signals and saw the wreckage of | + [pick up another man and a girl. | [There was . an argument, He [pulled a revolver from his khaki pants. BILOXI, Miss. (AP) Gun: But, they said, they arrested "Capt. Boatwright got a shark|.,.. ino notice -- trying to quell | four Negroes driving in a car one Negro attempt to swim from sand B | selves, reserved for whites -- glistened|, Troe Negro women said they| But he said the summit would emptily. [Fore wounded i bullets from a pe perfectly entitled to discuss Mississippi's worst race riot [PASSING Wiommobile: red the question of a German peace erupted suddenly on this 28-mile| Al Was re treaty. ported seriously hurt. us, | "But the men in the fishing | party talked them into letting us| |radio the coast guard that a man) At the same time, he left the door open for eventual accept- ance of full membership in the organization, It now bands to- gether the United States and all| 20 Latin-American republics to promote good relations among countries of the western hemis-| Shorteno, first son of an Italian was injured and let us sw immigrant te be named to the |ashore. judiciary in Canada, was feted at a dinner Sunday by Mont. up their identification papers and| real's Italian community, He [billfolds. One man lost 450 was made a judge May 6, 1939, bucks." ~CP Wirephoto ' im, a .__|sun on a lazy Sunday afternoon. "The four tourists had to give|, Ny C . women The Monroe County, Fla., sher- aorogs the highway from a white an-made beach under a warm Three bloody chapters followed in 0 confused sequence. First, about 50 Negro men, and children gathered hotel on the sand. Some stepped [into the water, the signal for a |group of whites to show up. {Fighting broke oul. Whites {chased Negroes off the beach |GATHER ON BEACH Next, four Negro men and [about 25 women and children {gathered on the beach in front of |the New Biloxi Hospital about one mile away from the first fight. A white group broke up the crowd when some of the Negroes stepped into the water. There was no official version of the fighting, but the four Ne- groes injured in this melee said their attackers hit them with T& © chains, blackjacks and sticks. 3 Before the sun went down, a crowd of Negroes estimated by Mayor Laz Quave at 300 to 400 roamed up and down Biloxi streets Came nightfall. Gun violence broke out then. Bullets and shot- gun pellets wounded. eight Ne- groes and two whites WOUND IN BACK Andrew Parker, 17. a white youth, said Negroes shouted for him to stop as he drove near a Negro residential area. He {stepped from his car and some- jone shot him, he said. He re-| {ceived a minor back wound | Police did not give a full list of (the wounded, es ---- N - FRR TN x » Barrette Sa Nha AY ana NEGROES are | white beach in Biloxi, white men Sm FLEEI pursued by | boys chasing N : J {ceived everywhere they went in baker Mdicutod two avenues for|yiovico City during their two At a Saturday night press con- days and three nights there re- negotiating a sale of steel rails|iober bY President and Mrs. Lo- to the Mexican National Railway, Mr. Diefenbaker told the Mex- ico City. press conference that . Policeman productive and that discussions {on trade and cultural matters {will be continued by officials of On the steel negotiations, he re- |called that several years ago . | Dominion Steel and Coal Corpora- Mad Patient tion at Sydney, N.S, sold some {Mexican National Railway VICTORIA (CP)--An escaped|sy GOMA AS WELL? mental patient armed With twos morican and German inter ng 2 policeman and injuring alc nny the rails to Mexico. If male nurse, ia. of Canada gets the order, it is re- mt, Joh Barry Ritu, oS ported that Algoma Steel as well > ' "las Dosco may figure in it, ace Goad, 54, a nurse at the ol Wikio Rows Mena Toth oo was severely wounded in then, cibie avenue for cultural re- the 44 - year - old patient after. anization of American States shooting him in te leg. A The OAS, from which Canada ' Olfieers were Su hHVINE 3D Se. always has remained aloof, has ermine whe as an observer at its next meet. rifles, ing in March in Quito, Ecuador. Goad, one of several male "vip piotenbaker indicated that| JUDGE HONORED nurses at the hospital who chased AL herore 7 am. yas in fail as an observer, at least initially. shortly ore 7 p.m, é condition in hospital. The patient was held in hospital under guard About 25 policemen searched area behind the hospital on Vic toria's northwest outskirts, He kept running through the bush, here. | whenever he heard a noise phere. "It was just a matter of hunt ing him out but we had to be careful about showing ourselves," . Saanich, adjacent to Victoria | Margaret's Fiance To Be Made Earl "Hospital authorities said he was R LONDON (AP) Antony Armstrong-Jones probably will dangerous when aroused. us es 0 be made an ear] before he marries Princess Margaret May 3 . changed very recently Mr. Armstrong-Jones will be elevated "1 was with Kirby and we J p " > were looking for him in heavy e epu 1C to the peerage and made an earl," he sald. brush. Suddenly there was a shot . . and Kirby cried out 'I've been] CAPETOWN (Reuters) THE Indian Border Talks May Have Failed He was shot in the heart." rush a bill through Parliament| Chou En-ai and Indian Prime Minister Nehru met for their Kirby, married and the father aimed at making South Africa al final round of talks today amid reports that they have failed of four children the youngest republic A to settle the Chinese-Indian border dispute. A communique ~ died en, The bill calls for a referendum route to hospital, among the country's 3,000,000) mandu on a three-day state visit to Nepal for more border A brother of the slain police- white citizens asking: 'Do you| talks. 356 Monteith Ave., Oshawa. He! rican republic or not?" HTH is connected with an insurance] Government leaders said they Living Costs In U.S. At Record irm here. will try to speed up the legisla WASHINGTON (AP) -- Living costs } t g 8 in the United States bill becomes law shortly. A guil-| department's consumer's price index to a k of 125 p CITY EMERGENCY lotine motion, limiting debate on! cent of the 17-49 living cost average peu 159 pel the bill, was approved last Fri.| day Labor Should Not Hold Power republic long has been the dream| MONTREAL (CP) Quebec~Premier Antoni POLICE RA 5-1133 of Afrikaners, who are Europeans 4 . SP = BES lof Dutch descent, and a cardinal] be represented in the government--but should not hold power FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6574 |[.i of the Nationalist Party since| as a single class. "1 do not believe in government by a de . , class," said the premier, also Quebec's | r Y > an ¢ a s labor minister and a HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 member of the machinists' union, Missis- | and fighting erupted when some | tense atmosphere developed | and | sippi. About 50 Negroes on the | Negroes entered the water, | and police ordered everyone $ Several Negroes received hos- | to stay off city streets them #rom all- | beach drew a crowd of whites | pital treatment for injuries. A ---AP Wirephoto 4 ference he reported Canada is paying a visit to Ottawa last Oc- his. talks with the president were Killed By {the two countries, {$26,000,000 worth of rails to the rifles ran wild Sunday night, Kill-|o ie are reported also seeking to shot through the heart and Hor-|" 'ap. 'nisrenbaker indicated atl shoulder before police. captured |jaijong with Mexico--through the Te NT agile Sgle - shot Invited this country to participate the patient when he escaped anada will participate in OAS| Sessions Court Judge Peter V, for the man in a five-acre brush popping up now and then to shoot | said Cpl. Robert Coleman of ou IiCa | "PVE BEEN HIT" 6, a friend of the Royal Family said today. 'Unless plans have hit' and dropped to the ground.|government plans this week to NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- Communist Chinese Premier only three weeks old was expected to be issued Friday when Chou leaves for Kat- man. Allin Johnston, resides at|favor the creation of a South Af- tive process this week so that the| hit a record in March. A rise in food prices pushed the labor The creation of an independent | today told Canada's union leaders that organized labor should it was formed nearly 50 years 1 ago. w

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