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The Oshawa Times, 12 Nov 1959, p. 1

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dhe Oshawa Tones Authorized as Second Class Mail Post. Office Department, Ottows Reds Protest Berlin Radio GM Closes Down Notes Sent To West WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and cool, increas. ing cloudiness Friday afternoon, winds west becoming light to- night, THOUGHT FOR TODAY A physician says dynamite is an excellent tone. A person must be careful, though, lest he get too much of a lift from it. TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Vol. 88--No. 263 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1959 Three Girls Drown In . Muskoka BRACEBRIDGE, Ont. (CP--|ing past at the time in a hydro| Three young girls were drowned vehicle and saw the accident today when a car driven by their x Ae Boner plunged off the main MOTHER SWIMS TO SHORE | Threaten Future Talks 3 awa; x r. Johnson leaped into the icy street of this Muskoka area towr river and managed to pull Judy flee of the submerged car. Mrs. Johnson swam to shore and into the Muskoka River. Dead are Beverley. 11, Janice, 'Auto Production LONDON (AP -- Russia told 7, and Judy, 5, daughters of Mr and Mrs. Elwood Johnson of Bracebridge. Mrs. Johnson was dr children to school when parently lost contro' of on a snow-covered ] rolled down a steep embankmen and into 20 feet of water Police said Mrs. Johnson's hus- band, a hydro worker, was driv- The other children were trapped in the car for about seven ninutes until it was hauled shore by somz workers who had| un to the scene. Both girls were| ead | Judy and Mrs. Johnson were taken to Bracebridge Memonial| Hospital but the little girl was] pronounced dead on arrival. The nother is sufering severe shock. | iving hil I'he car Narcotics King | May Lose Wealth As Ceylon's Sir Claude Cor ea, left, emphasizes his speech at the United Nations with a clenched fist, Canada's Wallace | HE DOESN'T HAVE TO SEE TO HEAR | political ecmmittee debate. De- the Allies today that if West Ger- | DETROIT (AP) -- All car as-|suspension of auto production many is allowed to build a radio |sembly lines in the vast General caused by a shortage of ma er-|-fztion in West Berlin it may hin- | Motors empire throughout the'ials. It built a .ew cars ducing |der negotiations on the city's fu- United States stood silent today, | the war for the militar" although ture. ; stilled by lack of enough steel to| production for civilians was pro-| The Soviet government, in a turn out even one more complete hibited. Strikes by its own work-| protest note, charged that the passenger car. ers have caused shutdowns o0a|setting up of the radio would be Production stopp yi several | most recently|unlawful and was designed to night at the world's largest ma-|i ctor, 1958. "step up subve:sive activity and| nu.acturing firm. Shutdown o.| Ford is operating on curtailed hostile propaganda. work weeks but hopes to pick up| The protest, auoted by Moscow 4d Wed A proposed legislation by West Germany on radio and television policy. The plans include a trans mitting station in West Berlin. The Russian protest said: "These actions of the federal German government cannot be described as anything but a pre- meditated attempt to interfers with tle success of the forthzom- ing negotiations on the Berlin question at the very moment when, as a result of the discus- GM's last operating assembly | A : speed by the end of the month. .,q t th ited [line was the climax of a series 0. [Chrysler also has cut back but dle. yas Se Se Us Lalts caused by the national steel, y1j hyjid all lines of cars through, Diplomats said the Russian strike. |at least next week. It hopes to be| 0 I giifly Was cpathort bY sions between Khrushchev and | Eisenhiwer, more favorable con. jGitions have arisen for reaching lagrecment on West Berlin," GM's five car-making divisions|agcembly until fresh steel sup-| would be turning out more than plies become available. 80,000 units a week. Resumption of steel production, The final line was closed Wed-|apparntly came in time to pre- nesday night at Willow Run, oul-|vent any serious slowdowns in ian resolution asking France to join in any arrangements for general suspension of nuclear tests B. Nesbitt closes his eyes, folds his arms and leans back during Normally at this time of year apie to continue at least some $40,000 VALUE bate was over the British-Ital- MONTREAL (CP) -- The legal|there might be an appeal against machinery that put narcotics the sentence "SCIENTIFICALLY CORRECT? side Detroit, home plant of Chev-| car-making for both American rolet's new compact car, the Cor-/Motors and Studebaker-Packard. vair. | Employees still on the General| In Oshawa, a General Motors kingpin Giuseppe (Pepi) Cotronijynrpny 10 COLLECT behind bars for 10 years is mak-| n Paul Ste. Marie, who| ing every effort to see the, the prosecution of Co-| wealth his career brought himf,...."c 4 tne fact Mr. Justice won't be there to comfort him wiltrid Lazure provided no alter- when his jail term ends. __|native jail sentence if the fines Criminal court prosecutors... not naid shows there is "an Wednesday began the legal Pro-iy onion to collect the mone." cedures which would turn his Reports credit the balding, legitimate business assels OVEI y.,uy i5wied Cotroni with 'fairly to the Crown if the 39-year-old |. ioncive real estate holdings in underworld figure fails to come nro iron) gp with the $88,800 in penalties" coironi's record dates back tol levied against him when he Was 1937 when he was given a sus-| sentenced Monday. pended sentence for theft and re- Cotroni has until this weekend ooivino "put until 1947 when he to pay a $60,000 fine and retur Nigot five years for receiving stolen the $28,806 he received from the y,,4¢ hic record consisted only| : | undercover U.S. and ( anadiap! o¢ preak-and-enter convictions. = |gestien that blood transfusions be parcotics agents who purchased = go wil appear Nov. 23 on a/made on a racially classified the heroin which eventually con parse of handling $9,700 worth basis victed him. of bonds stolen in a multi-million : Cotroni's lawyer, Antonio q,iar robbery of the Brockville] "It has aroused great interest," | Lamer, said we SO ro Trust = Savings go, in May, 'said a spokesman for the Colum-| is a 958. ieves to ; ,500,- : i i Tee what can be done about rais- Hig hb bide ok: ne bia Presbyterian Medical Centre. ing the money. He also indicated honqs, Bonds worth $1,200,000] The stir arose over the views) : of Dr. John Scudder, aired last! sr [were recovered almost imme i * Ga ; diately, week 'at a meeting in Chicago, ges . tendine, that transfusions gen- - hy ; . en would ue safer if donor and| LaidIn Bellevill | palient are of the same race. | "This may sound wrong soci-| ologically, but it is scientifically TORONTO (CP)--Attorney-Gen- eral Roberts of Ontario said to- day his department will not lav charges as the result of a royal commission report on last] menth's inquiry into the civic fi- nances of the city of Belleville. | He told a press conference that| he and his chief assis'ants lad studied the report of Judge Ar- thur Willmott of Coburg, Ont | and found no basis for lezal ac- tion. At the same time, Malcolm Robb, a Toronto lawyer, an-| nounced that writs against the Belleville council and some of its officials, which were taken out by six Belleville manufacturing firms, have been withdrawn Mr. Robb sent notice to Belle ville that the writs, which sough the repayment of money spent il- legally by the city, were "wholly| discontinued." The writs were taken oul against Mayor Gerald Hyde, all} members of council, city auditor] John Lewers and manager-treas-| urer Drury Denyes. They were] never actually served. | Several days ago city solicitor| R. A. Pringle began action to have the writs either eniorced or discontinued, They sought an in- junction to prevent council frem using city funds to pay for a $142,000 loss aitributed to opera tion of the Belleville arena and the McFarlands world champion hockey team. De Gaulle To Visit Queen In Britain PARIS (Reuters) -- Bucking- ham Palace announced tcday that President de Gaulle of France will pay a state visit tp Britain April 5-8 The palace announcement said: "The president of the French re- public and Mme. de Gaulle have accepted the invitation of the Queen to pay a state visit United Kinedom from. A April 8, 1960." CITY "MERGENCY PHONL NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Blood NEW YORK (AP)--Controversy is crackling in Columbia Univer- sity scientific circles over a sug. 1 PRINCE PHILIP GETS RAZZING MANCHESTER, England nchester Univer- gave Prince od-natured razzing correct," said Scudder, assistan: {professor of clinical surgery at the Columbia Medica: College. {FLAT DENIAL { Dr. Howard Levene, professor | of biometrics, commented: 'The conclusion drawn that interracia' trans'usicns are undesirable, and {that transfusions should be giver |only within a race, is simply not | coriect." | Presbyterian Hospital, affiliated with Columbia, sought |the waters in a statement Wed nesday night saying it matches blood only on the basis of ""med- ical compatability." It added re: garding Scudder: | "His views, of course, g g Wednesday. As Philip walked through the universitr quadrangle, students chorused the song: here Will the Baby's Dim- e Be? The Queen is expecting her third baby early Philip smiled weak'y he listened to the song when the students sang, Why Was He Born So Beautiful, he broke his silence Pointing to a student a black scraggly beard, torted: "You should ta V pl 0 with he re- 1k." com | : | | | | | | | | | the pril 5 to [i 'HAT' SHARED Secretary P. | ) publicly 'eating his hat' for misguessing the unems- ployment level for October, cuts two pieces for the princi. pals in the steel strike which | he blamed for spoi'ing the pre- diction he made last spring. James Labor After the ceremony in front of | the labor department building pieces of 'hat' cake to Steel- workers' President David J. McDonald and Industry Bar- gainer R. Conrad Cooper. On Racial Basis | patient gets blood from his own RACIAL GROUP T Jewish member of Columbia's] seminar on genetics and director | Aaron Himzlstein, both members, calm | {complaints jclal police have an anti |attitude by saying they have re- ceived a directive urging | partiality. police "enjoy a very bad reputa- % |tion in the labor world." sense in going back several years erating and trying to lay the blame for which Iceland last y | certain happenings or one group|as territorial water. Britain dis- iced fog that often causes a ship {ently was month strike in Copper Mines at {mite blast on mine property in Washington, he sent the two [there were a series of ot |clashes lpoLICE LIKE. REFEREES AP Wirepho'o. |provincial police arc like refer- planned an appeal to Iceland to|fishermen." {Motors payroll are engaged in| spokesman said Wednesday there | preliminary work on 196. models was still no indication when the or are in other operations not di- 6,000 assembly workers, laid off sectly related to car manu'ac-|2 week ago, can be put back to ture. And some truck production|work. | i i .| About 3,000 of the 9,000 plant Sh ing 34:GMC. and: Chev {workers were not immed] reasured sketches by Canadian i affected the steel shortage artists and four oil paintings pc Tost Gener al Motors Jouee have jon Bly retained. worth a total of about $40,000 sen. Gown sll even ol] The Oshawa plant will get its have been stolen from the Uni- gue Hob as arts shortages |full share of steel when ship-|versity of British Columbia Art oe oi Minhas layoffs run ments are delivered to General | Gallery. about 220,000 hourly employees Motors, the spokesman said. The sketches were part of an mand deliberate, earnest consid-|auestion say that there is po such|® Normal work force of It is expected that six weeks $35,000 collection which went on eration." thing as uniformly distinctive Ne- yy will be required before the display at the universit last He maintained that blood vari-|gro, while or Asiatic blood, but nds Oshawa plant can return to full week and were owned by Ed- ations are fewer within members|(hat various properties do occur FOUR-WEEK SHUTDOWN production. monton contractor Edward Poole. of the same race than between more frequently in some racial, The shutdown will last until racial groups, and that dangers| groups than others. enough steel can be obtained, f '"'sensitization" are less if and parts processed, to flil sup- Ranger Coach x, i ai Le ENDENCIES |, Jines at the assembly plants. NEW YORK (AP)--Alf Pike teday replaced Phil Watsen as coach of New York Rangers of the National Hockey Lez», Transfusions VANCOUVER (CP) -- Twenty | race, In other words, blood is much General Motors has d A "sensitized" person is one ke a person's fingerprints. Noles'imate how long this might be. who, because of antibodies set un| (Wo people--unless they are iden- Industry sources expect the shut- y one transfusion, may have|tical iwins--have blood exactly down to last about four weeks. erious or fatal reactions if the|alike. Yet tendencies for certain| This is the first complete GM Characteristies show up in racial : . | Police Slow After Shot Dr. A. B. Bhonslay and Dr. TORONTO (CP)--A councillo" in suburban New Toronto said Wednesday night a shot was fired at him last April acd it tosk 25 minutes to get a policeman to the scene. Councillor Harold Trickett dis- closed the incident during a coun- | eil discussion on increasing erime and vandalism in the community. The council said it will demand increased protection from the Metropolitan Toronto police. Several members said police |were slow in answering calls and agree: Mr. Sauve said police are only one charged that officers were but he sent on strike duty when there| suppressing news of robberies et much improve-has heen a call for them by local{and breakins. 1962. administrative authority. | Mayor D. R. Russell said even He said some changes in Que-|the newspapers do not know of gations from the Union of County|bhec labor laws are to be made many rcoberies in ihe area. He Councils and the Quebec Federa- cd the legislature session|said there had been five in the tion of Labor (CLC), that "some|opening next week. fast week including one in which progress" towards improving the| The make-up of the Quebec La-|52 holes were bored in a base- agreements may be made at a|bor Relations Board is to be ment floor and the floor carted Si same blood is given again. Dr. Richard E. Rosenfield, of Mount Sinal Hospital's blood of the Columbia medical staf, bank, said there was 'no data joined with Scudder in the thesis| nothing at all" to support Scu-|that racially matched blooc| der's conclusions. would--on the average -- make Scientists on both sides of theifor closer matches. Quebec Premier a se announcement was made by general manager Muzz Patrick, who sald Watson will remain with the club as su- perviser of its farm system. Pike, a former Ranger player, is being brought in from Winnipeg cf the Western Hockey League where he coached the last three years. Pike is expected to take over the Ran- gers Saturday, when he will sign a one-year contract. Pike, 42, was a member of the Rangers in the 1939-40 season--the last time the club won the Stanley Cup. Watson is in hospital and it is expected he will be oper- ated on for an ulcer early next week. A one-time star cen- tre for the Rangers, Watson became the team's coach in 1955. In the next three seasons he guided them int~ playoff positions. Last year, however, the club folded in the final two weeks and finished fifth. "Phil has done a good job and will remain in our or- ganization," said Patrick. "We are having trouble with some of our clubs in the farm 'system and he can help straighten things cut when he gets well." Watson likely will remain in hospital for two weeks after his operation, It is figured he will need another five weeks to recuperate. Raps Tax-Sharing QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Pauljees in sports and Sauve says the present federal- don't like the referee." "some people ovincial tax sharing ments are "intolerable" does not exp ment before However, Mr. Sauve told dele- ring Treasures Of Art Stolen In B.C. | The theft, announced by the {university Wednesday, occurred |lest Saturday, Sunday or Monday When the gallery was closed. Four paintings by Maurice Utrillo, John Constable, Jean Henner and Adolphus Monticelli, |considered to be among the old 'masters, were in the loot. |GROUP OF SEVEN WORK Among the Canadian works stolen were eight sketches by. A. Y. Jackson, four by Tom Thom. son and two each by James Mor- rice, J. E. H. MacDonald, Fred . The 72-plece collection came here last week after being shown at Regina. The thieves missed a valuable Thomson sketch called The Fish. erman. "The theft has certainly been a great shock and disappoints ment to me," Mr. Poole said in Edmonton. He said he was under the .impression they were to be exhibited at the downtown Van. couver Art Gallery, not at the university. He began the collec- tion 40 years ago. TAKEN INTACT Jim Banahan, director of the juniversity's information service, said the paintings and 'sketches apparently were not damaged. They were lifted off the display areas in their frames. He said the collection has been catalogued and the loss will be recovered by insurance. RCMP Insp. M. J. Nadon s2id officers are *'reasonabl- sure" the theft was not a student, prank. Dominion - provincial conference|changed, the level of the Mini- off. expected to be held in June,|mum Wage Act raised, and the| 'Nobody knows about that one| {Superior Council of Labor re-jand I don't think the police will] p asking for|vived. 8 |tell us," Mayor Russell said. JAIL OR DEATH No Shelter For Trawlers provincial share of corporation taxes at nine per cent are "'in- tolerable." PROVINCES TIED UP "However," he sz2id should keep in mind that nine provinces (all except Quebec) have signed fiscal agreements with the federal government and| that these arrangements do not expire until March 31, 1952 " nwis elieve "me 3 ould bs unwise to Yeiere GRIMSBY, England (Reuters) relax what they describe as a he federal government will 2 |_Radio messa: from the wild|""no shelter' ban on British ves- any further for the present time North /'lantic tsday told of a'sels before it becomes a "death than the limits of the agreemen! grim dilemma facing British penalty." | which expires in 1932." trawler skippers -- whether to| Capt. Dennis Welch, secretary The premier answered QFL|try to ride out Arctic blizzards or|of Grimsb's 350-member officers that Quebec provin- run for shelter on Iceland's coast|guild, outlined the appeal today. and risk a jail sentence. "We are making an approach Bitter early winter has added to our government in the hope a deadly twist to the fishing|that Iceland will relax her ban "war" bztween Britain and Ice before it is too late. . . . The land, which up to now has been|right to seck shelter is all we ask mainly a game of hile-and-seek|on the grounds of common hu- between Icela~dic gunboats and manity." British trawlers. British fishermen have been op- BLACK FROST NEAR within a 12-mile limit| Skippers say the dreaded ear claimed| 'black frost"--a dark cloud of The councils were | | "we | - unior im- The QFL brief said provincial Mr. Sauve said there was little to capsize unless the crew can | ~hip the ice away as fast as it |forms--is expected any day. pr another. This reference appar. puted the claim and sent out to the violent {Royal Navy gunboats to protect 5 Ga its trawlers. So 5 PENALTIES CHR AIN | Meanwhile, ploelandse sailors a Wii ] oS ERT! are on a sl One striker was killed in a dyna-|" Arrest by Iceland would mean|Grimsby, ps Te ant heavy penalties and probable jail|they got from a bumper catch on her for the trawler officers. This has the fish market here. stopped them up to now from| Welch commented: "It is abso- running for shelter, no matter 'lutely stunid to let Icelandic ships how fierce the weather. (land in Britain while their gov-| India's Prime Minister Jawa- But now the trawlermen have|ernment is refusing shelter to our| harlal Nehru, left, greets group of tribesmen from La- pel e 1 houl and Spiti areas of novth- ern Punjeb in New Delhi, The tribesmen live in the Himalay- Mr. Sauve told delegates the NEHRU RECEIVES TRIBESMEN as near the tr-ubled Tibetan border, 250 miles north of New Delhi. J COMMUNITY $30,000 $50,000 $70,000 $170,000 $130,000 $90,000 $150,000 $175,000 CHEST SCOREBOARD RR TR $142,947.63

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