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The Oshawa Times, 16 Dec 1959, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR An old-timer is one who re- members when th drugs were castpr oi and calomel. TODAY ¢ miracle I, camphor or The Osho Time "4 ' WEATHER REPORT Partly cloudy and continuing mild tonight and Thursday, sunny intervals, winds west and moderate. : | N os Second Class Mail Vol. 88--No. 292 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1959 NV x Authorized Post Office Deportment, Ottawa TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Reds Bristle With Rockets PARIS (AP)--Western leaders trying to patch up their unity in the face of Russia's growing might were told today the Soviet Union has 100 missile bases and has had intercontinental rockets in service for 17 months. The report of Soviet nuclear and rocket strength was made after French Defence Minister Pierre Guillaumat officially pro tested an American charge that France is shirking her NATO re- sponsibilities. The intelligence estimate of the Soviet Union's forces was made by Admiral Walter F. Boone, US member of NATO's top - level standing military group. The fg ures were given in a closed «rs sion of the ministerial conrcil, now in session here, but a NATO spokesman reported Boone's in- formation "very accurately" par- § alleled' those given the North At- lantic Treaty Organization earlier this mont 5,000-MILFE RANGE That report showed Russia had a missile which can carry an 1,800 pound atomic warhead and another with a range of 5,000 miles > In addition, the Soviet Union now has operational missiles of relatively shot range which""can be fired from submerged subma- rines Despite these figures U.S. De- fence Secretary Thomas Gates told the NATO review session: "The United States is confident of its present nuclear superiority, both with respect to nuclear Herter, at the opening council session Tuesday, insisted once more on integration of NATO Military forces under a unified command to counter the growing striking power of improved So- viet arms | With equal firmness, France has been holding out for a sys- tem to preserve what the Presi- dent de Gaulle refers to as the "national entity" of the partici-| pating forces--that is, each na- tion retaining full control of its forces . AWAIT TKE Couve de Murville appeared to be conducting a diplomatic de- laying action until President Eis- : enhower arrives Friday and can meet with de Gaulle. The French] hope the two old wartime asso-| ciates can iron out the dispute ! As hic allies understand it, de i | Gaulle wants American forces to remain in Western Europe. But! @. GENERAL TWINING i to have Sa Aving ported to have said Twining was bigger role in NATO and a over-stepping his duties and get-|.* + | i i : |stronger voice in world affairs. ting into political discussions a which should be reserved for gov-| One suggetion towards a solu-| ernment officials, not soldiers. [tion is a step-by-step arrange-| " | t v W. fence A NATO spokesman would only/ment to unify Western defences, § had at least in the air. In return, the | alliance for the time being would officially overlook de Gaulle's| refusal to accept stocks of U.S.| nuclear weapons in France un less he has sole control of them. confirm that Guillaumat brought up the matter of Twin ing's speech and the leak to the nress. He said NATO Secretary General Paul-Henri Spaak pressed his regrets and the t- Tod < 3 3 for Tas considered ng Mal! The United States insists on joint ! But other source aid Guillau control, a system accepted by ated Tr rn | Britain and Italy. mat called c¢ neil ------ to associate ] protest, which sounded to some observers like a call by France on the Allies to choose sides in ex- othe also wants France to have af New Policy | STEPPING DOWN 7 Persons Die : In Nild. Blaze "PROPER KICK IN PANTS CAN SOLVE DELIQUENCY VAN NUYS, Calif. (AP)--A | ing a student for disciplinary | | : Jet Fuel Feared Cause Of Blast | 8T Jos, Nfld. (CP)--Seven Police have recovered 10 barrels : assault with a deadly weapon. | persons--four of them children of the explosive fuel in the gen- schools, "might solve some of '1 don't see how a kick in [under nine years old -- were|eral area, our juvenile delinquency the buttocks, when properly [Killed today when fire swept a| Fire Chief Fred Vivian said problems." applied, without any apparent |ywooden tenement in the sparsely|the fire started when an oil stove Municipal Judge Francis A judge says a kick in the | purposes. J pants, properly used in the Ramos was charged with | | | | | | | | Ontario is the only province be- The proposed plan would allow sides Quebec which has ex-|a province to levy a 10-per-cent physical injury resulting |populated west end. {exploded. All the victims lived in ir awk § therefrom, constitutes a | pay), Madonna, Michael and|one section of the two-storey Coc hran made that remark in deadly weapon," the judge |ponert White, ranging in agel|frame building which ho 2 dismissing charges against said | from two to nine years, died with| persons Rudy Ramos, 30, a high school | The teacher was accused [their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jos- * history teacher fired for kick- | of booting Lynn Ready, 15 | ep rd hite He said the victims, apparently i ovincial Fire Commissioner | "5°, Tapped. | Prank Ryan said an investigation), PLTe0 ved oo Se He xa i iately. | was begun immediately aod. children. | 1} | {United States air base, has been|Who gave the alarm, She said she {sold illicitly to householders in Eo the house '"'shoot up in the area ames. : pressed interest in the federal rather than the present nine-per-| However, the commissioner] Firemen confined the blaze to versities would reduce iis corporation taxilead us to suspect that jet fuel| Mr. White, a bricklayer, had The plan, announced last|@ corresponding amount. Thelhad been used by the Whites, just moved his family into the Thursday by Prime Minister P-- tenement about four months ago. Diefenbaker, would allow prov-| Firemen were hampered by a |eph Write, and Mrs. White's 13-15 \" ching ont of bed when am | | ] b Ontario, Quebec "We'll find out where they| SOUND LIKE SHOT government's offer of a new plan/cent tax on corporation incomes, said: the section of the building where inces the alternative of receiving| Res rces Pl ' 1 shortage of water. An 800-gallon empty and a line had to be run weapons and to the means of the French-American dispute | their delivery." i However, he said the United VERBAL SROTES States needs more aid from its French Foreign Mini Allies to keep defences up to \C€ Couve de Murville avoided «wr. Checks On |sions instead of by direct grant. John L. Lewis, who announ- | before the House labor com- | The plan was directed at Que ced in Washington that he will | mittee earlier this year. Lewis, |bec, which has refused to accept | resign next year as president | who has headed the UMW for |direct grants in aid of univer- to a nearby pond. The building is in the same section where a child was fatally bitten by a rat (last month. date. Boone's report stuck closely to figures given out Dec. 2 by the Institute of Strategic Studies, an unofficial British group sponsored by the Ford Foundation. That re- port said Russia's missile bases were manned by 200.000 men and were located on the Soviet Baltic coast, in East Germany, the southern Ukraine and the Car pathian Mountains. This information was given the Allied ministers against a back- drop of! conflict between t and France o kL ed Fates C ance ov: te France's forces of her Allies under the tied NATO command and his fusal to accept American atornic| Weapons stockpiles on French soil. th ie . | i CRITICIZED BY U.S. | Gen. Nathan Twining, Jhairman| of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff. sharply attacked France last| week in a secret military com-| mittee meeting, and his remarks| reached the press. | Guillaumat opened today's min-| isterial session with =a protest over the incident. the anti-Communist Radio Free Eu- the issue when he spoke at Tues- day's opening session of the an | of the United Mine Workers, is | 40 years, will be 80 next Feb- [sities on the ground they infringe { shown during an appearance | ruary. Personnel nual NATO r although he ! had protested rbally to US State Secretary Christian A. Her- ter Monday TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) Offi- | | cials at Forbes Air Force Base --oo | have announced a new policy | calling for an around-the-clock | | check on personnel from the Mass Murder Try | ranks including off-duty activi- | 0 R di St i | ties and associates. | A directive Monday by Brig.- | n adio a | Gen. Ariel W. Nielsen, an air | MUNICH, Germany (AP)-The| division. commander, sets up a | system for dividing each squad- | rope announced today a mass at-| ron into groups of threefive tempi had been made to fig Staployecy in Munich. 3 1 rik Hazelhoff. European direc-| officer responsible for the men tof of the privately financed, under him. American-run radio, said poi-| 0 A letter by Gen. Nielsen out- soneus substance had been put S lining the new policy said such | into salt shakers at the station's| a leader must know the details cafeteria a Supreme Court ruled today that poison fismen, Each group will be |the '"mo-war" clause in Japan's|the nation and reutralizing Japan|is & { eaded by a non-commissioned [constitution does not prevent thel/in the eold war, |stationing of (here. armed forces are constitutional. [the post-war {15-man court was a blow to left-|clares Japs Decide Arms Clause wing hopes of TOKYO (AP) -- The Japanese ¥ hopes 3 Troops ol apan, American troops It also said Japan's own At issue was Article this "no-war" that Japan section forever The unanimous decision by the|tion, 3 of the family history of each | Hazelhoff sald the discovery man in the group, his financial was made on Nov. 21. He claimed| status, whether he owns an au- agents of 5 foreign Communist tomobile, and if so, all details power" were responsible pertaining to the auto includ- The director said the substance ing the airman's driving habits. was analyzed by U.S. Army med-| « ol 'cal authorities and was found to id ena "e atropine, a poisonous drug # . A derived from the deadly night- he ma Som a shade plant. with, and to counsel him on TENNIS COURTS Reform Prison New Experiment JOYCEVILLE (CP)--The fed- eral gov nment has gone modern w its ninth and newest penitentiary. It's the ville institu medium - s and 'he fi relorm-weon wnrishment rather 000 Joyce- ada's first al prison a fresh t under le to fi an the r $6,000 C mad th Tues- Fulton ceremonies Minister "Our concern here is not with a mass of offenders, you cannot reform 2 gnass. You ean only re- form an individual and therefore it is upon the individual that we will concentrate our efforts." 460 CONVICTS By next September there will be 460 conviels in Joyceville. Tt already has 98 inmates It's 2 place where a convict can have a private, quiet room with a radio and a scenic view He can have fresh clothes and a bath every day, and can join fellow inmates for meals served up on heated food wagons Most important--for both the convicts and the prison staff the man can work and be trained at a steady eight-hour-a-day job moving through doors that are often unlocked, or working out- side on a 640-acre beef cattle farm with only occasional super- vision by guards who are never armed. There are no high walls. Get- ting out of Joyceville would be CITY EMERGENCY | PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 53-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5.6574 | HOSPITAL RA $2211 the areas where he shows a | weakness," the policy letter | said This program known as | "quality control" was de- scribed at Strategic Air Com. mand headquarters in Omaha, Neb., as part of a command- | wide program started in 1956 to encourage the highly trained and well qualified to remain in service and to weed out the un- | desirables. { valking out of a rail- t as easy as road station These wil viets who month or t Kingston enitentiary and dingy maximum prison like v £ } other seven penitentiaries across Canada be the same con- have just spent: a in nearby | al BIG CONTRAST j ' ht 4 | There, the convict got one! 8 £ ? i ! change of ufiderwear a week and probably bathed less often. H lined up for his meals, then took his tray back to his barred cell to eat alone. At Joyceville the cells. each with a strong wooden door, are | arranged in 16 1 f 21-36 1 |each, with. the convicts segre- gated into these groups accord-| ing to their age and tempera- ment and possibly their work or night-school classes | A big courtyard will be used for tennis, handball an 1. There is 2 huge metal L. B. PEARSON European refugee families--each with one member suffering from| tuberculosis--arrivixd here by air BLASTS COURT from Rome today. landed, federal health department in Ot- has cast a serious blot © awa discovered that a six-year- history of Japan's jud old Yugoslavian girl was ill with i {measles and | refugees | Rodolfo {family suffering from tuberculo-| | sis security ie [the measles shortly | plane landed. The child had a|Japan's judiciary should not try Minister L. R. Peterson said the| | high temperature and spots onto rule on the validity of treaties/offer "really only concerns Que-| |her face were noticed by nurses once they have been approved by bec," and that either way there| |aboard parliament. Treaties, the court|will be nothing more "to help the | tained tario {health authorities are investigat- ling. other children aboard but foun no indication any others were in-| fected. He said he thought thelen, girl's case a mild one. plane, carrying the first of 100 pital for several weeks, {tubercular families coming to treatment for what was officially |Canada, {urban Malton airport about 10:33] lam. after a 3,000 - mile flight His five-year term was extended|(AP) from Rome. |nounces | war potential. 19 Refugee Families In Toronto TORONTO (CP) {last March, declared {stitution that deny Japan as |sovereign nation the right herent self-defence." Japan's growing army, {and air force, re {after the Communist Nineteen | orea and called "self-defence | leftists. ruling before R W the refugees|criticized the court's Wood of the|"a political decision . nutes Dr ry The decision Prime Minister Nobus s She is the dau Maria M and the brother the member of the hter o of |U-S. ington next month. force 7s. diately the desirability of mak- forcing US. |¢ disarming|ing a change. He said the plan iniciering and developing na-| 9 of Ja-|levels of government under the |pan's constitution. Written during Constitution. American occupa [noT INTERESTED de-| the possession of on wan said the matter is of no con- fort to carry out inventories and/timber but may issue special ex- { The high court, in reversing algoyndland said the plan "doesn't Tokyo district court ruling made affect us in the least." "There 4 {are no stipulations in the com-iq f . 2 said Education Minister A. of in-| Aalborg. Davyitionally," he said. « established attack in prynswick said "the offer of the now under a separate depart. iforces, are regular targets of the which deserves some study, but proposed natural resources de- The opposition Socialist party|t as ; YR which said a preliminary study indi- onthe trengthened der the plan. uka Kishi's whether Manitoba was interested f Antonio hand in his forthcoming fight to|in changing. Yugoslav| win parliamentary approval of a : v J.S Japanese revised security| FAVOR PRESENT PLAN treaty, due to be signed in Wash-| sister Lorraine Wool-|oyiiocion rocked the building, ] [bought their oil," he said. sot : Ponder Tax Plan |wumrmm = | we ioe ss [for granting financial aid to uni-|while the federal government| "We have no Hiformation to|the victims were living. {the money through tax conces- fire department tank soon was Urged For Quebec the constitutional right of the Nearby resident d provinces to administer educa- y resk oe _ they were about 6:30 a.m. When they got to the burning tenement, # was impossible to enter. Chairman Of Board Resigns OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis (fer Diefenbaker said today he is jaccej of the " hh Rais {research and to co-ordinate sery- Port permits.) € a Joy 7. Make a full inventory of for-|Slon on transportation. est resources which were being| He indicated a successor will exploited haphasardly; some for-{be named without delay. ests were being cut too quickly] Mr. McTague has beén con while others were left to rot, [fined to a ston Jospital for some. time with a h ent URGES STEEL AID and has missed a number of the Mr. Lapalme said he would not hearings of the royal commission. hesitate to back a plan whereby| The prime minister was asked the provincial government would as he entered a morning cabinet give financial guarantees to a|session whether Mr, McTague's steel - making enterprise in the|illness would affect the chair province using Quebec iron ore./manship of the commission. (tion. QUEBEC (CP) -- Georges La-|pariment and promote research, | Quebec Premier Sauve, whose palme, Liberal opposition leader sale of fish to local markets and| Ireply to the federal offer is ex-iin the legislative assembly, has of top category seafood {pected to reach Ottawa today or proposed an alliance of English- products. | |Thursday, has said the federal Canadian and French - Canadian, 4. Turn over all hydro-electric plan is in line with his own|capital for development of Que-|resources to the Quebec Hydro settlement proposal made ear- bec's natural resources to offset! Electric Commission wherever | ier. {American control of mining en- economically feasible and aim | Premier Frost of Ontario sald terprises in the province. «or lower and uniform electricity {he is definitely interest and his| a4 the same time he proposed rates. |government will consider imme-|, 'vu 4ically different government! 5. Charge the highest rent the {approach to the problems of ad-|market will bear on natural re- sources and, wherever possible, award leases by public auction. Mr. Lapalme said the govern-| 6. Ban the export of unworked ment should, among other things: [timber to prevent the processing 1. Create a department of na-|0f Quebec Wood by industries lo- tural resources--an urgent neces- cated in other provinces. (The Premier Douglas of Saskatche-|sity requiring & whole-hearted ef-|20vernment now bans export of [of responsibilities of the two| Ural resources in the province. |cern to his province. | Premier Smallwood of New- ices, | 2 Mamtals agriculture. as a {separate department and revam It is unlikely Alberta will shuf-\Quehec's conception of the fi e its taxes to take over grants, ily farm enterprise to increase : the production of the dwindling "Alberta favors direct number of farmers, federal grants offered wncondi- [INCLUDES FISHING Premier Flemming of New| 8. Place maritime fisherles-- |prime minister. is somethin g meni--under the authority of the lit would appear that a change] would not result in any advan-| age." | Premier Roblin of Manitoba cates the province would lose nothing of a financial nature un- He did not say| Nova Scotia Premier Stanfield and Premier Shaw of Prince Ed-| American forces are stationed|Ward Island said their govern- lin Japan under the original U.S.-|ments would not likely consider Dr. Wood said he discovered| japan security treaty, signed in(& change. before the 1951. The high court ruled The Maticic family is being de- said) "are a political matter." that| British Columbia Education {university meet the challenge of} aboard the aircraft, On- provincial government Lieut.-Governor Of Alberta Dies Dr. Wood said he inspected all id lieutenant-governor of |berta, died today. He was 83. The Canadian Pacific Airlines! touched down at sub-/termed '"'general fatigue." |indefinitely in 1955. EDMONTON (CP)--J. J. Bow- Al-| Mr. Bowlen had been in hos-| under He had held office since 1950 shop, a garage, a tailor shop, centrai kitchen staffed by in- mates, and other vocational training rooms. Outside there is space for a hockey rink, base. ball diamond and howling green To get into Joyceville, a con- vict has to be cleared by a ¥ . ston Penitentiary elassific Liberal Boss CHICAGO (CP) -- L. B. Pear-| son, leader of the Canadian Lib-| eral party, will be chairman of al al conference of Western leaders on| {the reduction of world tensions] MUST BEHAVE {May 11-13, it was announced) Once inside, it's not a breeze. Tuesday. | A wrong move or an escape can The meeting, to be held here, | send a man back to max is sponsored jointly by the Uni-| security, It still has enough dis-|versity of Chicago and World| cipline and regimentation to Brotherhood Incorporated, an or- make it unpleasant enough for ganization with United Nations men not to want to come back, Connections, founded in Paris in| At - Joyceville, the onlly weap-|1950 ons available to the guards sz Delegates discuss three .22-calibre rifles, three .22 topics: 1. Barriers to co revolvers and three og Zuns. cations; 2. Inequalities b stowed away for emergency use/Poor and rich nations: 3 only. »asigs of international order I hope we never have to have! All living winners of thé\ Nob armaments," Warder Orin Ear'|Peace Prize -- except Dr. Albert told reporters Tuesday. "I hope veitzer who has not replied| we never have to put a wal ave accepted invitations to around this institution." ilake part in the conference. ation my will three rs » ur © To Head Meet HOLIDAY CRACKDOWN 600 OPP Cruisers On Drink Patrol TORONTO (CP)--The greatest array of law enforcement units ever assembled by Ontario Provincial Police to crack down on offending motorists is being set up for the Christ- mas and New Year holiday weekends Assistant Commissioner Thomas Trimble more than 600 police cars will be on patrol At least bile radar crews will check speeding The force is using a "selective enforcement" program said Assistant Commissioner Trimble. This wil! assure maxi- m coverage where records show most accidents occur and where drinking drivers are likely to prove most hazard- ous said today 2 mo- Commissioner W. H. Clark has issued special orders to Gisprict, Inspectors to rearrange working schedules so every available man can be on patrol duty during. the holiday weekends, ud [tne future." | Tke Relaxes On Board Of Cruiser ABOARD U.S5.S. DES MOINES President Eisenhower {luxuriated today in his first com- |plete relaxation since starting his {three - continent goodwill tour {Dec. 8. | After arduous visits to seven [countries with his message of |friendship in freedom, FEisen- {hower sailed westward in the Mediterranean aboard the U.S. (heavy cruiser Des Moines. | He resumes talks on world {problems Thursday at a confer- jence with Tunisia's President {Habib Bourguiba in Tunis. Then {he returns to the Des Moines, [flagship of the U.S. 6th. Fleet, for la . 24-hour cruise to Toulon, France. There he will board a special train for Paris to attend ithe Western summit conference {opening Saturday : Eisenhower sailed from Athens | Tuesday afternoon after travel- ling 13,300 miles on his 22,000- |mile, 1i-nation tour. Within an hour after a heli : {copter landed him om the Des a a Moines, he was napping in hic] PRESIDENT EISENHOWER ( U.S. Embassy in Athens, after | | stateroom. Shortly after his 7| waves from open car as he | addressing the Greek Parlia- | rides with Greek Premier Con- | ment. The 300-member parlia | stantin Karamanlis from the | ment gave Eisenhower a rous- ing ovation breaking into his > r address several times with ap- p.m. dinner, Eisenhower turned plause AP Wirephots in for the night.

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