Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 26 Dec 1959, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

INIT FIRST CHRISTMAS BABY to arrive at the Ajax-Pickering General Hospital was the daughter of Mr Charles ElKington of 103 Em- peror Street, Ajax. The few arrival came to town at 12.28 am. and weighed in at 6 pounds 8 ounces. The baby has a sister, Jennifer, who is a | student at St. Andrews and a | INTERPRETING TH and Mrs. | CHRISTMAS ARRIVALS AT AJAX HOSPITAL LE ; brother Andrew, age two years. Mr. Elkington is a draughts- man with Ontario hydro and has lived in Ajax two years. The parents are shown with their new daughter, as yet un- named, in top picture. Second | Christmas baby to arrive at the | Ajax and Pickering General Hospital was born to Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Jackson of | E NEWS | | Kingston Road, Highland | Creek. Clocked in a 4.15 a.m. the baby weighed five and three quarter pounds. It was a sister for Terry Gilbert aged 18 months. Mrs. Jackson is shown below. Her wee daugh- ter was taking an interest in having her photo taken Photos by John Mills, Europe Enjoys Richer S By DAVID ROWNTREE Canadian Press Staff Writer This Christmas emphasizes| more than any other since 1845 Europe's comeback to something approaching and even surpassing its former prosperity The continent is moving into the stage of the affluent society that the United States and Can- ada alreadv know. : Some of Europe's economic milestones this year were: Britain allowed non residents to ex- change their sterling holdings for "any other currency, removed re- strictions on the amount of dol- lars British tourists were allowed and ended many import controls. 4 Stork Busy 'At Hospital | The stork superseded Santa ason {Claus in three Oshawa homes =) this Christmas as three babies chose Dec. 25th as their natal ing as well known as Los An- day. geles'. One survey shows that 73| Twenty-four pounds nine and per cent of British manual work- one-quarter ounces was the total ers own television sets. weight of the trio. Not everyone is happy about| First to arrive was a 10 Ib. 1 the changes. An old Labor party oz. boy for Mr. and Mrs. Alfred stalwart told his colleagues after|Szabunia of 1268 Simcoe street the Oct. 8 election that brought|south. Prime Minister Macmillan and| Later in the morning, at 10:15 the Conservatives into poweriam, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald again: "Our task is to prevent an af-|3 7 1p, 5 oz. girl. fluent society becoming a grossly| The trio was completed material and acquisitive society 7.45 Christmas night as a baby where rewards go to greed and| i was born to Mr. and Mrs. not to service _|Julien Michaud, Eastlawn street. | Their daughter weighed in at 7 1b. 3 and one-quarter oz. ~|up a list of definitions on what mandatory. |Smith, 133 Banting avenue, had at | | All are reported doing well. The Osho Times SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26 1959 PAGE NINE 3 Die In District Traffic Fatalities Accidents | Canada And U.S. Disagre 'On Defence Order Meanin flict ia views on both sides of {the border. |S today, after his Christmas day operation, for injuries in his ab-| The problem is complicated by domen. He was injured when the while|the fact that parts of a product car he was driving was involved | By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON (CP)--Canada and the United States, |agreed on many things, find it manufactured in one country can difficult to agree on what consti- be made of raw materials im- tutes a defence order. |ported from across the border.| US. authorities indicate a re.| What country should get credit cent attempt to clear up this mat-|for the product? A hypothetical| ter was not completely success-|case could be army boots pro- ful. They say there may have to duced in one country with rubber |be more talks, more cross-border | correspondence. jot A reconciliation in views may| [Qetorine 16. WERE OR ily mean that all of the order 5 | sympathy with Canada's request gotepiced. One US Single an for more U.S. defence contracts. celled » many defence orders in DISPUTE AMOUNT Canadian officials have loi maintained Canada spends more accepted. on defence procurement in the TRADE DEFICIT | US. than the U.S. does in Can-| "myo problem for Canada is that| ada. U.S. authorities suggest the| generally shows a huge def- situation is somewhat reversed or; ic Gn overall trade with her that the two countries are about oighbor. Last March Prime Min- [evel = lister Diefenbaker told the Com- However, the Pentagon agreed|mons Canada-U.S. defence pro- to allow the Canadians to make quction sharing must be made her. Another complication is that an| | nglance she cancelled more than she | goes into prime and sub - con-| "We'll never be satisfied un-| tracts and to see how an estimate tj; we have a very large share--| works out. {much larger than now," he said On this basis, U.S. officials| Since then the U.S. has eased |found their defence procurementits regulations to make it easier| lorders in the first nine months|for Canadian firms to compete for lof 1959 amounted to $75,000,000/U.S. defence orders. | | while Canadian orders in the U.S,| Last month at Camp David, | totalled only $70,600,000. A week Md., ministerial talks between after the figures were compiled, the two countries led to the con- they were discarded. U.S. offi- clusion that there should be more |cials declined to say why, but ap-| "fruitful co-operation" in joint | parently there still was some con-'sharing of defence contracts. | | Joy And Sorrow Mix At Yuletide By THE CANADIAN PRESS |ing with two attempted bank rob- Christmas came to Canada for | beries. 1959 with its usual mixture of| Toronto police worked hard at blessings and tragedy -- joy and controlling unruly Christmas generosity rubbing shoulders with driving, dealt with about 135 traf- {violent death. fic accidents and laid some 75 Across the country it was a charges for drunk, impaired and { Mar Yule | ice constable suffered minor i |juries and more than $2500 dam: |ages resulted from six holiday|victims died in separate mis-| accidents in Oshawa during Chrit-| haps. mas. . Frank Toscano, 31, of 362 Drew t., is reported in good condition in a collision with a car driven by Hans Hogrefe, 29 Sandra St. The incident occured on Simcoe St. S., at 6:20 p.m., Thursday. Damage was estimated at $275. Police Constable Brenton Snow-| don was taken to Oshawa Gen-| heels or soles imported from the eral Hospital, Christmas Eve, al-| ter he was struck down by a motorist on King St. W., at Queen] order for goods doesn't necessar-|{St. P.C. Snowdon was directing! A six-weeks old traffic at the time. The car was driven by Ter- rence Mahoney, of 58 Fernhill Blvd. The constable received a was attributed to mucous in the| the U.S. that it seemed on bal-| bruised right leg and some pulled|throat. The parents are Mr. and muscles. An estimated $1150 damage re- ulted from a collision involving three cars on Simcoe St. N., at 9:55 p.m., Christmas Eve. One car was driven by Gary F. Wiggins, 515 Buerling Ave. An- other was driven by Henry Rog-| ers, of 850 Hortop Ave. The third| car, a police car, was driven by| PC Ross Jaemison, of 146 Sus- sex St. | An estimated $650 damage re-| S St., Thursday morning, One car was driven by Rance Dilling, of Alexander Blvd., Bow-| manville. The driver of the sec-| ond car was William T. Brent of Raglan. The third car was| driven by Michael J. McArthur,| 274 Division St. | Two cars were involved in collision on Ritson Rd. S., at Con- ant St., Christmas Eve, One car was driven by Kenneth Prescott, 226 Cordova Rd. The driver of the other car was Adam Kerpello, | 561 Wilson Rd. S. Damage was| estimated at $275. TWO CARS INVOLVED | Two cars were involved in a collision Christmas day, on Sim-| coe St. N., at Rossland Rd. One| car was driven by Dawn I. Sev- ers, 90 Southwood St., the other was driven by William A. Everitt, RR 3, Rossland Rr. W,, Oshawa. | | Oshawa Man, Found Dead In Car On Bank Of Creek An Oshawa man was operated| Three persons were fatally in-jed field at the Liberty street/and allowed to return home were jon for abdominal injuries, a po-\jured in a Yash of traffic acci-| dents in Oshawa and district on ec. 24 and Christmas Day. All| | Dead are: | * Louis Milton Jackson, 39, of Town Line East, Oshawa, who was found dead in his car on the north bank of the creek near Pleasure Valley ranch early Thursday night. Miss Stavula Striftoeola, 19, of Toronto, passenger in a car that crashed two guard rails and landed on its roof in Bowmanville late Thurs- day night. An unidentified man, struck by an eastbound var on High- way 401 near the Lansing cut - off early Christmas morning. found suffocated in its Christmas morning on the Old Forest Road, Pickering. Death Mrs. J. M. Graham. Oshawa's traffic record for Christmas was termed 'the worst in the memory of veteran police officers". (See story on page one.) One constable was injured by a car while directing traffic. CAR UPSIDE DGWN An Oshawa man was found dead in his car, the road, on the north bank of the creek at 'Pleasure Valley, |sulted from three car collision|Christmas eve. lon Park Rd. S., near Wentworth| Louis Milton Jackson, 39, of Townline E., Oshawa, died of a | stantly {from the vehicle. She had been south and Highway 401 inter-| change here at 11 p.m. Christ-| |all of 480 Crawford drive, mas night. Terry Papary, Bessie Petro- poulou and Irene Xelamoutsiu, 0 Dead is Stavula Striftoeola, 19, ronto. of 480 Crawford drive, Toronto. She came to Canada from Trivpolis, Greece. Miss Striftoeola was Killed in- when she was thrown |one of six passengers in the |back seat. | Driver of the vehicle® Demitri- ous Constantinou, also of Crawford drive, Toronto, was ad mitted to Bowmanville Memorial |Hospital suffering undetermined |injuries. Others admitted to BMH, also {with undetermined injuries, are |Mrs. Mary Papary, 24, Peter |Papary, both of 480 Crawford |drive, Toronto, and My. and Mrs. ported in "satisfactory condi- tion", this morning. Given out-patients' treatment | The car was eastbound on 401 Highway at approximately 11 p.m. It is believed the driver at- {tempted to turn right on to Lib- |erty street south but failed to {negotiate the turn, The vehicle hen careened side- ways through two guard rails and four fence posts, knocking a highway sign over and rolled down a slight grade. It came to rest on its roof in a ploughed field approximately 37 feet south of the highway. Damage to the vehicle was estimated at approx- imately $400. The victim was taken to the |Northcutt and Smith Funeral infant was! Harny Papaskevopoulos, 128 Glen-| Home. crib/more road, Toronto. All are re-| OPP Constable Pat Harte-Max- well investigated, assisted by |Constable 'Jim McDonald and 'Cpl. Gordon M. Keast, N.Y. Celebrates | | NEW YORK (AP)--A 24-year- rendered to police Friday in {front of a Bronx church in con- | nection with the slaying of a 70- year-old drinking companion. Police said James Patrick Violent Holiday The slaying occurred in Bren- 120 feet from old utility firm employee sur- nan's apartment while his wife, Joan, and their five-year - old daughter were visiting Mrs. Brennan's mother. Brennan told police Fitzgerald had threatened to molest Mrs. fractured skull when his car left|Brennan told them he "'couldn't Brennan, who was believed to be the road on Simcoe St. N. The {live with this thing"--and ad- sleeping in an adjoining bedroom. car was found upside mitted he slew Thomas Fitzger- When Fitzgerald tried to enter down. Members of the Oshawal|ald Thursday after the two had|the bedroom, Brennan stabbed man loose from the wreckage. Please turn to page three for the obituary information.) 2 SEEK IDENTITY PICKERING (Staff) -- Whitby detachment of the OPP are seek- ing the identity of a man who| 1 was instantly killed at 12.30 a.m. Christmas morning on Highway 401, near the Lansing cut-off. Police said the man was stand- |ing on the pavement when he was| struck down by a car driven by George Henry Parker, of Whit- by. The car was eastbound. No identification could be found on the dead man and police are circulating the following descrip- The man was aged between 25 *| Fire Department pried the dead visited some bars together. The him. |vietim's body was found by po- lice Friday. Warehouse Explosion Rips Town WARSAW, Ky. (AP)--A Christ. mas Day explosion in a ware- | | {house "ripped through the heart| |of this town of 1,000 persons F'ri- day. Three cars were involved in ajand 35 years. 6 feet tall, had. a| Jack Smith, 32, owner of a bev- Deer Hunting Found Best |generally warm Christmas, but reckless driving and criminal ne- most areas--with the exception of | gligence. Toronto - was fatality | southwestern British Columbia, free. | [southern Alberta and parts of afjlq weather blessed most of Other European countries low- ered currency and import bar- riers, France devalued her cur- rency and two rival groups--the | CELEBRATING collision on King St. E., at Fare- hare lip, corrected by surgery, aerage distributing firm, was well Ave., at 5:20 p.m. Christmas| full denture, a tattoo on the right burned critically. Three other day. Total estimated damage was|forearm, two hearts and the word persons were admitted to hospit- $320, | 'Mother'. Long reddish brown als and at least 12 others re. hair, eyes, blue-grey. ceived treatment for injuries. After the slaying, Brennan dis- covered his wife was not even | home. FOUR OTHERS SLAIN Four other persons were slain in other stabbings and one shoot- ing elsewhere in the city. All were killed or found dead Christ- mas morning. In Queens, the bloody, un- clothed body of Mrs. Eleanor Higgins, 45, was found in her apartment after a small fire. She had been stabbed at least {half a dozen times with a kitchen knife. | Police said her nephew, Don- jald Siska, 21, admitted the slay- ing. In Brooklyn, police were ques- tioning a 19-year-old girl about the shooting of Nathan Hyman, 56, a cab driver. He was found slumped over the wheel of his taxi with a .22 - calibre bullet Common Market and the Outer Seven--began the job of chopping tariffs for their respective mem- berships RECORD SALES Stores in both Europe and North America reported record Christ- mas sales this year in what the Economist Magazine once called the most important commercial festival in Christendom Easier credit has encouraged buying sprees in Europe. Adver- tising for new mass markets is on much the same scale and simi- lar in content to that in the U.S.| and Canada. One correspondent credits the advertising mentality for the extraordinary lavishness of Christmas decorations in cities all over Europe. To satisfy buyer demand, some stores offer up to 48 months to pay for appliances. Luxembourg, in an effort to attract U.S. in- vestments, offers free land, free construction of a railroad spur, custom - designed buildings at nominal rent, government - sub- sidized loans to buy machinery and tax reductions to business concerns willing to up branches there. EVEN HAVE TRAFFIC JAMS Prosperity has also meant a record number of car owners Europe's traffic jams are becom- set Cavern Houses Defence Centre OTTAWA (CP)--A huge under- ground cavern to house a' self- contained communications centre for nuclear war defence is being hollowed from rock 15 miles west of Ottawa, Defence Minister Pearkes confirmed Thursday The defence department has al the project near Carp, a ] t t is expected to or the Civil organization in case Mr. Pearkes view that the under bare details of which have been known for some time, is in the neighborhood of 200 feet long and 180 feet wide Atop it will be nearly 100 feet of rock, shale and with space below to house electronics equip ment, self-conta commaodation al Mr. P is prepar ducted with under simu- lated atomic attack conditions 19 jye dec26h | of 1 in an inter- ground site and said that staff BIRTHDAYS Near Border | Congratulations and best i. ton Duff, the first male born in Thursday it He founded the North Star Drill- "ing Company which drilled wells wishes to the following resi- dents of Oshawa and district who are celebrating birth- days this weekend: Those celebrating today are: Peter Metcalfe, 810 Myers St.; Noel Lodge, 446 Vimy Ave.; George Bright, Seagrave; Virginia Lack, 99 Gibb street; Carolyn Wanna- maker, RR 2, Oshawa; Mari- lyn Morrison, 366 Athol street east; Grant Hardy, 41 West- moreland. Those celebrating on Sun- dav are: Mrs. Frank Pascoe, RR 1, Hampton; Roddy Gor- ham, 179 Riverside drive north; Noble Barager, 273 College avenue; Sandra Lynn, 18 Arlington. The first five persons to in- form The Oshawa Times of their birthdays each day will receive double tickets to The Regent Theatre, good for a four . week period. The cur- rent attraction 4s "Journey to the Centre of the Earth". Reports on birthdays will be received only between the hours of 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Quick Action Helps Family TORONTO (CP) The best deer hunting in Ontario this year was found close to the Manitoba border, reports the lands and] forests department today in a review of the 1959 season. The area shows a substantial increase in deer since 1955: ported a success rate of 55 per cent. A 100-per-cent rate is one Kill per hunter. Only one deer is al- lowed for each deer hunting li- cence. The Sault Ste. Marie district had one of its worst deer sea- sons. In the though bad with the hunt, was 24 per cent Nearly 4,000 hunters went tol Manitoulin Island for the deer season and made 1,043 Kills. In the North Bay district bad| weather discouraged hunters and| the kill dropped to 28 per cent| this year from 34 per cent last| year. Hunters in the Parry Sound. Pembroke, Lindsay and Tweed districts also reported fewer Kills. The success rate dropped to 28 per cent at Pembroke, 23 per cent at Lindsay, and 26 per cent at Tweed. "Some parts of Tweed district produced a very poor hunt," the] WALLACEBURG (CP) -- Nine uepartment reports, particularly small children learned the real in Brougham Township in Ren-\meaning of Christmas Thursday. frew County and South Canonto| .myou are members of a needy Their Sudbury distriet, al- weather interfered the success rate "ito provide the smallest tions and hunters' success was as good as in .1958--an excellent season ; In the Huron district seven counties were open to deer hunt- ng this year. Hunters in Bruce and Grey counties produced a " iccess rate of 24 per cent. onel The policeman was Constable per cent better than in 1958. In/Bill Lewis and the bundle was Huron, Waterloo, Wellington, Ox- Made up by members of the Wal- ford and Brant counties, hunters laceburg. police department and killed 288 deer for a success rate the Minor Sports Association of 13 per cent, The family would not have had ---- ~ a Christmas of any kind had it not been for the fast work of the two organizations. The police de- tment learned of their plight and discovered that th names had soméhow been missed by charity organizations. Immediate preparations were E: to t " £O0 1 g throughout southern Saskatche- Xiade i ay <leling wan before the First World War. |chants, even Christmas gift. Early Christmas Eve a uni- formed police constable wrapped at the door of their humble home. With him was a huge pack con- taining clothes food and toys. PIONEER PASSES REGINA (CP) -- Adam New- Moose Jaw 73 years ago, is dead Itrip took two months. {southern Ontario -- were blessed Canada. In the Atlantic provinces with snow, old or new. ; only Newfoundland had heavy | In Halifax the spirit of national gnaw. In the other eastern coastal | generosity was manifested in the provinces the weather was sharp| arrival Thursday of 20 European and clear. refugee families, each with one tubercular sufferer, who came fo} | ..'ern Quebec had some snow and| He saauiy as part of Cangde's in Ontario from one to five inches So i : 8€€ifell in areas north of Georgian | ; : | : in: ie Bay. In the Prairies mild, over- ae femiies went Shvisimas cast weather prevailed and in ay in. halax ang St '|British Columbia temperatures NB. 2s te hii B08 Canada, went up to the middle 40s unde mas in a free land for the first {S400Y skies, time. | 'Posties' Leader . Central Ontario and southwest-| SOME IN SANATORIUM Other tubercular refugees w is arrived in Toronto last wee [spent Christmas there and n May Get Tough |Hamilton, some with friends and| relatives and others in a sanator-| OTTAWA (CP) -- Dan Cross, ium, {national president of the Cana-| On the other side of the coin,|dian Postal Employees Associa-| scores of Canadians died violent tion, has threatened to withdraw) |deaths during the holiday period. |the association's support of the In Trenton, three residents of|joint action committee of the fed- the town were killed when their | eral civil service organizations. car skidded on a highway a few| In an editorial in Postal Tri- miles outside town. Three others |bune, he asks postal workers to were injured. curb their impatience for a while In Quebec six persons died in|--at least until the first week in a pair of train-car collisions at|February. {level crossings. In the Halifax | "If no tangible results are in suburb of Ed mon@'s Ground evidence by that time, I am pre- |three people burned to death pared to break with the joint ac- 1 hey flames ate through a frame tion committee and get tough." house. | Crime took no holiday for| |Christmas. In Pembroke, police | \charged a young i wg od Lengthy Delay |murder following the violent death of a four-month-old baby. I M . [POLICY BUSY in daIriage In Montreal police were hard Sas . at work through the holiday, han-| BRANTFORD (CP) -- Stanley dling some 1,000 calls and deal-|Gibbs, 30, of Toronto didn't get -- {married as planned Christmas |Eve. He was sentenced to 12 years in penitentiary after plead- Runs Into Danger At Journey's End |robbery. | Gregory, 30, of Toronto, received EUREKA, Calif. (AP) An seven years for his part in the| Englishman sailing from Hong theft Dec. 10 of $10,000 from the Kong almost was shipwrecked on Royal Bank of Canada branch at| a bar outside the harbor Friday|Scotiand, 15 miles southwest of| when the auxiliary motor on his here. dismasted Chinese junk ran out! Gibbs' bride-to-be, Erica Vau-| of fuel. | potitsch of Calgary, held as a ma- Coast guardsmen towed him to/terial witness since the trio was] safety. |arrested in a suburban Toronto "That's 'the. first time I've had motel, was released after giving any worry since Hong Kong," testimony. said Brian Piatt, 23-year-old for-| Miss Vaupotitsch said she met mer colonial service agent in Gibbs at the Grey Cup final in Malaya, after his black and red) Toronto Nov. 28. She said he later teakwood junk was safely docked. gave her a number of $20 bills| Piatt said he had sailed alone|that were identified as part of 7,000 miles from Hong Kong with-|the bank loot. out once dropping anchor. The, Sentence was passed by Mag- lisuais J. T. Shillington. One car was driven by James, E. Bell, 675 Olive Ave. A second He was wearing a blue car Twenty houses were destroyed wound in the back of his head. car was driven by James Briggs,| coat with a golden green silk lin- and about 190 of the community's| 1n the Bronx, an unidentified of Toronto. The driver of the|ing maroon socks, black shoes, 250 houses were damaged. Some RR 1 Hampton, Ont. Russ Expedition Reaches S. Pole- LONDON (Reuters) A 16- man Russian expedition reached the South Pole today, the Soviet| news agency Tass reported. The expedition, travelling on| tractor-drawn sleds, covered 1, 670 miles in a three-month jour- ney from the Antarctic shore of the Indian Ocean where Russia's polar base of Mirny is located. {third car was Robert J. Halliday, | black gabardine trousers, white were shirt, blue wool knitted tie. He would weigh 160 to 180 pounds. Any information on the identity of a person answering this de- | scription should go to the Whitby | cluded about | Detachment of the Ontario Pro-| ruined plant, vincial Police. GIRL, 19, KILLED BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- One teen-age girl was killed and nine other persons injured, .six of whom were admitted to Bow- manville Memorial jarred off their foundations and the roofs of some were wrenched loose. Fire chief Delmar Alexander said the $2,000,000 damage in- $400,000 at the Howard Yandell of the state de- {partment of public safety said the {blast may have come from a |furnace in the warehouse. He is | continuing his investigation. An ambulance attendant said {man, well dressed and about 70, was found stabbed to death on a sidewalk. - His wallet was miss |ing, and police said he might |have been slain by robbers. | In Manhattan, Eugene Chavis, 34, was stabbed to death with a {pentnife, Police booked his 24- |vear-old girl friend, Doris Wil BREAK STYLE BARRIER TOKYO (AP) Communist |China is breaking out of its style Hospital,| Smith told him en route to a hos-| barrier. "Clothing stores in Shan. when the: car in which all 10|pital that the explosion came as|hai, one of the country's fashion natives of Greece were riding, he lighted a cigaret in his office. centres, are displaying more than cdreened sideways through two guard rails and four fence posts and landed on its roof in a plough- State police sent 50 troopers into the wrecked town to prevent looting. |200 new styles in woolen fabrics for the winter season," the New IChina news agency reported. ling guilty to a charge of armed] § I A companion, George Russell Troops of the Canadian Army continue to serve in various parts of the world including Germany, the Middle East, In- dochind, Pakistan, Palestine with one lone officer in Korea. The Army in Canada stepped up its training on National Sur- vival during 1959 and also par- | i I & CANADA'S ticipated in. the Royal Tour. Upper left, three soldiers pre- pare to lower a casualty during a National Survival exercise. Lower left, soldiers of the | Canadian reconnaissance squad- ron serving with the UNEF in the Middle East. check at a Brazilian infantry outpost dur- | members of the 1st Battalion, ARMY 195 ing a routine patrol. Centre, | Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth | IT presents colors to Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders on Par- liament Hill during Dominion | Day ceremonies, Upper right, | The Black Watch (Royal High: | { land Regiment) of Canada ar- | i rive in Germany during the rotation, of troops to the NATO brigade. Lower right, Capt. J. P. Dufour of Quebec lights a cigarette for.a South Viet Nam soldier during a patrol of an International Supervisory and Control Commission team in Indochina.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy