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The Oshawa Times, 17 Feb 1960, p. 1

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- } monarch in the best of ea THOUGHT FOR TODAY Having given up hope that gov ernment might live within its incomes, many peop le now fear that government will be une able to live within their incomes. lye Oshawa Simes WEATHER REPORT Cloudy and mild with occasional drizzle, becoming partly cloudy and colder day, winds tonight and Thurs. southwest. Vol. 89--No. 39 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1960 Authorized os Second Post Office Class Moll Ottawe TWENTY-TWO PAGES Italian actress Marisa Pavan tries to rouse her week-old son, Patrick Aumont, for his first BAMBINO PATRICK picture in Hollywood today, but Patrick prefers slumberland. The husband and father is French actor Jean Pierre Au- S. Entry Barred For Actor TORONTO (CP)--An official of the United States immigration i service said today "there is a E question of the admissibility" into the U.S. of actor Douglas Camp- bell, refused clearance by U.S. officials Tuesday night as he started to board a new York- bound aircraft. John P. Swanson, deputy direc- tor of the U.S. immigration serv- ice in Buffalo, said in a long-dis- { tance interview today that the | "question of Campbell's admissi- i bility will have to be determined : 'when we talk to him." '| He said Campbell has 'been advised" he might not be ad- mitted to the U.S. at- New York {if he takes the plane there from ; Toronto. What Campbell might do Campbell makes his home, Mrs. Campbell said she understood the work permit arrived at Malton this ricrning. She said she has not heard from her husband to- day and believes he took a plane : for New York where he has a a 1:30 p.m. rehearsal engagement E. H. WALKER for an appearance in the tele WASHINGTON (AP)--A super-| power radar station able to spot Soviet missiles thousands of miles away will be set up in England yision production of Treasure by GM PRESIDENT HEADS CAMPAIGN Mr, Campbell himself was not available here. A downtown hotel said he checked out this morning] The appointment of E. H. Walker, president of General Motors of Canada, Limited, as to catch a plane. ON ARRIVAL general campai hai f 4 i e paign chairman of Me. Swanson, Je Euftdlo off the forthcoming O-hawa Gen- ial, Si S. - - dither No ond on at "Malton "would not deny" | eral Hospital New Wing fin "9 | drive for funds was announced anyone entry to aU.S.-bound air-| today by T. L. Wilson, pres ! is "present himself" to U.S. im- migration officials at a border| point or in New York. | i| Swanson said the fact that Campbell attended a left - wing peace rally at Toronto's Massey Hall last week "could be a | factor." mont. They have another son, | Robert B. Memminger, US. Jean Claude, 2. Mother is thie |oongylate-general in Toronto, said sister of actress Pier Angeli. Campbell was not cleared for AP Wirephotc 17s. entry when he prepared to DUE ANY MINUTE Queen Moves Into Maternity Suite LONDON (CP)--Queen Eliza- beth moved Tuesday night to the Minister Harold Macmillan for|Mother Elizabeth went to Buck- maternity suite arranged for her|his customary Tuesday evening|ingham Palace to have tea. The Queen received Prime In Buckingham Palace after her|audience at Buckingham Palace doctors told her to expect her|although he was willing to post- third baby 'at any minute," pone the visit, In what may have been their| The prime minister stayed for final prenatal examination, the|an hour and talked about the doctors found the 33-year -old| African tour from which he re onday, board a New York plane at subur- ban Malton airport Tuesday night because immigration officials did not have the customary work per- mit. Mr. Memminger said he under- stands the work permit arrived here today but U.S. immigration officials here "referred the case to Buffalo for a decision on Camp- bell's admissibility." He said it would be up to immigration offi- cials at the point of entry to de- termine whether Campbell was admissible to the US. even though he has the required docu- Earlier in the evening, Queen ments. (In Stratford, Ont, where craft but "could advise there| . > pe might be a Guestion of admissi-| dent of the Oshawa General = | Hospital. Mr. Walker has been bitty 10 fie US: With the Pere closely identified with hospital fon, got off the plane at New) work for many years and is . ed keenly interested in this phase He said some people get on the : ' plane and wait in New York until| ©f community service. The the matter is settled. He didn't] campaign is scheduled for this |know what Campbell planned to| SPring. for U.S.-British defence, the staie department announced today. | The huge metal screen--bigger [than a football field set om its |side--is to be built at a $120,000,- 000 cost at Fylingdales Moor, | Yorkshire. This is midway up the east coast of Britain, between London and Edinburgh. Defence experts said this giant - |installation, plus two others now |under construction in North America, will be able to provide speedy detection over a large area of the northern hemisphere of any missile headed that way. The reported range of the high- power radar is about 3,500 miles. The electric eye can thus peer | do. He said "the simplest way of. settling the matter would be for|' him to come to the border' where} immigration people "would ques-|? tion him." He said he could not'? say what was the issue but that § Campbell's attendance at a peace rally might be involved. : Campbell got considerable press coverage last week for his at- tendance at the rally, sponsored by the left-wing Canadian Peace Congress and the Toronto Asso- ciation for Peace. Both Campbell,| 2 who appears regularly at the| Stratford Shakespearean Festival, and his actress wife, Ann Casson gave dramatic readings and poems from the stage during the rally. The Queen was reported by |palace spokesmen to be "fit and well." She has been signing state papers, reading and watching television, Another Tuesday night event at Dominican Rule The Queen moved from her own t to the ground-floor Belgian suite, at the back of the palace, which has been converted into a royal maternity ward. The suite is so named because King Leopold 1 of Belgium used it on visits to Queen Victoria, a relative by her marriage to Prince Albert. It has accommoda-| tions for the father-to-be, Prince Philip, and a lounge next to the room in which Dr, John H. Peel, the Queen's obstetrician, will de- liver the baby. NORMAL DUTIES GO ON Meanwhile, the Queen was carrying on her normal duties, Prince Philip had one engage- ment today, to open an exhibition of architecture in nearby Port- land Place. X-RAYS FIND STOLEN RING CARDIFF, Wales (Reuters) A girl who thought she could swallow an engagement ring and keep it was fined £10 for theft Tuesday. The £45 ring slipped down Christina Meazey's gullet when she and her fiance visited a jewelry store. When the clerk couldn't find the ring, he summoned the store detective, who had Christina x-rayed. There it was in her stom- ach. To get it back, Christina was kept in a hospital for two days. Brownie pack. t on as usual, the AP riniess Anne's PRINCESS EXCITED On Shaky Feet 1% PORT u PRINCE, Haiti (AP) Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo is ies. This has not been distributed | # for home consumption, however. | Instead the domestic press re-| across the Arctic to spot missiles launched from Russia. ALSO GREENLAND ,ALASKA The two other stations in the chain now are being built at Thule, Greenland, and Clear, Alaska, for completion expected late this year or in 1961. No esti- mate was given for the construc- tion time of the station in Britain. The U.S.-British agreement to build it was reached last Monday. U.S. officials figure the con- struction cost at $98,000,000 for the United States and $22,000,000 for Britain, The British will com- mand and operate the station. Super-Radar Installed In England Fifty British and U.S. officers and men, plus 500 civilian teche nicians, will man the huge sta. tion. The screen is expected to be 400 feet long and 165 feet high. The total area of the installation is to be four square miles. Radio Corporation of America has the building job. Information . from the long- range radar, which also is simi- lar to some ballistic missile watchers already set up in Ture key, will be fed to defence con- trol centres in England and the United States. U.S. Aids OTTAWA (CP) -- The United States has decided to plunk down a substantial wager on the Cana- dian approach to developing atomic power plants, Under an expanded program of co-operation announced Tuesday night, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission will spend up to $5,- § 000,000 'specifically directed to- ward the heavy water reactors to be constructed in Canada." The agreement was reached in meetings in Washington and was announced by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, a ~rown com- pany. CRITICS BUSY It followed criticism in recent months by outside experts of Canada's decision to build atomie power plants using natural ura- nium as a fuel and heavy water *@ |as the control and heat-transfer |agent. heavy water are more promising. These and systems of other types "The princess was very ex- trying to stem the rising tide of cited," the pack's brown owl, discontent before it engulfs the ary Miljean, reported. "She Caribbean's oldest dictatorship. ept saying how much she is foes in Cuba, hoping to have a little sister." ME ons gn Be Rico, the vived statements by Trujillo fa- vorable to the church. Government sources say that to ease tension Trujillo may soon grant ty to many of those The Queen's son prince|iron.fi : di of Charles, 11, remained at his ex- thor fistetl, BB peat on is de- clusive Cheam boarding school|fiantly battling internal opposi- 50 miles west of London. [tion which flared last month and When the baby is born, Sir| nearly resulted in disaster. Michael Adeane, the Queen's 50- Trujillo crushed a nationwide year-old private secretary, will lot by a middle class group of telephone the news to Home Sec-|P ers, doctors and other pro- retary Richard A. Butler. Then dnl to assassinate him Jan. bulletin signed by the Queen'sia;" at the opening of a cattle doctors will be posted on the show He retaliated with a wave palace gates. All week crowds or arrests have braved near - freezing| i weather in the hope of being the CHURCH PROTESTED first to read the notice when it| But his action in jailing 1,500 is posted. to 2,000 persons drew fire from Metro Setup Considered In Winnipeg By THE CANADIAN PRESS A move to put 450,000 people in the Winnipeg area under one government controlling essential services was to be proposed to the_ Manitoba legislature today for approval in principle. The Manitoba government of Progressive Conservative Pre- mier Duff Roblin planned to pre- sent for second reading a bill that would put Winnipeg in the same class as Toronto--an urban area under one government, headed at first by an appointed chairman, The government bill providing metropolitan government for half the people of Manitoba will pro- vide essentially for: Bowmanville Woman Dies BOWMANVILLE -- Mrs. Char- tes E. Hone, 56, RR 4, Bow- manville, who was severely burn- ed at her home, Monday, died Tuesday at 10.45 p.m., in Bow- manville Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Hone was burned while attempting to light a burner of) an oil cook stove. Her clothes had ht fire. A daughter-in- law, Mrs. Shirley Hone, with her husband Donald, managed to smother the flames. The victim was rushed to the hospital in a police cruiser driven by OPP Constables R. S. Dia- mond and Jack Ricard CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 38-2211 the Roman Catholic Church. In a % |strongly worded pastoral letter, |the chureli protested there was a « [lack of human rights in the coun- 4] |try and deplored the suffering of ! [the families of those jailed. | Many of those jailed soon were {released, 'but 120 so far have |been sentenced to 30 years at {hard labor, the maximum under " the law, and fines totalling more { |than $1,000,000. All admitted par- ticipating in the plot. Other home - front troubles be-| set Trujillo. | Businessmen complain that eco- {nomic conditions are the worst in years. A drought last vear which {reduced the sugar and coffee |crops was coupled with lower Koakiinke Xi OTTAWA (CP)--Unemployment in Canada passed the half-million mark at mid-January, rising 134,- 000 in the five weeks up to Jan. 15, the government estimated to- |day. Monthly survey figures placed UNEMPLOYMENT JUMP 900,000 Jobless Canadian Report {world prices. Government income { |thus was cut, but at the same { |time the regime was forced into a Xan GRA vod il convicted in the Jan. 21 plot. A campaign is also being whipped up to rallv support for Trujillo for president in 1962. A parade of some 250,000 marchers is scheduled Sunday to demon- strate the popularity of the "ben- efactor of the fatherland," the title Trujillo assumed when he handed the presidency to his brother in 1952. Snowstorms and snowdrifts aren't too much of a problem for farmer Myron Hanson of Vinton, He simply climbs on the tractor-driven snow-blower outfit he rigged up and tears - SNOWDRIFTS GONE into big drifts, to make short work of it. A manureoader scoop funnels the snow into an auger and an ensilage blower does the rest. AP Wirephoto By THE CANADIAN PRESS A judgment in Peterborough questioning that city's legal right to give parking meter tickets to registered automobile owners {could dig into the wallets of On- tario municipalities. County Judge John de N. Ken- nedy quashed a Peterborough parking meter conviction Mon- day, saying the city had no legal right to pass a bylaw making automobile o wn e r s responsible for cars parked at meters. The Ontario Municipal Act only granted authority to make driv- extra military expenditures by the threat that exiled opp ts of Trujillo would invade from Cuba HURT ECONOMY government spending, par- ticularly for public works, with consequent repercussion through- out the economy. An official of the Dominican " Central Bank estimated that im- |compared with an increase of 98.- ports exceeded exports last year [000 a year earlier. by $20,000,000. The deficit in 1958 A government statement ac- was nearly $9,000,000. |companying the statistics said| Abroad, Venezuela is applying |that the latest increase was pressure against Trujillo's re- {larger "in part because of the gime in the Organization of |smaller-than-usual seasonal de-| American States demanding in- This caused a cutback in other § said. Peterborough police have stopped issuing parking tickets to cars over - staying their time at meters, The act empowers municipali- ties to enact bylaws requiring 'drivers' of vehicles parked on metered highways to make use of the meters and pay the fee de- scribed in the bylaw. Disuse of meters could mean a substantial drop in Ontario municipal rev- enue. GOOD REVENUE Toronto's 4,705 parking meters brought $525,892 tg. city coffers i|last year. Sudbury estimates i |each of its meters collects an av- i |erage of $2 a week, In Toronto, deputy solicitor J. { [Palmer Kent said the judgment i|*"could have some effect on the i |city's parking bylaws." g| | James Mackey, chief of Metro- . |politan Toronto police, said traf-| i|fic tickets for parking violations) pattled here, Rev. Martin Luther are issued to car owners. The tickets are stuck under the car's windshield wipers. "I think it is a matter of law Parking Tag Case Race Dispute May Void Bylaws ee a Bloody Fight 'Turns Into | PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP)--An |eruption of tempers and fists | here Tuesday turned a previously passive sitdown demonstration by Negro students at a segregated lunch counter into a short but bloody brawl. One white youth required hos- pital treatment for a slashed face--probably done with a razor, police said. Three Negro students were arrested. All were charged with disorderly conduct. One also was charged with assaulting an officer and carrying a concealed weapon. The violent outburst, concen- {trated in a parking lot, had its {inception in the attempt of some |50-to-60 Negroes, mostly high | school students, to obtain service |at the "white only" lunch counter lof a department store. | Police said a mob of more than| {250 or both races milled around| |a parking lot watching--and en- gaging in--numerous fist fights. As the white and Negro youths | King told a Negro rally in Dur- {ham, N.C., that his race must be {willing 'to fill up the jails of the | South" if it takes that to break i and I don't think I can comment|down racial barriers. are being developed in the U.S and Britain. The U.S. has launched a broad i [research and development pro- gram in the field of heavy water reactors. Its Canadi di Atomic Plant In Canada change of detailed information on the design of this type of reactor. "Increased co-operation will be mutually beneficial and in addi- tion will assist the U.S. AEC and U.S. industry in determining the future role of heavy water power reactors in the United States," Atomic Energy of Canada said. Khrushchev Discusses Burma Aid RANGOON, Burma (AP) -- A not-so-b Nikita Khrushch discussed possible new Soviet eco. talks today with They argued tht systeins us-|dent ¥ Win Maung and resurgent ing expensive enriched uranium|political leader U Nu. and graphite or gas instead of A government sourcé said the Soviet premier and the Burmese leaders also touched informally on relations between Burma and Communist China and the China- India border dispute. Khrushchev was reported to have applauded an agreement Jan. 28 settling still requires statutory authority. J. L. Gray, president of Atomic Energy of Canada, said the U.S, will contribute toward the de- velopment of a large-scale heavy water plant to be built by mid- 1964 on Douglas Point on the shore of Lake Huron, nine miles north of Kincardine in Bruce County. It also would contribute toward the development of a power plant expected to be built at Canada's second nuclear research centre on the Winnipeg River in Mani- toba, This likely will be a power plant fuelled with natural ura- nium and controlled by heavy water but cooled with an organic material. operation there would be an ex. Under the new plan of co-|i some disputed points on the Burma-China border and agree ing to negotiatg the others. Some Burmese observers felt that Khrushchev would not be in a handout mood on this visit, not- ing that the Communist National United Front party lost 43 of its 46 parliamentary seats in the Feb. 6 elections. But others be- lieved he would make a token of. fer of at least one aid project in an effort to show that Russian friendship is not based on Bur- ma's internal politics. Khrushchev today toured two Russian gift projects that re- sulted from his 1956 visit, a tech- nological institute for 1,100 stu- dents being built just outside Ran- goon and a 200-room hotel near. sub- urb, {layoff in Januarv, about the same| |as a year earlier but up 7,000 those without jobs and looking for|cline in the labor force." No rea-| vestigation of an alleged violation work at 504,000, compared with|son was ascribed for this. of human rights. the post-war January high of 538,-| The labor force in January| Dominican exiles in Havana, 000 last year. The estimate for|stood at 6,203,000 compared with|Caracas, San Juan and New York the previous month--at Dec. 12-- 6,076,000 the previous January have been keeping up a drum- was 370,000. and 6,231,000 in December. fire of propaganda against Tru- The number with jobs in Jan.| January unemployment repre-jillo, apparently exaggerated. uary fell to 5,699,000 from De-|5ented 8.1 per cent of the labor The conspiracy of young profes- lcember's 5,861,000 but remained |force, compared with 8.9 per cent sionals appeared largely a home- above the 5,538,000 figure of Jan-|2 year earlier and 5.9 per cent|grown effort, however. uary, 1959. = December. ; | Observers say manv of he ex- Besides i | On the employment side, the|iles have been discredited at brea # Yhose without Jobs, 12¢ decrease of 162,000 in those with home. They say the middle class 000 persons were on temporary i> between December and Jan- would like a transition to demo- {uary was greater than the 122,000 cratic government to avoid the {drop that occurred between the possibility of a revolutionary re- same months a year earlier. | gime patterned on Cuba's under from December. [Fidel Castro. elon it any further than that." | The Atlanta Negro leader spoke [to about 100 students from Negro v. 3 \ 7, | : 3 ¢ (WINDSOR NOT WORRIED | colleges in the Carolinas and Vir- | A spokesman for the Windsor|ginia who have been staging the |eity solicitor's office said his de-|variety store lunch counter sit- {partment is confident municipal-| downs. ities derive authority to hand out|-- parking tickets to car owners, . . whether or not they are drivers, | from both the Highway rivers, Snow Still Falling Act and the Municipal Act. | He said Windsor A Scotland Areas youll be unaffected by the Peter-| Soon Rewers)- Snow wat orough decision. sti alling in many parts ol twa ie daik Britain today with most of north- Drovineiat police COMMISSIONET | oy Scotland already isolated. lark said: It may de- "pigeon rail' lines were pend on how the Peterborough,» oq by drifts and power and HARSH BLAST Lucien Cardin, 40, Liberal member of Parliament for Richelieu-Vercheres delivered one of the harshest and bit- terest attacks on Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker ever heard in (W. H the Commons. Mr. Cardin said A simultaneous announcement from National Employment Serv- CHANGE AVERAGE However, the government sald|/ ARMY UNDER CONTROL he had never heard so much contempt for parliament as dis- bylaw is worded. However, we are more concerned with moving telephone lines were down. Schools were shut and mail and NEW FIREFIGHTER Water spews from nine moni- tors of the new firemaster in played by the prime minister |violations, rather than parking, milk. trucks stranded. ice said that at Jan. 14 there|it was about the same as the av-| Trujillo still controls the key were 75387 persons registered|erage December-J, y ch el t in the situation--the mil- for work compared with 549,084|in the previous six years. itary. He is trying to remove the and accused Mr. Diefenbaker |so I don't think it will have too| Aberdeenshire, two freight of humiliating External Affairs much effect on our operation." |iraine were buried by drifts. at Dec. 10 and 775,858 the previ-| More than one-third the de-|effect of the pastoral letter ous January crease occurred in construction, abroad by indicating it cme be- The increase of 134,000 in the the government said, and about/cause the church resented the estimate of actual jobless je-Jhalt in trade, manufacturing and government's refusal to curb ac- tween January jagriculture. tivities of Protestant missionar- Minister Howard Green by dis- | A spokesman for the attorney-| The Shetland Isles off the north! closing Canada's disarmament [general's department said the de- coast reported the heaviest snow proposals after the minister had [partment would have to see the|/in memory. 4 declined to do so. full judgment before comment-| Temperatures everywhere were ing. {around freezing. Swansea Harbor, Wales, today. The firefighters 40 foot-high structure is mounted on a pair of pontoons, 66 feet long, with diesel engines fore and aft. The monitors are four - inch gear - operated "nozzles which can spray water or foam. They are mounted at every corner of the two platforms and on the control cabin on top of the tower. Close to the water line are large wheels with pneumatic tires to permit fire- master to move against the side of a ship without damage. AP Wirephote EN A

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