Durham Region Newspapers banner

The Oshawa Times, 21 May 1960, p. 1

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

THOUGHT FOR Although a woman often says she has nothing to always has enough to put on to go shopping to buy else to wear. TODAY wear, she something he Oshavon Tunes WEATHER REPORT Prospects for Sunday and Mon- day mainly sunny skies with warm temperatures, winds light, mainly westerly. TWENTY PAGES VOL. 89--NO. 118 Not Over OSHAWA, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1960 Authorized as Second Cross Mail Post Office Department, Ottawe Price 10 Cents Per Copy Mosc ow Ovation For Mr. MOSCOW (AP) -- Premier Khrushchev returned to Moscow today after a week of diplomatic encounters which rocked the world. He landed at Vnukova airport from Berlin where he had cooled world war fears by saying the Soviet Union would not press for a new status, which would include the departure of the Allies from West Berlin, for the next six to eight months, The crowd at the airport shouted approval for the stand Khrushchev took at the frustrated Paris summit session Thousands of citizens represent- ing factories, intellectual circles and other phases of Moscow life jammed the tarmac. Representatives of each sector took the microphone to pledge support to Khrushchev and hail him for the stands he took in Paris and Berlin. As usual in his airport appear- ances, Khrushchev smiled broadly, waved enthusiastically, and affectionately patted chil dren who clustered around Correspondents were notified | the traditional mass meeting for a Khrushchev homecoming in the Lenin sports palace would not be held until next week, allegedly in| order not to interfere with the weekends. U.S. NOT REPRESENTED No representative of the United States embassy was at the air- port to welcome Khrushchev al- though protocol called for charge d'affaires Edward L. Freer to be crises to develop--the Russians present. Freer said he stayed away| from the airport because there| had been ne clarifications of re marks made about President Ei enhower by 'Khrushchev at press conference in Paris on May 18. and Nikita Khr -|good luck. It gave him the ex- S-lcuse for blowing up the summit his conference and avoiding the un- IP in Paris, which could have had| Representatives of Britain and |serious repercussions for Khrush-| France were present, however. |chev in his own political back-| BERLIN (AP)--Looking weary » unshakeable power. Let us strengthen socialist - brotherhood and guarantee a peaceful life." LESS VITRIOLIC The 66-year-old Soviet leader spoke twice before in public dur- ing his stay of less than two days in the Communist half of this di- vided city. Both times his words were soothing, despite violent at- tacks on President Eisenhower and Konrad Adenauer, the Vi. | German chancellor. He told East German Commu- nists Friday that things will hr Je to stay as they are, as far as eight months. Then he will be ready for a new summit conference. Whether the newly elected American pres- ident will also be ready is a ques- tion he did not discuss publicly. There was no mention whatever | in Khrushchev's fairly subdued| and apathetically delivered ad-| dress of an apology from the| United States for the spy plane| incident and punishment of those responsible as prerequisites for! another Soviet conference. THE PICTUE TODAY This is how the picture of the Soviet manoeuvring is beginning, to appear now to American sources here: The Russians saw no possibil- ity of significant concessions from the West at the summit on the West Berlin and German ques-| tions. They ran the risk of a show-| down in which unless they RS | SOVIET FOREIGN Minister Andrei Gromyko reads a state- ment to newsmen on arriving at New York's International Airport today from Paris. become "even more aggravated" unless the United States stops its "'aggres- sive acts'. Gromyko came to situation can U.S. Of o Low Flights: SHHOtegy SHINGTON (AP) State WA! | {today accused United States flying back to Washington today planes of "provocative" low-level to take charge of administration flights over Soviet merchant navy strategy aimed at defeating Rus- wanted the most dangerous of ships. sia's drive to brand the United Tass News Agency quoted an States an aggressor before the article in the newspaper Vodny United Nations. Transport by Vasily Zharkov, al Herter's return from Paris coin- high official of the Soviet minis-|cides with mounting U.S. confi- try of shipping, who claimed dence that Russia will be re- (American planes made 23 flights buffed in its follow-up move to |over Soviet ships since the start exploit the controversial Ameri- {of the year. He said the planes can spy flights into a resolution dived to within 165 feet of the of censure in the world organiza- ships and in some cases various tion, objects were thrown on the ves-| State department policy mak- sels ers, after canvassing prospects would have to backtrack. For Khrushchev, the spy plane incident probably was a piece of leasant aspects of a showdown| ard. But by exploding the summit, | C < flew home today after a stopover fm ml lke pip Corn . Tture was quieter than when he arrived two days ago. The Soviet premier left ahead of schedule, and thousands of East Berliners marching to the|satisfied the Stalinists and Chin- route to see him off got there too|ese Communists and whatever {other forces have been exerting Khrushchev, who pledged Fri-|pressure on him in his own camp, day night to leave things as they now must take a look at the is|threat to the carefully planned| ready for a new summit confer-|and executed peaceful coexis- farewell | tencé campaign. late. are in West Berlin until he ence, read this brief the |feeling of cold | world stands to suffer propaganda sef- backs as a result. COEXISTENCE DOWN DRAIN created a new war tension in the Moscow now 5 SENET 9 Climbers Plucked From Slope a Russian accusation that Japan has permitt | were made with the consent of ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)-- U.S. aircraft based there to make spy flights over the Japanese government.) . . 'A daring bush pilot plucked an Zharkov's article in the Soviet jnjyred rancher and an ill woman the Soviet Union. (The accusation was made in a shipping newspaper said the U.S. from the high reaches of North air force has recently "intensi-|America's tallest mountain late note handed to the Japanese am- bassador in Moscow. It said there had been '"'more than one in- |stance'" of such flights and they Khrushchev, having probably The Commu- men died in the Two Gromyko said the international | 4 # New York to press Soviet spy plane charges against the US. before the United Nations Security Council. AP Wirephoto Reds Accuse Herter Ponders Scheme were reported confident of defeat- LONDON (Reuters) -- Russia Secretary Christian Herter was|ing the Russians in both the Se- curity Council and the UN as-| sembly. GROMYKO HOLDS KEY The language Soviet Minister Gromyko uses nouncing the spy fl fer a clue about Russian-American relations. 4 in When he arrived in New York Friday night, Gromyko told re- porters. the international situation "even more aggra-| vated" unless the U.S. stops its| become "an 'aggressive acts." He said it is "incumbent u |the United Nations to |vote serious attention to this (spy|STILL SHORT plane) matter and to take neces, Even if he. had an euual _num- " | J | {turning Friday frool the wreck sary measures 10 end the polic of provocations'-and aggression.' Foreign remaining rivals, Senate Demo- de- ights may of- the future of Ing PO iq 317% of the 761 needed. U.S. oviets Down Transport E. H. Walker, president, announced Friday that Gen- eral Motors of Canada Ltd. will offer several new com- pact cars this fall -- The "Tempest" by Pontiac; the "Special" by Buick; the | NEW COMPACT CARS | ANNOUNCED BY GM | Eight Airmen In Russian Hands BERLIN (AP)--A of| "It like a legitimate |the Soviet Embassy in Berlin said misadventure, and let's hope the {today that Soviet forces 'forced Russians regard it in that way," {down a United States air force|he said. {transport which crash-landed in |East Germany Friday. _ WIESBADEN, Germany (AP) announced |The United States moved cau- "F-85"" by Oldsmobile; as well as an extension of body styles by the Corvair. In addition, GM will offer a strictly Canadian compact car known as the '"'Invader", Mr. Walker said. 1 Aq American officials Kennedy Triumphs In Oregon By JACK BELL | WASHINGTON (AP) The | Democratic presidential nomina- | tion campaign reached its chips- down stage today after the sweep- | ing victory by Senator John F.| Kennedy of Massachusetts in Friday's Oregon primary. Kennedy filed a first-mortgage | claim on his party's nomination. t was his seventh straight tri-| umph in the primaries. But it remained obvious that he | | has not yet captured enough votes to foreclose the bids of his chief | , | cratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson lof Texas and Senator Stuart Sym- ton of Missouri. Nor could Kennedy safely as- sume he had disposed of the pos- sibility that Adlaie E. Stevenson, twice the party nominee, might capture the nomination again. With Oregon's 17 convention |votes, Kennedy's publicly re-| {corded total of pledged votes rose | | | [that Gen. I. Jakobbvski com.|tiously today to obtain freedom mander-in-chief of Soviet forces|for eight Americans seized by in East Germany, advised U.S. East German police after their authorities the plane "landed unarmed air force transport Schwerin and that/strayed behind the Iron Curtain. The U.S. Air Force was ex- pected to approach Soviet au- The plane, crew and passengers | thorities to launch negotiations were reported under the control | for release of the seven men and of Soviet military authorities one woman aboard, but now has pending an investigation. turned the case over to the state Unofficially it was learned that department, apparently anticipat- the Russians said the aircraft had|ing that East Germany will try violated territory of the East/to force Washington into direct German state. negotiations. The U.S. does not Jakobovski's ¢ 0 m m u nication | recognize the Communist satel was in response to a message lite regime and has rejected sim- from Gen. Clyde R. Eddleman, ilar efforts following other bor. commander of the U.S. Army in der incidents. Europe. " The text of the message was FRA New BLAST th not made public but it was known S circles saw the possi. Bi that Eddleman had advised the Pity of 2 new anti - American #| Russians the C-47 had strayed blast Sollowing Friday night's an- {from its Copenhagen - Hamburg|oLncement by Las 4 route through a navigational er- that the twin-engined C-47 had p Tor. landed on her soil. OSHAWA CADET The press officer of the Soviet She US. Air Force said the Embassy said he could .give no|P.20€ ) was returning from a _ Lt. James Brough of Oshawa |details on how the plane was| "Pra® flight to Copenhagen is one of nearly 140 cadets (forced down. He said the Soviet|2nd was en route to Hamburg from the Royal Military Col- military command in East Ger-|" West Germany. lege, Kingston, Ont, who many was handling the case. The incident, coming on the graduated on Friday, May 20. | heels of the U-2 spy plane case, The Minister of National De. OTTAWA (CP)--The landing of created an additional strain om fence, the Hon. George R. 2 U.S. Air Force transport plane East-West relations. Pearkes, VC, inspected the |in East Germany "sounds like 2| Soviet authorities grilled 'the officer cadets on their cere- |legitimate misadventure," an ex-|seven airmen and a servicemen's safely' near |the plane, crew and passengers | were safe. ber stored among those |selected, he still would be short age of the Paris summit meet-|of a first-ballot victory. ling, warned that 'more irrita |tions, possibly other incidents' might erupt as an aftermath to|July -| So for the period of less than 11, Premier Khrushchev's blowup of opens in Los Angeles, the infight- \the talks Queen Mother ing is likely to be some of the -------- bitterest ever witnessed. [ His unbroken string of primary victories puts Kennedy in a posi- tion to say that he has the grass-| roots support of members of his| delegates who remain publicly | President Eisenhipwer, on re- uncommitted and those not yet! two months between now and when the convention) monial parade in the morning. |ternal affairs department official| wife soon after the plane came Premier of Ontario, addressed | The official, who declined to be of Kluetz about 1 the convocation in the after- |identified, said it appeared likely |the Iron Curtain iies east of injuries, |East German - police sald. The N i Off | plane was only slightly damaged. oO The transport plane disappeared | after taking off from Copared the Iron Curtain. Several hours later the U.S. Air By ALEXANDER FARRELL Officials of Canada's St. Law- reported the plane overd Canadian Press Staff Writer [rence Seaway Authority are also launched an air-sea AY Lawrence Seaway is counting on|step up business. o a steady traffic increase to bring| Best informed guesses in ship- LEADERS' COMMENTS The Hon. Leslie M. Frost, [said Friday. down near the Baltic coast town noon, that the plane lost its course. | All aboard escaped y Seaway Details of the landing were vague. To Fl in Start ie Hamburg on a route close to Y g Force's European headquarters MONTREAL (CP) -- The St. courting on large lake vessels to Baltic area. Both President Eisenhower and [fied its provocative flights" over Friday Soviet ships. crash of another rescue plane. AS - Don Sheldon, 38, of Talkeetna, Be i Denies Rumors party, that he has shown he can|its seaway business up to the ping circles seem to be that traf-| BC i den Mes. Hel ; TAD bring out the votes in areas where level originally predicted for last fic reports for May and June will Soviet Premier Khrushchev made C di ew Mrs elga Ing o An- the summit conference. There feeling of tension and crisis and oa i lito year. show substantial boosts in freight Public reference to th issi Sands > pe 3 ah VE ther I sia!it counts. 4 € missil chorage and John De y of Contra) WE NS SY Sh denia Kennedy can contend, more-| But the second season of the tonnage, much of it accounted for|Plane at about the same el oint, re., p. pparate 2 \ Lz, flig was absolute unanimity between |stiffen the back of the West. 2 Celebrate us, cow obviously would have to] ts of his single engined beth has publicly described a re- over, that he has «disposed in water route has not got off to a by bulk cargoes .in large lakers.| Eisenhower, flying back from "We will work persistently for shoulder the blanfe. So Khrush-| statement in a tired voice at East nists had: hoped to accomplish Berlin's Schoenfeld airport: much in this campaign by way| "As you know we spoke with|of lulling the non - Communist| leading personalities of East Ger-|world and weakening its resist- many over international problems ance and particularly. those problems| pressure on West Berlin at this resulting from the torpedoing of moment would only heighten the | | | Police Hunt Three Bandits MONTREAL (CP) Montreal police are pressing the search for three masked men who shot and killed a 52-year-old bank mana- ger during a $1,780 hold up Fri day. Three other bank holdups, a court-house shooting and a double shooting and suicide rounded out [ 4 22 1 Accidents Injuries Fatalities Charges laid for traffic offences 19 278 Dida) 5 , A imi i is |flying start. The cargo volume| Few observers think, however, the Pari i : sort that she plans to marry her|West Virginia of the issue of his| '3 3 : , ,/the Paris summit conference Hae. 4 wired en remained Do al pi vin Aor nary hes Roman Catholicism. {will have to increase considerably that the forecast of 29,000,000 tons | shattered by the U-2 case, was 4 - LJ a solution of international differ-/chev came to his East Seri cto da Da 25 i ici i es acis i bo ri : OE a : ie ng 5 en contend, on the basis|°f 25,000,000. Revised but unofficial estim-|;.. = ri x ences on the basis of the policy Communists empty - handed and 1 I'l Y . Day said the o her men were sued a for mal statement to. the oan Dadi at The seaway was open for 13lates projected from last year's iberare set | Sauseq it to vanish, ia : _ %h frog s sly "1 oress her ring reports tha § s , : oi fey : ) > as By THE CANADIAN PRESS Resgue efforts were pressed. i ph gig ho Big sir Ar would be acceptable to potenti- days in April and handled 826,678/21,300,000 tons, range around 25, (oo. ara: oh | : hi : : J {tons o. cargo handled, a daily be reached by 1968 ebrations and fireworks Monday. tional helicopter. a | EOE i y y rid | : Since 1952 the holiday has been Sheldon made a precarious air- |davghter, Princess Margaret, and {average of 75,259. (NO JAMS THIS YEAR |omineugly, referred to American celebrated on the first Monday plane landing on skis at the 14,- new son-in-law, Antony Arm-| [STILL OPTIMIST! 3 a . planes flying over "foreign terri- : ld |strong-Jones, who are on board! MISTIC The problem of costly ship|tory at this moment." 4 St. Lawrence Seaway Develop-|dents or tie-ups due to - May 24. 1819, birthday apn Bading, 31 booked three or four days ago 1 ; " pla He-ups opera Vers pe Dirtudey of 3 Jos 7 a was purely a family conver- 0 [ment Corparation, sae there is|tional deficiencies on the Mont- nouncement. Me ith © he fire NO PUBLICATION A x It Tad noting to. do with every indication the seaway will reai-Lake Ontario route this sea- gay X que VESSEL ON BOTTOM | somewhat fewer transits but far lakes on speculation, hoping te Libya, had been on a "morale Bading became sick from the al-|night proved by Democrats in the east, Syew pos, Years pu ios! $130,000.90) slave waler route in/ington. ading an ght. ra y ,000, s orecast | 1959--wi realized. pr titude late Tuesday. The touring Queen Mother is- the midwest and the far west. He © We do not know that any de |better known as "the 24th of of Anchorag flying far above |April, 1959, when the seaway break even point at 50,000.000 ] : |May"'--will see many Ne ddoor oo the Ha RL ns Be Coen The Queen Mother spoke by ra-| [operated six days, showed 451,554 tons annually, a level expected to EV: discussing the U-2 incident : » y dio teleptone Friday night to her before an East Berlin audience, Victoria D lek i man to Talkeetna. He did the West Indies Friday Tory Lewis G. Castle, administrator ofito have been licked. There have ria Day was celebrated on M¢ alkeeina. = i i " vaffi 5 i lw : " May 24 for years--marking --- same thing earlier to rescue Mrs.| A statement said the call was the United States operation, the heen no traffic - delaying acci- When the East Berlin radio con. \ g firmed the landing in a terse an. Canadian celebrs } 4] | He said there is a trend to- particularly independ ent or Force headquarters here said the Sevedian. cole aration o the hinth {ward larger vessels, resulting in "tramp" freighters, entered the plane, stationed at a base im clizabeth horn x i over 'the Avril i y i i] jag on Mount McKinley, where the| but she used "a stronger word He can assert that his record 1 rate if the tonnage on the seaway this year--made told the missing C-47 just half an of peaceful coexistence. The un-|told them they had no choicé but Canada's first warm-weather Day, 51, was picked up at theltn... penn were contemplating ally rebellious southern elements. tous of cargo, an average of 63,591/000.000 tons. the worst has not happened." hg i$ ¥ . preceding May 25, giving many 500-foot level of the 20,300 - foot East Germany's official , 8 news |be an increasing eco ic suc-|son. |FROM LIB 11952 and was followed in 1953 by the press report. " g fom ues son YA The Oshawa Times will not ; oe Ay : men were hurt in a fall and Mrs. |in private, an aide said Friday|and his policies have been ap-|{handled in 1960 is to approachibefore the official opening of the hour before he landed in Wash- ity of the socialist camp is an|to mark time, {holiday of the year--Victoria Day. 17,000-foot level by Link Ouckett marriage. [tons per day. The toll report for| Seaway economists have set the At about that time, Khrush- people a three-day weekend mountain and flew the injured the royal yacht Britannia in the Seaway officials are optimistic, jams, a piague last year, appears : ; * | : media said nothing until midnight 1] cess y 7 { la ruling fixing the same date for as Your ay Soon een GE as A be published on Victoria Day, {more tonnage. {find profitable cargoes. |flight." one of the most violent days in the city's history. Another major holdup occurred outside the city. Royce Smith, manager of a central branch of the Bank of Montreal, was returning from lunch when he saw three men wearing flesh - colored masks climh from a car outside the bank Mr. Smith, tussled with one of the men. Then held his arms « a husky six footer as two of them the third shot him The trio rushed into the bank shouting to employees to empty the till. After scooping up $1,780! they returned to their car and fled. Mr bank since 1936, left a w an 18-year-old son COURTHOUSE BREAK Earlier in the day shots ec through the halls of the Montreal courthouse as five young prisoners, scheduled to ap pear on charges arising out of 35 holdups, made a sudden bid for freedom The five leaped from the pris oner's box and ran for the court house door ' CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3.2211 fe and main : Girard fired at the group hitting Smith, manager of the Claude Nadeau, 18, in the thigh. | Monday, May 23, in order to give staff members an op- portunity to spend the holiday with their families. The next issue of The Times will ap- pear on Tuesday, May 24. The Times extends best holi- day greetings to is read- rs and urges you to drive safely the long week end DEATH TOLL DOWN There will be the usual holiday exodus of town and city dwellers into the countryside, but the Ca nadian Highway Safety Council has estimated that only 20 will die on Canadian roads. The fig ure is approximately half the av erage Victoria Day weekend high way toll during the last years LATE NEWS FLASHES Earthquake Hits Manila, Suburbs MANILA (AP) An earthquake rocked suburbs today: The 12-second this area so' far this year, over fou | ROYCE SMITH Provincial constable Adelard - Manila and its tremors were the strongest in Three other prisoners, identi- but ther \ hut there were no immediate fied as Jean Dupuis, 18, Lucien Simard, 20, and Georges Fournel,| mediately Jean Guy Bisson, 22, escaped and became the object of a city-| wide search DOMESTIC SHOOTING | | In suburban St. Laurent, Fred Soviet Rir Chief Awarded Order Reiger, 28, the father of two chil-| dren, fired four shots at his 24-| year-old wife and their boarder, Angelo Kulos, also 24, then killed himself with the same gun. Mrs. Reiger was in serious con- dition in hospital with a bullet] wound in the abdomen. Kulos was hit in the shoulder and above the left eye Four Montreal in the area brought the tota: |loot from the day's bank robb lies to over $30,000. cther holdups damage reports. d 24, were recaptured almost im- Third Russian Arctic Station MOSCOW (AP) Soviet polar explorers third temporary meteorological station in the reported today. The station is on the the Davis Sea have opened a Antarctic, Tass Drigalsky ice island in MOSCOW (AP) Air Chief Marshal Konstantin A. Ver- shinin has been awarded the Order of Lenin on his 60th birth- day, Tass news agency reported today. Vershinin recently Ships Moving After Crash SARNIA (CP) Great Lakes shipping started moving slow upbound at midnight after bein blocked near here for 12 hours by a double collision Friday The first collision sent the 444 foot land Cement to the bottom of the fcg-shrouded, 31-foot deep ship- ping channel two miles out from this lower Lake Huron port. About five feet of her deck re- mained above water. The United States Coast Guard reported the Standard Portland, ¢wned by the Boland and Corne- line of Buffalo, was down- hound into the St. Clair River on the U.S. side of the 800-foot-wide channel when she collided with the upbound August Ziesing of the Pittsburgh Steamship Division of {/nited States Steel Corporation. There were no injuries. lus SUBSEQUENT COLLISION About 20 minutes later two lakes vessel Standard Port-.| ¥| called off a visit to the United States after incident. the U-2 spy plane More Tests With Atlas Missile WASHINGTON (AP) with super-range Atlas fired into the Indian Oce being made United were not prepared to Atlas shot would be made. mis mn Fr hy e Plans State today for more er-ocear re from Cape Air Fr when th int rd ma Canave But next e the da officials 9,000-mile ree other upbound ships, trying to avoid the damaged vessels, col lided The 372 freighter British ocean owned by foot Tynemouth, the Burnett Steamship Company, | bumped with the 429-foot motor vessel Paul Townsend of the Hu- ron Cement line. The Tynemouth "was reported taking on water, A skeleton crew remained| hoard the Standard Porijand/ where it went down about two { niles north of the Bluewater | | Bridge between here and Port) {Huron, Mich The Zeising, which had her bow |wedged into the Standard Port- {land's hull, was pulled away late |Friday night and temporary re- | pairs started. The 580-foot ship, empty at the time of the crash, had a hole below the waterline between her third and fourth hatches ENGINE ROOM FLOODED Capt. William Graham, 52, of] River Rouge, Mich., skipper of the Standard Portland, refused to| discuss the collision except to say| the engine room filled with water! limmediately afterwards. Although room was left in the channel for ships to pass one way at a time, traffic was held up| until a U.S. Coast Guard cutter arrived to take charge. At, one time about 20 ships were wait- ing to move through the chan- nel The * Standard Portland carrying. a load. of taconite tug-boat captain working on channel deepening project near {the accident scene said he be- lieved the Standard Portland could be repaired and refloated.| 1 | | was! A | CITIZENSHIP CEREMONY mott and 'H. E. Robinson, | day was organized by the president, Oshawa Chamber of | chamber of commerce and the Commerce Judge Willmott | ladies of the Imperial Qrder presided at the '"'Canadian | Daughters of the Empire. For Citizenship Court". Mayor Gif- | story and pictures please turn ford welcomed 'he citizens at | to Page Nine. . the reception, 'he. citizenship Oshawa Times "hoto Shown above, at a reception for newest citizens, who received citizenship papers at the courtroom, Friday night, are from left: Mayor Lyman \. Gifford, Judge A. R. Will s Oshawa's >) 2 ob

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy