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The Oshawa Times, 26 May 1960, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY 8ign on a bulletin board outside a church: "What on earth are you doing for Heaven's sake?" dhe Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Fog forming again tonight, vari- able cloudiness on F' with scattered showers, little ¢! * in temperature. VOL. 89--No. 121 OSHAWA, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1960 Authorized as Second Cross Mall Post Office Department, Ottaws THIRTY PAGES 3000 KILLED IN CHIL Cleveland; and in last row, left to right, are: Staff Sgt. Leon Porter, Russellville, Ala., and Staff Sgt. Chester K. Slee- zer, Galway, N.Y, Missing in the picture is Airman Second Class James P. Garvin, Wood- bine, la, PA Lundy, left, pilot, Ohio; and Capt. George A. Jordan, co-pilot, West Lafayette, Ind., behind | the couple. Behind those offi- | cers are Capt. William T. Fre- | Germany, today. Front are | wen, left, Galveston, Tex., and Capt. and Mrs. Paul K. Mc- | Airman Second Class James A Cash, Atlanta, Ga., with Capt. | Morrison, Richmond, Va., and | County Considers Hospital Proposal Following representation by|ation and in no way represented] The Oshawa Hospital Board members of the Oshawa Hospital the thinking of the members of brief stated in part: Board, the Ontario County Coun-the committee. "The County of Ontario ac- cll Wednesday approved a motion| At a session of the council in'counts for over 20 percent of the to reconsider the matter of cap-/March, councillors, after five patients treated in the Oshawa ial grants to finance hospitall days' of debate on how to estab-|General Hospital. This is the pre- construction. |lish a formula for hospital grants, sent figure, and in view of the Representatives of six hospital approved a motion to shelve the increasing population in the boards, including hospitals in|whole question until 1961. |county, it is safe to assume that| three other counties, met with the Addressing the council on Wed-'at least twenty percent of the county council's special commit-|necqay afternoon, T. K, Creigh- total beds available, or 127 beds, tee on hospital grants during the|ion of Oshawa, said that he was after the present planned con- afternoon. accom gan od ves struction is completed, will con- wilt Memorial Hospital in yhudsay, fal represents atinosh as many esented ei the York Memorial Hospital s as are presently available 4) oi gp the Soldiers in all other hospitals in the County, (Continued on Page 3) (HOSPITAL GRANTS) A James P. Findlay, AMERICAN AIRMEN and voman who spent five days in East Germany after their C-47 plane was forced down pose after arrival at Wiesbaden, --AP Wirephoto tee, Reeve Morley, of Pick- ering Village, member of with a "'sug-|Newmarket, gested 1 la for di ion| Memorial Hospital in Orillia. purposes." He sald that the form-| ga gaiq that all hospitals were ula was presented for consider-|y cating this problem as a uni- ¢ to make him land. 2 MILLION HOMELESS PILOT GROUNDED U.S. Airmen Treated Well WIESBADEN, Germany (AP) |his flight over East German ter- The pilot of a United States Air|ritory was similar to the intelli-|' Force transport forced down in gence mission of the U-2 over : East®* Germany last Friday said Russia. today that six Soviet MiG jet fighters fired machine-gun bursts alone several times on the day {he landed and the next day. Capt. James Lundy, who was He said East German officials hi Wednesd. told al Passenger, Mrs, Barbara A. Mec- re anes ays |Cash, who was on a leave trip "There was no indication that| BH) K. McCash we were off course until the Lindy. adds a: [MiGs appeared. There was nol oe good, > uD, 8 my ind ba that they The Russians helped us out in and : . The battered old air force C-47|g pt with eight servicemen and an air| grounded by the air force after searched all except the woman| He said he was questioned | | | # with her doctor husband, Capt.' "Our treatment] ? The food was good. ? any way they could for our com- force wife aboard strayed 22) miles Jo, East, Germany nite) CENSUS TAKER samiurs Toe Rss rsd FALLS IN LOVE cans Tuesday, but bad weather| NAPLES, Fla. prevented their flying to the West until Wednesday night. ORDERS VIOLATED | The air force, in grounding the| 41 - year - old pilot for investiga-| tion, said he "clearly had vio-| lated pertinent flying directions." | Lundy blamed a false wind re- pert for his getting off course |and said he realized, when the| |Russian fighters appeared, that he had strayed, | taker asked the usual questions, but the bachelor being inter- vewed asked a bigger one-- "Will you marry me?" are honeymooning. The census taker was Miss Mary Halliwell. The bride- groom is John B, Demaree. been married or planned to marry. But when Miss Halliwell cppeared, "like a. beautiful vi- Demaree said he had never | |referred to the U-2 spy plane in- | The pilot said forecasters in Copenhagen had reported an easterly wind, but it actually was blowing from the west. NTP that as far as he knew, he did not violate any flying procedures. He said Soviet questioners had sion," at his doorway, "it was love at first sight." ore dinner vie dates followed. It was three weeks before he popped the big question. cident but did not suggest that Hospital. The county grant is an "integral part" of the plan for financing a hospital addition at? Oshawa, and a decision was nec-|' fied problem, not just one Wie Bricklayers Here applied to the Oshawa General... Under New Rules Gromyko Returns 7 7 ' 7 | TORONTO (CP) -- Nearly 200| essary before construction could| { : ! (®) Attack On l US. begin. rers h ; plaste and brickiayers in the Deputy-reeve Warren Mowat, |' Oshawa-Whitby area have come| sider the Projection of the Judas. tion meet with a committee of the trial Standards Act. council but an amendment by| yt uations endorsed ao | Deputy-reeve Ross Hawthorne, of | te rent edition' of the On| Pickering township, that the del-| in the current ion a re legation meet with the committee] : b tario Gazette, give the ricklay-| named as a special hospital com-| or a | ers and plasterers industry in mittee, was carried by council. 4 that area a minimum wage and ry. formula presented for con- restricted work standards for the gijeration, proposed a grant of first time. $320,000 to the Oshawa hospital, | Bricklayers will now receive which is 20 per cent of the $1,600, $250 an hour and plasterers 000 to be raised after deducting $240 an hour. Included in the provincial and federal grants of schedule are hours of work: holi-|$1,100,000 from the $2,700,000 the day and overtime rates. 1220-bed addition will cost FILM BACK TO EARTH er of Whitby, moved that the delega-| UNITED NATIONS (CP)--So-|what Gromyko described as pi-|rE0 viet Foreign Minister Andreiir cia has caught 10 United States| |spies." lo ate-like spy aggression acts for 4 Gromyko told the United Nations the future and he repeated his| 2 |Security Council today that '"'in|charge of 7 only the most recent years Rus- U.S. perfidy against the The U.S. had said a flight by ne small unarmed plane could 4| Gromyko made only a brief ref-/nct be described as aggression, erence to the alleged capture of Giomyko said, but he asked what the spies and gave no details as number of planes would rightfclly he made his final agrument in|c support of Russia's charge that| If one did not, would three or address Ww! committed aggression four be sufficient? the U.S. by sending spy planes over Rus-| sia. Apparently seeking to counter 2 the U.S. statement that a dozen epies 'had been arrested in the US. since Stalin died Gromyko| onstitute aggression, ttack. WHENCE MANDATE? "But when and from what peo- (AP) -- The |! attractive young woman census | ° She said yes, and now they | RELAXATION day and achieve the ultimate in Five - year - old Nancy Peter- son of Otitawa knows how to | relieve tired feet on the Sparks | in the cool water of a fountain. Street Mall in Ottawa to- | New Volcanoes, Quakes Continue SANTIAGO (AP)--No respite here from battered Puerto Montt appeared in sight today for south-| said the city of 20,000 on the {ern Chile, wrecked by five days|south - central coast was 2 {of continuing earthquakes, tidal shambles, {waves, avalanches and volcanic! "Tere ig little water and &l- |eruptions. |most no food," said one. "The in- {| The official toll so far was jured in the hospital had to be nearly 3.000-dead or missing, | moved info the street for fear the count was mounting steadily. | from Valdivia reported thousands missing could total 6,000.) [me entire food supply and began survivor flown to this capital "Everything danced in a ter- With countless communities B ed still cut off and the upheavals of | umor not predict the final toll. Low. | and ash from volcanoes hung) TORONTO (CP)-H. L. (Les) try on South America's Pacific |g. York West, was mentioned known dead at 1,708, with 1,123\yg. 0 inn 00 Phillips as provincial was altered by the disturbances| Mr. Rowntree 46, lawyer, has Wednesday. Tidal waves up to 15/2nd has served on many legisla Many coastal islands could not Grey North, resigned as provin- 12,000,000 homelses and $300,000, building would collapse." (Reuters news agency said esti-| were suffering from hunger and ""The whole world seemed to be rationing it, from shattered Valdivia province. rible rhythm." nature continuing, officials could | a lying clouds and rain hampered In Ontario over much of the southern part|gowniree Progressive Conserva- coast. [by a Queen's Park source today {missing and presumed dead. | which began Saturday. Three new [represented his constituency for feet high still pounded: along 750|ture committees, be reached for word of their in-\cial secretary and registrar-gen. 000 property damage. And the| Another group of survivors mates indicatde the dead and|cold. The armed forces took over shaking and quivering," said one| Appointmen ppointment UPHEAVALS CONTINUE aerial rescue operations. Smoke of the mountainous, narrow coun ive member of the Legislature The interior ministry listed the as a probable successor to Dr. The face of the country itself *eCTetary. eerth tremors were reported|four years with good majorities relaxation as she dips her feet miles of the southern coast. Dr, Phillips, 62, member --CP Wirephoto | {J It didn't all happen at once, Fe Russians t asked Mi: : hibide ning. Heard 1 | WASHINGTON (CP) -- The viewpoint would come out of the/sign of stopping. Heavy rains his constituency. the summit conference." United States bombarded U.S.S.R. and the world with Pres-| habitants. FEAR FURTHER QUAKES dent The homeless, numbering one-| eral May 11 after being convicted in open fics n he government source said mountains to which they had fled, Mr. Rowntree is an ideal choice because he is comp ar atively or plodded away from .he scenes of destruction, fearful of the|y , is experienced in corpora- tremors that so far showed mo|tion law, and has a good on over much of the vast quake area | added pig He said it is urgent an appoint. misery. ment be made because of a back- 'liming of the May 1 flight was ident Eisenhower's address Wed-|cesential to gather "important in.| In Cautin province the earth's(iog of company charters requir- nesday night, but early indica-|formation" which was "likely toSurface dropped as much as 1,000 tics were that few Russians|p heard it. | In his message, the American « leader asked that the failure of|added a point which may have|earth. the Paris summit conference be weighed ever more heavily on| tten and that East and West| American minds -- that never in "business-like dealings" again would they be caught as of seven shaken into life by the join for peace, | th here said the Russians let the| | Even without [re'atively few Russians could in seven languages spoken | that area. |P Eisenhower declared that "the | Voice of America headquarters Pear! Harbor, | [first 10 minutes of the speech get|learned that even negotiation it-|Cuba, Ecuador, Haiti, Peru, the through, ther jammed the re- self can be used to conceal prepa-| Netherlands and Norway. |maining 15 minutes. [ra the jamming, |Eisenhower. [have been expected to hear the sponsibility for what the U.S. hen the broadcasting rovernment |first began, since it was 3 a.m. military communications alert on The U.S. had said its spy flights Moscow time, Translations were the eve of the summit and the| SAFETY MONTH were to guard against surprise to be beamed to Russia through original masking of the truth on| today in 22 separate broadcasts the U-2's real mission in Russia. | | ing the approval of the provincial e unavailable at a later date," feet Me susich TW secretary. He did not disclose what this|near Lake Rinihue. Avalanches important information" was, but filled valleys with stone and Israeli Fighters Gun Down UAR Jet TEL AVIV (Reuters)--Israeli fighter planes today shot down a United Arab Republic MiG jet The figutor on an epgagement within San be used fo a nent in Bg for| rae air space, it was offically prise attack, said ond fonts for he Noncles announced here. particularly. ar ZO iounceteh su healt Ashen - faced refugees flown ice over the Sinai bi Desert near the U.A.R. - Israeli er, The last air battle between Israeli and U.A.R. fighters oc- SCORE BO ARD curred Feb. 1 when, according to the U.A.R. Army, an Israeli Mystere jet was shot down and Wednesday May Total|another hit. | Accidents 1 52 Smoke rose to 30,000 feet over 7,349-foot Puyerhue volcano, one ley had by the Japanese at|earth tremors. Relief supplies are being sent "From Pearl Harbor we|by the United States, Argentina, Eisenhower 'said he took re- did, including the JLOT SHIELDED The government's first state- Tsreel said then that s four Syr- i a ple did Washington get a man-|path of reason and common sense Ment, that the plane was merely Injuries 0 2% y |date for this?" Gromy] I} " » : on a routine weather - testing isd Noe Russia shot down a U-2 SPY tating" no such ie il wpe ¥ Ye Kustizes wil Diem, was a Peover" to protect Pye iy or) 1 . been obtai "alli : ,|Pilot Francis Powers if he were 1 U.S. ambassador Henry Cabot ee aiued, Soin, Lom "allies Undeterred by Khrushchev's til; alive and trying to escape|. T2iic Offences 19 Ludge was expected to deliver a pakistan had protested the use of display of abuse and "bad deport:| rehuttal after today on a Soviet|their territory in the flight plane|™¢0t, in Paris, Eisenhower, resolution that, on the basis of |, the U.2 plane which had been | SPeaKINg from the White House speeches by all 11 members in|shot down. on radio and television, said "we the emergency meeting of the France had used "strange| 1211 not back away, on account ; Security Council, already is/|ogic' in backing the U.S. while| °F recent events, from the efforts deocmed to defeat. > b ie lor commmitments that we have Official . at the same time calling for con- " Yui y oo lundertaken. i Dies A 62 SCOFFS AT OPEN SKIES [tis over mehtods of delivering "op." touch. of umility, he | Gromyko scoffed at President mien Ww oaous. ledged to continue to work for A Whi 8 ot , Britain had ace Soviet |P 0 continue to. wor § -until still-untried space spies other intelligence sources includ-| the a: rol ows is Kicenhower : Propessl for der| Union of bondi Rog Bini East-West nuclear test ban j can take up the slack. ng, Where they are used, paid and district, Elwood Robert (Doc) | (faq Nations surveillance. In/20d said it should not be re. and Sonrolied disarmament aud : : Yet agents. : : : ; . nrded. i any other i mary months. say. US. oie The US. Alf Force launched ms Gonel omcusl pity a he U.S. view that would do away| tied in the same manner guide? Site Esta Ot ICHCEE, the | . A Race age ie , orce jaunche (4 ) ng (with the need for espionage to' ppe! in the . : clals 'probably will have to doithis week a test model of the short illness. At the time of his| ard against surprise attack 13th century. But, said Gromyko, | He also would urge before the without the flow of clear photo- Midas satellite, which quickly death, Mr. Elliott was business pris ian MiG fighters were driven off after a "brief emcounter," and did not say whether any planes 817 were shot down. |sa'd it was no isolated event ELWOOD R. (DOC) ELLIOTT Noted Labor New Space Spies Will Take Over WASHINGTON (AP) The| With the U-2 flights abandoned, suspension of U-2 plane flights information will have to be pieced over Russia has forced the United tozether painstakingly from refu- States to fall back on more- gees, observant "travellers, pub- conventiona: espionage practices lished documents and various! _ graphs which could help them was dubbed a space spy. It isn't. manager of the United Carpen- know what is going on within It's designed only to detect the ters and Joiners of America, Russia. actual launching of ballistic mis- [ocal 397. He was in his 62nd A space system designed to sles. | year. provide photographs is in the (Continued on Page 3) works. But the first test firing SAMOS DESERVES TITLE (E. R. EI Ahi of the Samos satellite isn't sched- The Samos satellite will be the jimi uled until September, and a much |/irst orbiting vehicle to qualify for The "logic is marvellous, must say," said Gromyko of the US. proposal. He said it was made in the first place merely be- cause of American reluctance to R ds C i3 re accept reali disarmament. | e riticize Eisenhower had "confirmed" ' Ike's Speech borders now than in former cen- urise. longer time will be needed to get tie description "space spy." A a series of them in orbit and !com of Samos satellites, orbit- 1/it was more dangerous to violate| United Nations that Russia re- consider her previous rejections and agree with the U.S. to open § both their skies to aerial inspec- tion so that there would be no further need of such incidents as the U-2 spy-plane penetration. The U.S. would even put up some of the now-grounded U-2 planes for such an inspection if operating satisfactorily. IMPORTANT DATA sim of $a : ; [ | LONDON (Reuters)--Russia has ting at regular intervals, would | | bitterly criticized President Eis- eed a stream. of pictures to | ground stations, keeping large Reconnaissance p h ot ographs, aveas of the though taken from great heights,!surveillance. provide important clues to where| Although pictures televised the Russians are setting up mis: trom a Samos satellite would be sile bases, how they are placing|yseful for analysis, American de- their manned bombers, and what fence chiefs want to get the ac- vy are doing with their other|(ual film back to earth for close military forces. Such information is important n determining the chance of a Russian surprise attack, as Wash- ngtou noted in publicly defending {s use of the U-2 planes. Governors. ng apparatus Hence the importance of the Y:coverer satellite program aurched last year to perfect xs of ejecting capsules con-| NORTH BAY (CP) custody until June 3 when he The offence is alleged to have a Soviet Union under Now CBC Stations Recommended OTTAWA (CP) -- Operation of new television stations by | the CBC in Edmonton and by CFCN Television Limited in | Calgary was recommended today by the Board of Broadcast scrutiny under powerful magnify Rape Charge Adjourned In North Bay ~-- A Sudbury man was remanded in before Magistrate M. G. Gould in North Bay today. Albert Didel, 25, was arrested by provincial police early, Wednes: {ehower's television address Wed- nesday night for trying to justify |"provocative and aggressive' es- | pi"nage. It also condemned the exveri- {mental "spy" 'satellite Midas {launched Tuesday. Moscow Radio quoted the daily newspaper Sovetskaya Rossiya as isaying United States spy planes the UN would agree. At the same time Eisenhower acknowledged in the events that led to the summit crash the "'un- predictability of despotic rule" and called on the U.S. to main- tain a steady military strength for the "long pull." He stressed the importance of maintaining American foreign aid programs to improve conditions in which human freedom can flourish. | violated Soviet air space 113 times | in the 1953-56 period alene. organ-| ized from bases in Britain, Nor-| way, Denmark, West Germany, | |Spain, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Pak-| |istan and Japan, appeared on a charge of rape ay. ccured in Commanda Township Eisenhower went before his peuple to explain his actions at the summit, including the timing of the U-2 plane flight over Rus- sia. The tenor of his speech was It ning pictures and information | and recovering such capsules. | Several Discaverers have {#chieved orbits and capsules have been rejected but none has been recovered z that Khrushchev deliberately ex The newspaper said: |aggerated the importance of the "Such is the truth. about U.S.|incident in order to "scuttle" the criminal activities against the S0- conference, {viet Union. No sweet speeches! "It is apparent," he said, "that near North Bay during the early hours of Wednesday. Liquor Sales Referendum Seen TORONTO (CP) -- Today, Con. William Dennison said he CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 Eventually it is hoved that the Samos can be developed with a capsule that can take pictures as [it orbits and return the film to earth, I issue in the election campaign the liquor question, which has defeated," Mr. Dennison said. may ask for a city-wide referendum on the question of the sale of liquor at the park to keep liquor from becoming an good government, then good wets and good drys could be . "If we go to the people on nothing whatsoever to do with |th (his arguments stick" lad Tass News Agency commented at Eisenhower { in his TV, "failed to make|v {about peace can hide the irrefut-/the Soviets had decided even be- {able facts." | fore the Soviet delegation left Moscow that my trip to the So-| 16) Union (scheduled for June| nears the end of his TV report | San Diego, should be cancelled and that| to the nation on the collapse of | Station, He said the photo was nothing constructive from their| the summit conference, used § | this air view of part of the | 70,000 feet and referred to white Calif., Naval Air | lines on the parking lot. He said | the lines are 'Just six inches taken from a plane flying at | wide.' «AP WirephOto PRESIDENT EISENHOWER

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