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The Oshawa Times, 20 Apr 1961, p. 1

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hy THOUGHT FOR TODAY One drawback to improved high ways is that there is no longer any such thing as a distant relative. She Oshawa Times WEATHER REPORT Mainly clear tonight, increasing cloudiness Friday, warmer with winds southerly 20. VOL. 90--NO. 92 OSHAWA, Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Second Class Mail ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1961 Authorized es Second Close Mall TWENTY-SIX PAGES US. Runs War Risk Russ Say MOSCOW (AP)--The Commu-|weighty though even then It nist party newspaper Pravda was not the longest. | said today that United States| "Today the United States rul| policies on Cuba might bring|ing forces are striving to pur- war tothe soil of the United sue their policy with soft gloves, States itself. {but with the self - same stick. The grave threat was made That policy cannot be crowned in a special article signed by with success. . . . "Observer," the signature; "Today one cannot proceed which is reserved for important from the policy of big, long, Soviet policy declarations. heavy or other sticks because Denouncing President Ken- the other side has just as heavy, nedy's "big stick policy" with/just as 'long and not less regard to Cuba, Observer weighty sticks. . . . wrote: "There is only one way of "One can say that such a consolidating peace and co-op- path is against the interests of| eration, it is the policy of peace- the American people and may ful coexistence between States jeopardize the peaceful life of with different social systems." the United States itself. The sooner this will be Feslizel in the United States the better." S { Pravda also said: ; £4 arer "The actions of he United States gravely endanger e| peace of the world. But as| Walkout N. S. Khrushchev's message to| President Kennedy 52: re still is time to preven e ir- reparable from happening. The| Reported United States government can still prevent the fire of war| ,,, \ / -- The Sea touched off by the intervention- Nr Ar Theor of ists in Cuba from blowing into Narth America and three af-| a conflagration which could notigai04 unions are planning to be extinguished. walk out of the International REITERATES SUPPORT Transport Workers Federation, Pravda reiterated the Soviet a federation spokesman said to- statements of support for the day. Castro government. | "We have no definite news "The road upon which the that the Americans already have United States has embarked in decided to withdraw but we in its actions against Cuba is understand they intend -to do dangerous. It should not be for-/so." the spokesman said. gotten that today is not the mid-| The SIU is under suspension 30s but 1961. Cuba is not alone, |from the Federation for sup-| "It caf mo be smothered en- porting a wildcat British sea-| tirely by blockades nor by other/men's strike last year which | means, because it is an inde-|paralyzed North Atlantic traffic pendent state, an equal mem- for several weeks. ber of the United Nations. Cuba The federation s poke sman ig"a sovereign state. All pro-/said he could not name the ran mankind, all the honest three affiliated unions that are minded people side with it." | withdrawing. The Pravda said: | Roger de Keyzer, president of "There was a time when the the International Transport President Theo. Workers Federation, in dore Roosevelt proclaimed the Antwerp he could not under- 'big stick' policy. In those far stand the reported withdrawal. | off days the American stick was {Canadian branch of the SIU on| [the wildcat strike this union Canadians [cred but, year had ust "The disagreement with the eral revenues. 3 CASTRO PICKET IN TROUBLE ing broke out between the pickets and shoppers in the area. About 50 pickets carry- ing pro-Castro signs appeared in the late afternoon. Shop- pers in the area attempted to One of the pro-Castro | pickets that paraded in front | of Philadelphia's Federal Courthouse Wednesday, lies | on the pavement after fight- TOTAL VICT CASTRO GL GON RULE : Win Or Lose U.S. Blamed GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba feel they can control this (AP) -- Anti - Castro Cubans thing." in Oriente province are re-| Much of the actual power in {ported fearful that rebel invad-|the region apparently is exer- |ers waited -too long to strike, |cised by half - baked youths 4 . 4 |that the Fidel Castro govern-|who have been given forced in- through to Suerrilise walling > ment had enough time to round|doctrination and armed with| I is Cqmbrey. pit Bins the up the potential leaders of the rifles and sub - machine - BUNS.| wor apainst the pro-Communist uprising on which the invaders gai p count. {MOLEST PRIESTS Yegime, Hundreds of Roman Catholic/ Echoing Castro's claims, Mos- An American source thor- 3 priests throughout the eastern|cow Radio charged U.S. ma- oughly familiar with the activi- 0 < C - ies 5 i i end of the island have been ar-|rines are poised to strike and ties of Cubans in this eastern| le Se goveratinant cnd of the island where Fidel rested or subjected to humilia- ; Castro launched his revolution|tions of one sort or another. |Warnings that the use of Amer- | ican forces would have dire MIAMI (AP)--Prime Minister Fidel Castro asserted today he has wiped out rebel invaders on Cuba's southern beaches and {captured large stores of U.S. arms, including Sherman tanks. {But he conceded his forces have suffered heavy losses. The rebel leaders insisted the main invading force has fought | tear down the signs, then | fighting broke out. Police | made three arrests, then dis- | persed the crowd. . --AP Wirephoto Kennedys PM May Sweeping Tax Plan | oma corre wns his legislative hand and give the . WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| .ountry at least a peek at plas ident Kennedy today sent a taxi go. keeping 111,000 railwaymen plan to Congress which he said, york once his federally-im- would help modernize Amer- hy : osed strike ban expires May 15. ican business and create 500,000 p The last two days have been {building up to what informants |say is Mr. Diefenbaker's per- sonal entry as arbiter between The president said his pro- posal would attack "expense account living," discourage tax|the principals--Frank H. Hall of cheating and reduce the wortri-| Montreal, chief negotiator of the: some flow of U.S. dollars 15-union bargaining team and abroad without cutting into fed-| railway presidents Donald Gor- {don of the CNR and N. R. Kennedy described his pro-|Crump of the CPR. gram as "a first though urgent| While ministers have been ne- » gotatihg - behind closed doors Step ard broad tax efor) with these three men, the prime could combine elimination of| minister has declined to give Still Get pum A-Weapons OTTAWA (CP) -- Apparent United States abandonment of| its scheme to make NATO a nu-| clear power will mopftec any| Canada-U.S. plan f8r provision| of American nuclegr warheads to Canadian troop# in Europe,|: informed sources say. ? It was planned from the start --1959 -- that such provision |of corporate investment in com- hol and discriminatory any indication a: 19 Whether he i edora : : : *|MacPhers n ro : lor provisions with a lowering ofl oot op Findhi bun Biiey tabled basic tax rates. lin the Commons last week, These were among the most would serve as the basis of a notable items in the first-step solution. package: He has sidestepped the issue A special tax incentive for|by saying Parliament would business to modernize and ex-|told as soon as a solution is pand, withholding of taxes on|found--'based on the 1 ,m- dividends and interest, repeal of | mendations of the report or the special tax treatment given| Otherwise. dividends,, and discouragement LEGISLAZION EXPECTED It was understood, however, peting industrial countries. | that legislation was taking shape Rail Work Plan To Holiday [said the population hopes the| These attacks on the priests, |counter-revolution against Cas-|together with assorted incon-[COUsCedVEACes. =o 0 oo [tro will succeed. {veniences, have created consid- "dealt .a colossal blow to the "But they are doing nothing erable resentment against the forces of aggression" but "this until they have a better idea|Castro government. does not mean that the threat ot what is happening," the, The women have been unable/to the independence, of Cuba {source continued. to get cosmetics. They have had|has been removed and that "If the counter - revolution to cook with a foul - smelling/the interventionists have re- fails, the failure will be blamed Russian lard. Soap and deter-linquished their criminal on the United States and noth-|gents are nonexistent. While schemes." ying the United States can say|these seem little things, they) An anti - Castro leader in or do will persuade them thatmay be the stuff of which re-|Puerto Rico reported Wednes- our help and sympathy is volutions and counter - revolu-|day night that a new landing had been made in Cuba. He did Reveal and might be introduced before the end of the month. L:bor Minister Starr r t Mr. Hall here Tuesday to hear| the union's position and '.. 4 ; port Minister Balcer met with Worthwhile for years to come." tions are made in Cuba. [the railway presidents Wednes- GIVES BREAKDOWN |" Re ) ; The source gave this assess-| . [1] Both sides of the story were| i tai / | i binet this|ment of the situation in Oriente, ( ! di Pil t io be bronsn! UP in cabing *|Cuba's largest and most popu-| a a an . Oo S The $97,300,000 grant recom-|lous province: i | For a public uprising, {railways exta capital ith but Castro's government has Held Up In Cuba hour wage boost suggested bY those. who might have served] deral iliation board sev-| gat | | MONTREAL (CP) -- Two Ea fe ore a fore th ininal| 22 leaders. An uprising around padian pilots and their char-/to era po : ore A orig ot|the province's cities, especially tered airplane seem to be stuck Murray and Robinson, irike ate had been set Ior 1a5t/ Santiago or Guantanamo City,lin Cuba, Toronto livestock brokers. Dec. (would be extremely difficult. | Donald McVicar, president of {for Lippert and his co - pilot mend I for this year in the the| | "I would guess," the source World Wide Airways, said the Gri Se el |Larose. Earlier, they flew a {mission report would give the people need a rallying point.| |said, "that Castro and company last word he has had from two| | of his veteran pilots came Sun-|plane - load of chicks to Miami | - . day. They sent a telegram from for transfer to a Cubana Air- | Traffic Accident Havana saying: "Arrived OK.|lines plane. This time the flight Departing Tuesday a.m." was made direct to Havana. Deaths Increase OTTAWA (CP) -- The death The pilots are Ron Lippert, McVicar said the pilots have {toll from traffic accidents in 29, a native of Kitchener, now|flown the same plane for many - Planning Canada rose to 175 in February living in suburban Pierrefonds, years. Their usual routes take TORONTO (CP) -- Roy and from 161 in the same month last and Guy Larose, 32, of Dorion, them to the Arctic on DEW Que., just west of Montreal Is-/line supply flights. In thoi p the Dominion Bureau of Ivy Griffin were sitting around yah [the living room Wednesday Statistics reported today. land. Each has two children. Last summer th : : } i § e two took McVicar said he has tried part in a history - making air . : | A total 5906 persons were in- [isin talking SUL, the SUMMET ured compared with 1,351 in through the Canadian external| Ag ie ! {operation in which military and affairs department, the tele-| ;ijian . planes evacuated al- " ron. | February, 1960. | They talked, with sons Ken- Sharpest rise in the death toll companies and the telegraph|m oc the entire population of companies to communicate Gagno! : a with the mien. |Gagnon, Que., an isolated min- The plane flew 20,000 chicks Havana on a charter from| Ltd.,| ORY AIM Says Invaders Killed Or Trapped In Swamps {not give the location of the |beachhead. | There were rumors--entirply unconfirmed--that more d- lings were imminent. | In New York, the Cuban Rev- |olutionary Council said Wednes- day night: "Regretfully, we ad {mit tragic losses in today's | (Wednesday's) action among a |small holding force. . . ." The communique was issued {prior to the Cuban government's |claim of victory. | The Cuban radio said today |seven more alleged terrorists-- |{including Humberto Sori Marin |--have been executed by Cas |tro firing squads. Sori Marin was a onetime Castro lieutenant and a former minister of agriculture in the - Castro government. The Cuban government coms munique claiming total victory over the invasion force that hit th swampy beaches of Co- chinos Bay Monday said "Giron Beach, which was the last stronghold of the mercenaries, fell at 5:30 p.m. yesterday." CASUALTIES 'HEAVY' Signed by Castro as prime minister and commander - in- chief, thé communique claimed the invaders "suffered heavy Ities, dispersing in a swamp area from which no es. cape is possible." But Castro conceded his forces paid a "high toll in courageous lives." The prime minister said a "large quantity of arms of American m a n u facture were |captured, including various Sherman heavy tanks." The Cuban Revolutionary It was the second trip south{Council, which organized the |striking force of Cuban exiles, {had said earlier that the "land- |ings" were only a'phase of its |campaign to overthrow Castro. {It disclaimed them as "an in. vasion." "We did not expect to topple Castro immediately or without setbacks," the council said in a communique issued Wednes- day night in New York. | The rebel command now ap- peared to be anticipating a mounting guerrilla campaign which they hoped would stead- ily attract popular support would be made under a bilateral arrangement in the same way that there would be joint Can-| ada-U.S. control over nuclear EICHMANN STORY {neth, 28, and Clifford, 20, about {the holiday at the cottage. Mr. Griffin told Kenneth to be sure tand get a boat. was in Quebec, with 44 persons killed compared with 25 a year earlier. The Ontario death toll He said the plane is believed, to be the only Canadian one in Cuba. It was possible it was be-| ing town 500 miles northeast of within Cuba, much in the man- Quebec City, when it was/ner of Castro's guerrilla cam- threatened by a forest fire. |paign from the mountains of They made several flights/Oriente province that ultimately |was up to 68 from 65. = Shooting Suspects ui eb ried, but "it's getting long wait- Arrested ing. HAMILTON (CP) -- Thirty- |five minutes after a man had New Rebel Radio jen shot early today, detec- ing held in case Canadians need| to be evacuated. i : The twin - engined C-46 trans- Women and children. {port would be useless as a war " (plane, he said, but could carry 53 passengers. At 4:15 this morning, Clifford | (heard his mother screaming. Burst By Nazi pidge ak \ "I'm all right, son," ¢he CHARGED JERUSALEM (AP) -- Adolf in a recorded statement that father said. 'Call an ambulance Eichmann was cool and matter was played back Wednesday for for your mother." Shani Ferizi, 38, a Yugo- of fact--with one notable excep- the three-judge court trying him! The father went into the cel- slav immigrant who lived in tion--during the long sessions on charges of mass murder of lar. i Toronto last year, appeared {when he told his story to his Europe's Jews. 4 When the ambulance got them | and was remanded without (Israeli captors and a tape re-| "I cannot claim mercy be- to hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Grif- safer for American nuclear, Plea in Ottawa court today on |corder, an informed source said cause I am not worthy of it," fin were dead of stab wounds. + warheads in Europe to remain| @ charge of murder. The today. Eichmann continued.' a ruil | under exclusive U.S. custody, | charge was laid after K. San- | "He showed a little feeling should have hanged myself in| Later this year, the Canadian| kara Pillai. 30, first secretary |when he said he expects to get Public to that all the anti- warheads for Bomarc anti-air- craft missiles based in Canada. President Kennedy's rec. statements on the subject indi- cate he believes the problem of NATO control over the use of nuclear weapons placed under| its 2 tration--15 { the trigzer--would be too diffi-| cult to surmount. It now is his apparent view that it 'would be better and and rescued about 100 men|brought the downfall of dictator |Fulgencio Batista. | Diplomat Wounded In Riot By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Demonstrations for and against the United States over its Cuba policy continued throughout the world as the gov- injured including an |American diplomat. Edward)| | Infantry Brigade Group in West) of the Indian high commis- the death sentence," the Israeli Semites in the world would have . [tives arrested two suspects at Germany will get the Hon-st| sioner's office in Ottawa, was |informants reported. had these terrible events em-| Station Reports [gunpoint on a downiown Street. John artillery rocket, capable of shot Wednesdav. "I know I may face a sen- Phasized for them." | Both men later were charged carrying a nuclear warhead. | --(CP Wirephoto) [tence of death," said Eichmann 'He was quite businesslike roll 1AR=A Sew el imo wounding with intent to [the yest of the Hime, the Israeli cated in the Scambray Moun-| Police blame the shooting on ° PY source reported, 'but he seemed," """ | | moved, a little emotional when !2ins in Cuba began broadcast- an argument over one of the 1nese u marines ie read this." ing i dh anti - Castro/men's wives. r ; orces w! ich entered Cuba last| In St. Joseph's Hospital with | Seventy ~ ouaDes, (were weekend haVé carried out their one .22 calibre slug in his stom- ) rogation that followed Eich. Mission. ach and a second in his chest ! mann's . capture in Argentina. The station, which identified|is Arthur Powell, 43, of Hamil-lernment of Fidei Castro : ' O OIT1esS last year. itself as Radio Escambray Libre ton. claimed it had wiped out invad- " . he prosecution Wednesd (Free Escambray) said the in-| Doctors performed emergency|ing forces. began playing buck exCerris By vading force was in the moun-|surgery but were unable to re-| In Guatemala pro- and anti- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Red "We coula win" any test of the problem of coping with them the trial, bringing into the rec. '@ins reinforcing guerrillas who/move the tiny slugs. |Castro factions clashed in front China's growing submarine strength with the Communist/may take on critical proportions, ord the former SS officer's own 12Ve been holding out there for, Charged with wounding with of the presidential palace Wed-| fleet--it is believed to total bloc sub fleet--but not without officials said. version of the Nazis' "final oly. Months under the command of intent are Albert Whitney, 33, nesday night and shots were more than 20. long-range, mod- losses. ; However, "we know what to tion of the Jewish problem"-- Mai. Evilio Duque and Maj. and Robert Macavoy, 23, both of fired. Three persons were killed ern craft--has added a new di- There are others in the navy, do about it," Mustin said, claim. meaning total annihilation of Osvaldo' Ramirez. no fixed address. jand 13 mension to the United States and outside, who contend there ing the U.S. Navy has the tech- Europe's Jewry--and the part Navy's problem of defending|is ground for doubt about pres- niques and weapons in quality. he played in it. {Brows second secretary of 'the | American shipping lanes and ent U.S. capability in this field., The question, in the admiral's Th t e Ew i tod U.S. Embassy. was hit by a bul- coasts. U.S. Navy officials are operat view, is quantity. wie trial wag Iu Tecess pay | ; let in the left arm while watch-| But the big menace is posed|ing on the assumption that Rus-| "We've got to find some fr ig its inde- ing the clash. : | by an estimated 400 Russian sia Soon ina? fave Nuclesp: means to provide more money" o y. L C T ae ZQVe:n nen ia the submarines, most of them ad- powered subs--if it doesn't have for ASW capability or we're , | Laos Crease- ire A reement Near |shooting came from the pro- anced, » ypes andithem already. i 0 ind," sai g {Castro group. Police broke u tle ig on aby EE : going (Hi behing," be said. Assault On Cuba MOSCOW (Reiiters) British Ambassador Sir Frank [the Tl ean gas. pl although apparently not as deep- SER RED A-SUBS HAS ABOUT 450 d N Bi I . Roberts said today agreement on a cease-fire in Laos is A bomb was thrown at the ie os th: US Polars e advent of Russian nuclear Overall, the Communist bloc ot 1g nvasion "very near." He held a 6%-minute cocktail party conver- |U.S. Embassy in Quito, Ecua- rocket with its 1.200-mile reach. subs will multiply demands on has about 458 submarines. The sation with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. dor, but caused only slight dam- Rear Admiral Lloyd Mustin, | © S. anti - submarine forces, U.S. has more than 100, 17 of _ WASHINGTON (CP) -- State age. No one was in the build- the U.S. Navy's Anti-Submarine (SOme say by as much as five or|them fuciear powered In addi-{Secietary Dean Rusk iodsy de. Tremor Shakes Comwall Subdivision (ing. ip id i es. tion, Britain and other nations|scribe his weeks action by , v : Sg iversity Ctu- Warlare (ASW) Shit og In This is Because atomic-pro-|friendly to the United States|anti-Castro Cubans as not a mn CORNWALL (CP) A_ slight earth tremor shook homes oe pp hig ed an interview that as things stand | for invasi py and buildings today in the large Riverdale subdivision, just r concemne |pelled undersea craft can stay have about 100 subs. None are/jor invasion but "a type of re- fh ? g ¥ pi J the Castro regime in a mani- [submerged indefinitely, thus de- nuclear, although Britain is!sistance . . . likely to go on." byviig of here. There was no damage. The tremor was also |festo issued at Tegucigalpa. It PHONE NUMBERS {fying surface and air detection. building its first. Sh Rusk made the comment on elt 2% nearby Massena, N.Y. {said "A regime that is popped CITY EMERGENCY _ ai mor than 3 knot as com wi auras of Common ep opérenl ited Cuban Cuban Birliner Lands At U.S. Base i TL UN LISTENER ; J Ls, a m- 8s § vasion as he boarded a plane aii ims does not. meri e least pared with five or six knots of sub numbers? 2 on a speechmaking trip on At- HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) + A Cubana airliner en route [student sympathy." 3 U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stev- | at the U.N. in New York. The POLICE RA 5-1133 conventional subs, making it "We know everv one of their lanta. Ga from Madrid to Havana made an unauthorized landing at a Police broke up small pro. enson scratches side of mouth | Soviet bloc in the U.N. pres- i. ~ .vn, (that much harder to kill them subs by name and number." He said both President Ken-| U.S. air force base here today and was detained by military |Castro rallies Wednesday night| as he listens during denunci- | sed for a United Nations con- FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 [Wea Selected de # Mastin said, adding that the U.S. nedy 'and he would have more! Suthorjties. 3 statement issued by Kindley Air Force Base [in downtown Reme and Venice,| ation of the U.S. role in the | demnation of the United States . and when e Russians has pictures of many of them, to say about the matter later| said the airplane lacked insurance coverage required for land 39 s y | Cuban crisis b; i Bospiral RA 3.2211 muster 20-or more nuclear s ub taken by patrol plages. HS te da landing at a United States military ag q | tudents were arrested y Ambassador | as an aggressor against Cuba, in Rome. | Adnan Pachachi of leftist Iraq =(Ap Wirephoto) & | J «

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