Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 17 Jun 1961, p. 1

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A THOUGHT FOR TODAY You can judge how ill-informe ed a person is by noting how many things he's "agin". dhe Oshavon Gomes ~ WERTHER REPORT Warm sunny weather will con- tinue through S light. unday. Winds Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1961 . 90--NO. 141 Post Office Authorized es Second Class Mail EIGHTEEN PAGES Satellite Into Orbit VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (AP) -- The Discoverer No. 25 satellite was circling the earth every 91 minutes today, carry ing a secret payload the U.S. Air Force hopes to recover in one to four days. The 2,100-pound satellite, 18th in the series io achieve polar orbit, blasted into space through heavy fog at 4:03 pan PDT : | (7:03 p.m. EDT) Friday. _ (AP Wirephoto) | Because of the fog, reporters a mile from the launch area |were unable to see either the missile or its exhaust. But they heard its roar as it sped up- Orillia Flyers de : Sah JR, 7 a RELIC OF CUBAN INVASION near Giron, Cuba. Castro said | It bore markings of the Cuban | the invasion site by American the American-built World War | invasion force. This was the | Newsmen. | II plane had been shot down. | first on-the-spot inspection of May Be Safe An hour and 45 minutes later, | ORILLIA (CP) -- Two broth-|tracking stations in Hawaii and ers, who disappeared Thursday|Alaska reported the space ve-| ITeS 2 Own ou on a plane flight from Orillia, |hicle was in orbit. | 8 may have crashed in Georgian| Since the first Disco ve rer| nw a : " xh " Bay where a life preserver, a| hi Feb. 28, 1959, only TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)-- Washington with Attorney - Gen-jin lieu of posting $500 bond 24, FRCTE, & HC, PEOSES were seven Eo faled. to orbit. But Police arrested 17 persons foreral Robert Kennedy to seek each on charges of unlawful as-| : ] y breach of peace in disturbances help in preventing further ar-/sembly. Jailed also were two Uitegvered Friday, «aid Blake jhe Hiurss of Sapoule recovery that involved 24 "Freedom Rid- rests. Tallahassee Negroes and a 40. and Ross U 53 Have 4 > H " Flori hens " hit charges of fail-|70: and Ross Uren, 25, may have| mqwenty of them have had the ers' Jn Nonh Florida. Police in Tallahassee, Flor-|Wnlte Mar OF CIEL (found their way to one of the capability for ejecting space; Trips by racial integration-|ida's capital, collared 10 hun-/ing to leave the scene. islands in the area. | Se but so far only four| 7' testing groups also produced|ger-striking clergymen, includ-| Rev. Charles Hunter of Talla- capsy es, ; e r ; The paddle was identified by| covered. five arrests in Mississippi. ling seven white men, after the hassee provided bail Friday, member of the Uren family| APU S have been 7% A B26 bomber lay wrecked and burned at the air strip Parliament Hifl- "is «bil lion-dollar parking lot in a cautiful place", according to Senator John Conolly, Hill beauties, he told the Senate, are being hidden behind a { The five men, all sailors |whose ships are at Port Stan- {ley, nine miles south of St. Thomas, were riding in a car which struck a transport truck PRICEY PARKING LOT DIPLOMAT sea of chrome. He suggested if parking could not be abol- ished altogether, a parking building behind Parliament Hill cliff might solve the prob- lem. (CP Wirephoto) |after a bus station scuffle with, taurant. In jail, they ate their] In Diamonds {burg Negro preacher exchanged| Jackson, Miss. authorities| Like at Harold's Gambling day in 2 4 at this community | heated words at a bus depot|raised to 116 their total of ar-| Club in Reno. (IE "We have nothing to lose." |parked on the shoulder of the since breakfast where the Negro went to wel- " Riders" [near St. Thomas. TORONTO (CP) -- Thieves! 8 rests of "Freedom Riders The theft took place in down. | | said Dalton Davis, head Reno A "Freedom Rider" leader-|10 defied an order to disperse night. The 10 'Freedom Rid-\a5 one carried on the plane. {two unidentified white men, who|first meal | | I A id t {were not arrested. TAY Freed Ri RENO TAX MAN n CCl en eanwhile, "Freedom id- | | {IN HOT ARGUMENT lers" were served almost with-| " v CP) -- Two ! Hot | {CAN'T CASH IN TALBOTVILLE (CP) Sie Ne xe: ; oi Shnie Joe Chadwick had | blasted di i _|come "Freedom Riders" who when five of the integration-| $18,000 in chips stacked on a ing N12 damm TF day travelled there from Jackson- testers alighted from a bus that| blackjack table, As he sat and and escaped with $250,000 worth jown Toronto in an area heav-| > diy A "Weve 20 We ily patrolled at night by police. | ® "We. nt oash 'om. The safecrackers foiled an elab-| | aos Factions We Wout cash 'em ™ Har. orate alarm system installed by ship delegation conferred in|Friday at Tallahassee airport. |ers" went on a hunger strike a Ten aircraft of the Royal Ca-| -| Two Negroes and a white day before in protest at being padian Air Force and two pri- | wo ea Thieves Get Petersburg, a white out incident at lunch counters in| men were killed and three oth liody" driver was taken into cus- Tampa, St. Petersburg and RENO, Nev. (AP)-~Reven- lerc critically injured early fo! |ville. {brought them from Nashville,| pondered internal revenue of diamonds--Toronto's biggest! The group arrested at Talla-|Tenn. The five riders were agents seized his chips. successful jewel robbery in 90/hassee comprised two rabbis, charged with breach of peace | | old's shot back, "pending set- the firm -- J. Nunes Diamonds Limited--but technicians could M 2} U ° | | ay Be United ZURICH, Switzerland (AP)--|ing a preliminary huddle Fri- Negro ministers. All were jailed lice order to move on. notification of next-of-kin. | The two dead were passen-| cashable at any time. had injuries and. has been| The government earlier had transferred to Westminster Hos-| WASHINGTON (AP) -- A filed a $100,000 levy with the (pital in London for brain sur-{«gesth ray" bomb that would club against Chadwick's re- gery. (kill all life within its target area ported winnings. The two other passengers are|p.c heen discussed as the man were arrested at Ocala denied food at the airport res-\yate aircraft searched the area. Huge Haul u e au tody after he and a St. Peters-|Gainesville. oo'ers, they're everywhere. in a car - truck crash on "I'll sue," cried Lonnie Joe. years. {five white ministers and three when they failed to obey a po find no evidence of tempering. There was no indication of how the thieves entered the Richmond Street East building but police speculated they hid in the office building in which Gen. the diamond importers were lo- Western Laotian military Prince Souvanna Phouma, self-| cated and slipped the lock on an inner door. ; The jewels were kept in eight- inch-long metal cases in a large safe located in a cabinet wired with the burglar alarm. The safe| union." Phoumi Nosavan, pro-'day between Boun Oum and Immediate aim of the three] and head and possible fractures 'ency. door was blasted open with a, : % 1 > ie as y series of nitroglycerine charges|2[ter 3 meeting between Prem, {fereice, Which has bogsed i H : lier Prince Boun Oum, and his/down in efforts to make the eC ie said ere po Communist rival, Prince S 04 thea s1 Asian' Kingdoms ; Souphanouvong, head of the|peacefully neutral. Police believe the thieves car. Pathet Lao rebels. ried the diamonds from the We are all in perfect agree- building in containers and that ment," Phoumi told reporters. their precision timing indicates|"We are now going to seek for- they spent weeks planning the mation of a government of na- theft and watching the four- tional union." story building. The two princes met follow- will be application of the cease- fire in Laos where scattered | tisr Hoods in th inciall jungle fighting continues, the | ep Joong in. Lne provincial country's neutrality and "na- legislature buildings grew Fri- tional reconciliation." | ~~ Ff oun ° IHospiial Chniel Claims & si TORONTO (CP)--Fear of fur-{subway workers will be back on| the job Monday. Meanwhile, violence broke out é "Foul," said Harold's, add- in critical condition in St.|weapon of the future. But just ing, with the wisdom of the |Thomas Elgin General Hospital. how far in the future is worry- : : | ages, "how do they know |One has lacerations to the face; x strongman, said today the king- styled neutral who claims to be| he'll finish ahead?" ing at least one senator dom's three warring princes rightful premier of Laos. {have agreed to seek formation| of a '"'government of national|rival princes will be to decide on a single delegation to repre-| Phoumi issued the statement sent Laos at the Geneva con-| The projected bomb -- which land the other has head injuries. |might make the hydrogen bomb Q eens Park could be secretly experimenting : : . i to develop the neutron bomb Phoumi said earlier the items 00 eqare while the United States is hon: the three princes will take up| loring an atom-test moratorium. seem clumsy -- is called the neutron bomb, and it has been thrust back into the news by Senator Thomas Dodd, Connec- ticut Democrat. Dodd hinted the Russians He put forward such a possi- bility as an argument for re- {suming tests. day when a mixture of silt, wa-|at a Scarborough 'construction| CAUSE DEATH AT ONCE ter and air exploded through a project when about 100 strikers| Dodd, who referred to the concrete floor in the sub-base- menaced a workman. The strik- neutron bomb as "a kind of iment of the Queen's Park build-|ers were restrained by four car-jdeaih ray. said in a Senate =A nar 4hat tha "| A new development in Tor-|bomb. "would do next to no Officials had warned earlier Onto's strike situation came Fri-| physical damage. It would re- that the buildings were endang-| day when the 10,000 striking im- migrant workers appealed to |sult in no (radioactive) contam- ination. But it would immedi- ® ered by the work stoppage on h [ore ee because oa ton | Canadian labor for a nation-| ately destroy all life in the tar- [tion to tunnel faces. wide fund drive, terming their| gei area." Subway and public works of- MONTREAL (CP)--A former ago and looked at a number of) The hospital was founded byl|ficials said following the sub- administrator of Jean Talon cheques, particularly noting the Vancouver - born Dr. George basement break there was no| Bospitl fstfed, Foidoy. Sationes made' out'to Mr. CotAt: orl, whe, Mr. Bellumets said csaion o fear a solianse guy) demanded and got a kickback : decided to convert it into a pub DoS a danger of is and walls of 10 per cent from every gov- JUST VANISHED lic hospital when "'we found that! a cking. ernment grant made to the hos- Shortly after, he said, another the taxes were mounting." Enzineers said the break Fri- pital. man came {0 him with a letter |, ,y uy, opp; day ei a weak spot and The testimony was given b of introduction from Mr. Courte-| He s id it had b § sted said there could be a number Romuald ne Mba Edminis. | manche asking that the cheques that Mr. c t ugg 3 of such "small blows" of that trator of the hos ital from 1953 issued to Mr. Courtemanche be), in SU eanc A tu e . : : IoSpia. | he. he Shown. After this, the cheques a son-in-law of the late Dr. Al-|nature. to 1956. Mr. Courtemanche, he could not be found in the hos- biny Paquette, then health min-| It was the second blow at J, esi e iw Jom the pital records, Mr. Larose said, |iSter in the former Union Na- Queen's Park this week. On Senator Courtemanche was walkout a "national emer-| gency." The 12 immigrant unions ap- pealed to the Canadian Labor than $800,000 to a strike of New- foundland loggers 30 months ago. Independence Dodd, in warning of the pos- | sibility of the Russians develop- ling such a bomb, said it was lone way 'for destroying us at {Congress for a drive similar to|relauvely small risk to them- {the appeal which brought more selves." | Scientists have speculated on two possible versions of the 'bomb: He testified about other pay- tionale provincial government, Monday a cave-in occurred in a A : ments to municipal and provin-| Would be the man to see about courtyard at the rear of the Progressive Conservative mem-|...; oovernment officials. getting government grants, (building. In . i. ex ay ber of the Commons for Labelle for seven years before he was summoned to the Senate in 1960. Georges - Marie Larose, hos- pital accountant, said the can- | Mr. Larose and Mr. Belhu-| 'The first time I saw him,| The blows occur when air |meur testified before a three- Mr. Courte manche said he pressure -- used to keep water man commission appointed by would expect 10 per cent of the from seeping into the subway| the provincial government to, in- grants," Mr. Belhumeur testi- excavation--erupts through the | celled cheques made out to Mr vestigate the medical, financial|fied. "It seemed a bit expensive earth. Pressure now has been| a oquos haa oo and administrative affairs of but we received grants and he reduced and a 24 - hour watch rash and delivered to him have the hospital in northeast Mont- was paid 10 per cent. set up. as i s ap peared mysteriously real. . When the hospital got two Continuous work has been or- 3 . ha! Mr. Courtemanche was one of $52,000 cheques from the federa]|dered in the tunnel, caulking of | He said an inspector for the ht ole Loan' | e members of the hospital"siand provincial governments, federal income tax department. visited the hospital some time|op., the hospital was incorpo-|cheque for $10,000. d as a non-profit institution CITY EMERGENCY | 1555. He "You mean for statutoryfilled. later served as|grants?' asked Judge Victor Emergency crews were work-| (treasurer. [Chabot of St. Hyacinthe, Que.,|ing steadily despite the strike] PHONE NUMBERS | At the time, he had just been chairman of the inquiry board. |which has brought the multi- |defeated as member of the Com-| "He got 10 per cent of all!million dollar project to a halt. POLICE RA 5-1133 : of the negotiators and contr a c tors mons for Labelle. He was grants," said Mr. Belhumeur. FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 Courte- held a secret meeting in an at- elected again in 1957, and later, He produced a list Became secretary of state in the cheques sent to Mr. iefenbaker administration be-\manche, since the originals and tempt to end, the strike. If the HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 ltoge being made a senator. [vouchers could not be found. talks are sucessful the 1,000" ray LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain|said a report of the conference' ; {work will be published as a gov- | today named May 31, 1962, as the date of independence for the| 1,000-mile chain of sugar-and-| Indies Federation. The colonial office announced Commonwealth. The date is subject to accept-| ance by the West Indian legis-| |ernment white paper as soon as | practicable. A conference communique is- {rum islands making up the West syed Friday night said talks) : would be held next week to make the necessary amend- f the cast-iron lining of the tun-the date at the end of a 17-day|ments to the constitutions of the board of directors, formed Mr. Courtemanche was sent a nel started and any voids as a|conference called here to work seven Leeward and Windward result of the blow are beingiout details of the federations's|island groups before the feder- {independence within the British'ation becomes independent. Britain has given full co-oper-| ation in the progress toward independence but the islands latures of the plans produced by have run into several internal which wrapped up its work in a | road. | Names of the dead and in- D th R B mb jured were not released pending ea a (®) in the front seat of the : tlement of ownership," al- [ers in the front seat o - M H R lit though the chips normally are |car. The driver suffered sever a eo ea Y 1. A small nuclear reactor that © would shoot radioactive neutrons through a lead tube. 2. A scaled-down version of an atom bomb tailored to give out more neutron radiation than than bomb producing energy. In conventional A bombs, 85 per cent of the energy causes blast, shock and heat; the rest is ra- diation, _ When told of the two alterna- tive versions, Dodd told report- ers: "You are not far off." "I don't' believe the United States has developed such a weapon or is working on it," Dodd said. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)--U.S. spy charges against a handsome Czech diplomat and his counter-claim that American intelligence tried to hire him landed on UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold"s desk to- day. Central figure in the drama is Miroslav Nacvalac, 39, No. 3 man in the Czech UN mission. He said he will ignore U.S. de- mands that he leave the coun- rty until he gets instructions from his government. A UN spokesman said Ham- marskjold is studying a U.S. re- quest that Nacvalac be expelled on grounds he had been collect- ing information from an Ameri- can government worker for al- most a year. Also before the secretary-gen- eral was a protest from the Czech UN mission claiming U.S. agents had dangled promises of unlimited wealth before Nacva- lac if he would become a spy for the United States. Both the U.S. and Czech ac- counts were replete with cloak- and - dagger details including but facts varied lence, the sharply. THREAT TO FIANCEE State department spokesman | Lincoln White gave this account in Washington: Nacvalac made contact about = |a year ago with an American, then a government employee, |d: and demanded his co-operation, threatening that the American's fiancee in Czechoslovakia would be prevented from joining him in the United States. "She was used as a hostage to force the individual's co- operation in espionage activi- ties," White said. White said Naacvalac also in- dicated there was a possibility he might defect and remain in the United States. "Let me make clear, however, that in fact the American citi- zen was co-operating with this government while seeming to act under Nacvalac's instruc- |tions," White said. | The spokesman said the |American had access to classi- |fied U.S. information, but that |he furnished only 'purported' secrets to Nacvalac. He added that the American was of Czech origin. The de- partment withheld his name and that of his fiancee. She had since been admitted to the United States and they now were married. White said a meeting was ar- ranged with Nacvalac last Tues- day at the Gripsholm resaturant in New York. The meeting was attended by special agents of the Federal Bureau of Invesi- RY U.S. Says Man Spied For Year gation and Lt.-Col. Frantisek Tisler, former military attache at the Czech Embassy in Wash- ington who defected in 1959 and was granted asylum in the United States. White said the agents were present to discuss with Nacva- lac his alleged interest in re- maining here. "During the course of this meeting," White said, "it be- came unmistakably clear that Nacvalac's motivations and in- tentions were not genuine and were highly suspect." Nacvalac gave a sharply dif- ferent version of the rendezvous. Sipping a martini in a UN lounge he told reporters this story: Last Tuesday he was lunching with an unidentified American friend at the Gripsholm when three men entered, one of whom he recognized as Tisler. Tisler introduced the two oth- ers to Nacvalac as "Mr. Mack and Mr. Jack," and the Ameri- can friend left when one of the two flashed a badge. threats of blackmail and vio- MAKE TEMPTING OFFERS "Mirek," said Tisler, using a familiar form of Nacvalac's first name, "we would like you to be with us. Mr. Mack can open all the doors to the White House for you." "Mirek," Mack interposed, "if there is something we can do for you, the question of monsy 1 1 ly unimp We can get you all the money you want." Nacvalac said the agents wanted him to keep his job as counsellor in the Czech mission and work for the U.S. govern- ment. When he made plain he would not accept the offer, Nacvalac said, "they started to threaten me." Tisler even hinted at "physical liquidation." Zdenek Cernik, Czecho minis- ter who is acting UN permanent representative, said he received a note from the U.S. mission Tuesday night demanding Nac- valac's withdrawal..He said he etlephoned U.S. Amb a s sador Charles Yost next day and re- jected the note. The Czech mis- sion sent its formal protest to the UN secretariat Friday. Car Hits Trees Driver Killed ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- Oliver J. Boule of Galt was killed today when his car went off the Queen Elizabeth Way on the outskirts of St. Catharines. The car crashed into two trees. Boule was alone in the car. The flooding started as union|the constitutional c o nf e rence/snags. One thorny problem in the dis-| SILENT Loading of used cars marathon 12-hour session Friday cussions Friday involved migra-| for export and other mer- night. A colonial office spokesman|densely-populated federation. er 3, at the foot of Clark tion of workers within the| Bers is at a standstill at w street, Brooklyn Heights, to- day as the maritime strike goes into its firs} day. Ships, of the Americangdwned Meyer Line, are the Ciudad de Pasto, left, and the Hacsul, right. The Manhattan skyline is in the background., rtant to us. |

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