Uxbridge Cautioned On Interest THOUGHT FOR TODAY The person who pretends to be what he isn't is evidently asham- ed of what he is. a .* al - O he Oshawa Sines nilict -- Page 4 WEATHER REPORT Increasing cloudiness this even- ing, followed by intervals of snow beginning late tonight or early Friday morning. VOL. 91--NO. 39 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in TWENTY-TWO PAGES Russian Je 'Buz Plane In Corridor BERLIN (Reuters) The Western powers today protested Soviet attempts to "reserve" vital flying space between Ber- lin and West Germany but all flights in the corridors were re- ported normal. Passengers in a Pan-Ameri- can airliner on the Frankfurt- Berlin run reported seeing So- viet military aircraft but the planes made no attempt to in- terfere with the airliner. Protests from the United States, Britain and France| against Soviet bids for excessive use Of parts of the were delivered in Moscow at noon, Sources said the protests dealt with the whole situation arising from Soviet requests that parts of the three air corridors to Ber- lin should be reserved at spe- cific times for Russian planes, The three corridors--Berlin- Hamburg in the north, Berlin- Hanover in the centre and Ber- corridors} ,each 20 miles wide and form hte divided city's most vulnerable life-dines. Russia has asked for exclusive use of part of the corridors five times in the last week. All the requests were turned down by the West. Flights today in all corridors were reported normal, including those in the southern corridor, in which the Russians Wednes- day demanded three hours of exclusive flying time for today. In addition to refusing other |Russian "'reservation" applica- |tions--on the grounds no power j}can have exclusive use of a cor- ridor--the Western powers sent Phillips Raps School Expense TORONTO (CP) Mayor lone of them dived directly un- S flights of their own into the air at the time and altitude re-| quested by the Russians. | Wednesday night's request} came after Soviet jet fighters "flew close to".an airplane car- rying British Ambassador Sir Christopher Steel which was fly- ing at 7,500 feet, an altitude which a British spokesman said the Russians "tried illegally to reserve for themselves." The spokesman said "buzz- ing" would not be an accurate| description of the incident since) the Russian MiG jets stayed| i\"foo far away to call it buzz-| ing." lWAS 'UNUSUAL' Steel himself said: "We never believed we were in any imme- diate danger but it was rather} junusual to see so many MiGs lflying about in the corridor. |They never came too close but INDONESIAN STUDENTS PROTEST Some 200 Indonesian stu- dents staged a demonstration in front of the Netherlands embassy in Tokyo, Japan, to- lin-Frankfurt in the south--are Bluestein Case Appeals Heard TORONTO (CP)--Three men sentenced for the March 21 beating of gambler Max Blue- stein in the Town Tavern did not get a fair trial, lawyer Jos- eph Sedgwick said Wednesday. Mr: Sedgwick was arguing before the Ontario Court of Ap- peal on behalf of Frank Mar- childon, 40, who was t d te nine months for his part in the beating. Fred Gabourie, 35, also is ap- pealing his four - month sen- A | | Torogto ae oe rapped derneath us." 'orogito school trustees for plan- F ka ning' to spend large sums sal There are three 20-mile-wide re " » corridors leading into West Ber- what he called 'extravagant Nin and they give the city' its items in several schools. pe Mig ahd Ae He said the board of educa-|°/Y link with West Germany tion Wed y night demanded no Ange ae to Communist con- $12,000,000 capital budget! 'T'S: aimed at abolishing firetrap | schools, then a few hours later . t decided to plurchase $4,625 So P pe worth of hair dryers. vie a r Mayor Phillips said the trust- ees voted to spend thousands of Raps West dollars on landscaping and lawn | watering equipment, while at | the same time they "moaned F R fus ] about the need to get rid of fire- or e a Ss Controller William Dennison|. MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The said he would examine the bud-|5°Viet Communist party news- get closely and consider asking|P@Per Pravda said today the «¢.| Anglo-American refusal to par- board of control to seek legis- ticipate in an 18-country "'sum- tence, but John Papalia, 37 lation forcing the board of edu- mit" showed the two countries Wednesday abandoned an ap- 9 to send out its own taxiaia not want a solution to dis- peal against his 18 - month sen- A armament. tence, : The comment followed letters Mr. Sedgwick said the crown . handed over here Wednesday in subpoenaed witnesses and took New Yorkers Hit which President Kennedy and evidence from them before a British Prime Minister Macmil- justice of the peace. Much of By Heavy Snowfall lan turned down a proposal by this evidence has been withheld) Premier Khrushchev that heads} from the defence. | ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- New/0f government should open the} At the trial Magistrate Jos-|Yorkers battled up to two feet 18-country Geneva disarmament! eph Addison ruled the Crown) of new-fallen snow and towering| talks in March. ; need not disclose its witnesses,|drifts today as a massive storm Kennedy and Macmillan re- after being told one witness had) tapered off after an attack that|peated their suggestion that the! been threatened. jalso included destructive light-|disarmament parley be opened| The appeal is continuing. [ning and sleet. at the foreign minister level. -- ------ ---- <a United States Ambassador) |Llewellyn Thompson today re-| bed |ceived the British and French nte ration ine | ambassadors, apparently to dis-| cuss the disarmament confer-| ence. Pravda said the refusals by Kennedy and Macmillan to par-| ay ove or ticipate "can mean but one} |thing: A conscicus desire not Lid seek a solution to the prob- NEW YORK (AP) -- Negrojlast week against Englewood,|lems of disarmament." forces in the fight for United|N.J., and he has cases pending |»; 5 States school integration are|Newark, N.J., and Chicago. [AEEME IRSEEPONEBLE ra i ' " A avda article, by politi- turning their attention to the The South has now arrived cal commentator Victor Mavev.| o : ve : cd | Mayev- North, and this coming dispute|at the stage where integration ski, said the refusal was "an may well overshadow efforts in|is recognized by law," he said. |i-responsible step which cannot! the South. "Unless we fight in the North,|jeave the peoples of the world| ; yi ARS eer the South is merely going to|,,4; " Their work is being continued) Y going tO) undisturbed. in the South, but more and|adopt the methods used by the! He said the Western position more emphasis is being placed North to perpetuate segrega-| contained "all kinds of reserva- on what is called de facto school] 'ion. : oe : |tions which only stress the: lack| segregation in northern com-| Zuber said he isn't. afraid of/of serious arguments and. alas.| munities. ates i donc bso Negro) lack of sincerity of the West." r 4 ve received from| Observers in Moscow believe hye Rage gl nse Moa ne northern whites. |Khrushchev may attend the Ge- roeeees y "Basically, the Negro is not\neya disarmament confer schools will be peaceful. But 4 | ence they already have made suc- looking for sympathy," he de-| next month despite. the Anglo- clared. 'He is looking for equal-| American refusal to make it al cessful use of the courts, and ity, not a patron." 'heads-of-state affair. | they say they intend to continue using them when necessary. | Northern schools are not seg-| regated by law, but they gen-| erally have a policy of requir-! ing students to attend schools! in 'thétr own neighborhoods, | which often are mainly white or! Negro. : Pro - integration groups also} assert that in some cases boun- dary lines for school districts have been altered in order to South Viet N a Could Become WASHINGTON (CP) -- Thejto be protected by the Southeast! aad : United States is beating the/Asia Treaty Organization of cbnienye, seetegstion. peace drum with one hand|which the United States, Brit-| CENTRE SHIFTING? while trying to put out a dan-/ain and France are major mem-} Paul Zuber, an outspoken Ne-|gerous military brushfire with|bers. But Britain 'and France| gro lawyer who has pioneered|the other. Prospects for both/re major members, But Brit-| in northern school integration,|ventures, which have implica-|ain and France are cool to the| says he believes the centre of'tions for Canada and otherjidea of involvement in that} the entire U.S. segregation bat-|countries, arenot bright. jungle land. President Kennedy} tle is shifting to the North. Bh ag omy fight in South/finds himself virtually alone. | The 35, - year - old lawyer! ang Us" authorities, acknow!|WAR WORSENS won a school case in New Ro- edge that at any moment, if the| He has described the Commu- ehelle, N.Y., last year and he/qon unit Chinese decide to nist infiltration there as causing also has won cases against the move in force, the jungle war|@ War "'of growing ferocity."' He| New York City school system. | could flare into a major battle is reported to have increased) He filed his latest court case|that might spread and gradually|U-S. manpower aid to more suck. in the Western powers, |than 4,000 servicemen, working CITY, EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS: POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 spent more than $2,000,000,000 in}dered to return enemy fire. He the last seven years to support|ias enlarged the military as-| a pro-Western regime in that|sistance program in South Viet Southeast Asian territory, the|Nam by putting Gen. Paul D. jgovernment of President Ngo|Larkins in command. |Dinh Diem is reported to be} Meanwhile, stme of the Allies 'growing unpopular by the day.|and many of the neutrals,| Reports of a Korean-type mili-|watching the growing nuclear} tary coup are growing. power of both the United States! | South Viet Nam is suppose and Russia, are clamoring for' EDMONTON (CP)--Two men-|are added to community water, tal health organizations ap- peared before the royal com- mission on health services Wed- nesday and said more attention should be paid to the problem of emotionally disturbed chil- dren. Both the Alberta division of the Canadian Mental Health As- sociation and the association's Alberta southern region emplin- sized recognition and treatment of emotional disturbances at an day. Some of the students are shown as they scuffled with police as they tried to enter the embassy. The demonstra: Mental Health Groups 'Worried For Children |Supplies, the commission was told. Dr. L. K. Brooks, past presi- jdent of the Alberta Dental As- sociation, likened the campaign to that waged against x-rays 100 years ago. Anti-fluoridationists, he to make. municipal plebiscites t@ obtain the two-thirds majority required in Alberta. de- clared, have frightened enough ake. it difficult for] tion was in protest to passage of Dutch troops through Tokyo enroute to West New Guinea. AP Wirephoto Algiers Hit By Violent © Strike Day ALGIERS (Reuters) -- Rail, gas and electricity workers went on strike here as violence again broke out in Algiers to- day. The strikes were called to protest the killing of European public service employees ear- lier this week and to demand more protection from security bullets that killed two persons and wounded three. Five Moslems were injured by the rioters and a Moslem shot two of them dead. three dead were counted in the western port city of Oran as troops opened fire on enraged Moslems, rioting af- ter their quarter was blasted by Twenty forces. Three thousand persons Wednesday followed the funeral nrocession of a utility worker killed by Moslem insurgents Monday. Shots from a speeding car in Algiers badly. wounded a Mos- lem motorcyclist today follow- ing large-scale violence in Mos- lem - European communal In only 13 of 29 communities jwhere plebiscites have taken |place was a sufficient majority achieved, though 20 communi- ties gave fluoridation a majority of better than 50 per cent. Dr. Brooks appeared as a spokesman for the dental asso- ciation, which presented a brief 'that fluoridated water! cuts tooth decay by 60 per cent if used continuously from birth to age 12. early age makes possibl development of sound adults. In briefs to the commission, they said treatment and rehabil- itation of disturbed persons con- tribute to the health of the econ- omy, since mental and emo- tional conditions result in a loss of millions of dollars in produc-| tion each year. The Alberta division recom- mended that departments of ed- ucation and local school boards be urged to "formulate a pol- icy" with respect to the detec- tion, treatment and referral of emotionally disturbed children within the school system. MAY SPOT EARLY If all classroom teachers were trained to detect unhealthy be- havior patterns, the majority of disturbed youngsters might be spotted in the elementary grades. Anti-fluoridation groups are "scaring" people with dire tales of what will happen if fluorides Bodies Of Skiers Under Avalanche LEYSIN (Reuters) -- Rescue volunteers and police with dogs early today discovered the bod- ies of six skiers buried by an avalanche near this Swiss mountain village Wednesday. Police said a seventh skier es-| caped by sheltering beneath rocks as the 200-yard-wide thass of snow swept down the side of La Berneuse Mountain. m Fight Serious an end to the arms race. A number of them, inciuding Can- ada, are putting great stock in the forthcoming 18-country dis- armament conference. Fearing that Soviet Premier Khrushchev wants to twist that conference into another propa- ganda contest, Keunedy has turned down the idea of open- ing the meeting at the summit. He indicated -Wednesday he would be willing to go to Geneva midway . through conference -- if sufficient pro- gress is made by East-West negotiators to warrant. some While the United States has|@S military instructers but or-|success at the top But Kennedy also indicated there still are many roadblocks to be cleared before progess becomes evident A big stum- bling block is Russia's opposi- tion to accompaniment of step- by-step disarmament by well- policed measures to make sure no participant is fooled. Russia calls this spying. the} Ontario, | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS A snowstorm that belted On- tario Wednesday fizzled during the night as it moved eastward across Quebec. The Maritime provinces, first expected to receive a dose of snow from the storm, have missed both it and another {storm which had been forecast to move into Nova Scotia today from the New England states. A .few snowflurries persisted in southern Ontario today, but little accumulation of snow was expected from a storm centre pushing eastward from the United States midwest. A few intervals of light snow were forecast for late tonight and Friday. | Wednesday's storm was the ;worst of the winter for many jOntario centres. Twelve inches fell at Blind River, 11.7 on the Lakehead, 10 at Barchawana and seven at Sault Ste. Marie. The seven inches that fell on Toronto gave temporary em- ployment to more than 500 men when the National Employment Woman Claims Rape Threat 'Caused Killing PORT ARTHUR (CP) -- A tiny, 30 - year - old mother of five children, in a hospital-bed statement read Wednesday in Ontario Supreme Court, said she killed a man in her apart- ment because he threatened to rape her. Mrs. Maria Gutta has pleaded not guilty to a charge of non- capital murder in connection with the Nov. 3 rifle - slaying of Cordi Cosimo, 36. The shooting occurred in Mrs, Gutta's Fort William apzrtment on the eve of Cosimo's sched- uled trip to Italy to bring his wife and three children to Can- jada. | The statement said Cosimo \threatened to kill her if she re- fused an affair with him. She said Cosimo tried to seduce her every time her husband was not present. She didn't tell her hus- band to avoid family trouble. Police Constable Nestor Bod- narchuk said that when detec- tives arrived at her home her dress was ripped.to her waist, there were blotched red bruises on her neck, congealed blood on her arm. Snowstorm Blasts Fizzles Service directed them to snow removal from streets and side- walks. One woman gave birth to a baby in a car when snow prevented her from getting to hospital ia time. Air traffic was all but normal. One New York flight was can- celled by American Airlines and two were cancelled by Trans- Canada Air Lines. All trains were running, most of them on time. Sections of the Prairies did not escape wintery weather and colder air was forecast for to- day, a prospect met with en- thusiasm by Agricultural Minis- ter George Hutton of Manitoba. Canada Wheat | To Red China Said Diverted WINNIPEG (CP) -- Between 5,000,000 and 7,000,000 bushels of clashes Wednesday. 20-Year Prison Term Ruled For Doukhobor 44 plastic bomb explosions at- tributed to the anti-independ- ence European Secret Army Organization. The Moslem rioters ousted police and rescue workers and poured into the European quar- ter, sacking and burning stores and stoning cars. Troops opened fire on one group of rioters and killed nine. A French lieutenant died and four soldiers were injured in an- other street battle. The dead officer was Lieut. Philippe Jacquot, son' of Gen. Pierre Jacquot, commander-in- chief of NAPO's central Euro- pean forces. NELSON, B.C. (CP) -- Fred |. Europeans inthe Belcourt| suburb of Algiers poured out of 'pounds of heroin with an illicit Davidoff, 38-year-old convicted terrorist, was called a "Judas" by a special assize court judge, Mr. Justice Harry Sullivan, Wednesday and sentenced to 20 years in prison. In all, Davidoff, Sons of Free- dom Doukhobor and father of five, will serve 28 years. The 20-year term, invoked on David- off's conviction in the blowing up of government machinery at Winlaw, will be served con- secutively with an eight-year term imposed earlier for bomb- ing a railway track at Thrums in the west Kootenays, Mr, Justice Sullivan told Da- vidoff he was a Judas who betrayed others; that he was a dangerous man and should be Thirty-three persons died and 86 were injured in Moslem-Eu- ropean communal clashes mainly in Oran and Algiers, the country's two largest cities. Twenty-one of the dead were Moslems. DIE EACH DAY The death toll was only ex- ceeded by that of Jan. 3, when 38 were killed in violence rising out of Algierian independence claims and European opposition to them. Every day since the New Year has seen its list of dead and injured in communal trouble. , Soviet Charge Faces Defeat At UN Hands UNITED NATIONS (CP)--A Communist resolution accusing the United States of meddling in Cuba's internal affairs faced certain defeat today as the UN headed for a vote-on the cold- war issue. Cuban delegate Mario Garai- Inchaustegui was expected to make a last-ditch effort before the ballot to convince the 104- - country main political commit- pe Rav the United States 4 isolated in prison and denied all tary aggression against Fi- visiting privileges. del Castro's regime. Delegates The sentencing provoked ajpredicted he could do little to noisy demonstration muster support for the resolu- Sons of Freedom Doukhobors|tion presented by Romania and who crowded the courtroom. | Czechoslovakia. On Tuesday Davidoff went] U.S. Ambassador Adiaie E. berserk i n. the witness box,|Stevenson branded the Cuban pounding his fists and scream-|charge as "'irresponsible, un- ing epithets at the judge, jury|supported afd wholly false' and Crown prosecutor. Wednesday night on the heels A man of tremendous bulk,jof a recital of new aggression Davidoff refused to stand while|charges by Soviet delegate Val- the judge passed sentence. Helerian Zorin. continually slammed his fists} He rejected charges that the on the prisoner's: box and shook} United States is training Cuban his fists at the judge and thejexiles for an invasion similar to coyrt. the one that occurred last April, No 'Go' For Glenn Postponed Again CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)--A 54-mile gale sweeping across the central Atlantic forced the United States today to cancel its ninth attempt to rocket astronaut:John H. Glenn Jr., around the world. The next try is Friday--at the earliest. The storm, covering an area about 27,000 square miles, driving 18 - foot waves through the area where Glenn would\have to land in event of an emergency during the first few minutes after liftoff. their houses and. attacked Mos- lems indiscriminately Wednes-| day night after a car sped through a main street spraying! Term In Prison For Narcotics Distributor NEW YORK (AP) -- John Ross, described as the "largest retail distributor of narcotics in this country," has been sen- tenced to 74% to 15 years in prison for possessing heroin. Judge Mitchell D. Schweitzer imposed sentence Wednesday against the 41-year-old Ross. The sentence was the maximum for a first offender. Ross, a Negro, was convicted last Oct. 6 of possession of nar- cotics with intent to sell. Police said he was found with 2.2 The centre of this storm is located about 950 miles east of Bermuda. The postponement was an- nounced by Paul Haney, news director for the National Aero- nautics and Space Administra- tion, at 1:18 a.m. EST. As it did Wednesday, the "scrub" came after a special weather briefing for Project Mercury director Walter C. Wil- liams at the Cape Canaveral control centre. The briefing be- gan at midnight. market retail value estimated between $250,000 and $500,000. Before sentence was _pro- nounced, Ross' counsel, Carson de Witt Baker, himself.a Ne- gro, told Schweitzer that~ the accused would have been fret with six others except that he be black'. The six were freed because evidence against them resulted from the use of wiretapping, which federal law prohibits. Canadian wheat sold to Red China has been diverted to East- ern Europe, a Canadian Wheat Board source said Wednesday. The estimate is based on trade reports and involves wheat sold by Canada to Red China under a long-term agree- ment signed last spring. The source said in an inter- view the wheat has been di- verted to East Germany and Albania, but the Canadian Wheat Board is not concerned about it since these countries do not lie in Canada's traditional commercial wheat market. Once the grain leaves Canada, it no longer is the wheat board's responsibility unless it shows up in the United Kingdom or an- other traditional Canadian mar- ket. If this occurred, Canada would be put in the position of competing against its own wheat. Judge's Home Hit By $42,000 Blaze PETERBOROUGH (CP) Fire early today destroyed the home of Victoria.County Judge C. N. Currelly, causing damage estimated by the judge at more than $42,000. The fire broke out about mid- night as guests were leaving from a bridge party. The blaze apparently started in a recrea- her face and a bullet wound to/frame bungalow, but cause was 'undetermined. tion room in the 1% - storey TELL PRESIDENT Immediately after the deci- sion was made, the White House was advised of the further de- lay in the planned launch which was first scheduled for Dee. 20, Glenn was awakened at 1:05 a.m. by his doctor, William Douglas, and advised of post- ponement. Subsequently Douglas said that Glenn appeared to be somewhat disappointed and the doctor quoted Glenn:as saying: "Everything is stili go but the weather. When we get weather we will go." The doctor said Glenn then went back to bed. Earlier in the day Glenn's psychologist, Dr. Robert Voas, said the astronaut had heard of inquiries by reporters on the subject of how he relaxed after these repeated postponements. Voas said Glenn asked him to "tell the press my relaxation consists of sleeping." The doc- s |tor said Glenn did not take sleeping pills or tranquillizers. De Gaulle Meeting Adenauer Today BADEN-BADEN (AP) French. President Charles de Gaulle and West German Chan- 'cellor Konrad Adenauer met in this West German city today in a surprise conference to discuss MISSING SEVEN YEARS machine shop in Rockford, Ill. He is-the father of three boys and his wife Dorothy has since remarried. Dr. Carl Vernon Holmberg, research chemist missing from Syracuse University for the last seven years, found Wirephote political union of the sixy:ountry working as a laborer in a q Common Market.