Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jun 1962, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY The chief problem of the mod- ern family is having too much month left over the money. at the end of Ghe Oshawa Cine WEATHER REPORT Clear tonight and sunny on Thursday. A little warmer. Winds northerly 10 to 15. VOL. 9I--NO. 138 Price Not Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Pest Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, THIRTY PAGES Three 10 Cents Per Copy Men) Flee From Alcatraz SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The| search went on today for three| bank robbers who vanished} from Alcatraz Island prison in} San Francisco Bay Tuesday| afier wriggling through cell) wall vents tediously enlarged with stolen spoons Skilfully made dummies 'in their bunks prevented guards from discovering their absence for several hours Warden Olin Blackwell said he does not believe the three men, led by a convict with an TQ of 132, are alive if they tried to swim for it However, because of the thor- oughness of the trio's planning to bust The Rock, officials con céde that the man could have made it ashore on a makeshift raft Nor do they discount the pos sibility that Frank Lee Morris the leader, who is 35, and two brothers, John and Clarence Anglin, ate still on the island, lurking in a water's edge cave SPREADS TO U.S, The ever - widening co-ordinated by the spread over northern nia The three ered missing at 7:15 a.m day By that time they could have had 9% hours head start on search FRI--has Califor men were discov- Tues Sure Victory Predicted For Peru Candidate LIMA (Reuters) --Presiden- tial candidate Fernando Bel- aunde Terry today appeared heading toward certain victory with almost 85 per cent of the voje.tallied from Sunday's na- -tional &Jections in Peru. Latest, results lar ment, His closest rivals, Victor) Haya de la Torre and Gen.| Manuel Odria, trailed with 499,-| 070 and 470,071 votes, respec-| tively. Belaunde already has claimed victory even though ballots from remote villages are not expected to be counted officially for several days. Other returns also were pour- ing in for the election of two vice-presidents, 55 senators and 186 members of the lower house of congress, Congress could be the key to the election of the president if| the presidential poll proves in-| decisive. But obsefvers consid- ered this development unlikely Under Peruvian election laws, Congress is given the decision! of electing the president if none of the candidates succeeds in capturing one-third of the to- tal vote. Belaunde, however, has been holding a solid one - third in late returns and the remainder of the poll still to be counted was not expected to affect his standing. Aid To By THE CANADIAN PRESS |the conviction that success Soviet Premier has sent notes to Britain and the United States saying that/and create tension can bejter Nehru the agreement to form a neu-|achieved on the tral coalition government Laos could well serve as a mo- 0 del for solving other problems SHOULD BE NEUTRAL between the West and the So- viet bloc lan and President Kennedy. Kennedy's reply was expected to be made public by the White neutralist. pro-Western and pro-|far the Communists who hold u Communist Laotian princes set-|the al Khrushchev's message to Ken- tled on a "Dear Mr. Presi-|needed dent, good news has come from!from the cold war House today nedy began Laos Saying the formation of a coa-|said the Soviet premier, may|Eastern affairs, said lition government three rival princes of could be the «pivotal event 'in the cause of strengthening|cision of the 14-nation Laotian|has been formed. He said the I jconference at Geneva that Laos|U.S Khrushchev told Kennedy thatishould be removed from the aimed "strengthen cold war -arena, he said peace in Southeast Asia."" the results in Laos CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 It their perilous' adventure. They were last seen at 9:30 p.m, Mon- day night. No one is known to haye sur- vived an escape attempt from The Rock in its 28 years as a federal prison, although 35 men tried it in 11 separate attempts. In fact, it is Alcatraz' repu- tation as impregnable and es- cape-proof that maintains the 35-acre traet with 135 - foot cliffs for prisoners considered incorrigible and risky in the 30 other federal penal institutions Warden Blackwell gave this account of how the three men escaped the attention of author- ities: At 5 p.m. Monday, as usual, the doors clanged shut in the three-tiered cell block that housed 269 prisoners, watched over by 155 guards. At 9:30, at lights out, at least one of the escapees, had to be PROBE TOLD BOOKIE HAD POLICE DEAL ian Deal = Informer Can't ate 7 __._ @ Name Contact Not To Change : TUNIS TORONTO (CP): -- A witnessjbookmaker Sammy Balsém of testified before the royal com-|St. Catharines, Ont., warned @ mission on crime today. that St.;witness that "if you say amy- |Catharines, Ont., bookie Sammy|thing, all you're going to do is Balsom had an "'arrangement"'|get mea trial." ae, |with a member of the city p0-| The talks were between Bal- lice there as well as with mem-|<om and Thomas (Mickey) Me- jbers of the, Ontarjo, Provincial|Groarty, who testified Tuesday | Police that he delive 500 payoff Thomas (Mickey) MeGroatty, from Balsom iS ino peor ~~ Algerian national-;members of the Algerian pro- Bay ist Premier Youssef Ben!visional executive body which Khedda_ categorically rejected/is governing the north African today the possibility of revising territory until the July 1 self- the Algerian peace agreements|determination referendum to give further guarantees tol; pp yp KILLINGS European residents The European. Secret The head of the Algerian pro Army, K. Sees Khrushchev |solying other international prob-|ence. in| well. lan country should be indepen- Tass, the official Soviet news dent and neutral is one point agency, early today made pub-|0% which Kennedy and Khrush- lic similar notes Khrushchey|Chev have agreed since they| sent to Prime Minister Macmil-/Met at the summit in Vienna a}, lyear ago among _the|become a "turning point in the|night that U.S. troops in Thai- Laos/life of the Laotian people." |Geneva served as an excellent jbasis for development of Laos military advisers from jas a neutral |state. where there is a will there is|nist forces from Laos. U.S. stra a way,.as far as international!tegists disputes go is the only one that serves thjup to 10,000 North Vietnamese told to turn out his light rhereafter, every hour on the hour, during periodic checks, | nothing was found amiss FIND DUMMIES Then at 7:15 in the morning, at the regular showup, Morris} and John Anglin, 32, and Clar-| ence Anglin, 31, didn't get up.| Guards prodded what appeared is a | jadex thi ossibility,' to be their sleeping forms and) . ' rah rage possibility, found dummies -- "'very realis-} S en Khedda tic, plaster, paint and hair STARR POSTER HOT Ren Khedda. who made lieve a .22 calibre bullet was fired at the picture. Although heads and pillow bodies." It was found that the trio, ap cee. gS ppg nl no bullet has been located: the . etur el slightly dam- | - four inches thick with bits of yy sabe es was dic, [concluded at Evian spoons. Their painstaking effort ivarad tate Tunalay oe (ae Ren Khedda's McBrien of Brooklin a PC vol- after two weeks of contacts be unteer tween representatives of Alger loosened a metal cover leading --(Oshawa Times Photo) ia's European minority lvisional government jthat "'a series of manoeuvres' lis being made sabotage the Evian agreements by making it ap pear possible they can be re | Europeans Whitby Detachment OPP investigating a shooting inci dent at the Progressive Con- servative Committee rooms in Brooklin. An unidentified per- | son took a shot at a huge pic- | ture of Labor Minister Michael | Starr. From the size of the | hole in the window, police be- | Oshawa Team To Play In Metro Ice League For the first time in 10 years,,team at a dinner in Oshawa;prorer way. The protest about is to a ventilation shaft through each cell wall The 8-by-12 inch opening con nected the cells with a service shaft a yard wide From there it was 30 feet up a pipe to an air conditioner. This was dismantled, steel bars somehow torn aside and access gained to the mess hall roof. A 50-foot-long drain pipe led, to the ground, about 100 yards) gave 535,270|/ from the water on the San Fran-} votes to' Belaunde, the 46-year-|cisco or south side of the island) old founder-leader of the Popu-'that lies almost due east and Action party who cam-|west in the bay, Its western and paigned on a platform of land/narrowest end pointing at the! reform and industrial develop-|Golden Gate and its bridge. lter. Only the formality of final/leaked out at a meeting of the|league and it is r --_--------|approval by the executive of|Ontario Junior A group council/from Oshawa. And Niagara ithe Metro Junior League is re-|in Hamilton last night. Falls Flyers do not have any Canadian Car The Junior A group officials|thing to worry about. They are Industry Hit come next week. |quired to make this a certainty.) MONTREAL (CP)--The En- The team will play its home| cerned about the proposed Osh-|camp."" gineering Institute of Canada to-| games at Maple Leaf Gardens,|awa entry in the Metro league| He said preparatory work in day was told the Canadian au-| until it can move into the new! because the Niagara Falls Fly-|the setting up of the Oshawa tomobile industry has ignored! arena now being planned in Osh-\ers, also a Boston farm club,|team was being done by Wren domestic economic conditions! awa. It will be operated by an|fear that the new team will get and requirements. Oshawa group, in partnership/the talent that otherwise would A. B. Hunt of Montreal, vice-|with the Boston Bruins organiz-|come their way | president of research and de-|ation of the National Hockey; wry patrick commented: 'The velopment for Northern Elec-|League. discussion in Hamilton was not! tric Company, made the state-' Tynn Patrick, general mana-|fair to us and not fair to Osh- ment in an address to the insti- ger of the Boston Bruins, told|awa. We wanted to make the |given by the Metro League, and/side" the boundaries of Metro-|more young players now than final approval is expected to/politan Toronto. Niagara Falls|ever. There will be nearly 70 lops and now manager of King- ston Frontenacs of the Eastern Comets of the United States Eastern League. CONFIDENCE BROKEN Mr. Blair, speaking from King- ston, told The Times, that sion of the Oshawa entry in the Metro loop. ; "'We still expect to hold a din- Laos Solutio Other Issues injinterests of peace and coexist lems which now divide states) In New Delhi, Prime Minis- of India welcomed} same road as|the coalition government as "a| lvery. good thing, not only for Laos but for countries round! about." Nebru told reporters "the! only principle that can apply sa- \tisfactorily to these countries is jthe principle of neutrality." U.S. policymakers are well] ware that the extent to which the co-operative venture suc-} have the rivaljceeds in Laos depends on how: for the needs of the Canadian awa means a lot to us. When the 'Encouraging. States is concerned and there-| Mr. Patrick said it had been ee ee ee Kennedy replied to a message live and go to school in Oshawa. "The formation of this gov-|pointed during the summer. An That the little Southeast As- Vienna," Kennedy told Khrush- | ville, tute's annual meeting. The Oshawa Times today: "'We} announcement in Oshawa in the market. s : arena burned, we made a pledge Little had been done to Pro-\to maintain our interest in the vide a corrosive-resistant ma-|city and return as soon as we terial to prevent fender rust) could. We intend to keep that stemming from winter weather. promise." fore the matter gets meagre at-| planned to make an_ official - 4 Y Y tea rag preparalians yee tention," he said. announcement of plans for the,., WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| made ons aren nana 3 --________--.|ident Kennedy told Soviet Pre-| 'There is some excellent tal- |mier Khrushchev today that thejent right in Oshawa," he said. formation of a coalition govern-| We think five or six young Osh- from Khrushchev i a | We plan on a young club, with IR inal : whigh the| viayers largely in the 16-17 age ussian leader said the agree-| sroyp, and we thought it would jment on a_ coalition Se veruive wise for the team to have ment could serve as a guide to|some experienmce in a tough ernment of national unity under|Oshawa executive will operate Prince Souvanna Phouma|the team. My immediate job is marks a milestone in ihe sus-|simply to get the entry set up." tained efforts which have been| Other teams in the Metro league, besides Whitby, are To- chev. Five Teenagers Arrested TORONTO (CP) -- Five teenage boys were arrested Tuesday on charges of extortion and attempted extortion. Police said a restaurant employee received a threatening Mr. Hunt said there is need/haye had ties with Oshawa for - oe for a car in Canada designed more than 10 years, and Osh- Laos Coalition " by civic Only a small percentage of cence ' ives?" i the population in the United| VERY DISAPPOINTED apery seteosemesias, De Rte. |ment in Laos is "very encour-| awa players will make the team, aging." | but the outside players will also the solution of other problems||eague while the new arena was between East and West. ibeing built. A coach will be ap- put forward toward this end, es-| pecially since our meeting in|ronte Marlboros, Toronto St. | Michael's, Brampton and Union- telephone call and a demand for $50 on June 9. He paid the money. But only now stronger military position government deemedithere, choose to go along with remove their land! jt. W to Averell Harriman, -assist- coalition, ant secretary of state for Far Tuesday Formation of the : land would not be withdrawn) t will put t .|jus °C 208 coaliti ay r eeth into the de-|just because the Laos coalition McGoarty Family Moved military deployment is ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- Police said today that Mrs. at bolstering Western) Thomas McGroarty and her children have been moved se- in all non-Communist} cretly from their West St. Catharines home for protection. Asian countries Her husband, an accountant who once worked for book- As for the withdrawal of U.S.| maker Sammy Balsom, is a key witness at the royal com- bo Laos,| mission on crime in Ontario.. independent|Harriman. said this would be Candidacy Said A Dodge done simultaneously with the that} pullout. of non-Laotian Commu-| EDMONTON (CP) Defence Minister Harkness said today Dr. Lucien Bachand, Social Credit candidate in Terre bone constituency in the June 18 election. is running for office 'as a dodge to get out of the RCAF." Mr. Harkness said he could not make further comment on Dr. Bachand's candidacy a he has studied the situation more closely. al strength The agreements reached at|Southeast and They show, he said, Say a in the most important Laos settlement is} followed|the proposed withdrawal of out | becduse ipside forces, estimated to | step Russia has always his course, he said charged "in an attempt to (peace) | "My government categori- his statement, as he left for Cairo, said, "the return of real peace can only be realized through the loyal application of the accords statement came and |Oshawa will be represented by|later this month: He was "'very|the boundaries of Toronto is) oo, la juni » team this win-|disappointed" that the news had|sily. Whitby is in the Metro to. A a iaplor-nockey 16 pp only four miles| French administration. Tentative approval of the Osh-| decided to protest the extension| ly losing four or five of last) |awa entry has already been|of the Metro loop "so far out-|Year's team, and we are getting) officials indicated they are con-|Players at our August training|prime Minister Nehru told a Blair, formerly of Whitby Dun-|qea} a "death blow" to the! Professional League and Clinton) terested in 'someone had broken a confid-| ence" in the premature discus-} ,jin Algeria, let up on its killing) of Moslems when the secret contacts were begun. But the Secret Army recently intensi-| fied scorched earth tactics, de-| stroying schools and other in-} |vised under the pretext of giv- | ling additional guarantees to the stallations by fire and explo-) sives. Only two Moslems were} killed throughout North African! » territory Tuesday Ben Khedda said France so far had not employed sufficient means to re-establish order in Algeria "In certain French political) and military circles,' he said,| 'there is complacency and com-| plicity with colonialist extrem ists." Ben Khedda flew to Cairo for a meeting of the Casablanca Alliance of Africa States. He in dicated he would seek military aid against European terrorism| should France not put it down.| Members of the Casablanca} group. are Algeria, Ghana, |Guinea, Libya, Mali, Maroces| jand the United Arab Republic.| The Evian agreements guar- jantee civil rights for those Eu- jropeans who remain in an in-| |dependent Algeria ruled by the! Moslems. However, the Euro-| peans will lose the privileged) they have under the) | | Market Move Not | Worrying Nehru NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- press conference today he does not subscribe to the view that} Britain's entry into the Europ- ean Common Market would | Commonwealth. | But he said that India is in- making arrange- jments so that India's exports |to Britain "will not be hit" as| a result of British entry \ SUDBURY (CP)--The deci- sion as to which union will bar- |gain for more than 14,000 work- iers of the International Nickel Company hinges on 36 disputed ballots. The United Steelworkers of |America (CLC) needed 7,167) | votes--50 per cent plus one--of| ithe eligible voters to win Can- ada's largest union local. Steel polled 7,182, just 15 more than the required number. But the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers \(Ind.) immediately challenged |32 of the Steelworkers votes be- cause the ballot slips had not been stamped by the Ontario Labor Relations Board. A. R. Brunskill, registrar of] |the board and the man in) jeharge of the vote, previously! |had ruled the disputed ballots; valid. The board's final decision} is expected in the next two) | weeks. | Mine-Mill also charged that} four of the ballots were spoiled| |and should have been discarded} and that the total of ballots cast} was five more than the number} | of persons checked off as hav-} 'ing voted. Mr. .Brunskill agreed the count showed five extra ballots, | jbut said the number of ballots | was checked only once against) |the number of voters "and the} |result could be explained by the! late hour of the night," | | WILL RECHECK FIGURES The figures will be rechecked by the Labor Relations Board Attempts by Mine-Mill to in- jvalidate- the vote were de-} scribed by a spokesman for the} Steelworkers as "for the pur-| |pose of obstruction only." Two hundred of the 14,333 eli-| gible workers did not cast bal- lots when the yote was taken 514 months ago. The official re sult was:. Steel, 7,182: Mine Mill, 6,951 } There was some delay when| trying to preserve French rule); Disputed n't dime names KEY LO INCo Fate officials and! COMPOSER DIES | Sir Eugene Goossens, Brit | ish conductor and composer, | died today in a Middlesex, England, hospital after a brief illness. He was 69, Goossens | was a former conductor of the | Rochester, N.Y. Philharmonic | and the Cincinnati Symphony | and had made guest appear- ances with most other major American orchestras (AP Wirephoto) | Street Gangs -- Heed Graham | CHICAGO (AP) -- Evangel- ist Billy Graham's Crusade for) Christ held a youth session|bosses Joseph McDermott and} Tuesday night and about 200) teen-agers which crusade lead-; ers said were members of} street gangs showed up. | Graham, addressing the 14th) {meeting of his 19-day Chicago} crusade, said the 200 teen-agers were his special guests. Sev-} eral young girls were included jin the group. | A Graham aide said that} members of street gangs have} been attending sessions of the) crusade since Saturday when} the evangelist spoke to a youth| group in an area of high petty! lerime on the south side After Graham's sermon, sev-| eral among the 200 were in the) 1,265 persons who came for-| ward to make "decisions for Christ." Crusade officials said that 10,565 persons have now} made such decisions during the first 14 rallies. Ballots the time came to open the locked and sealed ballot boxes. The key to the boxes was in a separate locked box--and some- one had forgotten the key to the key box. A provincial police constable solved the problem by borrow- ing a meat cleaver from a rest- aurant and hacking the box open. The count, held in the ban- quet of a Sudbury motel, started at 2 p.m. Monday and it was 14% hours before 80 weary tab- ulators and officials emerged to announce the result. Workers Vote To Exclude Non-Whites BANBURY, England (AP)-- Workers at the Aluminum Com- pany of Canada plant here Tuesday voted in favor of bar- ring non-white labor particu- larly Pakistanis. The vote was 591 to 205. | Union Leader Tom Haskell] commented: 'I am astounded and disgusted at the result. The people who voted against col- ored labor must be afraid for their jobs." Haskell said he would 'for- ward the decision to headquar- ters of the National Union of General and Municipal Work- ers. Official union policy op-| poses color discrimination | About 900 workers abstained! in the vote and there were 128 spoiled ballots. The vote was taken after men} threatened to strike over em-| ployment of Pakistani Jabor.| Germans, Swedes and other European workers have been employed at the factory with- oum trouble, Haskell said. turned police informer recently,| said the bookie identified 'his lo-| cal.police contact. as a uni-| formed sergeant, whose name} the witness could neither pro- hounce nor spell | McGroarty testified Tuesday that in 1960 Balsom had an ar- rangement for gambling raid tip-offs with two provincial po- lice constables and that on one occasion McGroarty delivered) $500 from Balsom for them. | McGroarty also testified that rectly predicted that Deputy Commissioner James Barlett of the provincial. police, _ whose name has been mentioned in ear- lier commission testimony as @ suspected tip-off man, would have a heart attack. | DENIED TIPOFFS | Deputy Commissioner Bartlett! told the commission that he. had never provided tip-offs for gam- bler's but that on one occasion $1,000 turned up in a flower pot in his yard after he had re- ceived a visit from gambling Vincent Feeley. He had given the money to a friend to be passed on to the gamblers, MeGroarty's testimony con- cerning an alleged book-up be- tween Balsom and the St. Cath- arines city police came when he was questioned by Liberal party counsel D. J. MacKinnon as to what might happen if a bookie in the St. Catharines area did not pay Balsom, who, he said, was to receive $50 each from a list of customers for tip- off protection. "T guess they'd be raided," McGroarty. said. He added that on one occa- sion a bookie whom he named as Pat Mailey apparently had refused to pay and Balsom had | said "he'll get it." RAIDED FAST McGroarty said the bookie) was raided the next day by) the local police. McGroarty also told of a con- versation between Balsom and St. Catharines bookie Frank Mcllwain at the time, about two years ago, when Balsom was setting up his alleged protection) network, | TORONTO (CP) -- The royal) commission on crime today heard a transcription of con- versations Monday in whichj |a former Balsom employee who! policemen in 1960 In one Monday conversation, McGroarty, who had been wired for sound by investigat- ors for the commission, dis- cussed with Balsom the possi- bility of his testifying about the alleged payoff to Constables Kennety Lamorie and Carmén Lawrence at St. Catharines "That Lamorie and Lawrence deal got me down," McGroarty said as recorded by investigat- ors and read to the commis- sion today "That whole God damned af- fair has got me down." "You didn't see them," Bal- som said McGroarty: "No, but if they say it, you know. , ." "Did you see them," Balsom asked. "Oh, yeah, I saw them in'the restaurant but that was two years ago, you know," McGro- arty replied. (McGroarty testified that in response to telephone directions from a man purporting to be Lamorie, he placed $500 inthe cab of an unoccupied truck. He testified he saw the two officers in a nearby restaurant.) The' transcript had Balsom saying: "Well, that doesn't matter and they didn't say nothing. Use a little hearsay when you're up there," ISSUED PAYOFF The transcript, somewhat in- coherent in spots, indicated that Sgt. John Anderson of the pro- vincial police anti - gambling squad had told McGroarty he had been informed. that "Mickey issued the payoff.' Balsom was then quoted as saying: "Jesus, Mick, what the hell's the matter with you. If you say anything all you're going to do is get me a trial." "Yeah, I know that's it,"" Me- Groarty replied. "I'm going to deny it," Bal som said. The transcript here records McGroarty sighing. Balsom said "I'm going to say this guy's crazy, for crying out loud." He then advised McGroarty to "use your head, Mick." McGroarty replied: "Well, I got to. ..." Balsom: "But listen, they said noth ing." FIXED Professional wrestler Hay- stack Muldoon, who weighs in at 475 pounds, won a surpris- ingly easy bout with a wax effigy of Russia's @ikita Khru- shchev at a wax Fnuseum in BOUT Niagara Falls, Ont. He apples a headlock to his smiling op ponent which might lead one te wonder whether the bout-was rigged, (CP Wireyfhoto) I |

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