THOUGHT FOR TODAY Beatniks are people who ex- press their desire to be differ- ent by dressing alike, Osha Ti WEATHER REPORT Rain and more rain is forecast for this area, with the odd thunder= storm. Remaining mild. VOL. 90--NO. 95 he Price N 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1961 EIGHTEEN PAGES POOR PAY FOR SAFECRACKERS - Early morning marauders got a fotal of about $8 for their labor when they smash- ed into two large vaults at the Oshawa Board of Educa- tion building today. Explo- sives were used to blow a hole in the 12 foot by 8 foot vault on the second floor of the. building. Doris DeNure, a secretary in the superinten- dent's office, points out fhis hole, in the top picture. In the lower picture, mainten- ance man Harry Glass peers through the hole in the wall of 'the vault on the main . Mine Union 'fers (Ind.), said today a major| | | floor. This hole was made with a pick-axe. A cash 'box containing about $150 was also hidden on the premises, but was not discovered by the intruders. The building had been entered by breaking the lock on the south door. The door had been checked at 4.15 a.m. and found to be secure. The matter was investigated by Sergeant Al. Williams and Police Constable C. Laughren, of the Oshawa Police Depart- ment. --Oshawa Times Photo Britain, Russia '/the most important items on the| I C i § agenda of a three-day conven: Wants of its Latin associates in| FRANGE F BY ALGERIA No U.S. Move| Against Cuba | Seen Soon WASHINGTON (CP)--A close friend and adviser to President Kennedy says the president | ""got some badly boshed-up ad- lvice" on the Cuban invasion and predicted there will be no immediate committal of United States troops to the Cuban fight. Asked what Kennedy's reac- ition will be to Fidel Castro's |fhreat to shoot Cuban rebels captured in the abortive inva- [sion this informant said the rebels were aware when they {set out what their fate may be if captured. Kennedy's friends are urging him to keep pressing Latin Affiliation {American members of the Or- SUDBURY (CP)~=Don Gillis, ganization of American States president of the big Sudbury|to take action on the Cuban local of the International Union|crisis. The informant said that of Mine, Mill and Smelter Work-| 0 they 'refuse to act, the U.S. might scrap all its economic |task of the union is to become affiliated with the Canadian La- bor Congress. He said. this. will be: one of isolation element in the U.S. Just what action tion of more than 100 officers/the Cuban affair still has not of the union's national, district|been made clear. But it appears and doeal'lévels which openedithe U.S. government wants the here "today. | toughest course possible -- to Previous reports had quoted|isolate Castro's regime and ¥ ing the Sudbury docal| overthrow. it by force if Castro fuses to hold free elections." ally, and favoring CLC affilia- tion. uation is more dangerous for them than for us." {and other pacts with the Latins. |' {It would be a victory for the | 4 the US.| Bd i referring to a vote last year of "We've got fo see who will .|{the union's membership gener-|come forward. After all, the sit- HAVANA (Reuters) -- Fidel Castro warned Sunday night that direct intervention by the| United States in Cuba would cost the Americans "not only their prestige but also their ex- istence." | | The Cuban premier de- nounced "imperial. aggression" by the U.S. in last week's abor- tive invasion by anti - Castro forces and said that armies in- Castro Threatens | 'U.S. Existence' rebels were reported killed and 458 taken prisoner. There were cries of "Pare- don!" (to the wall!) when Cas- |tro referred to the prisoners. Castro explained the mass roundups of suspected counter- revolutionaries during the inva- sion as a necessary measure but said there may have been "cases of injustice." Ask Laos Peace NEW DELHI (Reuters)--Brit- Gore-Booth said the cease: ain and Russia today issued al|fire appeal would be available joint appeal for a cease-fire in'for publication Tuesday. Laos. Gore-Booth and Soviet Am; A copy of the appeal was bassador Invan handed over here to Indian called together on the Indian Prime Minister Nehru, together; rime minister to ask him' to with a request to him to recon-| reconvene the truce supervisory vene the three-nation truce su- pervisory commission for the Indochina kingdom. Nehru agreed to convene the commission--made up of India, Canada ana Poland--immedi- ately. Britain = and agreed to an international con- ference opening in Geneva on |commission. |international May 12 to discuss the future of [been called for by Britain with\y og 87 MEN Laos, Sir Paul Gore-Booth, the theq backing of the United! castro disclosed that the gov: Its task would be to verify a cease-fire between the r#¥ht- structed by the U.S. "are al-| He said the detentions were ways bound fo lose" in any| 'designed as a preventive | two Canadians to get life. jin .Cuba's cl hardly disturbed by the war. "It was like walking around in a concentration camp," said a World Wide Airways plane that was stranded in Havana for a week. "There were people with guns |dians are well treated. We were free to go where we wanted and they'll practically give Cana- dians the whole town. You was a war." Lippert, a native of Kitchener, and his co-pilot Guy Larose, 31, of Dorion, Que., the first to leave Havana once civilian flying was resumed Sunday. fight with Cuba's army of peas- measure" to remove "all who ants. and workers. |in_some way were inclined to| Castro's speech on telévision/help the enemy." was his first public_appearance| "We now hope to bring the gince the invasion. He spent situation back to normal and four "ours and Z5° minutes in since yesterday have st front of the cameras, Heh of ree nany people." i devoted to an oufline of the ad-| But the premier w | vantages of a planned economy, i fytyre it of pe ann as in Russia, over a private-en- without clemency for terror- terprise system. ists." 4 But the speech disclosed that pe READS CAPTURED PLANS wing government troops and leftist forces before the interna-|ment forces and the anti-Castro|show 'the landings and read out| tional conference. ing of 'the commission and the there was a virtual deadlock in|*t the fighting between govern-| Castro used a wall map to linvaders for two days. A two- lengthy plans captured from the Russia also The ceasefire, the reconven-|pronged thrust by the govern-|rebels, detailing arms used in| {ment army Wednesday swung the invasion and others to be ten throughout in English. Castro said the invaders ap- British high commissioner said|States, in an attempt to settle|ernment lost 87 men killed in Parently had counted on com- after the meeting with Nehru. the Laotian crisis. | Eichmann Set Jews Back By 200 Years JERUSALEM (AP) -- A wit- ish history at Columbia Univer. ness in Adolf Eichmann's trial|sity in New York City. He said: /mann's dictated statements testified today that Nazi Ger- many wiped out "overnight" the fruits of a 200-year-old struggle by Jews in Europe to improve their social and political posi- tions. Jini Eichmann, listening intently, began scribbling rapidly on a pad of paper in the prisoners dock, He was one of the early members of the Nazi party, joining it in 1931 when it was still outlawed in Austria. ; The witness was Dr. Salo Witt- mayer Baron, professor of Jew- PHONE NUMBERS « CITY EMERGENCY POLICE RA 5-1133 FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 "The Nazi movement that, even ina highly developed country, it was possible to turn back the clock. The steady de- velopment from 200 years of struggle by the Jews was set back overnight." The prosecution put Dr. Baron on the stand to delineate the social and political position of the Jews in Europe at the mo- ment when the Nazis came to power, and to show the extent of the d wreaked bet pilots had chased some rebel planes "nearly to Miami." By the time the final assault was led against the invasion force anti-aircraft fire and "one of our jets" had shot down all the rebel planes, he claimed. the fighting. Eighty-two of the|Plete air domination but Cuban The Canadian consulate asked them to bring back a group of about a dozen Canadians but {suitable and by the time the|'0C: arted to|papers were processed, regularirelief of unemployment. airline flights were under way. The 2 to repel any attempted invasion ® ominously on the brink of full ¢ mentarily. ow TANKS ROLL THROUGH PARIS STREETS EARLY TODAY Canadians Treated Well In MONTREAL (CP)--The first|caught a Cubana Airlines plane; home| for New York. from Havana since the abortive rl revolttion reported today that/we wouldn't get out," Larose hief city was|said. "The people at home were little more worried than we were. We Capt. Ron Lippert, 28, pilot of | all over the place. But Cana-| would never have known 'there were among| {their papers proved to be un: w were believed to have|/from Toronto and other groups { TH | | There 'was little' action for Havana citizens. They listened to the news broadcasts and went about their business under the watchful eyes of 'machine gunners. Nobody seemed wor- ried. "We would go swimming," said Lippert, "and there would A |be more guards than swim- | Cubans are all well - armed mers." : {with Czech and Russian weap-| The first hint Lippert and |ons, he said. From the numbers Larose had of something being of militiamen and women about, {wrong came the day they ar-| "jt| looked like 80 per cent of rived. The Cuban army shot {the people were armed." down a Cuban air force plane.| Unemployed Reach Ottawa OTTAWA (CP)--A mass dele- from Montreal and eastern gation of unemployed, expected|points streamed in by car. {to swell to 1,000 before the day| Nearly 40 of the leaders went is out, gathered in the capital|to Parliament Hill for a meet- today to back up a demand for|ing with Labor Minister Starr. The rést gathered at Lansdowne "We were never worried that |just spent the week at the Hotel | Riviera." { | "Actually," said Lippert, "no |one ever told us we couldn't " | | About 500 arrived by Parliament to organize a mass) rally and march later in the| day. Paris Guarded Against PARIS (Reuters)--The French government issued an urgent callup order to military reserv- ists today as the country braced by right-wing rebels from Al- geria. a The country still teetered scale civil war after a night of fear in Paris during which a rebel invasion was expected mo- The anticipated invasion did] not materialize, but the country remained under a government- ordered state of alert and the information ministry warned that the danger was not over. A statement issued by the premier's office disclosed the callup of reservists and said they would be set up into reg- ular formations. But it added that no arms would be issued to elements which did not belong to "'regu- larlv constituted units." This was taken to rule out civil defence groups, which the government said earlier it had planned to arm to heln fight any invasion by the right - wing troons trying to overthrow Pres- ident Charles de Gaulle"s Al gerian policy. PROCLAIM SUCCESS The rebel radio in Algiers con- tinued to broadcast confidently about the success of the revol Rebel leaders tlail Be lin Paris said the military junta thad the support of only a 'small number of military units." It was disclosed today that the leaders of the rebellion-- Gen. Maurice Challe, Gen. Raoul Salan, Gen. Edmond Jouhaud and Gen. Andre' Zeller --may face charges carrying the death penalty if they are taken into custody. The Seine judical authorities announced that they had opened "an information against X" nerson or nersons unknown -- the normal French way of open- ing a Friminal investigation-- under three articles of the French penal code dealing with military insurrection. The first two of the three ar- ticles apply to "those who with- out right or legitimate motive have taken over any military command" or who have retained it against the orders of the gov- ernment. to flights today after being closed during Sunday night's alert. Le Bourge! mal. The field at Marseille was being cleared of obstructions. But many smaller fields re- Invasion international c o m mercial The Paris fields of Orly and t were back to nor mained barred. Despite the callup order, France breathed a little easier after living through six hours of warlike tension. TANKS REMOVED Tanks which guarded the ap- proaches to the French National Assembly and other key build- ings during the night boiled away as the invasion threat abated, at least temporarily. The extra security guards who had been on duty on bridges over the River Seine were withdrawn and . obstruc- tions 'placed on the runways of Orly and Le Bourget airports to prevent' a rebel landing were removed. - Meanwhile, the French gov- ernment cut off all transfers of money to Algeria and sus- pended mail to the North Afri. can territory. Tanks, armored cars and huge. riot police detachments were 'rushed into position to de- fend Paris early today after Premier Michel Debre warned in repeated broadcasts. Contract Awarded For Boys' School TORONTO (CP)--A $1,284,444 contract for construction of a boys' training school at Simcoe has been awarded to Dunker Construction Limited of Kitch- ener, Public Works Minister Connell announeed today. a The site is south of Highway 3 on Ireland Road in Woodhouse Township, about half a mile southeast of Simcoe. Mr. Connell said construction will start at once to allow the contractor to provide peak em- ployment next winter and com- Leftist Troops Leftist guerrillas today attacked a village only two miles from Vientiane--the closest they have come to the Laotian administra- tive capital in their jungle war with right forces. Reliable reports from the vil- lage of Pak Thang said the guerrillas attacked with gren- ades and small arms, killing three government soldiers and Less repeated that Eich. LATE NEWS FLASHES to more than 500, Servatius led Less through a] Vk {series of questions about the |circumstances of the tape Bovill, 10, a public school stu recorded testimony by Eich- mann, part of which was played last week. He asked whether "undue influence'" had been used on Eichmann, and whether, he was told to answer questions Wiedman of Wallenstein. U.S. Investigates Intelli is working with Gen. Maxwell 1933, when Hitler came to power, and 1945, when he com- mitted suicide. | QUESTIONS POLICE CAPTAIN Prior to his appearance on the witness stand, Eichmann's law- yer, Dr. Robert Servatius, ques- tioned Capt. Avner Less. of the Israeli police, who interroga t Echmann over a period of "ei months. about certain matters and not about others. Less replied firmly, "no." Speaking to Less, Judge Ben- yamin Halevy said he noted "a kind of cross-examination--and this doesn't tally with your other remarks." "There were sometimes con- tradictions in what the accused said," Less replied. "I did it for elucidation." the secret defence activities LISBON (AP) -- Portugal into its territories on opposit | Mozambique." School Bus, Truck Crash, Three Hurt MITCHELL (CP) -- Three passengers of a school bus and a truck driver were injured today when a transport into the rear of the bus while it was stopped on Highway 8 to pick up a passenger. Injured were Joyce Ische, Barbara Gollnitz, Bothe high school students, Gloria dent, and truck driver James gence Agency NEW YORK (AP) -- Attorney-General Robert Kennedy D. Taylor in an investigation of the Central Intelligence Agency, the New York Times says today. A Washington dispatch to the newspaper says President Kennedy asked his brother to help investigate the CIA's part in the Cuban crisis and in all other aspects of of the United States. Portuguese Troops Pour Into Africa is pouring thousands of troops e sides of Africa, seeking to curb terrorism in Angola and prevent it from starting in wing government! Attack In Laos conference h a g|the fighting .in. Castro's favor. sent later. The plans were writ. VIENTIANE, Laos (Reuters) wounding eight before with- |drawing. The attack followed the cap- ture by the rebels Saturday of the strategiccommunity of Vang Vieng, 85 miles north of {here. Government forces were (reported today to have aban- doned large amounts of ammu- nition and equipment in their flight from Vang Vieng. Ninety-three government cas- ualties from Vang Vieng ar- rived at the Vientiane military hospital Sunday but no more Sounded have come in since then. Military sources took this as an indication that the govern- ment had to leave injured men behind during the hasty evacua- tion of the important stronghold Vang Vieng is a major gov- ernment military headquarters The leaders were armed with a 1l-point program demanding action to relieve unemployment. 'STOP PROMISING' The leaders of the group tra- velled to Parliament Hill in a large yellow bus covered with placards. One read: "Stop your promising John and start pro- ducing jobs." Another sign said the trek was being financed by Locals 220 and 224 of the United Auto Workers (CLC) at Windsor. Underneath was lettered: "Im- ports and overtime keep us on the street." | The brief said an almost un- {limited field for employment in public works was open in every corner of the country at the local level. Massive renewal programs for poor urban hous- ing areas, work on the un- finished Trans - Canada High- way, a national electric grid system and a trans-Canada oil pipeline north of the Great Lakes to Toronto and Montreal were all suggested in the brief. plete the work in the summer These offences are punishable of 1962. by life imprisonment -- or, i if| Arrangements have been carried out by force of arms,/made with the town of Simcoe by the death penalty. ifor water and sewer services. As the invasion threat eased] The two-storey brick and con- with the daylight hours, main crete structure will accommo- French airfields were reopened!date 125 boys. YOUNG HERO FAILS Fire Kills Tot Near Brougham By PHIL SIMPSON GREEN RIVER -- Despite valiant rescue efforts by her seven-year-old brother, a four- year-old Green River tot perish- ed in a house fire 7.30 Sunday morning in this community, five miles east of Markham on High- way No. 7. Firefighters found the body of Carol Ann huddled in a clothes closet after quelling a fire at the home of her parents, Kenneth and Joyce Beelby. Ironically it was Carol Ann § who enabled the rest of her family to escape the blaze. At 7.30 in the morning John Beelby, 7. Carol Ann's elder brother, heard screams coming from his sister's bedroom. He ran towards the screams i through the blazing room and § found the infant seeking shelter train Park about two miles sodth™ oft on the north-south highway to Luang Prabang, the royal cap-| ital. in a clothes closet. Immediately the young hero Government troops retreated {wildly before the rebel attack and at least 18 were reported killed. It was uncertain how far south the royal Lao troops with- drew and whether they were beaten from Vang Vieng or sim- ply abandoned the town. The Associated Press quoted reliable sources as saying three U.S. military advisers have been missing since the thrust beagn. Uniformed U.S. advisers moved to front-line positions] among royal Laotian soldiers have the stuff back," Whitney completely gutted, the second Sel Holroyd of the Whit last week, hoping to bolster the sagging government forces. Find Dynamite Under Sawdust TIMMINS (CP) -- Workmen demolishing an old building in! the bush Sunday located seven) cases of dynamite under saw-| | dust. Police had been seeking the 350 pounds of dynamite since April 15 when the mine powder raced to his 21-month-old broth- ; er, Keith, and carried him down- CAROL ANN BEELBY stairs to his parents' bedroom, where he called his father.! A neighbor of the Beelby's, John told reporters at the scene(Mrs. Jack Nighswand, gave that he thought his sister was|shelter to the stricken family behind him as he ran down the!following the fire. stairs. Mr. Beelby and his 28-year-old Kenneth Beelby, 31, ran up Wife were placed under sedation stairs to rescue his daughter by Dr. James Scott of Mark- but was forced back by smoke ham. . and flames. The cause of the fire is un- magazine of Broulan Reef gold mine was entered. "We are certainly glad to | Tobinship Police Chief Charles) Evétson said. ! He called the Markham and|known and damage was esti- Brougham Fire Departments/mated to be $3,500, which fought the blaze. that! Cpl. William Warner and PC De- tachment of the OPP igvesti- floor of the six-rdem insulbrik Igated the incident. home.