Sunday Rental Of Schools To Be Reviewed-- Ghe Oshawa ime THOUGHT FOR TODAY The recipe for successful after- dinner speeches includes plenty of shortening. WEATHER REPORT Clearing and turning colder this afternoon. Wednesday mainly sunny-and cold, VOL. 91--NO. 25 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1962 Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, payment of in \e Ottawa and © for Postage Cash. EIGHTEEN PAGES " WINTER'S BLAST OSHAWA got its part of the storm that swept southern Ontario with winds as high as 50 mph and deposited as much as eight inches of snow in some parts. The difference with previous This toiling trio braves the snow-laden gusts sweeping through the Oshawa streets Monday night, which deposit- ed woolly white blankets in the backyards and sloppy slush in the briny gutters. The city occasions this winter was that at least it did not rain, but | still the salt trucks had | rough riding in most parts to keep up with the snow, As- tounded drivers would find their cars going off in un- intended directions with idly spinning wheels or refusing to react to the touch of the brake pedal. --Times Photo by Bruce Jones No Procedure Decided Wind Snowiall 'Make Driving On Barring Red Cuba |Hazardous By THE CANADIAN PRESS Winds of up to 50 miles an IShakeup Said TORONTO (CP) -- Freder- ick Gardiner, former chairman of the Metropolitan council, was interest when he voted in favor of building part of the Spadina expressway. Because of this apparent con- flict of interest, council's deci- sion to build the first section of the expressway may be in- Revenge Move 'In Montreal MONTREAL (CP) -- Mayor Paul Provost of suburban La- fleche today termed a city council shakeup of the munici- pality's police force "an act of political revenge." The four-man council Monday night asked Police Chief. Ed- ward Lefebvre to resign and fired Captain Jean-Paul Morin. Incompetence was the reason given for the moves, both of aceused Monday of conflict of Gardiner Accused Interests Conflict valid, a Metro roads commit- tee meeting was told. The accusations were made in a signed statement by Allan M. Perly, chairman of the re- search and legislative commit- tee of the Greater Toronto Bu- siness Men's Association. He said the Foundation Com- pany of Canada limited an- nounced Dec. 4 lest year that Mr. Gardiner haa been named to its board of directors. The following day Mr. Gar diner cast a deciding vote at Metro executive committee in favor of the Spadina project. On Dec. 12 Mr. Gardiner spoke and voted in Metro council in favor of building part of the } project, Mr. Perly said. A subsidiary of the Founda- tion Company, the Foundation| FREDERICK GARDINER of Canada Engineering Corpor- ation Limited, ane two other companies were appointed by} Metro council in December,| 1959, to design the $154,000,000) project. | "We view this shocking} breach of public policy worthy! of a commission inquiry," said Mr. Pearly. |tually assured that County. would be without any Ontario County May Drop EMO At noon today it seemed vir- Ontario The committee ordered Mr. kind of Emergency Measures ALGIERS (AP)--Most schools in Algiers closed today in a teachers' strike of protest against terrorism while a wave of new attacks killed at least nine persons and wounded nine by noon. 4 One of the attacks took place on Rue Michelet in the heart of the city when Europeans fir- ing from a car killed a Mos- lem. Authorities reported that most schools closed after 70 to 90 per cent of the teachers did not re- port to work. The city's waterfront was par- alyzed for the fifth day by a strike of dock workers, mostly Moslems. The walkout was for a pay increase, but soon be- came interpreted as a political demonstration. Meanwhile, the terrorist Se- cret Army Organization distrib- uted new tracts warning the Europeans to obey the 9 p.m. ban on car traffic ordered by French authorities. All cars moving after 9 p.m., the tract said, will be consid- ered as belonging to "'the Gaul- list Gestapo" and will be treated as such. TERROR CAMPAIGN SWEEPING ALGERIA Bomb Explodes Police Hideout members of the secret army. Three men survived, two Viet- namese and a Moslem, but am- bulance workers said they car- tied 20 bodies from the wreck- age. The explosion was apparently triggered when one of the com- mandos lifted the cover of the typewriter case. While frantic telephone calls reported the incident to the top government representative in Algeria, Jean Morin, a plastic bomb knocked out power in Mo- rin's barricaded compound 30 miles east of the city. French Transport Minister Robert Buron was Morin's guest at the time of the blackout. Earlier a 'nearly legendary hero of the French Army, Col. Pierre Chateau-Jobert, beamed the secret army's appeal for re- volt over a clandestine trans- mitter, "I have chosen the road of honor," he said. "Officers and men, follow me!" Chateau-Jobert fled his unit in France to join the secret army cers as "'the first paratrooper of France," he commands a se- cret army «training base. in 'Algeria. Known among. offi- - <r RENT RNAccA i thLO eAS RN PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay|compromise amendment to be} called the Argentine view that which were announced in let-|Perly to confine his remarks tO oreanization by April 1. AP)--The United States and its| offered to the six nations hold-|it would be better to have alj/hour and falls of wv - is Lats American' supporters|ing out for a velvet-glove ap-|20. states censure Cuba than a} eight incl..s_ made driving ..az- backed away today from a de-| proach. {majority outlaw it, ardous in most of 'southern On- mand for an immediate vote by; The United States and 13). An Argentine spokesman said|'#ti0 today the hemispheric foreign minis-|Latin American states backing/Rusk seemed to have brought The provincial highways de- ters confereace to exlude Fidel/a tough line against Fidel Cas|the opposing sides toward a so-|Pattment reported light to Castro's regime from the Organ-|tro's government had just the|tution whereby each OAS body|heavy drifting on all eget ization of American States. jnecessary two-thirds majority) would decide on exciuding Cuba ped Loar me t be The majority group eased its|to carry a formal resolution to/in line with the proposed con- eat on the eas. an us- stand in an effort to break ajoust the Havana government ference declaration that the| oka to ey ' deadlock over how and when|from the OAS councils. Castro regime is incompatible| 4 rot a yt Ppa the suspension should take ef-| But they schedu'ed another| with the inter-American system.|™ent at age aga ed fect. bargaining session today in an)". Brazilian-led bloc has against travel in the Owen .The conference, supposed tojeffort to win over six of Latin| a preed witht the oihes 'on wach Sound district, whcre winds and end Monday, continued to drag! America's biggest and most in- censure of the Castro Pesimel cen, inches of snow had _re- on after hours of fruitless post-|fluential states demanding a de-|nut contends the resent oas| "ced visibility to almost nil. midnight bargaining As hopes|lay in the formal ouster of charter does not provide for| The weather office in Toronto faded for an. early adjourn-|Cuba. The six were Brazil, Mex- |said the snow would taper off settling over|t Prairie Farmers Aid eran of police work who was!) dismissed from a similar post) far to the Spadina project. in nearby Jacques-Cartier in| 1960 following a disagreement! ment to make," he said. with the town's mayor, refused to resign and charged the move} Act was political. against Capt. Jean-Paul Morin,"|Metro councii was dealing with|rate system would said Mayor Provost. between the captain and an/|contract. Iderman on the city's election ; ha a last May and the alderman|cated they will endorse their|members supporting this idea. did not name the alderman in- volved, charged he had been "impolite| and incompetent" in handling} Chief Lefebvre's resignation be- cause he was "incompetent in/The Western allies were ex-|action. his duties." the mercury stocd at 52 above} -- nee Ships Go To Sea For New Orbit Try \(AP)--Three aircraft carriers |were ordered to sea again to- day te stand by for astronaut John H. Glenn Jr.'s attempt to ride a spaceship' around the earth Thursday. ers to the officers involved. the Spadina project Chief Lefebvre, a 42-year yer The county council voted in Mr, Gardiner said Monday! » ; night there is no problem so|°ommittee -of the-whole this fmorning to abandon its agree- "ee ate.;ment with Oshawa which sets Beyond that I have no state lup a joint: EMO administration. Section 198A of the Municipal|/The .vote was 21-18. If there is indicates a member of|@ Split, the county must give jcouncil shall only disclose his/60 days' warning. ' where a contract or} City and county co-ordinator Capt. Morin said he would/interest contest his dismissal at an open|proposed contract with council|Col. F. S. Wotton said today he| sources town meeting tonight. |is under consideration. favored a joint setup for eco- "We have no serious charges| In the Spadina deliberations|nomic reasons but that a _ ease e |@ proposed scheme and was not/|workload. : A second motion, that the jcounty set up its own EMO, indi-|was turned down in committee- He said a feud had developed|involved in the awarding of a Committee m ein bers the combined Spadina express-|vote on both these motions at |way and rapid transit line. |2 p.m. today. The aldermen who voted for| See an Wee Ore nae he firing of Capt. Morin Colonial Debate sta' sa wea "sa" Delay Expected they had asked} 'has been out to get him." ng open decision supporting} Council was to cast its final | | he case of a young boy who}! was bitten by a dog. work." They said UNITED NATIONS: (CP)--/ers of abetting Tshombe in such pected to try to postone Secu-| A U.S. spokesman said the ~--~| rity Council debate today on So-|United States feels council de- lviet charges that colonial pow-|bate unnecessary at this 'time. ers are trying to block UN ef-|He charged Zorin had de- forts to return Katanga prov-|manded the meeting to confuse ince to the control of the cen-|the situation. tral Congo government. 4|MAY ATTACK RULE The council was summoned) Measures attacking Portu- into urgent ---- gry guese rule in its big West Afri- at nga the Untied States|C2% territory of Angola were man ahae West ilies would|2/5° expected to come to a vote ook te aticen tabate 'at least|i the United Nations General A 7,;Assembly today. i C e| : r ' Yh gin eta age! a Assembly President Mongi Adoula. arrives in New: York Slim of Tunisia pressed for the CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla: The countdown was near T grain farmers bogged down in talk in the Commons Monday, Before the House was the gov- summer drought had _ hit! ance, not drought aid. Discussion Bogs Down OTTAWA (CP)--The govern-!the ment's rush to distrubute $42,-/them. It was income mainten-|he said. "It is a hit or miss policy," "T call this thing peanuts, in Earlier, Defence Ministerjrelation to the farmers' costs." Harkness, pinch-hitting for ail- ing Agriculture Minister Alvin He challenged g ov er nment minus 48 hours--and the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration promised a long- range weather forecast either to affirm or delay the Thursday date. Glenn, spacecraft and rocket were reported in good order and plans were progressing for the flight with the only worry Informants predicted that So- viet delegate Valerian Zorin would try during the prelimi- nary discussion to air his charges that President Moise Tshombe of Katanga is ignor- ing council demands that he rid his army of mercenaries and| end secession of his province. | later. this week. vote to end the long debate on the Angolan question in which Defying French security forces, European: terrorists Monday blew up a special po- lice hideout in Algiers, knocked out power and electricity in the tightly guarded administrative compound of Rocher Noir, 30 miles east of the city, and launched a radio appeal to the French Army to revolt. | Late Monday night _ police reported several thefts of arms in the Algiers area. One was a holdup of a truck loaded with sub-machine-guns, carried out by three men dressed in riot police uniforms. Harassed officials, sheltered behind barbed wire and arm- ored cars in Rocher Noir, said they were fighting against heavy odds because the terror- ist underground had accom- plices on virtually all levels of the administration. "The secret army could take over Algiers in half a day if it wanted to," one official said. NOT AN AIM? It appeared, however, that a takeover of the city was not an immediate aim of the terrorist group fighting to maintain French rule in Algeria. Appar- ently it hoped to obstruct any independence a gree ment be- tween France and the Algerian rebels by demonstrating! through its campaign of terror that President de Gaulle's gov- ernment could not enforce. such an agreement. In one of its most spectacular acts to date, the terrorist group smashed a palm - shaded villa overlooking Algiers Monday with a bomb smuggled into the building in a typewriter case. Buried under the debris were some 20 members of a special commando set up to seek out Uxbridge Fire Chief Fined By Police Chief UXBRIDGE (Siaff) -- A re flashing light mounted on the dashboard of his car has cost Volunteer Fire Caief Ross Red- mond a $6.50 fine. _The Fire Chief, who won the light at a Fireman's Convention two years ago, was ticketed at a recent fire by Uxbridge Police Chief Laverne Ellemberger. Chief Redmond was fined under a section of the Highway Traffic Act that limits the use of a red light to emergency ve- hicle.. . Volunteer _ firefighters must have an amber light. Police Chief Ellemberger said he warned the Fire Chief sev- eral times during the last two years that the red light was illegal on a private car. "The Fire Chief tirst had the light on the top of his car. Later, after being warned, he Placed the revolving light in- side his car on the dashboard," the Police Chief said. Several of the town's volun- teer firefighters indicated earl- ier that they wouid stage a pro- test walkout if the Fire Chief paid the fine. Asked if the Fire Chief's car was an emergency vehicle (and therefore allowed to have a red light), Mayor Stanley Beach said he didn't know "Uxbridge Counci! is going to look into all. contracts between the town and the fire and police department," he explained. 50 delegations have been heard). since Jan. 15. Test-Ban Talks |back-benchers to urge an extra ernment plan to provide $1 an|Hamilton, said the $1-an-acre $42,990 000 payment to make up acre up to a maximum $200 a the weather. Zorin has accused colonial pow-) Revival Sought tie can ots to rl ade 1961 when the acreage as- é e general income position of} ,; ' { ported by MPs of all parties. jwestern farmers because their| ance ee ae ee Tn a bid to get quick apPro-| crop last year was little more|/EAT FEELS EFFECTS val of the acreage payment, the|than half the average produc-| C. A. Milligan, Conservative farm, a proposal generally sup- TATE NEWS FLASHES aS government broke into the tra-|tion yield for the. previous five|MP for the Ontario farming con- cane eight-dav throne speech| years, |stituency of Prince Edwatd-Len- onglone la oo of speeches, He said farmers who had no|Nox, said farmers in the East then and again Modan Mps|CtoP at all, or a small crop, can/felt the effects of last summer's [scoala cite ti id Thes/ receive assistance under the|drought as strongly as those in re 0 & yore. "'Y|Prairie Farm Assistance Act, |the West. The price of grains ment, United States prestige ap-|ico, Argentina, Chile, Bolivia a ae ae pea e = |during the day, giving way to ared to suffer a biow and Ecuador cM ae ine convened oniclear skies and sharply falling * The 14-country group met for; Both hides emerged from a ae time sare peace leoal pe grant pag ge Rose tec Thee aud Haneda three-| closed-door, elghi-hour bargain. 2 |fall was general in the Toronto ee ks ites thvcakent Central American nations con-| The' cold air . gy tae iv issue t Hire ening|sider this legalistic approach|southern Ontario has already hots ire Ir vn ak LEE AMATCED unnecessary delay which pos-|become entrenched in virtually yee : : jsibly would run into years and|all Canada east of the Rockies.|t | The foreign ministers went) which would endanger the Al-|Below-zero temperatures were | | without dinner Monday night in|liance for Progress program. | general this morning in both the 0 Taw an effort to break the impasse.| ~~ of compromise in the} 4 today is southwestern Alberta, A t ten tion' works. Traffic D eaths Up where. chinook winds are bring- Asked if the meeting produced} oe ing springlike temperatures and any progress, U.S. State Secre-| From Last Yéar s sunny skies. Early this morning QUEBEC (CP)--Seaman Ur.|(#ry Dean Rusk said, "I think! orpawa (CP) -- Accidents|{" Lethbridge gel Dupuis, wounded by gunfire °"' on Canada's streets and high-| Along the " west coast the ways Claimed 333 lives during| weather was fairly mild but a light on the freighter Wheat ae ae paged ol polo of'to be leaning toward what helof statistics reported today. lver, | e crew to his boa eee spasaaanerce one anne | Dupuis was testifying at the preliminary hearing of charges against Capt. Charies Carr and several shots with the intention of endangering life. Charges were brought by the Seafarers' International Union (Ind.), involved in several other, cases ks 2 result of incidents in- Dupuis said he and n iri other sailors approached the an- 000,000 -. among: _ prairie chored Whea! King the night of| June 29 in a tugboat and shouted, "Scabs" as they neared the ship, from a 22 calibre rifle in' the air. He fired two more shots at a light on the Wheat King, hit-| ting it the second time, with the intention of attracting the crew,| he said. panions met in the SIU office|™ ti thea before going aboar¢ the tug. (COMtnue today. |had increased to the point that Dupuis said the seamen were| Ex PRESSE: DOUBT HITS AT POLICY jit was unprofitable for eastern about 150 feet from the Wheat) After the chair had repeatedly| Mr. Pearson approved the ac-|farmers to take such grains as King when a mig ben 2h wns \intervened in the debate, onejreage aid, but denounced the|feed. spotted on them. Immediately,|veteran MP -- Harris Rogers|government for dealing with| If the acreage payments pol: Dupuis was. struck in the hip! proved in time for spring seed-| expediency and timed before an|parts of Canada. and in hospital for 11 days. Jing on the prairies \election i Wes case continues, mY airies, ts |: W. H. MeMillan (L--Welland) Opposition Leader Pearson) He promised an over-all farmiraised the situation of Ontario jlinked the acreage payment/policy under a Liberal govern-/bean growers who had suffered | . CITY EMERGENCY _ measure with the throne speech|ment, based on principles of|losses. PHONE N BERS promise of aid to drought-/general application. But he did He also asked whether it was _ If the acreage payment was/challenged. |good crop got the same pay- POLICE 725-1133 intended as drought assistance,| Hazen Argue, CCF-New Demo-|ment as those 'suffering losses. he said, then it was completely|cratic Party House leader, said|Mr. Harkness said payments un- inadequate acreage payments -- made injder Prairie Farm Assistance He said the money went 40/1958 and 1960--were not part of|help out, those with crop fail- all farmefs, regardless of hSw| permanent policy. ures. af , d foundation has been. laid. | i ; i fe patton _Semmiiiee_t0 draft S/ing seanion earty today assert! the Unkid Sidies and.teluee tec jing some progress had been ; J Maritimes and Prairies. ' After the session there were| Warmest spot in the country hints last June 29 in Sept - Iles har-|U.$. VEERING bor, said he fired two shots at) One conference inform ant November, compared with 325|cloudy, with an early-morning said the United States appeared|in November, 1960, the bureau |temperature of 42 at Vancou. officer. James Hartford of the Wheat King, accused of firing volving the Wheat King last summer. When there was no reply, Du- puis said he fired two shots Dupuis, questioned by defence counsel, said he and his com- there ew crackie of gunfire! (PC--Red Deer) -- expressed|farm problems through what hejicy were made permanent, it from the Wheat King, he said.|/qoubt the vote would be ap-|termed ad hoc action based on|should be extended to other stricken farmers. |not spell out the principles when | fair that prairie growers with a FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 jarmament talks. British delegate Sir Michael | Wright said in a press confer- jence the Western nuclear pow- jers "will certainly raise the is- |sue" at a test-ban treaty early lin the negotiations of the 18- lcountry disarmament commit- |tee opening here March 14. The American-British - Soviet test ban conference broke up in jutter failure Monday. Soviet jnounced it will seek to revive County Deputy Sheriff Hurt |the collapsed East-West negoti- jations for a nuclear test ban WHITBY (Staff) -- Deputy Sheriff for Ontario County Morley Bain, 41, of Zephyr suffered facial lacerations when his southbound car collided with a northbound half-ton panel truck driven by Antanas Galdikas, 43, 210 Havelock ' street, Toronto. The accident occurred at 9:45 a.m. on Highway 12 north of Whitby. Possible New Orbit Delay CAPE. CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- The spectre of bad | weather posed the possibility today that astronaut John H. Glenn Jr's. attempt to ride a space ship around the earth Thursday may run into a new delay. But Project Mercury |4delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin, officials pushed ahead with launch plans on the basis that |Who is returning to Moscow it is too early to tell for sure, £ |hext weekend; reacted to 2 Western proposal for a recess by breaking off the negotia- jtions and accusing the United |States and Britain for having |wrecked the talks. Sir Michael said that as far Invasion Survivor Executed KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -- A survivor of last April's in- vasion of Cuba has been captured and executed on charges of murdering a young teacher and a peasant, Havana radio said today. The man, identified as 47-year-old Braulio Ama- [as the West is concerned the dor Quesada; was the leader of the underground United 39,month-long conference is "in Roman Catholic, the radio said. ie" ' Tei treaty in the forthcoming dis-|) | EX-PRIME MINISTER HELD H. S. Suhrawardy, above, | former Pakistan prime min- ister, was arrest early to- day at hi i in Kar- achi, his secretary reported to the press. There was no official announcement the arrest. --(AP W: obo)