Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Mar 1962, p. 1

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Ay Ae? /- Don Jackson Wins World Skating Title -- Page 10 THOUGHT FOR TODAY The best way to kill time is to roll up your sleeves and work it to death. Oshawa Zimes WEATHER REPORT ~ Cloudy tonight. Cloudy with sunny intervals Saturday, not much change in temperature, winds light. VOL. 91--NO. 64 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1962 Authorized as Second Closs Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, TWENTY PAGES "WORLD CHAMPION JACKSON | Donald Jackson, centre, of Oshawa, winner of the men's world figure skating tilte .in Prague, Czechoslovakia, last right, and ner, Karol Divin Czechoslovakia, No Trace Of Airliner With 107 Passengers MANILA (AP) -- An armada! It was the. third major air of U.S. ships and planes, criss-|mishap this month. The loss of crossing 75,000 square miles of all aboard would be the third the western Pacific, today re-|worst disaster in aviation his- ported no trace of a chartered tory involving a single plane. American airliner missing with) The plane took off from 107 persons aboard. Guam at 8:57 p.m. Thursday The four-engined super - con-jcarrying fuel for about nine stellation of the California-jhours flying for the 1,600-mile, based Flying Tiger Line disap-jeight-hour hop to Clark Air peared between Guam and the) Force Base, north of Manila. It Philippines on a flight from|was last heard from 80 minutes California to South Viet Nam.j|later when the pilot sent a rou- Traves Air Force. Base initine radio message to Guam California said the plane car-/from about 270 miles west of ried a crew of 11 Americans,'that U.S. island base. 93 U.S. Army personnel and) The Clark Field rescue co- three south Vietnamese. Four ordinating centre declared the women were among the crew. 'airliner missing this morning Red China Shadow Broods Over Talk GENEVA (CP)--As in all re-'to Russia and that of France cent discussions on disarma-' vis-a-vis the Western powers ment, the shadow of Commun-| The link is that France and ist China broods over the 17-|China, while aspiring to nuclear nation Geneva conference, re-|status, have a vested interest in mote yet ominous the failure of disarmament China's mighty millions are) The problem of Mao Tse- not represented here. But déle-|Tse-Tung's China has not come gates are aware that some day,/to the fore in the Geneva dis- if any yards are made in dis-|cussions but it is undoubtedly in arming, the question of main-|the back of the minds of dele- land China's participation must | gates, particularly those from arise. the eight non-aligned nations. The present Western plan ex-| Chinese Foreign Minister cludes China in the first stage|\Chen Yi was asked recently of disarmament. Once the sec-|about China's attitude toward ond stage is reached, therejnuclear arms. would be a world-wide meeting) "When China has them, the of all "military significant" na-|question of war and peace will tions, naturally including China.|he solved," he replied. Getting China to come in will) In a way that cryptic remark undoubtedly be difficult but the/js typical of pale, ambiguous, "price must be paid,'" in the/faintly hostile shadow China view of some conference observ-| casts over the Geneva talks. ers. | night, joins in three-way hand- ; place winner, shake with seocnd place win- | of third | 'COSMIC' SHIP'S ORBIT NNOUNCED BY RUSSIA ™ Papalia Goes Secretly :4 To Face Trial In N.Y. TORONTO (CP)--John Papa- ' lia, 37, Hamilton. gambler and underworld figure, has been ta- ken abruptly and secretly from a Canadian jail to face trial in New York on a conspir- acy charge in a multi-million- dollar narcotics racket. A remission of Papalia's 18- |month sentence on a conviction in connection with the beating of a Toronto gambler was granted by the federal justice --AP Wirephoto |department, it was learned ie Papalia, sometimes called i'Johnny Pops' or "The En- forcer,"' is among a group of |Americans and Canadians icharged in the United States in a $150,000,000 narcotics conspir- acy. The move to get him out of jjail and into the United States for trial was done between Ca- |nadian and U.S. authorities. Information here was that he was to be tried in New York with two bail-jumpers in the narcotics case arrested in Spain recently. Eleven others so far have been sentenced to prison terms in the alleged international con- Allain Calmat of France. A U.S. Navy spokesman said it was believed the plane went down closer to Guam than to the Philippines. U.S. bases in the western Pa cific marshalled a task force of surface ships and air force, cue nae eee eee Bees spiracy to run narcotics into the iy |United States The searchers scoured an) One of. those charged--Al- ocean area stretching 750 milesiherto Agueci of Toronto--was November, it was reported here,|Bluestein in a nightclub here police got a tip that there was,iast year. a "contract'" out for Papalia--, Five men jumped Bluestein in meaning that he was ticketed|sight of some 100 club employ- for death ees and patrons. Bluestein and Police said that they took the|everyone else in the tavern had "necessary precautions' at Mill- difficulty identifying his assail- brook Reformatory near Peter-|ants. borough, where Papalia had a been imprisoned after a brutal FOILS PLANS 1 assault on Toronto gambler Max Papalia foiled plans to fly him pataabest --. from Toronto to New York. At Toronto International Air- port near here, where he was taken under guard to be put aboard a plane, he shouted that he was being kidnapped. He raised such a commotion that airline officials refused to transport him. The RCMP then |provided a car to drive him to jthe U.S. border at Fort Erie,| Ont., opposite Buffalo, N.Y. | Meagher Now RCMP's Second Most Wanted OTTAWA (CP) William] Adams, 40. of St. Catharines,|stood, he was under escort of sought since 1949 in connection agents of the U.S. federal bu- with his father's murder, isireau of narcotics. Canada's most wanted criminal, Papalia is to stand trial in the RCMP said today New York with suspects ar- Adams, born in Timmins, has|rested in Spain, who were car- been on the RCMP's list Of|rying Canadian passports in fic- most wanted criminals since titious names. 1953. He has worked as a crane| He is one of four Canadians operator, machinist and sales-| .narged in the alleged esr man. ring. Murdered Alberto Agueci's| A revised list released today|brother, Vito, drew 15 years at! contains the names of six men.'the end of the trial early this From there on, it was under-| 1 Claiming New | Global Missile MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Pre |for a seat in the Supreme 'Sov- mier Khrushchev claimed todayjiet. An introductory speaker that Russia has developed an in-|was talking about space ships vulnerable "global missile,"' fol-|and rockets when Khrushchev, -# lowing up an announcement that\sitting behind him, blurted out 4,a Soviet "cosmic ship" was or-|the news. biting the earth. "Yes, we launched one at '| Khrushchev said United States 3 o'clock (7 a.m.) and it is al- 'radar systems would be useless ready flying," the Russian 4 against the "'global" missile|leader said. since it could strike from any! Khrushchev told the election direction. |meeting that the Soviet Union "So as people say, you can ex-|was taking the lead in forming pect it through thé door and it}a society where man could not comes through the window," the be exploited by his fellow man. Soviet leader said. "Communism has now ceased The announcement came asjto be a dream," he said, and Khrushchev interrupted ajadded that socialism was bring. speaker at an election meeting)ing benefits to many countries. here to say the satellite had) Khrushchev thanked the elect- been shot off and was "already|ors of Moscow's Kalinin district flying." for making him their candidate The meeting was organized to|and said Russian elections had 'support Khrushchev's candidacy|become a popular holiday and $$ |"a_ good tradition." The elec- tions take place Sunday. He said that people criticized Soviet elections because there jwas only one candidate but added that Americans admitted there was no difference between the Republicans and Democrats. |. "What is the main difference |between the Republicans and the Democrats?" he asked. "The Republicans have as JOHN PAPALIA OPP Man Claims Told Of Bribery TORONTO (CP) -- A provin-|w orking as an undercover cial police undercover man said) agent. thei at pe he was once told a} Lawrence told him he and|tne Democrats iueer wis high OPP official received/Kenneth Lamorie, both mem-|, choice for the Sector The others, in the order they east of Guam and 100 miles) round dead in a field near Roch- stand on the list, are: wide along the transport plane's| ester, N.Y. route. Cloudless skies and calm Agueci was an associate of) John Frederick Meagher, 31, Se \Papalia and known as "the of Oshawa wanted by the Met- The airliner, piloted by Capt.|).,er." The supposition at the /ropolitan Toronto police for es- Gregory P. Thomas, 46, of Re time of his death was that he Caping custody in 1956 while en Bank, N.J., left Travis base in had been. killed to "shut his route to court to face charges northern California Tuesday mouth. His body was found bat-/0f armed robbery It was assumedin Saigon tered and burned. Roy .Edward Holowaty, 36, that the military personnel) hat killing has never been and Donald Edward Kolit, 30, aboard the plane were to join) solyed, nor have those of two both wanted for escaping from U.S. forces bolstering the 80V-lothers allegedly connected with the Saskatchewan penitentiary ernment's fight against the|/the smuggling ring. at Prince Albert Nov. 12, 1961, Communist Viet Cong: guerril-| After Agueci's murder last|the men, both serving 10-year las terms for robbery with violence, } 6 Se /may be armed and are consid- nents ered dangerous: files Roger McLean, 37, wanted by Quebec Provincial Police for es- caping custody Dec. 10, 1961, and wounding with intent. Mc- ', Lean was convicted in Ottawa Nov. 22, 1962, on charges: of oy aa armed robbery and sentenced to 15 years in penitentiary. Mc- Lean is considered "extremely dangerous." He escaped in Montreal where he was to face as PHILIPPINES - | 2 eh ws | H,3 PiU carci | hanks Prayer 1$ a6 Arc Ids os teere t Courtau 5 BORNEO a. o "en wid LONDON (Reuters) -- About 7 wn tt Gk POR ON = poate Pgin ee 2 VHERE PLANE BELIEVED DOWN teaey ent it one rites OKINAWA a g FORMOSA Pacitic CHINA a WO HMA Wr) Hany Kone Orcoan 8A om se tm ee tee saan tay MATIAERS, witty: Ube | several charges. }company went to church Thurs- Exclusion of China from the first stage- talks is the only way of getting a disar..ament con- ference off the ground, they be- lieve. PROBABLY WOULDN'T COME China is not in the United Na- tions and probably would not join the discussions here even if asked. The United States wouldn't sit down with China if) Geng 1A (AP) -- The 17-na she did come, and the Rus-ition disarmament conference sians are noticeably unenthus-\cajieq on U.S. State Secretary iastic about welcoming their re--Rusk and Soviet Foreign Min- calcitrant ally, ister Andrei Gromyko today to "I think it is significant that/start prompt informal negotia there has never been any sug-jitons on their rival disarma- gestion that Russia wants China' ment plans in," External Affairs Minister The move. proposed by India, Green told a reporter. came in the third session of the Because of her enormous pop-| conference after Brazilian For- ulation of some _ 700,000,000,/ci9n Minister Francisco San China is a force to be reckoned|Thiago Dantas urged the nu- with both in conventional arm-| ¢jear powers to carry out ne- aments and in her efforts to be-' gotiations to the extreme limit come a nuclear power. of compromise. He said the The Russians have no relish|<maller nations can play an im- for China joining the nuclear portant role in seeking com club from military con-| promise by negotiation siderati it would diminish' fididn Delencs Minister VK the Soviet claim to pre - emin- <a P Krishna Menon urged that Rusk ence in the Communist world aay then " en ar ' as , There is a para!'el between) 4 Meee , { the position of China in relation|(¢lesation i ae : time in getting for in formal talks Canada's Externa Minister Green said |meeting that "'it in line with our thin g the conference should get into nformal meetings and the min art tving up what the as together lAffairs after the much y that CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS " POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 is very Green said there was a great Informal Arms Talks After Plan Rejected |Home | : urgency to get something done! Russia's @nswer to Kennedy'sitreaty. day to give thanks for deliver- jance from a takeover bid by |the giant Imperial Chemical In- |dustries. The employees, from chair- tman to charwomen, filed from the company's head office to'a nearby church for a service of gratitude that the company had jretained its independence. They jsang the hymn Now Thank We All Our God. lat the conference which was ajtest ban proposal was given by, Imperial Chemical Industries "race against time." Soviet Ambassador Semyonzsannounced: earlier this week When the session broke up Tsarapkin. The U.S. president that it was dropping a £213,000,- Green had an informal 15-min-|announced two weeks ago he/000 offer to Courtaulds share- ute talk with Britain's Lord/had ordered a new atmosphericjholders. The offer was vigor- test series to begin in late April/ously opposed by Courtauld's di- Conference prospects suffered|but would cancel it if Russia rectors and most of the share- a blow Thursday when the So-|would agree to ban all tests un-| holders turned it down viet Union rejected U.S. termsider an international inspection --_ for a test ban. Resumption of system oe U.S. nuclear weapon tests in the!) Tsarapkin met with US. ne-| E i S k D atmosphere next month ap- euaater Ate: Dean and Brit-| ar Y tr e ate peared inevitable as a result. jish delegate Joseph Godber.| t . t SES Py tare : Later an American spokesman} Se A alns CNR tr Galen oe oF announced the Russian had ; 9 2 fused to devect foreleg apee: turned down Kennedy's pro MONTREAL (CP) -- The foe on Tiel: halo iG here posal abruptly and completely Brotherhood of Locomotive en- dahitey nathan Y , 4... |--without qualification. Tsarap-|gineers (Ind.) has set an early og nst violations of a test ban.\-in declared Russia would ac- strike date 'against the Crown Sy i ca cept a ban only with a national}owned CNR in its bid to. back ' i "inspection system--each of the demands for a new contract, it tional inspection where all other nuclear powers policing its own'was learned today d Sedan measures were pledge The date was reported to be se aga The Soviets for months have April 2 The Western powers were contended that detection instru- 0 J. Travers, assistant chief s adamant in their refusal ments are so far advanced that of the union in Canada, was ex- sarm without international/a sneak nuclear blast can be pected give details of the inspection of the Russians, With-|detected from thousands of|strike threat at a press confer. out a break in the East-West|miles away, and Gromyko is re- ence scheduled for later today deadlock over inspection meas-|ported to have told Rusk and -- Although the union's 4,500 ure Western diplomats|British Foreign Secretary Lord members had authorized a no hope for progress--but)Home earlier in the week that against both the CNR and ntended tc keep on trying.|/his government would not. ac ately-owned CPR if nec months, if neces-'cept foreign inspectors to ver the CPR is reported not compliance with a test banjinvolved in the union's strike ical. tain to top strike the pt for weeks or ify| essary sary year. Rocco Scopollitti got a 19-/money from a Toronto gambler|bers of the anti-gambling squad year sentence. Both lived in To-|for tip-offs on impending policejat the time, were each making ronto. gambling raids. '$500 a month for supplying pro- Const. George Scott of the|tection, he said. Lawrence said \OPP anti-gambling squad said/they got $250 each from Mec if | DRUNK DRIVER'S LOST WEEKENDS source of the information was|\Dermott and the remainder former OPP Const. Robert/from "patches"'--betting houses |Wright, with Joseph McDer-\under police protection. mott and Vincent Feeley on PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)-- | trial for conspiracy to obtain in- bi sad , one oon: George O'Sullivan Young, | formation from Const. Scott that) aye " eli ae McDex. | 42, appealing a sentence of |it was not his duty to pe a ion, he continued, } a year in jail and a $1,000 Const. Scott, giving evi ence z fine for ont arvine told |for the second day, said Wright prod DD sigas co ~ a judge he has a drinking |told him OPP Deputy Commis-|*\~""" ie " sh 4 | problem, but only on week. |Sioner James Bartlett once re- sg ge Ips xii fr x raids. | ends. G jceived 32,000 at a party from! n yet ano ae te ri oy Grp | So Judge Alfred T. sul. |McDermott, an admitted gam- versation, monitored by | monetti reduced Young's | sentence to a year of week- | ends in jail. bler Sgt. John Anderson, head of the He said Wright, former OPP/anti - gambling squad, McDer- Const. Carmen Lawrence and|mott complained to him about himself met at the Earl French|his customers being questioned Club in May, 1960, while he was by police during raids. ee --_--________--_ |; In earlier testimony, Const Scott said Wright told him John Cronin, former head of the anti- gambling squad, had collected Battle Over Eggs Won By Skipper VANCOUVER (CP) -- The,seven days ago when the 16|" jcaptain and officers of the 10,-/Spaniards and two Greeks re-\wjeDermott and Feeley posed |000-ton British freighter Ban-)fused to eat the cooking of Brit-| 4, inspectors when the present! jnervale have won the bacon-jish chef Cuthbert Griffiths. They|Qpp office building here was| |and-eggs battle. have been lounging in the mess| ynder construction, obtained the! They had threatened to quitjexcept for occasional picketing ceria) numbers of desks in the! |the vessel if 18 seamen on ajventures. jhunger strke, who protested! Griffiths said: }bacon and eggs for breakfast) «4; |; : F jand demanded a Spanish cook,| a ene Ones Buin finder |were not dismissed. the time Wright said he made $30,000 as Cronin's partner on lthe squad, he added. | "I said I'd like to make $30,- / 00 | | had keys made for them. They also posed as telephone) | British food." counts of anti-gambling squad The strikers were dismissed jofficers so they could check on Thursday. They will remain on|HAD NO JUSTIFICATION ithe long distance calls they jboard here until arrangements} A Spanish vice-consul and rep-|made, he quoted Wright as say- jcan be made for their return tojresentatives of the Seafarers' |ing. their homes in the Canary Is- International Union earlier in-|- gion, lands. spected the vessel and said the . men had justification for th A dH Id The hunger strike began strike. no Jusulication for te rme 0. up | Captain Murdo Macleod and' N 20 640 | lhig niin a | Canada Only his officers told a representa-| ets $ i tive of the owners, Banner Ship- U b : Ri k ping Company, who flew from) HAMILTON (CP) -- A man FALKIRK, Scotland (CP) ingest ;¢.;armed with a black revolver} London to investigate the dis (Thursday robbed the owner of pute they would leave the ship Canada--represented by the Er- nie Richardson rink of Regina-- the Sherman House Hotel of if the strikers did not depart. scored five on the first end to Milne, had the men dismissed. The representative, E. C. wallop Sweden 17-7 today and They immediately set up picket become the only unbeaten rink lines around the ship, car jin the men's world cu | championship In the other game of the sec ond round of the double round tr robin affair, the United States tied Scotland for second in the four-team standings by beating the Scots 10-7 The Richardsons rolled to the Canadian Brotherhood of Rail- highest score ever made injway Trainmen, longshoremen 4 cet ithe heal world championship competi-'. ; my Saas epi sed across the top of the head) tion stopped loading the bea with with the revolver and knocked The Canadian rink, playing grain intended for ommunist stunned into a row of garbage the draw game for the first five|China and boilermakers stopped cans. : : ends, ran up a 16-6 lead. Then working in the engine room A stolen car, believed to have a measure on the 11th end gave' Captain Macleod said the L¢en, used in the holdup, was Skip Ernie Richardson his rec-|strikers will be retur found, its motor still running, S » returned to the af as ies nearby. Beside the car were ord score Canary Islands in 'fa day OPjpeach OF | fy. 7 a ' Sweden now is winless in two|two."' He said the strikers et nadall yee hin pele cathy | starts leave the ship even if he has to)" wr. Masney was taken to hos- Richardson defeated thejkick them off pital where 24 stitches were re-| jUnited States champions 11-5 "I'm a strong Scotsman," he quired to close the wound in in the first round. isaid. jhis scalp, | in a brown shopping bag | Nick Masney has made a} practice of taking large sums) of money to his hotel for several ying years on alfernate Thursdays to rling)banners proclaiming in Spanish cash cheques for his customers| and English: from plants across the street) "We demand proper food and from his hotel. | eatment. We want to eat like| 'Thursday as he stepped from) people, not pigs." his car at the hotel with the bag) Vhe hs we 2 of money a man jabbed a re-| ae the cheese keted. | volver into his stomach and said with the aid of members of the!*this is a holdup." When Mr Masney struggled with the stranger he was slug-! said he owed Wright a, |§20,640, which he was carrying); | West Germany Hears Signals BOCHUM, West Germany |(AP)--The Bochum observatory announced today it has picked jup signals from what to be a Soviet space ship. seemed The observatory said the sig- jnals were received between 3:09 p.m. (9:09 a.m.) and 3:24 on the same frequencies used by broadcasts from the capsules of I Soviet cosmonauts Yuri Gaga- rin and Gherman Titov. _ The altitude of the new satel- ite was estimated to be around 173 miles. Time for one complete orbit was estimated. to be about 92 |minutes, the observatory said. | $100,000 for advance tip-offs. At} t Israel - Arab Clash Reported By Army 0 and he said, 'You'll make| TEL AVIV, Israel--An army t,'"' Const. Scott told the court.|spokesman today reported a de- He said Wright also told him|sert clash between an Israeli pae rol and two Arab marauders who attempted to infiltrate into I srael from the Egyptian-held Gaza strip. British articles and I'm cooking|Company officials to obtain ac-|§ : | of a One infiltrator was shot dead anti-gambling squad offices and/and the second captured, he Ss aid, ACQUITTED Clifford O'Brien, 66-year-old handyman from Hawk June. tion, Ont., is shown in Pem- broke after being acquitted of manslaughter in connection with the 1919 mystery death Pembroke merchant, Thursday A grand jury earlier quashed a murder charge against O'Brien. --CP Wirephote ) & ia

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