THOUGHT FOR TODAY The man who rows the boat doesn't have the time to rock it. he Oshawa Cimes WEATHER REPORT Sunny with seasonable tem- peratures today. Sunny with cloudy periods Saturday, winds light. Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1962 Authorized as Second Cioss Ottawa ond for payme Post Office Department, Mail nt of Postage in EIGHTEEN PAGES VOL. 91--NO. 70 PRINCESS WITNESSES MARRIAGE | Princess Grace of Monaco holds a bouquet of flowers as she walks with Phyllis Blum, | | | | London banker Julian Earl, 34. Earl and Miss Blum will | be married in a_ religious 30, her former { e secre- | ceremony tomorrow. Princess tary, prior to Phy mar- | Grace, the former Grace riage today in the office of | Kelly of Philadel and an the Monte Carlo mayer to! Oscar winning an is' Steelworkers Demand Immediate Vote Count TORONTO (CP) United!gested by Mine Mill could Steelworkers of America (CLC)|stretch into a year today called on the Ontario La "The sensible and lovical bor Relations Board for the im-|thing to do is to order that the mediate count of ballots be-jpoxes be opened immediately tween Steel and the Interna-jand the ballots counted immedi- tional union of Mine-Mill and|ately, he said. Smelter workers for control of} ., the big Sudbury Mine-Mill local.|_,,!f Stee! should fait om tne Spokesniéh" for Mine-Mill op-lpoard's resources, which would posed the application strongly/pe a terrible burden, would and hot words were exchanged/proye completely useless.' between lawyers for the two; we Tewis was supported by! factions. . i ; - Sydney Robins on behalf of the The board reserved its deci-isudbury local group led by sion President Don Gillis. Mr. Rob The board now has the 14,100\ins said the impact of the case Sudbu ballots locked up andjis being felt by the workers and had called today's hearing tejthe business community at Sud- look into charges by Mine-Millibury and 'As long as the count that the steel union used fraud'is held in obeyance the affairs to obt application cards that of the community are held in were necessary before the rep-/obeyance resentation vote was taken "Surely the only the de rkers counsel David sire of the membership can be es that the pro- made known is in the sanctity of estigation as sug- the voting booth." Hard To Report | On Viet Nam War An AP News Analysis By MALCOLM W. BROWNE SAIGON (AP) -- One of the battles being fought in South Viet Nam involves the problem of finding out what is going on, and reporting it Many correspondents here fee] they are losing. One puts it this way The Vietnamese government nst us, they figure we're es or Communist propa- sts. The U.S. side won't tell us much beyond the broad outlines of policy, and we can't even be sure of that. After pry ing for weeks to get a story from unofficial sources, we may end up being blocked by the censors." -Underlying the efforts of cor- respondents is the belief, among some at least, that Viet Nam could become the cradle of a re widespread war The United States nearly 5,000 servicemen to the country, along with major transfusions equipment for the Vietnamese forces WATCH IN WINGS Internally, both govern- ment and the Communist Viet Cong have stepped up opera- tions Viet Nam's inhospi- to the Western press ; from frequent press crit- of President Ngo Dinh administration. In a this month the nation's first y. Mrs. Ngo Nhu, condemned "pseudo- lism'" and certain wav Steelw Lewis su longed jent her attack had been di rected at the U.S. press The war here is where you find it, and unless a correspond- ent accompanies a military unit or runs into a Viet Cong am- bush, he is not likely to find it at all. Getting permission from officials in Saigon to ac company military operations is sometimes difficult As a rule Vietnamese sources regard as taboo questions stories about political arrests or related police activity U.S. officials are reluctant to show reporters military opera tions in which U.S. servicemen are performing combat roles Bien Hoa Airport, centre of U.S and Vietnamese military air ac tivity, is off limits to the public and to correspondents of has_ sent of the TORONTO (CP) -- Two Onta rio gamblers and a former pro- vincial police constable today were sentenced to 18 months definite and six months indef inite for conspiring to obtain confidential information from a police officer Joseph McDermott Vin cent Feeley, 38, and former constable Robert Wright, 31, were sentenced by Mr. Justice ele-|J. F. Donnelly shortly after in the West who she|10 a.m. following there canvic seem more interested inition Thursday by Supreme lining the Diem adminis-|Court jury tration than in winning the war. M seeming ism Diem's speech 41 powerfu powerful D aid underr In handing. down sentence, Mr. Justice Donnelly com- mended McDermott fer the good work he had done while éon ducting his own defence during the nine-day trial Nhu told this correspond CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. HOSPITAL 723- The information concerned po: lice raids between January and '| June 1960 on clubs suspected of gambling operations The jury. deliberated nearly three hours Thursday jafter being instructed by Ma, for 0 2211 RENCH PLANES BLAST ALGERIAN TERRORISTS Rusk Accuses Russia GENEVA (CP)--State Secre atry Rusk accused Russia today of blocking nuclear test ban treaty while presumably plan- ning a new series of atomic weapon explosions Soviet Foreign Minister Gro- myko sharply denied the charge and blamed the United States for ine failure to reach agree- {ment on a test ban The clash came in the 17-na- tion disarmament conference as the United States, Britain and Russia reported collapse of their efforts to start new negotiations . on a test ban treaty. at the wedding Gromyko said the United (AP Wirephoto by radio States is to blame for the fail from Paris)' yre iecause it has scheduled a new series of atmospheric tests and does not want a test prohi bition a nounced recently she plans to return to Hollywood to make a witness movie. She was Rusk said President Kennedy had emphasized the United States would stop all tests if Russia would sign a treaty with effective controls against cheat ing. Kennedy has ordered the tests to start in late April unless Golden, Mine - Mill 54° h a treaty is signed i i i counsel, said the case has been _ British F a "sordid mess" and that was Lord Home said the why the Steelworkers wanted to Powers are prepared to work dispose of it now. 'My clients,/out a control system on the win or lose, want to expose once Most objective scientific basis and for all the most sordid tac-| possible. Home promised "min- ties ever employed by a union in imum controls" to Gromyko ear- Canada so they might never be lier in the week but Gromyko repeated again." rejected any kind of interna- tc aa tional controls which would put foreign observers inside the | Soviet Union. |RENEWS CHARGE Gromyko renewed the Soviet charge that the West wants to set up an espionage system in | Russia, He brushed aside Rusk's |charge of new Soviet tests plans by saying it was a pretext to cover known American test plans Aubrey : sd Secretary Western orelgn Cry For Mercy By Lawyer For Eichmann JERUSALEM (AP) Adolf Eichmann"s lawyer appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court today for the condemned former Nazi official and claimed Eichmann was "entangled" mercy for RESIDENTS UNCONCERNED against his will in Hitler's plot against the Jews i Dr. Robert Servatius, Eich mann's West German defence} counsel, completed his_ initial argument appealing against the death sentence given Eichmann for complicity in the Nazi slaughter of 6,000,000 Jews Israeli Attorney-General Gid- eon Hausner immediately began phe prospect of 4,000,000 cubic his statement opposing the ap- reet of water flushing its vil- peal lages into the St. Lawrence has Servatius asked the five-judge little more than yawns supreme court to "see its wayjin the sleepy Chaudiere River clear to lift the sentence of yaliey death passed on the accused." B while the farmers milk "Only the can be the sugarbush and city folks sponsible for its organi brave the frost-humped highway oS subordinates to buy the first spring maple gg agg EEA tibia dis. SYTUP, provincial and municipal i ih authorities are preparing for obeyed orders of the state Hin eroret would have meant that he would ~ have been put to death. The ac cused sees the guilt in which he became entangled, but there is a conflict here because he was entangled against his will.' Servatius declared that FE mann '"'always has been at grips with his feelings of guilt, but he was an instrument of a state bound by orders to obey LAC MEGANTIC, Que. (CP) evoked ut state re is an 35 Trouble the nearby Gayhurst. dam road miles south of Quebec City, whose water -iogged clay centre looks as if it may slide away under the pressure of the spring break-up The break-up is expected be- fore April 15, and possibly be- fore the end of the month be- spot ch Gamblers, Ex-Officer Jailed For 18 Months Justice J. F. Donnelly for an/nine strikes him," he hour and 45 minutes. He ad- said vised the 12 not to be prejudiced There is against the accused 'because against Feeley, McDermott of their way of life said, 'he was put here just to The three men were acquitted keep my company." in a Supreme Court trial last The other two accused did not May and June of conspiring to present defence evidence bribe Const. George ott of the Summing up the Crown case, provincial police anti-gambling Special. Prosecutor J. P squad Milligan said the only assump tion to be made was that Mc Dermott was the man behind the scenes Tax mott part against no evidence at all DENIES PAYOFFS Addressing the day, McDermott repeatedly de nied he. had ever paid money! to right for tip-offs on police raids from Const. Scott He chars that because a well-known gambler case "has been made into a po litical football and the newspa pers have built it up into a royal|Monday commission journed McDermott admitted he was on: T a gambler and said he. openly But paid income tax on his earn- pects jur Thurs showed Feeley had returns and McDer- been in ship The end of the trial today was to clear the way for the provincial royal commission on crime to resume its hearings The commission ad after less 'than an hour day because of the trial Mr, Milligan said he ex to proceed today with y three charges against Wright of When a gambler appears in bribing Const. Scott with $1,000 front of you he's already gotlin three paynients. zed he is the expected | Authorities Fear | Break-Up Of Dam 'will be real trouble." Cause Red Wings Flyers in is Papuans Planning To Eat Invaders PORT (Reuters) Thursday nesians MORESBY A warned attempt to carry threats to invade Dutch New Guinea cannibals in territory plan. to eat them Australia Papuan legislator dependent oraneously. An informant said of such far - reaching signific- resume testing in the atmos-/nations, who have been trying started its series of about 50 pressed sharp disappointment then, Gromyko said Mahmoud Fawzi of the United States could not be expected to hammered on the need for the| He added Minister Green made two pro- nations, and other nations the day to consider the nuclear the conference--as was a sim- Green also proposed that Rus- VANCOUVER (CP) Mrs. eight smaller, middle-group na- a total of $6,000 Thursday when issue. This idea was docketed of conspiring to bring Chinese Ice-Plant Fire husband living in Mongolia -if . operating a false donee aia Threatens Rink that the threats could not apply!ted the nearby ice-making plant of the accused damage estimated as high as cause of her previous good rec- players and 100 spectators. in| were members of Hamilton Po- jone was injured jowned by Abso Pure Ice Com- and cooling equipment. It sup- of recent mild weather Forum officials were optimis- neer Mare Benoit said in an'in-/Hockey Association Junior A Charles-Edouard Deslauriers, Hamilton dunior resources, gave mayors of the Forum officials said Thursday} the situation Thursday night at had not. been scheduled at the| Beauceville, which suffered ing if a game had been on. | the most concerned about the Not be assessed as yet, but said will happen,"' said Mayor Jac- toa damaged i sa | worst." A. Dextraze, com- Quebec area, told the mayors Retains Seat Next Tuesday, telephone and cilities on high ground so that (Reuters) -- The Labor party | Earlier this week, Natural | dam "deteriorated" and oS it was announced today. | valley 828 votes in the Yorkshire con- would be directly in the path of Dean, Conservative--6,623; Rus-| Labor had a majority of 24,310 G. O. Sylvester received 35,194 In the present contest. the in- that out) candidate who fails to poll one- hold and . Thursday's voting Dutch West New Guinea, said/the total votes cast compared Rusk spoke from a prepared cannot be asked to trust the text. Gromyko replied extemp- Soviet Union's word on matters he accused the United States of ance." an aggressive act in deciding to. Foreign ministers of smaller phere. He denied Russia had to move the big powers toward broken a moratorium when it disarmament measures, ex- tests last September. There was at the failure of the nuclear test no moratorium in_ existence talks The American secretary told Arab Republic and Francisco the conference that the United San Thiago Dantas of Brazil accept a treaty based "'solely on Big Three to continue talks. | pure faith." Canada's External Affairs! "We do not ask the Soviet/posals for action. He called for Union to trust the word of other|4 full 17-nation meeting later in test ban problem informally. That suggestion was accepted by Woman Tells Of ilar proposal from Green Thurs- day. Fake Passports sia, Britain and the United States invite some or all of the Lila Chen, 44-year-old co-owner|tions to join them in renewed of a Chinatown hotel, was fined efforts to resolve the test-ban she was convicted on 12 counts for further discussion. into Canada illegally. Mrs. Chen said during her po- lice court trial Chinese Commu- j nists threatened to harm her T ll $150,000 | she did not co - operate with} 0 ' ' agents in Hong Kong who were} racket Magistrate Les Bewley ruled) HAMILTON (CP)--Fire gut-| under Canadian law becausejand threatened the Hamilton they did not concern the safety;/Forum Thursday night causing He said he did not consider a $150,000. jail sentence for Mrs. Chen be-; More than 150 minor hockey ord and her six children the Forum at the time had to be evacuated. The youngsters {lice Amateur Athletic Associa- |tion's minor hockey league. No Destroyed by the flames was a brick and frame building pany Limited." The _ build-} ing housed ice-making machines plied brine to the Forum for its artificial ice surface. Present level of the.Gayhurst/tic about the chances of playing reservoir is 1,148.3 feet. Engi-|the 'third game of the Ontario terview Thursday the critical final at the rink Sunday, despite level will be 1,165 feet the fire hydro electricity director for og Niagara Falls Quebec's department of natural" Ry ere ' iy " in| valley towns a pri Dib. night was. the first Thursday in| Soe ap erm Picture ofl nine years that a junior game} a meeting in Beaucey eauceville, lrink. There would have been| IS MOST WORRIED about 3,800 people in the build- the most in a flood caused by. James English, manager of ice-jJams in 1958, seemed to be the ice firm, said damage could whole situation it could run as high as $150,000, "We are hoping that nothing depending upon what equipment} ques Renaud, "but all.the same fy we are preparing for the B e,* h L b noni ritish Labor mander of the army's eastern the army has 2,700 men ready to move in and help evacuation I B El ° | -Election | utility companies are to be n y e 10n asked t ary fa- -- ~ » sked to set up temporary fa PONTEFRACT, England communice 5% 2 ' j Hevea aa he oat pect 'nt easily retained its . parliamen-| ' pt going tary seat in a byelection here! Resources Minister Rene Leves- i gh el + oe ge que warned that the Gayhurst Ore ae UNREAL Ye CoRHene: might unleash a wall of water Labor candidate Joseph Har-| and ice 30 feet high on the Per Was given a plurality of 19,- Towns like Beauceville, St stituency. The results: > Joseph and Vallee - Jonction|,. Harper--26,461 votes; Paul} the torrant sell Eckley, Independent--1,146. | In the 1959 general election, | votes in a straight fight with a Conservative. Labor candidate, | votes to 10,884 for Conservative =. T. Bowman. loses the £150 de- if Indo posit which is forfeited by any} West eighth of the total votes. the} Pontefract is a Labor strong- Herman Womsiwor, the showed the party actually made voice" of 750,000 Papuans ina slight increase in its share of if the Indonesians come there|with 1959--77.3 per cent as 'against 76.4 per cent. | Clash Follows _ Security Moves ALGIERS--French jet planes strafed Bab-el-Oued today as armored cars of the French Army blasted their way into the Algiers suburb in a battle with European extremists. The planes swung into action as the armored cars advanced slowly into the centre of the Eu- ropean quarter, each with a heavy machine - gun firing a burst every five seconds. Members of the European Se-' eret Army Organization fired from windows, balconies and from behind chimneys as the guns of the advancing column raked the walls of houses. The aerial and ground attack ion the extremist stronghold came after an afternoon of|}TQOO0K OVER TUNNEL fierce fighting during which Eu-| Jp the heart of Algiers, an ropean civilians armed with ba-|armed Secret Army unit of 10 zookas and _ grenade-throwers| men took over, for 15 minutes, put 40 French soldiers "out of a traffic tunnel cutting under- s action." |neath the University of Algiers. n rgentina An. army official who an-/The men checked identity pa- nounced the casualties did not|pers of some motorists and then BUENOS AIRES (AP)--Fol-)say how many of them had been|disappeared. lowers of exiled dictator Juan killed. | Shortly afterward the French D. Peron launched a country-- Smoke and clouds of dust/Army took positions near the wide anti-government strike to- hung over the quarter as the/tunnel. day as military pressure eight jet fighters swooped down European gunmen staged mounted for President Arturo to strafe roof-top snipers and/eight terrorist attacks against Frondizi's ouster. the armored cars crunched over|}Moslems throughout the city, National police went on battle broken glass and debris from)killing four and wounding five alert as the strike began at) shattered walls and skirted shot-|others. : one Lang Aoi of violence.|up cars. Inside the ancient Casbah, ro - Peron labor unions sum- 2 i moned nearly 2,000,000 workers THROW GRENADES nen gl ee - to strike for 24 hour: | Civilians dropped grenades)' , PP g' : * nours in protest)» sinflows and alc ing on normally while outside against Frondizi's deeree -- or-.{tom windows and balconies on Ee ' high ig dered by the military--nullify- the troops below and armored Uropesn extremists 10 ug . cars armed with .37-mm. guns/their battle against French au- ing sweeping Peronist v: i ild-| ay National Adveeture Pere gehen were called up to shell build-/thority. : ings vincial elections last Sunday. rt t 4 The full effect of the strike) GTOUPS Of arme was not expected to be felt un-/742 through the streets. til later in the day, but officials) The clashes followed strong predicted it would not be para- Security moves by the troops lyzing. The powerful Transport|after six French soldiers were) s 'Strike Protest Workers Union said it would not/killed and 12 wounded by gun- Over Alleged take part. Other unions also re- fire while patrolling Bab - el- fused to join in, but went on rec- Oued, an Algiers suburb. News Controls ord as opposed to Frondizi, The Europeans fired with ba-! The three armed service sec-200kas, grenade throwers and) papyg (Reuters) -- A strike retaries met with top military Pistols as the troops began/gicrupted the state radio and commanders at Goyern-\erecting barbed - wire fences|tejeyision services for a half- ment House in an early morn- hour Thursday night in protest ing meeting at first described gainst alleged government inter- as "decisive." The 90 - minute jference in news reporting. conference broke up. at Couple Injured ; 3:30 a.m. with no sanouner OR, Highway 401 Iradio'and television. ie ment | iy Bs Strikers walked out after they PRESS DEMANDS | _ WHITBY (Staff)-- A man |tearned of the suspension of tele- Word leaked out that irate, anda woman, still unidenti vision news commentator Joseph navy leaders once again pressed fied, were seriously injured Pasteur, secretary » general of their demands that Frondizi re- shortly after 1 p.m. today the Union of Radio and Televi- sign. Army and air force chiefs,| 0% Highway 401, a short dis- | sion Journalists. who had stood for retaining] tance east of the Liverpool |" But state radio director Rob- Frondizi, were reported waver.| Cloverleaf. The driver lost | ert Bordaz said no sanctions had ing under the navy officers' in-| Control in the westbound (heen taken against Pasteur and sistence that he be ousted. | passing lane and the ve- (he was reproached with no pro- The military tossed Peron bicle rolled completely over | fessional fault. He would be of- out in 1955 and is violently op-| 0" the boulevard. fered another post, probably posed to his return. } joverseas, Bordaz said. across the entrances to Bab-el- Oued, The troops returned the fire. At the same time, Moslem huts and shacks in the district of Frais Vallon overlooking Bab- el-Oued were seen going up in flames. Bab-el-Oued houses about 50,- 000 Europeans, mainly of Span- ish and Italian origin. By noon, French military au- thorities reported at least three attacks against the troops. In one case, a Secret Army com- mando unit surrounded a patrol of young draftees and seized their weapons without firing a shot. DEAN RUSK Peron Backers Launch Strike civilians) HAVE SKUNK TROUBLE Detroit. Their dog Sheba also | Charles Guttersohn, 21, his bride, Sandra, 19, make | use of clothespins as a measure of defence against a and | they could think of for help --but the skunks are. still there. They have tried seve eral times to occupy the house but each time have been de- feated and had to stay at the home of in-laws. gets protection from the troublesome intruders. The | use of a variety of pest con- family of skunks living under | trol methods failed to rout the | ie Guttersohns' honeymoon | skunks and the epuple have | WUtlage in Livonia, suburb of | called just about every agency