THOUGHT FOR TODAY Be tolerant of him who disagrees with you -- he has a right to an absurd opinion. ¢ Oshawa Gimes WEATHER REPORT Milder -today, clear and cooler tonight. Mainly sunny Thursday. Price Not Over : 10 Cents Per Copy VOL. 91--NO. 92 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1962 ' 'Authorized os Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in C TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES Inspector Examined n Diary TORONTO (CP) -- Inspector|replied. "But I did want Hatch. Allan Stringer of the Ontario I felt he was a good officer." | Provincial Police, was accused) par ciFTED DIARY before the royal baer eggs} Under examination by the| crime today of trying, in 1997,/1 iberal counsel, Insp. Stringer] to remove from Windsor, Ont..)<aiq he had. falsified his police| an officer who was "working qiary in omitting mention of a hard" against a newly opened ak to Winlase on wha fe Egy ee chief of the met Hatch in October, 1957. ' Stringer, i f Pitecborough district, denied) He also said he had, on a the allegation made by B. J number ot occasions, neglected MacKinnon, counsel for the to enter in his diary notations Liberal party, before the com- 0 out-of-town trips from Peter- mission ; borough, on one of which he de- Insp. Stringer, mentioned in|livered to an OPP anti-gambl- previous testimony as having|!n8 squad member a memoran- been under. suspicion by some dum describing how to raid the fellow officers in connection Ramsey Club at Niagara withi nformation leaks to gam-| Falls blers, said he had been trying) On the day of his meeting to get Sgt. Jack Hatch moved|with Hatch in a Windsor motel, from Windsor to his district butjhis diary entry merely stated only because he regarded Hatch/"duty locally" He said that was "not correct." as a good policeman "Why did you. falsify the Mr. MacKinnon brought out ; evidence from the inspector| diary?" Mr MacKinnon asked that the Roseland Veterans I don't know. but I did." Club in Windsor got a federal charter in 1957, Insp. Stringer/ MAKE OTHER POINTS Other point's at today's ses- had telephoned Hatch several times from Peterborough andjsion, the second day of exam-| had met him in Windsor and/ination of Insp. Stringer Toronto with a view to getting' 1. The inspector denied tell-; hundreds of ballot boxes that him moved to the Peterborough'ing gambler Vincent Feeley in| will be sent out from his area 1957 that he was trying to get! office to polls across the coun Shrubb--then of the| try for the June 18 general You wanted to get him out/Cpl. W. J of Windsor," the lawyer said, |anti-gambling squad and now Chief Electoral Officer Nel- son Castonguay poses in Ottawa with some of the WASHINGTON (CP) -- Can- ada, which lies in the direct path of radioactive fallout from Russia's 1961 nuclear tests, may be relatively free of much of the debris from United States detonations expected to. start next week First ' in than three years, the U.S. tests will be conducted over a_ period of "Oh, no," Insp. Stringerjchief of police at Peterborough --- --transferred to 'his district se Previous testimony was to the effect that Feeley knew of this US. Officer » 2. Mr. MacKinnon said a Jo- jseph C. McDonald, described by Gi 20 Y |the inspector yesterday as a ven eals Toronto realtor who had been |telephoning him, did not appear F B t ] on the list of real estate men. or e Taya Stringer had mentioned calls ue by McDonald as a possible ex- WIESBADEN, West Germany| njanation for a charge that re- (Reuters)---A court martial to-\cords show calls to the Stringer day sentenced U.S. Air Force|nome at Peterborough from a Capt. Joseph P. Kauffman to 20/tejephone number used by Fee years at hard labor for giving! joy. , information to Communist East) 3. Insp. Stringer said he used more gg -- OPP constables in their spare e elght-man court aisO S€n-itime to help him make boat} " : tenced the 43-year-old bachelor|covers for Hunde! He did not about three months in the "gp to dismissal from the air force pay the constables but he did Pacific ar wal oe an in which he had served 20 years not make any money himself. reso islands. J ohaeien a and forfeiture of pay. 4. He denied a suggestion by about 700 miles southwest Kauffman, bespectacled fi-'Mr. MacKinnon that in 1954 he| 42". ee . nance officer, was convicted/had interceded on behalf of|_ Lhe U.S. Atomic Energy Com- Tuesday night on charges of be- Geoffrey (Gyp) Feeley, a con-| mission says that of the total traying U.S. defence secrets to|victed bootlegger, who had aj debris from the Pacific shots. the East Germans. He could|prison term commuted to aj My about one or two per cent have received a maximum sen- fine. However, after Feeley's|i§ expected to consist of local tence of hard labor for life. 'conviction he had made a date fallout The sentence will be automat-ifor Feeley with the OPP's liai-| "The remaining 98 or 99 per ically reviewed by higher airson man with the liquor con-|cent is expected to be dispersed force authorities trol board. He said his post-con-|high above the earth's equato- Kauffman had inno-|viction report on Feeley hadjrial regions,"' the commission cent. been unfavorable added in a statement, indicating pleaded Moslem Patience Thin As Death Toll Mounts ALGIERS (AP)--One month)Oran and Bone, all with size-|population continues to support has elapsed since the signing!able European populations. the Secret Army terrorists of the Algerian cease-fir but' Calm reigns along the mined, the grim, bloody resistance ofjelectrified frontier lines Separ-| ¢ the European settlers in Al-jating Algeria from Tunisia and! geria's major cities casts a|Morocco, where rebel forces|!€Ts long shadow over the coun-/are camping, awaiting an order bornly try's future to march into Algeria shed "At their Tunis France has installed a pro- "¢W the Moslem. nationalist visional executive, charged seek another solution are becoming increasingly im-| with preparing Algeria for self-- Some rebel. officials fear that patient with the terror- determination Yet the execu-if the Secret Army is not des- ism. of the European right-wing tive is hoied up 30 miles from|troyed by the time Algeria Secret Army Organization. Algiers, in the barricaded ad-|votes in the self-determination Tuesday 49 persons--43 of them ministrative stronghold of/referendum, an independent Al- Moslems--were killed and an Rocher Nor. It has little di- gerian state will face a Euro- other 21 injured rect influence on Algeria's big)pean underground backed by Except for an occasional iso. modern economic centres,,most of the country's 1,000,000 lated retaliatory attack, the|where the defiant European|European settlers rebel guerrillas and terrorists cesraticld Rota have observed the cease-fire in obedience to orders from their government-in-exile in Tunis. The rebel command agreed to co-operate with France in set- ting up provisiona] institutions and in preparing the the cities' European quar the settlers believe stub- that terror and blood will either give them a headquarters status or force France to ebels raging CAMPAIGN IN HIGH GEAR But daily, European terror-} ists have been killing. Moslems By DAVE McINTOSH Mr. Diefenbaker listed sev- in Algeria's big cities in a des OTTAWA (CP) -- There will eral items of government legis- perate effort to provoke mass pe a federal general election !ation he would like to see Moslem reaction and thus com-)Monday, June 18, two months cleaned up before he sees Gov- promise the peace agreement. from today ernor-Genera] Vanier to recom- INPATIENCE GROW The enumeration of voters a pp sean "This situation has lasted too, Will' take place between April second aah Ne aeen al es jong." warned the rebel govern 30 and May 5. now eon shift aie ich wine ment in a statement Sunday Nomination day for. candi- 'nveienintals hee : 'The sincerity of the French: dates will be June 4 except in Mr. Diefenbaker next week authorities to put into life the}21 scattered ridings.|,;) ce a goa 4 E sEviemiants will be put to!Nomination day for them will yer SveAR 8) MOrInge ek ai uvian ag . i Mar ie Lakehead, Moose Jaw, Sask., the nh oc : Vancouver and Victoria The nationalists hope that the' There will be 265 Commons a , " Gocet Pee en Liberal Leader Pearson plans new Moslem local force, NOW seats at stake. The present Newf iland lat a being formed in A ria by the!,. ty atanding ha Commons to go to Newfoundland la e next Pench 'wuthoritic will be perry Sees C week, He has a date with Pres- v 2 ties, ' 'nereaenl ys fa , ' n Y inert into combat against the ont ect ee. Ge ident Kennedy April 29, and a shige isi ioe 203, Liberals 51, "New VeM-'roronto meeting the next day, Secret Army ocratic Party 8, vacancies 3. 'Then he will fly to Western Can- The nationalists steak ~-- Prime Minister Diefenbaker|ada ; i tw he e terrorism and economi ri aoe | announced the election date Ne D'e peewee are limited mainly to Algeria's|,,. 4 * es New emocratic th maifor Aloier Tuesday in the Commons after Leader T. C. Dougla ree major \Igiers,| - seul pao nf ead glas ja months-long electoral war of in Saskatchewan until of this month at least MPs greeted the an- nerves CITY EMERGENCY All a : The Conservatives took power nouncement with jubilation and in June. 1987, with a minority PHONE NUMBERS a shower of papers 2 ". government after 22 years of DAY INDEFINITE Liberal rule Exact day for dissolution of They were returned in a land the 24th Parliament for, election slide March 31, 1958, whén- the of the 25th remained indefinite.Commons standing read: Con but it could be today, Wednes- servatives 208, Liberals 49, CCF iday or as late as Sunday 8. large test.' be Party will be the end citie POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 7238-2211 ELECTORAL OFFICER READY In the passionate atmosphere} U.S. OFFERS PLANS | FOR DISARMAMENT Ontario Riding Faces = Choice Of Candidates |". | | ed for months to go Ontario Riding was one of the few in Canada that waited for an election announcement be- fort electing candidates Now that Prime Minister Diefenbaker has set June 18 as the election date, the political associations here are _ faced with the task of nominating candidates. STARR FOR PCs Labor Minister Michael Starr is expected to retain the nom- election. He has had the fed- jination for the Progressive Con- eral election machinery gear- | servatives. Ernest. Marks, sec- into jretary of the Ontario Riding PC Labor Minister Starr will have to stay in his own riding this election if he wants to be elect- ed, instead of travelling to other & ridings all over Canada helping others get elected BETTER ORGAYIZED "The Liberals are better or- ganized in this riding than they've ever been,"' said Mr. Drynan Although the New Democratic Party in Ontario Riding has set no date for a nominating con- vention, it is expected this will come about tonight at a meeting action when the date was set |Association, said today he did)in Ajax at which the provincial hy Prime Minister Diefen- | baker --CP Wirephoto jnominating convention April 26 ~jat Anderson Collegiate Institute jin Whitby. Canada Not Part not expect any opposition for NDP house leader Donald C Mr. Starr when they hold their|MacDonald will be the speaker. LIBERAL NOMINATIONS The Liberals have tentatively GLAD VOTE CALLED Clifford Pilkey, president the Oshawa New Party Club, said that it isn't known who will jcontest the nomination. "But," |set May 4 as the date for their/he said, "'we're glad the election Of Fallout Area much of the fallout may circle the earth at the equator instead of the northern hemisphere as was the case in Russia's Arctic series last fall In the U.S. case, "the diluted bands of low-level radioactivity will lose part of their radioac- tivity through natural decay processes before they gradually descend to earth over a period of years." Despite expressions of con- cern by Canada and other coun tries, including the non-aligned nations, the United States is moving rapidly towards re- sumption of 'the shots which may start about April 25, de- pending on the weather. Russia has threatened to reopen her aerial shots if the United States does More than 10,000 men are in- volved in the U.S. preparations of some 40 experiments Informants said there is no immediate plan for including the Bomarc, the anti - aircraft missile which Canada has adopted, in the tests. This never has undergone full operational testing with its nuclear load. Most experiments are to be in these categories: 1. Firing of intercontinental missiles under simulated field conditions 2. Testing of underground de- fence facilities to see how well they can «withstand a nuclear attack 3. Finding ways of improving the Nike-Zeus anti-missile mis- sile in the hope of developing an effective defence. The ma- jor Nike-Zeus problem is that it cannot discriminate between a real nuclear warhead and a decoy Russia fired an estimated 40 to 50 shots in the atmosphere last fall and'the U.S. concluded the Soviet made substantial pro- gress in shrinking the size of its warheads without reducing their punch Mr. Pearson said in the Com-|crets here in a long time, ap-jhe wanted to see passed--one|picked 139 candidates. The Con- mons after the election an-/peared perfectly genuine on all/omission was the Senate re-\servatives have 85 in the field, nouncement that the voters will decide the election "on the rec- ord of this government." Mr has another campaign issue in mind He charged that "obstruc-) tion' by the Liberals had made it almost impossible for Commons to get any business done Mr. Pearson replied that Mr. Diefenbaker was in effect saying that it was impossible for the government with 203 members to get its legislation passed "unless the opposition gave up the e se of its cherished rights of carrying out its du- ties J. W. Pickersgill (L--Bona- vista Twillingate) said Mr. Diefenbaker regards as obstruc- tion any Commons speech not made by a cabinet minister. On the whole, the mood of|throne speech debate, two on an from p the Commons was jovial after weeks of bickering and did-you-didn't" exchanges The the **vou- welcome of election nomination meeting. One of the candidates for the Liberal nom- ination in Ontario Riding willjernment. I think the people of) be John Lay, a Pickering gen- eral insurance agent. Mr, Lay is no stranger to the political field. He was the Liberal stand- ard-bearer in two federal elec- tions in 1952 and 1953 Mr. Lay is a nephew of the late Mackenzie King, former Prime Minister of Canada. A well-known Oshawa Liberal, George K. Drynan, predicts that BEDROOM SEX MIXING URGED LIVERPOOL (AP) -- Brit- ain's student teachers today demanded that colleges re- move restrictions against bed- room co-educational entertain- ing Davie Batley told a Na- tional Union of Students con- ference here that rules pre- venting student teachers from entertaining members of the opposite sex in college bed- rooms are narrow-minded. "We believe the authorities should give to student teach- ers, whom they have care- fully selected, a chance to prove they are not com- pletely untrustworthy," he said "At the age at which most students enter training col- leges, mixing of the sexes is both desirable and _ neces- sary." Kenneth Wallis, another del egate, told the meeting that he knew of a college where girls were forced to remove the mattresses from their rooms beiore men could be entertained He cited another which banned tathers from visiting their daughters in college hostel bedrooms The National Union of Stu- dents represents 170,000 stu- dents studying to be come teachers has been called, so that the peo- |ple can remove this inept gov- |Canada are fed up with the conservatives and this will be their opportunity to replace them." The new Returning Officer for this year's election in the riding will be Harry W. Jermyn, of Whitby. Mr Jermyn is a for- mer mayor of the town of Whitby. DURHAM CANDIDATES |. In Durham Riding, the situ- jation is a little different, at least |for two parties. They have al- jready picked their candidates. |Dr. R. P. Vivian, of Port Hope, jis seeking re-election as the | Progressive Conservative candi- jdate and Russell C. Honey, a |Port Hope lawyer, is the Lib- eral candidate. The NDP candidate has not been chosen. This will take place at a dual nomination meeting for both a federal and provincial candidate April 30 in |the Odd Fellows Hall, Orono. More Police For Algeria ORAN, Algria (Reuters) -- |Riot police reinforcements jheaded to Algeria from France today to beef up security forces in this western port city where 43 Moslems and six Europeans \died in communal violence Tuesday. | The reinforcement company jof 220 police left Paris as forces here launched a house-to-house search for arms and fugitive |members of the European Se- jeret Army Organization. Sporadic fighting between Moslems and Europeans here Tuesday culminated in a Secret j/Army machine-gun attack on a crowded Moslem suburb in iwhich about 0 persons were killed. _j|are to be completed. New Enforcement Idea Based On Spot Checks (AP)--The United;to be based. It would also con- sweeping stitute a verification that each world disarmament program to-|state was meeting its disarma- day with a new enforcement) ment obligations. concept based on spot checks) Unlike the Soviet plan for to- in the territories of the greatital disarmament within four powers. years, the U.S. plan contained The detailed 35 - page treaty|no time limit for its completion. draft was submitted to the 17-|The first two of its three main nation disarmament conference stages would last three years |by U.S. Ambassador Arthur H.' each. Dean. The step-by-step approach to Dean said the new plan was world disarmament contained based on the principle "that)numerous safeguards including the nations of the world should/an elaborate international con- seize a moment in time to stop|trol organization with ever-wid- |the arms race, to freeze the mil-/ening powers. 5 'litary situation as it then ap-| Each succeeding stage in the d pears, and to shrink it to zero,\disarmament process would jalways keeping the relative mil-|begin only when the control or- itary positions of the parties as|ganization 'determines that the near as possible to what it was|conditions specified in the @\at the beginning." |treaty have been met." Instead of starting the dis-| At the end of the final stage, of armament process with an in-| world peace and security would ventory of national military es-|pe maintained by a United tablishments -- which the Rus-|Nations peace force so power- sians have always rejected asify] "that no state can chal- espionage--the new U.S. planijenge it." -- iad spot checks in S€-| The general provisions of the = mete 7 | U.S. plan had been put forward USE SAMPLE METHOD by State Secretary Rusk March These new checks would be/15, shortly after the start of the jconducted on the sampling tech-/disarmament conference. The nique developed by big indus-|Russians at the same time sub- jtrial corporations. The military| mitted a detailed treaty draft. jsources and installations in any The U.S. draft provided that jsample area would give inter-lthe first of the three stages of jnational inspectors a picture of | disarmament would include a ithe total pear Ve ches ai 3 ban on nuclear weapon tests U.S. officials said Soviet dip-\«under effective international lomats with whom they dis-| wontrol'" and a ban on produc- cussed the sampling idea prior|,; tank $ ; ati tion of fissionable materials for to introduction of the dra TU ids in weapons. "seemed fascinated by it" but! did not commit their govern-! ment. | The U.S. felt the sampling procedure went a long way to-) ward meeting Soviet objections} * against foreign inspectors Injured On |swarming all over Russia in the 'early stages of disarmament. BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Under the U.S. plan, the in-|An Edmonton transport driver spectors would thoroughly in-| suffered facial lacerations this vestigate at any one time only) morning when two tractor-trail- one of. many identical districts| ers and a car were involved in jinto which the territory of the|an accident on Highway 401 big nations would be divided./anq Park road. Each side would be free to} Injured was E. Treloggen, 32, choose any single district or the| driver of a Midland Superior aggravated by a truck drivers' other without advance warning. | transport. He was treated at the \strike which has idled activity;PROVIDES CHECK |Bowmanville- Memorial Hospital in the Montreal section of the) From the arms and armed/and later released. Seaway. forces found in the chosen dis-| Driver of the other transpért | Officials here estimate that trict, mathematicians would) was John H. Sage, RR 1, Ome- |that the eventual opening of the|project an estimate of each|mee. T. R. Johns, of 818 Ontario |Seaway will see between 80 and|state's total military strength.|Street, Cobourg, was the driver 100 ships waiting to move up/This would provide a check of|of the car. : jriver and a possible 125 waiting)governments' declarations of] The accident occurred in the to go down. The locks can han-|their military strength on which| westbound lane of Highway 401 |dle 30 ships a day in each di-|the percentage reductions arejat 7.30 a.m. jrection. Lore ee | HARRY W. JERMYN Tension High In Shipping Circles Today MONTREAL (CP) -- Appre- hension mounted in shipping circles today as a strike and a damaged lock brought activity jin Montreal Harbor and the St. |Lawrence Seaway to an almost complete halt. | Tuesday, one local shipping) jofficial described a delay in opening the U.S, section of the island waterway as "about as bad as anything that has hap- pened to the Seaway since it opened." The delay, caused by a leak in the Eisenhower Lock at Mas- sena, N.Y., is expected to post- pone the opening by almost two ;weeks to April 24 when repairs Truck Driver The situation has since been eateee Hae ' Mill Head | Mine, | Fined For Meeting) SUDBURY (CP)--Ken Smith,} national president of the Inter-|: national Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (Ind.), Tuesday was convicted on a jcharge of unlawful assembly/ and fined $100. | Three other Mine-Mill officers and two supporters were also} convicted and fined the same amount. sides. Mr. Diefenbaker spun out his'/sory retirement .of senators at 83. election announcement for sev- ual date to the very end He said first he had Sept. 12 in mind for the election, the! solution of this House and the|V°#Pons Same day previously fixed for apparent slip because the day announced by Mr. Diefenbaker for the byelections was Sept. 10. Moreover, federal elections must be held on a Monday and Sept. 12 is a Wednesday The prime -minister said that because of opposition '"'delaying tacties" it had become almost impossible to proceed with Commons business There had been "'no real ef- fort to deal with Parliament's essential business."" In the current days, 27 had been appropriations, eight to session's 63 devoted to the opposition non-confidence tion and 25 on legislation MENTIONS BILLS Mr. Diefebaker mo- went on to tdate, one of the worst-kept se-imention government measures| == June 18 Election Date Announced form bill providing for compul- age 75--and then came to his Diefenbaker indicated he eral minutes, keeping the act- final, and key, sentence: "Therefore, I shall recom- mend to His Excellency the dis- holding of the election on June the two byelections. This was an 18." After the noise of desk-thump- ing and cheers died away, Mr. Pearson said the Liberals were "delighted that the prime min- ister at long last has put an end to the contrived uncertainty surrounding the date of the \election." The country would be glad at the news--"not perhaps as glad as the official opposition." H, W. Herridge, House leader of the CCF-NDP group, said his party is looking forward to the electorate's verdict Cost of the election, apart arty campaign expenses, is estimated at $10,700,000 Some 67,000 enumerators will tabulate the names of _ those eligible to vote The Liberals have already the NDP 89 and Social Creidt BIG ISSUES ON TAP Main election issues likely will be unemployment, nuclear for Canadian forces |the series of big budget deficits the economy and trade prob- lems raised by possible British entry into the European Com- mon Market The Liberals have been saying| Canada has been stagnating un- 'der the Conservatives. The lat-| G3 ter say Canada has never had! # it so good. Government legislation which] ! will die on the order paper in-| ® cludes the tax-change proposals] § outlined in the April 10 budget. However these changes will be put into effect, though retro- active legislation will have to be introduced in the new Par-} BRITISH, NOT CHINESE Mrs. Marion G. Buckley, 27, ; liament } Shows she knows how to use like a Chinese woman". even though she is British-born and speaks with an English ac- gent. She said she didn't mind Also consigned to the waste-| paper basket were government measures to end closure and to) day from Bryan Buckley, 29, | while they lived in Hong Kong give effect to two recommenda-| a camera maker. She testi- | but found it embarrassing af- tions of the royal commission) fied her husband insisted she | ter they moved to Los An- ion publications. | "look, dress, speak and act | geles. (AP Wirephoto) chopsticks after getting a di- vorce in Los Angeles yester-