Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 May 1962, p. 1

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hpPuesd re WEATHER REPORT Not much change in tempera- ture. Clear tonight. Friday mainly sunny. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The best way to stop the noise in the car is to let her drive. Ohe Oshawa Cines Authorized as Second Class Mail and payment j VOL. 9°1--NO. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES 121 a in Cash. 'ostage THIRD ORBIT COMPLETE CARPENTER DOWN SAFE | Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy Ottawa for OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1962 , S Reds U UITED AND READY TO GO rge Refugees | To Remain In China | HONG KONG -- Communist loudspeakers on the border ap- pealed today to Chinese fleeing Red China to stay home and help grow needed food, but Red border. guards were reported to} tc i have made no attempt to stopjtions. "We are watchin the flow of refugees with force.| About 4,000 refugees crossed the border into this British col-} ony from Red China early to-| day and were detained. } British authorities have turned back more than - 50,000 refugees since May 1. Another| ony, and the British say they|suade would - be escapees but cannot absorb any more. jothers just sat around, not even Government officials saidj)bothering to speak to peasants they had no evidence as yet that| gathering near the border fence Chinese authorities had decided/for night breakthroughs. to try to stop the mass defec-| The Communists Wednesday g anxi-'stopped supplying water to ously for any sign,' said one|Hong Kong from the' Shumchun official. |Dam, near the Hong Kong bor- Unconfirmed reports from the|der. Since last October China} border area Wednesday had/has been piping more than 26,-/ forecast that a number of ref-|900,000 gallons of water a day ugees would drop because Com-|from Shumchun to Hong Kong. munist border guards were mak-| Two years ago Red China ing moves to stop the flow. agreed to sell at least 5,000,- f |wounded a Moslem. F |shooting, hundreds of Moslems Algeria to take all those fleeing Moslem Troops Disperse Mobs ALGIERS (AP) Moslem|most if not all police in Algiers) troops of the new local force/will be Moslem by the time Al-| went into action for the first/geria votes on self-determina- time today--against their own/tion July 1. | people. While measures to destroy Without firing a shot, the|the European Terrorist Organ- troops dispersed a Moslem mobjization were slowly being put that surged from squalid tene-|into effect, authorities lifted the ments reer the central vegeta-|visa requirement for women ble market after European ter-jand children wishing to leave rorists firing from a car'|Algeria, Planes and ships have been the shuttling between France and Within minutes after |milled in the nearby streets,/the terror and uncertainty of clamoring for European blood|the country's major cities. and brandishing steel bars and In the last few days, settlers clubs. have been leaving at the rate A loudspeaker called on the|of about 1,500 a day from Al- rioters to disperse and return/giers alone. to their homes. Members of the} The police radio network re- police force of the Moslem Na-|ported 20 persons killed Wed- tional Liberation Front, the;nesday, including four Europ- FLN, helped to direct the/eans, and nine wounded in ter- crowd rorist attacks blamed on the Elsewhere in Algiers, terror-|Secret Army, which wants to ists killed at least three Mos-|keep Algeria under French rule lems and wounded two others. | sa Nt ca grec am wer Bee Oth DEPLOY IN SUBURB s One company of the local Farmers View force recently was deployed in the Redoute suburb of Algiers land two others will be deployed) Damage After |soon on the city's outskirts. AY \detachment of 250 Reger 8 7 t \licemen armed with sub - ma- h d chine-guns took over a police) un ers orms station in Algiers' east end sub-} : = urb of Hussein Dey Wednesday. | ples ppc soo age lle psegell Officials in the barricaded po day surveyed a scene of. de. lice headquarters | said that struction left:in the wake ofa |series of thunderstorms which Minor Fuel Trouble After Second Orbit CAPE CANAVERAL, Fila. (AP) -- Astronaut Malcolm Scott Carpenter was sight- ed floating in a life raft outside his floating Mercury Space capsule shortly after 2:20 p.m. EDT today. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- The Mercury Control Centre here re- ported today that the cap- sule carrying astronaut Malcolm Scott Carpenter apparently landed in the At- lantic Ocean some _ 1,000 miles southeast of Cape Ca- naveral--or 200 miles be- yond its intended landing point. Because of loss of radio communication, there was no indication of Car- penter's condition. Officials reported the nearest aircraft was 120 miles from the point where it was estimated the space- craft banded. The plane, an air force sea rescue craft, flew toward the scene with a team of para-rescue men. There was no immediate estimate how long it would take the plane to reach the scene, CAPE CANAVERAL, F 1a.| "We see no reason why he shouldn't continue into the third orbit; but we emphasize that he limit his automatic fuel con- sumption." The latter was an order sent jfrom the control centre at Cape Canaveral to the tracking sta- tion at Point Arguello, Calif., for relay to Carpenter when he passed overhead. If a decision had been made to bring him down after two or- bits, his reverse rockets would have been fired over Point Ar- guello and he would have de- scended gradually over the United States to a landing in the Atlantic Ocean 500 miles south of Bermuda. DETECT CONSUMPTION Officials detected. fast con- sumption of the fuel shortly after the second orbit began and told Carpenter to begin making more use of his manual control system to conserve' the avluable hydrogen peroxide. The system controls the atti- tude of the craft. Apparently Carpenter did not hear the original order, which came from the Canary Island tracking station, and it had to (AP)--Astronaut Malcolm Scott} Carpenter completed his second! orbit of the globe today and prepared to come back to earth after one more circuit. Rapid fuel consumption in his ~, Auror 7 spaceship caused great » concern during his second orbit. » But after careful consultation be repeated by two posts in Australia, Muchea and Woom- era, Carpenter told Mercury offi- cials there was enough fuel to complete a three orbit mission and She order was given to pro- ceed, ' As he passed over Cape Can- Grissom on the ground at Cape Canaveral that everything was fine. and he was in excellent condition as he sailed overhead at the end of two orbits. Carpenter had ended his first orbit at 10:19 a.m., EDT, flash- ing over Cape Canaveral 99 miles up. The hydrogen peroxide is squirted out in jet form from small holes around the surface of the capsule. If the capsule shifts off its planned attitude for some reason, jets fire to push it back on the proper at- titude (its angle of. relation to the horizon). The astronaut can control: the roll, pitch and yaw of his cap- sule by using his manual con- trol stick to trigger these jet streams. ; As he entered the second or- bit, Carpenter was 'told 'to as- sume' more manual! control of Aurora 7 to conserve the fuel, which is used up more rapidly when the automatic system is operating. By taking manual control; Carpenter could hold a steadier course and thus elimi- nate some need for firing the jets. A false reading on a chart in the Mercury control centre caused some concern late in the first orbit. A medical gauge showed that Carpenter's body temperature was 102 degrees. Astronaut Leroy Gordon Cooper at the Guaymas, Mexico, sta- tion asked Carpenter if the reading were. correct. Carpen- There was no official confir-|000,000 gallons to the British to mation today of the reports|help the colony's supplies dur- which told of shots being fired|ing the dry winter and spring. ----|over peasant's heads: near the] The Hong Kong government {border wire. said the Communists had sup- | ts : : ; nee? |plied 500,000,000 gallons more NS) Villagers in the security arealthan the quota for this season, Fisherman Drow |claim to have heard militiamen! After Canoe Tips jon tie Chinese sitle urging] Out could no longer continue be- f : jeause _Kwantung province i Kwangtung residents to aPPlY|farms were short of water for KIRKLAND LAKE (CP) --jfor "legal" exit permits. They| ii cation Donald Kilan, 32, drowned Wed-| said guards were using several)?" nesday in Purdy Lake, about|dialects to warn 'their people nine miles northwest of here,|they faced arrest in Hong Kong after holding to a capsized ca-|and would be sent back. noe for more than an hour. Poli¢e authorities admitted ter replied: "No, If so, I'm sure I would be sweating in my space suit." The powerful rocket broke loose from its earthly bonds at 8:45 a.m..and shouldered its way into the sky to start Car- penter toward a journey through the stillness of space. The rocket rose slowly at first, restricted by the 120 tons of fuels packed in its tanks, But it quickly gathered speed as the three engines, generating 362,- 000 pounds of thrust, hungrily consumed the volatile. fuel. The rocket lifted straight as an arrow for about 30 seconds and then pitched over a north- east heading. As the rocket entered the cold air of the upper atmosphere, a long white vapor trail 'spewed out from behind it. As the rocket rose, Carpen- ter reported that all systems in struck scattered parts of the| province Wednesday. An ll-year-old boy was killed} as a result of the storm which jalso damaged tobacco ' crops, juprooted trees, knocked down rage: . |hydro wires and stranded a boat ge Bh 8 lb pe |with three persons aboard in lightning started a blaze-- jaarer setae ii hie wan hie. Pag icy had the storm set 4 i) s struck at |ff fires to barns, |: , PRP MOUSE WAS BUICK Bt seiitamin the stot Wes Rickie | 4.30 p.m. just as Mrs. Wat- 0 i . | | Bandit Killed | son was icing the birthday |Mustoe of St. Catharines. He 1 He was on a fishing trip with|today that shouted appeals had eons ached se ages was struck by a bolt of light- ri ey poe garg jning as he ran across the street Harold Kruger of Kenogami,|been heard from the Chinese 4 Men Hurt | eight miles north of here, when|side. But they said many were | : hahaa near his home. The lightning] son, with her two children, tore off his clothing, singed his Shelley, 10, and John, 8, ran pair black and ripped off his their canoe capsized. Both menlindistinct and declined to dis-| | to a neighbor's house 10 | shoes. held onto the boat but Mr. Ki-|close what they had heard. n wun att e call the firc brigade, be- At Belleville, nearly. three lan lost his grip minutes before} Witnesses in the security zone ' | cause the lightning had put inches of rain fell overnight it grounded on a bank. said some Communist guards STE, SCHOLASTIQUE, Que.| the telephone out of serv- during a seven - hour period. Both men wore life-jackets. 'apparently were trying to dis-|(CP) -- One bandit was killed) ice. <a a - ----_--_____--_______________ |and three others and a police However, at the home of captain were wounded when} Mrs, Richard Shad, the Montreal and provincial police estimated 8,000 to 10,000 have) slipped by the British, further} crowding conditions in the col-| with the pilot, the Mercury Con-|8Veral just before entering the trol Centre reported: third orbit, Carpenter at- ENE ester _..|tempted to jettison a balloon 'LAY OFF OR ELSE' Probe Witness Receives Threat reported the jettison switch failed to operate and he was unable to release the 30 - inch sphere, Ground technicians assured him that the presence of the balloon would in no way affect the mission and that it would TORONTO (CP). -- Liberalloffice this morning and tele- party counsel B, J. MacKinnon] phoned him about it during the today told the royal commission|commission hearings. on crime that an anonymous; The letter put together with letter has warned him to "'lay| words clipped from publications off or else."' | apparently threatened some per- Mr. Mackinnon said that a/S0ns whose names were not men- friend received the letter at his|tioned by the Liberal party law- BLASTS OFF FIRE CHIEF'S HOUSE STRUCK Garrard Road Fire Chief James Watson was to have burn up on re-entry into the jearth's atmosphere after the third orbit. Carpenter then took more pictures of the balloon. The balloon surface is divided into five equal sections of dif- ferent colors. The idea is to en- able Carpenter to determine which color man can best per- ceive in space, Performing as if he were right at home in the strange world of weightlessness, Car- Several trees also were up- rooted in the area, one fell across the highway near the Trenton RCAF station. There é --| yer. As read to the commission, the letter stated: telephone was also dead. Salan Beginning Life Prison Term thwarted a bank holdup Wed-} nesday in this village 30 miles) northwest of Montreal. Police had staked out the Banque Canadienne Nationale Several homes were tried before the alarm could be called in. Toial estimated damage to the chief's house was were no damages. In Belleville, jtwo transformers-were hit an burnt by lightning. The boat stranded in Lake On- tario was towed to safety to- Missile Blast Traps 15 Men | "Tell MacKinnon to lay off or else. we get you and "(name omitted) but good." Mr. MacKinnon said he con- sidered he should publicize the matter immediately in order to penter told astronaut Virgil I. the capsule were working. branch for several hours before} the attempted holdup, acting on a tip from several citizens who} said some men had Hh ye the bank several times in the last few days. | The dead man is Jean-Paul) pors Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Giroux, 25, while wounded were] Brown, while power was Captain Mare Maurice of the} restored to the Watson Montreal department; Claudel home : pe alld gag Yvon and Firefighter George Allan Captain Maurice, a veteran of| had Lids' eesumibea ia: ht at the Montreal force, was hit in| light roll ied races file. ating the head and leg. He was to} '00™ mecuaes DENTS sie undergo surgery today. | siren called him to Chief Yvon Lamarche and Gaudet) Watson's house. He said it was reported in critical condi-| CUt Off power for about 30 tion in a Montreal hospital] seconds. No damage seta while Joseph Lamarche was| ©#USed by the eerie flame. said to be in good shape. | day. Captain Jan Makkreel, 36, Robert Long, and his son, Bob- jbie, 14, all of Toronto, were jaboard the 28 - foot sloop. They }were unharmed . | The thunderstorms erupted after warm air from the south- west clashed with cold air that relieved last week's heat wave. Communities from Windsor to Peterborough and as far north as Raith, suffered. Hail cut a swath from Lake |Huron to Guelph and damaged |sibbling tobacco plants. Lightning from a Lake Supe- rior storm centre struck the |Canadian Pacific Railway Sta- tion at Raith, 65 miles west of} |Fort William, causing extensive ) damage. iene | Near Brantford, lightning at |the height of the storm set fire Federal Action Urged (3 eee In Lakes Unions Fray chicks, one bull, three vales, 15} The civil defence dispatched ens, 10 piglets and five sows.|a rescue truck from Redding, OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min-|men, ister Diefenbaker has. been|Union. Loss was estimated at $10,000. Calif. rightists in their campaign tolurged to take federal action to The fled keep Algeria French halt violence in a bloody inter-| yp), with Grant To Aid Sale Of Cherries The sentence was pronounced) union struggle on OTTAWA (CP) -- The federal agriculture department at the end of Salan's nine-day|Lakes before today announced a grant not to exceed $6,500 to assist the trial after the prosecution had Red Cherry Institute to assist in promoting sales of frozen asked that he be condemned to}) i *g ic 8 ral : and canned cherries from last year's bumper crop of 24,- dnath, |Mr. Diefenbaker's office Wed |nadian seamen last month) The latest incident happened| 900,000 pounds in Ontario. nesday in a letter from Presi-|when it gz | , ac ; * PE : : : } a : si gained a contract within Montreal, when CMU P He was tried for leading the|dent Claude Jodoin of the Ca- Upper Lakes Shipping Limited,|; a tthe » ode . 5 : Secret Army, violent opponent|}nadian Labor Congress. ito represent some 400 seamen gh gin dl b agree Pon Refined Nickel Price Cut t ilab] of Algerian independence, and) The head of the 1,070,000-\on 25 ships. agin igh it ren stepped from) TORONTO (CP) -- International Nickel Company of |" oVauavle- the abortive "generals' putsch'|member CLC cited incidents of ¢. : his house to be met with a shot-| (, Ad se i ic hes NO dnt Poe in Algiers on April. 1961 \Kaatinge'" beni shootings,| since this break-through, vio-|gun blast that struck the side) C@nada Ltd, today announced a decrease in the price of Shore Paper Com- g pri, |beatings, break-ins, shootings, a ake of his cz electrolytic refined nickel of 24% cents a pound. This puts threats, harassment and hard-|!ence has erupted around the ee the export price to the United States at 79 cents a pound jknuckle tactics in the last six|Great Lakes--beatings in Port) The current turbulence. on the U.S. including the U.S. i t q ty of 1% cents d: |weeks to support his request for Atthur, rifle shots at Toledo z shipping sc , : aa eM ee a ee | support his request for A »jinland shipping scene seems to| and the Canadian price, allowing for exchange differences "all possible steps to end vio-| obscene telephone threats to/be following a similar struggle! at 84 cents : ¢ e jlence, restore order and pro- * cP rapang In Lae tee in-|waged in 1949 when the SIU} ; |tect the safety of individuals."|"midation at Trois -Rivieres,/and its controversial chief.) wert: : Hl _ He also asked for a full-scale|Que., and other incidents. {American-born Harold (Hal) C_| Millionaire Released On Bail |investigation of the independ-| In each case cited by Mr. Jo-|Banks, were invited to Canada| TORONTO (CP) -- Montreal millionaire Roy Robert- ent Seafarers International Un-'doin, the violence was directed/to scuttle the Communist-dom-| son, 56, who was sentenced to five years in jail last week, ion of Canada, which is trying)against CMU members or thcir|inated Canadian Seaman's Un_| Wecresday was relcased on $40,000 bail pending an appeal. ito fight off a new union of sea-jsupporters. 'ion. The bail was set by Mr. Justice W. F. Schroeder. $600. Most of this was in an electronic fire warning device, Other damage was in the roof and attic. The birthday cake was eaten at the home of neigh- At Launching CHICO, Calif. (AP) -- A Titan missile was reported to have exploded today at the missile base eight miles north of Chico. An unconfirmed report said 15 men were trapped in the launch- ing silo. ' At Washington, a preliminary report received by the U.S. Air Force said there were no known fatalities but there were 24 minor injuries, mostly caused by smoke inhalation. The blast occurred at 7:10 a.m, and was felt in Chico. It was not learned whether the blast was under or above ground, - A security guard at the mis- sile base refused to permit re- porters and photographers. to kill this sort of silly non- ense."' ' Mr. Justice W. D. Roach, the commissioner, had no immedi- ate comment on the matter. Mr. MacKinnon told reporters later the letter, whose text he ireceived over the telephone from the recipient, included among those threatened Royce Frith, president of the Ontario Liberal Association, Inspector Harold Graham, head of the Ontario Provincial Police criminal investigation branch who is attending the commission sessions, sent for the original of the document. Three Men Die, Six Missing In Avalanche BAIE COMEAU, Que. (CP) Three men are dead and six others reported missing after they were buried under an ava- lanche of sliding earth and rock Wednesday at a logging site 40 miles north of this St. Lawrence River port. They were among 17 men working on a pile of logs in the} ; Toulnoustoc River, w avalanhce occurred. others succeded i _ PARIS (Reuters) -- Former, The same high military court : Gen, Raoul Salan was moved |six weeks ago sentenced the Se-| to nearby Fresnes prison aticret Army's No. 2 leader, for- dawn today to begin a life/mer Gen. Edmond Jouhaud,. to prison term while French news-|death. In Salan's case he was papers described his sentence|found guilty as charged but un- as appeasement and a victory der "extenuating circum- for the terrorist Secret Army|Stances" which were not ex- Organization plained. President de Gaulle's rightist) The court stripped Salan, who political opponents claimed a/Was France's most decorated victory when the convicted|Soldier, of his Legion of Honor, traitor-terrorist escaped a death/one of the country's highest sentence Wednesday night. jhonors. tee ie aS | In Algiers, many Europeans French newspapers, with the) 3 peans exception of the rightist Aurore,|8°t Out of bed to celebrate when were chagrined by the totally- 'Ney heard the verdict on ra unexpected leniency, The death| Mos. They shouted "Vive Sa- sentence had been considered a|/@n" from open windows, certainty. | (In Tunis, headquarters of| the Algerian provisional govern- ment, the sentence stupi fied both Tunisians and *Neis| ians. State-owned Radio Tunis called it an encouragement for} terrorists "'to sow death.") | RIGHTISTS STRONGER ° The leniency was considered likely to increase political at- tacks on the government by the Canadian Maritime! Several persons have gone to |hospital with serious injuries gling CMU was set|after beatings. a real ' congress help, after) "The wave of violence that é fe Great the SIU was expelled from the|has swept the Great Lakes has lives are lost. CLC for raiding another union.| created a reign of terror," said The request was delivered to)jt broke the SIU's hold on Ca-\Mr. Jodoin. reaching Baie Co- | 2 miles northwest of {Quebec City, said "a slice of earth" suddenly edtached itself from the steep river bank and slid down on the log pile and the hapless workers. The resulting debris, reported to be a mile long, a half-mile wide and 45 feet high, has tblocekd the river. CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 11 ¢ 299 99 (ame

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