Chest--Investment In Humani Oshawa Cimes === Mainly cloudy with a few snow Authorized os Second Ottawa and for our Community THOUGHT FOR TODAY Middle age is when your wife tells you to pull in your stomach and you already have. flurries today and Tuesday and colder, » Class Mail Payment o' KEY INDIA POSITION Post Office Price Not Over TWENTY PAGES 10 Cents Per Copy f Postage in VOL. 91 -- NO. 258 | Cuba OKs ' Red Cross Inspection OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1962 GENEVA (Reuters)--The In- ternational Committee of the Red Cross today announced here that the Cuban government has agreed to it inspecting ships bound for Cuba. The committee's announce. ment said inspections would 'be carried out for one month by inspectors appointed by the Red Cross. : It said the committee learned of Cuba's agreement through the United Nations. President Kennedy suggested in a speech last week that the 6Red Cross undertake the in. spections of Cuba-bound ships-- apparently to replace the Amer- ican Navy's blockade against offensive weapons shipped to Cuba. The Red Cross announcement said the Red Cross could not accept direct responsibility for the operation, which would re- main the responsibility of the United Nations and the coun- tries concerned. Its contribution would consist principally in the recruitment of personnel to inspect ships on the high seas: Embassy Spy Charges Said | 'Fabricated' MOSCOW (AP)--For the third) time in a month the Soviet Un-| ion has accused a member of the U.S. Embassy staff of spy- ing and ordered him out of Russia The U.S. state department) termed the latest charges,| against Richard Carl Jacob, a} secretary-archivist, "a complete| fabrication." Jacob, 26, was accused of "maintaining secret liaison with a spy on the territory of the So- viet Union." Tass, the Soviet news agency, said he was "caught redhanded while removing intelligence data from a secret hiding place" in a house in Moscow. The nature of the material, said Tass, established "beyond a shadow of a doubt" that Ja- cob was in contact with an un- dercover agent. Jacob had served in Moscow for 10 months. A_ university graduate, he joined the state department about 2% years ago 'and entered the foreign serv- ice last November. The Russians on Oct. 5 ac- cused Lt..Cmdr. Raymond D. Smith, an assistant U.S. naval attache, of photograpniig Soviet nayal installations in Leningrad and expelled him. A week later they expelled a first secretary, Kermit S. Midthun, and charged him with attempting to buy secrets from a Soviet citizen. The state department said Smith and Midthun obviously were expelled in retaliation for the expulsion from the United | | It said 30 inspectors would be involved in the task. The committee said it had asked former president Paul Ruegger to go to New York for talks with the UN Acting Sec- retary - General U Thant ayd representatives of the countries concerned. The announcement said the final decision of the commit- tee would depend on the result of Ruegger's mission. It would be the first "polit- ical" mission the committee has ever undertaken. Traditionally, the committee is carefully to preserve its neu- trality and independence, in. sisting that it can be responsi- ble to no other body. A committee spokesman said before the announcement that if the committee agreed to under- take the inspection, it probably would recruit officers from the Swiss army to act as inspectors. The committee's normal du- ties involve purely humanitar- ian missions such a sthe care of prisoners of war and prisoner exchange. Reugger, 65, a noted jurist and former Swiss diplomat, was | |president of the 20-man inter. |national committee from 1948 to 1955, After this term as presi- dent he directed the commit- tee's activities in prisoner - of-| war work. In 1948 he personally super- vised Red Cross activities dur- ing the war in Palestine. FREEDOM OVER Albert Nussbaum Jr., on ber, was captured in down- the FBI's 10 most wanted list, town Buffalo early yesterday bows his head today as FBI ster dramatic chase. agents take him to court- (AP 'Wirephoto) Killing D LIEGE, Belgium Three women and two men _ were charged in court today with having killed an eight-day-old baby or with having actively co-operated 'in the killing. The infant, a-girl, was born last May with no arms. Her mother, Suzanne Vandeput, 24, one of the accused had taken the drug thalidomide during her pregnancy. The aceused are Suzanne Vandeput, her husband Jean, 35, her mother, Fernande Yerna, 50, her sister, Monique de la Marck, 26, and the family doc- tor, Jacques Casters, 33. In the Liege jury court they faced the three-man court of President Paul Emile Trousse, Vict . President Paul Lejeune and Judge Jean - Pierre De- champs. The court is sitting with a jury of 12--all men. In the accusation, the prose- |cution claims the baby, Carinne, Middle E Near Over Yemen' DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- A deepening crisis over Yemen threatened today to touch off a Middle East conflict pit- ting conservative monarchies against President Nasser's United Arab Republic. On one side are the royal strongholds of Saudi Arabia and Jordan and on the other the Yemeni revolutionary re- gime backed by the U.A.R. The crisis touched off by the overthrow of Yemen's ancient throne in Septeniber reached a new high Sunday with threats by the rebel regime to invade Saudi Arabia's main southern port of Qizan and the interior city of Najran. Saudi Arabia and Jordan, both monarchies, are support- ing attempts by the deposed Yemeni. king, Imam Moham- mad Al-Badr, to regain his throne. The revolutionary re- gime is backed by the United Arab Republic, which has sent planes and tanks and perhaps 1,000 soldiers into the tiny Red Sea country. -Yemenj revolutionary Presi- dent Abdullah Sallal voiced the invasion threat against Saudi Arabia as that country's radio claimed royalist warriors now control Yemen's entire north- west, Communiques. purporting to come from Al-Badr's headquar- States of two members of the Soviet delegation to the Unitea|@ls, including many U.A.R. Nations who were charged with| troops, chad been killed in the buying military secrets from a\fighting. The communiques ast War Four Students , Expelled At Mississippi U gion's caP-| OXFORD, Miss. (AP) -- The jUniversity of Mississ:ppi ex- '\pelled four students Saturday on charges growing out of dem- onstrations against Negro their siege" of the re ital of Sada. Sallal disputed the claims saying that his U.A.R. - sup -- army and air force crushed "a large-scale Saudi in- ; vasion" and that the entire) ames H cng t to th northwest region where the) "U8 Sacra aaah fighting occurred was "ceom-|chancellor, said the chargés in- : |cluded possession of dangerous eed under Republican con- weapons, possession and use of ' xplosives, drunkenness an He claimed nearly 4,000 in- boo ' |possession of a large number vaders were killed in four days|o¢ forged student identificat.on of fighting. cards. The university, in line with its usual policy, did not identify the expelled' students. Clegg said three of the four expelled students "admitted their involvement." These four are the first stu- dents expelled because of trou- ble relating te Meredith's enrol. ment. Several students were placed on probation earlier be- cause of actions in the riot that old girl's nose after it had|followed Meredith's appearance been severed for five hours, the|here the night of Sept. 30. Belgrade newspaper Politika re-|----- ports. | The child was injured when| T k S she ran into a scythe a laborer| Tuc. ers . top Khe carrying over his shoul-| er. Her father, cutting grass| Pl 0 nearby, picked up the child and| ant peration the end of her nose and carried} them to hospital. | KITCHENER ' (CP)--Striking The father kept wetting the | truck drivers employed by piece of nose he carried in his|Bestpipe Limited today suc- handkerchief in fountains and|ceeded in stopping operations at Girl, 9, Gets Severed Nose Grafted Back BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)--A grafting operation re- stored the end of a nine-year- | ters claimed hundreds of reb-|streams along the road,.Politka|the Ottawa Street South plant. said. The chief surgeon said the} Abou 50 employees declined principal reason the operation|to cross picket lines established was successful was that the|/by the six drivers, protesting added that in northern Yemen father had refreshed the tissue} \royalist forces have "'tightened periodically. | HELP The Chest CLIMB. $236,000 $200,000 US. Will Continue the use of outside trucking firms for long hauls- Cuban Surveillance WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres-| veillance of Cuba will have to} be continued ih some form long after the current missile crisis is settled, government sources report, Removal of the missiles from ident Kennedy feels U.S, sur-|Cuba remains a thorny prob- insp lem. By the terms of the Ken- nedy - Khrushchev agreement, the United Nations would super- vise the verification that Soviet missiles have been withdrawn damentals of , an international ection system. Mikoyan and Castro met twice Sunday at the Govern- ment Palace. No communiques were issued and Cuban officials gave no hint of the nature of A In offering this view of the president's thinking to report- ers Sunday, the sources did not .{ specify. how the watch would be kept. The object of the check, they said,. would be to guard against any future introduction of Russian missiles into Cuba. Aerial photographs of the is- land last month gave the first hard evidence that Russia was mounting an offensive missile threat in Cuba, the White House has said. And, it was from 'ae- rial photos taken last Thursday that the administration con- cluded Soviet Premier Khrush- chev had begun to make good on his pledge to tear down the} missile bases. $175,000 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 --_-- $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 also has been filling a surveil- lance role. Start 4 from the island. \the talks. Mi ined i The government sources who Wil MEO ECO kn souéeed ; w {Havens despite the death of his discussed Kennedy's position| wife in Moscow Saturday night. Sunday emphasized that he 18! Edward M M ti ssistant determined to verify the re-|.,-; . Martin, assistan moval of the weapons by inter.| State secretary for inter-Amer- national inspection teams--and ican affairs, said Sunday in a that nothing less will be satis- television interview: factory. "We still do not know where While the United States andjthey. (the missiles) are going, Russia are reported preparedj9r have verification they have to have the International Red |left the island or will not be re- Cross fill the inspection role| introduced." originally proposed for the UN| Meanwhile, in another: televi- Cuban Premier Fidel 'Castro|sion interview Theodore C. So. has the power to bar interna-|rensen, special counsel to Ken- tional inspectors from his ter-|nedy and one of his chief ritory. ~ai8peechwriters, said the United ng Deputy Premier Anas-|States has given no formal tas. I. fort to prod the Cuban leader|/ban missile: sites has into accepting at least the fun-| worked out, Sorensen said. / been aseS. Mikoyan conferred with! pledge not to invade Cuba. It} The U.S. Navy, in maintain-\Castro in Havana during the| will not do so until a satisfac.|had@ died to glowing embers, ing an arms blockade of Cuba, weekend--presumably .in an ef- tory. arrangement regarding Cu-|but the men--there: were three was p d May 29 by being given a bottle of milk contain- ing a barbiturate. COURT ROOM JAMMED Crowds of people, many of them women, gathered outside the court room entrance -!ong before the trial opened. Inside the court room, éspecially en- larged for the occasion by the removal of: partitions, more than 100 reporters and several hundred members of the pub- lic -- most of them standing-- watched the accused walk into the prisoner's box under the glare of floodlights. For the first time in Belgian YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... Fire Marshal Probes Food Mart Blaze .. Page Blair To Appeal OHA Ban Ruling .. GM Workers Give $74,560 To Chest .. Flames Destroy 2 Pickering Houses 300 Enter Eaton Twirling Contest Page Page +. Page -» Page Housewife Admits aughter history television and film ca- meras were in the courtroom. Mrs. Vandeput risks the death sentence--symbolic in Belgium, since it is always commuted to life imprisonment except for treason--if she is found guilty. Extenuating circumstances can reduce the sentence to a min- imum three years imprison- ment, ' She sobbed as she told a jury how she felt when she was first shown her daughter Carinne. "What I did was the only pos- sible solution,"' she said. "I felt the child could not be happy as it was. I thought of all possi- ble solutions after I nad been shown the baby but could find nothing else to do." She said Dr. Casters told her "I myself can do nothing. Do it yourself." Dr. Casters gave her a pre- scription for the poison and the baby's grandmother bought the drugs, according to the charges, FLIES TO FUNERAL Sergei Mikoyan, 34, who ac- companied his fathern Soviet deputy premier Anastas Mik- oyan, on his mission to Cuba, pauses at New York's Idlewildc airport last night enroute from Havana to Moscow to attend his mothers funeral. The Rus- sian deputy premier, whose wife died Saturday in Mos- cow, remained iin Cuba. (AP Wirephoto) timated 1,000,000 Chinese marched through Peking today in.a new mass demonstration in support of the Cuban re- jgime's demands against the |United States. | From early morning, solid lcolumns of slogan - chanting, flag-waving workers, peasants, students and_ schoolchildren converged from all parts of the city to march past the Cuban Embassy on the 'city's eastern outskirts. The march was the second mass Chinese demonstration in support of the Cuban regime in two days. Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai told a reception in Peking fol- lowing the demonstration that China "resolutely" backs Cas- tro's demands for the evacua- tion of the U.S. Guantanamo base in Cuba and measures to protect 'he island from Ameri- can espionage and~economic sanctions. id : Chou said Cuba would surely GUNMAN GETS $6. 97 Robbed BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- An Oshawa family was robbed at gunpoint by a masked bandit on a lonely country sideroad north of Tyrone, Sunday after- noon, Mr. and Mrs, William Fraser and their two children, Doug- las, 9 and. Melanie, 6, of 513 Miller avenue, had been out for a drive. About 4 p.m., they stopped at the Darlington towship north dump to take their pet beagle Russian Jews Burned Alive Nazi Testifies COBLENZ , West Germany (Reuters)--A West German ac- cused with 13 other former Nazi S.S. men of 30,356 wartime murders told a court here today Jewish partisans in Russia were burned alive after they threw a bomb at an SS. head- quarters. George Heuser 49-year-old for- mer head of the Rhincland Pal- atinate criminal investigation department, said his S.S. chief at Minsk ordered: the burning and told all his staff to attend Heuser arrived when the fire jor four, he said--were stil! dy- 'ing. Oshawa Family Million Chinese Back Cuba Stand PEKING (Reuters) -- An es-j/be victorious in its struggle|Indian press reports from In- jagainst U.S. imperialism. Parking newspapers, mean- while, stepped' up a pro-Cuban campaign that has grown stead. ily. more vigorous since Russia | decided to withdraw its missile |bases from the island. The editorial campaign has left little doubt in the minds of observers here that Communist China disapproves of the Sovie: decision. The People's Daily rejected any "appeasement policy" to- ward the United States in the Cuban crisis. In an editorial the Communist party newspaper pledged 'full support" for Cu- ba's rejection of United Nations supervision over withdrawal of Soviet missile bases. The editorial said "to com- promise with or meet the Ken- nedy government's truculent de- mands can only encourage the aggressor and will in no way ensure world peace." The Cuban crisis was "a cri- sis carrying out an appeasement policy toward United States ag- gression and a crisis encourag- ing U.S. imperialism to pursue even more insatiably its policies NEW DELHI (AP)--The In- dian government announced to- day the loss of one of its most important military positions on the battlelines with the Chinese Communists. Their position at Daulet Beg Oldi, at the northern end of the line in Ladakh, was evacu- ated a few days ago, a defenre ministry spokesman said. Lad- akh is at the western end of the Himalayan border. The outpost at Daulet Beg Oldi was the centre of a series of smaller posts, all of which fell earlier. The Chinese have now crossed what they claim to be their bor- der with India. at one or two places and have driven beyond the disputed territory. New Delhi officials think there are no chances now of a negotiated peace with the Chi- nese. Prime Minister Nehru has demanded the Chinese with. draw to positions before their incursions into northeast Inda began on Sept. 8 and has. re- jected proposals of a cease-fire and peace talks until they do. The Chinese offensive in both th northeast and northwest area of Ladakh was launched Oct: 20. Chinese Premier Chou En-lai says his country will not re. treat. (Reuters news agency said 'dian headquarters for the north. jeast frontier stated Indian |forees had recaptured three vil- jlages from Chinese troops near |Towang. The reports quoted | 'unofficial but reliable informa- tion," the news agency said. (The reports said the Chinese had "committed many atroci- ties and: caused untold miseries to the local population.") MAY ADVANCE The Indian Army is prepar- ing for the. possibility that the Chinese will try to continue to advance instead of retreating. Since the Communist offensive began 16 days ago tlie Chinese have driven forward at 13 points in the disputed border areas. Persons travelling on roads northwest of New Delhi re- ported Indian troops leaving that area, which faces West Pa- kistan. The troops were heading for Assam state, in northwest India. The two potentially most dan- gerous Chinese drives, now at least temporarily checked, are pointed down through the east- ern Himalayas toward the Plains of Assam. of aggression and war," the Sunday pup "Sally" for a walk in the woods, When they returned to their car, they were met by a man with a paper bag over his head, with two slits cut out for eye holes, and carrying a. revolver. man. "I want your money," he said, Mr. Fraser told him he didn't his Wallet. "I have. some," said Mrs. her purse: and handed it to the hooded bandit. STOPPED BY WIFE At this point Mr. Fraser said, "I don't think that's a a I'm going to tackle im. . He was stopped by his wife, who told him, "don't, it's not worth it. The Frasers were marched up the road for a short dis- tance by the-gunman, who then disappeared into the woods. "Tt was a terrifying experi- ence," Mrs. Fraser said today. "At first we didn't kow whe- ther the man was joking or what he was going to do." Bowmanville -OPP detach- ment was alerted. Twenty-three-year-old Doug- las Hugh Malette of RR 1 Ty- rone was arrested and charged with armed robbery at 7,15 p.m. He will appear in Bowmanville Magistrate's court Tuesday. 4 People's Daily said. U.S. weapons were being rushed toward Assam, U.S. Air Reds Drive Past Disputed Border Force planes were arriving in Calcutta at the rate of one every three hours to deliver 160 tons of infantry arms and mortars daily. British weapons also are being sent to India and Cana- dian arms have been promised. The terms on which the three countries responded to India's urgent requests remain to be settled. Chou En - lai does not .like Western help to India. "It is regrettable that India is buy- ing great quantities of weapons from the United States, Britain and Western countries," he said in Peking. In fact, India lacks money to buy them and the final terms are expected to be more on the lines of Second World War lend- lease that provided American weapons to Britain and Russia. New Delhi newspapers pub. lished a London press report that Czechoslovakia has sent 14 trainloads of arms to, China. also said "will cer- tainly not relax its efforts to find a peaceful settlement to the border problem." 7 But, Indian offici com. ment, China's idea of peaceful settlement means keeping a large honk of India. Ghana Urges South Africa Leave Parley TUNIS (Reuters) -- Ghana- ian Agriculture Minister Krobo Edusei today threatened to walk out of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization conference here unless the South African delegation left. Edusei asked the South Afri- cans to "leave immediately ... otherwise, our delegation will leave the conference and return to Accra." The conference was pended while delegates cussed the matter. Delegates from a score of Af- rican countries and Britain and France are attending the 10-day regional conference which op- ened Thursday. The South African delegation withdrew temporarily Friday after 18 African countries ap- proved a resolution calling for the expulsion of South Africa from the conference because of its apartheid (racial separation) policy. But after consultations with their government, the South African members re. sus- dis- turned to the conference. ry "What do you want?" asked -- Mr Fraser, when he saw the . have any and showed the man © Fraser and she took $6.97 from