shawa THOUGHT FOR TODAY Awkward age: When a child is too old to have a baby-sitter, too young to be one. Area Heavily Damaged By Storm -- P.13. he Oshawa Time ; i WEATHER REPORT Sunny and much cooler today and Thursday. Winds light Thursday. VOL, 92--NO. 155 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1963 Authorized os Second Closs Mail Post Office Department, Ottewa and for payment of Postage in Cosh. TWENTY-SIX PAGES Seven Die, 36 Hurt In Crash ROCHESTER, N.Y, (AP)--A twin-engined Mohawk airliner, straining to gain altitude in a raging electrical and hail storm, crashed seconds after takeoff Tuesday. Seven persons were killed and 36 injured, = seven critically No Canadians were listed in an incomplete airline casualty list. "Tt was like flying into the dead of the night,"' one survivor said from his hospital bed "The wind grabbed us the minute we left the ground," said another The Martin 404, carrying 40 passengers and a crew of three, was headed for Newark, N.J. via White Plains, N.Y. I fell into mud about 80 yards off @ runway at Rochester - Mon. roe County Airport, several miles southwest of Rochester The cause of the crash is un- der investigation One wingtip apparently struck the ground, a witness said. The plane bounced, broke in two and caught fire. Airport fire- men extinguished the flames In seconds. PILOT IS KILLED The dead included the pilot, Capt. Richard M. Dennis, 39, of Fairview, N.J.; first officer John W. Neff, 33, of Wilming- Oshawa Team | Allowed Into Jr. A Series TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto Mariboros and Oshawa Gener-) als were accepted into the On-) tario Hockey Association Junior] | A series Tuesday, but the door 'was shat to any other hopeful! entrants. / An owners' meeting accepted the applications of the former Metropolitan Junior A teams, but restrict membership of the junior competition to eight, the number reached with the entry of Mariboros and the Generals "Both were accepted without attached," OHA Dusiness anager Bill Hanley said today We told the own. ers that they would either have t® accept or rej 73 When Marilbo their apo n had ruled en viding they played a team the Metro Junior A Series and conducted Metro competition for a year. Mari- bores formed the Metro loop three years ago. Hanley said the three remain. ing Metro teams--Whithy, Ne McNeil and ampion -- wil meet soon to de ture 'It's quite possible the Metro group will stil Han ley said. "They get other teams." He said Kitchener and Kings- ton have expressed interest in joining the Metro group, but have given no definite Indica tien of their intentions Hanley stricted membership to they can sts season's s possible. They hed any condit t made owners TO the coud se de their fu operate," may sana felt the ser. tied for to conside: more appli- cations for membership AUDITORIUM PROGRESS $1,000,000 $900,000 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $50,000 Wa as ton, Del., atid Roy E. Drew, of |Pelham, N.Y., controller of Sylvania Electric Products In. corporated, Others killed were: Jerrold Kurtz of Harrison, N.Y., Thomas Callinan of York. town Heights, N.Y. Morris Falk, of Cos Cob, Conn., and Lee O'Dell of Westport, Conn. "Wind draft pushed us around," observed Robert Christopher, 28, of Stratford, Conn. "The pilot was fighting the stick all the way." Thomas Mayer, 55, of West- port, Conn., expressed the op- inion the plane had climbed to an altitude of 75 or 100 feet when "it happened in 20 sec. onds." '1 was thrown clear of the plane and landed in mud up to my elbows,"' said John O'Brien, , of White Plains, reported in fair condition with a skull fracture cuts and bruises AIDS SURVIVORS Joseph Pearson of Tona- wanda, N.Y., a worker on a construction project, helped pull out survivors. "One man was walking around with his ear torn and bleeding," Pearson said. 'He asked for help but I said there's no time. We've gotta get those people who are still in there." The airport's chief controller, Loren Wagner, said' "'the pilot asked for clearance and the re- quest was complied with." The crash was the second in the histary of Mohawk Airlines and its predecessor, Robinson Airlines. A Robinson plane crashed path Dr. Stephen Ward, key fig-|a Crown soe Basse arena peitn ae near Utica Labor Day, 1950, i sex-and-|that Ward provi rooms) Ward parly |S. ' | hog tone. we te Fe e he rented said she was pregnant by herjat the flat. with the loss of 16 lives. Baudouin Won't Take Resignation BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- King Baudouin today refused to ac- 2, ww er Se cements of Bat Old Bailey. Court, probably in September gium"s coalition government, tendered Tuesday following a split over the country's lan- guage problem. The coalition partners split over the linguistic problem that 'arose over the integration of six communes outside Brussels into the, Brussels. city administra. tion security 'held for trial on morals charges/in London and took a cut of the) land freed on bail after a pre-money they "earned" as prosti- iUmunary i Jw Ramet { ' ~ minute session with Richard H. DOWNTOWN OSHAWA DURING STORM car on downtown King street. It shows a few intrepid people who braved the rain and light- ning, The noon-hour storm saw* two houses struck by The heavy thunderstorm which struck Oshawa Tuesday did not keep everyone off the streets. This picture was taken through the windshield of a ways in the city and hail dam- aged crops in the surrounding area. (Story Page 13). --Oshawa Times Photo. lightning which also tempor- arily knocked out the radio transmitter at the main fire hall, Flooding occurred in sub- Crown Trying To Prove Ward Ran Brothel, Aided Abortions | NDON (CP)--Society osteo-,. During the three-day hearing, | ia De. Seo ik r red/tion as the star of a stable of/day whether there were other)ments that have been made scandal, today was/fer girls in two flats hearing, tutes. judge Leo Gradweij ruled that |URGES COMMITTAL ill be held in London's famous Ward's lawyer applied for bail, something which had twice been refused while the osteopath was still in custody pending the) preliminary hearing, and the bail was granted. The amount of bail was not immediately dis- closed Said Ward's lawyer: ai this stage." pletely," repercussions. / Mail Box Bombing Case Heard Today MONTREAL (CP)--The case of the mail box time-bombings -cames up today as preliminary hearings continue oa charges in connection with recent terrorist activities blamed by police on Le Front de Liberation Quebec- ° $ time-bombs were placed in pub- lic. mail boxes m suburban Westmount during the night of May 16 One of them maimed Set.-Maj ter R. Leja, 42, an army en ed critical injuries when exploded in his hands Judge Emile Trottier heard evidence Tuesday from two per sons charged in comection with a time-bomb explosion May 13 that damaged the side of an RCAF-leased building in Mont- reac' Named in the evidence were Georges Schoeters, 33. Belgian born economics student de- scribed, by the Crown as the "co-ordinator" of FLQ activi Ges; his wife Jeanne, 38, ow &-Tay technician and mother of two young children; and Rich ard Bizier, 18 former elevator eperater at a downtown hotel ARE CROWN WITNESSES Both Mrs. Schoeters and Biz jer appeared as Crown wit. pness@s against each other and both named Schorters as the third person whe had taken part » the bombing at the RCAF target--a ld-minute walk from the Schorters' apartment Mrs. Schoeters and Bizier are' charerd with conspiracy, with using an.explesion likely to er life and damage prop- r, and causing. public mis i endangering life. Maxi- mam penalty for the offences is ite Bott testified under the pro- itection of the courl--mranine ther b ad any futare testimony can nat peainst them in Bigier at first ily "a a court te tes i 8 county! Police claim HU dynamite ties and the FLQ," she said. ing the House had lied to th having ward had fumo that undermines our rights and Hberties,"" then said that he did not want to give evidence "against a mother of two chil- dren." tered the picture when it learned that as she was seeing Profuma Near the end of the hearing, the prosecutor to delve in the na- acts at one of * Ward's flats was thwarted by/ington eatly today after 11 days one of the Crown's own wWit- a an apparent attempt by Mrs. Schoeters said she dis. approved of her husband's ac tivities in separatist-minded cir- ales I tried to. discourage him from taking part in sach activi- ture of sexual messes, Margaret Ricardo, twice-convicted prostitute : REFUSES DESCRIPTION She added "I went along to protect him and shield h from suspicion. i did not want him to do any- thing foolish or endanger peo ple's lives." Mrs. Schoeters and Bizier gave substantially the same evi- dence about the planning and carrying out of the raid, magistrate. Schoeters kept two assembled they knew Ward had testified/that he uhe dynamite apartment bombing time bambs 7 in his to having abortions he on ight of the tanget The Crowa prosecutor also 'Ward must answer before a jury/sought to establish that Ward/some or (all of ,the charges lcharges ranging from living off) was invelved in two abortions. jthe earnings of prostitutes to procuring an abortion, The trial) The prosecution ended its sane! shortly. after the lunch break Wednesday and asked the mag- istrate to commit Ward for trial. "He pleads not guilty, reserves his defence and calls no evidence "I deny all the charges com- Ward told the judge. | The Ward case has had wigetestified at a previous .session) John Profumo resigned in'dis-/Called by the prosecution just) grace as war minister after tell. ¢ Commons he House on anjious session that she used a riggs cartier occasion when he denied] bedroom at Ward's fat for hav-\oanes oot See Ded Owe con: iNicit relations in 196] /ing with party girl Christine Keeler. introduced the 21-) | year-old Miss Keéler to Pro./ K { 5 ] The question of security en- was Miss Keeler was having an affair with a Soviet naval attache as the same time One said Ward hed made her appeals in Germany for greater Scheeters and Bizier preghant and that her abortion European unity keyed to closer scouted the neighborhood for a/was arranged and witnessed by|Co- operation with the United Miss Keeler, a 2i-yearold red- LATE NEWS FLASHES 23 Feared Killed In Air Crash WELLINGTON (AP) -- All ® passengers and three crew members were feared killed today. in the crash of a twin-engined airliners. The New Zealand National Airways DC3 went down in mountains near its destination, Tauran ga, on New Zealand's north island 95 miles. southeast of Auckland Soviet Space Experiment Detected BOCHUM, West Germany (Reuters) -- The Bochum Institate fer Satellite and Space Research said teday it was receiving radio signals from a new Soviet space experiment % believed to be a lamar probe Mass Birth Control Campaign Started PEKING (Reuters) A mass birth Heal be . f the Chine contre] campaign se Communist party for the last two months and main port, & was and government } cen under wa mn Shangha, Chmas largesi iy learned today. | j \head identified by the prosecu-| The prosecutor asked her to- The other girl/times when she had met people) The witness said boy friend, but that she got in| there were, | touch with an abortionist) "Did you do anything with) ithrough the osteopath. any of the people you met| The magistrate could dismiss Yes." | "What sort of things did you) do. with them?" asked the mag- istrate. "Was it proper or improper?" "I don't want to tell," said) Miss Ricardo. "It is not that 1) am shy. Do you mean I awent) to bed with someone literally) > jor on the couch or on the) described Ward. protege) oor? I don't want to tell you! who said she sold her charms! wnat 1 did with him." to the third Viscount Astor, | QUESTIONED FURTHER Miss Ricardo, a ond whe) Magistrate Gradweil told the! witness "there is no need to say) literally what happened but did/ anything improper take place?"'| Miss Ricardo did not answer.) Under further questioning she! jagainst Ward, or oder him held for a jury trial. Girls heard at previous ses- sions had included Miss Keeler, mistress of the disgraced ex- war minister, John Profumo, and dimpled 18-year-old Mari- lyn (Mandy) Rice ~- Davies, a) sell of the hearing Saturday, was re-| \before the lunch break.- | Miss Ricardo said at the prev- jvictions as a prostitute. She intercourse with men N) said Ward was present in the jthree occasions |flat when she entertained her }customers, but denied that she jshared the monetary proceeds' }with him. "I have never given the ac- cused any money at all," she! declared, A tall, attractive girl, identi- fied only as Miss W, told the! After 1-Day . Ov T i t sh vas troduced t erseas np Ward hag een 5 sel WASHINGTON (AP).-- Presi-/1962, and became pregnant by) dent Kennedy returned to Wash-/bim a few months later. She : lsaid she went to see Ward at and 13.000 miles of travel in Ris apartment and told him West Germany, the Republic of bout her condition. Ireland, Britain and Italy. During the conversation, she| Kennedy's trek through West-/S@id, Ward invited "her to stay) eran Europe was his longest/@t the apartment "so that I) Miss Ricardo flatly refused to overseas journey as president Could have an abortion." describe the natur of a sexual and it hit a high point during performance she admitted en- the first gaging in with at least one man. "I don't want to tell you what I did with him," Miss Ricardo president's success in winning|She remained im the partment) insisted. She refused under pres.massiz> displays of welcome/fr about four days. She said sure from both prosecutor and|from the German populace, andj S*e did not pay for the abortion Asked who arranged the abor. three days--in she replied: many and Berlin It was largely because of the Ger- hon. Keeler | After the operation, she said.) convincing statements of soli-2nd did not know whether the Earlier two girls who said/darity from German leaders,/Woman who performed it was) feels the trip was worth P2id. effort, He made repeated i States. . 2 eee ae Said Smashed jabroad there have been fears! jthat Germany might be prepar-| ing t cast her lot with igen} Ba hdad and President de Gaulle's con /AWGCQK g. troversial goal of an independ-| ent Europe free of close ties DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -- with the Americans. Iraq's National Revolutionary Although the Franco-German/Council ennounced today an ai- rapprochement is a reality, the tempted Communist coup d'etat reception given the president in/has been smashed and 'said the) Germany demonstrated that the/insurgents were "annihilated in' goodwill of the United States/30 minutes of fighting," near still has @ great potency in that Baghdad country A statement by the council According to U.S. sources, the broadcast over Baghdad radio! German response te policy pro-jsaid "Communist 'and hired posals pushed by Kennedy--in-/ agents" attempted to seize con-) cleding the idea of creating a trol of the straegic Al Rashid) muitiateral nuciear force in the army camp near the Iraqi: cap-} West -- Was more enthusiastic | stad early this morning. But = than anticipated. jemmment troops, national guards- The nuclear force concept,)men and police went into quick! which can not become a reality action and "completely crashed until. at, least three nations ac-/the attempt." the © statement cept it. 'also beld some anpeal sand for Itatien jeaders. However, it) The statement gave no details jgot a rather cool reception dur-jof casualties beyond saying 'he wg Kennedy's talks in Britain. were annihilated. { there?" |this country is just @ predeter- something; "Christine| @ Reds Demand > US. Release Spy Suspects | WASHINGTON (AP)--The So-jbassy in Moscow. The United) obliged when a photographer viet Union demanded today. the) States denied those charges. | asked, in Russian, for a picture, immediate release of two Rus-| Officials said the new espion-/ The other pair seized in a sians it said were '"'unlawfully|age charges and the earlier one} Washington apartment denied arrested" by U.S, authorities on] involving a Russian embassy of-| their guilt at a hearing in which spy charges Tuesday, ficial here were not connected,|they didn't have to say any- The demand for release of a|The official in Washington was --. bag oy ro ae Russian employee of the United|@ccused of trying to recruit a aa neg a. a the : 4 Nations and his wife was pre-|Russian-bom U.S. _ intelligence pogo ' oe ve f Robert sented at the U.S. state depart-| official to spy for the Reds. Kuist is B it raggene 7 ' ment by the ranking Soviet dip-|, According to a complaint filed Gather s 7 y* a 4 ra The lomat here, Change d'Affaires|in a New York federal court, can T, ry r& athe FBI ia Geongi M. Kornienko, in a 20-/the four arrested Tuesday con-| Hames w ge ad spired with at least two Soviet/from innocent . citizens--a Ro- military intelligence men to) man Catholic priest and a Cone }transmit to the Russians infor-|/Recticut housewife. eae on, mii tn herald ee ations an Pp movements, These included top-priority mis-|--even to say whether they, too, alle bases, it was learned. might be Russian. four were ordered held) without bail after preliminary) "Ais named bat not charged in a sone ee US. Ne The| te complaint are Russian UN , ere | oc y night. jemployees Aleksei Galkin, 45, espionage ,case were another| hearings were postponed to July} ang Petr Egorovich Maslenni- couple named in the compiaint/16 to give the couples time Ol kov. 43 wate or whom left for as John and Jan Doe, The FBI! obtain legal counsel, Russia in May said they had been living under}... 2 SEIZED IN APARTMENT he names innoe ; 'a A "known Soviet agent," the ---- 7 gt ecuced Seized in a raid on a Flush-| FBI said, passed caplonane ine cans }; h The s departm jing, Long Island, apartment)structions to the Soviet intelli- sch ge sn Pe gence men, dropped a magnetic |were Ivan Dmitrievich Egorov, ee ee ae ae 41, and his wife, Aleksandra, 39.| container off for the Egorovs on York | Egorov is a personne! officer in} Long Island and left a parcel at another drop point for Baltch, | the UN secretariat, CAN'T HELP RELATIONS The FBI said the couple re-|It said the container held data Korninko, referring indirectly! sisted arrest and the woman)on U.S. rocket bases. to the U.S, expulsion order Mon-| "Put up a terrific struggle" and) Baltch protested when a' com- day against a Russian diplomat/nad to be carried away by/ missioner decreed no bond here on other spy charges as|#8ents. Later Egorov told re- could be set, The official ex- well as the later case, said: |porters with a grin, "This is | plained that that's the rule when "Such acts cannot improve in| Comedy," and his wife casually|the death penalty is involved, ms 'wae wees! US, Forced Out Spy Data: Press LONDON (Reuters)--Pressure; The Telegraph's report said from Washington forced Britain|it was denied in Washington to release details of the big |that/ the Central Intelligence Philby spy affair in Parliament/Agency leaked the news of Monday, reports in the British|Philby's involvement with Bur. press said today. gess and por age to Washington .| The Washington correspond-/ Papers in order to force Britain "em.jent of The Daily to admit it. Conservative, said President) "The fact remains that the | Kennedy was told during week.|Magazine Newsweek, which jend talks with Prime Minister) Went to press Sunday, had a | Macmillan that the government|>rief account in yesterday's is. planned to announce that a for. | 5¥e. Newswee! k's Washington of- mer British diplomat and news-|fice chief, Mr. B. Bradiess is a paper man, H. A. R, (Kim)) Special friend of the president," Philby, 51, was a Soviet spy now] the report said. - believed to be somewhere in the) The New. York correspondent Communist world. of the pro-Labor Daily Herald But, "Mr, Kennedy already| Said there seemed to be a fair knew the facts," the corres./Chance the U.S. government in- pondent added. "American se-/directly exerted some pressure curity autharities gave the facts/©% Macmillan to reveal. details to the state department last/f Philby's "'spying activities." week," The Telegraph's corres.| Macmillan and Opposition pondent said. Leader Harold Wilson ex- Monday's statement in the| Changed bitter remarks in Par. House of 'Commons came from|tiament Tuesday after Wilson nuclear tests during talks with|Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath| Charged that U.S. pressure was the United States and Britain| Who said Philby was the "third/ °* the Philby revelations. due to open in Moscow July 15.|man" who warned ex-diplomats| At the same time, in yet an- Since this is not possible at/Guy Burgess and Donald Mac.|other security case, an Italian present, however, under present | lean in 1951 that British security nuclear Scientist who worked in Western demands for safe-| 8S after them for spying for Britain's atomic energy re. guards, Russia is ready to agree| Russia. search program was charged in to a ban on tests in the atmos./ Burgess and Maclean fled to) Curt With being a spy for Rus- phere, in space and underwater,| Russia where they have livea}**-_ he said. ever since. Nine charges of spying for Russia were laid against Giu. seppe Enrico Martelli, 39, who was arrested in April and has been in began in Old Bailey Central = Criminal Court Tuesday. The Wilson - Macmillan clash /began with Wilson demanding |that Macmillan set up another inquiry into British security, -- --. "assuming you i enough judges to | around." ™ One judge, Lord Denning, is investigating the security as. |Pects of the Profumo affair. | Macmillan said: "I think you |must learn to distinguish be- tween invective and insolence." He charged the Labor leader with asking "'complicated and offensive questions." Davis, deputy assistant secre- tary for European affairs, The two, arrested at their Flushing, N.Y., apartment, were ivan Dmitrievich Egorov, 41, a UN secretariat personne! offi- cer, and his wife, Aleksandra, 39 Picked up here in the same more than once here, "And to this I could add that one can hardly get rid of an impression that all this fuss about so-called Soviet spies in mined operetion to counter-bai- ance the recent revelation of es- pioneg of some American dip- tomats. in Moscow." The Soviet representative ap- parently was referring to Rus- sian allegations last winter of espionage activities by a ber of members of the U.S. K In E. Berlin For Sixth Day BERLIN (Reuters) -- Rus- sian Premier Khrushchev today headed into the sixth day of his) East Berlin visit after suggest-| ng Tuesday night the simultan- eous signing of a nuclear test ban treaty and a non-aggression pact between the NATO and Warsaw pact states Khrushchev told a rally of/ 6,000 persons Russia is ready to) conclude a treaty banning all & & | Mr. Philby has at any time be. \trayed the interests of this j}country. _. ." Philby, first secretary of the $< ./ British embassy in Washington \... from 1949 to 1951, disappeared - "+ 3] from Beirut, Lebanon, last Jan- _ | wary. Philby quit the foreign ser. | vice that year shortly after Bur- in Ontario, now goes wherever |gess and Maclean fied to Mos. Edward goes. The hawk lives. gt the Middie E en frops. me | He went to the Middie East h pee tages shoppers and |@S a correspondent for The 'Ob- other small animais. jserver and The Economist im --{CP Wirephoto) |1958. Bdward Benedict, a 14-year. old farm boy who lives near Qwen Sound, Ont.. found a sparrow hawk in his father's barn recently. The bird, smallest variety of hawk found 4 sd