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Dec. 27. 1962. 13 WASHINGTON IAPi—With a grim warning about accidents: and dangers of radioactivity. Vice-Admiral Hyman Rickover has asked the U.S. Congress to write into law his program for‘ selecting and training men for the navy’s nuclear fleet. Apparently still feuding with some other top navy and de- fence 0 f f i c i a l s. Rickover—‘ known as the father of nuclear submarines — told Congress it must protect his unique organi- zation by law or it will be destroyed. Rickovcr's testimony was made public Tuesday by the Senate - House Atomic Energy Committee. He spoke to the committee as It rode on the navy's first‘ nuclear-powered aircraft carv ricr, the Enterprise, during a lahakedown cruise last March 31 land April 1. . Several years ago it took leongressional intervention to prevent Rickover from being passed over for promotion from captain to admiral. which would have forced him to retire from the navy and as head of its‘ nuclear development program. Now Rickovcr, who will be 03 By JOE McGOWAN Jr. MIAMI. Fla. tAPl—The Cu-‘ ban rebels waded ashore at thel Bay of Pigs in the pre - dawn? darkness of April 19. 1061, con-1 fident they would free their‘ homeland from the brutal grip of Fidel Castro. But the invasion of Cuba was, crushed and more than 1.113 of-‘ ficers and men were taken pris- oner. They were irdprisoned for 11 months before Castro brought them to a televised showcase trial on Principe Castle, a co- lonial fortress on a hill in the At the end of the trial. the. captives were sentenced to‘ prison terms up to 80 years un- they paid fines ranging ifrom 325.000 for ordinary pris- oners up to $500,000 for three leaders. One month after the invasion was crushed. Castro made a speech In which he offered to exchange the prisoners for 500 tractors. PLEA FOR FUNDS Castro released 10 of the prisoners long enough to tour the United States and plead for funds to buy tractors. The cam- {paign fell through when the CLI- ‘han government high-powered earth-moving -ma-, ichincs instead of farm tractors .— (D m m ‘Admiral Makes‘Plea‘ 'For Nuclear Safety ]long as I am able and both I Hope For Prisoners Showed Ups, Downs Eoffcrcd by a group of American 1 out thcm. Ion trial before a military tribu- I suffocation when ijammed into a vehicle at the . in September. Edictator Fulgencio Batista. One Jan. 27, faces mandatory retire- ment in January. 1964. he said. But he told the committee “as and others feel I useful job. I would like to on." o a stay This brought the comment from representative M e l v i it Price IDem. TIL): “I do not think Congress is going to stand idly by an watch you put on the shelf. Congress has expressed itself before on this matter, and if further action is required. we are not reluctant to act." Rickover said the special nu- clear selection and training pro- gram “is quite foreign to the way mos a. izens group gave up the project. In April of this year, our families committee members! went to Havana in an unsuccess- I ful attempt to induce Castro to reduce the $62,000,000 gure. The negotiators were Alvaro Sanchez, committee chairman; Enrique Llaca. vice-treasurer: and Mrs. Virginia Bctancourt and Ernesto Freyre. The committee later per- suaded Castro to free 60 of the most seriously sick and wounded, on a promise of cash payment. They were flown to Miami for medical treatment, and later joined the committee in its fund drive. PAID FIR RELEASE Families of several of the prisoners obtained the freedom of their loved ones by making individual payments to Castro. Guillermo Alonso Puiol, for- mer Cuban vice-president. paid $100,000 for his son, Jorge» Alonso Pujol Also freed. for $100,000 was- Fabio Freyre. former sugar grower. Freed for $50,000 each were, Jorge Gobin. son of the ownerl of the Havana Post. English -. language newspaper that went underground after Castro took powcr re ‘ Gonzalez Du- ran. son-in-law of Anselmo Alie- gro. Senate president during the Fulgencio Batista regime, and Antonio Carboneli. Hope for liberation of the pris- ‘oners had never been dimmer when New York lawyer James Donovan entered the picture. The Cuban crisis over Russian rockets on Castro’s front porch appeared certain to wreck ex- change plans but Donovan learned through exile sources 'by Oct. 26 that the Castro gov- ernment was keeping the nego- tiations open. The climax came Sunday whcn word was flashed — the 1,113 prisoners were being freed. SEVERS RELATIONS BELGRADE (Reuters) —- Al- bania has officially told the Communist Council for Econo- mic Aid, Comecon, that it has severed all relations with the organization, the Yugoslav news agency Tanyug reported Saturday. Comecon is the Soviet bloc equivalent of the European Common Market. t things are done in the military." “That is why I am pretty certain that ultimately the navy will dismember this organiza- tion. because they cannot toler- ate an organization of this type. It does not fit into the neat pattern of navy organization." Rickover said the present navy nuclear training was ea- tablishcd by presidential order. “I think it shoull be by law. ' he said. citizens. TWO of the 10 prisoners—- Reinaldo Flea and Mirto Collazo ~—rcfused to return to Cuba. and the other eight went back with- Castro then withdrew the trade offer and put the brigade :3 m In addition to Pico and Col- lazo, 22 other members of the brigade no longer were. avail- able for trial. . Nine prisoners had died ofi hey were Bay of Pigs during the fighting. Seven more were reported to have died from wounds while receiving tr e a t m e n t at 113- 's naval hospital. vana FIVE EXECUTED Five were tried by a revolu- tionary tribunal in Santa Clara 1961. and exe- cuted on charges of collaborat- ing with the regime of deposed more died in prison of cancer. f‘ p I x ‘ ‘ 33¢ Castro's demand for release the prisoners, announced upon completion of the trial, was three times his original of-I for. It totalled $62,000,000. The Cuban families commit- tee took over efforts to free the I captives after the American cit- O w. i I I l By B. JAi . CONTRACT BRIDGE BECKER West dealer. I North-South vulnerable. NORTH .109 QAKJE'IGZ 0A4 WEST EAST .KQJB? .3 842 .853 4 QQ108762 OKJI @975 I ‘8 I SOUTH ; QAB QQlo I 0.93 QAKQ10842 'f'hebiddlng: West North Eat South 1. 2' Pele 3N'1‘ 4Q 4N1? Pass Pass 6‘ Pass Pass 8* 6. Pass Pass Dble Pass ONT Pass Pass ‘1. Pass Pass 7N‘1‘ Dbl e . Opening lead—king of spadesi My son Mike reports this. band played in a pair tourna-' meat. He was North and over- cailed the spade bid with two . He had no idea at this point that his side would wind up at seven notrump after a very unusual sequence of bids. Part 2 I.35—The Max Ferguson Show 9.00—cac New: I. Voice Reports 9.l0-Preview Commentary ‘9.15-—A.M. Chronicle IOU—Playroom I0.30—Tor. Market With Market II OO—CBC News HOS—Joan Marshall ILIS—For Consumere "JO—Record Album "JO—The Archers 11.45—Fancy Free 12.00—Jamboree Junction . IIIc best score might lie in no- South had a wide choice of‘ bids over two hearts. He knew there was a game somewhere. but couldn't be exactly sure of where it was. A slam didnt seem likely, in view of West's opening bid, but a game was highly probable. He could have made a cucbid In spades in an effort to find the best spot. and he could also have jumped directly to four hearts. But South decided. play- ing match point duplicate. that trump. So he jumped to three notrump. deliberater courting the danger that a diamond suit would be run against him. West, not vulnerable. bid four spades. and North bid four no- trump. This had nothing to do with Blackwood, but was mere- ly a raise In notrump. West then bid five spades, which North passed. The pass indicated a willingness to have partner go on: otherwise. North would have doubled. South ac- cepted the challenge. mention- ing clubs for the first time. West now hid six spades. which South doubled after two passes, but North, unwilling to accept a small penalty in lieu of a probable elem, converted to six notrump. When East passed, West rea- lized the slam would surely be ACROSS 39. Consumed 1.‘Morsels 41. Holy 5. Italian person river 42. Scarlett'a 9. Upper family chamber of ame parliament: 43. Permits Fr. 4 Not one 10. Scotcjt DOW. poet, 1.Girl'e Robert — porn 12. Barton, 2. Not Civil War suitable nurse ——-— an 13. Having feather wings 4. Imprinted 14 Lofty .Taken mountain (surprised) 15. Pungent 6. vern pic 7. The “Blue 17. Like angle" 18. Smell a. -—- 8. Canadian (suspect province 3 trick) 19. Turkish 20. Epoch 21. Traffic Sign color 22.A light: at. 23. Cumulus, for one 26. Author of “Robinson o 28. Owing 20. Mellow 30. The human race ' 31. Downing St. number 34. Yes: Sp. 35. Encircle 36.Ca.ndlenut ree 37. Notoriety DAILY CRYP’I‘OQUOTE A x Y D ta 1. 0 N G One letter simply stands for Each day the code letters are Y sknsunsa x RKHTK.-—GYDDSK RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT 1 .— ‘ tiilliiitlill’i'fi .lgsjd... ' . . a v St. JOSEPH'S URCH In Port anfrt Pa. dilii‘i' a; I. ~ ,- WAS rue FIRST PRINCE or WALE9 TO BECOME A FATHER DURING . THE LIFE or HIS Canary dads own FATHER as A MEMORIAL To BRITAINS INABILITY I” A PM” To morons THE ISLAND or TENEIZIFFE OF 353 YEARS BECAUSE IT Bil-W OFF MIRA! M250le RIGHI'ARM (Joly: um) DAILY CROSSWORD 9. \Vound mar 11. East; Indian plant. 16. Help 20. Sprite 21 Regret . 2. Com- m to horse Yeeterley'e Anew 23. Follows 31. Member 24. That. of 3 follows as Turkic tribe reasonable 32. Abrasive material poet. 33. “Peter Pen” 26. Ancient do prison 35. Rave 28. Son of 38. Falsehood Jaco 40. Exclama- 30. Hands: sl. ' —- Here's how to work it: L 31 a x n. F E L L 0 \V another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, X for the two O'e. etc. Single letters. epon- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. different. A Cryptogrnm Quotation N Y FXLNJH KO- ZTYDKO “KM-THO SXN XHDKEEXo AN Yesterday's Oryptoquotez IT TAKES A REA? 0’ WIN IN A HOUSE ’1' MAKE IT HOME.-—GUEST (o 108. King Features Syndicate, he.) made, so be "sacrificed" with seven spades. This didn't turn out well. because North passed again, once more inviting part- ncr to continue with an appro- priate hand. South read the pass correctly and contracted for no- trump. West had now run out of spade bids, so he doubled. South had no trouble making seven, but the manner in which I2.30—Maritime Farm B‘Cest Loo-cec News I. Inland Weathe- I.I$—Shirley Harmer 8. What's (h T nPF’ 1.45—Time Out For Melody 1.59—Dominion Observatory Time Signal lat—Time Out For Melody 2.45~John Drelnle Tells A Story soc-csc News 3.03-—T.C. Matinee 130—16 Matinee 5.00—Marltirne Fish I’Cest to—Ternpo 5.30—Tempo 6.00-CIC News I. Inland weather LIS—On Parliament Hill AM "~«‘~~~l r- e .A—-V Ithe grand slam in notrump w ‘lreached is certainly one of the [strangest I have ever heard of. OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE 1 HEAR me cm. CLUB 16 PLANNING IT6 ANNUAL TAG up MATCH New VE MA Joe! acreage you‘LL Be PINNED to TH‘ MAT 3v il RM. ? AR'S I. 6.25—Maritime Spemcast 6.30—Mueic In The Evening 7.15—Bytine 7.20-Merine Weather 8 Musical Interlude lilo-«Assignment loo-Radio international 6.30—eMusic Styled Iy lucio Aug. ultme 9.00—Cltiren's Ferum 9.30-Cdn. String Quartet TODD—National News Roundup I. Speaking Personally IO.30—Chrietlan Frontiers HOD—Maritime M "JO—Choral Encoree UM-M GENTLEMEN,1 PLAN To seem: we avewuca AT HOOPLE ‘ M MEANS OF ENTERTAINMENT! “FOR YOUR INFORMATION. ANOR aeowswo THRU THE WORLD‘S GREAT LITERATURE! Bors‘rerzous PARTIEG ARE MERED/ For? INTELLECTG LACKING OTHER PERSONALLY, 1 PREFER I" THE ’ 12.00—Marine Weather ‘9 Vs u , r 7r H. . ESHOW ASXOIN VWGNVNO 6'X LNEOV 138335 NHHSXS ’8 $990“ HONVI 3NO1 3H1 N'ifllflN MINEH VXOO1VJ 30f ENIV 1L1 1.1.3)! vua m7..— IT GUIZE DOES BURN ME UR...’ BY CRACW, I’M GETTIN' TIRED of. ...STICI<Y JELLY SPOTS ALL. K a.” THIS IS A LETTER TO SANTA CLAUS! _1, . I KNOW... JIMMY, rrt 657nm k/ND OF Lara. HUSTLE '_ UP 70 up NOW! MASA’I'D MN BUT ONCI'IN BED, JIWY' 5-NMEONFS COMING-- _ DOESN‘T FALL ASLEEP- ' I. v - n «AW/IN THATMN "we: um nu MM mm: mt Ml-u mum fit DO” q ‘Pooo. SANDQA 13H: Musr BE (serrws KINDA LONESOME.’ ISN'T rr ram 1 i I MEAN WE‘VE GONE WEEKS 1' DO You MEAN av THAT < c at E4 on, SHE TOLD M: ONCE,TI—IAT WHEN- :vzo we HAVE worms- TODAY/5 FLAWLES5'9 DIRTHVA‘I. so I‘M GONNA HUMOR HIM I WILL “WIS, I HOW dovou LIKE rt? IN'IEWOLTD PtCKIJPIEf WIRIBIITNON I WANT'D 'SECWANDTHATAMULE‘I'I GOOF‘I... IF THAT I5N’T A FRANK... . YOU’D BETTER ear oLAsses! £3 ‘ I Ln; «:2 *\ I “it .29. *1 - FL» FINISHING THAT PICTURE. —‘ i'M some BLIND]! I HAVE CNN 24 Hams or: SIGHT LEFTI.’ I WANT TO USE. THETIME. M “mum... -. r