The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, VOL. 94 -- NO. 109 Ghe Oshawa Cine 10¢ Single 50 Per a Home Gtivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1965 Authorized @s Second Cless Moll Ottawa end for payment of Weather Report Clearing and cooler. Tuesday sunny and mild. Low tonight, 52. Post Office Department Postage in High Tuesday, 70, TWENTY-TWO PAGES BIGGEST ROCKET EVER SEEN IN MOSCOW ON DISPLAY SUNDAY Marshal Georgi K. Zhu- kov, a top Soviet hero of World War Il, appears in full dress uniform with all his galaxy of medals as he takes part in V-E Day anni- versary celebration in Mos- cow Sunday. Zhukov was banished from the Moscow scene by former Premier Khrushchev and has just re- turned to the limelight join- ing other Communist of- The biggest rocket ever seen in Moscow--a 120-foot, three-stage solid-fuel weapon Cheer Loud For Stalin In Moscow By GEORGE SYVERTSEN MOSCOW (AP)--A. burst of spontaneous applause for Jo- lseph Stalin reverberated out of ithe Kremlin during the weekend land across Russia. The unrehearsed tribute sud- brated the 20th anniversary of VE-Day Sunday with a new -- is drawn through Red Square today during V-E Day anniversary celebra- MARK VE-DAY ANNIVERSARY a Sen 'In Britain | As Spies ; 4 } LONDON (AP)--Two financi-| EXPEL 2 SPIES PM FACES QUIZ tence 2 Ottawa Charges 'Compromise Bid | A ey By WILLIAM NEVILLE . jally strapped Britons with jobs OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- in top military establishments|icter Pearson was expected to pleaded guilty. today to spying|face questioning in the Com- \for pay from the Russians and|mons -- he ig iotan two Arab countries |ment's expulsion of two Sovie ee yf ye archon 52 \diplomats for trying to bribe mene OSEATC, Sachi €N-!two Canadians into espionage gineer in the aviation ministry, | work. The pair -- commercial at- jtache A. E. Bytchkov and em- tary, send a nuclear war- head unlimited distances. (AP Wirephoto by cable from Moscow) tion. It is of the type used to launch Soviet space cap- sules into orbit and can, ac- cording to official commen- |was sentenced to 21 years in j a familiar figure in local diplo- matic circles. Neighbors at his apartment in the Sandy Hill _ district where the embassy is i located, called him "a very pleasant man." Poluchkin, who had his wife and daughter with him here, ™ was not as well known. He @ lived in another Sandy Hill apartment which also houses prison for selling guided mis- Soviet Moon Shot Uses By FRED W. COLEMAN MOSCOW (AP)--Russia cele- jsile secrets to the Soviet Union. |The prosecution claimed he re- jceived a total of $14,000 in jnearly four years of spying. Sgt. Percy Sidney Allen, 33, an army clerk in the defence ministry, was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for selling defence documents to the em- jbassy clerk V. N. Poluchkin-- were sent home to the Soviet Union Friday after being de- clarod '"'persona non grata' by § the Canadian government. Charges against them in- @ cluded offering two Canadians § "thousands of dollars" to se- cure classified information and even seeking to "compromise" | the Soviet information service. STARTED IN 1945 Their case enters the Soviet espionage log which already in- cludes these entries: 1945--The first and most fa- mous incident, set off by the defection of embassy clerk Igor Gouzenko. It led to the depar- moon shot, a military display, an appeal for renunciation of nuclear weapons and a new attack on U.S. policy. The moon shot, Lunik V, was ficials at public affairs. Photo from Tass, Soviet news agency. (AP Wire- photo by cable from Mos- cow) denly erupted after a fleeting mention of Stalin as Russia's wartime commander-in-chief in la speech on the 20th anniver- _.|sary of VE-Day by the new So- a e 1 e |bassies of the United Arab Re-|female civil servants, public and Iraq for the equiva-| Word of the espionage case, There was no indication of|tures were similar to those onjlent of only $182. Allen, arrested|fifth in this country since the any attempt to radio back|liquid - fuelled rockets used in|March 16, had told police he be-\Second World War, was dis- photographs of the moon's sur-|the U.S. space program. jcame "desperate for money"|closed in a 275-word statement face. An earlier Lunik had) Other weapons not shown pre-jafter his wife underwent a can-jissued Saturday by the exter- photographed the dark side of|viously to the public were a six-jcer operation. They have four'nal affairs department. the moon. Nor was there anyjrocket anti - tank syste mjchildren. Mr, Pearson, who was in indication whether the rocket}mounted on an armored recon-| sir Frederick Elwyn Jones.|Montreal when the news broke, would hit the moon or go into/naissance vehicle, 20 new T-62)the attorney-general, prosecuted|declined immediate comment orbit around it. medium tanks that have been|poth cases. on it. A spokesman said, how- in-service since 1963, a medium ture of several Russian diplo- mats and the conviction on espionage charges of 10 Cana- dians. 1956---Gennadi Popov, a sec: ond secretary at the Russian embassy, expelled for trying to obtain data on the CF-105 inter- ceptor and an RCAF civilian clerk fired for his dealings in the affair. 1961 -- Lt.-Col. Anatoly Logi- New Space Shot Seen BELGRADE (AP)--A Yugo- slay cortes pondent reported from Moscow today the possi- ' bility of an impending launch- ing of a Russian space ship with a crew of several cosmo- nauts. Risto Bajalski, correspondent of the Communist newspaper Borba, said there is no official information on the flight, but viet Communist party lea Leonid Brezhnev. The crowd's reaction seemed to strike Brezhnev like a thun- derclap, Obviously surprised, he stumbled over his text, But he quickly recovered his com- posure and abruptly cut off the I S| ing his reading. vr The manifestation indicated| that, despite nine years of de-|j Stalinization, there may be| jc many more fans of Stalin in suspected. The crowd gathered 6,000-seat Kremlin Palace there are sufficient signs indi- cating a new space shot. He noted that certain person- alities, experts of high position usually in company of cosmo- nauts at Kremlin receptions, were absent from the one Sun- day marking the 20th anniver- sary of VE-Day. Also missing from the Moscow scene Soviet reporters known as spe- cial reporters of space flights. Drug Deaths Rise--Cotnam TORONTO (CP)--Ontario su- pervusing coroner Dr. H. B Cotnam has warned coroners that deaths caused by drugs, particularly barbiturates, are jaudiences before whom Nikita} j Khrushchev as a bloody tyrant. Many were representatives of {Russia's Communist party and |government jcomplete with} to- sympathy vituperation ward the late dictator. FOUGHT UNDER STALIN A majority of the audience, |however, were ordinary men land women who fought under |Stalin's command. Many of them probably charged into combat shouting the battle cry: "Za rodinu! Za) | Stalina!"" (for the Motherland, | for Stalin). \They still know by heart verses i der,|# 3,254-pound electronic instru- ment back scientific inform a tion. Tass news agency said it was earth satellite put earlier in the day by a multi- demonstration by hastily resum-|,), of the kind of rockets that have Russia than the Soviet leaders! into orbit. in thejequipped with of| vices" but Congresses auditorium was sim-|kind of information it would ilar to the hundreds of Soviet|send back from its 250,000-mile denounced Stalin'!s NEAR COURSE elite who professed|to its planned course. package to gather and aunched from an artificial into orbit tage rocket. The exact time or place of ¢ launching was not an- ounced, but it presumably took lace about the hour the Krem- in gave its first public display arried its manned space ships Lunik V_ was "measuring de- did. not say what Tass said ourney. | Tass said the rocket at 10) p.m. Sunday was 70,000 miles|tical of the claim that the rock- \from the earth and was closejets were solid - fuelled. They Dr. Kin To Count SELMA, Ala. (AP)--Dr. Mar- tin Luther King Jr. returns tejard Welch, I the Selma area today to count)/Gandy, 18 -- with the earlier his gains and losses in the mas-'hombings. The three are from |sive Negro civil rights drive that Many were taught hymns tO/has been unde Stalin in schools and nurseries. |yary, r way since Jan-| before. g Returns To Selean The U.S. Ranger 9, an _ 809-| Fico Bossard pleaded guilty to five pound electronic: package|range missile mounted on | oqints of violating Britain's Otf- crammed with television cam-|Self - propelled launching plat-/soi.1 secrets Act. The maxi- eras, sent back more than 5,000/form and a three-stage inter-| 11, penalty could have been pictures of the lunar surface| continental rocket, about 10:65) 75 years, eaoling tt 'on/ feet long. ; : ei March 2. Pe hve | Marshal Georgi Zhukoy, one| He was seized in March by The Soviet display came dur-|°f Russia's wartime: command- a be ype - Keep a ing a military parade' in Red|°7S: appeared among the Soviet " -- * . 4 Square. 'Thousandsof 'Russians !eaders. It was his first appear- me hing i ition "<1 ist ap ng saw the pair of 110-foot, three-|4nee ®t a Red Square parade/STOP 108 aviation minisiry doc: stage rockets and four other|Since former premier Khrush-/Wmen's in @ rented room. weapons never seen in. public/chev ousted. him as defence] At the time of his arrest, Bos- P i |minister in 1957. He made his|sard was making $7,000 a year | as an official of the aviation \first public appearance in eight E a ministry's guided weapons divi- gh fi oll gular ay years at a Kremlin rally Satur- sion. were solid - fuelled and Sea aay their range was "unlimited." oO ae : The agency added '"'they are}, In New York, former pres- similar' to the rockets that|ident Eisenhower, the Allied launched the Vostok and Vosh-/COmmander - in - chief in the kod manned space ships. |Second World War, said the |time had come for Russia to ARE SKEPTICAL "rehabilitate" Zhukov. Western observers were skep- OFFERED HELP Sir Frederick said Bossard, a former attache at the British Embassy in Bonn, claimed he was approached in a London bar in 1961 bf a man repre- senting himself as a Soviet Em- bassy official. The man' sug- gested he could help Bossard fi- nancially in return for intelli- gence information and other meetings were arranged. "I was trying to get some jtranslation work from German into English, my income hav- ing been considerably reduced since returning from Germany," Bossard told the police. "At that "He was a very good sol- dier,"' Eisenhower said, 'and he tried his best to make things noted that some 'exterior fea-iwork in Berlin." His Gains, Losses youths--Leroy Horne, 19, How-jor without the help of. other 18, and Nelson} state authorities. In Pittsburgh, the national }council of the Young Men's Ne EP ABS, |Christian Association » Seer to WILL INVESTIGATE end racial discrimination in In Montgomery, Ala., Attor-/ YMCAs. red," Bossard said he received] £200 ($600) from the agent as a starter--"and in view of my desperate financial straits, I ac- cepted the £200 and agreed to supply information." Bossard said his usual method time, I was fairly heavily in the | lever, the prime minister would |have a statement ready for the |Commons when it meets at 2:30 |P.m. EDT. |KEPT INFORMED External Affairs Minister Martin also was out of Ottawa --on a European tour--when the expulsion was announced. Officials said he was kept informed of developments by telephone. The external affairs state- ment said Bytchkovy and Po- luchkin were told to leave the country after it was learned "they had engaged in activities) incompatible with their: official status." Soviet ambassador Ivan Shpedko was called to the de- partment last Tuesday, of the two men. They left three) days later. A spokesman at the Russian embassy confirmed the pair's departure, but rejected the! espionage charges as "not a| fact." jn | OUTLINES CHARGES | The departmental statement outlined the specific charges against the two men as fol- OWS: "In one instance, a Canadian civil servant was paid thou- sands of dollai# to gather in- formation and documentation in Canada, the purpose of which was to assist in the establish- ment of espionage activities in Canada and' other countries, fi c a 0 " in- formed of the charges, and toldjobtaining access to "arrange for the departure"|information." a C. ment, The commercial attache of the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa, A. E. Bytchkov embassy officials expelled from Canada Friday. The external affairs. department in its announcement Satur- day said the other man was Vv. N. Poluchkin, a clerk. The department said the men had spent "'thou- two dahil of dollars" tnying to obtain defence and indus- trial secrets, Two Canadians were also involved. to classified As in other attempted espion- ge incidents, the moves back- ired on the two Russians, GO TO RCMP The two Canadians, who were ot. identified, went to the RCMP and, "'as a result of this 'co-operation by conscientious anadians,"' the RCMP were ble to halt the Soviets before there was "any damage to Canadian interests." Other than the facts as set ut in the departmental state- little information was vailable on the affair. External affairs sources said the government wanted to play down" the incident as nov, assistant military attache, sent home after being caught by RCMP receiving confidential government documents. 1964 -- Vasily Tarasov, press gallery correspondent for the Soviet government newspaper \Izvestia, ordered to leave after being charged with to bribe a government em- ployee to obtain classified in- formation. Hit Targets N. Viet Nam From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP) -- U.S. and South Vietnamese planes began pounding military targets in North Viet Nam at midnight Sunday night and continued the --_ hammering through the ay. Returning pilots report de- struction of. bridges, highway and railway vehicles, military emplacements and one large junk. A U.S. spokesman said the planes encountered light to moderate groundfire but that all planes returned safely without sighting enemy aircraft. One navy jet pilot was killed Sunday when his plane failed to pull out of a strafing dive on a truck during raids on North Viet Nam. Two U.S. soldiers were killed and eight wounded in a six-hour He will spend two days in the|ney.General Richmond Flowers| It passed a resolution asking area and speak to a gathering)<aiq the Ku Klux Klan had be-|the national board to consider at Selma Tuesday night. come an effective political force| resolutions on integration and to Rev. Andrew Young, a Kingjin some parts of the state. He|make recommendations to the on the increase to an alarming degree. Dr. Cotnam was speaking Sat- urday to about 60 doctors from |giving thanks to Stalin for ev- lerything from their daily bread to the onset of spring. battle with the Viet Cong 30 miles west of Saigon. It was one of several attacks during the weekend in the Mekong River far as possible to try to ease any damage to Soviet - Cana- dian relations. The administra- tion also hoped to avoid any and 'to perform economic intel- ligence tasks, including the pro- vision of detailed information on the Trans-Mountain pipeline was to select guided weapons files at his office and then "take them to a hotel room and photograph suitable ex- aide, said Sunday the Southern|said he intended to push for anjcouncil at its meetings at Min- Christian Leadership Conference] investigation of the Klan with!neapolis in 1966. would conduct writing clinics in|----- Serene 3 vee across the province attending Small groups of people gath- an in-service training course for ered in ted Square after the coroners. meeting to discuss the applause delta. The battle west of Saigon be- gan early Sunday when a Com- chance that the Russians would expel Canadian diplomats from Moscow in retaliation, inform- system in Western Canada. tracts during my lunch period." -----| "In another instance, a natur- "I am alarmed by the num-|for Stalin. Many openly re- ber of barbiturate and other|Pudiated Khrushchev's charges drug deaths coming through|against the former Kremlin) 5,9. improve their reading and my office today and I am far/|Tuler. writing so they can qualify as from satisfied with many of the| The comments are typical Of|yoters, he explained. coroners' investigations intoithe warm sentiments toward Three Ku Klux Klansmen these deaths,"' Dr. Cotnam said Stalin frequently encountered charged with first-degree 'ure Barbiturates were used in half by _Russian-speaking foreigners dor in the March 25 night-rider of all female suicides in On- in informal contacts with ordi- slaying of a white civil rights tario last year nary Russians CARELESS SHORTCUT Popular sentiment may soften Dr. Cotnam said that often the official criticism of Stalin doctors are busy and give large in coming years. But it is not amounts of barbiturates to pa- likely to force the Kremlin lead- tients to avoid the bother of/ers to vindicate or rehabilitate repetitive visits. him. "Poor Taste" Ads Criticized TORONTO (CP)--The Onta-jof their films--quite often the rio Board of Censors said today good ones--with lurid and mis- efforts to oversell sex or nudity leading advertising." 2 n in newspaper movie advertise- Of the 17,826 pieces of adver- William Orville Eaton, 42, and ments are giving the motionjtising reviewed by the board |Collie Leroy Wilkins jr., 21-- picture industry a questionable|during 1964, 319 were rejected| OMY Wilkins has been tried. The reputation and 91 were changed in some| (Tal ended in a deadlocked jury The censorship. board saidjway. The rejections totalled last week newspapers in Ontario have about twice that of the previous In New Orleans, three white given it their complete co-oper-! year. teen-agers were charged with ation in rejecting movie ads in| "In Ontario we are fortunate arson after firebombs were poor taste. to be dealing with a most co-/hurled at Negro homes. "While we rarely find fault|operative press," Mr. Silver-| The arrests were the first in with motion pictures in a mat-|thorne said in his annual report.ja series of eight such bombings) ter of taste," said 0. J. Silver The newspapers published in'aimed at Negro homes and thorne, the board's d tor give board build'ngs connected with civil "we do find distributors |their complete support'in reject-| rights activity | learned little from the past and ing questionable copy--efforts to Police said there was no ev-| continue to misrepresent manyioversell sex or nudity." jidence to link the arrested/ the region during the coming} |weeks. The ¢elinics will help Ne- rally and march by some 500 persons in downtown Anniston, Ala., Sunday, About half of the marchers _.. parade of about 10 blocks |through the northeast Alabama \city. | GIVEN OVATION ovation to the three KKK mem- bers charged with the murder lof Mrs. Viola Liuzzo of Detroit, |civil rights workers from Mont- gomery to Selma following the march to the capital. | Of the three--Eugene Thomas, and thi oviner the that lat worker were participants in aj & wore their Klan regalia for the| jm The crowd gave a standing! 3 who was killed as she shuttled) : alized Canadian citizen was paid thousands of dollars to provide technical information in the electronics field related to the defence industry and to) '"% \compromise other Canadians,} ' lincluding female employees of} , |the government, with the object) of securing their assistance in CBC Troupe To Arab Republic TRENTON, Ont. (CP) A CBC concert party left the RCAF station here today to en- tertain United Nations emer- gency forces in the United Arab Republic. | The group of 17 entertainers includes Miss Canada, Linda Douma; George Armstrong, captain of Toronto Maple Leafs; folk singer Simone Dina; singer Tommy Common and comedian Gordie Tapp. a b Jayne Robbed Of $51,000 Gems NEW YORK (AP) -- Actress| Jayne Mansfield's East Side town house was robbed Sunday of $51,000 in jewelry, including an 18-carat diamond ring, police said | | The actress told police that! \the $22,000 ring and 13 other| sage at Montreal, spoke to Ipices of jewelry were taken! the gathering, made up |from the first floor of her house| mostly of former concentra: |on East 69th Street. An open tion camp inmates or their |window was found on the ground] relatives, (CP Wirephoto) /floor, police said, | MARK CAMPS' LIBERATION of the liberation of Nazi concentration camps. Prime Minister Pearson niversary faces some 1,500 Jewish Ca nadians who gathered on Parliament Hill in Ottawa today to mark the 20th an- Mr. Pearson, who had just | returned from a meeting with Quebec Premier Le- | se munist mortar barrage des- cended on the capital of Hua Nghia province. nts said. Bytchkov, a blonde, stockily- uilt man in his early 40's, was NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Britain To Tighten Security LONDON (Reuters)--Prime Minister Wilson announced today a major tightening up of Britain's security proce- dures. He was speaking in the House of Commons shortly after the jailing of a government missiles expert and an army sergeant who admitted selling secrets to other countries. Czechoslovakia Grants Amnesty LONDON (Reuters) -- Czech President Antonin Novot- ny today declared an amnesty for Czechoslovakians abroad who return to their country before the end of this year, it was announced here. The amnesty applies to those who "'illegally left Czechoslovakia or stayed abroad without permission." ...In THE TIMES today... Giftord Cool To Holding Tax Talks Here--Page 11 Ann Landers -- 14 Obits -- 2} City News -- 11 Sports -- 8, 9, 10 Classified -- 18, 19, 20 Television <#--16 Theatre -- 17 Comics -- 16 Whitby News -- 5 Editorial --- 4 Women's -- 12, 33, Financial -- 21 Weather -- 2 14