Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont+ ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 95 -- NO..111 She Oshawa Cimes OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY 306, 1966 Authorized os Second Sitows ant tor sormant of Rosoee by tome Weather Report Mainly sunny with northwest winds 15 to 20, Low tonight 40, High tomorrow 65, TWENTY-TWO PAGES Ukrainian intellectuals in the Soviet Union, After their hour-long orderly demon- stration, at which Finance Minister Sharp spoke pr'r" SOME 1,500 Canadians of Ukrainian descent de- monstrated on Parliament - Hill Saturday against the "renewed persecution" of Surveyor Off On Moon Trip CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)| quickened the pace of the moon A spidery Surveyor spacecraft) race. Wednesday, Gemini 9 ast- with a revolving camera eye|ronauts Thomas P, Stafford and rocketed toward the moon to- Eugene A. Cernan are to try day, aiming for the first U.S./again to rocket into orbit on! lunar soft-landing on a dry,|their twice - postponed rendez- ¢rater-pocked plain where U.S.| vous and spacewalk mission. astronauts may explore within) The National Aeronautics and three years. booster rocket thundered away/be required to determine from Cape Kennedy at 10:41; whether Surveyor was on the a.m, EDT to start Surveyor on|correct course, | ts 'intended 231,483-mile voy-| 'The flight plan called for the. age. |2,194-pound craft, which resem- If the complex moonship sur- bles a giant spider, to execute vives its 63-hour journey, it is|several intricate manoeuvres. to touch down gently on the | The flight control centre re- moon's Ocean of Storms about| ported after four minutes of| 1:38 a.m. Thursday, flight that the Atlas shut down| Surveyor could transmit hun-| and . the hydrogen - powered} dreds of clear closeup pictures|Centaur upper stage separated) and scientific data which could! and ignited. | determine whether that area of, -- _ the moon is safe for manned) NDP Said Ready IX, showed last February that | at least one area is firm enough) To Gain Power two - pronged U.S. assault on\ganized to strike for power in gpace as the SARNIA (CP) -- Margaret|Council, Mr. Lewis said the Porteous, 20, of nearby Bright's) provincial party has undergone "lelection, Stephen Lewis, NDP | member for Scarborough West, |said Saturday, Speaking at a political educa- tion seminar sponsored by the expeditions. History's first for ianding. LONDON .Ont. (CP) -- The s Wife Charged lunar soft-lander, Russia's Luna The launching triggered a New Democratic Party is or- ' In Mate s Death London and District Labor Grove was charged Saturday|its biggest internal reorganiza-| with non-capital murder in con-|tion since the Second World nection with the Friday night] War. stabbing death of her 25-year-| Mr. Lewis said redistribution old husband Leonard. of Ontario ridings has benefited! Mrs. ~Porteous, mother of|the NDP making it possible to two, was charged about 12)win many seats outside Metro- hours after the body was found) | politan Toronto, where its ma- a few feet from the couple's|jor strength now is concen- cottage. trated, POLAND'S STEFAN CARDINAL Wyxzynsk1i, wearing biretta, walks in front of "Black Madonna" painting in Gdansk toward the Oliwa Cathedral today, cheered by some 100,000 Polish Catholics, during celebration in connection with the 1,000 years of Christianity in Poland, Shortly after this, riot po- lice dispersed several hun- dred churchgoers who tory, down and burned a gover ment signkoard and goo |Space Administration said five! A powerful Atlas - Centaur/or six hours of tracking would! space agency Ontario in the next provincial] |club president Humphreys told |The Times. | ' Generals mis oerte ia: SOVIET PERSECUTIONS OPPOSED | AT MEETING IN OTTAWA UKRAINIANS LAUNCH BIG PROTEST OTTAWA (CP)--About 1,500 Ukrainians from Ontario and Quebec demonstrated, listened and sang on Parliament Hill Saturday to protest "the re- newed persecution of Ukrainian intellectuals, writers and poets in the Soviet Union." A delegation from the Ukrain- Sharp with a brief asking the government to place last year's arrest and conviction of two young Ukrainians literary crit- ics before the United Natioins commission on human rights. The critics were Ivan Svitly- chny, 42, and Ivan Dzyuba, 31, who, in a secret trial, were re- died in 1963 and whose work criticized the Soviet govern- ment, Svitlychny was reported sen- tenced to seven years hard la- bor in Siberia. Dzyuba, who has tuberculosis, was said to have been released, The brief also asked the gov- lease of those already sentenced or arrested" and "do the ut- most possible. . . to ensure the restoration of religious, political and individual freedom for Ukraine and other nations of the Soviet Union." Other demands were the launching of 'a strong protest against' the use of moral, phys- West," and use of "extreme gare" in cultural exchanges with the Soviet Union so that these are not used as 'propa ganda instruments against the subjugated nations and the eth. nic groups in Canada." Members of the Committee, which embraces some 28 non- Communist Ukrainian organiza- fan Canadian Committee, ganizers of the demonstration, presented Finance Minister ore ported convicted of smuggling to the West work of Vasyl Sy- monenko, a Ukrainian poet who secution. . . ly, they marched some two miles to the Russian Em- bassy where they paraded with their placards, to) th ti ts ernment to intervene "through proper channels to end the per- demand the re- ical and political and blackmail and others in Canada and the tions and churches in Canada, later paraded two miles to the Soviet Embassy, persecution of Ukrainians 8 cata aE Em 2 MORE MONKS IN SUICIDE THREAT TO FORGE KY OUT (CP Wireph TED O'CONNOR Ted O'Connor Generals' Coach Russell D. Humphreys, Q.C., |president of Oshawa Generals Junior 'A' Hockey Club, an- nounced today that 'Ted' O'Connor, popular homebrew. star, will hold the post of Man- ager-Coach of Oshawa Generals, for the 1966-67 season. "No official contract has been signed bute mu tual verbal agreement has been reached and we expect to con- clude the formalities shortly," wot as Vet, "The officers and directors decided to combine the duties of manager and coach and this will be a _ full-time job," added Mr, Humphreys. "This will also mean securing a new coach for our Junior "B" team, the "Smith Crushmen", he said, "Ted"' O'Connor, who coach: ed the Junior 'B' Crushmen last season, to a group cham- vionship, is a product of the! Oshawa Minor Hockey Associa-) |tion and starred with Oshawa for several seasons,| "HANDS OFF CUBA" Russians Warn USS. MOSCOW (Reuters)---The §So- viet Union warned the United States Sunday to stop "'hostile action" against Cuba and said Havana could count on reliable friendship from Moscow. The warning came in a state- ment from Tass, the official So- viet news agency, "The Soviet ruling circles fol- low developments in hat area closely and consider it neces- sary to issue a reminder of earlier pledges of support for heroic Cuba, which is fighting for its freedom and independ- ence," Tass said. "Those who harbor aggres- sive designs against the Repub- lic of Cuba should not forget that Cuba has true and reliable friends." The statement was prompted by new tension around the American Guantanamo bas? in Cuba; -starting=--with...the ..re- ported shooting of a Cuban sen- try by a U.S, marine May 21. Tass accused the United States of hostile actions in the Guantanamo area, and said re- ports of these actions were "'re- ceived with wrath' by the So- viet people, Sunday's declaration was the third Tass warning to "imperi- alists" in three days, "The renewed provocations jagainst the Republic of Cuba show again what a danger the forces of imperialism, who do not stop at any crimes, consti- tute for peace, freedom and in- dependence of the peoples," the news agency said, "The shameful war against the Vietnamese people, the mil- itary intervention in the Domin- fean Republic, the establish- ment of sources of tension in the Middle East and other parts of the world, and the hostile ac- tions against the Republic of Cuba are all manifestations of one and the same aggressive policy,' Tass added; 'But the imperi- alists will not break the will of the peoples, and their starving CUBAN FAGS THEY GO OUT HAVANA (Reuters)--Smok- ers in Cuba, cradle of the smoking habit, are facing an agonizing problem--their cig- arettes keep going out unless they inhale all the time. 'Damn that blasted ciga- rette, it has gone out again," is 'a common phrase in Ha- vana today. The cause of all the Irrita- tion is a bad consignment of cigarette paper imported at the end of last year. "It does not contain the right ingredients,"' Granma, official organ of the Cuban Communist party, told smok- ers in a recent article. But it promised that the quality would soon improve and that special control meth- ods would be taken to prevent | a repetition of the error, Cuba will import 1,010 met- ric tons of cigarette paper this year, 688 tons of it from Spain, 122 tons from France and the rest from Czechoslovakia, sang campfire More than a dozen ~ naturedly songs, persons were arrested, in- cluding Gene Kramer, As- sociated Press correspon- | dent, who was held for five hours and whose of the incident were confis- cated, (AP Wirephoto) | films for freedom, independence and social progress," Cuban Claim U.S. Ship Sunk MIAMI, Fla, (AP)--The Cu- ban Navy said today it fought and destroyed an armed boat "from the United States' Sun- day night. The communique from Fidel Castro's navy department was heard in Miami on a broadcast by Havana radio, It said the 'pirate' craft was caught in the act of Janding two spies near Havana. Then, said the communique, both infiltrat- ors were killed and the fleeing speedboat was pursued with the aid of flares by air and eur- face craft. "About 10 miles offshore units of the navy engaged it and de- stroyed it with a direct hit," the communique said. 'Two wounded survivors were res- cued from the sea. The others presumably perished in the ex- Mob Taunts 2. Policeman 2,000 Riot TORONTO (CP) -- Teen-age regulars in Yorkville Village, Toronto's coffee-house district, said Sunday a weekend fight that attracted a screaming crowd of 2,000 all started with a haircut, A 17-year-old youth, who de- scribed himself as a villager, said 50 members of a gang scended on the village Saturday night to cut the hair of long- haired youths, Police believe the riot was touched off by a fight between Alan Eggleton, 17, of Toronto and a member of The Greasers. John Shaw, 17, of Toronto, said the fight was part of a standing battle between the vil- lagers and The Greasers. "This is simply the North American style of a feud between the Brit- ish mods and rockers," He said a greaser was a hood who comes to a ae area looking for a@~ fight, youth said the greasers "strut around" and mock passing vil- lagers, After the fight started he- tween Eggleton and the oher youth, police attempted to break it up, Constables James Hughes and William Owens ar- rested Eggleton but the other youth escaped, OFFICERS TRAPPED Before they could get him into a waiting patrol wagon, a crowd of about 300 screaming teen-agers trapped the two po- licemen and forced them to climb on top of a car, Witnesses said shouts of "kill the fuzz" came from the crowd and bottles were hurled through the air, The noise of the crowd at- tracted other teen-agers and an estimated 2,000 persons jammed the narrow street before a spe- cial squad of 20 police fought their way through the crowd and escorted the constables and their prisoner to the station. Police charged Eggleton with called 'The Greasers' de-' AN UNIDENTIFIED youth is hustled along a To- ronto street by a detective following a brawl in the Yorkville coffee house dis- trict of Toronto Saturday LONDON (AP) Billy Graham took on jeering heck- lers at Oxford University Sunday and came out of an over- crowded church to proclaim: 'In Oxford they used to burn people for their beliefs, but they are more civilized today," He was referring to England's killing of Protestants in the reign of Mary Tudor and Roman Catholics under Elizabeth I. The burnings were recalled in books recently published here and in the United States. Grahams went to Oxford as a warm - up for the month's "crusade" he starts Wednesday. Groups of Oxford students, es- pecially those attached to the university's "humanist group," causing a disturbance and ar- rested Gunter Wetzel, 19, of | Toronto for assaulting and ob-| structing police. Two other Tor- onto youths were ."arged with| plosion, Hann assault, | TU protested his appearance in Ox- ford's Anglican church as "vio- lating church law."' They sought jto mount a massive protest-- but this fizzled into the appear- ance of mostly bearded heck- wine POLISH CATHOLICS REBEL Hecklers Jeer Billy Graham In Sermon At Oxford U. By GENE KRAMER GDANSK, Poland (AP)--Gov- ernment workers during the night removed all traces of a burned and twisted government signboard after it was wrecked Sunday by. hundreds of Polish Roman Catholics, Riot police dispersed the crowd of some 350 persons who had just come from a rally cheering the visit to Gdansk of Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, No one appeared to be hurt, but more than 20 persons who helped storm the huge sign- board. were 'believed under ar- rest, In Warsaw, the U.S. embassy complained to the Polish foreign ministry about the five-hour de- tention of Associated Press cor- respondent Gene Kramer. He was yeleased but officials con- fiscated his film of the incident. Two other Western reporters were held for two hours, The incident began shortly afier a sermon by Cardinal Wyszynski to a congregation of 22,000 inside the Basilica of St. Mary. Loudspeakers relayed the sermon to a cheering crowd of 100,000 in the streets. Fresh from the flower-throw- ing ovation for the Polish Cath- olic primate, 'a crowd of home- bound worshippers stopped and attacked a signboard in a square opposite the main rail+ way stations, They ripped its two wooden signs from the steel frame and burned them, then toppled the 15-foot scaffolding into the flames, CARRIED RED SLOGANS The. two posters displayed Communist slogans against the Catholic bhierarchy"s campaign or forgiveness for the Germans. The government has conducted a determined campaign against a letter the Polish bishops wrote to the German Catholic bishops last November proposing Polish- German reconciliation, One of the two posters showed a broken statue of Christ, said to have been left in the gutter by the Germans, Printed across it was the information that more than 6,000,000 Poles were killed in the war and the words *'we do not forgive," The second poster condemned as a Nazi collaborator Karl Maria Splett, the last German bishop of this historic seaport when it was the city of Danzig. After the war Poland sentenced Splett to eight years in prison, He disputed the charge of col- Jaboration, claiming that he had intervened against Nazi terror- ism many times, ¥ Suicides Feared From AP-Reuters SAIGON (CP) -- Two more | Buddhists burned themselves to death today in the struggle to *, \force South Viet Nam's military |regime from power, A Buddhist |leader warned of more suicides junless Premier Nguyen Cao |Ky's government steps down, | A 17-year-old monk burned | himself to death at the Buddhist | Institute here and another monk took his life by fire at Dalat, a resort 115 miles from this South | Vietnamese capital, | A Buddhist girl was reported to have cut her wirsts and died in Dalat today, A later report | sald the' girl survived but there |was no confirmation, | Two Buddhist women burned | themselves to death Sunday, ' | Thich (venerable) Tam Chau, |the Buddhist Institute's moder. jate chairman, appealed to monks and nuns for an imme. diate halt to such "'self « sacri- fice," But later the 86 + pound monk told correspondents selfs immolation is -not a contradic. tion of Buddhist principles of non-violence, He added; "We hope the general (Ky) jrealizes the situation, Today ig jonly the. beginning, I will try to do my best to use diplomatia means. If not, there is no other way but to struggle with suicide and blood,' NO DEADLINE SET Tam Chau gave no deadline for Ky's resignation, but his talk of more suicides as a means of forcing the United States to withdraw support from Ky indie cated the monk was under pres- sure from extremist members of the Buddhist hierarchy, night. An estimated 2,000 persons jammed a street after malice . afficars were trapped on the roof of their car with a youth they had arrested, toma 'we lers, with whom Graham dealt smilingly, With the approval of the high- est Anglican Church offictals, Graham preached in Oxford's St, Aldate's Church after the regular Sunday service, 'HVTanerennaurssvneanevcapnnee TaN aeons NYRI APY aM i i nue Di } NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Cuba Rejects U.S. Claim HAVANA (AP) -- Cuban Communist Party Chief Ar mando Hart today repeated Cuba's rejection of an Amer. jean charge that six Cuban soldiers infiltrated the U.S, Guatanamo naval base, Hart also warned that Cuba was ready to repeal U.S, aggression, In an interview published by Granma, the Cuban Communist party newspaper, Hart said the U.S. charge was false. One of the Cuban sold+ jers was killed by an American guard in the incident May 23, None Seriously Injured INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, (AP) -- A' blazing pileup of 16 cars, including one driven by Billy Foster of Victoria, B.C, stopped the 50th annual §00-mile race today moments after it started, Only one driver and six spectators were hurt, none seriously, The 24 cars remaining undamaged re-start+ ed the race in single file after flames in burning cars were extinguished and the debris cleared from the 2% mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway track. The 16 cars were the most ever involved in one smashup at the track, A, J. Foyt, winner of the 1961 and 1964 races, suffered a cut finger and bruised left knee, He wastreated and cleared to. drive relief for another car, if needed int Aes ...In THE TIMES today... Col. McLaughlin Opens Samac Building--P. 13 Brooklin Stops Losing Streok---P. 8 Obits---26 Comics---16 Sports---8, 9, Theatre--11 Women"s-----1 4, Weather---2 Ann Landers--~12 City News-~13 Classified--18, 19, 20, 2) Editorial--4 Financial--17 10 ec ee 15 UU. AL LR