Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 May 1966, p. 1

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{ LY | ioe Pastor Bares Scars | Of Torture At U.S. Hearing Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- wille, Ajax neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- os ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 95 -- NO. 93 10¢ Single "SOc Per 8 ai ene Betivereid a Lz: OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1966 Oshawa Times 45. Authorized @s Second Clos Mall Post Office Department a Ottews and for payment of Postoge in Cosh. | - Weather Report Cold continuing. Winds light. Low tonight 30. High Sunday THIRTY-TWO PAGES A WINGMAN HAYES SCORES FOR GENERALS 9 pateennne emer Defence Star Injured... : e By BILL scoTT TORONTO (CP)--"We'll get a crowd of '14,000 here Sunday," predicted a Maple-Leaf Gardens publicist after Oshagva Generals defeated Edmonton Oil Kings.7- 1 to tie the Memorial Cup junior hockey final series at a game apiece. "Yeh and we'll get a-new ref- eree," answered: Oil Kings' manager Bill Hunter, who de- scribed the officiating as "a dis- grace for a national final." Attendance was 7,210 after Wednesday's opener drew less than 5,000. LS neault of Montreal encouraged chippy play. Daigneault handed out 24 penalties, including one misconduct and four majors for fighting. *He's going to lose control," Kinasewich added, "and that won't be good for the players or the fans." Oshawa coach Bep Guidolin said the Generals won the game for Bobby Orr. The 18-year-old defence star had difficulty skat- ing because of a groin injury and was used sparingly. Or said he hurt himself while prac- tising last week. TEARS MT NT STO ne ee NS A .Oil Kings Let Down FOR ORR! kins played a major role in the Generals' comeback after their 7-2. loss in Wednesday' $ opening game, Oshawa goaiie Ian Young made 17 saves, Sut his defence stopped easily twice as many. "We were trying to make the big play," Kinasewich -- said, "giving them a lift and they took advantage of it." He said the Oil Kings just afte the first period when they were be- hind 2-0. Kinasewich and Hunter both said goalie Don McLeod, who made 24 shaves, didn't look good and Don Caley, a pickup from "We didn't play well. In fact, we couldn't play much worse," Kinasewich said. "But we'll come back Sunday." " Al Hamilton; considered the West's. outstanding junior, only made a brief appearance for Oil Kings in the third period. Kin- asewich said the 19-year-old, 200-pound - defenceman injured his tailbone a couple of weeks ago and was in pain Friday night. Kinasewich said Hamil- ton's skates were broken during ' the game and his spares weren't too good, so he was kept on the bench. (Times Phote By Joe Serge) | Only Gouzenko Rivals Charred Body Spencer Spy Charge mes. VANCOUVER (CP) -- Boyal\ report in the commission hearings into the} Spencer affair are at an end,| leaving on the public record al- legations of Russian spy activi- ties in Camada'rivalled only by those revealed by Soviet cipher clerk Igor - Gouzenko in_ the. 1940s, All that remains is for Mr. Justice Dalton Wells to weigh the evidence and make his re- port. He said Friday as two) days of hearings ended here-- they were preceded by three s of Ottawa hearings in April--he _expects to _have his WASHINGTON (AP)--A refu- gee Lutheran pasjor stripped off his clerical garb to 'the waist at a U.S. Senate hearing Friday to show the torture scars he said were inflicted by the Ro- manian secret police. Rey. Richard Wurmbrand, 5 after testifying about religious percecution in his Communist ruled fatherland, said: "T'd like to ufidress myself to my belt and show you what a Romanian prison' is like." Pointing to numerous knife wounds on his neck, chest and back and telling of his broken bones, he said: "I show you the tortured body of my fatherland and my church," The pastex, a farmer repre sen- tative in Romania of the World Council of Churches, said that | job. 6, him government's| hands within a month. The Ontario Supreme Court justice was appointed by Prime Minister Pearson following an unprecedented furdre .in Parlia- ment over the cas? ofthe late George Victor Spencer. He is to} letermine whether the 62-year-| id postal clerk was fairly| treated in being dismissed with- out pension from his Vancouv er| Highlight of the case was the| rélease here of a 99- page, partly-censored document con- taining evidence by Assistant Commissioner W. H. Kelly. i j | during years of imprisonment the Romanian secret police tried to torture him into mak- ing "accusatory state ments" against bishops and other church leaders With his wife sitting and. occasionally dabbing her eyes, Mr. Wurmbrand told the Senate internal security sub- committee that "I was not the worst tortured." "The proof. is alive," he said He was released from prison in July, 1964, and came to the United, States about a month ago, But before he was allowed to leave Romania, he testified, the secret police warned him. that "you can preach Christ as maich as you like but don't touch com- munism,"' beside that-I am In Burned Car | The charred body of a man, Hunter and Edmonton coach Both coaches agre Ray Kinawewich both said the leniency of referee Frank: Daig- Roberts and Chris awa defencemen Nick Beverley, ed that Osh- Weyburn, Barry - Wil- Politicians | ville, was pulled from the patel | ing wreckage of a care early > t e The report told of yesterday in' Bowmanville | --Clandestine meetings be- On Apathy NEW YORK (AP)--British psychiatrist Dr. Joshya Bierer had| tween Spener and Russian agents; : Information passed to Russians on farms for near the U.S. border; --Information about iS. troops stationed in Canada" --Photos and data on t Trans Mountain pipeline whieh feeds. oil to the B.C, lower mainland and Washing- ton state; --Names from gravestones and information gn_ business and schools now defunct said the body is undergoing an the examination by the Attorney General's laboratory in Toronto and results are not expected un- til late Monday The chief said his department We | checked out the iicence number} lof the car, found burning on | Lambert st. about 5.45 a.m., land it was from Bowmanville. He said he has possible iden- tification of the man and his} sale immediately, details were re information No other leased Wide Reforms Sought In Que. MONTREAL (CP)--La Presse The document alse contained!says the final volume 'of. the? a lengthy statement taken by|Parent. report on education in the RCMP from Spencer, in/Quebec recommends substantial which. he admitted ' repeated! reform of local school organiza- contact with Russian agents trips to Ottawa under assumed! the names and use of. code mes sages to set up meetings Spencer was found dead in his Vancouver home Aprii 9. A cor- oner's' jury decided his death was natural. . The Vancouver hearings saw a clash between Commissioner} Wells and lawyer Harry Rankin, and recommend changes. representing the Spencer estate La Presse says the report rec- Mr, Rankin repeatedly attacked|Ommends in effect that school the evidence given in the state- | boards no longer have any de- ment by.RCMP Assistant Com-|nominational character but that missioner elly and said he had they be obliged to assure, when made USpencer's activities ap-|a situation demands it, the avai- pear sinister' when infact they lability of Catholic, Protestant! were not. and non- peporinatanal school- He demanded .that persons pias ay who had given information| which Kelly's report was based | be called before the commis-} SUGGEST USE The gravestone names and in formation on defunct schools and businesses, it was sug- gested, was to provide legiti- mate cover names and back-| ground for Russian agents | which could not 'be readily checked system of denominational schools in the province The newspaper publishes what it says is the text of the recom- mendations of the fourth vol-| ume of the Parent royal com- mission, set up in 1962 to study |Quebec's educational-s y ste m | Re hauls Warned wis at urwrstoe'| 'Capitalize' address but cannot disclose the| jtion and an overhaul in depth of} hand look he convinced women rule United States. "But I was wrong in say- ing that women had taken the DEEP. RIVER, Ont. (CP) --)| Laurier LaPierre said Friday night that politicians capitalize over," he said. "What has on Canadians' fundameptal in- happened is that..American difference to each other and) men have turned over every- their desire to stay apathetic. The university professor and) television personality said in an! laddress to the Ontario Recrea-| Bolare he lefi London April tion Association that Canadians) 47 for ag lecture tour of the have not accepted two facts of| United States, Dr, Bierer me o greatest handover in his- their national life. ' | he believed prosperity a' One is the stereotype view Ca-| |nadians, have of themselves and | |the other is a changing Quebec,| " His statements were hooted he, said. down by spokesmen of the Canadians should accept the| feminine and masculine j cultural reality of their environ. | views, leat The ability to speak two) After three weeks of obser- Alanguages should be regarded) yation from Phoenix to New as an intellectual asset. Orleans to New York he said: It took a long time to find so- "What I expressed vhs an lutions--to---secio-political._prob-|- intuition: And- it turned-- out lems in this country, possibly} not to be doubly right--it because Canadians feared the) tyrned out to be right a hun- word sol dred times over." They considered it all right for Dr. Bierer «said: "America Americans to have had a revo-| jg a yery competitive society. lution but preferred to call the! you must work hard just to Canadian development evolu-) keep up, And the result is ten- jtion. sion and insecurity. "The husband comes home 'Record Lows women are the root of mos Americans' troubles. 'US, WOMEN IN COMMAND, 'PSYCHIATRIST CONVICTED | | said Friday that after a first- ; is yen ye 4 | thing to their wives. This is Sask., may replace him in Sunday aft- ernoon's third game. Red -Wings.« All NS ception of Orr, physical shape. the Generals, with the ex- are in good gu 'ay a erce Strife Erupts Anew In Viet Nam Ky Declares To Hold Power For At Least Another Year SAIGON (AP) -- The U.S. northeast of Saigon. It was the command claimed today almost|seventh day in a row that the total annihilation of a reinforced|giant bombers returned to the jenemy battalion in two days of| \savage fighting in central Viet! |Nam. A military spokesman said ithere was "'precious little left"| lof more than 400 Viet Cong and| 'North Vietnamese troops en-| jeountered 10 ,miles north of 'Bong Son and 280 miles north- 'east .of Saigon in Operation' ' DR. JOSHUA BIERER But he doesn't have the time to show love: and kindness. Instead, he treats her like a mother." Dr. bierer is in the U.S. to advance his dream of abolish- ing mental hospitals. For more than 30 years in Britain he has fought for clinical treatment-of the mentally. ill. | after competing all day and For May In Ont. | he finds his wife unhappy, TORONTO (CP) -- " Overnight| U. 5. - soviet * temperatures today, ranging| from a low of 15 degrees at |Earlton to a high of 33 at Wind- lsor, established records for the} |Imonth of May throughout the od ahtioneg ee nese official has called for a | The 23 - degree overnight tem: | ynited orld Mat tn erga perature recorded at Toronto) ...4 onsters' A Menace Declare Chines -TOKYO (AP)--A leading Chi- Istepped - up attacks the |U.S.S.R., selling out-the Viet Nam war ef- on he calls a U.S.-Soviet/fort on behalf -of the United] Davy Crockett. has taken place near the coast | along the South China Sea. The spokesman said troops of | |the helicopter-lifted 1st Cay-| lalry (Airmobile) Division killed| |332 enemy soldiers Thursday jand Friday. A South Vietnamese spokes- man reported that Vietnamese jparatroopers and _ reconnais- /sance units who supported the | American action killed 84 more. This raised the total enemy) dead to 416, News of the, héavy ground fighting, the biggest action in three weeks, dominated a day in which there were also these developments: 1, Primé Minister Nguyen Cao Ky declared he will penate head. of the South Vietnamese | government for at least, another year. The fighting |had 2. The U.S. Air Force, in a |delayed report, said its fighter- bombers had wrecked two spans lof the vital Bac Glang railroad} land highway bridge 25 miles! northeast of Hanoi. 3. Air force. B-52 bombers | again bombed a suspected Viet Cong troop concentration near the Cambodian border, 75 miles! Viet Cong stronghold to support |U.S. Ist Infantry Division | troops, ENEMY FORCE RETREATS The military spokesman said |there had been tio 'significant \eontact with the enemy since midnight Friday, indicating the {remnants of the enemy force fled. The spokesman said 12 U.S. jair sorties were flown in sup |port of the action and credited | Bilots with killing 85 of the Viet 'ong Trial Awaited For Two Years TORONTO (CP) -- A lawyer acting for a Toronto man wha has been held in jail amost two years awaiting trial received permission Friday from a York County judge to read confiden- tial records of the Ontario de- partment of reform institutions. Lawyer Anthony C. Bazos told Judge William Lyon the records are essential in the defence of Robert Arnold Baker, 21, who is charged with robbing. eight elderly men, Mr. Bazos' said he plans to |plead temporary insanity for |Baker. "T need the government rec. ords so a psychiatrist ean ade- iquately give an opinion on Baker's mental state." which is accused: of |@mmammnemenmmmm mat Neen IIIT NEWS 'HIGHLIGHTS aiioan Lose Attempt For spear International Airport was well "holy |below the record of 33 degrees lestablished for the month ,on May 10, 1947. nist party, said Friday night) The 33 degrees at Windsor|the U.S.S.R. and the United]! was below the previous record | States are "rallying monstérs! cothey|namese people behind the fac-| of 34, also established in 1947, jof all kinds to knock to gether | de of 'aid', and.are attempting | States. Hysni Kapo, of the Albanian |Communist party politburo said} the Soviets "are undermining} the heroic struggle of the Viet- alliance." Teng Hsiao-peng, general sec-| retary of the Chinese Commu- jsion. But Mr. Justice Wells re-| fused, He said this would in- volve the security of Canada and "the security ot this coun- try. is of more importance than the publicity of this hearing." Mr. Rankin, in the closing about Return "To Good Old Days' Of Ambulance Riding Urged TORONTO <(CP)--An Ottawa Of Financial Woe JAKARTA (CP) -- Indonesia's finance minister gave' Parlia- ment a blunt warning today the country's financial condition Dr. WN . B, Cgtnam, -. gon said although millions doctor has suggested that On- tario return to "the good old days when doctors rode with the ambulance." Dr. K. E. G. Wilson, president of the Traffic Injury Research Foundation, made the statement Friday at a three-day confer- ence of coroners organized by the attorney - general's depart ment. Dr. Wilson charged that five times as many rural as urban accident: victims die in ambu lances due to the ignorance of! attendants He said most hospital emer-| gency departments are inade- quate and recommended training of specialists with all types of injuries that crash victims receive In an interview later, Dr. Wil-| of do} lars are spent on cancer and heart research, practically noth ing is spent on accident re- search, "Tam unaware of any Canadian auto manufacturing companies spending anything n] accident Tesee arch in this ecoun-| tr," Dr.: Wilson said. | the to deal of the Ontario's Supervising coroner, told the conference that inexperienced ambulance attendants trying to massage hearts have been re- sponsible for the deaths of some accident victims, DAY CARE PROGRAM hours of the hearing, made a summation; saying Kelly had made $pencer appear as a sin- ister figure, particularly» with respect to availability of farms in the Sumas area along the U.S. border Sultan Hamengku Boewono who also is deputy premier, said the state has been reduced to living oni credits and declining gold and. foreign exchange re- serves. 'Toe -Typing' By JOY MILLER NEW YORK (AP)--As one knows, , in necessity of Mother Woman- has always two or three a Lois Benjamin "keep the sauce pablum spoon goi \ been able to her to But now ers in the ing home jamin; a y if with 9,000,000 United States g working two The minute major need for working ention 1s the resourceful sex-- roles expertly--or, phrases it, e! simulta. SAVS eously while she's typing heques, Mrs, mother - about got some a tance }yothers, BETTER THAN CANDY. London reported an overnight| a counter - revolutionary 'holy| low temperature of 27, three de-|alliance', in an attempt to iso- grees below the previous record|late China, Albania, all Marx- set in 1928. It was also 24 de-/ist-Leninist parties, all Marxist-| grees at 'Frenton' where the pre- Leninists and all revolutionary vious record of 31 was set .in|forces.' : : 1954. As a reaction to this, Teng said, China is forming an inter- national front based on "'the great unity of all the rev- olutionary pe Oples of the M she "Abc very- sored day the Says, are government-spon program in the sional status of household workers so that adequate help at home ' ing would be available tion is These would be better Moth- the lat Day than all the candy 'The flowers if the world, care a revolution nrofes aaa! juggle and she based had a life- and ¢ with the what working mother She Mrs. Benjamin has time with of contact prob- moth- f bring- Ben- - vlems o fashion designer land and she's the mother of Tony, time * 5 and Rog rer, 3 ona hese . di she's an expert H ten a book So You Waitt to Be a Working Mother. y Jo Cor water either verhap employ made work, this others Need Help! and to take mother "they're countries set up women are women Day is the daughter of a famous one- as a pl some | world, Teng addressed a crowd of 10,000 gathered in Shanghai to 'honor visiting Albanian Premier Mehmet Shehu, The official) |New China news agency distrib-| uted the text of his speech. to- |days 'The leading Communist party "of the Soviet Union naturally cannot be in- cluded in this united front, since it not-only does not op- pose, but activety serves, U.S imperialism,"' Jeng said. | URGES FIGHT care should be regarded | He urged a "'fight to the fin- iblic utility as much as lish" against the "Soviet leaders) or electricity." pa an said there could be n6} concentrated effort-- compromise with it by the government' or Teng's speech reflected a 'fur- s some ] nationwide ther toughening of the Chinese ment -agency--should be line both at home and abroad. to upgrade domestic jit coincided with new, purges of she says, 'Chinese intelleciuals .and yut those day care centre care of *children white works,' she says the first thing emer Their posi- that they need women in or force U.S. position is that needed 'at home-- honorable about on ancient and ockeyed 'theories want P) | tor profit from it and strengthen} |Soviet - U.S. Teng reiterated China's read- iness for war and described it} as a weapon against imperial- ism, collaboration.' Klanshen Held, Wife Wounded | -ATHENS, Ga. (AP)--Ku Klux| |Klansman Joseph Howard Sims, 13, sought since Thursday: when his estranged wife was shot, is group of the/iM jai! here today on a charge | a of assault with intent to murder. | | The klansman, acquitted two ;years ago of.charges of murder- ing a Washington ge sur- lrendered to Sheriff J. D. Polk late Friday and was returned there. i ri . Sims' wife, a mother of eight, |was shoat while at work in the | maternity ward of Athens Gen- eral Hospital. The bullet struck Jher in the cheek and lodged} |there. She from her husband for two | Weeks, had been separ ated | on Rhodesia petered out: An | dian High Commissioner Lion sanctions committee, helped informed source said Cana- el Chevrier, chairman of the persuade th® African dele- gates to let the matter hang in 'abeyance for the present. | Cuba Launches Yugoslav Attack HAVANA (Reuters) -- Cuba today violently attacked Yugoslavia for the third day in succession, denouncing the Yugoslav government as "accomplices of the imperialists Observers were taken aback at the vehe- mence of the tirade, which came in the third part of an editorial in Granma, official munist party, replying to Y | Cuba, | in Viet Nam', ¥ Polish Pageant Marks Milleniu Generals Swamp Oil Kings--P. Ann Landers--15 City News---]3 Churches--6, 7 Classified --18, Comics--23 Editorial--4 4 19, 20, 21 ... In THE TIMES today... School Board Chairman Quits--P, 5 Obits---22 ae Sports--8;) 9, 10 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15 Weather--2 organ of the Cuban Com- ugoslay press comments on m--P, 13 8 a SONGS AU HU RE

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