Weather Report Not much change in the cool weather of this week. Some cloud is expected. Low tonight 40. High Sunday 52, Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, Soe Por Wesk Morse Colivered THIRTY-TWO PAGES } VOL, 95 -- NO. 99 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1966 nas Neen: A esi stone its ee Peace Essential Canada Tells UN UNITED NATIONS. (CP) -- Canada told the United Nations Friday that "no 'peacekeeping operation should be authorized unless recommendations are made regarding peaceful settle- ment as well." Ambassador Paul Tremblay, Canada's permanent represent- ative to the UN, said there should be no disagreement among UN members about "the importance of associating peacekeeping with peaceful set- tlement."' However, he said, Canada are bound to be occasions when peacekeeping action cannot be delayed pending agreement on procedures for peaceful settle- ment. Peacekeeping operations must be considered as a means to bringing about peaceful seltle- ments, Tremblay said, and not as "'an end in themselves." He suggested that member Directives On Marriages nations consider informing Séc- retary-General U Thant of the types of forces they'can most readily provide for peacekeep- ing operations and of any steps they are taking to prepare for possible participation in such operations, "In so acting governments might wish to bear in mind the needs of the UN for observers as well as fok troops," said the P ithe ~ Security Council recognizes that in practice there |ejther: | take responsibility for financ- i |. | | | | ambassador. aes He said in deciding to estab- lish a peacekeeping operation should | Recommend, explicitly and | implicitly, that. all members ng --Recommend that only some} members of the organization undertake such responsibility. --Or recommend that the op- eration be financed by volun- tary contributions. Prominent In Unity Talks LONDON (AP)--Pope Paul's\is not claimed that the instruc- recent directives on mixed mar-|tion (of the Pope) is more than riages between Roman Catho-|a temporary directive, that it is lics and non-Catholics are only|intended that the question of temporary and w.il| have a) mixed marriages shal! have its} prominent position in future) place in the future inter-church| talks on church unity, the Arch-| dialogue, and that meanwhile! bishop of Canterbury said today.| applications for dispensations| Dr, Arthur Ramsey, the An-|can be submitted to the Vati- glican primate, told a Canter-| can. bury diocesan conference he) «My advice meanwhile to An- felt "few very small conces- lic in tala: sions" had been made to non-|8C@Ns 18 this: Catholic feelings and added that|. "First, they should stick he had made his beliefs known firmly to their consciences when during a recent visit to Pope asked to make promises about Paul. children; and second, if there He said non - Catholics felt|1s a wish to ask for a dispensa- strongly against the Vatican rul-|tion, advice can be had by writ- ing that children of mixe djing to the archbishop's commis- marriages-must be brought up} sion on Roman Catholic rela- in the Catholic Church and re-|tions at Lambeth Palace," sented the implication that mar-| He said Roman Catholics as riages in the Anglican Church| well as Anglicans long "to see were not true marriages |this matter set upon a happier "I can, however, say that it! basis,"' Preparation Underway For U.S. Space Walk CAPE KENNEDY (AP)---~j)yous and space walk mission. Gemini 9 astronauts Thomas P.| Stafford, 35-year-old air force Stafford and Eugene A, Cernan|major, and Cernan, 32-year-old had a four - hour appointment|navy lieutenant - commander, with doctors today to make cer-| also will huddle with Gemini of- tain they are physically and/ficials to discuss all phases of mentally fit for their rendez-| Crisis In NATO To Top Agenda LONDON (Reuters) -- George Thomson, Britain's new minis- ter for European affairs and NATO, leaves Sunday for talks in Washington and 0 tt a wa on the NATO crisis created by France's moves to pull out of the 15 - nation alliance's inte- grated military structure He will spend two days in Washington before flying to Ot- tawa Tuesday for similar con- sultations with External Affairs Minister Paul Martin. Thomson's main Washington talks will be with State Secre tary Dean Rusk and Undersec- retary of State George Ball, now special adviser on NATO policy. The. Washington and Ottawa consultations are in preparation for a key NATO ministerial council session in Brussels next month, Mass Protest 'Apollo as5Sronauts will make in the planned three-day flight. The Gemini 9 doubleheader launching is to start at 11 a.m. EDT Tuesday when an Atlas rocket boosts an Agena satellite into orbit, A Titan II is to propel the astronauts. aloft at 12:39 p.m. to begin pursuit of the Agena. Stafford and Cernan are to catch and link up with theAgena after a four-hour chase, prac- tising many of the manoeuvres returning from the moon, Cernan's health is especially important because he is to make a physically - demanding two-hour, 25 minute space walk during which he is to deter- mine just how well man can operate outside an orbiting ship. For part of the excursion he will zip about with a rocket- powered back pack on a 150 foot tether, The manoeuvres sould set guidelines for future space-tasks such as assembling space stations in orbit, main- taining and repairing satellites and transferring from one craft to another, rca nanenansebinineiaatan | By Students On Data Given Draft Board| CHICAGO (AP)--A knocking, on the door of University of Chicago president George W Beadle's home marked the formal end of a mass student demonstration against the school's policy of supplying in formation to draft boards, But Beadle was not home Fri day night to receive the mes-| sage, so a declaration outlining the students' stand was under his door Earlier most of the 350 dents who had occupied and con trolled the administration build ing since Wednesday fil across the darkened campus They. left behind a' token force of 25 protestors to maintain a 24-hour-a-day sit-in Their declaration said the d cision to withd ¥ most demonstrators marked tl! bs ginning of the second phase o their protest slipped They said they would contact! , each faculty member to outline the student's position, then rally Wednesday to reasse th sition PERMIT ACCESS "We shall pe , to and operation of the building mit free by the administration, as long! as they act in good faith," the Statement said. The statement said a univer sity announcement that the stu- dents would be regarded as par- ticipants in resolving the draft 100,000 SMILES GREET PARADE An estimated 100,000 peopié lined Simcoe street this morning ~ to watch the parade which kicks off the city's centennial project. The stimate came from Ter- ence V. Kelly, financial chair- man of the fund-raising cam- paign, who called the parade "the largest in the city's his- tory" He said the biggest thing he, Mayor Lyman Gifford and E. R. S, McLaughlin noted while riding in a convertible near thé front of the parade, was the smiling faces. . "Enthusiasm is rampant," said Mr. Kelly, "and we sure got a boost from the weather- man, "All we want is 50 cents a week over a year and we'll have the finest recreational complex in Canada for our Centennial Project and know we did a good job for future generations." Mr. Kelly paid tribute to Jim Doswell, parade chairman; and his committee, for the organiza- tional work that went into a parade of this scope. Robert Wilson, parade mar- shall, a bug for promptness in getting parades off on time, was up to his usual form this morn- ing and had it off right on the button at 10 a.m. SHACK POPULAR Although. there were many highlights of the parade, per- haps one celebrity who drew the most awe, admiration and auto- graph hounds was Eddie Shack, professional hockey star with Toronto Maple Leafs. Popular with the younger set was Batman and Robin, a por- trayal of the television series of the same name, complete with a 'Batmobile' car, an experi- mental model loaned to the parade committee by General Motors of Canada Ltd, Mr. Kelly said today's parade was approximately four-fold big- ger than the 1963 parade which kicked off the campaign for funds to build the Oshawa Civie Auditorium, He said the slogan for the 1963 parade was "Let's Build It Our- selves for Ourselves'. This year's parade slogan is 'We Did It Before, We Can Do It Again". Critical Period Ahead Turnout of parade partici- pants was overwhelming, Gaily- decorated convertibles with pretty girls, many of them beauty queens representing var- jous organizations, majorettes swinging batons to the lively marching music of trumpet bands, floats depicting various activities both present and fu- ture at the Civic Auditorium, as well as hundreds of march- ing children made up the bulk of the parade. A strong contingent of Shrin- ers was another highlight, espe- cially tue entry of the Niagara Falls Shriners who brought their 'Maid of the Mist" with tem = a model vf the famous honeymoon ferry that almost took up the complete roadway. The parade took: about one and one-half hours to complete. Crowds lined the parade route right from Alexandra Park to the breaking-off point at the southwest corner of Memorial Park, "It's things like this that make me proud to live in Osh- awa," said Mr, Kelly. Ma UNIAN ' |Conciliation id asa ace ah) 1 China: Mao On Wane Head Chose Earlier, Beadle had said: "The university's policy with ct to student deferment re- mains as it was. We will only provide grades and class stand-|. The fact humans don't live} ing information to selective ser-| forever suggests China is edging| vices at the request of the par-/towards a difficult and perhaps ticular student." critical transitional period in The demonstrators argue that| Volving her Jeadership at home a student who refuses to ask and strategy abroad hat the information be sent to| At 72, Mao Tse-tung still is jeopardizes | the fountain-head of China's po litical structure but he shows evidence of waning physical strength and stamina. Voices of W YORK (AP)--Two hun-/ opposition are heard and stilled, dred students staged a sit-in atjonly to be raised again, ques ty College of New York Fri-|tioning the path the leader has day, contending that the school/chosen for his 650,000,000 peo- ould not co-operate with local! ple onara By HAROLD MORRISON i e service iimself with his draft board There is no evider practice of; bellion. Many mor 4 Class stand-|pass before China's and ades to selectiverleaders feel the pressures o service, |rising consumer appetities, such! % rotested the asin tent ing en as those now spreading in the a greater sense of individual fulfilment. : But there is evidence, in the criticism of Mao, that some of the rigidity in the Chinese 'po- litical System is dissolving. No one at this stage can predict what the end of the Mao dy- nasty may bring. SPLIT PERSONALITY China appears half-fearful of, half-emboldened by events just beyond her tightly borders The big buildup of American heightened Chinese concern that OTTAWA (CP) -- J. CG. A, ) |China, But if the North Vietna-/Cameron of Ottawa, a former Canadian Press Staff Writer Soviet Union for automobiles,|mese can paralyse the power|judge of the Exchequer Court, better housing and clothing and} of the U.S,, how much easier|has been appointed chairman of it would be for the better-pre-ja conciliation board to deal with pared Chinese to suck in, hold|a wage dispute between the rail- and perhaps exhaust all Ameri-!ways and 22,000 non-operating can military. power. |members of the Canadian "Once in China," says Pre. | Brotherhood of Railway, Trans- |port and General Workers mier Chou En-lai, 'the U.S./"o0*. : will not be able to pull out,|(CLC), Labor Minister Nichol- son announced Friday however many men it may send over and whatever weapons jt} About 21,000 are employees of may use, nuclear weapons in-|the CNR, with the other 1,000 cluded. employed by the Ontario North- "Since the 14,000,000 people of |!and Railway, the Northern Al- lsouthern Viet Nam can cope | berta Railway and terminals guarded) with over 200,000 U.S. troops, |jointly operated by the CNR} financing should be borne by the the 650,000,000 people of China and CPR can undoubtedly cope with 10, Last Wednesday. the many U.S. aggressor | | Soviet World R f t BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) --A communique issued Friday night after a visit by Soviet Communist party leader Leronid I, Brezhnev carried stong indications that a major policy dispute has erupted be- tween Romania and the Soviet Union, Left out of the communique was the standard phraseology that both-sides reached '"'com- Possible affirm Romania's independent|munist party leader, The speech course from Moscow and its| strongly reaffirmed Bucharest's split with the Kremlin over the| independence from Kremlin feud between China and the So-| leadership. viet Union, In his speech, Ceausescu said (Moscow radio said Friday| Romania stands for abolition of night the talks were held 'in a}all military blocs, presumably friendly atmosphere."') meaning the Warsaw Pact--the Brezhney came to Bucharest /| military treaty among Commu- last Tu@sday on an unan-jnist nations in Europe--as well nounced trip, He had been/as the West's North Atlantic scheduled to visit next. month|Treaty Organization, plete identity of views" in the talks between Brezhnev and Ro- manian leaders. ja speech last Saturda The document seemed to re- but there was speculation he pushed up the date because of OPPOSED KREMLIN by Nico-| Informed sources said recen- lae Ceausescu, Romgnian Com-| tly that Romania opposed Soviet Government Action Scored JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- A leading educationist added his voice today to protests against the South African government's restrictions on a student leader who was instrumental in organ- izing Senator Robert F. Kenne- dy's visit to South Africa next month, "The government is trying ... to make Senator Kennedy's visit impossible--it is doing this by victimizing an individual and that is scandalous," said Dr, Ernst Malherbe, who recently retired as principal and vice- chancellor of Natal University, He was commenting on the government's restriction order on Ian Robertson, 21, president of the multiracial National Un- ion of South African Students (NUSAS) which is sponsoring Kennedy's visit. The order prohibits Robertson from taking part in NUSAS ac- tivities, restricts him to. the plans for a permanent advisory group on military planning and refused to take, part in a Ware saw Pact conference to work out plans for joint action in sup» porting North Viet Nam. In a dispatch from Washinge ton, the New York Times sa analysts are poring over Ceausescu speech for extensions Capetown municipal area and|of Bucharest's formal declara. prevents him from teaching. He|tion of independence two years taught part-time while working) 40, for a law degree, He will be| The document has alerted of permitted to continue his|ficials to the possibility that Ra studies. mania may be getting ready te The restriction order was ie =o hd og Pact, the 1 sued by Justice Minister Baltha-|¥°> ° lzar Vorster under the Suppres-| Ceausescu said military blocs sion of Communism Act, There|f both East and West are in is no appeal, pond ged big anscat| sover- About 1,500 students protested nar feeling a ye it Ae. i 4 the government's action at 8) France of President de Gaulle. rally in Johannesburg Friday. The Times says Washington The liberally-inclined Progres-| anaivets suspected that the Ware sive Party is planning to hold a saw Pact military alliance be mass mares - Johannesburg's tween eastern European nations city halt Tuesday, was at the centre of the Mose Senator Kennedy (Dem.|cow - Bucharest quarerel. The N.Y.), @ leading supporter of|U.S.S.R. has recently been call- the U.S. civil rights movement, |ing for strengthening the pact, has accepted an invitation from| presumably meaning new forms the student union to speak next/of consultation that would give month. on the annual day of af-|Moscow a greater voice in the firmation of academic and hu-| policies of its allies. ; man freedoms, Ceausescu also said the abo- Have Clarification Delay In CIA - Canadian Suit BALTIMORE (CP) -- Action was delayed Friday until Au- gust in a naturalized Canadian's $110,000 slander suit against a fellow Estonian emigrant offi- cially labelled a member of the U.S, international spy appar- atus. The delay was ordered by Judge Roszel Thomsen to ob- USSR-Egypt Talks Go On ALEXANDRIA (Reuters) -- Russian Premier Alexei Kosy- gin and President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Re- public today continued confiden- tial talks on world problems in the president's heavily guarded vacation villat Marmoura, about 10 miles from here. Only scanty details were be- ing released on the Soviet lead- er's activities. Soviet sources de- scribed the day as "'one of talks and rest' with the possibility of a swim for Kosygin in the Me- diterranean, Kosygin, on an eight-day tour of Egypt, is making his first of- ficial journey to a non-Commu- nist country since he took office more than 18 months ago. Although Kosygin is not a head of state, President Nasser has been personally conducting him around the country. Hees Suggests Changes In NHA LINDSAY, Ont. (CP) -- For- mer trade minister George Hees suggested Friday that the National Housing Act be to direct unds to towns and rural areas. He also proposed that the fed- eral government's housing agency, Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, be allowed to make mortgage loans for ree mortgage speculative building and f0F) pmo home construction on land not 4 ... In THE TIMES today... City Clubs Will Have New Home--P, 13 Motor City Car Club Show Opens--P, 9 served by sewer systems, Mr. Hees, Progressive Con- servative MP for Northumber-| land, said in an address to the Ontario Municipal Association that the federal government should consider requiring insu- rance companies to invest mort- gage funds in towns and rural areas "as a duty." Mr, Hees said that high-cost apartment developer and low- ' CBRT cost, long-term financing by the| forces in South Viet Nam has|000,000'of them. No matter how called a strike vote in protest potential home owner. The re-! Editorial---4 H itorial--- troops against Labor Minister Nichol-| verse now was the case because lition of military blocs and for> eign bases--presumab! ing the presence of in East Germany, id, ai Hungary---has become an "at- dent" wish of more and more people in an increasing number of countries, 'Juri Raus, 39, described by Farm Leader the U.S, Central Intelligence s Agency as its employee, is al- Resigns Post leged to have slandered Eerik Heine, 46, of Rexdale, Ont., in the United States by calling him Littlejohn of Highgate, second 0 Soviet supe {ce-president of the Ontario In federal district court here|¥ice-pre i Federation of Agriculture, has Friday, Judge Thomsen said a main question is the legal situ- resigned over what he terms ation of spy work the gear failure to pro ? . vide leadership. _ 'What can the FBI or the CIA! qh his letter of resignation, he ao in tne United States, Can*leaiqd the OFA nas not been ada, Hungary or Estonia?" the meeting the needs of the "vi- judge asked, able farmer." Lawyers for Heine pin their} "I felt the organization was case on the assumption that) trapped into serving the farmer Raus' position with the CIA/who will not be in agriculture does not entitle him to the U.S./in a few years," he said in an government's claim of privilege| interview. through executing instructions} 'In whatever crisis arose, re- given to him, gardless of whether it pas good 'We think if we can get the|in the long run or not, they facts, this man (Raus) is just}provided temporary assistance a volunteer," Heine's counsel| which just prolongs the agony." contended, Mr, Littlejohn said a number They argued that legal protec-|of farmers must realize they tion through privilege, which|should retrain for jobs outside U.S. Supreme Court decisions|agriculture. There are opportue have granted federal employees| nities everywhere in Ontario he in the past, would not then ap-|added, but not for the number ply to Raus, of farmers now on the land, \ NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Government Commutes Death Penalty OTTAWA (CP) -- The Pearson government announced its 2st consecutive commutation of a death sentence Fri- day, sparing the life of Lloyd Lyding, 26, of Edmonton, Lyding had been sentenced to be hanged next Wednesday for the capital murder of his estranged wife. Kashmir Ceasefire Reported Broken RAWALPINDI (Reuters) -- Pakistan claimed today that Indian troops opened fire across the Kashmir ceasefire line last Thursday, killing one civilian and wounding another, tain clarification of the issues in the case, LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Purvis technicians and engineers went mediator was turned down by synnqmitnttitn nanny Ann Landers--14 |. City News--13 |-- Churches--6, 7 | Classified--20, 21, 22, 23 the U.S, may be interested injmay come, they will certainly|son's delay in appointing a con-/0f inadequacies in the National! finding excuses for invading'be annihilated in China." jciliation board chairman, |Housing Act, Gury Obits--23 Sports--8, 9, 10 Theatre--6 Whitby News--5 Comics--18 Women's--14, 15 Weather--2 Finnish Workers Reject Mediation HELSINKI (AP) -- Finnish telephone and telegraph on strike today after a last- minute compromise proposal by-a government - appointed both sides, TLE TUTE