Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax neighboring Pickering and centres in Ont- crio and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 115 ? SLE age ee Na, 7 he Oshawa Cimes 1c Single SOc Per Week a OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1966 Assthorized os Mall Second Closs PEE Spe tata Weather Report Showers expected tonight and tomorrow. A little cooler for the weekend. Low tonight, 65; high Saturday, 68, Office od ln son at Vee ae TWENTY-TWO PAGES The stage is set for one of the hottest running ever of the Player's 200 race at Mosport, Saturday is the day and a crowd of 60,000 is expected to watch the feature race, The above shot STREAKING ACROSS THE LINE was taken yesterday during time trials for the feature race, Getting the chequered flag after his qualifying lap is Toronto driver Eppie Wietzes who is driving a Ford GT 40 entered by the Toronto Comstock team. A field of over 30 cars will compete in the feature 200 race, Among them will be such internationally known drivers as Bruce McLaren, Chris Amon, Jerry Grant Buddhists Die By Fire In Truce Opposition By ANDREW SS ROWIEC SAIGON (AP) -- A Buddhist] gotiated by Buddhist moderates nun burned herself to death to-| with Premier tremist Buddhists to a truce tes| Nguyen Cao day in the courtyard of a small|Ky's military regime. pagoda in Da Nang. She was) Another development that) the sixth Buddhist to take her|imperiled that agreement was life by fire since Sunday in ajthe resignation today of the wave of anti-government fana-| moderate head of the Buddhist ticism that continues despite ap-| Institute, Thich (Venerable)| peals by Buddhist leaders to)Tam Chau, the chief Buddhist) disorders in Hue, the Buddhist negotiator with the government:! stronghold 400. miles northeast stop such self-sacrifice Monks said the nun, Thichnu} Dieu Dinh, 26, left behind a let-| ter for President Johnson charg- ing that 'Vietnamese Buddhists were annihilated by your poli- cies in Viet Nam." The suicide indicated the strong opposition among. ex- Guelph Woman | Has Siamese Twins TORONTO (CP)--Doctors to day made extensive tests to see whether Siamese twins, born Thursday night, could be sepa- rated surgicaliy. The twins, both girls, were born to Mrs. Leonard McGhee, 25, in Guelph and were brought) to the Hospital for Sick Children} here by ambulance under police escort, They were in critical condi- tion early today. Dr. John Sommerville of Guelph, an obstetrician, deliv- ered the babies. They were the eighth Siamese twins born in Canada in 15 years, The first ones recorded by the Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics were born near Edmon- ton in 1949. All have died soon after birth They have lived for periods ranging from a few hours to six months. In three cases, surgical teams tried unsuccessfully to separate! them. Tam Chau said in his letter of resignation: "T have tried to solve the present situation but I have failed," A speciat council will be called to decide whether to ac- cept the resignation, but Budd- hist sources said this might take two or three days. The Buddhist Institute {s the secular arm of the church SAIGON I8 CALM Tam Chau's. announcement came as the Buddhists observed the 2,510th birthday of the founder of their faith, Buddha Calm. settled over Saigon after the Buddhist Institute urged its followers to commemorate the anniversary at home with pray ers for the dead in the weeks of Buddhist agitation for civil jan rule, Troops hauled down Minimum Wage Asked For CNIB TORONTO (CP)--The Toronto and District Labor Council Thursday night called on the government to apply the $1-an- hour minimum provincial wage to blind workers in the sheltered workshops of the Canadian Na- tional Institute for the Blind, The action followed the return to work Wednesday by blind employees of the CNR after a six-day strike for higher wages ITALIAN POLICE BREAK UP 'MAIL ORDER' PALERMO (Reuters)---Po- lice here claimed today to have broken up a gang known as '"Kidnappers. Anonymous" which abducted teen - age girls on commission as brides for hot-blooded Sicilians Under arrest were three men charged with criminal association and acts of vio- lence According to police the gang was hired by bachelors from surrounding villages to aging 200,000 lire (about $322). Under Sicily's traditional _ code of honor, a family whose \daughter has been abducted ynd seduced can only avoid BRIDE GANG disgrace by allowing. her to marry the: seducer, Police believe numerous kidnapping by the gang were never reported to them be- cause they ended In wedding ceremonies But one kidnapping went wrong. On May 28 three masked and armed men burst, into the cottage of a peasant, Salvatore Albano, 51, looking for his 16-year-old adopted daughter Maria, to take her to a jilted lover Present with the family was her new fiance, 23-year old 'Tomasso Fedele, a judo expert, who with the help of her father put them to flight. roadblocks outsid> the Institute compound, The Buddhist struggle move- ment remains strong in Da Nang, 380 miles northeast of Saigon, although Ky's troops crushed the Buddhist-led upris-| ing there last month, There was no word of any of Saigon which Ky's soldiers took control of Thursday with out bloodshed, Meanwhile, waves of Ameri can. warplanes pounded North Viet Nam Thursday for the fourth straight day of heavy raids, The navy and air force at- tack planes hit once again at anti-aircraft sites---a main tar- get all week--and also at oil de pots, storage areas and river traffic Multi-Lane Tunnel 'Replaces Skyway ST, CATHARINES (CP) -- Highways Minister C. §, Mac- Naughton said Thursday a 12- lane traffic tunnel will he needed under the proposed new section of the Welland Canal to accommodate traffic on the Queen Elizabeth Way, Highway 8 and Glendale Avenue. Mr, MacNaughton was in St Catharines and nearby Thorold to discuss highway problems with municipal representatives, He made the statements in an interview, French Anti-Nato Manoeuvres May Cause Brussels Conflict By HAROLD MORRISON LONDON (CP) -- Revenge - seekers and peace-makers will be fighting it out at Brussels Monday, when foreign ministers attempt to repair the French torpedoed North Atlantic Alli ance. Diplomats predict _ mili jtary surgery may be only par tially successful On one side are Britain and the United States, which pri vately feel they ought to take a sock at France and Pre dent Charles de Gaulle for fir ing the shot which threatens the! alliance On the other are allies such as Canada, Belgium and Den mark which figure it is time to push hard for Kast West dis armament. and disengagement and on de Gaulle By virtually ordering lies out of France by next April jand pulling fo easy the. al ne at ee Gaulle 4 and Jackie Stewart. During yesterday's qualifying ses- sion Bruce MacLaren clip- ped three tents of a second off the official lap record Oshawa Times photo By Bruce Jones Templeton Scores 'Gashouse Gang' TORONTO (CP) -- Charles Templeton of Toronto, vice-pres- ident of the Ontario Liberal As- sociation, said Thursday that some Conservative members have been known to "stagger Into the legislature drunk and fall asleeh in their chairs," Speaking on his daily program over CFRB, Mr. Tem- pleton said that a small but vo- cal group of Conservative mem- bers --. dubbed the Gashouse Gang by other MPPs --- contin- ually stagger in after an eve- ning meal 'most of which ap pears to be liquid." He said the group "doesn't know what is going on and isn't going anywhere," He criticized Lloyd Letherby PC--Simcoe East) for heckling Stephen Lewis (NDP Scar- borough West) as the' NDP member tried to speak during a legislature debate about a 10 year-old-boy being assigned to an all-adult ward in a Hamilton mental hospital Mr, Letherby said the charge was a lie and it was a disgrace that Mr, Templeton would make such an accusation He said the Gashouse Gang Was & young, Dias group that sits on the opposition side of the house hecause of the overflow of Tory seats. He had never seen any of them come into the house drunk Allan Lawrence (PC -- St George) said 'some type of charge should be laid,"' He said that in Britain anyone abusing MPs could be called to the bar of the House of Commons to an- swer, The program, Dialogue, is a daily CFRB feature with Mr Templeton and broadcast per- sonality Pierre Berton, of NATO command by mid-1967, de Gaulle has upset the balance! of the carefully-nurtured mili tary pact But the majority of the 15- country organization is expected by experts to urge caution dur ing the three-day talks, Biggest immediate task is to find a new home for the Su preme Headquarters: of the Al-| ied Powers in Europe--SHAPE) and while a decision on this move is likely, there seems to be great doubt whether the min isters will able to agree) where and when to move the NATO council out of Paris The council is the organiza tion's political arm and appears ready to allow it te remain providing the mili be ary machinery is sent else Some countries the such as organization where Canada, feel own troops out) ought to go along with de Gaulle| Nam, radio} PASADENA, Calif, (AP)-- iSurveyor I radioed its second long stream of pictures from \the moon early today--photos of litself and lunar terrain, They contained no surprises Some of the second were out of focus, b | taken to speed the camera on ja fullgircle sweep of the land- series Longshoremen | Surveyor Detailed Shots ing site -- the Sea of Storms, near the moon's equator, | Others of the series were re-| Sends The 620-pound spacecraft set- tled gently on its three shock-| absorbing legs early Wednes-| Third Time Lucky For Gemini 9 Shot Astronauts Attempt U.S. Second Space Victory By HOWARD BENEDICT CAPE KENNEDY, Fla, (AP) The Gemini 9 astronauts--shat- tering a 17-day jinx -- rode a mighty Titan II rocket into or- bit today and sped at 17,500 miles an hour toward a rendez- vous with a target satellite, After two heartbreaking markably detailed, some show-|day after a successful 63-hour|Scrubs, astronauts Thomas P, ing eighth after Scientists, | of the inch, results of an studying turn the 'interesting areas. | Reject Talks MONTREAL (CP) -- The In- ternational Longshoremen's As- sociation (CLC) said Thursday {t cannot negotiate further with the Shipping Federation of Can- ada and has scheduled a new lround of talks today with rep- |resentatives of 11 stevedoring companies The ILA, which represents 4,200 striking longshoremen in |Montreal, Trois - Rivieres and | Quebec City, withdrew from ne- gotiations with the shipping fed- eration Thursday. In a telegram to Prime Min- ister Pearson, ILA representa- tives said they 'have been | placed in the position of deal- ling with the Shipping Federa- \tion of Canada, the members of} which are not our employers jbut are in fact foreign steam- ship companies for the most) part located in Great Britain, 'It is obvious that the. Brite ish seamen's dispute is respon-) sible for the adatwant™and ca- pricious attitude of the Shipping Federation of Canada," the ILA telegram said, The ILA met briefly Thurs- day night with two men who represented the 11 Quebec steve- 'Unite Soon' Church Told QTTAWA (CP) -- The United Church must wholeheartedly take its first formal step this fall toward union with the An- glican Church of Canada, the |moderator of the United Church said Thursday, Rt, Rev, E, Marshall Howse said the church's general coun- cil at Waterloo, Ont., in Septem ber should give overwhelming acceptance to Principles of Un- ion drawn by a joint committee Or tne two commune, The principles are in no way legally binding, Unnecessary de bate by the council might cause hard feelings later, he told the Ottawa-Montreal conference of the United Church, Approval in this spirit would match that given by the Angli }can general synod at Vancouver last fall Dr, Howse said failure to reg- ister unanimous approval would put the United Church in a 'negative position' during further negotiations toward un- fon. and leave the council alone,| feeling this body at least would! ensure continuation of a NATO! link pith the French govern- ment Britain and the U.S, are re ported to feel that the council should be moved as quickly as possible Qualified authorities say the upshot of the Brussels talks may be a compromise agree ment that the council be moved! some time but no date fixed There. is a strong view that SHAPE, probably squeezed into} a smaller size and with reduced} power, should be located on Bel gian territory and that some de| where nearby should be the var-| nent European peace, ious advisory bodies With the Communist threat in| gling over the cost of moving Europe continuing to recede and} United States attention pushed more in the direction of Viet the whole question i manding of}may go on for years, doring companies affected by the 26-day-old strike, Neither side had any comment after the meeting. They said the talks will re-open today, GETS INJUNCTION | The National Harbors Board obtained an interim injunction Thursday prohibiting the long- shoremen from threatening its employees, invading harbor property, blocking free access} to the harbor or picketing on) streets leading to the port area The injunetion, which will be reviewed at a hearing June 6, also limits the numebr of pick- ets at entrances to the harbor.| Lawyers for the National) Harbors Board cited reports of violence in the port area Tues- day in making their request for the injunction in Superior Court. They said a Brazilian navy cadet. was in hospital with a fractured skull as a result of the violence and another cadet was assaulted, In Ottawa, Transport Minister Pickersgill told the Commons Thursday that interference by a picket line at Quebee City forced the Russian liner Alex- andr Pushkin to sail down-| stream Wednesday night with- out a pilot, | The ILA met briefly with a| federal mediator, Judge Ren e| Lippe, Thursday night to con-| sider another proposal dealing) with the reduction of work) gangs. A spokesman said this| was the major stumbling block) to the conclusion of successful) contract negotiations, PROPOSES COMMISSION | Judge Lippe's proposal calls) for the establishment of a com- mission to investigate the make- up of work gangs and other re- lated matters, The recommendations of the commission would be imple- mented sometime after Jan, 1, lyo/, 1 Under the wan, ILA members would be also assured of alter- nate employment or employ- ment compensation during the 1967 shipping 'season, Neither the longshoremen nor Jutige Lippe had any comment on the proposals after the meet- ing. 'We will meet with the steve- doring companies tomorrow and consider all the facts together before making a statement,"' an ILA spokesman said Thursday night, NATO military goals is under- going radical revision, Even the U.S, is starting to trim its forces amid reports that sharper cuts may take place in a year or two Britain also is looking eagerly at the possibility of trimming its own forces on the Rhine, amid rising pressure from Brit- ish Labor backbenchers de- fresh initiatives on East-West disarmament British diplomats main- tain that while the disengage- ment oal is g00d = one, strength must be restored be- fore NATO can be used as a springboard for a more perma- There also will be the hag- the vast military from France tors apparatus Some commenta | straight like objects on the apparently | ($14,000,000) mens Association (CLC) that the which has tied up three Quebec ;Commons a telegram from the association companies in the federation are British strike in Canada cannot be set- jtled until the British seamen's maintain the negotiations| strike ends unless the bargain jing agent is changed, j miles, | The feat was hailed as a sig- by 1970, | It also brought from Presi- dent Johnson, along with praise, a renewed call for preserving the reaches of space for peace- ful, scientific activities, Like Wednesday's series of 144 pictures, those from Sur-| veyor today showed the un-| damaged spacecraft, the ter-| horizon, One shot of the horizon 144) miles away showed small cra-| ters in the distance, Another, aimed almost down at the ground, five feet away, depicted gravel- hard - packed surface, Some} were one-eighth to one-half inch in diameter, Seamen For Clamp-Down LONDON (CP)--Pressure for | an even tighter clamp-down on Britain's trade appears to be growing among striking' sea- men, The national executive of the 65,000-member seamen's union will meet Monday for the first time since the strike began 19 days ago, It will be faced with appeals from strike committees in Lon- don, Liverpool and the north- east for stronger measures to break the deadlock, It will also face a thinly- veiled appeal for a return to/| work made by Lord Pearson| when the judicial inquiry into the strike he is heading began formal sessions Thursday, | He said; "If the strike could) be called off and the men_went! back to work, our discussions} and deliberations could take place in a calmer atmosphere, | which would be a great advan:| , tage," | His remarks that the strike is| causing "great damage to the national interest" were under-| lined Thursday by the news that Britain's gold and dollar re- serves dropped £38,000,000) during May to £1,219,000,000 ($3,657,000,000). It was. the largest. monthly fall| since last July, Even that did | not show the full extent of the pressure the strike has brought on the country's gold reserves, since it was estimated that, without the strike, there would have becn a gain during the month, The loss was attributed to sales of sterling by foreign in- vestors worried by the strike news. i Union officials have men-| tioned two possible moves: --Further "blacking" of for- eign-manned ships docking in Britain to deny them dockside labor, Two tankers under Pan-| amanian registry have al-| ready been "blacked:" Appeal to dockside unions in| other countries to '"black"| British ships which have not} returned to home ports and/ been tied up by the strike, | 'No' To ILA From Minister OTTAWA (CP)--Labor Minis-| 3. ter Nicholson said today he has! no power to meet a. request by the International Longshore-| Canadian Shipping Federation be displaced as bargaining agent for employers in the strike ports, Mr. Nicholson read to the which says most - owned and that the items as small as one-|voyage of more than 250,000| Stafford and Eugene A, Cernan finally got going on a vital, three-day flight that could bring urriedly full-circle sweep, plan later to| nificant advance in the race to|the U.S, its second space tri- camera back to snap land men on the lunar surface|UMph of a busy week, "For the third time, gol' Stafford said as he sat in the spacecraft poised for the launch, Just 31 hours after the Sur- veyor I moonship landed softly on the lunar surface and sent back dramatic pictures of pos- sible manned landing sites, the Titan propelled Gemini 9 aloft lrain around it and the distant|on a vital, three-day rendezvous and space-walk mission, The big Titan, with the rays of a bright sun glistening on its sides, rose slowly from its launch pad and sped out over the Atlantic Ocean, followed by a big white tail of vapor, "We're right down the mid- dle," flight director Eugene Kranz shouted, 'Good! Excel- lent!" "Everything," he told Staf- ford, "is green and go," 'We're on our way!" Stafford relied exultantly, "It's fantas- tie," To make today's launnh pos- sible, Stafford faced and over- came the same communica- tions problem that forced Wed- nesday's shutdown 100 seconds before firing, A radio guidance command that would have given the spacecraft precise steering di- rections failed to get through to its computer, This time, the de- cision was made to go ahead. Shortly after the Gemini sep- arated from its booster rocket, Stafford fired his jet thrusters to make necessary corrections in the orbit and plane of the spaceship and put it on the de- sired path of pursuit, GEMINI 9, with astronauts Eugene Cernan and Thomas Stafford aboard, is boosted off pad atop Titan II rocket from Cape Kennedy oy Gemini 9 is to rendezvous space with a target vehicle launched' Tuesday. (AP Wirephoto) ford had needed three tries bee WILL MANOEUVRE Before returning to earth, the astronauts were to perform many of the manoeuvres Apollo space men will make on round- trip journeys to the moon, A year and a day after Ed- ward H. White II became the first American to walk in space, Cernan was to climb out of the space ship Saturday and for 24 hours hurtle through the skies s a human satellite, A barrel-shaped target satel- lite--fired into orbit Wednesday before a communications failure forced the second scrub of the Gemini launch--flashed across a cape as the Titan roared to ife, It was the second time Staf- fore going into orbit, His Geme int 6 flight last year was poste poned twice before finally get. ting away. The 11-foot-long tanget satel- lite, a tiny dot in the vastness of space, was entering its 30th Fevoiuiion of the earth as Stafe ford and Cernan began their hot pursuit, They planned to close in on the quarry after a four-hour chase covering 75,000 miles, Not until they were within eyesight of the satellite would the astronauts know whether @ shroud protecting it from the heat and pressures of blastoff fell away when the target sep. arated from its Atlas booster, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Hydrogen Bomb Loss Cost $6 Million WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Navy will bill the U.S, Air Force about $6,000,0 00 to cover its costs of re- covering the air force's hydrogen bomb from deep waters off Spain, the defence department indicated today, Air Canada Employees To Take Vote TORONTO (CP) -- A strike vote will be conducted next week among the 1,500 members of the Canadian Airline Employees' Association working at Air Canada, Robert Dye, president of the independent union, said today. Sewer, Water Cutoff Bill Introduced TORONTO (CP) -- A bill was presented in the legis- lature today that prill permit municipalities to shut off the water supply of persons or sewage service rates, who default on sewer rates STL ... In THE TIMES today... Who, Whet Is Big Louis?----P, 1 Councillors Back Down On Project----P, § Ann Landers--12 Theatre--14 Women's-----12, 13 City News--11 Obits---26 Editorial---4 Weather---2 Whitby------5 Classified---18, 19, 20, 21 Financial--17 Comics---16 Sports---6, 7, 8 onsen neem riety terest UU Ua ial