PM CALI 'Go 5 ian ae = VY OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson telephoned Van- couver Friday night to ask a postal clerk fired because of al- leged espionage activities whether he is happy with the way things have gone. George Victor Spencer said he isn't. - A sharthand renorter took notes at Mr. Pearson's resi- dence in what apparently was between a Canadian prime min- ister and an alleged spy. The exchange lasted 24% minutes. ter announced that a judicial in- quiry will be held into Spencer's complaint that he does not feel he was given a fair deal. The terms of reference will be the same as those given ear- lier in the Commons by Mr. Pearson--a study of whether or not,.any of Spencer's pension and insuraneo benefits were taken away without cause. There would be no delving into the es- pionage aspects of the case. The telephone call to Spen- cer, 57, the cancer-ridden sub- ject of RCMP surveillance and political controversy, was the strange upshot of a day of si- zziing debate in the Commons. In the telephone conversation Mr. Pearson quoted a telegram read into the Commons records by David Lewis (NDP--York South) telling of an interview of the NDP member with Spencer and caving that Snencer wanted a review of his case. AFFIRMED TELEGRAM Mr. Pearson then said: "All I. want to do, Mr. Spen- cer, is to confirm that you signed this telegram and that you request the inquiry referred to in it." "Yes," Spencer replied. The dialogue will continue in the Commons Monday because a motion by Mr. Lewis was still before the House when it ad- journed, The motion would trim $17.01 from administrative ov. penses Of tle Justice depart- ment. Mr. Lewis made it clear this amount was selected as a' spe- cific censure of Justice Minister Cardin--cutting the pay and al- lowances that he gets as a min- ister to leave him with the nor- mal $18,000-a-year stipend of an ordinary MP. He moved his motion after re- peated statements by govern- ment ministers that no inquiry into Spencer's case would be held. One of the strongest gavern. ment argumenis in tie face. or repeated opposition demands for an inquiry was that Spen- cer hadn't asked for one. But Mr. Pearson also said he believed the government made $ ALLEGED SPY--FINDS HE'S UN a mistake last May in the way it announced the expulsion of two Russian embassy function- aries from Canada and the way Spencer had figured in attempts to set up an espionage ring. FIRST INDICATION Mr. Pearson added that "until tadav" the civil service never ad aly iidication irom Speii- cer that he was dissatisfied. Mr. Lewis asked permission of the House to withdraw his motion but unanimous approval was needed and discussion was PPY -- CALLS INQUIRY still going when Friday's sitting adjourned. The Lewis and Pearson speeches were the eye of @ hur- ricane that left Hansard littered with stark accusations, with- drawals, appeals and refusals. During the debate: --Opposition Leader Diefen- haber caid the Concaunetinns would "be fiappy io approve the 1965-66 justice estimates as long as Mr. Cardin didn't get a dollar of them. --Mr. Cardin apologied after telling Mr. Diefenbaker a = a= = to "shut up" when the Con- servative leader interrupted him to demand a royal com- mission into organi ed crime."' --Davie Fulton (PC_ --Kam- loops) accused Mr, Cardin of "bordering on black mail" with Mr. Cardin's threat to Taise the Monscigner ur Mune singer case--ihe name wasn't clear--in the Commons. Mr. Cardin said Mr. Dief- enbaker was using the Spene cer case as an excuse to "exe ecute"' him. oa Afterward, the prime minis- Weather Report Sunday Cloudy, Cold. Light Snow. Low Tonight 25. High Tomorrow, 32, Home Newspéper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman ville, Ajox, Pickering and neighboring centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. She Oshawa Cines Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, THIRTY PAGES 10¢ Single Copy 50c Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1966 All 124 Aboard Die In Air Crash OnFuji Gauntlet Of Forest Blaze Run By Rescue Teams GOTEMBA, Japan (CP) -- A British Overseas Airways Corp. jetliner crashed in flames to- day in the tangled forest at the foot of Mount Fuji, Japan's \sacred mountain, killing all 124 persons aboard. VOL. 95 -- NO. 40 1) NTR vragen tedgeretgtee nr nnn Winnipeg Swamped By Violent Blizzard | WINNIPEG (CP) -- A mam- &imoth cleanup operation was launched in Greater Winnipeg CANADIAN LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia (CP)--Poland's hockey team is the most improved team in Europe, Rev. David Bauer said today after Canada posted a 6-0 win over the Poles in the world amateur championship here. It was the second easy vic- tory in two starts for the Cana- dians, who beat the United States 7-2 Thursday, but the gen- eral attitude in the dressing room after the game was that the team still is not clicking on all cylinders. Playing coach Jackie McLeod of Winnipeg said, '"'We missed a lot of chances around the net." parermeernray sessing Family Reunion In Tokyo (Guelph Staff All But Ends In Tragedy 6-0 Win In Yugoslavia Today BETTER POLES BLANKED Father Bauer, an adviser to the team, said he agreed with that statement. "We should have had a bigger win, because we were around the Polish net a great deal of the time." The priest said the.Poles ex- hibited a tough brand of hockey, tougher than the Russians and most other European teams. 'This was a rugged game. They were hitting us hard and we took some time to settle down." In fact, the Poles had the bet- ter of the play for the first 10 minutes of the game The Poles lost an 8-1 decision to Russia Thursday. TACKLES POLISH DEFENCE Polish coach Zdzislavy Maselko commented after today's game that his team lacks the "'techni- cal skills' 9f hockey. He rated the Russians a better team than the Canadians. Polish goalkeeper Walvery Kosyl may'not see action again in the tournament. He injured his hand in a goalmouth scram- ble at the end of the first pe- riod and had to be replaced by Tomasz Wisniewski. The two. Polish goalies hand- led a total of 44 shots, to 19 against Canadian goalie Ken Broderick of Toronto. [Termed 'Lax' 3 E £ = E today in the wake of one of the most violent blizzards in mem- ory. The storm, which struck southern Manitoba and North- western Ontario early Friday, was expected to abate by late today. At dawn, all available snow clearing equipment had started work on major thoroughfares, About 400 buses were in ser- |vice: early Friday but within jhours 135 were reported stranded in huge snow drifts. At 11 a.m. the Metropolitan Winnipeg Transit Commission had imposed a curfew as the | streets became impassable. | By noon Friday Winnipeg 'looked like an Arctic ghost | town. |19-FOOT SNOWDRIFTS Winds swirled through the de- serted streets at 70 miles an hour whipping up snowdrifts as high as 19 feet in some places. Most businesses told employ- ees to stay at home and all schools were closed. Only a handful of corner grocery stores, cafes and drug stores re- *!mained open, ; An emergency committee, | made up of municipal and pro- vincial government officials, was set up to cope with the ef- fects of the storm. The Winnipeg Children's Hos- | pital ran out of oxygen but an jemergency line had been jhooked up with the: Winnipeg KITCHENER (CP) -- A coro-| General Hospital as a tempor- Eighty - five Americans and one Canadian were among the victims. The Canadian was identified as Theodore Vasevich, a 53- year-old engineer from Toronto. The crash came only 18 hours after a Canadian PacificAirlines DC-8 jetliner was wrecked land- ing at Tokyo International Air- port with the loss of 64 lives. It was the third major air disaster in the Tokyo area in @-month. The Associated Press quoted reliable military sources, as saying they understood a Jap- anese military plane had coi- lided with the BOAC Boeing 707 jet. Japanese defence forces said CANADIAN (B, BRIHISH CRASH ay they had no report of a colli- sion. RECOVER ALL BODIES Other Japanese officials dis- about 70 miles south of Tokyo. Rescue workers who reached blaze--started by the plane asjo said they had recovered the gers and the crew of 11, Poland Lags missed this idea after discover- . ing that no other planes were I P B d reported missing in the area, nh eace 1 NEW DELHI (AP)--India is the scene of the crash after run-junderstood to have told Canada ning the gauntlet of a forest/that Poland, the third member f the International Control it tore through the trees, burn-|Commission for Viet Nam, is ing and disintegrating--reported|not "ready" to join them in a there were no survivors. They|peace effort. A high ranking source said bodies of all the 113 passen-|Friday Indian Foreign Minister Swaran Singh met Thursday anese. Nine of the crew membersjwith Canadian High Commis- were British and the others Jap-|sioner Roland Michener to ex- press the Indian view. BUFFALO COAT ON BEAT The jetliner, on an around- India was reported to feel the TOKYO (AP)--A Hong KongjU.S. Army hospital in Zama, 20;the Canadian Pacific flight to ner's jury Friday termed the ary measure. reunion with her husband, a/miles west of Tokyo, after she;Tokyo, planning to change here| medical staff of Guelph refor-| Lack of fresh milk and bread] U.S. Ist Cavalry Division cap-/had talked with her husband's|to another airline for the flight)/ matory 'extremely lax" in cir-|caused most of the concern for] cisco, crashed 12 minutes after|solution only if the three mem- tain in Viet Nam, almost ended| parents . by. long-distance...tele-/to the.United, States, cumsteness geth ¢;hrospital officials' wlttiougir at) : taking" off trom 'Tokyo's 'airport|ber countries agreed on such a in tragedy Friday night for Mrs.| phone to Fort Lauderdale. "I was sitting alone on the| death of a prisoner Dec. 5, four|ieast one company had called] Published on.schedule but deliv-)partment store. All hotels and/for Hong Kong and London. move. And the feeling also was Mary Hueber-of Fort Lauder-) "I'm also trying to get a call) right side of the plane just be-| 24¥s after an operation in Kitch-|in a number of employees to|¢ry trucks were unable to dis-| motels were booked to capacity.| Eyewitness accounts. of the|that Poland would be under dale, Fla., "but I suppose I was| through to my husband in Sai-| hind the wing," she said, "Sud-|€N¢r-Waterloo Hospital. provide fresh supplies. | tribute the editions and news-| For the first time in its 61-|crash varied. Some said the|pressure from the Soviet Union just plain lucky," said the 27-/on," she said, "but apparently|denly it was dark. Then there|.1he jury ruled that Anatol] Two elderly men died during] boys sere told to stay at home.|year history, the Winnipeg|plane exploded in mid-air. Oth-|which would prevent any Polish year-old woman, one of eighi|there is some trouble locating! wore flames all around. Chomenko, of South Porcu-|the storm, both apparent vic-!. Thousands of people, unable|Grain Exchange cancelled trad-|ers said the airliner appeared|move at this time. survivors of the crash of a Ca- him." "Tt seemed that the whole left Pit®: Ont., died of pneumonia| tims of heart attacks. jto get home, sought refuge in| ing for weather reasons. And for|to be making a desperate at-| External Affairs Minister nadian Pacific Airlines DC-8 jet-|_ Her husband is Capt. Robert]. 4, r the te Mf had hy fe 4 due to bronchial obstruction fol-| Police were mostly occupied|Stores. At least 1,400 spent the|the first time since 1919, the|tempt to regain height near the|Martin told the House of Com- liner at Tokyo International Air-- Edward Huebner 2 7 ie yy aoed lowing his operation for removal] with driving expectant mothers|Might in beds in the furniture| Winnipeg post office cancelled|12,390 - foot snow - capped|mons in Ottawa this week that port. The Huebners had spent a six- fhisueh 'i Then Y Cae th fe of a tumor in his lefi lung aad |: hospital. aise of a large downtown de-'mail deliveries on a weekend.|mountain when it suddenly|some progress had been made Mrs. Huebner's parents, Mr.| week vacation together in Hong | terminal." age | POLICE USE TOBOGGANS dropped, tail first, like a fall-lin ICC attempts to find a solu- = Heavy Snow, Screaming Winds ..» And Snowshoes Too the-world flight from San Fran-|ICC could attempt a Viet Nam and Mrs. Carl Horne, live in| Kong after being separated for| '°" | The inquest verdict ruled out} page F ing leaf. tion. Beaconsfield, Que. many months by the Viet Nam| She was taken first to a Jap-|testimony of brutality by the| Pol te in suburban St. ital is janese hospital for treatment of/prison's staff, and stated that| US¢d Power toboggans to make |PARTED AFTER VACATION ; She spent the night there andj had no bearing on the death. They parted Friday. He took a\then was moved to. the Zama plane to Saigon. She boarded! military hospital Saturday. Dr. H. B. Cotnam, Ontario's Supervising coroner, described as "terrible" and "stupid'"' ac- tions taken at the reformatory October' when Chomenko Soviet-Made Missile Site (i: si" sioment hospital for misbehaving. | He said the action was taken | without the permission or know- gency house calls. Residents were also without| newspapers Friday. Both The!snow and screamin, i i : g winds be- |Free Press and The Tribune) gan to relax their paralysing jgrip on a vast section of the jnorth-central United States to- Unions Picket i "evo, 'and muses om emer Relax Grip On Central U.S. FARGO, N.D. (AP)--Heavy The U.S. weather bureau Near Hanoi Bombed By U.S a ledge of doctors. Chomenko was back in hos- jcalled it one of the most savage jfor the train were brought to Air| of Brock Campus blizzards recorded, Blinding snow, and winds For a time, nearly 500 pas- sengers were stalled in three transcontinental Northern Paci- fic trains in central North Da- kota. Early today, 190 of them remained on an eastbound train at Eagle Butte, some 50 miles west of Bismarck. Food and fuel them. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Jury Still Ponders Candace Case MIAMI (AP) -- An all-male jury pondered anew to- day meagre on-the-scene details of Jacques Mossler's slay- ing. There was no sign of a verdict in the second full day of deliberations. Judge Géorge Schulz said he intends to keep the jury at its task over the weekend, if need be. Walkouts Mar Unity Parley ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) -- Twenty-three Afri- can foreign ministers passed resolutions today attacking Rhodesia and South Africa and wound up the main. part of a unity conference marred by the walkouts of eight members. CATHARINES (CP) -- clocked at more than 100 miles Lt.-Gov. Charles Tighe de- More than 200 workers walked|@" hour in some areas moved clared North Dakot - t off their jobs at the construction |ortheastward from western| i oe hsite of Brock University's new|South Dakota to northeastern /@rea. |campus buildings Friday after | Minnesota. Bee union representatives! Behind it left scores of com-| . picketed the site |munities so paralysed they) Th M D | 'The pickets said they are pro-|looked like. ghost towns. | ree en 1€ testing the use of pre-cast con-! There were three known dead, | crete made by a strikebound/all in Minnesota. But at least 27 In North Crash song | Toronto company. persons were missing, the ma- | I THE TIMES i d The pickeis were Ray Ford,|jority in North Dakota, where! * be - 3 business agent for Toronto Lo-|the storm's fury seemed great- | ELLIOT LAKE, Ont. (CP) -- Pie n ° ay pu! Three men were killed and|- } jthree others seriously injured | cal 506 of the International Hod est. Carriers' Building and Common! The mercury neared zero at}; "ta s |Laborers' Union (CLC), John |the height of the storm. in a two-car collision five miles}: | Quirk, also of the Toronto local, . Mountainous' drifts made [rth of here Friday night. and Joe Connelly, chief shop|snow-level readings rare. But| Dead are Stanley Logan, 41, |steward at Toronto's Beer Pre-|at Devils Lake, North Dakota,|and Roger. Melansson, 43, both|_ | cast Concrete, which was struck'gauges measured up to 34/0f nearby Spragge, and Otto]= tby the union Jan. 12 inches, Mayrs, 40, of Elliot Lake. | The strike began eight weeks} Schools closed, business dis-| Richard Rochand, 25, and ago when Beer and the unior}tricts shut down and trevel by|Gerald Lavallee. 42, both of failed to agree on a new con jany means was impos: ble injnearby Serpent River, and Ru- tract. About 120 men walked ou |man# areas. Uncounted thou-|dolp Mayrs, 32, of Ellot Lake, sn of travellers w was poe in serious condition in hos-|= uni r Bolker, a the science teaching conference here of the Canadian Teacher's Federation, said Friday that Friction is one of the hot- test numbers in a selection of 84 records: some science teachers are using to ja Education Week Preview--P. 11 Whitby Details School Needs--P. 5 Hull After 51st Tonight--P. 9 Dbits--20 Sports--8, 9 Theatre--15 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13 Weather--2 Ann Landers--13 City News--11 Classified--18, 19, 20 Comics--21 Editorial----4 __She was interviewed at the} war. lacerations of the leg and shock.' fighting among. the routine enquiries, Power tobdg-! TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto curity risk by RCMP is the cen- ment Friday by Justice Minis-| Force planes blasted a. Soviet-|northwest of the central low-|Temoved to the Kitchener Hos- ST. sition leader Diefenbaker to|day night and encountered fire! Wit) more than was prime minister." Mr. Car-| Vietnamese capital, air force] | oops son pee Benga ry JAZZ TEMPO from 1957 to 1963, did not re-|munist MiG-17 jets made three|, Meanwhile, some 300 miles; scratch a scientist, he may Widespread speculation de- ey in North Viet Nam. No/suerrillas attaeked a base Dr Henry ferred to. ' ; He said that in the first all-jing on, with Communist bodies! Munsinger, East German clerk! North ended Jan. 31, planes} about 100 miles southwest of the} Canada and is reported to have ret ground fighting, thousands|killed 105 members of a rein- up their classes The Globe and Mail says she| ment of some 2,500 0 n nth tle in territory ously re-| lad of Sir Isaac Newton and Financial--20 prisoners} Said Involved newspapers say an East. Ger- man- woman -considered a se- tre of the mysterious Munsin- ger case referred to in Parlia-| SAIGON (CP) -- US heavy fighting six miles| Pital two weeks later and was ter Cardin. ;Supplied surface-to-air missile|Iauds provincial capital] of Pital Nov. 28 Mr. Cardin challenged Oppo- site 34 miles west of Hanoi Fri-| Quang Ngai. "put on the record his partici-/from three Communist jets) ony u¢ ied des gy a8 SCIENCE SETS pation" in the case "when he| about 80 miles from the North|°"®™y 'counted dead, the ma- din did not elaborate and Mr, | Spokesmen said today. iit the enemy Diefenbaker, prime miinister| Pilots reported that the Com-| mys OTTAWA (CP) -- If you ply. passes at air force planes late|to the south, 40 miles from Sai-| tart to sinz you a Friday over the Red River val-}80n, a battalion of communist! appoist friction. veloped outside the Commons , ai Aa what case was being re-| *Merican planes were hit in the}Camp of a U.S. infantry battal speaker at & exchange, the spokesman said,'ion and heavy fighting was go- say a Goon Mane Ck out raid since the suspension of; reported lying in "piles." say > Ww y s Olgalire¢ vile al : ) US. air strikes against the| In a third action at Tuy Hoa,} in a Communist embassy in Ot-| truck H | s ruck at targets throughout northern city of Quang Ngai,} tawa. She was deport " iet Ne , * Guang Neal awa. Sh ported from North Viet Nam American paratroopers Friday} died in East Germany of leu (5; Ee Sie «ais oe 3 kemia two or three years ago a ERE genni -- ee a aes North. 'Vielnamese per iy anche aap clude 3 nam trooy talion during a sé hour bat What Gravity?, The Bal- was believed by some to be a' Vietnamese army cons -igarded 2 , V, le 2 . é arm) n | gard as an enemy strong-| Zoom a Little Zoom Communist agent. iday in the second straight day' hold. | but 40 have since returned anc | the pliant continued to operate.|stranded. pital here.