Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax Pickering ond neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. She Oshawa Gunes VOL, 95 -- NO. 85 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1966 Weather Report Weather warnings over. Con- tinuing cold Friday. Cloudy with few sunny periods. Low tonight, 85. High tomorrow, 52. Authorized a prcond Class Mol! Post Office Department a "end poyment of Postage in Cash. THIRTY PAGES U.S. Pushes Assaults On Viet Cong SAIGON (CP)--U.S. DA'S China |J Blast Looms? OTTAWA (CP)--RCMP Com-)men,in her room and incapable missioner George B. McClellan|of telling an accurate or truth- jtestified today that he has been ful story." military TOKYO (AP)--Japanese gov- m@\unable to find out how Gerda Commissioner McClellan also WAVES BATTERED the Lake Erie resoit village of Wheatley, Ont., in a violent storm Wednesday, forcing residents to flee their flood- ed cottages. HUNDREDS OF HOMES THREATENED 60-Mile Winds Rip Erie Shores WHATLEY, Ont. (CP) -- Resi-| who saw a workshop and the 27-|growth which might otherwise dents of southwestern Ontario|foot cabin cruiser it contained|be damaged by May frosts. The wind-driven flood waters breathed a sizh of relief today, as winds died down after re- versing the flow of Lake Erie) destroyed, said he plans to sue the government for damages. Freezing rain and | | the i ' ; : t| 'ted today that|e™mment sources said today tha Aenea pa nite es "hitting | China s third nuclear explosion, | Ithe Viet Cong with renewed|¢xpected early next month, | lvigor after weeks of lessened may be a preliminary hydrogen) activity during the political cri- bomb test. We | sis They said the year's interval Eee 7|\ sine king's last atomic ex- : t forces waged 77|Since Pe : 4 Ta cont gy ge i operations plosion would have given Chi- against the Viet Cong in the last) "@S® scientists enough time to week, an increase of 10 per put them on the verge of ther- cent, and the air force stepped| monuclear capability. They said) The Viet Cong me a a ok part of a Chinese effort to boost tinued to avoid contact with|their international prestige dur-| U.S. forces, and U.S ne ing May celebrations in the dropped sharply last wee Communist world. The U.S. -- Oe 5) Sarees in Washington re-| Americans were kille orted Wednesday night that wounded and eight missing or i U.S sivecnibet has ad- captured last week, compared). Sones ' with 89 killed, 635 wounded and| Vised its allies to expect another five missing the week before, | 2t0mic: explosion or. the Chinese) Viet Cong losses for the week ging se ees ee at d 69 There was no indication of how were put at 694 killed and 69\the U.S. government acquired | | 547) jcreated more hardship on the| GUN DOWN POLITICIAN sno w! United States side of Lake Erie. be killed and 33 missing, a captured, compared with 531/it: information, but the U.S. killed and 135 captured April 19-/ Central Intelligence Agency ac- 16. Government froops ype curately predicted the first al "f ~inese atomic explosion, cline ~~ i gently a Japanese security offici- SUSE Ete) Wer - als supported the new predic- | jtion and said the blast proba-| A South Vietnamese politician bly will be set off at the Uighur) _ Wednesday and threatening hun-|struck the Toronto -. Hamilton| Thousands of residents were) 2. shot to death on a street|test site, in Singkiang province! dreds of homes and cottages/area. Salting crews were called)/forced from their homes in an| along both the Canadian andjout and police motorcycle pa-|area stretching from Monroe, | corner in Da Nang by two un-|in northwest China, where Pe- men, geen: . king exploded its first nuclear AT NATO U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara attends the opening of the NATO special Committee of De- fense Ministers in London today. (AP Wirephoto) _.j|the RCMP wanted to keep her |Munsinger got into Canada in acknowledged that he erred in 1955 after being refused entry|saying in secret testimony April on security grounds three years|6 that it was in August or Sep- earlier. jtember of 1960 that the RCMP He said in cross-examination | started investigating Mrs. Mun- by Conservative counsel C. F.|singer's 1955 entry to Canada. H. Carson at the Munsinger in-|. He said he had meant that quiry that it wasn't surprising| was, about the time he began to she had been able to get in. take a personal interest in the The commissioner said that| case. during the massive post - war) The commissioner agreed that immigration to Canada it was/her file contained a July 25, |"'rather easy" for anyone in|1960, memorandum between |Europe to buy the necessary;|RCMP visa control officers at |documents, especially if one|Cologne and Stuttgart, Ger- jhad the help of Communist/many, stating that due to an agents. |'unexplainable error" by the While he was testifying, Pi-|/RCMP and the immigration de- lerre Sevigny, former Conserva-|partment, she got a visa to itive associate defence minister,|come to Canada in 1955 after jand Donald Fleming, former|being rejected in 1952. |Conservative justice minister,| Mr. Carson asked what was jentered the courtroom. They /|the error. The commissioner re- | were accompanied by their law- plied: jyers, As a lawyer himself, Mr.) « s | |Fleming sat at the table for BE ll er _ | counsel, | | Commissioner McClellan said| Mr. ane -- whether jthe RCMP took up the Munsin-| 59 i cleared for security in jger case with the immigration 3 |department Dec. 16, 1960. | He said Mrs. Munsinger was due to leave on a holiday and "T can't tell you because I don't know how she got into the country," Commissioner Mc- Clellan said. Did that mean somebody who was questionable on security grounds still could get a visa from returning to Canada if possible and thus "'lessen the security. risk." ed. States shores. trols were taken oft highways.|Mich., to- Port Clinton, Ohio.! tea was the hardest hit,| Hamilton, hardest hit by the| Rowboats and amphibious ve-| rsons forced to evac-|freezing rain, reported one-jhicles were used to rescue per-| houses. One summer}quarter inch of slush on streets.|sons from flooded homes and cottage and a boatlimise collaps-! The rain and stiow moved/cottages, eft before the force of 60-mile-/northwood today and winds) About an-hour winds. |Were gradually decreasing. |evacuated Police began to evacuate the} 6,000 persons from the Monroe were). area about 2.30 a.m. Wednesday | as 10-foot waves swept over the shoreline and threatened homes. About 30 boats were battered | about in Wheatley harbor where waves were four feet high. The Erie Packers office was flooded. One of the last residents to leave the lakesid> area was Mrs.: Pearl Henry, 81, . who spent the day mopping four in- ches of water from her cottage floor. The Detroit sroman final- ly left at 6 p.m. to spend the night with friends Lakes and river levels began to recede early today in the) Windsor area, where 24 hours of rain and high winds had) flooded basements, cut com- munications and played havoc with wummer homes. In the Detroit River, where U.S. Coast Guard stations re- ported the water level was 60) inches above normai, an inter-| Hationa: appeal wes ast to all vessels to travel slowly) in an effort to reduce waves.| At LaSalle, near Windsor, river water rose to within inches of the town's main ap- proach bridge, but traffic was not impeded. Lakes and river levels began| fo recede early today in the} Windsor area, where 24 hours of} rain and high winds had flooded} basements, cut communications | and played havoc with summer homes, In the Detroit River, where U.S. Coast Guard stations re- ported the water level was 60 inches above normal, an inter-| national appeal was broadcast to all vessels to travel slowly) in an effort to reduce waves. At LaSalle, near Wihdsor,} river water rose to within) inches of the town's main ap-| proach bridge, but traffic was not impeded. | The storm across Lake Erie forced a dozen freighters to) seek shelter at Point Pelee Na-; tional Park, near Leamington.) Damagé was estimated as high! as $50,000 along tne east beach | of Mersea Township outside! Leamington. Henry van Damme, a resi- dent of the Leamington area Dangerous Driver Gets 10 Weeks KITCHENER (CP). - Romeo Benoit, 24, of Fletcher.) Ont., was sentenced today to 10) Arsene weeks. in jail on a charge of dangerous driving. Police testified they chased Benoit through a_ residential area last Thursday and stopped! his car by firing shots to fiat-) ten his tires. | Benoit received an additional week fer driving while his li cence was suspended. and aj further two-year suspension. 4, The victim was Tran Thuyen, 50, secretary-general of the Na- tionalist party in Da Nang. The assassins escaped. The Nationalists have apposed Buddhist and student street There were no injuries report-| area, Another 1,400 were moved|demonstrations to bring down ed as a direct result of the|out of the Toledv area andithe ruling military junta, and storm, but men reported loss of nets. However, the cold and unsea- sonable weather did'not affect) southern Ontario, the depart- ment of agriculture reported. A spokesman said that the cold weather has kept back budl The many ways of waging war with the Ontario Regi- ment can be seen at the Sportsmen's Show which opened today at the Oshawa Civic of at the show, which is sponsored by the * Anditorium One the exhibit commercial fisher--many persons were forced to move up to the second storey their homes. Another 1,800 gan town. U.S. officials said it was the|frontier 70 miles northwest of | were taken vegetable and fruit growing in|/from Luna Pier, a small Michi-|tons of abandoned Viet Cong) Japanes security have expressed strong support for the U.S. commitment in South Viet Nam. U.S. troops found hundreds of the Cambodian of supplies near worst flood in the area since|Saigon. It was one of the big- 1952. R WITH ONTARIO REGIMENT | Union Rod and Gun Club, is a model tank. training ground used by experts in military strelegy. Second- Lieutenant D. R. Aide, of the shown above a plans h move in fhe war game, The Ontarios, is he 5 next "4 gest hauls of the war. | regiment exhibit is. one of many in the show which runs until Saturday. Official ceremonies opening were slated for 6.30 p.m (Oshawa Times Photo) device Oct. 16, 1964. TWO TESTS EARLIER it was about as. powerful as} the U.S. atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima during the Sec-} ond World War, equivalent to about 20,000 tons of TNT. The Chinese exploded a second and However, she had returned to 2,300 Teachers | " | To Remain Outre ae eT, 3 . \for a visit. She held a German pMtONTREAL (Pte orev pmaprt and gave het aden rad " -|as 1420 Tower Street, Montreal. ployed striking teachers voted/ The commissioner. at one early today to accept a labor! yoint changed his testimony. contract and come to Canada? asked Mr. Carson. RCMP UNABLE EXPLAIN ENTRY IN 1955 Europeans Could Buy Way In, Inquiry Told mer Conservative justice minister, arrives for today's session of the Munsinger ; inquiry being held at: Ottawa. | DONALD FLEMING, 'for- (CP Wirephoto) Race Dogs' Meat Drugged but will remain on larger device last May 14. U.S.|strike. | officials said at the time that it) At separate meetings in ma may have been dropped from a} jor centres, throughout the prov- plane. ince the teachers decided to con- officials|tinue their walkout pending said Peking probably was pre-|withdrawal of charges against) paring a& uranium-235 device suf-;|members of their executive for ficiently compact to be fitted onjignoring an interim injunction a missile as a warhead, This|ordering the teachers back to clashed with the view of Japa-|work. nese government sources who! Premier Jean Lesage said predicted preliminary work on} Wednesday the government. is a hydrogen bomb. not in a position to withdraw) The government sources said|the charges because the matter} it was unlikely that Pekingjis now before the courts and could test a nuclear warhead/will have to be settled there. now because of extreme diffi-| The members of the executive! culties in making aheat-proof are liable to a maximum pen-| guidance system for the missile, lalty of a $2,000-fine and 60 days| U.S. officials also have said in jail each if convicted, that it will take the Chinese' The teachers, members of Le| some time to perfect a long-/Syndicat des Professeurs de} range missile capable of deliv-|l'Etat du Quebec, struck April} ering an atomic warhead, 112. ' At first he said he believed the RCMP had kept the immi- gration department informed of, Mrs. Munsinger's movements) LONDON (CP)--A 26-year-old until she left Canada Feb, 5,|Canadian woman says she fed 1961. drugged meat to racing dogs at Later, he said he didn't know|both London and Ramsgate last whether there had been any|year at the instigation of a man oral communication with the|0w charged with conspiring to immigration department. The| cheat bettors on greyhound only written communication |Taces. with the department after Dec.| Margaret Murray reiterated 16, 1960, did not occur until|festimony she gave a week ago Oct. 20, 1961. at the trial of four men and The commissioner repeated |r oiteey. Pag tl . uae previous testimony that Mrs.|~. Laie sete nitty H Munsinger's application for aj/@nd -- oe in 1962 = Canadian vn in 1088 was re.|returned there last year, bu jected because of derogotory was brought back to appear as and subversive information |® aye at the trial. P 4 against her. | er address in Canada, an He said an RCMP report at the addresses of several other that time stated that Mrs. Mun- oe were kept secret by singer was "'of low moral char- : acter, addicted to entertaining|, Shortly after Miss Murray She Likes English Girl Hides On U.K WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) --!a member of the naval atseone §]| The British submarine Walrus| staff at the British embassy, continued its journey home to-|told a reporter a full investiga-| day after dropping off a stow-| jaway who said she wante to | visit England because she liked | English boys. | And the girl, Barbara Mc- Vay, 17, of Baltimore, is back with her mother aad stepfather, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Turso. The Walrus and two more British subs were docked in Baltimore since last Thursday, following NATO manoeuvres. | When the' Walrus left for |home Wednesday, Barbara was hiding in the conning tower. But after four hours, exhaust fumes from the sub's engine sickened her' and she turned | herself in, COULD HAVE DROWNED "It's a good thing she got sick," a police detective said later. He said the compartment where she hid would have filled with water if the sub had submerged. When she did come out of hid- ing, the sub radioed the Brit- ish embassy and was ordered to get the girl back to land im- mediately, An army patrol boat met the | sub in the Delaware Canal. Bar- bara was placed in the Wilming- ton detention home until her parents arrived several hours later "IT wanted to go to England," she said. "I like English boys." She also said she wanted to visit her father, later identified as Tech. Sgt. V. E. MeVay, sta- tioned in the British Isles with the U.S. Air Force Capt. Douglas M. H. Stobie,' BARBARA McVAY, 17, Baltimore, sits in the rear of a police car after she was | vented! last week, Judge C. Boys . Sub tion would be made to deter- mine if any crew member had helped her. OTTAWA (CP) -- RCM structed him to have Guy F. The commissioner said that for security and intelligence. charges of influence-peddling Wreckage Of Airli LIMA, Peru (AP) -- Sea wreckage of an airliner that 43 passengers and a crew southeast of Lima. day North Vietnamese pilots Nam April 23, 24 and 26. Ann Landers--12 City News---13 Classified---24, 25, 26, 27,.28 Comics------16 Editorial--? Financial--21 discovered as stowaway on the British submarine Walrus. (AP Wirephoto) a % NEWS HIGHLIGH Favreau Told Of Gerda Case verbally about the case Dec. 1, 1964, by the, RCMP Nielsen, Conservative MP for anne syqyenrnenetemnerteetgrtette | ...In THE TIMES today... Rubber Workers Study Time-Study--P. 5 Generals Defeat Shawiniyan--P. 8 Canadian Woman Claims Aarvold ordered a retrial of the case and since then two of the witnesses have testified that they_gave perjured evidence ip exchange for money. Miss Murray said Wednesday she met Peter George Hubbard, 31, and Ronald Maxwell; 42, at the beginning of 1965, At Hub- bard's suggestion she got a job as a "kennel maid"--a woman working in the greyhound ken- nels at Walthamstow in north London, and doped some of the greyhounds, she said, for which she was paid about $360. In June, 1965, she left to work as a kennel maid at Ramsgate, |\She was there during nine jmeetings and doped dogs at |seven or eight of the meetings-- at least two at each meeting and at most 15 dogs. sonny TS P Commissioner George B; McClellan testified today that Prime Minister Pearson-'ine avreau, then jistice minister, informed by the RCMP about the Gerda Nunsinge be Mr. Favreau was ixformed irector This was a week after Erik the Yukon, launched his in high Liberal circles. ner Sighted rch planes today sighted the -- disappeared Wednesday with of six in the tugged Andes mountains. It was not known immediately whether there were any survivors. Search planes four-engine Cohstellation near Huampara, about 60 miles located the smashed 10 U.S. Jets Bagged -- Hanoi TOKYO (AP) -- Hanoi's official newspaper claimed to- , shot down 10 American jets and damaged many others in dog-fights over North Viet Obits---21 Sports--8, 9 Theatre---23 Whitby News--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weother--2 LATA