Home Newspaper | Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and fieighboring centres in On» tario dnd Durham Counties. 10¢ Single C 50c Per Week Home VOL, 95 -- NO. 44 She Oshawa Times livered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1966 Authorized es Second Ottewa end for payment of Class Mail Post Office Deportment Weather Report Friday mostly cloudy and continuing mild. Low to- night, 82, High tomorrow, 45 eat Office Depart TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES AMSTERDAM (CP)--A smoke bomb burst ahead of the golden coach carrying Crown Princess Beatrix and her German bride- groom Claus von Amsberg to their church wedding today. Soon afterwards another smoke bomb went off and what sounded like a firecracker ex- ploded in the crowd, making one of the six carriage horses jerk at the rein. Beatrix and Claus remained calm and smiling. Up to that point they had received a warm- hearted welcome {rom thou- sands of Amsterdamers who had been expected to cold-shoulder ithe wedding. DEERSTALKER DIEF Opposition Leader Diefen- baker arrived in Vancouver Wednesday night for two days' fishing and the Con- servative party provincial convention. Upon arrival, he was handed two stuffed sal- DESPITE DE GAULLE - U.S. Body OfNATO Stays Intact mon and given a deer- stalker, double-peaked cap a la Sherlock Holmes. He termed it a 'Liberal minis- ter's cap -- when you've got it on nobody knows which way you're going." diplomatic channels, including} the NATO council. WASHINGTON (CP) -- Presi-| dent de Gaulle of France wants, the spirit of NATO preserved! But American officials con- pithout French participation in| firmed that the U.S. and its al-| the military flesh of the alli-|lies for some time have been ance, |drawing up plans to meet "any/ The United States is deter-| and all contingencies that might mined to keep the body intact,| arise." | with or withou French muscle} This means that in the event and at whatever cost, and ap-/France withdraws her owNlice Beatrix had trouble getting|behind steel - helmeted troops,|wife. Mrs. Bull wore a silver) (CP) -- Czechoslovakia defeated pears to have Alliance support.| NATO forces and demands com-|the ring on Claus' finger. Fin-|Waved along the route and tried| brocade outfit. The U.S, will proceed without)mand of American, Canadian|ajy he fixed his own with a|to run and keep up with the slow) 'The burgomaster touched on) goal today and became the fav- encouraging any view that|and German forces, there will! NATO is in crisis and will not}be a wholesale NATO wpith- talk to France about changes in|drawal from the strategically-| NATO on a nation - to - nation|important French nation. basis. It will involve some 2,500 Ca-| This is the picture drawn here|nadians--half the air division} after what seems to be de| split between France and Ger-| Gaulle's first shot in carrying}many, about 26,000 American out his long-signalled intentions.|troops and some German sold- He sought by letter to iers. effect changes with President} Supreme Allied Headquarters Johnson. Johnson said this is an} will go elsewhere with weapons} Alliance affair, deserving seri-| and supply hardware--a moving| ous consideration. job costing at least $700,000,000. De gaulle in a terse statement) But there is expected to be Wednesday described any 'fur-|extensive bargaining all around ther discussion about revising) --alliance to France and bilat-| NATO as useless. erally between Canada and Later Wednesday, spokesman| France--before the removal is! Robert McCloskey of the U.S.) carried out. state department said the U.S.! knows of no plan for immediate|seemingly-rigid language of the convening of the 15 NATO for-| French president, is the possi- eign ministers and that the U.S.|bility his intentions are some- has no such plan. Consultations) what less sweeping than his lan- will proceed through normal) guage. New Seal Herds Sought r 1 Still not ruled out, despite the| Troops and police were alert for serious trouble in the wed- ding which has roused bitter re- sentment among citizens who re- member the Nazi occupation. Police battled with anti-German demonstrators who chanted long live the republic' and hurled smoke bombs. In two earlier minor incidents, police had to remove bicycles laid across the royal route and a man was seen on a bridge brandishing a large Star of David with the figure 6,000,000 on it--representing the Jewish dead in the Second World War, | The 28 - year - old princess, known as the smiling princess, beamed broadly most of the time in public but twice during the civil and church ceremonies showed strain and appeared close to fainting. She wore a gown of white satin with velvet- like patterns and a long train starting at the waist. She also wore a short tulle veil held by a pearl diadem worn by her grandmother Queen Wilhelmina at her wedding in| 1900. | Apparently deeply in love Beatrix frequently whispered to} von Amsberg who appeared} calm, confident and happy. As the couple exchanged rings dur- ing the 75-minute church serv- Crown Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands looks over her shoulder as she walks from the Royal Palace in Amsterdam this morning with her bride- grin moving coach, driven by a team About one-quarter of Amster-|of six horses, At the 35-minute} dam's 800,000 people turned out|civil ceremony in the city hall,| under grey chilly skies to watch|Burgomaster Gijsbert van Hall,| the fair-haired princess riding in|told the groom that his "'human-| the painted, gilded coach withjity, dignity and understanding her groom. He has taken Dutch|for the feelings present in our nationality and has been made a,nation" had made a deep im- prince of The Netherlands. The| Pression on everyone who had "van??.. + imet, him changed to the dutch "van" and| Afterwards the marriage cer- he also has been given the title|tificate was signed by eight of-/ of jonkheer, a minor rank of/ficial witnesses including Prin- nobility. cess Alexandra, in a cream The location of their honey-!| gown. moon still is a tightly-kept secret but in London the 'Ever OTTAWA GIRL A WITNESS ing Standard said the latest tip) Among the witnesses was Re- is that the couple will honeymo|nee Smith, 27, Dutch-born for- n Canada. schoolmate of Princess Running about 10 minutes be- . i hind schedule, the bridal couple Beatrix in Ottawa. Mrs. Smith made their way to the two cere-| Wore a brown velvet outfit and monies from the flower-decked|was accompanied by her hus- royal palace where they walked|band, Bradbrooke Smith, 34, a| out arm in arm to be greeted|justice department official. més |by about 10,000 people, cheering) Among the diplomatic represen- justily and waving in the huge/tatives at the crowded church square, * |ceremony was Canadian Am- A crowd up to 10 deep, held'!bassador W. F. Bull and his In Newfoundland Area 'HALIFAX (CP)--Ships carry-jably done more than anything ing some 500 hunters were sail-jelse to raise the publi¢ ire over ing today for ice packs off|the hunt, said some scenes of northern Newfoundland and un-/the film were staged. restricted killing of seal herds| In a telephone interview from beginning Saturday. his hotel in Cap-aux-Meules They left behind bloodied Gulf|Que., producer Andre Fleury of of St. Lawrence ice where their|Montreal said scenes showing crews clubbed and skinned 50,-jadult seals being killed and 000 baby seals in three days. (skinned were taken before the They also left behind increas-|season opened last year. ingly bitter opposition to the He said he received permis- annual hunt. Humane society of-|sion to do this from fisheries ficers accused the hunters of/officer Phillip Beauschesne. The "deliberate, sadistic, stupid cru-|fisheries officer denied granting elty' and at least three hunters'any permission but said he! will be charged knew the were being An Ottawa veterinarian sur-|Shot 9n ice off the Magdalen geon, Elizabeth Simpson, 26,|1slands called the hunt revolting. She| 70m Hughes of Toronto, gen- said she had seen the seal pups,|°@! manager of the Ontario a few days old, skinned alive, | Humane Society, said he would "it's not only cruel to the |lay criminal charges against seals: it's uncivilized to expect|three Magdalen Islands hunters a man to club to death 100 of|f0r 'bloody, stupid, sadistic these little things each day,' |Ctuelty she said He said he | "obviously alive and bleeding STAGE FILM SCENES profusely from the nose and At the same time, a man whojhead and only partialiy| produced @ film that has prob-'stunned."* scenes found nine | ANTI-RED ST On Rampage Hit Police NEW DELHI (AP) -- Food jrioters set fire to an express jtrain and a railway station out-; jside Calcutta today and threw) jup barricades and stoned police junits in the city. " The mobs turned wild after 5 jpolice killed a student demon-| |Strator. About 10 persons were reported killed. | Railway tracks were ripped| 'up in many places and some , |demonstrators squatted in front jof trains to prevent them from moving. Much of West Bengal state, of which Calcutta is the capital, was in the grip of a general | strike to protest the govern-| |ment's: food policy. | Buses and trains were halted 4 |and a few private cars that ap- | peared on Calcutta's streets | were stoned. | The army was called out at Rishra, about 10 miles from Cal- cutta, where about 5,000 demon- strators set fire to 18 cars of jan express train travelling to |Howrah, one of Calcutta's main railway terminals. Two fire engines were set ablaze and the firemen were chased away. Rioters also set fire to a rail- way bridge between Konnagar and Rishra, about 12 miles from OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Cardin charged today that two or more former cabinet ministers in the Diefenbaker cabinet were involved with a former East German spy. He identified the spy, a MORE EX-PC MINISTERS INVOLVED WITH SPY: CARDIN Smoke Bombs > Indian Mobs Near Royal Pair Diefenbaker Rapped For Stand On Case woman, only by the name of j Munsinger and said she died in East Germany a few years ago of leukemia. The minister told a press con- | ference that he will ask the cab- jinet to reopen the Munsinger case. He said Opposition Leader Diefenbaker did not handle the case properly when he was prime minister and should ex- plain his conduct. Mr. Cardin said he under- stands the RCMP has a file on the case but that Mr. Diefen- baker never referred it to the law officers of the Crown. He himself had not seen the file but had learned a great deal about the case while he was in another department -- presum- ably as associate defence minis- ter, Mr. Cardin said he is tired of hearing Mr. Diefenbaker insin- uate that the Liberal govern- ment is corrupt and plunged in scandals, The Liberal party had de- cided to fight back hard and use the same tactics as the opposi- tion if y: Calcutta, and to the Sod railway station on the outskirts of the city. They also tried to burn the Barrackpore station but were driven off. Czechs Edge 'Canada LJUBLNAJA, Yugoslavia groom, Claus von Amsberg, as they leave for civil wed- ding ceremony. The bride wears a tiara of pearls and diamonds and a short veil. (AP Wirephoto) |Canada '2-1 with a last-minute the tenseness of the day during|orite for second place behind the civil ceremony. |Russia in the world hockey) CONTINUED | championship. aint nines Stanislav Pryl scored the win- | P. 2 -- AMSTERDAM ning goal 28 seconds from the| end. A brilliant goal by Roger | 4 Charges a ollow Bourbonnais, a native of Edmon- | ton who lives at Riviere qui} Chase-Gun Battle Barre, Alta.,. had tied up the |game 1-1 for Canada untlil the VALLEYFIELD, Que. (CP)-- Anthony Miller, 27, of Bedford, | last explosive minute of the most thrilling match of the tourna- Que., was arraigned on four| charges Wednesday resulting! ment so far. _Czechoslovakia's win was its from a chase and gun battle at|fifth in five starts and put the a roadblock Monday near Have-|Czechs into temporary posses- lock, Que., 25 miles southwest | Sion of first place with 10 points. of Montreal. Russia, with eight points from Miller, one of three men|four wins, plays Sweden this sought by police after a Quebec | aitemonn se Badin Police constable was The loss was the first for the wounded in the hand, pleaded|canadians in the tournament not guilty to attempted murder, |after four straight victories. illegal possession of firearms, |The Canadians defeated the auto theft and reckless driving.| United States 7-2, Poland 6-0, He was arrested Monday, soon|Finland 9-1 and East Germany after the chase began. 6-0. ure UDENTS RIOT JAKARTA (Reuters) -- Indo- nesian students injured a Chi- nese diplomat as they stormed and ransacked the Chinese trade office in Jakarta today A police spokesman said the Chinese was hurt by stones thrown by: several of the group of about 100 students. About the same time, another group of about 200 anti-Commu- nist. students forced their way into the Chinese consulate eral and ransacked the place Students who stormed the trade office dragged out official documents and made a bonfire of them, They broke windows and smashed down doors. At the consulate the students destroyed every Chinese ment thes docu- hands on jrivine ° ould lay afte ning entry b truck thro t teel gate Wednesda tudents raided the Pena office of the New China news * agency. They partly burned the roof and damaged two cars in their first attack on a non-gov- ernment building since the 12 days of anti-Communist demon- strations began. Troops fired into the air near the ransacked Chinese consulate to disperse studnets who were stopping passing cars and pune. turing tires. GUARD. EMBASSIES Indonesian troops guarded the Chinese Embassy's high walls from the outside. Troops also guarded the British Em- bassy buildings to deter possi- ble trouble' makers. Two' days ago the American Embassy was attacked by extreme leftwing youths and cars burned Meanwhile President Sukarno red at his palace leaders of nine political parties confer with UUs CUA to find a way of stopping the mounting demonstrations. University professors, school teachers, political leaders, doc- tors and scientists have come out in open support of Jakarta's high school students. The students have also been holding violent demonstrations demanding the dissolution of the Indonesian Communist party, changes in Sukarno's cabinet and lower commodity prices. Administrators and teachers of the University of Indonesia, closed by the government last week, have called on the gov- ernment to reconsider its deci-« sion and reopen the university. At the same time, the power- ful Moslem scholars' Hachdatul Ulama party called on the coun- try to take further steps to crush the Communist. party and its "'lackeys,"' AMT WAS A SPY Referring to the Munsinger woman, Mr. Cardin said: "We know that she had been en- gaged in espionage work" prior to coming to Canada. Whether she had been a Com- munist agent while in Canada he did not know. Mr. Cardin also confirmed press reports that if he had re- signed, Immigration Minister Marchand and several other | Quebec ministers would have} resigned also as a mark of solidarity with him, He said this could have top- pled the minority Liberal gov- ernment and the ministers' threats to resign had had a great deal of influence on his decision to withdraw his resig- nation over the Spencer case. He said he disagreed with Prime Minister Pearson on the latter's decision to hold a judi- cial inquiry into the firing of alleged Vancouver spy George Victor Spencer from the post office for security reasons. | However, he and the prime minister were still good friends and he was not criticizing Mr. Pearson in any way. MIKE TO STAY Mr. Cardin denied a report in Montreal Le Devoir that Mr. Pearson told a Liberal caucus Wednesday he would retire from politics in three months in the interests of party unity. The justice Minister was asked to confirm press reports that a member of the Diefen- baker cabinet had been photo- graphed in a compromising po- sition with a Gerda Munsinger and that the photographs had fallen into the hands of the RCMP. Mr. Cardin said this question should be put to Mr. Diefen- baker himself. A reporter then asked whether one minister or several had been involved with the woman. "TI said ministers," Mr. Car- din said. "More than one min- ister was involved." The minister said government action was justified at the time against the political figures in- volved but that it was too late now because the Munsinger woman was dead. Reporters pressed Mr, Cardin to explain why an inquiry or [Prosecution was not justified now come ministers in the future. Mr. Cardin said he would con- sider this point. When reporters continued to press him, he said that in the circumstances he would. consider suggesting to the prime minister and to 'the|= cabinet that it might be in the public interest to reopen the case | Asked whether there had been | a security leak in the case, Mr, j= Cardin said he was not in a po-|3 sition to comment, One reporter said the politi-|= cians involved could conceiva-| = bly run for office again and be-|= s JUSTICE MINISTER CARDIN charged today that 'two or more former cabinet m in the Diefenbaker ent prere involved Rumors Heard. los: Of New Manned Space Unit MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Strong] There have been persistent re- rumors of a new Russian|ports for several weeks that # manned space launching circu-|new Russian manned flight was lated in Moscow this morning. |likely sometime in March--pos- The rumors said Russia was|sibly a "spectacular" involving expected to announce today its|more than one flyer and the first manned flight since March, |rendezvous of two ships. 1965. As usual with reports of this} CSmonauts Pavel Belyaey kind, they could not be: con-|and Alexei Leonov were the last firmed with official sources. two Russians to go into orbit~ last March 18 when Leonov be- Soviet space shots are never publicized until the craft are ac- came the first man in history to leave an orbiting ship and tually in orbit, and postpone- walk in space, NEWS HIGHLIGHTS disclosed. C1... WE...11 Ts AL... 1 Viay WuulUu Ligill ViIlUVAGlO NEW YORK (AL) -- Heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay said today that if Ernie Terrell pulls out of their title fight at Toronto March 29, he is ready to fight Canadian champion George Chuvalo. Clay said Terrell has "upset all my plans" with his announcement Wed- nesday night that he would not fight the champion under the terms of a new contract offered by Maple Leaf. Gar- dens, site of the scheduled bout. Nkrumah's Bank Account Frozen ACCRA (Reuters) -- The bank accounts of ex-presi- dent Nkrumah, his Egyptian wife Fathia, cabinet minis- ters and other public officials were frozen today by the new regime. Nkrumah's personal fortune has been esti- mated by former financial adviser Ayeh Kumi as not less than £2,500,000 ($7,500,000), most of it in Ghanaian banks. Kumi said Nkrumah owned some property in Cairo under his wife's name and. had a-comparatively small sum of money in foreign banks. OHHA Seeks To Avert Strike TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontario Harness Horseman's Association today took steps toward strike action at Greenwood Raceway in an effort to back up wage de- mands. Les Ehrlick of Toronto, president of the OHHA, said at a press conference today that notification of strike action has been sent to the Canadian Trotting Asso- ciation, the Ontario Racing Commission and the Jockey Club. ...In THE TIMES today .. 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