Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- erio and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 95 he Oshawa Zimes Mithorized a8 Second Close Ma! OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1966 Weather Report Moderating trend coming but cold again tonight. Low tonight, 30. High tomor- row, 55. Post Office Depertment . Postoge In Cash. TWENTY PAGES Ottewa and for payment of Mexican Ring Given To Gerda Biatastinmermeant PSG ads cat a TC TROUBLE ON MAINLAND... HT RPS GTN AEST RRR AH ..» LONG SUSPECTED ABROAD Wave Of Dissidence Deeper? Sevigny Says OTTAWA (NP) -- Pierre Se- vigny said today he gave Gerda| Mrs. Munsinger in September, Munsinger a ring which he had bought for $5 in Mexico. The former Conservative as sociate defence minister said 'oss-examination at the) = aad |to Boston in a private plane Munsinger inquiry that he gave the ring to the German blonde in October, 1960, when he was having drinks in the Chateau Laurier with her and two of her| friends. Mr. Sevigny said he wanted to put straight an incident which had caused a Jot of "tur- moil and noise." He said that when he had been in Mexico earlier he had bought 10 or 15 rings and other trinkets to give to his secreta ries and other members of his staff It was a habit of his to make such gifts, he said. When he was with Mrs. Mun- singer at the Chateau, "I picked >the ring out of my pocket--I had paid $5 for it--and gave it to her.' He added that Miss Jacque line Delorme now had the ring because Mrs. Munsinger had given it to her Miss 'Delorme, a friend of Mr.}the inquiry had stated that Mrs. Munsinger,|Munsinger was denied entry to Sevigny and Mrs. was listening to the inquiry tes-|the U.S. in | grounds, timony. She 'Was Never My Mistress' /_ Former Minister Declares Mr. Sevigny said Mrs. Mun- singer "never was my mis- tress" and that as long as he knew her in 1959-60 "she was not a prostitute, call-girl nor a thief." The word mistress implied "a kept woman by a married man. Mrs. Munsinger was never this to me." Mr. Sevigny said that at the. request of an old friend, Jac- queline Delorme, he went to see Mrs, Munsinger, about 12:30 a.m, Nov. 1960 "We talked at great edie I hours of the morning. I went back to sleep again. When I woke up, I called a taxi and took the train from Westmount station to Ottawa The Munsinger inquiry, headed by Mr. Justice Wishart Canada, has received RCMP re ports describing Mrs Mun singer as the mistress of Mr Sevigny, a common prostitute petty thief, passer of bad cheques and self-admitted So Fulton Saw It As Security Risk, Contraci Nedaak Spur Reported Facts To Diefenbaker Civil Servants Walkout Earlier, former justice minis ter Fulton testified that in view a security risk he be created by Mr. Sevigny reli tionship' with Mrs. Munsinger He had reported the facts to then prime minister Diefen baker He considered M Diefen baker's judgment in keepin Mr. Sevigny in the cabinet had been vindicated since there had not been at the time or subse- quently any breach of security He said the RCMP about Mrs. Munsi r did not raise any questions in his mind about Mr. Sevigny's loyalty but did raise questions about "Mr Sevigny's discretion Miss Delorme, who de rself as an accountan ison officer' in the : field, testified she received a letter, dated April 28, 1961, from Mrs. Munsinger in Germany The letter, entered as an ex hibit, stated that Mrs. Mun reports cripea Commons Cuts Quorum Broadcasting Committee ond vote wa group on a comir not before mem it @asier fo tee. to desi the vAdca continue its commit hearings -into the between the CBC and . V posed New Democrats, six Creditis four Social Credit. MPs nds pendent J. A. Mongrain (Trois Rivieres) and a dissident servative, Rod Webb (Masting Trantenac) Immediately Con fier it, a sec- | counsel Poggi member | Mr. Sevigny also sald he went to the dog races in Boston with 1959. He said Mrs. Munsinger had been invited to the races by a friend of his and they had gone Mr. Sevigny said Mrs. Mun-| singer had never travelled in a} government plane. He branded as a "'lie"' travelled official in an plane) | with him to Boston. At one point under cross-ex-| amination by Jack Campbell,| for Justice Minist Cardin, Mr. Sevigny said: "All this happened so long ago and should never have been) brought up in the first place." At another point, Mr.. Justice| Wishart Spence, conducting the) inquiry, said Mrs. Munsinger was an experienced traveller who had been to the United States among other places. Today was Mr. Sevigny's sec-| ond day on the stand. At Mon-| day's hearing, he said he pert the night of Nov 26-27, 1960, Mrs. Munsinger's Montre a i apartment, and that was the last time he had seen her RCMP reports submitted to 1953 on security viet espionage agent before she came to Canada in 1955. She| left this country Feb. 5, 1961. Mr. Sevigny said he told Mrs. | |Munsinger he would do his best | jto help her get her German | '8 |passport renewed so she cola} return to her homeland. He said he never was black-|r mailed over his with Mrs. Munsinger never? asked him for information| t about defence or government/s matters. t "Since this is the 'crux of tifs| complete investigation, that Mrs would be connected in any! fashion with any alien group, any subversive group or repre- sentatives of foreign nations|5 which since hav e become hostile! t to us. . y s Mr. Sevigny declared that ' anyone near me was in any way connected my country I would be the first to advise the proper authorities and corrective meas- ures t ask for vorking 'for. the Munich held before singer vas United State forces in at the same job she to Canada Later, she said, there weren't|t any more letter from Mrs,;t Munsinger and she concluded)! her friend, had died of leu-j1 kemia. Mrs Munsi nger hadit told her of hav a complete lange of hind) disease. She told Mr that Mrs. Munsinger Miss Delorme said she firstit knew Mrs. Munsinger as Ricky or Olga Monseignor. She hadin been introduced to her by Hu- bert Ducharme, whom she de- scribed as a lawyer In November bumped into Mr, Duct John Doyle, not further fied, in New ne asked about nor." She Doyle that Mrs died a, leukemia in Sevigny |t 1964, jarme shie|t and 'Olga Mon- Ger- f forced by he} editiste proposal] lowing the mittee to sit broadcasting com while the House is appl for session, It- would editiste Gilles | blamed poor attendance by Lib eral MPs for the lack of al quorum at some House commi Lee meet tesn| BLAMES LIBERALS Mr. Gre goire said a 25 committees have 13 Liberals and that there would be no adjournments for jack of} 2 quorum if the government members showed up. | reports that she had Y TOKYO (AP) -- China's an nouncement today of its third nuclear explosion strongly indi- cates that the wave of dissi- dence on the mainland may be deeper and more widespread than suspected abroad The gravity of the "'anti- party, anti-socialist'"' movement within Chita -- now apparently the subject of a purge on a "Scale exceeding that of the "anti-rightist'" campaign of 1957 --was pointed up by the re- peated reference in the nuclear testannouncement of the "thought" and leadership of China's 72-year-old Party Chair- man Mao Tse-tung. The statement said the com- plete success of the explosion was ensured by the fact that the scientists, technicians, mili- tary, workers and others in- volved held high Mao's banner and '"'gave prominence to poli- tics,"' creatively studied Mao's works and followed his. policies, It called the feat a "great vic- tory for Mao Tse tung's thought." In exposing both '"'anti-party" individuals and those who have merely strayed from the correct path, the Chinese have empha- sized' that the culprits have either opposed or misinterpreted Mao's writings and thinking. The use of Mao's name in the statement on. the latest bomb test, a practice which was not followed in China's announce- ments of two previous tests, ap- peared to be a further effort to rally wavering elements around the Communist party leader- ship. PIERRE SEVIGNY AT MUNSINGER ENQUIRY ing Monday morning's ses- sion of the Munsinger judi--- (centre) asso- Jacqueline Delorme (second from (left), an old friend of Gerda Munsinger. and Mr Sevigny's legal counsel (left) Jules Dupre, follow Pierre Sevigny former Conservative ciate defence minister, is accompanied by Mrs. Se vigny (extreme right) and 'Car Parking Tickets | clal inquiry | Oe eis vw Slight Gains ] 'On Exchange | TORONTO (CP) -- Prices on) | the N NUCLEAR CAIN. Hydrogen Elements Show Technical Advances Made PEKING (Reuters) --- News-,bombed by the United States # papers brought out their biggest) would feel justified in sending banner headlines here today to|troops outside Chinese borders Toronto Stock Exchange) announce China's. thermo-Mo attack American forces in modest recovery in| | staged a Start Wildcat Strike ser oeee tame aoe MONTREAL eal's 3,500 (CP) longsh Brokers attributed the early gain to reaction to similar in- contract.| NHB police ter sev a work- creases posted by important is- Mont-|the signing of a new or emen| The old one expired Dec. 31 ers to move their cars from handling of 4 conciliation board has been|areas reserved for relationship| staged a wildcat walkout Mor She hadjday for I wish) was the same as tha felt it was the last time I would| solemnly to say under oath that! the previous, walkout ever see her. Because 1 wasinever at any time whatsoever! eting of very tired I fell asleep. When/did I have cause to suspect or| parked cars by I woke up it was in the early | think Munsinger| bors Board police jheld Monday night by appointed Claude perior Court | Plans to meet time in 19 deep- sels along the second hree weeks, tying u ea and 18 inland ves he waterfront, The reason the strikers gave| yen for| 19, union offic' he tick-| days before tl the dock workers'}men back to National Har-| turned or that the While hurried meetings were repre: entatives of the union--the In under Mr Provost In last month's walkout, April| another on their opyn time as the entire parking would be resolved, The exact cause of Monday's walkout was not clear sues on the New York exchange, Justice) c 0 4 : vestors moving into of Quebec Su-| The dockers complained that| and to in ( 8 and the board) they are often required to move; the market to buy stocks at the this week.|from one end of the harbor to| low prices they had fallen to in |the last few days After 45 minutes of trading, later ials tried for two | jobs change during the course hey could get the) of a shift jmage in provincial ivil in profess ies walked off the and Montre their Ssalarie because of the|are was dead. | walk off Montreal they will not return til they reach @ settlement identi-|c York. Mr. Du-/|both cities ernational ociation Union hat little : prog QUEBE( (CE loved ec City n support o ncreased heir first work Officially he holding erm used by he legal right After neetings in he government Pickets were ipal governm The decision had told him and study sessions was made Satur Munsinger!day after a breakdown in nego- tiations with the government He The civil ederz ation *of DOROTHY CAMERON APPEALS . Longshoremen"s (CLC)--the 'if| Federation of Canada Spence of the Supreme Court of|I suspected then or now that/nHRB a second issue a vital factor in with the enemies of)|on the part of t loomed > unes member negotiation Som servar sional job in Que-) gist al Monda demand fot is' part of contract 1 vear studs ployee the job without having to strike Simultaneous Quebe the civi to set up on prin nt lildin ir Health Minister begin the| of servants }are members of six unions affil- iated to the Quebec-based Con- Natio nal Ag-| TICKETING BLAMED a One report said several long-| hipPing| shoremen had received tickets and the) on their cars parked in a num- 8S! ber of areas including the vi €58) cinity of grain elevators in the east end of the port ained| But a spokesman for the NHB heen) said no tickets had been issued toward] He said the walkout began after gas ina Cong They surveyors, accountants engineers agronomist chemists ologists omists $s and 600| Unions ts em include eng \ : Stuart Keate, on capac post as Vancouver raphers react laim they rec tween CBC people They eive $2,000 ervants | sional SIONS, A} City who hotel the dispute program "This Seven Days average salary ead morning City and ants said work,.They re-| One.said that Montreal Trans-|the Toronto exc aanee area understanding} portation Commission buses are lindex, a measurement o es issue|so slow that "without a car it| key stocks move, had risen . "But if you bring your car the| index was up .90 pornte to --- | only place to park is on the har- jin Monday's trading, the indus- |bors board land. This is w hat] trial index had reached its low- lice have started ticketing us in| Several important stocks were |places we've always cheer in| unchanged, but 'among those {from recent slumps were Beil Tea G U do Telephone up .50 cents to $52.50, | Aluminium up $1.62 to $41 25, IG (Reute nited States troops have been ph Viet guerrillas near the | Cambodian border, a U.S. mili-| pKING (Reuters)--Premier Chou En-lai pledged today that But the spokesman here de nied the gas was of the type weapons to blackmail others forestry China's purpose in develop biolo- British developed riot control ei as, he said from econ - fence and its ultimate aim gvas Tear gas is in common use by/ the elimination of nuclear weap the gen sorting pat believe there|for a visiting Albanian govern than other profes- res sigh r of cans being) ment delegation, the New China employed by the pped in @ combat area __|news agency reported of Montreal and Hydro | details about the explosion Mon Their now is of China s third nucleat > $8,000 a vear and they are seek which the Chinese saic ing an increase of 20 per cent Visits Nasser te Hour said the test was < 10 per cent in the second year < - ntrit x on oe China's and $1,000 in compensation to portant contribution to C cover the last five months of means. you don't get any lunch,| points to 163,28. The industrial the fight is about--the NHB po- jest level since Aug. 10, 1965, | before." lshowing signs of recovering CPR, up $1 to $59 and Alcan SAIGON -(Reute tear bid to flush out Siete i tary spokesman said today *|}China never will use nuclear} ineers which causes nausea. It was a ing nuclear weapons was de geor American troops here, when|ons, he told a farewell banquet| to The Chinese leader gave no hei Soviet Premier contained thermonuclear mate- in the first year of the contract '| security and world peace negotiations work sn CAIRO (Reuters) Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin arrived in Cairo today for an eight-day official visit, He was met by China s developing nuclear President Nasser " | weapons, but'she absolutely will It is the Soviet leader's first | not place blind faith in them official visit outside the Commu We submit to the nist world since he came to! nuclear anyone power 18 months ago, Inor will we nuclear learn that four of the six unions| Kosygin's visit was seen here | Weapons to blackmail others é involved joined the walkout/as a sign of increasing Soviet| He said China would never be without even having heard the|interest in Middle Eastern af-|the first to use nuclear weap gov ernment' 8 contract offer fairs } ons with Chou declared Eric Kierans, in charge of the governnient end the negotiations, described the work stoppage as an illegal strike will never blackmail of use HULL, Que. (CP) -- said he was surprised to ever involved Monday eight young Trade the re HIS HOMEWORK publisher. of Sun to try an agreement be management and its television producers in an internal dispute, works on his report in his Ottawa room, The centre of is the television (CP W Wirephoto) Deaths . Fire Held Accidental ner's jury returned a verdict of} accidental death at an inquest) night into the death of] _ children April ~ ... AROUND WORLD CONSEQUENCES Great Masters Were Explicit, PORONTO (CP) by the staged b Doroth Car Court of Ay conviction sounds of ext Defence upheld. sreat great Picasso and embrandt were rsities and It could wel\prevent art ga one cards, the seller could go museums; libraries, uni- of other similar in- from exhibiting irded I ' 1 mate oru0on 0 the of the In his judgment Cameron last November istrate Fred C. Hayes said some each by Lawrence Chaplin Toronto and Fred Ross of jail John He Magistrate Hayes 2i-page judgment tt nant characteristic hibit is "'the Paintings $s such as leries said Miss Ca on downtown meron Yonge Saint works in ¢ tion ( res va among the six mercial galleries in Jaintings yn exhibit iS a legiti cultural itage world undu "De seven against Mjss of sex.' among 50 Mag to attract Mr. Williston argued B lovers rather than persons bs y yctur of of the nude figures in the draw most any picture ested in pornography artist could be obscene i Ny ings were engaged in acts which illegal under the rimina used in a disgusting manner an Gh ihe Gon If some of Picasso's works + ned if ¢tandards showing intimate were put on a would become would be an outrage decenc} ifixion x1 det ' sexuai agains Miss billboard, t made genera »bscene be He argued scenity in the de Ma members of the Cameror morality squad raided ameron's gallery and the draw exhibition titled Eros 65.* Five of the drawings were by Robert Markle of Toronto and Toronto M { there is Wo scription fine art ; . hax seized seven ings from the ause they to public sortrayal of sex in the "And if some of Rembrandt's works were nade into . post-" trayal may be gal Street best com Toronto . vere calculated connoisseurs and art inter Williston said even paint vould "be used were or no matter how explicit the por nuclear test, but gave the world no further details of what the scientists achieved. There was little sign of public excitement in Peking streets. News reports were confined to the text of the official an- nouncement, with its enigmatic over western China Monday hydrogen bomb--material. No explanation of the nature or strength of the blast was available today from Chinese of- ficials, The test was China's third since 1964, The phrasing of the announcement suggested the de- vice had at least elements of the hydrogen bomb -- a feat that marks a step forward in China's nuclear progress, Newspapers announcing the successful test were posted on public noticeboards all over Pe- king and the announcement was broadcast in factories. Asia Addressing the U.S. directly, Chou sald: "If you come from the sky, why can't we fight back on the ground? That is why we say the war will have no boun+ daries once it breaks out." phrase that the device exploded|ARE SKEPTICAL (In Washington, U.S. officials contained thermonuclear -- or|Were skeptical the Chinese had tested an H-bomb, (U.S. Atomic, Energy Com- mission and state department officials said they were await- {ng analysis of radioactive de- bris from the atmosphere before making a positive judgment, (Scientists at Niigata Univer- sity, northern Japan, said they would collect dust from the rooftop of Niigata's municipal office building to detect fallout expected to reach Japan start- ing Wednesday. (Experts at the French nu- clear. energy commission. ia Paris interpreted the Chinese announcement as meaning the REITERATES STAND Immediately below the an- nouncement of the test in The People's Daily today was a re- iteration by Premier Chow En- lai of China's attitude tows ard} the United States and the pos- sibility of war He said China would not pro-} voke war but if it was attacked] by the Americans, the war |would have no boundaries The premier's statement was| made a month ago in a press | timing of its publication, as welll as its place in the official news- | paper, left no doubt that it was| intended to complement the nu-/ jclear announcement. | | Chou promised China's 'sup jport and help" if any country jmet with aggression by imper- jialists headed by the United | States } Without mentioning Viet Nam, jhe hinted that if China was | claiming jinterview and-observers said the|s | bomb was an atomic bomb con- | taining thermonuclear materials such as tritium, deutherium and lithium.) The Peking ennouncement suggested the bomb was ex- ploded in the air and probably {was dropped from a plane, Cheering Communist party of- ficials hurried into the streets in the capital distributing a spe- cial edition of the party news- paper, The People's Daily, pro- the test a complete uccess. The announcement gave no in- dication of the bomb's strength or any further technical details. The blast took place over Western China at 4 p.m. (3 a.m. |/EDT) Monday, the official an- nouncement said, One purpose of China's development of nu- clear weapons was to oppose 'United States-Soviet collusion for maintaining nuclear monop oly," the announcement said. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS 'Floods Devastate Central Cuba HAVANA copter floods in (Reuters) -- central Cuba, it causing widespread damage warehouses rivers have overflowed after Rescue parties including heli- units have evacuated 500 families threatened by was reported today. Several days of torrential rain, The loss included sugar in . Sinden Named New Bruins Coach BOSTON (AP) -- Harry Sinden, vlayer-coach at Okla homa City last season, today was named coach of Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League; Sinden was chosen to succeed Milt Schmidt who resigned to devote full time to his duties as Bruins assistant general manager In THE TIMES today... Centennial Porade Organized -- Poge 9 Oil Kings Goolie Totks Out -- Ann Londers---~12 ity News---~9 Classified--J 4 'omics--12 Editorial--~4 Finencial--18 Page 6 Obits TKeatre---13 Whitby News----5 Women's Neather---~2