Home Newspaper' Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, VOL. 95 ~~ NO, 97 She Oshawa Times 10¢ Single SOc Par Week ee ativeres OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1966 Authorized as Second Class Ottowa end for payment of Weather Report Cool sunny weather over Southern Ontario, with some clouds, forecast, Low tonight, 85. High Friday, 50, Post Office rtment Be yD gy THIRTY PAGES Gifford today Mayor Lyman had his hands full separating junior hockey de- fence stars Bob Falkenberg and Bobby Orr -- both itch- ing to clash again Saturday Close Air Raid Ever Made To Major Port SAIGON (Reuters) U.S, |2 MAYOR ACTS AS REFEREE in the fifth game of the Me- morial Cup finals But, as the smiling faces indicate, the "get-together" prior to a civie luncheon for the Gen- erals and the Oil Kings, was 36th U.S, plane lost in raids on fighter - bombers Wednesday| North Viet Nam made their closest raid ever to) the Meanwhile, official figures re- major North Vietnamese|leased today showed American|losses were light. port of Haiphong, as two flights|deaths in Viet Nam totalled 82 of navy planes hit a surface-to-|last week and exceeded South of Hue, marine units were in Vietnamese second time. air missile site, a U.S. military | spokesman said here today. | The pilots reported scoring di-| fatalities for the South Vietnam reported 61 rect hits at the missile launch-|troops killed and 22 missing in ers at the site 10 miles north-| action east of Haiphong. The closest previous attack to Haiphong was 12 miles, Three' missiles were fired) from we before American! bombs struck, None of the planes was hit, But near the Nerth Vietnamese town af Daing! Hoi an F-105 Thunderchief was shot down by anti-aireraft fire, | and its pilot was reported miss- ing. By U.S. count, it was the) Urge School Tax Change QUEBEC (CP) Increased flexibility. in the collaboration between schools and the church and a uniform rate of real es- tate taxation for educational purposes were among the ma jor recommendations in the final part of the report of the Parent reyal commission on ed- ucation in Quebec released here Wednesday The recommendations were included in two volumes which are actually the fourth and fifth volumes of the whole report The first volume released Wed- nesday dealt with denomina- tional and non + denominational school affairs and the second with education financing. The first volume of the report was made pubt c in 1963 and the second and third volumes in} 1964, The commission, set up in 1961, was headed by Msgr, Al- phonse Marie Parent. The final two volumes contained 530 pages Volume four contains 74 rec- ommendations, The commission recommended that the present Roman Catholic and Protestant} school commissions be elimi- nated in favor of a_ united! neutral body. It also recommended that par ents and the government have increased control over school board sile itral bodies, would, if ted, have all schools--Cath- Protestant and non - de- under their juris- national LOCAL OVERHAUL \ the new organizations overhauled and special tion service for Indians be created Volume five recommended a uniform rate of real estate tax at education purposes which would allow all to pay ac-) cording to their ability, ystem, .local would be educa would der schoo mn for LEFT 456 BODIES The Viet Cong left 456 bodies on the battlefields in the same} period were captured Another 121 guerrillas About 90 miles northeast of Saigon, U.S. paratroops attacked an estimated Viet Cong, Paratroops found 14 dead in- surgents U.S. marines launched two new operations in the northern part of South Viet Nam, sup- ported by massive artillery and air barrages. Sixty helicopters. airlifted a large marine force 18 miles west of the coastal city of Qu- ang Ngai, The marines blew up an intricate Viet Cong tunnel network 200 "ta 250 A Prime Minister Lester Pearson of Canada and 1! Munsinger Prob Said Anti - Soviet MOSCOW (AP) -- Pravda to day charged that the Gerda |Munsinger case is being used to \*cast a shadow on the Soviet Union," The newspaper of the Soviet Communist party said in an Ot- tawa story the case is perpe- trating the 'myth' of Soviet spies in Canada 'It is clear to every sober- minded person that all this can not promote better relations be tween the Soviet Union and Canada," Pravda concluded, The article was apparently the first reference to the Munsin- ger case in the Soviet press The newspaper acctised 'some members of the cabinet" --it did not name them--of be- ing involved in trying to use the scandal for anti-Soviet purposes, 'It is curious," the article jsaid, 'that in this they were | willingly helped by the FBI," Pravda . repeated its charge, | contact with the 'Soviet peo- ple." Pravda mentioned Soviet exhibitions in Canada, reasoning that attendance at these could be affected "An attempt is niade to con- vince the Canadian citizens that spies are waiting for them at almost every corner." Pravda took the position that the Canadian government has serious economic and social problems to deal with, 'but the government puts aside serious problems for a so-called na- tional security case." |made many times in the past, | |that "certain circles in the} United States' are interested in} | promoting anti-Soviet feeling' in| Canada, | The newspaper, which serves | as semi-official spokesman for} the government, maintained} \that not only is the Munsinger| lease being used in an attempt} |to worsen -Canadian-Soviet rela-| \tions, there is another motive} |behind it--to intimidate com- mon Canadians from having the series in six games, But, naturally, Bobby Orr, pre- dicts the exact opposite, Both players are team cap- tains and both are rated ex- Outside Workers' Strike |Forecast For Vancouver 'COUVER (CP)--A strike! Union Secretary Jack Phil- 500 outside workers here|lips did not say what possible pread to'suburban North/procedures were discussed at a Ss id Wi hh Id | Vancolwer this week lunion meeting Wednesday night al it e | American | ye North Vancouver Civic) The North Vancouver situa- e C | |Employees' Association 700|tion closely parallels that inj TORONTO (CP) -- The Globe outside and inside workers--will| Vancouver. and Mail says the provincial jhold a government - supervised | The Employees' Association government is withholding two) says Cardin 'strike vate Tuesday lvoted 94 per cent to reject reports showing serious neglect! j .| OTTAWA (CP)---Just in- Union officials indicated they|concillation board award of a of senevet eon delinquent chil ister conan Weluaiie cae expect overwhelming approval|10.5 - per - cent increase on a = in Eilned i says one re-| gorically" denied press reports of strike action and a walkout/basic wage of $2.29 in a two-| ig . Ae Naat December by|that he would resign this sum- could start in the populous north|year contract. The members| Oi . ge f the attorney-gen-|mer or even before Mr, Justice side centre as early as next/seek a 12-per-cent increate. Pei gf mpl says the| W. F. Spence reports on his in- Friday The Vancouver workers want! Metropolitan Toronto juvenile| quiry into the Munsinger secu- In Vancouver, meanwhile, ©X-/an extra 70 cents an hour on aland family court is under-|rity affair, HONG KONG (Reuters) ecutives of the Civie Employees' |three.year contract, though they| staffed. ~ The denial was telephoned to North Viet Nam today accused| Union (outside workers) were jclaim they would have settled! Phe other report, the story|The Canadian Press by the United States of using large|t® meet today to consider the |for 40 cents an hour over two! says was delivered in April to| spokesman in the minister's of- quantities of poison gas during|!@test city council offer to get)years before the strike Health: Minister Matthew Dy-' fice. ; operations along the Cambodian|"* é mond and "showa~that only a/Mr.-Cardin started the Mun- border in South Viet Nam, | small part of the province's|singer uproar in Parliament The North Vietnamese news emotionally disturbed children|when he blurted out the word agency, monitored here, said an are being helped in schools or|"Monseignor" during a debate official. protest was lodged with}: | elsewhere, : jon the justice department esti- the International Contro| Com-| all in good fun. Edmonton last night evened the best of seven Canadian champion- ship series pith a 5-3 vic- tory, Bob Falkenberg pre dicts his team will clean-up cellent NHL prospects, Fifth game of the series will be played at Maple Leaf Gar- dens starting at 8 p.m. Oshawa Times Photo é cae JUSTICE MINISTER A spok id 47 a1. [DY 'WwW. "t it' spokesman sa guerril- |? las had been killed and 15 cap could on f ul a tured so far while Near the old imperial capital their third day of Operation Wayne and reported five Viet Cong killed. U.S. Charged With' Poison Gas War entindinua ¢ ROVAaAGNS é The City has offered 2%44 cents said it was non-poi Jury Absolves Car Of Blame , | Dead Woman's Driving May Have Caused Crash MILTON, Ont. (CP) -- On- |this particular accident," the \tario's supervising coroner said| verdict tont nued, | Wednesday he hoped an inquest, "While there is some sugges- jin which a 1964 General Motors | tion of instability, evidence does | Corvair was absolved of any/not confirm that this instability jmechanical blame in the death iof a Burlington, Ont., woman, will become a model for future traffic fatality investigations; Dr. H. B, Cotnam said jerashes were often written off as accidents when they were not, A recent amendment to the jprovincial Coroner's Act makes provisions for coroners to call jmechanics or engineers to de- termine if there was human or }mechanical failure. A coroner's jury, which delib- day, said there was no evidence of any mechanical failure or flaw in design which could have contributed to an accident in which Mary Hayward, died of linjuries suffered Feb, 4 in a col- lision 'with another automobile, The jury suggested that the uneven condition of the road may have been a contributing factor in the accident and that over-inflation of the front tires may have also contributed to the sensitivity of the steering, causing Mrs. Hayward to over- compensate for the car's move- ments, "We also feel that a possible mental attitude on the de- ceased's part as to the steer- ability of the car, may haye af- fected her reflexes and judge- ment," the jury said, Mrs, Hayward's husband, Wil- Mam, testified earlier that she had complained repeatedly about the steering and was on her way to have it checked at a Milton garage when the accl- | several existed, any more than might be experienced in any make of vehicle of this age and mile- age," The jury said it believed the woman would not have received fatal injuries. had she been wearing the car's seat belt. Mrs. Hayward died Feb. 11 of la blood clot which formed in her lungs, James Musser, chief research jand development engineer for General Motors at Detroit, erated for 4% hours Wednes-|termed a practice of weightings down the front end of the Core vair which was suggested by witnesses as '"worthe less.' Of yesterday's verdict @ general Motors spokesman com- mented in Oshawa this morning? "We are very pleased to have had an opportunity to present ou rviews at the inquest and to have been vindicated', Union Man Shot Four Arrested SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Po- lice, acting on a newspaper man's tip, arrested four men Wednesday in connection with the shotgun assassination of @ San Francisco union leader, Stil another man, an account ant, was sought, minister a union welfare fund, one is the secretary of a con- tractors' association, and the dent occurred, "The jury can find no eyi- dence of mechanical fault in Nuclear Limit Offer Rejected WASHINGTON (AP) -- The state department says the United States has turned down a Chinese proposal to limit the use of nuclear weapons because it belleved the Chinese did not "have a legitimate and con- structive interest in disarma- ment," This reasoning was offered Wednesday by press officer Robert McCloskey who con- firmed that the Chinese offer) was made to the U.S. McCloskey did not say how or when the proposal was made but said '"'we do not feel it was a constructive step toward the problem of disarmament," He gas | collectors, parks and street} cia wage of $2.28% an hour pared by a committee repre-| A few days later he charged cas sini 7 ole of Canada, India and Poland since: LONDON (Reuters) -- Brit-|ily Court Judges, who presented|baker, prime minister at the sonous tear strike," overseas trade, ;eall off the strik jat midnight Sunday--while the ters)--Official secrecy still sur|the Soviet leadership to seek jected this offer once Ispeech during the weekend by|ternational Communist organi-| bodies after to the scene Durocher, who ¢s is cleaners, gravediggers and ewer m@intenance men --walked off their jobs Saturday | and garbage has been piling up| @amen 5' . 'senting the health, welfare edu-| that two or a ee t se 1.8 ane ne , ™ cation and reform institu-|servative ca net ministers ol . " crete bse oe' cht "i$ t . '/tions departments, recommends| were involved with Mrs, Gerda J a 4 ns gas "consider any procedure 1a e 0 gt e ve a nse ' ; "er Pr singer. mye nd that powder form over areas of Tay|the civic outside workers' union| | measures suggested by the As-|Munsinger, a German, and tha Ninh province last week may, in writing, wish to suggest ain's 62,500 merchant seamenia brief to the committee, itime, mishandled the case, were today poised on the brink| . : ere jof a strike that could cripple | jeer" ete | imecountas economy eed! Romania Military peecn | | Leaders of the seamen's un-| | ion planned.to meet again to-| 5 ] LW] | day to consiNer an appeal by| 1ves rem in 1 ers | |Labor MinisterNgay Gunter to} . | | due to start) BUCHAREST, Romania (Reu-|anachronism, may have caused | ties --_ 'an inquiry! rounded the visit to Bucharest/clarification of Romania's pol- | nit ir pay and working COn-/4¢ Russian Communist Party|icy lines, pone Leader Leonid Brezhnev today,| The speech also criticized the The seamen, who claim their|his Romanian counterpart might/zation of the Stalin era--and ap: average wage is just under £60/have promoted his dash from|peared to criticize the Soviet ($180) a month, want more pay Moscow. Union over Bessarabia, which s pay) Diplomatic observers believed|was ceded by Romania in 1940 the pregeht average 56 . hour|Chief Nocilae Caeusescu, which|vian Soviet Socialist Republic, workifgz week, described military blocs as an} Observers said Caeusescu's The seamen have warned that ere i Z speech, made on the 45th an: with crewises shins in three tal Leads Police munist party Saturday, was the} four weeks, Vital domestic! most outspoken by an Eastern- coastal 'trade att bloc leader in recent years, supplies from the northeast to! i Cea London's power stations, would) pyypMoONnrT, Que, (CP)--The cu's remarks--viewed bin the Stop in a few days bodies of .two persons eke oe eitmigtly Mile. gies found in this community, s0/fVen's -- @ ' . tn-lai a vars Y nesday through information |! m-lal_and the Warsaw Pact : ake meeting here in July - might i given by a man who broke jail/," i Births a E t d F id with Lucien Rivard provincial | have caused concern to the | Gxpecte niday ; ' | me ' . The bodies, found in a single OTTAWA (CP)--The govern \ es | ' oe) Nee doncday| shallow grave, are believed tol§ Th i jment 'wes asked Wednesday |), those of Andre Paquette, a uicide reat jrecent bomb tests in Commu- : | ; Montreal mail truck holdup inlB Murder Accused | Inis "reate ss ge ae ee en ee 1964, and his girl friend Alice ee Rioux SAULT STE, MARIE, Ont | Valley) said in the Commons began last December] Ste. Marie testified Wednesday jthe fallout is expected to hit Andre Durocher led them! that W. Dalton Barber, 55, told }North America by Friday and him he "would cut his own |than that from previous nuclear) convicted narcotics - smuggler] killed his wife | j tests Lucien Rivard from Bordeaux! Barber, assistant to the vice- MacEachen/|jail March 2, 1968, pleaded) president of operations at Al- PLEASANT MEETING 'replied that because } portance of the question, he!several armed robberies and/ with capital murder in the Dec would take it as notice and pro-/ thefts which netted more than'3 death of -his wife, Marjorie, jvide an answer later. } $1,200,000, 33 Thant, secretary general a laugh together today of the United Nations, enjoy Pearson calls on U Thant, ( ; as The outside workers- garbage |, a two-year agreement on the It adds that the report, pre-|mates, mission on Viet Nam, made up throughout Vancouver ever sociation of Juvenile and Fam-|Conservative Leader Diefen- The U.S as a means of ending the The seamen already have re-|pyt diplomatic observers said a|Comintern--the Russian-led in- and a 40-hour week instead ofjthe speech by Romanian Party|and incorporated in the Molda- : ' | rersary 2 ' Anus Britain's ports would be choked} niversary of the Romanian Com includi ] ; neluding coal) : To win rave The observers said Ceauses- 7 Chine "eatiheds . . | s miles north of Montreal, Wed Chinese Prime Minister Chou Chinese Fallout } Russian: Jeaders police said i whether radioactive fallout from) van implicated in a $1,400,000 A. B, Patterson (SC---Fraser Police said the search for the) (CP)--Carl A. Schobelt of Sault lis said to be four times heavier caped with) throat' if people thought he Health Minister of the im-| guilty in court Wednesday to|goma Steel Corp., charged Qu. seriously interestedin-disarma- ment, 'they would have mani- fested this by signing the nu- clear test-ban treaty." L killed May 7. There has been no arrest in that slaying. last the owner of a saloon in San Francisco, The arrests are in connection with the slaying of Dow Wilson, 40 leader of AFL-CIO Painters Union Local 4, who was gunned down on a street April 5 after a union meeting. Murder conspiracy warrants were issued for all the five men, Charles Raudebaugh, San Francisco Chronicle crime ree porter, said in a copyrighted story that an informant told him he had been offered $5,000 to kill a union leader. Raude- baugh identified his informant as Wally Char $4 said he had refus but recalled it after the killing and turned to the newspaper man, Raudebaugh said Charleston nelned police in their investiga: tion, More than $42,000 in rewards have been offered for a convice tion, Most of the funds came from union sources, The arrests came as 500 mourners attended funeral added that if the Chinese were|services for Liayd Green, finan clal secretary of Painters Union cal. 1178 who was shot and nant NEWS Road Deaths Blam TORONTO (CP) HIGHLIGHTS e Laid Walter Famme of the Ontario Insurance Agents' Association said Wednesday that in- competent drivers rather than defective cars are respon- sible for the rising highway death toll. Investigation Called TORONTO (CP) -- A noted defence lawyer has called for an investigation into alleg ations of wire-tapping by the RCMP, Arthur Maloney, former Progressive Conservative MP for Toronto Parkdale, said Wednesday night that if the force has been doing this, Commissioner George Mc Lellan 'and others responsible' should be dismissed, Boost Car Production TORONTO (CP) Motors have scheduled minor Ford of Canada and. American increases in car production this week while General Motors and Chrysler will cut pro- duction, the Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Association re- ports, ... In THE TIMES today... Planners Consider Apartment Complex----P. 17 Oil Kings Down Generals---P, 1 Ann Landers---18 Classified-----24, 25, City News----17 Comics----23 Editorial---4 Finonci 28 26 27 Obits---28 Sports+-10, 11, 12 Theatre---22 Whitby News---5, 6 Women's--18, 19, 20, 21 Weather--2 SU, o Seat ol al UU ag ll