Weather Report Seasonable temperatures and light winds forecast. Low to- night 50, high Sunday 68. Home Newspaper' OF Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax Pickering ond neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durhom Counties, The Oshawa Times Authorized os Second Closs Mall P. Ottewa ond for payment of OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1966 THIRTY-SIX PAGES VOL, 95 -- NO. 105 Fag hy 2 American Asian Role... ... Hangs In Balance VIET WAR NEARS SHOWDOWN By EDWIN Q. WHITE SAIGON (AP) ~ South Viet Nam headed today for a show- down that could decide the fu- ture of the massive U.S. com- mitment here. s With civil war ranging in the northern city of Da Nang and street rioting in the capital of Saigon, it appeared that the showdown might come quickly as events, once again, seemed to have swept past the U.S. ca- pability to influence them, Whether the regime now in power -- the military directory headed by Premier Nguyen Cao Ky~--can survive the internal struggle is a matter of open speculation, The odds against it appeared to be mounting, As the fighting between Viet- namese widened, the impossibil- ity of keeping Americans from becoming involved became ap- parent, There now are too many nearly 260,000-for them not to become involved, Americans were wounded in Da Nang and U.S. marines held strategic installations from gov- ernment and anti - government forces when they considered them essential for American se- curity. U.S. officials worked fever- ishly behind-the-scenes to effect a solution to the civil strife and violence, One reliable report said Amer- ican authorities had asked LA- Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi in Hue to come to Saigon to meet with the Ky government and try to find a settlement, He refused. HAS LITTLE CONTROL Thi's refusal demonstrated two things: The feeling -that when the blood has been spilled and the smoke has settled, he might emerge as a new leader; and that the United States, de- spite its vast military role here, can do little to control the pres- sures that make up the explo- sive world of Vietnamese poli- tics, Reports from Washington in- dicate there's a possibility that South Viet Nam might be forced to give up the three northern- most provinces next to North Viet Nam. "If we have to do something like that, why don't we just get out altogether," said one bitter U.S. official, Other reports from Washing- ton reflected a tougher tone than the United States has taken in past Viet Nam crisis, Highest officials were quoted as having said the United States can only do so much, that ernments cannot be he! to achieve independence and sta- bility without helping them- selves, Buddhists Insist Ky Resign Fighters Strafe Da Nang While Saigon Mob Riots DA NANG '(AP)--Civil strife continued in South Viet Nam today as Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's air force attacked rebel troops at Da Nang and riot po- lice clashed with more than 5,000 Buddhists in Saigon. Fifteen U.S. servicemen were wounded by mortars and rock- | ets during clashes between rebel and government forces at Da a a, OF Reprisals SAIGON (AP) -- The United | nt warned Buddhist leaders day | today that. American troops will Viet | Strike back in case of further shelling of U.S. installations by ~ | Buddhist - backed rebel troops, | The warning was delivered by American consular representa- tives in Hue to Thick Tri Quang, a powerful Buddhist leader in the rebellious northern province, | American sources said Tri | Quant repeated his demands for U.S, pressure to oust the mill- ltary government of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. The American represent- atives met Tri Quant shortly after dissident fire in the em» battled city of Da Nang injured 15 U.S, servicemen and after rebel troops fired mortars at the U.S. air base near the city. American military sources said they felt none of the at- tacks were deliverate but. ex- 'posed American servicemen to additional danger. from Ky's air force dro four or five bombs in rebel po- sitions across the river freed downtown' Da Nang, The target was an encampment of about 100 rebel soldiers near the Da Nang River bridge. These trmmps had held one end of the bridge before it was taken over by U.S. marines, and they had been firing free Nang and some mortar shells|quently on government troops fired from rebel positions|from across the river. landed at the U.S, air base near) It was the first time that Ky, the city, who is commander of the air Reports said there had been/force as well as premier, ore heavy fighting with casualties|dered planes against the Bude ' on both sides, dhist-backed dissidents, In Hue, a Buddhist centre 50 USE TEAR GAS ; miles north of Da Nang, a long Riot police in Saigon fired DA NANG CASUALTY after he was wounded by second successive rebel fire in a street near a of shooting in South Buddhist pagoda, It was the Nam's second largest city, A wounded Vietnamese government soldier is car- ried to cover by comrades Huge Project Slated Could Replace Canal cellation of the present $180,-| take five years to build and cost 000,000 program to complete a! about $107,000,000, twinning of the existing locks Studies of the bypass were One of the projects has al-| first announced last December land Canal between Lake On-jready been given the green when Ottawa expropriated 4,000 tario and Lake Erie were. an-| light by the government -- an/acres of land for it, nounced Friday by Transport!$4-mile bypass to carry canal) The second project, which the Minister Pickersgill, traffic around the city of Wel- | government still has to ap- If both are launched, the es-| /8n4. |prove, would dwarf the bypass|* The canal now twists through} job sean aes Pig Pgs 0 the heart of the city where four; It is a complete replacement pacity would be doubled to highway and two railway|in a new location of the present) BOMBS REBEL FORCE OTTAWA (CP)---Two massive projects that would involve, in effect, an almost complete re- placement of the present Wel- BUDDHISTS' ON MARCH IN SAIGON rioted and demonstrated against the United States and the Premier Nguyen _Cao Ky gime dn Saigon. A thousand joined in demon- stration with Molotov cock- tails exploding in the _ Stree! ets, Shouting woman carries banner saying "Vietnam for Vietnamese" as a_ torch carrying crowd of Buddhists Organization andl $ { é than "As s00n as last year he called) Chart ier| yyimmennananaeentmmamaananenny syne syyernrengenseeemat ena | NEWS HIGHLIGHTS one who has bad nerves, the) Rebel Shells Fall Near U.S. Planes boone ped gy llgh ac tnghs hag DA NANG (Reuters)--The U.S, Air Force evacuated some only partly disabled where do| Of its jet fighter-bombers from this giant South Vietnamese you draw the line, and when! air base here early today. after rebel shellfire exploded ' near grounded aircraft. ;you do what does he get, not} Air Line Employees Threaten Strike even enough to live like a hu- man, "All people Want to be useful, . jlet us give them the right to TORONTO (CP) -- Robert Dye, president of the Cana jearn more so they can become| dian Air Lines Employees Association (Ind.), said today the 1,500-member association has offered Air Canada its minimum wage demands and is planning strike action that "will shut down Air Canada", unless the demands are met. . What chance of higher| wages have the none skilled older people the ones that have not the stability to learn, the semi invalid and the sick, the old sub icitizens, not destitute people, | that goes for every one sick and} } well let them earn a living w ast oath say $200.00, "And the none skit $200 and) Cay Safety Experts Appointment Lauded WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congressmen studying the auto safety problem today applauded the appointment of six ex- perts to advise the U.S. government on tighter safety standards for its fleet of vehicles, and cuts off | MALL § ... In THE TIMES today... Centennial Campaign Donations Flow In--P, 13 Whitby Man At Drame Awards Presentation---P, 5 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi 'n re- dent Johnson and his key ad- visers are shaping S, policy NO PAPER on revamping the North Atlan aty $ Orage while VICTO across the Atlantic als are RIA DAY reported studying: ways NATO could play a role in future East The staff of The Oshawa | West fence-mending Times will be observing the Johnson met Friday night Victoria Day with State Sec y Dean Rusk nena' will Robert § Dean Acheson, former state sec-! retary now advising on NATO'to his 14 NATO allies--includ- affairs ing Canada -- to remove the military system and his order give powerful the feder- aining ation ffi The federation delegates officis walked out of the third session of the concijiation hearings,| stating they would be condon ing all illegal act if the hearing continued while an illegal strike was in progress, , Ships have been diverted to) Monday Halifax and Saint N.B.\ tion resun Tuesday affai addy from the struck port of Comics--23 Sports--10, 11 Theatre--7 Weather--2 Whitby News----5 Women's--18, 19, 20 Ann Landers--18 City News--17 Classified---24, 25, 26, 27 iditorial--4 Financial--22 Obits---27 holiday, No Jefence Sec publishe be publi qd McNamara, Ws ¥ Regular publica- rr ' , line of Buddhist monks marched on the U.S, consulate with de-|'e" 888 grenades at 5,000 Bud. mands that the United States in-| "ists outside the capital's roain tervene to end the fighting at|P880da where monks and nuns Da Nang. were on a hunger strike to back demands for the ouster of Ky's hig the leading sce government, Thich Tri Quang, telephoned|" There was no official explana- from Hue to the Buddhist In- stitute in Saigon with this mes- = oe adnate more than 100,000,000 tons, and bridges often impede traffic. |seven-lock system which car-| As Ky's air force bombed sage for Ky: Resign or more generally orderly, though noisy. larger locks would draw bigger| TAKES FIVE YEARS han 7 . pt Sea Phage rebel forces in a Da ty and] "ee fgets! Se we Three U.S. marines were vessels into the St, Lawrence) pr, Pierre Camu, president of ihe 400 oot Nis a os Ese _{0P| riot ut ors BY onmtras| | _*0u mre planes! wounded by rockets from @ Seaway. of the St, Lawrence Seaway) ment, An eis shth lock at "the| tors in piney Ky stad a "ci. | tool Ger te tana eae reo But it also would mean can- I Authority, said the bypass will) Lake Hrie end would need im-|vilian - mii tary national Young Model Nene Ue cores Be cee provement, people's congress" meeting for| 1 " ordered into the air during the Informants said it would cost| next Tuesday in an effort to end| incident but were recalled and ana ian S autione at least §$250,000,000, probably| the strike. Royal Pen Pal did not engage the government more | The congress is supposed to| plane. The project, still requiring aj represent a cross - section of | ismisse s * Tan LONDON (AP) Prince| Another eight U.S. marines year of study before it can be} the country's political factions Charles has a pen pal~18-year-| were injured when mortars out ecognition {China: submitted to the cabinet, would| and is to discuss the ways of lold..mode}].Rosaleen Bagge. landed on marine positions. Of- og dy Dimes gg of five -- SS teeth, abertien for goed _EDMONTON (CP)--When the} 45, left a long and tangled trail. | parliamentarians of corruption | hay Says = ag eg a said their injuries ranged WASHINGTON (CP) -- Some] The report disclosed that Ca : stituent assembly Edmonton Journal received a! It includes the letter to The and mis-government, It is a/ish seek loesn't write often,| from slight to severe. American legislators have ad-|nadians urged renewed efforts) P%: Camu sald studies still a wis _|letter from a man who said he Journal, dated May 11, 1966,/rambling document, in places|DUt when he does he goes on| Two U.S. Air Force men suf- vised their Ottawa counterparts|at negotiations with de Gaulie|#t@ in the early stages. but the |planned to become president of and a handwritten speech found) almost incoherent and full of |for pages. |fered slight injuries when the that Canadian recognition oflon the future of the North At-|@™M would be to build longer| Canada after killing as manyjin his Toronto room, in which/spelling errors, but Chartier's| .Rosaleen, daughter of a re-|rebel mortars landed on the air China would be unpopular inilantic Treaty locks able to handle bigger ves ugmen e use members of.Parliament as pos-;\he outlined his grievances) bitterne sme through, tired army major, and the 17-|base and @ third airman was the United States but it is Can-| Canad fe i Masta Sanka re a seaway now is | sible, it was dismissed as the} against Canada's parliamentary; Of parliamentarians, he said: his a yy have been 2 | injured by a stray bullet. A U.S. ade's own. business. Sedna Bulth and Recewlicenieee ted to rage ling lake ni T ih | work of a crank. | system. ie aca accuia ere ry. vd three years, she| naval officer was wounded by a Canadian parliamentarians senator George Aiken of Ver \ Fen tk vosse J of not more 0 OW Ip Wednesday the author of the), It also includes a record of r cain wi 9 leeale. wales a ot riday, " grenade fragment in downtown also are more inclined toward|mont. drawing on experionce|.©) ore ot eneth letter was killed by a home-| peated brushes with the law and iva ' ss Ci ee ' a wig oe ap prince at a) Da Nang. a "go-slow" attitude in facinglat all nine conferences ed SPEED TRAFFIC LONDON (AP)--Hundreds of}made bomb in a washroom in/|an estranged wife' who said he/ pope A ee . a. i nd keds | fats "we orfo oh ige ons her] On the war front, U.S. troops the situation created by Presi-lthe Jatest conference was the It would also be possible to/Ships lay idle in British ports} the Parliament Buildings in Ot-\didn't want a home and fam- © iG card ot ; m m turn father farms 1 acres at|pursued a fleeing Viet Cong dent de Gaulle's decision to pull! most constructive ME ahties the wuaviee a Menkes and|today as the spreading strike of] tawa ily coats to the first degree, King's Lynn, 20 miles from the|force from helicopters today France from the NATO military : speed up the flow of traffic The 62,500 merchant seamen neared| Paul Joseph Chartier, about! 'The letter repeatedly accused) "Its too bad we cant give royal country home at Sand- jand scattered them in rugged structure DESERVES SUPPORT present S7-mile Welland system |the end of its first week and} ™ z them a jolt say 10,000 volts to ringham. mountain country of central These points emerged in the) The report said' there is unan-/has- become the bipgest bottle. |tugme n, sympathizing with the e jremind them of their promeses| I have never been escorted] Viet Nam. final report of the ninth Can-jimity that the U.S. has been| neck in the seaway. although it/Seamen, have refused to tow the now that they are elected they/out by 'him because he has) They reported killing 24 to ada-U.S. inter - parliamentary|striving earnestly for a solution) handled a record 54.000.000 tons| Vessels to nearby anchorages. | ovl1e n ers | give us a line that is 1966 years|never asked me," she said, '"'I/raise to 122 the enemy dead so conference which ended Friday to the war in Viet Nam and! of traffic | Within another week, if there| | old, believe he's not allowed to take/far in an operation which be- after covering topics ranging|that President Johnson, Who) prodictions of ! 'affin (is no settlement, many of Brit-| Speaking of what girls out actually. gan Monday. from China, NATO and South-|spoke to the' delegations Thurs Beg ag ll Weller trattic| tn docks will be jammed, its the nation's social ills, east Asia to water and tariffs,|day, deserves sympathy and have 1% taka mai 000 tink & warehouses loaded with waiting) ; wrote ' . support year by 1970 and 79,000,000 ton exports eT @ | nquiry ° ® "There was general agree-| by 1980. If the situation becomes acute| Dock Strike ment--that close relations of} "p» Daca aitsiaod: thase ae enough to endanger Britain's| eatin confidence between the| conservative estimates lese ae) Prime Minister Wilson has| OTTAWA (CP) -- The Soviet, these reports in his testimony and Canada would not be! , gai ie: {promised to proclaim a state uf| embassy has decided to enter| before the inquiry May 9 and itd affected by differ-|,.Friday's announcement by} emergency and order the Royal|some indirect, unsworn testi-/refe rred to a "Soviet trading ta emated ences in Canadian and Ameri a ii r oe oo hel ay at to man the ships and open} mony a the Gerda Munsinger -- ae yp Mes wag bso an viewpoints concerning)" Oo ¢ Oi the ports security inquiry. where 1e verman vorcee TR in & Communist China late 2,000 acres east of the, 'This could create an irrecon:| A spokesman for the em- had her apartment, oy oe ae Canadians would like to ab ee oe 7 be cilable rift-between Wilson's La-|bassy says Russia didn't have Oter, nome reports bub. shoremen's Association (CLC) (|Sorb the Alaska Panhandle with) to se ahead say AM 8 bor party and the trade unions.) any kind of trading mission sta- mitted o the inquiry sta e na said Friday night attempts by Suitable recompense for the! gyctom ' new lock) Although tew authorities think/ tioned in Montreal in 1960 Mrs. Munsinger, who lived in Judge Rene Lippe to mediate United States, Smith said wv stem things will get that far RCMP reports submitted to! Canada from 1955 to 1961, had} the contract dispute between! The Panhandfe. an Expropriation procedures pre-| There have been no fights, no| the inquiry, now adjourned un-/ worked in Germany for the the union and the Shipping Fed: ject satan . ing ve nt land speculators from|scabbing (strike - breaking at- {til Tuesday, state that Mrs, Russian intelligence service eration of Canada have shown ateral talks, extends) grabbing up property and de-/tempts)--even though William! Munsinger in 1960 lived in _a/and was a common prostitute no progress more than 300 miles down Can-| manding inflated prices, Those | Hog arth, general secretary of| Montreal building at 1420 and the mistress of Pierre Se- Wail Gotlor: lawyer stor. the ada's West Coast who own the property when the/the scamen's union, has criti- Tower St, which also housed a vigny, then Conservative union which seudeunts At access to tidewater expropriation is ordered argue! cized at what he has seen as Soviet trading company, -- ciate defence minister, Mr aftikine dockeineears i Re Smith, British Columbia Lib later ge government agents Wilson's bias against the strik Former Conservative justice! vigny has denied _--." real, Quebec and Trois-Rivieres, eral and a co-leader of the 24 j over the price ers oF minister Davie Fulton cited) that she was his mistress, blamed lack of power in the}/man Canadian delegation, said up" terms of reference in the | iCanadians want the Alaskan ® Chartier once threatened to! judge's appointment for making/boundary pushed back to the Ey ern Oowers xamine |kill an Edmonton lawyer who} it "just a sham.' 60th parallel This would wipe , | we 18 opposing the discharge of | The walkout began in Mont.|°Ut the Panhandle and include 'his bankruptcy, was convicted} real May 9 to support demands "eau, the Alaskan capital e twice of obstructing a police} of increased pay, shorter work.) Smith didn't specify what sort officer, and once of common as- ing hours and better working of recompense he felt Canada '@ | @) lance u ure O © sault conditions, The last contract ex-| would offer but suggested the Once, when stopped by police pired Dec, 1, 1965. issue is for a government-to because the truck he was driv- The ILA called on the federal /S0Vermment approach jon purely defence aspect ing was overloaded, he tried to government Friday to mre ry Atlantic ¢ dump the load on the patrol car. | Judge Lippe | a more "We should see it more as an i ; A mandate to 'force' Reports indicatpd the discus-| organization's facilities. {rom organization of Western nations Rip hag or a job, ation to start barg sion centred on a meeting of France within a year that could negotiate from), 8 set NATO ministers June 6-8 in Sabian his strength with the aim of arriy Pea ly Race tla Brussels. The United States is) WORK WITH RUSSIA? ing at some common ground ;* 'K "ah erty epi ee et expected to urge moving) In London, a British source/with Russia about attitudes to| TUCker and as a security guard. | NATO's military and political) said officials there were study:|the world of the 1980s and 1990s) Many of his moves he blamed} headquarters from Paris to Bel-\ing a new plan for allowing| wher. we might have to contend 0 marital problems, gium, streamlining the NATO|NATO to work ultimately with) with a third superpawer," he' His wife, Ruth, om! living in | setup and giving West Germany|the Soviet Union if China' said Salmo, B.C., said he hit her oc-; a bigger role emerges as the world's third) Other diplomats said Acheson, casionally, and was given to} natior 1 Talks were prone "dd by Pres: superpower is investigating how the alliance of temper when losing at a t ident Charles de Gaulle's plans The source suggested NATO)could help iron out East-West ye. She said he didn't want Ball and| to pull France out of NATO's(officials should concentrate less' problems. home or family. 18 ' Tohr un l niet State George W. lh AA iil iA NA ly