Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- _ ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and -- Counties. Weather Report" Cool. weather. will continue, Sunny tomorrow with some cloudy spells, Low tonight 42, high Sunday 65, 85¢ Per Week Home Belvered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1966 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES 2 CRASH PUTS CAR OUT OF MOSPORT RACE Gerry Grant's chance to score a win at the 6th Cana- » dian Grand Prix to be held today at Mosport was ruin- "ed yesterday when his car was smashed up during time trials. The car, Lola 70, a Mark II Ford, was badly damaged when it shot off the track at the pit straight. The auto is shown above as it is loaded into a trailer which will take it to a repair shop. Gerry, who was uninjured, hopes to drive her again. --Oshawa Times Photo New Charge Sought in Civil Righis (AB) entice this see ask dismissal of assault) vised a circuit ae Friday he in sag Bata of a qiyil - rights advocate, presu- stiffer Sowa, who fled in ¢ bl will 'move to have charges | against Thomas L, Coleman dis- ror when Monda: rg "Richard Morrisore, a white Roman Catholic priest Boston Gangsters Shoot Two In Mobster Vendetta MIDDLETON, Mass. (AP) -- Gangland guns in greater Bos- ton raised thelr death toll to 32 as a fusillade of bullets from a speeding limousine killed two underworld figures, one a or of an earlier gangland Mafia Men Out On Bail Stephan Hughes, 39, of! Charlestown, Mass., who sur- vived a gangland shooting last March, and Samuel O. Linden- baum, 66, of Revere, Mass., were slain by a burst of rifle| fire from a car that overtook them Friday as they drove to- ward Boston. The site was about 15 miles northeast of Boston and only the case is called) ville 7211: Killing niels of Keene, N.H., was killed by shotgun fire Aug. 20, 1965, on a street in Hayne- 's Jawyer said he will fight the move. A highway en- gineer and special deputy sher- iff, he was acquitted of man- slaughter last year in Daniels' death. In New York, at least 10 of 35 demonstrators were arrested outside a new Harlem school after barricades and a_ small army of police blocked their) | way. | | The incident marked a third| day of disorders at the school | by Negroes protesting assign-| ment of Stanley Lisser, a white! man, as principal. The arrests| came after students and teach-| jers had entered the building without difficulty. FORBIDS VIOLENCE A federal court in New Or-| | to Animals for | gram, few miles from where Hughes' | leans forbade six white teen-| brother Cornelius, 36, was slain|@8¢rs to attack Negro pupils at] in similar fashion May 25. "This is definitely a gangland murder," said Detective James NEW YORK (AP)--Thirteen Cosa Nostra figures, warned not t stray far after their re-| Teas€ im ¥1,500,000 Sail, had-the weekend to decide what they will tell.a grand jury delving into their crime-syndicate acti- vities. - The 13, representing Cosa Nos- crime-control points around country, will be questioned by the grand jury Monday on the 'current distribution of syn- dicate power and changes! within its hierarchy. 'The grand jury heard two witnesses Friday, one of them the owner of the restaurant in the New York borough of) Queens where police found the} 13 meeting Thursday at a steak- and-lasagna banquet table. The identity of the second witness! Was not known. |Leary of the state policé: 'They dust happened to catch up with} ithem here."' Burke 01 Essex Couniy said wie Slayings were "'definitely tied in with the numbers rackets in {Boston and Revere." FIND POLICY SLIPS Hundreds of policy slips were found in a bag in the car, to- gether with a .38-calibre snub- jnosed pistol and $1,100 in cash. Witnesses told police the car jused by the rifleman was a! "long, black sedan." Police said| an automatic weapon was used | to fire at least seven shots into the victims' car before the ol ers' car sped away. | The victim's car, rented by! Lindenbaum earlier in the day| jand driven by him, then| jcrashed through a guard rail land plunged down a 10-foot em- _|bankment. Both men were dead when witnesses reached the nome | SCeNe. The Times today introduces a sparkling new format for its popular Saturday Show- case. The enlarged section comes to you in easy-to-read peach newsprint. Special features this week include: Artist Decorates Ukrainian Church --Driver Advances Also in the Showcase you'll find: On The Town Garden Guide Showtimes at the Movies Teen. Scene Television Highlights Home of The Week Education Course District Attorney John P. s.| a newly desegregated school at |Bogalusa, where police' recently| dispersed armed crowds of whites and Negroes confronting| each other outside a school. Elsewhere: --A Negro group's condemna- tian. of ttmbonns} dod 93 co matancy | and bigotry" was heard in| Knoxville, Tenn., where Glos- | ter B. Current, a top New York officer of the National] Association for the Advance-| ment of Colored People told a state NAACP meeting that| foundations of civil-rights pro-| gress 'are being destroyed by| | black racists." | =~In Montgomery, Ala., gover- nor George Wallace has de- clared a civil contempt cita-| tion against him is "another| step toward the eventual jail-| ing of political prisoners in this country." The NAACP has asked a} three-judge federal court to hold! Wallace in contempt for alleged| | violation of a two-year-old order} against interfering. with school | desegregation. No hearing date 'is set. ! MONEY BRINGS LOTS OF GRIEF LONDON (AP) "Ever since I won all that money,"* said Perey Harrison, "there's been nothing but trouble." Marvienn. a 52 - year - old laborer in a fertilizer factory, picked up mere than $1,000,- 000° in Britain's soccer pools three weeks ago--the biggest individual pools win on rec- ord. But now look what's hap- pened: Harrison has had to aban- don his first vacation in 30 years; eleven of the 13 mem- bers of the family have been stricken by a strange stom- ach ailment; he has been re- ported to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty leaving his three cats hungry; and he's lost his pet dog Lassie. Harrison arranged the va- cation soon after collecting 338,356 ($1,015,068) tax free--for correctly forecasting tied games in the soccer pro- He took all his rela- tives to a holiday camp on the Essex coast. PETS STAYED HOME Left behind at his cottage home in Lincolnshire were the three cats. A friend prom- ised to look after Lassie. Then the trouble began. Members of the family be- gan going down with the stamach complaint soon after arriving at the holiday camp. Harrison himself escaped ill- ness, But in the meantime came word that the RSPCA was in- vestigating the condition of his cats. On top of that the friend back home reported that Lassie had vanished after bolting out the door. His wife, Maud, said neigh- bors had told the RSPCA that the Harrisons left the cats without food. "It's just too silly,' she said, 'They are farm cats, not pets. Even when we are home we don't feed them. I think it was just sour grapes on the part of some neigh- bors." ' CHARLOTTETOWN (CP) -- The continuing popularity of Progressive Conservative Leader John Diefenbaker and the effects on his future of the Munsinger report may both be put to the test here today as the Prince Edward Island Con- servative Association holds its annual meeting. * Dalton Camp, president of the national PC association, who has called for a reappraisal of party leadership, is attending. And so is Wallace Nesbitt, PC member of Parliemert for On- tario's Oxford ridiriz. who has said he may challenge Mr. Camp's presidency at a Nov. 15 convention in Ottawa. The Munsinger report with its| scathing criticism of Mr. Dief- enbaker, contains fresh ammu- remove him from the leader- ship. nition for those Conservatives) who have been attempting to) Challenge For Camp On Party Leadership bility of acting as a spur to pro- Diefenbaker elements who have rallied to him in previous chal- lenges was made obvious Fri- day by Egan Chambers, a for- mer national president. WILL SUPPORT DIEF Mr. Chambers, who left the presidency after falling into Diefenbaker's bad graces, said in a Montreal interview Friday that the findings of the Spence royal commission now would lead him to support the leader. "I wouldn't want to with- draw my support from Mr. Diefenbaker now. It would look as if I was agreeing with the | Liberals and their commission." He thought any attempts to junseat Diefenbaker now would be unsuccessful. Mr. Nesbitt, speaking in Hali- fax while on a cross-country tour, said their is a possibility he may oppose Mr. Camp as But that it also has the capa-' president in November. Tory Leader Raises Herbert Norman Case | Pearson's Conduct Cited In Diefenbaker's Defines By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)--John Diefen- baker was accused Friday by a government-appointed inquiry of mishandling a security case by putting personal judgment ahead of national security. Mr. Diefenbaker promptly fired back that this was what Prime Minister Pearson had done in an earlier security case. The accusation against the 71- year - old Conservative leader was made by Mr. Justice Wish- art Spence of the Supreme Court of Canada in his report on the 1960 Gerda Munsinger sex-and- security affair. The judge said Mr. Diefen- baker should have fired his as- sociate defence minister, Pierre Sevigny, because Mr. Sevigny had intimate sexual relations TOKYO (Reuters) -- North Viet Nam has rejected the lat- est U.S. proposal to negotiate a Sint Naw neaes af an attemot to fool public - ' The official (North) Viet Na North Viet Nam Rejects Latest Peace Proposals Goidberg, was dodge, The U.S. proposal called. fo antes" 'lby U.S. Ambassador news agency said in a statement|steps by the north to end its today that the offer, in a speech| military action in the South, and at the United Nations Thursday|to consider a gradual, super- Arthurivised withdrawal of all "exter- More U.S. Bombers Stage Raids On Storage Dumps SAIGON: (AP) -- Waves of, U.S. bombers raided North Viet The crack South Korean Tiger Division ended a six-month op- Nam today for the third time/eration and promptly launched in four days. |a new one. Simultaneously, Aus- The bombers hit enemy infil-|tralian troops terminated their tration routes, truck parks and|current operation and the U.S. storage depots. ;command announced that the Smaller U.S. tactical bomb-|recently arrived 196th Light In- ers gave the once-demilitarized|fantry was in action for the zone between North and South| first time. Viet Nam a going over. pound-| The U.S. command said the ing seven North Vietnamese) total number of U.S. planes lost storage areas in the zone. | over North Viet Nam, as of Fri- nal" South. The agency: said the Goldberg byipeesh: and the activities of SP pctiannt Tnhacne and hie aides » indicated. the: "U:S.imperial- ists" are launching a new peace negotiation campaign in an at- tempt to deceive public opin- ion and conceal a rapid expan- sion of the Viet Nam war to prepare for the U.S. congres- sional elections in November. The agency's statement dis- missed Goldberg's suggestion that a segment of the Viet Cong could take part in the peace ne- gotiations. It said the fact is that the United States government does not recognize the National Lib- eration Front (political arm of the Viet Cong) as the sole genuine representative of the South Vietnamese people. An editorial in the Peking People's Daily, quoted by Ra- dio Peking, today accused the United States and Soviet Union of conspiring together to per- petuate a Viet Nam peace hoax through the United Nations. military forces from the In South Viet Nam, groundjday, totalled 385, includi 14 fighting was small and scat- tered. ---- | | | Mob Inju ures. | 'Portuguese -- KINSHASA, The Congo (AP) A screaming mob of Africans| sacked and burned the Portu-| guese embassy today and man-| two other Portuguese. The government radio said} ithe mob of about 200 was made {up of Angolans, exiles from the neighboring Portugucs: colony | of Angola. | Lt.-Col. Bangala, the Kin- |shasa military governor, said] the three Portuguese were in- jured by the mob and taken to a hospital. They were discharged after treatment. In Lisbon, Portuguese officials condemned the attack on the |demilitarized zone, jcity. of Qui Nhon. In the six }month operation, South Korean not previously listed. A spokesman said 128 U.S, Planes have been lost in action over South Viet Nam. Inside the demilitarized zone |U. S. pilots reported destroying |six structures and setting fire |to a fuel depot and seven piles of perpen supplies, Less than a mile south of the! U.S. mar- ines reported 24 North Viet- House Drops Legislation WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House of Representatives com- mittee on un-American activi- ties apparently has abandoned, namese killed as a result of naval gunfire. South Korea's Tiger Division handled its chief diplomat and) ajjed an end to the oldest al-|Klan terrorism. lied operation in Viet Nam. It| started last March 26 and ex-| tended through mountain coun- try and the Ha Trung valley in- land from the central coastal forces reported killing 299 Viet Cong and providing protection for the area rice harvest. About the time they ended this operation Friday, the divi- sion launched a multi-battalion search-and-destroy sweep in the Phu Cat mountains six miles embassy as a brutal and savage act. north of Qui Nhon. NASSER HAS WEAPONS... By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer | An ominous new note, in the |form of President Gamal Abdel |Nasser of the United Arab Re- public, has been injected into the Rhodesian crisis. | The note is sounded despite jsurprising optimism expressed lby white-minority leader Ian iSmith, an. optimism not shared iby British government officials, ; Smith told his Rhodesian | Front party Friday he believes | "the end is in sight" in the long dispute over his country's inde- }pendence, which he seized from Britain last year. The sugges- tion is some secret agreement is about to be cemented. The view in British' circles, however, is nothing has really | changed. In the dispatch of two minis- ters to Salisbury this week, Prime Minister Wilson wanted to make clear Smith could ei- ther agree to a broadly-based government with black repre- sentation or face selective United Nations sanctions by the end of the year. SURRENDER NOT SEEN One British informant said despite Smith's statement there is no indication Smith is ready to surrender The situation could change ibut as it now er the only ... AFRICA THREATENS WAR :| U.AR. May Aid Rhodesia's Foes road that may be left to Wilson is the UN and the possibility of increasing friction between Britain and South Africa, whose new leadership has again main- tained it won't observe any boy- cott in trade with Rhodesia. 'But pressures are: developing from 'other quarters. Perhaps most significant is the current meeting between President Nas- ser and President Julius Nyer- ere of Tanzania. The big factor in the persist- ing threat of black Africa. to make war against the white man if the Rhodesian rebellion is not brought to an end is the lack of military power among the relatively new African States. The U.A.R. has that power. It is well supplied by the Soviet Union. While it still is questionable whether neighboring Kfrican countries could mount an effec- tive military offensive against Smith--even with Nasser's help --there is no doubt the Africans would draw new encouragement from any assistance he could provide. In his five-day visit to Tan- zania, Nasser has called for a new rally of all revolutionary forces in Africa and the prepa- at least for this session, a bill | stemming from its six-month in- | vestigation into alleged Ku Klux Disagreement among commit- tee members. over. the broad- ranging measure's constitu- tionality is the chief reason for the committee's failure to act so far on the bill. The legislation, titled the Or-| ganization Conspiracies Act of} 1966, was directed generally at} clandestine organizations which engage in criminal conspira- cies. The committee held three days of legislative hearings. This was in contrast with the months of investigative hearings in which numerous dragons, wizards, kladds and kludds were con- fronted with charges that they had engaged in violent Klan ac- tivities. Most declined to answer questions. South Korean SEOUL (AP)--The South Ko- rean. assembly today accepted 80 islator Kim --Hu-han, touched off a government crisis by dumping human excrement on Premier Chung Il-kwon and four cabinet members. The 17-member cabinet signed* following the Park took no action on the Quits Assembly, . the resignation of opposition leg- | who}: re- |: incident |= Thursday. President Chung Hee |: with Mrs. Munsinger, a one- time Soviet espionage agent. He said this created a se- curity risk and made Mr, Se- vigny vulnerable to pressure from foreign agents or the Montreal underworld where the liaison was common knowledge. DIEF LASHES BACK Mr. Diefenbaker lashed back in. a statement: "The point is made (by Mr, Justice Spence) that a doubt as to loyalty must be resolved in favor of the state. "This was not followed by the present prime minister in 'the Herbert Norman case," As external affairs minister, Prime Minisier Pearson in 1951); A) accepted responsibility for keep- ing Mr. Norman in his depart- ment after a security check of Mr. Norman, ten @ 4 as Canadian ambassador to Egypt, after a U.S. senate com- mittee revived charges of com- munism against him. MR, SEVIGNY COMMENTS Commenting onthe report in Montreal, Mr: Sevigny said: "Tam not a security risk and I never. was a security risk, and beyond that I have no further comment to make. for the time being," Mr. Diefenbaker said the re- port contained no suggestion of a breach of security, "The report is simply a ve- hicle for the dissemination of opinion by a. commissioner hand-picked for his appointed task, with the objective of bring- ing about the destruction of the leader of the Conservative party." The judge commended former justice minister Dayie Fulton for promptly informing Mr, Diefenbaker of the case and for trying to prevent. Mrs. Mun- singer's application for citizen- ship being granted. But Mr,. Fulton -should have ordered the RCMP to dig deeper into the case and should have consulted his legal advisers. In Kamloops,'B.C., Mr. Fulton said the report is "'nothing more than one man's opinion six years after the event." 'It is much more important for us to get on with today's business for Canada and that is what I intend to do." SPREES WITH CARDIN Mr, Justice Spence agreed wholly' with Justice Minister Cardin's Cotrene et a Mhcon diplomat in Tokyo. In 1957, Mr, Pearson conceded that Mr. Norman in the 1930s had had Communist associa- tions but had abandoned them voluntarily by 1939 when he joined the external affairs de- partment. Mr. Norman committed sui- cide April 4, 1957, while serving LONDON (CP)--Gerda Mun- singer said Friday night she is sorry her friendship with Pierre Sevigny caused him to become a victim of Canadian politics. Otherwise, the woman indicated in a television interview seen here, she has no regrets about a former relation- ship that has been described by a government-appointed inquiry as a serious security risk. Mrs. Munsinger repeatedly denied the accuracy of a de- scription of her as an espionage agent, prostitute, petty thief and smuggler--the description in_Friday's report of the inquiry by Mr. Justice Wishart Spence of the Supreme Court of Can- ada. and that it was worse than Britain's 1963 sex and security Profumo scandal. At Sorel, Que., Mr, Cardin said it is regrettable that cer- tain persons appear in a bad light as-a result of the report but the inquiry was necessary to clean up the country's politi- "I was never at any. time con- cal climate. Gerda Denies Espionage Role Regrets Sevigny's Troubles nected with espionage in East or West Germany or Canada," she said in an interview filmed in Munich, West Germany. At another point she said she German) has 'never been in espionage." The Spence report accusations are ridiculous. Asked if she has any regrets about her part in the affair, Mrs. Munsi said no that "I am sorry, he (Sevigny) became a victim." Mrs. Munsinger said she had not been the mistress of Sev- igny, former associate defence minister in the Conservative government. "A mistress is a kept woman. I was never kept by Mr. Sevigny at any time." ROSENEATH, Ont. (CP) resumes Oct. 5. VATICAN CITY (AP) -- Nam had to run the gauntlet ported today. NURSE Parliamentarians Tour City--P. Ann Landers--12 Church--6, 7 City News--11 Classified--14 to 17 resignations, indicating he ex pected the cabinet to stay. He) ration of a charter of Africa ac- tion. punitive action against Kim. asked the assembly to take| t UT it Comics--23 Editorial--4 tive MP for Northumberland, Trade Minister Winters to start a trade crusade for Cana- dian farm products on world markets when Parliament ..In THE TIMES Today. Heart Foundation Group Plans Cenvass--P. 5 North Wins High School Gomes---P, 8 Obits--17 Sports---8, 9 Theatre--20 Weather--3 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--12, 13 NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Hees Calls For Farm Trade Crusade -- George Hees, Conserva- said today he will press Canadian Cleric Sent To Haiti Pope Paul has named Arch- bishop Maire-Joseph Lemieux of Ottawa to be apostolic nuncio (ambassador) to Haiti, tions broken four years ago, the Vatican announced today. Moscow Says Guards Cut Pigtails MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Girl students from North Viet restoring diplomatic rela- of Chinese Red Guards who tried to snip off their pigtails, a Moscow newspaper re- THUAN iW UPTURN a 1 A