Phantom plans" led to break-in - By LEW DIGGS MONTREAL (CP) — There were no plans by a Front de Liberation du Quebee cell for a violent celebration of the 1970 October Crisis, says a letter presented Tuesday to the inquiry into the 1972, police 0 ice break-in of a leftist news agency. - The alleged plans were cited as a: reason for granting the three anti- terrorist officers who authorized the illegal break- in unconditional discharges t June, . Cpl. Richard Presseau of the Quebec provincial police told the inquiry the officers had information that journalists at the Agence de se Libre had ‘‘tight links’ with the FLQ's Liberation Cell. The cell members were living in exile in Cuba, where they had been flown in exchange for kidnapped British trade commissioner James Cross. Agency journalists were exchanging coded telex messages with the Liberation Cell and had access to ‘“‘terrorist records,” Presseau said. But commission lawyers resented a lettey from lormer cell § member Jacques Cossette Trudel saying the Celi had re- _ Wind and waves cleaned oil spill By TOM McDOUGALL HALIFAX (CP) — A scientist said Tuesday the shoreline of Nova Scotia’s Chedabucto Bay has largely cleaned itself since the ing of the tanker Arrow but oil deposits remain in a few areas. Paul Keizer of the Bed- ford, wey Insfitute of eanogra 8 in an interview that only 40 to 50 kilometres of the bay’s shoreline still show any signs of oll, and less than 10 lometres remain heavily When the Arrow sank in February, 1970, she spilled about half of her cargo of $.8-million tons of bunker C oil, polluting about 300 of the bay’s 600 kilometres of shoreline. Keizer addressed | the ning session Tuesday o Gil- Environment 77, an international sym) ium sponsored by the institute to iscuss how northern marine environments recover from oil pollution... He took part in a study of. Chedabiicto Bay in 1976, six” years after the Arrow sank. He said the cleansing has been duelargely to wind and wave action, possibly helped | by residents who removed some of the oil at the time of the spill. The areas still affected were mostly along rocky shorelines. The oiled beaches now appear much the same as any other beaches, he said. But in places, the oil has congealed into the sand and oxidized on the surface into ‘a pavement-like surface usually six to 10 centimetres “It almost looks like a downtown street,” Keizer said. “The surface. is preyise ve but if you eak though it you get a black running oil. On a hot day you get cracking, and fresh black oil runs out.” Dr. Walter J. Cretnay of the Institute of Ocean Sciences in Victoria said | ghost of a spill of heavy fuel ’ oil in a bay near the nor- ‘thern tip of Vancouver Island has dissipated. TANKS RUPTURED _ _ Thespill was caused when the freighter Irish Stardust only WINCH MEMORIAL ran aground on Haddington Reef on Jan. 28, 1973. Her fuel tanks ruptured, releasing about 200 tons of number 5 fuel oil, a slightly lighter type than Bunker C. A study showed that certain parts of the oil decomposed faster than others. Non-toxic, paraffin- like components dis- appeared first, but heavier . components were still there. He said the effects of these heavier components on marine or human life are not known, but there is concern that in sufficient quantities they could cause cancer or mutations. A Norwegian scientist re- ted that crude oil spilled into the North Sea last April from a blowout at the Bravo offshore drilling ramp in Norway's Ekofisk oil field has largely disappeared. K.J. Johannessen of Norway's Insititute of Marine Research said that -by the end of July there was only a small amount of oil jJeft on the surface; there was none in the water below the surface and none had reached shore. . KITIMAT COMMUNITY ARTS COUNCIL 6th ANNUAL ARTS &@ GRAFT FAIL nounced its terrorist ap- roach because of lessons it d learned in the October Crisis. ‘The letter, dated Aug. 29, 1972, was from Trudel and | his wife to Louise Vandelac, an agency journalist described in earlier testimony as a schoolmate of Trudel. BREAK-IN APPROVED Presseau said police anti- terrorist officers received approval from_ their superiors at least eight days before carrying out the illegal break-in, conducted on the night of Oct. 6-7, 1972, without a search warrant. He said he first discussed the break-in, which had already been planned at a junior level, around Sept. 20, 1972, with Inspector Jean Coutellier, who headed the Quebec force's security and intelligence operation. Coutellier was one of the three senior officers who © pleaded guilty to authorizing the raid wifhout first obtaining a search warrant. Presseau said that within a week of his first meeting with Coutellier his superior informed him the break-in had been discussed and approved by superior of- ficers of the Mounties and Montreal police. DOCUMENTS STOLEN During the break-in, the officers stole large quan- tities of files, mailing lists and correspondence belonging to the agency and two other groups that shared its office—the Movement for the Defence of Quebec Political Prisoners and the Cooperative de Demenage- ment du 1 Mai. Authorization was given to carry out the raid without obtaining a search warrant rtly because of a desire to eep the operation a well- guarded _ secret, especially (because) there was a question of not returning the documents to the APLQ,”’ testified. PLAGE: DATE: TIME: £ HOSPITAL — SATURDAY OCTOBER 15, 1977 MOST OF THE MOVEABLE EQUIPMENT AND FURNISHINGS LEFT IN THE OLD HOSPITAL 200 Items are involved including a 30-kilowatt diesel-electric generator THE CITY CENTRE MALL OCTOBER 22, 1877 §:30a.m. - Sp.m. FREE ALL WELCOMED FUHALT Vim OLD HOSPITAL BLDG. BIDBING STARTS AT 12:00 noon _ AUCTIONEER - D KERR'S AUCTION “but | Presseau p HARDWARE STORES Cowes THE HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12,1977, PAGE 5 AN bring you al " TY. GUIDE ALL LISTINGS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE | 2 day, October 12 KING (NBC) cFTK {cBe) BctV (cTV) l 9 KCTS (PBS) ar to midnigh KiIRO (CBs) | 00 1 The Newlywed World Series NHL Hockey Mister :15 | Game Baseball Vancouver Rogers :30 | News Cont at Electric :45 | News Cont New Work Company :00 | News Cont ) Zoom ‘ 115) | News i The Zoom ‘ 130 |] News Cont Rangers Big Bive :45 | News Cont Marble "oo | seal Cont “Grizzly MacNell- 15. | Tonight Cont Adams Lehrer 30 | Truth or, Sportsweek Grizzly Amer. 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