| Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont+ ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 98 -- NO. 103 Che Oshawa Fimes 10 Single Co; SS5e¢ Per Wask Tone Delivered US. Aircraft Bomb Village, Chinese Claim HONG KONG American jets bombed a Chi nest village Tuesday, and|fence department rejected the warned its armed forces to be|Chinese claim. The. department vigilant against any surprise at- tack by the United States. A Chinese defence ministry spokesman, quoted by the New China news agency, said four|per, People's Daily, threatened U.S. F-105 jets dropped four/the United States with "doubly bombs on the town of Ningming, about 20 miles north of the bor- der with North Vietnam. He said the bombs, dropped| man said '"'warmonger" Presi- at about 5 p.m., destroyed aldent Johnson had acted like a house and three cow sheds. The spokesman said the U.S. planes fled when Chinese Air| H : (Reuters) --jNone of the American planes China claimed today that four|was reported shot down. -| In Washington, the U.S. de- said reports failed to show there was any évidence the charge was true. The Communist party newspa- severe punishment" for the al- j\leged raid. The defence ministry spokes- |"cornered animal striking out in \desperation"- after five US. | planes were shot down ee Force aircraft attacked them. lover Chinese territory. Veto By DeGaulle Risked By Labor LONDON (CP)--A_high-rank- ing informant said today the La- bor government realizes it may be knocked cold politically if President de Gaulle again im- poses a veto against Britain's membership in the European Common Market, The informant added, how- ever, that the government feels that because of the pay-off in vastly-expanded market oppor- tunities, the fresh venture is worth the risk. De Gaulle, in 1963, blocked Britain's membership bid and this. appeared to react unfavor- ably in the 1964 British election which unseated the Conserva- tives, in power at the time. The informant said the Labor administration has assumed de Gaulle will not readily oppose entry this time, though he may raise objections at some point during negotiations, The Common Market is com- to France if de Gaulle decides to block Britain's membership, It is a fair assumption, he added, that if Britain again fails to gain entry, the Labor party may face extreme difficul- ties in the next general election, due .in 1971, Asked whether _ alterna- tives have been given serious consideration, he estimated there are about 20 alternatives but none are as promising as the Common Market. One of them, an Atlantic free trade area, has been discussed infor- mally on both sides of the At- lantic but without generating real enthusiasm in Ottawa Washington or London. discussed its intentions to apply for Common Market member- ship with all Commonwealth countries. More detailed discus- sions took place at the Anglo- Canadian ministerial talks here A U.S. MARINE machine- gun team fires an M60 in close quarter jungle fighting near Khe Sanh, in the north- west corner of South Viet- OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY, 3 1967 nam. Marines there weath- ered heavy attack by North Vietnamese troops today at disputed Hill 881 North. Re- inforcements,° bolstered by air and artillery help, se re- pulsed the enemy attacks, (AP Wirephoto by radio from Saigon) mitewimie.'" Marines Hold Key Hill Under Intense Attack Weather Report Sunny with few cloudy pe- riods. Not quite so cool Thurs- day. Low tonight 32; high tomorrow 52, Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES SHULMAN 'By Dirksen Republicans: Kept In Line WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sen- are Republican Leader Everett |Dirksen is keeping his some- |times balky Republican troops |lined up behind President John- json in fighting the war in Viet- nam. Dirksen left his hospital bed |Monday, not yet fully recovered |from a bout with pneumonia, to |put down an incipient revolt jamong party members who do not like the way the war is go- ing and are searching for a Re- |publican alternative. | When Dirksen got through jlecturing them at a closed pol- icy committee meeting about the political liabilities of ques- tioning the iresident's. basic di- rection of a bloody conflict, they went along with a statement jgiving "wholehearted support" jto Johnson and standing '"'four- square" behind him. This put the Senate Republi- cans in line with the latest stance assumed by one of the leading candidates for their party's 1968 presidential nomi- nation, Governor George Rom- ney of Michigan. Romney said in Atlanta, Ga., Monday: "I don't think we that will help the enemy." EVERETT DIRKSEN ++» leaves hospital Decision Du On Truscott OTTAWA (CP)--The Supreme Court of Canada decision on the Steven Truscott case will be given Thursday morning, it was announced today. The court has been studying the 1959 murder conviction of Truscott under an order from the federal cabinet. The case was referred to Can- should pursue a way that will|ada's highest court last' year, weaken the president as long as|seven years after Steven Mur- he is president. And I don't|ray Truscott, then 14, was con- think we should pursue a course| victed in the sex area near Clinton, Ont. Truscott's death sentence wa: _| first Slaying of Lynne Harper, 12, in a wooded MAY TORONTO (CP)--Mr. Justice | William D. Parker said he |would consider today whether jor not he would take any action | against Dr. Morton Shulman for |releasing to newspaper men in- formation barred from the Par {ker Royal commission. | The Ontario Supreme Court judge is heading the commis- sion investigating the former |chief Metro coroner's allega- tions against the Ontario gov- prameet of 'cover-up' of cir- | cumstances deaths. He said he did not know whether he had the power to |cite Dr, Shulman for contempt, surrounding some but he would look up the law! jand consider action today--the day's recess since the jhearing started Monday. he newest development in |the controversial Shulman af- jfair followed from the former jcoroner's allegations during jcommission hearing Tuesday that an inquest held about three years ago in southern Ontario involved a "loaded jury." | PREVENTS EVIDENCE | Mr. Justice Parker prevented |Dr, Shulman from entering in| r evidence a note to Dr. Shulman|infestigation FACE CONTEMPT CHARGE | 'Loaded Jury' At Inquest, '| Former Coroner Alleges est and maintained: "The in- quest was fair and square." During the commission ex- change of the matter, Mr. Jus- tice Parker stated he did not "propose at this time to investi- gate an inquest that did happen outside Toronto," but said the note might be admissable later, In other matters before the commission Tuesday, Dr. Shul- man said that he had not per- sonally visited the scene of a fatal fire which indirectly brought about his dismissal from the position of chief Metro coroner by Attorney - General Arthur Wishart. One man died in an Aug. 31 fire at a Workmen's Compensa- tion Board Hospital in suburban North York. Dr, Shulman told the com- mission he received his infor- mation about "improper" con- struction at the hospital from a newspaper reporter. It was after the hospital fire that Dr. Shulman charged the }provincial government with in- competence .and with covering up information. He was fired as chief coroner and Premier John Robarts ordered a commission into the allega- from Toronto coroner Dr. Elie|tions, Cass concerning the death. At Tuesday's hearing, Dr. | The judge ruled that the case\Shulman asked Dr. Cass, who was beyond the bounds of the|is commission inquiry because th of jurisdiction. | However Dr. Shulman e conducting the current in- €\quest into the hospital fire inquest was held outside of Tor-|death, if he knew that a wit- onto and the inquiry is re-\ness in the case was "so fright- stricted to Dr, Shulman's area|ened" he was reluctant to ap- \pear at the inquest. N-/ Dr, Shulman's informa |tered the press room adjoining |tion concerned the death in Tor- s} Fee of six countries, of which 'rance and West Germany are the strongest. The informant said five--all but France--have indicated support for Britain's membership, though Britain doubts Germany would stand up. two weeks ago, he said. More of these discussions will take place with Commonwealth countries bilaterally as Britain <> lige with its application bid. . Police To Question Owners commuted to life imprisonment. The cabinet decision to ask the high court for an opinion on SAIGON 'AP)--A comp nv ofjheavy fighting 20 marines were U.S. V aes weath ec ajkilled and 45 wounded. The ma- | . s | By 10 a.m., the fighting ap- Manstield Hails heavy attack by two companies|rines reported they killed 40 of North Vietnamese troops to-|Communists in repulsing the the case came after Toronto au- get this introduced--so here. it "aetiee peared to have died down, the s ; ic| MARINES TAKE HILL US. Withdrawal thor Isattel . SeBourdais te; ' day at disputed Hill 881 north/attack around the strategic| ig alge au The note from Dr. Cass to Dr. spokesman said. i hay | i S. and-with reinforeements .and-air/piece of "high ground "on the}: Other marines reported théy/ WASHINGTON (AP)--Senate|!'e Trial of Steven Truscott, al'*1, aniston, the havaman "ae el ; and artillery help, repulsed|ninth day of a campaignjoccupied Hili 881 south in an|Democratic Leader Mike Mans- ~ngharei that cast doubt on mS Jory anid today: there inay pete oe ak maeee i denshans, them. through hills of northwestern/assault Tuesday to clear the/field urged today a "phase by LM eab Set have been three patients of the|cviq- . 12, , Elsewhere, U.S. infantry and|South Vietnam near the Lao-|Communists from that point/phase reduction" of U.S. troops ray Gane: are open . the doctor in question on the coro-| ""tiere is a sinh ah dae Sue South Vietnamese paratroops|tian frontier. overlooking infiltration routes|in Europe, and said a planned peters Ae: ht a Agta a) ner's jucy,.dbut.he denied that seatn dence LC oncved' te tte reported killing more than 300; A spokesman said the marine|/from Laos, 35,000-man cut is a good start/"€W 'rial or acquittal for 'Trus- | ' day and told reporters: "I don't|ont., late in 1964, two days think Charli¢é Dubin (commis- after she had undergone an op- the commission hearing oan Se of Pearl Gray of Alliston, sion counsel) will ever let me|cration in Alliston for hemor- Of Renault Station Wagons scribed the vehicle as a small|caches of the war north of Sai-|tack at 4:30 a.m. The barrage! ported killing 464 Communists. KILBRIDE, Ont. (CP)--While 150 searchers continued to look for the missing 10-year-old girl, Ontario Provincial Police said Tuesday they will question the owner of every Renault R-4 sta- tion wagon in the province. Marianne Schuett . was last seen last Thursday getting into a car or station wagon near her school in this Hamilton - area community. Three witnesses de- Greek Army Controls Rescue JANNINA, Greece (Reuters) Greece's new military regime has put the army in direct con- trol of a massive rescue and relief operations in this earth- quake-devastated area of north- west Greece where at least 18,000 people are homeless. Some villages perched on the 5,900 - foot high Tzourmekas Mountains were still cut off from the rest of the area today --48 hours after an earthquake struck as Greeks were in church for the Orthodox Easter Monday mass. Police say these remote vil- lages may have suffered severe damage and when communica- tions. are restored the present casualty figures of nine dead and 56 injured may rise sharply. Interior Minister Brig. Styla- 'nos Patakos ordered financial aid for the families of victims and immediate distribution of tents and clothing before return- ing to Athens from Jannina during the night. Another 160,000 Men Requested? NEW YORK (AP)--Gen, Wil- liam C. Westmoreland has asked President Johnson to send another 160,000 fighting men to Vietnam 'Yo bring the total U.S. strength to 600,000, the New York Times reports. Quoting informed sources, the dispatch from Saigon says Westmoreland, the commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, made the request during his trip to the United States last week and urged that the reinforcements be sent "as soon as possible." Associates said he hoped the e station wagon, possibly a black, |& late-model Renault. Michael Tate, regional man- Communist saldiers in two bat-|company was six miles north- D tles more than 400 miles apart.|west of the forward command|95 the marines have lost a to-| At the same time, i Another American unit uncov-|post at Khe Sanh when Com-|ta] of 116 men killed and 321|Senate advocate of a substantial that in nearly five hours of|perhaps more than 300 men. In bitter fighting since April red one of the largest enemy|munists launched a mortar at-|wounded. Marines have re- was followed with an assault by) poe ys. command sai the two Communist companies,/,merican infantry killed 181 Viet Cong in nearly seven hours on. The U.S. command announced ager of the Renault c y, has supplied police with names of all persons who have bought a Renault R-4 station wagon since it was introduced in 1963. OPP Inspector William Lid- stone said 100 policemen and 50 civilians searched Tuesday north of Kilbride and will con- tinue as far as Acton, 15 miles! from Kilbride, if necessary. The area has been searched before by about 18,000 persons last Saturday and Sunday, but Inspector Lidstone said the rough terrain could require closer inspection. Police in Niagara Falls, Ont., said a woman clerk in a down- town bookstore phoned to say a customer resembled the com- posite sketch of the abductor. She told police the man, who had bought some comic books, had gone to a nearby post of- fice. When police arrived, the man left the post office and fled down a side street. The suspect escaped after a chase through the railway yards, police said. Rewards for information lead- ing to the arrest and conviction of the girl's abductor total $5,- 500 and her parents have of- fered to sell their home to raise ai Tuesday night visibly slowed the more showers were forecast for today. of the game. p.m. was 117,743, putting the to- tal attendance from inaugural day last Thursday at 1,718,342. total attendance up to the clos- ing of the fair - site Tuesday night was 760,400. This meant that total attendance was more than double the estimate. more than 40,000 remained on the site with many of the die- hards concentrated in Ronde amusement area. | Transportation Commission of- fi ransom money. funnelling visitors into the 1,000- of fighting with a Communist battalion in the Mekong Delta about 40 miles southwest of Sai- Showers Reduce Crowds miele. But Expo67 Ahead of Game /the engagement Tuesday, which continued until around midnight junder flares dropped from |planes. (CP) South Vietnamese paratroop- ers, reinforced by armored ve- hicles, reported killing 156 members of a Communist bat- talion trapped in a loop of the |Song Bo. River five miles north- west of Hue, the coastal city. acre site which covers two is- lands in the St. Lawrence River and a tongue of downtown Mont- real stretching into the river, But whatever happens Can-| RESTAURANTS WATCHED da's world's fair still is ahead|, Better methods of cleaning up litter were put into force and overanant lohee Were da restaurants were being closely scribed as "very light' in the watched to see that they abided night-long engagement | 's t prices must} " set: See re ee | Hue, about 400 miles north of be posted at the entrance. y Maurice Novek, Expo's res-|Saigon, has been under heavy taurant boss, defended the|Pressure for two months from i Communist attacks on roads, prices in some of the national|\0 a restaurants which some visitors|bridges, outposts and pacifica- tion teams. have called steep. He said that visitors should be ready to PaY| SUPPORTS BUILDUP The battle furnished added \for the luxury and the be ah ing i i tiona < Rice oh eeene fine aout evidence of a heavy Communist buildup throughout Quang Tri restaurant. a s yhat : me ee eee ae and Thua Thien provinces. Hue is the capital of Thua Thien. they're getting into. The prices Rain squalls and high winds| should be posted." | limited ground action in the An outdoor event scheduled today is the laying of the keel northwest corner of South Viet- nam near the Laotian border. of the Atlantica outisde the At- lantic Provinces pavilion. rotia MONTREAL -- Rain influx into Expo 67 and Tuesday's attendance up to 11 Expo's advance projection of Despite Tuesday night's rain, the La Talks were held with Montreal icials about better means of VETERAN TERRY Saw- chuk displays prowess that led Toronto Maple Leafs to buildup could be completed by Jan. 1, The Times says. a 3-1 victory over Montreal t , Ps) HOW THE STANLEY CUP WAS WON... constantly alert and in com- mand, gue career, was virtually un- beaten in the Toronto nets Canadiens and to the Stan- ley Cup. Sawchuk, 37, with 18 years and 100 shutouts pean defence. in that direction. reduction in U.S. troop commit- ments in Europe indicated he q|Will seek to keep the pressure parole in about two years. on for continuing withdrawals. The United States announced Tuesday a plan to withdraw up 35,000 army and air force personnel, plus their depen- dents, from West Germany. Britain and West Germany en- dorsed the move as part of an effort to cut the cost of Euro- U.S. - officials estimated the manpower transfer would mean savings of about $100,000,000 a year in foreign exchange expen- ditures. The withdrawal of U.S. troops} and of four squadrons of U.S.| planes will not begin before next | Jan. 1. Korea President In Early Lead SEOUL (CP) President Chung. Hee Park, 49, took an early lead tonight in his bid for a second four-year term. On the basis of first returns he was in front of former presi- dent Yun Po-sun, 69, by a mar- the chief that the conviction be upheld. cott. It also could recommend there was any conflict of inter-/case of Pearl Gray, deceased. |After reading it over you may Truscott, now 22, has been held in prison since his convic- tion. He would be eligible for | Two-Week Rest For Surveyor PASADENA, Calif. (AP) --| Surveyor III starts a well- earned two-week rest tonight) after 10 days of digging into the| mysteries of the moon. | Four trenches--the first fur- rows made by man in any but his native soil--are visible evi- dence that the lunar surface is strong enough 'to. support manned landing craft. More than 6,000 pictures tele-| LOW - CUT DRESS|""? com" the original to' (On: BARES CHEQUE CANTERBURY, (Reuters)--In Britain chest. College student Cain Tuesday walked his bank, put Christina Davidson on England, it is legal to write a cheque on anything, even a woman's Michael into 18-year-old the counter and pointed to the writing on her chest above her low-cut dress. read "pay pounds cash five $15)."" Bank offic- jals gave him the money and stamped 'paid on her chest. The money will go to a student-run charity. vised by the tripod spacecraft show the dry, grainy soil has tario Supervising Coroner) Dr. (H. B.) Cotnam. ... "In any event, you're the chief, so I felt you should know what's cooking. Right? As ever, Elie." Dr. Shulman asked Dr. Cot- jnam for an inquest, and Dr. |Cotnam replied that he had al- ready ordered an inquest by the coroner in Alliston. That inquest, held Jan, 20, 1965, heard some conflicting | testimony from doctors as to |-he cause of death and the jury |--the jury which Dr. Shulman lclaimed Tuesday was "loaded" -- listed the cause of Mrs, Gray's death as peritonitis (In- flamation of the membrane lin- jing the abdomen) complicated 'by kidney trouble. the consistency of wet sand, at least to the depth of 714 inches, and there is some indication of| a harder layer underneath. | Controllers at,Jet Propulsion Laboratory radioed commands Tuesday preparing the 620-pound spacecraft for the 250-degree-be- | low-zero lunar night with taped) instructions for the operation of| the heater protecting its elec- gin of nearly 2 to 1. Early re- votes and Yun 64,650. DENVER WIDOW GIVEN $95,000 . DENVER, Colo, (AP) -- A U.S. district court jury awarded Tuesday $95,000 to a Denver widow who had sued General Motors Corp., alleg- ing her husband was killed be- cause of a faulty 1965 Chevro- let Corvair. The jury deliberated seven hours after a nine-day trial before awarding the judgment to Mrs. Dorethea M. Walden, mother of seven children. Her suit alleged that her husband, H. L. Walden, 46, a welder, was killed Oct. 1, 1965, near Tucson, Ariz.,, when the Corvair he was drtving left the road and crashed in a ditch. Her lawyers claimed the universal joint bearing on the ear's drive shaft failed from fatigue because of improper factory assembly. General Motors lawyers claimed Walden had_ been drinking and lost control of the car after swerving across the highway centre line, and, as these photos show, (CP Wirephoto) $ t \ in his National Hockey Lea- tronic brain. turns, mainly from Seoul and| The hand-sized scoop mounted| lits suburbs, gave Park 118,409/0n a five-foot extension, was left} poised 30 inches above the sur-| iface, ready to resume digging} after the sun rises on the moon |May 17. | All tests so far, a laboratory) spokesman said, show the ter-} rain that surrounds Surveyor \III's landing site in the dry {Ocean of Storms would support lthe 15-ton landing craft planned te the Apollo program. 'Race Classic Won) By Royal Palace NEWMARKET, England) (Reuters) -- England's Royal Palace today thundered home|» ahead of 17 other three-year-old | = colts to win the one-mile-Two|- Thousand Guineas, first classic) race of the British flat-racing} = season. : France's Taj Dewan came in second followed by American-) = owned and Irish-trained Missile | = in third place. | The winner crossed the finish} line a short head in the lead} = with a length and a half sep-|4 arating the second and third] = horses. | Royal Palace was a 100-to-30) joint favorite, Taj Dewan}= jstarted at 4 to 1, Missile at 40/5 'to be \ NEWS HIG Good Samaritan Sought By Police mtg LIGHTS BURLINGTON, Ont. (CP) -- Police officers working around-the-clock in their search for 10-year-old Marianne Schuett of Burlington, who is missing since Thursday, are looking for a Good Samaritan who may have helped the girl's abduction push his car out of a rocky dead-end road last Thursday night. Lapointe In Satisfactory Condition MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (CP-AP) -- Lieutenant-Governor Hugues Lapointe of Quebec, recovering from pneumonia, continued in satisfactory condition in hospital here today, Lapointe became ill last week after coming here for a rest. - OTTAWA (CP) Canada Unlikely To Cut Forces No major Canadian military re- duction in Europe is foreseen here despite U.S, and Bri- tish announcements Tuesday of troop cuts, it was learned today. Canada did a bit of military reducing in Europe last month when the number of CF-104 Starfighter bomb- er and reconnaissance eight. .In THE TIMES Today .. Maple Leafs Win Stanley Cup--P. 8 John Ambulance Plans Inspection--P. 5 St. Catholic High School To Expand Grade IX--P, 13 Ann Landers----14 Ajax News--5 City News--13 Classified---24 to 27 Comics--18 Editorial--4 Financial--23 Obituaries--27 ma ¢ squadrons was cut to six from Ta Pickering News--5 Sports--8, 9, 10 Television--18 Theatres--27 Weather--2 Whitby News---5 Women's--14, 15, 16 i RN