Ev 33’; ' L: . Guardiafiilgror it lid‘lsland . @ is fitted “Covers Prince Edward IslandLike The Dew” 1» a Author-Ind u locum (nu-I lawns-moron our-.mummntdwmhu‘ l mag-st. .1: . he leaves London's Admiralty House Wednesday after first meeting of Pcarson's four- day visit. to England. Canada's CANADA‘S mm. Minister Lester Pearson. left, shakes . hands wth Britain‘s Prime Minister Harold Macmillan as high commissioner in London. George Drew, is back- ground. cable from London). Mike Reluctanin Ready To Take Nu‘clear Weapons By BEN WARD 'is expected to see Labor party trnl over nuclear weapons LONDON (Cp)_prime Minm chder Harold Wilson today .achicvcrl by NATO. the better ‘ . eai‘son arrived in mid-after-tit would be for the alliance. '6‘_Pear5°n “lid Wednemay he{noon Wednesday after a 10-hour1 0n trade, he said he is "in belleVes Strong)! in W need for.iilight from Toronto aboard an complete sympathy" with the in ( disarmament but that his gov-ERCAF Lukon aircraft and im-‘United States proposal for tars ernment intends to carry out itsimcdiately headed into a com-‘itt reductions on an across-the- Amn-od policy of filling those ibined press and television inter- board basis. defence commitments alreadyiview in a small reception room "Wc have just about ex mark which call for the acquir-lcrowded with more than .30 Ca- haiistcd the possibilities of the lngdot' nfiiciear warheads for 03- median and British reporters. icommodi na ian orces. s l i roach." he said. Arriving for talks with Primc‘Exr'LA'l.“s MM lp Mimswr Macmillan. the Cana_ He. said he intends to givoiMAY CAUSE PROBLEMS man 193d" told an airportthlacmillan a complete View of But the us. approach Ge n 9v a disarmament confer. would “mime {0" m0“ 5- out some “suitable substitute." ence, for a discussihn on the: Pearson said he naturally will The. problem of Britain‘s latest hohind . scenes dc\,eiop.1talk to Macmillan about. the trade deficit with Canada would ments at Gnnpva. 1prospects for a multinational have to receive special atten- lle is in begin formal (.,,n[er_.l‘lATO nuclear force and indi‘ litm- He made it clear that Can- ministrr this afternoon. He also stop. The more collective con~ Brim“ exports' to help bring lsclls annually here. ' Main cause of the decline in h. sales in Canada closer to } c amount which Canada now On JFK-Pearson Agenda tits-“trig:charities: introduced by the former gov- By DAVE MclNTOSH am, the genera] outline or de. crnmcnt last June because of OTTAWA tCPl — Talks be-ifence co-oporation hctwccii (‘aii- “19 {Ol'OiEn “Change Cl‘iSil- tween Prime Minister Pearson ada and the U.S.. at least "Hill This had inm'dcd "arm sup and PreSIdcnt Kcnncdy May 10- infill when the pr-cscnt NORAD Chal'flt‘s Whirh increased the 11 at Hyannis Port. Mass. are}agrcement cxpircs. is cxpcctcd Pm“ 0‘ British pmducts in expected to touch off a scriesito emerge from the Hyfinnis C3““““' of Canada~U.S. dcfcnce negotia- Port meeting. A‘l‘ed Whether he saw m tions. ‘ The ncwvgovcrnmcnt wants to lions among Canada, the U iiiormants' indicated chncs-icontinue and. if DOSSihlf‘v 9* and Britain as a 50” 0f trans. day that. besides a nuclear cu-s-ipani’. the work of the Conscrva- ‘atlantic triangle. Pearson said lady-and-cnntrnl. agreement. theitivc government in the field of that if anything “muons wnuld negotiations wul cover theseldefcnce development and pro- have to be quadrangular. sinCc subletitizssme canad [.1 duction-sharing. This progi‘gm‘Prjtam and France were both . ian paric-aa 9 ho . .'.. '" nation in development and pro-ih‘oos Tffti‘iiilmin tUziS. Shogfgngc‘ mower commas or canadal d.ction of the new TFX tTacti-lcontracts for Canadian firms In and cal tighter. Experimentalt jetlrecent years. -b°r- plane in exchange for ana- dian acquisition of a number of the fighters for air defence. i One of the chief TFX contrac-l tors.in the U.S. is General Dy- namics Corporation of New: \ork which owns Canadair‘ Limited, Montreal. Cana-L dair has little new business in sight and the Liberal goVern- ment Is said to want to helpi mist; the company going full; TOKYO (AP) 2. The number of flights made by nuclear bombers of the U Strategic Air Command 0 a. S. ~-—“(‘.rew mem‘ from the Japanese fishing boat. i a Communist Cbinese'llii Maru. which said it. badi l V" the ship had been hit threelJin Ho (Leap Forwardi. {mada' sources sud “Ch times b for edoes fired from An offic Sight}, “leg, severe” restricteulan unidintifie’d submarine. the he was doubtful of the torpedo. men. Pm inservatlw‘ “"9"” Japanese maritime safety ing report and suggested thatf n‘aihiy Irma, SAC '0 .opcml'e agency reported. [the frc i g h 1 or may have; Pacifi' 0 H M Atlantic “ml The agency quoted reports grounded. 1‘!le POSTPONE CLOSINGS l . -' Soc '01 ' "' POSSlblO postponement 0“ NOR,” ‘ Jana); he intended shutdown by ihel ‘0.“ y , ..‘ SAir ForceoftheSCre-| p .1 L; fuelling tanker bases at Frobi-I ,, u Zilrcr hon Ilsiiz'ffin island, Forti » i urc l , an" Namam Ana”: my and Cold Lake. Alta. . I?" ‘. 4' M0"! v00tloo'lct tntercep- ' I ’ WORSHUl '0” for RCAF Air Defench l . L Command. The 1961 agreement. under which . tained 66 Voodoos from the US. ‘ i did not provide for spares. ' The proposal by North A meirican A " Dell: -l mand that the underground combat centre near i r""i WIN. Ont. be made NORAD‘s aim-- natc headquartc.~. ti. Future development of the defence netwurk into it .WWOK? 'i .t ‘3 i I ffloigbtoi" ‘- Yvd 1:}! Ho, 'lnforinlnts said that. apart “5'5" W1 ", '1 nuclear oucstion it is l utilities, M Pepi-am: and Mr. MAP LOCATES approxim- :pcculgtcd hthat the shin may ‘ ne y Wm M mu, my “an i t a" th mum m fl ave. eon it by an old float- ab these subjecu_ vacuum" “Ex” n h e C hci n N: ing mine released by C b inese and negotiation on them would 0 "9w ere. a ‘. communists during the Kor- mviep m omcms (or “I. ‘0'” communist freighter sank in can "I i ml weeks nod months. i the Yellow Sea. U.S. Navymen (AP mnaruo'ro MAP); tCP Wirephoto by des Quatres Sai ty - by - commodity ap.: enccs with the British primematcd that he favors suCh a ada would welcome increasedI Waiter Admits 2 Fires MONTREAL tCPl D nique Dettore, 23. a waiter. tified Wednesday he was paid $1.050 last fall to set two fires that led to station in insurance payments. He said he got the money from two insurance adjusters whom be identified as Wilfrid Jarjour. 49. and Jean - Claude Duquette. 34. Three. other witnesses testi- fied they made. payoffs totalling almost $17,000 to the. two adjust- ers after collecting insurance money for their fire-ravage properties. They appeared at the preliminary hearing of Jars. jour. committed for volunta ' statement May 8 ‘ Dcttore to st i f i c d with o tes- three men and conspiracy. The waiter said he; :4 $700 for setting fire; i i Andre Delislc.‘ 39. the third itness. testified he. collected 13. in insurance after an empty building was destroyed 1by fire in suburban Chomedey .Nov. 11 and he gave Jarjour and Diiquette 10 per cent. He also paid them more. than $300. be said. for what be de- ‘ W madei scribed as “"1” Work" "9 sait'llot Commons is likely to revive. the “Sir Winston WEATHER Cloudy with showers or snowflurries. cooler; winds southeast 20 shifting to northwest 20. Low-high 40 and 42. ummm. CW W MAY 2, 1963. Icebreake cor Moan SEVEN 14 PAGES IRAN r Wolfe Called CENTS To Aid Of Fishing Boats :Qu 'i P It” i .ONDON (Reuters) Winston Church inounced today he will not run Southwest Essex that the most [for Parliament in the next gen-important phases of my politi-l eral election because he is un- cal life have unfolded. 1 shalll table to attend sessions of the never forget your loyalty and! ‘- 1 House of Commons. 3‘ G1 indness to my wife and my- urchlil has represented tlie‘Self fiver "‘“59 m°mem°u5 at district of Woodford in .ycam ‘ ,County as a Conservu-j Churchill already has two of ‘ 3,. member since 1945.1the greatest honors the soverul sag-Tye... before that he eign can confer on any subjecti ' " of ——a knighthood of the Order of: .. imitated Epping. east iii .a letter to the chairman ijflli Woodford Conservative 'Kasociatloo. the. elder states- . ‘ rt '; again because of the ac- in the Garter. Britain's highestl order of chivalry, and the 01'.: .der of Merit. He now is the fa-‘ .tber of the House of Commons1 y virtue of having the longest eriod of continuous service. . A cording to latest reports’ ‘3 We» setting ablaze n t" ,zzin' ‘broiie a thigh bone. He said the fp'r'm , avt't‘g .Jusm mum“; ‘ bober. accident “has greatly decreased l 3‘“ a ‘8” '0“ m 9 ‘°“' o my mobility and it has become! “‘3‘” H difficult for. me to attend that 0 9” $4M th jliouse of Commons as I would .sime . _ . t y . 9. wish." . i . l ' . ‘ ?;Vr';::r”fa':: 1mg“ . ‘3 38""; The Conservative governmfnt y 9 T ‘ - a mi ‘ got Prime Minister Macmil an E lam" “"9"”1“ ‘1 1“ l“'iiitill has about 16 months left i swine“ ‘ \ i~ R to “is five-year term. No one .ChT‘t" 3:133» ‘ offirjknows exactly when the next . Rwanr r331 .‘ tufl§::ceive_§general election Will be. . .ing an insur‘atr'l payment oflREGRETS MOVE . I . HAY RIVER. NIW'T. (chy $22,000. - l in his letter Churchill said: .Evacuation of abom 300 rash gfigdgggg 2°33,“ zggsgggemgnens from this flood-stricken Hake this step, ;commuinity began Wednesday “I have now had the honoriniizht. .and privilege of sitting in the The not) were among 900 rcsi- lflouse 0‘ Comm“; for mm'eldents who have taken shelter in itygll‘ficzle:fu;c'es' said Churcmlthe separate school. located on high ground above swirling flood i. . . . -ill s deciSion to leave the House waters that mver threequaners ot' the town to a depth of more l l l OTTAWA (CPl - Dctails of g the new dairy policy announced ‘ Monday are being spelled out. in lletters to the trade and farm groups. the. agricultural stabili- ! zation board said today. Officials said they are. not pre- ‘pared yet to forecast just what 'impact the policy changes will have on the butter surplus or ion some other aspectsu Insofar as the housewife is iconccrned. she will continue to lpay the same price for butter. ,probably more for ice cream, ievaporated milk and othcr man- iufactured foods. and perhaps lless for cheddar cheese ‘ Dairy farmers who 5 t i 1 hip milk the U~S~ its only “Clgh‘iand cream solely for the pro-. l Red Chinese Crew Claims Ship Sunk By 3 Torpedoes duction of butter will also con- spokosman said . ton freighter sank An agency the 11.482 - bers of freighter which sank Wednesday rescued all 59 crew memberslabout 5:15 pm. Wednesday. He. ‘3' l in the Yellow Sea reported that ‘from the sunken freighter Yue {said the crew reported that. thei ciaft was hit three times after in] of the agency said i being followed about four hours. The sinking was reported to have taken place bout 120. miles southwest. of Cheju Island. * off the tip of South Korea. 3 SEND PATROL BOATS 'l'hc maritime safety agency. "mp said patrol ships were sent to the scene. 1 he crew members were rcs-' d from three lifeboats. account received by the o newspaper Yomiurl quoted crew members as say- ing the freighter was hit twice T one An ' rather than three times. The Japanese fishing boat Tsushima Maru joined in the rescue. No reports of injuries to the crew had been received. The Yuc .lin Ho left Tisingtao. China. heading for Japan with H.000 Inns of corn and sundry goods. The ship was originally expected in Moll Port. south- western Japan. today. .. y mcn speculated that perhaps the freighter bit in floating mine. They said the Nationalist Chinese. have no sub. marines. had noted that reported sinking took place in a 3" 'b ‘an area that was heavily mined. the Communist Chinese dur- by in; the Korean War. ’4 i New Dairy Plan Given In Detail press conference that. Canada‘fihl‘s government's .VleWS 0" de'ifor ncw difficulties. in halving: this meal“ "in" “’"ing Especulation Whemer he Nightlman the? feet nuclear commitments in its d Jim“ and “Onomlc matters- tariff rates it would be necerl fir" H lulmnately accept ' peel-age“ TWo Otter aircraft were load- (ence alliances Wm I 2sz _3' But be added that he does not‘sar to take into consideration' The charges against. the. men which would thus makehi'm a ll mg passage“ at mp Dalian)“ ,. til the commfl’ mend t0 have “large. SDEClElcthecaseofrone n troldm'fi arise from an investigation by manhunt heinous: et.-_Lord8- ifloodea m hive, git m Th.‘ "by agrebifién LW ' " 490mm" ‘9 MEFOUM‘E after tllllliitsutti'ritt' intake" ' ifim‘flt the fire commission's office into. One of 'GllUI‘Chm'S anamhlotters Vownyed by Wargair-Lim- pcarsnn met paid a wmmfffl‘st memfl- The emphasmjio while another made'a dropla series of fires in various parts lwas the soldier-statesman John med 'a'nd Northwest Team“ a1 we courtesy can on Macmillan.ivoiiid on General discus-.10 25 per cent from 50. lot the province in the last. fivelChurchill. the first Duke ohm]. a” are c Fable a: cam“ at Admiralty House and met;.sions. With him dccmons to be‘ On the Commonwealth tariff‘ years. Six others are. before the Marlboroug. _ n ‘ .ing abom 12 women .nd ch“. with LL06“. E. L. M‘ Bums. ‘made during a process of inter. . pmrerencm pearson said “lawns on various charges, Churchill said: It is against idren each. They will fly their chief Canadian negotiamr at bheligovernmcnt consultations which should not be abandoned with-i 1passengers to Yellowknife. 117 miles north of here. Three other aircraft—a .DC-3. a C-46 and a Beaver owned by‘ Pacific Western Airlines—were. en route. here from Yellowknife. and Fort Smith. to assist in the evacuation. The five aircraft are expected» to fly a shuttle service throng - out the night. 2 Lake Ships Reported Safe By THE CANADIAN PRESS Coast Guard re tinue to get. 64 cents a pound for. ‘ top grades of their surplus prod- ‘ uct. l The agricultural stabi‘izationi l board sells surplus butter to the; lwholcsale trade at 52 cents a: ' pound. absorbing the 12-cent diffi i ference as it did last year in a l _ a - _ 40‘_ Th? U.S. lwaiomzimygmrtofiffisng $ tported Wednesday that two‘ i ‘ I ivessels stricken by high winds gSUBSlDY CANCELLED 'and stormy seas on Lakes 1 The chief difference now is’Miciiigan and Huron were out that this subsidy won't be paid of danger. I on butter produced from sur- Gales freezing temperatures. plus fluid min; Last, year_ this and. snow bit the .Great Lakes .milk was channelled ' region Tuesday night but the weather improved Wednesday. .—_—__— lmost lucrative alternative—but- ‘INSIDE TODAY i = F. O F. 3‘ m i tcr. l With the 12-ccnt incentive gone. officials hope some of ‘it a. will go into cheese now. though there are some problems amgmgsfhnfi ""“N‘” - in handling it. Federal suppie- Chasm-i“ ~ - - - ~ r - ram-v 1:1 . menlat‘y payments on milk Com‘k ~ - - I - - - r -. . n ‘ “Md” up five Enos...'::"::..:::::::, . ainéitto 30 cents a hundred- Kings, Queens. City I ' . . H 5 ‘ Fl . markets 8 “1"” paymem“ “"2379” Su'hih'feerside ............ .. 3 :(gp‘pfigctznmill other mi or‘ lsarlnce County . . . . . . . . ‘ Offimals say tc_ have nol wmefiis'"_'. """""" ‘ i butter resulted ' n the dairy year which ended Tuesday. Policing action will continue ‘to be done by the board from the. audited records of the pro- cessing plants that turn out. but- Figurcs compiled by th Dominion Bureau of Statistics also are used. The board has not told the how much dried skim milk it intcnds to buy as a fur- ther means of diverting milk from butter production. But. it has set a maximum price of 11 ccnis a pound for the product. Last. year. it bought at 8.3 roots in pound—but was ‘ also paying a supplementary' paymcut on the milk involved. Ont. Lieui.-Gov. Sworn To Office TORONTO ICl‘l William Earl Rowe. 69. vctcran provin- cinl and fcdcral parliamentar- ian. was officially sworn in Wednesday as Ontario's 20th lieutenant-governor. An audience of about 100. in. cluding scveral members of the new lieutenant-governor‘s fam- ily and top provincial govcrn-. merit officials. saw brie ceremony establishing Mr. Rowe ‘ as the Queen's official represen- ‘ tative in the province. ‘ 3 ." SOVIET PREMIER Nikita Khrushcth and his bearded luest. Cuban Prime Minister 1 t I Sir ‘ the background of the unswerv- w ill. 88. an-vi-ng support of the people of‘ . 1 tries. May Day has become an Three Craft Trapped , In Basin Head Area . By STAN BOWLES hPliPVPt’l that one boat 15 skip» ; Guardian - Patriot Staff Writer pared by Alfred Sorrey and an- RCMP last night reported that (“her by Marvyn Johnston. both I three small fishing boats were ". MO'llazuP' The ."ewman 5. 4 V with Mi. Sorrcy is said to be a . trapped in heavy ice It roiiplc "l Mr. Hewitt. Lower Montague. In ; miles off Basin Head. about half tbc third boat were believed to ‘way between Souris and East be .loscph Dingwell and John 3 Point. Donovan. both of Fortune. ‘ The call was rot-civcd at According to reports from the JRCMP headquartch shortly at- Montague area last night. the . ter 5 pm. An omergcncy t‘ 3 ll Montagiic boats ‘nad lcft. there 3 was immediately put through carrying little in the “av of food it’or assistance from the dcpart- and mini (nothing, E merit of transport. it was lcarncd that s e i' e ral ‘ E.l'(.chi\ri‘utt.d local m arinc fishing boats had left their . . .agen or e epartment. said home ports of Montague. Mur- B‘rtg::;:t%::§0:f "Ill/[rd 315"“ ;that the icebrcakcr CCGS Wolfe ray Harbor. Murray River. Anv Cit Chief I gt. 9 M. H”; ,left here shortly after 9 pm. nandalc. Cardigan. and other S y a.“ C {"‘flc' ' ‘ and was expected to reach the localitics. with the intention of “pen” 0"“ 0 Quem" “'35 trapped boats about daybreak; heading for the north side and ani‘ouncefi. yesl'erday .b-V I today. ‘nonc of them had been board ane M'msler Pearsnn‘ W“ l M". Mci‘lutt said that once the from since pulling out. Justice. Dorion. 54. associate 'WOH-e had reach“! H“, area i chief justice of the. court since. it appears to h...“ captain ,‘ha, ICE is HEAVY Marc. 1961.. sucoeeds lion. in“. ice will wish me fishing Veteran fisbci'mrn along the William Bridges Scott. man before they mum hp ipd‘ east coast. reported that. ice (CP Wirrphfllfll. clear. the“ th, iwnman (-mwg‘ around that section of the Is- ' of each boat will likely be takcn‘ land is ""W lira"! 1" Um I aboard the Wont ‘ placcs it is. so heavy that the E ‘ wmds blowing as they were yes- MAY SAVE BOATS tcrday had little effect on its Pushes Efforts ‘ But. he was of the opinion that. movcmcnt. ii! there is an outside. chancc of' . it small boats did 11 st pORT Au pRINCE. Ham saving the oats. every effort . trappcd in it. and the ice gets Mp).-.“ inter.Am€1-ican peace will be made to do . . caught by the title or run. they mission met with Dominican The three boats. ranging in. would be crushed in a ew Embassy official-s Wednesday size from 35 to 40 feet in length utcs. ‘after talking with Haiti's Presi- are believed to have set out ycs- Shortly before 10 o'clock last dent Francois Duvalier in an at- terday. They were apparently. night. the meteorologist at. the tempt to quiet tempers in the headed for North Lake to awalti Charlottetown radio range re» internationa] d l s p u t C that . the opening of the lobster season .3 portcd‘htbat 1vgere flowingl . ues ay 1 mm 9 son a. m. . .an tt‘réatened hlwdShf’d in the“ it could not be confirmed, asl were forecast to incrcasz to 25. Lambbean‘ Haitian internal V‘°‘.communication with the tirappcd‘ and then start tapering off after lance. was reported continuing. lbnats was not possible. but it. is. daybreak. May Day Observance is Marked ‘ 0n Both Sides 0 iron Curtain (or) (trimming ln all the Communist capitals.i as Mayor Willy Brandt told a firecrackers andl giant portraits of Marx. Engels mass audience in front, of the 1 broads CJ Peace Mission l i LON DON nist. Chinese Russian rockets highlighted tra-j an .enm —- the "prophets of. Reichstag building only a mile ditional ay celebrations; communism” — i promi-{away from the East German Wednesday in scores of coup-1 nent but the Communist Chi-i parade that West Germany t and non-Communist world. i In many Communist. coun-i ties throughout the Communisttnese continued their practice of? would never accept the Commu- including a picture of disgraced; nist border wall or the division Russian dictator Joseph Stalin. got the country. c Communist Chinese also: lndcpcndent Algeria cele- made their celebrations strictly.hrated May Day for the first civilian. There has been no e—Itime with slogans calling a king May Day military parade: unity and the building of social- occasion for rocket-rattling dis-l plays of military might and in. other nations throughout ropc. Asia and the Caribbean,v since 19:59. :ism in public holiday with specches.l In Havana, lhp higgnst Nlay‘ In Grcccc. May Day wag picnics and union manifostos. nay cclpbl‘afinn sincp Fidel, marked by a general strike 0! Castro came. to power was led 50000" workch Md mass ral- by President Osvaldo Dorticos.i_ lies in mint cities as left-wins Deputy Premier Raul Castro‘jtrade union leaders called for Fidel's brother. and lndustriesi “more bread. democracy. peace Minister Ernesto Guevara. But and nuclear disarmament." the parade was devoid of the; In France. West Germany. Soviet tanks and rockets. igfflflillm. ltalyyanjdrgpain. May Arms locked to signify iinity‘ “YWMRQW'” 0‘ 3-"- and power. thousands of ('iibans A' .lhe Valilcallv P099 30"” stamped. shuffled or walked spfiakmg “WHEN!” 0‘ the R0 briskly past the reviewing stand "‘3" Calhm‘" {93"- d“-" “fum- in mocks of 4m . Joseph the {winter}. said ter in what part of the world Yugosxa‘yia's (Tlphmmm Ln. isoboing ril:lt‘ai:ior:ogl:d he may be." i 3:19:21; rotor: in the dominion of public 1“ “Frill “19 “W” we-‘leml music and carrying satiric plain. 18‘ in the Western. ards brought up the tail of a ha” "f the cit-V Pl'meSted solemn thrcc~hour parade H to against the “blatantly milita-I the. obvious (taught of bemoda]. ristic demonstration" in Eastl led president Th0. Berlin. where more. than 2.000; ' goose-stepping troops and 250i ADDRESSED BY MMDR ' tanks. armored cars and rocket-l In West Berlin. police rcin. were on :uard lc dcmonstrations in scow. Soviet. Premier. Khrushchev and Cuban Premier: Castro stood atop the reviewing stand in Red Square to watchl a long civilian parade followed by an impressive military dis-l play. chcn types of Russian rock-§ cts trundled through the square; climaxed by a 70-foot-long . in-j ‘ tercontinental ballistic missile in1 Moscow radio announccr saidf could "reach the. encmy no mat-‘ Cold Weather Sets Records HALlF‘AX tCPl At least two Maritime. centres sot mild wcatber and precipitation rec- ords (MIND! April. in Monrtom the average tem- carriers rolled past East Geré forcemcnts man Premier Otto Grotewohl. 1 against possib the previous average sot in 1961. The comparisons were taken ‘from Mbncton ainrmrt records dating back 24 years. At Grconwnt‘d in the heart of Nova St‘o-tia's Annapolis Valley. lhc average April temperamire was 37.5 dcgroos. the lowest avoracc recorded since the. opening of the Greenwood air- port in 1042. Broadcasting Probe Planned TORONTO tf‘Pi- State Score tary .1 .W. Pickersgill said Wed. nr-sday a report on Canadian broadcasting. which be indicated wont he a prcliide to a full govci-nmcnt inquiry. Wlll be pre— parrd by the top officials of the Board of Broadcast. Governors. thc (‘BC and the Canadian As- sociation of Broadcasters. I v lic told thc CAB. annual ‘ “ ‘ ' “ v mccting that both 3136 chm- F‘ldel Castro. join hands on the spond to chccrs of crowds diir- man Dr. Andrew Stewart and ing May Day celebrations. CBC Prcsidcnt Alphonse Oui- Lcnil Mausoleum R c 6 Square Wednesday on tbcy rc- "' Photo from Tass met have requested such an in. (AP Win-photo) . quiry.