"in VOL. LXXIX NO. 236. If It's Good For The island The Guardian Is For It ; By TOM MITCHELL BTTAWA.-(CP) — Joseph: Al- phonse Quimet, the man who ushered the CBC into the age of television, has hagded in his notice of retirement. Mr. Ouimet, who has spent 32 of his 58 years with the publicly- owned corporation, pegged his effective retirement date to adoption of new broadcasting legislation, which he said he ex- pected would come early in the new vear. If. there should be some delay getting the legislation ‘throygh, he would take ancther look at the situation. But in any -ease—he—would..not_remain past 19A8. =—Prime—Ministre——Pearson..tax bled in the Commons Friday an exchange of. letters between himself and Mr. Quimet, who said his reasons for quitting the $40.000-a-vear' vost _were ver- sonal and professional and un- connected with any recent prob lems or criticism. Mr. Pearson said he accepted the resignation with regret. “I Would like to return to a more normal private-and family life before it is too late to enjoy it,” Mr. Ouimet wrote the prime minister Oet. 5. Mr. Pearson's reply -was Hated the following day. ASKS INVESTIGATION Opposition Leader Diefen- beker, after_-paying tribute..to Mr. Ouimet’s capabilities, told the Commons the resignation notice ‘indicates that all is not well and the time has come for ~ @ full parliamentary investiga- _ #8 job,” tion” of the CBC. At a news conference that fol- lowed the tabling of My Oulmet denied this. It’s time to let the CBC do Mr.- Ouimet com. mented. His resignation was uncon- nected with any recent prob- lems or with the report by: the Fowler committee on broadcast- ing that suggested the power of the-CBC chief should” be diluted. Mr. Ouimet said he had. told’ the government of his desire to retire by age 607when- he was ~feappointed to another seven-, ~ year term as CBC president a : year ago. The résponsibilities of his position “have literally taken ™many years, ‘he-said-in- . my time and: energy" for ‘He said he has no. firin plans “yet for- other work when he Time Of Death Is Challenge leaves the CBC. “Don’t think of me as sitting in a rocking chair somewhere,” he told reporters with a grin. NO PLANS FOR POLITICS Asked whether. he would go into politics, he said — the letters, | Outhorised as Second Class Mail by ~ os : wa and ter p> ‘ rg S ne i «? oo vf CBC's Presider’ Announces Rath. “vent | CBC PRESIDENT Alphonse Ouimet explains. that his signation is for personal sons. Prime Minister Pearson not a charice in the world.’’ He also doubted that he would ac- cept any connection with private radio or television, A reporter noted Mr. Ouimet has the most--important post among French-Canadians con- nected with the federal govern- cn How did he feel about ca- prospects for’.French-Cana- Bess in the civil service? “I havé never felt out of place | or not at home. “I've always felt very strongly about Canada as a whole rather than its parts. I More se =|$10 Found HALIFAX ae. Police sald ‘nine counterfeit $10 bills were: | discovered Friday in Halifax, bringing the week's total to 20. Police said the bills now are appearing with five different ser- ial numbers. - -Counterfeit bills also turned up during the week in Truro and. eh N.S. announced Mr. Ouimet's resig- nation in the Commons Fri- (CP Wirephote) s should join the | day. ~~ think Q civil service.” Mr. Ouimet said such side ef- fects as last spring's producer- management clash over the TV program This Hour Has Seven Days make people forget—.that ey CBC is really performing well. ee ' CANADA, SATURDAY OCTOBER 8, 1966. ‘Train And Bus Toll Reache \ ae OTTAWA: ~(CP)—The— govern. ment’s plan to establish a live- stock feed, board won general support in the Commons Fri- day, though opposition spokes- men_ pointed to ‘possible compll- cations. The measure was given sec- ond reading—approval in: pritiei- ple—without a formal vote and passed into the committee stage »for clause-by-clause study. The board is to take over and administer a plan, introduced during the’ Second World War, under which Ottawa subsidizes shipment of - feed: grains from Prairie farms: to livestock feed- ers in Eastern Canada and_Brit- ish Columbia. Angus MaeLean (PC — 4+Queens), fisheries minister in the ‘former Conservative gov- ernment, said that while not op- posing the government’s bill categorically, more benefits could be given to farmers out- side the Prairie provinces by other policies. In the Maritimes, Mr. Mae- iets Plan For Livestock Feed Board’ Gets General Commons Approval ‘get less for their product because of the “quantity. of, western. subsidized... grain available to. livestock feeders. SHOULD LOOK AT. OTHERS It would be better, for Mart- time farmers, to subsidize: the movement of fertilizers such as limestone and potash from cen- tral and Western Canada, he added. There are “dismal stretches of abandoned agricul- tural land in the Maritimes growing up in scrub’?” which =. be brought into produc- ion Forestry Minister Sauve, whose department will oversee the board, said $16,000,000 will be at the disposal of the board, which could borrow more from the treasury if needed. ~ He thought the -legislation ‘stated that the agency could only buy feed grain from the Canadian wheat board, but after doubts expressed by some oppo- Montrealers Lean said, local feed grains Russia E Chinese as retaliation for China i ‘Soviet students home, was one Fof the ‘first concrete measures taken by the Soviet Union against China since the two Communist wiangs became. As Truscott Hearing: Continues: By KEN KELLY OTTAWA (CP)—An American pathologist gave evidence at the Steven Truscott hearings Friday ~ «which challenged Crown. evi- “tlence about ‘the timeand place of _ of 12-year-old Lynne ‘ Harpe: Dr "Chatles: ‘Petty ‘of Balti- more, Md., assistant © medical ,éxaminer for the state of Mary- land, testified. that Lynne prob- ably died some hours later than the Crown's. medical witnesses had estimated. He told the Supreme Court. of * Ganada that scratches on. ~Lynne’s legs. indicated she was dragged some distance to the isolated bushland spot near:Clin- ton, Ont., where her body was found: June 11, 1989 °°: Furthermore, he sald, if * Lynne was raped or rape had yy) Hs day's Canada Gazette, been attempted, he would “ex- i to find. traces of semen. wever, from police photos of [the séene and from’ the’Crown's medieal reports there were no such traces. - ENDED HIS TESTIMONY ; ‘Truscott— himself completed testimony: Friday which he had begun the previous day as the Supreme Court conducted .a re- view. of his murder -conviction on instruction from the fedéral cabinet. He was convicted in 1959 at the age of 14 of the sex slaying ofthe Harper girl and sentenced to be hanged. The ‘tabinet com- muted this to life imprisonment. Dr. -Pétty, a Harvard: Univer- sity graduate, said that based on the Crown's autopsy reports; police photographs and evidence about when’ they wére made, * Lynne had been dead less than 48 hours when police and police scientists: began. their examina- tions-of her~hody. The Crown had’ introduced evidence: at Truscott’s a that | Wite’ s Expenses For Trip Ruled Under Taxable Income OTTAWA (CP)—The revenue department has crushing news foday for the wife who accom- panies.her husband to conven- tlons atthe firm's expense. ‘From now on, any company payment of a wife's expenses for a business trip or conven- tion has to be reported as an item of taxable income: for the husband. In a new information bulletin to employers published in to- the de- partment listed fringe benefits that. are to be included in re- - porting the employee's income. Most of the items are old ones. But No. 8 is new-and teads: "Where an’ ‘employee's’ wife accompanies him .on a ‘business . ‘rip and the -employer either pays her. travelling expenses or: reimburses the employee or his’ wife for “them, the payment er reimbursement shall be reported @s a taxable benefit to the em- @ ployee,- even though the wife participates in ancillary social activities or makes some incl- dental. contribution to the busi- ness aspects of the trip.’ A revenue department spokes- men said the intent of this pro- vision always had been_implied in the tax laws. But this was the first time employers have- been specifically instructed “on the matter. INSIDE TODAY Island news Summerside ... Editorials ...........- Kings, Queens, City . os Peat Pav eeuks odes Sport . Comics (Helesve va ecerags Classified. 10, ‘i, Finance, markets .......: seemeenerreeneee cg ea: Sit eu: tot te on 00 9 He ined Lynne probably was killed be- tween 7 and 7:45 p.m., June 9— 41 hours before her body was found by an RCAF: search party from_a nearby air force base. “Dr. Petty’ said ‘that in his opin-. ion Lynne was dead ‘‘in the neighborhood of 36 hours, posst- bly .40'> hours,’ from autopsy time.’”’ The autopsy ‘started at 7:45 p.m. June 11. ‘ESTIMATE IMPOSSIBLE Dr, Petty, who said he nor- mally conducts about 400 autop- sies a year, testified that. if would: be: impessible «for anyone to estimate’ Lynneé’s death at 7-7:45-p;m:, June-9;-on-the-basis of the<state of her ‘body’ ‘and the conténts of her’ stomach. ‘Truscott, who did not testify at his trial, told the, court.Thurs- day .thatihe and Lynne were to- gether between “about 7:30 p.m. and 8. p.m., June 9. s He said he Jeft her at the junction :of a Scounty road and highway No. 8, near where the ‘body. was found. Hid-last sight .}of her was gefting into.a grey 1959 Chevrolet. * Dr. Petty ‘said in reply to questions by G. Arthur Mar- tin) Truscott’s lawyer, that scratches on the outer parts of Lynne’s legs, visible’ in ‘police photographs, were ‘caused by dragging of the body.’ At Truscott’s _ trial, police medical evidence was that the Scratches were caused by some- thing . pressing on .Lynne’s ‘body in. the’ brush, “Leating through an ‘album’ ot Dr. Petty ‘enumerated three points which. he said showed Lynne’s body in a considerable degree of rigor mortis, the after - death muscle stiffening which last several hours. ADJOURNS HEARING ‘The’ -court - adjourned «until Tuesday, Oct. 11, at 10:30 a.m. mony about microscopic slites of body tissue which he éxam- inthe Ontario attorney- ea ctime laboratory ‘Sept. , this year, - omeye Friday's: expulsion, explained enlarged police photographs, |’ EDT as Dr. ‘Petty began testi- | xpels Group — Chinese. officials that the was made on the basis the Chinese Embassy here wa told of the expulsion. order ‘by-|-- ‘The-plme was deserted as the Soviet higher education min- the -one in which Mr. Shefler istry and it was a to| made his global flight in com- pany with Max Conrad, an of ne: | American Are Killed - In Crash BURLINGTON, Vt. (CP)—AU three: Montrealers aboard a twin-engine plane which crashed bd David Shet- ‘from a flight sition members it was — to get a legal interpretatio the point. before’ the bill. ‘wa A passed. A. B. Patterson (SC—Fraser Valley)...said great care will be the new board and its advisory council. They should be repre- sentative of farm organizations and chosen for their. ability to contribute to the health of agri- needed in selecting members for |" Death Sentence. Is Commuted aine OTTAWA (CP)—Th...... ‘OTTAWA. (CP)—The cabinet has commuted to life imprison- ment the. death sentence im- posed on Claude Levasseur for the mutder of bank manager Emile Marier; it: was announced Friday. . Levasseur, 90, was convicted in 1965 of shooting the 71-year- old mian during ‘a: holdup in: St. Germain de Grantham, Que., on Aug. 8, 1964. He was scheddled ‘to’ ‘be hanged Oct. 14. It was the 22nd consecutive commutation by the Liberal government, No one. has~ been culture. hanged-in Canada since the Lib- erals came into power in 1963. Over Ferry CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA — Prince Edward. Island must keep pressure on ‘the federal government to ensure that transportation to the Island province will not again be inter- rupted by strikes, in the view of: Kings’ MP Melvin McQuaid, . Commenting on answers he received to questions about the P.E.1. ferry operation .and its possible take-over by the depart- ment of transport, Mr. McQuaid said he. was as far from satisfied with the government's reply. . The minister says it is difficult to estimate when on our\‘representations may & f Which publi- “ela merit te ia saaese Ghana ‘Mountains of Vermont west of Lake Cham- known: as F ‘Grandfather. oer the question of resuming on the basis change. of students, postgradu- ates and traimees as soon as the Chinese side displays readi- ness. to resume such ex- changes.” reciprocity the ex-|be published Monday, Thanksgiving Day. The next edition will be Tues- day, Oct. 11. No Paper Monday The Guardian will not ie kina Fla. southeast of here Friday for 44 “lzalez, 32, told authorities the 23- ‘companion were clinging to-a 44 Refugees ». (Are Missing Pressure Seen Needed Operation expec ted. This is tantamount ‘to -wabien that. no action has as yet been taken on the . representa-. tions which were made quite some time ago by the provincial government, the: - ‘Maritime Board of Trade, the Canadian Trucking Association and our four federal MPs” The Kings’ MP ‘asks why it is taking the government so: long to act’on a matter so vital to the economy of the province: He not- ed that Premier Alex Campbell Stated he has received assur- pee a a Dae that. it recog- southwesterly 20... _ Sunday: sunny. ; ¢ wor oe TEN CENTS En Route By GARY McOARTHY DORION, Que. (CP)—At least 19. persons, almost_all of them teen-agers, were killed Friday. night in the flaming collision of their --@fartered bus and - a freight train near Dorion. Police Chief Jean Lapointe of Dorion, in announcing the num- ber of dead, said: - “This is the worst tragedy I’ve ever seen in all my years on_ the éorce.” The morgue in this commu- nity 15 miles west of Montreal said 11 bodies from the crash scene had been brought there WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy periods; winds Low-high 40 and 55. 1 + houchd, oa "20 PAGES Collision 9 Dead Que. School ‘Group - To Dance Dorion is a community. ¢ 5,000 people on the north shore of the’ St. Lawrence River and on the ot aie the western tip of Montreal Island. SEARCH HIGH GRASS —_ volunteers ‘combed high grass’ mear the tracks as well a8 ditches for possible victims ‘of the accident. The bus was said to have been taking teen-agers. from a student ce known - a Cite des Jeu (City of Young) to a dance "in nate, Que. 4 Debris was: spread over “@ wide area after the crash. .- The ambulances, sent to the scene from Montreal and other neighboring .areas, took the vie- tims to Lakeshore and other area hospitals. : ed Numerous. cars crowded the highways in the area, (AP) — Coast | Guard helicopters combed seas Cuban refugees feared to haves drowned when their small boat broke up and sank four days ago. Two: survivors were rescued Friday. One of the men, tenta- tively identified as Enrique Gon- foot craft left Cuba with 46: per- sons crammed aboard and was sunk by hurricane Inez. Gonzalez and his unidentified ‘raft when they were spotted by the crew of the British freighter Nicolas Bowater, whiclt rescued Members of the British* press afrived in the province yesterday under the auspices of the P.E.I. Travel Bureau afid the Canadian government Travel Bureau. Upon’ arrival at Charlottetown airport, they 1 . ‘BRITISH PRESS REPRESENTAT “were taken. to tne’ Prince” ‘Ed ward Island | ~ department ‘of tourism where they met with ministet of “Dr. Lorne Bonnell. ane ean vei meet Walter Ay We mayor a OTTAWA — Two Prince Ed- ward Island MPs criticized a government feed bill in the Com- mons Friday. David MacDon- ald, MP for Prince, and Hon. J. Angus MacLean, MP. for them. -~ at” 10.30 and will call on Lieutenant - Gov- ernor W.J. MacDonald at 11.30; Seen here (FROM THE" LEFT) ‘are Philip Kelly, Bur et * mingham Poot aad Mall Kea Ctiatlo sown, principle of the Legislation but Weed, "Manchester Evening News and Cronicle; Rodney Andrew, Southern Evening Eého; and Hon; "Lorne Bon- Queens welcomed the eel jin Prince Edward Island ‘| firing squad with Canadian ap- | proval and Canadian rifles nine | Columbia would have very great . There was.a fear that tthe board ~thembers: -might--be more with the econo- | mist and his slide rule than with | | the -practical _| knowledge which now exists in »} various régions. . experience and - Mr. MacLean said there has ‘been-a great change in farming was hecause of a failure Two ‘Island | MPs Gitical: Of Feed Grain a CAPITAL BUREAU |; OF THE GUARDIAN | ment. es of grain. The local’ sredatie was *lin a position of having nothing to sell when the price rose. The Queens’ MP said mills ‘found it more oes to have two or three c: Western grain on rather than look in markets for the relativ: lots of grain which wi to be bought and tru vidually. Mr. MacLean said favor of having: a tern grain at a rea looked ib as the grain a audes seetac produced only h the: meat it consumed ie iL £ ey a a HE re 2 g iil Fie gi into production many but Defence Dept. OTTAWA (CP)—The defence t is ‘investigating al- legations that Canadian officers a. German court mar- tial five days after the Second, World War ended that led to the execution of two German sail- ~ AwW article in the West. Ger- man magazine Der Spiegel says | that Rainer Beck, 28, and Bruno | -Dorder, 20. were convicted of de- fertion and shot by a German days after the Allies forbade summary military tribunals. - The article says..a Canadian general approved the ~action. at @ Netherlands internment camp and a Canadian officer congrat- ulated the firing squad. bn Retreltgs Phngd wae «hay vestigation to the Comnions -Fri- neil,’ minister of Swellare and counts development. As Defence Minister Hellyer | the “tf of acres of land. Is Probing ‘German Claim On Execution office in West Germany a» nounced a similar investigation.’ The German announcement said relatives of one of the exe- cuted men have filed charges . of,..murder against Wilhelm | Koa, a former German na-_. val judge who allegedly . pre ‘sided at the court martial May, 13,, 1945, Opposition Leader Dietentia-. ker asked: Mr. Hellyer. whether. a preliminary investiga’ tion would allow him to say the’ story was without foundation... “Ido think in so far as tite story is concerend the facts will: indicate as . a. G suggested,” ee: ee Police, ambulance drivers and