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U. S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA Phone 9-5247 Friday Date May 5, 1967 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8)

British Problems Air War In In Common Market LONDON(AP)B yArthur Gavshon) North Continues BRITAIN'S SiIEING POPULATION of colored folk yesterday emer- SAIGON (UPI) COL. ROBIN OLDS of Washington, D.C., shot down ged as a major issue in the a North Vietnamese MIG-21 jet interceptor near Hanoi Thrusday, nation's bid to join the Euro- the U.S. command reported today. The former All-America foot- pean 'Common Market. ball player at West Point became the first U.S. pilot to bag The question was raised in two MIGs in the Vietnam war. the House of Commons. Law- Ol.ds,husband of actress Ella makers of all parties demanded Raines, downed the supersonic '--._ssurances that all British Park Wins MIG Thursday as U.S. Air Force citizens--black, brown, yellow Thunderchief jets streaked into as well as white Commonwealth In South Korea North Vietnam from Thailand immigrants--will receive equal SEOUL (AP) (By H. Hartzen- and blasted a big electric treatment in an enlarged Euro- busch)PRESIDENT CHUNG HEE PARK transformer plant only seven pean Economic Community (EEC), was re-elected by a landslide miles from Hanoi. But Prime Minister Wilson yesterday in the most orderly North Vietnamese regulars warily sidestepped the problem election since South Korea got who streamed acrossthe demili- while acknowledging that it its independence from Japan in tarized zone recently locked "bristles With difficulties." 1945. But his chief opponent with U.S. Marines in continued He promised to deal with it quickly raised a cry of ballot- fighting near the Laotian bor- ally when parliament Monday box stuffing on a huge scale. der today, while other Com- begins a three-day debate on With 80 percent of the un- munist troops inflicted heavy Britain's application for EEC official returns in, the gov- casualties in an attack on an membership. Wilson did under- ernment' broadcasting network U.S. Special Forces camp six take, however, to discuss the said the 49-year-old candidate miles away. issues with the six EEC gov- of the ruling Democratic Repub- Asthe ground war intensified ernments before settling the lican Party had won with in the northwest corner of question of British entry. 5,003,520 votes. Park's chief South Vietnam, U.S. Air Force The color bar factor came up opponent, former President Yun j in Parliament because of a Po-Sun of the New Democratic provision in the Rome Treaty Party, had 3,789,463 votes and (setting up EEC) which allows four splinter-group entries free and unfettered "mobility totaled about 300,000. of labor" between(Cont'd pg 2) The size of his(Cont'd pq 2)

a 0 1an a PAGE 2 FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1967 GITMO GAZETTE SAIGON (Cont'd from page 1) American com- LONDON (Cont'd from page 1) member nations. mand. If there are jobs going in Germany which-the U.S. headquarters said 181 Americans were Germans- cannot fill, for instance, Italians, killed in combat in South Vietnam last week, Dutch, French,Belgian or Luxembourg workers 22 percent more than the 148 killed the week have the right to fill them. before. Nearly half were Marines killed in With this in mind several legislators asked thefighting for the hills that began April 24. Wilson if he had discussed this issue with EEC The number of Americans wounded was slightly leaders especiallyin the context of the rights less than the week before,957 as compared-with of Commonwealth immigrants in Britain. 1,031. There are at least a million of these im- In the attack on the Lang Vei Special Forces migrants, mostly from Asian, West Indian or camp, about 420 miles north of Saigon, two of African member-countries of the Commonwealth. the 12 American Green Berets in the camp were In the 1960s alone about half a million have killed and the three companies of South Viet- streamed in although now the British have namese and Montagnard militamen suffered heavy limited newcomers to 8,500 yearly--and only if losses. they have jobs to come to. A Vietnamese spokesman said the Communists Wilson repiied he had not yet discussed the fired 200 mortar rounds into the camp under question with EEC leaders. He added that even the cover of darkness before attacking. The in Common Market countries there are doubts attack lasted more than an hour. The spokes - about the rights of entry of )utsiders. man said the camp communications bunker was Commonwealth immigrants have-the right to knocked out in the initial assault. becomefull-fledged British citizens after five years residence whatever their color or race. WASHINGTON(Cont'd from page 1) today's final session of.mid-year meeting. MARIETTA, OHO (AP) BARRY GOLDWATER TOLD a The independents want Congress to write into Marietta College audience that the United S law the details of the mandatory program that States must stay in Vietnam because "as long limits oil.imports to 12.2 percent of domestic as Communism is in Asia,there will be no peace crude production. They contend thousands of in Asia. As long as there is no peace in Asia, barrels of imports are circumventing the re- there will be no peace in the world." strictions through such loop holes as special If this country pulls out of Vietnam we may quotas for petrochemical plants. eventually lose our "number one position in The Trade Expansion Act currently authorizes the world," the ex-Ari-zona Senator contended. import controls only in very general terms. Goldwater said America is at war in Vietnam Detailsof oil controls are left to the Interior because "we have committed our honor by treaty" Department. to the South Vietnamese people. Calvert and Harold M. McClure Jr. of Alma, Michigan, the Imports Committee Chairman said HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIER (AP) DARTMOUTH COL- 0 stricter controls are vital if independents LEGE FORMALLY apologized yesterday to former are to have the economic incentives needed to Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama for the out- halt a downward trend in the discovery of new burst by white and negro hecklers which drove domestic oil reserves. himfrom the stage at Dartmouth Wednesday night. -The committeefbrecast yesterdaythat domestic Dean Thaddeus Seymour expressed regret to demand for petroleum this year will average Wallace that some Dartmouth students "so fla- 12,250,000 barrels a day, an increase of grantly abused the cardinal principle of an 400,000 over 1966. academic community by infringing on your rights Domestic crude production for 1967 was pro- as guest on our campus." He said that the ma- jected to average 8,505,000 barrels a day, an jority at Dartmouth felt that a man's opinions increase of 179,000 barrels daily. deserve a free and unobstructed platform. Wallace was drived from the stage by the SEOUL (Cont'd from page 1) victory margin raucous hecklers but returned shortly after- was a triumph for Park who had defeated Yun in ward to finish his talk. He ran into some more trouble outside the auditorium when the hostile group rocked his car, denting the roof Pages Missing or Unavailable GITMO GAZETT FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1967 PAGE 7

MAJOR LEAGUE- BASEBALL (By Sig Couch) Only three games were played yesterday and all of them were in the- as the Ameri- can League took the day off for travel. The Dodgers have been having a touqh time of SPORTS it all season, losing 3 of four extra idning games including the one Tuesday that went 15 . The breaks seem to be falling the other way this year and so it was last night as they lost to Pittsburgh 9-3. Going into the bottom of the 7th the Dodgers THE FTG TRAINERS won their second game in a held a slim 3-2 lead and the roof fell in. row last night, shutting out the Hospital Med- With the bases loaded ex-Dodger ics, 2-0, on Tom Fox's four hitter. a to start the Pirates on a 7 No longer the "Funniest Team Going", the . Bill Mazeroski finished it off with a Trainers seized a scoring opportunity in the bases loaded . Bob Veale allowed only sixth inning to push across two unearned rund six Dodger hits in eight innings to pick up on two hits, an error and a passed ball by his fourth victory of the season against :no Medic catcher Bubba Freeman. losses. Until the sixth inning, the Trainers' old Houston picked up 2 runs in the first inning pros had been unable to get a man past second of their contest with PhiladelphiA and added a base, although they had gotten four hits off run each in the 4th and 5th innings to downthe young Gary Bishop. Phils 4-1. Bob Aspromonte hit his second The Medics, on the other hand, had Pat Pic- homer of the season and three Houston pitchers chione on third base with one down in the bot- held the Phils to five hits. tom of the first and had runners on first and In the only other game played, San Francisco second with one away in the fourth, but Tom beat the Mets 3-1. Mike McCormick, the Winning Fox struck out Leo Cardona to end the fist pitcher gave up only 3'hits in:.the 7 innings inning threat. He struck out Freeman and got that he worked and won his first game since Peterchuk to ground out to second to eliminate 1962. Jim Ray Hart hit homer number 3 for the the threat in the fourth. Giants in the second inning to start the scor- Fox gave up only four singles and no Valks ing for the Giants. The Mets tied it up in the while striking out six. It was his first win fourth, but Willie Mays singled home the tie of the season against one loss. breaker in the sixth and they added the third Gary Bishop was tagged for five hits while run in the ninth. walking none and striking out seven. For Bis- Today there is a full slate in bothLLeagues. hop, it was his fifth'loss of the season al- In the National League, St. Louis 'plays at though his Earned Run Average dropped to 1.35. Chicago, Los Angeles is ii Philadelphib,. San He has won four games this season. Francisco travels to Pittsburgh, Atlanta is Under the lights tonight, the Security Group host to the League-leading Cinciinatl AdLege, Hilltoppers visit the CommSta Comets. and Houston is at New York. On Saturday, the fast-moving NAS Flyers are In'the American League, New York plays bt the guests of the Marine Barracks Leathernecks Kansas City, Washington at California, Chicago at 3, while the undefeated League-leading Nav at Cleveland, Boston is in Mihnesota and the Sta Indians are the guests of the NSD Supply- League leading Tigers host baltimore. men at 6. The FMF Devildogs host the VC-10 Crusaders PAGE 8 FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1967 GITMO0 GAZETTE

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA, (AP)(By Jim Strothan ) WASHINGTON (UPI) PRESIDENT JOHNSON HAS asked LUNAR ORBITER 4 ROCKETED moonward yesterday to Congress for legislation in1 the rail dispute. photograph with special cameras 90% of the The legislation would block a threatened ha- moon's front face and hidden backside in the tionwide railroad strike by six ahopcraft most ambitious lunar survey yet attempted. unions until January of 1969'if the unions and A fiery Atlas-Agena rocket, which nearly had management fail to reach an agreement in a new been grounded by a troublesome rocket valve, 90-day cooling-off period. beat a racs against the countdown clock and The President has asked the nuuse and Senate blasted off at 5:25 p.m. EST to start the fly- to set up a five-member board to try for a ing photographic laboratory on a planned 89- settlement during the new cooling-off period. hour, 245,519-mile journey through space. He cites particularly the war in Vietnam as in The craft a sister ship of Lunar Orbiters the national interest. 1,2, and 3 which photographed in striking de- Should this fail-, as it already has. once in tail millions of square miles of the moon's a Congressionally-ordered 20-day delay, the backside and portions of its front face was to plan would force both sides to accept the swing into a lofty egg-shaped orbit around the findings of the board until January of 1969. moon on Monday. The President did not call this compulsory Cameras aboard the spacecraft are to begin arbitration but labor experts feel it is a snapping pictures May 11. modified form of it. "We appear to have a good flight," a space Johnson said---"nothing here warrants resort agency spokesman saidas Lunar Orbiter 4 winged to a compulsory arbitration procedure which toward its distant target. would disregard all that collective bargaining An official go-ahead to launch was delayed has accomplished and substitute the unfettered until 3:30 p.m. Thursday, after project offi- discretionary decision.of others." cials agreed that tests on a valve in the * **** * Agena s fuel system showedittobe acceptable. FATIMA, PORTUGAL (UPI) POPE PAUL VI WILL join a multitude of pilgrims already streaming ATHENS (AP) THE GREEK MILITARY regime-yes- into this tiny, mediaeval village to reaffirm terday began formal questioning of anti-mon- their belief the Virgin Mary appeared there to archist leader Andreas Papandreou. three shepards' children 50 years ago. The interrogation which could lead toa ttea- The Pope's visit May 13 for the 50th anni- son trial against him, was adjourned after 20 versary of the "Miracle of Fatima" is almost minutes. certain to swell the number of visitors Leyond An Athens investigating magistrate studying the originally expected 1 million. the Aspida conspiracy case talked with Papan- The Papal visit will be the most momentous dreou in a hotel 25.kilometers outside the event in the history of the shrine since a city. The American-educated Papandreou has crowd o . about 70,000 persons gathered at a been held prisoner since the April 21 Army hollow ina drenching rainstorm on Oct. 1, 1947 coup. for a promised miracle. The site was apparently chosen to avoid any disorder.