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Not over 7c per single cop) Member Audit Bureau PY: ‘of Circulation. “The strongest memory +s weaker than the weakest ink” THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1968. PAGE 6 A Chance For Reform Hope is now being expressed that the defense committee which the Pearson Government proposes to establish shortly will do a badly needed reform job on the setup of the defense department itself, both in its civil and military branches. On the civil side, the Glassco royal commission made several sug- gestions, notably with respect to the role of the deputy minister of the department which is at present too rarrowly circumseribed. This results in depriving the minister of the staff assistance he requires. Given the present size and complexity of the armed forces, he must have more adequate civil support if he is to discharge his duties effectively. The commission recommended, specifically, that a strong staff, es- sentially civilian in character, and outside the framework of the ser- vices, be built up to assist the min- ister and presumably prevent him from relying too heavily on wholly military advice. : OUTMODED SYSTEM—But this is not all. According to the Winnipeg Free Press in a series of editorials ‘on the subject, at the root of the problem is the fact that all three services are operating under a staff system which was obsolete half a century ago, and which Britain abandoned after the Boer War. The chief objection to this sys- tem is that the army’s commander- in-chief carries a responsibility far too heavy for one individual, and he tends to rely on others whose train- ing and habits of thought are identi- cal to his own. The minister, for his part, is a transient political figure, ostensibly senior in authority but in fact almost totally dependent on one man for advice. In Britain the army functions under an army council, patterned on the admiralty board and composed of the secretary of state for war, who is chairman; the permanent un- der-secretary (deputy minister) ; the parliamentary under-secretary ; the chief of the imperial general staff; the adjutant-general; the quartermaster-general ; and the vice- and deputy-chiefs of the imperial general staff. Each military member of the council has specifically assigned responsibilities and takes his orders from the council as a whole, rather than from a minister or a command- er-in-chief. Thus the chief of the imperial general staff is responsible for training, intelligence and “ad- vising as to” military operations; the adjutant-general, though he may be lower in rank, carries responsi ity for recruiting, personnel, medi- cal and legal services and army wel- fare; other civil and military mem- bers have their own responsibilities and, regardless of rank, speak with an equal voice in the council. ADVANTAGES—There are two great advantages to this system. One is that Js has aE th e between the minister ida the com- mander of the army. The other is that it has assured complete civil control beyond the parliamentary level and right into the organiza- tion of the service itself. ‘These reforms proved so suc- cessful in the British army that they were incorporated into the Royal Air Force when it was estab- lished in 1917 and today all three ‘British services are still administer- 4 by councils of senior civil and military officials, each with his own carefully defined functions and each with direct access to the minister heading the department concerned. Here is an example which might well be considered when the propos- ed defense committee is appointed in the Canadian Parliament. If some sense of order and coherence {is to be restored to defense policy, this would seem to be the logical place in which to make a start. Proud Of The Struggle Washington has a new Ambas- sador to Finland, Mr. Carl T. Rowan, whose first statement to the press on his arrival at Helsinki was with regard to racial situations like those at Birmingham, Ala., and Oxford, Miss, which he described as a dis- grace to the United States. The point of Mr. Rowan’s remarks, however, was that this disgrace was felt by the American people generally. It was not something they were complacent about, far less inclined to excuse. The President, the Attor- ney General and the Supreme Court have made it clear time and again that segregation is a violation of the Constitution, and it is this interpre- tation that will prevail. “People ought to understand these events that have taken place in Birmingham and Oxford, because there will be more of them,” Mr. Rowan said. The situation is quite different from what it was 20 years ago because the Negro is more educated, politically more powerful, and has more money; and he is de- termined to use these resources to achieve first-class citizenship. He also has very important support— the support of the Government of the United States. The Ambassador added that he was proud of the struggle that is going on to wipe out this blot on the American record, proud of the prog- ress achieved and confident of the success that would crown the efforts of those who were fighting in the cause of justice and equity. Mr. Rowan has two claims to special distinction, one of them very pertinent to the issue on which he spoke so frankly. At 87 he is the youngest Ambassador for the Unit- ed States, and he is a Negro. Roadside Menace The farmers of Bruce County, Ontario, are clamoring for drastic action to curb an abuse which is by no means non-existent in this Prov- ince. It has to do with roadside beer drinkers who heave their empty bottles from car windows, causing a litter which is dangerous as well as ugly and unsanitary. These bot- tles tend to get broken, and broken glass in farm lands punctures the tires of farm tractors, gets in the gears and pulleys of farm machin- ery, and, most distressing of all, gets in the throats and stomachs of ani- mals grazing in the field. There are laws prohibiting this irresponsible practise, but the Bruce Federation of Agriculture believes they do not go far enough. It wants bottling companies restrained from using glass containers alto- gether, and has passed a resolution to this effect. Waxed cardboard containers heaved out of car win- dows would—concededly—make an untidy landscape, but they would not cut a child’s foot, or cause a cow to die from internal bleeding. Metal iners would rust THE OTTAWA CIRCUS OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson NATO Conference Regarded As Milestone The North Atlantic Treaty Or- | ganization is fourteen years old, In that time, it has held its sters twice in Ot- ch of those Ottawa Confer- ences has marked a decisive eoning point in the history of pat Bitmap 1951, the Ottawa meeting comprised, for the first time, not only the Foreign Min- isters but also the Finance Min- isters and the Defence Ministers of the member countries. This marked formal recognition t ha t the costly defence effort by the alliance was creating financial and economic problems such as inflation, imbalance of interna- | tional payments and barriers to a freer flow of trade. | To study these rising difficul- | ties, and to propose solutions, the Ministers set up a commit tee of five, whose report stress- ed the need for active measures | to implement the ‘Canadian | Clause” in the this is the famous Article Two, which binds the member countries to co-operate in the economic, pol- itical, social, cultural and infor. mation fields as well as in de- ence. That 1951 Ottawa meeting also recognized that NATO must be more than a club of rich white western nations, which could so easily be misunderstood by the less favoured nations of the wo as a conspiracy to use naked armed force to preserve for our- selves our privileged wealth. The first broadening of the circle was achieved at that meeting, by in- viting Greece and Turkey to join the pact - a step which also had considerable military. merit CREATING PARTNERSHIP Tlaiary) eultiooerbaniatoh ihe | 1963 Ottawa meeting as a sim- arly significant milestone, al- | though the true significance was | not made clear in the innocuous wording of the Ministers’ ‘final communique. The enormous disparity In strength and wealth) between | .S.A. and other members of the North Atlantic aDiance of course led to that country bear- ing the greatest share of the very onerous defence burden. But the consequence, which was not welcomed by allies who are equal in status if not in stature, was that the predominant ally tended more and more first to lead, then to dictate, and finally to go it alone. There w: sentful and not altogether un- justified Gis that NATO had an alliance away, as glass will not. There might be difficulty in the way enforcing legislation of the kind proposed—it would apply to soft-drink bottlers as well as brew- eries and distilleries; but the farm- ers’ grievance in this case is a real one, and calls for a combined drive against, a practice which should no longer be tolerated in any commun- ity. . EDITORIAL NOTE Justice Minister Chevrier has promised to order his investigators to “look anew” into causes of the recent boost in sugar prices. A cur- ious point in connection with this promise is that it came after Oppos- ition Leader Diefenbaker had re- ported that as of March 31 there were 47(/,000,000 pounds of sugar in storage in Canada, and had charged that there had been “unconscionable profits in the refining industry.” One would imagine that the storage figures quoted by Mr. Diefenbaker would be as accessible to the Gov- ernment as to the Opposition, and that Mr. Chevrier, in particular, would be familiar with them, into a eguatellAAoh of one super- state attended by a cluster of little satellites. EVERSING GEOPOLITICS The most vivid manifestation of this has been the counter- hopefully for Western Europe, by General De Gaulle. At worst, there would be developed a Eur- opean super - state, possibly ex- ceeding ane USA in manpower and know - how and resources, which weal be a Third Force in | the worl And of course it would possess | and control its own nuclear strik- ing force. Further, as Britain's abortive attempt to join the Eur- | opean Common Market showed, | it would become an inward-look- | ing trade bloc imposing bar- | riers to freer world commerce. “The Atlantic Community must | come together; in one Atlantic Community,”” declare} P rim Minister Pearson, in his address of welcome to the delegates. “The West cannot afford t wo such Communities, a Europea one and a North American one, each controlling its own policies | and each moving away from the | other as a common menace re- | des. Disturbed Mind Will Play Tricks By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen THE MIND plays strange tricks on the An excell ent example, concerning E & derly woman, appeared in cent issue of the Axnuaia of la: ternal Medicine. ‘Byer duane 29, for 38 years, sh oped bay fever which lasted FH days and then cleared. These bouts consisted of fever, tear- ing of the eyes, nasal conges tion, and coug! es «that was not all. For -20 "3 she also experienced a Tour day siege of diarrhea addition, a appeared on her arms ev- ery March that lasted tires “to five weeks. The eruption had recurred like clockwork since, 1951 and always cleared up ‘spontaneously. When this woman's puzzling story was fitted together it was obvious she was suffering from three anniversary reactions in- volving the respiratory tract, the intestine, and the skin. term is used because the illnes- ses recurred at the same time each year. An emotional up- set is the usual cause of anni ecsary) concen james HL and Dr. Stewart Wolf wueston ed the women, they fou her husband had been Milled in 1919, leaving her with two sons and a daughter. Three years la- ter she fell in love with a mar- ried man who resembled her dead husband but on August 29, 1924, he left her to return to his wife, This rejection precipi- tated an episode of weeping and a nasal discharge that marked the beginning of the hay fever of 38 years duration, She consulted an osteopath 17 years later for her hay fever bouts and became infatuated with him, In mid-July of the next year he was killed in an auto accident. Shortly thereaft- cr, diarrhea made its debut. In 1949 she sought medical aid from a depressed, elderly phy- sician who was drinking too h and going downhill. She tried to help him but he died in March of 1951. Shortly thereaf- | ter she received an injection of | penicillin and developed a skin reaction. This was the initial appearance of the ras! Her present physicians be- | lieve that her husband's death ‘The 1963 Ottawa Conference, | made this woman emotionally | by noting this need, by founding | a multinational nuclear force in whose direction the lesser a tions may participate, reversed insecure and that each attempt | to maintain the family as a unit led to further damage to her security. I suppose we never the trend towards a two - prong: | will know how the mind produc- ed Atlantic alliance. History may | ed the: credit the “dull” Ottawa meeting | with one of the most significant | achievements on the difficult road to achieving a true com- | munity of the Atlantic nations. | The Right Way To Worry Ottawa The tricks some people are) using to make the rest of us | worry about the right things are getting downright sneaky. The other day a Vancouver news- | paper ran a piece about the pop- ulation explosion. On to the end | of it was tacked this editor's | note: “In the time you have tak- | en to read this article, about | 200 babies have been born.”” That is nasty. Right off the bat | it makes you feel guilty for tak- ing time around reading articles when so many “babies are up and doing. And it’s mis- leading. At an easy cruising speed the article took one min- | ute, 45 seconds to read. Every man who has served time in the maternity ward waiting room knows that it takes many times longer than that for even one baby to be born. Perhaps the note was written by a woman. Women do not sit Journal | | in maternity ward waiting rooms. They are kept busy do- ing pleasant, relaxing exercises which make the time seem shorter! Tt must be admitted that this | Vancouver note is not as bad as | the one that used to keep crop- | ping up at the end of all manner | of articles. That one said, ‘“Ima- ine! While, you were reading | Chinese Communi s ts | irereiroer a7 beta taro rier had to sit there and ee fine the whole thing, Tle ht | through to where the doctor | walked into the waiting room | said, “Congratulations! You are the father of an 8'2-pound Chinese Communis Imagining that 50 times in the | space of 2! minutes could leave the worrier emotionally disturb- | ed. He knows how he would feel | it the doctor said it to him. | What Is A Bohunk? D. Kermode Parr in the Fredericton Gleaner ‘That odd term appears in the | list of Canadian words printed in the new Atlantic Year Book 1963. ‘These are words that oricinated | in Canada, or are normally used | only in this country, or that have special meanings here. They ame from various sources at Gifferent times, and all the in- formation I have on this ‘‘bo- hunk” is that it was supplied by one of the erudite professors working on the Canadian lang: uage, with no other detail but the meaning: “labour Use of it In a press release about our Year Book brought me some observations from Alden Nowlan, the poet. He wrote that in Hants County, Nova Scot ia, move charted for France, and the word was a derogatory rac- Successes | For r Dr. Erhard is only one month since Lutwis Erhard, the West Ger- | man Vice-Chancellor and Econ- omics Minister, was named by his party to succeed ore te | Adenauer this autumn. Yet has already demonstrated cone siderable , determination and sureness of judgment, And this may come as some surprise to those who thought Dr. Erhard had seemed lacking in political wisdom in his party conflicts with Dr. Adenauer. Shortly after his nomination Dr. Adenauer’s successor, of the most important in- dustrial ‘disputes in the post- war period broke out. A battle between labor and lus- try seemed to be on the point | the | from both sides, of spreading throughout country. Dr. Ei intervened, placing his personal prestige at | stake, and succeeded in bring- ing both sides. toa Pg secied Following this, hard decided to take part in the state elections in Lower Saxony. This was a gamble, for in sev- eral recent elections the Chris- tian Democratic Party has lost considerable support. In the re- sult, the Christian Democrats | showed a large percentage gain. This did not give them victory. The Social Democrats also gained and will hold the largest number The ‘third parties” lost heavily. But the fact that the Christian Democrats could gain support, when they had but recently been losing it, is important, and is being at least partly cre- dited to, Dr. Erhard's interven- tion in the ca ‘The Economies Minister scor- ed a third success in Geneva, in the preliminary trade negotia- tions between Common Market and the United States. The talks fad been clave to fall formula ure. that Tiealle ‘won have been proposed hard. Since he was named succes- sor to Dr. Adenauer, Economics Minister Erhard has enjoyed marked success, If he can con- tinue this record, there will no | Ionger be any talk of his being insufficiently experienced in po Litho fo spate ee aged indi- | cating a word mainly of Amer- fal epithet, like “wop” or “hun- Kie,” and normally referred to labourers of east European ori- gin. It never was used to denote a native labourer. In Carleton County, New Brunswick, on the other hand, Mr. Nowlan finds that “bohunk” is a word used only by old-tim- ers, and then to mean “‘some- one who fs careless or slovenly ‘a rather boyish way. The grandfather will speak of his Seapesrace grandsons as ‘young seem to be much in use in the | Maritimes, and those who may | come out with it are likely to be men of above sixty years of age. Naturally I looked (after read- ing Mr. Nowlan’s interesting note) in some more dictionaries. The Concise Oxford gives it the meaning of “Central European labourer of inferior class,” and marks it with an aster ican usage, colloquial. A Webster New Collegiate does not list bohunk at all, but a bigger Cen- tury dictionary includes it, giv- ing as onl; inition “a Czech- oslovakian.” Nothing appears in any of these works to explain the derivation of bohunk. It seems altogether a pretty my- | required se three common symp- toms with extraordinary regu- larity, BLADDER CYST Mrs. . writes: How is a cyst in the bladder removed? REPL’ Small cysts and be eradicated without making an external incision, A cysto- scope is used and the growth is fulgurated with an electric cur- ent. An abdominal operation is when the lesion is large and a part of the bladder wall ae iret along with HEADACHES AND LEISURE J.M. writes: I've always had eaddehics but they are more frequent since I broke my leg | recently. Do you think sitting around doing nothing is respon- ible? REPLY Yes, provided the headache is caused by tension or frustra- tion. ANEURYSM? G.LB. writes: A friend told me her cousin 1s In the hospital with a mannerism. What of a disease is this? T don't know, but it sounds like a doozie. SINUS AND FOOD C.W. writes: Does food play a role in sinusit No. Raa dng AA a possible exce} TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Air pollution is a nationwide menace. Our Yesterday's (From the Guardian Files) ‘TWENTY-1 ae YEARS AGO 30, 1938 ens e train service ee the Mainland went into effect yesterday. At the same time the motor jitney service between Charlottetown and Summerside which is schedul- ed to continue throughout the Moreover, the word does not! summer months was inaugurat- ed. Slight damage was caused by a roof blaze at the old smoke house in connection with Roop's Limited, meat and fish dealers, Grafton Street, yester- day afternoon, bah Avert AGO Miss maton ’ Mecalley BSe (ED) of the Wisconsin Teach- ers’ College is conducting a se- ties of demonstrations in read- in the various schools of the province, sponsored by the W.J. Gage Co., Toronto. Ar- rangements for these demon- strations which are for the nefit of those teaching the pri- | HAD SECOND THOUGHTS MONTREAL (CP)—Two gun- men walked into a suburban bank branch, then decided they didn't need money as badly as they thought. They walked into a branch of the Banque Canadi- lay, ane hesitated, then turned and ran out; wit- nesses said. ARMY PR PICKED Dea (CP) B.D. M inted deputy dire ot Clastion Army public rela- tions, it was announced Wednes- day. He will assume his new | German Chancellor, duties in Ottawa June 7. mai rades, we sterious word. the focal De nee ot Educa- tion. A Catholic Women's League isl Clarking and Mrs. W.J.P. Mac- Millan assisted in the ceremony. mony. USE HOVERCRAFT ' A ercial’ hovercraft service is planned for sightseers on the River Thames tn London. The FLYING DUTCHM a La “Your Island Steak House” tumors can | NOTES BY THE WAY _ Short skirts, it’s claimed, make girls look taller. Also, they're apt to make men look longer.— Sarnia Observer, ae don’t think smoking makes a woman's voice harsh, ty Popping a garti 00 het It Reporter. Latest thing in lelsure shoes for men is the custom-made al- ligator loafer, Could anyone who nee afford it? — Ottawa Jour- nal. me ee eee department store eee fos not so smart him- self.—Toronto Star. A farmer 1s a paradox. He 1s an overalled executive with his own home his office; a scien- tist using fertilizer attachments; a purchasing agent in an old straw hat with grease nails; a production expert faced with a is; and a manager facing a price cost squeeze. — Oakville Joumal-Record. Frederic Bastiat, 19th - cen. tury French polltical ou Geonomist Ge: Everyone wants to live at the expense of the state. The y forget that the state ges at the ‘expense of everyone. — Galt Re- porter. _ baby sitter to returning par. “Yes, Johnnie went to bed er a vaink Alas 8.50, 9.10, 40, 1020, 11, 11.35, and’ mid. night!” — Hamilton Spectator, pitts can't swim, we're told Then why, we wonder, do they get into bathing suits during the winter? — Chatham News. It was discovered that for eight months the new clerk had mistaken the wastepaper chute down to the furnace room for a filing cabinet. As a result, she had stuffed down the chute ev- ery letter given her to file. “And that's not the worst of it,” la- mented a vice - president of the firm. “We figure that we lost ‘over 5,000 letters — and to this day, we haven't needed a on- of mi!" — Wall Street Journal, Duvalier Rides Out Storm By Harold Morrison Canadian Press Staff Writer French President de Gaulle may have the United States to think twice about en- couraging the overthrow of Hai- tian President Francois Duval- r. While the U.S. screamed about the alleged butchery of the Duvalier regime, de Gaulle sent the strongman a letter dis- cussing the warm cultural rela- tions between France and the tiny Caribbean country. US. authorities maintain, however, the de Gaulle letter, in reply to one sent to him by Du- valier, had no impact on Ameri- can policy. What the U.S. had hoped, in fact, was to “scare” Duvalier out of Haiti by encour- aging prospects of an internal revolt against his regime. American authorities now admit their policy had backfired. Instead of seeking to escape from Haiti with a huge fortune that he is to shave amassed, Danes? quietly rode out the storm and the threat of an invasion from neighboring Dominican Republic. SEES NO ALTERNATIVE Now there are reports circu- lating in the press quoting high sources as saying the U.S. be- latedly sees no present alterna- tive to the Duvalier dictator- ship. The U.S. was not even en- gaged in a “covert” effort to topple the strongman, was the way one report puts it, It appears in retrospect that just as the U.S. tried to change the political situation in Cuba and failed, it now faces failure in its policy on Haitl. The U.s, wants to get rid of Duvalier but doesn't seem to know how to do it without losing a great deal of grace in world affairs. While de Gaulle's letter to Du- valier may not have been the main cause of the sudden change in American policy, it undoubtedly had its impact. ‘The US. had raised cries about the Duvalter dictatorship and waited to hear the echo of sup- port from American allies, Some in the Latin area re. sponded favorably but Europe U.S. LACKED SUPPORT It became evident as_ the weeks went by that President Kennedy would not get much support from Britain, France or Canada for a Duvalier eviction Duvalier_ shrewdly calculates invasion odds. Many of the anti- Duvalier Haitians who took refe uge in the Dominican Embassy were given safe passage out of the country. A fact-finding team of the Organization of Ameri- can States was invited in and it found many of the Dominican charges against Haiti un- Then came disclosure of de Gaulle’s letter—just as the U.S, was about to break off relations with Duvalier. Current Ameri- can relations with de Gaulle are frigid. An act of aggression against Haiti that could be traced to American hands might have hampered relations with France even more. Service Pay And Pensions Globe and Mail, Toronto Canadians will not be inclin- ed to argue with the Govern- ment’s decision to raise the pay of the armed forces By a total amount of million, Service pay, especially of highranking officers, still falls far short of salaries in comparably respon- sible positions in civilian life. There are legitimate que tions, however, about the val of another method this coun- has of compensating its service employees—through the pension. Armed forces officers in most cases are eligible for retirement at substantial pen- sions at an age far earlier than in private industry. As the Glassco Royal Com- mission on Government Orgai ization noted in its most recent report, this policy has three ob- for youth aniyeivaselyaisens its combat, the need to make the armed services more attractive to young people, and the need to keep the services vital by eli- minating roadblocks to the sen- ior positions. Nevertheless, as the Glassco Commission reports, the prac- tice is a costly one in terms of the wastage of experience gained at public expense and the price of providing pension benefits. Whatever justification the policy may have when ap- plied to combat, it is doubt. ful that it makes sense in the case of noncombatant officers, who form a very high percent: age of the total. For example, a lieutenant can retire at the age of 45 with an annual pension of $3,747. The Glassco Commission esti- mates the investment required to pay him this amount at $0. 000. In the case of a lieutenant general, who can retire at the amount is $190,000. The commission suggests that provision might be made for continuing to use such person- nel in the public service after the retirement date from the armed forces. The suggestion is one that should be considered. 55, Nightmare | Utopia Men are forever sae of ideal communities, uto} where everybody se ace ‘tis share of what needed to be done, everyone would love one another and everyone be hap- Py. Plato's Republic, Bacon's New Atlantis and More’s Ut Pia were no more than idea: But in the 19th century many utopian communities were set up, ran ideally for a while then foundered on human _ frailty. Men couldn't be disciplined as community living required, nor could they at all times keep the injunction, “Love one another.” A new attempt ts being made .F, Skinner of Harvard. inventor of teaching machines and the baby crib in which the baby is neither cuddled ner changed, is seeking volunteers for a community to be called havioral —_ engineerin; Dr. Skinner gets his ideas about what can be done with people by experimenting on rats. They can be conditioned, as wre Paviov's dogs, te many things — particularly if the end Product of obedience is food. Dr. Skinner doesn't seem to have benefited wholly from his experiments. His utopia is to have “monastic reading-at-ta- ble, music in approp- priate moods,” all the ameni- ties of gracious living. Except one. “Schedules are important,” his outline reads. “No between meals, no midnight snacks.” Any utopia would founder on this rule. Utopias are supposed to be Heaven on earth and we prefer Sydney Smith's idea of Heaven: “Eating pate de foie Lifeguild. It is based on “be- gras to the sound of trumpets.” | FOR YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS HYNDMAN Insurance since 1872 Our experience of 90 years as your disposal. @ Charlottetown @ Montague Agents Throughout the Province & CO. LTD. underwriters, is at OFFICES: =_