ON THE AIR WEDN ESDA Y PROGRAMS CFCY-TV L30 pm.--Musicale ;_oo p.m.—-Password 1.30 p.m.-Scarlet Hill [30 p.m.—Hennessey 5,01 p.m.-Razzie Dazzle 5_3o p.m.—Woody Woodpecker ‘loo p.m.—Provlncisl Affairs liberal 6_|5 p.m.—live longer 53} p.m.—-Gazette 7_3o p.m.—Cinema lost Moment coo p.m.-—Red River Jamboree 930 p,m.—Perry Mason 1030 p.m.—Festival 72o p.m.—-Winter Employment Panel [1110 Guardian. Charlottetown, Wed. lab. 19, 1934, 7 By BEM PRICE WASHINGTON tAPi—.At age five. the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has the solar system for a playpen and dollars for building-blocks. NASA's accomplishments in placing satellites into orbit and the man-in-space program are Ilmnreasive but there is official concern here about the high lco . By 1970, the US. space agency will have spent—-at the current rate of expenditures- somewhere between s35,0oo_0oo__ 0‘00.and 350.000.000.000 in estab- lishing a space program which looks toward a manned landing . , _ r I l ram is one probing into manyvdesigned to carry out 16 scien- th 8 ‘unknown and uncharted areasi land that NASA must be allowed? ‘a certain flexibility in the ma-l nipulation of funds. . . . i “Nevertheless the committeei has become seriously concerned} . reprogramming. . . , Thlgi trend. if unchecked. carries the potenti for gross abuse andj mismanagement of funds." ‘ The general accounting oft‘ice., Congress‘ overseer of spending, has reported that NASA contrib- uted to the wastage of abouti $i00.000,000 in connection withl the Centaur rocket and the Ad-' vent satellite program. with the relatively high rate ofifailed Young Canadian ln Con- rt ce ii 30 pm.--Strangers For a Day 1; 00 p.m.—CBC TV News ,2 H gm.-—-CFCY TV News and Weather 12.20 a.m.—Sign off CKCW-’.i‘V ig/25 p.m.—Station Sign On News. 100 p.m.—Wednesday Piaybill One Girl's Confession 2.30 p.m.—At Home With Helen Crocker 3_oo p.rn.-Take Thirty 330 p.m.—The Friendly Giant goo p.m.—Razzle D 1 (9 5,30 p.m.—Vl/Ocdv Woodpecker 5.00 p.rn.—-Provincial Affairs 6,15 p.m.-—Lionel Television New! o.25—Supper Club 6.35 p.m.—Weather 540 p.m.-Supper Club 900 p.m.—-Red River Jamboree 9.30 p.m.—Perry Mason 10.30 p.m.—Festival Young Canadians in li.3O p.m.—Strangers For a Day i200 p.m.—-CBC-TV News l2.lS a.m.—Viawpoint i7 20 a.rn.—l|one| Network News 'l2.25 a.m.—Sign Off 70l p.m.——CFCY TV News 7.i5 p.rn.—Purlty Jackpot CFCY RADIO WEDNESDAY 6.28-—Sign On 6.30—News and Weather 7.00—Habrew Christian Hour b r 7.l5—Country 8. Western Roundup ‘eét 91 7.30—-News and Weather 7.55-—Ferm Report 7.-ll—Country 8. Western Roundup 8.00-N w 8.1 l—Weather _ . .l6—Country L Western Roundup “ 8.45—Waather B.50—-Atlantic News Roundup 8.57—Thought For Today 9.00—News 8. Voice Reports CBC 9.l0-—Previaw Commentary CBC 9.15-—Notes and Music 9.27—Mavines Musical Charades 9.30—Notes and Music 9.35-—Notes and Music 9.55—What's The Song i0.00-News and Weather 10.05-Notes and Music ll.00-News and Weather ll.O5—Notes and Music ll.27—Matinee Musical Charades il_.30—NoteI and Music ll.45-—Bu|letin Board ll.50—Notes and Music ll.55-Atlantic News Roundup l2.00—Wuther l2.05-Towns and Country Time l2.30—News and Weather l2.i5—Don Messer CBC l2.30—News and Weather l2.43—P.E.l. Road Report l2.45—Town and Country 205—Tops In Country and Pops 2.27—Matlnee Musical Charade: 3.03—-Trans-Canada Matinee CBC 3.30-—'lops In Country and Pops 4.00—News Headlines and Weather‘ O :37 52 4.03—Canada Roundup CBC 4.iO—Tops In Country and Pops 5.00—Naws and Weather 5.05—Matinae Musical Charade! 5.2B—The Outports 5.25 20—Marine 6.00-—Naws and Weather 6.l5—On Parliament Hill CBC V 9 -s so 0. C 9.3o—w|nnlpag Pops Orchestra BC —Netlonal News, CBC iO.30—Music Canada CBC li.05—8tarlight Serenade ll.30-New and Maritime Weather l l .35-—-Starlight Serenade l2.00—News, Regional Weather and Sports Scores l2.05-Sign oft CIA WEDNESDAY 6.00—The Gerry Foqsrty Show, P l.00—Naws and inland Weattid l.i5-Maritime Sportscatt s.2i—rh. Gerry Foamy Show Part !.24—1’h. lab Goulet Show 8.30—Gerry Fogarty Show Part 3 8.35—Msn Ferguson 9.00-CBC 9.i0—Preview Commenter?’ 9.i6—A.M. Chronicle i0.i5—Playreom l0-30-Music Diary ll.00—C mw, I. Direct Reports ther, Sports lPower supplies 37,000 families. tart‘ Sllppleménlefl by thiiee die- a. on the moon. b In its first five years NASA‘: nary diZ.t h d d t , -‘ ' 0610 F as nixpan e 0 35100‘ ‘Nov. 2'7, 1963-two years and 11 Centaur was scheduled by NASA for its first flight in Jan- 196l. It flew successfully 000 employees. it pays the high- :est salarieis hot’ any federal ‘ailency an as more people‘ H349) in jobs paying to.8b0Ul the Welg lreleased a_ report last lwhich said a miscalculation f;E.](,'0(;?,d:;'§;laal:z3gnlg::;1 any “her inch of the defence department's ' lAdvent program. 1" 3 "P0" l° C°i)8F°-is “tel While waiting for development House of Representatives spacelof the gems“, the defence d,_ committee said it understoodgpanmem had been spending that “our national space pro- 54.000000 a month on Advent. tNfld. Power Plant Operates On Remote Control System By DAVE BUTLER ‘throughout the province. The ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. tCtP)—On ‘area principally covered is the a rocky hillside deep in the bar- city of St. John's, the central ren interior of Newfoundland, area of the province around $2,000,000 worth of shiny new Grand Falls, the northern coast electric components turn out not‘ Bonavista Bay and a wide icontinuous 17.000 horsepower—.area around Corner Brook on and the nearest human is 15lthe island‘s west coast. miles away. , The rate of cost to customers ‘ This modern, remotely con-tin St. John's is $1 for the first trolled hydro - electric power.l5 kilowatt hours, two cents a plant at Rattling Brook. near‘kilo\i'att hour for the next 200 Grand Falls, is a symbol of the ‘and one cent a kilowatt hour prosperous and rapidly expand-ifrom there on. Some residents ing Newfoundland Light andtin outlying districts say this is Power Company Ltd. The com- ‘about 40 per cent of what they pany’s rates. despite steady ln- are paying other companies. :vestments in service and capl- .\lewfoundland Light and tal expense. are the lowest in DOWN‘ Eels lls €lP<‘tT'l<‘llN lmm it nine hydro plants located a|1dillli‘Ol]fll‘lOlll the province. These anada. Newfoundland L i g h t _or one-third the province's pop-set and one steam pla ;ulation. It also supplies about: At present. there are no con- txa per cent of the power used gnecting links between the power Oflicialclom ls Concerned» Over Space Program Costs’ tific investigations in space. Beyond this, NASA has had some expensive failures. ' Six e Ranger shots. de- signed to send operating televi-1 sion cameras to the moon. have ‘ . Each failure has cost‘ around $18,000,000. Then there was Mariner 1. which was to investigate the. atmosphere around Venus. Fail- ure to insert a hyphen in the‘ guidance formula. NASA has said. caused the rocket to ceer . off course. it was destroyed; Cost: $20,000,000. I The year-by-year record es-, tablished by NASA shows thatl the space agency has yet i complete a major program on schedule or at the original cost, estimate. - .O00.000 and : - i the agency is asking for $5‘300'_ ‘months behind schedule. The pAys HIGH SALARIES 1 cury, which sent six astronauts‘ NASA has approximately 32__;ESTiMATE WRONG tlnto space, was roughly a yearl The general accounting offlcolbellllld llle Original schedule. Itlto be restrained by considera- Octoberlwas expected to cost $200,000.-Etiona of techhology." tilt. ‘me final NASA report said it cost $34,000,000. Another report involves Proj- ect Ranger failures. Dr. Edgar M. Cortwright,, deputy director of the office of‘ space sciences. commented in, House space. committee on Ranger setbacks: I ". _ .Quallty'controls and the, uniformity of standards were‘ spotty." . Ranger is the responsibility of' a Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Pasadena, Calif. It is a cor- porate subsidiary of the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology. There are scientists at Pasa- dena qualifled to discuss indus-, trial standards. They feel. how-; ever, that such a discussion‘ should not be attributed to them vwauyuo D’ '< name. They reported launch vehicles’ in the fuel tanks and loose sol- t ering left lying around which in the welghtlessneea of space would float and cause short? circuits. One physicist commented that j NAS had e training,- ground for scientists. fresh: from the universities. and that young scientists often were in- clined "to push the state of the “The temptation to undertake advanced things is so great," he said, “that few are willing l ht the Centaur could lift had forced c-ancella- l.I.IcKlES‘l’ GIRLS A THEIR THE WORLD! GIRL oflhe Lfilt‘l,t‘§ai.lA mas can CHOOSE AS HER l HUSBAND ANY BACHELOR | IN me miss -AM)’ I usaw sum. l the province's second—iarg.l,s0ur('es and each plant serves ecu-ic power ut,ili[y.—.the a population in the area where United Towns Electric Com-ill l5 Sllllfiled» pany Limited. : owever, early this spring a S u c c e ss of Newfoundland i5l3Fl Wlll be made 0" 8 131000‘ Light and Power is attributed lmolt line which will by company spokesmen to keep. stretch the 185 miles from St. lng equipment and gey-vicegl;J0hn's to Gander and will pro- modern. and building new gen-tvlde the first tie-in with other crating plants so power would Iareas. This is to result in a few be available when needed. Iyears in a single power and New-nmm-|13n¢-1 Light imdwhich will allow exchange of Power was born in 1896 as the’P0W€‘l‘ 3¢‘1‘0S5 fill)’ Part Of the St. John's Street Railway Com-lPI‘0VlnC0- pany. The name was changed‘ to the St John's Light and] OPPOSES MARCH Power Company in 1920 and tot M0NTREA1_4 lcl"-Tl‘? Sill‘ jts present name in 192A_ §d€l’llS' council Of Sll’ George Last (3 the company inuwilliams University has an- stalled electrically - controlledlnounced it will not SIIPPOI1 8 mercur_v vapor street lights onlstudents’ march on Quebec City Water Stre here—the same March 13 in support of free uni street on which the company verslty education. The French- had installed modern streetiiaisguage universities of Mont- C8I‘5 57 .\'98l‘S 820. 'real and Sherbrooke as well as Annual sales now amount tollhe French - language Sllldefll ‘more than $6,000,000 and thetnewspaper association, Pres-i larea of coverage by the com-!Etudiante Nationale. support pany is being spread the march. l CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER East dealer. . This hand may appeal more Both sides vulnerable .to the purist than the every- NORTH iday player. but it is a thing of 6 lb e a u ty nevertheless. It was i 9A109B .played in a tournament. 0 K1095 5 In the actual case. South g at l’ $10974 ‘doubled at three spades and WES E-431' imade the contract after West O33 ‘had cashed the Q-J of clubs . V 543 fand then shifted to a diamond. ‘O-l37‘3 OAQ63 illeclarer eventually lost a i‘Q-7 soil--‘K3’ lspade and another club and U!“ thus made his contract. QKQJIO9‘ But if the defense had func- l :KQJ7 tioned perfectly, South would ihave gone down one. East had l ‘G5. lsignaled with the eight of clubs « The bidding: ion the opening lead of the lE9.st. South West North lqueen. and West at this point 519 1 29 Pass should have known practically Pass 29 89 Plan every card in declarer‘s hand. Pass 84 Dble. l South was marked by the bidding to be void of diamonds and East was s l m l larly mar- ked to have the A-K-8 or A-K- 8-x of clubs, as well as the A- Q-x-x of diamonds. This should have indicated to ‘West the danger that the de- fence could collect no more Opening lead —- queen of bs. i.l5—Tommy Hunter Show i.-t5—Tiina Out For Melody L59--D.O. Time Signal 2.00—Tima out For Melody 20. Offers for 17. Over: poet- sa.le again 22. Before 23. Laughing 25. Prefix to Scotch names 28. Tribe of Iroquoian Indians 32. Particle 34. To send out 41. Hazards to navigation 42. Fat 43. Letter-box opening 4. Brood 1. Accuse DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE AXYD II LONG Each day the code letters are I‘ A X G B H D A VGAV.—-I-IJNOD Yesterday's Ci-yptoquote: HONOR AND RESPECT OF ARTS ACROSS .In a 8. Medley gain 1 Scorch 3. Peer Gyritls 21. Dirk [gap 5 Rom.da.te mother 24. Gratuity UV} 9 Selected 4 Radical "5.Sp-ars 10 Least '5 Persia. 26 Socrates desirable of 8 Covered spoke lttera th here 12 Loathed powdered 27 En- 13. Kind of earth closure necktie :0 bOX 1‘ , 0!‘ 6 14. fan of- tellildneli-Ce 9 Specked Yeuterdnifll Aim"! 15. Place where 9. Seat 30 Ch?-F3 liquid enters 11. Cubic ed 36- Finest chimnei meter 39. Cut, as 16. Eskimo 15. Lands rn ody ET?” ters surrounded 31. Shop 40. Geisha. 19. River: Belg 33.Reclaimed girls w 1 sash One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's, x for the two 0's. etc. Single letter-. two!- trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. A Cryptogram Quotation W G M V N J D EDA MED KGVM HDNHBO (Q 1984. King Futures Syndicate. Inc.) — Here’s how to work it: LBAAXR FELLOW different. IF!- W0!‘- POETS ARE WORTHY THE ALLMEN.--1-XOMER ..i5-Al i Sch i B’ t 2 tum? '60 C“ than three clubs and a spade 2.Ii0——Atlantic School B’cast [by normal vla.V- and Well "Thing: of Nature" — s hoiild therefore have given 2.45-—John Drainie tells a story ,lhnliEhl to the possibility of Ob- 3,oo_—cac News ltaining a fifth trick elsewhere. 3.03—Trans-Canada Matinee | Had he led a heart at trick 4,oo_cac wn two, this goal could have been 4.o3—Cdn Roundup attained. Declarer could do no better than win the heart and force out the ace of spades. west would duck two rounds of 5.20—Tan'ipo spades and win e hi one, 5.30—CBC Notebook ‘in order to give East a count on 6.00 CBC News a Weather the number of spades held by bis-—on Parliament Hill lsouth. He would then lead the 6.20—Maritime Sportscast jack of clubs. e.3o—Muiic In The EV0"l"9 This long - delayed club play, 7.l5-—Bylina and the steady refusal by 7.20-—Marine WX. & MU|lC2'i ll'\?Of* west to lead a d|arnond' '0 0 would alert East to declarer's 7-30-llvilt"-"' 3"°"""' void in diamonds and force 7»35‘l"""'"°" East to overtake the jack with 8.00-AtIl9""1*"' the king and cash the ace. E30-Cl"l'""‘ "°"“°" _ ' On the ace West would dis- 9.00--Univsrsity of that Air and 8 heart re- 4.30-Countdown 5.00--Mar. Fish B'Cast~ card a heart. 9.30-Wed l’°P' turn now by East would permit l°-°°‘CT'hC ’;""' ""”" '°""d"’ I" West to ruff and thus score the 0 rev nces M trick‘ l°-3‘*"”“'"""""' “P illgsslbly West should not ll-004"’ °' "" d bled three sped s. ”'°°‘5’°"' 5”". Wm‘ . Mm" lluat viiith mltorrect defense. I I OUR BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR HOOPLE 0" ' . id h been vin- l2.l5-in e lioht" MW‘ l“d§.'J_'" W“ ‘V. I1.45—Music in the Nisht ‘“° 6'X maov saunas ‘had been delivered with water ix ESIIOW .I.l.3)| V11! ?__.:s in -. Werlllli INC Pndiid-I lawn] I'M TAKING you To ‘THAT »-rv st-tow .5,’ TOMORROW! Dir) VA Even Maria w on SUI CIT‘ XWN AND KNIT’ ? MOL oy, BEAT- up our, DAD.’ 1 SIMPLY V CAN'T‘ wean THAT RAG TO THE CLASS ‘ O , YE$,ET1'A'S HERE.’ aur si-i:'s eusv PRACTICING HER MUSIC LESSON - n..x....i_.ou'*"” —-—‘ PIANO.‘ NO,SHE.'S PLAYING on HEI2 FATHERS ll3.I33)IS '8 SOSDDW i.ooi<,.iuiiioiz I'M Nor INTERESTED usesur IMJUSTGIE V)|OO1Vd EOI‘ IEONVII ENO1 3H.l. \.lI\\ l.' 70 -nwvx you no 1:777/vs mess: pp/A/K. - //0% RA/N C0145 SOON.’ ‘ soar.’ /v PAIII ms /-wAuy amt! ISNIV 'lI.'| II Miuurls t!- as iuvssnemno THIS sueaza nioaoueiilals!