IF It's Good For The Island “he Guardian Is For It o. & VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 222 Authorized as Second Class Mall by the Post Office Department, Otiawa, and for paymeni of postage “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1965. ? Tank Battles Are Reported In India-Pakistani War | By CONRAD FINK ‘dusty northern plains of India| sion’® against Pakistan with U.S, and captured the town of Gadra. | and Pakistan aJong routes con- | | consent. querors have used for centuries. saying China would lend .mili- ito be on the Lahore front near (Delhi, Some _ thought He stopped short China northern Pakistan Monday and of. Now the main battle appeared QUITS POLITICS the Pakistani city of Kasur-and_ THAN Thousands Flee Coast As Betsy Changes Path Warning ar To New Orleans | Tatie Huricane Betsy Clear, SEVEN CENTS % a NEW ORLEANS The fierce but fickle storm, af- Much as winds, ter raining death and destruc- precautions (AP) — Er-! made a streaming out of lowlying areas lie ood Weather clouding over in afternoon, show- ers by evening; winds southerly 15. Lowe high 40 and 65. Saturday: showers. 12 PAGES Thousands of persons were NEW DELHI (AP) ~ Both weuld initiate minor clashes by Tuesday claimed they were. : : oe |sides reported tank /pattles|alung the Vast India - Tibetan threatening the city. ——, ae tera turn to along Louisiana’s western coast. | Thursday and India_ sid there, ‘frontier in the hope—of- drawing. | ortnwes rsday, posing Until the storm shifted course ‘was very heavy fighting be-| troops away from Pakistan, |LAUNCH ATTACKS | a threat to populous New Or.|in mid - afternoon, forecasters tween Indian and Pakistani| Officials in Washington and| India followed up this drive’ leans and the Alabama and had predicted it would hit that |armies as United Nations Secre-| London expressed similar fears| Wednesday by launching twin | Mississippi Gulf of Mexico region. ary-Gener®] U Thant arrived of China’s intentions. jattacks on a front near Pakt-| coasts. As the nortern Gulf coast area Un Pakistan on his peace. mis-| In the latest broadside, Chin- | Stan's cit, of Sialkot, 60 miles) | Hurricane-warning flags /wefe braced for Betsy; south Florida ‘sion in this tormented sub-contl-\ese Premicr Chou En-lai told a north of Lahore, and in the flying from Mobile westward ‘to counted its loss from the giant nent. lreception at the North Korean Gadra area 600 miles to the Galveston, Tex. Gale warnings storm. Betsy left four dead and | Forces of the two countries embassy in Peking that India | pore — Indians Ja = _— amoleret sanshere oon “a _— . anaes. hi atter drive penetra six miles) coast from -Panama City, 0 south, sea-level New were reported battling on, the!is guilty of ‘crimes of aggres- | Fla., to Matagorda Bay, -Tex. Orleans, which fears. water as began taking as Betsy veered tion on southern Florida, swept courses. India cl-imed it had destroyed tary aid to Pakisatn. : : u 75° U.S.-made- Pakistani. tanks in. inde troops lashed ..cross|the Indian city of Ferozevore, . New Democratic Party into the Gulf of Mexico early Dangerous Hurricane Betsy the last 24 hours and now has the frontier near Lahore in| Where Pakistan claims to have. iouse leader, Douglas Fisher Wednesday. --+ . NOW poses a much greater - , sys made .a peretration of Punjab. has announced he will not be a The New Orleans weather bu- threat to the New Orleans knocked. out a total. of 114. | * reau said the massive storm fea.” the weather bureau said. Pakistan claimed ll . Indian e \ Kasur is #0 miles south of La- candidate in the Nov. § fed- drives into -Pakistani territory Camp Claims: jhore. Ferozepore is 10 miles im- raj election. Mr. Fisher said had changed to a northwesterly, ‘All precautionary measures had been stopped and 10 Indian side India and 40 miles south he js withdrawing from poli- .course and would move still fur-|284inst high winds and high tanks destroyed. of Lahore. tics to be closer to his family. ther to the north Thursday night. ides should be rushed to com- wie sien viseried: eee Sp lit Mandet The ‘developing battle there’ In the last house he represemt- The centre of the giant storm Petion. in more tanks and jet fighters. [was viewed in New Delhi a8 ed the riding of Port Arthur. then was located about 225 miles USED TO STORMS Sadie ‘the diti th a (CP) Dalton ‘highly important because it was waa Videatredd doubt tc mee Camp, national president of the a test of the main portions of | lhi- ¢ ld |Conservative party, says the " mils sate ee te oar valions have settled their ‘leadership difficulties and are peared io be few in the Indian halter ‘wenpated Wal te ‘Mor. € 1 (CP Wirephote) south of Mobile. It was moving jboth armies’ armored units. and | eiHighen winds are estimate | 120 to 140 miles per hour near, a centre," the weather bureau . ‘Hurricane force winds ex-} Residents of the coastal areas, wise to the ways of storms, loaded their cars and trailers and headed for inland refugee centres. KINGS PLOWING CHAMPION CONGRATULATED Edwin Mills, Bay Fortune, is William MacInnis of St. Pet- being congratulated by Queen ers was runner-up. Mr. Mills ithe air forces’ | fighters. A Pakistani spokesman in/ yesterday after he won. the ground- anne Kings. County. plowing cham- . has represented the Island four of the Furrows Carolyn Camp- bell of Whim Road at Dundas pionship yesterday for what was believed the -fifth time. times in Canadian competition. (See story on L page 5). China’ s Admission To UN Urged By Secretary-Gen. Chinese participation in a pre: jgardies#-af Meolonvt:-renerdieas By WILLIAM NEVILLE capital who. wanted one. Pe worrie WORRY Worried Indian officials, lactone, tried to assess the penning behind. China's _re- “| neated vowals ‘of support for | | Pakistan and its condemnation e India as an aggressor. Chinese attempts to butt into the Indian - Pakistani quarrel Canada and_I expect he'll keep | frontier in the Sialkot and Gadra |wette expected by many in New! federal election than they were for the last. vote. “The party is in better shape {now than it was in the 1963 elec- tion,” Mr. Camp said in an in- terview Wednesday. Opposition Leader Diefen- baket ‘‘has the bigge-:t personal following of any politician in it,” he said. | Rawalpindi |and many Indians were cap- , sectors. DeGaulle Lashes At. NATO Plan ‘By PETER BUCKLEY said India’s offen- sive in this sector into Pakistani territory had been thrown back across the international border tured, ‘ He claimed Pakistan! - units | also had stopped tke two Indian attacks across the international rosa outward 90 miles from the leentre anc- gales extend outward 250 miles in all directions.” These persons are faced with hurricane threats every year— and especially since Hurricane (Continued on page 5 Col. 7) Hasele Foreseen ‘On Student Vote. # i r as = ¥ ee aa . ig OTTAWA (CP) Participation, poted ‘UN-sponsored > world dis. of state. ray ae <i. PARIS (CP)—President nm international peacekeeping armament conference and Pe- “If this should be our goal, ‘ : . ‘ ess 8 : operations gives Canada and king's admission “as soon ag it is obvious that we should . oe aes ve Mi argon Ae carte a ax a other smaller powers the right possible" to the world organiza-'strive to bring about, as soon : re = e : seg agarinas 4 OTTAWA (CP) — oe for the polling division in ie waeee trees eee sae e Panes aon Gta ae heest ata S| ish ado major world problems, External Affairs Minister Martin said Thursday. , He told the 54th Inter-Parlia- mentary Conference Canada be- lieves that through United Na- tions membership, small and middle countries have “‘rights and obligations with respect. to the ‘search fort security. . “If the leading powers are un- ~ able--to<find -solutions~to some! ~~problems.--other--nations.--must.-; LAREDO,—Tex.— LAP)—Police+ disclosed .Thursday that Lucien | - take whatever action is open to ee a speech prepared by him |Membership of "the United Na- but delivered in his absence in tions. Asia by an aide, Thant said the prime aim of the UN must be whether general or nuclear, can, community |hardly be made while one of “consisting of all nations, fe |the major military powers of the! to build a _ world 24-Hour Guard Put On Rivard - “Progress in disarmament, |world in terms of conventional | weapons, | ~ a come a nuclear power in its own to. control Canadian radio and |its replacement by school broad- bers. which has recently be- iright, does not participate in the | deliberations. SUPPORTS. JHANT or) Mr. Martin departed from his | y BEN WARD sooteiie (CP)—Creation television was recommended to | ie government Thursday in a report sizzling with — criticisms ~ ‘of CBC management and pri- ~them-in furtherance-of the -aims~ _Rivard-56of Montreal, accused- prepared text to support the lat- vate broadcasting. “of the (UN) charter,” he said./of heading an international nar- ter point. “The participation of many. middie and smaller powers in peacekeeping operations has given those nations the right to ‘coticS’ smuggling ring, has been placed in the Webb County jail, with three federal officers work- ing in eight-hour relays to main- said, ¥ ? “I would look forward,” he “to the participation of) The 140,000 - word report by the Fowler committee on broad- | casting urged that the present | |recommendations, the casts. PRIVATE TV HIT All-Powerful Central. Authority commit-lits decisions: and recommenda- | of | ‘tee proposed a complete ban on tions, ll-powerful central -authority |morning TV. programming and agreed upon by the three mem- lantic Treaty Organization un-| writs are issued. | L hearty shake to one of the pil-| for future European co-opera- | tion. however, less its integrated military com- | (CRITICAL OF TRIVIA They found that TV program- | 11969 at the latest. . And he repeatedly emphasized. . tion may bee unable to do so. lars of routual: Western defence! One official predicted a ‘‘king- and laying down his own terms sized hassle’ over a section of the Canada Elections Act and to vote in either one of such polling divisions as he may elect.’’ which says university students, WON’T VOTE: This was Wednesday, |gun their fall term. _This. Mainly, he posed a threat to voting away from home, must This means for the Nov. were jointly pull France out of the North At-'be in school when the election cues such students may get 8 list in their home towns, and rel not where they attend unil- mand structure is abolished by. most’ universities have not be- versiy. If they are more than a few miles from home, says ~It~blistered—private -T¥--sta--ming--in—Canada—is—“‘seriousl¥~the theme’ of national: independ- fiot arisen since the section was that they won't vote. tions for not living up to the imbalanced’ with trivial enter- ence, | “glowing promises'*—they—magle. | tainment.-shows-from--the United= “subordination” which. in their original applications for States dominating -prime view- | criticized.as a ‘‘dis- | the amounts spent on ilicences; | grace” Communist China in a world! Board of -Broadcast Governors |Canadan talent by private ra- disarmament conference, if one and the CBC board of directors | dio and TV and said the six-| and lashed out. at the jing time. The new authority should seek more balance and | (Continued on page 5 Col. 8) inserted in: the act in the mid- \elections provided ample oppor- variety in: broadcasting. The report said more Cana- The section can be changed Under nogmat-..circumstances, tunity for the students to get on the ‘section provides students the voters’ list at their univer- with the opportunity to vote ef- particular __situation..has_one_official,__it_means_in._ effect. —he=—-pro-+1930s--becaube- no—-subsequent--only—by—Parliament,—- and--sinee——_— fessed to find in. NATO and’ im elections were held this late ip ‘dissolution Parliament does. not - the European Common Market. 'the year. Spring and summer exist. : contribute to the formulation of ;tain a 24-hour. guard. takes place.” ibe scrapped and replaced by & | year-old BBG failed to make |dian content is needed on TV NDP ‘( h : : : : Pi si e siy residence. ther at home or in their unt-- _ policy on matters of major con- Rivard goes on trial Monday Use ee — Broad- full use of the powers given to |and proposed that the present st he ion of the act says: versiy town, and with the = cern.’ in federal court on smuggling Former S‘side : oe uthority. it: rule calling for 55-per-cent Ca- | “For the purpose of a ception of November elections, ‘charges arising from the arrest It said the new authority | The bright and. sometimes nadian content be an absolute | ‘Said Fuller _ Beneral election, and not- no problems would arise. | t J i : . "Wir Martie atdraesed tes goo. |" October, 168, of. two . sne- Man Admits jshould have as ef iata breezy report was written by |Minimum. withstanding anything in | For a December election, the =< odd delegates from 8) national’12"8, from whom authorities ve or fo improvement of radio Robert M. Fowler, 58, of Mont-| ~The CBC's programming; VANCOUVER (CP)—For the this act, person who, on students would be settled in parliaments after UN Secretary- seized 76 pounds of heroin. Car Rin Role ae programs. real, president of the Canadian drew high praise but its man- \first time, the New Democratie the date of the issue of the © schoo} well before the writs _-General._U__Thant,_speaking in Rivard was moved here last g rate | The opening sentence of the |Pulp and Paper Association; |agement structure came under | \party hopes_to._have $1,000,000. __writs therefor, is duly regi-- were .issued, and for summer. absentia, called for Communist week from an undisclosed jail. TORONTO (CP). Four Tor. report reads: “The only thing [Mare - Lalonde, 35, Montreal fire, receiving full blame for the to spend on its federal election stered and in attendance at elections they could vote at ————— re ee ee soe that really matters in broad-lawyer, and Ernest Steele, 45, ‘impression gained—by “the -com--- campaign, National Leader T. C. a -recognized- educational _in- home even-if-they-were_in_resi- ing part of an international gans casting is program content; all undersecretary to State Secre- mittee ‘‘that the CBC lacks co- Douglas said Thursday. stitution, and for such pur- -dence when the writs were {se tt tht ivel tal wets coe: the rest is- housekeeping. | tary Lamontagne. _ hesion, unity and esprit de! He said in an interview he poses resides in a polling sued. ] tenced in magistrate’s court | 7° Carry out this role effec-| They were assigned by the /COrps. ‘had asked at the recent NDP division other than that in The situation would a ee . i j Cooper Made Decision To Drop Rendezvous HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) —Astro- naut Gordon Cooper- disclosed Thursday. that he made the de- ‘cision to abandon an attempt to rendezvous with another satel- lite during the record-shattering Gemini 5 space flight. Wednesday on charges of pos tively, the proposed authority government 16 months ago to| ‘It called for abolition of the jnational convention ‘for $1,000,- which he ordinarily resides | sessing stolen cars. should be given full powers to ‘carry out an extensive study of +16-member CBC board of direc- |000 and he would guess the and if he is otherwise qual- Commons had acted on the Thomas William Wood, 21, for- set the general broadcasting Canadian broadcasting and rec- tors, 14 of whom are part-time |amount will be collected. ° if n elector, is en- unanimous recommendation of merly of Summerside, PE.I., policy of the publicly - owned |ommend a new structure for it. members, and_ their replace-| He said in the 1963 general titled to have fis name en-__ its elections et the voting age to 18. Nov and Peter Clarke, 22, said they had already served seritences in Houston, ed suspended sentences and” Texas. They were | on two years’ probation. sem Koidis, 22, and Charles public disclosure of his fole In Kismoky, 22, did not serve time this critical decision. JECTS SATELLITE ‘He said the REP for Rendezvous Evaluation, Pod—was successfully — ejected from the base of the Gemini 5 in, satellite—called <ix months. ‘the U.S. for their offences nd were sent to jail here for 1 es The men admitted the stolen car ring began operating in Tor- onto in the autumn of 1964. CBC and be armed with life-or- death control over the activities lof private stations.” Among a host of other major Report H OTTAWA (CP) High- lights of the Fowler comit- tee report on broadcasting: Responsibility for the direc- Mr. Fowler, who headed. the 1955-57 royal commission on {ment by two senior officials—a election the party spent between director-general and a general | $400,000 and $500,000 and ended broadcasting, was chairman of) the committee and wrote much of the report personally. All of ighlights | Mo significant contribution te public-service programming. ‘CBC and private broadcast- ming, extension of TV to areas Coope: said he made the de- spacecraft ‘and that he and Con- Cars were stolen here and then | tion, supervision and control - &TS have failed to interpret_the cision in order to conserve rad were preparing to chase it driven to Houston. of the whole broadcasting sys- | two national cultures to each power so the “Gemini 5 astro- across the. sky when the prob- Tater some of them were | jo. should be ‘astigned to | other. nauts and ground controllers|lem in the fuell cell cryogenic taken down through Mexico and independent apeney te he E : : could study » problem in the system arose. Central America to the republic ealled the. Canadian . Brood: Improvements in ’progr-m- | | | they were fuel cell power-producing sys- - Cooper said that before aban- of Honduras where j i tem. ‘ doning the rendezvous, he and disposed of. | ta meee Canc toune ane tan lacking this service and mod- The problem cropped up dur- Conrad had made excellent ra-|~ None of the cars has been re- | des (literally, Canadian Ad. *Ttization of CBC should take ; ing the second orbit Aug. 21 dar contact with the REP. This covered. | ministration of Broadcasting), | Precedence over color TV: Clarke and Wood: “said they shortly cfter Cooper and astro- was an encouraging develop- | ‘ ie . naut Charles Conrad blasted off ment for the Gemini 6 flight had been lured into the ring PY |” Broadcasting licences should | _ Detailed inquiry into -om- from Cape Kennedy. The mis- scheduled Oct. 25. On that trip, professional thieves who had of | he issued by the new author- | Munity-antenna.TV_should—be- sion control centre here se- astronauts Walter M. Schitra fered them a holiday cee | ity, not the federal cabinet. | =< ee es riously considered terminating and Thomas P. Stafford will use south and a quick way " : : the flight during the sixth orbit an identical radar system ac- Money. Canadian broadcasting as a The new authority should : h ther ; whole__is being increasingly ; . because ofr* drop in- pressure tually -to-tink up with ano’ } eo dete licy of CRC and | in the fuel cell oxygen svstem. satellite in space. INSIDE TODAY dominated py the worst of | 91. that CBC” is well -led, dezvous attempt was the, first a eeeceneesee Se {Continued on page 3, col. 3) | $32,000 in the red. by tered on the list of electors for the polling division in which he ordinarily resides more serious this time 8, only students 21 or. over will. be affected. ; By — sown all_‘but es Conrs ed thet oe a eee staffed and administered EC entia spacec Systems, severa ical an mec “ Sintter Se 5 Cooper and Conrad gave the cal problems, the Gemini 5 pi-. Classified ....... sete 1, - a © oridise ‘maven New authority should regu- power system a chance sta- | lots were able to complete many Births ........06--e0057: $ -eerviee Vasically Canadian tw | late activities of private bilize and they swe into|of the assigned 17 scientific, Deaths .~.......---.--:: o. | edntent-and character broadcasters with enforceable their 120-orbit__flight during | photographic —and technological -— Comics ......+-- +++ ++++ 2): 7 . : undertaking in each licence which they eclipsed every ma- |expreiments. j Fas cea a @4 Morning television should be regarding quality and variety jor manned space flight-record.. For the last 11 days Cooper, | Peete he | eliminated to make way for | of programming, Canadian 7 Cooper and Conrad held aia U.S. Air Force liéytenant-col- Finance. markets ........ a educational TV. YS 4 content, use of Canadian tal- |. REFUGEES CROWD LOUISIANA. ROADS . : : ‘press conference to tell the onel, and Conrad,» navy lieu- Editorials eos 3 rs ; ent and public service obliga: | story of their epic mission. tenant-commander, have been, Sees aeneths; city ete i. ww vue a po | ees. Cattle, household goods. in- ~Cameron Parish, in southwest “Betsy. ‘aie is the foorh Gee a In 1957 hurricane And- Cooper’s statement that he di- in virtual isolation, telling their | , fara ates | made little attempt to i oe —- . ; Tey took over 5300 lives and rected abandonment of the ren- experiences to doctors, scien- Prince County . «2 | promises voiced when ap-, -| New authority _should have difftria! equipment and people Louisiapa as they evacuate witlin the last (wo-yees fe jw nsions of doliars-in damage ‘tists and engineers. « : ven meee i-plying-“for licences and make | (Continued on page 5 Col. 5) | are jammung the highways im low areas ahead.ef hurricane dents of the area have evac: to this area. (AP Wirephoted 3 oh epee bet