._‘ ..__ fiuardimt tenure riiaea sauna Ialaad Luio no on .Vl. J. Hencou. Publlahat Iurtcn lawle Frank Walkei lam.-mivu Edltot Editor Plabllahed every waeli day morning (except Bun lava and atatutory hclidayal at I65 Prince Street. Charlottetown. P.E.l., by Ihomaon Nawapapen ltd. Ilaneh office: at Summeraide. Montague. Alber ten and Sowla. lepreaentad nationally by Thomson Newspapeva Iaing Services Icionio. 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal. 640 Calhcari Street UNiveralty 6-5942; Western office We! Georgie Street Vancouver (MA 7037) Member Canadian Dally Nowspnvfl ’Uh"|l"" Aaaocleton' and The Canadian Pran. The Canadian Press la exclusively entitled to the me toi rem-'5 Iha local now: published here h- All vlghta on republication oi apfli" ‘“‘PI'¢l|l' herein alao reserved Subacriplicn taint Not over 35: pet weali by carrier. 3] 00 a year by mail or iural route: and areas not aervicod by carrier. $14.00 a year oil ialand and U.K. $20.00 90' V". in (1.5. and alnawhera cuiaida Biitiah Con inonwealih. Not over 7: par aiii9'° -IODV . Membe, A..¢i.i i3...g.,.. at Circulation. "—‘-‘The strongest ii_i*eni_uri-_t:—Ii1;!1/~‘€7 154"‘ the iucii/rest ink" ATtiniisfiijlilfiihlsfi-962. _._.....:——-—-~"‘ “ ‘W’ T W‘- Meritecl Appointment It is with izrcat plcasiire that. we carry. in to(l;iy's iicws collimiis, the announccniciit of the Hillmlnt‘ merit of Mr. H c ii L h .\l;ictl"?l1‘1'l9. junijnr MP for (gin-i-iis. to the posit- ion of [)al‘lli'~lfli(‘iitiil'_\' secretary to the Hon. Howard (lrecn, Minister of External Aff;iirs. No man in the public mo oi‘ (_:;iii;iil;i is hotter qualified to fill this I'l“‘l“"‘-“ll’l“- IN- I fact to which we ll.‘l\.'P called at.- tention on several prcvioiis occasions. There is no iloiibt that the ap- pointment was made at Mr. Green’s own insistence. The two men see eve to eye on the many problems . relating to world peace and disarma- ment, and the niiiiisiei"s burdens will be relieved to a great" extent by the expert aid which Mr. Macquarrie can give him His special kiio\\li~i1::o and ability In this field have long been recog- nized. but since we already have an able Island cabinet representative in the person of Hon. J. Angus MacLean. it was fcared that this would stand as a bar to Mr. Mac- quarrie's arlvaiicciiieiit. That has not been the case now, and his ap- pointment is all the more irratifying in view of the fact that it was made eo obviously on its merits. A Worthy Campaign In his travels in l‘illl‘0[)e General Eisenhower has been airing some ideas which are not altogether new. but to which he has endeavored, through his prestige, to give added weight and urgcnc_v. These propos- als have to do with the setting up of an lnternatioiizil university. or world school to promote global understanding. Speaking as a giicst. of honor at I luncheon attoiided by many of his wartime British colleagues in Lon- don the other day. the General sug- gested taking, for such an inter- national college, students after two years at their own college and giv- ing them two years with the stud- guts of other countries. This would include the Communists, “if they no’ wish. so that they can see truth and the propagation of truth and have nothing to do with doctrinal politics or with the promotibn of a particular ideology.” ' At Stockholm recently the Gen- eral made the same proposals, sug- -gesting that the United Nations General Assembly might want to call upon auch organizations as the World Confederation of Organizer of the Teaching Profession for A eaalelaanca in nmninating members I! the faculty of the college. He j . ’_ a school of 2,000 to 3.000 "dedicated to the educa- ' ofycung people particularly in “WEEK '-Mallory, diplomacy, politics, " . communications. an d *" It would be "a new and kind of clearing house for A of hatred ii-. ‘me hlatcry>oif'humai:lt:yl1t .~woiiiitbe.tantht. bin- jinlitlcalithaory or done! f or future . j , for tguiiii.-. slII’!.‘lV"“.¢“" eay.” Elie General eonelnded. ‘one of the big missiles that we throw around the world costs more than it would take to run the school for one year.” ' It is to Ccneral Eisenhower's credit that he should be campaign- ing in this manner. Certainly there is no question as to the need for at- tacking world problems at the edu- cational level and on the inter- national scale he envisions. But be- tweenwhat is needed and what is feasible there is a wide chasm. To expect the Communists to call a moratorium on their "doctrinal politics” and accept the ground rules he has laid down for propagat- ing truth would. we fear, be out of the question. Perhaps that day will come. and sooner than we ex- pect. Far be it from us, therefore, to put a damper on the hopes of those who believe it to be nearer than it seems. The Next Move There is_speculation now that Premier Khrushchev will come to New York for the opening of next moiit.h’s session of the United Nat- ions General Assembly. What occas- ion could be more tempting, from the propaganda point. of view? The excitement caused by the Soviet space achievement this week will still be at its height. and the stage will be set for any pronuncement on world at't';iirs that Mr. Khrushchev carcs to make. If he docs decide to make his appearance at the U.N.. or if he chooses some other platform. -it is reasonable to expect that he will put forward some new and brash proposals about Berlin or about Ger- many. The double cosmonaut flight has taken the headlines on the anniver- sary of “the wall”, but it remains obvious to the world which side of the wall offers the most. attractive living. East Berlin and West Berlin Dl'9SP.nl a stark comparison bctwcen Marxist drabness and a consumer economy that no wall can hfde, or space achievements minimize; and the time would seem ripe for some new Soviet manoeuver to retrieve the situation. Even Walter Ulbricht. Moscow‘s puppet leader in East Berlin, con- ceded in Pravda that before the wall "it cost us more than 30,000 million marks ($l,700 million) just to prepare-a labor force, which was then recruited by West Germany.” And in spite of concrete, barbed wire. and machine guns, more than 12,000 persons still have escaped to the West from Communist-ruled East Berlin last year — at least ii thousand of them East German bor- der guards. The Geneva conferenceihas been dragging its heels on the Berlin question. The Western allies have made it clear that they have no in- tention of permitting West Berlin to be strangled by Communist pres- sure, but they will do well to be on their guard particularly at this junc- ture. It may be the calm before the storm that will see a new Soviet- created crisis in that area. EDITORIAL NOTES Many motorists seem intent on seeing how late into the night they can drive without turning on their lights. Their stupidity produces a needless traffic menace. l I D The opposition of the Halifax Canadian Legion to having a wreath to "former enemies” (the Japanese victims of the Hiroshima blast) placed on a war memorial is under- standable; probably correct. It is astonishing to consider, however. how many of our former enemlaa have become our "present frlcnda—— the Japanese, Italians and Germans: —-and the measure of enmity shown tcvurd us by such allies of the past as Russia and China. . ' , I I V Now it's in Prague that “Uncle Joe” Stalin's reputation has taken a slump. The huge ‘concrete Stalin monument there is to be replaced by “e moderate-size building which will acrve the city’: social and cut- tunl life." The new building is to aatpreaa "the idea of lasting Czecho- slovak-Scviet friendship” and old Joe doesn't fit ,into this plan at all. ‘His 18,000-ton monument.-—biggeat outside the Soviet Undon-etanda on a hilltop overlooking the city. When it is reduced to‘ rubble it will have few relics anywhere of the are of Stalin-worship in the whole nonfat bloc. lie glow-laireiialt. can-" DUAL CONTROLS DIETECTIVES ARE BAFFLED Listening with an experienc- ed ear, Mr. writes to this newspaper from the press gallery that Ottawa has sunk of late into a pro- found and awesome silence - silent, indeed. as the tomb which the contemporary capi- tal so much resembles. Mr. Diefenbakcr‘s “cooling off period" has reached a tem- perature too low for morcctcr w:irm-blooded creature to all our weary political specula- crisis, or at least the.mclo- drama. grasp it, more unfolds the most adian literature, the supreme wliodunit. a set of circumstanc- es contrived for the giants of criminology. for Sherlock llol- mcs, Hercule Poirot or Perry Mason. HOLMES (TALLEI) IN Every conceivable clue hcrc -- the missing money. the empty vault, the murdered tax- payer and a government still upright. with outward appear- ance of life. but wearing. a 3 Holmes would say, the risua sardonicus, the grin of doom. "My dear Watson. depend upon it." says llolmcs. "this would be only a routine case were it not for two points over- looked. as usual. by Scotland Yard. F‘irst.~mil1ions of dollars disappeared several years he- re the crime was discovered by the public treasurer. Sec- ond. tiic government, a victim of slow homicide, went cheerful- ly about its business until th e ii’ iii pccting that it was already dead. A fascinating case. Wat- son. worthy of our talents. Fotcli my pipe and violin and low and ‘buy a devalued Can- adian dollar. scope . an certain chemical tests it may tell us everything." The methods of M. Poirot are more subtle. ’ magniflquc. ca. But it la not the physical evidence. you compre- hend. mon ami. that leads us to the solution. No. that is n - lng, rien. Alors. we must seek the psychology, the workings of the grey cells. the death wish of the government. It is cunning. it is diabolic. The government suddenly decides to drop dead -pouff, like that -— but what ‘is PUBLIC FORUM ‘I'M: aoiuina la wan to tie dlaaeedaa iidauta ot anemone ef bv nril: aadoraa voadeata. All lattara Jdfllll a aeoaaaan. Tia Oaanflaii eater late any corraaoaad in Man nauiiuaa. _ mm FINE ACHIEVEMENT Sir.-We noticed with a great. deal of pride the outstand- im acblevetncma, of of Grade: X and XI! of Montague Regional High School in the re- cent provincial examinations. A large percentage of puplla in the Honor Llat la not only I credit to the pupil: themselves. but also a credit to the exca- lent teaching staff and-Prlnch pal oftlie school. ‘ _ parent I would M an lnivateattd use _ liy to express “awtalatioe to the to ii a . not call actiool iioim. but also for genuine concern. in the‘ wdfare of their inmlla altar ach-ooi opinion of «Ira enbllabad are cab coadeaeattu is enable to -ea r@ 1 am. sir, ., ' yaaaar. aurice Western 3; i . AS MASON WOULD SAY I0 . l diire - the deep freeze. But in 1 . may be misunderstood. tion perhaps we are missing the 3 high drama of the Canadian _3 - worth my time. Bcforc our cycs. too jaded to . 1 plane -ticket to Washington and thrilling dctcctive story in Can- ; e , move backwards to Jiine. 1957, its motive? Find’ the motive and ‘ you find the answer." Or if Perry Mason is called I in the case proceeds with fac- I tual efficiency. ‘ “A man on the phone, very ‘ excited. most i Della Street, the dete_ctive'ai secretary. reports in her crisp I nc. Says his name IS Flem- ing and he’s mislaid three bil- lion dollars of his employer's money. Can't imagine where it 3 went. Says it's irritating a nd . "lf they’re'Canadian dollars." j says Mr. Mason, "the case isn't ' if they're American I'll take it for a rea- sonable fee. Buy a first - class arrange for me to meet , head of the International Mone- ‘ nothing. Better still. send him to without sus4 - stop at the bank like a good fcl- Under 8 micron =also have reason i could muster tary Fund at nine sharp, to- morrow morning. When we find out how ivnuch Fleming has borrowed thcrc we'll be on the right track. And tell Fleming to l keep q u let. see no one. say _‘ a Commonwealth conference in London where nobody w ill notice him. And note down in To ke-Over in By H Canadian The non-aligned Indonesian rcgime. with its friendly link: i to Moscow. has scored av major . triumph over a NATO member . ' ouble - loaded Southeast Asia. Just as another NATO ally, ‘ Portugal. found reason to be upset with the role of e United States in the loss of tiny f Goa, so The Netherlands may to be is- pleased with the lack of U.S. - support in opposing Indonesia's take-over of West New Guinea. Fae with the prospect of fighting a lonely and costly war over a jungle-choked territory. the utch government has yleldedwlth all the grace it and acceded to President Sukarno's demands that it get out of the Dutch New Guinea as quickly as possible. VOTE IN SEVEN YEARS The Aug. 15 agreement signed at the United ns turns over West New Guinea to In- donesia next May after a tem- porary reign by the United Ne-. tlons. And Indonesia has agreed to allow the ‘Papuan natives to d they want doneala or become independent. ’ ct cannot be deceived by arold Press ‘Staff M’ The chance: that the natives WhoduniiOn Por|iomeniHi|l ' 0 Bruce Hutchinson in the Winnipeg Free Press your filing cabinet The the Frenzied Financier. BACK TO DICKENS But all these eminent investi- gators are likely to fail. The Case of : contradictory evidence, the dis- covery of new victims every day. the increasing llst‘of bodies and suspects on Capital Hill baffle the best minds until the grandfather of all detectives finally summoned from t pages of Charles Dickens. The immortal Inspector Buck- this 0 n is G scientific Jargon. ‘He relies his own lmmci-ta “When it comes to crime," he says. “any move is a probable move, so long as it’s in th e wrong direction. Start with the election of June. and you see the truth. Of course the other detectives’ mistake is obvious. They looked in the right direction. they looked at the government standing right side up and read its statement: in English. Stand it upside down. in its natural posture. ‘ read its statements in reverse, and then you begin to compre- hend it." New Guinea Morrison rlter in will choose independence seven years are small. th region of saw-iiootihed mountains many of 700.000 natives have never seen a white man or a flying machine. They still fight with spears and stone axes. Indonesia says it will begin an educational campaign, but it may be certain the natives will receive an education highly . the Indonesian cause. The blunt reality for the is that just as neutrallat Indie expanded its tccritary by taking over Goa. so has Indo- nesla been able to expand by taking over West New Guinea. While the U.S. may be tied to Portugal ‘and the Nether- lands through the North Atlan- tic alliance. American diplo- mats are acutely aware of t growth of non-aligned political forces and are actively courting these forces by making clear by deed and word the U.S. re- pugnance of old-style ‘colonial-‘~ am. play ball with Sukarno. the U.s. at least peace In a troubleaome area. swo‘ Dbacrlbed Public Enemy ' lbaatlale B. Van, Detlea ua are ac lntercatad in our accomplishment: In out- er space that news about th e microscopic world of germs la of aecondary importance. Bim- Iaa vlrua 40 (SWO) may not be ea glamorous as the Teletar ae- talllte but it baa made a n u In- ber of our top laboratory aci- antuta prick up their ears. V40 ha I emerged as the number one c I! of the microscopic world and la be- lnl iudled by cancer menarch- era. vaccine manufacturers. pad uanetlcla According to the edlcal World News, ‘ cin- quant la a troublesome contem- lnant _ of certain aeruma. difficult to eliminate because it in the tlaaut uaad vaccine 3. . It.waa found in extracts of monkevkldncy ttaauea in which and certain ' reap are grown. so a from these batches con- tained the unwanted BVGO. Vac- cine makers are doing an ex- cellent job of eliminating Hi I a contaminant. A vlruii similar to SWO has been found In chicken eggs. We eat most of the eggs p r o- duced but eome are used for making vacclnea—anotber. poa- Ilblc source of contamination. - What is wrong with SWO? One study showed it produced malignant tumors in hamsters but nothing comparable to this has been noted in other animals or in humans. ‘Many scientists are burning the midnight oil in cancer research lnatl tea try- ing to determine whether it: 2 virus la a cancer producer. All hope it is not. On the other hand. SV40 does alter the shape of cultured liv- lng human cells growing in a test tube. These cells also de- velop abnormal nuclei within el hi to 14 weeks. In addition, the altered cells beget cells that ‘process the name changes. Genetics entered lh picture when it was discovered th at SV40 affected the chromosomal pattern. Many of the altered cells lost one chromosome, and- ing up with 45 instead of 46. This explains the changed ap- pearance of the cells but I he tiaauea were not altered in any way. The cells were not hurt or killed nor did they be- come , malignant. (Dr. Van Dellen will answer questions on medical topics if stamped. aelf-addressed cnvc lope accompanies request.) OUR YESTERDAYS (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (August 18. 1937) Harry E. Foster of the teach- ing staff 3%? convention of the assicial Aa- aociatlcn of the Maritime ’Prov- inpea and Newfoundland on the plays of Euripides. In his dress. which is to be published in the Dalhousle Review, Mr. Foster analyzed the dramatic methods employed by the great Greek tragic writer. What is fully expecbeddo be the most outstanding Provincial closed tennls‘tournament ever staged here is due to open 0 n the courts of the Charlottetown Tennis Club Tuesday afternoon. with interest at its highest peak due in a great measure to th e recent holding the Eastern racquet wleldera have been coming Island championship. TEN YEARS AGO (Aumat 18. 1952) Missfiaelyne Craig has been released from her duties at I-IMCS Dockyard. Halifax’, to pursue her studies at London Conservatory of Music on ,a full time basis for the next three years.’ Miss Craig is holidaying in Charlott as Dorothy and Louise Cox and will leave for England at the end of the month. . Veda Seaman. 15-year - old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. - rlc Seaman. Springfield, Lot 67. and a student at the scboc fur Dcef at eeaaful in having productions in handicraft _ first prize. A shopping bag and Ilirfild. pmttlly designed and finished with extreme care as fgndietell. were admired a. practising steadily since, for the. etown with the Mlas- . How Russians Get Ulcers New York let-dd fibula The great dream of every soviet . which proved fer. more the conquest , outer space. la to have‘: place to live. '1' a re pi-omlaea o . iii ....a-.- '==°-......; llll l wiiiiin mu-ii’ at.“ . t ‘lgiiateu eat like averanalded _ 58%, as on-inaatvai yrfira, .. e V‘ I . now being manecad by the tea’: it i ! ‘iii. ‘-iiiiiii *5 ‘ ' _l of West Kent School . recently addressed the_ annual . subject of the technique of the ad- ‘ Canadian Championships. local . Notes tar THE wk-YT know. Brandon The eaaicat way te tell the diflqrenee between youna plant: and weeds in to pull up every- thing. If they come up again. they're weeds. — Gait Reporter. mCana°t::fl!:nat lead of Iagamaad c in team to have found avg one. -v of- tawa Journal. _ ' The mat iiimeiiu mi of ut- tfnzxto the top ofitbe ladder la géttlng through the crowd at the. bottom. — Niagara Fella Ra- vlew. . "I have‘ made a will lcavlll my brains to the hospital and just not an acknowl uncut from the euthoritiol." ‘Were they pleased?" "They wrote that every little thing helps."- Montreal Star. Yugoslavia‘ recently sent ..4o skilled workers to the Hannover trl e r- many. Exactly half of them sought political asylum. People uudei-_ Co mu at rule are escaping y an means, f o ul or fair. -— Ifltc eper -—- Water- loo Record. - of acne. eaha hva he e bad effect 5 ill! ¥0|Il‘l_IOl‘ Inner. atlun—butnotaobadaatlic effect the younger ‘generation has had on autos. -—- Brandon Sun, Some astronomical effccfia are a bit queer. Aa when a full moon on a mild and pleasant evenlnl makes autioa run out of gas. -;- Cbatham News. Canadian ear make}: in duced more vehicles in th ‘first six months-of 1082 than ever . A made is not naceuarlly a sold but we can‘! they are maklnl them for gar- den oraanenta. It follows that 1962 has I good year for a good many car-buyer: foe. — Ottawa Journal. A leading 'rcac_arc| «innin- 0- O car 08‘ laknown as "'I'heBIlnk.Rata Teal." Tiny cameras, hidden on the shelves of a, aupcrmarket recorded the number of tlmea women blinked. While choosing their goods.’ the blink-rate was slow. but when they came to paying the bill the camera showed thgt the blink-rate shot up enormously. — BBC om- --- A AA vvvvvvvv-vvw e LUNCH or inns in 0 Excellent cuisine I I 2. 3. Bachelor's hi 4.. 5 6 7 of _ strudyfiira obtalinthe in such courseachosen required for either de Education. English. anotlia 2. Special Requirements: fa) Arts; Iaafin In FEES (per year) Tuition .. . etc. IV sonoLARs1iu>s: $300.00 dc to the I’. 33001!) should St. Dunatan'a University APPLY: ' .'I',he Robin Room . O In quiet-country surroundings 0 Early American atmosphere 0 Your Chef Tieleman El-kelena ’ SHERWOOD ACRES MOTEL Opposite the Airport St. Dunsiun's University PROGRAMS OF STUDY: Bachelor’: Degree in Arts. Bachelor’: Degree in General Science. Decree Ommneticc abegreeinfidircationi , Diploma in to a Diploma in who wish to combine some class ion with a work. Students who. after,l:he completion of i in Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Sc gree can do so by completing fifteen additional a to mice. enabling students with satisfactory G-trade XII to niiaiify for all classes of lic- by the Prince I-Idw.-iird Island Department of II ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS: 1. General Requirement: Seven Prince Edward Island Grade XII e. a science. and an elective with and F‘t_'ench In spec cases _ _ who lb not have complete admission quallficat.lons._ 1. Students in the university year who cial assistance are eligible P5‘ . Youth ‘Traiining Program. Application for title Department of Educe Gram or and loans up to . ins 'neaciie_r ’l‘rsIning. Application for these is made fol‘- on Sep . 3. A numberoflrilt-sarleaaladacliolars-hl1Iae'a'eavaLleIieto students of superior academic made in the Committee on ' THE, REGISTRAR. St. Dunstan’s University. Charlottetown, P.E.I. the Robin Room .vvvvvvvvvvvvvvVVVVV Wocmui Sccmtamlal Studies, wish to nce De- academic way as include the course ‘subjcrts on Hie level or equivalent- history algebra. geometry. . ' least 80%. an average of at '1'? edfurstudents ateeeeaaeoaaeaeeea r ea-aeeoeelaeeeaaaaee - . . . . . . . . . . ..u.....- . _ are in need of finan- tio rceive interest-free loans the Dominion-Provincial ~1- tlcti. Charlottetown. $300MboItlI&8lI.k- ability. App!-lcotion for schola:-diipa. III 1. Grade 2. Gmdexfl II ADMISSION ‘ Oomnleticnof adex Ill FEES(iNIy ): 'I‘IIIl.ion sr. DUN8l'AN’8 mun salmon rnoonaiiis or STUDY: XI REQUIREMENTS: [V APPLY: ‘ 32%“. "On n-araaaabaeaaaaaeaeaeaaaaaeaeeeele aa I ‘ISM Ulm lion in America organized what‘ l