overs Prinee Edverd Island Like The Dew # W. J. Hencex, Publisher Wellece Ward Managing Editor Editor Published every week day morning (except-Sun- dey and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P.E.|., by Thomson Newspapers Lrd. Beénch offices—at Summerside, Montague, Alberton y end Souris. Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425 University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- versity 6-5942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037. tMember Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association and The! Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively, entitled *to-the use for repub- lication of all pews dispatches in. this paper erédited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published herein. All tight ‘or republication of special dispatches here Wm also reserved.. Subscription rate: - Not over 40c per week by carrier. $12.00 a year by mail on rural routes and areas not serviced -by carrier. : $15.00 a year off Islahd and U.K. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com- monwealth. Not cyec Je ‘single copy. Member _ Audit Bureau of Circ: lation. 4 “SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1966 Easier s Tlumoh In that--magnificent—passage- in Frank Walker °| St--Patt's-epistle-te-the-Corinthians,— that ‘now is. proclaiming - first-fruits_of them—that slept,” we have the enduring foundation of all the Christian creeds, It is the found- Christ ~ risen from the dead and: become. the - ‘ation of which the freat-ecumenical = movement is being erected-in our time, and it: affords the surest hope that it will succeed: ; This season of the year, between the departure of winter. and the ar- rival of spring, was held in special regard by the ancients. There is ; —something—magical about. nature ‘awakening from her long. Cold sleep, giving ‘warmth and renewed life to ’ living ...creatures everywhere. But Christianity added immeasurably to the significance of these recurring changes, bringing —assurance—of—a ' spiritual growth and regeneration. . One of its manifestations is our belief — in what we call progress, that man- kind can, by faith and works, move steadily toward better and higher || things. If ever we needed a firm hold on that. belief it is-in the troubled world of today. In this. city and province of churches, and throughout Canada, tomorrow's festival will be observed fervently and gladly. And, let us hope, with the inner peace which comes from detachment. from our ~ wordly cares in praize and thanks- giving. * ak «Still A Myslane Our causeway: project timetable had to be rescheduled in order, as Fin- © « “ o~ We do hope the minister will get around, as soort as. pessible, to ex- ~plaining how the “maximum” pro- ‘ gress sO necessary to completing a job of such magnitude canbe achiev- _ed by eliminating “summertime em- ployment” on that part of it which requires a spring and summer climate, and postponing it till the fall. This with, be “An” engineering feat surpassing all the other marvels of the caliseway, and. we yearn “to ~ know more about it! Ended: With A Bang . _ It can’t be said of our legislative session that it ended, as the late T. S.-Eliot-foresaw our—civilization ending, “not with a bang. but a _whimper.” The “bang” came on Wed- nesday, the day before prorogation, with=-an all-out. opposition barrage against some. of th rovernment' in- dustrial and fishe#men’s loan’ trans- =actions, dence of what it claimed was-political interference and demanded a judicial “inquiry, “away from politics,” and ~an external audit to boot. | in the government, were sabotaging our chances for industrial develop- ment_and threatened to take his case _ ‘to the people—‘‘the final tribunal” —before whom he was quite willing to take his chances. ~ It was all very dramatic. But the closing proceedings. on- Thursday were carried out in the usual sedate manner, and the expected announce- _ment of an early election date did not materialize. Indeed the Premier, in a_press statement, disowned any in- tention of making one,-either then or _ in dispute the better. over the, weekend, and “perhaps none for a good time after that.” Which, of course, doesn’t mean that he-couldn’t change his’ mind on the subject. But. we think the: gov- ernment would be well advised if it found means of presenting its indus-. trial advancement activities in a clear- er light before seeking a fresh man- date from the taxpayers. This is a major part of its policies, and there is no question of it being of major importance. to the province. There. may be difficulties in the way of meeting all the demands for infor- mation that have been raised. But if it is innuendo and not. facts that the opposition ‘is relving on to discredit the. government’s record, as the Premier alleges, then surely the more light that is thrown on the matters There. isan old saying about the in which—it—produced—evi— | Premier Shaw charged that his opponents, - ‘in-seeking-to-undermine confidence: [sav—'6 ANYSo DY ss LISTENING. b CULT OF PERSONALITY™ a STE RS: DATE A Problerr Alt Christians celebrate Fas- ter as—a-day—of joy,_but for_cen-_; turies they have disagreed. over fixing its date. : In the early years of Christia- nity, the faithful observed Eas- ter on many different days. The | Orthodox Church's Easter gen- erally varies from that of other | Christian churches though in 1966 it comes on the same. day, April 10. Easter can fall on any date be- | tween March 22°and April 25. It occurred on March 22 in 1818; but will not be so-early again:| in the 20th century. Easter fell on April 25 in 1943, but will not do “8 again until 2038, - Fixed Date “Sought “Secular groups have long -ur- ged that Christian churches as- - sign Easter. to the same date each year, or at least shorten the time span. The variance from year to year ‘affects the flow of trade, court sittings, and school holidays. A group of British schoolboys once peti- tioned the Home-Office to delay og ance Minister Sharp said, to “mini- ____mize the pressures on peak summer- e time employment” in Prince Edward Island; but how about the pressures in Montreal?. According to the Mon- -treal Star, Ottawa is still playing with the idea’of going ahead on the pa- latial $70 million CBC complex in the east end of_theicity. Not exactly going ahead, it adds, but ‘the hole, thus quieting .down us natives.” And, according to The Star, <_. there are two very good reasons for “concerned, Jeaving the site as it is. First, it says, the Fowler report: called into question the whole CBC | plan as it applied both to Ottawa and Montreal, and, though Mr. Ouimet may not agree, the Fowler report is still.an issue. Second, it is in Mon- treal that the full force of inflation, as far as the construction industry is is being felt. Yet on a project that could well be postponed, there is to be no monkeying with the works timetable. But we are assured, down here, that despite a spring and. summer holdup on the next phase of our causeway there would be ‘ in completing the project.” This as- surance came _ last Prime Minister Pearson in the House “digging - Monday from. “no delay procedure in our law courts that it. should not only provide for justice being done, but: for being plainly seen to be done. It should, in short, be above suspicion by being admin- istered in as wide-open a manner as possible. There are court cases that must be held “in camera,” and there are governmental transactions which, in their initial stages, may require to be conducted with a measure of secrecy. But the rule holds. good in law and politics, that the more. the publicysees the less it is inclined to harbor—or he misled into harbor- ing—-doubts that. bréed suspicion and mistrust. 2 bid Of Its Kind An_ international. gathering that may prove of widespread importance —and certainly to Canada in view _of its Agricultural Rehabilitation and Development Act—is the first World Land Reform Conference, scheduled to open in Rome on June 20. At least 60 nations will be represented, and the delegates will be professional land-reform experts. They will com- pare notes on the success or fail- ures attendant on the various system of land. distribution in many coun- of _Commons,-and_it-was_reiteratedin-— , & press. statement issued on Thurs- day by Works Minister Mcllraith. Work, he said. is continuing on the New Brunswick ‘approach and tend- ers for the 41. mile approach on the P.EI. side will be called in June, following completion. of land acquis- | ition and detailed plans and specifi- cations. He insisted that while.‘‘some work scheduled for completion this _ July and August might not be fin- ished until the fall,” this would not affect the 1970 target. i While welcoming this announce- ment, we still are at a loss to recon cile it with. the minrster’s’ previous statement just before.the November federal election that_work-on the Is- land approach would have to be undertaken “in the spring.” Alsg; his statement in/the Commons on Feb. 14 ‘that if was “impossible at this early date accurately when a project of this magnitude. and to—-foreeast complexity would be completed”. but “that it shout “with maximum pro= Sree,” ao jatein— et inenas aaah tries designed to benefit small farm- “oe Discussion is expected to centre onthe best methods of reassembling land after oversized farms are broken ‘up. A difficulty is that theoretical land reform often runs counter to the trend of modern farm economics, which, demand mechanical planting and harvesting of vast. acrpages. Experts may also investigate what _ land reform does to other develop- ment programsrin poorer nations. Does it keep the right people on the farm? Are the hest-snited «workers -heading for the factories in search of employment? What. credit programs “permit. impoverished new landown- -ers to get a proper start in modern . farming? The conference will have.a heavy agenda. United Nations experts. are hoping itil he an efficient clear “ing house fora lnt-of practical know ledge thatehas Tong lain’ fallow Canada. let us; hope. will be compet- represented: at“its deliberations. ® in the interests of efficiency. t Easter and the isiial” holiday, so they would haye more time’ to study -for examinations. Ecclesiasticat— authorities the Roman Catholic Church, the Church of England, and some other denominations have indi- cated they have né“fiind:men- tal objection to a change in the date-fixing system. years, churches have seriously discussed. adoption of a_ fixed Sunday for Faster - - the second Sunday in April is often men=- tioned - - but no agreement has been reached. Perplexity over. the date for Easter goes back to the second century. Christians of Jewish origin wanted Faster celebrat- ed in conjunction with the Jew- ish Passover. Gentile Chris- tians wanted Faster always te- lebrated on what is now called Sunday, regardless of the day of the month. The Council of Nicaea in A. D. 325 declared that Easter must he__ celebrated. by Christians everywhere on. the Sunday fol- lowing the 14th day of the Pas- chal full moon: after the spring, or vernal, equinox. To simplify cale Council decreed tht for eccle- siastical’ purposes, March - 21 should be regarded as the ver- nal equinox, though in fact the date may vary by a day or two. Similarly,: the traditional Pas- chal full moon does not always: coincide with the astronomical or actual, full moon, Calendar Reformed Despite the Council's: efforts, confusion about Easter remain- ations, the “Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (April 9, 1941) A Berlin despatch to the Pop- oli di Roma, Rome, said the Suez Canal would be the Axis goal if Yugoslavia and Greece are conquered. The Greek high command an nounced that Greek troops ‘an estimated - 300,000 men) cut off in eostern “Macedonia tne German capture of Salonika were still holding out. ; TEN YEARS AGO -4-¢April 9, 1956) Nalional Research’ Connell Scholarships were awarded to D.C. Santry of Charlottetown and James Farl Rruce of High Bank, in the amount of $2,000 for Mr. Santry and $1,600 for Mr. Bruce. v Former intelligence chief Ot- to John, who made world head- lines bv flecing hoth wayvs,., -across the Tron Curtain within 18 months was almost a ‘forgetten prisoner’ tn a West German jail Officials said it might he three months hefore tKe handsome, broad-shouldered German was broupght to trial-on charges still then lo be specified, 4 t % —in t “In recent | m For Man Centuries | National Geographic Society |ed widespread, and Christians “Easter can be caltulated until. | continued to celebrate ‘the - holi- | A. D. 8499. by means of Clavius's ' day-on-different days. To-com- tables, still printed in such stan- | plicate matters further, the ca- | dard works as the Book of Com-~ wlendar year slowly but steadily | mon Prayer. | | advanced ahead of the solar An English editor, comment- —+ty-deposits. When the individual ~hand=the~corticosteroids—help-.to. ,impeded and by ’ UNITED NATIONS Cirrhosis | " (CP)— Alcoholic’ cirrhosis is a ser- | International Coatrol fous liver’ condition and the four- th most common cause of death among males under age 40. Until | recently very little could be done to correct the disturbance or to treat the complications which include. hemorrhage from the upper part of the stomach, distention of the abdomen with fluid, and coma. Something can | now be done for all of these. shadow across ~ United Nations | | headquarters. | UN Secretary | pessimism and disappointment | | with failure so far to open | Deace talks on the Vietnamese | Question despite a i | initiative to use the ‘commission | The liver, a huge vascular | to bridgé a gap between recent | sponge, is the body's largest or-|UN efforts and a suggested gan. It performs about 70 vital. Geneva conference. areas of which ‘six or more Canada’s External Affairs are needed for survival. The of- | Minister’ Paul Martin; made a gan enlarges initially due to fat- special trip to UN headquarters . } in mid.- February .to discuss a ; | possible role for the commis | | sion with Titant and U.S. Am- |bassador Arthur Goldberg be- | blood ‘circulation . through the | fore going. to Washington for organ is blocked. | talks with U.S. State Secretary | The portal veins drain blood | pean Rusk. from the digestive tract and | bring it to the liver where. it is OVERSEAS AGREEMENTS filtered through a maze of pas-. sageways. continues to drink and eats poorly, the structure shrinks and | hardens. Trouble begins when heart. The blockage of the por- way for French. withdrawal | ‘develepmen ‘of- ascites and,~in and North Viet Nam divided. the past, there was little to do | ‘Lexcept.to remove (tap) the fluid | at a press conference. Wednes- periodically to relieve the pres- day the idea. of using the com- abdomen. A salt-free diet, diurétics, spir- RANSOM RAISED onolactone, albumin ~ infusions, | : . ~MIAMI_{AP)--The.. kidnapper. control the fluid. An operation to | of 18-year-old Daniel Goldman bypass the liver _Also_ is avail- ‘now can collect. $45,000 for the | able. |youth’s safe return. The youth's | Meanwhile the. body ‘tries to |parents, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron ‘re-route blood around the liver |Goldman,~ say they have the by enlarging certain vessels $25,000 ransom- money ready, | the Miami‘ Herald has= offered ach. Thesé esophageal veins be- | ' $5,000 for his safe return,. Gold- come varicosed : and rupture when irritated by food and acid. | Bleeding occurs in more than |parents! home in the exclusive By Dr. Theodore -R. Van Dellen | 'The inability to mobilize the | by him Commis-. tions. | sion to“help bring’ about Vietna-_, |mese peace talks has cast a possible means of | Canadian | New Hope For Peace Talk Ho lopes | Dimmed Canadien Pees talf Viet -Nam- had been discussed nd some of the delega. At that time two or three bringin about--a--conference were dis ‘cussed. One was the (UN) Sec- GeneFal tT | retary Council involvement, the Thant-+ Wednesday expressed other was involvement by some of the neutral countries and the third was the possible invoive- ment by the. ICC. “My. personal feeling at that time was that it was- worth ex- ploring the possibilities of a use- | ful ICC involvement in contrib. .” | i | b near the entrance of the stom- friends have raised $15,000 and — man was kidnapped \ from his | | Geneva uting toward a peace settlement to the Vietnamese - problem in | preference to the Security. Coun- cil involvement or the involve- ment of neutral. countries.’ But_so far the efforts-to use . the commission to set peace talks inmotion have produced - no tangible results. - a | TWO OBJECTED - The idea of using the commis- sion, in» bringing about peace | Canada, Poland and India are ' talks ‘had an optimistic ring to The network re-con- | members of the commission set | it — especially after—the United nects into'a single vessel that | UP to oversee the 1954 Geneva | States succeeded in getting the carries filtered_blood to the | agreements which paved the | Vietnamese situation on the 15- “ation Security Cotncil’s: tal systems contributes to the | from “Indochina and left South | agenda in the face of objection , from The secretary -. general said France. the Soviet Union ~and The Soviet Union and France | argued the~ matter should be + sure— in_the greatly - Popa mission to help bring peace to | taken up ‘in Geneva, where-the - agreements originate “ Both hopes, however, appear to. have been dimmed some- -what especially with Poland's _ reported objection to any. move by the commission under pres- ent- circumstances to launch a - ace conference. EASTER Sunday Dinner half—ol—those—with—varicosities—| suburb—of—surfside-March—28.. and one-third die from sanquin- ation. Today many Is OUR BYWORD are saved - by vessel ligation. a A potential remedy was re- | cently suggested when it was ;found that lymph flow also is | venting the thoracic duct or enlarging its~ year. é ing on.the movement to fix a In 1582, Pope Gregory resolv- | Sunday for Easter! déplored the | ed some of the disorder. He re- idea. The editor recalled that | | formed the calendar, and the jin his youth he and countless | | Gregorian calendar still is wide-other chojr’ boys diverted them- | ly used. The astronomer Cla- selves during ponderous ser- | vius prepared tables for determ- mons*by reading the Easter {ining ‘the date of Easter. ~Y table in the prayer book. 4 Disturbing Cynicism increasingly tfession signed by steven ‘Trus- — Peott-is wanted badly-by a large ;number of persons who have It’ {s becoming apparent that the -extraordinary public concern about the Trus- cott case can only be- satisfied |by the appointment of a Royal | Commission of investigation as | demanded ‘by Isabel LeBourdais | |in her book “The Trial of Steven | sions, who stand accused by her Truscott’’ which claims that | of having had.a part in a gross young Truscott, tried and con- | miscarriage of justice. : _vieted_ seven years ago forthe These persons” forthe most murder of Lynne Harper, is in- | part did not reply to her accusa- nocent of the crime. | tions,.and:.those who did have Concern about the matter _{s notably failed to_come _to_grips — heightened by the publication of a very curious letter, written by J.R. Geoffrion, executive assis- tant to Justice Minister Cardin, to Daniel Truscott, Steven's fa- | ther. . The kev sentence in the’ letter ‘reads: ‘‘The penitentiary auth- orities are. hopeful that Steven may be encouraged to abandon his so-called ‘defence strategy’ when discussing his offence and be absolutely.-frank~-with; the psychiatrist who is only acting iwith a view to help and assist the patient.” It is impossible’ to escape, the conclusion that this Is a thinly veiled offer hy the Justice De- partment to the boy's parents of a discreditable and disgrace- ful bargain, a parole in ex- change for a confession. | plication in Mrs LeBourdais’ book: members of the judisical, ’ A disturbing official . cynicism | is revealed in the Justice ~De- |partment official's letter. If Truscott confessed to a gross. | ;and horrible* crime, the ‘work of | a deviate, he will be released and given the opportunity to re- peat the offence. On the ‘other | hand, if, as he has.all along, he | continues to assert his innocence he will be kept in jail. This was precisely the _atti- tude of the. authorities of Salem, ‘Massachusetts, during the wit- 'cheraft aberration of the 1690s. | Those who confessed to he ing witches were spared. Those who held to their plea of not guilty were hanged. A full-scale investigation into every aspect of this strange and terrible case seems more than | ‘ever _mecessary. | With Alcoholism - ‘oronte Globe and Mail Dealing, which alcoholics andtadiicts can be sent; few places of treatment. Judicial decisions in the Unit- ed States are not binding upon connection with a vein in the .}- Volkswagens- neck, the liver becomes smaller, : followed by, disappearance of | Are Our Specialty | ascites, and dessation of bleed- |] Corpplete Rne of genuine |ing from varices. This is an im- | Volkswagen parts. | portant breakthrough. ! : ~ VIRAL PNEUMONIA RUDISCH'S P.F.T. writes: Is virus penu- GARAGE | fashioned pneumonia? ° _| Now that the~ bacterial~pneum-— ;been named directly or by .im- , | legal, medical and police profes- | with her speci specific charges. | suits are-so-t monia more serious than old) REPLY _~ rior to the discovery of the sulfonamides and penicillin, the. | -oldér type of — pneumonia~ was! more serious: .in some forms, one of every three patients died. onias are tamed, viral pPheumon- $ ia is more serious. CLOSING OFF TUBES | | Mrs. D. C. writes: Can the | tubes, be untied once they have bent Yed?_ “TS REPLY Fy Theoretically, yes, but the! | procedure is difficult and the re- | at—most—| Service, call-or write incertain—th, | Bynecologists do not consider it | practical: ; TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— | ‘Carelessly baiting -hooks can | | lead to an accident. |] 192 Kent Charlottetown IMPROVE THE APPEARANCE OF YOUR PROPERTY! STOP THE = AND DUST NUISANCE a SCABIES D. EF. writes: Ip” the seven with year itch contagious? | weit ee | ASPHALT PAVING of your driveway, car port, side. . walks, parking lots, curbs, ete. ~For. a free-estimate and ise —WARREN MARITIMES ‘LTD. Box 1054 or phone 4-6135 Charlottetown, PE. 1, SPECIALISTS IN ASPHALT PAVING FOR OVER | SIXTY YEARS A complete Easter Dinner With Home Made Vegetable pene and. Dessert. $1.85 Dial 4-6669 HEIDELBERG Coffee’ Shop & Delicatessen Soe ti Depa g Youll 7 the features from Weekend Magazine - © DISSOCIATION ‘CELL NINETEEN . ‘psychiatric “Hérmit?’ Does he « hate prison officials? Johnny Young, convicted as Quebec’s first habitual criminal baffles prison authorities. He refused to leave his Kingston Pene- years. This week Weekend- Magazine tells the story of the’ A THOUSAND DAYS Ontario is making a start on the problem this year, with a 60- ‘bed diagnostic centre for Skid | Row alcoholics-in Toronto. two rehabilitation farms and an in- dustrial tlinie to which alco | holics may be referred by their | employers. But there are 9,000 to 10,000 Skid Row alcoholics in Ontario, 90,000 other alcoholics, and all need areatment. The provincial Government has promised to spend $18 mitlion-over the next 10. years to provide it; and per- | haps a sober recognition of the fact that it really is cruel to pun- ish_a sick man for having an un- Canadian courts; but the prob- lems that. confront both coun- tries are frequently so. similar that it would pay us to examine some of their decisions for in- struction. Such a decision was handed down recently by the U.S. Court of Appeals for. the District of Columbia. | _ Eight fo nothing, the’ court held that proof of chronic alcoh- olism ‘is a .defense_to a drunken- ness charge because the defen- dant “has lost the power of seit control in the use of intoxicating heverages.”” The court had pavsewed a 90- day suspended , sentence impos- ed on a man convicted of public Controllable disease will speed drunkenness for the 70th time | the program. | since 1936. It ruled that the trial ; | judge had erred when he refus- | DEFIES BUSINESSMEN ed to hear medical and psychia- tric evidence that the man was SPALDING, England (CP)— Mrs. Lian Hardy is a farmer's an aleoholic, and cited two ear- lier convictions which had been Wife with a grudge against -the profit-making middleman be- | invalidated under the. Fighth Amendment, which prohibits | callse —she says cabbages she and spit directly to the public. Ee cruel and unusual punishment. These two cases had dealt with alcoholic and narcotics addic- tion. Because alcoholism (or ad- RUSK LIKES BOND diction) is a disease, it would be WASHINGTON (AP) — State cruel, the courts held, to blame Secreatry Dean Rusk. likes to ! relax by reading spy stories. a person for having the disease, having it im public, or exposing himself to it. It would even be cruel to brand the sufferer as a criminal though no other punish- ment was attached and he was given a suspended 7 sentence What the judge should havé been able to do in the Washington case was to commit the accus ed for medical: treatment That is also what indges and magistrates should be doing in Ontario ‘Rut they, like the jude Rusk disclosed in a television interview program sthat for a half - hour. before retiring. at night he- reads history, biogra- phies, sometimes poetry, and novels. “1 do enjoy mystery stories,” he said. “I've read all the Bond stories."" . 30 Years of Servien Speaks For Itself.,.._ For the Finest es in the District of Columbia ey ALITY MEATS ; a run into a snag in’ administering {Visit this particular piece. of justice ‘There are plenty of jails wo Queen st: Meat Market / 1 One of the main ingredients of President Kennedy's special magnetism, during his brief da\s in office, was his family. The second of a four-part Weekend Magazine serialiZa- tion of the ‘best-selling book, strange, lonely world of the man Who wouldn't come out. ation cell where he had been for the last two ° EGG-PHOTOGRAPHER Birdwatching is a hobby with many people but few concen- trate.on watching the eggs. Dr. George Peck, Oakville veterin “arian, man in North America who makes a specialty of photo- * Is he mentally sick? Is hea is probably the only “A Thousand Days”, details graphing birds’, nests — and the warm and informal family especially their eggs: The Jife that went on in-the White frustrations and’ rewards of House-—when—the.Kennedys_ this unique hobby are told” were there. A Blue Egg is a Good Ege Blue eggs are the-latest! Food Editor Margo Oliver says that ‘there is now a special breed of chicken that lays. blue eggs. But she prefers brown ones and perhaps you like white. However, regardless of theif color, Margo's recipes for this week use plenty of eggs — for delicious desserts or egg-stra special dinners. Holland's. Glad Hatters Alkmaar, Holland is famous for more than just its cheese market. Women’s Editor Doyle Klyn visited Alknyaar to see the cheese auctroned and. was just as fascinated by. the gaily-hatted men of the various cheese guilds. You will see why in her column, “Ac- cording to Doyle” this week in Weekend Magazine, a WITH _ WEEKEND © TE | _-==@rhd Rolored Comics _ tr “by. Robert Marjoribanks. Cold Water and Courage — Long-distance swimmers are a breed apart, says Sports Editor Andy OBrien. And Canada’s Regent Lacoursiere is one of this exclusive club of athletes. ‘He told Andy. what 1s was like to swim the 34-mile endurance test that is the Mar del Plata course speckled waters in Argentina. held among sharks wnt vem MAGAZINE. ~ STILL ONLY 10° At All Newsstands hea