l fiflhr Gfitnsrdtaui rum. Pnuu Lavinia qunc Lu: ‘I'M new w, J. minus. ruuiuu- Iurlon uwi. Flanl Will-i cumin rem: Edna Pueluuau y wink a" morning i. a i Mir em me IlIl-ilary nelie-yu .i ies Pun" suui. (Milan-town, P.E.l.. by luumuu. Nuw-n-p-n lie limm uni: l Summeuidl. Montague. Miser in me Smile. . vlnl WIIIIm °"l“v 5.9.... 5i .i. VIMouval [MA mil Manlin CInIdlln DIily lew er Puhlllhlr. Amati on and Vhe Canadian Pi in. Canadian rm- .. .x‘iumi, mum-u m iii. i... lot new human oi alclm i-. um in». u E- rIpunlllI ion at Suhlcnpllan relea- i. u nd c in All rlphln rm hlleln .lm runvld. Not em :5: pm week by vu' all no I yul by mall a: hull mm M m- vviud - rid u.i<. noon u. monwullh. Na! am 7: par Iiflgll copy. ‘ Mellle Audi! am... at ciivuluiuuu PAGE I SATURDAY. JUNE l. mu. Liberals Committed, Too Would the Liberal Government repudiate or keep the commitment made by the Diefenbaker Govern- ment with respect to going ahead with our causeway project? This was the question asked Works Min— ister Deschaleleta in the House of Commons on Thursday. The minis- ter‘s reply was that “the matter is under consideration at present." We trust that our Liberal rep- resentatives at Ottawa will give their support to those who are urg- ing that the Government’s consider- ation in this case be prompt and favorable. Their pledge, Is given on Ieveral occasions in the last federal campaign, was to build the cause- wa if its feasibility should I). established. Can there be any ques- tion now that the feasibility Itud- iea have been completed and that the project is in the planning stage? This was shown in the 1963-64 esti- mates tabled in Parliament this week by Liberal Finance Minister Gordon. $500,000 toward the cost of “planning a causeway and associat- ed structures acrnss Northumber- land Strait." Could anything be clearer? Mr Gordon's depalimental en- {zine would never have advised lhi: nEItdllul‘e if they hadn't established beyond doubt: the pro— ]ecl's feasibility. Nor, of course, “mild Mr. Gordon have tabled the item at all if he believed it misrep- resented the purpose for which the expenditure wan to be made. That the sum may have been placed in the estimates by the outgoing adminis- tration is beside the point, except to prove that the department was even then quite satisfied as to the results of Its feasibility studies. Now it seems to be a question not of the causeway‘s feasibility. but of the political feasibility of going ahead with it. If it were I commit. ment about nuclear Weapons, now, that would be different! Prime Min- ister Pearson is very much concern- ed about “honoring” all Comma» five undertakin' in this reaped;- even to the extent of honoring pled- ges Mr. Diefenbaker claim! were never given. Would it be any less honorable to repudiate I causeway pledge that would benefit Canada's whole Atlantic area, and to which the Liberals themselves are commit:- ted now that the work has reached tfhe stage indicated in Parliament? After all, it was the Liberals who initiated the causeway scheme. We have always given them credit for that. Let us hope that we shall be able, also, to credit them with full marks for consistency in carrying the project forward. Khrushchev’s Windlall Why does Mr. Khrushchev plan to visit Cuba? Why has he made such I fuss over Castro? The ans— wer. according to the Christian Science Monitor. is appallingy sim- ple. Because Cuba is the only con- qust Khrushchev has made without lifting a finger. Because Cuba fell into his hands like a ripe plum. Be- eIuse he did not. have to use the Red mics, and because even the path of subversion. which he did use. was WY- Becauand this in the key mimpother Cubae could come to him just as easily. All he needs is a painful grievance on the part of the people of ecme country Igninst a «mule govemment. That is what W in particular, too often ‘ vii-l they bun: with in... film are! CubI Ind went to use .lin h mixer it and force to i l nuiuee Iniim Cour . l atop other Cub-I from going Oom- munist, it wasn't free that lost Cuba in the first place. It was a deep, p o p u I r, island-wide grievance against I despot named Batista who was far too closely supported by special interest in the United States. It was a political, not a military, motive. More Cubes could (all to Communism anytime, anywhere that the same conditions prevail—an d without Mr. Khrushchev having to lift that finger the next time, or the next or the next. The Monitor lays the unwelcome facts right on the line. pointing out that: lines these political shifts to- wards Communism could occur with. out the Red armies being used, the United States could not stop them uness it; proposed to invade every country that adopted a political radi‘ calism the United States did not like. The way to prevent more Cuban, it concludes, is not to flaunt United ‘ States warships and marines (ex- cept to stop the forcible export of Castroism). It is to look around for other Batistal. And to help the Americas find way to quarantine them, like I stitch in time. New Labor College A new page will be added to the history of the Canadian labor move- ment on Monday, when the new Lab: or College of Canada will begin its first courses in Montreal, The Col- lege—the first of its kind in North America—Is l joint undertaking of the Canadian Labor Congress, the Confederaton of National Trade Un- ions, the University of Montreal and McGill University. While they have always been very active in the field of labor education, the two Canadian labor bodies have learned by experience that: more extensive educational pro- grams are required to train trade unionists for their increasingly com- plex r o l c in present-day society. Hence the new college, which is charterd as an independent, institu. tion with a board of governors drawn from its four sponsoring bodies. Some 80 students will attend the college this year for its first seven- week term. The courses will deal with history. sociology. economics, political science and trade unionism —theory and practice. Because the college will enjoy the (lo-operation of both a French-language and an English-language university, th e new institution will be completely bilingual and bicultural. It is pointed out that: while there are already labor colleges in the United Kingdom. Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and other Euro- pean countries as well as in Central America, Asia and Africa, the Lab- or College of Canada will he the first to provide identical courses in both French and English. This in ii promising move Indeed, and one which could prove of fa!" reaching importance not only to Labor interstl but to those of Can- ada generally. EDITORIAL NOTES At long last, Canada is to have a suitable building for the National Archives and the National Library. The contract for its construction was awarded recently in Ottawa, and the building is to be finished in time for the centenary of Confederation in 1967. u o e In introducing I special course in remedial English, Rhoden Univer- sity in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, conducted tests which disclosed that a high percentage of the students were not properly prepared to cope with a first year 1 course in English. Furthermore, it we: found that half of the prospective entrants to the class couldn't spell. South Africa. comments an ex- change, ie not alone in an academic misfortune of this nature. A large-scale pooling of special— ized knowledge and experience in the corrections field will take place in Winnipeg. June 2-7, when the fourth biennial meeting of the Can- adian Congress of Corrections con- venes, sponsored by a division of the Canadian Welfare Council. A roster of distinguished speakers will ad- dress an expected 500 delegates from across Canada. Purpose of the con- ference ill to help develop and pro- mote preventive and treatment ser- vices at a high level of quality and efficiency, for juvenile delinquents and adult offenders. ,‘ THE SHAPE WE’RE IN THREATENED WAR IN IRAQ Kurdish Tribesmen Demanding Autonomy NIflMIII Geographic NewI Bulletin Kurds In mm are writing ano- l flier Ilormy chapter in their liuuz. lllmulluous history. The fierce lrlhesmen fluently renewed drmands [or Bulunomy, and threatened to resume their gueriilu war against the central government. Krudlsh leaders or- dered I cease - fire in February aflc'r I new rrgime took power in Iraq Tllc Kurds inhabit r u X g c d mnuntalns and deep valleys in thP uni-lion a n d s where l r e 11. um. and Turkey meet Tlmugh the remnn is called Kurdistan, II. is not a pnllllcal enlitv. Some Kurlls also (“roll in Syria and lhll Sm‘lcl nion. in their 4.000 - year history. vile proud. independent people never have taken an affront linlltl)‘ or submllted for long to anv rulcr RACE STARTED wnn Rnstilitlcs once broke out lie-l lwvcu lwu Kurdish clans, the: Gabols and Zeidans, because a‘ Gabnl made a slichling remarki about u zi-ldau rider during an imurumpiu horse race, amel- fighting rnncd for eight months and erupted again Iitcr two years of apparenl pence, Two other Kurds quarreled so vlolenl» ly ulmul the identity of a star that they came to fatal blows, The Kurds mum lue ancient Sumerians, Hiltiles. and Assy» rians. uml stoutly resisted Aruu. Mongol. and Turklsll invasions. They are now under the nomin— al control in the nations in which they live, but mum a large de- grce ul independence. Through- out this century they have re« peatcdly rebelled against author- lly and dreamed of - iree Kurd- lstnn, ,,llmales of the Kurdish pol? lllation range in 8.500.001! One of in: oldest pea- pies in the world, lilo Kurds are at Aryan stock and u k In Inctcnt language akin to Persian. They are shrewd. enormously courageous. and blessed with a lens: at humor Kurds prize culm-iul clothlng. The men we“ flowing robes, IIAKKY trousers. Ind hu cum- merbfllldl of bright lhndel mix- Id indiscriminately amt green. riaii. blue, grayv runet brown, and white with blue polkI dots, Fringe! on tllell‘ volumin- oils turban: serve both en de- corutlonx and fly Whisks. The Kurds “ll of n lunclt chlenaln who, when sentenced iii be hanged. was given one last should llkc in be lunged will. a "a - Ind . green rape." HOSPITALITY A mm Al! Kuldll are noted (in lhelr lins- pltulitv. an iirl Innide up in the word karIm. Every age, or local chief. mnlnulne . guest Is brolled chicken in plum anuce, dolmeh (meat. rlke. and pull wrapped in grape leaves). a n d candied squash and eggplant, Visitors to the musl humble homcs invariably are invited In stay for ten, Once nomadic, the Kurds now grow wheat, rice, tobacco, cut- ton. and fruit. Some work in oil fields and on public . works pm lects. Others have established businesses in Sulaymaniyah. an all - Kurdish city of 30.000 in, q. urdn are sunul Moslemx. lqu H u it Canadians are to make joyful and unanimous hoopla in the country's um cenlrnnial. [here must. u- some progress In sewing Anglo-French inner-l ences in the next four years. , Public pnliclcs can help but will not be decisive. Commuul. cation between prrsona in two languages is what is required, Voluntary private declsions are lair more cficclivz, In this branch of human helluv- lnr, than any thing any govern- melll can do. There Is new: of such decisions. wi-luug recently in lhe Monl trail Slur. ruler Dcsbarats re- pnrls: "In Montreal leIl'niu)! French has suddenly become the thing to do. French gram- mars are almnsl status sym- hols among the English execu- tive class. Many companies — have organized their own French courses " Nu law compelled um execu- lives and cnmpaniul in m in The On should welcome the honesty case's address in the graduat— l ing elm ni nu Universin Western om. o, 1‘. did mm most other sunken men for Quebec have lulled to do, He placed Quebec's proh- Ielll! squarely in their nnlillnal context, and made il clear um - Royal Commission on meal- turelism could not solve them. A Royal Commisslon. he laid, "cannot change opinions that are deep-ranted and often kept up by prejudlces um have ex- . I'll K they allow their women more‘ ed French Without Tears Flnunclul Post. Tarolflo freedom than most Mosleml. Kurdish Women usually are not veiled One Kurdish tribe. the Yazidis, are called Devil Wor- ihlpers. Adherents believe In I god who created the unIVerse but propiliute Shnitan, I fallen Ingel. WrIting In the National Geo graphic Magazine, S u p to me Court Jusfice William 0, Doug- Ins said he was surprised to see I Yazidl prince drinking wh‘ ky, contrary to Musleln tenets, "We drink what the devil would want us to drink," In Ilde explain- Illil way. an' were lllL‘y moved by in overnight yen to promote biculturalism or read lhe works of Heller: and Victor Hugo in the original. The reason they want. to learn French now Is that numerous Quehccoix have become quali- fied as managers, enginrerl. cconomi. s. lochniciaus, Ii “les Angluls” want to do business with these newly influential. de- cision-making men, they simply must know French. This Is In even! of supreme importance in the country's hil- tnry. II is also. for a change. I happy evenl. It explains the re- mark of Eric Kierlns, president of the Montreal Stock Ex- change, that the French Cull]- dian uproar called “Mnilrfi Chez~Nous" is “the grentesi thing that ever happened in the Provmce". The Q n e be r renaissance could lave. Install! of destroy- ing. Confederation. ly Way Globe and Mail. Tmm English . speaking Canadians lnent. Only a radical reflrtenta- l (ion of our Federal System and nllnt feItured Premier Jun 15- l everything Ihnl It calls for will lucceed in removing the cum- nl l en oi hil dissatisfaction," W‘sel Mr. Lesage a right. 'rh- cIIIngel Quebec demand: dn ‘not fall wltllin the nope of I Royal Commission. however board lu ieruu of reference. They Ire cauldlutlonal u. in. line. and they would luvnlvi. 8! he put It, "a pleat deal more than - Iimple touching-up of the Constitution" They would, in i.c_l. require complete le- Brown Spots Easily Removed . and I freckllnl Ire then In than u Dleldnnl. Exbevt for MIN more Iuwepllble ILII duller com- hnelr unsightly Ip- ll patches my yaI with-autumnal trouble. But they can become emu: Ind. II I relull. would no watched carefully. Malignancy ll suspected when they begin to grow, peel. and {III to Ilenl or become Ill)“ rounded by I rcddencd inflam- Id be», Thickeninl or much- ening or the lellcn me he a meInanIuI Ilgn. rate. consult your physician this. growth became warty-like or larger. Anyone with lenila keratoeu would avoid excculvo lunflIlM K I 0 V E s. on the lhady ride of an street, Keep the skin sail. with nllI Ind ointment: which Alan help no- im ihe epidennll, Them In several WIYI (0 IV move the lesions Ind they ought to be eradicaled when they pose I cosmetic problem. Fr.- uinl with liquid nltrolen or lulid carbon dicxlde (dry ice) II on method. Destruction vlil X»ruy nr dccuodessicIlInn II math I. Surgical I l {I i I I on ll done when there any Question Illnut the dilz'nolis. Thin ll win because the remnved IQ: elun can he lent to the It'll)an- lory for microscopic examina- lion. Till ensuing cosmetic re- mills are good and there in no doubt about the wisdom of cl- iminatinl the keratasil prover Io be malignant. wmlluNG SENSATION c.v.s. writes: My lluslnnd has been having dizzy well: all Irising (rum hll bed but not when on hil feet. The docml' Ilnl diagnosed it n vertigo. Please explain the difference belwee dizziness Ind VEI’IIZD. REPLY A true vertigo is . particular type D ' ' ‘ hicn the individual develops n lenullm I: ll the mm were turning around when the eyes are closed or that n. is spinning in space when they are open. This is in cuuuusl in other 1mm oi dizziness in which the individ- ual feel: lightheaded. giddy. or as ll walking on straw or des- crndlng rapidly in an elevator. send stamped, self-address e envelope for leuilei on dim- ess. LAUGHING AND YAWNING LK, Wl’llfls‘ I'm an sill. grade pupil and our class would like your opinion on III: iuilowmg question: when you yawn laugh. does the hearl have i work hauler or does it. benefit l (mm the relaxatlon of these actions no on t [ REPLY , The heart rate is altered only slightly by I you yawn or is ug , USELESS KIDNEY FIR write If I kidney quits :ullcti ng, wul it have m be remnved’! REPLY The Inswer depends upon the reason why the organ dues nol lunction, whether it is prodll lng Symploms. and whether VIII health of the Individual in Id- versely Iffected by the condi- VISIDN IN ALBI'NISM I“! writel: My son ll In Il- nino Ind his eyesight II Very Poor, In this due to bl] candl- lion? REPLY Yes, because the albino Ills deficiency of pigment Ind thil condition nilcrl is Issocllilsd with lowered visual Iculty Ind refractive errors. TODAY'S HEALTH “TNT— Casters on heavy furnllufl wlll help move tho piece! WIRI- aut lt‘rain Our Yesterday’s (From the GnIfllIIn FIIQII TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Junie I IN Rt. Rev. John anKenlc-y. D Lord Bishop of NOVA Sco- tII Irl’lved in Chnrllmelnwn last. night Illid will be the guest of Rev. Canon Malonl durllll his slay here. His Londnhip will I Idalllnlslu' file “:0!ch rite of Palm‘s CI» filed for went in: "We would he Ierlounly mil— taken If we were in Interpret the French ClllIdiIns' present dislallsilction II I caprlciuus and passing tendency. 0n the house where he enkrlllnl hi I visitor! with upeclnltln uni-n 1,800 Square The Grnluulral Survey hnl puhllshed Memoir m on Banks vlciurla and Strlanalon Island- Arclic Arrhinelflln. and incl- dentally nolrs that as recently as um Cu n e d8 was nut sure whether KIII‘ had In her area Sit-fansan Island. which cov- ers unless than LW liquer miles A Ecnlnglcul recnnnIIssInre iii the islands was made in I959 by R. Thorsteinan Ind . Tnlel'. helped by a couple of these little airplane! lriuu c. that land un mush around with Illelr large. lowvvresxure tires. TM! in prelty lonely country, even today Ind the report lIyI IIlIt SMInIIUn lllnnd. North of Vlclnria Isllnd, IIII no nettle- lnInl Ind Ihcre ll no authentic record of any while m n Iv. In! Vlllted I! before Illelie re- cent Geolofllcal Survey lllvllll- nations. SleiImImI Island vaeIrcd contrlry. If mus! be looked upon II being deeply permu- Miles Added JonrnIl from the III by RCA! Ind USAF flighII between I” Ind M, That well I large llland should have been mined une- ed lonle lurprlle Ind Mrs. Dl- Inn Ruwlely of 0“an made I paint. of checking luck on Il'll dllry of Starker Storkermn, I member of the CInIdlIll Arctlc Expedllion of Isis-1!, She found llllt Starkerloll had In In Mind In the Wlitioll of Suflnmn Ind why It never found Ill Way on to pulllIIlled mIpl II I mystery. N01 every country of count all Iffmd to pIu up 1,!!! mIleI of “land and never mlsI it. The men of Sullnlwn ll- IInd In!“ tho geologists but In «than they look pull! much like other Aral: rock] of which CI IIII lllflnlh Iuwly. TIIII ii all holiday nip“. may I no doubt it II but to lulled down on III! on puhllshed lnIpI fur the first time Inn It llId than“ emu-Humane. ill mall of tho ml power In In! h I n d e d to the Province: nd the Federal Government IIpsInE into little more than I 51 vim. l Any Conxtlllonal cumin. let alone one of Inch muznliude. could be affected only by ill. federal and PlovlnclIl Gavel-ii- merits acting ln concert. Prim: Mln‘uler Lulu- Pear- Ion would be wile to let . lde the Idea oi - commission. Ind to call lnnleld . Domlnlnn-Pro- vinclnl conference. 14 malice inrmully table hel' prom-u im- Conatltutlonal cIIIlIlE. Only nun wlll me other provinch and the mlioml Government be .va to determine li the wow i all cumu- m Immune, or can be made acceptable, in- ii mum I. an only nun m wer. ASKED 1'0 I! JAILID MARSEILLE. FrInN (REMI- ; evil—A mulury emu-t Thumin lulled Jeln lIrnlel'. (mel- hEId of the NIII Gunpo‘l special Iervicee In amiable, France, I! Illl own request Muslin! I new trial. Bllhlel‘. gentent‘ed In dllfll In Iblenlll Iumarllkss, He we: culled pro- vulun-l liberty but may in , nu feared MTIIIII can [reach reel-um Mm. in st. lhednl Ind 51. PIul'l Chunk. Dr. HaalIm of Tannin ll r.- llevlng In SI. Plul'l owing 00 Ill l the lilueu oi the min- ED. Raymond. Tnml'lln, May ll — Election of a moderator to mccced Rev. Dr. Hugh Munroe of New Glac- gow will he one in the llrst du- ne. of cm cnmmlsslonerl when . the «ill .uuuel general Ilsen'r hly or the ill-email“ Church mm in Calvin Church Wednesdly Welling. ‘rllN Yanks llco June l. mu Recenl graduates in Mzdlclne It MCGIII Unlverslty. Montreal, Included Dr. .1, Cyril Slnnoit ul Bristol. as: Dr. slumu MW- ed four yen: in the ncnr be~ rm enlerlng st. Dunslln'l iini. verslty when in annual 35¢ demo. 5!, Pricr'n CltlledrII AYPA 1 carried nif tap none" will their DlIy. "The Prllon Am“ TIJI street. . In companion with two Dime Theulle Guild plan, Wllh nlng Ill! Role bowl. Ml. W91.- nlore, the adjudicator. cllnll PM Shim I Ind Lllv MIC- Pherlon II thl IUD neflormerl In the pill ll'PEN! EARLIER Hnuuwlvu li-l RMnIalI on let their [Inle Zrlpal two to three week- urlle'r llnce mu. Observer Team To Yemen I! CII‘IIIII CIIIIIII “ Mill VIII“! The bluI IIII d the UIIIM NIflonI la in b! m In In- otlliet incl-led carnal- of (III world. This Lime 1“ Y _ In - Ilnl dean ml] , land It ills bottom of the Au- and malican the men u! on whole Middle Int. The IdvInee party oi - UN oblerver lulu ii In leave for Yemen Iny an: m. It folluwed by u to —pollibly including some CnnIdiInl along seeps. helicopter: and other equlnneni ncccmw w IIIPPDI'I ml: . com. The Id! will In to Patrol I buffer lane 12% mil" wine up- "3th ropuhlchn troop], bI ked by the Unlied Ath Rh public, Ind those of the row]- dull. lucked Ivy Sludl AI'IblI. (our mum. He cle mm the cult It Ill: than H,- 000.000 nil y. lu ope: Saudi Anni. ml die U.A.II. will meet the entire bill. While no coma-y has opposed nu UN mlulon . Illull cloud oi mummy lawn up at United mum. heldquIrlefl in New York over like way it via In). The Immedtlu IIIuI ll whether flll secular: ' llflzral acted within Ill] power: in IuA tharlzlng ll. opentlun. In fill background II the wider dehltn over the whale conltlluliuml General Alflmbly '1‘" gun-fixemna til at: "33:. will "u '° c Thu]! mat with I Silvie Miami" on the YEmen‘Iltlé Wednuday Ind time were l-u. non um lluul- would demand I Sficuri'y Council meetlng on the displwh of e observer mm. Eul on ThurSdIy UN of. necr- nid no request for a meeting had been mIde. The fluulInI lhemIelvel would make no comment. POWERS HAVE mANGED Under the UN elllrler. the 53 minty Council ls liven ‘prl~ mIry responsibility" loi- main- ten-nae of lnlel‘nntlunll peace and ll empowered to “deler- mine the exlllence of any lhreII to the peace" Ind In “decide what menial-cl shall be taken" loTrheator peace. 9 Iwnurv-ceneru, on l mu hand, is given mil; val! to “b in hlll lion M the Security CWDL’II"I| matter that III considers a MINI! In the peace. In the early days of the UN the powers of the first mun carnelian, Trygvc Lie. were Ihnrply circumscribed thin lleld, aul since then a body of p r e c e d ent has grown up, through the dispatch of [mail missions by the secretariat that has amended till power] of the office. In [In case of Yemen. ThInt hnl given report! in m Secu. rily Council—couched in careful language—but has not niacin. cIIIy Inked for Its approval. In IIII last report Why 2: he laid that because of the urgency of the matter "I have i! In mind framework of the pcwerl nl Its aim main organs .m. GcncrIl Assembly. Secu- rily Council Ind secretariat. , Russia liu been simmering: hand during the current Ipeclll . ussinn of the assembly on what i it consider: me lukeuvu. by the l Russia’s to proceed wlth the establish ‘men! of the npol'atloll as soon II the necessary arrnngclnrnu for the mall and thell' require- ment: can he made." It could mean. If no objecilnnl Ire rllsed. mother step in the UN's continuing evolution. Problem Monkel] Glum The Soviet lnllouncemelll Illa! le Kozlov. the mall expccled to succeed Mr, Khrushchev, in Ill I!!! caused much speculu— ttnn tn the Western world. But such guesllnx. although natural. has proved very profil- al‘lle In the past. The designs- tion of I successor does I! guarantee the! he wlll Inst for very in Stalin had indicated Mulenkov the person he in- cred. This WI: well Imown, of course. In other Important Com— munists, and when SlaIIn died are at care was taken to pre- vent. Malenkov tram becoming I true successor. The very [Act that he had been indicated by Stalin led other! to combine mime him. It was Mr. Khrush- chev, virtually unknown In Ill! West I! the time, who eventu- ally W0 II win also difficult um Lenin‘s dcalh to know who. if Anyone, would assume nu pow. m. benin himself vva highly suspicious of Stalin. And it u.“ only nitcr a considerable per. lod or political manoeuvoring, that Stalin not rid of important rivals such as Trnls . n ls possible that Soviet poll- tics have now eeome more Ilahle than "’le used in he. and that the slnlllllles for pow. er of live uiuu will never be we posted with such intensity. in there can he no assurance Ihat this will be so, Ind an . result mm m. be little certainty that any mm favored while Mr Khrushchev ll Itlll in power, will .cumlly triumph once hir. Khrushcqu has done. "Nihon" Or "Nipon" Ell-(lulu III“! New: The 1964 Olympic Games nrl Icheduled to he held It Tokyo, and Japan in my wlin PI‘EPII’I» llonn for the great event, in which the civilized world will cnmpete. There in, Imwever. one tiny fly In the otherwise ununlll oint- mall. I! II the questlnn Is in how llpan‘n nmclnl name should be pronounced. The name, Japln, In Itself, or course. In Occidental mispmuuui clIllon. The Japan», illelnl I l v e I. have two venln uIIl‘ nunc tlons. “NInpon” Ind “Nlhon At last rtpo the oiiice of the memler was ltudying whether it i. wimh while to Ittelllpt in work out In agreement on pro- nunclatlon In limo for an 1964 Olymplnn Bored with in. “ii-m. old mm" on television! Bright. bouncy, iii-null. nevuteleviaion mum— unkiu; the mil-lila- into tun-(lame aux-e Ind cholcn by TV pio- ducen u the under-zl- most likely in lucceed in their particular field- or Inteminment — m the maiden; of a photo- feature in all. week’- lune. Sm! wnm Ind Photographer alll Tm: Ind am Beaver pmidI Weekend Mmline ma. Ire with l lneIIr preview of in... nut. in the omnr. lug them under l_t ] lllaell linin- daemon”. The problem is by no means I new one, Several "mes in the past Interested Erwin! have dis- cussed it, without reecnlng any decision. Prior to the Second World War, Japan's powerful military leaders urged the use of “Nip- pon.” It sounded more like I warriur': word than the gentle! lhon " Slnre the war. however. public opinlon has one! more wavered between in: iwil prununcintluns. In favul‘ ui e unlfied pronun- ciatlnn, u is argued that there i- no other cumin-y iu the world which due: not have an officially Iccepted natlonel namI. Literally translated, “Nlhnn” ll reputed to signify "in. emu-mi of the original su - TVS NEW YOUNG Illd mule. . ncflo ll:- £2