—__controlled response—rather than jdeal If It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It . VOL. LXXIX NO. 102 Anne .Coombe of Toronto watches as her driver” Rose- mary Smith of Dublin, Ireland, turns mechanic -and fixes Anthorized es Second Class Mall by the Post Office Department, ‘Ottawa and fer Payment Of Postage in Cash. 8 ‘WHEEL TROUBLES vr -some minor troubles in one of the front wheels of her Sun- beam Imp. Miss Smith, a> tap rallyist in Europe, finished the \ first May of the 4,000-mile Van- couver-Quebec City rally with- out incident. ; (CP Wirephote) U.S. Defence Secretary Elated With NATO Talks By FRED S, HOFFMAN WASHINGTON: (AP) ~- U.S. |in the use of nuclear weapons in jence in part to the longstanding | terms for a comprehensive re- Defence Secretary Robert Mc-,| => Namara-returned from onde nist attack on West ons. Sources pictured McNamara | as elated that, for the first: time, the just-concluded London | talks on NATO nuclear strategy | - produced a meeting of the) minds between the United | States and both the defence min- | isters and military chiefs of key-| NATO countries. i But this elation turned to dis- | may. sources indicated, when McNamara read published re-|and Robert Grindlay, Enmore, |@" United States propose a change defence of NATO territory.” priate to each.” This appeared to be a refer- U.S. position that the NATO em-—-couniries-must—strengthen—their-|--Publiels Saturday convinced that allied |phasized again, as he lias be- jarmies and other conventional |changed its position on the fo- leaders now accept the basic fore,—the belief of the United forces so they can meet any |cal issue in the dispute—the re- U.S. position that. any Commu-/States government that NATO |Communist attack at the Iron moval by management of co- Europe |must possess both non-nuclear Curtain and _ hold should be met. by a carefullyand nuclear forces adequate to enough for- political. and mili- |rier LaPierre from the popular ) with a wide range of tary leaders to assess the situa- |public automatic use-of nuclear weap- |threats with the power appro- jtion: and gauge the seriousness |Hour Has Seven Days. it off long of the attack, PCs Nominate Dr. George Dewar, O'Leary ports saying he had proposed a | were drastic change In the basic US.) position. ~~ }and assemblyman re- nominated councillor candidates __.___ The defence— department is=latureDr-Dewar-—is—Minister-ofMacLennan,—P ,- sued a statement saying: no time and in no way did the’ Dr. Dewar’s nomination was O'Leary In 2nd Prince |moved by Kevin Kilbride, Lot 11 d seconded by Ray Rafferty, onway. .—Mr.,-Gfindlay’s nomination was jmoved.by Allie MacNeill, West . Those reports said the United | spectively for second Prince in |Cape and seconded by Walter States proposed a new policy |the May 30th provincial election’ Newcoumbe, Port Hill. which would junk -the~ carefully at_a Progressive Conservative |__Speakers—were—Premier—Wal- measured response and> substi-|convention held at Ellerslie Sa-|ter Shaw, David MacDonald, tute an automatic, though lim-| ited, tacks on NATO territory. | “At nuclear. reply to -any at- |. turday night. Dr. Dewar and Mr. Grindlay were members of the last Legis- Education. iMP, Senator Orville Phillips, Dr. Dewar and Mr. Grindlay. Acting chairman was Angus ~Hill—and—sec- retary was Peney MacPherson, SUICIDE SUSPECT ED Prince Friedrich’s Body Recovered From River BINGEN, West. Germany sen Schloss Hotel q where hejcause of the death has yet to (AP) — Police announced Sun-|vanished on a- midnight walk. |be determined.” day they have found the body |The prince owned -the hotel;—a+ The-54-year-old-—prince,— who- of Prince Friedrich of Prussia, |converted castle only 50 yards|had lived in England for most grandson of Germany's last | kaiser, who had been missing | from the edge of the river at Erbach. since April 19. They said the body was re-jin charge of the investigation, tovered from the Rhine River jsaid the situation ‘‘appears . to near this town 18 miles down-|indicate suicide but there is no stream from the Reinhartshau- \definite evidence, The official Unlimited Future Forecast For Man “By RALPH DIGHTON LOS ANGELES (AP)—“The “Children need approval, se- curity and challenge. These are world could be transformed in'simple things. but they make a one generation.’ says a psy-|monumental difference in the ehiatrist, “if all parents would |child and later in the adult." actite what we now know, Dr. Wahl said many parents about raising children.” \"seem to want to make their “There will be an ‘unlimited !children go through the same future for mankind when this|hell they did in growing up.” begins to happen," beliavas Dr. |This is understandable, he said, Charles W. Wahl, asseciay® pro- |but completely wrong. ' fessor of psychiatry at Uni-| In addition to a better under- versity of California atf/Los An-|standing of child-parent rela- geles. jtions, the psychiatrist listed Dr. Wahl, one of the speakers (these other grounds for hope in a UCLA series on The Hu- ‘that humans will improve: °° ~man-~-Agenda=Biological--Pros-.-1... “increasing... racial.inter- pects and Human Values, said|marriage is good genetically,” “ lof the last 30 years, is survived |by his wife, Lady Brigid Guin- | Chief: Prosecutor Hans Klein, ness Iveagh, and five children, |and Miss Delorme. the chief inves- \tigator in the search for the prince said it firmed that divorce proceedings to end the prince’s 20-year mar- riage to the Guinness brewery heiress were pending in Frank- furt. | Last week, West German court. KNEW ABOUT WORRY Prince Louis Prussia, oldest brother of the house of Hohenzollern, was formed of the death. He said in a statement last week he knew his brother ‘‘was deeply con- cerned ahout which I and various members of the family will give no. in- formation. It concerns a cir- cumstance from which suicide appears tn be excluded.” Discovery, of: the body came after police ‘search had~ been broken off. For more than a lweek, scores of police, sup- iported by helicopters, had leombed the woods surrounding ithe hotel. had been con- | The first hearing was to have heen held Tuesday in aj? Ferdinand of dead prince and. chief .of the in- something about in an interview based on his talk Monday night: Personal maturity and -the capacity to love and work are primarily developed not through sociologic factors directly but) through a Joving and secure rel- lationship within the biological family “Throughout all this most essential of history knowledge ——harcheen scientifically neglected | and the .raising: of children left to ‘common -sense’ and to folk- ways HAVE LEARNED NEEDS | he said. "Like any kind of cross- | breeding, it tends to improve. the product. Multattoes gener- | ally test out better than either | parent. This is why so many | Italians are. beautiful—they are | Mao Tse-tung Didn’t Show a mixture of many heritages. | \Intermarriage also means we will get to know each other bet- ter, and if you know someone well you can't hate him."" aK steady dec it “’the ‘dominance of religions and po- litical systems in forming ‘human concepts. 3. A growing tendency to TOKYO “AP)-—China’s Com- }munist chairman, Mao Tse-tung up at Peking's \did not show —Day—parade—or—other—holi-+- to | \day festivities, according ‘broadcasts from the Chinese | capital. . ‘ | It now is more than five months since he was last seen “In the ‘last 50 years we-have solve problems through evolu-|in public, leading to speculation ow, however, what done to raise.a child came ta needs to to become a reasonably happy the. control of reproduction as | adult. tion rather than revolution. \the 72-year-old leader is either ag “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MAY 2, 1966. Threatened CBC Strike By MICHAEL GILLAN prehensive review’’ of the dis-| pute over the Seven Days show. | Mr. Keate, 52, who was) aboard an aircraft for the capi- | tal only hours after Prime Min- | lister ‘Pearson called him, is to! meet today with CBC President J. Alphonse Ouimet and repre: | sentatives of the producers’ as- sociation. | Informants said _ that after | “delicate’ weekend nego tiations by the prime minister, the disputing parties agreed to make initial submissions ta an outside party. These are ex- pected to determine whether } » WEAT southerly winds 15, sh ye Bodies Found — ‘resumption of discussiofis’ and, 2 000 ‘Workers Shout Protests — By REUTERS | 25. Low-high 35 and 45, wor MoRE SEVEN CENTS HER Cloudy, becoming sunny in -afternoons ifting to northwest 14 PAGES n ner, addressing a rally in Fam Germas + ‘Ouimet Friday and association found in-the strait-near Pictou, jcused in a speech by Soviet De-| N.S. RCMP said. Both bodies fence Minister Marshal Rodion | were_unidentified, last night. || Malinovsky of waging a “‘vi-| nineteen inn Mug and pipatic: war’ against - |the Vietnamese people. Noel Mur ly | He was attacked in speeches | p y jat mass rallies in the capitals— 4 ‘and in Peking he appeared, pale . jand trembling, ‘as the nastiest ‘character in a series of May strong desire to keep the na- | tional service operating in the. public interest.” The prime minister met Mr. representatives — _ head iestewnses Tom Koch — Satur- ay. - : el Mr. Ouimet has denied the Is Appointe | producers” charge that the CBC \Day plays.. i } intends to clamp down on con-| GANDER, Nfld. (CP) — Dr. In Viet Nam itself, 5,000 South jtroversy in public affairs pro- |Noel Murphy, four-year veteran Vietnamese workers marked |gramming, stating that man- of the Newfoundland legislature May Day in a demonstration by agement only wants. the pro-jand acting opposition leader jgram's ‘‘sleazy’’ items curbed. |since January, was elected. pro- |He also said the corporation |vincial Conservative leader Sat- MR. KEATE jcannot allow its hosts to use| urday. view can be agreed upon. Ors \Programs to state personal opin-| The 5i-year-old physician de- iubliclys-n-e1-t:h-e F-side had prepared.state Nd ay abe JON S pon ec cn nnn efeated.his.only... i hosts Patrick Watson and - Lau- affairs program, This |SET STRIKE DEADLINE The producers said last week they would strike at 10 p.m. E Sunday unless manage- ment~suspended its: decision on the co-hosts. Management had offered to set up an internal in-* quiry by Guy Coderre, its ad- ministrative vice president; about procedures but had re- \fused to re-open the Watson-La- |Pierre ‘case. cS Mr. Pearson, who intervened | Friday in the dispute, said in a| } Lawyer Names Gerda’s Friend MONTREAL (CP) — Jacque- line Delorme, nightclubbing friend_of_Gerda-Munsinger-when- the. latter lived in this city, jlikely will be called to’ testify at the Munsinger inquiry by Pierre Sevigny's lawyer Jules '| Dupre. Interviewed by telephone Sun- day, Mr. Dupre said ‘I wanted to. call. her. to-testify. last- week, but circumstances did not per- mit it.’ Miss Delorme appeared with Mr. and Mrs. Sevigny as iA spectator at the hearings last week. “She wasn’t there watch," said Mr. Dupre. “If the situation ’ does not change and if circumstances permit, I'll call Miss Delorme to testify. But I can’t say ex- actly when-—that‘Il -be.’——— At present, Mr. Dupre said, he intends to call only two wit- nesses, Mr.. Sevigny... himself only to t { } | ‘*The four: adjudicators for: 4. A growing tendency toward jill or ‘deliberately staying be-| for this year’s Music Festival, lifetimes. lengthen. hind-the-scenes while major. pol- itical shifts are being made. | May 27, arrived in Charlotte- | town during the weekend, \ ernoon that he asked the Van- couver - born newspaper execu- tg coincide with. the start of the on, the first ballot.. The vote tive to meet at once with both |season’s second-last Seven Days count was not released. sides ‘“‘to- discuss the current show, the CBC proceeded on the; Dr. Murphy, president of dispute over the program This assumption the program would) Humber Valley Broadcasting Hour Has Seven Days, with & be shown, but had tapedand|Co. which operates radio station view—to—making_an— independent titmed—material—available—in-CFCB—Corner—Brook,—leads—an- ‘and comprehensive review.’ jease the strike went through. opposition in the 42-seat legisia- Announcing suspension of the! Mr. Keate is a member’ of the |ture which numbers six follow- strike deadline, the producers Canada Council and honorary jing the admission to~-the-Con= said Mr: Pearson had told president of The Canadian’ servative ranks them “the president of the CBC press. / {dependent member. has met our request for a. full- | scale. review of the case of This Hour Has Seven Days by a dis- interested third party: The CBC said it welcomes the Liberals Named | Wagner Case Despite the strike threat, set|messman A. B. Butt of St. John's Friday.of an im) laround the U.S. Embassy in \Saigon, shouting ‘Americans go home" ~ and. carrying slogans isaying ‘‘stop the war.” | The parades and festivities followed: -the -usual.. pattera-.-—, NO NEW WEAPONS _ In Moscow missiles rumbled across Red Square on huge car- riers, but no new weapons were ispotted among them by West- ern observers. | —In—Peking,—red—flags—and \bunches of flowers were waved OTTAWA (CP) —_A threat- | is ready to, meet immediately =the bodies of twx men float- President Johnson was cast in |Berlin, described West ened strike hy Toronto ‘CBC with Mr. Keate and the Pro ing in the Northumberland Strait the role of_the villain ‘of Viet |President Heinrich Luebke 2 producers was suspended for ducers. | were discovered Sunday. ‘Nam Sunday as thousands of the worst enemy of the work- |the time being Sunday with the | ‘CBC OPTIMISTIC One of the bodies}was recover- workers marked through the ers. |appointment of Vancouver Sun “Ag for the future the corpe ed by the crew af—one- ofthe world’s Communist capitals to| Only half a mile away across {publisher Stuart Keate to! open fration is optimistic knowing CNR ferries off Cape Tormen- celebrate May Day. ithe Berlin Wall, 300,000 West talks aimed at starting a ‘‘com- | lshares with its producers a tine, N.B. while the other was His administration was ac- Berliners attended a rally in the flag-bedecked square of the re publie at the Reichstag Build- ing. Mayor Willy Brandt told them East Germany should end ithe order to shoot at refugees trying to cross the wall. , Half a million-people thronged central : Warsaw .for Poland’a May Day, also celebrating the nation's—millenium. : FIGURES IN COSTUMES A pageant displayed ‘historical figures and costumes through- out 10 centures of nationhood. Another May Day theme this “struggle against revisionism,” a blast against the Soviet Un-. jon. | voted columns to reports of a speech, by Premier Chou-en-lai Saturday when he launched the most blistering denunciation of the Kremlin leadership yet made: at a public rally here. Day speech the Russians were lin the rain as thousands took to the streets in holiday: mood; Politburo member Paul _Ver- a MacSWEEN * LONDON (€P)} — Britain's’ lactually using their aid to t | Viet Nam to attack China help American imperialism. Labor Prime Minister _ Steps Up His Campaign & By JOSPP i a 4 pee ' plans for improved , year — in Peking — was the |. Sunday’s.-Peking papers de. i He told crowds in a pre-May_ ‘mand 3 Mr. Wagner. Is Adjourned MONTREAL (CP)—The coun- cil-of-the Montreal Bar-Assocla- tion has adjourned until Sep- tember its consideration of a it has been learned. i The complaint was filed. Fri- day by Judge Jean-Paul Berube of Riviere du Loup, Que., who on a bylaw of the bar in a speech-last Oct. 1. It also was learned that Mr. Wagner appeared at a Friday hearing held by the committee on the complaint. The hearing was conducted in private and no statements were issued. It lasted five hours.’ a The bylaw forbids lawyers giving out erroneous informa- tion on a judicial report, on grounds ‘that this would be. an insult--to—the——-dignity — of - the courts. The association could dismiss | |the.. complaint .or_it could_repri- said Mr. Wagner had ee | ae eres drowned_at_sea. In 4th Prince SUMMERSIDE, — Frank Jar- ton. Mr.Jardine-representedhis dine of Wilmot and Max Thomp- /district in the last legislature. ison of Crapaud were nominated |The nomination of Mr. Thomp- jas Liberal candidates to run in |son for assemblyman was mov- ithe fourth district of Prince injed by Eric Robinson, Tryon and ithe forthcoming provincial elec- | seconded by Allan Murphy, Cler- tion. The meeting was held Sat-|mont. Speakers included leader complaint against Justice nad afternoon at Kinkora |of the penveition: nee co {ster-Claude- Watner 0 ~> High School. —— bell, —“Mrs.—Aida—Mulligan, “Mr. ae skate: Waenerof Suebec. Mr. Jardine’s nomination for | Jardine“and-Mr;-Thompson. councillor was moved by Colin, Dr. W.E. Callaghan chaired |Waugh, Wilmot Valley, and se-|the meeting and Neil A. Mac- a by John A. Smith, New- |Leod was secretary. Howard Gavin Tragedy overshadowed the ,4in some way, became entangled: opening day of the lobster fish-|in a rope and was accidently ing season Saturday in Tignish| pulled overboard. His’ 13-year- when Howard Gavin, 17, son of old brother Ralph, and Frank Mr:—and Mrs. Cletus. Gavin- of | Hogan were in—theboat when Tignish who was operating a/ the accident occurred. boat owned by his father was| -Howard, who stayed afloat for | some time, was unable to swim, Liovd G. Green, Toronto, On- tano, (RIGHT) who arrived here Saturday, is joined by (FROM THE LEFT), Vayne Reports indicated that Howard, ! but kept shouting for help. He Labor prime minister marked |ficiency' and higher living stand- May Day by stepping up his ards will be undermined. |. crusade for_reform_of_Labor—un-|—_‘* -It_would_be_tragie fons. Soa! “The biggest job facing the Labor movement today is to demonstrate- to all our mem- bers the necessity of our policy for prices, productivity and {n- comes,’”’ said Prime Minister Wilson in-a May-Day message. danger of paying ourselves much more ‘than we are. truly earning, and unless we hold Tignish Browrua OnOpening Day was out of reach of a rope aiid the engine of the boat in some way could not be operated by either of the remaining two in the: boat. They _acrried_ no_ life saving equipment. NOT RECOVERED Constable John Greer - and “For we are still ingrave-+ iwe created unemployment through an uncontrolled scramble for higher which priced our goods out of iworld markets.” : Ray Gunter, the blunt-spoken son's minister of labor, de- liveted— : lines but in more robust lan- guage: : pedi ee ‘AGE OF. GRABS’ : — “We now live in the ‘age ef the grab’. Most. people appear ing that we now are. living im a most precarious’ situation. “By some feat of escapism jthey_imagine our standards of \life are guaranteed: That if we do nothing everything will be jall right it'is surely a jerazy- situation.”* | Friday, ‘Wilson told. the na- jtional executive of the 1,000,- | |000-strong : Amalgama Engi- neering Union of his: plans te ivisit big union conferences. this '|summer to discuss productivity. | The aim was to give march- ling orders to industrial leaders wages - almost incapable. of understand. | other members of the RGMP. jin what must, for Britain, bea division of skindivers have not crusade on which the whole as yet recovered the body. The future depends. Wilson startled search continued: late Saturday ‘the union heads by declaring: — might and was called off late! ‘‘The sooner the AEU rule Sunday due to poor visibility |book, as it exists today is rele- and wind, reported the Charlotte- gated to the industrial museum, town RCMP. : . |the -more quickly you will be ‘ving besides. his parents able to gear yourselves to meet Surviving besides. his p ldustry andthe nation." are the following brothers and | sisters: Emmett and James of |: He demanded a new indus- » Llovd. Ralph and trial revolution to achieve proe- ee eae aries sae |ductivity and a determined at- Ralph Perry, Tignish: Dora, tack on everythings that stood Mrs. Clifford Gavin, Toronto; in the way, such as: Avoidable : ‘ iy Kim- Industrial disputes; 9.1 t dated ue oe ie |working practices; over-man- i esa seetucceactite ~ ning; and irrelevant demarea- tion. Wilson’ began his crusade the previous Friday with a- tough speech to the Scottish Trades US. Bombers Hammer Base &'" Congress at Aberdeen, } where he slammed not only 3 : -hackward unions but manage~ SAIGON (AP) -— US Air ‘ment: Force B-52 bombers hammered, ‘We want more professionals, a Communist base camp 75 | more men trained in manage- coast, U.S. 7th Fleet ships de- | aytomation and. not fourth-gen- molished. Viet aor with rockets and five - inch! dustrial dynasty.” miles from Saigon Sunday and!iment methods and the prim smaller strike planes hit a Viet ciples of manufacturing indus Cong munitions plant. 50 miles |try,. science, technology and Cong buildings eration survivors of an effete in shells. In Saigon, | tightly organized |May Day demonstrators clam- | ored for peace and end to ithe air attacks’ which they claimed are ‘‘engendering the The tone of the speeches and the timing built-up eXpectations ithe —budget which James Gal- |laghan, chancellor of the ex ichequer, will bring down Twes day will be a tough one. ~ ADJUDICATORS ARRIVE K. Riddell, Montreal, Quebec: Frances. Wickherg, Winnipeg, Manitoba; Farle Terry, Lon- don, Ontario, the three other feomplete destruction of villages jand Hamlets.:’ The. demonstra- |tions bore. a sharp anti-Ameri- -ean_tone and U.S.. officials ex: ° INSIDE TODAY pressed belief they were infil-! (Classified ......... Paya trated by Communists. Birthe i. cssees évegeees 8 Ground action onthis interna: |. Deaths .......cssssasers-s ® tional labor day wasyat a Vit-) Comics ........seee0eee. leual standstill. Bad ‘weather, §port ..... cc cvcucebea Oe ee leurtailed air attacks on \North Women’s ....... a | : {Viet Nam, which ~boasted it) wreitorials .......; ee judges, im the foyer of the brought down its 1.000 U.S. wats! gummerside ......... sai Charlottetown Hotel last night’ plane Saturday. The US. des Kings, Queens, City .:.. 5 They had arrived only an hour, fence department lists 306 “prince County ..... ...... z planes lost as of April 13. earlier by plane. ' former union chief who ts Wil- ” MS seoreenpnrtn fen