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"'llll illullccal Illelllrllt ;.l well/lei LIMA ink" llle well/rest PAGE 5 _————— Dangerous Precedent Parliament ioted the other day to allow the Liberals to have their cake and eat it ill the mutter of proving their colllelilion that the former Conservative government had committed Canada to a nuclear arms pol ' sad to pro- duce evidrlice tllzlt such commit- ments existed, External Affair Minister llnriin said he would have to consider whether “a summary of, or extracts from" classified docu- ments should be produced; and it was to the production of a garbled version of this kind that the Com- mons agreed on motion of Mr. Stan- ley Knowles, NDI’ nlemller for Win— nipeg North Centre. The House wn‘ deaf to Oppos- ition Leader Diefenbaker's con- tention that the entire record, or nothing, should be produced. Mr. Martin professed shocked surprise that a former prime. minister should suggest that Clds>l led documents dealing with the security of the na- tion be made public. But Mr. Diefem baker didn't ask tllat, He said it was A case of “either or." His point was that if these documents were secret, they should not he discussed It all. No court of law woultl permit witnesses to quote at will from documents incriminating other par- ties, to which the “dill?” s alone had access. without, dcmniidinlz What Mr. Diefenhukov demanded in this case. This dreary argument about former nuclear cnmmiinlents caus- ed a lot, of confusion in the last elec- tion campaign, and no expilrlrated edition of documents in the. con~ fidential file is going to throw much light on the matter. The Bible itself can be shown to prove almost any. thing if its statements are lifted out of their context and quoted for ulter- ior purposes, The Liberals will now be permitted to set a precedent in this respect so far as parliamentary practice is concomell. It is possible, however. that they won't follow it through. Parliament.- nry precedents are danlzeroils things . to create. If this proposal is acted upon there will be nothing to stop members from asking for summaries of advice given cabinet ministers by civil servants or of cabinet meetinlzs themselves. It could raise a lot of complications in which no adminis- tration would care to be involved Food Congress Problems At the opening of the World Food Congress in Washington this week. President Kennedy recalled that it was twenty years ago—in May 1943—thut the first such can- [PHI was held. The objective has remained unchanged—~“that all na- tions. all peoples, all inhabitants of this planet, have all the food they used." At: the opening of the first was President Franklin Roose- vaitvhnd declared: “Freedom from mt and freedom fmrn fear go hand in hand." Thiit. said Mr. Kennedy, us still true today. The same central problem that troubled President Roosevelt when he filled the first world food con- gress is unfortunately with us to- m. Half of humanity is still un- dernourished oil hungry, in 70 de- v "lupin; nations—with over two bil- , mic—malnutrition is wide- W 3nd persistent. 5- ‘S‘o'lang Ia freedom from hun- E s yin in only half achievod,” Mr. Ken- Minted, “Ml long as two- ?“ ‘ till “than of the world haw food deficits—m citizen, no nation can afford to feel Intiafied or secure. We have the ability, we have the means, and we have the capacity to eliminate hunger from the face of the earth. We need only the will. In the Food and Agriculture Organ- izatlon, which is flpnnsoring thll meeting, we also have the machin- er~ " The President went on to em- phasize the need for international CO-llpel‘atlml, international organiz- ation and international action. These things. he said, are indispensable in a contracting world which grows more interdependent. This interde- pendence requires multi-national solutions to its problems, particular- l.v those involving basic human wants and needs. In sad contrast to these inspir- ing words is the fact that this great congre sponsored by a United Nu- tions organization. lacks the repre- sentation of the world‘s most large- ly populated land. Communist China. still an outcast from the world coun- cil of nations. has no voice here. And it has been largely through the in. sistence of the United States that it has rcmzlineli outside the pale. 0f- ficially it doesn‘t exist so far as UN. activities are concerned. That is perhaps the most “cen- tral problem" of all for a World Food Congress to give consideration to. Situation Unclear From \\'ashington comes word that an intensive government in- vestigation is under way to define American fishery rights along the Canadian coast. This iYIVen igtltion has been prompted by Prime Minis- ter Pearson's announced intention to extend the Canadian coastal fish- ing zone to l2 miles from three, and would seem to imply that there is still uncertainty in official quarters as to what the American fishing rights are. One U.S senator, Edmund Mus- kie, of Maine, has expressed par- ticular concern about the impact of the Canadian intention on American fishery operations in the Ray of Fundy. He claims to have made a “preliminary attempt" to find out just what rights the U.S, has in this matter, and to have been un- able to get the information. Meanwhile the state department says that in accord with the tinder- tandillg reached between President Kennedy and Mr. Pearson at Hyan- nis Pol-l, last month, the US. will not accord any Canadian 12-mile limit any official recognition. To do so ' increase the. pr on the US. to recognize such limits in other countries, including Mexico. This doesn't appear to have sat- isfied Senator Muskie, who has sent a telegram to State Secretary Dean Rusk urging him to take “every step to protect American fishing rights under existing treaties." We may expect more such demands un- til ii clearcm definition of American rights is forthcoming. and a more explicit statement from Ottawa with regard to its concurrence in the claims that may be based thereon. The Only Way "All must realize that there is no hope of putting an end to the building lip of armaments, nor of reducing the present stocks, nor, still less, of abolishing them alto- gether, unless the process is com- plete and thorough and unless it proceeds from inner convictions: unless, that is, everyone sincerely cooperates to banish the fear and anxious expectations of war with which men are oppressed, If this is to come about, the fundamental principle on which our present peace depends must, be replaced by another, which declares 'that the true and solid peace of nations con- sists not in equality of arms. but in mutual trust alone."—Pope John XXIII, April 18, 1963. EDITORIAL NOTE By pressing a billion in Mont- real, a flight booking clerk can now get n reply in four seconds from an electronic computer in London which tells him what vacancies are avail- able on flights hetween London and Montreal for 20 weeks ahead. The system has already hen used for flights within the United Kingdom, and is to he linked with services to Frankfurt, Dusseldorf, Rome and Zurich. The machine. it is noted cailsunlly, is designed to deal with up in 7,600 inquiries in one hour. p TlCK-TlCK-TlCK-TlCh-TlCK Alr- L' ' Seen PAY-S 0F 96609“! 2o. FLOATING AWAY Exit Antorctico’s Little America National Geographic News Bulletin Little America Admiral an E, Byrdx Isa li ll urn from 1539 in 1941, has shipped out lm an iceberg, .i x: .lslumlsl recently sluhluu the calllp ticaillig hi the Ross . a 350 miles from ' bl Email site. The resell-la station, like the olllvl lbu- Little Americas. was hullt oll llle scaua'd edge of the lit: Luv Shell. 3 cannula-size li’l‘ field fed by gluolels. Al the shun moves north at about Inui- . llugclccberzs break off and hat allay. lceinlls will alohlually doom all the camps. row i'oill-‘om' ’le late :ldnl.l'al ayl-e esLah- llvlilll the original Little Amer ire lll .lalluuly, 1929. during his ill-,1 assaull on the “'02er culi- lll. lllll’lll. The outpost stood 795 mllf‘s lmm the geographic Sunni PulD. Some 2,300 mile: mm the nearest human dwelling. Byrd is men s 14 mun in weather-light buildings Warm- ed lly karc:L‘ne stolcs. il'liltur months brought bitter colll and lung darkness. Byrd mu»: “We became a family ill moles. scultllrlg umugh glistiin- in; snow tunnels with lanterru and flashlights." who.“ lilu temp-mature drop- pul In 54 dogmas below zero, u "‘an could hm lull breath freele. "We hall to warm l‘alld- lbs belmle Ihc'y iiwid burn," the Admiral recalled. Th9 great cxplorer's conquth or the South Pole by air. and thr- discoer l\f Marie Bylu Land climaxcd the 1929-10 ven- lun, When Byrd returned in Litlle American in 1934. he found the old camp lliiact beneath on feet of .luvw oil a mess hall table slord a coffee pol. :1 hair loaf of luau, and a slab of roast ht‘fll wliil a fork sticking ll’l ll, Little Amer-inn If was built atop the first. The miniature ' city had n broadcasting vialll, four-COW dairy. and motion- plciure ohoatcr, A dramatic moment came dur- hie Byrd‘s stay in Lillie Amer- Ice ll. Overnight, without warm ing, the underlying ice broke loose from the Shelf ullu um ca almost went to sell. For- tunaiL-ly, a cold spell mended the cracked ice. first two expeditions were aided by grunts mm the National Geographic Society, and Ollr Yesterday/s 'rrlvm Ill! Gulrdlnll Flln) TWENTY- FIVE YEARS AGO (June 7. mm Follrlwim: induction exercis- u at Acadia University Mny 25. Mr. and Mrs, LG. Murdock were in I rr t ed in st. John's Church, Wlndsnr Both are mem- ber» of the year‘s graduallnl class of Acadia. Mn. Mill-duck was the former MI" I! 2 ryl Mona Langley of Port 'leliel- hllrv. and Mr. Murdock In from Charlolletrm'll, PEI, The Little Theatre Guild of Summenlde wnn firnl Dilce In what Wal deurlbed I! [he Iirat drama festival held in Princa Edward Island. R. Wilson net—m of Charlottetown Wu uuyulliutm TEN vnlns Aoo (June mm) HALIFAX rCPt — Most Rev, Walter F. Barfml, All“ lean Archbishop of Edmonton. and Primate of II“ Canada. will ar- rive this week tu begin llll lint offirlnl vlllll to the discus of Novll Scotln, Nolli Thursday he will leave for Charlottetown Ind later will villf Newlvuilol-nn, A representnilve body of ml- flrllls in the Sprint: Park are: unullmmly mm n I met. in: held in the SDHIII Pll'k Ell! int mum in like the prellm» lnnry lulu lbw-in lncnrpon- llon under the Vl age Services Act. Ant- ‘ mall , National .v Geographic published , personal Accounts .Bym‘s udventunss, i Six-YEAIMLIJ FDDD Little America sea. was Byrd's headquarters fur the 19:19-41 united states Antarctic Service Expedition. Members ol the groin: walk-led six miles south to abande lLillle America u and pieuickcd mi pc-i-lccuy Drcscn'cd six~yc~al~ ,old beerstluk, him. butter. ,llln candy. l When lavlvl led the Navy'! l lmalnmoth “Operall’eu l-liiglr pump" in 194647, u tell city— A Word For Ivory Towers ‘ A snc r often gut-s with the forms ' vnly lower" or "sea i lielnic cloisic the implication i being that. university life should i come into the stream at things. lnln the marketplace where life is really lot-d. That notion it n u ll'l reveal ,v much knnlvll'rllle Of what docsl till ("I in a good university. There is there I ferment and fill- , , greater lacing ut "reality" "1 l many are inclined in think. ‘ Ell! cvcn If universities stay ulnlli, is that so undesirable? We pass on, in a counter in the ar- Kllmenl that higher education E in. now at ‘FI‘GQ'LE in suwnn ill the inter- sliuuld he more "practical." this v ,lniereslinz lhrsis li-oill ‘ Tlmes Lllcrar)’ Supppil-melli: ‘nne at he lllllcllnlls of a uni- valslly is till- a shalt ill-mil in shut all young people. Ilmost muluisilcslly to separate them, (mm the wui-lli—lrol-l-l the wurld, l this tries at u university is pref- , the flesh and the devil— and to ‘ breed in them a spirit of lllillll-l l The Vanishing Schooners el .grce: jtlle lbulul Little America—hue i led the ice two miles no'l'lll all ole lhirlt. ; 0n the 1956 Omaha-l Dcelz‘ ,liaomiul Geophysical Yeatr. Ad» mini Byrd established Little America v, the last before his death . year later. nae five- ;me silo boalud 17 oil-heated buildings, not and cold running wum irinlenspring mull, cusses. As I rival lbubll, Navy nub. mama Foul-u. a! July fireworks. Sam Claus suits, land 15.7w birthday candles. Inumnl [crested devotion to the cloister— ed, but achieving, life bl the ill. lellecl. "The life of I unlversily. like llie life of . moms l' .ll "my training depot. uughl vex. haps not ta be more wumiy merged with the life going on, in the same cllv. the same m. Maior Problem In Parts Of US. I! Dr. W R. VII Doll“ AMEN mm“!!! M bl I nl'oblun In than United State! In mll ml In tho nulli- we: I punitive blood ml VIII found in U M cult of I ran- dom rumpuu of I") Individ- ulll. Thll ll inchdihll. thth urea in known to heavily infill“! with tbs punit- u. Till- dlnrdu, fennel-1y call. of] kinetic tributary. in ad liter I tiny Imehl th- live: ill the lnlenllnll (not of Huh. I! bolnl'lll In I primitive cllu of urginllm. conlllllnl of I llnlle cell. which Imllilpllu by dlvll'l- lug. In no time. one becamu two, two become four. And (our become Ellht. The-e cfliisfl enter the body through continua-ted food a: mat". The entire flmlll’ Ullsht in be examined when one memA her ll lullnd to have the dll case, In addition. the water. ice. Ind food supply lhnuld be ex:- mined for 3)“ . The afflicted Individual lllllll W all the Druid! vigornully, especially nfier ucll visit to the mm, to prevent selfvreinlectlim I: well ill Spr- of the dltelne to Milan, The amebl nettle] in the wall of the intextlne and produces I small ulcer. The relultlnu irri- luilbn leads tu recurring nt- uckl of dill’l‘hll. gl-lpillg lb< illimllllli plains, nausea. and nc~ casimialiy vumlllng. Sum! in- tested persons have no Intestin- Il complain" but cnnluli I fill)“ sician because nf marked flatl- gue. weight loss. or sllglll fever. ill some are wholly unaware of the infestation, These people are carriers and pose a danger- nus problem when they are none too clean about their pErsnnnl hubiis al- are pmleuslanul mod handlers, Y unsis is made finding llll' parasile: ill the stall I may be necessary to examine leverbi specimens before posi» live results are obtained. In one of my patients. the parasllex were found in the nth specimen. A h 00d test also is available but it is not as Ipecllic as the unol unblyslll. Alahrine unu carbursone are the best remedies. These are us- ed together but the remedy can touch cause reactinns may occur. C. . . What is the dis- ease people get from eating rub- bits? ill:er You may refer to lularemia, all infection associated with he llulillg (not eating) Wlld rabbits and other wild life lhlt harbor the causative organisms, Domestic rabbits usually are nfe, Send ii stumped. self~nd« drassl‘d envelope lb: leaflet on rel-nil. Today'l Health Hillto— All exits and passageways in by ' 1. NOTES BY Alli "Mom-lam lllld —lfuhfllmmflm o —I|mlanbnrvor. Wlhl '“fll '1!!! E III I rucnla. I'll!- modal. flu milk- vu in. Wall ball- uly a rudy m an it — u butcilu mil ll," — out R.- A clnnu W uyl in before hlvlll n ell-um I o I out of the month one Illnllld 1!- Way: mollteu the up: in order in mm! tho lHII Ind lanai the impact —- Well. we'll keep It. In mind. — Stafford Balcon- Motarbil, AIM be!“ told that an Handed Mllllnl - In give mhlllw I! lllfll lpeei‘ll — Ind wrapnmlnd from windccrunn -—fm‘ mater Villblllty — now find that nelllln‘ of there lppenr in the llltlt on“. They may forfliven for being I lltttll cyni- cll about Ih lmpnrunea of Initial four. rather than two. THE WAY WI.“- Mlle-I :mglmm;lhuamlu WWW,— l‘mPr-u. a “do” NIOHMM- Mn. Wayland-In u, drum is dflvlnl over 'In. Ind over 70 i'll'lVllll I! N. — 3!. CI. "urine! Stud-rd. mm dldn'lnuhlu ll , no me an til. ml tic-rules, sn. mud. n. blind to ollr awn flulll." — Mantra] 5hr, An old lady in l I Bible to - ll-lend wemn, Exu. mining the nu carefully. flu portal clerk iuquind it it contained lnyllllnl ill-auntie. - 0 ly the ell commuunnleilu," :n the reply. - Vancouver in. Tim fmlnen wen com-rill; u l " llfllebuyltnyoilr plant drop their tool- the null... E cut the Whlii-le blown?" "lied one. “No, no! I replied the other forlomly. more or, The derly um hm their looll nwly 'luadlln'lpl. — landfill Tim“. Running The UN. Show before lhlt time." — Financial mt. ny Cum-u clunnliu (Indian PM sun erlvl- The deeply import-lit quel- uou faclnz tile United Nutia ll how he the General Assem- hly cull go in running the Ihow. For more than 12 yuan the ammbiy hul been gaining power In lu membership dou- bled. rile veto-cramped Secur- ity Cnunell nu declined in impumllce Naw members are liking themselves whether they Cll'l ignore the international facts of in: that put the veto in ma hands of the five permanent council member: in the first pluee. Spcclflcnlly, can the scores of smaller liltlmil ill the l‘ll»mem— her assembly hope to effect peacekeeping measures if the United States or Russia are seriously opposed. » UGLY REALl’l‘Y As Indonesia's L, N. Palar put It lhll week, the veto was given originally to the five members that were considered powerful enough to frustrate U'N action. Th! phrase ‘mllm- ilnlty among the permanent members" wnl merely a polite euphemism for an ugly reality, Now. he said. the we PO r in frustrate Ihe UN lay prlnrlpally with two members. He Wim— d s... lated" posltlon the Soviet Union now occ , Without lichlully ltullllg It. the Indoneslln reflected ear that nu assembly. rich in votes but poor in lcluul power, might become I debating nuclety pu- Ilng resolution: it lud no have of enforcing—while the bl! pow- ers simply bypnnled the UN in denllnx with crises. the home should he clear. in the cumin debate thel Us, has championed the mini. ler power over peace-keeping npcrnllnlll. But some oluervers see lliul. catlnnn that U,S. (cell the shift at power has gone lai- enough. BALANCED CHANGED The lulue point! up the ml that the UN charter no longer reflect: the real balance ill power among the UN uruulu An hr back u use the "ulll . lng lul- pence" resolutiml, backed by the U.s.. in effect provided that the .mnlhly could lake over the Security Council's peace-keeping powers wll veto prevented the council from acting. The principle was lirenitth- ened iii the Suez crisis of l95ll when the UN Emergency rum was set up by the assembly without securlty Council nation. in the case ol the Congo, the Soviet Union actually voted ll| the council to send u UN force. but later condemned lt "lliegbi" relarygencrui Dug Hammal'sk- jnld had allegedly violated coun. cll directives, 'l'lie lore: has been sumac chiefly because the U gave it strong moral and this clal backing while Russia re. mained on the aldcllnes. The big test will come when the small-country majority tries in tulle an actlun that seriously affects nne of the giants W The t nulls nurcilllllili i RESTAURANT : "Your Island Sunk 1 House" .WW..X lion, nmund t might in he more sharply separate than If is. During their universlty years. ill other words, slfldel’lls ought not in be trying to live mnl'e fully in the prelent but HIan lmuuluu lively and nblel‘ttvcly in not the ml but the perennial." l John enry Newman would . so would Matthew Arn: . lhnle emineni Victorians MIKllI of modern thinkinK would not While there may be some ‘ danucrn in [on much shelter mull the chuck: ill life. we think crnhle in turning n college into I vocational school, Mouln‘ll Gurllo ran run-lumber 'rllll their hell bl years ago will never for- get what I splendid spectacle the l ch 00 um inqu h. the lDVlll'S harbor Near] 100 , them stalled out of Luuenhnrg in 1921 — the year the (a mo“! Elucnosc was launched. Even as late as the law: the harbor had still a fine fleet. nut lust year the number of Lulullburgl fishing fichllnners was sum. to eight, And wo i-d comes that iile lust of them that welll dory-fishllig will do an ill ‘more, ll has proved impossible lo recruit‘fllll crews. The old skllls of the dory-fish» i iniz have been dying out. so that for sum year! new ll ve hurt to he sought Ill Newfoundland rm lile Lunenburg schofin e l- l. Now it hnsbeen luulid lmpoulh- enbaknr complained in the Com mnlls last week thlt Clnldlln Mlnlsferr were il‘i-leliuu the press about event: n the North Atiuntlr Council meeting before making their reports in run» men. and he thought this n as mutton from the mum of Pu- llament Mr. Diefenhaker‘l Intervention may have been no more i n n puny skimming but it mun . point of some lmvnmnce. The doctrine that Parliament in Ihe nnly chlllnel through which the l Government can nuke its views and Actions known ill the public l h being too willer “eluted in Ottawa Tlie dorirll! i- muml ill iheuy. but ill pr-cllce ll my tonfllct willl the whllt'l rllht in llmwl vmnl the mlBl‘llmflll in thin. llld unlell il in interpret- ed with will. lllltude It my n- nrlcl nthei- thln Wee] Pull ment'l Milo ell-limit and do- . but: Government . Thu-.1. l... quarrel with the belief that [he Gavemmen' llhauld lem- ul- Plllllmt ts in Lunenhuni a num- i i l- The Right To Know Globe And Mill 1' i lam-l Miami in .l. to recruit - lull mw mu re Nu'duubt It had to come, and ‘ it u only remarkable thnt the ‘rchonnera have lasted so long. Long 3010 when Joseph Conrad was trllninz for his lite at can he was strongly nuvlseli ngalnlt . l choosing to learn the lore of sail- l lug; he was told to equlp him— i i sell for the age of ilelm. And i , lluw steam luell nu. given way to mung by diesels. Though nu melting may of l the Luncnhurg fleet lollowl the trend. much ill the llngerinfl «race and ram-lice bl the lie. will fade willi It. For the culls ; were I link with the oldest day- i u: the world. when men we lit { down la the m hi unlpll, Ind first had their hualnenl in in e i (felt waters, ' i omnlo Opposition Lelde'i' .inlul Dlel- lull-Jar slnfemeflls lll policy. ill. ‘ excepiinns ere h l ten slimlld not abreast of dly.lo- there are I when. loi- example, .Vflnlllel'l Ire la- 'clpntlng iii In him-m. ilvli-l antenna in which ll i- the custom for uni. nun-nun in brief in mm: lutinu-l meal, it h alum that Clnldlln re, pom" Ihould luve lb rely a British in vim-u smell «lum- to find out whll his happened. null delegation tends, deliber- mly or otherwise, In hum-cl emu ill the light of its own in» nu. ml the Cauldiln pub He may receive unly . men I or [1.5, vlew of ullnir . Parliameni'I right. in not protected by unneceulry lee. ncy When flcla .lla npl nlluu hm been Wblllhed ml illum- uie Dml, Malibu. ol ‘ Pull-mi Ire in - flr belie: l out when tho in“. l t l i budget. For swimming in the figure . . . every taste . . . every soaking up the sun . . . wlth rllshlon detailed bodices, built-ill bras, and figure molding front panels. famous maker suits for every ocean. orjust swim suit. Second floor ready for the big splash some with square neckline: and deep plunge back . . . adjustable straps. By SEA QUEEN. SEA NYMFH. COLE OF CALIFORNIA, BEATRICE PINE. Sizes 32 .44 ' 5.95 - 19.95 fill-mucou- »« MO0RE&M‘lEODL D