(<- o Impress By ROBERT EUNSON SEOUL (AP)—South Korea's newly-elected president uses a childhood anecdote to impress visitors with the job he faces in a country afflicted with run- reat to its security. President Chung Hee Park that at the age of six he was on one end of a rope and 3 big brown hull was on the “1 was a very small boy," the new president of Korea recalled in an interview, “and that bull had a mind of his own. I had ii hard time getting him to go in the right pasture to eat grass. There is an analogy between the mi of six and the ('0lllll.l‘y 211000.000 people- many of them hungry and will- ing to work. but no less stub- horn than the bull about being I‘ . [Now there is a general feeling in Korea that it’s time to quit going off in different direction: said as much in a speech to party controls by a majority. VARIOUS PROBLEMS “YD “If there is readiness in the minds of the people in the gov- C fabrics 0llARLO'l'l'l'l‘l‘0WN away inflation and a constant 1917 animal has been replaced by a to andstart pulling together. The.‘ _-lapan is leader of the opposition in the;5° National Assembly. Yun Po-sun, iP€Tl0d 0" 8 Pfogram to n0I‘ma1- inricsts and a nun had been that body which the government ‘f°rm°r colony. The Korean andl With This is the final week of HOOl.EY'S big January Sole. Many bargains still remain for you. so hurry in today. 9 Assorted styles Laminated. gabordine. woollens and other assorted Branded line for your protection Assorted shades Warm quilted or pile lining _ ‘ Sizes from 36 to 50 . reg.priced to $22.95 reg.'pricedto $l3.95........... C OPEN FRIDAY TILL 0:80 P.M. OPEN SATURDAY TILL 5:30 P.M. l Childhood Anecdote Employed S. Korea Visitors en-nment as well as the minds 'abi'ity to stabilize its econom . , s t y. 3‘ wllllglemgple hlllléhe nation. as lThe_ Park government will place now to éettiestiiu be p°s5“’l°l‘ “in” 0“ its operating budget. by one __ ese matters -one lforeign exchange, money supply Park‘ was bot , iillld Import levels. The stabiliza- n on a farm in }itli]<Hiagrogriifrn_tis intended to halt; . . 011- ' -' If you would divide the farm- .help from lhels IEJ'csc°m£il1lIshe11' "5 "‘ K°"°3 W0 high. middle ‘easier to come b l l ‘ glglkltzzjdbrfickets of income." Park knows that the economic M t b» my Parents would problem is the one he has to ve o e placed in the lower llick first. sroup. They were very nor, rice farmers." The year 1964 Knight Well be lAnfi'M'iSsiOn giplaysar Korea turns the bend :1. 5 recovery. d_ t_ am hso excited." said tiiel error Preads is inguis ed Ben C. L’ b, f -‘ mer Korean ambassadd? to tllire Across Congo }U;iitedtNatti§nS.I"1 alrln comm LEOPOLDVILLE The Congo "W ° 5 Y- 1'63 Y believe ' the Park government is going — A guerrilla rampage pemljigllicge thtisl cpuntgylits inde- against Christian missions and “ 35 3“ W301 ‘-0 Congolese government author'ty Jbe here to do my part. was reported spreading “pig” ‘t\l_g]l=‘-I) Bi: U.S. ver three southern provinces. h e United States already Roving bands of rebels ai- RS Pumped more than $p.000.- iready have killed three Roman 000.000 into Korea in military icatholic priests and an Ameri- ;assis:ance and aid programs. [can missionary, Irene Ferrel. spend .43. and unconfirmed reports ii 10-year reaching here said two other 00.000000 0 ve r lize interests with Korea, its islain. ' ate of emergency Japanese governments have set ‘declared in Kwilu province and a six-montli target date to end iguerrilias spreading terror in .the bickering that has keptlthe neighboring Kiasai and me u know we have variouslthem at odd ' th. d ' problems to solve." Park said. lthe Second Vi/of‘ldce\Var.P en of Kwango regions near the Angel. border, the central Congo gov- S. will ernment ordered 450 troops into a’s lthe area. New aid from the U depend on Congress and Kore Mews OATS TOPCOATS O Laminated and reversible I Regular and plains 0 Assorted shodes 0 Sizes 36 to 44 EXTRA SPEClAl.—ONLY $13.88 OVERCOIITS 0 Famous brand; 0 Broken sizes only remaining 0 Regular and tall models REG. TO 6950 $49.88 Once a Hooley Customer Always a Hooley Customer |l00LEY’S Men's Wear Stores nomsoun open FRIDAY 111.1. mo p.m. open SATURDAY ms. mo p.m. N.B. Power System Survival Seen After Nuclear Raid MONTREAL (OP) Damaged or not. a thermal plant would ome contami- expressed confidence nated through radioactive dust "ml “'9 elecmc POWGI‘ System in hoppers. ash pits a various of their province could continue air and gas circuits. It would in operation following a nuclear have to be shut down, and its 3°k- boilers and reservoirs drained. Three l as 3 The engineers. all officials of; He recommended that nail. the New Brunswick Eectric.ties draft emergency operating P°W°}' C°mm|55l°fl- Weft! Pal‘ll- ‘procedures for power plants. clpatms in a panel discussion Official shelter areas should at the annual winter conference the designated in. power plants °f l-he Calladlflll Eleclflcfil 55- ‘and improved where necessary °°l3li°“'5 9339"‘ 2050- with an extra wall or overhead _Frank C. M.acLoon outlined a barrier, pilot study the commission con- Emmett .)_ Burge55_ djsmbu. ducted in its own area. Nuclear [ion standards engineer, 1-ecom. b°mb5 W9”? assumed l0 h3‘V€ mended that linemen and other °"?l°d°d "93? Cllfltham and maintenance p e r s o n n e I be ‘amt J°hn D99 3. 1962. deStl‘0y- traied in radiation hazards and ms or damaging three thermal that trucks be equipped witii ra- diation measurement devices. power plan . _ Although what would happen Mr. Burgess said the pilot immediately after a nuclear at- study on nuciear attack “sup. is was “almost pure conlec- ports the feeling that the elec- ture," it was assumed that de- tnic power industry . . would mind! 501‘ 91'-‘Cl-Pic POW?!‘ W011“ continue to function as long as decline 55 ind“5”'le3 shill WW1‘ there was a demand for power 3“, Service “’°“ be ’¢5l°1'°d and actual physical facilities quickly to most areas. were operable}! Employees would remain on * the job at generating stations. . which offered good protection Indian Councgl against fallout. Communications were the ma- ° Mm Outlines Plans jor problem. and Mr. Ma . . . . recommended that utilities ac- For cenfennlal JAMES NELSON guire standby facilities. includ-. 3’ ‘ ‘OTTAWA (CPl—The National ing radio. for emergency opera-l tion. ‘Indian Council has outlined an ambitious program to the Cen- tennial Commission for em- 1' plants are more l‘e5l5l"phasizing native Indian cul- ant to blast effects than ther- ture and lore in Canadavs 100 mal plants and could continue birthday ce1ebray_;on,_ WOULD CONTINUE Andrew W. Gibson. plant op- erations engineer. said hydro l0.‘hP9l'3l9 5°ll°Wln8 8 “"9193” Centennial commissioner John Fisher said after their meeting , that the program is ambitious and will require intensive work. He congratulated the three- member delegation and said he ho other national groups were as energetic and as ad- . vanced in their plans. Wilfred Pelletier of Toronto. leader of the group, said the council plans a program of ex- change visits of Indian students. chiefs and cou-ncillors between various parts of Canada. start- ing this autumn and working to a climax in 1967. The council also wants to em- phasize the contribution of the North American Indian to Can- ada thro geantry, preser- vation an play of lore, and promotion of the In- dian c nipeg Feb. 4 to review the committee's plans. They in- clude participation in the world’s fair to be held in Mont- real in 967. TO STUDY CITIES The giant city—or megalo- polis—will be studied this sum‘ mer at the 20th International Geographical Congress. being held in Britain. BALANCE oi= FINE SWEATERS $6.88 ‘8.88 ‘l0.88 Indian Ii 4 JAKARTA, Indonesia e The °°l"1°ll Will meet in Will‘ ltary machine — the Indonesian ;§EcoNi) SECTIBN l l i l I I l I l l ' ’llhe P.E.I. I<‘cdei-al-pi-oviii- Court. Here retiring president. cial Agricultural C o u no it W.N. Black. left, chats wi elected new officers at its 17th newly elected president, Da- annual meeting held Tuesday vid eacock. vice-president and Wednesday at B lrch Donald F. Stewart and secre- l l l lndonesian Army Claims Delender Role By KARSTIN PRAGER -widen their responsibility for (AP)-n lthe security of Southeast Asia. In line with government pol- llcy. Jani said. ‘ w‘ er per- spective is needed. Our politi- ‘cal concept is to eliminate the direct confrontation of the two ‘blocs «East and West) in Southeast Asia and relinquish the responsibility of security and stability in the region to Southeast Asian countries them- lsoutheast Asia's biggest mil- ‘Army—is claiming the role of the area's defender. The claim ‘undoubtedly will cause more uneasiness among neighboring nations. Lt.-Gen. Ahmad Jani. young lU.S.-trained chief of staff of the ;Indonesian Army, t.old students staff command rat the iselves." . ‘school recently that Indonesia's Indonesia. he said. has all the lsoldiers must be prepared to necessary potential for this task l N O T I C E RE AMENDING ZONING BY-LAW CITY OF CHARLOTTETOWN A notice of motion to amend the zoning regulations in the areas as out- lined in the above photograph to allow commercial. and park and institutional areas. All interested citizens are invited to view and have explained the pro- posed changes In the plan at the office of the City Engineer. : Written objections to the proposed changes in the zoning regulations will ‘ be received by the undersigned until Friday. February 7. 1964. at 5.00 p.m. Sigiicd: JOHN J. BUTLER, City Comptroller. AGRICULTURAL COUNCIL ELECT S OFFICERS industrial. ' Charlottetown, '1'liurs.. Jim. 30, 1964. tary-treasurer John McAleer. The Council makes a contin- uous study of production and marketing problems in the agricultural field. —— the region's biggest man- power reserve. the most strate- gic location and the richest re- In G C Indonesian political leaders have made no bones about their conviction that their nation more than 100,000,000 people. most populous in th world, is entitled to a sphere of influence in Southea Whether Indonesia can do the job is another question. SOVIET WEAPONS Indonesia has about a third of a million men under arms. widely scattered among the 3.- 000 lslands of the republic and equipped with a mixture and outdated equip- ment. Most of its modern weap- ons. including jet fighters. me- dium-range jet bombers and D we. G missiles. come from the Soviet 1 Union. Logistics. maintenance and We ffiuarrlimt PAGE 13 communications are m a j o r iproblems. And aside from fight- ling rebel guerrillas at home the igmy has had no battle experi- Tlie Malaysia crisis provide! a measure of how much Ind l esian leaders oppose foreign military influence remaining in‘ Southeast Asia. i Judging by official statement: lover the last year. Indonesia ra- lsents nothing more than the jfence treaty between Malaysia, ‘the new nation it has pledged ,‘to destroy. and Britain. Under the pact. British troops and ships are still stationed in Malaysia. on the doorstep of tho dent Sukarno denounces this an "imperialist encirclement.” . Jani said that under a “ sophisticated" defen e Indonesian government is planning the following moves in bf the next four years: - 1. Creation of an army stra- tegic reseive command. 2. Completion of a retraining 945 . against the Dutch. iilacture all of its light one end arnmuniliion for them. 5. Preparations to put the than a volunteer basis. Indonesian archipelago. Preoi-‘j 3. Improvement in organiza- tion. 4. Plans for the army to inan- army on a conscription caliber residential. ‘lCl'iilcl-Beating Said Common of babies and _small arents brothers and sisters in Ontario every year. the province's su- pervising coroner Dr. H. B. Cotnam said ere. He said his department has opened an all-out assault on this major social and medical problem. “Since I took office 13 months ago. we've held inquests into 12 battered child deaths. And I'm not counting obvious murders where a child has been hanged or shot “For each child that comes to me dead, there are probably 100. perhaps more, being ham- mered to a varrying degree. “Many—-who will be perman- ently crippled. mentally defec- tive or seriously psychological! disturbed —— might be better dead." he sa' . The chidren are victims d an extremely common, although recently discovered. phenome- nom doctors call the battered- child syndrome. He has also asked all social agencies and olice forces to join his department in an effort‘ to discover these beatings early. Harbor Open A At Montreal MONTREAL (CP)—A combi- ;nation of mild weather and ice- lbreaking effort has resulted an open shipping channel on the St. Lawrence River rom the Atlantic Ocean to Montreal. is nominally yessels are breezing in and out of the harbor and light traffic its scheduled to continue throng} St. Lawrence ship channel said here the channel ice lll gone out and ice-breakers an simply widening areas betweei Montreal and Trois-Rivieres. 9 miles downstream. "To put it briefly. they're jut doing maintenance work now. the said. Only ice-reinforced vessels ( ‘the Danish Lauritzeii Line wer calling at Montreal on a reg! lar basis 5. Hcrodotus. one of the wor first. inquiring explorers. boa ‘.up the Nile in the fifth can ‘ returning to I tales 1:. BC. Athenians with strange TORONTO (CPI -—- Hundreds ' children are 0!’ t~. ———————————--l . SAW STRANGE SIGHT‘