if It's Good For The-Island - _ The Guardian Is For It / ‘ “Covers Prince Edward. Island Like The Dew” VOL. LXXVUI. NO. 214 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1965. She Guardian WEATHER Sunny and very cool. Winds westerly 20 diminishing late afternoon. L-H, 42— ~~ 53.Wednesday, cloudy, warmer. a mm a08® SEVEN CENTS 24 PAGES sosei ner vavire ez wooy Okicdvay¥ — he Hot Words Anticipated | di ; | | | ] | ndld alms Ictory | é tntern ationa : 5 | K h Ei hti | Affairs On Tap f as mi Id Ing By WILLIAM NEVILLE the opening three days of gen- OTTAWA (CP)—The House of eral debate. From AP-Reuters at _-altituden of 8,000. tw 1/08 ene tees acenetGemis ae ee fot lien. } NEW DELHI (CP) — India ‘feet. | acrimony, is expected to wit- made up of national legislators said Monday its troops won & 14, 11.900 - foot Hai Pir Pass, |ness some international verbal and not government represent- ows in the cree a Ce thete | Indian troops dug in and Chavan |warfare at next week's S4th atives thus it has no real decl- t made no mention e' ; interparliamentary conference. .| sion-making power. It will hold primary target—a pocket of claimed they had thus closed Official aim of the conference | recorded votes, however, on the supposedly-_-—encircled _guerril- one of the primay routes for 7% foster mutual understand-| specific resolutions placed be- j las. : ; what he called “Pakistani infil- jing among the world’s politi-' fore it. | There yee ts maine aie acugenyg a Indian- * leians, but indications are all Other resolutions cover ef- New Delhi whether the guerrtl-| held Kashmir to join the guer- : | will not be sweetness and light forts to meet. the world popula- las—teported in strength of rilla war there. ™% ‘ : 4 |among the 800 delegates from tion explosion, increased inter. ASTRONAUTS Gord '1,000 or more—had slipped from) ay Indi kes id ‘= ste some 60 nations. national economic co-operation, oper ett and Charles Com carrice. Lake ‘Champlain te Cooper said, "i's great to be 2 (fap the Indians tried to (a8h- jgter other Indian units were KUGENE. WYNNE STANLEY VASS | The Russians aré reported the strengthening of parliament. rad approach a landing at the spaceport where they back on solid ground.” ion inside Pakistani territory 19 | standing fast and not advancing —— Jo. toe ~~ a Te ie tain aaa ateee Cape Kennedy, Fia., Monday started their historic eight- . (AP Wirephoto) West central Kashmir. |from two other penetrations into " United Wirce ca Vial teams. ter |wandla tar” eduazatioaal Defence Minister Y. B. Cha-) pakistani territory in the north- nited States on Vi am. In- media for educational purposes. j van told a cheering Parliament | west Tithwal sector and in the , 7 donesia is said to have pre-| As well as the debates, the I e e Indian troops achieved “com- | north near Kargil pared a new verbal assault on conference will hear speeches plete success” in ‘cleaning up| ; ; * Malaysia. And South Af rica,| by Prime Minister Pearson,, Ex- S } be, roun ain operations” im Uri sector and|_ i” tséian_~ held Kashmir {t- i. : ‘ which isn't even a member, un-| ternal Affairs Minister Martin had captured “substantial quan-|%!f. oly minor incidents were doubtedly will take a battering’ and hopefully, UN Secretary- a= : : tities” of arms and equipment. |TePorted between Indian troops in absentia. General U Thant. 7 ras ° But he’ made no mention of 204 Suerrilla bands that began | Only the latter item will come Most sessions will be held ip For Ha S ace | WINS any- prisoners or_casualties suf. fighting there Aug. 5 in what before the conference in a for- the oe a which, . |turned into one of the most se- 4mal way.’ One of seven draft| thanks to the parliamentary. re ‘ fered by either side. rious confrontations between ‘In- ; fant r : resolutions to be voted on cess, has undergone its first | Appointment of two biologists, Stanley Vass, a native of Sas- petted a antiie dia and Pakistan since they be- stanley Vass and Eugene Wynne |katchewan, graduated from the brands South. Africa's gas real — - ca = rent . . : i in 1947. fi Ndi wieinn | Tni : ink |policy “‘a grave crime against’ years. Among the new features CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) rocket was erected Monday for |flight surgeon, said Cooper and ‘the UN ceasefire line — it was a Perna Se Se: ___ to the fish and wildlife division | University of New Brunswick \Sumanity" gtr calls . all is a five - language translation The Gemini'5 space twins came|the next U.S. adventure. aloft,/Conrad each lost 10 pounds, the third such large-scale as- of the department of fisheries, | with a science degree in 1952,” wountries ta. censure system to carry conference de back home Monday, safe and/the Gemini 6 mission set for |“‘probably due to dehydration,” sault since Aug. 15 — in an Red By kee was announced last. evening. by | follwing a distinguished career i ning government. eae in Spanish, Russian and sound, from the cliff-hanging Oct. 25. On this two-day flight,|but no other adverse symptoms (effort to trap “Pakistani infil- y Ic j Hon Leo, Rossiter, department !in both the RCAF and RAF asa other. contentious issues Japanese as. well as English odyssey in space that won them astronauts Watter"M’Schirra’Sr:+had*-shown=np to sway space |trators” allegedly massing in minister Transport Command pilot.- are expected to come up during and French. worldwide praise and Thomas P. Stafford will! officials from their conviction|the so - called Uri salient. The From Harbor They-will be employed, the _ Formerly with the rae = Serer Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper make the first effort to link up that they had qualified men for attack was launched Thursday minister. said, in the Canada| Board at Ellerslie, P.E.I., Mr. . . Jr. and Charles Conrad Jr.—the with another orbiting satellite. lunar flights. through heavily wooded terrain Land. Inventory Project now un- | Vass comes to the department Post ement Of Ei ht Da $ first men to qualify themselves’ ‘‘We're glad to be getting back ————— HALIFAX (CP) — RCMP derway as part of the ARDA With some 14 years of exper- g , ; gi rf for a journey to the moon— | to work, writing a report on the se : : . picked...a.man__out_of Halifax program: 7 eascn an pot tiredt en Ai } t : hopped happily out of a navy’ flight—the good, the bad, the’) se = Harbor Monday but said he was The. project, which is a part of i A nn ed IP S eel S k plane that brought them from! indifferent,” Cooper said. ‘We dead by the time he was brought the eee Bisa in of ee Tee ieee Mr. 1ouNnc or ri e we Game of the sireralt carter | hope it_ will immproye the- quality > . mere a ~ — side. recreation resources, will be de- dren will be taking up residence WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-'am sure that as they return te Champlain. ‘ of later flights.’” _ Police identified him as Mar- voted to an inventory of wet- in Charlottetown. Mr. Vass will dent “Johnson announced Mon- their negotiations, they will be It’s great to be back on, After brief statements, the as- "8 A tin Behan, in his'30s, of Dart- lands in the province with parti- : “phe W, : ; e of the importance. of d." Cc i : be heading up the Wetlands In- day night an eight-day post- aware mpo golid ground,’ Cooper said a3 tronauts were hustled away to mouth. He is believed to have cular reference to their capabil- id- their efforts to every man and be arrived at C. Kennedy i i i : ventory Project. .|ponement of the Tuesday mid- | f ‘ 1 at Cape Ke - ‘begin their flight reviews and | jumped from the Angus L. Mac- ity for producing waterfowl and ' ‘night steel strike deadline woman in this country—and te Their plane came in at. 200 to undergo e&haustive. medica} | = Donaid bridge. sports fish. : Eugene..Wynne, formerly sct- Joh id steel unions and the health and vitality of our miles an hour, a snail's pace to tests to determine if the long; mae "Nar emer oe ee ence teacher at Central Quecas | eo eagenieat ghamtianies will economy and the security of the two men who had hurtied exposure to the vacuum of space | Regional High School, Hunter | : ; |American around the world.” 3,338,200 miles through space at affected them in any way. ** LONDON (Reuters) — Prime jciding with American - owned $ River, graduated from St. De ee ee ae wear Johnson said in his statement 17,500 miles an hour. The Soviet news agency Tass winister Wilson sought the back-| Ford's announcement that 10,- . stan’s University, Charlottetown eee at aaa 7 W¢ ‘he has been meeting with prest- The plane stopped slightly said the flight achieved its pur- ing of employers and union 000 workers would be laid off CA rson aces in 1958 with a bachelors: degree |*0uSe iG-day. I. W Abel of -the United Steel more.than two miles from pad pose and was.‘‘a deserved SuC- jeaders this week in a deter- one day a week because of fall- : in science. Mr. Wynne comes | His announcement Of . the | Workers of America, R. Conrad 19, where a Titan II rocket, at- cess.’’ . mined hid to bring peace to! ing domestic _sales, raised an e e e : the department with consider-| postponement came six hours ' Cooper, ‘chief negotiator for 10 the most perfect countdown In their 120 -- orbit—journey, pg iain* ie i -~an. outery. from vi - able experience in the sciené& ‘after the negotiators sat down major steel. companies, Labor 4 ¥- Britain’. strike-torn auto indus- -@nery Ty from government : = e ‘ the mafned space program, |Cooper and Conrad set up al try and opposition leaders, labor un- i er rl in teaching field including exper- together in the executive office Secretary W. Willard Wirtz and them Aug. 21 on their | whole list of space records for, \, balli " 1- ion chiefs and the press. : tience as an interpretation offi- building across the street from Commerce Secretary John T. ere and perilous eight-day |their Russian rivals to shoot at, Walkouts Peer 1 oe ; abel _In the first six months of thts a ees " _|eer and naturalist with the Na- the White House. Connor. ee for a change. nor disputes a: show wo t year, more than 645,000 working By STEWART MacLEOD and constituency _ organizations tional Parks Service. Mr. Wynne | . “I am confident all Americans All told, four steel industry of | about 30,000 employees ou! OTTAWA (OP)—With his own across the country. The National is assistant biologist on the Wet- appreciate this response by un-|ficials and six union represent- , “ On this -same pad, another | Z sa ‘ |-.Dr--Charles.A. Berty, Gemint PM Lat two ot Britain” ing automobile exporters—Ford and the giant British Motor Cor- which makes = Austin, $s lead-* days.-were .lost..in..109..stoppa in aoe cae teers oe oe een eee ee eer M y ges mind apparently firmly ‘set on Liberal “Fedération will! also be lands Inventory Project” and” ion “and ‘a fall election, Prime Minister giving Mr. Pearson some up-to- makes his home in Charlotte- tives. Their decision has been|to answer Johnson's summons }Pearsor _-is-- 1-.te- -he=-date-information-within the-next own. - /.made-in-the —public— interest. tte -the—White--Hause. In the car industry. The prime minister, visibly irritated on return from vaca- company representa-/atives flew here from Pittsburg ==" poration, tion by this latest body-blow to ar ond ‘Britain's struggle to overcome : its -balance-of-payments crisis, The’ massive shutdown, - coin- called the latest strikes ‘‘unnec- essary, self-inflicted wounds.” +PM LEADS. INQUIRY - | He announced he would lead the M.G., among 100 Feared Dead _After Avalanche ,ers_in the next. few. days prior to any definite announcement. ; The prime minister -returned |Sunday from a nine-day western trip during which he_ provided |elear indications of — his inten- tions to call an election, prob- surveys. 5 Wednesday a cabinet meeting will be held, where the matter is bound to get an airing. Mem- bers of the cabinet are known to be divided on the desirability of a fali election, although a ma- MP’s Dissect Parliament - SAAS FEE, Switzerland (AP) Millions of tons of ice broke off 4 glacier in the’ Swiss Alps Mon- day and swooped down on a hydro-electric construction pro- _ fect. Authorities feared up to 100 workers were killed A witness. said the avalanche fame so fast that the workers “were buried under the masses of ice without ever even looking op.” he__workers,_Italians__and Swiss, were working .on_ the Mattmark power project in southern Switzerland not far from the Italian border The avalanche buried the en- tire construction site, including machinery and workers’ bar- tacks. Blocks of ice as big as a two- storey house were: piled up on -‘*They were buried under the masses of ice without ever even ‘looking up. “Nearby, the workers’. wooden S 0 ; barracks were flattened by the On rties air blast preceding the ava- ; j lanche. I saw them collapse a LA JOLLA, Caalif. ‘AP)—Ex- second or two before they, too, ploration parties moved in and disappeared under the ice.” out of Sealab Il Monday as 10 Hermann Geiger, famous 2quanauts settled down to work Swiss alpine rescue pilot, flew in their dark and dangerous over the scene shortly after the World 205 feet below the surface avalanche _struck._He said -he of the Pacific. are saw “terrible chaos” as meg | Reconnaissance sorties” was struggled through the tons af the phrase a US. Navy spokes- ice to search for those buried ™an used for the trips the rub- beneath. ber-suited divers made from the Venture Out |—which -will be an underwater barracks for three 10 - man Military Junta_ Has Resigned j Sealab II was lowered to the ‘a top-level | Minister Ray Gunter, auto firm | ;chiefs and union “leaders and‘\formant. “it would appaer to - steel cylinder—12 feet by 58 feet, —teams-in-rotarion—for—45 ~days+ bottom 1,000 yards off this south-| inquiry, with Labor ably in November. “Now,” says a qualified jority is believed to favor one. The prime minister left little doubt ‘in the minds of his west- ern audiences that he had plans to dissolve Parliament in the next few weeks. At no time in the West did he attempt to cool At Bar Association Meet | the messianic approach in pref- ceedings be televised met mixed reaction Miss Jewett said it would he seek measures to prevent fur-|be definite ther disruptions. | comes up in the next few days Backing for Wilson came/to change his mind.” quickly from George Woodcock.! After virtually making his in- a thi Se Ry JOHN LeBLANC s TORONTO (CP)—A long cata- erence to lucidity. logue of the shortcomings of) “John?” someone. suggested | Parliament wag listed Monday from the floor in an evident preferable to amend the Broad- secretary of the Trades Union |tentions known in t Ww t the mushrooming specula- | Congress, who said miner quan tiineeee knowa ia teen wl Neer. si sgoeueel to by. three prominent MPs in a reference to Opposition Leader casting Act to let the CBC use rels must not be allowed to es- ite site Sik Wades: tinte te | be staying it down @lightly when | Panel session at the annual con- Diefenbaker. politicians to a much- greater calate into major stoppages af- | actions and he likely will re- he met reporters on his arrival vention of the Canadian Bar As “There are others,’’ Miss extent on public affairs pro- fecting thousands. ‘ceive s from | k here sociation. secon sas. oe ea * ~ ees ee eens = a A~-certain—amount— ot agree. Mr. - Fisher suggested Parlla-. Mr. Fisher said he.would like ment—notably. on the theory ment should be “put on the to see federal-provincial confer- ‘road’ holding —sessions—across~-enee—proceedings—on—TV.-That the country—-so “its members was where the real. policy-rmak- could get the feel of Canada. ing power was switching Televising of Parliament, Mr. TV AND PARLIAMENT ‘Gregoire said, would produce ‘The suggestion of a floor ques- the lowest-rated programs on tioner that Parliament's pro- TV. “ “that members of longer service are slowing up reforms—was reached among members of the | Liberal, New Democratic and Creditiste parties. A Progressive Conservative spokesman was unable to attend. the forum: “What's. wrong with Parla: | ment?” : Liberal Pauline Jewett of From AP-Reuters ern California resort last Thurs-| SANTO DOMINGO (CP{—The day and the first team took up civilian military junta that vov-|Tesidence late Saturday. j _erns part of the Dominican Re-| Chores planned include: public resigned Monday night. | 1- Connection of ‘cables from) Gen. Antonio Imbert Bar- Sealab Il to a seven-ton, bee- | reras, president—of— thé juntay— hive - shaped Benthic (deep) | announced the resignation ina !aboratory, a multi-channefled radio-television address. - television and telephone station; Th si i ‘ which will provide the primary aa cue wat celeual te communications between the | clear the way for installation of| U8derwater base and a twin- a civilian-military junta pro hulled crane barge serving as posed by the Organization of the mother ship on the surface. American States political com- This will take over the function | the scene of the disaster. RESCUE By nightfall,’ the Swiss air- rescue patrol had brought out about: 20 badly injured workers by . helicopters to hospitals in Brig, Sierre and Sion. “Oncoming darkness hindered rescue operations. All lights failed around the site and the three helicopters had difficulty landing. An estimated 1,000 workers were performing the last chores | of the day as ice broke off the , aihat ; ms mittee of a network of direct cables | towering Allalin glacier and_ used until the could be- came smashing down shortly be- 4,T™*,anmunenmem °0m€ 8 Oheieg fore dusk. sharpest fighting here since 2. Mapping of the ocean floor | It-was one of the worst dis- June... near Sealab [II and study of asters in recent Swiss history. fish and other marine life. ' Alois Hauser, a photogravure DENY ATTACK worker from Zurich, saw the Dominican military leaders ‘ disaster from the Britannia supporting the junta denied that : Mountain refuge immediately their troops launched a mortar INSIDE TODAY above the Allalin glacier. attack, tha started the fighing. The officers said. an_ invesi- gation turned up no_ eVidence that the mortar shells which fell into the rebel-held sector of Santo Domingo had come from their positions. Earlier the inter - Amefican “It all happened withif 20 seconds,” he said. “I was look- ing down on the big construction site about 900 metres (3,000 feet) “below me. Suddenly there was) tremendous crashing sound and 1 saw ‘part of. the glacier | tumbling down. peace force reported that radar, _Fditorials s sees o e+ CoC es KOS 7 Discussing the — fe “The workers seemed not to picked up mortar fire coming, S#m™mme tie cc _ the week-long international notice it coming down on them. |from the junta-controlled sector. Kings, Queehs, ee ore criminological congress in~ Probably the noise was drowned | north of American military Ptinee tees ’ Montreal are, from left to sut by the machinery. ilines >-right: Jose Mendoza, Troconis, a. 5 ee ee CRIMINOLOGY CONGRESS UNDERWAY “recior of the University of Santa Maria, Caracas, Ven- ezuela: R. J. Hainault, presi- dent of the congress, and Jean Pinatel of France, — general’ \ : | } ' | secretary of the International Criminclogical Society. Mr. Pinate) attacked the’ concept of capital punishment. Binge Ahan, | (NDP—Port ; winded” debate, giving an Northumberland, Gilles Gregoire, deputy leader of the Creditistes, and Douglas Fisher Arthur) also came close to unanimity on abolition of the Senate. “It's main function is for handing out political plums,” said Mr. Fisher, in reply to” a question from the floor as to the “significance” of the upper chamber. ts LIBERAL BACKS ABOLITION “I, too, am for abolition de- spite the fact that I'm a mem- ber of a party that uses it for )a@ political lworicant,” said Miss Jewett in a reference to use of senate appointments for politi- cal wheelhorses. Mr. Gregoire said he would like to see senators named by labor unions, farm unions, finan- cial groups, even student groups. In its present form, the |space it takes up might be bet- ter utilized with a gymnasium. Miss Jewett said he is both- ered by “repetitious and long: in- flated impression of the impor- | tance of a discussion. There was | a tendeney for{‘debate to degen- erate into excesses of political Partisanship. . ~ 3 Generally, she said, too many . (CP Wirephoto); {| politicians of the old school took | fighter-bombers US Port Nan Strengthened By R576. From. Reuters*4P - SAIGON’ (CP) American military power in the Viet Nam war will be significantly ad- vanced by the increased use of B-52 strategic bombers against the Vi Cong, U.S. military sources said Monday. The sources said Guam-based U.S. B-52 bombers again blasted The announcement of | t h-e step-up in B-52 raids came ‘as Viet Cong guerrillas made five separate attacks on towns and Outposts in the Mekong Delta, South Viet Nam's rice bowl, in what could be the beginning of a late monsoon or rainy season offensive. : : In all five Viet Cong attacks, Viet Cong base areas in two the zuerrillas first shelled their weekend raids which could now targets, then moved’ in — with be expected as an almost daily small arms pattern. Government casualties were reported to be light. U.S. and South Vietnamese — aircraft lit the skies over the delta with more than 400 flares as the government troops fought off the attacks. None of the out- posts was overrun, a U.S. mill-_ tary spokesman said. But two tother outposts overrun were Sunday: & % Thunderchiefs American authorities disclosed a further rise in U.S. military manpower in Viet Nam toward the goal of 125,000 announced by President Johnson. As of mid- night last Thursday, the total was 90,050. Meanwhile, advocates of the Strategic Air. Command bomb- ing system claim the B-52s, which fly at about 20,000 feet, Two US. F-1 are better able to catch the | were lost over North Viet Nam guerrillas by surprise than Sunday and the pilots of both iwere listed as mussing.