Ehr @um'dirmi Coven Prince Edward Island Like The new . W. .I. Hancox. Publishe' lurton Lowia Frank Walker Incentive Editor Editor '4 ..Puh|iahad ovary waek day morning (armpit Sun lunch offices at Summersidn, ton and Souria. lopraunted nationally by Thomson Nowspapon "Mvartiaing Service: Ioronlo. 425 Univolaily Aye 'l’mpire $8894.- Montreal. 640 Carlicari Straol UNiversity 6-5902; Vt’esierri oitica. l030 Well Goorgia Street. Vancouver (MA 7037) . Canadian Daily Montague. Member Newspaper l‘ublishap Association and [he Canadian Press. the Canadiar Frau is exclusively enlilled lo the use for rapub "cation of all new: dispalcliaa "I this capo: credited to it 0' l0 lIl¢ Associated Press or Rau ~tors. and also to the local news pubhslied hora 1 in All righls on republire-‘ion 0’ metre! dispath harain also reserved Substriplion IaICIS Not over 35: per week by carrier. IIVOO a year by mail or rural routes and er”: ‘ _nol Mrviced by carrier SILOO a year off Island and UK. $20.00 per year t" U.S. and elsewhere ouisida British Corn monwealth. Not over 7: per single copy. Werner will: lillfeil" r" Circulation. " PAGE _c_iiloanv. “FEBRUARYlas, A Rival Attraction Royal commissions are supposed to function in a rarefied atmosphere above the smoke and din of partisan politics. Evert so. the Carter royal commission on taxation has se: something of a precedent by decid- ing to proceed with its investigation in spite of the hectic campaigning weeks ahead on the federal level. Hearings are to be held in Ottawa earlv next month, and will continue across the country during the latter part of March and for some time thereafter. This causes our sturdy Liberal Contemporary. the Winnipeg Free Press, to shake its head reprovingly. One of the more useful functions of any royal commission, it says, is that its hearings become a kind of public forum in which all aspects of a controversial subject are brought out into the open for discussion and analysis. It fears that in the atmos- phere of an unusually intense elec- tion campaign the commission’s hearings are likely to be completely submerged. And, of course, there is the pros- pect that the commission will be reporting to a government other than the one which appointed it. The government which is elected on April 8 may want to extend the commission‘s terms of reference and perhaps alter its membership. The Carter commission will be conducting the first complete review of taxation ever undertaken in this country. and it would be “tragic if ’its task is impeded or misdirected 'In a sea of political controversy." But why should it. be impeded or misdirected in the manner which “the Free Press suggests? The com- . mission‘s venture is a bold one, to ' be sure; but if it: is nonpartisan in 'i its activities. why shouldn’t it carry ‘on as instructed? Its terms of ref- erence were indorsed by Parlia- ' ment, and should not be subject to post-election interference. As for : its hearings being “submerged” in “ the froth of campaign activities. -perhaps the reverse will be the : case and the electors will welcome this rival attraction. It will give i them something besides politics to 7 think about it, and it could have a lsobering effect in assessing the 3 value of the more hectic perform- : ances that will be. going on under the Big Top. jFrance's Booming Economy . Few finance ministers could have j had a more cheerful message than Valery Gisard d’Estaing when he j told the French national assembly the other day that their Country had r become one of the world’s leading 3 creditor nations in 1962 with gold : and foreign exchange reserves of $3.7 billion. This after prepayment . or $409 million debt to the United 1 States. ' Another index of the surging ‘ French economy is the $1.3 billion . in foreign aid spent by the govern- ". ment last year. most of it to former . ‘, France the highest per capita donor of foreign assistance in the world ’ T and second only to the United a ‘i States in total amount of foreign I ‘ aid granted. I Leatyaar personal incomes jump "ed 7%. par cont and personal con- sumption roaq almost as fast. Auto- mobile phduction ran more than 20 par ant thud of 1961. Paris de- w store sales increased 15 foot“. over 1901. Total output of economy grew by about almost exactly the rate In the national plan. Thla sauna-x— -s-m. ... 7 colonies in Africa. This total made . year the plan calls for total output to grow by 6 per cent. By compar- aion, the United States economy has been growing by 2 to 3 per cent annually in recent years. Three developments are credited with being largely responsible for lifting France from the shambles of World War Two: American aid ($9.4 billion worth since 1946); political stability restored by Gen- eral de Gaulle after his return to power in 1958. and the stiff com- petition of the European Common Market. It is this economic well- being that t‘ortifies de Gaulle in pur- suing his brusquely independent line towards Britain and the United States. But commentators note two dark spots to mar the generally favorable picture. These are rising retail prices and labor costs. In the third quarter last year the French retail price index was 5.6 cent higher than a year earlier. The price of bread, for example, rose in November for the second time in a year. And wages last year rose twice as fast as production. If this trend contin- ues. it could cut into domestic in- vestment and make French goods less competitive in world export markets. U.S. Wheat Referendum As agricultural committees in (‘ongress go to work on President Kennedy‘s message of Jan. 31 on farm legislation, the subject breaks down into four main categories—- wheat, feed grains, dairy products, and cotton—each representing dis- tinctive problems. The commodity on which sharpest attention focuses is wheat. Among growers of that grain the administration has called for a referendum under legislation of 1962 in which producers will be asked to approve of what Charles E. Shuman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, calls “the tightest, most binding controls every seriously considered for any farm Commodity.” These controls would be more binding than heretofore because they would regulate not merely the acreage planted but also the num- ber of bushels marketed. In this sense, it is claimed, they would make of the wheat growing industry in the United States a kind of mammoth uti'tel in which the grow- er would be assured of a favorable price but his place would be deter- mined not by ambition but by a his- torically based allotment. Wheat referendums .in the past have approved acreage allotment systems. but by diminishing Votes. It is possible there may be difficulty in getting the twodhirds majority required for putting the present pro~ posals into effect. In that event the. President has asserted that the wheat farmer would be left with- out “either support management or effective price supports.” Existing law provides, h ow- ever. that price support shall be given at one half of parity, which now would be $1.25, compared with prices around $2 for this summer’s wheat in the future markets. It is expected that Congress, being still in session. would be spurred to take some action in anv case. EDITORIAL NOTES There’s no question that election campaigns are getting too long. This one, comments the Ottawa Journal dourly. will have lasted a year, when it is over—if it's over when it's over. . t I ‘ Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky was a czarist pft‘icer who become one of the top Red Army military com- manders but who was executed in 1937 in a Stalin purge. Now, to mark the 70th anniversary of his birth, the Soviet government has announc- ed the issuance of a commemorativa postage stamp in his honor. It seems that the surest way to posthumous glory in Russia nowadays is to have been martyred under Pram i or Khrushchev’s former boss. Adlai E. Stevenson, U.S. am- bassador to the United Nations, was the recipient of a well merited award last week. It was from his 'alma mater. Princeton University, and it took the form of $1,000 for best exemplifying, in Woodrow Wil- con‘s Words, “Princeton in-the nu- tion’s service." Mr. Stevenson was graduated from Princeton in 1922. The award was set up in Wilson’s name by the alumni as- aociation. :- THE RELUCTANT SANCHO PANZA LIBYA'S TRANSFORMATION Turning Ooses Into Boom Towns National Geographic News Bulletin WASHINGTON —— Libyans. who have lived for centuries on the edge of poverty. now have a more pleasant problem -— in- stant prosperity. The North African kingdom seeks to devise a sound spend- ing program for an estimated I $500 million in oil royalties and taxes that foreign oil companies will pump into the national poc- ketbook over the next five v years. Revenue from the large all deposits, discovered In I959, has brought swift changes to the ancient desert land of nomads and small farmers. HIGH HEELS T00 Remote oases have turned in- to 20th-century boom towns where cars outnumber camels. Hotel and restaurant owners ca- ter profitably to foreign oil per- sonnel. The twin capitals, Tri- poli and Benghazi, have super- markets and Beneath their flowing veils and robes, Arab girls wear lipstick. nylon stocking. and high heels. The Libyans trained to work as skilled laborers on oil rig s are receiving record~high wag- e S. More Libyans are going to school than ever before. When Libya became independent 12 years ago. its academic popula- included 16 high-s c h 0 ol graduates and 25.000 students.‘ 150.000 youngsrers are In . In 1960, the new Libyan University enrolled 4‘25 under- graduates. and 279 Libyans were studying In colleges b d ‘ a ma . The oil industry. though Lib- ya's biggest boon. still employs relatively few Libyans. several thousand at most. About 90 per- cent of the country's ,2 , people live along the Mediter- ranean in a narrow coastal strip growing barley. vegetables. figs oranges. and dates. Only three percent of Libya‘s soil has suf- ficient water for farming. One of Libya's major exports has been the desert crop o scrap iron left from the World War II campaigns of Rommel and Montgomery. There are perhaps six million land mines. booby traps. and unexploded shells still buried in drifting sands. Oil-company trucks have armorplated floors for protec- tion against explosions. In pla- ces. every fool of ground must be checked before oil crewa can I explore and drill. ibya has been called “the world's largest sandbox." It is; nearly three times the size of l dealers often attracted custom- as .was lgold mounted wolf‘s teeth. Col- : Texas and has less than two in- habitants to a square mile. Be- douins. dressed In Biblical garb, drive their herds of camels and goats across a blistering sand- scape where temperature soar to 135 degrees Fahrenheit In the ahade. Here live the desert fox superhighways. i gand a shy desert rat that looks Ilike a toy kangaroo and walks 1 upright. l In ancient times when little was known and much imagined 3 about Libya. Herodotus describ- ed strange tribes that ate lo- lcold. sweet water spurted from lsalt hills. One desert tribe. said Ithe Greek historian. spoke a language that sounded like bats { squeaking. custs and lived in cases where; is bleak future. Oil has changed . l Parts of Libya formerly were 1ruled by Britain and France. jUnder a 1951 United Nations 112- i ,‘solution, an independent king- idom w s l provinces. 'lli‘ipolltanla. Cyren- iaica. and Fezzan. ‘ Af Independence, Libya faced {that Now Libyans find new Thope in the saying: Bukra al'ld, tor “Tomorrow comes the feast- i ting." Allen Harvey Canadian Press Staff Writer Canadian Press Staff Writer Prime Minister Diefenbaker's rules out any hope of transform- 1 ‘ing the association into an eco- ‘ The P.M.’s London Visit brief visit to London affords an occasion for the first face-lo- face meeting of Commonwealth leaders since Britain was shut out of Europe. The trip was arranged months ago with the sole purpose of enabling the Canadian prime minister to have conferred upon him the honor of becoming a freeman of'the City of London. I i Since then. Britain’s attempt ‘to join the European Economic Community has been frustrated by France, leaving British pol- ‘icymakers uncertain of the next .move. Extra interest therefore attaches to the "working dfnv her" at London's Admiralty 'House Saturday night between i Diefenbaker and his host, Prime lMinister Macmillan. After the breakdown of the i Brussels negotiations. Diefen- :baker said In Ottawa that Brit- ain had chosen the Common- ‘weallh over the Common Mar- lkel. He. also reiterated his con- victlon t ommonwealth trade could be accelerated. British ministers will show in- iteresl In specific suggestions for Commonwealth trade expansion lParticularly welcome In White- l'hall Would be some indication .that club members are prepared 1 lower industrial tariffs gagainsl British goods. l Enthusiasm for the Common iwealth as a panacea for the na- illon's economic ills has notice- ,any dwindled in official circles. l nomlc unit similar to the Euro— pean Common Market. Commonwealth is "real. but fragile." This view was ex- pressed in London last Tuesday in a speech to Commonwealth ' correspondents by K e n n e t h lYoungcr. director-general of the . ,Royal Institute of Common- wealth Affairs. Discussing lihe disarray in Bril- ish affairs a It er Brussels Younger said the nation should not allow ilclf lhc luxury of thinking it can “fall back" on the Commonwealth by “lighten- ing up" the preference system or setting up joint investment boards. “For one thing. the other :wouldn't accept the Idea." said. formerly minister of? Younger. vstale at the foreign office. A similar warning came from Sir William Hayter. former Brit- 'lsh ambassador in Russia. “‘valuable as the Common- wealth is, it is perhaps regret- ,table that its existence some- times blinds us to the realities |of our situation in the would." Such attitudes are commo 3among British ministers. Ther 1are many who hope that Britain, 3 despite President de Gaulle. lmay In a popular phrase “catch a later train" for Europe. But; until that tlme arrives Macmil- lan will be eager for any crumbs of Commonwealth com- ;forl that Diefenbaker. and later the prime ministers of Aus- formed from th r e e , I] e 1 1It Is felt that the geographical jtralla and New Zealand. can 3 :disperslon of member countries tprovide ’ h S Wolves Teel To tomps Milwaukee Journal In Ancient Rome. cosmetic ‘ But it is likely that none of ers with free trinkets such onlal merchants In the United States offered free sewing need- |les to gel. business. More recent- lly. free coffee and candy for the lchlldren have {lures In our stores. Wanted: A Horp Mender Fred Rosa In The Listener Today there Is no longer a harp maker In the Principality of Wales Nor it seems is there anyone who takes his harp to a party In Wales and then breaks during one than choruses that make Twicken- Rugby XV comes south. He will have to pack his harp off to -— of all places — London to be mended. And this not only .costs money, but also takes time- 1 New harps are rarities. and most of them come from France. 1 am told it Is possible to buy Iliad for arbou one from 500 ithe harps become fewer and pounds or from America for ;fewer. Iboul 700 Pounds but these m a With understandable hmeui. prices that would even shatter the self-assurance of an elsledd- fod comper This is serious that the Welsh sic Society. Cymdelthaa Danl. has stepped eleventh tinctlon this centurtea - old art. Harp Mu- It Is planning to open In Mont.- e. a national drills—so Cerdd In at th e hour to aave from ex. well. It Is not only the nail nal ela- lt teddfod but also the m rousing bards held In almost every town iuage of heaven. ‘or longing. they remember the lgnlden days when harplata and lharp makers had their patrons. leading members. may he laat chance to save the harp. come familiar gomeryshlre a workshop that will not only repair harps but eventually manufacture them as tings of and village in Wales that need ham tremble when the Welsh I the harps; other organizations too are concerned In the revival of Interest in the muslc that by tradlh’on accompanies the lung- So It is with some dismay that E the Welsh Harp Society looks ‘ over a land where planes abound ;and even jukeboxes resound but But lyrical though the Harp Society may be. It Is also practlcal. ' The workahop. says one of Its our merchandising gimmicks as successful as the trad- ing stamp. Although first intro- lduced in the United States about l1890, the trading stamp really idid not catch on until the mid- il950's with the growth of super- } markets. .' Today. trading stamps are ‘big business. An estimated 77 per cent of all American famil- Ies collect and redeem them— ,between $700 and $800 million iworth last year. It takes more these l I ate stamp (Irma and tlon, according to trade sources. Trading stamps stonary was trading stamps. in the Unlted States to trading stamps: about. 8 per cent of the per cent of the total dis- aomethlng for nothing. than 125,000 employees to oper- II-lpllly merchandise for stamp redemp. can be re-l deemed for everything from ap- pliances to school buses. Even a mule for a LIma. Peru. mis- reported to have been purchased wllh redeemed n executive of one company attributes 14 per cent of the to. tal dlslributlon of heating pad: rIbullon of electric coffee ma- kers. Trading stamps. In short. play Proof ls Locking In Diet Theory By Dr. Theodore R. Van Della: A DECADE has elapsed ainca we first began to hear the pub- licity about choleaterol and low {at diets fc.- prevention of heart attach. Despite the passage of years. we still have no proof that reducing the amount of cho- lesterol in the blood will ward off coronary thrombosis or pro- long the life of a victim of a heart attack. The logical explanatlon Is that may factors other than diet play a role in the revelopmeut of handening of the coronary ar- teries —— the basic cause of the ordinary heart attack. These elements include the emotional and behavioral pattern of the in- dividual. lack of physical activ- ity. excessive smoking. heredity. and the person’s sex. Obesity and high blood pres- sure also enter the picture. In addition a magnesium deficiency and several nonfat nutritional substances are implicated, so as excess salt. protein. and car- bohydrates. But the cause of heart disease in one person may differ from that in another. Avoid extreme views in single area and practice mod- eration in all things. Including the diet. Cholesterol is not necessarily synonymous with coronary heart disease; and an elevated level is not a sure sign the heart will ‘ffer. But we cannot write off cholesterol entirely because an elevated level is a high risk factor. 0n the other “and, as mentioned previously. the possi- bility of a heart attack is In- creased by high blood pressure. obesity. changes in the clectro~ cat-diagram. heredity. or the sex of the individual. We ought to avoid glultonous eating and get down to it nor- mal weight. Eating some but- ter, cream. milk. cake. marga- rlne. meat. and eggs will not kill anyone. But take it easy if the blood cholesterol level elevated. Discuss the diet with your physician and try not to go overboard by demanding I cholesterol {that you have read or heard bout. BLUE SKIN t G. R. writes: What cause the skin to turn blue be- sides cold? , Disorders of the heart and lungs are common causes of cya-nosis. The blue baby is an example. In polychlhemia, the skin darkens because there are too man-y red blood cells and too much hemoglobin. Cyanos’ iresulls from taking certain drugs in large quantities. 0b- struction in the throat or larynx . also shuts of the oxygen supply ‘ and darkens the slain. HICCUPPING FAMILY H. A W rites: Are prolongedl spells of hiccups (lasting days) inherited? My huband has this condition and his father had ll 00. REPLY The possibility exists in your 1 family but we might assume th cause rather than the hiccup is ihereditary. A thorough medical examination must be done to " determine whether hiccuping f has an emotional or an organic basis. TINGLES AFTER COCKTAIL .R. writes: What causes a ‘tingllng sensation in the ' of the fingers after drinking alcohol? 5: U m REPLY This may stem from the plea- sure broughl on by effects of the alcohol. I doubt if it means neuritis or represents a side re- 1 action to the chemical. He j said in a newspaper article that - CALLUSED HEELS L. S. S. writes: Could gout be responsible for calluscs on the heels? REPLY Calluses stem from friction and gouby individuals may de velop the condition if painful joints become swollen n in- : tcrfere with walking. iToday’s Health inni— V, Break tension with a good i sleep at. night. gOur Yesterdo ’s (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ‘ ebruary 25, 1958 The Charlottetown Kinsmen Club combined anniversary night ‘ with their first ladies night at . an enjoyable and successful dln- .ner at the Canadian National Hotel. Thursday evening. Af- ter dinner the proceedings look the form of a theatre party at the Prince Edward. Charles MacDonald. Halifax. road construction engineer, who l has been in the service of th e 1 Nova Scolia Government for the t past 12 years In connection tsurfaced highways. has been i engaged by the Prince Edward llsland Public Works and High- : ways Department. TEN YEARS AGO February 25. 1058 Three young lads from Sum- , merside while playing near the IGovemmenl Garage last even- lIng discovered a parcel whlch 1‘ upon Investigation revealed 84 I forks. 20 knlves and one spoon, I all of Kingsplate silverware. It is believed the silverware is part of that taken from the ummor- side Curling Rink. several weeks ago. Philip Dumaresq. Halifax. the I Nova Scotla representative on munity Planning Associatlr.‘ ‘- ‘ the guest speaker last evening , t the first supper meeting of the ' Summerslde community planning l unlt organized In Summerslde. a slgglflcanl role in modern, mere andislng. The idea behind r them. however. In almoat ll old I AN“ comm! mm. Ion Itself. It la The eggs of the corn~root ap- aa civillzst simply that one of the easleat hid are taken below the frost ways to a customer‘s heart Ia line by ants In the winter and to make him feel be Is lettln‘ returned to the surface In aprlu. ' lowering products 1 would ‘ total distribution of toasters and the national Board Of the com. 3 NOTES BY THE WAT non Great Britain have discovered they can get Juice from grapes, elderberrlea and other raw ma- terials by putting them in the apdndrler of a twin-tub washing machine. — Cleveland Plain Dealer. In some waya Canada never changes. Twenty-five years ago Prime Minister Mackenzie King and Opposition Leader Bennett supported a motion to establish a Common! committee on the question of a distinctive flag.— Ottawa Journal. A page passed through the lobby of the exclusive hotel. "Young man." remonstrated the manager sternly. “you should know that it Ia against the rules of this hotel for an employee to whistle while on duty." “I’m not dog." — Gall Reporter. lug to his students- have the facts on your side when ‘ fighting a case. hammer them i into the jury. If you have the ; law on your side. hammer it in- ‘ to the judge. But If you have i neither the facts nor the lawi on your side, hammer the table , as hard as you can." — Hamil- ton Spectator. e - made wine fluclera la , “ A dog has many friend. 5., cause the wag was put in I‘ tell instead of ‘ tongue I! Fifth Wheel Among the planet: of our an. says a U.S. potential. Venus and Mars could support "an lntclll. doubt the earth could, loo. Toronto Telegram. A woman applying to vorce explained that her pound paid more attention to te]. evisxon than to her. Maybe i was because he couldn‘t turn her on. — Chatham Daily News. I' ‘1. bus. Visitor: "If your mother gave you a large apple and a small one and told you to divide will your brother. which apple would you give him?" Johnny: "D'va whistling. sir." replied the em- ; ployee. “I‘m paging somehody's . mean my big brother or my lit. tle one?" — Montreal Star. In Sweden every farmer as. i aesses his own farm. He puts a A professor of law was lectur- 3 value on his land and building; “If you i ’ and he pays taxes according to his own valuation. It sounds de. lighlfully easy. There is a catch in the Swedish system. If a far- mer who has valued his land at $10.000. for tax purposes. sells his farm for 315.000. the govern. ment quietly steps in and lakes $5.000. -- Stratord Beacon Hep ald. When Not To Swedes can be pretty stub-i born. Certainly they are not go- l Ing to give up their unique pol- i icy of armed neutrality. But they can be flexible on occasion f —once they are convinced they are on the wrong track. A case in point is the coming ‘ decision —— assured but not for- mally taken yet —- to switch; from left hand to right hand‘ driving on streets and high- . ays. In all continental Europe. Swe- den alone drives on the left.f This makes for accidents when Swedes drive outside their coun- itry and when foreign visitors drive on Sweden's highways. Since 1955. the great debalel has been under way. Now all four political parties are for- changing over. But it will be a national convulsion. for most of Sweden‘s eight million people will have to relearn the habits of a lifetime. It will also be an expense. The I price tag on the transition has ‘ See Sweden Cinclnnali Enquirer gone up each year. Current esti- mates are that the three year readjustment will come to 75 million dollars. Roughly half of that will be for converting 8.000 buses and streetcars. which have their doors on the wrong side. Changing highway signs also is a major item Swedes have been walking to the left, loo. Thelr revolving doors are backwards. Thia could entail yet another outlay in the great conversion process. There is. however. one forlun. ate circumstances. Swedish au- tomobiles. and nearly all the cars they have imported. have left hand steering columns. as in almost all countries. So on this score they are already equipped for driving on the right. If you are planning to visit Sveden. and value your life. don't go for the turbulent and i confusing week in the spring of .1964 when the actual change. over is scheduled. Montreal Gazette i Hard On Ancient Rome Few visitors to Rome can cs- lcape a feeling of humility. andl lof the timelessness of things»: Iwhen they gaze upon the re- lmaiins and monuments of an empire that vanished over a. Ithousand years ago. but which] lsurvives in spirit. and which thus permanently enriched the i icivilization of the West. . ; these very monuments. lwhich have been a tangible. iphysical witness to this past. are now in danger. The severe and bitter winter which has. jplagued all of Europe this year a I has taken its tell. And the toll may be Irreplaceable. ater and snow have entered . into numberless cracks. fissures. f and openings in the ancient‘ monuments and buildings. It 'has then frozen and begun ex- terting a tremendous and irresis- tible pressure of expansion. the winter. Colliseum, the Arch of Titus, the Baths of Septimus Severus. and other remains, have suf- fered extensive damage. According to the superintend- ent of Antiquities for the R0- man Forum. “only radical pre- servation and restoration el- forls will be able to save them. and the task of saving them may be so great that it cannot be undertaken. So many storied remains. that have. survived a thousand year! may new fall before a sin glo And nothing but the most urgent of modern restora- tion programs may preserve them. If the worst happens. this will seem a poignant tragedy to many. like a second decline and fall. or a second sacking of the city. with nature's barbarians as the‘Vandals. Unsmiling CBC i Ottawa Short of the sadistic savagery l of an American magazine‘s ar- l ticle on the Prime Minister last i week. there is ample scope for the lampoom'ng of political fi- , gures within the bounds of de- cency. i The politician makes him- i self a target for criticism, and l humor. especially at election 1 time. A Canadian politician i should be no more exempt from t lampoonlng than Winston Chur- ic ' was exempt from Labor jeers in political fights after the Second World War. The CBC, with all the know- ledge il has accumulated about the conduct of elections and the attitudes of Canadians. should t e too limorous about the shows It puts on in the next few weeks. The Prime Minister him- self, we imagine. would be sur- prised to read that the CBC had cancelled in television show in which a comedian does a lake- of him at a press conference. The CBC normally is not pro- tectlve of the Prime Minister. who has had his share of criti- cism and leasing through Its services. But now there‘s an el‘ , ection the CBC decldea that i [any spoof of Mr. Dlefenbaker l AAAAAAAAAAA Journal must be balanced with a spoof of Mr. Pearson. And if a spool of Mr. Pearson has to be bal‘ cured with one of Mr. Thompson and finally one of Mr. Douala: the CBC will give up and there won't be a light bit on the elec- tlon personalities at all. This will be regrettable. We lament it particularly because we are to be exposed to batta- lions of long - faced political commentators. including news- papermen. who have no great background knowledge of politics but become solemn experts . virtue of seating themselvos in a chair with a microphone be- e if. The CBC could lampoon some of these clay - footed pundits along with the politicians. One of the democratic rights is l h 9 right to laugh at ourselves. but you'd never know it to hear and watch the CBC at election time. ,_______________..—.. ’ The : FLYIIIG IIIIIGIIMAII i ' RESTAURANT “Where Cooking IS A Work of Art" '0’. 0‘ i 4*" l Dava Murphy 134 in. l 70 omen col/narrow MERIT MAN. 5 All i ll GS SERVICE SECURITY WITH AUTO 8. FIRE INSURANCE (tall 894-8132 or write Richmond Street Mlnrr "roam-arc! com-ANY ACROSS CANADA ‘ ‘—