EH2 (Eduction l Covcrl Prince Edward lainnd Like The Dow w.l. w-nsz, rubluhu Burton Lowll 5mm. tum Published .va week day mo'nlng .exiem Sun l divs mu ntaiutosy holidays) n us We. 5m. charlbnemn, p r l.. bY lho’nmn Newwapeu to sum. bum .- Summenlde Muslim. Alb-r um and so“... sews...” yum-y h. "mm anwsnen ‘25 Umvevsltv in. (when amt Dime um w... mm“. iMA 7o371. Mcmhet Cet'adlv‘ Dally Numm Plbltlhou hummus" and m Anni..." w... the um.” um, u “numb .man u. m. i.. to: am. hum n math u... new , (mdttcd is n by n the Associated Press a. Remain l Ind also vb in. m. hm mlbllllen um... All my». a. who...an nl in...» durum hmm sum”. ram out Walla: ram l Unlvenlty mswz, Gwen sum ‘ lisp mama Not am is( . y We. bv “my 5H 00 . my hv mu a! rival mum and mu not sermrrd by rattler . sumo - yEdr all lxlarld m UK moo an . year in u 5 ml eye-mm. eum‘. emuh chm. mol'wealtil um my 7; my «my. .upv \‘smnut luau Euros“ at Ciliui How Far Will it (30? “ll” i‘urlmueul again in . stun. aill‘lillnn focuses on tile im- iiill’iiilfiil.‘ of the national contribu- tol'y pcnsion plan and the prospects of it ohtilllling the required support it through. As Prime Min— isiur Pearson noted in his televised address on Sunday night. Quebec has "opted out" of the plan and it Will require the fill] cooperation of Ontario and all the other provinces to mulle it workable. To be a truly national plan. of coil it should have Quehec par- ticipating as “ell. But the. irony of the situation is that it was the na- tional Liberal Party that oririinallv came up with the proposal which has led Qltoliec to adopt this new approach in federal-provincial re- iatlon.. in their election platform the Liberals promised to establish an “option formula” which would int plalls, scholarships. apply to all and unive y grants. ['ndcr til plan any prorince which so do ed cotild “contract out" of a joint program and would recFiVe from Ottawa the share of money in \t“ h it \lottld hare been entitled. Alrcadv Premicr {dosage has taken advantage, of this provis- ion by keeping his prm’int‘e out of the national pension plan and the. municipal loan and development fund—though neither is a "joint plan" in the trtie se. .e. of the word. it is predicted that he will apply it shot iv to the promised aid to education program and efforts to .v reach 21 new agreement on high- ways. And after that. What? According to a ilriier in the Montreal Gazette. the general bE> lief is that once the option formula is established with Quebec contract- ing out of verv federal plan which roncerns ills province: and taking it: molan “ith it. it will only be a short step to - rice allocation of funds reollii-rd for the province's share in national drt‘ense, customs. , etc. This. it achieved. woltld indeed he a victory for Quebec provincial mltonomv. But Where would it leave the smaller provinces which can't afford this luxury? The pension plan debate will provide Parliament with an oppor- ilinitv of taking a good. hard ionic at this "opting out“ clause. and at what it could mean for Canada. Britain's Nuclear Worries United States emphasis on the question of NATO nuclear defense is reportedly causing much concern in British governmental quarters. Officially known as the multilateral seahorne nuclear missile force—the MLF’the. project's formation has reached the stage of tentative un— derstanding between the US. Ger- many. Italy. Greece and Turkey. its purpose is basically to give Ger- many a nuclear role as assurance that German interests will not be passed over in the East-West con- !rontment. and without gi 'ntz Ger- many nuclear weapons under solely German control. The British defense ministry. represented in the cabinet by Mr. Peter Thorneycroft. has never liked the MLF and now it is coming down hard against it. it believes that the project—which involves a proposed fleet of 25 surface vessels carryinli U.S. Polaris missiles with nuclear warheads capable of reaching Soviet territory from near-Atlantic and Medlmnnun positions—la militar- lly useless. The British churn of the out is Ibo Ioen II I budget diuea m, although Germany in reported to ho wining to pIy anathde o! the i i «Km- 1 The British {main office, had- ed by lord Home. looks instead at the political side of the MLF, and fears the consequences for Britain's influence if the force comes into being without Britain. Prime Min- ister Macmillan. who must settle the question in the cabinet. is said to he. temperamentaily on Mr. Thornev- croft's side. He would agree with the. feeling that it will be In in- significant contribution to the West.- ern deterrent. But perhaps most important. it would divert funds from Britain's own independent nuclear deterrent. in be carried in Polaris submarines and the TSR-2 aircraft. The Conser- vatil'es are committed to In in dependent lietemnt. According to I London corres- pondent in the Winnipeg Free Press. the, British clearly hoped this prob- lem would stay on the shelf pend- ing the forthcoming NATO review of overall strategy. This would mean ttntil next spring—presum- bhly safely past the election. But nnly three months after President Kennedy's hastily-arranged visit with Mr acmillan on his European tour last June. Washington has dropped the hot potato in Britain's lap again. And I very hot potato it is. US. Plowing Contests Concern has been expressed about the future of plowing matches in the United States. which I few years ago drew ouch crowds that It the national contI.st in Daxter Iowa. in 1MB. President Truman made a major farm speech that is credited with winning him the Mid- West farm vote in on area that turned down President Kennedy in 1360. The falling off in attendance has been marked of late. An effort to pump new life into the national matches, which ended on Sept. 21 this year at Vandalia. Illinois, is now going on. John Daniel. president of the newly formed USA. Plowing Association and twice a national campion in contour plowing. is spearheading the drive. Until this year, the contests have operated under a loose federation of a plmvmen's committee and the National Association of Soil Con— servation District. which promotes soil and water conservation. The plowmen. however, are now on their own. The Vandalia Chamber of Commerce sponsored the 1963 Van- dalia contests. and stands to loss money. Farm-equipment manufaca tltrers and other exhibitors pay 51 n front foot: for space on the grounds, but expenses have outrun the take. One of the national context founders saw the demise of the con- test unless I new way was found to attract the modern farmer. He sug- gested a national company to under- write the. plow-men, as is done for the World Plowing Matches. which will be held this year on Oct. 10 and ii about 40 miles northwest of Toronto. EDITORIAL NOTES British researchers claim have found the reason why pigs have that “middlaagetl spread". They don‘t work for their food. The solution: elevate their trough: so that the pigs, who will do prac- tically anything to get food. hsvo to stand on their hind legs to eat. The result: more prolitablo lean meat. I I o A grim story about finding rul skeletons in I closet comes from Bordeaux. France. About 50 allele tons were found then the other day in an attic of In abandoned stone church. They appeared to have been there for many years. Nearby residents said the are: WII placed off limits to German troops in the Second World War after sev- eral soldiers had diuoppeorod in the dark. narrow streets. Their bodies were never found. a An ancient Roman ship which hailed the Engliuh Thoma two thousand years Igo will shortly b. resurrected from the mud Ind M. to become a tourist attraction. A trifle more than I you Igo, work- men excavating foundation for In underpass banuth Blackfrlm Bridge diucovu-ed the craft buried in the river bad. it; rceovory in- volves the lifting of it: timber: on. at I time. Ind numbering them In thot tho ship all bI reconstructed in the museum for which it in do. Iigned. * FROM BAD TO WORSE OTTAWA REPORT b Patrick NICiIOiSO‘I Fine Art From Unuiiiizeci Junk Heaps The must ole-catching {ea-l lure bi lhc .trbllc rim or thil‘ continent is the scattered gar- bane of itl‘lillE ss-callon oiil drums on a usu to some at the radar slailims \siilrh are our electronic scnlincls in the Arc-1 tic. i sell everywhere this spool” of North America'l gas-propelv that Distant Earlyl Warning line. the llighly-lrain~l ell operators and malnlenancel men sit. hlitiiiled and bored‘ through the long Arctic winier,. surrounded by those abundant nil drums free [or the inking. i was very stnick by [his cum. trasi. 3.01“) miles away. on the. backward islands oi the Carib-l bean. this North Alnrricanl poor has also been spilled . among the comparatively un-‘ educated and backward colour. . ed folk who Sll unoccunlcd m the summer-like heat. In tile Arctic. the ingenious: and educated white man leave: those all drums rotting Ind snub. lug up the landscape — exceptl tor the very few uhirh are util- imt as outdoor substitutes mi indoor plumbing. But ihe black mun has devised All attractive and proiilahle use ior that gar- page Ml‘le AND nouns wuh rhythm tingling in his. blond and sucking an outlet. that black man cannot aiiord to buy canned electronic music. Hel must make his own. This neces-l my has drlven him in createl from those discarded drums fillet oi the must talented and haunt- in musical instruments in use unvwhcre today. Stimulated by boredum. driv- en by poverty. he has harvested . that Earbalie. Ind convertedl PUBLIC FORUM j nu cb-Imn l. a... m u. dirt-ulna a «union II i.- am um non-o uplnlbll bl mm:— mull-nu. All lum- outfit-Ind m .ub loci in Qflflllll n n l mu.- Tn. on. lInl m u by win-um...» mm . unmtltefl rnmcc NATIONAL PARK l Sin—The letter to the press l W.B. McLellun oi Aiml I! ('1‘ the location oi lb. proposed bull in Prince County sceml logical Ind nppmprlau. Thl. writer would respectfully suggest Mk» in: in - little um territory An ‘ an; giants hk. Stun Laurel and those U.S. ss-nallon oil drtims‘ into instrumems tamed and Du ‘ pular everywhere They have. migrated from the Caribbean! carniva‘l inio Ihr uou-nqulnnm theatres and cosiiv nllzhi cltlils‘ at the white man in every me-l lmboiu. ll all started in Trinidad club} ing “'Drlti Wal' Ttro Then a scared USA acquired n 99- year lease on tho island to esla- l bush an off-shore deience basl' ‘ The Us forces soon cluttered that tiny Caribbean island with‘ empty oil drums Then one day some coloured man started tap-‘ ping one with a mere oi ham-i hno He noticed that. by hitting. the top at that bailered drum inl dliiel‘L‘l'li plam he could make sounds with different. ncln 1 From hat discovery. lngei‘hi Ility produced refinement. . l l ART WITH A HAMMER Today. the West indizln pains- takingly hammers in the bead bi I discarded or. drum, until it‘ iI concave lo I denlb at about six inches Then he marks the ; nutcr run: of thr head into sea» lions ni various thickness. like slit-rs of an anch rake ulib 1 hole in the middle Finain the centre oi the drumhcud ii divi- deti up into irrerular sections at dliicrent sizes Each or these‘ dilil‘iing lines us then slowly and ‘ laboriously indontcd by hamv ‘ The Laugh Era Bnltlmore Sm: it isn‘t iashionahle any more . In throw custard pies A low are stlll bring flung Irmlrli‘l on some ; hr the zanler television shows. lain at night. but no one's heart ‘ i. nit The authentic pies. Home of them still sailing through ftlm‘ revivals. actually were thing in yr 40 year-s duo on the Hal Roacr ot. Those were the pioneer days t «at mime-making. when nrrinLI were written almost as they were shot, and giant: captured lnugh. ' ter on cellqu . a what glanu they were. Oliver Hard Ind little glun like the urchin: Roi their Iran on the M aura twith 5.1 buildings. one I blackv smith shopi bi the Roach belly- tnuizh factory. Will Roger]. Thedfl Bll‘l. Lupe ‘ note when struck with I ham- lTiIE ii'AuMillg bell~llke percus- mering on I centre punch or small chisel. Then from the inside of the drum. each individual section is hammered outwards. The hand of the drum. still concave. is then covered will! [lumps of dif- lerem shapes and sizes. Each of these humps yields I dliiereni. boo stick or padded drum stick. The pitch at the whole drum m be varied by cutting ll round the side. Skilled design and hum. nlering can yield as many an 53 notes on a single drum. Seven men. playing six single drums and one double drum. normally make up the complete complement of that now world inmous combo. the sleet band. stun nl this instrument is ideally suited to the staccato rhythm bi shunt American music. Ind tn lhe ringing melodic sweep nl uu: negro Calypso. Today the Us. taxpayer Ind shareholder pays out money to buy containers in which oil pm ducts are shipped Iround the world. Then. when they have been discarded and convcried, he pays more money to listen to their musical product. The white man does not lack musical LII- out: but. as those unuclilwli Junk heaps oi the Arctic indicIte. be lacks ingenuity. ‘ in. creaking boards. They were there before the camera genlu- . 595. and behind them were many more. i For comedy in those slapstick 1 days depended not just on tat-a ‘. or situation but upon odd eiiecix. ’ So it a squirting one or an m- rordioned nlvm were needed. it was bulll on the buck 1m. 2y m Rmfl now. lb. any: and most of the people. Ind the Hai Roach lot lb Culver city is t to be auctioned on Ind torn t dawn. a victim or bankruptcy. It would buve been in I d o . shrine. - monument in those lun- makers that Chili with hiked ut. He uld: i reckon ll you could plchge Ill the laughs that elm! out of this place Ind let lbem In all at once. it'd b. u lot bigger than the biggest hydrogen bomb. I Just reckon it would.“ Nobody rectum ilk. on ma viz; mun West. Point in Nail PM! u [I m. min Vein! and Bebe Daniela all Iny more either. Ihnrz mu. irom West Point to Campbeliton erpeciIin. II in d ' very close proximity to the beau- Re F0 "Us Log Ago i n uiul Ilure Iliue wIterI M the mum, ,m - oull.— a feast. Im‘ the aulheltc eyes oi wnrisu Illd natives. A nalurnl consequence hi the :Iuhlishmcnl oi 1 pm in thll area would be the West Point— unciouche. its. terry which would but all approximately one hundred miles in: onmin. Quo- Ind TrInl-CanadI bunt-tall enroutc to In lllIIId Nationll Par . The Bands Ind "runs" in thin Melina m quite nuntmun The min which up quite II I i- r u w could eulllv be dammed hy n unlewa llmiIIl- to tho Not-in nivel- cquewa and the lume- aloe Lilli! Mllniflelllh. m Pond. skinner. Fund. rm. road and NIH Pond. The Michel ill lhll IrQI If! mIl lor WEI. "imminl Ind wmr mm. Their Ind Illl “on; m: d with; on to you I abort um‘l‘m ".33.: lunch (Will (Wm thlne‘ ulll Run to minnil' Point (on. Ind I lull nltlul il Moor til-n an Inn" Mun our . There an prIclhIlly no :10: Valera Show ‘ m or hood. lemma- 1 htn. sir. elm J PB‘N‘DW Once again. it leeml, tb- RIII~ nuns are (ulna - yur of lean pickings. For the filth Iu'Iigh! season. the Soviet lIrm hIrVut IPMHTA to h I mediocre and. The 1963 crop of teed fl'lilll. wk": and potlloel bid: to be Yur‘l. A lhol'l- . in l- turclnl lIrmers to IlIthIAI’ livestock they unlit-n feed. report-l til WIll Street Journal. prolofllill r c StIter Innlyltl. mIIl rm but will ring little II It Ill INN! "52's poor hIrVell. The Runninnl If. biImllll bid wellher~ Ilium. vim-r cold. I lnu Inrtnl Ind I dry. bot III.- nler. One InIhr when (min. MI‘UIl Md 1.. "III hlll "I nor. mli qllm of flilllll. Low" iIrm humane III! no (Iran on lbemnlm up bell. lulu- “ Id 4W em... a mhmt.tltIhopId. will provide enough bread ii till crop M m dithIbd. Russiln hrm pmdllction hII been itmpini IlncI 1|”. when the now me year I) ere-Io o! 70 MI' cent by 1N6. in nu yur IincI then hm (Irm- managed to mIIch their record 1950 output. ll'hlI hII limit! in Lil! methode turnover of lo- viel Ittricultlm ministers. in laying bun acid In live yen". Balidel the mfllm' Ind ftlln- bilnl both llllh Ind low. United Slate: InAlyIu IN inclined Io hilme R l the Soviet rrll Illa control: with I llck of Id.- :1qu lmnbvo lb an Ilowdowl which IIII empfl the production oi urn-nu M ed [Inn an! m numb. ‘ “EA! Ur elm DAYTON. out: int—m Bollard Ina Uncovering TB Big Problem By Dr. Theodm n. Vu pelle- The heat Ls on for ra in erIdtcate tuberculous. Thin youtbllny may be lull around the corner. considering the pro- gress made in the iIst so years in cunnuenng thin infection. The number one problem is to un- cuvel- those with tile disuse lo they cut be treated Iucceusiuily Ind kept from infecting otherl. in the pan. we the rolled up- on man chest x-ny surveys lol- the detection of unknown cuu. The tuberculin skin too! is not in costly and ll more logical. upe- clnily in children. it is the pencil with . positive but who develops tuberculous. This ll not. I com- mon occurrence. considering the ins: number with pnIltive tut.- Ind the relatively smnll number of individual: with tuberculosit. out line those with a negative on "rely it ever get the Idlllt type at Ihe Giselle. the field u narrowed considerably by rate!!- in: the positive metal-l. This to s t mum of inkcting .n extract of e cIusaltve tu- bercle built into the skin. The site becomes mi when positive. indicating that the individual bnrbm - loan. at tuberculoILs organisms. even though he is not ill at the time. To Ivoid mn- understanding. we must stress the fact that a positive tubercu- lin tent is not lynnnomwl with havlrg tuberculosis. ll means the lnlilvlclunl has “ind! contact wllh the micro-organisms which y or my not have caused an Ictive infection. A positive lest. expecinlly in infants. should be followed up with erIys, to determine who» ther tuberculosis bl the lungs hn- developed. it a previous «ell Wu negative and now Is positive, the tyke is l r e a t o d in though the disease existed. Children Ind adults with n no nun. tuberculin reaction lhollid hm the chest X-rIyed It min. in intervals. 50 long as we have tuberculin positive persons, we shall continue in have active cases, and tuberculosis in pushed on to the next genemlnn through contact. But this is only part of the program A person with . osl- live mull should I‘lu everything possible to prevent the diaelle from becoming ncuve. Pool' gen- eral health lowers resiltance to the bacilli. They are more ilker in gain n ioolhold when . person harbors other infections, m. an inadequate diet. and lives under and Im- roundlnzs. CIRCULATORY menus on. writes: I my out hoopl- ml insurance and find . rider attached to the policy saying they Wnuld not pay nu any dis- use at the circulatory system. What are [nae diseases? REPLY nun and blood Vessel ills. orders. The most common are high blond pressure, stroke. corn- nary thrombosis. and hardening bi till:- arteries. MlGRMNE AND srhllss L on wrlm- fan migraine in a 19 year old girl mine tram not gelling enouch ml? R ‘PLY Yes. Other factors are frus- tration. worry. tension. too much competition. and other emotional stresses HEAVY OLDSTER . . R.W. writos. Would reducinfi help In overweight woman of 81 with high blood pressurei REPLY Perillps. but take it any Lol- ing 3 pound per year lhouid in enough at your Inc. HOWEB smmon P s. writes: Does lhampnning under the shower calls. Excel» 5le ms: of hair” No. Look elsewhere lor on cause of excessive hnir hm. 'I'IIDAY'S HEALTH HINT- Keep your fireplace screened. EN travel bargains NOTES BY THE WAY Mnly - in My one hi: father‘s Ihlfll Ind necktie. more accepubio mu bu opin- ions. —— ()1th- l‘or Elie: Pet mu. Very Il- lecllonlib - CiIuifled Id. If we wallth I pet skunk. which we don't. We'd prefer that it be damn“ and undemonltnuve. — Tlmmln; Presl. The other 1|! I bellow drop- ped in to m Dr. :1. Schlleiar. aptomeifllt. He complained that hil new [llllll weren't neuiy II strong II he'd like them to be.”BlIt they’re No. 1 power," Doc uphlned. “Well. What‘s. tin mt Itmnger kind?" ked the culhmer. “No. 1 pl) r w I the reply. "And after (in ? inth the inn. "Aller mt. Sir." declIred Doc grimly. “you buy I dbl.” — Chilton Timer ournIl. Mother Nature in - wile old girl. She equips with thick skull. the kind bi pcolir who butt the” head lntn stone walls. — Wood Imk Sentinei-Review. The plight u the poor Amer ican worker is pitied by hum-n pmpIgIndistI. The American. they lament. n a nun who bl. tor toiling for live dlyl. spendu the weekend hauling . boat Ilong the htghwny. — su. Cath- erinu Standard. Vic-r: “Ab. ma morning Mrs. Brown. i see ynu are lak- ing a trump into the country." Mrs. Brown: "A trlmp indeed! N the you know this is my husband." -— Gall Reporter hon-n32 annghlm can u. very Tweet when they mm to— or sometimel when they merely want. —Chaiham News. NoiabieWiiis hie-hell The Public Record Oiilct ill Moduli, which keepl alloy 0! Erltlln'l historic documents. hu put on display I niecllon a! not- able wiiia. Snrnelhiill Ii) will: has In undying fascination. Much ol I mu'l chlructer m vealed in his w i l i. One of [hole on dinphy in th 9 Public Record Diflcu iI the will of King Rich was depend by hi! cousin. Henry IV. and died miserlbly. and pro- bubb' violently. in Pontefrnct Castle. The will. Imong a t h e r things. provide: [or completing I new Illve III Weltlllinlter Air hey. Ind for the luppori oi lep- er: who were lo lay prIyel-s {or bi! will. Another notable exhibit wIl ShukespeIre'I will. find! lesl thIn I month before he died. it ll now believed lhlt ll! did not Confusion a = get along well with nu wl Ye. Anne Hathaway. His ll rim. firms this belief. He left most of ill: property in Strntlnrd-on-Avnn in his eldest daughter Susannah. dividing the rest between his uh, or daughter Judith and his sister The bequest in his wiie twrilten II In lnPl'ilInIIEl’lll was that site Sim . ave "my second best ed .. Most of the will! were written to dispose oi Dmpeny. Rutllvr unusual il til! will of William Pitt the Younger, the Films Minister of Britain fllrnueh I great. part of tn: struggla Igainst Napoleon. His will. RI might be expected is brief it end! with the words: “i own more than i can lame behind " His bills may have gone tin- pairl but at least. so in Is frank. not: was concerned. he died an honest man. in Vietnam New York Timel Senator Mansfield. . penetra- ting student of Far Eastern Iii- .m. has called the nation's It- tendon to n major bcdeviimenl in our efforts to help South Vlet- nun win the war ngnlli Cum- muuilt guerrillas. 'i'hll complic- ating element in the deep Illllt ill-lid! the Administration on just wllnt policy be pursue—I split Our Yesterdays (From hi GIIIMIIII Flea) TWENTY- FIVE YEARS AGO (1W! 1. 1m) Rev. Dr. GIVIn P. itlonazhnn returned Dunstan'l yel- may from St. John's. New- foundlnnd. when he performed the ceremony of the inn-rim oi hi1 brother, Dr. T.'r. Managu- an to MlsI MIry CalluIn. The "Dutch Pin" bowling tall!- bnment that is in lured It the Holy Name Alley: next week in attracting a lot of lumen. and entries begs to I' i . “Duck Pins" willie not I new game here luv. not been indllll- ed in to u very great. extent. uid Gordon Emery. manner of syn. TEN YEARS AGO (W 1. 139) PM. .T.W. Blluchlrd retired vlcegrinclpll Ind French lIn< Ell-Be til-char It Print: at Wllel Colic“. II “flu. in m lItigr uplclw Illil I! the col- lege.pendin1 the Irrivll of I new French talcher on the III”. Stanley Willis. Comlll. um Sterllnl Mom. Pmnl, leave today iot- cobalt". Ont. when they will compet- ln on tour- nILinnIl Ind world clumpiolh Ilip plowinl mil“. Charlottetown to: Sackville Moncton Truro Saint John Halifax Anti onish S dne Quebec Montreal IIKlal'atfld by the hitter hosili» illes and contradictory cutlrsel among the various American Agencies in Saigon. The result ll all-around confusion no int. ens: it could mean disaster. The situation the United State! iIces In Vietnam is dililcult and e l i r a t r enough wllhont such complications. The remulv. Pallcies of President N50 Dlnh Diem and his borther Nhll I" nlienatinll thr counlIiV's people: on military campaign in impai- red by divided command: tho impending debate on Vlelnnm in the United Nations General A!- umbly will and new embarras-~ a. merits. As President Kennedy h I I stated. the stakes in Southeast AsiI are to» high for In to see the war lost. But the Wnr will not be won by what he himself dur- Iclerized u “Imhivalenca” il our eiiltrl. The obvkmn remedy would seem to he the one MI- tor Mnnsiielti antigens—namely. to put all activities under til. over-I‘ll direction of AmbaISI- dor Lodge Ind to institute Inch changes in personnel or may bl n |II'! Ionic conxilo tency in our Vietnamese policy. Any policy is better than in: pul- Icy It all or I dozen policiel up- entlnli It cross‘purpnscl. Ending the present ml.)- up over who l! in charge should MIcNamarI and General lelnr a mainr llnnl of Secretary all their trip Io Vietnam. The FLVIIIE IIIITBIIMAI RESTAURANT “Your IeIInd sunk House" ~l