+e ___bresident of the Atlantic Pro- vinces and Jibrarian_at-the-Confeder- _ation’ Centre Library, chats Hall Saturday morning before conference Library Associalion — ~ GENERAL SESSION. ‘Douglas Boylan (LEFT) - School Libraries, Saskatche- ciation's annual conference. wan, and. Mrs. T.M. Lothian, ~ High. School, ,.at Montgomery “Tibrarian “at ‘Queen Charlotte ~ Mr.Wright spoke at the lunch: m meeting Saturday. The ° concludes early 100 Delegates Expected For Atlantic Workshop Approximately 100 delegates and-—officials—from.Ottawa are expected to attend the © four-day Atlantic Rehabilitation work- shop which gets underway at Prince of Wales College today. Represented~-at-the--convention will be delegates from the pro- vinejal’ departments of educa- “tion, health and welfare, repre- sentatives from local welfare councils, mental health clinics, public health servicés and: offi- cials from the departnient of veteran's affairs. : The workshop opens _ this morning with a welcome from chairman ‘lan Campbell, nation- al co-ordinator of civilian reha- bilitation, : ‘KEYNOTE ADDRESS. The keynote address will be tish Columbia, now living tawa... The first workshop session this morning, under the. chairman- ship of..Dr. Bertrand Primeau. ‘medical director at the Rehabili- tation Institute of Montreal, will deal with, ‘identification’ and re- ferral of. handicapped _nersons with rehabilitation potential’. Phis afternoon, under the chair- manship of Dr: Primeau, a ses- sion will be held to discuss ‘‘dis- ability assessment for rehabilita- tion planning!’.° Speaker~ at the morning-.session—will be Pa *MacDondld, director. of social service at Victoria General Hos- pital, Halifax: while the: after- noon session will hear Dr. “Earl Steele, -commissioner for in Ot ‘tario Workman's Compensation— delivered by_Gerald_Duclos,i--pooeg 4 panel discussion will ‘rector--general;--Canadian..Man- power Services, formerly of } Bri- DEATHS MacDONALD — At Ajax. On- tario; May 29, 1966.Susan Gaile, -four-year-old—daughter.—of...Mr.- and—Mrs. Robert MacDonald, Jr., and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Willis and Mr. and Mrs. Robert MacDonald: Re- ’ “mains will arrive at the Cut- held in the afternoon; will dis-| —eliffe_Funeral _Home~ -Arrange- ments will announced. later. McKENNA — At Kansa Kansas, on May 29, 1966, Rt. Rev.: Msgr. J.T. MeKenna for- merly of Iona, P.E.1., and_bro- ther of Peter McKenna, Orwell Cove, in his 84th year. Funeral >to be held from St. Patrick's ~Chureh, Kansas City, -Wednes- ‘day, June Ist. Interment in the church cemetery. MacDONALD — In the Charlot- tetown Hospital, May 28, 1966, Joseph_B. MacDonald, formerly of Riverton, age 64 years: Rest- ing at the Hennessey Funeral, Home from where the funeral will take. place Tuesday morn- ing: at 8.15 to St. ‘Cuthbert’s Church, St. Teresa, for Requiem Surveyor's Progress as it | High Mass at 9 o'clock. Inter- dashes across 231,483 miles of | ment_in the Church cemetery. McALDUFF — ‘Suddenly at the Western Hospital Friday, May 27. 1966, Mrs. Frank McAlduff, Alberton, in her 72nd year. For- warded from ,the Rooney Funer- al Home to her late residence from-where the funeral will be held May 30 to the Sacred Heart Church, Alberton’* for .Requiem High Mass at-10. Interment in the Church cemetery. MacKINNON — At the Prince “Bdward—Island Hospital, Satur: day, May 26, Gladys Joyee Mat- Kinnon of Brooklyn, P-E.1. Rest- ing at the home of her parents Mr: and Mrs. George -Mac- Kinnon -Brooklyn Funeral Valleyfield United Church Tue day,.May 31, at two o'clock. In- -terment in’ Brooklyn cemetery: In lieu of flowers: donations to the Canadian Cancer™-Society launched-at I1-a.m: Wednesday, incident had not been revealed: would gratefully be accepted, MacDONALD — Suddenly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John D Chaisson, Bear River, of: Rou- gald MacDonald of Monticello in his 49th year. His temains “WHI TES “At SEVEN “O'CIOCR “This ing procedures with the evening. @t=thes Perry Funeral Home: Funeral arrangements will be—announced. later. . iii ae irene be held during the afternoon ses- sion. % The third workshop, scheduled for Tuesday morning will dis- cuss “vocational assessment’”’ under session chairman Frank Wellard, rehabilitation co-ordin- ator for Nova Stotia. Guest ‘speaker will be Dr. James Tuck, directors of psychological _ ser- vices, Rehabilitation Foundation for -the Disabled, Toronto. The ourth workshop session, to be f .cuss_‘‘training of the— petl’’. The session chairman is W.J.° Hurd, technical and voca- sas City, tional training for the Depart- | tled, | ‘ment of Citizenship and “I gration, Ottawa. A film, e “its a.wonderful world’, will be ‘shown Tuesday evening at.Prince ‘of Wales College. (film. of shel- | |tered workshop — Toronto crip- {pled civilians). FIFTH -SESSION-—- ' The third day, of the |Rehabilitation Workshop will, feature a fifth session ‘‘new: pro- grams in-manpower and welfare and their_relationship to rehabil- itation’’? under>the chairmanship SPACECRAFT (Continued from: page one) weighless space will, be followed closely by Stafford, Cernan and other astronauts. For one day in the next three years they may traverse the -same route. Re The Ocean of Storms is con-. sidered a possible landing spot for—Apollospacemen~ and Sur- veyor is. to ,determine—if—the surface there is firm enough to support a manned expedition. Launch crews were busy on three pads ~ Sunday, preparing for the heavy assault on’ space. SYSTEMS CHECKED . The Atlas-Centaur and Sur- veyor received final systems checks. ¥ The Atlas that. is to -boost from Gemini 9's target satellite and after what 3- the Titan 2 that is ‘to hoist the an attempted murder and a sul- astronauts also underwent ex- tensive . tests. 6 The target Satellite is to be > with Gemini 9 to follow at 12:38 pm Stafford, an air force lieute- Atiantie ‘of lan Campbell, to be held in the-morning while. the afternoon, session will deal with ‘‘employ- ‘ment of the handicapped:’ under chairman Dr. Frank MacKin- iworkshop will conclude with a ‘dinner and social. The final day of the conven- tion will feature three work- ‘shops. The morning session, un- ider the chairmanship of J.V. Klien, research officer with the | ‘Department of Citizenship and Immigration, will deal with “‘in- lstitute on the special problems and characteristics of handicap- ped groups’. The eighth work- shop session, scheduled for: 11 a.m., will discuss ‘‘co-ordination and resources--while the - ninth ‘session at 2 p.m. will consider - “future goals ‘in rehabilitation’. |events rocking the country are A conference summary will be all here, ——> delivered by G.W. Crandlemire ‘and provincial reports heard. S iremarks from the chairman, Mr. | Campbell. BE t | an ee John Robinson of Augustine Cove received the ‘degree of Bachelor of Science in Chemt!- cal. Engineering at the’ convo- cation held recently-.at the Un- iversity of New Brunswick. He’ and —Mrs. a | is the son of Mr. Eric Robinson. He is now as- | | ‘sociated with Eric Robinson } Inc., Albany. Halifa Murder Try. | f | ee : _And Suicide | HALIFAX (CPS — A. 23-year- told man was dead and his 10- year-old wife in hospital Sunday police described as cide at northend Halifax home ‘early. Sunday morning. + “Names of those involved in the ‘by police Sunday night. : |, The woman was reported to ‘have @uffered a .303-riflé bullet nant-colonel, and Ceérhan, a> “ ‘ ; ' woufd “in her right shoulder. navy lieutenant-commander, ‘are ee m to practice several different coh ai he sled types. of rendezvous and. dock. "UST © 900. target— “-ROWDS manned lunar flights. * 000.000 mark. aneeremnncf 4 jter of I966.0r as late <as. mid- | Island News Page. Western and Central Districts |The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., May 30 1966. 3 Expected Earl “By JOSEPH BENHAM “GANTIAGO,’ Chile (AP) Chilean Copper Price Cut y Next Year “eopper and- cause the. price: to al ‘drop, one~ observer’ said; while : By DALE BURGESS INDIANAPOLIS (AP) The world's ‘fop” racing ‘drivers ‘will pull on: insulated underwear and flame-resistant ‘cover-alls today and charge for a $750,000. pot in the—golden—anniversary—500-mile Ho race. eee The big question’ is “whether Chile, which. rocked “the eco-|a step-up in the war in Viet. !talian-born Mario Andretti, the jnomi¢ world in April by raising Nam would -aggravate they cur- 1965 U.S the price of export copper 20 rent shortage. Any African de- who Auto Club champion dominated _ preliminary cents’ a’ pound, will begin eut-, velopment which halted the flow trials; can maintain his pace. ting the price early in. 1967, a of copper from Zambia or ‘the A. J.-Foyt, who had Andretti's ‘majority of industry and gov- Congo would have a major ef- pale position last year, kept: it jernment official believe '-The big question$ are when \the. price will begin to drop and seen, officials say, they do. not ‘!m and went on to win ‘going’ “believe the Chilean government @W4% how ‘far’ it will fall. fect on the market. “a Barring something. unfore- only a- couple of hundred yards before Scot Jimmy Glark ‘passed Clark is. back in -the There is nothing resembling will move the price above. the S4me No. 2 starting ‘spot this Unanimous agreement on either point’ But the nearest thing to ‘a consensus would seem to be along these lines: eee —The.world copper shortage will” begin to ease early next year,” although coppér will re- jmain in fairly short supply un- til at least 1968 and it probably will be 1970 before . production catches up with demand. —As the shortage becomes \less. Severe, the price will be- igin to: fall slowly ... as slowly ‘as the Chilean government can ‘go and still hold its share of jthe market: | ~The price’ could begin to de- \clige as early as the last quar- 1967, but most observers © say \they believe the first quarter of 1967 is a ‘likely time for, the drop to start. 2 “level off somewhere between 40 Chilean and .50 cents a pound. This-is the-—-area~ of least agreement, | with some. officials..saying—the' 62-cent level to which it raised im April. - | Any move to increase’ the price aggin would be certain to meet ong opposition .from ‘the copper: produeers ‘who are iknown to have counselled _against the 20-cent. increase on grounds. .that °it- would make customers..turn to such as aluminum: and plastic. Chilean officials say they be+’ lieve customers who turn away ‘from copper are likely to do so because of the difficulty in ob- taining the metat~rather than was the price; though. they consider iprice a factor. eee The government and three major copper producers—Ana- éonda,: Cerro and Kennecott— are planning a major expansion and development program —---—=The-_-decline.:-probably—will which _is expected _to double copper production by 1970-1971. The 1965 production ‘ting Chile behind” the “United substitutes, year... Other. former® winnerss besides Clark ready.-to challenge * An- dretti, who finished: third. in his first 500 last year, are. Foyt, Parnelli _Jones__a nd — Rodger Ward. ; On-the fourth row -of-the-grid is the “only --€anadian, Billy Foster pf Victoria. He qualified at a speed of 159.490 miles an hou” in aVolistedt Offenhauser, just a fraction less than a Lola Ford driven by Jackie Stewart of Dunbarton, Scotland, who won the Monaco-Grand Prix last week.. . Last year~Foster became the first. Canadian ever to qualify er mrt * Indianapolis 500 | i Is Set For Today #, - (Sith place at’ the: 200-mile mark | when a. water jacket burst and forced him to retire. OTHER CONTENDERS Strong contenders besides Clark, -the1965--world_road_rae- ing .champion, include Graham Hill .of London, No. 2 in the world _standing;Stewart, and Dan Gurney’ of Costa Mesa, Calif... is | Rear-engine cars powered by special Ford racing engines,. al- most identical with Clark's win- ning power plant, filled 24 of 33 starting spots. ; Front engine Offenhausers which have dominated the. races for many years.before-1965. were _represented by a single bright red ear driven by veteran Bobby Grim of Indianapolis. Most. cars in the field are capable of running long dis- -taneces—at-more-than—160- m-p-h., compared * with . Clark's record of a tittle over 150s last year. Much of the credit for the tremendous speed was given to- new, low profile tires — with treads almost a foot wide. The, ‘race was run. with- out an injury but driver, Chuck Rodee of Indianapolis was killed this May 14 when he crashed _into the ¢oncrete retaining wall: on a qualifying run..He was the 57th fatality at the oval track since+it--opened in 1909, in the 500 and was running in WASHINGTON (AP) ~The \think the price may drop to the ‘States and Zambia as the. ma- Suviet. naval threat in the Eu- jhigh 30s and others talking con- \fidently of 50-cent copper. ‘All _prédictioris were heavily |qualified. Everyone interviewed said the Viet Nam war, unrest in the African gountries which jor copper producers in the | Western world. = Large-scale expansion of cop- per production in . Peru, . the |United States, Canada and Aus- tealia, among other areas, also ropean area ‘is real now, and still growing,"* ‘Senator Stuart Symington (Dem.: Mo:) ‘said in a censored report. made—public Saturday night Symington said-U.S. naval of- produce copper and the health jis under way or_in the planning fivials he talked to on a recent of. the U.S. and Eijropean econ- omies will have major impacts _on_ the copper price situation. _ SEE. IMPACT OF WAR. Major -reductions in auto pro- ‘duction in the United States would yeduce the’ demand for ‘stage, and . some officials say they believe there. will be enough capper on the market by 1970 to drive the price below the point-on-which_ it. settles fol “lowing the predicted 1967. de- \cline. . European trip expressed sur- prise that so little attention has been paid to what was pictured as a dramatic change in Soviet Baval capability over a short time, : ’ The senator's views were con- | Helpless, Slow Population — Appears As Face Of VietNam _ By ANDREW BOROWIEC HOI AN (AP). -—This dusty ‘town—with. its handful--of. ‘Bud- idhist dissidents, barbed wire, helpless leaders: and apathetic population—is the face of Viet |Nam, 1966. cen | The pain, hopelessness, fa- \rigue and indifference to the |- Hoi_An, about 360 miles north- |\Viet Nam — wit! . all The workshop will close upon problems and lack of solutions. \Jéentless , missions against In_ the centre of -the--town,—a locked in a pagoda in what ap- | pears tobe symbolic resistance i jtu--the--government of Premier Nguyen Cao. Ky. ‘ Around the pagoda, barbed wire has been thrown to isolate the insurgents. But food. comes under their big, straw conical hats. : : : : “We cannot let them starve— ¢\they are relatives of the people glof this town,” said the local garrison commander, Lt.-Col. Nguyen Tho Lap. ~~ Machine-guns protrude from Eithe pagoda grouncs and mor- iitars are in position. So far, no ove has used them. Officially, Hoi An is in government hands and the strange fortress ih the town does not seem to disturb anyone. |FOLLOWED CHAPLAIN | The men ‘locked in the pa- jgoda are part of Viet Nam’s, recent history, They followed \slogans, appeals of rebel gener- -tals and the impassioned call of: ja Buddhist chaplain who led a battalion of the 5lst Regiment ‘‘to the rebellion.” ie The battalion, however, soon disintegrated, most of its men deserting the chaplain to return ~ to their homes or to the army. The chaplain fled: Some of his soldiers are still in the pagoda. > WESTERN - FUNERALS A'HEARN FUNERAL — The funeral for Mrs. Timothy A’- {Hearn was held from. the home of William. Gaudette on Thiurs- day morning to St. Simon and St. Jude Church Tignish. Rev. _M.J. Rooney officiated. - Honor- ary pallbeawérs were: Joe Han- drahan, *Parnell Cahill, Edward C..Gaildette, Richard’ Ellsworth, Joseph Conway, Fred Overbeck. Pallbearers were: Anthony \Keefe, Ben Waite, Hubert Han- drahan, Herbert Gavin,’ Fred _Ryan, Holland Cahill. Flower. poth—-mother-and“baby-were- tet jthrough—regularly,—earried——by— old women with shrivelled—faces-\.: efided in this pathetic ‘‘defen- \sive perimeter.”’ : \ |. We..-are letting them. -stay ituere, they ‘don't do_any harm,” agit taB er ' The dusty streets of Hoi An ‘are lined with barbed wire. Ex- ipressionless troops in hung with hand grenades, list- ~ lessly-stand-wateh, Some—crouch in the dust. will be jeast of Saigon, is a miniature | Over the surrounding country- its side, American—planes fly re- | st - the {Viet Cong. - Somehow, to -the Jatrangers.. {0 REVOLT FIZZLES OUT ~~ .--Barlier this month, Hol An imade “headline news when re- : heavy-| Charlottetown Radio ran American helmets, their belts | night : tained in a 9@page report to the chairmen of. the Senate armed |services and foreign relations Precipitation Is Recorded An-inch of rain fell‘between 1 | pm. Saturday. and .8 o'clock | Sunday morning, reported - the ge la |= tas een : ~_ILEON, Spain (AP)..—~ Fire architecture in Europe. ‘Firemen soldiers—and other residents of the city helped fight Called Real, Still Growin: totalled about 600,000 tons, put-. Fire Breaks Out In Ancient Church committee—on--his—trip-Syming- ton is a member of both groups. He also serves on the Senate Borden, 19; of Glace Bay, panel which oversees activities\~N-S.; yRuth Annear, 16, of | of the Central Intelliegence | Charlottetown, P.E.I., only, Ageney, a girl-contestant: first-place ‘win- Symington had previously, "°° Vermeeren: and Ross _ summarized the-report- In a letter May 4 and a press con-| ference. . Symington said’ he~ was: told in~briefings~that—-the—“heart—ot--5 > ainst American Viet —Nam-- the. Soviet-naval_threat-was-the- submarine’’—and that: this~ in- formation-was- not: based on -con- jecture but .“‘rather on hard facts." teed ae |\NO LONGER RESTRICTED | The former air force’ secre ‘ary_noted_that —‘‘formerly.we thought: of tthe Soviet fleets .as greatly restricted by unfavor- lable geography,"’ and he added: \""One fleet was. too far north, jand the other two were bottled | ‘up by narrow straits guarded by traditional” enemies of the So- | viets. All were remote from one another. But now the Soviets st nave torn a leaf from the U.S, | navy book on mobility.” lsaid> the Russians have kept fromm the Black Sea and Baltic regularly deployed in European waters. . oy ‘Presumably, referring te. this | jhandful of deserter soldiers and people of Hoi An, this has be- broke out Sunday night in Le- use of mobility, Symington said | |Buddhist ‘‘suicide squads’ are come a strange war, fought. by on’s 13th century cathedral, one ina censored _section:_‘'The So-. ra _iof the finest examples of Gothie viet navy._by: this means _has_| found-their warm water port. on | the open sea-this is a goal they’ have had since Csarist days.” But in order to keep matters | | Vermeeren, ; In, recent months, Symington | guomarines arid surface —units-} \ 4 4 ' Teen Age contestants at the Sonior Chamber. of Commerce Teen Age Safe Driving Cham- LINE UP*THEIR SKILLS | | Ramsa ys ,. of Summerside, PEI ree pionship ‘“‘Road-E-O" in North | Sydney get a close-up look at the trieky skill-driving course npefore competing in the llth annual Atlantic area event. Overall winner. was Charles 19, of Stephen- | Ville, Nfld., with 757 out of a Red Naval Threat InEurope || Second of. Fred- possible 900 ~ points: was Don Sharp, 17, Bernard Dugas, 16, Sydney. Shown above, ~ o(lr) t |_ Sydney:.Shown above. (4 to ry Hockquard, 18, N.B.; Bernard are:__Charles of Dalhousie, SWEDES DEMONSTRATE STOCKHOLM ( Reuters )— Demonstrators Saturday burned paper American. flags in protest policy. About 100 ‘police: battled with as*many demonstrators’ for about 15 -minutes outside the United States embassy _before | restoring order. ne “the Soviets are not the world's ranking -naval power. U.S, and Ajlied navies continue -to -oper-_ a‘e without interference and are ready to meet all tasks.” Pio. RRS. | INSTANT HEARING NOTHING IN EITHER _EAR!! : always wanted, an_ invisible —hearing—aid—nothing in either ear, no earpiece fitting of know. 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' : formed ——a— dissident —‘strong—-tourist_attractions. ______~_in_perspective, Symington... hold’’ and vo to overthrow |" Priests battled the flames to ‘the Ky regigé Later, Yeu de- rescue ancient documents, some UR REWINDING ided to “for sick leave’’ dating to the 11th and 12th cen- and Lap moved in with two bat- talions..Hoi An officially entered | linto. the fold. ; In~ the — flag-bedecked ~~ town ‘hall, the town’s leaders. debate ;what—to~-do -next.- Many are | The stark ‘problem of Viet | Provincial Headquarters — |\Nam’s indecision, or ha} f- ;hearted~-protest--and~clamor~ for ‘something new and better,” youths who have. known nothing but-war. Some are older men, trained in French colonial rschools. An American adviser lsits impassively amidst the ‘clamor of Vietnamese voices. | Slogan. follows slogan — win the war, bring happiness to the people,..defeat communism. Al- -jmost everyone in Viet Nam has «been hearing them for years, { copter landing zone, U.S.- ma- rine helicopters land in clouds of yellow dust. Coolies. stripped | to the waist unload packages marked: ‘Gift of the American people.” A fmarine < officer carries a child: with a bandaged leg to the ‘helitopter. Some women in | spotless as dais — the graceful | national costume—follow. The helicopters take off. Someone who was late: hopelessly waves |his_.arnts. Perhaps tomorrow they will come again. x ‘Vietnamese guards lean against sandbag gun emplace- “ments. They don’t even look in the. direction of. distant bomb explosions. ~ HAS BABY BOY NEW YORK (AP)—Mrs. -Clif- _ton Daniel, the former Margaret Truman, gave birth Saturday night to a baby boy at Univer- sity. Hospital. The child, deliv- ered by Caesarian section, weighed four pounds, 12 ounces. j b oys were: Brian Gaudette, Em- ported doing well. It- was the all-applicable--to-techniques-that--The_-populafion of Tokyo {s |mett -A’Hearn, Gary A*Hearn, fourth—childe—all boys—born 6 might have to be conducted on thought to have passed’ the- 11,- Jimmy A’Hearn. Interment was the daughter. of former presi- in the Church cemetery. dent and Mrs. Harry § Truman. Outside the town, on: the heli- | turies. The fire broke out~-after>an ‘lelectrical storm which hit this ‘area of northwest Spain during the afternoon. ‘ 168 Gt. ‘ Day Call... “ - For Transportation To , The Polls Election 46816 4-5683 6298 Polls Open 5 9. A.M. To 6P.M.— & REPAIRS Storey Electric Ltd. 136 Pr aKa St. ,Ch'town George St. — a ¢ > if t ‘Ine ‘by* the , Starlite Bidg., Halifax, N.S. Maritime Hearing Service, Bayers Rd. Shopping Centre, © Queens County P.C. Assn. x Vince Shea 215 Belvedere Avenue ~ Charlottetown, P.E.L~ ‘ ~ for: eee e PRODUCTS . 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