r. way The Guardian | Covers Prince Edwerd telend Uke The Dew W. J. Mencea, Pucisher Wellece Ward Frenk Welker Banaging Editor Editor Published every weet dey morn tg (except Sum dey end statutory hoger) ef ‘65 Prince Street thariottetown P Ei. te “homers Newspapers ltd «trench offices et S.cmesce Moctegve. Alberton end Sours Represented cemorelly By Thomson Neatpepen Advertising Servces ‘orerte 425 University Ave Empire 38894 “Mortree $49 Cethcert Street Unb versity 65042 Western Office 1030 West Georgie Street Vancouver WA POI? 4 Member Cereces Dely Newspaper Pubishen Association anc The Canadien Press. The Cenedian Press is excisively entitied to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches in this paper tredited to i of to the Associeted Press or Reuters end also to the ince! news published herein Ab fight’ or repudlication of special dispatches here in also reserved Subscription rate Not over 40 per week by carrier $12.00 @ year by mail on rural routes and ereas Mot serviced by carrer $1500 » year off tsland end UK. $20 00 per year im US. end elsewhere eutside Brtsh Com monweaith Net over 7c single copy. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation PAGE 4 WEDNESDAY. JUNE 9. 1965. By Way Of Contrast Following a recent blast in the Soviet press at the way Russian citizens are being treated in Canada. the press attache in the Soviet Em- bassy at Ottawa. Vladimir Grigoro- vich. called a press conference last week to deliver a harangue on the same theme’ It seems. poor man, that he is being hounded by RCMP security and intelligence men who follow him around so closely that he | seldom has a private moment. In view of recent espionage revelations. resulting in the expul- sion of a Soviet diplomat and cor- respondent from the country, Cana- : dians mav feel that a little extra precaution along this line is not un- called~for But Mr. Grigorovich is quite worked up about it. By the nature of their duties, he feels that he and his associates must maintain contact with a wide variety of people. and..snooping ‘on their activities— as he says the RCMP is doing-—is simply not cricket. He must have been disappointed at the way in which Canadian news- men reacted -to this. appeal to their sense of justice and courtesy! They ‘reminded him. in their columns, that | uncomfortable as he and his col- leagues may be under this form of supervision, at least they are in no danger of being thrown into prison for questioning without any charge being laid. Much luckier, that way, than foreign correspondents in Mos- cow who, half a century after the Revolution and 12 years after Stalin's death. are still kept away from any contact with the Russian people. Those who seek such contact do so at their peril. A notorious. case was that of ~ Prof. Bafgehoorn of Yale, who was arrested in 1963 because he was try- ing to talk to Russians and conduct an innocent survey.. He was released “only at the personal intervention of the late President Kennedy. And last April a British lecturer in the Russian language. Gerald Brooke, was, arrested with his wife when “they went’to visit the home of a Moscow librarian. Mrs. been released, but Mr. Brooke is still -in a Moscow prison, although, thus | far, no charges have been preferred against him. . Perhaps Mr. Grigorovich’s audi- “tors kept thinking of these incidents, -and of what a reliable correspondent “in The Economist of London had to -report on the subject: “Sad to say, " Moscow is still a city where a foreign visitor, even when travelling with an organized group. can be hauled away ‘to an unknown prison and subjected _to gruelling questioning for weeks on end without any communication with his consulate, family or friends. or ~any charge in a public court.” In the circumstances the Soviet “spokesman’s dissatisfaction with po- -Tice methods in this country is, to “Bay the least. a little finical. The Gooneys Won =. The United States Navy has lost “g@ war in Midway Island, that tree- “shaded atoll of World War IT fame -which the Americans won at bitter _ “cost from the Japanese. This time it the albatross (known as the -“gooney bird”) that was the enemy. » The navy fought just as stubbornly “against it as it did against the Japs, | but to no avail. It was outnumbered __bv the birds and by bird lovers— and now it has beat a retreat. —. The story is told in a United Press International dispatch from the abandoned island. which lies half- wav between Hawaii and Japan and over which the gooneys have exerted their seniority rights. The birds just never would recognize that airplanes had the right of way. The head-on Grashes were expensive and danger- ‘ous for the Americans and always fatal for the birds. Ione month 538 wey killed-by military planes while appropriate biblical quotation: Brooke has causing an estimated $256.000 dam- age to the pianes:and subtracting 10 years from the life of every pilot who landed there The navy imported ornithologists to solve their problem. One of them suggested fire-crackers. so thousands of dollars of roman candles, sky- rockets. sparklers and cannon crack- ers weré tossed about the sand dunes. The birds squawked, flapped their big wings and tore up the island get- ting away from. the racket. But back thev came when the noise subsided. Then somebody decided to move the entire bird population to Kure island. 65 miles away and uninhabit- ed,-figuring the young hatched there would make it their permanent home. That didn't work. Next bull- dozers. were brought in to level the dunes which caused the updrafts . which the albatross needs to become airborne. Tons of asphalt were spread over acres of the sand near the run- ways. Still the birds came _ back. When all other means had failed, a frustrated navy captain took direct action and armed the garrison with clubs and ordered a mass slaughter. The massacre of the clumsy gooneys was easy. But among the club wielders was a sailor bird lover and member of the Audubon so- ciety. It took only a quick message to Washington to unite the bird lov- ers who rushed to the gooneys’ de- | fense. Congressmen were threat- ened with impeachment if some- thing wasn't done. The navy depart- ment found itself facing appropria- tion cuts-and congressional investi- gations.-- The captain = was’ quickly relieved. Today the jet age has solved the problem in favor of the birds. Mid- way is no longer an important Pa- cific bastion of defense. Planes that flew to and from it have been re- placed by planes that flv over it. And as the human population dwindles. the bird population increases. The latest estimates now place the gooneys at about 50.000 and ove: ing yearly | Too Successful? A news item in the Financial Times of Canada starts off with an “Hath the rain a father? or who hath begot- ten the drops of dew?” Few. persons are willing to admit that a truly suc- cessful means of making rain has ever been discovered, it says. But in Quebec's Lake St. John region a small body of irate farmers is com- plaining that nearby rainmaking ex- water. The rain hath a father al- | right. they say. It is the Weather ; Engineering Corp. of Canada Ltd.. of Montreal. This firm has been engaged for several vears in trying to make rain in the Ottawa Vallev and the north shore of the St. Lawrence. The oper- ations are still in the experimental stage. In the agricultural areas near- by, weather checks have found no significant difference in year-round rainfall, but the provincial govern- ment has moved to -protect the dis- gruntled farmers anyway. It has de- creed that the generators used in the experiment may.not be employed from mid-May to mid-June, mid-July to mid-August and during the whole month of September. Still the complaints pour in. The Quebec opposition leader, Mr. John- son, has brought the matter up in the legislature on behalf of the Lake St. John residents At Alabama Two vears ago the name of Vivian Juanita Malone was on the front pages of Canadian as well as Amert- can newspapers. She was the voung | Negro student who registered at the University of Alabama. It was in the attempt to dissuade her, and to per- petuate segregation. that Governor George Wallace made his futile “stand in the schoolhouse door.” It was because of her that Presi dent Kennedy federalized national guardsmen fo prevent violence and reminded the American nation: Negro’ baby born in America today. regardless of the section of the na- | tion in which he is born. has about one-half as much chance of complet- ing high school as a white baby born in the same place on the same dav. one-third as much chance of complet ing college. one-third as much chance of becoming a professional man. twice as much chance of becoming unemploved. . .” ; Last week Miss Malone graduated from the University of Alabama—the first Negro to receive a degree in the school’s 134 vear history. accomplishment.” savs the Milwaukee Journal. “provides solid hope that the disgraceful comparisons the late | president cited will disappear.” “Tis | a consummation to be wished periments are producing too much. Fer THs SPECCH maaae “mE Suns HATINE- ~ Twe PRESIDENT SA THeGeR. MAM THAN You eee EWA eS oo” WHITE HOUSE SKETCHBOOK REVISING THE REWRITTEN ~ Putting Stalin Back Into Perspective: The trouble about history is that sooner or later vou may have to unrewrite it. Clearly the Russians are now much occupied with trying to get history as straight as pos- sible. after all the gross and crue! falsifications of the Stalin ' era and the less crude versiong | Presages in anv way a return under Nikita Khrushchev. Into this pattern, of course. fit | the discreet efforts to put Stalin back into proper perspective: There is still no sign that this | to Stalinism. Rather is it evt- dence of the sober, and realistic desire of the new Soviet leader- | ship not to have their country the lauchingstock of the rest of- the world Everyone knows that Stalin played an important part World War If. And it really has been too much to expect outsid- ers ‘er even Russians) to pre- tend that he never happened—or that if he happened, everything that | wrong | “FADS MUST BE FACED” | gov- | "conference According to a report in a Polish emigre journal. A.V Sne- at a recent historians’ in Moscow— said that facts must be faced and an answer given to the question: what did Stalin do for the So- viet Union? To get this, he said, Soviet historians must treat Sta- } lin as objectively as they did Peter the Great or Ivan the Ter- rible Interestingly the Soviet fense Ministry journal. De- Red Star, has just reported that So . viet military historians have re- written the history of the Battle of Stalingrad The journal mak- es the point that the new version is objective and that mistakes made in the earlier version of. the battle have been put right. It is fascinating to speculate | whether the reported circulation | of the last letter of Nikolsa Buk- | Shevists, harin one of the original Bol- shot on Stalin's order in 1938— should be-seen in the | Same context FAKE OR GENUINE? First, of course, it must be es | tablished whether the letter 1s “The_{ | for some time. No efforts “Her | genuine, ‘If it is a fake. it is still a@ movingly written one.) And: if it is genuine, Bukharin’s heart- rendingly simple protestation of his innocence and loyalty sheds objective light on the darkest side of Stalin's character. History. of course, has many mantles. It is often colored by the sympathies of those writing it But such coloration is some- thing different from the con- PUBLIC FORUM This ccleme te open te the by correspenden’s = qeestions terest. The paper last week, I wish to thank the firm of Morrison and Mac- Rae Ltd., especially the fore- man Mr. Sigforth Raynor, and Mr ry mess cleaned up. Now it is up to the Minister of Highways tn complete the job of erecting fences. shifting of culverts, ete 1 would also refer to the paint- ing of the white lines on pave- ments which have been finished been made to have them done as vet In my last letter I invited Hoa. Mr. Stewart and the Minister of | Highways to call and discuss this matter with me. I again ex- tend the invitation. H they are too busy perhaps Premier Shaw would have a few minutes to spare, as I am unable to go in| to see him I am. Sir. etc . WILLIAM W. POUND New Glasgow. P FI rewriting | imi he did was egregiously | | Queens. | i ' | ia ' Harris, for the cooperation | we received in getting this sor- | has Christian Science - Monitor or suppression «hich has hither- to marked the record of the past put together in the Soviet. Union —and in other iands where au- scious manipulation, distortion : thority seeks to control thought. Let us hope that the chink of light now being let in there will Se l : Fountain Of Youth — Sherbreake Daily Record — Despite the zreat victories of , medicine over disease in the present century. the limit set by the Psalmist -~ three- score- years-andten sti! remains for the vast majority of humans the ultimate period of life. ___ Figures quoted by. publie _ health experts and life insur- ) ance companies of afi increas- ~~ ing. life-span are merely the number of years a newborn in- fant is expected to live. The act- ual period of life still hovers around the seventy-mark and the exact reasons why the body Wears out about this time still | puzzle science But there is one people that mysteriously eludes for half- a- lifetime longer the fate of the rest of the world They are the isolated. half-lezendary Hunzas. who live in the northern moun- tains of Pakistan They reportedly z i could Baa Seataeel Mcorery It {s rather uniortunate, in a way. that manufacturing is known as “‘secondary industry.” It is secondary in the sense that it processes materials that are primary in their raw state. But in terms of importance the, set- ondary industry..is really prim- ary For it is manufacturing that is relatively “‘job intensive’ —it provides more employment than ' primary industries can. No country can really grow with manufacturing And yet, as Gen. Keefler says. “secondary industry knows no nationality.” Its demands on na- ture are lemited to a few acres of unoccupied land on which to build a plant. and some source of power. How far success in manufacturing may be detach- ed from the possession of raw materials is seen in the Swiss and the Japanese would be as well for Canadians to ponder such questions. There are no natural resources in Swit- terland that make them special- ly proficient as watchmakers. any more than there are natur- al resources im Japan to explain their success with transistors What these nations did was to develop technology as a nation- al resource. and establish re search and development as in dustries The importance of Canada getting away from the idea that all natural resources are buried in the earth. or grow out of it, was well emphasized last week at a seminar at Quesen’s Univer- sity by Maj’-Gen. R_H. . president and chairman "the board of the Northern.—Electric Company Limited “Dominion Day” Stands Geardian_ Bureas. Ottawe Some of the embarrassing problems that arise when zov- ernments start to play around with the names and titles of de- partments were outline here by Heath Macquarrie. Mr. Macquarrie and Hon. J. | Angus MacLean. the MPs for spearheaded a Conser- vative defence of the word “do- | minion™ in the Commons when Quebec Liberal sought to | change the name of Dominion | Day to Canada Day. Mr. Macquarrie said that the Liberal administrations of Mac- kenzie King and Louis St._Laur- ent had attempted to extend the American expression “federal” ‘in place of “dominion” ti gov- ernment documents and term- | inology. them dead im their tracks was the Dominion Bureau of Statis- ties,” Mr “D” would leave a very unde- sirable implication.” The Queens” } talk out the private member's bill in the hour allotted for its debate. They denied that the j—— “The one thing that stopped Ontario is to inaugurate a reer tem of community colleges, sometimes: termed “junior col- ‘leges.”” They will be 4 sort of academic halfway house be- tween our colleziates and uni- versities They «ill aliew collegiate stu- dents to top off their education, ‘be it academic or technical by a couple of vears extra learning. ‘Or these tears may be used as i tion or part-time students. New v College System , Pirpece Bat there universities in the real ‘sense a the word. Some students get in- verzied into atten*az these plac es on the assumption they have hich academic standar@. ° ‘ sneezing occurs whenever con- tact is made with the offender. Extensive skin tests are needed when the-cause+s-evasive Desensitization is possible when the causative acént cannot be eliminated. Sometimes a mild Sensitivity to a number of items ; will add up to a severe allergy. | This is why the job of removing ! possible offenders must be ¢om- | plete. By adhering to a few sim- | ple rules. and taking an antihis- t tamine. most victims can re- main on the job. tress with plastic and eliminate | should be given to ible | friends Draperies eae often hold enough dust to keep Rose im a turmoil: substitutes are available. Use hypoallergen- ie cosmetics. Air- condition the home. especially whe living in a dusty community .. RINGWORM. CURE E L S «rites: Is there a cure remedy. In addition, there are dozens of good fungicidal salves or ointments containing iodine, benzoic acid. thymol. salicylic , acid. resorcin: sulfur, gentian violet, propionic acid, undecyle- Ric acid. ammoniated mercury or formaldehyde C_ V. writes: Would a hyster- ectomy cause faulty § circula- tion” REPLY No. provided vascular compli- cations such as milk leg do not follow the operation 7.95 a 2 i z 3 i POMPEO DOPIIIAIaa, — = 3 Baas: : d wm = ° © “a with suckers. As he passed them out to friends, he said. “It’s « brother.""—Plymouth Review. The Liston-Clay fight was se bad, suggests a pessimist. that the next heavyweight title fight may draw only a $4,000,000 gate instead of $4,500,000. — Ottawa Journal. | Peace Talk Aimed At Soviets By Arch MacKenzie Canadian Press Staff Writet - When President Johnson says the United” States would much rather talk than fight. his words are aimed at the Soviet Union and the Eastern European Com- munist bloc. His words reflect existing “Between the great powers of East and Wes,t there is no his- tory of conflict on battlefields of the past.” he said “Between the people of the Soviet Union and the people’ of the US. there has been friend- _American foreign policy which ship and—there can he great includes encouragement of looser ties among satellites, ob- servers suggest. But Johnson's emphasis is being construed in Washington as recognition that the Soviet Union is feeling the | heat of its Viet Nam dilemma and particularly the propaganda advantage Viet Nam has given. China in the Communist ideo- | logical war. A harsher Soviet line has de- | veloped toward the United a se wk ak | States. Public statements have been tougher. Now old but ade- | quate Soviet bombers have been | sighted in North Viet Nam. “Russia seems to have lost any interest it might have had in helping launch peace talks. In- ' Stead it is working overtime to get a place at the Afro-Asian summit conference to open in Algeria June 29 and China is working just as hard, appar- ently, to exclude Russia. FORCED FRIENDSHIP . There have been statements from both Communist camps that, if the worst comes to the ‘worst in Viet Nam. Russia and s China wil get together Johnson's words show contin- uing awareness of the risk that Viet Nam will force a Sino-So- viet reunion. Such a develop- ment would increase the hazard of a major conflict, it is as- sumed. In foreign policy addresses last Thursday at Chicago and Sunday at Washington's Catho- lie University of America, John- son took aim at Europe's Com- munist nations. Win $100. Drawn June 30, 1965 formed” opinion understanding.” He suggested the peoples of the USSR. and Eastern Fue rope “know above all others the cost of 2Oth-century warfare.” ‘LET US REASON’ At Catholic University the president said. “To the peonle-—- and to the leaders—of the Com- munist countries, te the Soviet Union, to the nations of Eastern Europe and Southeast Asia. we extend our invitation come, now, let us reason tocether.”* Johnson bolstered his case for American | peaceful intentions by recalling words spoken by Franklin Delane Rooseveit Abraham __Lincol: gerald Kennedy, - son, George Washington, and two non-Americans, Dag Ham- merskjold and Pepe John XXIII “As peace knocks,” said Johnson, “‘our door ts unlatched, our table is set We are ready— and we believe mankind is ready with us.” implicit—_in each” was the theme that the US. desire for peace is frustrated by the re- fusal oft North Viet Nam or China to agree to peace talks The president's speech was supplemented by a rash of other: weekend speeches by «“pnior government spokesmen involwed in the seasonal! tide of colleze graduating ceremonies The president and others, aware of some foreign policy Opposition on U.S. college camp uses, stressed the need for “in _ aS. 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