if It's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It Edward. Island Like The Dew” WN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1968. THAN: WEATHER Sunny, not quite so’ “cool. winds ce Low-high 35 and 60. Thursday: sun warmer. TEN CENTS 16 PAGES | het, 2a, ince “VOL. LXXIX NO. 221 oraertnt * ‘cuswn cal tor gaoment. tf seed Rees fee TO ~Sitnag 1 .an Take t And iet Nam Sogsatt 1 Thoughts. Unitied Na By DENNIS BELL VANCOUVER (CP! Can- ;ada’s 10 provincial education |ministers, under pressure from jeducationists for a national ap- |Proach to. problems of man- | Power‘ and_professional training, [met in .closed sessions Tuesday | | Prior to the annual convention jof the Canadian Education As- | | sociation. Major subject under discus- | ision is formation of Canada’s Fducationists Ponder | pag ional Plan ‘native pect reinforcement ‘of the CEA to- allow nd organ- lization to assume of the functions educationists ‘Sion are earmarked for the proposed in- lter-provincial project. [TO OUTLINE TALKS B.C. Education Minister Les- | \lie Peterson, chairman of . the’ |CEA’s_ standing: committee of | jeducation ministers, scheduled | ~ HELLYER ARRIVES IN HALIFAX x duled a news conference to- visit to East Coast military bases in Nova Scotia’ and Prince Edward Island. The minister—declined—_to—answer-- questions, saying he had sche-- % Defence Minister Hellyer is welcomed to Halifax Tuesday night. by Rear-Admiral J. C. —OBrien,sea—operations— chief. - Mr Hellyer_ is on a three-day - day. ‘Thursday he will visit air bases at Greenwood, N.S., _and_ Summerside. _ (CP Wirephoto) | M Reaffirms Determination ja news. conference for today to, jannounce results of the” discus- | |Sions. Other items under discussion | by the ministers and expected | have argued Ito be dealt: with by delegates to first national education office. | }Such an office would be respon- isible for co-ordinating provin- lcial policies on éducation on a | \nationwide basis. Educationists ;that—a&— unified approach to |the CEA convention are: _; iteaching and Taide is neces-| ~Standard of university en- sary if Canada’ is to deal suc- irance examination require- | cessfully with automation and | ments. advancing technology. —Renewal and revision ot! “Today's. technological, soci- | federal - provincial agree-| ety needs a lot of trained tal- | ments on education, including | ent,” said™-Charles Ovens, sec-| aid to technical and voca- | tional schools. } retary of the B.C. Teachers’ | . Federation. | NOW HAS A SHORTAGE “Canada has a shortage of such people in the professional, ‘To Control Economic Policy —A—_teacher— exchange pro- | gram between Quebec and the | English-speaking provinces as| a 1967 centennial project. aoe proposal by Premier Rob- | \ ae Ae OTTAWA (CP)—Prime Minis- } Mr. Pearson said’ he sees no © possibility of the government re-. verting to- July 1, 1967, as the | starting date for federal pay- iments to provincial medicare iplans. He ‘acknowledged ‘that he had | idiscussed _ with several MPs | itheir protests over the decision ite delay the starting date to iJuly 1, 1968. He {ook personal responsibil- | ter Pearson emphatically — af- firmed Tuesday the_federa! gov- ernment’s intention to keep con- trol over financial and economic | policy and the means to exer- tise that contro! He sharply rejected the sug- zestion at a press conference that last week's federal-provin- cial conference marks an end to co-operative federalism. { “Not a hit..of it,” be -re- lity for the delaying decision but” marked. “There can't be any |said he had been in London for other form of federalism in |the Commonwealth prime min- isters conference when it was jannounced by Finance Minister Mr. Pearson listed two of the ‘Sharp without consulting the legislative priorities for Parlia- ‘caucus of Liberal MPs. ment which resumes Oct. 5.| Mr. Pearson's conference, First is the overdue revision of jheld while a cabinet meeting The Bank Act and next is the jstill was in session in another Canada than. co-operative feder- alism.” federal. government's medical care insurance bill. jroom, ranged over these sub- jects: Queen Elizabeth Honors Once Exiled Negro Leader “ LONDON. (Reuters) — Queen ._ Elwabeth Tuesday knighted Seretse. Khama, the African leader once exiled from his na- tive Bechuanaland for marrying a white Englishwoman but now slated to be its president. Khama, now prime minister of Bechuanaland, will become president when the British pro- tectorate becomes the independ- ent republic of Botswama 10 days from now. An announcement from Prime Minister Wilson's office said Khama has been made a knight commander of the Order of the British Empire. come_ hereditary chief. was ex- iled from Bechuanaland for- six years after his 1948 marriage jto Ruth Williams sparked bitter controversy in his Bamangwato |tribe. He met his wife while jstudying in England. He renounced his claim to be hereditary chief, but after re- turning to Bechuanaland in 1956, established himself as a political leader. Khama, who. wants to. build a multi-racial state in his new na- tion of 550,000 people, won a big majority in last vear’s gen- eral elections to become Bechu- analand’s first prime. minister: |. The Khamas have three sons __Khama. [once in _line to be- land a daughter. y 1. He expected to receive jlater - this week the report - of iMr. , Justice Wishart Spence on ithe Gerda_Munsinger sex and security inquiry. It would be made public without delay. 2. The federal government land Trans-Canada Pipe Lines lLtd., officials were “discussing possible changes in the com- pany's proposal to build a gas pipeline to Eastern Canada via the United States» The cabinet ‘previously vetoed U.S._ routing of the line. - 3. He expects no cabinet changes before Parliament re- sumes and warned against lis- tening to Mrs. Pearson on the subject of his retirement. 4. He was pleased with by- election victofies in Burin-Bur- geo and Grand Falls-White-Lab- | rador. in Newfoundland — and Nicolet = Yamaska in Quebee Monday. “It’s good to know what you are trying to do is recognized in some sections of the coun- try," he said after noting that the Quebec victory represents a gain from the Progressive Con servative -oppositiorr. ~He~ hopes to say” something soom about a byelection to fill the remaining Commons vac- ancy in Hull, Que., where Lib- eral MP Alexis Caron -died three weeks ago. On _ federal-provincial affairs, Mr. Pearson said he had-- not had. -time since his return to study the brief of Quebec Pre- mier Daniel Johnson. He was aware of it in a gen- eral way and the cabinet Tues- day had discussed -preparations for an October conference. with the provinces dealing with taxa- tion, education aid and other matters. NEW. AGREEMENT SIGNED | United War On Poverty Set For N.B. Rural Areas By RONALD LEBEL FREDERICTON /‘CP)—A, con- terted war on rural poverty. will | xe waged in two areas of New 3ranswick under a $114,000,000 federal provincial agreement signed Tuesday. Ambitious new tactics will be tried out during the next 10 vears to lift’ the education and income levels of 116,000 persons, many of* whom live in isolated shacks and earn less than $500 a vear. Various federal agencies will invest up to $81,000,000 in three northeastern counties and in the St John River Valley between Fredericton and Woodstock -un- der a new regional development | program. For the first time,: the gov- ernment of Canada is committed te economic planning at the re- gional level,”’ Forestry Minister Maurice Sauve told'a press con- ference > ‘ Liberal Premier Louis Robl- chaud hailed the agreement—as “a total attack” on poverty and as “a great experiment in Ca- Madian democracy.”’ Mr. Sauve said discussions are under way with the nine other jprovinces to launch similar ‘ye- gional development programs jin heavily-depressed areas. ‘ The New. Brunswick pilot |projects have many novel fea- itures: 1. Up to 4,700 dirt-poor fami- lies scattered in backwoods and in coastal hamlets will be of- fered cash incentives and new housing to move to the mining- boom city of Bathurst and six other growing towns. 2. Government agencies will buy thousands of ‘small farms and ‘convert them into parks, INSIDE TODAY | Island news .....- eeeevs 2 Summerside ........-- ‘oe DOME | i cviigceeeees sie Editorials ............++5. 4 Kings, Queens, City ca Di Wemen’s 6.652 cuss poe Finance, markets ...... .9 i BPOTE |) oo. c cee eee sone Sige COMICK ....ccevevescens: 13° Classified pee tiny, 14, 15 conservation areas echanized farms: or and a tourist centre of beaches, boating and camping facilities will be built around the -60-mile pond that will be created by the $120,000 Mactaquac dam_ being built. 14 miles north of here. 4. Canada’s first educational television station will be built next year in Bathurst at a cost of nearly ~ $5,000,000. It will —re- lieve critical shortages of teach- ers and schools and supplement vocational training and adult education programs. grants of up tq $2,400, depend- ing on the number of children. BUILD CHEAP HOUSES cost housing units will be built for them in Bathurst, Campbell- ton, Dalhousie, Caraquet. Ship- pegan, Tracadie and. Culliton. Where necessary, housing subsidies will be provided and persons between 55 and 65 will be guaranteed a minimum an- inual income of $1,200. ee j | i | | | technical and engineering lev- | | els. It’s a national problem and | . . . it needs a national solu-| -ert Stanfield of Nova Scotia ‘ cial teachers’ tion. “If the provinces fail . . . establish a co-operative .-. proacW, the Racrsl eerunael will have to use direct interven- |. tion.”” . Federal intervention in the | field of education—defined in (* the British North America Act} as a provincial responsibility— | is precisely what the ministers seek to avoid. Educationists say they the-support of at least six prov- at the University of Alberta; inces for a national education|Dr. Harold S. Wyngham, diree- Office,..including Quebec. tor-general of education in New The office, -if set up, would |South Wales, Australia; Dr. be a co-operative inter-provin- Ieee J. Deutsch, chairman of | cial venture financed by grants from the federal and provincial | lada, and J. A. Ouimet, governments. ldent of the Canadian Broadcast- The ministers also were be- ing Corporation. apy Pian. federal government. whose jobs technological advances. A venti favoring integration of provin- pension funds | with the Canada Pension! © wingaking of higher educa- tioi and grants to universities | - and technical schools by the —Retraining of workers are outdated by ng speakers at the con- are CRA President Dr. have |H. T. Coutts, dean of education | 'Heads For Moon 3. A new town walled Culliton . Families that agree to move P from the countryside to a “growth centre’, will receive In addition, up to 4,000 low- {* First Eskimo Is OTTAWA (CP) Simonle Michael, -33, a chosen leader of the Eskimo community in Fro- bisher “Bay, has. become _ the first member of his race to be elected to the Northwest Terri- tories’ council. ; In the first. territorial’ election ever held on Baffin Island Mon- day, Simonie held an _ unbeat- able lead’ over merchant Gor- don Rennie ‘and pilot Weldy Phipps with only a few polls yet to report. Raised by an Eskimo hunting family, Simonie in his youth Elected To Council In Territories | and depended on primitive means for his living. Like other Eskimos he was given an iden- tification number—his is E7-551. Latest official figures re- ported here gave Simonie 755 votes. Mr: Rennie polled 247 and Mr. Phipps 109. There are about 2,000 eligible voters in the vast constituency, one of three created in_ the Eastern Aretic by Parliament to give elected members a ma- jority in the 12-member council. Another Eskimo, Abe Okpik of Yellowknife, N.W.T., is one of five appointed) members of lived in tents and. snowhouses try to at The Hague Tuesday ‘ay Queen Juliana arrived at Par- liament to deliver her annual the council. DUTCH. SMOKE BOMB QUEEN JULIANA | .~ Dutch policement stamp out a smoke bomb tos- sed into the royal procession: - speech from the throne. In the speech the government an- nounced some tax. increase and urged the Dutch to save more in order to fight infla- tion and restore The Nether- ‘lands’ economic balance, Po a launch. Osamu Itagaki, new Japan- | ese ambassador to Canada, steps' from’ plane . at Toronto International Airport Tuesday = en route to Ottawa: with his wife. He ‘will present his cre- dentials to Governor-General Vanier on Friday. (CP Wirephato)- Surveyor Two | | PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — the Economic Council of Can-/|Surv eyor II raced through presi- space. Tuesday on a path that should cause it to hit the moon gently. The craft, Camera-carrying space- on a mission to scout a landing site for astronauts, blasted off from Cape Ken- nedy, Fla., at 8:32 a.m. EDT— the last possible second’ for a It soared into a near- perfect course. ‘Scientists at Pasadena’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, control- ling the flight, expressed hope that its 63-hour flight will be as spectacularly successful as that of- Surveyor I. The first Surveyor, overcom- ing longshot odds against a first-flight success, made hist- ory’s first soft landing on the moon and then radioed earth- ward 11,237 close - up _photo- graphs of lunar terrain. The odds against Surveyor IT | are even’ longer. It is pro- | grammed for a trickier de- | ‘ horse. lice said smoke bomb was the work mostly of. young anti- royalists who came to The Ha- gue from Amsterdam. The’ bomb fell harmlessly under a (AP Wirephoto) scent, at a 23-degree slant, in- | A stead of vvettitally, and *errain (i the target area is rougher. Surveyor II’s landing site is Sinus Medii (Central Bay), a plain in almost the exact cen- tre of the moon as seen from earth. There is a chance ‘it could land on‘a slope or a boul- der and topple. If it brakes to a safe landing, Surveyor’s camera eye is set to revolve around the moonscape and show just how rough and stable the surface is. The site is-one of nine poten- tial landing spots being consid- ered ,for Apollo astronauts be- fore the end of tis decade. Sur- veyor I touched down last June 800 ‘miles west in the Sea of Storms. The seven-shot Sur- veyor series will check other atéas later. . | By .ALEXANDER FARRELL jby 112 votes to 1, -|bring’ peace to Viet Nam. | tS Work Hard For Peace -[sUrged On Members wit UNITED ATIONS (CP) ~“— stentions. th on Italian F eign Minister Amin-| Guyana, the former colony of jtore Fanfani stepped down as |British Guiana in South Amer- [president bf the General Assem-lica, was admitted to member- bly Tuesday with an appeal to| ship under, the sporttsorshir of members to work harder ,to'al:l Commonwealth countries, ‘bringing. the total UN member- The Viet. Nam war wasn't ship to'118. , specifically on the agenda for| External’ Affairs Minister ithe three-month 1966 session as |Paul Martin, heading Canada's |it opened, but it was on every- (delegation, was among those to 'body’s mind and was certain to ibe-on=many lips in weeks ‘to |come. “Viet Nam doesn’t need to be an agenda item,” said one dip- ‘lomat. “Everybody will be talk- ing about it.” - Secretary - General U Thant, with his plans to retire, also was on everybody's mind and this preoccupation found quick expression in the new session. Both the new assembly presi- dent, Abdul Rahman Pazhwak of Afghanistan, and Fanfani| welcome..Guyana__to--the —-UN, Martin said Canada -has “- special relationship with Guy- ana and -the other Common- wealth countries and territories in the Caribbean.” « | lis imminent with the return of Indonesia, only country ever te leave the world organization. UN sources said Indonesia’s re- turn becomes ‘official when Thant replies to a letter he re - ceived Monday from the Indo- nesian ambassador to the Another membership increase __ Paid warm tribute to Thant—as |United States, &. N. Palar, ‘tell- /@_-man_respected-and_trusted- by. ting. him™Indonesia wishes to re- all, regardless of disagreements Sume its participation. lon specific questiops. Both made| Pazhwak’s acceptance speech DELEGATES SUBDUED Delegates ‘from 117 countries | arrived .with ‘spirits somewhat subdued by Thant's declaration —in a _ statement ay and again in °a news conference | Monday — that East-West» ela- tions are at a new low and that draws its moral inspiration, this situation is blocking progress on major issues. Thant’s strong, Herpreted Nov, 3. sign that both the Soviet and U.S. governments want Thant to accept another full term.. Than had two courtesy caHers. Tues- day night, Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko and U.S. Vice - President Hubert Humphrey. Fanfani said: 4 “Even if there is no possibil- ity today for the United Na- tions, as such, to exert a direct influence for the settlement of this (Viet Nam) — conflict © no country and no individual par- ticipating in the activities of the United Nations can forbear to help in the search for an at- tainment of peaceful solutions.” GIVEN STRONG SUPPORT The assembly chose Pazhwak, Afghanistan’s UN ambassador since 1958, as its new president implied critt- ae of both the~United States | Union, have ues | some as a part-| jing atau nalsiones he said a lis willing to consider staying on} until Dec. 31. His first term. ends | | There continued to be every), lit_plain they hope he will accept lwas a strong statement of faith a pee five-year term. jim the United Nations. =~ “Above all, the United Na- | \tions is a moral force, pressing: home hourly its message~of the inew. world. order. It alone rep-. iresents the aspirations of all ithe peoples of the world. In ipartnersip with the human family, from whom, in turn, [ i the sole and supreme hope — world.” : New Plant | Announced CORNER BROOK (CR)+Pre- mier Smallwood said oa ; Monday i ct mag- nesium from sea water ja: tes. ~ be built at Stephenville, on the province's. west coast. It would be the first installa- tion in Canada. using ‘vast quantities of sea. water’ to ob tain magnesium, used in manu- facture of a brick employed in ore smelting, Mr. Smallwood said. Mr. Smallwood. gave no fur- ther details of the operation ex- cept to say construction would begin almost immediately. He was speaking at the 25th an niversary banquet honoring the service of Roman Catholie |Bishop—Michael O'Reilly of St. George's.’ night a plant to extra | | By KEN SMITH Canadian Press Business Editor If you’re in Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Regina or Calgary, you can live more cheaply to- day than a year ago, despite all that talk about rising prices— BU. You'd better be ready to do without clothes. You can forget about shelter and you'll be giving up cigar: ettes and_ liquor. And you'll have to limit your diet to potatoes or frozen or- el juice. ‘Furthermore, you'll have’ to hurry to take advantage of even these few benefits. A Cross- Canada Survey by The Cana- idian Press shows that every- (gee everywhere, expects still higher prices for living ‘essen- itials in the immediate future. [ANNOUNCE INCREASE. ' | Already, the en's Clothing | |Manufacturers’ » “a sociation in) {Ontario has promised a $5 to /$10 increase in the price of suits ‘across Canada this fall. This | feet come on top of rises of $5 to $15 reported during the, last lyear by major cities across the |country. r | One ‘national grocery chain me its prices will have to- edge | up jt cover the addition of $2, its total labor bill airing t the last year, as well as climbing wholesale, service and material costs. Searcjty of mortgage money jand flfabor costs have been iblamed for rental and housing | iprices. that range as much as|was 110 to per: cent higher than iranged to $64,822. at } last year—-and that shortly are jexpected in some areas to jump ithat much again. Gasoline prices generally are country compared | anyone | across. the with a year ago, but planning on walking look at the cost of shoes. They’re up, too, by $2 -to $5 a) pair and manufacturers predict | more to, come. Even in the few. areas where example—the survey found’ sug- gestions that the cost line had been held by- cutting quality. CLIMB DOCUMENTED This march of prices been well documented by cial figures. The report last | week by the Dominion Bureau | Beach Point Contract Let | |OTTAWA (CP) A $53,307 |federal works contract for the | lextension of a boat landing at | {Beach Point, P.E.I., has been! awarded to Norman MacLean of Murray River, P.E.I. The 200-foot extension, includ- ling a haul-up. slip. for fishing boats, will be connected to jshore by a filled area providing a to a highway. Mr. MacLean’s contract bid| the lowest of four which has up one or two cents -a gallon! to beat | that increase had better take a) little price change has been fe- | ported—clothing in Victoria, for) offi- | Cost Of Living Shows Increase, Cross-Canada Survey Indicates lof Statistics of cost-of-living In idexes in 10 major centres across Canada showed these jchanges from a year ago, with. Fg representing 100 on the in- St. John’s, Nfld:, 127.1, 2.6; Halifax 139, up 3.5; Saint John, N.B., 141.8, up 4.0;. Mont- jreal 142.6, up 3.9; Ottawa 145.2, jup..6.0; Toronto 147.9, up 7.4; up ;Winnipeg 140.1, up 4.7; Saska- itoon-Regina 136.7,: up 41; Ed-~ imonton-Calgary 135.4,. up 4.5; |Vancouver 139, up 3.5. More disconcerting, perhaps, jis that the month-to-month in- jdex figures indicate the rate of |price increases is accelerating —in the case of some cities, it’s ’ | growing more than twice as fast as during the last year. These index figures, however, give only part of the picture of what rising prices’ mean to | shoppers. | The survey compared. for ex- ample, the price of a bag of: basic. groceries at a chain store \today and a year ago, Included jin the: grocery list were milk, ibread, meat, eggs, butter, po- itatoes, orange juice and break- fast cereal. z A> year ago, a Toronto house- wife could have taken that bag jhome for $4.71. Today it would jcost her $5.30—a 12.3-per-cen increase, despite cheaper pota- toes. ‘ In Halifax, ‘the total price has climbed 7.4 per cent to $5.53 from $5.14. Montreal shoppers |now pay $5.30 or 6.4 per cent more than last year. ‘ In Ottawa, the ‘price is up 7.4 per cent ' to $5.44 from $5.04 } |