on our behalf. No definite agenda has been an- 4 \ Mr. Johnson raised this subject | | | RIGHT BACK WHERE WE STARTED FROM user need not change glasses when he switches from close to (From The Guardian Files) | Still, it was tactless of Yale | University to announce, the day : : Che Guar the interviewer changer mind -a | Prebyopia~ 1 U.S; Misston To Moscow- x e or the last ae Ae Za i ' : — : US. I$ n ° Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew 2 By me w. J. ieeuani Bebdhes attitudes are usually fair] yastable, ZS a. Candidates ' eusiie Van al Writer ee Manapiog Case de _ = moving in oe direction a / é ° a. Be — The pfommer, emmenaing the pave ee disclosures shed Published every week day morning (except Sun like a slow tide, the peri imme- LECT; ROUN y Dr. Theodore R. Van Delles | Mike mission to Mos- | ight secret Soviet attempts da Gat eas koe ee : eres 1ON MERRY - GO- When a 42-year-old man steps cow, judged against the virtual |to negotiate peace in Viet Nam Se cent hemdar) @ 68 Prince Sweet | diately prior to an election is often ru, é a out of a teleohone booth with a ‘collapse of Soviet-Chinese rele- | while publicly accusing the U.8. Branch offices at Summerside, Montague, Alberton confused and fluid. . pemey 50 - @ number, he is | euggests new —_ ” of naked aggression against the 2 eam So it's our fault that things didn't ggg, ae wer | Sa eae 2 Ou | eae, SS cay wee resen' nationa! mson Newspa } ‘ Adcatee see ue ae tiehueneiey pase work out the way the Gallup pollsters @ visual defect that occurs with and possibly to pull the | resist all peace efforts: Its iinpite 2.0004, Mentesal_ £40 Cothean torene Uni-——assured--us~ they would! We're’ the sereeene youre. Toe, tom 2 tae ee @ war it Rented, and abusive one ver: . 3 estern ice West orgi ss reced beyond _ cannot . Moscow suggest Senet Vonamuver saa 7087, ones that should be apologizing, it distance at which he reads ordi. | The U.S. Senate mejority |Chinese leadership may have Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers seems. “The pre-election report for nary print (approximately nine | leader, and the men with bim, | privately concluded it cannot Association and The Canadian Press. The Canadian 1965 ” savs Mr Sanders fi r m1 4 >. The alternative is to are characteristically outward- hope for any further Soviet en- Press is exclusively entitied to the use for repub- ae; eee y, the book farther away but | looking and liberal-minded and, couragement of the Vietnamese lication of all news dispatches in this paper “will take its place in our proud rec- | = seme can be stretched just more amposseat, all oy redited to it or to the Associated Press or Reute: é es + | ar. . friends Presi ohnson. North Vietnamese leader aa a a ae local news published see Al ord of accuracy os further evidence * the eyes can adjust to minor | may ashes be easy to con- | Chi Minh must ren fe go right or republication of special dispatches here “of ‘aehievement in a very difficult defects to maintain clear vision | clude that they carried with | whether he can .ope the In also reserved. Subscription rate area of research.” The pupils contract, the lenses them @ message from os ae wer in South Viet with ee ee oo ome ye change and the person squints to | ident to Soviet Premier ‘China's aid $12.00 @ year by mai! on rural routes and areas A statement which deserves to go shut out the rays of light that | Kosygin. HARD TO RESIST ret TOO m veae aif Island and U.K. $20.00 per | down with that age-old alibi for distrort the image. But the day | Kosygin's relations with Jobn- | 1, in contrast to the Chinese Fis US aad’ elsewhero eultide Qin Com: chieve t i ther field of re- of reckoning comes because | son have been hurt by the Viet- | ory for more blood and sacri- yea J.S. and elsewhere outs a ment in another fle re there is a limit to how much | namese war, a costly exercise (fice the U.S., through Russia a are aes search: ‘The operation was success- | strain the oven oan take to focus |in ‘containment that has burt | snouid offer some form of new ___ Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. __— ful but the patient died.” | eee aaiee nee ae oe = Lod Us. regi Viet trallty eccompanied by interna. PAGE 4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1965. : ; |jer:-there is mo need to co~tinue jen je en eee ) Sane Sees 2 3 S . oogee =~ * ee oe Mr. Jo nston Speaking ole ee menu et on keeps urging on its | sist, particularly when the al- Welcome Back Again! A correspondent in today’s issue Clan week beanies & ieee: demnaing Koga i. watek tan oS ~ _ Today our Island capital has the scores as “high-sounding clap-trap” | wre whee vision becomes clear oe y aegediy ie king. privilege of welcoming, again, the | the US. Declaration of Independence on. ee _—_ — > ee en ms vietery would be fe premiers of the Atlantic provinces to | in view of American disregard of | ee a ener cen | Recent disclosures of an ex- should turn to Manew and ac- * ° S shed | 7 ‘ rr: ; . ¢ | : the historic conference table which Negro rights, and the hypocrisy of | oe — ~ or ar- ioe between coeee ond —_? ame ene. has played such an important part in | “pontificating at a distance” on the | them. The same applied to wom- accused Kosygin of conniving A move by Hanoi towards our Confederation history. This time, | issue of Negro rights in Rhodesia. | fe _ —_ or knitted socks with the U.S. against _ Nem Moscow waa tne great rami- it is understood, Premier Smallwood | One point worth noting, however, is | The individual whose nation of Soviet celations with | ideological dispute. , ; occupa- will be unavoidably absent; he will be | that the U.S. government does stand | ten calle for combined close and | ~* . represented by Newfoundland’s min- | for equal rights to its citizens; the | work soon finds . is ‘ ister of finance, Hon. F. W. Rowe. | Smith regime in Rhodesia does not. ee ee See a Hail, Hiber nid Premier Stanfield and Premier Robi- No one is more aware of the failure 4 Sate ee = herein Financial Post chaud—both old friends—will be on | to reach the American objective than \Nemens abe ones :— rae Everyone knows that Lief | found North America about 500 : - ; : i Ericsson, the dauntless Viking, | years before Columbus arrived hand, and Premier Shaw will be at President Johnson; no one has striven lower part is used for near vision oor hee N ‘aia ; : oe He tly t ve the road- and the upper is clear or refract- other Norsemen a his genial best in “doing the honors” | more earnestly to remove od tor disease. Naif elesces ales bit of exploring here during | blocks in its path. are available In this way the Our Yesterdays these centuries. . MOK ee witlrashiaes nounced. As Premier Shaw says, the meeting is mainly to provide ‘‘an in- formal opportunity for all of us to discuss mutual problems.” These mat- ters cover a wide range, including federal-provincial fiscal relations and ways of applying a united front to many of the cost-sharing, welfare and educational programs; the effective ness of ARDA and other federal schemes for the Atlantic region; freight-rates assistance in the light of pending legislation based on the Mac- Pherson Royal Commission re por t; offshore mineral rights, and the ex- panding activities of the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council. It is likely, too, that a Nova Scotia ’ suggestion for consideration of a “‘free trade” arrangement involving the Maritimes and New England will be ‘ discussed, though, as we suggested the other day, such discussion must necessarily be of academic nature. We wish again to place ourselves on record as favoring such an arrange- ment wholeheartedly, if its practical nature could be established. The social amenities which go. with the conference will contribute to_ the success we all hope it will achieve. Despite the shortage of time, we trust that these will not have to be unduly curtailed. Without them, indeed, it wouldn’t be a Charlottetown conference at all. Those Proud Pollsters . It will come as a surprise to most Canadians, but according to Byrne Hope Sanders, director of the Cana- ' dian Institute of Public Opinion, “‘any experienced researcher will agree that the Gallup Poll’s report on pre- election party standings was a sound one.” That flop the pollsters made in predicting a clear Liberal majority, he means? Critis who talk that way, says Mr. Sanders, “reveal their lack of knowledge of the principle and problems involved in this aspect of research.” . So there it is. The findings of his organization, this ex pert explains, were based on interviewing five days before the election. At that time ‘no evidencé was found for any increase in Conservative strength. Thus what must have been a marginal turn to the Tories in the last few days re- sulted in an underestimate of their strength, with a corresponding over- estimate for the Liberals.” How do we know the sampling wasn’t all haywire from the ‘start? Because Mr. Sanders says so. He goes ‘on to explain that “any last- minute turns to jone or another of the parties are reflected in the haz- ards of political pre-election report- ing.” Political research established five days ahead of the vote can be “very difficult.” “The sample reveals attitudes of all eligible voters; yet, normally about oné-quarter of the electorate does not bother to vote. Moreover, in the actual interviewing, | although most respondents will report the brand of soap they buy, the car they like best, or the publication they prefer, a significant segment of the electorate is: always-undecided as to which party it will vote for—often until the final moment of truth in the polling booth.” Still another segment “refuses to state its voting intentions, while an- again last week, in announcing that he is planning for a White House civil-rights conference next spring. He noted that while more than 200,000 Negroes have been registered under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, many hundreds of thousands have not; and he added: “This is a challenge not only to government, but to Negro leadership. I urge you to work around the clock. _Tell those who have been barred from | the polls that a new day has come, that at last they may have a voice in shaping their own destinies. That voice will be heard from the sheriff's office to the Congress—but orly if it is used.” Again, the President denounced as “a national shame” the way a vast majority of Negro children are schooled, housed and fed. “Millions are trapped in ghettos and shanties— discouraged and hopeless,” he said. “They will be as far from sharing in | the promise of America as if they inhabited another planet. A guarantee of job is useless to a man who cannot read an application. A college scholar- out of school in the eighth grade. The promise of new schools is useless to a man who doesn’t believe in the a child who cannot study, or whose eyes cannot recognize what he sees...” The President of the United States said that, and more, on the subject; but he didn’t end on that with the Negro American on this mid- November evening,” he declared. “Neither the ignorant violence of the Klan nor the despairing'of Watts can reverse it.” a As a follow-up to this: assurance, he announced that Congress in Janu- white juries.” ; Who can doubt that the “‘tide of | change” is indeed running in the | right direction under leadership of | as to the significance of the different trend it is taking in Rhodesia? EDITORIAL NOTES According to a survey conducted by the British Motor Corporation of Canada, there is a lot of silly self- esteem behind the male thinking that women are less efficient than men be- hind the wheel of an automobile. Women have been found to learn their driving more quickly and with fewer mistakes than men. They re- ceive fewer speeding tickets and think faster in an emergency. In an acci- dent they are more polite. * e * 176,450 in government expenditures in November has been signed by the Governor General. As the Ottawa Journal points out, the guardianship of the public purse is a major respon- sibility given Parliament and the job is not being thoroughly done when money is spent by warrant. The Com- mons or a committee may at a future sitting decide to study the November | accounts in detail, but that is most un- likely. It’s just another evidence of | how the taxpayers’ interests suffer , when an unwanted election is called. 1 ship is useless to a child who drops | joining the weary, empty ‘‘grac- | future. A new classroom is useless to | note. ‘‘The tide of change is running | ary will be asked “to prevent injus- — tice to Negroes at the hands of all- | this kind? Who can have any doubt | A special warrant to cover $163,- | Aims Of A Truly Liberal Education THE UNTEACHABLE ART Hamilton Spectator According to Dr. ZS. Phimis- | free-ranging. We can learn | smacks of educational anarchy, | ter. Ontario’s deputy minister of education, if the young people of today are to be happy in the world of tomorrow they will have to be equipped for the art of liv- | ing and provided with outlets for “their idealistic energies. These are worthy objects, but there is nothing new about them. | To live a full and useful life hag always been the purpose. of ra- tional existence. If now we are turning living into a conscious art and pursuing it, it is because we have been scared by those prophets who predict a comput- erized world filled wit.. people with nothing to do, either miser- able or going on the rampage. “A liberal education,which- Dr. Phimister sees as an imperative need to balance a dehumanized | technology, is the best equip living. The educated are seldom bored. | The difficulty lies as much in | | definitions as it does in practice. | Even “liberal education” is in danger of becoming a lifeless | cliche, and if we are not careful the “art of living’’ will follow it, ious living’ in lessness. The old idea of a liberal edu- cation was broad, humane, and 2 Git More than half a century ago | the neighboring nations of Ar- | gentina and Chile settled long- | standing border differences on the basis of the arbitration of King Edward V11 of Great Bri- | tain, Following the settlement | in 1902, the two countries join- | ed.in erecting a statute on their boundary. utter meaning- | | The statue was made by melt- \..ing- down cannon belonging~ to | both peoples, and was supposed to be a _ substancial remem- brance of the clause in the ag- Teement which provided __for mutual limitation of armaments It achieved world-wide recog- oan as the “‘Christ of the An- However, the spirit shown ment for practising the art of | | from it. A special kind of neurosis seems to have pervaded modern education and it is ucing the exact opposite of the liberal idea. A high school grade 80 much in dollar-income in -lat- er life; a university degree Means a better chance. for a “good job’’. Such talk is common enough, but it is a contradiction of the whole concept of liberal learning. : So long as the major part of education is based on routine by rote, churning over and, re- gurgitating a selection.of.the thoughts of dead great men, and penalizing originality and -imag- ination, so long will liberal edu- cation elude us and the tribute to it be nothing more than lip- service. It is not enough that a person | should know from memory the chemical] composition of a rose, or be able to recite the numbers | of Beethoven's symphonies, he | must appreciate their beauties, | whether he lives in today’s | world or tomorrow’s. ‘The chief virtue of liberal edu- | cation is that it provides full op- | portunity for the expression of originality. Such a thought is ‘frightening im these days. It London Free Press then has not always persisted. Recently a border clash be- tween Chilean police and Argen- tine troops caused angry dem- onstrations in Santiago, the cap- ital of Chile and prompted Chil- ean president Eduardo Frei and Argentinian president Arturo Ilia to call special cabinet meetings. ’ This time the national. lead- ers seem less warlike than and it is to be hoped that they will be able to settle _ent_.without—further- 7 Both Argentina and Chile have economical troubles which are difficult to cope with now and which would be greatly compli- PUBLIC THE OTHER SIDE Sir,—I would like to comment on the editorial appearing in The Guardian of Tuesday, Nov. ‘16th | concerning the Rhodesian crisis, in which the writer compared the Declaration of Independence pi the American colonies with Ian Smith’s U.D.I. The point the editorial was that the latter did not include some high-sound- | ing clap-trap to the effect that | all.men are created equal. | Most ‘Western’ states have a | definite Church-State _ separa- | . tion, and while it is perfectly | Proper for the former to sub | scribe to and champion this no- | ble hypothesis, the state is con cerned with matters temporal, | and here, both physically and | mentally, man is created most | unequally. For the want of something bet- | ter to cloak his ‘Go to Hell ev- | erybody’ step, Mr. Smith un- | abashedly copied from the De- claration of Independence. How- | ever, no one can accuse him of | not being hard-headed, so he took a long hard look at the ex- periment which this document spawned. Lét's see what he saw. | Let's take a small segment. | Let’s look at Mississippi, where blacks are also heavily predom- inant. | members in the legislature, | muzzled probably, but there. Mississippi? A black can vote freely if he meets cer- tain low educational standards. In Mississippi it takes the Nat- ional Guard to escort him to the Z Ak Rhodesia has fifteen black — flaps At At ts ct Ren tne Sef ere ful stare of the Sheriff and his ® 2 cri If < I d *2 ae 35 J ; : i at SF i gees ul aa Fs ea i _ z 4 4 3 & | 3 3 #: ze i 3 Ss Zz z i iy z z : ft i z § a : = 8 a s ° e a $3 i ot af 5 3 & t ? they will disappear rug with the Indians and Eski- mos. Yes, I have relatives in Rho- desia, (White). I am, Sir, etc., PAGE FOUR READER Charlottetown. means—- memory, learning capsule facts | the incid- DISDAIN DROOPING Giraffes only a few hours a night, usually with their heads erect. | far from the narrow rut of cur- | ricula, with their medieval-like | rigid adherence to “what it says |in the book” and nothing more on pain of penalty. If education encourages adven- and | of knowledge, whethever it | found, then it will be liberal, not | until, And, it can be added, if it | were it would not be necessary to provide “‘outlets for idealistic | energies,” these would be gener- | ated. naturally. | The art of living can be learn- "When our education system of- | fers full scope for individual ex- pression and provides for the virtues of humor, courage and initiative, then it will be liberal. And, then, too, the fears of gloomy prophets foresee a vor of a more rational view. ed, but it cannot be taught. | distant vision. Bifocals do not satisfy every- erything within, 20 inches and be- yond 50, but not what is between. here is where trifocals come in | handy. With a single pair of | glasses, the person is able to read the paper, look at the cal | picture on the billboard across | the street. Er CYSTIC SWELLINGS | .F. T. writes: Could a person . have a ganglion anywhere but on the wrist? REPLY | Yes,.over tendon sheaths any- | Where. However, these cyst-like ‘lesions are more common on the | wrist. They are easily remedied by injections of ACTH or related hormones. ASPIRIN. AND HAIR M. W. writes: I take aspirin | and | true cause falling hair. Is this 3 REPLY than the hair. one. The individual can see ev- | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO * (Nevember 22, 1940) The Military Training Centre period. Lieut. F.J. Storey left on re _Lturn-to-Sussex after spenditig a few days.in the city. He was ac- companied by Mrs. Storey. TEN YEARS AGO (November 22, 1955) The Dharilottetown Fire De- | partment honored six of its | members who had 25 years ser- vice or over, with a presentation of gold watches suitably engrav- | ed, at the Clover Club. The six men: Fire Chief Herbert H-Je- |_well,-38--years;Lieut.-L.A.--Ste- | wart, 4 years; Wally Scantle- every day for arthritis but peo- ’ bury, 4 years, (retired); Walter | ple tell me it will dry the scalp | Perry, 31> years;. Arthur Heny, | 29 years, (retired); Lieut. Len | Connolly, 28 years. | The Maritime’s first and only ;. No. Aspirin is well tolerated | woman mayor, Mrs. Gladys M. future world filled with idle j|by most humans, but too much | Porter was re-eliected Mayor loungers can be discarded in fa- | will disturb the stomach rather | of Kentville, N.S., by acclamat- | jon. ie New | early in the morning a continual = | flow of recruits reported at the ; camp and before — 260 the 21 year- endar on the wall, and enjoy the | pre tong hs nt | before Columbus Day, that an | early Viking map of this con- | tinent had been proved authen- | at Beach Grove Inn was a hive | tic. Americans of Italian des- : | Of activity as the second batch cent were deeply aggrieved. He requires better visual acuity, | for this intermediate space, and | | John V. indsay, the campaign- York mayoralty came out for Cristofero. There are a lot more Italians than Vikings in New York. Naturally, Lindsay was elected. But how come that he over- | looked the Irish vote? The Scan- +dinavian adventurers, when they got here, may have been met by McNamara’s band. The In- dians told them about white | skinned men who marched with poles bearing white banners, 2 | Bood description of an Irish re- | ligioug procession. SELF - SERVICE Laundry & Drycleaning |] @ Economical @ Easy and speedy @ Visit our Car Wash alse S&M Eden St. } | Ch’tewa 4 _ Now, presidents answer letters by Long Distance Company The Island Telephone Limited ce. and get decisions fast Even a simple “Yes” is usually the result of a discussion — and how can you _ discuss things without talking about them! Your voice gives words their power, their friendliness, their real meaning. And the man at the other end of the line gets through to you—clear as a bell—when you hear his reactions, his questions or his answers. Try answering a letter by Long Distance soon. Even if you're not the President yet. You might find yourself behind that sign sooner than you think.