Reflection : Ken MacLean For the occasion of his wedding, Rev. MacLean , borrowed Mac MacLean 's 1918 Model T Ford Car which had an open top. In the process of taking his bride from the church, he flipped the car in the ditch, and there they were hung upside down, but unhurt. him into retirement for, according to conference records, he received a disability pension at age 68. In fact, ill health kept him from attending the 50th anniversary of his ordination held by the Maritime Conference. Rev. MacLean retired to Charlottetown where he was a member of United. He passed away on November 1, 1971. The funeral service, under the direc¬ tion of the Prince Edward Island Presbytery was held in Summerside . Rev Vans was buried in his home community of Lot 16 . The Maritime Conference minutes of 1972 described Rev. Brenton Vans MacLean favourably: "A dedicated servant of his Master, Mr. MacLean will be remembered by all who knew him as a man with a warm personality who made friends easily and who maintained his friendships."11 Rev. Louis Pellissier As written by Rev. Pellissier My involvement with United Church, and my later decision to become a minister, brings back many good mem¬ ories of my brief but intensive time with Lot 16 , its people, and its congregation. I came to Prince Edward Island in a job position with Indian Affairs. I "ended up" in an old green farmhouse in Grand River owned by Erskine Forbes in the late fall of 1971. After a riot on Reserve, my wife, daugh¬ ter, and I needed a place to live, within commuting distance of a temporary Band office in Summerside . The "green house" — with its Kemac range, oil heater, and affordable rent - was ideal, and Erskine and Vera were wonderful land¬ lords and friends. We even attended church with them (my first "attendance" anywhere in many, many years!) and met some folks in the congregation. By the fall of 1972, we were gone again - to Chatham, 141 CHURCH MINISTERS