2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, August 26, 1963 BOOST SEATING CAPACITY The stands are for photo and television. coverage of the event. In background is the Reflecting Poo! and the Wash- Steps leading to the Lincoln Memorial are packed with chairs for tomorrow's March on Washington ceremonies Robar On Pensions Program if if RENFREW, Ont. (CP)--Pre-jfedera!l plan federal-provin- mier John Robarts says his Con-|cial discussion of:details showed servative Ontario government is|the program to be disadvantage- offering "complete co - opera-!ous to the people of Ontario. tion'? to the Liberal administra-| Mr. Robarts showed reporters tion in Ottawa in working out/a copy of a letter he wrote to details of a proposed federal|Prime Minister Pearson Aug. 22 system of contributory pensions.|promising "'to co-operate in any Replying Tuesday to a charge|way possible" at the federal- ington Monument; In left fore ground, workmen move a 'Liberal Says Eastview Probe Report 'Edited' the objects of the. company. It records Mr. Lavergne's own testimony he thought the other members of the company had jinvited him to participate |through pity. This entire page was dropped from the published version of the report. Page 13 of the origi- tial version contains the follow- ing passage; 'It seems plain that the council either abdicated its powers in respect of these to all concerned we refrain rom further coniment on this yranch of the evidence but we 'onsider that this matter war- rants further and complete in- vestigation.' "Much of the Eastview inves- tigation was concerned with the town council's handling of land development, particularly in re- spect of the operations of an in- vestment company in which Mayor Lavergne had an inter- est. 'Page 36 of the original ver- | NIAGARA FALLS, Ont, (CP) Liberal Leader John Winter jmeyer charged Tuesday nigh \that 'political superiors' edite' the Ontario municipal affair departments report on the 196i investigation into the finances o! Eastview, the city encircled by east-end Ottawa, Mr, Wintermeyer told an elec- tion rally audience that the final published report did not include 31 references which put Gordon Lavergne, then mayor of East- view, in a bad light. Mr. La- } vergne is the Progressive Con-|sion of the auditors' report re- servative member of the legisla-|lates in detail the evidence tak- ture for Russell. jen on why Mr, Lavergne was The Liberal leader held up|taken into this company and what he said were 54 photo-| concludes with the statement/the interest of the ratepayers of Stated pages of the original] that the mayor had. neither the/the municipality was sacrificed Eastview report written by the/time, skill or money to devote tolto that of the subdividers.' municipal affairs officials who| -------- ' -- ot ne as se ee, a eee ae ewe mitral tae tom NDP Chief Favors Federal Program and treasurer or that these lat- ter usurped them, In any event, the powers appear to have been exercised in such a way that material excluded from the fi-' nal version 'SOFTENS' REPORT "The whole effect of these omissions and substitutions is .o weaken and soften the report, particularly in, respect of 'he onraWA (CP)--Premier Ro-jsaid that Premier Robart Tory member for Russell in the arts Is consistent in both his |should be seeking aid similar to last legislature, Mr, Gordon La.| Pension and medicare plans, that provided by the former vergne,"" Mr. Wintermeyer said merely setting down certain res Conservative federal govern- "Who made these changes?"| quirements to be followed by the;ment of 75 per cent of the cost the Liberal leader said. "I can|Private plans already in exist- for vocational training facili- tell you this These changes! nce, Donald C, MacDonald, On-| tic 8, were not. made by the officials|{4tlo leader of the New Demo The Ontario pension plan was of the department of municipal/eratc Party, said Tuesday, inadequate because it covered affairs who conducted the in-| '2'll give him one thing pe S'only half the people, provided a vestigation. Those changes were| Consistent His medicare pe small" maximum of $80 made by their political supert does the same thing in apa y month after 40 years and in- an" , lremoving some of the flagrant) volved a private agency rather| : {abuses of the private plans,"/than a public one in control of| He said Page 15 of the origt| said the NDP provincial leader.| the peneion contributions nal "concludes with the audit!) py, spoke to a press confer- Ont matters in favor of the mayor| = ts Awaits ors' findings with respect to al eged corruption by a memoer of the Eastview council in re lgard to the administration of building bylaws." "The fina] sentence on this page read: "In our view this }matter should be brought to tne lattention of the attorney-general {for such action as may be found to be appropriate.' 'In the photostat piano into the Memorial for use with mass singing -AP Wirephoto Data 1 have, ario needs to rescue itse er before making his second! 95) rescue itself py major speech in the Sept. 2 ovincial election campaign Mr. MacDonald gave views | He favored the federal pen- |sion plan proposal over Quebec's 'S |war that characterizes feder. | these| ment," Mr. MacDonald | jmula has certain desirable fea- jtures, But the main federal at- traction was that it was tailored vincial governments, then it should be able to do so while! This exclusive Associated Press Wirephoto shows. two Hazleton, Pa., miners, who spent two weeks of hat- rowing days and nights 330 coal Russia-Canada Trade Talks To Resume OTTAWA (CP) -- Negotiations the 'atmosphere of coldjon a new trade pact between al-|Russia and Canada are expected |Provincial relations at the mo-|to resume this fall. Indications said|are Tuesday night in a speech here.!ment will seck different terms. If a province wanted to opt| Talks had opened in Moscow plan--with Ontario third -- al-jOUt of co-operative joint proj-jlast November and continued|® . though he said the Quebec for-jects between federal and pro-|here in March, but were called)? tI off after the April 8 federal gen-|> that. the Pearson govern- EYE { } "I'm not going to answer his) jarguments point by point,"' he ladded But on Mr. Wintermey-| ier's charge that the Ontario j|government is serving the inter- ests of private insurance compa-; nies, the premier commented) that 'we shut them (the insur-} ance. companies) out" in the by Liberal Leader John Winter-| provincial conference Sept. 9 on|hospital services program | meyer in the Ontario election) campaign, Mr. Robarts told a} press conference here. that he neither opposés the federal pensions programjbor force would be covered by but is awaiting more informa-|the Ontario program for porta- tion from Ottawa ble pensions, Mr, Robarts said: The Robarts administration is "We have to have a place to 'ocessing legislation to create| start." sions plan, Asked about Mr. Wintermey- technical aspects of the pen-| Mr, Robarts maintained the casual, hand-shaking nature of| his while covering nor endorses/er's charge that only half the la-/ campaign | some 375 miles Tuesday after| an informal start to his prov- ince-wide tour Monday in North Bay: and surrounding Nipissing ridings provincial system of portable} pensions to be run by private companies INTER Mr. Robarts referred briefly PRETING THE NEWS to the pensions issue at an even- ing meeting in Arnprior, term ing the Liberal charges a red herring, At the press conference, Mr. Robarts said there are advan- tages and disadvantages to both the public and private pension plans, but he did not elaborate The premier, who visited Ren- frew on a nine-town tour by car from North Bay to Ottawa, de- es > Jin-| : opposes.the federal plan the United Nations Security Mr. Wintermeyer said Monday|Council are raising. concem for in Ottawa in launching his cam-|the future in the troubled Middle paign for the Sept. 25 election| Hast area. that "'the Tory party is a priso-| The Security Council has sat ner of the vested interests and|nearly 200 times to deal with .». . the Tory party is opposed to|some aspects of Arab-Israeli re- the Canada Pensions Plan." lations since the. 1949 armistice Mr. Wintermeyer said lack ofjended the fighting that ben support by Ontario' could block|when Israel was created under the national pensions program.|the General Assembly-approved "I'm not going to' block it|plan partitioning the former now," Mr. Robarts said, "I'British mandate don't see how I could." Since 1956, when a UN mili- He added it is possible his\tary force was stationed along government would oppose the|the Israel-Egypt. border follow- WEATHER FORECAST Rain Tonight, Early Thursday Official forecas Toronto weathe: a.m.: Synopsis By JIM PEACOCK Canadian Press Staff Writer Certain elements in the cur- Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, High Thursday Windsor 65 75 St. Thom 65 London 62 Kitchener t issued by the offic Cloudiness forming ahead of a slowly organizing low pressure system' in Minne- sota now covers much of Onta rio and is moving east. Show- ers in Michigan are moving into southern and central] sections of the province and although quite) light will likely intensify tonight with thundershowers develop-' Hamilton St. Catharine ' Toronto .....+5 ose Peterborough ...- Trenton ing. Killaloe ... Lake St. Clair, Lake ie re : Lake Huron, Windsor, London l suai ane Partial clearing this afternoon. P00 Cloudy with scattered showers}. 4, c M and thunderstorms tonight er baal og glace early Thursday. Sunny intervals| wort Riven bee Thursday afternoon Winds] vroosonee ie southerly near 15 tonight and!timmins .. early Thursday , Niagara, Lake Ontario, Hali- Observed Temperatures burton, Hamilton, Toronto: Low overnight, high Tuesday Cloudy with scattered showers! Dawson 35 63 and possibly thunderstorms to-| Victoria ... 5 66 night and Thursday morning, Edmonton 63 sunny intervals Thursday after-| Regina 74 noon. Winds southerly 15 tonight|Winnipeg . 85 and Thursday. Lakehead . 71 Georgian Bay, Algoma, White White River. 71 River, Timagami, North Bay,| Kapuskasing RP 74 Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: A/North Bay......., 70 few sunny intervals this after-|Sudbury 73 _noon, cloudy with scattered|Sault Ste. Marie... 72 showers and thunderstorms to-| Muskoka 72 night and early Thursday.|Windsor . 78 Southwest winds. Overcast with London 77 rain tonight tapering off to a Toronto . ' few showers Thursday morniag, Killaloe cooler Thursday. Winds becom- Ottawa ing northerly 15 Thursday Montreal ASIII IVI + AVYVVVysVwaaanngwwwsesng on oo > & 9 Irsael-Arab Rift Raising Concern ing the Suez crisis of 1955, most lof the Israeli-Arab skirmishes have occurred along the 70-mile Israel-Syria border The newest flare-up occurred jalong this boundary last week after an incident in which the Israelis said two Israeli farm- jers were killed by Syrian raid- Jers. The incident was followed \by air and ground battles be tween Israeli and Syrian forces and each side charged the other jwith aggression | NEW ELEM NT The outbreak took a discour- agingly familiar pattern, but a new element was injected when Israel, for the first time in 10 years, appealed to the Security Council for recourse instead of relying on reprisal raids srael has been condemned in Pp UN in the past for its re- someone has crossed. this out!for all 10 provinces. and written over it the words:| Still, any province should have 'There should be further inves-|the right to opt out of any fed- tigation.' "' feral scheme, if co-operative fed-| The Liberal leader spoke tojeralism is to mean anything. an audience of 85 at the Cana-|This applies to Quebec, Mr. dian Legion Hall. Federai|MacDonald said, while conced Health Minister LaMarsh intro-|ing that the absence of both On- duced him and predicted that/tario and Quebec from the fed Ontario would vote Liberal inj@ral pension plan would create the same fashion as it did in last| administrative difficulties April's federal election He said that the Ontario Lib- 'Mr. Wintermever' said itera! party is not a factor in the would take too long to cite alljelection if its leaders and poli of the changes which were|Cies are assessed, The NDP is marked in the original by pen-| absolutely not' prepared to cilled circles : coalesce with any Liberal gov- He mentioned these others,)™nment however "We are aiming at 55 seats-- "Again on Page 71 of the orig. enough to form a government a inal version, there is a passaye| He granted that the party held which reads: 'In fairness to adjOMnly five seats in the last legis- concerned we refrain' from fur-|!@ature but said there is ample ther comment on this branch of|Precedent fora sharp expan- the evidence but we consider|S!0n. that this matter merits the at-| The Robarts government secks tention of the attorney-general/ a blank cheque from the elector- for such action as he deems ap-|ate when it should be bearing propriate.' : down hard on some major "Part of this passage is:also|points, Mr. MacDonald said. crossed out and overwritten, so| Aside from the pension question that in the published version,|the needs of higher education the passage reads: 'In fairness'were extremely important. He 'Two Issues Face 'Federal Cabinet . y JAMES NELSON It was reported -that. some OTTAWA (CP)--The federal) change may be made in the ad- cabinet meets today amid|ministrative structure of the mounting « political interest in/fair organization, possibly. by two issues -- the government's|appointing a general manager pensions legislation and leader-;who would be given more inde- ship for the 1967 world's fair at;pendent executive power than Montreal the commissioner - general has Back to preside after a 10-day had. absence from the capital On the pensions question, Mr Prime Minister Pearson. He re- Diefenbaker said in a statement turned to his desk Tuesday after|that those who now receive $65| a trip that took him through his|a'month at age 70 are entitled| Algoma East constituency, to|+9 an immediate increase to $75, Toronto, Stratford and Char-) because that was a promise im- 1s lottetown plicit in the Liberal party's na- Also attending will be Health| tional campaign program last Minister Judy LaMarsh, back' spring from a three-week tour of. seven The Conservative leader bith pipes hg pon charged that the Liberal minis:-| Two other reasons are seen e Aviirent pte ene ell itry has caused a muddle and in Western quarters for the Is-|,. confusion in introducing its re- raeli policy reversal The sig wt st pri fair tirement pensions plan, and that ' quesuons drew critical lite ear-\the cabinet now trying to 1. Domestic pressures on Pre-jiier this week fom Opposition| make excuses, He also charged mier Levi Eshkol's government Leader Diefenbaker. Tuesday h Nai ater to prove that it is dealing more| "e2eer Diefenbaker. Tuesday he' the Liberal party with trying to for cefully with Syrian attacks demanded an immediate my make the national pensions than just filing protests with the|cTease in old age pensions. Ear-|scheme an issue in the Sept. 5 UN truce mission authorities ap-\ie" he said world's fair plan- Cntario general election. pointed to oversee the demili ning is suffering from organiza- tarized border zone hoeger Mga wey and inability; i : 3 : o make major decisions, "ae To test whether the United) "The resignation Monday of| Nations is capable of fair judg- 7 ment or only one-sided justice.|~_'- Carsley, deputy commis-| . isicner-general of the fair, fol-| ARAB RALLYING POINT lowing last week's resignation of | Israel charged, and. Western commissioner-general Paul Bi- sources see some basis for it, envenu, left the fair organization, that Syria sought to divert at-| without a head. Mr. Pearson in-| |tention from serious internal dif-;dicated the posts would be filled| ficulties and to attract support|before the end of this week. from her Arab neighbors--the| Informants here suggest that United Arab Republic and Iraq.jthe resignations of the two top Conflict with Israel has always'men, appointed by Mr. Diefen-| brought at least temporary har- baker when he was prime minis-| mony within the Arab world and ter, resulted less from political! jit is thought that the Ba'ath' differences with the Liberal gov- Party which recently seized'ernment than from relations | |power in Syria figured new ten-| with Montreal civic authorities sion with Israel might help si - -- OSHAWA'S jlence attacks from pro-Nasser BIGGEST REAL ESTATE jelements MOVE prisal attacks and last year Brit- aim and the United States joined in such condemnation. By going }to the UN now, Israel may hope to avoid further censure FO PREFERRED ATTENTION PAUL ISTOW 728-9474 EALTOR Your Original CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of Carpet on Display Si Select from the largest St display east of Toronto. N-I-R-C LICENSED CARPET CLEANING 728-468 | NU-WAY | RUG. CO. LTD. Expert Upholstering _ 174 Mary Street Present world political condi- tions may prevent the Security Cauncil from dealing with the border situation in anything ex cept superficial terms, which} with Israel's apparent insistence) that its case be judged as a} test of council impartiality,| raises this question: Will Israel feel justified--if| not satisfied with the results of} her appeal the council--in taking the situation into her own hands by military. means to { not being denied 'an equivalent amount of federal monies." "Basically, it is our conviction| that Ontario's approach should| not be one of attempting to gang| up on Ottawa, either on its own! or in conjunction with Quebec EXAMINATIONS PHONE 723-4191 by appointment F. R. BLACK, O.D. 136 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Wil: a cigar for his fellow miner, Henry Throne, 28, who could only chew on cigars in the tiny cubicle in which they were trapped. --AP Wirephoto feet underground after they were imprisoned by coal slide, safe and happy afte: their rescue early Tuesday. In a Hazleton hospital, are, David Fellin, 58, left, lighting eral election and the ensuing|/the Russian purchases were to change of government. be Canadian wheat, Meanwhile, the three - year) In dollar terms, the Soviet jagreement signed by the Con./Union agreed to buy $25,000,000 servative govemment in 1960)worth of Canadian goods each has expired. 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