ee eee ee Congo soldiers and vil lagers of Ituri stand over the ten rebels they beat to Pte enn wees --_ aati toe tua doris ne ee THE CONGO village two days earlier. This picture was made last December by a white mer- DEATH IN death as a reprisal for the public mutilation and slay- ing of two women in the cenary serving with Congo army. Ituri is in the northeast part of the Congo. In For By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- The pro- posed Canada pension plan was expected to continue getting a robust shelling by the Canadian Life Insurance Officers Associ- lation today after a double- parrelled session Tuesday showed no signs of depleting the ammunition. The association, representing 102 Canadian, American and European insurance companies, mounted a broad offensive against the proposed pension plan when a 13-man delegation appeared before a joint Senate- Commons committee Tuesday. The assault was mounted from a number of fronts: That today's aged would get nothing from the plan; that those most in need of benefits would get less than the well- off; that the unemployed and those with: small earnings would get no benefits; that the structure of the plan is too complicated; that it is bound to become unstable; that tying it in with the cost of living means admitting inflation is} uncontrollable; that it would be} the Canada Pension Plan ! THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdey, January 13,1965 3 'Save Sir Alec', They Cry, chee | |He Has Medical Check-Up with existing private plans. [its suggestions would not give| LONDON (CP) ~ Sir Alec The nub ot the association's\the many more than 'existing|Douglas-Home received a med- argument was that Canad alflat rate of $75 at age 70, while|ical_ check-up for new political could better be served through|the proposed pension plan Were --_. on ile Tory "tile amendments to the existing|would increase their income.|$!S'S, launched a "save Sir/backbencher i "}Alec" campaign. |told young Tories in his Surrey old-age security program than|He regretted that the associa-\'",, , Tory troops have been or-|constituency there have. been through the implementation of|tion would "chide us" for not | Pil i 5 the compulsory wage - related/doing more, while its sugges- dered, in effect, to stop fighting wholly inaccurate" reports .of nsio heme tions amounted to even less over Sir Alec's future and in-|plots to oust Sir Alec. eee ; , ' " |stead concentrate their fire on) Another step in the campaign 'NEEDY GET LEAST' G. E. Brown, senior vice-|the Labor government. is a report that Lord Blaken- The pension plan meant '"up-|President of the Sun Life As-) Sir Alec, 61, entered an Ed-\ham, Tory party chairman side-down welfare'--those most|SUance Company of Canada,jinburgh nursing home Tuesday|whose resignation has been in need get the least return./S#id the suggestions wereinight for what the hospital ma-|forecast ever since the Oct. 15 Some 2,000,000 Canadians would|™¢@nt merely to set out a pat-itron described as a purely rou-|general election, now is almost fail to quality for the plan, said|'¢™™-. Parliament could increase|tine medical check-up. ag Spo ree Ragheb A the level of benefits. Lady. Donaiandaesh» 'tested the association, and in 1976 two- : thirds of all Canadians over 65 Sir Alec made the appointmerm Strike Hi ts some time ago, added at their Luxury Ships would still be receiving no . Scottish home: NEW YORK (AP) -- Sched- More Kicking has the complete confidence of Conservative MPs." fice. This is another indication that Sir Alec, warmly. supported determined to stay. SERVICE PLANNED ' MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union plans direct train service between Moscow, Stockholm and Oslo this year. Tass news agency reports that' railroad coaches will be carried across the Baltic Sea on ferries be- tween East Germany and Swe- Dorion Inquiry Cast Out Of Damon Runyon MONTREAL (CP)--The cast)Liberal organizer and his busi-/ing of Aime (Rocky) Brunette,|sessions court judge of characters involved or men-|ness partner, drove to Ottawa tioned at the Dorion judicial in- three or four times and made|nightclub and described by po-| alinnumerable phone calls to the/lice as a minor underworld fig-|jyagment capital last summer, trying tojure. é ae Quebec Provincial Police de- into an alleged $64,000 fraudu- quiry keeps growing at steady rate. To the string of persons injarrange bai! for Rivard followed }door preliminary high places in Ottawa named) He added that Eddie Lechas-|scribed the killing as an under-|jent bankruptcy. earlier, add the names of three|seur, accused in an alleged fur-|world execution, possibly con- Montreal figures: a election organizer, tion and a_ perjury fraud racket. Robert Emilien. Gignac, the murder suspect, was escorte' from Bordeaux Jail Tuesday to} testify at the inquiry about his) efforts last. summer to help ob- States on charges of smuggling|mazie Boulevard. dope for. a Mafia-ruled syndi- cate. Liberal|niture-store bankruptcy fraud,|nected with a nightclub protec- a murder|worked closely with Mrs. suspect in a gangland execu-|vard in trying to line up her suspect|husband's release on bail from p, linked to an alleged bankruptcy | Bordeaux. d Gignac, o| himself as president of two con- The judgment Ri-/tion racket. Crown witness in ROBERT GIGNAC day. 35, has identified EDDIE LECHASSEUR | Judge Wagner at Lechasseur, 32, is free on $5,-/time Wont Declare War On Malaysia: Sukarno JAKARTA (CP) -- President; palace, he was asked if Indone-\tacked, the Indonesians would sia would start a war over the|strike back." Malaysia agency reported. He replied: Talking to reporters at his|not, but if Indonesia were at- U.K. Troop Movements Reported In Malaysia Sukarno said today Indonesia would not declare war on Ma- laysia but if she were attacked! che would strike back. | KUALA LUMPUR (Reutets), Gen. Sir James Cassels, the} defence leaders Meanwhile, jet fighter - bers from the British aircraft carrier Eagle flew into Singa-|plans for a major expansion ofjain by using the Malaysia dis- pore airfields today hours before the 50,000-ton ship|included establishment of dep- was scheduled to berth at the|ots.to train 6,000 conscripts and|had deliberately spread rumors the (From Hong Kong it was re-|cuards in remote jungle .and|withdrawing from the United ported that an airlift of British|coastal areas -- where Indone-|Nations was to. free it from all Army Gurkhas from Hong Kong|sian guerrillas have been land-|ties so as to begin a general at- to reinforce security forces in|jng. Malaysia got under way today.)| ------__- Singapore naval base. The troop movements took place as British and Malaysian officials reported substantial In- donesian build-wps in Borneo and on the islands near Singa- pore and Malaya. Some 50,000 British service- men are stationed in the 16-| month-old Federation of Malay- sia which links the former Brit-| ish colonies of Malaya, Singa-| pore, Sarawak and Sabah| (North Borneo.) The federation is locked in an undeclared war with Indonesia Indonesian President Sukarno, who sees Malaysia as an exten-| sion of British colonialism in Asia, has sworn to crush it. Cassels, who arrived here| Tuesday, conferred today with) Malaysian Defence Minister Tun Abdul Razak and armed forces chief-of-staff Lt.-Gen. Tunku Os- man Jewa WITNESS © WANTED Anyone witnessing en ec- cident. involving @ car and pedestrian at Gate 25, GMC South Plant on Thursday, January 7, 4:45 p.m. is asked to contect: DAYS -- Mr. Heyes, Toronto EM2-1771 Cell Collect NIGHTS ---- Mr. McDonell at 942-4944, 35, head waiter at a north-end|Quebec attorney-general. | Judge Wagner's March 24) a closed- investigation said Lechas- seur was present when a key ; Bie! : the fraud Gignac's preliminary hearing|case was beaten up in 1963 in| as been postponed 12 times|his furniture store, which has and now is scheduled for Fri-|since gone bankrupt, 4 lto change his testimony. ; ; recommended perjury struction firms, Beaubine Con-|999 property bail awaiting pre-|charges be laid against Mr. struction Company' and Hoche- | |iminary hearings tain bail for his friend Lucien|!aga Holding Company, both)charges, He was charged with|bec Superior Court and urged Rivard, wanted in the United|With offices on north-end Cre-\conspiracy to intimidate a wit-\fraud charges agaist Lechas- ness, inciting to perjury, intent|seur and six others accused of On Oct. 9, he was charged|to injure and six other counts/bilking creditors of large| with capital murder along with|last April 13 on the recommen-jamounts of money through an Gignac said Guy Masson, aitwo others in the Sept. 17 .shoot-idation of Claude Wagner, then|alleged bankruptcy racket. into nine|Justice Adrien Meunier of Que- } ° | In South Viet Nam #sanignee ot: SAIGON (AP) -- Two Amer- ican planes went down today in South Viet Nam near the Cam- bodian border, One was shot down, the other crashed when and now/it ran out of fuel, U.S. spokes- men said. No lives were lost in the plane crashes. Two crew mem- bers of a small army spotter plane suffered second - degree burns when their craft was shot |down. A U.S. Air Force officer suffered minor bruises and scratches when his plane ran jout of fuel. Anu - government demonstra- tions in three cities subsided, and the demonstrators in Hue prepared to send a delegation to Saigon to discuss their griev- ances with chief of state Phan Khac Suu, All was reported quiet in Hue, Quang Tri and Nha Trang, where noisy demonstrations and told the same | U " Pl Cc flag awe rg on Ny me | Ih cassis ina show © unity wi | . s anes Tas jthe International Long- ANNOUNCEMENT shoremen's Association. - Ship companies ordered the and the Seafarers International Union announced that their members would refuse to cross the longshoremen's picket lines. All three unions are AFL-CIO affiliates. The NMU and SIU emphasized that they were not striking. The two big ships knocked out are the liner. United States, flagship of the United States Lines, which -had been sched- uled to sail for Europe Thurs- day with 800 passengers; and the Argentina of the Moore-Mc- Cormack lines, which was to have left New York today with about 180 passengers on an eight-day Caribbean cruise. The action by the seagoing unions greatly increased the impact of the three-day dock strike which is causing an es- timated loss of $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 a day to the U.S. economy. Up to 200 ships are re- ported tied up-.in two. score ports. took place Tuesday and Mon- day. A three-day general strike ended in Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon. In the central Vietnamese city of Da Nang, another cen- tre of demonstrations, about 700 students seized a government sound truck and continued their protests. No violence was re- norted. In Saigon, conferences con- tinued between U.S. officials and Buddhist leaders who op- pose Premier Tran Van Huong's government, but the Buddhists were reported taking as hard an anti - government line as ever. Meanwhile, Communist China charged that "U.S. imperial- ism" was behind a South Ko- rean government decision to send 2,000 non-combat troops to South Viet Nam. benefits. "There is nothing whatever to statistics, which Richard A Cashin (L--St. John's West) about 24 hours. said were misleading. Leading Tories are known. to ad , F be dismayed that the party You ride one horse when it leadership has been a topic of suits you in one direction and] uled sailings of two luxury lin-lheated public discussion during Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win-|merchant marine supported the|determined to avoid another nieeg North Centre) said thatjlongshoremen on strike on theljeadership struggle in the face despite the concern shown for|U.S. Atlantic and gulf coasts. |of a possible general: election The seagoing unions called|jater this year for immobilization of American- t STARTS CAMPAIGN Conservative Central Office, Jo- seph Godber, former labor min- ister in the Tory government and now a member of the sha- dow cabinet, declared: the Conservative leadership, "When Parliament reassem- bles next week, it will be seen once more, just as it was seen before Christmas, that Sir Alec The -- mounted ~ be' concenied "abel. I, eapant offence under a heavy cover 0 ek e 4 c! chick him to be in the hospital for another when it suits you in an-|ers have been cancelled as sea- ' other direction," he said. going unions of the American oor pent Tempdoy, Thy? go Kicking off what is regarded as a campaign organized by the "A great deal of nonsense has been talked and written about Canada's favourite NICK SIBLOCK Sibby Real Estate Ltd., is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Nick Siblock to their real es- tate sales office. JORDA BRANVIN Sherry Emergency Talk Sibbys REAL ESTATE LTD. 299 Simcoe St. South CHILL IF DESIRED "Give Us free home delivery certain to stay at Central Of-~ Judge Meunier was convicted | of perjury Oct, 23 and sen- tenced to two years in jail. A) former Liberal member of Par- liament for Montreal Papineau, he was released on $10,000 bail Over UN Crisis phone Jordan Wines | 728-7576 or 728-7577 ATRESIA I ' é « a ? 3 by Blakenham throughout, is. a The Cash" TORONTO (CP)--Cash grants ben- senior British defence officials| military buildup in. neighboring British chief of staff-designate|in the federation. British' Army|Malaysia 'is unprecedented in who is here on a 10-day survey|Defence Minister Fred Mulley! peace time." of Malaysia's defence problems,|is in Borneo and Gen. Sir Mal- today conferred with Malaysian|colm Cartwright - Taylor, com- jmander of the Royal Marines, bom-/is in Singapore. several| Malaysia's citizen forces, These| pute as an excuse." |BLADE ROAST |SHOULDER |SHORT RIB || PRIME RIB his appeal hearing. Masson has been Antara news| When asked if there were in- |dications that Indonesia would |be attacked, he replied: "No |comment."" Sukarno said there would be|* : no other steps following up In-|Wuiry later. ean contracts, a Liberal "No, definitely three days later and is awaiting GUY MASSON only as a construction execu- tive with good prospects for, and member of the Quebec Young Liberals' Federation. He lis scheduled to testify at the in- UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- Secretary - General U Thant sought today to salvage a foun- dering Asian - African plan to settle the stalemate over the General Assembly votes of na- tions which refuse to pay peace- keeping costs. Thant held an emergency con- ference Tuesday night with As- sembly President Alex Quaison- Sackey of Ghana after the identified organizer donesia's withdrawal from the) United Nations. bee A foreign office spokesman charged Tuesday that Britain is preparing to attack Indonesia 'by creating "another Suez in- cident" in this part of the world In a statement, spokesman Cassels was one of the three|Ganis Harsono said the British stitute for thinking Tuesday. Why? Karsono said Britain used Egypt's seizure of the Suez Ca- nal as a pretext to attack the Egyptians in 1956 and such an Razak also told reporters of, action 'will be repeated by Brit- theory; we too fast." Besides, _ it's form a committee. His definition of | Harsono charged that Britain arming of 40,000 home/that Indonesia's main reason for IT'S EASIER NOT TO THINK" LONDON, Ont. (CP)--It's not a thinking man' thinks W. D. Sutton, don's director of education. "Today we use every sub- find," he told a service club "It's easier not to think; it costs too much; it's been tried before; it's too full of mustn't move easier to mittee: 'A group of the un- fit appointed by the unwill- ing to do the unnecessary." United States announced it had rejected a provision of the Asian-African plan setting aside the UN charter's Article 1. This penalty clause takes away the Assembly vote of any mem- ber two years behind in its pay- ments. Informants said Thant and Quaison-Sackey hoped to persu- ade the 59-nation Asian-African group to make their plan more palatable somehow to the United States and to the Soviet Union in hopes of avoiding a showdown. when the assembly s world, Lon- we can instead of payments on tures should be sought from the Ontario Department of Educa- tion, John D. Parker, the Metro- politan Toronto School Board's new chairman, said Tuesday night. Other provincial grants paid on municipal projects are paid when the projects are built, Mr. Parker said. But, he said, with the depart- ment of education municipali- ties find themselves issuing de-| bentures to finance the prov-| ince's share of new schools. Paying cash for school con- struction will allow the board to reduce considerably the amount of debenturing, he | cated it would pay into a vol- untary fund without disclosing the amount and provided its payment was not listed as a peate-keeping contribution. But it also demanded that Article 19 be suspended and threatened to quit the UN if deprived of its Assembly vote. Both the Russians and the French contend the peace-keep- ing assessments are illegal be- cause they were voted by the General Assembly instead of the Security Council. A 12-member committee of the Asian-African group plans to present the plan in a resolu- tion to the Assembly, but it de- cided Tuesday night to delay drafting it until Thant negoti- ates further with the United States, Russia and other na- tions concerned. Such a resolu- tion would probably bring on the Soviet-American confronta- tion that other nations are try- ing to avoid. THAT BIG SAVINGS EVENTS IS ON RIGHT NOW! Glasses made to your Eye Specialist's prescription G. D. Jait. OPTICIAN 936 Simcoe St. N. 723-3110 January Clearance returns from New Year's recess Monday. Article 19 would take away) the vote of the Soviet Union, | France and 16 other nations} more than two years in arrears on their total assessments be- cause of their refusal to pay peace-keeping dues. a com- tack on Malaysia. The Soviet' Union has _ indi- HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS 49: 39: LEAN MEATY--Blade Bone Removed FRESH PORK SHOULDER FRESH PORK BUTT FRESH PORK LOIN END 49: og: ROUND cf STEAK 79 tb POT ROAST BONELESS BEEF 393 | 49 39 30 LEAN TENDER ECONOMY 6 & 7 RIB Red Brand Steak or Roost EXTRA FEATURE "eae 49° a7: 39:| BACON 1-LB. EXTRA FEATURE Sis 956 FIRST GRADE ORONO CREAMERY BUTTER BREAD 2 DEVON RINDLESS 24-02. loaves OVEN READY CHICKENS 2%-3 Ib. ave. SALE Save On Top Quality Brand Names in... @ SUITS @ TOP COATS SPORT COATS WINDBREAKERS SWEATERS SHIRTS @ SHOES REDUCTIONS OF 20% to 40% Employment Opportunities Civil Service of Canada WELFARE ADMINISTRATORS, experienced university gro- duates in social sciences or related studies, National Health and Welfare, Ottawa, Up to $12,300. Circular 65-580A. ENGINEER--Mechanical Building Services Maintenance, Air- port and Property Management Division, Transport, Ottawa. Up to $10,700. Circular 65-1202. ECONOMISTS--LABOUR MARKET ANALYSIS, Labour and Unemployment Insurance Commission, Ottawa, Up to $8640. Reference 65-2000-2. TECHNOLOGIST--Mechanical Equipment and Instrument De- velopment, Mines and Technical Surveys, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, N.S. Up to $8460. Circular 64-1226. "SHIP INSPECTORS (MACHINERY) AND SHIP INSPECTORS (HULLS), Transport, various centres. Up to $8280. Com- petition 65-202, PRESS RELATIONS OFFICER, $7950-$9030; PUBLICITY SPECIALISTS, $6990-$9030; REPORTER-EDITOR, $6990- $8280; EDITORS, $5730-$7710, Labour, Ottawa. Circulor 64-1969A. TECHNOLOGISTS--Electronic Equipment Development, Mines ond Technical Surveys, Bedford 'Institute of Oceanography, Dortmouth, N.S. Up to $7710, Circular 64-1176. EXPORT TRADE PROMOTION OFFICERS--Phormaceuticals; Adhesives, Cleaning: Compounds and Surface Coatings; Chemists or Chemical Engineers, Trade and Commerce, Ottawa, $7560-$8640, Circular 64-1551. *SUPERVISOR OF CONSTRUCTION ACCOUNTING, Contracts Division, Public Works, Ottawa. $7260-$8280. Competition 64-684. *BUILDING CONSTRUCTION COST ESTIMATOR, Bilingual, Public Works, Ottawa. $6990-$7710. Competition 64-1328. * MUSEUM DISPLAY DESIGNER, Historic Sites Division, North- ern Affairs and National Resources, Ottawa. $6990-$7710, Competition 64-392. *AUDITORS, Unemployment Insurance Commission, secondary school graduates, with accounting or auditing. experience, National Employment Service, North Bay .and Sudbury. $5100-$5820. Competition 65-0-514. *STENOGRAPHER 3 (SECRETARY), National Health and Wel- fare, Moose Factory, Ont. $3900-$4350, plus isolation cllowonce. Competition 65-0-506. 23% Simcoe South 728-7974 For details and application forms, write to Civil Service Open Fridey Till 9 P.M. Commission, Ottawa 4. For competitions marked * details and application forms at Post Offices in major centres, National Employment Service Offices and Civil Service Com- mission Offices. Please quote number as indicated, See eee Se Re aerate haere, aoe