2 © THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Februery 26, 1968 ting ek oe Ea Commons Grinds Out | Canada Pension Plan AWA (CP)-- The legis- lative wheels began to grind out the Canada Pension Plan in'the Commons Thursday, al- ane slowly. a fate demonstration of government - opposition collab- oration, the political parties ex- mee adyance word on which of the bill's 118 clauses each of them intends to propose amendments. me the nature of the a ments to themselves but agreed that clauses on which no party wants to geo an amendment m ee afte little debate. ; the Commons rose at * tts I and possible amendment later. Earlier the Commons de- feated, by a standing vote of 99 to 48, the first Conservative amendment which would have required recipients of contribu- tory retirement pensions to live in Canada 10 years before qual- ifying. This was proposed by Gordon Aiken (PC--Parry Sound-Musk- oka) as a prelude to introdue- tibn of the Conservative plan to arantee minimum pensions of $25 a month to everyone. These would be in addition to $75 a month now paid out of social security taxes for Nationa Renewed By 'OTTAWA (CP)--Members of Parliament, armed with a foyal mmission's warfting that Ca- nadian confederat on is in peril, are to renew the great national uhity debate Within the next few weeks. 'Finance Minister G ot do n's bill to permit provinces to with- dtaw from some shared-cost programs comes before the Commons as the iast major piece of legislation before the current session is concluded. Because the opling-out bill was inspired by Quebec's de- sire for greater control over its own affairs, the debate is expectéd to rival the protracted flag debate of last year in con- tentiousness, allowed| .m. adjournment, it had 14 clauses and let six others stand for further debate everyone 70 and older but would be paid out of the pen- 'sion fund built up by the con- tributory plan. PLAN SCORNED Liberal and NDP _ speakers scorned the Conservative plan, saying it would divide the coui- try by not being paid in prov- inces which opt out of the Can- ada Pension Plan and would mean stretching out the matu- rity of the plan to 20 years, instead of 10. Stanley Knowles (NDP--Win- nipeg North Centre) sald the Conservative plan would actu- ally mean a cut in prospective retirement pensions for every- one now 45 and up to 62% years of age. Under the Canada Pension Plan, anyone who has con- tributed the maximum amount for 10 years will draw $104 a month on retirement at 65, An amendment being introduced by the government to a fater section of the bill will lower the qualifying age for the $75 stand- ard old age pension to 65 from 70 over a period of five years. During the debate the mood of the House alternated be- tween one of honeyed sweetness between the parties and one of rogant by Conservative house leader Gordon Churchill (PC-- Winnipeg South Centre). A mo- ment later Mr. Churchill and Mr. Knowles were exchangin compliments on having rea each other's earlier speeches. George Chatterton (PC--Es- quimalt-Saanich) said the Can- ada Pension Pian can't be called truly national because Quebec and any other province can either stay out or quit it after it starts, DUCKED OUT--IN When he ducked behind the curtains into the lobby for a smoke after his speech, Miss LaMarsh said he wasn't inter- ested enough to remain to hear her reply, He slipped back into another part of the Commons and she said the plan is na- tional because it sets targets for universal, comparable and portable pensions schemes whether operated by the fed- eral or any provincial govern- ment. Mr. Knowles asked what ma- chinery is provided for a prov- ince which, after going it alone, wanted to join the Canada Pen- sion Plan. Miss LaMarsh said legal draftsmen were unable to back-biting partisanship, Health Minister Judy La- Marsh, piloting the measure for the government, was called ar- al Unity Debate 'Armed' MPs adjournment, the Commons passed the resoliién for the bill, and Mr. Gordon said this méant that as of Jan. 1 the provinces . wanting could operate under the new ar- rangement, The finance minister said the present bill was an interim measure pending a full-scale re- view of shared-cosl programs by a tax structu.e committee composed of. representatives of the federal and povincial gov- ernments, PROGRAMS FROZEN In the interim, probably 1% years, the provinces opting-out and receiving a federal tax abatement to permit them to to opt-out); provide for all the possibilities jbut if such a circumstance an_ individual Mr. Knowles reiterated NDP plan to raise. the $75 Standard old age pension to $100 a month at the same time the Canada Pension Plan is in- troduced. Mr. Aitken said this basis. burden of more than $400,000,- 000 on the Canadian people at a time they aré contributing to the portablé pensions. The con- tributed money might be used to pay the extra $25, he added. Mare>! Lambert (PC -- Ed- monton West) wafned that a clause in the government's bill providing for automatic in creases in pension benefits geared to the consumer price index is dangerous in that it could contribute to inflationary spirals. John Munro, patliamentary secretaty to Miss LaMarsh, said that such index-geared in- creases -had been written into similar pénsions plans in Scan- dinavian and other countries for many years. These cou- tries had been world leaders in this kind of legislation and had The debate could last many|conduct their own iaxing, must/not had trouble with the provi- days or éven weeks, but nobody yet belié¢ves it will take as long as the flag. On the eve of the Christmas 'Khrushchev' USSR Policy PEKING (Reuters)--The Chi- nese Communist party today poe published a sweep- ing new attack on "Khrushchev- ism without Khrushchev" in Russia. The party newspaper People's Daily splashed on iis front page what it called a publisher's note to the third volume of a collec- tion of statements by former Russian leader Nikita Khrush- chev which it sail were being published here to help carry the struggle against Khrushchey re- visionism through to the end. The attack came only three days before an_ international Communist meeting called in Moscow for March 1 by Rus- sia's new jeaders. China has not yet said whether it will attend. The publisher's note as given by The People's Daily today did not mention the new Soviet lead- ers by name, but it called on them to repudiate "modern re- visionism and dogmatism." The publisher's note went on to say Khrushchev revisionism had become the Russian party program, and, under slogans of peaceful coexistence, peaceful competition and peaceful tran- sition, "it opposes revolution and Marxist-Leninist teachings." "It is changing the nature of the proletarian patiy and open- ing the doors wide to the restor- ation of capitalism in the Soviet Union." EMMANUEL BAPTIST 'Church held its first annual business meeting recently. This was the first time such @ meet has been held since the church became. a duly organized and constituted 'New Testament Church and a part of the Feliowship of Evangelical Baptist Church in Canada, FORMER ALDERMAN John Dyer was seen shortly before 8 a.m. today des- perately trying to dig his car wheels from crusted ice 'on Athol street east. LORD BADEN-POWELL'S Birthday was the theme for the 20th Oshawa Company Girl Guide and Brownies' Mother and Daughter ban- quet this week. MICHAEL BELL, the son of Dr. and Mrs: R. G, Bell, 309 Golf street, has been awarded the Dean Symons Scholarship at the Univer- sity of Toronto which goes to the resident student of Devonshire House obtaining the highest marks in the 1963-64 session. Michael is a second year pre-medical gtu- not change the present pro-| grams, such as hospital care,) welfare, vocational training) and health grants | Opposition Leader Diefen- baker, who has «ince argued that the federal government is bringing about the separation of Quebec, let the resolution pass but said this action should not be interpreted "as approval of the course which this govern- ment has in mind." Conservative sources say the party's caucus now is discuss- ing tactics on the issue, but many believe in the end they will be determined by Mr. Dief- enbaker alone. His stand so far on the issue has been opposed by Quebec leader Leon Balcer, the mah who tried to have the Conservative leader _ replaced) during the Christmas adjourn-| ment. | The New Democratic Party also fears the opting-out pro- cedure, if extendeg to the taxa-| tion field, will remove control| over the economy fiom the fed-| eral government, The western} and Quebec wings of the Social Credit party hold differing views, and private doubts are held by some English-speaking Liberals, The MPs will have in mind, when the debate starts follow- ing passage of the Canada Pen- sion Plan, the warnings ex- pressed Thursday in the interim report of the royal commission on bilingualism and bicultural- ism. The commission said unless steps are taken to resolve the unity crisis, of which Canada is not even fully conscious, "there is grave danger to the future of Canada and all Cana- dians." "What is at stake is the very fact of Canada," the report added. d THERE dent at the U of T and is a graduate of O'Neill Col- legiate and Vocational In- stitute, NDP SUPPORTERS of T. C. "Tommy" Douglas, na- tional leader of the NDP party, were disappointed to- day when he was forced to cancel his speaking engage- ment at MCVI because of the weather. They had ex- pected to meet with him briefly following the speech. } | THE BAND of the Ontario Regiment will present two "Pop" concerts in the Me- Laughlin Collegiate and Vo- sion, jarose, it could be dealt with on| the would mean an additional tax! NAMPA, Idaho (AP)--The Great Titan of the Ku Klux Klan in Idaho is a Negro. Paul R. Bellesen, 33, who operates a janitor service here, received his officer's card Wednesday from the Na- tional Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in Tucker, Ga. "It was a great challenge to me to see just how secret the Kian is and if I could get in," Bellesen said. "I did." Bellesen said he wrote James R. Venable, Imperial Wizard of the National Knights, that he was with the Elks Club and thought he had a number of followers. "1 failed to mention I do janitor work for the club." He was made an officer and instructed to organize a Klav- ern (chapter) in Idaho after submitting an applica- tion with $15 and vowing al- legience to the Klan. "I also wrote to the Impe- rial Wizard of the United Ku Klux Kian," said Bellesen. "He was more cagey. He asked for my photograph." The young Negro, a former member of the British Co- lumbia Association for the Advacement of Colored Peo- ple, said he is not now a member of any racial organ- ization. "I'm definitely not a Black Muslim," he said, 'I'm as much against them as I am against the Klan." ANTI-NEGRO KU KLUX KLAN DUPED, BUT GOOD, IN IDAHO But he said he is against the Klan, not individuals in it. "Anytime Wizard Venable comes to Idaho, I hope he'll drop in and have a cup of coffee." : Bellesen was born in Ev- erett, Wash., and lived briefly in British Columbia with rela- tives, where he joined the B.C, Association for the Advance+ ment of Colored People. SIGNS ANYWAY The application form for the Klan contained an oath that the signer was a 'white, An- glo-Saxon Protestant." "Being a Negro and sup- posedly unable to. read any- way, I signed it," said Belle- n. OTTAWA (CP)--Five RCMP witnesses now have testified to the Dorion inquiry that their su- periors either removed or over- ruled them during an investiga- tion into charges of attempted bribery and coercion against federal ministerial aides. Superintendent William George Fraser, 56, acting head of the RCMP's criminal inves- jtigation branch, was the latest. He testified Thursday the inves- tigation was taken out of his hands by Deputy Commissioner J. R. Lemieux before it was completed. "I was never told whether the investigation was still open or closed," he said, The file on the investigation, which began Aug. 11, ceased to be sent to him regularly after Sept, 3. He said he originally picked Sgt. Joseph McLeod, whom he had known since boyhood, to in- MP Demands Nielsen's In Georgia, Venable, in- formed that he had appointed a Negro as great Titan in Idaho, said: : "His membership is hereby revoked." Venable's arch-rival, Calvin Craig, grand dragon of the United Klans of America, said he was overjoyed at the news Venable had accepted a Negro as a member of the Klan group. "This is not surprising to me, about a nigger belonging to Jim Venable's Klan, be- cause he's already admitted taking in Catholics," the grand| Sources dragon said. | OTTAWA (CP) -- The matter SAIGON (AP)--Although they dislike the continuing political chaos, U.S. officials in Viet Nam appear to be prepared to con- tinue business as usual even if there are many more coups. It is all part of what some U.S. policymakers have described as a 'manageable mess." In many ways, South Viet Nam is politically similar to a medieval feudal state, The ruler, whoever he may be, rules by the grace of his powerful barons, whom he must play off against each other. Vietnamese barons are not necessarily military field com- manders. They may. be civilian politicians with certain forces at their disposal, they may be re- ligious bloc leaders, or they may belong to a specialty of sect. Two of these armed sect S, the WEATHER FORECAST Sunny And Cold, Milder Saturday TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Off-lake snow will persist through the day, There is drifting in most areas but this should gradually subside. Tonight is expected to mainly clear with light winds and rather. cold Lake St. Clair, Niagara, Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Killaloe, northern Georgian Bay, Wind- sor, Toronto, Sudbury, Hamil- ton: Mainly sunny and cold today. Occasional drifting. Clear and cold tonight variable cloudiness and a little milder Saturday, Winds becoming light tonight and Saturday, Lake Erie, southern Lake Hu- ron, London: Variable cloudi- ness with snowflurries and con- and cold tonight. Saturday vari- able cloudiness and a little mild- er, Winds becoming light to- night and Saturday. Northern Lake Huron, south- ern Georgian Bay: Mainly cloudy with frequent snow squalls and heavy drifting to- day, gradually subsiding this evening becoming variable cloudiness with light snowflur- ries late tonight and Saturday turday. Timagami, Cochrane, North Bay: Clearing. Heavy drifting most of day. Clear and cold to night. Variable cloudiness and a little milder Saturday. Winds becoming light tonight and Sa- turday. Algoma: Snow squalls and heavy drifting near Lake Supe- rior today otherwise clear. Vis- ible cloudiness and a few snow- flurries tonight. Variable cloud- iness Saturday. Cold today and tonight a little milder Satur- day. Winds becoming light to- night and Saturday. White River: Clear and cold TV and STEREO see WAYNE'S 78 Simcoe N. Telephone 723-1411 be| St. siderable drifting today. Clear|) Cold today a little milder Sa-|K today and tonight. Cloudy with occasional snowflurries Satur- day. Winds light. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Friday; Kitchener . Mount Forest... Wingham Hamilton ., Toronto Peterborough ... Trenton Kingston .. Killaloe Muskoka .. \North Bay. Earlton Sault Ste. Marie., Kapuskasing ...++ White River..sseee HO Ut ts CO NR HN | | Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Thursday: DAWSON sesccoreee "6 1 Victoria 43 Edmonton 21 Regina 16 Winnipeg . 7 Lakehead "ll White River 10 3 6 0 «lt 0 9 11 |b /North Bay. Sudbury .. Muskoka Windsor .. London ... Toronto Trenton Killaloe Ottawa .. REED'S WEEK-END CASH, CARRY FLOWER SPECIAL ROSES Q7« 4 BUNCH | REED'S Florists Downtown Drive-in Simcoe & Bond 163 Bloor W. i | OSHAWA cational Institute Audi- torium. They will be on March 12 and April 23. THE ANNUAL MILITARY Ball of the On'ario Regi- ment is. to be heid May 7 Bec bare Need Mortgage Money? Reel Estate ALL McGl L Broker Day or Night - 728-4285 SATURDAY, FEBRU ONTARIO MINOR HOCKEY ASSOCIATION PLAY-OFFS DECIDING GAME ARY 27, 7:30 P.M, OSHAWA CHILDREN'S ARENA PETERBOROUGH BANTAM ALL-STARS vs OSHAWA BANTAM ALL-STARS ADMISSIONS Adults 300 Students and Children 280 Americans, Viet Guerillas Shore Up Johnson Policy Viet Nam--the armed religious), lof whether to investigate how information leadung to the Dor- ion judicial inquiry came to the hands of a member of Parlia- ment is under consideration by the government. Justice Minister Favreau gave this information to the Commons Thursday after a question by J. J. Greene (L-- Renfrew South) and a &tate- ment by Erik Nielsen (PC-- Yukon), the MP whose charges in the House Jed to setting up the inquiry. Mr. Greene's question was Hoa Hao and the Cao Dai, claim support of around 4,000,000 per- sons among the population of 14,000,000. MOST STAY FRIENDS Most of the military barons remain fairly good friends, even when they plot and make coups against one another, Most of them -went through the same military schools and fought the same campaigns, Most are anti- Communist. A really central direction of the Vietnamese armed forces is nearly impossible under these circumstances, For a year, the information otherwise fllegally obtained' | | Mr. Nielsen. the barons more or less t0-\Grop his opposition to bail for insight into their relativelings United States strengths and weaknesses, army, the religions and the Viet-| namese people asa whole have/ig say that he had acquired pushed for an openly anti-Amer-jany information illegally. ican policy. Khanh served as @/ Mr, Greene said he intended sort of stopgap between these|no such inference but it seemed groups and the Americans. He/obyious that the information ended up by being disliked and/nhaq come from 'a secret docu- distrusted by many on both|ment or file and he wanted to sides. : jknow whether the government Some Vietnamese fear. that\would inquire into how this in- with Khanh gone extremists willlfogmation came out. take over, ripping what. little) ee stability is left in the country. | NEW UPSETS LIKELY More power plans within the| 1965 general staff itself are likely,| LICENCES particularly among the clique} of officers known as the "Young| for Con Available At Turks," Two in particular are rivals} Brig.-Gen, Nguyen Cao Ky, the) HARRY DONALD ro. Dundes East - Whitby air force commander, and Brig.-| Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, gov- Open Daily Till 5 P.M. Including Saturday ernor of central Viet Nam. Militant Buddhist leaders, with their control of demonstra-| tions, have their fingers on a variety of firing buttons. | Bitterness among north, cen-; tral and south Vietnamese is); likely to fan the flames of con) flict. whether the government would investigate to determine how "from a stolen or document became available to This was a reference to an RCMP report of investigations into a claim by Montreal law- J yer Pierre Lamontagne that he recently ousted Lt.-Gen. Nguyen| was offered a $20,600 bribe and Khanh was a cotter pin holding) was subjected to pressure to gether by dint of diplomacy and), narcotics suspect wanted in Mr. Nielsen rose on a ques- Strong groups within the/tion of privilege to say he was| sure Mr. Greene aid not mean) RCMP Rivard Investigators Charge Overruled, Removed vestigate the allegations of Montreal lawyer Pierre Lamon- tagne. CHANGED CHIEF Three days later Deputy Com- missioner Lemieux, who had agreed with his first selection, instructed him that Insp. J. P. Drapeau was to be chief inves- tigator. This had been the de- cision of the deputy commis-) sioner and Commissioner G. B. McClellan. Deputy Commissioner Le- mieux had taken the investiga- tion out of his hands because Insp. Drapeau "was ki French to Lemieux and re- ported to Lemieux." He denied suggestions that he resented this. 4 Drapeau has testified that he was overruled Sept. 10 by Deputy Commissioner Le- mieux when he suggested broadening the inquiry to ques- tion other persons involved. Former Sgt. Ronald Crevier, who assisted Insp, Drapeau in part of the inquiry, said he felt at about the same time that his hands wete tied and he could not take the initiative without instructions from headquarters. He said he would have liked to set a trap which would have produced evidence for an arrest and to question several addi- tional persons. Insp. Drapeau also said he would have liked to set a trap in a "bugged" room but had to follow his instruc- tions. ONLY TOOK STATEMENTS Insp. J. R. R. Carriere, chief of the RCMP's criminal inves- tigation branch at Montreal, said he was given nothing to do in the investigation after taking NEED... FUEL OIL at PERRY Day or Night 723-3443 statements from Mr, tagne and his wife. He said Insp. Drapeau was sent to Montreal fjom Ottawa to question persons in the Mont real area. Supt. J. A. <A. Thivierge, chief of the Montreal division, said he had no part in the in- vestigation at all after he re- ported to head quarters with the comment he thought Mr. La- montagne's charges were true. He hadn't been kept informed of progress and the only time Insp. Drapeau came to see him was in December when Insp. Lamon- ment in seeking the extradition of Rivard to the U.S, oa charges of being a key figure in an in- ternational narcotics smuggling conspiracy. Rivard has been in jail at Montreal since June 19, Supt. Fraser, standing ram- rod straight in the witness box, testified he "never gave it a thought" when asked why he hadn't assigned a French- speaking _ invegtigator because most of those t questioned spoke French, He said that as far as he was concerned Inspt. Drapeau and the other investigators had a free hand to take the initiati during their sleuthing, -- - Ross Drouin, Conserve rty counsel, suggested that puty Commissioner Lemieux took over direction of the in- quiry because it was politically Drapeau was looking into a leak about the investigation. Commissioner MeClel- lan, Deputy Commissioner Le: mieux, former commissioners' C, W. Harvison and L. H. Nich- olson and Insp, G. W. Reed, the RCMP's legal adviser, remain to be heard by the inquiry, among others. HEARD AUG, 11 Supt. Fraser said he first heard of the bribery charges Aug. 11 from Insp. Carriere tagne hd accused Raymond Denis, then executive assistant to the immigration minister, of offering a $20,000 bribe July 14 to obtain the release on bail of Lucien Rivard. Mr. Lamontagne is counsel for the United States govern- A JOHN McPHERSO CIA who informed him Mr. Lamon-|) nS nnensnnenSs sense en @ AUTOMOBILE © URBAN FIRE ® ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS CO-OPERATORS INSURANCE TRY this friendly \ CHILL IF DESIRED May | Co-operate in planning your insurance protection FAMILY LIABILITY @ LIFE ND OTHER INSURANCE NEEDS Cabot $t. Phone 728-7207 and CO-OPERATORS LIFE ] THE OSHAWA BUSINESS DIRECTORY | 282 King Street West, Ansus-GRAYDON CARPET COMPANY } © BROADLOOM © TILE © CORLON © RUG CLEANING Oshowa 728-6254 Modern Dry Cleaners & Shirt Launderers Oshewa, Ltd. 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