~“days>He~ If.It’s Good For The Island The-Guardian Is For_It e VOL. LXXIX NO. 250 ’ Avtiorisea as ) Second Class Mall by Ottawa and fer payment 28 -New Deal On Education | Is Clarified By. Ottawa. By DAL WARRINGTON OTTAWA (CP) — Some of the confusion over how Ottawa’s new deal for higher education wilt affect the Atlantic prov- inces seemed to be cleared up Tuesday but the four eastern ‘premiers waited for Prime Min- ister Pearson to reconsider some of their objections. After a night of refiguring the proposed federal formula. for tax transfers Premier Small- wood -of Newfoundland was somewhat happier. ‘It appears we're gaining a couple of million dollars instead‘ of losing $2,000,000 as we thought.” But he, said, ‘This still doesn't satisfy us.” “There seems to be pretty general agreement among the <_provinces- about the proposed - plan to provide more money for ,» uuiversities,"" said Premier " Gtaptield ot Nova’ Scotia. ‘‘It’s GOV.-GEN. VANIER Vanier isit = baa OTTAWA (CP) — Illness has forced Governor-General Vanier to cancel his engagements for the next few days > also postpone a visit ot rince Edward Island next week, +# was announced Tuesday. An announcement by Guy Robillard, press ‘secretary ot Gen. Vanier, said: “The Governor - General has contracted a virus _ infection which will necessitate cancel- ling his engagements for a few ~deeply~-regrets~that- this will force him to postpone a visit to Prince Edward Island which was to take place next (In Charlottetown there was no immediate announcement. of plans for the opening of the new science building at St. Dunstan’s University, one of the official acts scheduled for the Gev- ernor-General during his visit.) In Ottawa, Premier Campbell commenting on the postpone- ment of the visit to P.E.1.° of Governor-General Vanier and Mrs. Vanier expressed his re- -gréts that His Excellency and Madame Vanier will be unable to be with Islanders next week as previously scheduled. ‘ ek Premier Campbell said last |’ night ‘‘I extend the best wishes of the people of P.E.1. to His Ex- cellency for a speedy recovery and hope that his proposed visit tote. be re-schieduled at an early pte ” Memorial Service ; Held For O’Briens MONCTON (CP)— A memo- rial service. for Mr. and Mrs. ster O’Brien of Moncton; who were aboard the schooner Sandy ,~Point_lost_earlier this month on | som trip from Cartwright, Labra- ‘dor to St. John’s, Nfid., will be —he!d here Thursday. The. 53-foot vessel left, Cart- wright Oct. 2 on a return trip .. to St. John’s. An extensive air and sea search turned up wreck- age near the Spotted Islands of the Labrador coast. Mr. O’Brien -was a_ scrap metal dealer with business in- terests in St. John’s, Charlotte- town. Sydney and Halifax. ‘Borden Driver Escapes Unhurt TRURO (CP) — No decision has been made about a mazis- ‘terial inquiry into the highway |: death of 58-year-old John Eisses df nearby Glenholme. Mr. Eisses, a father of nine, died when the car which he was driving was in collision with a truck at Masstown, about 10 ‘ miles west of here. “Truck driver Lloyd William ‘ Perry of. Borden, P.E.I., escap- -/-on..each.provincial_ government. | __}sure the full benefits of the pro- -| the federal plan to’ get out ‘et aid for vocational high schools that we don’t like.” The federal-provincialconfer- ence adjourned at noon Tues- day after Mr. Pearson prom-: ised to ‘‘take another look’’ at the effect this withdrawal would have on the provinces. N.B. STANDS TO GAIN Premier Campbell of Prince Edward Island. said he thought the federal government under- estimated the full effect of this proposal on the provinces. Premier “Robichaud of *New Brunswick said. his province stands to gain even with the proposed withdrawal from voca- tional high school programs but the gain would not be enough to cope with over-all rising costs-of-education= “We still don’t linow exactly what New Brunswick will get in obscurerIt's a problem of defi- nition:”” What was needed was a defi- nition of where secondary or high-schoo} education ends~ and higher education begins: In some provinces, Mr. Robichaud cond year of university: New Brudawick could not accept. this. ADMITTED BY OTTAWA Premier Smallwood said Ot -tawa admits this definition is a Other hand Ottawa _ obviously matter for, the provinces. On the other hand - Ottawa obviously had the right to determine the basis on which it will pay for higher education. The—university. --aid proposals in themselves were fine. ‘‘We have no quarrel with them. But vocational education is one of our greatest problems.” “Why: did they have to bring trade schools into it?”’ he asked. “Why not tackle the problem of universities by itself?” Premier Stanfield said he does not foresee much more discus- some comment when Mr. Pear- ence today after his “second look.” “T don’t. think there’s much conference,’ - the premier added. Nova - Scotia said, this might be at the se- CAPITAL BUREAU OF THE GUARDIAN OTTAWA P.E.I. Premier Alex Campbell said Tuesday that the federal government's new proposal for financial as- sistance. to higher education is sufficiently cloudy as to cause him to delay comment. The federal-provincial- confer- ence on aid to education broke up in some confusion Tuesday noon when the provinces and the federal__government __ were . un- ancial effects of the legislation Premier Campbell said the offisials. from -both: levels ef | government would be © holding | separate meetings to try to mea- gram in each individual case and the-delegations would be: spend- ing Tuesday aftefnoon doing their arithmetic. He said that at present he does not want to quote any figures because of what appears to be a wide diversity of opinion as to how much P.E.I. would receive under the proposal and how much it would lose because of federal withdrawal from voca- tional training programs. ASSISTING PREMIER Assiaune Premier Campbell here-is.Hon.Gordon L. Bennett, | the education minister; and Hon. T. Earle Hickey, the provincial treasurer. “Our. problem. is. that. any. ad-. ditional money we receive for assistance t to higher _ education OTTAWA (CP)—David Mac- Donald,’ Conservative MP for Prince, says censorship is so stringent in Portugal that even the Pope is rezarded by the dic- tatorship as a subversive. Mr. MacDonald, a United Church minister, and Andrew Brewin, lawyer and NDP MP for Toronto Greenwood, spent four days in Lisbon last week to collect information for _a group which seeks amnesty for poli- tical prisoners in Portugal. Mr, . MacDonald. and Mr. Brewin will address this group, which paid their fares to Portu- gal and arranged interviews, at a Toronto meeting this. week- end. At a press conference Tues- day, the Prince Edward Island MP said an article in a Roman Catholic publication on the elec- tion of Pope Paul was censored by: the state to delete a refer- ence to the Pope being open to 4 ideas of the modern world. Mr. Brewin said he and Mr. MacDonald entered Portugal as tourists and that.as far as they INSIDE TODAY Island news ........ eesei 2 Summerside .......5...... 3 Deaths ....... scbasveud:8 Editorials ................ 4 Kings, Queens, City ..... 5 Women’s ..,.........5.. 6 Comics ..--.....5......... 9 Classified ............ 10, 11 Finance, markets ........ 12 - there’ll be plenty said outside.” Campbell Calls Proposal Cloudy might have to go toward our vocational training program,” iMr.-Campbell said. “We have two universities on the Island in St. Dunstan's -and Prince ot Wales and they both need more money. We are here to fight to help them get it.” ; He said that none of the pre- miers yet knows what his pfo- | vince may get from the federal proposal. Premier Ross. Thatch- | er of Saskatchewan claimed, for example, aan his province would. able to agree on the ,exact fin- |; : a Mr. Campbell said the confer- ence on education would resume Wednesday morning and by that time it was hoped that some agreenient could be reached on the financial aspects of the‘ matter so that the proposal could be discussed again in an effort to reach a conclusion. Tomorrow afternoon the con- ference swings into the tax sharing portion of the meeting Land the premier said that the sion on the~ education—formula- although there will doubtless be }, gon reports back to the confer} more to be said on this in the} “No.,.ddoubt | - shed + uoou onan” sivas Probe Of sonore ori nee ard Island ard Like The Dew” ‘ANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1966, day: cloudy. mor Eee TEN CENTS stont-a the! new. Summerside Senior High School: at the offi- cial eS Sactinony hela - “Yast evening. The chairman’ of the board of trustees, William D. Jay’ presided, ‘General con- Akaclges, the damnmerside firm -of- Williams,-Murphy..and-Mae-- , turned the key of the school over to Mr. Jay. (See story on page 3) || Okayed In N.S. 4ways this winter provided cer- ¢ | studs used and method of em- Medicare NEXT MOVE UP TO HANOI! sea ie final touches were being put on a P.E.I. submission which will be made at the opening of - this meeting. He expects the confer- ence will conclude about noon Friday. Fensorshi Reported Strict In Portugal knew they were not shadowed by the secret police. Measures were taken by the persons they saw — relatives of political prisoners, . lawyers, newspaper men, students’ and lay representatives of the Ro- man Catholic church — to keep the whereabouts of their meet- ings secret. WASN’T CLOAK DAGGER “But there wasn't.much cloak and dagger,”’ Mr. Brewin added. He ‘said Portugal,-an ally. of Canada in NATO, Has more po- _|litical prisoners proportionately | ' than any country in the world. There was complete negation of any form of justice, a reign of terror through preventive de- tention and police and torture to extort confessions. “The 40-year dictatorship in Portugal is not benevolent and gentle as supposed.” Mr. Brewin said. PROGRAMS: JAMMED Mr. MacDonald said CBC pro- grams considered critical of the Salazar regime are jammed. Incoming papers and: maga- zines were censored or banned altogether. Even some Portu- guese government documents were censored. No critical com- parison with any other country was permitted. “Even the word freedom is banned,’ Mr. MacDonald said. Mr. Brewin added that. Porto: | guese troops going Overseas to fight ‘colonial wars guese Guinea, Angola. and Mo- zambique are not p' arms or ammunition until. they arrive C in Africa because of the govy ed injury MANILA (AP) — The seven anti .- .Communist allies with troops... _fighting...in . South._.Viet. Nam have resolved to pursue the war there ‘‘until the (Com- munist ) aggression is ended,” but offered then to withdraw for- eign forces within six months if North Viet Nam pulls out of the south and violence ebbs. central argument raised by the Communist side — that: ‘the United States intends to stay.in- definitely and that no peace is possible without American with- drawal. The offer was in a final com- munique of the seven-country anti-Communist summit ing in Manila, which also pro- duced a statement on the Goals of Freedom and a Declaration of -Peace and Progress in Asia and the. Pacific. Prime Minister Keith Holy- oake of New Zealand summed ‘it up: ‘‘The ball is now in North Viet. Nam’s court.”’ Concerning the anti-Commu- nist foreign forces in South Viet Nam, now numbering 370,000, the communique said: The offer bore down on the} meet-. ace shall be withdrawn, eG close consultation,’ as the other side withdraws its forces to the north, céases infiltration and the level Of violence thus subsides. Those~ forces will be withdrawn as sodn as: possible and not. later than six months after the above conditions have been fulfilled.” U.S. sources noted it would take at least six months to with- draw the ‘huge force, including 330,000 Americans. » The South Vietnamese govern- ment subscribed to the with- drawal, but its own qualification was embodied in the commu- nique. It said South. Viet Nam, mindful of past experience, would ‘‘insist that any negotia- tions leading to the end of hostil- ities incorporate effective inter- national guarantees.” While offfering “a ‘road to peace, South Viet Nam’s allies vowed. that the country would not be conqueted by aggressive force. “We shall continue our mill- tary and all other efforts as firmly and as long as may be OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Tues- day that the: government has backed away from a post office plan to remove the Canadian coat-of-arms and the words royal mail from. postal trucks, He sparked a Commons up- roar when he charged that the Liberals ‘‘remove the -Crown’ at every opportunity. They ‘‘en- deavored, by stealth, te get away with this and got caught.’ Now the government was. tak- ing its usual course—running away. ‘“ Acting Prime Minister Martin angrily denied that the govern- ment has taken steps to remove references to the Queen. He said Liberals are as loyal to the Queen as is the Conservative Portu- | chief Speaker Lucien Lamoureux had trouble keeping order as jeers, taunts and applause drowned out speakers in a 45-, ernment’s fear of revolution. y minute debate on the fate of the necessary, in close consultation Dief Says Likerals Caught In Removing Coat-Of-Arms ‘Canadian’ coat-of-arms in the post office department. FORMED REPORT BASIS The ‘unscheduled debate be- gan. when Postmaster-General Cote .read. a four-page state- ment saying information from his department formed the basis*for an Oct. 13 report that the coat-of-arms and the’,words royal mail gradually would be replaced bye a maple leaf em- blem on postah, trucks. ‘This had been published be- fore the matter could be’ stud- ied -by the cabinet, however, and he regretted any misunder- standings. He had ordered the prepara- tion of a simple symbol for the post office, but had no “‘inten- tion of interfering with the proper use of any existing sym- bol.”” ‘se Mr. . Diefenbaker said the poate - general's explana- 3 ee Allies In Viet Nam War. Draw Up Pez Formula Pepa ie a menear ess eee er ae er } among ourselves, until’ the ag- gression is ended,” the commu- nique said. NO MENTION OF BOMBINGS The communique did-not show any willingness to cease the bombing. of North Viet Nam, as has been demanded at the United-Nations, Nor did’ it :men- LIAN Prime Minister Harold Holt and Vietnamese Premier Nguyen Cao’ Ky are tion’ “just cannot hold water.’’ with U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, CENTER, after Hunt Enlarged For Prisoners HALIFAX (CP) RCMP said Tuesday the. search for two pri- soners who escaped from ‘the Lunenburg County Jail early Monday morning has been ex- tended beyond Nova Scotia. * Gerald George Howie, 29, of Enfield; N.S. and Wesley Clu- ney;—33,—-of_Dartmouth,..N.S.,_es~| caped after sawing cell bars. Both had been serving sen- tences at the federal penitentiary at Dorchester, N.B., and had been transferred to the Lunen- burg jail to testify as witnesses in_a supreme court trial. Studded Tires HALIFAX (CP) — Motorists will be able to use metal stud- ded tires on Nova Scotia high- tain limitations are followed. Highways Minister Pyke said Tuesday government approval allows use -of pneumatic tires fitted with metal studs on. the highways at any time ‘between Oct. 15-April 15. The miniser listed five prov- isions involving the limit of protrusion. of the studs, dia- meter, number of studs allowed | for each tire by weight of ve- hicle; balance in the number of bedding-studs in the tires. acloneschnoren Bill Passes ‘OTTAWA (CP) — care insurance bill nected ae ap- proval in principle by a vote of 182 to 21 in the Commons Tues- day night. The Conservative and Social Credit parties split on second jreading after .an acrimonious eight-day debate. The bill was opposed by 10 *| Conservatives, seven Credi- tistes, two Social Credit mem- bers and two independents. Voting for the $700,000,000-a- year program were 102 Liberals. 59_Conservatives, 1 Dame. crats, Social Credit Leboe (Cariboo) and A. B. vat terson (Fraser Valley) and In- dependent J. A. Mongrain (Trois-Riveres). . LONG STILL TO GO The legislation still requires clause-by-clause study and third reading, which. could be a lengthy process since opposition sont ae Ree te rie es jreplied. $1 Million OTTAWA . Minister ieee ted te’ cone mons Tuesday the revenue de- partment is conducting a ‘‘semi- judicial investigation’ into a car .import .transaction involv- ing Studebaker and Volks wagen. Revenue Minister Benson con- firmed that the transaction is under investigation. ; Neither minister offered a di- rect reply when T. C. Douglas, NDP leader, asked whether “they were aware the transaction involved Studebaker of Canada buying Volkswagens in the U.S., importing . them. into Canada pe i under the Canada-U.S. uto agreement and then resell- ing them to Volkswagen at a “handsome. profit.” REJECTS MOTION Speaker Lucien Lamoureux disallowed. a motion by Alfred Hales (PC — Wellington South) for an emergency debate on the issue.’ Mr. Drury, Mr. Benson, Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Martin and John Turner, minister with- out portfolio, all argued against an ‘emergency debate. Michael. Starr _(PC—Ontario) said Studebaker, in the throes of going out of business at Ham- ilton,-made; a deal. with another company to-evade duty and-that ee was party to the a - terms of the auto treaty, which per- eee Canadian car manufactur--|- ers to import “foreign cars or: parts duty-free. + A department official had re- plied that if the transaction was carried out in a certain way it would fall under the terms. The question now is, Mr. Ben- son said, whether the transac- tion was carried out in conform- ity with the opinion given by the department official. REVEALS NO NAMES Mr. Benson did not reveal the names of the writer of the orig- inal letter ‘OF of the official who ‘Opposition Lea der “Diefen- baker demanded to know whether the government had given permission for what he called the mulcting of the pub- lic treasury. ° Mr. Benson said it had not. Mr. Diefenbaker asked that the letters in question be tabled. Mr. Benson said he first would (Continued on spage =3; col: 5) HANDSHAKING AUSTRA- | shown , parties have promised to intro- duce many amendments. have to look at them. __Mr. Hales said. in his motion -Mr. “‘Benson™ ‘said: e letter was: WEATHER Becoming sunny this morning; wa light winds. Low-high 37 and 60. Thurs- N 12 PAGES ‘Car Imports Now Being Conducted PC. Motion Declares Involved HON. MR. DRURY that Canadian taxpayers were short-changed —about by the two car firms. He said Volkswagen Canada © Ltd. and Studebaker Canada Ltd. each savéd roughly oe 000 in duties on the deal PROMISES. ACTION Mr. Benson said if there had been any evasion of duty, com rective action would be takes Mr. “Diéfenbaker quoted the president of Volkswagen as says ing he had-misgivings about the: transaction and that the com- “patty had~ obtained $1,000,008 Mr. Douglas said ‘Studebaker had imported. 5,000 Volkswagens,. evading the 17-per-cent tariff. es slehing. of Joint Nam in Manila Tues- day. President Johnson and his war allies announced they are prepared to withdraw © forces from South Viet Nam wn Tene 4 within six months after their cohditions for establishing peace are fulfilled. (AP Wirephote via cable from [Russian ~ Satellite deals have been.made by other. Canadian—car companies. Were there other loopholes * the agreement? Raymond Langlois (Cred tiste — Megantic) said fancy skating around the law ‘should. be stopped. Mr. Drury replied that the revenue department is examin- ing the propriety or otherwise of the transaction. Mr. Hales asked whether the revenue department had com sulted the justice department | about the legality of the deal. rm oe tear nanan cae ance in writing oa ae 3 He---asked>..hether.— similar.--——.- {GIVES NO DIRECT REPLY Mr. Benson said he accepted full responsibility in the matter, but gave no“tirect reply to the question. Mr. Douglas asked whether new evidence has come to light in the case which caused the departmental investigation. Mr. Benson said he would not like to prejudge his auditing de- partment, which had started an . investigation before the matter was raised in. the House Mon- day. But there seemed to be doubt that the transaction had been carried out in conformity with the opinion given by his departmental officials. In Toronto, a spokesman for 2 Volkswagen Canada Ltd. said “ 4+Studebaker Canada Ltd., using ‘its duty-free status, imported about 10,000 Volkswagens into Canada between January and ‘| June, 1965. The spokesman was clarifying his company’s earlier statement that the total had been only about 5,000 cars. He said the first. figure was an estimate made from memory by Karl Barths, president of Volkswaget Canada. The larger total came to light when the company had a chance to check its books Tuesday. ee piste O Orbits Moon ‘ MANCHESTER, Engl an (Reuters) — The Soviet around the moon. at 4:47 . T Tuesday, scientists at™ ported. Eartier scientists at the space. tracking station picked, strong signals from the sa for more than 75 minutes. _ Luna XII, launched Saturd may be the Soviet Union's lunar orbiting craft to ; cameras to take close- pi tures of the® moon’s a though its mission has not defined. 42 Sir Bernard Lovell, dire Jodrell Bank, ; be in closer a may ;Manila) ~ moon than any - shot. tls eye g 20g ears shot Luna XII went into orbit , m. Jédrell Bank radio-telescope te. a