If t's Good For The Island The Guardian Is For tt * lids teh 8A So RAP Ht wt git ont A al i ip niin RR Ay axitin ie “in oh Sens st + ardian “Cavers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 6, 1965. nov MORE SEVEN CENTS avot satay aya t WEATHER f Cloudy, showers clearing by evening, Winds westerly 20, gusts to 40. Low- high 33 and 42. Thursday: cloudy. 12 PAGES i ‘ VOL. LXXVIII. NO. 244 : gn al : eh one ame este Sa i fie % * Se Prqye ee de, Tt ie eae ee PRIOR TO THE delivery of night, Dr. Frank MacKinnon, the night's progrem. Topic the Samuel N.. Robertson principal of the college, and wes “Education and Economic Memorial lecture at Prince of W.O. Twaites of Toronto, who toon" dceeotaen "Oe ale a Wales College auditorium last _ delivered the lecture, discusses afontgomery Hall Federal Aid In Education ingNeed er support to /universities and \ He added in his 15 of the ( H 3 3 & i uF Wi Ny i E 3 z : if i i 3 | f t : i i | i i - »p ee OE Sy >. “ nt cnHLETH ee i 2 E i Piel gEFoEE R82 Fee titer é vehicle in a speech at annual conference of the Instru- ment Society of America. = AT APEC MEETING | bh (Continued on page 3, col. 6) ‘= Urban, Rural Interests _ | eee rm Clash As Jobs Discussed fs Us apie eFF, { <p pcer ladde Is Planned night. It was accepted at an emergency Meeting of the board's council, named a committee to lEric Kipping Resigns Position As General Ma N.S., came to this province|from the Province a avoid trat nd founded r Trade Board . 2 |Board of Trade during the win- S| ter 2 ident of the Atlantic Provinces || Economic Council filling out the 6 \side whose death occurred on his own business, Square K. Cop- struction and was president until appointed general manager of the Since June he has been presi- term of John Wight of Summer- June 1. A new president was pameted at Halifax this week: | Pope Buoyed | By Reception | On UN Mission By BENNET M. BOLTON VATICAN CITY (AP)—Pope Paul returned Tuesday from his peace pilgrimage to New York and urged Roman Catholics to work harder than ever for world peace. He said the gravest threat to peace is disparity of goods among classes and coun- tries. Buoyed by the tumultuous re- By. RONALD. LEBEL... - ster- dug up a 3%-year-old Lit erai_election promise — univer- sity ‘scholarships — and put it back.-on public view Tuesday for the Nov. 8 -vote. Federal: scholarships total- ling — $10,000,000 annually for deserving university students, starting in the fall of 1966 and increasing with the population in the 186-24 age group after 1967, 2. Increased federal grants to } } "; : i : «7 iv? ; i ot f —— “ ah ‘ | | | } \ St. John’s Hears City Water Low ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP)—St. “a graye emer- President . White -House ternoon just before it was an- \ ‘4 . icbacin ‘7 ~ PM Dusts Off - 1962 Promise The Association of Universi- ties and Colleges . of Canada holdsapress __ conferénce today Mito release a bulky - report . on university financing by a com- mission of four expefts, headed University of Toronto. GAVE COPIES Confidential copies of the re- port were given. about two weeks to Mr. Pearson and the four party leaders, the association said. - Mr. Pearson’s reference to the scholarship plan was the first -government policy state- since the Liberal platform 1962 election was pub- April 30 that year. 1962 platform, which was used again in the 1963 election stated: “Establish Canada = scholar- ships for university edueation: will ‘be 10,000 scholar- &@ year, each valued at &@ year and available for ars of study. The awards to all and will be t. The administra- plan will be inde government.” AS JOHNSON ANNOUNCES OPERATION: Johnson in the nounced that he would © enter tion: The operation is schedut- ‘late Tuesday af- Bethesda Naval Hospital te ed for Friday. might for a gall bladder opers by Dean Vincent Bladen of the | ception he found on the papacy’s first transatlantic pilgrimage Monday, a mission to the United Natios, the Roman Catholic CASH J FACES CHARGE EL PASO, Tex. (AP)—A grimfaced Johnny Cash, one Sistiea’ mele, genes 11.50 music, bond Tuesday -night and was freed from jail. He-is charged ing illicit drugs. The la singer was ar rested ay night at the El Paso international airport. U.S. customs -officers said he had 668 tablets of dexadrine, a stimulant, and 475 tablets of equanil, a.tranquilizer, in his possession. |‘ Rhodesia Given Program. Offer LONDON (AP) — Britain of- fered Tuesday. to finance a multi-million-dollar . crash pro- gram. to prepare Rhodesi’s Ne-' groes for majority rule after, the white-governed central African colony achieves independence. But Rhodesian Prime Minis- ter Ian Smith, in London for the crucial independence talks, dis played little interest in the Brit- ish offer. Instead, he and his delegation again demanded independence without conditions, a state he threatens to bring. about unilat- erally if Britain insists on let fing the colony’s Negroes even- tually hold power. : Op era = ion Work Interruption - Is Expected Brief with smuggling and conceal- | WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres-|experienced difficulty on Sept, ident Johnson announced per- 7 while at his Texas ranch. |sonally Tuesday he wil enter “I felt some pains in my | Bethesda Naval Hospital Thurs-| stomach which seemed to be day night for removal of a/the result of something I had poorly functioning gall bladder.) eaten,” he related. Johnson,, reading a statement Johnson weet on to’ sey that . \the White House. physician, to reporters in the White House vie admiral George G. Burk- cabinet room, said “doctors joy suspected gall bladder expect there will be a minimal trouble’ bad that faster ekaab time during which ‘I will not be instions confirmed that tenta- conducting business as usual. itive diagnosis. .He eniphasized that, should| The operation will be per- presidential action or decisions|formed by Dr. George A. Hal- be required at a time when he! lenbeck, 50, who heads a sec- could not personally carry them tion on general surgery and the out, -Vice-President Humphrey section of surgical research at will act for him. |the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, The one-to-two-hour operation Mina. will be performed Friday *t the maval hospital in suburban 3eth-| esda, Md., where Johnson was a patient last January with a Dr. Hallenbeck, who met with reporters after Johnson made his statement, said that the risk involved in the operation is min imal. Dr. J. Willis Hurst of Atianta, who has been Johnson’s heart specialist since the U.S. chief executive's 1955 heart attack, | also was present and said that He ade ven. att ae elded it should be removed. age who never had a heart at- Johnson reported that he first) tack. heavy cold, - The president said his doctors have diagnosed his condition as “a poorly functioning gall blad- der with stones.” . pontiff “went. from a red-carpet airport reception to an enthusi- astic welcome by 2,200 assem- bled bishops in St. Peter's Ba- silica. . Speak He asked the Vatican Ecumen- ical Council bishops to show by acts, as well as words, their support: for his commitment of jthe church to the struggle for world brotherhood. ‘ | | j j | ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. (CP)—Pre- j|mier Smallwood announced gov- jernment plans Tuesday that will j|give almost completely free ed- |ueation to students at Memorial | University. | Before ‘more than 2,000 Me- {| morial students, Mr. Smallwood said the Newfoundland govern- ment has decided to make tui- ition free for all students at the juniversity up to and including the fifth year, beginning in the Hall of 1966. Total cost for this |schemes in 1966 would be more’ ithan $1,600,000. oe afte mg r ford the ‘bichoos Mee hed the Roman Catholie Cape Breton Steel Mills By DAVE NICHOLSON HALIFAX (CP)—The Atlantic Provinces Economic C ou ncil heard cheering words Tuesday ef government assistance to Cape Breton’s coal industry, but eohe predictions for the island's steel industry. Salary For Students Planned By Nfld. Memorial University He said plans also are nearly final to pay a “salary” to stu- dents at the university starting in 1966 to help finance their ed- ucation. Students who live at home in St. John’s would re- ceive a monthly salary of $50 and students whose homes are outside St. John’s, but are stay- ing in the city while attending Memorial will receive $100 a month. This would cost miore than $2,000,000 next’ year if all students were covered, Face Threat From Quebec. - Delegates to APEC’s annual economic development in the At- convention were meeting in the |lantic provinces was’ interupted same downtown hotel where La-/as Mr. MacEachen’s statement bor Minister-MacEachen an-/was read. nounced promises of aid to the! I said the federal government coal industry. : would “invest’’ $25,000,000 in re | A meeting that was in the pro- |habilitation in the "s }eess of discussing federal aid=to jcogi industry, including about > |$10,000,000 for a new mine at Lingan, near Sydney. Delegates applauded the an- nouncement and APEC officials said the move was bound to help the economic picture in the whole Atlantic area. FEARS FOR STEEL Just before the announcement was made, Rev. Andrew Hogan, of the economics department of . |St. Francis Xavier University in ; Antigonish, N.S., warned that mene naw. the Cape Breton steel industry ° could go under unless something CHANCE FOR ALL .. was done to prepare it for new He would hate to think that|competition from Quebec. the education of any Newfound- | He said plans for a new steel landers would be retarded ‘“‘by mill at Becanour, Que., being a lack of mere ” If any-|built with financial help from one in Newfoundiang ever) the. Quebec government, ‘are wants to go to univ y, and/ominous for Cape Breton’s fu- doesn't, “don’t blame me.” jture. If the steel industry is te Mr. Smallwood also hinted|be saved, we have to find out that salaries for faculty mem-|/now what we can.” bers are<to be increased. “What| There were arguments that INCREASE GRANTS | _He_said_another plan, set—for- fall of 1966, is to increase yearly grants to education students from $600 to $800. ated scale with first-year stu-| dents receiving the benefits this year and~ second-year students mext year. However, he said the government had _ reconsidered and will now pay all tuition starting next fall. . He said there ie a possibility that only first-year students will receive the salary next year with other years coming in on a graduated scale. How- ary scheme are not yet com- plete. ' + “We're pretty sure we know where the“ money is to come from,”" Mr. Smallwood said. He mew or increased, taxation in connection with the new plans. He reaffirmed that the gov- ernment is in no way attempt- ing to control the university. “We pray. that no clumsy hands INSIDE-TODAY Classified ..--.,...... 10, 11 Ee isi cscs chineices ii { Comies ..........++.. osee 8 DPN as oe ces ses evev. 8 Finance, markets .-...... 7 Women’s ........ sovee™™ © Editorials ................ ‘ Summerside ..... os. 8 Kings, Queens, City ...... 5 Prince County = ........ 2 | posals they have to make.” .| He said’ previous plans had | called for only free tuition and this was to be done on a gradu-| ever..he said plans for the sal- | said there would not be any) the university does is their busi-|the construction of a steel mill ness regarding faculty shlaries, by the Dominion Steel and Coal | Hut_the government will do all Corp. at ‘Contrecour,. Que. |im its power to meet any pro-|would stop the Becancour devel- lopment from ‘cracking the About 4,000 students are ex-| ramparts’’ of the Canadian steel pected to attend Memorial next |industry. fall, an increase of 500 over this| But Father Hogan said serious (Continued\,on page 5, col. 7) | (Continued on page 5, col. 8) White Employee Of Railroad Tells Of Killing After Wreck DURBAN . (Reuters)—A_ white railroad employee told from his hospital bed Tuesday how he watchea frenzied Negroes kill his friend minutes after the worst train crash in South Afri- can -history killed 81 Negroes and injured 130 Monday night. me were bodies. A chap who had his head cut off was lying next to me, and not far from me a woman sat on a rail hold- ing half 'the body of her child.” Then, Jagles said, he saw his white friend, signalman Wally Hartslief, running from his -ig- An official statement revising nal box to help; a group of Ne- earlier casualty figures was groes started’ screaming and | given. ‘rushed at Hartslief. ‘Frans Jagles, 34-year-old sta-| “They were kicking and hit- tion foreman, was the only ting. I just saw Wally throw his |white passenger aboard the hands up and I knew it was the {packed suburban train which end.” jwas running late as it ap- Jagles said he managed to get SAW BODIES AROUND |proached Effingham Road june- tion about eight ‘miles from here. While crossing the track inter-| |sections, the last three of the 11) ears were derailed. | dJagles told reporters he was | sitting in the next-to-last car |mext to some Negroes. } | “One minute we were going alohg, then there were just stars.” he said. |whole thing crumpled and If found myself bent almost dou- ‘ble “1 looked around. All around ie clear of the wreckage and set out on a nightmare crawl through undergrowth to escape the crowd. He reached the office of a quarry about 400 yards away. crawling ‘all the way. e A Negro night watchman at the quarry telephoned for police and ambulances. é Jagles said he and Hartsliet jwere taken to hospital in one of the first ambulances to arrive, | -“I saw huge blue flames the “By the time we reached ; hospital, he had died.” Officials said a three - d of inquiry, which was due start investigating the to ter Tuesday, would