Oshawa Times (1958-), 6 Oct 1965, p. 2

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-"Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, October 6, 19468 Civilians Of Rebel JAKARTA (Reuters) --_ Ci- vilians in Central Java have been reported to have heen slaughtered in an uprising there _by Communist and rebel forces. The official Jogjakarta radio said Tuesday night the families of the military commander in Jogiakarta and his deputy were killed when the rebels oc- cupied the city. _ The radio said Jogjakarta was recaptured by government forces Tuesday. Reports reaching Jakarta to- day said fierce fighting was go- ing on at Klaten, near Jogja- karta, and Tjirebon, about 50 _miles east of here. Reports of continued fighting in Central Java came in the wake of Friday's unsuccessful coup against the~ regime of President Sukarno led by Lt.- Col. Untung, one of the presi- dent's palace guards. The army newspaper today reported in defail on the man- ner in which six loyal generals and a litutenant were killed in the uprising. The newspaper said the house of Gen. Achmad Yani, the army commander, was fired on early on the morning of the revolt Oct. 1. Yani's guards returned the fire and when the general came out he was hit and the rebel troops took him away. Pakistan-Indonesian Plot On Malaysia, Says Latter KUALA LUMPUR. (Reuters)} Malaysian Premier Tunku Ab-) dul Rahman today charged Pa-| kistan with conspiring with In- donesia against Malaysia. - Pakistan has severed smite matic relations with Malaysia, accusing the federation of sid-| ing with India in the current conflict. Malaysia had evidence that Pakistan's foreign minister, Z. A. Bhutto was in conspiracy) with Indonesian Foreign Minis-| Victims Killers The general was taken in a jeep and was tortured on the way to Lubang Buaja near the Halim Air Base, where he was buried in a well, the newspaper! said. : Maj. en, Supratto, second deputy "army commander, was sleepin, hen the movement's troops broke into his unguarded house and-took him away, it said, adding he was shot dead at Lubang Buaja. Maj.-Gen. Harjono, third dep- uty army commander, was wounded when the troops fired on his house from several tisdictional disputes" and too) little time on developing new} programs to meet the problems} vid Lewis said Tuesday. nies and hour or the other gains we have stressed at the bar-| gaining table," he told a con-| Woodworkers of America) (CLC) for social ; | struggles About 300 delegates are at-| free public education, th tending the week-long conven-| of every free man to vo tion, representing more than, many other benefits that we dent does not necessarily im- 100,000 workers in logging, saw-| now take for granted." On Higher Plane TORONTO (CP)--Parts of the; mills, plywood and furniture}yy Judge A. C. Hall here Tues- labor movement are spending) factories across Canada and the'day when he found no negli- "far too. much time fighting ju-| tnited States. . Mr. Lewis, who warned the IWA delegates that. he is "not| progress, of automation, labor lawyer Da-| known for saying things people) ;want to hear," pointed to the) The accident occurred May 9, "We must never be Satisfied| struggles of the labor move-|1963 when John Hofstee, of Man- with shorter hours, a few pen,-| ment that were "the spearhead!chester, attempted to pull a because|truck, owned by his neighbor, those struggles were fought for/Charles' Coombe, which was the good of all the working peo-' mired on the Coombe property. vention of the International) ple," and added: 'Labor Must Fight! No Negligence, Judge Decides , |In Snapped-Chain Broken Leg WHITBY (Staff) -- A civil ac- tion for damages was dismissed gence on the part of the de- fendant in an accident involving the towing of a vehicle on pri- \vate property. arthritis in the knee was attrib- utable to the accident, 'The plaintiff testifed he was standing at the spot where two chains were attached when Hof- stee pulled his car ahead quick- ly, snapping the chain against his 'leg. Coombe said his leg was still painful and weather conditions affected it. {When Hofstee pulled his car "We are forgetting those ahead, the slack chain struck that points. He was dragged into a jeep and died after being stabbed in the neck. | WEATHER FORECAST Maj.-Gen. Parman, first as-| sistant to the army comman- der, was taken in a truck and; tortured to death. | The newspaper said Brig.-| Gen. Pandjaitan, fourth assist- ant to the army commander, registered strongly when the! ¥ |movement's troops fired on his| © jhouse. He and his two sons! TORONTO (CP) -- Official were wounded. | office. at 5:30 a.m. Windsor ......... 48 65 The troops captured the gen-| Synopsis:, Warmer tempera- St. Thomas.. 7, ae 65 jeral and torutred him on the! jtures and a few showers are| London ... . 4 60 jway to Luang Buaja where he} likely Thursday. Kitchener ........ 45 60 |died. | Lake St. Clair, Lake Ontario,, Mount Forest..... 42 60 Brig.-Gen. Sutojo Siswomihir-| Lake Erie, 'Haliburton, Killa-) Wingham .....+... "42 60 |djo, director of the military law} loe, Lake Huron, Southern|Hamilton ........ 42 * 60 jacademy, was taken in a jeep| : ig 4 Georgian Bay, Niagara, Wind-|St. Catharines ... 45 62 and shot dead at Lubang Bu-} as : sor, London, Toronto, Hamil-| Toronto .....ss6%. 45 62 laja, it added. | ' . ton: A few brief showers and) Peterborough .... 42 55 | STUDY-IN -- OR IS IT STUDY-OUT'? warmer. Winds south 20. Trenton .,... 42 60 . Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- Kingston . 42 58 Calvin Bolt, 10, studies the vacated white school in fer,of white students to other |magami, Cochrane, Wes te r n/ Killaloe aw Pee 55 reading as Negro students Crawfordville, Ga., he counties, (AP) |James Bay, White River, Al-| Muskoka . a 1 58 hold a study-in Tuesday at group is protesting. the tran goma, North Bay, Sudbury: | North Bay ee 55 ar TIN ACHES an fot Scattered showers and warmer) Sudbury .. - 40 55 Winds southeast 20. |Earlton .. have Showers Part Of Payment For Warm Front Advance Forecast Temperatures forecasts issued by the weather Low tonight, high Thursday: brought Coombe and broke his leg. e right : te and) Judge Hall ruled that an acci- ply negligence. He said the |plaintiff had put himself in a |position of danger which he 'could have foreseen. Is it that nagging backache again? - If it's backache that's bothering you, it could be due to urinary irritation He said also that the action less and no negligence could be attributed to him. He rulled the plaintiff had been subject to an arthritic condition for six years prior to the accident but the of the defendant was not care-) and bladder discomfort. If so, Dodd's Kidney Pills can help bring you, relief. Dodd's Pills stimulate the kidneys to help relieve the | gondition causing the ackache, Then you feel better and rest better. | You ean depend on Dodd's | Kidney Pills. New large | size saves money. emetrseaniecog ss Why Pay More. FUEL OIL DX FU SAVE!! ON PREMIUM QUALITY Phone 668-3341 Serving Oshawa -- Whitby & Ajax Districts 16: EL OIL PM Resurrects Old Line Of Money For Education jment since the Liberal plat-|British Columbia $825,000; and) {form for the 1962 election was|the Yukon and Northwest Ter-| ter Subandrio to try to keep Malaysia out of the Afro-Asian conference, and at. the Com-| monwealth prime ministers' con-} ference in London, he had op-| posed a move to censure Indo-/ e a cBEL nesian aggression against Ma- By agg a Mi laysia, Rahman said. OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- i j i "What surprises me most is|ister Pearson dug up a 3%4-year sess a as eth se yc $20,000. that they have not broken off\9l@ Liberal election promise--| ©'® P m, used aga!| AWAITS REACTION ~ 7 . iversity scholarships' -- andiin the 1963 election, stated: | ' diplomatic ties with India withioat it hack an public view| "Establish Canada scholar- Turning to aid to universities, whom they are at war," he!puesday for the Nov. 8 vote. ships fer university education: Mr. Pearson said his govern: r " ' "iment wilt await a brief from) added, 4 nei ee aoiee aicen w;ithe universities flowing 'from Calling a press conference -2 BLADEN REPORT FINDINGS (Continued From Page One) | university donors, and expan- sion of the Canadian student! loans plan "as becomes nec-/ essary." Adm in istration of! the plan is. expected to cost 'roughly $3,000,000 this year. The report said federal grants should continue to be distrib-| more able youths will be kept} 2. Increased federal grants to) Students with well-off parents uted by the association of uni-| out of college and the quality ofyiniversities and a federal-prov-|would get less than needy stu- versities#in all provinces except| higher education will drop if Quebec. The 1960 arrangement| that gives Quebec an extra|nored. Massive sums would be|what form the federal aid will' much each successful applicant slice of corporation taxes in| needed from government. I lieu of grants should be re-| "We tained, under provincial jurisdiction. The provincial were urged to set up independ-! ent commissions to distribute grants according to a logical, | equitable formula and to pbs control over university financ- ing and any political interfer-| ence with academic freedom. asked to assume the bulk of non-repayable aid to students. This form of-aid- by both lev-| els of government should climb|by proportional boosts in stu- || to $153,000,000 in 1970 and $245,.| dent aid. | 000,000 in 1975 from an esti-| mated $39,000,000 last academic! ness would be necessary, espe-| year. Average bursaries* to" under: graduates should rise to $700 in 10 years from about $300 last! year. Ald to the average needy graduate student should double oa gt an was pro- jected at 340,000 in 1970 and 461,000 in 1975 compared with 180,000 a year ago. The univer- sities' operating cost per stu-| dent was forecast at $3,633 in! 1975 compared with an esti-| mated $1,891 in 1964-65. | BRIEF PLANNED The Association of Universi- ties will prepare a brief to the federal and provincial govern- ments on the basis of the Bla- den report, the first detailed Study of university financing in Canada. Dr. Bladen, 65, is an English- born economist who has been on the University of Toronto| faculty for 44 years and dean! of arts and sciences since commission on the automotive industry in 1960-61. Other members of the com- -- mission were Conservative Sen- ator Wallace McCutcheon, 59, former trade minister, member! of the royal commission on health services and a governor of two universities; Dr. Louis-| Paul Dugal, 54, Quebec - born science dean at the University of Ottawa, and Howard I. Ross, 58, prominent Montreal execu-| tive and chancellor of McGill University. The report said university costs are rising dramatically because of an unprecedented rush among young Canadians to get an advanced education. Public opinion demanded a greatly expanded role by all governments in financing higher education. NEED A NEW FURNACE? Me Down Payment--First Payment December--Cell PERRY }much larger pool of skills and | talent; | graduates could benefit from a college education, but only one in six went to college. WARN OF CONSEQUENCES |in. the 18-24 age group afterinearly 20,000 each year, mean- ada can afford these sums, and/ Ottawa was advised to avoid|even that Canada cannot afford exerting any control over uni-|not to invest these sums if we versities, which should continue|are to achieve the goals of ek HE bog doug weghbieln aga (ge financing by a com-|divided among the provinces) - were urged to make more ef-\{iniversity of Toronto. ficient use of their facilities, to} ' use computers and closed-| nort circuit television and to com-|weeks ago to Mr. Pearson and Prince Edward Island $57,000; pewed forces in fund - raising|the four other party leaders, Nova Scotia $425,000: rives The provinces were also' studies. general increases in tuition fees crease in investment in higher || education, 1959.' cast amount ($2,000,000,000) on He served as a one-man royal/higher education and have| nearly as much, even possibly | hours before the publication of raat the Bladen report before decid- ithe Bladen report on university $1,000 ® year and available for ing on its policy. | ifinancial needs, he promised A det ds | Provincial education minis- jtwo measures to assist higher [ESS THAN $1,000 ters and university heads would) Economic growth required a/education: Mr. Pearson said in a pre- be summoned to a conference 1. Federal scholarships total- pared statement Tuesday that|ere to work out "the exact ling $10,000,000 annually for de-/most scholarships will be smal-/form in which federal assist- serving university students,|jer than $1,000 a year to permit/ance will be given." starting in the fall of 1966 and/more flexibility. The number of| Universities should remain lincreasing with the populationscholarships might reach under provincial: jurisdiction, but Ottawa had a responsibility to. improve research programs jand facilities and to 'overcome ivariations in the fiscal capaci- ities of the provinces." Of the scholarship plan, he (said its purpose was to make {sure that no youth with ability, {be shut out of college because) half the high school FRESH KILLED The experts warned that|1967. ing they would average $500. fincial conference "within theldents. The provinces and uni- next few months" to consideryersities would decide how their recommendations are ig- itake, RELEASE REPORT jgot and Parliament would al- agen gay annually for!o? poverty, It would supplement The Association of Universi-, : the $40,000,000 - a - year student ties and Colleges of Canada) The fund would increase atiioans plan and the $46,000,000-a- holds a press conference today|@ estimated rate of four perjyear youth allowance program to release a bulky report on cent each year and would be|jaunched a year ago. have argued that Can- lmission of four experts, headed|according to population in the | To save costs, universities hy Dean Vincent Bladen of the 18-24 age group. MAKE NEW PAPER : x Egypt has built a huge' fac- The province's estimated tory" with a $5,700,000 American Confidential copies of the re-\shares for the first year: loan, to produce paper from were given about two) Newfoundland $275,000; sugar cane fibre, New MANY ARE YOUNG Brunswick $350,000; Quebec $3,-. In some underdeveloped coun- to250.000; Ontario $3,125,000; tries with high birth and death the|Manitoba $500,000; Saskatche-jrates, half the population is first governmeni policy state-lwan $475,000; Alberta $725,000; aged under 25. unless these were accompanied | ==---------- an - - -- -- = STEAK Boneless RUMP or ROUND STEAK and post.- graduate|the Association said. Mr. Pearson's reference They were asked to avoidithe scholarship plan was Increasing support from bust-|/ cially for "experimental ven- || tires Yor the enrichment' of the | normal university program." "In the long run we may| achieve even greater wealth by iil this greater concern for the | individual; we will surely come|| nearer to achieving the 'good || life.' " | '.. . The growth in expendi-, ture on higher education in Can-} ada forecast" in the report) "would be indeed frightening if| it "were not related to the growth in gross national product." The report said one per cent} of the GNP or about $430,000,-.|| 000 was spent on higher educa-' tion in 1963-64, The GNP was ex- pected to climb to $83,000,000,000 by 1974; i "To the extent that the growth in GNP is dependent on the in- |} we may 10 years|| hence be able to spend the fore- gs." more, to spend on other thin REA CLUB STYLE DY T 'PATTIES 19 Buehler's We Have The Best of: TURKEYS SIRLOIN and WING SEASONED BEEF LB. BOX + 40 55 REGULAR AND TO E A 12 King St. E. 723-3633 ALSO READY AT HAMS FREEZER SPECIAL --<--<--<------ N= OF *3* VEAL Cut end QUARTERS ww. 5 5¢ Wrapped FREE BEEF un, 49 AAA A A number to remember... 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