condemns all modern war, de- plores nuclear etockpiling by any and all nations as a threat to. mankind, This was written inte the text after groups of bishops from Western Europe, Britain, Af- rica and Asia demanded in de- bate Jast month that the council take a stronger stand against nuclear weapons. ATTACK PROVISION The target of their attack was a provision inserted in the text at the urging of some American bishops. It said that in view of the inability of present inter- national organizations to assure peace, the possession of nuclear arms could not be considered illegitimate. This was dropped by the By BENNET M. BOLTON VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican ecumenical coun- cil's controversial statement on nuciear war came io & Voie to- day with an American arch- bishop seeking support for amendments to remove the "ban the bomb" tone from the document. His chances ap- peared doubtful. The vote was the last major hurdle for the council's decree on modern world problems be- fore final approval clearing the unique document for promulga- tion. At issue was a new wording in the text removing approval of nations stockpiling nuclear arms as a deterrent to aggres- sion. Instead the document, which Council Vote Looms On Nuclear Issue silica. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 17, 1965 3 drafting commission after ®@ storm of protest from speakers on the floor of St. Peter's Ba- The new wording hroucht erit- icism from Archbishop Philip Hannan of New Orleans, former auxiliary bishop of Washington, Cc He said earlier this week he was afraid the document could be mistaken as a condemnation) by the council of U.S. policy in Viet Nam and he annotinced that he had prepared amend- ments which he would propose. One of his amendments was said to call for the section on war and peace to recognize that in some cases the possession of nuclear weapons by the non- Communist world had fore- stalled possible aggression. NATO Defence Ministers 'Plan Nuclear Powwow | By DAVE McINTOSH { Russia maintains that im- OTTAWA (CP)--Most of the|proved nuclear arrangements NATO defence ministers will|within NATO would be a blind hold a special, one-day meeting|to give Germany some control in Paris Nov. 27 to hear propo-jover atomic arms, thus defeat- ling the purpose of a non-dis- agreement, NATO signal, and twice fainted as he was trying to lower a lifeboat to leave the ship. 'sais for improved nuclear ar-| lrangements within the alliance, |semination p linformed sources said here/denies this. Tuesday. Canada has said NATO's pre- Defence Minister Hellyerjsent nuclear arrangements are plans to attend and to bring the|jnot entirely satisfactory and told how he ordered a gen- eral alarm sounded, then he sounded the abandon ship lated at a news conference his actions after being noti- fied of the fire. Voutsinas Captain Byron Voutsinas, 33, skipper of the Yarmouth Castle cruise ship, today re- YARMOUTH CASTLE SKIPPER SAYS: Ship's Condition Good OTTAWA (CP) -- The high- Cancer Curb Is Reported TORONTO (CP) --A_ new weapon against certain forms of cancer has helped control the disease "in an encouraging number of cases' although there has been no cure, the Toronto Academy of Medicine was told Tuesday night. Developed in the University of Toronto's Banting and Best department of medical re- 8 ays pi ALEXANDER KING DIES Alexander King, artist and died in New York Tuesday of ; author who became nation- a heart attack, He was 66, -- search, it takes the form of a spending buoyancy of the eco- ; h é proposals back to Ottawa for|that it favors a greater ex- nomy, together with its taste|-ahinet discussion before|change of nuclear information Crew Behaved The Best \for imports, is swelling govern-\waro's annual ministerialland some form of integration MIAMI (AP)--The captain ofjcrew members and only aboutany liht on the cause of the : ; | [ the san conte pn gn passengers. mysterious fire which began. in aa coffers with an almost! neeting in Paris Dec. 16-18.|such as the proposal for an in- day his vessel was in perfect} Lehdo said the second life-jthe forward section of the ship aces oe increase in taXiphe proposals are secret but|ter-allied nuclear force which it condition before it sailed to ajboat from the stricken vesselland swept from bow to stern isha : lare believed to deal with es-|supported in 1963. fiery doom last week with alwas left unattended alongside/before it sank in 1,700 feet of] Total tax revenues in the first/tablishment. of a special NATO) At the same time, this coun- loss of 84 lives. ithe Finnpulp as crew members/water. lhalf of the current fiscal yearjcommittee for regular consulta-jtry has decided against parti- "Tt had all the (safety) equip-/from the Yarmouth Ca stle| "We lare up seven per cent from the|tion on nuclear policy. __ jeipation in the proposed NATO ment and it all worked per-|scrambled aboard. {where or how the fire started,"'| ame period last year But! The problem arises mainly;seaborne nuclear force -- now, fectly," said Capt. Byron Vout-| "I did not see anyone aban-|said a lawyer for Yarmouth} tease : |because West Germany, whichjin effect, a dead issue, sources sinas, 33. "The condition of thejdon ship by himself," said Vout-|Cruise Lines, Inc., gene ral|sales tax revenues are Tunning| contributes more manpower to|said'-- and has come out ship was perfect. isinas. 'They (crew members) |agent for the ship. |more than 15 per cent greater/European defence than any|strongly for & non-dissemina "It was class AA--the best|were helping passengers.| Voutsinas said he was asleepjand customs revenues are up other NATO country, wants/tion treaty. ship I ever served on." |Everybody did what they werelin his cabin, directly below the|noarly nine per cent some voice in the alliance's nu-| Informants said Canada {fs The Greek captain, a veteran|supposed to do." lbridge, when he was informed) ,.° : clear affairs. West German|willing to listen to appropriate of 14 years at sea, also de-|... lof the fire by a watch officer,|, 1" period covered by the la-lChancellor Ludwig Erhard re-|proposals for better nuclear ar-| fended his crew against attacks SAYS ALARMS WORK ._, |He said he heard the general test available figures is the SIX/peated the other day that his|rangements such as a_ select! from some survivors and the| | Voutsinas also said the ship's fire alarm as he dashed for the|months from April 1 to Sept.|country does not want indepen-|consultative committee as sug-| master of a rescue ship, the/@larms, fire hoses, overhead) yridge about 1:15 a.m. 30. The last six months of theident control over nuclear wea-jgested by the United States. It) Finnish freighter Finnpulp. sprinkler system and other} fiscal year running to next rons, is not now committed one way Eighty -. one passengers and safety devices operated per-|ORDERS sos |March 31 will show the full ef-|" The situation has becomelor the other, however. two crew members are believed|{ectly and that eight of the Yar-) After reaching the bridge, |fect of income tax reductions)eyen more complicated by the| The consensus here seemed to have died when the 5,000-ton| mouth Castle's 14 lifeboats were Voutsinas said, he ordered the|which became effective at July!qesire of a number of NATO|to be that Canada would accept Yarmouth Castle sank off Great /owered. radioman to send an S O'S, but/1. countries, including Canada, to|wider nuclear policy planning Stirrup Cay, about 60 miles) Many survivors said there|the crew member could not) Former finance minister Gor-jadvance the cause of an East-|in NATO if this did not hamper northwest of Nassau. was no warning as fire swept nie aged ree shsike don estimated in his budget|West agreement to prevent the|chances of a nuclear non-pro- A honeymooning Canadian|ihe mr gor 2 red ne of flames, heat an ispeech to Parliament jast(SPread of nuclear weapons. \liferation pact. , . | iy ee Mg a Gillan poses lay unused on the deck spring that sales tax revenues b Voutsinas said the signal Ol his f Py ene : and that only four lifeboats got)abandon ship was sounded by|this fiscal year would increase) fon those believed to have into 'he willbe. : ' C ians Fund ' ge ag broke a window | by $98,000,000 to. $1,303,000,000 i | The captain defended the in-jof the bridge, reached into the/from $1,205,000,000, This is an FE gringo includ' ternational regulations under|burning compartment and rang|om of eight per cent daved. , {which the Terianets Coste wd a ager blasts on ania ; ; \whic! ew e anamanian istie. | WS INCREASE P Saye! -- died in Nas-|fa9° sailed, He said they were) Voutsinas said he fainted) But sales tax revenues for the shone as stringent as U.S. maritime|twice, briefly, while trying to/first half of this fiscal yea i lower a motor launch near thelamounted to $659,900,000, com-;| TORONTO (CP) -- The On- bridge after finding all passage-lp ared with $570,160,000 last|tario Liberal party called on the ways to the stern blocked bylyear, an increase of 15.7 per|Provincial government Tuesday -e|to introduce legislation to limit and control election campaignicharges against him as the funds and expenses, jresult of a car accident, _ Meeting in caucus for the first! Im an eight - page statement time since the Nov. 8 federal|the party cael paawened that election, the Liberals also urged| donations to political parties be that redistribution reforms beitay deductible "since in the flames. Finally, with the help|cent, The increase is even more introduced next session "since/tinal analysis, political parties! of other crew members, another|dramatic in the sales t , s tax re- forward lifeboat was lowered, |ceipts of the old-age security a provincial election could belare as im A 0 ' portant to the well- ealled within two years. |being of the country as any) have not determined | at the caucus that he would re- main as Liberal party leader. Speculation has been that he |would resign because of court jaws. And while his regulations did not require a fire drill during ing English at a_ press confer-|*he short excursion from Miami ence of his role in the holocaust|(0. Nassau in The Bahamas, that ewept the Yarmouth Cas-\Voutsinas said passengers had tle 110 miles off Miami in the|been told what to do in an emer- Atlantic last Saturday. gency during the one-day voy- "The crew behaved them-|*5° 7 ¥ , We tell everyone, the room cree, en. poet, Voutsinas) towards and all others, to telljgestures, sald..""They did everything POS-lthe passengers exactly what to/burn my hand here and I burn sible, even giving their own life F ; jackets to passengers. ed Oe aan on so they/my hand here." BREAKS SILENCE Breaking a three - day public silence, Voutsinas, fold in halt- he said, fund. "I faint because of the thick! That fund, from which uni- smoke," he said, adding with|versal old-age pensions of $75 "I faint again and 1/@ month now are paid to every- jone 70 and older, receives three percentage points of the 11-per- jcent sales tax. Receipts from "That means you give your life to someone you have never seen and will never see again," he said hotly under a barrage of questions. 'They were a brave crew." Earlier, in Savannah, Ga., the PASSENGERS GOOD The passengers, said, '"'were very good. "Some of them, you lwere hollering and shouting, he said, "but they were not hys- |terical. Voutsinas know, Voutsinas said he, the other|April through September this crew members and burned passengers they jrescued rowed a short distance|year's mid + year receipts of to the freighter Finnpulp. $11,000,000. Then, Voutsinas said, he| Total receipts of the old-age rowed back to the burning Yar-|security fund in six months this severaljyear amounted to $246,300,000,| ~ hadjup 36 per cent from last fiscal/ Andrew Thompson announced! United Appeal". per oi oa _It urged the: government to) WING IFFLE jlimit campaign funds available NGS SHUFFLE lto any candidate and make pub-| DETROIT (AP)--Detroit Redjlic all campaign donations Wings of the National Hockey above $100, | They proposed that the gov-| ri : i | : é ; ' hg League sent centre Pit Martin| There was no panic on that;mouth Castle, boarded it and re-jyear were $563,500,000, _ com- run! ernment. es ti s|sumed supervision of the evacu-lpared with $54,500,000 lastj@nd Defenceman Gary Doak to ec etinnk atiaue & at aon of passengers from thelyear, an increase of 24 per|their Pittsburgh farm club in|minister these controls and to rn, cent. Starting next Jan. 1, how-jjhe American Hockey League|provide. each candidate with The captain said he was the/ever, the fund will have to bear Tuesday 5 basic election expenses, includ- jlast off the ship. the additional cost of $75 ey At ing a share of the cost of radio " EXPAND STADIUM master of the Finnpulp, Capt John Lehdo, said that. the first/ship. Even though the fire wa lifeboat off the burning Yar-|so fast, no panic." mouth Castle carried 15 or 20| Voutsinas was unable to shed/St Britain To Mark Centennial small pump that automatically feeds into a patient's blood- stream, day and night, a steady |flow of a chemical that discour- ages growth of cancer cells. | Known as Conjector (for con- tinuous injector), it was in- vented by Campbell Cowan, a research associate in the unl- versity's Charles H. Best Insti- tute. Development of the new |pump, now under consideration for patent application, was re- \ported to the academy by Dr. Leo J. Mahoney, assistant pro- fessor of surgery in U. of T.'s faculty of medicine. The pump has been undergo- ing clinical tests at St. Mich- ael's Hospital, Toronto, with what Dr. Mahoney described as "very encouraging results." Four Missing In Ottawa River TEMISKAMING, Que. (CP) A search is continuing along a 50-mile section of the Ottawa River for the bodies of four hun- ters feared drowned Friday night, police said Tuesday. Dragging operations were un- der way between Temiskaming 190 miles northwest of Ottawa, and Mattawa, Ont., 50 miles downstream. The missing men, believed drowned on a weekend hunting trip when their boat over- turned, are Raymond-Denis Pi- lon, 35, Joseph Larry Pilon, 59, and Clarence McLeod, 38, all of Rouyn-Noranda, Que., and De- nis Groulx, 54, of Mattawa. Skate Exchange HIGHEST TRADE-IN ALLOWANCES Boys' Hockey or iris' Figure DELUXE SHOE 8 BOND WEST If (The new Oshawa Professional Bidg.) #) ally famous after frequent appearances on television, ~AP Wirephote « New Smoking Danger Seen VANCOUVER (CP) -- Two professors said Tuesday smok- ers are in greater danger from a disease called emphysema than they are from the more publicized lung cancer. Dr. B. J. Sproule and Dr. J. P. Wyatt of the universities of Alberta and Manitoba respec- tively said emphysema occurs more frequently than lung can- cer and causes about the same number. of deaths. "The main difference is that} while cancer is usually localized) in one lung and results in a) quick death, emphysema can| result in a slow insidious death | over a number of years." | The two men were speakers at a symposium on respiratory disease here. Dr. Sproule is as- sociate professor in the division of pulmonary disease at his uni-| versity and Dr. Wyatt is pro-| fessor of pathology. Dr. Sproule said emphysema is a chronic disease that de- stroys lung tissue and leaves the organs filled with air. Ad- Brian M. Chaytor D.D.S. ANNOUNCES the opening of his office for the general practice of dentis- try at 173 Simeoe St. N. jvance of the disease could be jhalted but treatment could last jas much as 20 years. Best of both worlds Nowfrom Electrohome, perfect- picture TV for people on the gol Atruly personel... truly portable portable. All transistor, battery | or house circuit operation. See, hear Electrohome personal 11° TV...at CHERNEY'S. | FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 728-1081 Office Hours Monday to Fridey 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. | ASK ABOUT cotour | P. Tuesdey ond Thursdey pm. te pm, | be _ |monthly pensions to everyone and television appearances. POLICE TRY SCIENCE 1G r LICE TRY SCIENCE REGINA (CP)--City council | jat age 69 instead of 70. The Spas qualifying age is being lowered) | VANCOUVER P) Radar year-by-year until it reaches 65./Tuesday approved construction jequipment has been ordered for| Sales tax collections repre-|of 4,600 additional seats at Tay-! the-city- police"to~use~in~patrol-|sent about 17 per cent of total|lor Field, home of Saskatche- | dele Sab gindtement lenders sont. ling Vancouver streets. It is ex-jtax revenues and about 44 per|wan Roughriders of the West- Tuesday announced plans to Pie take u as ert porkonn aes to be in operation by the'cent of old-age security fund re-|ern Football Conference The) mark Canada's centennial year| commented: : end of the. year. venues. |field now seats about 15,000. Good Nomes To Remember When Buying or Selling REALESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters -- Vice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd. 723-2265 With 3-Pronged Sales Drive LONDON (CP)--British 'busi-jabout $60,000,000 a year at pre- TROUD' FOOD MARKET, 24 SIMCOE ST. NORTH ~aHEST QUALITY MEATS MUSHROOMS Cottage Rolls J/¢ | 49 59;| BREAD 2 Cc 59: ¢/ BREAD 49 C Cc GRADE "A" LARGE SIZE 69: | Eccs 59 ¢ | aa Ib C CRUSH and WILSON'S CANNED Ib | ASSORTED FLAVORS c A A N with a three - pronged sales; "Canadians seem quite un- drive. able to make up their minds Britain hopes to "steal the about what kind of government show' from other exhibitors|!Ney want but by God we're go- with major displays of indust-|i"8 to make up their minds rial products and equipment at about what kind of products to Toronto_and Vancouver in May buy.' 1967. British consumer products will be pushed through retail outlets during a British week in Toronto in November, 1967 The British National Export Council, backed by the govern- ment trade. department, an nounced at a press conference that Canada will be the target for British industry's major trade promotions in 1967 under the theme Britain salutes Can- ada in centennial year. 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