ated the obligation of non-Ca- Dr. Ramsey forecast the ques- --R.C. STAND ON MIXED MARRIAGES KEY BARRIER - CANTERBU ROME {AP)--Pope Paul and 'the Archbishop of Canterbury pledged today that. their churches would work toward to an active program of colla- boration to bring them closer to- gether. That was the climax of the hbishop's historic three-day - nity. But the archbishop said 'a'terward the Roman Catholic Charch's stand on mixed mar- Siave still was a maior harrier. 'Archbishop Michael Ramsey made his statement on mixed marriage after he and Pope Paul had prayed together in the pontifical Basilica of St, Paul's and had issued a joint declara- tion committing their churches visit here--the first by an An- glican primate since the Church of England broke away. from the Vatican in 1534. But the bombshell came sev- eral hours later ata press con- ference. There the archbishop said that Pope Paul's recent changes easing mixed marriage regulations "does not satisfy the consciences of Anglican Chris- tians and other non-Roman Ca- tholic Christians." He said that he had told the Pope. this in their private meet- ing Weancsday mgnt to discuss ways for better relations be- Anmemmnn 4: Romen-Catholio bles. tween the Roman-C.a-t Church and the Anglican com- munion. : Archbishop Ramsey said the issue of mixed marriages would have an important place in the discussions of a joint Roman Ca- tholic-Anglican commission that would be created. He said this commission, en- visaged in ine joini deciaraiion, would be made up of members - of 'the Roman Catholic hierar- chy and representatives of all Anglican communities. He said thé Commission wow i d"stuey doctrinal difficulties standing iz the way of union. But' the archbishop said again and again that he considered the question of practical difficulties, such as mixed marriage, as "very important + ++ very im- portant." He referred specifically to the cuange in homaini ¢ a t nu S i act mixed marriage regulations is- sued by the Pope on the eve of the archbishop's visit. The ruling partially relaxes Cathclic restrictions on --me: riages of its members with per- sons of other faiths. The new regulation lifted the onus of excommunication from Roman Catholics married out- side the church, It also elimin- tholic partners in mixed. mar- riages to make a signed prom- ise that the clildren wanld he a56 GIRL Tao Coucre: raised as Catholics But "it in- sisted that the children must be raised as Catnolics. The archbishop said that a careful reading of the new regu. lation "makes it clear it has not been issued as final." He made it plain that in the joint discussions that lie ahead Anglicans would préss for even greater liberalization of the rule. 'tion would be included in future Anglican-Catholic discussions. He said a mixed commission of Roman Catholic and Angli- ean thealogians which is being set up to study differences be- tween the tyo churches will in- ciude members from < Coun tries as well as England. Despite his emphasis on the great differences that still sep- arated the Anglican and Catho- lic communities, Arc h bishop course of Christian unity in my an tinn aaa an avan porerrreryorererripesss kro tr--etneres effect in the next generation." He said the most hove sine 'gle moment of his visit occurred at the end of the common prayer service when he and Pope Paul issued their joint declaration pledging their churches to work toward union. Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowmon- ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 57 She Oshawa Cimes 10¢ Single Copy - SOc Per Week Home Delivered OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1966 Authorized as Second Class Nel Ottewa and for paymen Weather Report Cloudy with a few sunny in- tervals and continued cold Friday. Low _ tonight, 20. High tomorrow, 37. Post Offi Deetimert 'os 4? of Postage in TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES @ Red River Rises Countdown Near WINNIPEG (CP)--Flood de- fence officials, one eye on the weather and the other on the rising Red River, are ready for the countdown stage. In two weeks or more they'll know if their predictions and precau- tions measure up to the impend- ing threat. A cold snap Wednesday slowed the river'r rise, and forecasts on when the flood crest would arrive here were were back at least a day. Agriculture Minister George Hutton said the crest now is ex- pected in Winnipeg on or after April 8, a day later than pre- vious predictions. It could ar- rive as late as April 18. Peak level is estimated at be- tween 26 and 28 feet above average winter ice level, at least two feet below the tops of the city's primary dike system. Emergency measures director Andrew Currie said Wednesday all was in a "high state of read- iness" in the city, Dike raising _ and building operations con- tinue in the hope of keeping all but isolated low-lying areas dry. An emergency reception centre has been established in suburban Fort Garry to handle flood évacuees. The Red Cross is in charge of registration and inquiry, a volunteer bureau so? lodging and the Salvation Army! . SANDBAGS RE PL ACE for clothing. snow shovels in eastern North. Dakota, where the - Red River of the "North is spilling out of its banks. Here men work on a dike protecting homes in Fargo, CAN FEED EVACUEES tions "were being made to accommodate and feed) evacuees at the Manitoba' School for the Deaf in suburban! Tuxedo. An emergency transportation | service -- commercial, provin-) cial, army and municipal ve-| hicles--to move personnel and supplies has been organized. gjattitude that buffaloed me. I where the river Thursday was 124% feet over its 17- ' \fpet-flood: stage. A-~'viver. | Paper Says s MD Told Boy To Confess TORONTO (CP) -- The Tele- gram today quotes Dr. J. A. Addison of Clinton, Ont., as say- ing he told Steven Truscott to confess when he interrogated Truscott after the sex-slaying of 12-year-old Lynne Harper. In a story from Clinton, the paper quotes Dr. Addison as saying: "It was his (Truscott's) told him to confess, to tell the truth, that it would be a lot eas- ier for him if he did." The story says the total inter- rogation of Truscott the night of his arrest lasted nine hours. The last three of these, the paper says, Truscott faced Dr. Ad- dison alone. "We couldn't get anything out of him," the paper quotes the doctor as saying. '"We finally got a statement but it rambled and Not Afraid Of An Inquiry For Truscott, Doctor Says Dr. George Scott Says: "Have Case Down Cold" KINGSTON (CP)--Dr. George)in today he is not concerned over the prospect of a judicial in- quiry into the Steven Truscott case, "I have my case down cold," he told the Kingston Whig-Stand- said he would welcome such an inquiry. cott, a 2l-year-old prisoner in Collins Bay penitentiary. u imprisonment for the 1959 slay- ing of a 12-year-old Clinton, Ont. gir. He was then 14 years old. A recently published book by Toronto author Isabel LeBour- dais, The Trial of Steven Trus- cott, maintains Truscott is in- "The only guy who is going and this is pathetically true,"/ Dr. Scott NDP. -- Winnipeg tre) last Sunday that he had taken truth serum which a ported his claim of innocence. each case to let to know all Scott, a prison psychiatrist, said|the facts," Dr. Scott said. "'Un- less I understand the dynamics of the offence, how can I make any recommendations?" He said any allegation that he alone had the final say in whether or not a prisoner was ard in an interview in which he we <was strictly false, 0 I just make recommenda- ions to the parole board in cer- Dr. Scott was the psychiatrist | tain cases. They may or may who interviewed Steven Trus-| not accept them." Each prisoner referred to him sually gets one hour a month Truscott was sentenced to life/of direct treatment, Dr. Scott said. Truscott told Stanley Knowles North Cen- Dr. ge ad comment der is fir wet tobe hurt by all this publicity| j-eatin Steven: helpful prisoners ai many, He said the use of pores daa Midwest Killer Bitirard Leaves Death Trail Of 21 level 20 feet over flood stage is expected next week in Grand Forks, N.D. -- 80 miles north. didn't make any sense." The statement was not a con- fession, the doctor is reported to have said. It concerned some bruises on the groin of the Trus- cott boy, which Dr. Addison, a general practitioner, had been called in to examine, CHURCH LEADERS Jom 0 IN PRAYER Pope Paul VI es 8 blessing as Dr. ichael " Ramsey, the Archbishop of Canterbury, crosses himself after the two church lead- ers. joined in prayer in the * pontifical Basilica of St. Paul's Out- side-the-Walls in Rome to- day. The ceremony climax- said during an interview at the] orton helps the prisoners to re- i te of Psychotherapy, | Jease their thoughts and can be Private hospital he operates) helpful to the patient in under- here. j ; "The same thing is true with ue ste -- ne cbignpe end any inmate who is shoved into! ,, the spotlight while in prison." 'Anyway, when the drug: is The Truscott family has|¥S¢d, any information given is privileged and is strictly be- €d the visit of the Anglican Primate to the leader of the Roman Catholic Church. (AP Wirephoto) The doctor is quoted as say- ing: 'Some people think I charged that Dr. Scott repeat- edly tried to pressure their son i the doctor and his pa- into a confession. They said his attitude has been: "No confes-| '"'I cannot use the information Plans have been formulated to evacuate hospitals if neces- sary. An emergency radio link has ond killer blizzard in a. month been offered to municipalities broke up today, but it left the for priority communications and north central and plains states accepted by St. Vital| buried under massive- snows. Boniface. |Schools and roads were closed Chall defence staff have been |and at least 21 persons were assigned contacts with alm i each | dead. area where evaucation is a pos-/ Nebraska counted 11 dead, sibility; An emergency informa- Minnesota and Iowa each had tion centre in Fort Garry, now three dead and South Dakota Operating eight hours a dayj/and Wyoming had two deaths seven days a week, is ready to|each. Switch to a 24-hour basis at a' The storm hurled a one-two moment's notice. punch of sléet and\snow at most Meanwhile, this is the cufrent | Of the area. The ice ripped down flood picture at communities| powerlines and powerful -- along the Red River south of|stacked the snow into impa Winnipeg: Sable drifts. Travel was ae At Emerson, at the Minnesota |ally halted over the area. border, a Deak of five to six feet The weather bureau said the above bank evel is forecast for storm was centred over Sault April 5-11. It bad been expected Ste. Marie, Mich., early: today as early as April 3. and was moving in a north- At Morris, between Emerson ortheasterly direction. It was and Winnipeg, the crest also has | Not expected to effect the north- been delayed two days. It's not | eastern United States, expected before April 6 and' Four men were found suffo- may be as late as April 13. cated in a car stalled just east will be nine to 11 feet "of of Howells in northeastern Ne- bank level. 'braska Wednesday _and a man is Mother Cecilia, Neighbors Feud DUNCAN, B.C. (CP)--Mother Cecilia Mary is in hot water again--not with the church this time but with her new neighbors at the resort community of Mill Bay, just south of this Van- couver Island centre. Mother Cecilia is a Roman Catholic nun who got in trouble with the Vatican over an animal shelter she keeps--it now houses 60 dogs, 25 cats, pony. She recently moved it 30 miles! north from the Victoria area be-| insufficient} cause there was room in the former quarters One neighbor, Miss E. M. Et liott, wrote Roman Catholic Bishop Remi De Roo of Victoria OMAHA, Neb. (AP)--The sec-| driving a snowplow found two brothers dead in a stalled truck near Greeley, Neb. shouldn't have used that line of questioning. They call it police tactics. Well, I was acting as} a policeman." sion, no parole." Big Storm Strikes Dr. Scott declined to comment directly on the Truscott case, He} ™ feels-it is privileged information given in any other way and cer- tainly cannot make any written eport on it. Political prophesy by the 17 goats and a} Minneapolis-St. Paul, part of the area which escaped the Da- kotas - Montana blizzard three weeks ago, was in the eye of this week's storm. The area TORONTO (CP) --More thanjnearly a foot of snow on parts) mins, received 12 inches of snow jone inch of snow fell in Toronto the aftermath of a| of northwestern Ontario. Forecasters at the Toronto winds. sys jearly today, ] Ip savage storm that roared up| weather office said Kapuskas-| from Wisconsin and dumped'ing, 150 miles northwest of Tim-|snow-belt extended from an area lay under 14 inches of snow, s ® with winds whipping drifts to F B t four feet. or rl ain -- PARALYSED GOOSE BAY, Labrador (CP) uch of the twin cities busi- --Prince Philip, at the controls ness was paralysed Wednesday of an RAF Andover aircraft, and most of the 700,000 workers jJeft this RCAF transport com- in the area were unable to get'mand base at 6:59 a.m. AST -|to their. jobs. (7:59 a.m. EST) today on his Norfolk in northeastern Ne- jreturn to Britain following a braska had 10 inches of snow |two- "week tour of the United on top of, a two-inch layer of| \Stateseand Canada. Siush' and 'ice and many areas| An airport official said the} of the town of 15,000 were with- jaircraft would land in Green- out electricity for more than a| land for refuelling. The plane day. Downed power lines also! was originally scheduled to cut electricity in dozens ofijeave here at 7:20 a.m smaller Nebraska communities. | The prince i scheduled to Cattlemen _heedi w ; : warnings and sardine salir ane spend tonight in Iceland before mals into sheltcred areas suf- flying home to London Friday. fored only slight loss. | He launched a tour of United Schools were closed by the| States centres to raise funds for hundreds and the University of underprivileged children. andj Minnesota in Minneapolis closed| Promoted a "Buy British" trade| # for the first time in its history,;|Campaign while in North Amer- Drifts up to 10 feet isolated|ica. Queen Elizabeth and the some sections of northwestern|Prince had visited Common- Iowa. Spencer, a town of 9,000,| Wealth territories in the Carib- was without power since Tues-' bean. day night. | The Queen flew directly to Deadwood, S.D., had 19 inches/London at the end of the tour. of snow and more-than a foot|Philip wound up his tour. with! covered many areas in southern|an overnight stay Tuesday at} PHILIP'S LANGUAGE SALTY IN "THE DUKE LONDON (AP) -- "Here comes that bloody machine again. Why don't you take the thing and stuff dt up. . . The, rest of Prince Philip's words were inaudible as one 4 of his aides broke in: "Take the bloody thing right out. You wouldn't like it." The machine was a micro- phone which a television crew on his American tour pushed in front of him during a visit to a hospital in Florida. The program, The Duke Goes West, reviewed his recent U.S, tour and was shown by the BBC Wednesday night. He completed a three-day Cana- dian visit to Toronto and Ot- tawa Wednesday and flew home. Bioody is a mild swear word in Britain. The prince has been known to use stronger terms to express his GOES WEST" dislike of cameramen, though not on television. The BBC said several view- ers telephoned to protest that gthe film should have heen ed- ited. But Desmond Wilcox, the program editor, said: * "This was in no way an anti-royal or knocking piece. We wanted to show the back- stage atmosphere of the American tour. "TI feel it is totally repre- sentative of what any reporter following the Duke of Edin- burgh on an official tour is likely to encounter. It would have been dishonest to censor | his remarks. "The sequence will prob- ably upset a lot of people. But any journalist who has ever followed the duke will tell you he often uses saltier language than that." {for another legal argument in Min esota. _'Government House in _Ottawa. , OFFICIAL TEXT OF JOINT DECLARATION BY POPE AND ARCHBISHOP: between a doctor and his pa-|know-it-alls is strictly hearsay tient. He said that as a psychia-| and will have to resort to facts, trist he gives an opinion to the|clear and concise." parole board based on whether] He said some "crackpot" now the prisoner is ready to handle} could "confess to this well-pub- perole. licized and clearly documented Every effort must be made crime.' NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Bomb Search Nears Climax PALOMARES (AP) -- Operations for recovery of a ssissing-U-bomb- from-2,50¢ -feet-of- water-off -this- Spanish coast resort appeared to be reaching a climax today. But no official would predict exactly when the missing nuclear weapon would be hoisted aboard a waiting naval vessel. Two small units of Admiral William S. Guest's special naval force were operating about five miles off shore at the point where the bomb pas located and photographed by a midget submarine March 15. Virginia Hill Found Dead SA URG, Austria (AP) -- Virginia Hill, once a girl friend of Bugsy Siegel and other United States underworld ener dismissed the 10 men and| figures, was found dead near here today. Police, who gave | two women jurors for the morn-| her age as 50, said there were no indications of foul play, ing but because of her background they ordered an autopsy. Denis, 33-year-old lawyer, is Virginia Hill has been living here with her Austrian hus- charged with corruptly offering] band, ski instructor Hans Hauser, for 16 years. an undisclosed sum of money Viet Cong Attack Thwarted July 14, 1964, to Pierre Lamon- tagne to have the latter drop SAIGON (AP) -- South Vietnamese troops and planes today beat off an attack by 700 Viet Cong on the head- | buffetted by 30-miles - an-hour The weatherman said the north of the Sault to Timmins. Rain fell in most northern cities, but some snow was reported in Timmins. White River and the Lake Nipigon region received seven inches of snow. The storm, moving into north- ern Quebec early today, covered most of southern Ontario with a mixture of rain and wet snow. Trenton reported heavy rain, but cities along Lake Ontario and Erie showed early morning Snow: Denis Trial Again Stalls OTTAWA (CP) -- Hearing of evidence in the Raymond Denis trial was delayed again today the absence of the jury. Judge Frank Costello of Kitch- | opposition to bail fo: narcotics | smuggler Lucien Rivard. quarters of a government armored regiment 12 miles north of Saigon. The Viet Cong made off with two tanks but government planes destroyed them. Government forces NEW CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP ERA ROME (Reuters) -- Follow- ing the full official English text of the joint declaration today by Pope Paul and the Archbishop of Canterbury At sey, bury, the conclusion Archbishop © of representing the Angli- can communion, have met to exchange fraternal greetings. flict and to In willing Canter- of their they command of Christ who bade His disciples love one another, declare re-establish unity. obedience to the that, with His They affirm their'desire that all those Christians who be- long to these two communions may same sentiments of respect, claimed 71 Viet Cong killed. South Vietnamese troops said they suffered only light casualties. A government spokes- man said two guerrillas -- one carrying North Vietnamese money -- 20 Chinese-made sub-machineguns and six ~ anti - Tank weapons were captured. ..In THE TIMES today... gt ce cs be animated by these Saying she regrets the shelter has been located across the highway from her cottage | Mother Cecilia split with her} church over its attitude toward the shelter. She said in an in- terview Wednesday Bishop De Roo has no jurisdiction over the by St. Gregory to England and shelter there founded the cathedral Miss Elliott said in her letter ste of ( surernury toward Beautiful Mill Bay now be which the yes of all Angii- gins to look like 'a shack town cans { "Some of Mother Cecilia's dogs art quite savage and have MOTHER CECELIA MARY bitten unsuspecting people, Common declaration given by His Holiness Pope Paul VI and His Grace the Archbishop "®f Canterbury, 24th March, 1966; In this city of. Rome, from which St. Augustine was sent now t na of their Christian communion, His Holiness Pope Paul VI and His Grace Michael Ram- > centre meeting they give thanks to almighty God who, by the ac- tion of the Holy Spirit, has in these latter years created a fnew atmosphere of Christian fellowship between the Roman Catholic Church and the churches of the Anglican com- munion. This encounter of March 23, 1966, marks a new s e in the development of fraternal rela- tions, based upon Christian charity, and of sincere efforts to remove the causes of con- help, they wish to leave in the hands of the God of mercy all that in the past has been op- posed to this precept of char- ity, and that they make their own the mind of the apostle which he expressed in these words: "Forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus" (Philip- pians 3, VV. .13-14). esteem, and fraternal and, in order to help these de- velop to the full, they intend to inaugurate between the Ro- man Catholic Church and the whole Anglican communion a dialogue. which, founded on the gospels and on the ancient common traditions may lead to unity in truth for serious which Christ prayed. (Continued On Page 2 -- ROME TEXT love Aon Landers--14 City News----13 Comics --20 Editorial---4 Financial--25 Hospital Campaign Postponed--P. 13 YMCA Holding Parade Of Chompions--P. 5 Classified--22, 23, 24, 25 Obits--25 Sports--8, 9, 10, 11 Theatre--21 Whitby News--5, 6, 7 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 Weather--2