Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Mar 1967, p. 17

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(CP Wirephoto) Thompson Says In Letter He Received No Support By HENRY HEALD ling a booming rather than a de-| 1934 meeting in Caroline, about OTTAWA (CP)--In his leiter|pressed economic cycle* |50 miles west of his home town of resignation as national leader} Mr. Thompson was also ham-|of Red Deer, Alta., when he of the Social Credit party, Rob-|strung by an organization that ert Thompson said he had re-|placed major power in its pro- ceived "'something less than full|vincial segments and gave little support'"' from the party's pro-| authority to the national party. jvincial organizations. The 1963 breakaway of the The 52-year-old former educa-| Quebec wing to form the Rallie- tionist was constantly at odds|ment Creditiste left both groups was pushed onto the stage after the official Social Credit speaker didn't appear. William Aberhart, then leader of Social Credit, heard about his speech and invited the young school teacher to attend study with doctrinaire Social Credit theorists. Although he believes strongly in Social Credit idea greatly weakened. In. recent {moves towards reconciliation, lsparked by the Creditistes, it of monetary reform, he has|was certain there was no room often said that Major C, H: |Douglas, founder of the theory, would have expressed himself differently if he had written dur- 'Canadian Anglican Bishop Apologizes To SYDNEY, Australia (Reut- jers)--A Canadian bishop who 'criticized the Anglican diocese jof Sydney has apologized to the |primate of Australia, Most Rev. )P. N. W. Strong. | The apology was included in ja letter to the Australian) Church Record from the Angli- 'ean Bishop of Huron, Rt. Rev. George N. Luxton of London,, /Ont., who visited Australla last year, An article in the December lissue of the Canadian Church- |man by Bishop Luxton caused a furore in Anglican circles here. He called the diocese of Syd- ney "the isolated island in the Australian church, the first and largest, and least representa- tive of all the dioceses." His article continued: "It seems strange to a visitor that this major area should be able to maintain almost invo- late {ts monochrome character and present a solid front of old- fashioned evangelicalism to the | Anglican world. |POSES QUESTION Jwith the proviso tha "How possibly can the Syd- jney diocese talk of unity with jother communions unless it is jyearning and striving for unity |and comprehensions with its} present family. "Am I wrong in thinking that the whole Australian church is delayed in its pilgrimage by the Sydney isolationism?" Following Bishop Luxton's article, the primate of Australia defended the Sydney diocese in a letter to the Anglican press. Archbishop Strong said that for Mr. Thompson in the leader- |ship. | Mr. Thompson's first associa- tion with Social Credit was a Aussie Primate since the advent of the new constitution of the Church of England in Australia, the Syd- ney diocese had 'shown a real desire to work in harmony with) the rest of the church in Au-} jst ralia." ment. |TERMED INTEMPERATE | "The primate refers to my jarticle as a wounding and in- temperate attack on the diocese of Sydney," he said. "He goes on to imply that since members of the diocese of Sydney advised me and helped me in my travel plans for Australia it is surprising to him that I should write frankly for Canadian readers about my impressions of the Australian ney." "Let me hasten to say that i did not understand th Le help given to me was n I | lay aside my critical faculties and write and speak nothing but praise of the Australian scene. "'My apology to the new prim- ate is a sincere one. ... "Perhaps unity will increase in the Australian church as frankness in dialogue is estab- lished and as some modest lee- way of criticism is allowed to the occasional outsider, even though he, has been helped through local. counsel and chered by local hospitality'. Cancer Research Contradicts ' Several Convention Concepts "It is indeed very much an} church and the diocese of Syd-| must} sessions. Mr. Thompson sought nomina- tion in the 1935 provincial elec- tion that swept Social Credit into power in Alberta, but was turned down because he was not yet 21. He studied chiropractice in a J.S. college, married one of the lecturers in 1939--the year he graduated -- and had barely started in practice near Red Deer when war came and he enlisted. In 1943 he was taken out of _ the RCAF to head a delegation of teachers and medical person- nel assigned to the rehabilitation of Ethiopia after its liberation from Italian rule. | His next 15 years were spen jin Ethiopia, broken only by @ jyear in the United States to integral part of our now na- Complete a degree in education tional church." he said, administration, Bishop, Luxton said in his| pre ? LEADE \ccaancy that he was disturbed | oN, ny LEADER |by Archbishop Strong's state- , Thompson returned to Canada in 1958 and was soon jactive again in Social Credit. In |1960 the party elected him na- tional president and made him jnational leader the following year In 1962 he was elected to the Commons as the leader of 30 members, almost all of them rookies in Parliament, like bim- self. And 26 of the group were from Quebec, presenting him with a formidable language bar- rier. Defections, splits and election losses reduced the party to enly five members by the end of 1958, But throughout his parliamen- tary career there has always been a minority government-- first Conservative and then Lib- eral--giving his party a power beyond the strength of its num- bers. | Nevertheless, he chafed in the {opposition role. Administration was his training and foreign af- jfairs his first love. Neither one jcould be played to great ad- vantage from the opposition benches in the Commons. |BEST IN PUBLIC | His personality sparkles on television and he is much sought after as a public speaker. |form, | The Thompsons and _ their jeight children live in a comfort- able house Mr. Thompson built jhimself on a small farm a few {miles south of Red Deer | In Mr. Thompson's long ab- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP)|sule around the disc, and typical |sences Mrs, Thompson manaves Physical irritation, instead of in-|cells were seen to adhere to it'the farm, keep the local Social ducing cancer, seems to prevent firmly, : |Credit organization in line and malignant , transformation, the| Between the sixth and about |finds time for additional com- American Cancer Society said|the 14th months, cells detached munity and church activities. Thursday in a report on experi-|from the disc durface and ments with mice The society said the research, results tend to contradict sev-| eral of the convention concepts of how cancer starts and devel- ops. The study was made by Dr. Gerhard Brand, professor of microbiology at the University of Minnesota; his wife, Inge, a physician, and Lance C. Buoen, lassociate scientist in the divi- sion of microbiology at Minne- |sota. The cancer society said the findings add new facets to the knowledge of the nature of the cancer cell, but also deepen the jmystery of cancer's behavior. | One finding, the society said, |was that the transformation to cancer occurs to cells in a dor- mant, or non-dividing, state. An- other finding was that the first pre-cancer cell seeks to estab- jlish a monopoly for its progeny by supressing other pre-cancer cells. INDUCED CANCER The three researchers in- duced. cancer in mice by insert- ing tiny plastic discs under the 'kin in both flanks... Within a few weeks, the body ibegan building a defensive cap. vaded the connective tissue cap-| sule. They were cancer cells, | and a tumor started to form. | At the end of a year, about 65 per cent of the male mice and almost all the females had de- veloped sarcomas. Eventually) all died of cancers of the con-| nective tissue. | The organization noted ques- tions have been raised as to whether plastic appliances used by surgeons as substitutes for flesh organs will produce can- cer many years later in the pa- tients. | "Knowledge of the composi- tion, size and shape of plastic substances which cause cancer! would be useful,' the society | said. "It also would be helpful to have some idea of the mini-| mum time needed for cancer de-; velopment. "If it takes--as in the mouse --approximately half a lifetime for this type of cancer to de- velop, a 60 - year - old patient | would have little to worry| ahout." PAYS FOR PAPER °/ The black spruce is oné o the most common trees used in Stalin's Daughter Defects To West MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Svet- lana Stalin, daughter of late Sovjet dictator Josef Stalin, de- fo¢ted to the West apparently fter flying to New Delhi with the ashes of an Indian who may have been her husband, ee sources said here to- ay. They said she went to India soon after Brijesh Singh, an In- dian Communist, died at Mos- cow in December or January The sources said Miss Stalina was believed to have married Singh about two years ago but that there was no way of con- firming the story. The Soviet foreign ministry and American and Indian em- bassy spokesman declined coms ment on reports that Miss Sta- lina defected to the U.S. em- bassy in New Delhi and now was in Rome. The sources said Miss Stalina 2, liad a long love affair with #year-old Singh,. who worked as a translator with a Soviet nublichine orcaniestion Paper manufacturing, loublishing organization. e

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