- oA? aw . eter de “Bea, left, head of the Vos "Secretariat for Christian Un- ity, talks with Paul-Emile Car- _@inal Leger of Montreal before The Guardian Is For It " berity declaration, reportedly. approving all parts of the his- a ee ' (cP co by cable from RC Freedom Declaration Okayed WithReservation VATICAN CITY. (AP) — The Vatican Ecumenical Council fin. ished detailed voting on its re- s freedom declaration sday, ‘with many progres’ sives apparently resisting newly: inserted stress on the Romar Catholic doctrine that catholic- ism. is Christ's one true church, The heart of the declaration The declaration. will be .made a council decree after final vot- ee ee which the objec- tions most will bring only minimal re: . The decree could come in mber, or ria council's Decem- Paul today, the prelates meet- ing in St. Peter’s Basilica gave wide approval to key sections SEARCH FOR. TRUTH A total of 2,082 bi im favor of a section. " all men: must be free from cion in following their conscience and that all men must accept:the Roman Catholic church if they come .to recog- nize it as Christ's one ae ae im their ee Se “al es the Catholic about one true ae x motivated many to vote. approval a with ae voted that way, most of ‘these Edward Island Like The Dew” N, CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965. Dief's Arrival In Province Delayed By Poor Weather was learned first there would be _ a - WEATHER Snowflurries or drizzle in eee Low-high Ideas F northwest ‘ean . Friday: sunny, cool, 24 PAGES or Help Show Variation SUMME scheddl-| baker and party was delayed by ee a conditions. ‘ed midnight arrival here of| weather Progressive Conservative leader | 14 a delay in the artival. Then it was reported he would remain in Saint John over night. By JACK GRAY Canadian Press Staff Writer Most of Canada’s - university oft he’ religious freedom text. . | vations.» There were 543 who |san¢ 7 airport John Diefenbaker, Mrs. Diefen-|come the party chieftain but it) Flag Issue In Saint John Speech ‘ Dief Runs Into Rain, Snow As He Returns To Maritimes SAINT JOHN, NB. (OP) glk book sme Alig on tem: Conservative Leader Diefen- conference on the| Wilfred Anthony Teevens. as ae Sgt Spay — : Independest in poles & (South China Sea. af cxid| Rants. chas withdrans Unser "4 spokesman “said. the low ae aye ee soriibetion te wot Nang nd t bly es mane, of he Eee forces. |Poit. two A-4 Skyhawk oo ae heavily This tetuces. the election's ‘bombers were destfo at ju he stopped at eens eandidate total to: 1,012. ‘Lai. eee four jurging increased federal aid to It was not immediately clear lwhere the weather caused the delay. One story said an East- ern Provincial Airways plane was weather bound at Sydney. It had been intended to leave | there early in the night for Saint | John: Newsmen at Saint John said Is Revived | SAINT there was no sign of fog there. John Di But at Summerside, first re- flag’ issue here ports said the Saint John air- and attacked port was fogged in. vagy eg ot ‘ seaport It eee a a a = : ; Ewe an all-province ri for ing what changes in to-| : Vea ate sad; °, ihe Conservative candidates day's Kinerary might be neces. Prices Frozen S . eaad: y im the federal election. wi | BY Irish Gov’ T have no apatawios to ollet | "te: 1968, New Brunswick elect: | 7rival. r t for the stand I ‘took, - ed six Liberals and four Con-} Late information from Saint sce (Reuters)—A price | this party took—none at * jservetives. John was that Mr. Diefenbaker | freeze —on-- food and consumer ’ ‘He said he had asked follow: |” were mo. flage among | would leave early in the dav | goods went into operation Wed- ing the Commons flag debate for here. If no further delay mesday as part of an austerity what the : : . | Was encountered it was consid- drive by the ‘Irish government, ‘would be. red possible most of the day's ‘Prime Minister Sean Lemass| of Young program would be carried out. |said. “Manufacturers of food, wt aiatien \drink and luxury commodities jon of the. 5 a ° would be forbidden to increase | Mr. Diefenbaker also Candidate prices without giving three how earlier months notice “exposed” | . fs | Viet Cong Hit Two Hard Blows SAIGON (AP) — Viet Cong guerrilla’ mortar and infiltra- OTTAWA (CP) — The first! withdrawal. of a:candidate nor- \imated for the Nov. 8 ctectiaa | was ‘reported Wednesday by |fion squads attacked US. ma- Chief Electoral Officer Nelson rine airfields simultaneously Castonguay. ” ‘ shortly before midnight Wed- centre to brief from the Giant cee Chanel students want government help im paying for their education. Some want fees abolished, some oppose this but want other fi- Bancial help. ,, | This much became evident Wednesday, National Student Day as students across the country. paraded to provincial legislatures to launch a cam- m by the 140,000 - member adian Union of Students to end social fand economic bar- fiers to higher education. CUS argues that the country would benefit if financia] bur- dens were lifted from youthful shoulders. It points to the recent Bladen report which claimed that 4 per cent. of United States’ growth and productivity im recent years is related di- rectly to education. IDEAS PLENTIFUL The students had almost as, many ‘ideas Yor aid to education as they had marches. Some were frankly disap- pointed in their reception- Those visiting: Premier John Robarts in-Toronto came away im” a gloomy frame of mind. |They said be told them the gov- ernment regarded education as a privilege and not as a right. Other provincial leaders were non-committal when visited by delegations, a cross - Canada survey by The Canadian Press showed At Ottawa, some 1,000 _ stu- dents marched to Parliament Hill. a Placard read: ‘Free Tee-- books iter er Tidy were met” by 1, il, Progressive Conservative and New Democratic Party politi- cians seeking election Nov. &. | aiathee outlined his party’s educa- | tively front the Students: “What Cabinet members promised consideration of the brief. Lib- eral Leader Gerald A. Regan said the crisis in higher educa: tion is a “revolutionary situa- tion demanding steps never taken before.” criticized the Conservative go7ernment of who also is education minister. He was applauded when he said a full-time Nova Scotia minister of education is needed. Not all the demonstrations were held Wednesiay. At Char- lottetown the Students’ Union of St. Dunstan's University, in a brief to the Prince Edward Is land. cabinet Monday, asked the government to absorb any rise in tuition fees above the present level of $400 a student. The brief claimed costs --have climbed to an unparalleled level in many parts of the country, particularly the Maritimes. HOLD PANEL TALKS ae were held Wednesday 11' a.m. to 4 p.m. at Sir George Williams College and Loyol, Othe Quebec English - lan- guage universities did not par- ticipate because, said a spokes- man for McGill students, ‘the French - language Quebec Stu- dents Union is holding its an- nual congress today and for that reason French students feel they could not organize any- thing for Wednesday... . “The French - language stu- dents will most probably ar- Tange to hold a protest day at Of Missing | Premier Robert L- Stanfield, In Quebec province panel dis-. a cumin 5%. will Tia ‘ie a he Mae ik Res 3 e. fone 1es . ‘ I “ ————— ee “Negro nationalists would ‘ac- as a basis for negotiation in-thedispute-over Rhodesia‘s bid for independence from Brit- ain. But details of what the two men said were not disclosed. | Throughout the day Wilson met opponents and supporters of Prime Minister Ian - Smith's @hile minority Rhodesian re. gime Some su€h as Nkomo were brought from places’ of detention ® gee the British leader. &Garfield Todd, former prime | banned Negro nationalist party. | With Nkomo was his ad- viser; Leo Baron, first white Rhodesians to be re-| was temporarily | | released from restriction in the Bulawayo city area to make the journey. . Despite .all The next ‘section also won en- dorsement. It speaks of prohibi- tions.— that ts not be forced by the state to send chil- idren to schools wunmatching |their church beliefs, that states recognizing one particular reli- gion nevertheless respect reli- gious freedom for other. citizens the precautions, |there and that public authori- about 2000 Negroes were as-|ties avoid abuses under the pre- /sembled outside go v er nment text of religious freedom. house as Nkomo arrived. Some | shouted “one man, one v a reference to Negro demands for the vote. The breakdown on that vote | was 1,715 in favor; 373 in favor si with’ reservations and | against. ,PROBE ORDERED -% , a “LONDON (Reuters) — The British government has ordered public inquiry into the cause it's an Edinburgh-to-London air- | station: crash whick killed % at - shrouded London Airport early Wednesday. investigators com ed _ the Wreckage of the British Euro- pean Airways plane, a: turbine- fropeller driven Vanguard, ftrewn along more than a mile of flame - seared runway 28, §ecking a small black box of instruments expected to tell every detail) of the plane's fatal las: moments. i7he investigators rend tape recording of st words of Normal Shackelt the >lane’s captain. It showed that Shackell, making his third | attempt in an hour to land in} the swirling on-and-off fog, in-| tended to cancel the Janding and | fly another circuit around the! . Witnesses heard his! @ngines race and grab fot eleva- i tion. BROKE APART Instead, the plane’ s wheels dammed down. and it began to break apart. It slewed down the runway, spouting a tail of flam- ing fuel. The rear half of the fuselage broke off. Bodies were found strewn and charred thé route, some of them belted into their seats. | also 9 IN CRASH The main part of the wreck- age skidded to a stop, billowing flame, only 300 yards from a fire “whose trucks were -al- ro in motion. But despite the spraying of thousands of gallons of foam ont he wreckage and the runway, there was no hope of saving any of the 36 aboard. All but’ one of the 30 passen- gers and six crew members on the £3 ($9) midnight bargain flight were British residents, most of them Scots. The lone exception was from Tasmania. those killed was Britoa La Alan Gullick, 58, home sales director of Glaxo Labora- tories Ltd. He was appointed to the post Oct. 1 after being presi- pao of th. company’s Canadian bsidiary, Glaxo - Allenburys (Canada) Lid. of Weston, Ont- INSIDE TODAY Classified 5 ene a Bitthe® .....--00s00++ ao Comte Be an, acolo de is Sport... Suiees ies ee Finance, markets. Sak ob 28 Rural churches . oeeweee 19 Wome Hewes sasveeTees 6 Sanerbae potas Lebeeettnn. A Kings, Queens. ai ce ~ Prince County 8 Recording Shows Pilot Planned To Make Another Try At Landing One of the crew members, Fiamma Gabaldoni, 2, was the daughter of an Italian~ count. She was one of a standby boty which took over the flight when fog kept the reguisr erew from reaching Edinburgh. FIRST IN FIVE YEARS : The crash was the first BEA has suffered in five years of fly- ing a fleet of 20 of the British made, four-engined Vanguards. They have carried more than 9,000,000 passengers in that The fatal runway was the same one where a Trans-Can- |- ada Air’Lines (now Air Canada) DC-8 skidded into cabbage patch on takeoff two years ago, with 75 aboard. No one was in- jured.- The Vanguard cram tol was the worst ever suffered at Lon- don Airport and the first fatality in 15 years. The crash was Britain's third this year and 1965 fatalities now total 102. Aviation Minister Roy Jen- kins, ot the inquiry in Parliament, t members ceil- ing -visibilty for talk-down land- ings is 383 yards. “I have no reason to think—although this is a matter for the public inquiry —that the pilot was operating -below- this minimum:;" ies held this week in Vancouver. | PWC founded in 1834 and one of |Canada’s oldest colleges, was , |For Pearson 3 |eral rally in a shopping plaza | jhere turned into a fiasco Wed- | : os prime minister and. he was "ithe was een eee education for all capable benefiting from it. At Fredericton, about wal University of New Brunswick students were caught unex- tedly as. Opposition. Leader a wee paid an impromptu | Werte They - hastily called off a oneete rally protesting high university fees and burned a small effigy of fees as Mr. Diefenbaker left after a_ short visit. Students said they felt it ‘would be a good idea to show the Conservative leadér their “plight.” He shook hands and | itold them he was the only | | political leader in Canada visit- nesday night and Prime Minis- ae on National Stu- ter Pearson was forced to re-, — sort to a hand microphone to| MARCH IN HALIFAX try to make himself heard. An orderly crowd of more Mr. Pearson went down than 1,000 students representing among the huge throng in the six Nova Scotia universities shopping mall to make a speech marched on thie legislative Hbut the public address system pyildings in Halifax with a failed just as: he ‘was about-to seven-page brief asking more = his address. federal and provincial aid, in- preskéd\ around cluding increased per capita grants to $5 from the ‘current cussions is the Bladen Commis- sion-report-on- financing univer- sity education. Dr. Frank Mac- Kinnon, principal of PWC is re- presenting the college at the meeting. Plaza Rally Is Fiasco By DAVE McINTOSH . TORONTO.(CP)—A huge Lib- taken through a store and up a|¢> found Tuesday. inal RCAF plane flew the bod- © Wiarton 10. miles north- of Owen Sound. } four men who set out Saturday from this village on pe tip of the Bruce Peninsula Prof. Roger Eric Deane, 41, of the University of Tofonto; Thomas C. Nicholson, %, a draftsman; Ario Gatti, 41, an artist and designer; Peter Mac- farlane, 38, an executive pro- \ducer with CFTO-tv, Toronto. | ‘The four left here Saturday in ia 16-foot open aluminum, boat \loaded with skin-diving and pho- tography equipment and pow- power out- and motor were | fourd intact but filled with wa- ter on the rocky shore of Dead- |man’s Point, om the west side of the peninsula about 15 miles south of here. In the boat were a scuba-div- ing mouthpiece, a weight belt, a screwdriver and an empty plas- tic bottle, evidence that the boat had not capsized. A gasoline jtank was found on the shore 50 |feet away, freight elevator to the! balcony which was blocked ‘by police. Mr. Pearson told reporters he! was wotried that some children might fall in the crush and be trampled Mrs. Pearsoi. said to her hus- ‘band when they reached the |baleony again: “You survived.” \/EFFORTS FAILED Frantic efforts to fix the pub- lic address system failed and in Labelled M Story On Conscription ost Absurd land 10,000. children of a ae be- | Leaders On ‘Hustings By THE CANADIAN PRESS THURSDAY Pearsen—In Vancouver. Diefenbaker—In Prince riding | and Charlottetown. Deugias—In Victoria and Van-| couver. Don MacRe Charlottetown, ee oe os “a receives a yo plaque from semi-finals of the tween the ages of t a Thempsen — In oria a George Reynolds, program nla ger Ze 14 was held Tuesday night with | Vancouver Island _ chairman at the Canadian Leg Legion: A contest for the 90 children competing. Cacouetie—in Chapleau. Que. | Mr. Seucone on aoe ates By DAVE McINTOSH | draw its forces to North ‘iproke down. TORONTO (‘CP)—Prime Min-| | America. Mr. Pearson told reporters he ister Pearson said Wednesday; This could mean a replace lwas told by police that the |? statement by opposition mem: | ment of U.S. power by another jJerowd numbered between 3,000 bers that Canadians will be con- | | power which vould prevent scripted for Viet Nam is the} countries in Southeast. A-sia most absurd story of the elec- ever exercising freedom. | tion campaign. “The U:S. is the least imper- | He said at a luncheon for eth- | ialistie of any nation who ever pic leaders here that it is not) wielded super power,” he said. | the intention of the Canadian |‘“The Americans just want to government to send military | et ee aa baseball and Coca {forces to Viet Nam. | Cola ‘ola Washington knew this and ac- | aint a net the: oo a cepted it, he added. | wou not negotiate in iet Cong and North Vietnamese Mr. Pearson also defended | government and their Commr / United States policy in Viet . pe sage AEB ws Sei nist backers, he said. am in his first foreign affairs; Referring to atte ations campaign, 'for service in 44 Nam, Mr. He said it would not neces-| Pearson said: sarily -be in the interests of | | peace to have the U.S. with- | paign, this is the most absurd.” ¥ > “Of all_the stories -in-the ecanr- ed to be progressives. gtudents from the University of universities. He | was introduced PW EI Tt d- oo da neti tailed To ae were said to {eel |New Brunswick held up 2 sign|as “ite only national political ec e Ject_ was hardly mentioned. | | Ontario Men "ont ; ee So reading: “Good grief; us leader who is visiting a univer- Premier Joseph Smaliwood's | “~ By TOM OCHILTREE [minister of Southern Rhodesia jolir doctrine, already | Spelled ino more.” They said they were|sity campus today,.National Stu- | introduction of a tuition - free) ToBERMORY, Onl. (CP) — SALISBURY (AP) —— Cea TIES E eS eee tet en ee coer the Chenea ae ena is Seameat tare, [amt Day.” ; freshman year at Memorial the ‘bodies of four Toronto um Negroes swarmed through Smith's regime, also. arrived for | 0D a s ee church, was!" An airport guard ordered the| The 200 students crowded into’ @) on erence University in St. John's iy * \derwater photographers missing Wednesday while Brit-|talks with Wilson. Tice Phecednin detintation Te four students out of the building |the entrance hall applauded mentioned by Rex Murphy, 18. \trom here since Saturday were ish me Minister Wilsoh en-|. Todd was allowed to come to — full b = despite protests from one of|when Mr. Diefenbaker outlined. eee ae ______}et_. Freshwater, Nfld. pexavered ee ie Toke SaaEEnSaeane — in. talks. with banned Ne-igelisbury- from: his cattle ranch | 7" {ul vote breakdown. om-iwr.Diefenbaker’s aides, Tom|his party's platférm policy on| Prince of Wales College yer raised ‘to degree-granting status| owe NEED ‘Huron off the Bruce Peninsula, gro Nationalist Leader B the southern part of the coun- |) a iste i vee: — t Van Dusen, They moved out to|aid to higher education. terday was. elected to member- - ane cae your. is be-| He said Newfoundiand, the | An RCAF search and rescue Nkomo on Rhodesia’s future. where he was placed in re-|FOt "Dt ‘vith reservations and (2, driveway where Mr. Diefen-| En route to this seaport he ship in the Conference of Can-|in7 suended te ae bee st| poorest province, had recog- \#pokesman said the bodies were Wilson, in his meeting with-jstriction nine days before for | 6s against. baker briefly to shake ;stopped Oromocto, the adian Universities by the annual | 51) institutions of higher learn-|mized that ‘‘the most practical (found within a few cali a of to discover what |allegedily ‘associating with a henge OR them. townsite meeting of the conference being |ing and the feature of its dis.|way to get out of its darkness” | the skin divers’ boat was