firm after 22 weeks — page 8 Wednesday, August 8, 1984 Newsstand Price 40° Vol. 47, No. 31 acne ae ‘Set up transit probe, Socred governmenttold — editorial, page 4 — page 6 — Aug. 6, 1945 remembered: ‘No more Hiroshimas. S02 5. te eth igi Mae” te “Paty He RE Excluded from news, : CP lodges | protest ro — page 2 — t : : Turner, 7 Mulroney: t ef corporate si Candies were lit at dusk in Vancouver's Robson Square Aug. 6 as several hundred people joined thousands more around the world in Be ike Commemorating the terrible day, 39 years before, when the U.S. obliterated the Japanese city of Hiroshima with the world’s first nuclear voices née Weapon. That atomic bomb ‘‘was a bomb that was not necessary,” said Vancouver deputy mayor Harry Rankin (top left). “It was to test the and atomic Lomb for ase in World War Ill.” He urged the audience to “fight alittle harder and speak outa littie louder. . to ensure that there never is & third world war.” Rankin also read a message from Hitoshi Motoshima, mayor of Nagasaki. Kinuko Laskey (top right), a Hiroshima survivor Said she did not “like to speak of my experiences but | must to make people understand. . that the bomb that fell over Nagasaki must be the last.’ The commemoration was jointly sponsored by the Coalition for World Disarmament, Project Ploughshares and the World Conference sad a 2 on Religion for Peace. page < — ae