- / -
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER
25
1970
Vol
14
No
228
28
Pages
Man
found
dead
A
57-ear-old
man
was
found
dead
under
a
second
storey
win
window
�
dow
of
the
Canada
Hotel
20G
George
early
today
Police
believe
he
was
either
killed
by
the
Impact
or
froze
to
death
Coroner
Harry
G
Kennedy
said
he
will
hold
either
an
In
Inquest
�
quest
or
an
inquiry
into
the
death
depending
on
Information
pre
sented
Dy
a
ponce
investigation
Police
do
not
suspect
foul
play
They
are
attempting
to
reach
relatives
of
the
dead
man
today
The
man
apparently
jumped
or
fell
from
the
open
window
of
his
room
at
the
hotel
He
landed
between
the
hotel
and
the
next
building
and
was
not
discovered
for
several
hours
police
said
Police
said
the
man
would
probably
have
died
from
expo
exposure
�
sure
to
the
27
degree
below
zero
temperature
if
he
was
not
killed
by
the
fall
The
door
to
his
hotel
room
was
found
locked
His
shoes
were
left
by
the
bed
Police
said
the
body
may
have
been
in
the
snow
for
three
hours
before
it
wasdiscoveredat4am
The
man
had
been
seen
sitting
alone
in
the
Canada
beer
parlor
earlier
In
the
evening
police
said
Earhart
executed
TOK0
Reuter
A
letter
to
an
Engllshlanguage
dally
newspaper
says
that
aviatrix
Amelia
Earhart
who
dlsap
peared
on
a
round-the-world
flight
In
1937
was
executed
by
Japanese
soldiers
and
burled
on
the
Island
of
Saipan
The
writer
Identified
only
as
Thomas
E
Devlne
US
A
says
he
knows
where
Miss
Earhart
and
her
navigator
Fred
Ivoonan
are
buried
I
A
Japanese
woman
Mrs
Mich
Sugita
said
in
the
same
newspaper
The
Japan
Times
recently
that
Miss
Earhart
was
executed
on
Saipan
She
said
she
lived
on
the
island
with
her
father
a
military
policeman
at
the
time
The
controversy
over
Miss
Earharts
disappearance
was
recently
revived
with
the
publi
publication
�
cation
of
a
book
sajlng
that
she
was
on
a
sping
mission
when
she
was
captured
by
Japanese
troops
The
book
said
she
now
Is
living
In
the
United
States
under
an
assumed
name
Devlne
writes
that
he
landed
on
Saipan
with
US
invading
forces
In
194
1
and
was
an
eje
witness
to
the
discover
of
Miss
Earharts
plane
in
a
Japanese
hangar
He
sajs
that
about
a
year
later
an
Oklnawan
woman
showed
him
a
grae
on
Saipan
In
which
she
said
were
buried
the
bodies
of
a
white
woman
and
a
man
who
had
come
fiom
the
air
Cut
speed
jury
says
corners
jury
Tuesday
night
recommended
a
reduced
speed
limit
at
the
spot
where
a
Prince
George
niand
led
IsoV
lnearMac
kenzie
rmand
Pereira
died
at
the
In
Intersection
�
tersection
of
the
Mackenzie
road
and
the
road
to
BC
Forest
Products
The
jury
found
the
death
acci
accidental
�
dental
with
no
one
to
blame
but
said
the
speed
should
be
reduced
from
GO
miles
per
hour
to
40
miles
per
hour
The
also
said
the
intersec
intersection
�
tion
should
have
aflashlngamber
warning
light
placed
on
the
corner
Angr
callers
set
to
give
w
city
hall
a
telephonic
snait
because
snow
was
still
piled
high
on
side
streets
Tuesday
were
frustrated
The
civic
blower
went
on
the
fritz
In
the
afternoon
and
BC
Tel
had
to
come
to
the
rescue
and
repair
the
switchboard
Technicians
deny
rumors
that
the
hot
blasts
coming
from
irate
taxpayers
melted
the
wires
Somewhere
in
the
city
there
is
a
lady
who
Is
not
only
wearing
a
fur
coat
that
does
not
belong
to
her
but
who
may
be
wondering
whatever
happened
to
her
recipe
for
lemon
sponge
cake
Well
the
wife
of
the
editor
of
The
Citizen
has
the
recipe
and
a
coat
that
is
several
sizes
too
small
for
her
So
would
the
person
who
took
the
wrong
coat
from
the
Legion
hall
last
night
please
drop
it
off
at
The
Citizen
and
claim
her
own
back
Please
The
College
of
New
Cale
Caledonia
�
donia
has
a
new
data
pro
cessing
teacher
Ernest
W
hite
40
a
Canadian
citizen
who
re
returns
�
turns
from
a
job
as
director
of
a
data
centre
in
Seattle
Wash
White
starts
work
tonight
re
replacing
�
placing
Al
Leverldge
who
has
been
promoted
to
chairman
of
careers
department
at
the
col
college
�
lege
gm
A
childrens
handicraft
pro-
gram
Is
looking
for
any
kind
of
wool
to
make
mittens
for
the
children
on
Cottonwood
Island
If
you
have
any
spare
wool
of
any
kind
contact
563
6911
and
they
will
pick
it
up
and
thank
you
a
Would
you
believe
Its
colder
out
west
than
It
Is
here
PCMP
Corporal
Ed
Olfert
said
the
Vanderhoof
Fraser
Lake
Fort
Fraser
area
yesterday
was
so
cold
he
couldnt
keep
the
windows
of
his
car
cleared
4
Only
tfhen
we
got
to
Bednestl
the
windows
started
to
warm
up
Corp
Olfert
was
out
west
Inspecting
school
buses
The
Citizen
-
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8mtjw
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t
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tour
that
starts
with
discussions
in
Washington
with
President
Nlon
Al
Ahram
the
semi
official
Cairo
newspaper
said
toda
that
Husseins
Egyptian
visit
will
begin
next
Wednesday
and
that
from
there
he
will
fly
to
Washington
London
Paris
and
Bonn
The
newspaper
said
he
will
leae
Washington
before
Dec
11
because
Israeli
Defence
Minister
Moshe
Dai
an
is
arriv
arriving
�
ing
In
the
United
States
that
day
Hussein
will
spend
Christmas
In
London
with
his
wife
Prin
Princess
�
cess
Muna
who
is
British
She
has
been
In
Britain
since
fight
fighting
�
ing
began
between
Husseins
arm
and
Palestinian
guerrillas
In
Jordan
several
months
ago
Al
Ahram
did
not
say
what
Hussein
and
Sadat
would
dis
discuss
�
cuss
but
the
king
said
in
an
In
tervlew
Tuesday
that
he
Is
pushing
for
a
summit
meeting
of
Arab
leaders
to
discuss
the
Palestinian
situation
He
said
he
Is
sending
Utters
to
them
but
not
to
Yasser
Arafat
leader
of
the
Al
Tatah
guerrillas
and
ac
acknowledged
�
knowledged
head
of
the
Pales
Palestinian
�
tinian
movement
Hussein
said
the
summit
would
discuss
possible
Palestin
Palestinian
�
ian
representation
In
any
future
peace
talks
with
Israel
and
whether
a
Palestinian
state
should
be
established
on
the
West
Bank
of
the
Jordan
River
currently
occupied
by
Israel
He
told
Associated
Press
cor
correspondent
�
respondent
Dennis
Neeldthathe
wants
the
summit
to
examine
all
aspects
of
the
Palestinian
question
We
want
to
know
where
we
stand
he
said
4and
we
do
not
want
to
leave
the
matter
float
floating
�
ing
since
this
might
lead
to
se
serious
�
rious
repercussions
Angered
Trudeau
calls
MP
phoney
OTTAWA
CP
MPs
hurled
verbal
acid
in
the
Commons
Tuesday
as
the
House
began
de
bate
on
the
second
New
Demo
crat
motion
to
set
the
govern
ments
public
order
bill
back
to
the
committee
stage
in
an
effort
to
Inject
opposition
sponsored
changes
into
the
bill
The
olley
began
as
David
Lewis
NDP
ork
South
said
the
government
refused
to
ac
cept
the
opposition
amendment
to
the
Public
Order
Temporary
Measures
Act
1970
because
it
would
be
admitting
that
the
reg
ulations
under
the
War
Mea
Measures
�
sures
Act
represented
panic
stricken
legislation
I
say
ou
re
a
phone
shot
back
Prime
Minister
Trudeau
The
prime
minister
was
an
expert
to
learn
from
Mr
Lewis
retaliated
Mr
Trudeau
had
discarded
ever
progressive
idea
he
ever
had
The
government
had
set
out
deliberately
to
create
a
state
of
panic
in
Canada
Debate
continues
toda
on
the
NDP
motion
which
seeks
to
send
the
bill
back
to
commit
tee
of
the
whole
stage
from
the
present
debate
on
third
and
final
reading
The
bill
moved
out
of
committee
stage
clause
by
clause
study-
Mon
da
The
motion
would
have
the
House
reconsider
a
clause
of
the
bill
that
allows
evidence
of
sup-
Inside
today
a
Business
5
w
15
Classified
Comics
16
17
18
19
Crossword
15
Edi
Editorial
�
torial
4
Home
and
family
21
22
Horoscope
15
Second
front
11
Sports
12
Tele
Television
�
vision
15
tfcte
1
said
Wheres
the
fire
Woathcr
Today
Sunny
and
cold
Clouding
over
tonight
Lows
tonight
near
10
below
port
of
the
Front
de
Liberation
du
Quebec
prior
to
the
bill
tak
ing
effect
to
form
presumption
of
guilt
of
present
support
of
the
FLQ
The
bill
would
replace
regula
tions
under
the
War
Measures
Act
invoked
Oct
16
It
would
make
membership
or
support
of
the
aims
of
the
FLQ
a
crime
as
did
the
regulations
punish
punishable
�
able
by
five
years
in
prison
Earlier
Tuesday
the
Com
mons
defeated
113
to
78
an
NDP
motion
to
have
the
committee
of
the
whole
reconsider
t
h
e
issue
of
a
review
board
to
over
see
the
administration
of
the
legislation
b
Quebec
authori
ties
In
that
vote
Conservatives
lined
up
against
th
Liberal
ma
jorit
The
watchdog
clause
was
de
feated
113
to
78
Standings
in
the
House
now
are
153
Liberals
73
Conserva
tives
23
New
Democrats
13
Creditistes
one
independent
and
one
vacant
for
a
total
of
264
Opposition
amendments
to
the
retroactive
clause
and
on
the
watchdog
Issue
had
alread
been
defeated
in
committee
stage
Mr
Lewis
accused
Mr
Tru
deau
of
painting
the
prospect
of
a
massive
Insurrection
when
ac
actually
�
tually
only
50
to
100
criminals
were
involved
in
terrorist
activi
activities
�
ties
and
only
because
police
had
been
unable
to
catch
them
Mr
Trudeau
then
left
the
chamber
and
Colin
Gibson
L
lUmilton
Wentworth
entered
the
fray
charging
the
NDP
dep-
ut
leader
with
a
sardonic
and
111
conceived
partisan
on
the
prime
minister
Problem
is
cost
MONTREAL
CP
-
Judge
Jacques
Trahan
presiding
over
a
coroners
inquest
into
the
death
of
Pierre
L
a
p
o
r
t
e
Quebecs
former
labor
minister
said
Tuesday
he
restrained
him
self
In
delaying
sentence
for
two
persons
found
in
contempt
Preferring
to
avait
a
less
vexing
moment
Judge
Tra
Trahan
�
han
set
next
Tuesda
for
con
tlnulng
the
inquest
and
senten
sentencing
�
cing
the
two
for
refusing
to
tes
testify
�
tify
After
trying
for
at
least
20
minutes
to
get
Clement
Roy
an
unemploed
22-year-old
to
tes
tlfy
Judge
Trahan
had
to
nan
die
some
wild
histrionics
from
Use
Rose
Both
were
found
in
contempt
Judge
Trahan
tried
unsuc
unsuccessfully
�
cessfully
to
persuade
Roy
that
his
testimony
might
prove
the
Innocence
of
another
person
or
persons
But
Roy
calm
throughout
his
brief
appearance
replied
that
an
thing
he
said
even
under
court
protection
could
result
in
charges
being
laid
against
oth-
ers
Nothing
to
say
I
have
nothing
to
say
he
repeated
several
times
Lise
Rose
sister
of
two
broth
ers
wanted
in
the
kidnapping
Oct
10
of
Mr
L
a
p
o
r
t
e
screamed
before
being
dragged
out
that
she
had
been
stripped
stark
naked
and
beaten
dur
ing
interrogation
by
police
The
last
thing
she
screamed
before
being
taken
away
by
two
policemen
was
Paul
and
Jacques
I
love
you
Paul
Rose
Is
wanted
for
kid
napping
both
Mr
Laporte
and
on
Oct
5
James
Jasper
Cross
British
trade
commls
sloner
believed
still
alive
and
In
the
hands
of
the
Front
de
Liber
ation
du
Quebec
Jacques
Rose
Is
wanted
for
conspiracy
In
the
kidnapping
of
Mr
Laporte
strangled
Oct
17
Protests
ail
conditions
Llse
Rose
said
that
In
protest
of
Inhuman
conditions
at
pro
v
1
n
c
1
a
1
police
headquarters
where
the
inquest
is
being
held
and
she
Is
being
detained
she
refused
to
testify
She
said
that
all
the
women
arrested
in
Montreal
under
the
War
Measures
Act
were
taken
to
the
Montreal
womens
jail
ex
except
�
cept
herself
and
Lise
Balcer
They
were
kept
In
provincial
police
cells
and
sometimes
al
most
froze
at
night
They
were
both
in
the
seventh
day
of
a
pro
test
hunger
strike
Lise
Balcer
21
whose
uncle
Leon
Balcer
was
a
federal
cabl
New
Democrats
and
Creditlstes
j
net
mlnlster
ta
the
Dlefenbaker
administration
is
charged
with
being
or
professing
to
be
a
member
of
the
FLQ
as
is
Llse
Rose
Llse
Balcer
has
testified
that
she
lived
for
a
time
with
Paul
Rose
In
the
bungalow
south
of
Montreal
where
Mr
Laporte
was
believed
to
have
been
held
for
the
last
seven
das
of
his
life
Judge
Trahan
told
Lise
Rose
that
he
is
powerless
to
do
any
thing
about
conditions
in
her
cell
He
was
acting
slmpl
as
a
coroner
and
had
no
other
juris
diction
Gaetan
Robert
legal
counsel
for
Llse
Rose
said
she
had
been
the
victim
of
discrimination
re
malnlng
in
her
cell
for
more
than
23
hours
every
day
This
meant
he
said
that
she
went
without
fresh
air
Both
unwilling
witnesses
were
among
several
dozen
persons
arraigned
Nov
5
and
awaiting
attack
trial
in
January
under
the
War
Measures
Act
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Wat
Motorists
in
angle
parked
cars
on
Third
Avenue
Tuesday
found
the
slithery
snow
made
backing
almost
impossible
But
this
panel
van
took
a
different
tack
and
made
good
CIVIC
CANDIDATES
ON
DISPLAY
TONIGHT
The
speech
making
begins
at
8
p
m
at
tonights
all
candidates
forum
being
hosted
by
the
Prince
George
Chamber
of
Commerce
at
the
Simon
Fraser
Hotel
Candidates
for
city
alderman
school
board
trustee
and
regional
district
director
will
be
given
five
to
seven
minutes
to
state
their
platforms
A
question
and
answer
period
will
follow
An
invitation
for
the
public
to
attend
has
been
extended
by
chamber
president
Ludwig
Weilmeier
Prospective
candidates
who
have
not
yet
de
dared
their
intention
of
running
are
also
most
wel
come
to
speak
said
Weilmeier
Just
state
your
name
and
the
position
you
are
running
for
and
you
will
be
put
on
the
platform
on
five
minutes
notice
or
even
no
notice
he
said
Heavy
fighting
again
in
Jordan
BEIRUT
Lebanon
AP
-Heavj
fighting
broke
out
be
between
�
tween
Mng
Husseins
army
an9
Palestinian
Arab
guerrillas
in
Jordan
todaj
the
Palestinian
resistance
movement
reported
A
statement
said
the
fighting
broke
out
at
730
am
and
was
still
raging
at
noon
Telephone
lines
to
Amman
were
out
The
statement
claimed
Jor
Jordanian
�
danian
troops
opened
up
on
guerrilla
positions
in
Thahrat
Asfour
with
mortars
and
heavj
machine
guns
It
did
not
give
Thahrat
Asours
location
The
outbreak
of
fighting
fol
followed
�
lowed
the
disclosure
that
Mng
Hussein
and
President
Anwar
Sadat
of
Egypt
will
confer
In
Cairo
net
week
before
Hussein
begins
a
four
nation
Western
use
of
the
sidewalk
to
surprise
pedestrians
and
break
free
Citizen
photo
by
Dave
Milne
Inquiry
outburst
27
BELOW
CHILL
ONLY
A
SAMPLE
For
those
who
approached
the
dawn
with
numb
fingers
and
dead
motors
rest
assured
the
cold
will
not
stay
However
the
weatherman
warns
the
27
below
last
night
is
just
a
sample
of
what
is
to
come
this
winter
It
was
one
degree
short
of
the
record
28
be
low
on
Nov
25
1965
Temperatures
will
rise
today
and
be
a
little
un
der
zero
tonight
followed
by
more
snow
most
of
to
morrow
18
r
yt
frv
s
S-sJVr-
TL3X
rtto
HkiSmHL
111
Loveliest
lady
of
them
all
is
Valerie
Kordyban
17
selected
as
Prince
Georges
Queen
Aurora
XIII
at
a
fash
ion
show
Tuesday
evening
Queen
elect
Valerie
the
Rotary
Club
candidate
will
succeed
Aurora
XII
Marilyn
Kos
when
she
is
crowned
at
the
Winter
Carnival
Jan
23
Princesses
selected
were
Miss
Kinsmen
Lee
Ann
Pozer
20
and
Miss
Elks
Angela
Schmidt
19
Kindergarten
now
desirable
By
Greg
Mclnlyre
Citizen
Staff
Reporter
Prince
George
school
trus
trustees
�
tees
like
the
Idea
but
there
wont
be
kindergartens
In
School
District
57
next
fall
Trustees
Tuesday
night
went
formally
on
record
In
fa
favor
�
vor
of
kindergartens
But
costs
could
bar
early
intro
introduction
�
duction
of
kindergartens
Into
the
school
system
Trustee
Colin
Sablston
be
believes
�
lieves
there
Is
a
good
possi
possibility
�
bility
that
kindergartens
could
be
a
reality
by
fall
1972
Sablston
is
chairman
of
a
committee
of
trustees
teach
teachers
�
ers
and
administration
staff
that
has
studied
for
the
past
two
years
the
possibility
of
establishing
public
kinder
gartens
In
this
school
dis
trict
At
present
there
are
a
dozen
private
kindergartens
in
Prince
George
where
parents
pay
12
to
15
per
month
Tuesday
night
on
a
recom
recommendation
�
mendation
by
Sabistons
com
committee
�
mittee
the
school
board
went
on
record
In
favor
of
public
kindergartens
It
was
a
breakthrough
Sablston
si
Id
to
have
kin
kindergartens
�
dergartens
adopted
as
a
de
desirable
�
sirable
policy
He
added
It
became
a
mat
matter
�
ter
of
record
Now
It
is
a
mat
matter
�
ter
of
practicality
Secretary
treasurer
Mac
Carpenter
and
the
school
board
finance
committeehas
been
given
the
task
of
find
ing
the
cost
and
the
space
re
quirements
for
a
system
of
kindergartens
for
Prince
George
district
students
An
estimated
2000
students
would
be
ready
for
kinder
kindergarten
�
garten
next
fall
If
these
students
attended
kindergartens
half
a
day
they
could
be
fitted
into
about
50
classrooms
Sablston
said
If
the
cost
of
50
extja
teachers
and
class
classrooms
�
rooms
to
make
public
kinder
kindergartens
�
gartens
possible
cost
tax
taxpayers
�
payers
half
a
mill
It
might
be
very
desirable
However
Sablston
said
If
kindergartens
are
found
to
cost
about
five
mills
they
might
not
be
so
desirable
WvWIJbPi
ia
COLIN
SABISTOM