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 - n mTrviSjfiHHHIiHHiHBBHBBfl N aF Jrcv i r V- law M I 1 ffllMHW I n gnu m jfyTFarvjj HStA i I A 1 J mWiXlPl I R MA Ml traJSHa i r1 Mvmmi m II lllfitra Sfelff IIS RBM WW I 111 Ife Ea WW a llif -X anHmil K III ill iiiim m Wml I T i - rTBMMm W J jk rfi 8mtjw i - m t iwhh tmr HiBHjmBBHLKtvti 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 S 10c Copy PRINCE GEORGE BRITISH COLUMBIA 5ir -siMSlH AAnramnf Rnx 1 4IRe9 COIl lu III PI 161 1111110 Ilia HHRig iPIMNHNMHHR J PI t- B JHlSl 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