- / -
IMMIGRATION
MINISTER
INTERVENES
Dep
orfati
on
order
d
eloyed
for
city's
Leiva
family
until
the
minister
completes
After
hearing
from
the
under
custody,"
Bradshaw
sidering
allowing
the
Leiva
for-
landed
immigrant
application
must
first
to
to.
JAMIE
LAMB
by
an
inquiry.
Immigration
officials,
the
said.
"We'll
wait
for
further
children
to
remain
In
school
status.
Canada
Manpower.
If
any
Citizen
Staff
Reporter
Leivas
have
decided
to
word
from
Vancouver."
in
Prince
George'
to
finish
Earlier
this
week,
an
Andras
Canadian
can
fill
the
job,
Immigration
Minister
Ricardo
Leiva,
35,
his
postpone
any
flight
from
Lawyer
Ray
Cantillon
their
school,
year,"
Cantillon
aide
said
the
minister
the
Canadian,
rather
than
Robert
Andras
has
intervened
wife,
and
two
children
were
Canada
pending
further
told
the
Citizen
he
has
discussed
said.
"He's
also
looking
did
not
have
the
power
to
Leiva,
will
be
given
the
job.
in
the
case
of
Ricardo
required
to
voluntarily
word
from
the
minister.
the
situation
with
into
the
possibility
that
the
delay
a
deportation
order..
Oberle
noted
that
with
unemployment
Leiva
of
Prince
George
who
leave
Canada
by
midnight
Jack
Bradshaw,
senior
John
Gilbert,
Toronto-Broudview
Leivas
can
fly
to
Cuba
or
Prince
George-Peace
figures
currently
was
to
have
left
Canada
tonight
or
face
deportation
immigration
counsellor
In
MP
and
NDP
Costa
Rica
and
apply
as
River
MP
Frank
Oberle
expressed
running
at
seven
and
today
to
avoid
deportation
to
Chile.
Prince
George,
said
no
immigration
critic.
Canadian
landed
immigrants,
concern
earlier
this
one-half
per
cent,
he
doubts
to
Chile.
The
family
has
faced
deportation
formal
action
will
be
taken
"He
has
taken
the
matter
rather
than
fly
all
the
week
that
the
Leivas
would
if
Leiva
would
be
allowed
to
The
Prince
George
immigration
for
the
past
year
against
the
Leivas
if
they
up
with
Andras
and
it's
now
way
to
Spain."
not
be
able
to
teturn
to
come
back
to
Canada.
office
received
a
after
failure
to
qualify
as
are
not
out
of
Canada
to:.
under
full
investigation
by
Cantillon
said
there
is
no
Canada.
,
Gerry
Goldstein,
one
of
telephone
call
Wednesday
refugees.
Leiva
fled
to
night.
the
minister,."
Cantillon
permenant
immigration
office
Oberle
based
his
remarks
Leiva's
Vancouver
from
the
Vancouver
regional
Canada
after
the
military
"If
the
family
does
not
said.
in
Cuba,
but
a
on
Leiva's
need
for
a
Manpower
lawyers,
said
the
minister
office
requesting
local
coup
in
Chile
in
September,
take
voluntary
departure
"In
addition
to
delaying
Mexican-office
officials
visits
job
requirement.
has
the
power
to
waive
the
officials
not
to
enforce
the
1973,
and
arrived
in
Prince
by
midnight,
the
department
enforcement
of
the
deportation
the
island
four
times
a
B.C.
Railway
has
offered
Manpower
job
requirement
Leiva
deportation
order
LEIVA
George
in
March,
1974.
will
not
take
them
order,
Andras
is
con
year
to
accept
applications
Leiva
his
job
back
but
the
on
humanitarian
grounds.
Socred
backs
noose
OTTAWA
(CP)
-
Social
Credit
Leader
Real
Caouette
painted
a
verbal
picture
of
Canadian
society
on
the
verge
of
anarchy
Wednesday
and
blasted
the
government
for
.
ignoring
public
opinion
during
debate
on
a
bill
to
abolish
capital
punishment.
.
"We
have
come
to
the
point
where
we
are
encouraging
violence,"
said
Mr,
Caouette,
who
used
his
home
province
of
Quebec
to
illustrate
how
he
thought
society
was
coming
apart
at
the
seams.
The
seeds
of
an
evolution
were
planted
when
parents
were(
told
to
stop
spanking
their
children
because
it
is
not
right,
Mr.1
Caouette
said.
As
a
result,
children
no
longer
respect,
their
parents,
or
their
teachers.
Teachers
no
longer
respect
the
school
boards
and
the
school
boards
no
longer
respect
the
govern--,
ment.
Earlier,.
Liberal
Norman
'Cafik
(Ontario)
and
Progressive
Conservative
David
MacDonald
(Egmont)
argued
that
capital
punishment
should
be
abolished.;
In
separate
speeches
they
agreed
Canada
is
one
of
the
most
peaceful
nations
but
that
many
Canadians
perceive
more,
violence
in
society
than
actually
exists.
Mr.
Caouette'
also
said
society
is
blitzed
by
violence
on
television;
movies,,
radio
and
live
theatre.
"Everybody,
including
MPs,
is
afraid,"
he
said,
adding
that
,
people
are
being
threatened
over
the
telephone.
It
is
in
this
climate
that.
the
Canadian
public
wants
capital
punishment
retained
and
the
government
should
hold
a
national
referendum
to
let
them
prove
it,
said
the
MP.
The
entire
Liberal
cabinet
should
resign
and
be
replaced
with
people
who
represent
their
constituents,
he
added.
Solicitor-General
Warren
Allmand,
who
is
piloting
the
bill
through
the
House
with
Justice
Minister
Ron
Basford,
has
said
he
would
resign
if
Parliament
voted
for
capital
punishment.
"I'll
tell
him
squarely
he
hasn't
even
got
the
courage
or
the
gumption
to
resign,
given
the
attitude
of
the
population,"
Mr.
Caouette
said.
The
11
members
of
the
Social
Credit
party
would
vote
against
abolition
because
opinion
polls
Indicate
that
is
what
Canadians
want
MPs
to
do.
Although
the
Catholic
Church
in
Quebec
has
stated,
its
support
for
abolition,
Mr.
Caouette
said
he
stands
by
what
the
church
taught
him
in
school
:
'
'That
assassins
should
be
hanged."
At
one
point,
he
turned
to
New
Democrats
beside
him
and
accused
them
of
hy
pocrisy
for
supporting
abolition.
and
abortion
at
the
same
time.
"They
want
to
shoot
him
before
he
comes
into
the
world."
Earlier,
Liberal
Simma
Holt
(Vancouver
Kingsway)
asked
if
cabinet
members
could
vote
as
they
wished.
Prime
Minister
Trudeau
said
they
would.
TODAY
For
sale
bicycles
DOLL'S
DESIGNER:
Barbie
'too
sexyj
OAKLAND,
Ore.
(AP)
Bill
Barton,
who
designed
the
original
Barbie
doll
18
years
ago,
says
he's
disappointed
about
the
way
Barbie
has
grown
up.
"She's
become
a
sex
sym-'bol,"
said
Barton,
who
now
has
his
own
manufacturing
business.
Barbie
originally
was
"a
very
nicely
thought-out
concept
for
a
little
girl,
a
doll
she
could
make
clothes
for,
one
with
natural
features
and
movements,"
Barton
said.
"I
really
have
some
misgivings
about
what's
happening
today.
She
has
just
gotten
too
sexy."
The
Barbie
he
designed
for
s
'AAAAEEEEIII'
The
city
will
auction
45
used
bicycles
at
the
RCMP
building,
999
Brunswick
St.,
at
7
p.m.,
today.
The
unclaimed
can
be
purchased
on
a
cash
basis
only.
Above,
Constable
Mike
Stewart
surveys
the
bicycle
clutter.
Mattel
Inc.,
Barton
said,
"is
very
similar
in
concept
to
the
one
on
the
market
today."
"The
face
and
most
features
are
the
same
except
that
her
features
have
become
exaggerated.
The
clothes
have
become
oversexed."
And,
said
Barton,
"they
give
her
too
big
of
a
bosom,
there,,
for
the
proportions
of
the
doll."
Mattel
could
not
be
reached
for
comment,
"I
don't
know
if
it's
true,
but
I
heard
there
soon
will
be
a
male
doll
with
all
the
manly
features.
That's
going
beyond
the
realm
of
what's
proper,
I
think,"
Barton
said.
Citlun
Pholo
by
IinTmUcr
Extended
lottery
reported
MONTREAL
(CP)
-
La
Presse
says
the
federal
government
has
accepted
a
plan
to
create
a
national
lottery
to
help
Quebec
pay
for
the
Olympics.
The
newspaper
says
in
a
report
from
Quebec
City
that
the
lottery,
to
run
until
1979,
would
provide
about
$300
million
to
defray
part
of
the
.estimated
$900million
deficit
for
staging
the
Games.
After
1979,
proceeds
from
the
lottery
would
be
used
to
support
Canadian
athletes,
the
newspaper
says.
Ten
draws
are
planned.
The
current
Olympic
lottery
ends
with
the
August
draw,
after
the
Olympics
end
on
Aug.
FEATURED
INSIDE
Operations
are
performed
at
Vancouver
General
Hospital,
in
spite
of
continuing
strike,
Page
3.
Ferry
workers
have
decided
to
"harass"
the
provincial
government
as
contract
dispute
goes
on.
Page
7,
A
proposed
oil
pipeline
to
carry
Alaskan
and
foreign
crude
from
Prince
Rupert
to
Edmonton
could
transform
the
west
coast
city
into
a
-major
port.
Page
35.
Paddling
down
a
river
doesn't
always
involve
a
leisurely
trip
to
communicate
with
nature.
Page
15.
Business,
8;
Classified,
16-26;
Comics,
30;
Home
and
Family,
40-41;
Horoscope,
33;
International,'
5;
Local
and
Provincial,
3,
7,
10;
National,
2;
Sports,
13-15;
Television,
31,
.
'
.
The
Thursday,
May
6,
1976
ALBERTA,
Provinces
to
join
inflation
law
fight
EDMONTON
(CP)
-Alberta
has
joined
Saskatchewan
in
"a
major
case
in
terms
of
constitutional
precedence"
in
preparing
arguments
for
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
on
the
constitutionality
of
federal
anti-inflation
legislation.
Lou
Hyndman,
Alberta's
minister
of
federal
and
intergovernmental
affairs,
announced
in
the
legislature
Wednesday
that,
like
Saskatchewan,
Alberta
will
intervene
in
the
federal
request
that
the
court
rule
on
the
constitu
tionality
of
The
Anti-Inflation
Act.
1
The
case
will
be
the
first
major
question
on
the
constitution
the
court
has
had
to
deal
with
since
it
became
the
final
court
of
appeal
for
Canada
in
1949,
Mr.
Hyndman
said
outside
the
House.
The
province
decided
to
intervene,
arguing
the
federal
government
acted
outside
its
powers,
because
it
sees
the
Anti-Inflation-Act
as
an
"aggressive
new
power"
which
will
eventually
tip
the
balance
against
the
provinces
if
allowed
to
stand.
Mr.
Hyndman
said
the
decision
to
get
into
the
argument
did
not
reflect
any
unhappi-ness
with
the
way
wage
and
price
controls
are
being
handled
and
the
anti-inflation
board
is
doing
"a
not
unreasonable
job."
In
making
the
announcement,
Mr.
Hyndman
explained
that
Alberta's
position
is
that
those
portions
of
the
federal
act
dealing
with
the
private
sector
are
beyond
Ottawa's
powers
under
the
British
North
America
Act.
The
peace,
order
and
good
government
clause
has
been
used
as
the
federal
government's
emergency
power
clause
and
usually
has
applied
in
times
of
war,,
In
this
case,
rather
than
an
emergency,
the
federal
government
characterized
inflation
as
"a
matter
of
serious
national
concern."
"Should
that
act
be
found
to
be
within
the
constitutional
powers
of
the
federal
government,,
provincial
constitutional
powers
could
be
seriously
and
permanently
eroded."
;
Alberta's
interventionals
a
matter
of
"serious
and
important
principle,"
he
said.
THE
WEATHER)
Cloudy
skies,
a
few
sunny
periods
and
occasional
rain
showers
are
expected
today
as
a
series
of
weather
disturbances
moved
into
the
Central
Interior,
Sunshine
and
a
few'
showers
are
expected
Friday.
The
high
today,
14C;
the
low
tonight,
3C.
Friday's
high,
18C.
The
high
Wednesday
was
12C;
the
overnight
low
was
1C
and
5.6
mm
of
rain
fell.
The
high
for
May
6,
1975,
was
8C;
the
low,
-2C.
Temperatures
page
2
Vol.
20;"
No.
89
SASKATCHEWAN
Grit
fund
theft
charged
MONTREAL
(CP)
Senator
Louis
de
G.
Giguere
was
ordered
Wednesday
to
appear
in
sessions
court
here
June
1
on
charges
of
theft
of
$16,536
and
breach
of
trust
involving
Liberal
party
funds.,
The
offences
are'
alleged
to
have
taken
place
between
April
20,
1970,
and
April
1,
1975,
during
which
time
the
senator
was
trustee
of
$55,000
contributed
by
various
companies
and
financial
institutions
"for
the
use
and
benefit
of
the
Liberal
party."
Named
as
having
a
"special
Nechako
River
rises;
floods
hit
Vanderhoof
Citizen
staff
reporter
VANDERHOOF
-
A
swelling
Nechako
River
near
here
is
causing
some
residents
to
abandon
their'
houses
and
has
put
part
of
the
Sunny
Slope
Motel
and
Trailer'
Park
under
water.
Bill
Gardner,
owner
of
the
complex,
said
at
11
a.m.
today
NO
PAYMENT
PLAN
It's
cash
on
line
for
Autoplan
now
VANCOUVER
(CP)
-
The
Insurance
Corporation
of-Brit-ish
Columbia's
financing
program
has
been
stopped,
requiring
motorists
to
pay
full
insurance
premiums,
ICBC
spokesman
Jerrold
Beckerman
said
Wednesday.
As
of
May
1,
no
new
instalment
plans
were
being
issued,
said
Mr.
Beckerman.
He
said
that
up
to
that
point
the
Crown
corporation
had
taken
130,000
contracts
6n
the
instalment
program
to
cover
175,000
vehicles
which
totalled
$32
million
in
policies.
Litmem
.
.
Prince
George,
British
Columbia
1
5?
pj
SENATOR
IN
COURT
GIGUERE
that
"the
trailer
park
is
slowly
going
under."
He
said
the
river
rose
three
inches
during
the
night
and
is
still
rising.
"Two
trailers
pulled
out
earlier
in
the
week,
but
the
rest
will
have
to
sit
because
they
would
get
stuck
if
we
tried
to
move
them
out,"
he
said.
Drivers
were
required
to
pay
a
downpayment
of
one
quarter
of
their
premium
with
the
remainder
to
follow
in.quar-terly
payments
due
no.later
than
May
1,
July
1,
and
Nov.
30.
Interest
was
13
per
cent
annually,
ICBC
was
introduced
by
the
former
New
Democratic
Party
government
in
1973.
Earlier
this
year,
the
Social
Credit
government,
which
defeated
the
NDP
in
December,
increased
insurance
premiums
by
an
average
of
130
per
cent.
interest"
in
the
funds
were:
Power
Corp.
of.
Canada,
Ltd.,
Distillers.
Corp.
Ltd.,
Steinberg's
Ltd.,
Canadian
Pacific
Ltd.,
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada,
the
Bank
of
Montreal
and
the
Liberal
Party,
The
breach
of
trust
count
is
punishable
on
conviction
by
up
to14
years
imprisonment
while
the
theft
count
carries
a
maximum
10-year
sentence.
The
charges
were
laid
before
chief
sessions
court
Judge
Andre
Fabien
on
the
basis
of
information
supplied
by
RCMP
Staff-Sgt.
Pierre
Gour-deau.
Per.-y
Creighton,
spokesman
for
the
Provincial
Emergency
Program,
said
most
of
the
flooding
is
occurring
in
the
lower
levels
of
the
municipality:
He
said
some
families
in
a
low
lying
subdivision
were,
cautioned
to
leave
their
homes
because
a
road
leading
to
the
houses
was
flooded.
Creighton
said
the
evacuation
was
urged
as
a
safety
measure.
He
said
no
call
has
yet
been
issued
for
volunteers
to
assist
in
sandbagging.
Creighton
said
sandbagging
currently
is
being
done
by
individuals
around
their
private
residences.
So
far
4,000
sandbags
have
been
put
into
place.
"The
river
is
still
going
up
but
it
is
not
a
major
problem
yet.
We
still
have
another
18
inch
leeway
in
most
places,"
he
said.
Emery
Wilson
regional
engineer
for
the
water
resources
branch
in
Prince
George,
said
the
flooding
is
caused
by
low
level
run-off
and
by
11
inches
of
rain
which
has
fallen
since
Monday.
Although
there
was
no
rain
in
Vanderhoof
at
press
time,
forecasts
call
for
continued
clouds
and
possible
rain.
(NOW
HEAR
THIS
)
The
city's
cleanup
is
going
so
well
now
that
crews
are
making
some
return
tours
of
areas
which
have
already
had
their
week.
Friday
is
the
last
official
day
for
Area
3,
south
of
Patricia
Boulevard
to
Cowart
Road
and
east
of
Victoria
Street,
20th
Avenue
and
Highway
16.
Next
week
the
cleanup
moves
to
the
last
area
south
of
Ferry
Avenue
and
Cowart
Road
and
including
all
subdivisions
specified
for
garbage
pick-up.
Included
are
College
Heights,
Par-kridge
Heights,
Charella,
Starlane
and
Peden
Hill.
The
Prince
George
District
Trail
Guide
has
received
such
enthusiastic
response
that
it
is
now
out
of
print,
However,
hiking
enthuasiasts
need
not
worry.
The
Caledonia
Ramblers
are
printing
more
copies
and
they
should
be
on
local
book
shelves
a
bout
May
24
.
They
will
sell
for
75
opnts.
Two
youngsters
purchased
Jaws-type
rubber
sharks
at
Sears
toy
counter
Wednesday.
"Wow,"
said
one,
"wait
'til
mom
sees
these."
Just
to
be
sure
Mom
got
a
surprise,
the
two
also
purchased
a
package
of
fake
rubber
spiders
and
reptiles.
Mom's
reaction
is
not
known.