1 / 44
Hucfc
.
.
House
intruder
shot
by
guard
PLUMMEH
30-year-old
Washington
cab
driver,
is
reported
to
have
had
a
criminal
record,
but
was
not
involved
in
any
previous
intrusions
on
the
White
House
'grounds.
'arm7
(
TOURIST
ALERT
)
VANCOUVER
(CP)
-Monday's
Tourist
Alert
listissued
by
the
RCMP.
Following
are
requested
to
contact
the
nearest
RCMP
detachment
for
an
urgent
personal
message:
Neil
Brown,
Oregon
Robert
Dunn,
Calgary
Kenneth
Hewer,
Nanaimo,
B.C.
Irene
Ollerich,
Vancouver
Raymond
Paquette,
Saskatchewan
Dennis
Schlemko,
Regina
Carl
Sisler,
Fort
Worth,
Texas
Merv
and
Sonia
Street,
Unity,
Sak.
Henry
Weenk,
Plenty,
Sask.
Claire
Williamson,
Houston,
Pa.
It's
summertime,
and
the
living
is
easy
for
Greg
and
Brian
Skakun.
The
Huck
Finn-Tom
Sawyer
pair
rolled
up
their
pant
legs,
kicked
off
their
shoes
and
found
fixed
for
life
as
well
as
its
attempts
to
find
out
about
the
planet's
evolution.
Scientists
unjammed
the
pin
by
recreating
the
problem
on
an
identical
lander
here
and
developing
a
command
to
free
the
pin.
There
were
several
anxious
hours
between
the
issuing
of
the
command
and
Viking's
response.
Thecraft
finally
sent
back
pictures
showing
the
arm
in
the
correct
position,
and
then
close-up
shots
of
a
small
section
of
the
red,
rocky
Martian
surface.
A
police
sergeant
said
Plum-mer's
motive
was
unknown.
After
talking
with
Plummer's
parents,
the
sergeant
said:
"He
never
indicated
to
them
he
had
any
qualms
with
the
president."
Plummer,
a
bachelor,
was
estranged
from
his
parents,
he
said.
Secret
Service
spokesman
Jack
Warner,
asked
whether
the
incident
would
cause
any
security
changes
at
the
White
House,
replied:
"We
constantly
review
our
security
procedures
and
find
no
problems
with
the
outer
perimeter
at
this
time."
The
White
House
recently
installed
crash-proof
gates
costing
$550,000.
A
man
crashed
into
the
old
gates
in
a
car
on
Christmas
Day
1974,
and
in
February
1973
an
absent-without-leave
soldier
landed
a
helicopter
on
the
White
House
lawn
amid
a
hail
of
bullets
from
guards.
Last
November
an
unarmed
intruder
came
within
a
few
feet
of
Susan
Ford,
the
president's
daughter,
on
the
first
of
his
three
illicit
entries
onto
the
grounds.
But
no
previous
incident
resulted
in
death
or
serious
injury.
Plummer
was
shot
several
hundred
feet
from
the
White
House,
where
President
Ford
and
his
family
were
in
their
second
floor
quarters.
It
was
not
known
whether
Ford
heard
the
shot,
but
White
House
spokesmen
say
he
was
informed
of
the
incident.
(FEATURED
INSIDE)
Residents
of
Wells
relax
in
Good
Eats
Cafe
and
wonder
if
anyone
will
come
to
visit
a
sewage
system.
Page
17.
0
Business,
6;
Classified,
18-27;
Comics,
13;
Editorial,
4;
International,
5;
Home
and
Family,
14-15;
Horoscopes,
16;
Local
and
Provincial,
3,
7,
17;
National,
2;
Sports,
9-13;
Television,
13.
The
Olympics
Full
coverage
of
weekend
themselves
Lake.
TttlkORISTS
REPORTS
Security
tightens
MONTREAL
(CP)
-
The
Star
says
the
RCMP
is
taking
seriously
Australian-based
reports
that
international
terrorists
are
on
their
way
to
disrupt
the
Olympic
Games
here.
The
newspaper
quotes
an
unnamed
force
spokesman
as
saying
that
the
RCMP
security
and
intelligence
squad
is
"seriously
investigating"
the
report,
although
no
concrete
developments
have
come
out
of
the
investigation
so
far.
"We
obtained
our
information
through
regular
channels
as
well
as
international
news
agencies,"
The
Star
quotes
him
as
saying.
"But
the
information
we
have
is
too
sketchy
and
not
confirmed.
It
will
take
several
days
before
we
will
be
able
to
say
anything
definite."
The
information
indicated
the
terrorists
would
stop
over
in
Australia,
the
newspaper
says.
Defection
denied
j
.
Uttr
BORZOV
events,
pages
9
and
10.
gi
15'
Copy
Monday,
July.
26,
1976
Vol.
20;
No.
144
Prince
George,
British
Columbia
POLICIES
THREATEN
TO
CREATE
'BACKLASH'
g
g
8
Tom
and
HAD
THREE-FOOT
PIPE
White
fatally
WASHINGTON
(AP)
-Authorities
are
puzzled
about
what
motivated
a
man
who
was
fatally
shot
by
a
White
House
guard
on
the
mansion's
lawn
after
scaling
a
fence,
brandishing
a
three-foot
pipe
and
ignoring
the
guard's
command
to
halt.
Washington
police
said
the
intruder,
Chester
Plummer,
raised
the
three-foot
pipe
"in
a
threatening
manner"
and
ignored
repeated
orders
to
halt
from
the
Executive
Protective
Service
(EPS)
guard
on
Sunday
night.
The
guard,
Pte.
Charles
Garland,
fired
a
single
shot
that
hit
Plummer
in
the
upper
left
chest
and
felled
him
about
60
feet
from
the
eight-foot
fence
he
had
just
scaled.
The
police
said
Plummer,
a
Viking's
PASADENA,
Calif.
(AP)
-With
Viking
1
back
to
almost
perfect
health,
scientists
are
preparing
for
this
week's
search
for
life
on
Mars
man's
first
scientific
analysis
of
another
planet's
surface.
On
Sunday,
scientists
freed
a
pin
that
had
jammed
the
lander's
telescoping
sampling
arm,
which
on
Wednesday
will
reach
out
and
scoop
up
50
cubic
centimetres
of
Martian
soil-enough
to
fill
a
shot
glass.
Analysis
of
that
soil
in
the
lander's
miniature
laboratory
is
the
key
to
Viking's
search
TODAY
Citizen
photo
by
Dave
Milne
a
raft
for
a
recent
day
of
fishing
on
Cluciilz
MONTREAL
(CP)
Spokesmen
for
the
immigration
department
said
today
they
have
no
reports
of
any
requests
for
political
asylum
from
athletes
competing
at
the
Olympic
Games.
The
statements
came
in
response
to
unconfirmed
broadcast
reports
that
Soviet
sprinter
Valery
Borzov
had
defected
to
Canada
or
had
been
kidnapped.
The
report
was
prompted
by
Borzov's
failure
to
appear
for
the
200-metre
preliminary
heat
Sunday.
Mikhail
Efimov,
press
attache
for
the
Soviet
Olympic
team,
said
Sunday
night
that
Borzov,
winner
of
the
gold
medal
for
the
100-metre
sprint
in
the
1972
Games,
had
not
appeared
because
he
had
aggravated
an
injury
in
the
100-metre
final
Saturday.
(
THE
WEATHER
)
Mainly
cloudy
skies
with
late
afternoon
and
evening
thunder
showers
are
predicted
for
today
and
Tuesday,
A.
trace
of
rainfall
was
recorded
for
Saturday
and
Sunday
at
the
airport.
Saturday's
high
was
21
,
with
a
high
of
22
recorded
Sunday.
Overnight
low
was
8.
Low
today,
4
with
a
high
of
18
predicted.
On
July
26,
1975
the
high
was
18;
the
low,
11.
Cloudy
skies
and
showers
are
predicted
for
the
next
few
days,
Custody
dispute
fatal
TISHOMINGO,
Okla.
(AP)
It
is
a
drama
acted
out
many
times:
estranged
parents
battling
for
the
custody
of
their
children.
Steve
and
Jean
Cain
were
such
parents.
Three-year-old
Cody
was
the
focus
of
their
tug
of
war.
Now
father
and
son
are
dead
and
the
mother
is
in
hospital
in
shock.
Three
of
the
father's
friends
are
charged
with
second-degree
murder
and
.
both
families
are
ripped
by
heartbreak.
As
in
other
custody
battles,
all
legal
remedies
exhausted,
the
father
had
attempted
an
abduction.
Cain,
described
by
his
lawyer
as
a
"very
mild-mannered
young
man,"
travelled
from
New
Mexico
to
Tishomingo
to
get
the
child,
accompanied
by
three
friends
he
had
known
throughout
his
school
years.
'
Their
abduction
attempt
was
well-planned:
one
of
the
four
knocked
at
Mrs.
Cain's
door
asking
to
use
the
phone.
When
admittance
was
gained,
Cody
was
grabbed
and
the
four
fled
in
separate
cars.
But
they
had
not
reckoned
on
the
hot
pursuit
by
the
maternal
relatives,
and
certainly
not
on
the
wreck
which
threw
the
three-year-old
out
of
the
car,
slamming
him
against
some
rocks
in
full
view
of
relatives
on
both
sides
of
the
family.
The
car
carrying
Cain
and
his
son
hit
an
embankment
and
overturned
three
times
after
being
bumped
in
the
rear
by
the
pickup
truck
driven
by
the
child's
maternal
uncle,
Clay
Martin,
witnesses
said.
Temperatures
page
2
1
1
w
Little
hope
seen
for
improvement
WASHINGTON
(CP)
-
Relations
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
have
become
tense
and
there
is
little
chance
of
any
significant
improvement
in
the
near
future,
says
a
research
project
released
today.
The
Canadian-American
Committee,
made
up
of
business,,
labor,
agricultural
and
professional
leaders
in
both
countries,
says
in
a
report
that
Canada
has
undertaken
policies
in
recent
years
aimed
at
preserving
and
enhancing
its
national
identity.
"These
initiatives,
which
in
a
number
of
instances
have
appeared
to
outsiders
to
border
on
protectionism,
have
come
as
often
from
provincial
governments
as
from
the
federal
government,"
it
says.
"(They)
threaten
to
create
a
backlash
among
an
increasing
number
of
U.S.
citizens
and
one
is
tempted
to
ask
whether
Canada
has
given
sufficient
attention
to
the
distinction
between
what
is
politically
desirable
in
the
short
run
and
what
is
economically
necessary
in
the
long
run.
"At
some
point
a
danger
will
arise
that
by
placing
the
highest
priority
on
too
many
objectives
at
one
time,
the
capacity
for
bilateral
co-operation
will
be
exceeded."
Momentum
'spent
The
committee,
sponsored
by
the
C.
D.
Howe
Research
Institute
in
Canada
and
the
National
Planning
Association
here,
adds:
"The
momentum
for
positive,
forward-looking
bilateral
agreements
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
appears
to
be
spent,
at
least
for
the
present."
Co-chairmen
of
the
Canadian-American
Committee
are
Robert
Macintosh,
executive
vicepresident
of
the
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
in
Toronto,
and
Richard
Schmeelk,
a
partner
in
Solomon
Brothers'
investment
bank
in
New
York.
The
study
says
relations
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
became
progressively
closer
in
the
years
immediately
after
the
Second
World
War
because
of
government
policy
decisions
and
the
actions
of
individuals
responding
to
incentives
created
by
natural
market
forces.
"As
this
process
continued,
Canada's
ability
to
sustain
a
separate
identity
from
the
United
States
was
perceived
as
a
problem
by
an
increasing
number
of
Canadians.
"The
government
of
Prime
Minister
Trudeau
has
sought
to
mobilize
this
concern
into
support
for
policies
that
would
override
the
integrative
tendencies
of
natural
market
forces."
The
committee
contends
that
recent
Canadian
policies
toward
the
United
States
have
been
based
mainly
Police
start
hunt
for
50-time
wife
LONDON
(AP)
-
Scotland
Yard
is
looking
for
a
slim
blonde
who
married
for
money,
not
love,
at
least
50
times.
All
of
her
bridegrooms
are
illegal.
immigrants
who
thought
marriage
would
enable
them
to
stay
in
Britain.
The
Yard
said
Saturday
it
has
traced
50
"husbands"
of
the
unidentified
woman
Turks,
Moroccans,
Cypriots,
Indians
and
Egyptians.
They
said
the
men
were
approached
by
marriage
brokers
who
set
up
the
ceremonies
for
the
equivalent
of
$630
each,
including
$180
for
the
bride,
Bride
and
grooms
met
only
once,
just
before
the
registry
office
weddings,
and
parted
with
a
handshake
right
after
signing
the
book.
Now
the
"husbands"
find
they
are
illegally
married,
still
on
two
hypotheses,
neither
subjected
to
careful
research.
"First,
it
is
assumed
that
closer
economic
integration
between
Canada
and
the
United
States
necessarily
implies
greater
integration
in
other
areas
cultural,
social
and
especially
political.
(Given
the
asymmetry
in
the
size
of
the
two
economies
and
populations
it
is
further
assumed
that
the
United
States
would
dominate
this
integrative
process.)
"Second,
there
is
an
assumption
either
that
policies
aimed
at
overriding
natural
market
forces
will
not
result
in
significant
costs
to
the
Canadian
economy,
or
if
they
do
that
these
costs
will
be
accepted
by
the
majority
of
Canadians."
Queen
ends
Canada
visit
LONDON
(AP)
-
Queen
Elizabeth
returned
to
Britain
today
from
the
Olympic
Games
in'Montreal.
With
her
when
she
landed
at
London's
Heathrow
airport
aboard
a
Canadian
Forces
Boeing
707
jetliner
were
her
younger
sons,
Prince
Andrew,
and
Prince
Edward.
Prince
Philip
is
staying
on
at
the
Games
as
president
of
the
International
Equestrian
Federation.
Buckingham
Palace
said
he
is
to
return
to
Britain
Aug.
2.
illegally
in
Britain,
out
of
pocket
and
subject
to
deportation.
Most
came
to
the
country
without
papers
in
search
of
jobs
and
permanent
residence.
The
Yard
said
the
marriage-of-con
venience
bride
is
in
her
40s
and
used
wigs,
various
makeups,
aliases
and
false
addresses
at
London's
36
registry
offices
and
others
in
surrounding
towns.
Reagan
picks
running
mate
LOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Ronald
Reagan
said
today
he
has
selected
U.S.
Senator
Richard
Schweiker
of
Pennsylvania
as
his
vice-presidential
running
mate
if
he
wins
the
Republican
party's
nomination
for
the
United
States
presidency.
(
NOW
HEAR
THIS)
The
Cariboo
and
Central
Interior
are
getting
lots
of
media
coverage
these
days.
Fort
St.
James
was
the
subject
of
a
recent
Weekend
Magazine
article,
Prince
George
was
mentioned
in
the
Victoria
Colonist,
and
now
Barkerville
may
be
the
subject
of
a
'name"
publication.
The
National
Geographic
had
a
photography
crew
in
Barkerville
this
weekend
and
is
putting
together
a
B.C.
feature.
A
Prince
George
thief
is
going
to
have
to
take
lessons
to
use
an
item
stolen
sometime
early
Saturday.
The
item
is
a
custom-made
$1,200
Gibson
Dove
Special
guitar
and
it
is
one
of
only
seven
models
in
Canada.
George
Staddon,
owner
of
the
guitar
and
a
folksinger,
hopes
it
will
be
returned
since
the
thief
probably
would
be
unable
to
pawn
it,.
Those
planning
to
take
in
the
Fran
Dowie
Review
in
Barkerville
can
take
advantage
of
three
showtimes
during
the
weekends
1
p.m.,
4:30
p.m.,
and
6:30
p.m.
The
Citizen's
item
on
the
review
Friday
missed
the
two
earlier
timesi
Reservations
can
be
made
by
calling
the
provincial
parks
branch
office
in
Barkerville.