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The Ottawa Citizen from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • 6

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A6 The Ottawa Citizen, Sunday, April 17, 1994 The easy way to Mm CANADA own a home. XT A- 'ECONOMY Montreal police nab fugitive featured on TV crime show FOR MORE INFORMATION 7454567 GRG FINANCIAL SERVICES INC. 1661 Montreal Unit 6, Gloucester i i- ihiii. i. mi 1 1 i ii 9 "i in ft ft f.i 8 a awwr jtjtf ijr 1 .1 1 ll i I I J.

UUMrAn N.V GUARANTEED 4 KflY lJWTZ INVESTMENT I 11 V9mLl-'7 CERTIFICATE Tl 0 1 ftp- .55 .30 f15 tOI 1 YEAR I GICORRRSP same neighborhood. But the fingerprints of the suspect didn't match those of the wanted man. Later Friday police received another tip, arrested a second man. "We've got the right guy now," Det-Lt Jean Ostiguy said. "We've been in contact with New Bedford police and we're convinced he's the real David Vieira.

He used several aliases, including the name Antonio Pacheco." Vieira worked under that alias which happens to be the name of a well-known soccer player in Portugal at a Montreal fish market Vieira was also a member of the Sports Montreal Benfica club. He volunteered as a bartender for the club for the last two years and played goalie for its soccer team. 90-119 a 5 YEAR GIC Aaron Derfel SouthamStar Network MONTREAL A 5'fe-year search for a U.S. fugitive wanted in the stabbing death of his wife ended Friday with the arrest of the wrong man, then the right one, David A. Vieira, 42, known among Montreal's Portuguese as the goalie of a community soccer team, was arrested at his mid-town home a day after the TV show Unsolved Mysteries broadcast a story about the 1988 slaying of Alice Arruda.

She was stabbed 24 times in her apartment in New Bedford, Massachusetts, 50 kilometres south of Bostoa Hours before the arrest, Montreal police, acting on tips from people in the Portuguese community, had picked up a man in his 40s at another apartment in the DAYS St G.I.C.'S 1 YEAR 2 YEAR 3 YEAR 4 YEAR 5 YEAR 6.625 6.90 7.15 7.55,. ANNUAL 6.15 R.R.S.P. 6.15 6.625 6.875 7.50 7.15 6.00 6.375 6.75 7.00 7.50 NO HANDLING CHARGES RATES SUBJECT TO CHANGE IDS ill The Montreal Gazette 'rlASSFV- Mf Sli. MuSw oUi 2 II IM fill I I IMII II IHWlll III I mmmwm II, 3 7 0 cp photo Prime Minister Jean Chretien escorts European Commission president Jacques Delores into Parliament Building on Saturday EC president suggests economic 'security council' to stabilize world markets MOTHEI B.B.Q. Chicken 9.95 B.B.Q.

Sirloin 10.95 B. B.Q. Shrimp 10.95 B.B.Q. Ribs Chicken ....12.95 B.B.Q. dinners are served with a Caesar salad, Sunday to Thursday evenings for a limited time only.

TUCKER'S M-3 HWtl 61 York Street 241-6525 miMlHUlll imiMUif l.WIU-I.UH council must include representatives from African and Asian nations, he said, acknowledging global problems could no longer be solved by a few industrialized nations. "No one can say we can continue to live the way we did before." Iklfji i 1 1 "cry THE COMPUTER PARTS STORE 170 MB 340 MB $289 1 $415 MOTHERBOARDS 386 DX-40 I I 486 DX-33 VLB $169 $539 SPECIALS Sony CD ROM I I Microsoft Double Speed Mouse 16 bit Sound Card Version 2.0 $399 $49.95 II I I I I I I LJ Bring this ad. to PC WORLD and receive one of the FREE options listed above with the purchase of any of the following systems. ABSOLUTELY PC ANNOUNCEMENT i mm 1 By Dianne Rinehart The Canadian Press 7 The United Nations should set up an economic security council to deal with threats to the stability of world markets, European Commission president Jacques Delors says. "There's a need for our countries to use their strength together," he said in a speech Saturday.

The council would deal with everything from fluctuating currencies to environmental problems brought on by fast-paced economic globalization. "We absolutely need to find new solutions to avoid destabilization of world economic order." Delors said people must be prepared for radical changes to their social safety nets, education, investments, workplace and unions to avoid the the threats of political instability, high unemployment and increased competition. "Nothing is sacred," he said. Among the changes Delors expects: Social safety nets can no longer be financed through taxes added to the cost of expensive labor. Instead, he suggested, taxes should be placed on anything that degrades the environment The education system must be radically altered.

"The speed of change in the economy makes it necessary to be educated throughout one's life." Labor costs must be brought down. The organization of work must change radically and training must be continuous. "I think it's very sad when people at 50 have to retire. We must organize things differently." Union leaders must take into account the unemployed as well as workers. They cannot afford to "just throw the ball back into the employer's lap." Delors said it was clear1 more countries have to work together to avoid destabilization.

"What I am proposing to do in Europe also applies to the rest of the world." A UN world economic security mpA on? II FH II I WAaWAKAOiV: I EI GAYE ELIZABETH MOFFETT GAYE E. MOFFETT, R.N., B.Sc. M.Ed., announces the official opening of G.E.M. HEALTH CARE SERVIESSERVICE DE SANTE. GAYE E.

MOFFETT OWNERPRESIDENT is a bilingual sixth generation Ottawan with twenty years health care and business experience. G.E.M. Health Care ServicesService de Sante specializes in private duty nursing, health and home care services, for private, government and institutional clients 365 days a year, 24 hours a day. II I ttwaw mmmrjittm mtmn! rm'ti 1 II Health Care Services Service de Sant6 383 PARKDALE SUITE 407 761-7474 till A lt i 1 1 hlH IP AW I Y4 if KM OTTAWA Wednesday, April 20 5:00 PM Ottawa Hilton 150 Albert Street Date: Session Starts: Place: MAKES If A A ROOM MOST? MBA and Graduate Diploma in Organizational Training programmes from the Centre for Innovative Management at Athabasca University. Uniquely designed and delivered electronically right to your home by Canada's leader in distance education.

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About The Ottawa Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
2,113,644
Years Available:
1898-2024