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The Windsor Star du lieu suivant : Windsor, Ontario, Canada • 22

Publication:
The Windsor Stari
Lieu:
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Date de parution:
Page:
22
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

nyiTpr' piH 22 The Windsor Star, Monday, March 27, 1972 XP 8, S.v -f 't- r. TORONTO (CP) Robert Lome Stanfield received a unique endorsation on the weekend: Pierre Elliott Trudeau said he thinks that Mr. Stanfield would be an effective prime minister. The prime minister was asked to comment on the opposition leaders capabilities in an interview with Joe Morgan of CKEY radio, which was broadcast Sunday. Mr.

Trudeau said that he doesnt know Mr. Stanfield any better than the Conservative leader knows him. But how good would he be as prime minister? Im sure hed be effective. He was premier of a province (Nova Scotia) for several years. He did some good things and some bad.

Hed have a batting average which would be something less than 1.000 and so do I but what the exact figure would be you call it. The people will when we have a general election. Y' St YY Yt- Ste, onKecs' 5 slv Wg i. 1 KL4 X'- I -t m4f 4 -wW i r.nrV-f-t frW 'if 7wf 4 Indians on warpath PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) The Hopi Indians tore down a two-mile fence erected by their Navajo neighbors.

A Navajo Tribe spokesman said such action could have unfortunate consequences. A dispute between the two Northern Arizona tribes boiled up over the weekend over 1.8 million acres of land the government once ruled should be jointly used by the two tribes. A Hopi delegation was to go to Washington today to discuss the situation with the Bureau of Indian Affairs and members of President Nixons staff. The Hopi tribe live on a 2.4 million acre reservation surrounded entirely by the 24,000 square mile Navajo Reservation of 130,000 inhabitants. At issue is 1,859,000 acres of mesa and barren flatlands at the northern end of the reservation.

The Hopis claim that the Navajos have built fences to keep Hopi livestock out of the area and said 8,000 Navajos live there, compared with seven Hopi families. Saturday the Hopis called on Gov. Jack Williams to send National Guard troops into the area. Williams declined, saying it was a government matter. 'ivk- PI Alt 7 5 holy nosAinr vn 4 1 4 i 1 HSn 5.

rot nr o' -i, fir S'v -gg a r- y-ri i H-. jl yyv nil a r- 5f. i j. '-J ft- iA. 0'- ''''Ai r-'- A- rt K- fv 'If 4 Photos by Cec Southward A modern-day Pony Express parked outside Holy Rosary Church Sunday ready to tell people of the new Holy Rosary Educational and Recreational Centre which opens today new centre They came hack ATLANTA, Ga.

(AP) The alligator population in the vast Okefenokee Swamp of South George is staging a comeback because of tough laws enacted in recent years, and fears that the large reptile might vanish are lessening. Alligators were hunted to near extinction because of the demand for products made from their tough hides and they remain on the department of the interiors official list of endangered species. But the alligator population is growing rapidly again in the huge Okefenokee Swamp one of its few remaining strongholds. Three years ago, poachers roamed the Okefenokee, killing the reptiles and skinning their hides for sale at $7 a foot to legally licensed dealers. Now the price of an alligator hide might best be computed in terms of the fines and imprisonment that can be imposed for possessing it and the poachers are almost if not completely-gone from the Okefenokee.

'i ifjf 'i i Wl 7 ZXf Xf 4 111 I I VyV Yf. lit iu impressed with the art work, asked a volunteer: Who did all of this work? The kids from your own neighborhood, was the And that summed up what the new Holy Rosary centre is all about: active, sustained neighborhood involvement and participation. The $800,000 complex is unique in the province. It marks the first time a school board, a municipality and a citizens group have all worked together on such a project from start to finish. Living and learning will be combined in an open concept-open design.

Resource people will be brought into the centre from many parts of Windsor, rather than having area people go outside their community. The new centre will house a community focus with meeting rooms, day care facilities, a gymnasium, a swimming pool, and a library which recreation director Malcolm hopes will be geared to senior citizens and ethnic groups. Mr. Malcolm said the centre the separate school begins operations today, the community centre will be finished by May will operate on a seven-day basis. The centre also hopes to take advantage of the skills of the people w'ho live in the area.

We could have a guy around here who is good at woodworking. Well, maybe hed like to teach a course on it to other people. This concept is endless in its variations, he added. We could have courses in home repairs, oral French, gardening, workshops, you name it. This centre will be for everybody who lives around here, Mr.

Malcolm said. And that is where the van played an important role. The vehicle was an instant attraction to children particularly. As soon as it rounded a corner, the public address blaring, they ran out from school yards, from their houses, they rode up to it on bikes, surrounded it with their kites, pet dogs, hockey sticks and brothers and sisters. By BRUCE BLACKADAR A motorized town crier hit the streets in the Drouillard Road area Saturday and Sunday bringing with it good news of a very optimistic feature in that neighborhoods future life.

The two-year old dream of the East Windsor Citizens Committee a community school which would serve as a focal point for the whole area will be realized finally when the Holy Rosary Educational and Recreational Centre opens today. The committee chose a novel way to tell the people all about it by borrowing a St. Clair College van, loading it with workers, pamphlets, and art objects done by neighborhood children, and driving up and down area streets. The colorful vehicle People Power WTitten on the back and Citizens Victory on the front stopped at intersections, parked in front of Holy Rosary Church to inform parishioners after Sunday mass, and attracted a wide variety of responses from sometimes very confused but friendly onlookers. Children ran after it.

Dogs chased it. But the message worked. Elizabeth Marcus, an EWCC worker, estimated that volunteers in the van had made about 400 house calls Saturday alone. We got a lot of people who said they were willing to participate in the programs. They want to help see this community centre grow, she said.

The success of the van approach Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, we are touring this neighborhood to tell you of the new Holy Rosary a voice inside boomed out into the streets over a public address system was helped by the enthusiasm of the crew inside. The crew included EWCC volunteers, a community school consultant, and one of the centres new directors, Keith Malcolm. One neighbor who strolled through the van, obviously x'i -H VY i i 5-y Froggie went on warrin PENANG, Malaysia (AP) Two species of frogs battled for five hours Sunday, an event local residents believe portends a coming disaster but which zoologists say is a fight for breeding grounds. Fisherman Osman Bin Mahmud, 54, reported the two species involved were dark brown and yellow-skinned and about 70 died. I saw a mass of frogs gathering by the stream as I shined my light along the banks.

It was like two armies gathering for battle. The croaking was very loud when they began to fight, clawing at each other. Local residents say the latest disaster following a frog war was floods early last year in which about 50 persons died. i 'V -Y 1 WV 1 x-- -r i v. 1 c't i etc Jt i -i, e- i Fischer to opt out REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Chess wizard Bobby Fischer of the United States has informed local officials he will not play the second half of his world title match against the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky in Iceland, the president of the local chess association said Saturday.

Gudmundur G. Thorarinsson said the International Chess Federation should tackle the problem. Fischer had requested a change in financial conditions for the match and was turned down by both Reykjavik and Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The two cities have been named as sites for the title competition half to be played in each city. 1, 1 v- A y- 0" 1) i Vi "-Sf- yty Parade if xbYp sl'xr- A s- tv -w 7 kj 4 I A vi W' Yx 3 is1 vi NNfr 3' i vV aY Y'.

5. 4 wl Ui Yxi 4 Ij, 4 y. T- '7 t4 Vi VyY 'Y. 'j 'y 5. fv -Y i Y- 4f, 1 sr In i' DIED James Cameron Armer, 87, an adviser to the Canadian government on metal production during the Second World War, in Toronto Margaret Dale, 96, a leading Broadway actress in the early part of the century who played major character roles in the 1940s, in New York.

Yvan Dugre, 58, active in horse-racing circles in Sherbrooke, and Montreal, apparently of a heart attack in Montreal. Rabbi Eliahu Pardes, 80, chief rabbi of Jerusalem for the last 12 years, and chief rabbi of the Sephardic community of Jews originating in Middle Eastern and African countries, in Jerusalem. Dr. William Nkomo, 57, first black president of South African Institute of Race Relations, of a heart attack, in Pretoria, South Africa. SETBACK Princess Anne suffered a minor setback Sunday in her campaign to win a place in Britains Olympic equestrian team in Crookham, Eng.

The Queens 21-year-old daughter failed to hold an early lead and finished eigth in her first competition since winning the European three-day horse trial championship last year. OUCII! Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, fell and broke her leg while skiing Sunday on Mt. Tecumseh in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.

CRITICAL Former U.S. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, the onetime King of Harlem, remained in critical condition Sunday in Miamis Jackson Memorial Hospital. Powell, 63, has been listed as critical in the hospitals intensive care unit for a week. STAYING ON A spokesman for Louis Rasminsky, governor of the Bank of Canada, said Sunday in Ottawa, that Mr.

Rasminsky has no immediate intention of resigning his post. WINNER Adrah Peggy Thatcher, widow of former Saskatchewan premier Ross Thatcher, won the Liberal party nomination as federal candidate in Regina East constituency Saturday night by acclamation. 4 A'-SA -VVV- kf4 fy am ip4 A I 'A. frY' it i ft'V' vv. A small dog caused slight luuoc ami a little confusion Sunday when it kept jumping in riiwt out of tlin nti Mrg.

Theresa Lalouf, far left, and Mrs. Louise Rolfe, both East Windsor Citizens Committee workers, hand out pamphlets to just one of the many groups of children I in 0t, ft mti 0 in ar mil iim imHi fertAeflfeSi iufintsMAnvf ii.

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Années disponibles:
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