Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - April 7, 1983, Winnipeg, Manitoba
4 Winnipeg free april 1983 astronauts ready for stroll outside shuttle Cape a two astronauts Are primed and eager to take a dual space walk today into challengers open cargo Bay first americans in almost a decade to Challenge the hostile Arena outside their Mission specialists Story Musgrave and Donald Peterson were to slip into the five metre 18foot Long cargo Bay Sansregret wants to try to forget continued from Page 1 the Hes a Good it would be different if he had a mile Long if he had been sent to jail it would have been worse that the kid would have gone crazy in Sansregret talked about the night her son walked into her bedroom in 1981 and confessed to killing the she said until that she had no idea he had been using but had caught him smoking i was i believe she he was talking it was he was crying just he still cries about it and has a hard time falling he now just wants to continue hav ing psychiatric attention and try to for attorney general Roland Penner said yesterday there is a possibility the Crown will Appeal the he told reporters he will await the recommendations of a com Mittee of senior Crown who review All cases to decide if a sentence ought to be in late Clad in cumbersome space suits that provide oxygen and protect them from meteor radiation and from extremes of heat and Paul Weitz and Pilot Karol Bobko were to Monitor from Chal lengers Cabin during the hours the space strollers were to work out testing the suits and the tools and techniques for future satellite service and repair at White engineers pre pared plans to Correct the orbit of the communications satellite that went As tray after being ejected from the shuttle they said they would Start firing the crafts Jet thrusters sunday to move it into its intended High orbit Over a period of several suits checked to prepare for their mus grave and Peterson checked their suits in the ships de pressurized Airlock the purpose of the test was to pin Point any troubles in on the fifth flight of the shuttle Columbia in technical problems Deve loped in the suits hours before two astronauts were to take a space walk and the exercise had to be the Only question yesterday involved batteries that Power Small headlamps on the space walkers four Are required for each and Musgrave reported Only seven of 11 on Board were Mission control said the headlamps Are not Essen tial to the while Musgrave and Peter son were to attach rope like tethers to guide wires that run the length of the Bay on both they planned to test hand winches and ropes that May be useful one Day in retrieving Satel Lites or in making emergency repairs to the Jim free press Good he perched on Wilf Braun and Paul Cadena take advantage of the Spring weather to get an Early Start on liquid refreshment took the Edge off the 6 terrible tale of bureaucracy dead mans effects disposed of while son away by Cecil Rosner a Winnipeg Man says the provincial Public trustee seized his dead fathers possessions and gave some of them away without notifying British Bobby shot in heist London a gunmen shot and wounded an unarmed police officer yesterday in Brit Ains second armed robbery in three Days and some officers began patrolling with guns for the first raising a storm in the police officer was wounded in the West Ern port of Bristol by two gunmen who robbed a Bank and later were the shooting came two Days after six men with shotguns robbed a London Security firm of million the biggest Cash theft Ever in police said they were following several leads in the Security firm the biggest since the great train robbery in 1963 in which 6 then Worth was one of the great train Ronald Buster told reporters he wished he had been in on mondays calling it the biggest tickle of All in the Northern City of where criminal use of guns is up 74 per cent since 1979 police announced yesterday that Small to bile units of armed and highly trained officers now Are patrolling the City round the it is the first time permanent gun carrying police have been deployed in Britain the exception of Protection officers for Diplo the decision Drew loud protests from Mem Bers of parliament who want most bobbies to remain As they have been since sir Robert Peel created the police Force in All this will do is encourage certain Crimi nals to go which will Lead to an Escala said opposition labor my Andrew Ben this could mean shootouts with lots of innocent people Roy labors spokesman on police said what we Are getting or risking is a further move away from the traditional policing which has worked so Well in with policemen attached to the Community and with an affectionate relationship to the comm its the most cruel and callous thing you can said Gordon its a terrible tale of bureaucracy gone gillespies died in the beverage room of the Winnipeg hotel police contacted the dead mans sister and eventually called his oldest to identify the body at the Gillespie said the funeral was held March 2 and shortly afterwards he had to Fly to Ottawa on a business trip for a few when he returned lie found the Public trustee was in the process of disposing of his fathers they had already cleaned out his place and Given part of his personal effects away to the salvation said and arranged to have everything else auctioned Gillespie said his had been separated from his wife for a number of years and lived alone in a Garry Street the value of the articles taken by the Public trustee is not the Issue so much As the manner in which they handled the he unusual dispatch he the trustee knew there were next skin so Why they have waited Gillespie asked they acted with unusual dispatch for a govern ment Gillespie said he also was incensed at the attitude of the civil servants handling the he said he was told a Silver ring belonging to his father was of no even though it held tremendous senti mental value for i guess he made the sin of dying Gillespie Al Matthews of the Public trustees office con firmed yesterday the suite was cleaned out and some articles Given away without notification of next of Matthews said proceeds of the auction will be used to pay off funeral and other expenses 1 get a hold of him gillespies Matthews we have instructions from court so we dont really need consent from the Matthews said police referred the mans death to the provincial surrogate and chief county court judge Philp signed an order turn ing Over the estate to the Why the police sent it Over to the surrogate court i dont he its their avoid additional rent Matthews said he didst know whether any rela Tives were told about the surrogate court action before the order was Matthews said it want n unusual because relatives sometimes prefer to have the Public trustee handle the affair arrival of healthy haitians prompts smuggling probe a at least 70 haitians packed aboard a wooden Sailboat arrived in Florida yesterday afternoon in the second Boatload of Refu gees reaching the state in three officials Gary Deputy chief patrol agent of the Border said the Agency sent some of its illegal alien smuggling investigators to see if there Are any links into a smuggling the Boatload of 47 about four children and 21 women All appeared healthy and one of the haitians told the coast guard they had been at sea for 27 but officials doubted that the with an old tree trunk for a Mast and sails that look like rags sewn arrived at the Islamorada station at 5 said chief Petty officer Gene Hughes said Roy Leonard of the Islamorada based fishing boat Captain Winner ii saw the boat off Crocker about six nautical Miles East of at 3 a coast guard vessel met the boat a half hour later and escorted it to the const guard they All look Hughes they were All clean and they took off old clothes and put on new ones As we were towing them in buildup on their All looked like Thev were they Tell me they came direct from he their Story is that they stole the got on it and no one is in As on 29 haitians were seem off the coast at the first group of Island refugees to arrive in South Florida in such a fashion in More than a those refugees 21 five two Chil Dren and an infant taken to the Krome Avenue immigration deluded continued from Page 1 the soviet retaliatory strike might turn out to be the final one for most of the Western european tries where the missiles would be he accused the United states of planning the missile deployment to offer its allies As hostages for Retalia Tion and enhance its own chances of surviving a nuclear Ustinov said if the missiles were the United states would not go if in Washington they think that we will retaliate Only against targets in 5 Western Europe if Pershing and cruise missiles Are they badly delude retaliation against the United states will be Western diplomats said Ustinov appeared to be reiterating a soviet Posi Tion rather than saying anything the soviet Union has always said there can be no such thing As a nuclear i War limited to implying that if attacked by european based it will hit Back with its strategic Western diplomats said by spelling out the link Between Western Europe t and the United Ustinov was in effect backing up the logic of natos deployment nato experts say one of the Aims of the planned deployment of 572 due to begin in is to couple the Security of the United states with that of its Western european Ustinov said reagans proposal of an interim agreement to limit the number of soviet and me Diu Range missiles in Europe was designed to disarm the soviet Union he said Moscow was ready to with draw All nuclear weapons aimed at european targets if the West did the he accused the West of being deaf to the Warsaw pacts january offer of a no aggression one Tim fur Sal to celebrate our new association with Harold Loyns furs with Canadas largest fur manufacturer Steen Wright furriers is Able to offer you an unbelievable Opportunity to buy first run production of 19831984 merchandise at not to be repeated bargain prices Wolf Coats Mink Coats fully dropped skins Blue 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