Da "KINSHASA (AP) — -The Government said fodya ebvel invaders in southern ‘Zaire were holding almost 100 ofreigneré hostage. The rebels charged that government troops were, killing foreign civilians in ‘the battle zone, . :t Diplomats here could not aald the confirm: the report of hostage-taking. The rebels pro-West gov: ett of President Stobutu Seko was trying to stir eign outrage over alleged ties-and win Western fever in his batile to keep ** Shaba Province as part of ‘this former Belgian colony. ie ae ae Wee a Information was sketchy about: the military situation around the rebel‘held copper mining capital of Kolwezi, where government ground forces and paratroopers {were trying to dislodge the ‘Invaders. No Western- ' Correspondents have been ‘alléwed. into the area. The French government, meanwhile, denied a rebel claim that French te a had been the area to . Sopot ciate troops. But -the US. and Belgium said they has paratroop units ' standing by for fora possible evacuation of their citizens, About 2,800 Belgians, 40 French citizens and 76 Americans live in the * Kolweri- area, WOMAN AMONG DEAD - Zaire’ official ZAAP news “agency eaid the rebels had :selzed American, Belgian, French and British hostages Lalwezi. It also sald the invaders ahd killed three LAUSANNE, Switnerland, (AP) — The body af Charlie “Chaplin, stolen from. hia village -grave the night of March 2, has been recovered and police have arrested the -two alleged thieves, a Pole ’ and. a Bulgarian, police said y. i The two men were varrested Tuesday after allegedly calling police ademanding a ransom forthe Qfetura? -ob othe :wcomedian’s ° ‘body, ‘sald Examining ‘Magistrate Jean-Daniel Tenthorey. Hesaid the body was found ‘near Villeneuve, a small town at the eastern tip of ‘hake Geneva about 18 ‘kilometres east of Corsier- " .sur-Vevey, where Chaplin ‘spent the last 25 years of his life and where ha was buried last Dec, 27. Tenthorey, the Vevey ‘district examining ‘magistrate who directed the . aM month investigation said ° ‘the body was recovered “early Wednesday morning. ‘He Bald more than 50 police World OTTAWA (CP) - Paul Martin, High CO Commissioner in London, will represent ‘Canada at ‘the funeral of ‘former Australian prime ‘minister Sir Robert Menzies, 83, who died Monday. "Funeral services will ' be ‘Friday. ‘MONTREAL (CP) - A doctor. who used clay, honey anc -- beet juice to treat a patient who later died of breast cancer was barred from ‘practising medicine for life Tuesday by the Quebec Prefessions ‘Tribunal. The tribunal found Dr. Paul-’ Eulle Chevrefils guilty- of ctices “contrary to the ic principles of medical Beit “AMMAN ‘(Reuter) + An American’ woman due- becom King Hussein’s fourth wife has changed her name to Noor from Lisa and will _become a Moslem, informed sources said here Tuesday, - Miss Halaby, 24, daughter of . former Pan American World Airways chairmat Najeeb ‘Halaby, is a Christian but- willaccept the Moslem faith, ~ ; Immigration the s CANBERRA (Reuter) : Australia sald Wednesday it will offer a home to refugees ‘from Indochina to ease the t.of those waiting in overcrowded camps in Malaysia and Thailand. Minister Michael Mackellar sald that in the year starting next July, Australia. will admit #000 Vietnamese, Cam- Laotian ees, . ose safle, the architect of Habitat or at 8 _ housing complex for Expo 67, has been ap pointed director . the ScLool -of Urban, Design at Harvard University in Cambridge, Belgiang and an Italian, one of them a woman said to have been killed trying to keep the rebels froma ab- ducting her husband. Diplomats: here had reported Tuesday that at least cine Europeans — eight Belgians and an italian =~ were killed in the fighting near Kolwezi, a city of 100,000 += people 1,344 kilometres 840 miles southeast of Kinshasa, Some sources said the Europeans were killed by the rebels some were killed during random bombing by government planes, and other said they were killed by pillaging soldiers of the Zaire army. Reports reaching Brussels also had siad severw] Europeans were being held by rebels as hostages, although further reports today from Belgian sources ,said the rebels generally . were not mistreating non- African.s . The Johannesbur Star, a South African newspaper, d from Zambian on Tuesday that all able-bodied white men in rebel-held territory had been placed in protective custody. BLAMES GOVERNMENT The rebel Conbgolese National Liberation ‘Front issued a statement in brussels today saying the ‘~vaders were protecting the civilian population in Kolwezi and that govern- ment forces, ‘whose bar- barism and disorganization are well known,’’ were death for the civilian , Chaplins body recovered investigators took partinthe - final phase of of the search. He did not say im- mediatley wherther other suspects wore being sought. Chaplin's oak colt welphed 325 pounds, an detectives said it would have taken at least three strong men to drag it about 2 metres from its gravesite in the cemetery overlooking Lake Geneva. before loading it into a smalivan, °.> ’ There was no immediate comment from Chaplin's Faaly’e Swiss lawyer, Jeate fa s§ wyer, Jean- Feillx Paschoud, refused to talk to reporters. Tenthorey and the family had received a ls aa anonymour phone calls after the theft of the body, but police said almost all of them were from people who ob- viously were not connected with the crime. “Let's just say that among all the false demands we received, this one was serious and was taken seriously,” Tenthorey said. briefs Mass Safdie is to assume his new position in J MONTREAL (CP) - A 44- year-old man is being held by pollee in connection with Tuesday’s stabbing death of Gilles es, 97. The victim was stabbed during a quarrel in front of his home in east-end Rosemont. _ CHICAGO (AP) - Joseph Healy, who sealed 16 floors of the Sears Tower to protest the killing of whales, Tuesday apol to a judge, pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct charge and was put on a year's probatlon. After his ‘ap- pearance before: Circuit Court Judge James Piragine, a policeman handed the 25-year-old: to- university student a shop- ping bag containing th the gear: ‘he used to climb part of the ‘world’s tallest boating My 1. Ithad been confiscated after Healy’s four-hour climb. KNOXVILLE, Tenn, (AP). - The second African - elephant born in captivity in the Western Hemisphere — was delivered Tuesday at the Knoxville Zoological Park. General ureter John Sleming sald Sapphire who 18 years old, gave birth to a 20t-pound baby elephant. TOKYO (Reuter) - Two’. moderate carthquakes jolted northen Japan sues ay injuring ¢wo persons 8 and causing minor damage to two buildings, police said. The Japa Metcoralogical Agency sald the earthquakes, both céntred about 20 kilometres “The panicking blood- thirsty Mobutu regime thus hopes to accelerate the sending of foreign troops te ” helpit,”, the rebel statement said, Shaha Province was in- vaded. last week by an estimated 4,000 exiled Lunda tyribesmenfrom Angola who crossed northebn Zambia and in two days seled - Zaire rebels hold 100 hostages Lolwezi, 40 kilometres from the Zambian border, The Pentagon hag readied elements of the 82nd Air- borne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C. and Military Airlift Command planes for 4 possible evacuation of Americans form the batile area, but a spokesman said no deployment has been andere, Most Americans evacuated WASHINGTON (AP( + Helicopters and a convoy of trucks rescued most of the Americans endangered by fighting in Zaire’s Shaba province today, the US. state department said. But 11 Americans were left in the combat area. Robert Holliday of the state department said the rescue operation was mounted by Morrison- Knudsen, the Boise, Idaho, . firm whichemployed most of the Americans in the area of Kolwezi, a town which has been captured by rebels... There were conflicting reports about how many Americans were evacuated, Holijday said the ‘depart- ment did not: have all the details of the operation. He said the best information he ‘ had was that the remaining Americans have not been injured and are not being held captive. However, a company spokesman said in telephone call from the Zalre capital of Kinshasa to The Associated Press early taday that three of the company’s employees were missing. Meanwhile, a defence department source said it is unlikely that U.S. Army _ paratroopers, now on. the alert, will be sent to Africa because ‘the situation seems to be sorting itself out.” A Pentagon source said one report indicated 77 Americans were evacuated. The defence department sources asked not to be identified. . - The state department said the trucks and helicopters encounntered no opposition as they made their way to a compound 15 kilometres from Kolwezi where the Morrison-Knudsen em- . ployees were staying. The company spokesman in Kinshasa said the three missing Americans have not been heard from since last week when 4,000 revellious ‘Lunda tribesment overran the area. ; “We assume the missing people are safely holed up in a dwelling somewhere,” the- spokesman said. - Morrison-Knudsen Co. employs 54 Americans on an electric power Project near Kolwezi. LONDON (Reuter) - All cabinet ministers in Ugarida have been ordered to surrender their guns im- mediately to the armed forces headquarters, Kampala Radio said Tuesday in a broadcast monitored in London. No explanation was given for the directive. Businessman shipped to Saudi Arabia ROUSTON, Tex, (AP) - While trying to get into Saudi Arabia in search of lucrative deals, -one Houston building contractor already ‘there shipped himself out of the country in a wooden crate. John McDonald, president and co-owner of Heritage ‘Building Systems In- ternational, said he doubted Saudi officials would ever let him leave the country after they confiscated his passport . last November and accused him of not meeting contract. obligations for construction of a cement factory on the Persian Gulf. NcDonald said he spent several weeks checking cargo flights from Dhahran airport before he stipped. inside a crate labelled cement that he and. some friends had taken through. customs. With McDonald instead of a sack of cement inside, the crate was loaded on a Europe-bound plane, “One of the real .precautions I had totake was making sure the crate was shipped in a pressurized cabin,” hesaid. “Otherwise, I was a dead man.” McDonald arrived in Houston May 8. He said problems began after his firm arranged for a contract to design, make and ship precast concrete forms t be used to construct housing at the cement fae- “Although McDonald said he WAS raid $450,000 for providing the materials, he refused toerect the buildings until-hée was paid-an ad- ditional $82,000 that he sald was called for in the agreement. The dispute apparently boiled down to whether he would erect the structures before or after he was paid the money. McDonald placed an ad- vertisement Tuesday in the . Washington Post calling for a Senate investigation of his treatment which he said caused him to lose 153 days of work and his company’ $182,000 in damages and uncollected invaices. A state department spokesman in Washington said U.S. officials were aware that MCDonald “was having contract difficulties with the Saudis” but did not know the extent. of his complaints, The spokesman said a report has been for- warded to the Saudi government. HONG KONG (Reuter) - Chinese archeologists . have excavated 110 ancient tombs dating back more than 2,000 years, the official Hsinhua news agency reported Tuesday. It said the discovery was in the south- western Kwangsi auitonomous region and involved more than 1,400 relics belonging to the Warring States Period 475- 221 BC, : _ , “ ‘ , ‘ off Aomori on the northern — tip of the main island. a ‘Honshu, registered maximum of four on the Japan Aomori and nearby Mutsu. ese scale of seven at . Agreat light beer forall kinds ofreasons. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - George Wallace, ance a feisty symbol of segregationist resistance and four times a candidate for president, hag ended his political career with a surprise announcement that he will not run for the U.S. Senate, ; On Tuesday night -in Mobile, after days of reflection at the governor’s retreat at nearby Gulf Shores,. the Alabama governor told the Alabama League of Municipalities: “Having thought all day yesterday, anc imat night and today, I want to make this announcement te vou. I’ve decided I: will ‘nut be a candidate for the Cnited States Senate, » “Although, I feel I colle] win the U.S. Senate seat, my conclusion in the last few days is to retire,” he said. 6he announcement shocked even some of his closest aides for the 5@year-old Wallace had been considred the Democratic favorite in the race for the seat being vacated by Senator John Sparkman. The decision, assistant press alde Bivin Stanton said, means Wallace will retire from political life THE HERALD, Thursday, May 16, 1974, PAGE 5 -Segregationist Wallace - ends political career when his current term as governor ends next January. By law, he cannot succeed himself as governor a third straight time. However, one person who refused to write his political obi was his second wife, Cornelia, divorced from Wallace last year. - Mrs. Wallace said Tuesday night that her former husband is not‘the George Wallace of old.” But she added: “Let's face it, THis is a man who likes the roar of the crowd," . During 16 years in state and national politics, Rhodesian minister asks for report on deaths SALISBURY (Reuter) — Rhodesia’s black minister of combined operations asked, bush for a full report from the Country’s sécurity ‘forces on the deaths of 50 black civilians caught in a battle between government troops and guerrillas. The minister, John Kadzwiti, said he asked for full details after discussing the incident with his par;ty leader, Rey, Ndabaningi Sithole. ‘Sithole, Bishop Abel Muzorewa, Chief Jeremiah Chirau and white Prime Minister Ian Smith form the Supreme Executive Council of Rhodesia’s transitional government. The council holds the ultimate respin- sibility for the conduct of the war. Military headquarters announced in a communique Tuesday that 5¢ civillans were killed and 24 wounded in fighting between security forces and guerrillas on the night of May 14. One guerrilla was reported to have been killed. Kadzwiti said Tuesday night that he had just heard of the incident. "I have asked the security forces to submit a full report and until I get it, 1 cannot comment,” Ba . . Sithole also said he knew nothing of the affair. “If it is true, it’s a pity,” he said. “It Inspection program blamed for fire JELLICO, Tenn, (AP) — A volunteer fire chief says he requested a safety inspection several months ago for the aging Jenkins Hotel where seven residents died in a fire. Eleven others were in- jured eigher leaping from windows or scrambling down. a rusty fire escape. One - remained in critical dition today. ‘"Phis is the worst tragedy Ive ever seen,” sald Jim Barton, aged 24, who managed the 76-year-old three-storey hotel for his disabled mother-in-law. “It’s con- the absolute worst, a real - disaster.” The fire apparently started in the lobby, where a fire had. been left smouldering in a fireplace, about 2 a.m, Tuesday and sent smoke up the wooden stairway leading to apart- ments occupied by about 40 residents, many of them elderly and living. on disability pensions, "Moat of these people were dead before they even knew there was a fire,” said Jess Hodge of the state fire . marshal’s office in Knox- ville. “We found some of them in their beds, in- dicating they died of smoke inhalation." A controversy erupted over how recently and how well the hotel had been in- spected for fire safety, “We don’t have a very good inspection program,” said W.C. Deuel, Jellico’s volunteer fire chief. “This hotel hasn't been inspected anytime recently.” Chief Inspector Bryant Welch of the state fire marshal's office in Nashville sald local fire departments should inspect hotels because his agency does not have enough inspectors, Deuel_ told Welch he requested an inspection of the hotel several months earlier.“ When ‘asked for _ additional ' details, Deul declined to expand’ on his statement and refused to show records of past in- spections of the hotel. seems most unforturate.” BROKE CURFEW The communique said a routine security forces patrol inan unspecified atghty couth of Fort Victor! sou ort Vic — encountered a guerrilla group addressing 4 meeting of tribesmen at 10:30 p.m., long after the dusk curfew. The troops opened fire and ‘killed on of the guerrillas who was talking tothe group, it said. Other guerrillas fired back “across and through the tribesmen,’” the com- munique said. It gave no other details. It was the bloodies incident of its kind reported in the guerrilla war that began five years ago. Thirty-five black civilians were killed in a similar incident last May. The killings cast another shadow over the fragile multi-racial interim government, which has just embarked on a campaign to sel] the Salisbury majority- rule agreement to Rhodesia’s 6.8 million blacks, 80 per cent of whom live in rural areas, most of them under curfew. Political sources here expressed concern over the effect the incident might have on the populaarity of the black leadera involved in the transitional government, who now are identified with actions concerning the security forces, rural - ' 1972 at a Laurel, Wallace was called saviour, devil, reformer, bigot and buffoon. But he was never ignored. Wallace burat onto the national political scene in 1963. In January he stood on the steps of the state Capitol to give his inaugural ad- dress, crying: ‘Segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever!” In June, he stood in a schoolhouse door to block two black students from entering the University of Alabama. He parlayed that defiance _ of a federal desegregation order into three terms as governor and runs for the presidency in 1964, 1968, 1972 and 1976. He, became a symbol of Dixie-styled conservatism. In 1968, running under the ‘banner of the American Independent party, he carried five states and won 46 electoral votes. captured 13.5 percent of the popular vote, the largest showing by a’ third-party candidste since 1924. But while campaigning in shopping centre, Wallace was cut down by bullets fired by Arthur Bremer. His wounds teft him partially paralysed and in constant in. P although confined to a wheelchair, Wallace made one last run for. the presidency in 1976. By then, however, his ‘‘too-much- bureaucracy’’ theme had “been pre-empted by another southerner, Jimmy Carter. - LONDON (AFP) - Prime Minister James Callaghan appealed to business leaders Tuesday to buy British, even if itis not in their immediate interest. He told a dinner given by the Confederation of British Industry that the only way to get the economy moving is to reduce imports. NEW YORK (AP) - Charles Bush, a 55-year-old anthropologist and director of the Brush Wellman Corp has been elected president at ‘the Explorers Ciub.' Bush is a. staff. member ‘of thé American Museum of Natural History and has supervised excavations which uncovered the oldest ~ lf you reside in Terrace or Thornhill and do not have @ paper cartier - we have a PHONE DAWN: 635-6357 1/2 the calories and less filling. He -