Appeal Denied in Gates Case " I F Tuesday’S Supreme Court Session

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Appeal Denied in Gates Case 24 - EVENING HERALD, Mon., Oct. 13, 1880 iUanrhpBtpr Cloudy Variable cloudiness WPATUCD ‘‘’‘*^5'’ Sunny tomorrow and continued cool. ► • j Appeal denied in Gates case " i f Tuesday’s Supreme Court session. By DAVE LAVALLEE C. Bieluch has set a hearing next after the initial order allowed during routine fingerprinting. headquarters at Troop H. Within two The motion to dismiss the appeal was Herald Reporter Tuesday at 10 a.m. to consider the Heiman to appeal the decision to ter­ Bieluch said the evidence sought hours of the completion of the tests. granted without an opinion from the carrying out of the initial order. minate the 2()-day stay. could be of material use to determine GLASTONBURY - The State court. Gates' blood will be analyzed at a ■ In mid-July Bieluch ruled that the " Q Supreme Court in Hartford has dis­ The Supreme Court's ruling, which whether the defendant committed state licensed hospital. state may obtain samples of hair, \ 'v :. y't missed defense attorney Maxwell dismissed Heiman’s appeal of the the murder. He said it could not Heiman, who is defending Larry blood, and body fluids from Gates to Heiman's appeal to block a Hartford order to obtain the evidence, also dis­ , "practicably” be obtained from any Gates is free on 6100,000 bond. Neal Gates, 19, of Glastonbury, who compare them with evidence found in Earthquake damage Superior Court order, requiring that missed the appeal of Bieluch’s other source, Mrs. Hart was found shot to death Homeless victims was arrested June 25 and charged in a car and on the body of Mrs. Hart. the suspect charged in the June refusal to grant a 20-day stay. the murder of Mrs. Hart, has con­ June 18 in a wooded section of An­ shooting death of Elizabeth Hart, of An Aug. 20 Grand Jury hearing had dover, ' Homeless families in A1 Asnam, Algeria, the tremor continues to mount as rescue A freight train was derailed by the force of have been killed and a quarter of a million sistently argued that the method by Heiman said during the appeal last Glastonbury, submit to tests for After Bieluch’s order, Heiman to be postponed on the case until the look down on the ruins of the city destroyed the earthquake which struck Algeria Friday. persons have been driven from their homes which the state wants to collect the Tuesday that he was "seeing protec­ The night before Mrs, Hart was workers search ruins. (UPI photo) requested that a 20-day stay be state could obtain the evidence. by the tremor. (UPI photo)* samples of body fluids and hair. samples would violate the defen­ tion against the unreasonable discovered, her 14-month-old son by an earthquake Friday. The death toll from Rescue officials*say between 5,000 and 25,000 placed on the order until he could Bieluch’s original order also r Chief Assistant State's Attorney dant’s constitutional rights. execution of the order.” Thomas was found dead in the Robert Meyers filed a motion to dis­ appeal it to the Supreme Court. granted the state permission to ob­ In response to the Supreme Court According to the original order. driveway of their home. No charges Bieluch did not grant the stay, but an tain special prints of Gates' palms miss R e im s 's appeal during last ruling, Superior Court Judge William Gates will submit to the hair, palm have been brought in connection with automatic five-day stav in place and hands other than those obtained and saliva tests at State Police the baby’s death. I Death toll mounts in Algerian quake V ti-' \ I Al-ASNAM, Algeria (UPI) — About two dozen people, including more than 140,000. quake rivals the worst to ever hit Bodies already uncovered were experts and satellite com­ Clergy favors Rescuers pushed away rubble with a 2-month-old baby, were plucked At an emergency Cabinet meeting North Africa — a 1716 tremor that is hurriedly buried as soon as they were munications gear. bulldozers and bare hands today in a alive from the ruins of the city Sun­ Sunday, President Bendjedid Chadli believed to have killed 20,000. identified in makeshift morgues. A continuing flow of thousands of hunt for survivors in the earthquake- day, but several hundred other vic- ordered additional generators and The 2-month-old baby was plucked Chadli ordered that the second priori­ refugees streamed from towns and flattened city of Al-Asnam, but timk dug out with bulldozers and floodlight equipment to the ravaged in a miraculous rescue fromr-the ty after saving those trapped was to villages in the stricken area, spurred city, and 200 more ambulances were avoid risks of epidemics. rejoining CD government officials said the death earthmovers were already dead, wreckage of a four-story building by continuing aftershocks that A toll already has passed 20,000. bringing the total of corpses already thrown into the evacuation effort to where already about a dozen corpses As a 17-nation international effort brought fears of another damaging -Av' By MARY KITZMANN an important one constantly under "We still do not know the scale of recovered to more than 5,000. get still uncounted thousands of in­ had been found. gained momentum in Algeria, field quake. Herald Reporter discussion in his church and CD this disaster," a doctor of the Interior Ministry aides said more jured to undamaged hospitals. A rescue worker wriggled under hospitals arrived from West Ger­ The shocks endangered rescue housing. Algerian Red Crescent, the than three times that number were “We lack organization, not medical tons of fallen concrete, following the many and Yugoslavia that would add crews digging through the MA.NCHESTER - Town The problem with the CD referen­ equivalent of the Red Cross, said of still under collapsed buildings, and supplies, for the moment,” the Red infant's cries. Emerging with it in 1,2(X) beds to those available in the treacherous debris and officials tried clergymen are speaking out in favor dum is where the church's respon­ the killer quake that reduced the rescue teams in isolated villages in a Crescent doctor said, acknowledging apparent good health, he ran with it disaster area. France sent an ad­ to keep the refugees off the only two of rejoining the HUD Community sibility, in defining moral obligation town to rubble in about 30 seconds 60 mile swath of destruction reported delays in treatment at hastily thrown in his arms to a waiting ambulance. ditional 80 doctors and paramedics. open roads, already clogged by relief Development program, a change begins and ends. "It's difficult to Friday. the number of homeless would reach up aid stations in schoolyards. The Its mother was apparently dead. The United States senr disaster convoys and wailing ambulances. from their reiative silence of a year- define,” said Nancy Carr, director of and-a-half ago. The Manchester Area Conference of Although five town clergymen said Churches (MACC). "On the issue of they would not "campaign from the housing’, we can definitely say for X pulpit” or “tell parishinoers how to someone to vote against the program vote” they said they will define their because of racial bigotry or prejudice Fire Iraq forces opinions. During' the April 1979 is wrong. Directly on housing we say referendum, when the town a chritian cannot ignore the needs of withdrew in a 3 to 1 vote, there was his brother.” little pastoral guidance. But this year, the five clergymen and the Mrs. Carr said another objection to kills Manchester Area Conference of the program, the so-called "federal on the move Churches believe they have a respon­ strings" of filing the Housing BASRA, Iraq (UPI) — Iraq said hard-line Moslem militants. sibility to relate their ideas more Assistance Plan, and setting goals today its ground forces were "still Iraq's long-awaited push against clearly than before. for low-income housing, were an four courageously advancing toward the Abadan began Saturday with its Some, like Rev. Dale Gustafioa, area, that it was difficult to provide oil complex of Abadan" in the fourth forces throwing pontoon bridges from Emanuel. Lutheran, Rev. religious guidance. , HOT SPRINGS, Ark, (U PI) - week of the Persian Gulf war. Ira­ across the Karun River and pushing Stephen 'Jacobson, from St. Mary's “These are areas where moral Some residents had to jump from nian forces were reported stubbornly tanks and troops across the Espicopal, and Rev. Howard Love, obligations are mixed with personal windows and slide down drainpipes to resisting the Iraqi push to gain waterway. 10 miles north of Abadan. from North United Methodist, plan choice." she said. Mrs. Carr men­ escape a raging fire that killed four mastery of the Shatt-al-Arab Iraq announced Sunday its forces X on writing letters explaining why tioned during the last referendum people and injured three others in a waterway. were “maintaining their advance they support rejoining. Others such MACC prepared a brochure that did low-income apartment complex. A A military communique issued in with confidence and high m orale" as Rev. Burton Strand from (Concor­ not directly urge voting against the barefoot neighbor rescued other •'.St.:; Nancy Soaft, left, completes the paper work to become a registrar. Residents have until 8 p.m. today to become voters moratorium. This year's brochure B|ighdad claimed Iraqi troops and the troops were "getting ready to dia LiRheran and Rev. Nell Curtis, residents. voter in Manchester. At center is Paul Phillips, an assistant in their towns in time to vote in the Nov.
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