Victors Issue New Execution Order

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Victors Issue New Execution Order PAGE SIXTEEN - EVENING HERALD, Tues.. July 24, 1979 Steuernagel, McGowan Atlantic Solo Sailor Development Commission Study Contract Inked Planning Additional Park For Cheney District No-Hit Manchester Legion Vows ^Never AgaiW Page 12 Page 2 Page 5 Page 10 iiaitrl)PHtpr Continued Warm, Chance of Showers Dtlailt on page 2 Energy , _____________ _________________ > A Family NEVOSpaper Since 1881 ■ 20t Single Copy • 15(t Home Delivered _ . _ I Voi. XCVIII. No. 260 — Manchester, Conn,, Wednesday, July 25, 1978 Pittsburgh: Gulf Oil Corp." — Tuesday reported a 65 |»rcent| ■ rise in second quarter profits and* * the Standard Oil Co. of Ohio said its earnings for the quarter jumped 70 percent. Victors Issue New New York; The four U.S. partners in the Arabian American Oil Co. — Exxon, Mobil, Texaco, and Standard Oil of California — _ Merit have a distinct market advantage ' Execution Order over other domestic oil com­ panies because Saudi Arabia MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) — definite orders to immediately killings. He ascertained that, not crude is cheaper than oil from The Sandinista army issued a decree execute all those elements of ^the me.” other OPEC nations, oil analysts ordering its troops to execute any Somoza guard who are caught' in He said the guardsmen had been said Tuesday. former national guardsman caught these activities,” the communique brought to the camp — a former free Washington: Congressional attacking its checkpoints and the jun­ said. trading zone near the international leaders told President Carter ta declared some 2,000 guardsmen in The decree also ordered all San­ airport — in buses and had been Tuesday that his windfall oil a Red Cross refugee center will be dinista militias to turn in their searched before they entered. profits tax will not be passed by treated as prisoners of war. weapons, to the new army with a In announcing the guardsmen were Congress until after the August Firefights around the capital promise that those who join the new prisoners of war, Borge said each I recess and may be watered down, Tuesday overshadowed the military force will be re-armed. guardsman’s case will be considered out that an energy package will diplomatic recognition extended the But Nicaraguan Red Cross Presi­ individually and those charged with I passed perhaps by early October. new government by the United dent Ismael' Reyes challenged crimes will be brought up before the Cleveland: Despite soaring States. Cuba, and El Salvador. Borge’s statements during a joint civilian tribunals and tried under the I profits fueled by the Alaskan oil I W b Interior Minister Tomas Borge news conference outside a row of criminal laws of the Somoza regime. boom. Standard Oil of Ohio plans " " warehouses where more than 2,000 “In no case will the death penalty to raise its gasoline prices by as charged Tuesday ex-guardsmen in a Red Cross center just outside guardsmen and their families are be applied,” Borge said. He added much as 5 to 6 cents a gallon by staying. that the Nicaraguan revolution had the end of this year, a high- Managua were heavily armed and have been responsible for the con­ Borge took newsmen to the fields been ’’the most generous revolution ranking company executive dis- around the camp and pointed out in Latin American. We have not I closed Tuesday. tinuing sniper attacks on Sandinista C h a n ^ checkpoints in the capital. what he said were the bodies of San­ executed anyone, nor will we execute Houston; A federal judge, The Sandinista National Liberation dinista soldiers killed and burned by anyone.” I facing an appeal on a similar guardsmen who left the refugee ■The Red Cross will continue 'lO ad­ ruling earlier this year, Tuesday Front Tuesday issued a decree ordering its forces to kill any camps at night. minister the camp and all women dismissed a 29-count indictment guardsman caugbt ambushing or Reyes said in response, “I cannot and children who wish to do so will be accusing two oil companies of ascertain that these people (in the allowed to leave. I taking illegal profits on oil sales. sniping at Sandinista positions. "The military forces have camp) are the ones who did the W uhington: Acting Transpor- I tation Secretary W. Graham Claytor said Tuesday he will recommend that President Carter .Gas Crisis May Rescue veto Amtrak funding legislation if Congress blocks the ad­ ministration's proposed I passenger train cutbacks. Some of Nation’s Rails M ai2c^'JlJ;u-l^;?i;e»7sffi Temot MacRenato, an American colle|B P ^ s s o r relaxes By DON PHILLIPS Reps. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., and Brock Adams. Either the House or will have to u k e shorter showers I with his automatic weapon at a hotel in Managua, Nicaragua WASHINGTON (UPI) - The gas­ Wyche Fowler, D-Ga., fought an up­ Senate could have vetoed the Adams plan last May, but they did not. and endure colder rooms and I Tuesday. MacRenato was bom in Nicaragua but became an oline crisis and power politics ap­ hill battle against acting Transporta­ tion SeCi’etary -W. Graham Claytor However, that was before gasoline I fewer lights this winter because I American citizen several years ago. He returned to his country parently vWll save many — but not all becanie both expensive and hard to the school’s r .2 miUion uUUtyl tofishtfor the Sandinistas against Somoza forces. (UPI photo) of the country’s pasrcnger trains. and Democratic Republican leaders of the committee that drafted a HW6 get, causing mlluons of Americans to budget approved by the state I ^ _ rediscover the train. Le^slature is not enough to keep I J g million Amtrak funding bill. Smoking They came within 17 votes of The House bill would set ridership success, but their amendment to and loss criteria that would have the Two Boards "roposed freeze the Amtrak system for one effect of adding trains that had been I Superintendent Richard J. I A cut by the Adams plan. The final Martwick has recommended the I wnn A V V * ■ 11 year failed, 214-197. Instead, the House decided to take reduction likely will be 20 percent, a back-door approach with technical not 43 percent. 1 o Admiiiister Colleges amendments that will have the effect The ^ nate also will act on the bill, winter to avert a possible winter | of saving several individual trains, probably within the next two weeks, energy crisis. and an effort will be made there I HARTFORD (UPI) - The state Southern, Central, Eastern and mainly those that have experienced 'Enriched Flavor!cigarette sparks whole operation costs. Western (Connecticut State Colleges. sharp ridership increases pr run either to freeze the system or add P h a n t o m | Board of Higher Education has more trains. proposed establishing two separate But University of Connecticut UConn’s branches at Stamford and through the districts of powerful con­ President John DiBaggio said the Avery Point would fall under the gressmen. Under the House bill, Amtrak SODDY-DAISY Tenn (UPI) —I IJoardsoftrusteestooverseeConnec- jurisdiction of the four-year board. Technically, some 43 percent of would make the final decision on I A mysterious voice on the public ‘wo-year and four-year in­ proposals were "far too sweeping” I and were not necessary to address The board also recommended com­ Amtrak’s route miles are scheduled which routes would be dropped or new taste era in low tar smoking address system at the Sequoyah I slj^Iions. the problems facing the state. bining the position of chancellor with to be cut Oct. 1 under a plan devised maintained, following criteria laid nuclear plant has cTflcialsI The plan, which must be approv^ president of UConn to oversee the down by Congress. scratch in g th eir heads a n d ! “’e legislature took up eight Under the plan, a single board of by fired Transportation Secretary trustees would oversee the two-year heads of all the four-year schools. searching for the "Phantom I Tuesday during A proposal to merge Eastern Chicken ’’ I board chairman, atorney schools, including the 12 community Not too long ago, smokers believed that if a cigarette had colleges, the five technical colleges Connecticut State College in Sometimes the voice makes I Willimantic with the University of less tar, it had less taste too. Low tar cigarettes simply didn’t I clucking or pecking sounds. But of a conflict of interest, and the University of Connecticut’ I branches at Waterbury, Torrington Connecticut at Starrs was set aside Delay Expected the ’’chicken ’ can talk, too. Education Commissioner I and Hartford. for further study. taste very good. The chicken - dubbed "PC" for I M'chael Usdan said reorganization is Usdan said a 43 percent decline in 1 the short - has been ruffling his I necessary to cope with the effects of Another board of trustees would Then along came MERIT and a whole new taste idea called govern the four-year institutions at the number of high school students I colleagues'feathers by squawking I student population, forecast by 1994 coupled with On Windfall Tax ‘Enriched Flavor’ tobacco. And in three short years, smoking lover the plant's public address I O Connecticut’s low birth rate will | g e m about how inept he thinks | Q | . Q | | p BlaStS St RIC reduce the number attending college. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The cor­ Carter wants a bill that will changed: Usdan also called for a more nerstone of President Carter's produce $140 million to finance his "cohesive front” in obtaining finan­ energy program — the windfall energy program, and he had wanted 1. No other new cigarette in the last 20 years has attracted cial support.
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