The weather Inside today Mostly cloudy, warm, today. A few Area news — 1-B Editorial ........4-A showers expected. High 60. Goudy and Classified . 5-B-7-B Obituaries ... 12-A continued mild tonight and Sunday. Comics........ 11-A Week-Review . 2-A Showers likely. Low toniqht near SO, PA <a»^ “ Tfce BHght One** Churches ....... 8-A Wings............7-A high Sunday 55-60. National weather SECTIONS Dear Abby ... U-A Sports__ 2-B-3-B forecast map on Page 5-B. lINSifiE MANOBQESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27.1«8 - VOL. XCVI, No .« jpRiCEi EfFTEEN CENTS fV Rhodesian conference m &-V4C stalemate is broken / GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI) - independence by March 1, 1978. terim government to create even dependence to Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) The monthlong stalemate has ended The two men again rejected the wider disagreement among has been delayed by one month while in the Rhodesia peace talks and the British compromise formula Friday, delegations. some people are wining, dining, ml conference now can move on to con­ demanding two amendments to the A particularly critical subject is bickering and dithering in expensive, 6t sider the makeup of the interim proposal. They met with Richard and whether blacks or whites will luxurious and posh hotels,” government that wiil rule until power came away saying "Britain has dominate the transitional Muzorewa said. is turned over to the country’s black accepted our amendments.” government's Department of He told Richard he may have to majority. British conference CHiair- Mugabe and Nkomo said they will Defense and Security. consider leaving Geneva unless there man Ivor Richard said Friday he will issue a joint'statement this weekend The break in the Stalemate is genuine movement next week. hold bilateral talks Monday with on the undisclosed amendments. followed an attack by Bishop Abel Rhodesian Foreign Minister Pieter "Patriotic Front” leaders Joshua The two amendments were “small Muzorewa, another black nationalist van der Byl also called on Richard to ■V,- Nkomo and Robert Mugabe on the textual changes,’’ a British leader, who charged that Mugabe protest the slow pace of the talks. structure of a transitional govern­ spokesman said. and Nkomo were holding up the Van der Byl, Muzorewa and ment With that issue settled, conference talks. Ndabanlngi Sithole, the third black officials expect negotiations on an in­ “Already the granting of in- leader, previously had accepted ...’...{iSfrrij 'The two black leaders blocked the Richard’s compromise formula. talks for a month by demanding Bri­ tain commit itself to Dec. 1,1977 as a fixed and binding date for in­ dependence. Blizzard moves into Plains Britain's counterproposal, initially rejected by Nkomo and Mugada, called for Rhodesian elections and dumping heavy snow in wake the completion of legal processes for By I tilled Press International towns of Granby and Dillon, Colo. Snow and blowing snow reached A blizzard that tore through the Near blizzard conditions hampered into southeast Nebraska Friday Rockies and the Black Hills, holiday travelers in Kansas and night, while rain changed to snow in Blood drawing marooning many Thanksgiving northeast New Mexico early today. northwest Missouri and southern Holiday travelers, slowed down a bit The weather service said strong Iowa. - D i Monday at MMH as it moved into the Plains states winds, bitter cold air and blowing A storm advisory was issued today Friday night and early today. for the northern and eastern portions ckup. and drifting snow would reach as far The Red Cross has a critical need The storm, worst of the season in south as northeast New Mexico and of New Mexico, and a winter storm »noi- for all types of blood, especially type , 742- the high country, dumped two feet of the Texas Panhandle. watch was issued for all of west 0, and volunteers can donate blood snow at Lead, S.D., Friday and was Texas. Monday. described as "a howling blizzard” at Near zero visibility and wind gusts Travel advisories were also posted >ecial The Red Cross blood collection unit its height in northeastern Wyoming. up to 45 miles per hour plagued for the Texas Panhandle and the will be at the conference room of Blizzards swept several high western Kansas. Interstate 70 in South Plains states. \ QH Manchester Memorial Hospital Mon­ passes along the rib of the Colorado Kansas was closed due to blowing Stranded travelers Friday day from 10;30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Rockies and piled knee-high drifts snow and icy conditions between thronged motels in Sundance, Wyo., Walk-in donors are welcome. aginst buildings in the mountain Hays City and Oakley. and overflowed into makeshift lodgings at the county jail. Casper Mountain, near Casper, Wyo,, got an eville unofficial 16 inches of snow. More T and Karen Ann Quinlan living than 10 inches fell in the Big Horn Mountains. The snows were even heavier in western South Dakota, where the in the twilight of her life cold, moist air, forced abruptly up­ 65 ward over the Black Hills, unloaded single MORRIS PLAINS. N.J. (UPI) - parents not to subject her to extraor­ A spokesman for the Tufts-New with a vengeance. Twenty-four in­ Ition. Karen Ann Quinlan lives on in the dinary medical procedures that England Medical Center where An­ ches of snow bogged Lead, 18 inches . Call twilight of life without her respirator would delay her biological death in drew Puopolo was rushed by police hit Galena and 16 inches fell at as debate continues over whether she the event of terminal illness. Doctors early Nov. 16 after being stabbed, Deadwood, dll in the hill country and other patients have the right to have said she probably will never said Friday at least five elec­ west of Rapid City. )neof die. recover from the coma. troencephalographs have been taken. The Montana Highway Department iffers She was taken to St. Clare's The most recent tests have found no room, The 22-year-old comatose victim reported 6 to 12 inches of snow fell in Hospital in Denville and placed on room, has been breathing without brain activitv. the southeast part of the state. the respirator when she suffered .must mechanical aid since her life- [new, sustaining respirator was dis­ respiratory failure. She was sub­ sequently moved to the Morris View tades connected last May. wide, Nursing Home. here. 'V diate Miss Quinlan, who has been in a In August, a reporter for the Montana hamlet hit r incing coma since April 15,1975, remains in Ladies Home Journal was permitted ;, 13ti the same condition which has been to see Miss Quinlan and wrote that terlln listed as “critical" ever since she 1-828- her body was emaciated and drawn >1 Christmas lights now operational took a combination of tranquilizers up in a fetal position, while her head hy propane explosions and alcohol. moves constantly with eyes roving hospitals in Great Falls 30 miles ! Foot The official beginning of the Manchester Christmas shopping Miss Quinlan won the right to die wildly. BELT, .Mont. (UPI) - Two 30,000- needs “with grace and dignity” last March gallon propane tanks exploded away. season was last night when the ceremonial “turning on on of the The case has drawn worldwide Investigators still were unsure Plaza lights” took place. The illuminated Christmas ornaments were when the New Jersey Supreme Court attention because of its sensitive Friday, spreading a stubborn fire 169. ruled unanimously that she could be through two grain elevators, a farm today of the sequence of events. They installed earlier in the week and on hand for the “lighting” (ac­ legal questions. said a derailed 45-car Burlington removed from her respirator with In a related case, a young Harvard cooperative and several homes. IIN - tually accomplished by the photoelectric cells governing the the agreement of her doctors and a Eleven persons were burned in the Northern freight train might have e box, University football player is in regular street lights) were Phil Harrison, left, and Mrs. Gladys hospital ethics committee that her explosion, but none was seriously in­ slammed into one of them. Or. they condi- critical condition in Boston today as said, the tank explosions may have Conroy, representing the Greater Manchester Chamber of case was hopeless and she would doctors try to determine whether all jured. Most were treated and never return to normalcy. released. Ambulances had to speed knocked the cars off the tracks. Commerce. (Herald photo by Pinto) brain activity had ceased the night he "Nobody knows for sure what IBILE Miss Quinlan once had asked her was stabbed in the heart. over icy roads to get the injured to Call happened. " Cascade County Civil , 828- Defense Director Bill Murray said. One lank blew up in midafternoon, Carter keeps door open the other two hours later. wides The blaze was contained Friday idy for night. And firemen from four sur­ ice In- rounding communities as well as )etlng, for Kissinger role bow from the Montana National Guard itchen PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) — President­ Making no public appearances Today’s news summary and Malstrom Air Force Base selec- elect Jimmy Carter "would feel no since he arrived here Tuesday remained on the scene until dawn I from, hesitancy" about tapping Secretary evening, he mainly has been cncen- Compiled from United Press International The heat of the fire was so intense cellent of State Henry Kissinger for a trating on future Cabinet ap­ that asphalt on the street caught fire. frades special diplomatic assignment after pointments, particularly in the fields Murray said he was unsure how », and he leaves the Cabinet, according to of economics and foreign policy. many homes in this north-central lervice 272 maiK e&rly today.
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