Banner Graphic, Volume 10, Number 105, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 January 1980 — Page 2
A2
The Putnam County Banner Graphic, January 7,1980
Iran ignores U.N.deadline; U.S. seeks punishment
* WASHINGTON (AP) With Iran officially in defiance of a United Nations ; deadline for freeing the 50 American ‘hostages in Tehran, President Carter is seeking immediate Security Council action :to punish Iran through adoption of economic sanctions. Carter, brushing aside suggestions by U N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim that sanctions won’t be effective, said through a spokesman Sunday night that the council must take action against Iran “without delay.
By five non-aligned nations
Withdrawal resolution circulated
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Five non-aligned Security Council members circulated a draft resolution calling for the immediate withdrawal of all foreign troops from Afghanistan as the United States called the Soviet intervention a “dangerous breach of peace and security” and a “terrible miscalculation.” Sponsored by Bangladesh, Jamaica, Niger, Zambia and the Philippines, the resolution did not mention the Soviet Union by name but “deeply deplored” the armed intervention in Afghanistan. Soviet Ambassador Oleg Troyanovsky told reporters he would veto the resolution if it came to a vote. A majority of the council or of the U.N. membership then could get the Gen-
Banner-Graphic “It Waves For AH” (USPS 142-020) Consolidation of Ths Daily Banner Established 1850 The Herald The Daily Graphic Established 1883 Tetephone6s3-5151 Published twice each day except Sundays and Holidays by LuMar Newspapers, Inc. at 100 North Jackson St., Greencastle, Indiana 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as 2nd class mall matter under Act of March 7.1878. Subscription Rates Per Week, by carrier $.85 Per Month, by motor route $3.70 Mall Subscription Rates R.R. in Rest of Rest of Putnam Co. Indiana U.S.A. 3 Months $10.25 $11.25 $13.75 8 Months 20.25 22.50 27.25 1 Year 40.25 44.00 54.45 Mail subscriptions payable in advance . . . not accepted in town and where motor route service is available. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper.
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Waldheim was due to report today to the Security Council on his three-day visit to Tehran last week. However, White House spokesman Jody Powell and diplomatic sources in New York said the timing of a public meeting on Iran was in doubt because the United Nations has been occupied with the question of Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. U.N. observers indicated the council would do no more than adopt an agenda today concerning Iran, with work on the
eral Assembly to take the matter u p in an emergency session, which would prolong the publicized international condemnation of the Russians. Eighteen U.N. members spoke in the council debate Sunday, the second day of the debate, and only three communist nations East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Vietnam defended the Soviet action. U.S. Ambassador Donald McHenry, the first speaker Sunday, said Soviets authorities made a “terrible miscalculation” in sending troops across their southern border into Afghanistan. He rejected Soviet claims that they were invited in by the Afghan government and said the Kremlin had engineered the
Gandhi regains power in India
NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her branch of the Congress Party headed for a smashing national election triumph today, less than 34 months after Indian voters dumped her from office to protest her abandonment of democracy for 19 months. Results from 108 of the 524 election districts represented in the lower house of Parliament gave 84 seats to Mrs. Gandhi’s Indira Congress Party and its allies. These first results were from a cross-section of districts across the country and suggested a landslide for the late Prime Minister Jawaharlal
coup Dec. 27 in the Afghan capital that resulted in the overthrow and execution of President Hafizullah Amin and his replacement by Babrak Karmal, whom the Soviets brought back from exile in Czechoslovakia. “Are we to believe that President Amin invited Soviet troops to come into Afghanistan in order to oversee his own downfall and his own execution?” McHenry asked. He said radio transmitters inside the Soviet Union, purporting to be Radio Kabul, broadcast the first word of the coup, and “the real Radio Kabul continued normal transmissions for at least one and a half hours after these announcements were first heard. Nothing in
Nehru’s 62-year-old daughter, who headed the government from 1966 until her defeat in the last election in March 1977. Others elected included seven candidates from the Janata Party headed by Jagjivan Ram, unofficial leader of the Untouchables; two each from the old Congress Party, caretaker Prime Minister Charan Singh’s Lok Dal and the two Communist parties, and nine candidates from other minor parties and independents. More than half of the 362 eligible voters stamped paper ballots in the voting Thursday and Sunday, and final results were expected later today.
Farm leader Sample dies
ZIONSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - Glenn W. Sample, an Indiana agricultural leader for 30 years and president of Indiana Vocational Technical College, was “one of the most dedicated, most sincere individuals I have ever known,” says Gov. Otis Bowen. Sample, former vice president and director of the Indiana Farm Bareau, died Saturday night in Columbus, Ohio. He had been hospitalized there last
GREENCASTLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS ADULT EDUCATION
HIGH SCHOOL CRIDIT CLASSIC (Classes begin the weak of January 14,1980) (High School Credit Classes) Co*t Day Time Teacher Economics *2.50 TU 6:00-9:00 Franklin U.S. History 2.50 M 6:00-9:00 Hile Art 2.50 M 6:00-9:00 Lane Typewriting 2.50 M 6:00-9:00 See Bookkeeping 2.50 W 6:00-9:00 Bertram Engl'*h 2.50 M 6:00-9:00 Ross M ° th 2.50 W 6:00-9:00 Mason Industrial Arts 2.50 TH 6:00-9:00 SPICIALINTIMST CL ASMS (First class meeting wifi be first week In March) (NON CREDIT) The following courses will be offered If enrollment warrants: < Non Credit dosses) Cost Day Typewriting ‘IO.OO M 6:00-8:00 See Bookkeeping 10.00 W 6:00-8:00 Bertram GoH 12.50 W 5:00-6:30 Ross Shorthand 10.00 TH 7:00-8:30 Hurt Tennis 12.50 TH 5:00-6:30 Layton Woodworking 10.00 TH 7:00-9:00 Metalworking 10.00 TH 7:00-9:00 Printing 10.00 TH 7:00-9:00 Drafting 10.00 TH 7:00-9:00 Auto Mechanics 10.00 TH 7:00-9:00 S « win 9 10.00 W 7:00-9:00 Jones Cake Decorating 15.00 M 7:00-9:00 Greil Drivers Education 20.00 W Arranged Layton Conversational French 10.00 W 7:00-9:00 Luxar Art 15.00 M 7:00-9:00 Lane Antiques & Collectibles 7.50 M 7:00-9:00 J. AM. Franklin Sridge 10.00 TH 7:00-8:30 Ross Physical Fitness (men) 10.00 TH 7:00-8:30 Physical Fitness (women) 10.00 W 7:00-8:30 Crawley A Pieper Swimming (men) 10.00 TU 8:00-9:00 Izzo Swimming (women) ,10.00 TU 7:00-8:00 Izzo
MGISTRATION - January 9 and 10,1980, 7:00-9:00 p.m. Registration will be held in the High School Library, 910 East Washington Street. 971 ,Urth6r ln,orma,,<m ca,,: Char,M Director of Adult Education, Qreencaatle High School, 653-
sanctions resolution beginning later in the week. But with the hostage crisis now in its ninth week, and with the administration facing increasingly heavy pressure from Republican presidential candidates for decisive action, Carter apparently feels he can wait no longer. “The United Nations should go forward and do what it said... it would do,” Powell told reporters Sunday night. Carter and his top advisers received a report Sunday from Waldheim on his Iran
these broadcasts from Kabul confirmed the content of the Soviet'broadcast disseminated in Afghanistan’s name.” The council was scheduled to resume the debate this morning. Fifty-one countries endorsed the request for the Afghan debate, the most ever to bring an issue before the council. Most of them were expected to speak. The council is operating with 14 members, one short of its full membership. The General Assembly has been deadlocked since late October in trying to choose between Colombia and Cuba to fill the Latin American seat vacated by Bolivia Dec. 31. The assembly was to vote again today.
Mrs. Gandhi was rebuked by the voters in the last parliamentary election after she turned the world’s biggest democracy into a dictatorship for 19 months of emergency rule in which she suspended civil liberties, jailed thousands of her opponents and allowed her son Sanjay to carry out a birth control program of forced sterilization. The voters turned to the Janata Party headed by Morarji Desai, a coalition united largely by opposition to Mrs. Gandhi without a program for coping with India’s huge economic and social problems.
Thursday after suffering an apparent heart attack while returning from a holiday trip. He was 67. A 1935 Purdue University graduate, Sample served for three years as farm editor of the Richmond Palladium-Item. In 1945, he joined the farm Bureau as information director and editor of the Hoosier Farmer.
trip. Waldheim also told reporters that Iranian authorities believe they can count on outside support to overcome the effects of any U.N. move to apply sanctions. On Dec. 31, the Security Council gave Iran until today to free the hostages. In the event of non-compliance, the council decided it should “adopt effective measures” under articles in the U.N. charter authorizing economic sanctions against nations found to be a threat to peace. The resolution containing today’s deadline was approved 11-0 with four coun-
■Bp &.. ok
Joy Adamson, conservationist and author, tends broken leg of cheetah cub in 1970 photo
Author's death may have been murder
Daily Telegraph, London NAIROBI, Kenya - Mystery surrounds the death of the world-famous wildlife conservationist Joy Adamson, with newspaper reports here suggesting she may have been murdered and not attacked by a lion at all. A police officer at Isiolo Police Station, in the Shaba game reserve area where Mrs. Adamson had been conducting a behavioral study on leopards, has been quoted (by the newspaper “Sunday Standard”) as saying senior policemen had gone to the spot where her body was found last Thursday evening after receiving a report that her car had been stolen, suggesting a robbery motive. “There was very little blood and no sign of clawing, according to the report we received here,” he said. Earlier reports said the body had extensive wounds in the arms, hands and head. Another report said Adamson had been seen by camp workers approaching a lioness with eight cubs. They are said to have warned
tries abstaining, including the Soviet Union. It was not clear, however, whether the United States would be able to muster similar support for the formal adoption of sanctions. A two-thirds vote of the 14member Security Council is required. China and Zambia, for example, have said they were reserving judgment on the sanctions issue even though they supported the United States in the New Year’s Eve vote. In addition, the Security Council’s
her not to get too close to the lioness because it was lying in wait in a swamp for buffalo. This version says that when Adamson went too close the buffalo were frightened off and the lioness then turned on Adamson in anger. Her husband, George, and financial adviser, Peter Johnson, have declined to throw any light on the matter. Both are said to have seen her body, which is in the city mortuary here awaiting examination by pathologists. A private cremation service is planned for next week. The game warden in charge of the Shaba reserve, Mukiri Githendu, has reported an increase in the lion population in the area in the last three weeks. He appealed to researchers and park visitors to be extremely cautions of the animals. Githendu said that during the time Adamson was in the reserve, she had been extremely co-operative with the officials in charge and had not hesitated to consult them when she had a problem.
Sniper killed after firing into park
DALLAS (AP) A man fired about a dozen rifle shots at random into a park Sunday and then was killed after a police officer fired on his car as it sped toward a roadblock, police said. Police spokesman Bob Shaw said the man, identified as Jose Angel Vargas, 29, was struck by at least one of three bullets fired by a tactical officer. However, Shaw said Vargas may also
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have shot himself with a pistol he was holding. About 15 police officers were dispatched to the park just south of downtown Dallas after a man opened fire with a .22caliber rifle. A witness said dozens of people were in the park at the time. Shaw said no-one in the park was injured, but at least two police cars were struck by bullets.
rotation system has placed four new members on the council and removed four others. And U.S. officials have acknowledged privately that the American campaign to denounce the Soviet Union for its intervention in Afghanistan could induce a Soviet veto on the Iran issue. Also uncertain is the impact of Waldheim’s view that sanctions would not be effective in inducing Iran to free the hostages.
Carter signs loan guarantees WASHINGTON (AP) - Although President Carter is signing into law legislation giving $1.5 billion in loan guarantees to Chrysler Corp., the future of the financially strapped automaker still hinges on crucial decisions by its workers and bankers. The legislation, which the president was signing at an afternoon ceremony today, makes the federal guarantees contingent on $462.5 million in wage concessions from Chrysler’s hourly workers and other private help including SSOO million in bank loans. The latest concession, amounting to $243 million in lost wages, is yet to be approved by members of the United Aitt© Workers union, which represents all but about 4,000 Chryslers’s 105,000 unionized employees. Representatives of 184 UAW locals meet tomorrow on whether to endorse that concession, which union bargainers and the company agreed to Saturday. A rank-and-file ratification vote should be complete J)y the end of the month, officials said. v Saturday’s agreement “stinks,” said Joe Zappa, chairman of the union bargaining committee and head of a Detroit local. But he predicted UAW members would approve the pact anyway “to save their jobs.” About 90 percent of the new UAW concessions would come through eliminating 17 paid personal holidays scheduled in 1981 and 1982. In addition, a pair of 3 percent annual wage increases were delayed several months and a day’s bonus pay in December was eliminated. The UAW members had earlier agreed to $203 million in wage concessions. The bill also requires whitecollar workers to give up $125 million in expected wage increases. Chrysler in turn is required to turn over $162.5 million in stock to its workers. Chrysler must still raise a total of $1.43 billion from selling its assets and from its banks, suppliers and the states and cities where it has plants. Chrysler representative Richard Muller said talks were continuing with bankers, who refused during congressional hearings to say whether they would come up with the money necessary to trigger the loan guarantees. Muller said meetings also were being held with state and local officials, who are down for $250 million under the financing plan. Some of this aid, Muller said, would require action by state legislatures that are not yet in session or would have to await legal opinions by state attorneys general. Chrysler, which lost $1 billion in 1979, hopes that by the end of the month it can have the financing package assembled and thus qualify for the federal loan guarantees, Muller said.
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