Banner Graphic, Volume 14, Number 60, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 November 1983 — Page 2

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The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, November 14,1883

Flights resume after warning

\ BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Syrian-backed militiamen shelled Beirut’s Christian sector today for the first time since a cease-fire took effect seven weeks ago, and U.S. jets Resumed reconnaissance flights after Syria was warned not to fire at them. * * Formations of F-14 Tomcat interceptors scrambled off the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower to stage repeated runs over Beirut and the surrounding mountains before midnight and at dawn, according to Lebanese police. 4 The flights followed a stem warning by the Reagan administration to Syria against firing at U.S. planes. Syrian batteries fired at U.S. planes last week, but police said fbday’s flights drew no fire. The sorties by the F-14s coincided with a meeting between President Reagan’s new Middle £ast envoy, Donald Rumsfeld, and Lebanese President Amin Gemyel. A presidential palace statement said they discussed ‘Existing conditions and the latest developments in Lebanon and the Middle East.” i Shortly after the meeting ended at midnight, police said Druse gunners in the central mountains fired artillery and Soviet-made Grad rockets into east Beirut. At least 13 Grads crashed into

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Christian residential neighborhoods, Christian-controlled radio stations said. No casualties were reported. There were no new reports of casualties or major battles from northern Lebanon, where Yasser Arafat and his loyalists in the Palestine Liberation Organization are trying to hold off Syrian-backed mutineers. More than 1,000 people have been killed since the PLO fighting began Nov. 3 around Tripoli. No reason was given for the overnight barrage in Beirut. Druse militiamen of Lebanon’s Socialist Progressive Party frequently shelled the Christian sector during civil warfare last September. But since the Sept. 26 ceasefire, they have refrained from hitting the capital. U.S. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said the Marines at Beirut International Airport could hear the shelling this morning but did not come under any fire themselves. On Sunday, efforts to reconcile Lebanon’s warring factions hit another snag when the government said Syria had asked Gemayel to cancel his planned trip to Damascus today to meet with Syrian President Hafez Assad. It reported the Syrian Foreign Ministry said Assad was ill and hospitalized, but did not specify his ailment.

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Nuclear protests spawn arrests

By The Associated Press Police made 137 arrests during anti-nuclear protests in Britain and Australia, the premier of Greece reported progress toward creating a nuclear free zone in the Balkans, and Italy’s Parliament convened today to debate NATO’s missile strategy. Anti-nuclear activity even spread to East Germany, where about 20 candle-carrying youths held a “peace” rally over the weekend before dispersing when police approached. In Alice Springs, Australia, police reported 111 arrests Sunday after hundreds of women

Banner-Graphic "It Waves For All" USPS 142-020) Consolidation of The Daily Banner Established 1850 The Herald The Daily Graphic Established 1883 Telephone 653-5151 Published daily 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 mail matter under Act of March 7.1878. Subscription Rates Per Week, by carrier *I.OO Per Month, by motor route ‘4.55 Mail Subscription Rates R.R. in Rest of Rest of Putnam County Indiana U.S.A. 3 Months ‘13.80 ‘14.15 ‘17.25 6 Months ‘27.60 ‘28.30 ‘34.50 1 Year ‘55.20 ‘56.60 *69.00 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.

protesting nuclear weapons swarmed over a fence at a U.S.Australian intelligence post, demanding that the facility be closed. The protest continued today at the Pine Gap base as the arrested women began appearing in court. Protesters said they also were commemorating the death of Karen Silkwood, an American concerned with worker safety at a nuclear fuel plant who was killed in a mysterious car crash nine years ago. Police Sgt. Darryl Menzie said 109 of the women arrested for violating a restricted area identified themselves as Karen

Repaired rail said fatal crash cause c. 1983 N.Y. Times News Service MARSHALL, Texas The derailment of an Amtrak passenger train that killed four people Saturday morning.occurred when a section of rail that had been repaired earlier in the day apparently split apart, officials said here Sunday. Donald Engen, one of the five members of the National Transportation Safety Board, said it would probably take a week for a full investigation of the cause of the crash. A final report from the board will not be ready for at least four months, he said. But preliminary examination, he said, indicated that the tracks split apart as the first passenger car on the 11-car train passed over it. He said the board would also investigate whether the train had been traveling too fast for conditions. Passengers who were on board said they thought the train had sped up just before the accident. Tim Hogan, director of public relations for the MissouriPacific Railway, which owns and maintains the tracks, said that before the crash electronic sensors on a freight train picked up an irregularity in the track where the derailment later occurred and that a work crew was dispatched.

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Silkwood and were charged with giving a false name. Ms. Silkwood, who worked at a nuclear fuel rod plant, died in a car crash in 1974 while en route to a meeting where she reportedly was to present evidence of health hazards faced by plutonium-plant workers. In London, protesters fell to the ground in a “die-in” demonstration during a Remembrance Sunday service in which British leaders including Prince Charles and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher paid tribute to the nation’s war

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Scotland Yard said 18 people were arrested on charges of “insulting behavior” during the demonstration at Parliament Square. The protest was not noticed by those at the service a block away. Eight other antinuclear demonstrators were arrested in incidents elsewhere in London. In Dresden, East Germany, where 35,000 people died in a 1945 allied bombing raid, visting Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie, head of the Anglican Church and a British World War II tank commander, appealed for an end to the nuclear arms race.

'Major goals accomplished' as Reagan returns from Asia

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) President Reagan headed home from his Asian tour today, leaving behind a renewed commitment to South Korea’s security based in part on having stood “eyeball-to-eyeball” with communist North Korea. “All the major goals were accomplished,” White House spokesman Larry Speakes said aboard Air Force One today as Reagan returned from the 15,650-mile, 6‘/2-day trip to Japan and South Korea. Reagan continued on to Washington after a brief refueling stop in Anchorage early today. Reagan ended his South Korean visit Sunday with a farewell call on President Chun Doo-hwan. The two leaders then rode in an armored limousine past tens of thousands of flagwaving Korean? to a brass-band and red-carpet send-off at Kim-

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U.S. troops hold 100 prisoners in Grenada camp

c. 1983 N.Y. Times News Service ST. GEORGE’S, Grenada - In the nearly three weeks since the invasion of this Caribbean island, American troops have detained more than 1,100 Grenadians and Cubans for interrogation. The prisoners were held in a camp equipped with wooden interview booths and boxlike isolation chambers with small holes for ventilation. American military officials said that 74 prisoners were released from the camp Sunday, leaving only 100 of the total still in custody there. Thirty-one others, said by officials to include a number of high-ranking officials of the former government of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop, were transferred to the island’s Richmond Hill prison. The officials said the prisoners included members of the People’s Revolutionary Army, Grenadian militiamen and civilians. Slightly more than half of those detained at the camp were Cubans captured during the initial stages of the invasion. All were recently sent home. Capt. Russell Cancilla, commander of the detention facility, said that the 100 remaining prisoners were expected to be released “in the next couple of days.” New prisoners were being brought in Sunday, however, and Cancilla said there were no plans to close the camp, which

po International Airport. Reagan left with a reaffirmation of the need to maintain South Korean security and with a public reminder by Secretary of State George Shultz that the threat from North Korea can temper progress in human rights. Actually seeing North Korea from inside the demilitarized zone separating it from South Korea left “a deep impression” on Reagan, said Speakes. He said it was the experience of being “face-to-face with communism, being literally eyeball-to-eyeball with the North Koreans across the DMZ.” Also aboard Air Force One on the 15-hour-plus trip home were two ailing Korean youngsters from poverty-stricken families coming to the United States for heart surgery in New York. While Reagan emphasized the military tension in this

is situated behind barbed wire in a dusty clearing beyond the Point Salines airport here. It is under constant military guard. Nearly all of the prisoners released Sunday said in interviews that they had been treated well, but there were some reports of rough treatment. American military officials said that they detained the Grenadians for questioning at the request of the new government, which has granted itself emergency powers. Cancilla said there had been no “incidents” inside the camp, that no prisoners had been in isolation chambers for more than two days, and that none had been punished. “We’re not running a prison camp here,” he said. But Kendrick Radix, a prominent Grenadian lawyer and a former attorney general in the Bishop government, said that conditions were “primitive” and "beneath the standards as set by the laws of Grenada for prisoners.” Radix, who was kept overnight in an isolation chamber late last week, said he was unable to keep dry in the rain. The camp and its five towers are on a peninsula on the southwest corner of the island, just south of the airport the Cuban government was building and not far from the point where American Rangers arrived on the island in the predawn hours of Oct. 25.

capital 30 miles south of North Korea, the government’s decision to place dissidents under house arrest or in custody during the president’s visit drew attention to human rights issues. Shultz told reporters questioning South Korea’s human rights record that “if you look over a period of time, you see progress. “That isn’t to say that there aren’t problems. But I think you, also, have to bear in mind that there is a country just a few short miles from here that continually threatens this country. ...’’hesaid. “So it’s not a little game that’s being played. And I think that security is something that has to be borne in mind. There are very genuine threats,” said the secretary of state, who pronounced the trip “an outstanding success.”