Banner Graphic, Volume 17, Number 66, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 November 1986 — Page 3

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A model of the planned Vietnam Women's Memorial, honoring the 10,000 American women who served during the Vietnam War, has been placed

Prosecutor nixes pardon for Hasenfus

c. 1986 N.Y. Times News Service MANAGUA, Nicaragua The Nicaraguan justice minister says he opposes any pardon for Eugene Hasenfus, the American air-cargo handler who was sentenced to 30 years in jail Saturday after admitting that he helped fly weapons to anti-government rebels. The minister, Rodrigo Reyes, served as chief prosecutor in the Hasenfus trial. In an interview distributed by the official Nicaraguan press agency Sunday, he said he expected the United States to use “maneuvers or reprisals” to win “the freedom of its agent.” Hasenfus, whose supply plane was shot down over southern Nicaragua Oct. 5, denied in his testimony that he was a knowing employee of the Central Intelligence Agency. But the people’s tribunal that found him guilty on Saturday said his links to the CIA were “fully proven.” “I don’t see any possibility of a pardon for Hasenfus,” Reyes said. “If there was a pardon, the people would reject it, and the political authorities who issue it would have to explain themselves very well.” Hasenfus’ wife, Sally, who was here for the trial, said she would appeal to the Sandinista government for mercy. The defense has five days to appeal to a separate tribunal set up for the purpose. Defendants convicted by the people’s tribunal, which was established in 1983 to try accused rebels and their supporters, do not have the right of appeal to the Supreme Court. The Roman Catholic primate, Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, who has been at odds with the government, said Sunday that he hoped Hasenfus would be pardoned. The Rev. Joseph Lowery of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, who observed the trial at the invitation of the government, also said he had asked officials to show mercy. At the American Embassy, a spokesman said only that the verdict and sentence had come as no surprise. The American consul was in the courtroom Saturday. Enrique Sotelo Borgen, the defen-

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on display in Washington, D.C. Efforts are under way to raise $1.2 million for its installation. (N.Y. Times photo)

se attorney, also said he had expected the result. He said any government decision about a pardon would be based “not just on legal factors, but on political factors and on factors we know nothing about.” After the verdict was read, Sotelo sought to approach his client, calling out, “I want to speak to the defendant.” But the presiding judge, Reynaldo Monterrey, forbade the consultation. He had announced before reading the long verdict that neither Sotelo nor the prosecutor, Reyes, had any role in the day’s proceedings. Hasenfus was given the 30-year term, the maximum allowed under Nicaraguan law, specifically for “actions aimed at subjecting the nation totally or partly to foreign domination or infringing on its independence and integrity.” The tribunal added a three-year term for illicit association, to be served concurrently, and ruled that a terrorism charge was covered by the same sentence. The government portrayed the verdict as an indictment of U.S. involvement in financing the Nicaraguan insurgency. “Verdict is a condemnation of the United States,” said a headline in the official Sandinista newspaper Barricada.

Banner Graphic (USPS 142-020) Consolidation of The Dally Banner Established 1850 The Herald The Dally Graphic Established 1883 Telephone 653-5151 Published dally except Sunday and Holldaya by Banner Graphic, Inc. at 100 North Jackaon St., Greencaatle, IN 46135. Second-class postage paid at Greencastle, IN. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Banner Graphic, P.O. Box 509, Greencastle, IN 46135 Subscription Rates Per Week, by carrier*l.2o Per Week, by motor route*l.2s Mall Subscription Rates R.R. in Rest of Rest of Putnam County Indiana U.S.A. 3 Months *17.40 *17.70 *19.00 6 Months *32.25 *32.80 *36.70 1 Year *63.00 *72.70 Mall 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.

Downtown projects divert housing money

Study cites Indianapolis funds use

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) A disproportionally large amount of federal funding intended mainly to upgrade housing for the city’s poor has been spent on downtown development projects, such as Union Station, according to a university study. The study’s report, which suggests that too little of the money has been spent to directly aid the poor, looks at how ssl million in federal Community Development Block Grant funds were spent here between from 1982 to 1985. Such funds are often the only dollars available to neighborhood groups for housing renovation efforts or commercial revitalization projects. The study by David Wilson, an assistant professor of geography at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis, found that the

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funds “were spent in a fashion which more frequently assisted middleincomeresidents.” Much more was spent on economic development than housing, the report said. “For each year between 1982 to 1985, economic development received a disproportionally large amount of funds to the neglect of housing-related activities.” Wilson, whose research interests are in housing, urban policy and social geography, said in the report that Indianapolis spent 50.5 percent of its available block grant funds in 1985 for economic development, while nationally the figure was 11.5 percent. The professor’s analysis of information provided by the city shows economic development projects in the city’s central business district received 23 percent of the available funds, while the next highest

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category was private housing rehabilitation with 15.1 percent. “A large portion of these (business development) funds were earmarked for large anchor retail establishments, notably the recently completed Claypool Court and Union Station projects downtown,” the

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November 17,1986 THE BANNERGRAPHIC,

report says. The study also contends that while the private housing rehabilitation directly benefited low-income persons, the next three largest expenditures were for uses that more directly assisted a range of other populations.

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