The Daily Collegian Tdesday, Sept. 9, 1980 News briefs Marine to enter innocent plea JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (UPI) Marine Pfc. Robert R. Garwood, facing a court-martial for allegedly deserting and collaborating with the enemy in Vietnam, will plead in nocent to sex charges involving a 7- year-old girl, his lawyer said yesterday. Garwood, 34, did not appear at a "first appearance" hearing on the charges, but attorney Pete Bailey told reporters an innocent plea will be entered later. First appearance hearings are conducted in North Carolina courts to make sure a Prison director gets security WASHINGTON (UPI) Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti has or dered 24-hour security for Bureau of Prisons Director Norman . Carlson and his top aide, whose homes were shot at last month, officials said yesterday. Federal law enforcement sources said the FBI has received reports that the previously undisclosed shootings may have been instigated by the Iranian community or Islamic groups. But chief FBI spokesman Roger Young said, "We have been able to establish no firm link between the incidents and any suspect." Responding to an inquiry about the shootings, Young said, "Three shots Were discovered to have been fired at Mr. Carlson's residence and four were fired at the residence of James A. Meko, his executive assistant" during the period of Aug. 14 to Aug. 18. At the time of the shootings, of ficials said, both men and their wives were in California attending Sillas announces resignation SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) U.S. Attorney Herman Sillas, who became entangled in bribery allegations, told President Carter yesterday, he was quitting • his prosecutor's job effective Oct. 1. The White House Friday put pressure on Sillas to resign although the accusation against him that he received a $7,500 bribe from a Southern California man serving time'in prison for passing bad checks "has not been proved." The administration said the in vestigation severely damaged Sillas' relationship with the Justice Department, which asked him to rcsig,sulast-Januagy-after-he-failed biro lie detector tests. The Justice Department concluded its in v&stigation last we e k with no finding of wrongdoing. ;Sillas, one of this highest-ranking Mexican-Americaris in the Carter administration, read a brief hand written statement at a news con ference in his wood-paneled office: "I have this morning forwarded my resignation „effective Oct. 1 to President Carter. The reason is very simple. I no longer desire to serve as United 'States attorney for • the Eastern District." Former spy sues government TRENTON, N.J. (AP) A Cuban defector sent to her homeland by the CIA to spy on her husband is suing the United States for $1 million, claiming that inadequate training led to her being captured and jailed for nine years. Carmen Mackowski charged in a federal suit filed in Trenton that proper training by the Central In telligence Agency would have enabled her to avoid "detection, arrest, imprisonment and subsequent illness." The former Maria del Carmen y Ruiz was instructed in espionage for a month before she returned to Cuba in the 1960 s to spy on her lusbind, Alfredo Ruiz, then director of Cuba's "Department Against Spies," said her attorney, Robert Greenberg. She has since remarried. Mackowski, now 44, and a former Perth Amboy resident, spent nine years in a Cuban jail. She was sen tenced to 20 years in prison, Gieenberg said, after her arrest one night in mid-1968 by two Cuban Captives allowed to raid bar PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) Three masked robbers held seven people captive in a suburban restaurant yesterday, supplying their hostages with drinks from the bar while negotiating with surrounding police for money and freedom. The deadline the robbe . rs set for an agreement passed, and law en forcement officers called it "a positive sign." Police said the gunmen robbed the safe in the Ringside East restaurant about midnight and were surprised by.a deputy sheriff as they emerged from the establishment. They quickly retreated back into the restaurant and took a dozen diners and em ployees hostage. Police surrounded the building and a 'stand-off ensued. But nearly 12 hours later, no shots had been fired. During the early morning hours the robbers kept the restaurant bar open and let the captive customers and employees drink cocktails. defendant has an attorney and is aware of his legal rights. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for Sept. 29. Garwood was charged Friday with engaging in a "lewd and lascivious act upon the body of a child, who is a 7-year-old girl," and attempting "to commit a sex offense with a 7-year old female." Testimony, in Garwood's court martial is scheduled to begin Sept. 17. The military judge said the sex charges will not delay the beginning of testimony. meetings of the American Correc tional Association. Carlson lives in suburban Burke, Va., and Meko resides in the nearby suburb of Fairfax,Na. Each has two children. "Both homes were vacant when the shootings took place and no injuries occurred," Young said. He said low-caliber guns were used in both cases, but declined to elaborate. Young said the FBI and the Bureau of Prisons are investigating. Sources said Civiletti approved dispatching the marshals on Aug. 19. The security was still in place yesterday. William Dempsey, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshal Service, said yesterday the 24-hour detail was assigned to both homes "with the authorization of the attorney general's office." Federal enforcement sources said the FBI had received information "on the street" that the Iranian com munity may have been involved in the shootings. U.S. Attorney Herman Sillas Sillas then told reporters he could not resign earlier because the bribery allegations had been unresolved. "I could not leave here as long as that cloud was there," said Silas. "I just think it's time for me to move on to something else. I was cleared because I knew what the facts were." agents while she tried to relay a message to the United States from a park in Havana. The U.S. attorney's office in Newark will seek to have the suit dismissed Oct. 6 by U.S. District Judge Dickinson Debovoise, a federal spokesman said, adding a formal response to the suit would be filed two weeks before that date. Born in Cuba, Mackowski lived in the United States and her native island, joining forces with Fidel Castro's communist government in 1955. She later declined a government job in Cuba, Greenberg said, moving to the United States as an anti communist and becoming a U.S. citizen. Greenberg said she worked for the CIA from December 1964 until her release from prison in December 1977, earning a total of about $28,000 during that time. She was released from Cuba during a thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations through the efforts of Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, her attorney said. Marilyn Stafford and her husband were released about 2:30 a.m. after she told the robbers she suffers from a heart ailment. Three more hostages, all men, were released at intervals until 6:50 a.m., seven hours after the robbery attempt. That left seven people captive inside the restaurant, including the son of owner Wes Peterson. The son, whose name was not released, manages the restaurant. Later in the morning, law en forcement officers delivered six pairs of handcuffs in response to the rob bers' demands. Money "is not the first priority item under consideration at this time," Robert Gast, FBI agent in charge in Oregon, said at a mid-morning news conference. Both Gast and Sheriff Edgar Martin refused to confirm or deny reports that the robbers were asking $500,000. Missing plot deed confuses case FORT WORTH, 'Texas (UPI) A missing cemetery deed yesterday further twisted the unusual legal battle over opening the grave purported to contain the body of alleged presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. A ruling in the case is expected next week. Attorneys for Oswald's older brother, Robert, who oppose the opening of Lot 259 in Rose Hill Burial Park so the body if there is one can be autopsied and identified, were unable to produce a deed for the plot. This was a blow to Oswald's brother since he contends he purchased the grave and an exhumation would violate his property rights. ,i6 ; frip te:l, lloi4 its fer. ~~. ~` .. : , t.r4r,,r When you ask good friends for a favor, you know what they're going to say. So you tell them you're moving again and then wait for the groans to stop. They may not like the idea, but you know they're going to be there. When you're finished, these people are going to deserve something special. Tonight, let it be Lowenbrau. Attorneys for British author Michael Eddowes, who contends a Soviet spy was buried in Oswald's grave, subpoenaed cemetery manager Neal Wretberg, who, produced documents indicating the deed had been mailed to Oswald's mother, Marguerite, in 1961 two years before the Nov. 22, 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy. Oswald was arrested in the assassination but shot to death at Dallas police headquarters by nightclub owner Jack Ruby , before he could stand trial. A notation on the back of an in ternment record showed Marguerite as owner of the grave and a burial record card also showed the body was deeded to Marguerite. In addition, a notation on When you need big favors you ask good friends. wenbrau. Here's to gOod Mends. co, 1980 Beer brewed in U.S.A. by Miller Brewing Company. Milwaukee. Wisconsin the back of a copy of the deed said the original deed was mailed to Marguerite on Aug. 14, 1961, after purchase of the family plot. • Attorneys for Robert Oswald argued the copy was legally inconclusive since it was not certified. Eddowes contends there is "powerful and persuasive evidence" a Soviet secret agent assumed Oswald's identity when Oswald defected to Russia in 1959 and returned to the United States in 1962 as a "sleeper" assassin. Robert Oswald is seeking a temporary injunction to block the exhumation, saying he will be unable to "conduct a normal life" If the remains are dug up. His main attorney, Craig Fowler, said he would "probably" appeal any decision against Robert. When ' asked' why why Robert was trying to block an effort , that could prove his brother was in nocent of the assassination and clear the • family name, Fowler said: "Innocence has nothing 'to do with it. He is satisfied ~ O it's his brother in there." Tn other testimony yesterday, Dr. , Linda Norton, a forensic pathologist - with the Dallas Medical Examiner's ' Office, said Oswald's Marine Corps : dental and chest x-rays would help medical examiners make "positive, 100 percent identification" if the body in his ' grave is exhumed Students affected in nine states Strikes stop classes nationwide United Press International ' The nation's largest teachers' strike kept classrooms closed for more than 100,000 upper grade students in Philadelphia yesterday, but abbreviated sessions, were held for pupils in elementary schools and special education classes. Strikes by 35,000 teachers and other school employees in nine states and Puerto Rico most seeking higher wages, smaller classes and job security idled or disrupted classes for some 650,000 students. . In the newest strike, teachers in San Ase, ' Calif., voted at 5 . a.m. PDT yesterday to walk off their jobs, and the district's 33,000 pupils began the 1980-81 school year under the supervision of substitute teachers. No end was in sight for the eight-day old walkout by Philadelphia's 23,000 Contract talks collapsed Thursday night;= the eve of the first day of school for philadelphia's 220,000 public school students and no new negotiations were scheduled. The key issue in the impasse is the planned layoff of 2,000 teachers. „Classes were canceled system-wide in Philadelphia. Morning sessions were held at 200 elementary schools and 15 special educations centers, but at tendance was sparse. In Rochester, N.Y., 58 schools were closed for a fourth day yesterday as the city's 2,300 teachers continued their seven-day-old strike the first in the City's history. The state's chief public mediator, Erwin Kelly, arrived in Rochester Sunday in an effort to get the stalled contract talks moving, but •he left yesterday saying, "I am not much en couraged." The main issue was wages. In New York City, schools opened as planned for nearly 1 million students after matrons who ride buses with 170,000 students approved a new con tract late Sunday. Bus drivers had threatened to honor the matrons' strike. One Roman Catholic school in Brooklyn was struck by members of the Lay Faculty Association. The school's 1,400 students were sent home when 46 of the school's 66 lay teachers did not show up for work. Teachers in Newark, N.J., ratified a new contract Sunday and ended the strike in the 61,000-student school district that began Wednesday. Schools also opened yesterday for 4,000 students in North Providence, R. 1., after 35 janitors voted to end a 5-day strike that was honored by teachers. But strikes continued in three other Rhode Island communities with 17,400 public schools students. Outside Philadelphia, negotiations were bogged down in 17 other Penn sylvania school districts where some 3,500 teachers walked off jobs at schools with a total enrollment of 51,000. In Carlinville, 111., teachers returned to their classes yesterday after a two week strike, but classes were canceled for some 8,800 students in Barrington District 220, northwest of Chicago, when the teachers' union called a strike after contract talks broke down Sunday night. Teachers also were on strike in seven other school districts in Illinois affecting 100,000 students. In Ohio, strikes by almost 3,000 school employees in four Ohio communities, including Columbus, affected some 80,000 students. Classes were held yesterday in Columbus, but enrollment was down. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers