co.daistate/nation/world ,;, Iranian president confirmed BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Iran's new president was confirmed in office yesterday by Ayatollah Ruhol lah Khomeini with a warning there would be calls for his death if be betrays the Islamic revolution. The official Iranian 'news agency Pars said government officials at tended the ceremony for Moham med Ali Rajai at Khomeini's residence outside Tehran. Pars said the Islamic leader reminded the new president, formerly prime minister, of his moral responsibilities. Torrijos dies PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) The plane carrying Gen. Omar Tor rijos and six others was flying over cloud-shrouded jungles when it crashed into a rocky hill' on one of the most dangerous air routes in Panama, aviation experts said yes terday. The 52-year-old commander of Panama's national guard was on a routine check of military outposts Friday when the plane crashed and all seven aboard were killed, the national guard said. Helicopter crewmen who recov- Polish leaders WARSAW, Poland (AP) Senior military commanders met yester day to deal with threatened strikes and marches protesting Poland's food crisis, the official news agency PAP said. The Military Council, led by Pre mier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, out lined "tasks for the military in the economy and for, fighting specu lation and other social destructive phenomena," the news agency said. Strike alerts and marches to pro test food shortages and high prices Military may replace workers NEW YORK (AP) Defense Sec retary Caspar Weinberger said yes- terday that if air traffic controllers walk off the job, about 700 military personnel will be mobilized to help avert the "almost chaos that would ensue." Interviewed on ABC News "Issues and Answers," Weinberger said it would take military personnel three or four days to begin operating effec tively. But he said he believes "over 50 percent" of the flights would be able to operate on schedule in the Royal visit called 'an insult' MADRID, Spain (AP) Madrid's Sunday newspapers called the visit to Gibraltar by Britain's royal new lyweds, Charles and Diana, "an insult" and a "provocation." The couple stopped at Gibraltar Saturday as they began their Medi terranean honeymoon. "If King Juan Carlos is the king of Spain, he also is king of Gibraltar with all the fullness and rights," said the paper ABC, which gave wide coverage to the stopover by Charles r. , , -..,,pv.: ,, nt'i. , -•,-T. ! • - - r-r,..:t, 41-': ,- ..• '., ..i-q.=...".- 42:,r, :'.''''."..,.• ..-'•'..-", :;,,...,.:•• ----:..;, t:',. . ' ;'....,'• + :::,',....''':','''''''' ', - ','''' . :"..P't.",;,'.'i 1 :• '' '1 ..- ',;.- • •:,.'..' ',':,',. : :'. ' • ' 11.''''f'''' • +." {,/ "Should you put a foot wrong, the very 13 who voted for you would shout, 'Death to you.' This is the nature of revolution," the news agency quoted Khomeini as saying. "The people will no longer submit blindly to anyone.." The voting July 24 gave Rajai a landslide victory to take over the presidency, vacant since Abolhas san Bani-Sadr's impeachment in June. Rajai, backed by Islamic cler gymen and a longtime foe of Bani- Sadr, took 88 percent of the vote. There were three token oppnents. in plane crash ered the bodies said Torrijos' watch stopped at 11:55 a.m., 40 minutes after his twin-engine Otter took off from the airport at Penonome, 60 miles west of the capital. The pilot had attempted to land the plane at its destination, Coclesi to, at 11:48, the national guard said, but he was forced to turn around because of bad weather. The two towns are 10 minutes flight time apart. Authorities said the pilot had just signed off a report when the plane slammed into a hill called `!Juan Julio." discuss strikes were announced yesterday for seve ral cities, one day after the ruling Politburo warned such demonstra tions "create a great threat to the country." Solidarity also said today's sched uled union-government talks on how to solve the crisis were postponed indefinitely because the union needed time to prepare a position. Earlier, the union's No. 2 leader Andrzej Gwiazda said the talks were "not timely for technical reasons." beginning and "perhaps more later on." Weinberger said 700 soldiers would be available to help out in the event of a strike. FAA officials said their current plans are to use no more than 400. About 15,000 air traffic controllers were threatening to strike at 7 a.m. today in a contract dispute. Weinberger said the United States has recently increased economic aid and military shipments to the gov ernment of El Salvador. and Diana on the British colony claimed by Spain. Juan Carlos boycotted the royal couple's wedding in London last Wednesday to protest the visit to the 3 1 / 2 square-mile rock at the southern tip of Spain. But over 3,000 Gibraltarians gave the couple a rousing reception after Charles flew his bride in a turboprop plane to the colony from Britain's south coast, a 6 1 / 2 hour, 1,000-mile journey. After a half-hour stay, the couple departed on the royal yacht Britannia for two weeks. Tax cut: Reagan By JIM LUTHER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) The compro mise version of President Reagan's t4x cut plan faces a final vote in the Senate today and liberal Democrats are prepar ing their final attack on the bill's $32 billion worth of tax breaks for the oil industry. The bill, at $748.8 billion the biggest tax reduction in history, was completed by a Senate-House conference committee Sat urday morning after an all-night session where the chief sticking point was oil taxes. F'f 'At a time when millions of average families are being asked to sacrifice as part of the administration's economic program . . . it makes no sense to give the federal store away to the oil companies." The Senate has agreed to dispose of the bill today and the House plans to do it tomorrow. That means Reagan is likely to sign the legislation the key element of his economic program sometime this week. Congress already has completed action on another big part of Reagan's package, $l3O billion worth of reductions in federal spending over the next three years. Once the lawmakers finish the tax bill, they will recess until Sept. 8. UPI wirephoto The heart of the bill is permanent tax rate reductions in each of three succes sive years, with the first small cut taking effect on Oct. 1. When fully implemented, the reductions would average 25 percent, with the same percentage relief going to all income groups. Tax relief in the legislation is tilted considerably toward those with incomes of $50,000 a year or more. That is by design; Reagan contends these taxpay ers will invest their tax cut in ways that will benefit the economy. Bth Irish hunger striker dies By ED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) IRA hunger striker Kieran Doherty died yesterday in the Maze prison on the 73rd day of his fast, Britain's Northern Ireland Office announced. He was the second Irish nationalist hunger striker to die in two days and the eighth in the fast that began at the Maze five months ago. Masked supporters of the Irish Republican Army hurled gasoline bombs and bricks at security forces in predominantly Roman Catholic West Belfast after news of Doherty's death spread, police said. Doherty, 25, had campaigned from his cell and was elected to the Irish Parliament in balloting last June. British Army headquarters reported an armored personnel carrier was attacked and a 21-year-old soldier suffered wounds that required both legs to be ampu tated below the knees. It gave few details, but other reports said the vehicle was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade. Police said a Catholic man suffered chest wounds from a grenade that was thrown at a police vehicle in Belfast's Ardoyne district. They reported policemen and soldiers fired plasic bullets to disperse rioters. Earlier yesterday, before Doherty died, two members of the Royal Ulster Constabulalry were killed when a landmine destroyed their squad car 60 miles west of Belfast. Two other RUC policemen in a second car were wounded and the assailants, believed to be members of the IRA's•Provisional wing, escaped, officials said. The deaths raised to 14 the number of security officers killed this year. That attack was part of the violence that followed the death early Saturday of Kevin Lynch, a convicted member of the Irish National Liberation Army who was in the 71st day of his fast. He was serving 10 years, convicted of ambushing troops and conspiring to steal weapons. His burial was set for today in his hometown of Dungiven, 45 miles northwest of Belfast, and security forces anticipated more violence during and after the funeral ceremony. West Belfast women banged garbage can lids and blew whistles when they heard that Doherty, who had Longest surviving 'plastic heart' patient dies HOUSTON (AP) A retired Dutch bus driver who lived longer than any other man after receiving a plastic heart died yesterday, just one week after doctors replaced the artificial organ with a hu man heart. Doctors said Willebrordus A. Meuffels, 36, of The Netherland, who lived 54 hours with an artificial heart, died at 8 a.m. of "overwhelming" complications. Hazel Haby, spokeswoman for the Tex as Heart Institute, said, "It was just a combination of complications. There were pulmonary problems, kidney prob lems, infection it was just an over whelming situation." Meuffels, one of three people ever to receive a plastic pump, was the patient of Dr. Denton Cooley, 60, a heart trans plant pioneer. Meuffels had been hooked up to a waits —Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. for Congress When the bill is fully effective in 1984, a typical four-member . family with two wage-earners, a $20,000 income and cur rent tax liability of $2,013 would receive a tax cut of $544. The $50,000 family, now paying $9,323, would get a $2,570 tax reduction. • The bill extends additional tax cuts to married working couples, many of whom must pay more taxes than if they were single; provides greater tax incentives to savings; liberalizes tax credits for child care expenses; all but eliminates estate taxes, and cuts taxes for business, main ly by allowing faster recovery through the tax system of money spent for build ings and machinery. Senate plans to pass the final bill by voice vote Saturday night were thwarted by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. He announced from his home state that he would demand a vote on a motion to send the measure back to the conference com mittee with instructions to change the oil provisions. Kennedy's long-distance holdup an gered some colleagues who were itching to begin the five-week recess and worried about the threatened strike by air-traffic controllers. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., manager of the tax bill, who had stayed up all night with other conferees to work out the final legislation, observed sarcastically that Kennedy's absence "indicates his con cern for this legislation." Kennedy opposes the $32 billion worth of tax breaks in the bill for the oil industry over the next 10 years. Hp also was irked that the conference rejected lived longer than any of the others in the current fast, Maze, died at 7:16 p.m. today. He took his own life by had died. refusing all food and medical intervention." The hunger strike by Irish nationalist inmates in the prison outside Belfast was launched Marh 1 by Bobby Sands to force the British government to grant them political-prisoner status. Britain refused and Sands died May 5 after fasting 66 days. "Kieran Doherty and the seven other men may not have died if the British had moved," Sinn Fein, the legal political arm of the IRA, said after Doherty's death. The IRA is outlawed in both Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic. Catholic militants have rioted following each hunger striker's death, directing their wrath at British troops and the predominantly Protestant Royal Ulster Consta bulary, the police force in this British province. 'We are not prepared to surrender to the British. We stand by our demands.' The overwhelmingly Catholic IRA and splinter fac tions are seeking to end Northern Ireland's status as a British province and unite its Protestant majority with the heavily Catholic Irish Republic. Irish Premier Garret Fitz Gerald issued a statement in Dublin saying he regretted Doherty's death and extended sympathy to his relatives. But he added, "I have also learned with sorrow of the two RUC consta bles murdered today in the course of their duty in County Tyrone. This deplorable act brings only further disgrace on the organization which carried it out." Britain's Northern Ireland Office said in a statement, "Kevin Doherty, a prisoner in Her Majesty's Prison respirator to assist his breathing, a dialy sis machine to cleanse his kidneys and was kept heavily sedated until his death. Neither Cooley nor the patient's wife was at the hospital at the time of death. Since his ordeal began July 23, Meuf fels had survived a diseased heart that became "completely lifeless." He lived more than two days on the artificial heart, had been through two transplant operations and had overcome a blood clotting problem. "We're all really sorry," Haby added. "Everybody was feeling so good about it this time last week." Meuffels lived longer after an artificial heart transplant than any other person, but did not hold the record for survival while carrying the plastic pump. The use of a plastic device to replace the entire heart has been tried only two —statement smuggled from Maze Prison But. Cooley and a team of surgeons decided to implant the controversial plastic heart in Meuffels 10 days ago ,after the patient suffered a massive heart attack following triple-bypass sur gery. his plan to allow a tax credit of up to $2OO in 1981 to help lower-income families pay their heating bills. The oil figure is about halfway between the $19.9 billion in the original Senate bill and the $46 billion in the House bill, which was written by Reagan supporters in a successful effort to win the votes of oil state Democrats. "At a time when millions of average families are being asked to sacrifice as part of the administration's economic program, and at a time when millions of elderly citizens are being asked to accept drastic cutbacks in their Social Security times before, once last August in Argen tina in a patient who died 15 hours later. In Dr. Cooley's first try at the proce dure 12 years ago, the patient, Haskell Karp, 47, of Skokie, 111., lived 65 hours and then died 36 hours after receiving a human heart. Cooley came under fire from the Na tional Heart Institute, Karp's survivors, and his former mentor, Dr. Michael Deßakey. They complained that the de vice had not been properly tested and said it was unethical to "experiment" on a human being. Meuffels, a retired tour bus driver, benefits and their retirement plans, it makes no sense to give the federal store away to the oil companies," Kennedy's statement said. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, who had joined Kennedy in a fight against the oil benefits earlier in the week, issued a statement saying that their efforts had saved taxpayers $l4 billion. He said the fight was over. Opponents of the oil provisions were able to block a House provision that would have raised the 20-percent oil-de pletion allowance to 22 percent and kept it at that level. Doherty was given a 22-year prison sentence in January 1978 after he was convicted of hijacking and possessing guns and explosives. He was elected June 11 to the Dail, Ireland's Parliament, from an IRA strong hold near the border with Northern Ireland. The Dail is on summer recess and the earliest it could proclaim a by-election would be late October. Doherty was the first member of the Irish Parliament to die fasting since Terence MacSwiney, lord mayor of Cork and an IRA commander. McSwiney died Oct. 25, 1920, in London's Brixton prison after fasting 74 days. Sinn Fein said Saturday that a new hunger striker would take Lynch's place soon, but gave no name. It also said Doherty and other fasters would be replaced when they died. Five prisoners are still fasting. After Lynch died, rioters pelted police with debris and gasoline bombs in several sections of Belfast. One boy was seriously hurt when a booby-trapped British flag blew up as he tried to remove it from a stanchion. Catholic churchmen among them Bishop Edward Daly of Londonderry had appealed to the hunger strikers' families to save the protesters' lives by autho rizing medical attention. On Friday, when 29-year-old hunger striker Paddy Quinn became comatose, his widowed mother instruct ed doctors to intervene. After 36 hours of intensive care he regained consciousness in a Belfast hospital. He had fasted 47 days. "It seems his life has been saved," said the Rev. Christopher Mohan, the Quinn family's priest. "He has been conscious for long periods and is aware of what is happening." Mohen said Quinn showed no signs of repudiating his mother's actions. Despite speculation her intervention would start similar moves by other relatives, none had shown signs of following her lead. A statement issued on behalf of the hunger strikers by their supporters, who said it was smuggled from the Maze, declared, "We are not prepared to surrender to the British. We stand by our demands." survived for 54 hours on the electronical ly controlled twin-chambered plastic de vice until a donor heart was found. The body of a 27-year-old Tennessee laborer, who suffered irreversible brain damage during oral surgery for a broken jaw suffered in an auto accident, was flown to Houston shortly before midnight on July 25 and Meuffels received the transplant. The human heart functioned well, but Meuffel's natural defense mechanisms were suppressed to prevent rejection of the transplanted organ and he became more susceptible to infection, Haby said. The FDA, which regulates the use of experimental devices, has asked the hos pital for a report on the Meuffels case and officials say they will make their conclusions after they have reviewed the information. 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