state/nation/world Senate committee attaches strings to MX fundin• By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - The Senate Appropriations Commit tee voted yesterday to approve $9BB million for produc tion of the MX missile, but said none of the funds can be spent until Congress approves a basing plan for the new nuclear weapon. By a 16-12 vote, the panel approved an amendment that goes in the same direction as a compromise Presi dent Reagan had suggested to save funding for the MX, but it does not give the president the specific time limit for start of the MX a program that he wanted. Money to build the weapon still faces floor votes in the Senate and the House, and House opponents say they can defeat the measure. The proposal voted by the Appropriations Committee was sponsored by Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., an opponent of the weapon who said the vote "locks in" the position of the Senate against the dense pack basing of the missile that Reagan favors. Lawyers promise surprises Tylenol suspect confessed, prosecutor claims By PAUL SERAFINI Associated Press Writer NEW YORK Two lawyers for Tylenol extortion suspect James W. Lewis said yesterday the govern ment may be overstating the evidence against him and claimed there will be "surprises" in the case. The attorneys made their comments after a prosecu tor in Chicago charged that Lewis wrote an extortion letter that amounted to a confession to the seven Tylenol poisoning deaths in late September. The prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb, also alleged during a bond hearing for Lewis' wife, Leann, that Lewis, while a fugitive, threatened to kill Presi dent Reagan. Lewis is being held in New York in lieu of $5 million bail pending government proceedings to have him sent to Chicago.for prosecution on the extortion charge. Attorneys Frank Lopez and Harry Batchelder ap peared with Lewis yesterday before U.S. Magistrate Nina Gershon at the federal courthouse in Manhattan to clear up who was going to represent him. Lopez told the magistrate that he and Batchelder were old friends and that Lewis, 36, agreed to have them jointly represent him while he is awaiting remov al proceedings. Atlanta murders: ATLANTA A judge yesterday denied a motion for a new trial for convicted murderer Wayne B. Wil liams,turning aside defense argu ments that new evidence and trial errors warranted a retrial. Superior Court Judge Clarence Cooper denied the motion after a six-hour hearing, saying he found no validity in the defense argu ments. Williams, a 24-year-old black free-lance photographer, was sen tenced to two life terms in Feb ruary after he was convicted of murder in the slayings of Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of 29 young blacks whose deaths during a 22-month period were investigated by a special po- Have a whale of a Christmas Santa Claus arrives in Miami by means of an unusual sort aboard Lolita, an cohorts are on strike, demanding a better vacation package they want 8,000.1 b. killer whale at the Miami Seaquarium. Rumor has it Rudolph and his Christmas off. Lewis, who was arrested Monday, agreed at the hearing to accept the two lawyers. He told the magis trate he had abandoned his earlier intention to file an affidavit indicating he had no funds in order to be provided with a court-appointed lawyer. Outside the courthouse, Lopez and Batchelder de clined to reveal any defense plans. They said they would hold conferences before decid ing whether to contest the government removal effort and expressed confidence Lewis would accept their advice when they reached a decision. Lewis, who was arrested at a New York Public Library branch after eluding a nationwide manhunt for nearly two months, is charged with writing a $1 million extortion demand to Johnson & Johnson, makers of Tylenol, in which he threatened a second wave of poisonings. Webb said Tuesday in Chicago that in the extortion letter Lewis "confesses" to poisoning seven people in the Chicago area who died between Sept. 29 and Oct. 1 after taking cyanide-tainted capsules of Extra- Strength Tylenol. Webb said the letter threatening Reagan "alluded to Tylenol" and apparently was motivated by a dis "agreement with unspecified Reagan administration policies. Judge denies new trial for Williams lice task force. Georgia Supreme Court rulings Homer and Faye Williams, par- that criminal defendants have no ents of the defendant, were in the right to attend post-conviction courtroom yesterday as a team of hearings. defense lawyers argued their new Defense lawyers alleged numer trial motion, alleging 78 instances ous instances of prosecutorial mis of error during the sensational, conduct during the trial and argued nine-week trial. that a drawing posted in the jury Mrs. Williams said she was not dining room during one day of the surprised by Cooper's ruling. trial should in itself warrant a new "He's very biased and controlled trial by the prosecution team," she said. "He has no right to be a judge. The only thing he's interested in is sav ing his face. I'm very glad it's moving out of his court. Maybe we can get justice now." Williams, who is being held in the Fulton County jail, was not present for the hearing because of earlier Hollings' amendment to a stopgap money bill would retain $9BB million in the measure to buy the first five of the 100 planned missiles. But it also bars any use of the money until Congress approves a basing plan, with no restriction on when that might be. A day earlier, President Reagan had proposed retain ing money to buy the missiles, but freezing it only until next spring, when Congress would vote on a new basing mode. Hollings' move was accepted after only brief debate. His margin of victory came when four Republican senators, some of whose votes were unknown, sided with him. They included Sen. Mark Hatfield of Oregon, Lowell Weicker of Connecticutt, Arlen Specter of Penn sylvania, and Mark Andrews of North Dakota. "This pretty well locks in the position of both houses against dense pack," Hollings said. "I don't know anybody in the Senate who likes dense pack." Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., argued against Hollings' proposal, saying "we would be misunderstood at home and abroad if we adopt this." Defense attorney Lynn Whatley also cited an affidavit from a teen ager who claimed he saw someone, but not Williams, stab 15-year-old Joseph "Jo-Jo" Bell to death. Bell's murder was one of 10 other task force cases introduced at the trial to show a pattern of killings. MX supporters have said any congressional action against housing a new land-based missile in the United States might upset NATO allies who have agreed to accept new land-based U.S. nuclear weapons starting next year. That is a "valid concern," Hollings said, explaining why he had not tried to eliminate production money. Hollings also criticized the president for renaming the MX the "Peacekeeper," saying, "next thing, they'll be calling the B-1 bomber the Virgin Mary." The Reagan administration shrugged off the commit tee's action and said it would fight for the compromise the president announced yesterday. White House spokes man Larry Speakes said chances were good for passage of the Reagan-backed proposal when it comes to a vote before the entire Senate. Speakes said that if the committee's plan became law, "Congress could postpone indefinitely a vote on a new missile." "A filibuster could keep Congress from voting, and the American people deserve a vote on the missile," Speak- Gdansk dockworkers lay wreaths at the base of a monument to workers slain during rioting in 1970. Today is the 12th anniversary of the uprising. Lech Walesa is scheduled to speak at ceremonies today. Walesa spurns official's summons, plans speech for labor anniversary By W. JOSEPH CAMPBELL Associated Press Writer WARSAW, Poland Labor leader Lech Walesa spurned a summons from the public prosecutor's office in Gdansk yesterday on the eve of his first public speech in more than a year, sources in the Baltic port reported. The sources said Walesa, in a letter to the prosecutor, complained that the summons was improperly drafted and vaguely worded. Plainclothes police were in evidence around Wale sa's apartment house in Gdansk last night, and in- formed sources said he spent the evening conferring with a lawyer about the summons. The summons did not specify what the prosecutor wanted to question Walesa about, the sources said. There was speculation that the government wanted to pressure him to call off the speech he plans in Gdansk today or to grill him about irregularities which PAP, the official news agency, reported Tuesday had been found in the finances of the Gdansk chapter of the Solidarity labor federation. Gdansk, a traditional hotbed of labor agitation, was reported calm, with extra troops and police patrolling the city, on the eve of the anniversary of the 1970 clash there between police and shipyard workers. Scores of Walesa's fellow workers at the Lenin Shipyards were slain. P 7 1 ':"'; Another spy scandal t 4 rocks Great Britain . . LONDON (AP) Another spy The newspaper said British se , ; f , ' , scandal broke here last night when curity services and Scotland 1:11 ' B th r e ita F in or b e y ign reci O u ff e i s c t e la s s a t id we a ek So h u a t d h k Y ee ar p d i ' n s g S Kl pe u c e ia un l B d r e a r n o c b h se t r h v a a t t d io e n a . ls - i • - :: irti... 4l ' ~, K . : ,t, : ,:. ;; .. ; :s . ': /. 4 ',' • .',ll. • ' S . :l 1 African Embas i s no y faf o icc f t f ii i av c li i t a si l etas w tius h n o cy l m eft . with espionage cases had been pa bee ti n ble 'e w ng it a h ged his The phrase is recognized diplo- Klue's lowly rank did not merit him a mention in the Foreign Office's Diplomatic List of foreign . -„• —l matic language for spying. The diplomats in London. But : the Dai same expression was used Dec. 3 ki: f ',',, - . i ly Express claimed he was a more when the Foreign Office an „ : , , ; : 7 't ', important figure in the South Afri - • nounced the expulsion of Soviet Pi • : 'can Embassy than Lt. Col. Alexan naval attache Anatoly Zotov for der Clark, the army attache, and spying. Col. Van Niererk, the armed The South African official was forces attache. named as Joseph Klue, a security However, the British domestic police warrant officer at the news agency Press Association em bassy. A Foreign Office spokes quoted British government man said Klue left Britain sources as saying Klue was "felt following an approach by British to be engaged in espionage in only authorities to South Africa's Am- a bassador Marais Steyn. fairly limited way.” ..s.. The spokesman indicated that if PA added: "It is not clear if lt the South Africans had not with- Klue was the organizer of a South drawn Klue from Britain, the Brit- African intelligence network coy ; I ish would have expelled him. The Foreign Office spokesman ering part of Western Europe." A delegation from Britain's refused to give 'details of the al- Anti-Apartheid Movement led by / leged activities leading to Klue's Member of Parliament Robert departure. Hughes met British Home Secre t The Daily Express reported that tary William Whitelaw this year to AP Laserphoto Klue "is known to have run a complain about alleged activities network of agents spreading fear of the embassy. PA said investiga in Britain and in Europe from the tion of Klue's background by Brit- London embassy in Trafalgar ish authorities began from that Square." date. The Daily Collegian es said, reading a statement he said was approved by Reagan. "If it becomes law, it would leave uncertain the question of America's resolve to rebuild its national defense." Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., meanwhile, said he has 14 co-sponsors for an amendment he plans to offer on the floor to delete the MX production funds. The co-sponsors include 12 Democrats and Republicans Charles McC. Mathias of Maryland and Larry Pressler of South Dakota. "The administration's compromise proposal is merely a delaying tactic," Cranston said. "It is postponing at great cost to the taxpayer our facing the inevitable: that no invulnerable basing mode for the MX has yet been devised or is likely to be devised." The stopgap bill must also be voted in the House, which last week defeated MX production money in a separate Pentagon spending measure. With the lame-duck Con gress hoping to adjourn quickly, it now appears that there won't be a Senate vote on that separate Pentagon money bill. The government has not said whether it would waive martial-law restrictions to permit the memorial meet ing today at which Walesa planned to speak before the monument to the slain workers. Sources in Gdansk close to the government said there were strong indica tions he would not be allowed to address the gathering, but added that nothing definite had been decided. PAP reported that Mariusz Wilk, former editor of the Solidarity weekly Samorzadnosc, and six other people were arrested in Gdansk and Warsaw on suspicion of possessing and preparing illegal publications "con taining false information likely to stir up public un rest." The official media reported the government held a brief, sparsely attended memorial ceremony at the monument yesterday. Walesa, chairman of the outlawed independent labor federation who was released last month after 11 months internment . , planned in his speech to urge his followers to pursue peacefully the ideals and ambitions of the independent labor movement. "Our workers' issue is still open, and ours will be the victory," he said in an advance text of the speech given Tuesday to Western correspondents in Warsaw. PAP reported on Tuesday that government auditors uncovered "many irregularities" in the administration of funds by Solidarity's Gdansk local, including "unjus tified expenditures, violations of financial regulations and rules of record-keeping." Thursday, Dec. 16 state news briefs PUC wants no one left out in the cold HARRISBURG (AP) The Public Utility Commission wants to know how many Pennsylva nians face being left in the cold this winter. The PUC has sent inquiries to all gas, electric and steam heat corn panies in the state asking them how many of their ratepayers are without service. The commission regards heat as an "essential service," PUC Chairman Susan Shanaman said. "In the absence of a commis sion-ordered ban on service termi nation, this commission expects Unemployed eligible for surplus food HARRISBURG (AP) Unem ployed Pennsylvanians will be eli gible for government surplus cheese and butter under an agreement between state and fed eral agriculture officials, Rep. James Manderino, D-Westmore land County, said yesterday. Manderino, who will be House majority leader when Democrats take control in January, had urged state Agriculture Secretary Pen rose Hallowell to distribute sur plus dairy products to the unemployed, along with the needy, nation news briefs Unsatisfactory bonus results in death NEW YORK (AP) A 38-year old law clerk who complained about the size of her Christmas bonus shot and killed one of the firm's partners yesterday, police and a 'company spokesman said. Barbara Austin was charged with murder after she allegedly fired three shots into Jay Jacobs, 50, at the offices of Burke & Burke on Fifth Avenue, police said. "Afterward, she was heard to complain that the amount of her 2 nuns convicted in child abuse case WHITTIER, Calif. (AP) A nun accused of slamming a young student into a wall and punching another in the stomach was con victed of child abuse yesterday. The district attorney's com plaint alleged that Sister Lourdine Sok threw an unidentified 9-year old girl against a wall and hit 8- year-old Michael Garza in the stomach, pulled his hair, pinched him, stomped on his' foot, and grabbed him by the cheeks and lifted him off the ground. Following four days of testimo world news :briefs Leftists kidnap president's daughter GUATEMALA CITY (AP) Government security forces searched yesterday for the kid napped daughter of Honduran President Roberto Suazo Cordova, held under threat of death by leftist guerrillas demanding publi cation of a political manifesto. The government announced Tuesday night that 33-year-old Xiomara Suazo Estrada, who lives in Guatemala City, was kidnapped by an unidentified guerrilla group that identified itself to local media by the initials CDT. A Honduran government corn munique said the kidnapping took Sadat's brother charged with fraud CAIRO, Egypt (AP) The Egyptian government yesterday formally charged Esmat Sadat, half-brother of the late President Anwar Sadat, with corruption, fraud and influence-peddling and demanded that he and two sons be imprisoned for one year. Prosecutor Abdel-Kader Ahmed Aly ordered Sadat, 58, and mem bers of his immediate family to be tried by the ethics court, estab- that the utility companies' will exercise the utmost restraint in using their powers of termi nation," Shanaman wrote in a letter to the companies. PUC regulations require that a utility representative meet with the delinquent ratepayer before turning off the heat during the winter months. The company must also attempt to negotiate a reasonable payment plan and, if no agreement is reached, must submit the case for PUC review before terminating service. in food giveaways that began last February. Hallowell had felt that giving the food to the unemployed would vio late federal 'regulations, the law maker said. But Manderino said U.S. Agri culture Department officials met with state officials Tuesday and made clear unemployed people could qualify. Surplus foods will be distributed to union food banks as soon as the state gets written confirmation, Manderino said. year-end bonus was unsatisfacto ry," Michael A. McElroy, a firth spokesman, said. McElroy said that after shooting Jacobs in his office, Austin re turned to her desk outside and sat down. Police said that after the shoot ing, Austin was taken to Bellevue Hospital for treatment of an ap parent drug overdose. She was reported to be in good condition. ny, a jury found Sister Sok guilty of child abuse and Sister Urban Maureen Molitor guilty of failing to report child abuse, Deputy Dis trict Attorney David Velasquez said. The nuns' attorney, Joseph Brandlin, called the verdict "an absolute travesty." Earlier, Brandlin said the charges were "fabrications brought on by a group of dissident parents on a vendetta against the two sisters." place early Monday. It said "the crime is doubly unjustifiable be cause Dr. Suazo has no official relation with the government of Honduras, nor does she partici pate in any way in the decisions of the administration." Foreign Minister Eduardo Cas tillo Arriola said the Guatemalan Cabinet was meeting with the president to consider the govern ment's response. He said govern ment position has, been "not to deal with guerrillas, but the case of Dr. Suazo Estrada is special, since it involves the daughter of the leader of Honduras." lished several years ago to fight corruption. Hearings are sched uled to begin Saturday. The charge sheet also asked the court to confirm Aly's decision of Oct. 20 to sequester the property of Esmat Sadat, his two wives and 15 children. Cairo newspapers estimate the Esmat family wealth at about $6O million. 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