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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 1
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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 1

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Homcgrovn boys' from Noxon keep on MPC land holdings give it povcr of another sort Also this Death 'God'i Page 25. Stroke depression treatable. Page 1 0. 2.75 million die In droughts. Page 8.

on water system buyout. Page 1 1 Congressman wants Shultz out. Page 22. notching the wins SPORTS MIDWEEK BUSINESS PAGE 18 PAGE 15 mm Newsstand: 30 cents Home delivery: 26 cents Missoula, Montana (S(offi(dD(dl(otf Marines in Lebanon Associated Press ftlBANONy East, and my attempts have fallen on deaf ears. Innuendo and hearsay reign supreme." The Washington Post reported last week that Jackson, In private conversations, "has referred to Jews as 'Hymle' and to New York as "Hymie" is a shortened version of Hyman, a surname, and It is considered offensive by many Jews.

Klrkland hails Mondale win AFL-CIO President Lane Klrkland on Tuesday hailed Walter F. Mondale's Iowa caucus victory as proof of his presidential appeal "across the spectrum" of the Democratic Party. "We did our duty" for Mondale in Iowa, Klrkland told a news conference on the second day of the AFL-CIO's week-long executive council meeting in Bal Harbour, Fla. But the AFL-CIO chief, trying to blunt criticism that Mondale has become beholden to unions, said the Iowa results should serve notice in New Hampshire and elsewhere that Mondale has the best chance of defeating President Reagan this fall. Reagan news conference tonight President Reagan will hold his first news conference of 1984 at 6 p.m.

MST Wednesday In the East Room of the White House, it was announced Tuesday. gates who will be apportioned on the basis of the precinct caucus results. Eight other Iowa convention delegates will be officially uncommitted. The Iowa results boosted Mondale delegate total to 118. Glenn was in second place with 17.

The totals include House Democrats who were selected as delegates by their colleagues last month. David Nagle, the Iowa Democratic Party chairman, said up to 85,000 Democrats went to caucuses, but he cautioned candidates against drawing too many conclusions from the caucus results. "This should only be the exhibition season," he said. "It shouldn't tell you who the candidate Is." Jackson denies ethnic slur The Rev. Jesse Jackson denied Tuesday that he made an ethnic slur against Jews and accused Democratic presidential rival Walter F.

Mondale of leaking confidential discussions between the two candidates. Jackson said he has been victimized by "innuendo and hearsay." "I deny allegations made by some persons in the media that I have spoken In derogatory terms about persons who happen to be Jewish," Jackson said. "Time and time again, I have tried to clarify my views concerning black-Jewish relations in America and by extension, my views on ways to achieve peace In the Middle Taking no time out to celebrate their Iowa victories, Walter F. Mondale and Sen. Gary Hart turned their attention on Tuesday to New Hampshire and the next big events on the Democratic presidential circuit.

Both were on the trail quickly Hart telling a crowd in Bedford that Mondale's support Is "very soft" and Mondale accusing President Reagan of "leadership by amnesia." In Manchester, Mondale concentrated his attention on Reagan In an appearance at a restaurant. "No one is effectively in charge of this government," he said. "At a time like this, Americans want a president who Is engaged, not detached. They want a president who takes responsibility and not (one who) gives excuses. "The people of New Hampshire won't settle for government by staff, policy by default, management by alibi and leadership by amnesia," he said.

All eight Democratic candidates were making their way to New Hampshire for a League of Women Voters debate on Thursday where they will hone their appeals for New Hampshire's first-in-the-natlon primary next week. Iowa Democrats gave Mondale nearly half their votes In Monday night's precinct caucuses. His success In locking up delegates to the national convention this summer In San Francisco was even more substantial. His showing appeared to give him 48 of the 50 dele Hart 'not going to play by Mondale's rules' By MIKI SHANAHAN Associated Press Aug. 23, 1982 A contingent of Marines arrives at Beirut's International Airport as PLO guerrillas are evacuated.

They are on station until Sept. 10, leaving without suffering a casualty. Sept. 29, 1982 1,600 Marines land and take up positions at the Beirut airport as part of a multinational force after the massacre of hundreds of Palestinian refugees In two Beirut camps. Aug.

29, 1983 The first Marine deaths from hostile action are reported with two killed and 13 wounded from stray shells during fighting between Lebanese army units and Moslem militia. Oct. 23, 1983 241 U.S. military personnel are killed in a truck bomb attack on the Marine headquarters at Beirut airport. The bombing results In a redeployment of non-essential forces to U.S.

ships offshore. Fab. 21, 1984 Marine combat troops start pulling out of Beirut and spokesmen say the evacuation will take "a week, maybe two." Mor. en th Marin pullout, Pag. 22.

ences with Mondale and attacking the former vice president as a representative of "the old politics," Hart has portrayed himself as the only one of the seven other Democratic candidates who has clear differences with the front-runner. Hart has been gaining steadily In New Hampshire In polls taken among Democrat! and independents, rising tour points to 12 percent In a Boston Globe survey in late January, compared with 18 percent for Glenn. But even If Hart finishes a strong third, or second in New Hampshire, the focus of the presidential campaign shifts to Important states where his campaign strategists say he will be unable to take advantage of momentum developed In Iowa and New Hampshire. the Democratic Party with 94 percent of the precincts reporting. Glenn had 3.4 percent for a sixth place finish behind four other candidates and an uncommitted slate.

"I think as the other candidates drop out of the race, my situation will Improve," Hart said. "I think the voters of New Hampshire will generally follow the trend In Iowa." At the very least, Hart said he will become known among millions of potential supporters nationwide and attract much more money to a campaign that has been low budget from the start. After the results were in Monday night, Hart said, "I expect more people will have heard my name tomorrow than have in the past year." By stressing his generational differ state's primary election next Tuesday, he will replace Sen. John Glenn as the principal rival to Mondale. "I think this will be a two-person race and I'll win It," said Hart, who emerged as one of the caucus winners despite losing 3-1 to Mondale.

The Hart entourage with campaign aides and reporters consisted of a van or two In earlier campaigning, but on Tuesday, It had grown to a bus load of people. The number of reporters covering the Hart campaign has been increasing since the Jan. 15 debate at Dartmouth College, said media spokeswoman Kathy Bushkin. "And in the last 24 hours it took another big leap," she said. Hart attracted 18.4 percent of Iowa Democrats compared with Mondale's 48.9 percent, according to figures compiled by WASHINGTON Democratic presidential candidate Gary Hart plans to exploit his second place finish in the Iowa caucuses by working hard in New Hampshire and then waging a "guerrilla campaign" to nibble away at Walter F.

Mondale's big lead and well-financed organization. "We are not going to play by Mondale's rules," Oliver Henkel, Hart's campaign manager, said In an Interview Tuesday. "We are going to go our own way," Henkel said. Meanwhile, in New Hampshire, the Colorado senator predicted that after that CPR training used quickly Murderer disarmed Grandmother uses breakfast and prayer By LIS SIAOO Associated Press Louise Degrafinried By ANTHONY BROWN of theMlisoullan Last week, 13-year-old Destry Randies finished two weeks of CPR training at Rattlesnake School. Monday evening the test came.

"I never thought it would happen to me, that I'd really use it," Destry said Tuesday. "But I did It made me wonder why everybody doesn't know CPR." CPR is cardiopulmonary resuscitation, the method used to revive people whose heart and breathing have stopped. Destry's chance to use it came late Monday. He was working in his grandparents' yard on South Sixth Street West when his grandfather, Ben Sayler, 69, collapsed Inside. Destry and his uncle, 16-year-old Mike Randies, took over.

They are both taking CPR training. "I ran in and I knew I could help." Destry said. "It surprised me. It was like it was all on paper and I was reading how to do it In class I had always forgotten to cover the (victim's) nose, but I remembered. I kept saying to myself "Pinch the nose, pinch the For the next five minutes they did CPR, Mike doing the chest massage, Destry the inhala-tkmi The first heb to arrive was ing other troopers.

Louise Degrafinried talked with the convicted murderer in her kitchen. "I said 'Put that gun down. I don't allow no violence And he put that shotgun on the couch over there." She said she offered Arzeneaux breakfast after he complained he was hungry, and that he ate several eggs, some bacon and a half -gallon of miik. "He just turned that jug up and drank it down In about two gulps," she said. Arzeneaux ordered her husband outside to start his truck.

"He said he wanted me to take him somewhere. But I went out and took the coil wire out It wasn't going to start," Nathan Degrafinried gaid. Inside, Arzeneaux took off his boots and wet socks. "I told him I'd give him some dry socks but the police got here before I could do it for him," she said. At the same time, she said, she was trying to persuade him to surrender.

"I told him Td pray with him and I'd pray for him I told him I was a Christian lady and I had two boys of my own, but they didn't ever get into trouble." Then Simmons arrived. "He (Arzeneaux) said my husband was going to tell on him," Louise Degrafinried said. "I told him not to worry He was cold and wet and had to sleep on the ground outside -pjj. i ii ii I -v I (hp- Ii s. BRADEN, Tenn.

A starving escaped murderer toting a shotgun was disarmed and persuaded to surrender Tuesday by a 73-year-old grandmother who fixed him a big breakfast, prayed with him and promised a pair of dry socks. "I said 'God loves you. You done wrong but God loves Then me and my husband took him by the arms and walked with him down the steps and over to the trooper," said Louise Degrafinried. After Riley Arzeneaux, 28, of Memphis, surrendered to the Tennessee Highway Patrol, law enforcement officers acting on a "gut feeling" beefed up the manhunt in the area for one of the other four "extremely dangerous" inmates who escaped from Fort Pillow State Prison on Saturday. One of the five was recaptured Sunday and officials believe two have left the area.

Degrafinried said her husband Nathan, 71, went outside Tuesday morning to see why their cats were making so much noise. "I was talking on the telephone when he came In with a shotgun pointed at Nathan," she said. "I said 'Call the police!" but I wasn't sure she (the neighbor) heard me." The neighbor to whom Degrafinried was talking called a truck stop where Highway Patrol LL Jerry Simmons was drinking coffee. He headed for the Degrafinried home after alert the house He ought to give himself up." Nathan Degrafinried went back into the house to check on his wife while Simmons shouted for Arzeneaux to surrender. "We each took him by the arm and he didn't give us no trouble Then the police took him away," she said.

A correction official, speaking on the condition he not be identified, said the intensified search was based on a "gut feeling" by Fort Pillow warden Herman Davis that one of the three remaining escapees was still In the Braden area while the other two have fled. Recaptured Sunday was Randolph Oliver, 33, who was serving six life sentences for murder and rape. He was arrested while trying to hitchhike in Brownsville, about 20 miles northeast of here. Still at large were James Cleeg. 30, of Sullivan County, serving a life term for being a habitual criminal; Ronald Freeman, 41, of Knoxville.

serving 198 years for two counts of murder, and Sylvester Alexander, 33, of Memphis, serving 40 years for robbery. Arzeneaux was serving 25 years for second-degree murder. Casey Randies Destry's uncle and Mike's brother. He is an owner of the Arrow Ambulance Co. He said he's arrived on hundreds of similar scenes, and in about 1 of 10 someone is using CPR.

But never had he seen people that young working so coolly to Destry Randies talks about trying to sove hit grandfather's life. ESSE 4 sections, 32 pages AroundAissoula 12 I Classified 25-2? Comics 30 Community Entertainment 22,23 Finance 18-21 Obituaries 12 '51? Western Montana 13.14 save a man uie. "And they were doing it correctly." Casey Randies said. "Everything was right They had him going again by the time we took him to the hospital." But Ben Savler died later Monday. A younger man with the same quick care.

Casey Randies said, would have had "a really good chance" to survive. Destry, meanwhiie. arrived for classes Tuedsy with a letter for his principal, thanking the school for CPR train- Ing. a required part of the District 1 curriculum. Later Destry spoke to one of his classes.

"With the (practice) mannequins, we'd kind of fool around." Destry said. "We didn't think about using CPR. I Just told them it can happen to them, that they could use it, and that they shouldn't think they won A couple of them seemed to torn They're the ones who rrght save somebody." Partly cloudy Wednesday. Cool with local westerly winds. Increasing clouds Wednesday f5ht.

incwer Lf msr Highs, 3Cs; lows, 2Ss..

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Pages Available:
1,235,288
Years Available:
1892-2024