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Show FROM PAGE ONE Standard-Examuner Cuba 4 ham operator in Panam ceived a mayda ‘ Cali about b 4 a.n when the ship was ab From 1A The shooting continued for more than four hours, passengers said, moving from Cuban to international waters. A Cub g uban gunboatfired on a boat wounding some of the refugees The Coast Guard located the boat | about 63 miles southwest of Key The jet located the boat about 67 | West and broughtthe injured to miles southwest of Key West in in- the boat because these people were ternational waters. The cutter Point willing to die before they would stop,” said Arturo Cobo, director of Lobos arrived about 8:45 a.m., Coast Guard spokeswoman Simone Adair said. Passengers said thejet’s appearance chased the gunboats away Jose Ponce, a spokesman for the Cuban Interest Section in Washington, which represents the Cuban government, said Saturday he had heard nothing about the attack. the Cuban Transit Center in Key West The ship’s captain, who was shot in the neck, was in critical condi- One of the other three wounded was released from the hospital; the other two were in stable condition. | Keys Memorial Hospital. rescued by acer Coast Guard Miami e Key Wi Atlantic Puerto Ocean Rigg ns Br an ty | eee ica P Haiti Jamaica | Dominican || Rebublic based exile group Cuban American National Foundation said other refugees have been harassed at sea recently while trying to escape Cuba. “The Cuban government covers Caribbean D-Day Venezuela Columbia. “~< The Associated Press the memories. As was the case a half century ago when weather forced Gen. Dwight Eisenhower to delay D-Day for 24 hours, the veterans hoped for a spot of sunshine Saturday. Winds gusted up to 35 mph, but fairer weather was forecast for Sunday, when the royal yacht Britannia and the U.S. aircraft carrier USS George Washington lead an armada to Normandy. Sheeting rain swept a garden party given by the Bntish royal family into tents on the grounds of Southwick House, the headquarters from where Eisenhower ordered the invasion to begin with the words, “OK,let’s go.” Later, military bands performed at “Beating the Retreat,” attended by 5,000 veterans and foreign dignitaries. The ceremony symbolized the departure of the invasion fleet. The evening’s main event was the largest state dinner in the 42year reign of Queen Elizabeth II, held at Portsmouth Guildhall, a From 1A pinned to their jackets and sweaters. Wearing uniforms pulled out of mothballs, they passed around faded black-and-white photos at a huge tent billowing in the wind on Southsea Common. Wright said he has returned to a different Portsmouth. The seaside resort, heavily bombed during the war by German planes, was taken over by Allied forces as a base for the D-Day deployment. “Banks of barbed wire were stretched out. Gun emplacements lined the shore. You could almost walk across the Solent (River) on ships,” the Englishman recalled. Jeeps, tanks, arms and ammunition were stockpiled and ready for the roughly 100-mile trip across the Channel. Fear among the young men waiting to be deployed was palpable, he said. “I went from a boy to a man in a matter of days,” Wright splendid Victorian structure heavi- ly damaged by German bombs but since restored. said, his eyes filling with tears at 98 Sea it up,” she said. North From 1A ~ In a speech, the queen urged world leaders to protect the D-Day veterans’ hard-won peace. “This commemoration has brought the past into the present. May it also be an inspiration for the future,” she said. For the many veterans notinvited to the official events, Portsmouth City Council offered free drinks at the 16th-century Southsea Castle. Others were invited for a nostalgic cabaret night of 1940s music, free food and drinks. But most preferred to go with a buddyor two to the pubs that line the Portsmouth shore. Jimmy Disorgra, 75, of New York, a U.S. Armygunner with the 789th Anti-Aircraft Battery on Utah Beach, said his main purpose for coming was not the celebrations. “To say a few prayers for the boys and to put my feet on the S ns ndepend ratic ys Th } ne his $6 n rmer Demi | North w 1 delega call. ecceeaneeneny / Cuban refugees Ninoska Perez of the Miami- Late Saturday the Coast Guard brought 59 people ashore, Keene said. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service was processing them at the Coast Guard base before turning them over to the Cuban Transit Center in Key West, he said. i full of Cuban refugees Saturday copters. “The gunboats could not stop tion. etmeteBile me off the coast of Cuba. The operater relayed the call to the U.S. Coast Guard, which dispatched a Falcon yet, a cutter and a couple ofhelli- Lp = \ te me » Wild 55 percent in Ned t Tt ¢ r ypel was not decided until the i largest block of votes was announced The arena broke into loud cheers when North’s tally went over the top. The unofficial delegate count was 4.858 for North and 3.924 for Miller. ‘ sec Miller then asked that the convention nominate North by acclamation Before the balloting, the retired Marine Corps officer enthralled the delegates with a slickly produced video that leveled a “whose side are you on?” attack on liberals in Washington and the national news media. He likened his campaign to the D-Day invasion 50 years ago with the enemy this time being “the over 1 h *s to Robb, who faces three little-known <¢ m his ing Reagan in nents in a June 14 pnmary Miller, 51, countered that North’s nomination would splinter the party and set up the independent bid by Coleman “North will be locked out, be ineffective.” said C. Daniel Clemente, a northern’ Virginia businessman circulating petitions for Coleman. GOP activist Greg Eanes said: “First and foremost, we are Virginians and our duty lies with Virginia, not an extremist ideology or a candidate whose main claim to North arrogance and power of a newnobility in our nation’s capital. “This time there’s only one hill took a hard conservative line on most issues, they differed in their atscanc 1 j rebels at a time when such funding for the Contras was illegal, then he lied to Congress before the scandal surfaced. He was later fired. Under a convoluted system, the delegates cast 8,782 votes. 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