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Show ya.p 2jA The Sait Lake Tribune, Friday, April o w wri flaying Suspect !'' Arrested Oklahoma Gene ILWELL, Okla. (AP) roy Hart, accused of murdering ce Girl Scouts at a camp near Locust last summer, was arrested at a ;11 h me deep in the rugged Cookson s of northeastern Oklahoma on rsday, authorities said. t've State Bureau of Investigation Direc-t$- i Tom Kennedy said Hart, 34, was uefrmed and offered little resistance vpen he was taken into custody by eight bceau agents. riam Pigeon Jr., owner of the hilly hfish country home where Hart was amrehended, also was arrested and vut be charged with harboring a fugitive, Kennedy said. jfiart. a convicted rapist and escapee frrfrn the Mayes County Jail in Pryor, is accused in the slayings cf Lone Icc Farmer, 8; Doris Denise Milner, 10; and Michelle Guse, 9, all of the Tulsa area. Hie girls were killed on their first day of 4 Girl Scout outing at Camp Scott on Jurje 13, 1977. Their bodies were found ner their tent in the hilly, wooded area of rjortheastern Oklahoma. Associated Press Laserphofo Jews Oppose Lutheran Proselytizing The American Jewish Committee Thursday strongly protested a campaign by the 2.8 Lutheran er Cleveland Voters Defeat T ax Boost for Schools Voters in CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland turned down an attempt to school bail out their deficit-ridde- n system by a 3 margin Thursday night, refusing to approve a measure to raise their property taxes an a erage of $87 a year. With GOO of the city's 649 precincts reporting, unofficial returns showed 61,955 votes against the emergency tax measure and 37,387 in favor. About 27 percent of Clevelands 290,000 registered voters went to the polls, election officials said. James OMeara, executive secretary of the Cleveland Teachers Union, said earlier in the evening that if the levy failed the union would ask the state Supreme Court on Monday to force the schools to close. A group seeking to remove Mayor Dennis J. Kucinieh from office, largely because of his March 24 dismissal of popular Police Chief Richard D. Hon-gistcanvassed polling places to collect signatures on recall petitions. Cleveland schools would be forced to close for lack of funds if the 9 five-yea-r tax increase failed, school officials argued during the campaign. No Date Mentioned But no date was ever mentioned for closing school buildings in the 113.000-pupdistrict, the largest public school system in Ohio. The embattled s hool system could not meet its $5 million biweekly payroll e for 11,000 employees last week and has a growing pile of unpaid bills, many dating back to last year. It has ended six of the last eight years with a deficit, and banks have refused 5-- ST. LOUIS (UPI) million-memb- to raise $30 million annually for Clevelands public schools. Cleveland voters line up to get ballots Thursday for levy vote Two were beaten and one was strangled; all were sexually abused. The camp was closed after the slayings, anu Ute parents of Lorie Lee Farmer and Doris Denise Milner filed a $3 million damage suit against the Girl Ecouts of America, charging negligence in the girls deaths. Church-Missou- ri Synod to convert Jews to Christianity. "We are stunned and dismayed, said Rabbi A. James Rudin, the committees assistant national director for affairs. 'By singling out Jews for intensive proselytizing, the Lutheran Church-MissouSynod has in effect branded Judaism as an inadequate and incomplete religion. By undertaking this program, the Missouri Synod has sadly revived the Medieval image of the Jews asi theologically deficient people. Rudin said at a news conference that his organization does not object to conversion campaigns aimed at the entire population but resents having Jews singled out. He was particularly angered at a training manual for conversion efforts, in which illustrations portray a Mr. Average Jew base with what Rudin termed stereotypes. hie synods program is the result of a resolution adopted by its convention laij summer in Dallas. The statement ses a goal of having 50 percent of its membership work to convert Jews to Christianity. inter-religio- ri Hoy Dies, Police Threatened! Dead Woman? Coroner Hears Breath 7, 1978 il full-tim- A REDDING, Calif (AP) woman who was pronounced dead, then shocked coroners when she gasped for breath in the county morgue, was in critical condition in a deep coma Thursday. Tier chances at the tune she was admitted were very dismal, but we do have some fair hopes now, although she has a long way to go, Dr. James Mannion, her physician, said Thursday at Shasta General Hospital Mannion said that when Ginger Regus was first brought to the hospital's intensive care unit about 11 a m. Wednesday, her body temperature w as a highly abnormal 80 degrees. The county coroner said she had apparently attempted suicide. A rives at Hospital She armed at the hospital about an hour after a construction worker found her cold, still body lying m brush about 40 feet from her ear, which was stuck m mud outside Redding, about 200 miles north of San Francisco. Shasta County Coroner Joe Kohn pronounced her dead about 20 minutes after she was found. Her eyes were fixed and dilated. There was no respiration, no pulse, no nothing. Several other people examined her as well and nobody could detect any sign of life, Kohn said later. Empty beer cans and pill bottles were found in her ear, Kohn said. About 45 minutes later in the county morgue, however, a deputy coroner was shifting her body from one gurney to another when the woman ga.sjiod for breath. Spontaneous Breath' to loan any more money to the schools. Passage of the tax hike would allow the school lioard to borrow against the anticipated $30 million in annual Proposition Success in the campaign had been v iewed as a long-shproposition from the start, despite the documented difficulties of the Cleveland schools one of 130 school systems in the state facing financial troubles this year, according to the Ohio superintendent of public instruction. Long-Sh- ot ot Even before the election, the school hoard had arranged for a second election in June, in case the measure failed Thursday. F- -l 1 1 She took a spontaneous breath. This was brought to my attention and I looked and she took another one, said Kohn. We were both shocked, very shocked, but we started instituting some lifesaving measures to bnnher back around again. he said. y When resuscitaa small heartbeat, tion triggered Mrs. Regus was transferred upstairs to the hospital, Kohn said. Mannion said Mrs. Regus was suffering from such severe hypothermia loss of body heat that her vital signs would have been reduced to imperceptible levels. He estimated she had been lying on the ground In near freezing temperatures for 2 hours. eardio-pulmonar- Citys Residents Worried By Actions Since Bust WILL.iMANTIC, The Conn. (AP) three weeks since police arrested youths on marijuana charges have been chilling. K fire has killed one of the boys involved, the high school has been vandalized; the police chiefs car has been firebombed; other police have lieen threatened. Is there a connection? The people of this old mill city are and the dead worried that there is Ixiys father is certain of it. But the head of a special police tean looking into that question says people are overreacting. I feel that the people of Willimantic are in a state of panic at this point, trying to link every crime thats been committed since these drug arrests, and I think thats totally unfair. That comment is from Detective Lt 52 seven-memb- "Nazi Actually A Slave, Witness Says A defense witness CHICAGO (AP) at Frank Walus trial supported his claim Thursday that far from being a Gestapo agent who killed hundreds of Jews in World War II, he was actually a Polish slave worker in Germany. Walus is on trial to determine whether he lied to U.S. immigration officials about his past. If he is found guilty, he could lose his U.S. citizenship and face deportation proceedings. Rita Heiehlinger, an employee of the German General Health Insurance Agency since 1941, testified that she recognized her handwriting on health insurance documents issued to Walus. She said she had helped prepare the documents. The defense claims these documents show Walus, a retired as 11 prosecution laborer, was not witnesses have said a Gestapo agent. The federal attorneys office claims the health insurance documents were forged to serve as covers for Gestapo agents who feared reprisals after the war ended. Paul Sly man, w ho heads the special team and disagrees with John Saucier Sr. Saucier's son, John Jr., 9, and daughter Tabatha. 10, died Tuesday morning in a fire at their home that officials have called suspicious because it started outside the home. In a telephone interview Thursday from his sisters home in Turner, Maine, where he had gone to arrange for burial, Saucier said his son was one of the youths arrested in March and was the states main witness in the a claim Slyman disdrug arrests putes The father claimed the boy w as killed for revenge, and said his former wife with whom John Jr. and Tabatha told him their son had been lived cooperating w'lth police since his arrest He knew who was selling it and everything. He was the states only witness at 9 years old, and that kind of stinks. the Norwich Bulletin quoted Saucier as saying in a copyrighted article. Saucier also said that two weeks More his sons death two shots were fired at the youngster as he came home from school. But Slyman says Saucier is wrong. The boy was never a key witness in he said Thursday. the investigation, I dont feel there is any connection with the fire and the drug arrests in the city last month. The fire is not the only mysterious event since the 52 youths, aged 9 to 19, were picked up on a variety of charges involving possession and sale of marijuana. Willimantic is a city of about 15,000 in economically depressed eastern Connecticut which years ago was made prosperous by thread mills that later moved away. Between March 15 and Tuesday, the city has seen extensive damage done to its high school, a firebombing of the police chiefs car, and a shotgun blast into the home of a police captain. On Wednesday, Slyman said without elalioration that other policemen have been taking precautions because they, too, had been threatened. Still, he said, no connection between the events had been shown. 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