The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 17, 1979, Page Page 2, Image 2
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Shah leaves Iran
TEHRAN, Iran ? Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlevi
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iviv xian ijcvicuty i ucsuay iui jtigypi ana me unitea
States after Parliament gave Prime Minister Shahpour
Bakhtiar and his new government its second vote
of confidence.
Palace sources said the 59-year-old ruler and Empress
Farah left "according to schedule" at 12:15 p.m.
after giving reporters the slip with ? false announcement
that they were delaying their departure
until today.
The shah said the length of his stay abroad would
depend on his "physical condition." But many believe j
the vacation will turn into permanent exile and the end
of the dynasty his soldier-father founded 54 years ago.
"I hope the government will be able to make ampnHs
for the past and also succeed in laying the foundation
for the future," the shah said. "This work needs a long
period of cooperation and patriotism in its utmost
meaning. Our economy must start rolling again and we
must have better planning for the future."
Port recaptured
BANGKOK, Thailand ? Forces loyal to the ousted
Cambodian government recaptured Kompong Som,
the country's only deepwater port, informed sources
reported Tuesday. But they said Vietnamese war
planes new the heaviest strikes of the three-week-old
war, and it was not known who held the port now.
Thai intelligence officials and other reliable sources
said Kompong Som, 135 miles southeast of Phnom
Penh, was retaken Monday after stiff fighting. Then
the Vietnamese air force went into action, and the
situation Tuesday was unclear, the sources said.
>
Settlements planned
TEL AVIV, Israel ? Israel is planning three new
paramilitary settlements in occupied Arab territory,
and the project seemed certain to upset U.S. Mideast
mediator Alfred Atherton.
Cabinet Secretary Arieh Naor said work probably
would begin within a few days on one of the outposts,
and work on all three would be started in a few weeks.
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iNixon win reTurn
WASHINGTON ? Richard M. Nixon is going to the
White House, for the first time since his resignation, to
have dinner later this month with President Carter and
China's Teng Hsiao-Ping.
Nixon, whose 1972 outreach to China ended 22 years
of estrangement between the two nations, was invited
by Carter, who built on Nixon's initiative by
establishing full diplomatic relations with Peking.
Teng, China's vice premier, is scheduled to begin a
week's tour of the United States Jan. 29 with a White
House visit. The state dinner is that night.
Midwest crippled
CHICAGO ? With many schools closed and transportation
still disrupted, the weather-weary Midwest
struggled today to cope with hip-deep snow that
threatened fuel and food supplies. A second runway
reopened at O'Hare International Airport, the nation's
busiest.
The storn-related death toll climbed to at least 53,
and the National Weather Service said there was a
chance of more snow tonight.
Birthday celebrated
As Americans marched and listened to speeches
honoring Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday,
legislation was introduced Monday to make the date a
national holiday.
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wiui iresiaeni uarier as a new supporter, sponsors
introduced the legislation in both houses of Congress.
King, who was assassinated in 1968, would have been 50
on Monday.
Numerous schools and businesses around the nation
were closed to mark the date, which is formally observed
in 13 states and most major cities, according to
Rep. John Conyers, D Mich., who offered the holiday
legislation in the House.
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WASHINGTON ? Congressional opponents of
President Carter's China policy are opening a scattershot
attack that threatens to delay the confirmation
of Leonard Woodcock as ambassador to Peking and to
disrupt the legislative schedule of Senate leaders.
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PSC makes changes
A South Carolina Public Service Commission
spokesman said electricity bills will not change much
because of PSC-ordered changes in two utilities' fuel
cost recovery methods.
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Parker, said the action the PSC took Monday "sounds
to me like a good move."
The utilities, who wanted their base rates to cover
more of the fuel that they use to generate electricity,
won on that point. But the PSC threw out both firms'
fuel adjustment clauses.
Parker said Monday afternoon, "The public will be
| more satisfied when they know any changes in fuel
charges must be approved by the commission instead
of automatically every month."
Woman sentenced
CHARLESTON ? A 19-year-old woman has been
sentenced to 18 years in prison in connection with the
beating death of her 2-year-old son.
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v^n*-un uuuge waiter lox sentenced vonda Elizabeth
Brown Monday after she pleaded guilty to manslaughter.
Brown, who lived with her common-law husband,
was charged in the death of Michael Brown March 25,
1978.
Charges dropped
FORT JACKSON ? Charges against a drill sergeant
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ui uidiii camieni ana assault nave been dropped after
an investigation found insufficient evidence in the
case.
Sgt. George R. Moss had been accused of hitting
three teen-age recruits in the chest and throwing two of
them against a wall Dec. 12.
The recruits, who required no medical treatment,
were in their first day of training with Moss.
Taping challenged
The chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme
Court says disciplinary action could be taken against a
judge who permitted a Columbia television station to
I ? r? ? ? ? 1
viucuuipc a courtroom proceeding.
J. Woodrow Lewis said Monday he was unaware of
Family Court Judge Harold R. Boulware's decision to
allow a WIS-TV news team to tape a proceeding in
Richland County Family Court.
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