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_wire_ Government ci CHARLESTON, S.C. <AP) Charleston restaurant has I government, which charges with illegal drug money. Forfeiture proceedings we Court against 82 and 82 the restaurant "82Queen." mi i- ? 1 Ane acuon, nowever, en restaurant. Court records allege the p to exchanges of controlled federal Controlled Substance Similar court filings have other forfeitures initiated 2 Island, equipment and cash federal statutes. Assistant U.S. Attorney Li on the investigation. Joseph R. Sliker, presider (Charleston) News and Coui called by his attorney conc< but that he did not know whal Asked about the restaura * ?1 11 <<T> I. iuiu uie uewspapei, i vt: in that be?" He said he has not been si restaurant is continuing to cc Transplant w( HONOR, Mich. (AP) - A a teen-ager his right hand a] from the sport ? and he'll u hold a gun. "I've got a new shotgun since," said Mark Rhodes, deer this year." Rhodes lost his right th discharged on a deer hunt damaged, requiring six opei During the most recent si on Mark's right foot was tr Ronald Clark. Clark thp funrapnn caiH t will have feeling and the s further surgery to repair th< Clark estimated about 20 done in the United States si in 1969. 'Adopt-a-rat' LOS ANGELES (AP) to a painful start after one lover's apartment bit a TV i say "cheese" for the earner "We're going to put the Huston, spokesman for tl Regulation, said Friday, " from Channel 5 on the thi about the adoptions. "We'll keep them 10 day "They will either go on s< wildlife group. We don't r research." "I had to get a tetanus s trying to get him to hold turned and sunk his teeth ii nip, it went all the way to th Lucius McCoy, district s ment, said the bite didn't perament, I guess." The Huston said. Under the adoption progi $2.13 apiece, but there was "If you buy a male and fe them for free," Huston saic Police arrest GREENVILLE, S.C. (A year-old suspect in the the wheelchair. But the 13-year-old muse put the loss of the chair b people of Greenville. Edward, unable to propc a new electric wheelchai nffr?rt hu Wnl niti'/pne "V V...UV..U, outside his Greenville ap parents admitted they did i A total of more than ! through donations and a Apartments where the i director of the Greenville P About $3,700 of that ami which he received in early toMDA. Robert Kugene Louke \ ceny in the theft of an ele Monday and was being h< n 111 n a__ r\ _ i a ureenvme v.ouniy ueienin USC todai RH film: "Sharky's M Reynolds and Rachel Wi 9:30 p.m., $1.50. Lecture: St. Francis o and 8 p.m. Gambrell Ha onfiscates land - The land underneath a stylish >een confiscated by the federal the $200,000 property is linked ;re filed Monday in U.S. District 1/2 Queen St., the location of ?s onlv thp nronprtv not thp roperty "is a proceed traceable substances" in violation of the ! Act. been made in recent weeks in igainst parcels on Hilton Head . all for alleged violations of the onel Lofton refused to comment it of the 82 Queen Inc., told The -ier on Monday that he had been srning some government action t it involved. nt Kainn 1 inlraH fa Hrnrfc Clil/or kiv W1115 uimvu i-u ui U50, uiiivui eard rumors like that. How can erved any legal papers, and the mduct business as usual. Dn't stop hunter hunting accident that nearly cosl pparently hasn't discouraged him se a thumb that used to be a toe tc and I've shot a couple of times id. i am going 10 iry again ior a umb Nov. 15 when his shotgur ing trip. His hand was severely rations to repair. jrgery on Aug. 26, the second toe ansplanted to his hand, said Dr hat with the new thumb, Rhodes ibility to write. But he will neec 5 rest of his hand. 0 toe-hand transplants have beer nee the procedure was developec program starts An "adopt-a-rat" program got ofl of 53 white rats taken from a rat newsman holding up the rodent t( as. m on sale this morning," Dyei tie city Department of Anima but one of them bit Mike Botula imb." Now the pound isn't sure s for observation," Huston said ale or we will donate them to i elease any animals for medica hot," Botula said. "We were jus still (for the cameras), and h< nto my thumb. It's not just a littli e bone." iupervisor for the animal depart result from disease ? "just tem white rats don't carry rabies -am, he said, rats would have cos a way to cut the cost: imale, you would soon have a lot c I. wheelchair thiel P) - Police finally arrested a 11 ft of Edward Boardman's electri ular dystrophy victim had alread ehind him ? courtesy of the kin il a manual wheelchair, was give r after an intensive fund-raisin His wheelchair was stolen froi artment two months ago and h not have the money to replace it. ?4,900 was collected for the be fund-raising party at Crossroac theft occurred, said Pat Fiel< Muscular Dystrophy Association. 3unt went to Edward's new chai r September. The extra funds wei las been charged with grand la ctric wheelchair. He was arrestc 2ld Tuesday on $5,000 bond at tl on Center. y lachine" starring Burt o.on _ a t -7 i aiu, -c.ou p.m. ^ i; / ana f Assisi Colloquium, 2:30, 4 II Auditorium. DHEC reduc (AP) - State health officials, who canceled a program to provide South Carolina hemophiliacs with lifesaving blood components, now say additional money may be available, a member of a hemophilia group said. Last month, the state Department of Health and Environmental Control announced it would end the program, which provides expensive bloodclotting components to hemophiliacs. "DHEC has indicated it will retain some assistance funds in the program, although not at the same level." said Peter Korn. who is president of the state chapter of the National Hemophiliac Foundation. "I'm to meet with them Thursday to discuss income limitations for participants," he said. Korn said DHEC officials apparently reconsidered the termination after the cancellation was Mm BBMH T I HTTT w 7""iir^^Ki 1 BEHi llll^p Andy Bead practices his power shot beach ball tournament in Charleston s| ; Court to dec ! (AP) ? The South Carolina Suprerm "in the next few weeks" whether pris t letting some prisoners go six months t B end, Solicitor James C. Anders said We< e A circuit court judge who ruled the pi refused this week to change his mind, " issue now goes automatically to the higl Jesse P. Pratt, executive director '? Community Corrections Board that program to help ease prison overcrowi he was "somewhat disappointed" b Circuit Judge William H. Ballenger's d< II Prison officials were supposed to selected prisoners out early under paro I Ballenger's ruling came in a suit i I claimed that the program was ill dangerous criminals on the streets. c "I know overcrowding is a problem, 1 out on the street is a greater problem," y The prisoners were required to have ! Romanian Arc lg n DETROIT (AP) - Romanian Oris thodox Archbishop Valerian Trifa, accused cf being an ardent Nazi >y supporter who incited riots that killed Is 300 people during World War II, will d, be deported, the Justice Department announced today. i cru:,. :? iu? f: ?~^OA ? - , i ma ta uic in si tunc in ju yuai's ci fit person has been ordered deported for fascist activities...and it won't be the r- last," Allan A. Ryan, director of the id Office of Special Investigation in the le U.S. Justice Department, said at a news conference. Ryan said his office _ is probing 210 people who are knowr fascists living in the United States Twenty-five of those cases are in the courts. The announcement was made aftei an abrupt end to Trifa's deportatior trial in Detroit following ar agreement worked out between Trifj ^ ^c i l 4u u:? 1!-- 4.. Janu leueiai auuiunues, according u Trifa's defense attorney Williarr Swor. The trial had opened Monday. The deportation order was disclosec by Peter Black, historian for th< es program's publicized in the media. He said some rmlifinn 1 rvrnccnra onnaronflir u/QC = . 1 ? -.= ".rj ~?J^T ': " r-*.? f?.- ? T^/Ty^T ~ 1111 ' " " ! 'flyffMUAl >: >: ^vI^^r-;Fi.-:i-: -Lrf IK^ db iBdiiimuiB mrayne Yancey waicnes. ittsy lonsored by the Windjammer. ide prison rele e Court should decide preceding six mon on officials can start ar.me,d. >efore their sentences in^'n ' or r inesday. B,ut An,dJ> msii mates with long se rogram illegal in May to leave prison afte , and Anders said the "That is not the 1 court. excluded by statute of the Parole and the case." wanted to use the Anders also said ding, said Wednesday release doesn't fit ut not surprised by Ballenger agreed, icision. the person returns. ... . . . . . "Furlough mear begin in July to let Pratt said ?A fur le supervision. supervised . Ours is filed by Anders who whatever the S egal and could put state's parole strat reduce the numbei )ut having these thugs prisons. Anders said. That includes pi clean records for the offender is requiret r nmsnop races c Office of Special Investigations in the Justice Department. The archbishop will leave the United States voluntarily and hopes to go to Switzerland, Swor said. Trifa will apply for travel documents from Switzerland and must leave the United States within 60 days after ; receipt of the documents, the defense attorney said. Trifa agreed to "admit depor1 tability," meaning there were facts present in the case which could have 1 led to him being deported, Swor said. In return, the government will "abandon it's claims of persecution and killing" against Trifa, Swor said. 1 At the news conference, Ryan said i Trifa admitted to three specifics: i membership in the Iron Guard, ) deemed by the United States to be a i fascist organization; misrepresentation of facts to immigration officials 1 when he entered the United States; and his ability to be classified as an pv/iivivai p voouiv nppui vuvaj m wu exerted after hemophiliacs' families expressed concern. State Sen. J. Verne Smith, DGreenville and Ihe author ef the bill that created the program several years ago, promised to see that it continued after DHEC announced the cancellation Sept. 17. Since the announcement, some patients were scrambling frantically to locate the blood components that would no longer be available through the state's health department, according to Korn. "I have received several calls from the families of hemophiliacs who are frantic," Korn said. "They ask, 'What do I do? Where can I get my product?"' Korn said the lack of advance notice of the cut caused a great deal of HmBHnnnDHHnnBHmns A A_ III \# - VI funding concern to the "bleeders" about future availability of sometimes hardto-locate components. DHEC terminated the assistance program Sept. 30 for about 100 hemophiliacs in the state who need components periodically to survive r 4 1 LI _ * J! are getting ready for a two-man ase issue ths and not be serving time for murder, sxual assault, assault and battery with lapping. >ted the program would allow some inntences for such crimes as manslaughter r serving as little as six months. s case," Pratt said. "That individual is 3. It never was the case and never will be I AI - - ~ i me program was illegal because early the legal definition of furlough. Judge saying a furlough is a leave from which is different things to different people," lough in the Army, for example, is unsupervised." upreme Court decides, Pratt said, the egy will be to continue to look for ways to - of non-violent people in South Carolina -obation and programs under which an 1 to make restitution to crime victims. leportation excludable alien because he had lied to get his entry visa to the United States. The remainder of the charges uKctnisi mm were dropped, including an allegation that Trifa incited the pogrom in Bucharest in which Jews and opponents of the Iron Guard were beaten and killed. Today's settlement is "a complete and total victory. We got everything we set out to get," said Ryan, who added that the settlement cannot be appealed. The deportation order will not affect rn..; ? i - - - inia s standing with the Romanian Orthodox Episcopate, a 35,000member church based in Grass Lake, Mich., a suburb of Jackson about 90 miles west of Detroit. Asked why Trifa, 68, agreed to the settlement, Swor said, "Instead of dragging it on, that's why. He's old and ill. It was a no-Win situation. ? ireqiieiu internal uieeaing. The termination resulted . om DHEC's efforts to comply with a 4.6 percent-budget reduction mandated to offset projected revenue shortfalls. Expressing concern that DHEC bureaucrats could discontinue a program created by the General Assembly, Smith said he hoped to get the funding for the program restored. Smith's resolve to get the program funded again was "the only glimmer of hope" the hemophiliacs had seen in their efforts to reverse the DHEC decision, Kornsaid., iff ^^HHH|^B.:. jw