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_wire Dramatic rescu ATLANTA (AP) - Brig. Ge chiefs from around the worl rescue from Red Brigade te; cause of law enforcement ar Italv. "A lot more good than bad h 42-day captivity, which ende< freed him after bursting into being held. "In Italy, the enhancemei indescribable." Dozier said forcement agencies in Italy ha He attributed his rescue - th of a prisoner from the Red Bi ... routine, solid police work." Dozier, now deputy commai Armor Center at Fort Kno thousand police commanders of the international Associatic Using photographic slides, 1 turns delivering a thorough , "the exercise." Dozier, then deputy chief of southern Europe, was kidrn Verona, Italy, after two meml as plumbers, gained access t was bound and gagged but i attention four hours later. Nuclear capabi NEW YORK (AP) - U.S. mi many of them involved with 1 neighbors, will be capable of the year 2000, the New York T The analysts, citing a recei the Times that the United Sta the possibility of nuclear wi Soviet Union. "A continued effort should I nuclear weapons capability, potentially hostile, to Unite report Defense Guidance, i strategic direction for the am rne analysis saia any nui other than the Soviet Union tactical nuclear weapons usee "Priorities should be suvivability, endurance, cor trol, and intelligence capab forces," according to the repc Navy tries to NANOOSE BAY, British arrived in a hovercraft, torp destroyer, but all they foui waving their flippers as the rocks. The rescue armada descer resident telephoned authoriti two overturned vessels an clinging to the capsized boats A Coast Guard hovercraft< with divers.Military maneu\ were suspended and Canadia ui\avy aesiroyer neaaea i Two Fisheries Departmen area, and a helicopter was Forces Base at Comox. When the would-be rescue] only "seals and sea lions, dc Coast Guard Capt. Claude Sa "Thev were sitting on the us," he said. "From the shor rocks, it would look like some boat. "We had to go fairly close arms waving." Report tells of WASHINGTON (AP) - T parently has failed to preve technology to the Soviet Uni< In a 67-page report releai committee on investigation States strengthen its intellif halt a "massive, well plan effort to acquire U.S. techno The subcommittee stoppe staff recommendation that I enforcement powers under t "The evidence is strong I they obtain from the West industry," the panel said. The minority staff of the investigation, recommend Customs Service be given f\ of export controls. The Commerce Depari responsibility, through its Customs Service assigned a r*??~~ USC todai RU film* "Cauo fhn 11)1 I Will* UUVU II lis and Jack Gilford, 2:30, Basketball: LISC vs. Coliseum. le boosts pride J n. James L. Dozier told police u Id Monday that his dramatic ju(^ rrorists this year boosted the toss id enhanced national pride in miu the dk rPGiiItMl " TVwior cniH i\( hie ? ? , v. iiiei i when a police tactical squad regj the apartment where he was ir cas< it of national pride has been u.S I. "The esteem of law en- rui is been rapidly accelerated.'' ser le first successful police rescue day igade - to "superb police work f0r< pro< riding general of the U.S. Army car x, Ky., spoke before several ?? attending the annual meeting the in of Chiefs of Police. effe Dozier and his wife, Judy, took pUb account of what Dozier called Hat H ?rr v a l j autu ui s iauu iuiccs in mei ipped from his apartment in Spe< t>ers of the Red Brigade, posing stiti ;o his living quarters. His wife 0pp nanaged to attract neighbors' the evi< i|?A doc wiy increasing ^ litary analysts say 31 countries, It ongstanding disputes with their woi producing nuclear weapons by or t imes reported Monday. reg it U.S. intelligence survey, told ? ites would be forced to consider ir with nations other than the be made to reduce the spread of particularly nations hostile, or d States' interests," said the a classified five-year plan of [led forces. clear confrontation with a foe i would be limited with small i, the report said. | directed toward achieving nmunications, command, con- I illities of our tactical nuclear 9L t. save sea lions j Columbia (AP) - Rescuers edo recovery boats and a Navv id were a school of sea lions ? ly sunned themselves on some I ided on the area after a seaside | ies about noon Friday to report f d seven people in the water was dispatched from Parksville j /ers at a torDedo ranee nearbv in torpedo recovery boats and a I oward the scene. t vessels also were sent to the dispatched from the Canadian rs arrived, however, they found >zens and dozens of them," said j j int-Amour. rocks waving their flippers at e, the way they were lying on the ?nnp hantfinc* nn tn an nvprhirnpH D...0 K ourselves to make sure it wasn't 1 technnlnnv flow ? 0 y "i 'he Commerce Department ap- ?* nt the flow of American military )n, a Senate subcommittee says. ai 5ed Sunday, the permanent sub- d< s rftpommfindftfi that thp United n jence and enforcement efforts to ined and well managed" Soviet A logy. :d short, however, of adopting a P' the department be stripped of its *r he Export Administration Act. e that virtually all thfi terhnnloffv 0 ^ i ; is applied to the Soviet military subcommittee, after a year-long ed at the hearings that the n ill responsibility for enforcement s ii tment now has the primary s Compliance Division, with the e secondary role. ~ 1 3 I C< Tiger" starring Jack Lemmon I 7 and 9:30 p.m., FREE. p Marathon Oil, 7:30, Carolina e u V udge overtui OS ANGELES (AP) - A federal mil $e, citing a legal technicality, act ed out regulations that require sig lions of young men to register for I draft and also said the govern- juc it cannot selectively prosecute im istration resisters. Coi i knocking out the government's I i about 21-year-old David Wayte, Ha . District Judge Terry Hatter Jr. agj td Monday that the Selective pr< vice System should have waited 30 He s for public comment before en- I :ing a draft registration att clamation issued by President stu ter in 1980. it rhe court cannot close its eyes to enl fact that the proclamation became be ctive a mere 21 days after it was lished (in the Federal Register)," he f on? t*f ill nrf I ici oaiu in 1110 i umig. j atter also ruled that the govern- de it had violated Wayte's free fov ech rights under the U.S. Con- ov< ution by prosecuting only vocal } onents of the draft. He also cited at government's refusal to turn over ha ience, and its refusal under the ha trine of executive privilege to a I w White House counselor Edwin foi ese III to testify. ] was unclear how Hatter's ruling re< lid affect the registration process thi he four men convicted of resisting m< istration. The government says 8.9 pr< * * mmyr. No water? Five ducks searched diligently Tuesda reflection pool before resting where the li 'rial set for 19 SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) lardsmen face trial for the 1980 slayings oman Catholic churchwomen, and a court sufficient evidence "to hang them." Monday's ruling by Judge Bernardo Rai ' days after U.S. Ambassador Deane R. H ashington might sever aid to war-torn E lere was progress in this case and one inv ' two American land reform advisers. The guardsmen have until Thursday tc nd appeal Rauda Murcia's decision. Pr< efense then have two weeks to prepare tl ian jury hears the evidence. A verdict could come by early January, nibal Jimenez, the judge's secretary. Although details of the indictment ha\ ublic, Jiminez told The Associated Pre iterview that the order "means the judge vidence against the prisoners." Serman leaderi WASHINGTON (AF) - West Gerlan Chancellor Helmut Kohl, uggesting the time might be right for uproving Soviet-American relations, ays President Reagan should seek an arly summit with Communist Party iader Yuri Andropov. < After several hours of discussions i ith Rpatfan Kohl sairi at a npws anference Monday night that he 1 ould recommend a superpower i jrnmit if there were adequate reparations. Earlier, however, presidential pokesman Larry Speakes said there /as no - indication -that a- summit /ould be held anytime soon. rns draft p Llion men have complied with the while 585,000 men have failed to nup. J.S. Attorney Stephen Trott said the Ige's order would be appealed mediately to the 9th U.S. Circuit urt of Appeals. f the appeals court reverses tter's decision, the indictment ainst Wayte will be reinstated and >ceedings will resume, Trott said, had no further comment. Mark Rosenbaum, one of Wayte's orneys, said he was "pleasantly inned" hv the ruline. and believes if is upheld on appeal, the nation's tire draft registration system may invalid. 'It means the whole draft is out," said. ilosenbaum said that if Hatter's cision is upheld, the convictions of ir other draft resisters could be er turned. V T _ r 1*1 1 ? A. 1 A. wayie, a iormer pnnosopny siuueni Yale University, said, "I am very ppy right now because the judge s dismissed the case...I think this is )ig victory for us and a big setback the Selective Service System." [n his decision, Hatter said he ji (<iUA J i izugiuzeu uie wiuespieau eiieci at a decision granting defendant's )tion to dismiss due to the illegal omulgation of the proclamation will MRSPJHjl mm W&iNiiimM i afternoon for water that was drai quid should have been. 80 slaying o - Five national Rauda Murci of four American enough to hang t source says there The guardsmc in prison if conv uda Murcia came inton warned that One defendai )\ Salvador unless confessed and i olving the murder slaying of the cY The victims w ) appoint lawyers N.Y.,andMaur asecutors and the Jean Donovan, leir cases. A five- of Cleveland. according to Jose They disappc Calirorl/M?'p twifn tjuivauv/i o line e not been made were found the ss in a telephone highway about has found enough van was nearby Evidence sug suggests supi "The stan<lard criteria would 1 whether something could be achieve mere, speanes said. "Basically, v have not seen anything to indica that we are closer to a summit." While suggesting that a relaxatic rf tensions in the post-Brezhnev er ma\J ho r\AociK1n 4 ,J 1 ...?J ?/v j/vaoiuic, 1VUIII adiu It WOU1U t "absurd" to assume that a change i Moscow's top leadership post wi mean a change in the system. Speaking of Andropov, named Friday to succeed I^eonid Brezhne Kohl said, "We'll have to wait and s to try and sound him out on what li he is going to take.'- Brezhnev di Nov. 10. iroclamation | have on this nation's Selective Service registration program But he said the government failed to prove Wayte had not been the subject of selective discrimination in the prosecution of draft registration resisters. | "... Persons prosecuted for failing to f register have consisted solely, not . 1 orrtnltr nf vtaaoI ' t iai gtij, ui t wai iiuh j vgiouanui, Hatter noted. "The inference is manifest that the defendant has been singled out for f prosecution because he exercised his First Amendment right to free speech..." the judge wrote. Before Hatter's decision was released, the government announced it has shifted tactics in its crackdown on men who haven't reeistftred Th*? government said Monday it would scrutinize Social Security rolls and tax records in an effort to catch more non-registrants. Hatter ruled that Carter's presidential proclamation on July 18, 1980, ordering all young men to register for the draft within 30 days of their 18th birthday was invalid because the initial registration period began nine days too soon. i ' ,,. -|} vws&wamm Photo by Andy Putnam : ned from the Thomas Cooper Library i f phiirphijunmpn I M I UIIVVUBIIUII a "wouldn't take this step unless he had hem," the secretary said. in face a possible death sentence or 30 years icted of premeditated murder. it, Carlos Joaquin Contreras Palacios, has implicated the other four guardsmen in the Lurcnwomen. ere Maryknoll nuns Ita Ford, 40, of Brooklyn, a Clarke, 49, of Queens, N.Y.; lay missionary 27, and Ursuline nun Dorothy Kazel, 41, both ?ared Dec. 4, 1980, while driving from San rnational airport into the city. Their bodies i next day in a shallow grave alongside a 30 miles outside the capital. Their charred gested the women may have been raped. erpower summit >e After a planned meeting today with id Senate leaders, Kohl was to fly to New ve York for a speech and separate te meetings with American Jewish groups and with United Nations uenerai Javier I'erez de Cuellar. >a In a joint statement issued after their two-hour lunchtime meeting, Kohl expressed appreciation that J | Reagan lifted the sanctions he imposed on U.S.-licensed European firms participating in the Soviet I pipeline project. ;v, iteagan ana tvoni saia tney were ee "ready to conduct relations with the ne new leadership in Moscow with the ed aim of. extending . the areas of cooperation." '