at ere BL eam an a A ty + Sot enn oe pane Mer mae beepers tae ag ran : Page i The Neral, Thursitay, July 4, 1983 ‘a nih that lasted pen than a day." |.:! The, Criminal: District Court jury fqund fackages of al: of: his. go “The prosecution, contetided that Crowley >, Meilfed’ ‘his:dark-haired* ‘40-year-old ‘Toom- : "mate, Maurice: Nolan, wha: was last: seeti alive shorily. after. moving | Into Crowley's : , apartment. . » -* Although, ¢ the’ ‘remains were never: " -{dentified as belonging to Nolan, a district - - attorney's spokesman sald Louisiana law . “;,, does not require positive, identification of the victim ‘to warrant, an indictment — only evidence that another human. ‘being _ has been killed. . "The human remains | were discovered. after. police ‘weré called to help ‘evict ms ‘Crowley on March 24, Police said he told i them the frozen meat he Was unloading. hotel in a remote Finnish town, where she abandoned - a musical life stifted- by ~- from the refrigerator was dog meat, and they arrested him for cruelty to animals. The next, day, after the meat thawed at the . coroner's - "laboratory, . contained human flesh.. $ hu man flesh «In the’ trial, coroner's: - pathologist’. “Richard Tracy teatlfled thiat @ breast bane, af ivibs, shoulder blade, voice box, kidney anid a spleen “were clearly human.” \ lab: seca ‘Ain hy testified Maurice Nolan wad found to’ analysis. _ - disclosed’ that at. ‘least four packages ’ He said the: remains were ofa ‘white man ’ rom ie Walter esa. a poles erin ‘be O-positive ‘when he. Sold, blood.: personal ‘property: taken: from" Crowley: “when he was ‘booked. ‘on the. cruelty-to- : - animals charge’ included a hospital card, a. driver's” licence, a . Social .” Security . ‘document “and two "$85 checks that ‘belonged to Nolan. : . Crowley's lawyer, Ted Adams, offered no witnesses andn no testimony in the trial. Adams left court Without" talleing ‘bo "reporters. ” . : Adams had “said “he: might change « _ Crowley’s plea from not guilty to not guilty " by reason of insanity, but-no suth change — was made when trial began Wednesday. Ao State sanity, commission -had found Crowley competent. ‘to. stand trial. At the time of his arrest, Crowley was on probation for commandeering a crowded - ‘bus in New Orleas in’ 1981 after an argument with the driver over his, fare. Russian Violinist escapes _ WASHINGTON (AP) — Soviet that fleeing to. artistic freedom in the United States was as easy as hailing: a: taxi outside’ her Soviet bureaucrats. Leaving a priceless, 350- . year-old Stradivarius, on . loan from ‘the: Soviet -. government, fying on -her . bed, Mullova, 23, walked out of the hotel with her friend, Soviet. conductor . Jordania, 40, Together, they left. by taxi for Sweden’ at dusk July 2, They said they had told no ./ otie.ol weir plans to defect ‘during the ‘concert. tour in '” -Finland,. and they “en- countered no obstacles -. gong the way.- . toStockholm. When the U.S, - From Kuusamo, Finland, “48 kilometres west of sthe’ they - Soviet border, travelled southwest, crossed the open border to the Swedish port ‘of Haparanda on the Gulf of Bothnia and continued south along the coast to Lulea, where they caught a plane ’ Embassy reopened July 5 ’, Mullova * nodded in agreement during - ‘their first meeting with after its holiday weekend, -and ~~ Jordania requested political asylum in the United States, Mullova, co-winner of the. . 1982. Tchaikovsky Com- petition -in Moseow,and Jordania, conductor.of the Kharkov Symphony Orchestra in‘ the Ukraine, told their story ata news conference attended by a fellow Soviet National ' Orchestra, ; “Now I feel I have a new Symphony. beginning in-my career in | this country,” Jordania said through an interpreter; His companion smiled . and’ reporters since they arrived ‘last Saturday. - ' ’ DISCUSSING PLANS Both are under the care of the Tolstoy Foundation, a private organization based: . ~" in New York that has aided more than: 30,000 Russian. emigres since 1975. The pair skid they ere discussing fulure plans Rostropovich, who left his homeland in 1974 and was . ‘stripped of his Soviet citlzenship four years later, Before she made her break, Mullova said Soviet authorities had limited her concert appearances to-two, or three‘a month, usually in” schools of clubs. in remote provinces, but never on such prestige | Moscow stages as the Tchaikovaky.° Hall or the banquet hall of the Moscow Conservatory, ‘where she had studied under the late Leonid "(show my art,” or ‘why the. Kogan. . . She said she could not explain why she “was not- given the opportunity. to government failed. to provide her with a Moscow apartment or- the ~ other } violinist Victoria Mullova said Wednesday. amenities Usually accorded a Tchaikovsky Competition medalist. - “They promised a great deal, -but nothing came of it,” she _ said. acknowledged - she did not belong- to the Soviet Com- munist party, but denied suggestions that played a role in her treatment. Jordania, who was a winner in the Karajan conducting competition in 1971 in West Berlin and specialized in - ‘Interpreting She. ‘stage’ For example, he said the Kharkov orchestra he had -conducted the last six years «was forced to play in a 400-- _seat hall so amall that the. ‘could mot ace. commodate . the ‘full or- _chestra, which limited its repertoire and ‘destroyed : Vato “emigre, - Mstislav Rostropovich, the - cellist and musie director of ‘the’ with © ‘the musicians’- enthustasm. ~Girl dispairs ” ROME, (AP) g8a 16-year-old girl, refusing to marry a 32- : year-old: man chosen by her widowed mother,killed terself,_ - with | ‘a ’ shotgun blast i n the southern. Calabrian village of Fabrizia, police said-~ today. Maria Maiolo, a tall brunette known as the prettiest girl in the impoverished village of 740 people, shot herself. in the abdomen Sunday with her father’s. gun, Hours earlier, she attempted suicide by slashing her, wrists. * Her death ‘focused attention on what Rome's 5 0 Messaggero newspaper called “an almost forgotten reality in the deep south — a medieval lifestyle." It-said arranged marriage is widely practised in the south, mostly in Sicily and CVALABRIA. ql Messaggero said two years ago Maria was engaged against her wishes to Antonio La Rosa, a bricklayer Working near the northern city of Modena, La Rosa accepted as a condition of the marriage, planned" ‘for August, that he would not take his bride to Madena after . the wedding, but leave her at-her mother's home and send ~ her living expenses every month. ““There’s no doubt the money was the most important factor in this case,” Il Messaggero quoted a local police’ - official who investigated the case. “He (La Rosa) had a secure job, and for a family with no steady i income, this was obviously a major attraction.” ~ Sinee Maria’s father, A carpenter, died three years ago, her mother had been supporting ‘the family ‘of three by working as a part-time cook. Her neighbors said Maria became a changed person after. the engagement. ‘She became a. chain ‘smoker, would. suddenly cry and lock herself up in her room,” one neighbor, me told the newspaper. Another said ‘the stopped seeing her’ frlends. . . “Baby survives - . eurrent negotiations. Last_year’s: wag. $1. 06 a pound: and the 1981: price aoe oe bid that eoyld ‘extend: toa tie-up. of the entire, fiahi i industry din the. -ptovinee.. “fish-progs BB nfshing co-operatives and ‘Indian , ‘toJoin n'a fight against culs in salmon ‘prices tered. a ; Ve by-the Fisheries Association of B.C . ireesing panies in B.C.. whieh’nes industry. phen with ‘th union “ead has offered 88 cents a: pound fo sockeye éalmon price: for's pckeye The Fisheries : ‘Association, ‘ an ‘alliance i The unjou: ‘will hold a meeting. ‘today’: ft this - th oni unity in aii effart to: persuade members of peratives anid. the Native: Brotherhood of .B.C. “its tractitional rivals:— ‘to join in’ ‘the’ ‘fight-back” -Native ‘Brotherhood, usefulness of Buch a move. + Rivard: said the’ association has indicated it is - willing to ‘settle for pricés close to last year's but that © - the final price’: will depend on negotiations with shoreworkers, who are being asked to accept a wage freeze. - The: union, ‘Which ; shoreworkers last year. ‘Poor, management by “dinosaur fishing com: - panies over the years, coupled with the economics of the market, have stiown that either shoreworkers or c fishermen are going to suffer’ losse, Rivard said: . Furthermore, he said, if the-co-operatives ‘do: not join in the protest, they Would have enough fleets to: . . dake all the fish while the brotherhood ard the. unton 7 are tied mp. oe \- . “which, “negotiates cf. separdily wilh: the association, will ‘vote Friday. on: || whether: to Aupport: the union in-a possible’ tie-up. ~+, But. Jeain “Rivard, ‘executive - director. of the 8 , ‘Brotherhood: “has expressed skepticism: about the -f. also ‘bargains. on ‘behalf ‘of . ; shoreworkers, is asking for a-$1:50-an-hour i increase : _ to thelr current average wage rate of $11.30 an hour, « The union: won a 0-cent-an-hour increase for’ Bae | give: meone a cheque. righ "NOW; = ¢ome. for’ 80 ‘days, because. of. red tape: “In describing ‘the: fiscal’. ‘tumaround, "7 Ticoeca. Bqld: “You mow, | as- Americans, os brings us together," . WINS: GUARANTEES - Tacocéa... wrung - $1.5 | billion in guarantees from. the U.S. ‘government to Chrysler then drew down $1.2 billion of the “cash and combined it with worker con- wheel-drive cars to retuin to protitability. - From 1879 to 1981; Chrysler lost a total of $700 © million; ~ manager of Vilas, Fischer, ‘a New: York _ City firm: that analygés the stock market. -Of $172.1 million. fT the ‘works western | composers - fee - Soviet audiences, had similar complaints of frustration i in. pursuing his musical career, ‘ HACKENSACK, N.J: (AP) — A 20-week-old girl, who was oor ao. tiny. when she was born four months premature‘ that. one nurses tashioned a water bed for her out of a plastic sand- ‘wich bag, was sent home from. the hospital Wednesday amid a throng of well-wishers. . “She has beaten all the odds, said neonatelogist Harold - Perl, who treated the baby, “‘As we get better and better _ 7 technology, we are saving smaller” and smaller. babies, Faith ia a testament to that.” ‘Faith Materowski, ‘who weighed 19% ounees when she - was born Feb. 23, ; now weighs five pounds, 4% ounces. She has grown froth 10'¢ inches at birth to 19 inches, Perl said. Per] said Faith is ready “to be treated like: any other newborn,” - _ "Ber parents are going to feed her, burp her and take her . \for a walk.” She is in good health except for an eye condition known as ~ retrolental fibroplasia, which results in detached retinas . and is common among extremely premature infants, Per] said. . HAD SURGERY TWICE © The baby underwent surgery twice In the last two weeks to repair the retinas in both eyes, Sight in her right eye will ‘be impaired permanently, but doctors will not know the extent of the damage until she is older, Per] said. Mrs. Materowski, 39, had experienced five spontaneous. abortions before Faith was conceived, Physicians tried to * -delay Faith’s delivery with drugs and they administered . medication to spur development af, the fetal lungs in the ; event of a premature birth. “It was not the expectation thal she would live,”. Perl: sald. Faith was fed intravenously. and breathed with the help of a respirator. A BKAND-+Aid used after she underwent heart surgery covered her entire cheat. '- With underdeveloped, poroiis skin and little fal, she lost Muids.rapidly and had to be placed under heat lamps to . control her temperature. She survived congestive heart " failure, renal failure, respiratory distress syndrome and © pneumonia. : ‘ ‘immigrants. | ‘He > went to college on a soliglarship and wound. up at:Ford; where he worked qn the suc “Leesaful Musting that inspired a generation ‘of _ he. told ‘thie National Press Club- -duudierice,- as pase ‘that: the actual payment. would not. a re we seem tohave a rather peculiar trait, we, . yun: ‘better ‘and faster scared. Adversity “ . In 1978, Chrysler faced bankruptey. But : loan : > give the company. an infusion: of cash, -. : cessions and 8 snappy new!line of front-~ 8 27 billion, but could post a 1883 profit of ; sald Maryann’, Keller, ~ ; me auto-firmi posted a first-quarter record a Anthony lacocea, 58, who rat went drew ‘ain rea Pa., “He: waa - the | ‘moll believable partner in the advertising firm of Kenyon and Eckhardt. aot a ; s The firm originated the: idea of putting * Idcocca in Chrysler's. television com- ‘mercials.. The. ads. helped: make Lacocca one ; spokesmen i in. ‘America: “of ‘the. . best-known corporate Now Tacocca says the challenge ts to : maintain rebounding sales, - “We, can't go back to the old ways: of getting fat and letting all kinds of costs creep. back in,” he'said. “Only. by cém- - _ peting-hard and 1 fair will we bé able to” make it."".. ~~ Yen F Ford narhed thin ‘president of the : ompany. in 1970, ‘bit. the two men, ‘clashed.: : ‘fir 1978, Chityaler:..' veal. Chrysler. was: '1n\'1078, | - Chrysler lost §1: 1 billion,-the . “Facocedi a. ‘immediate tele was. ir) ‘gain goncessions’ from: unions’ and. arrange the - "largest government bail-out ever from the 10S. Congress.- The-Loan Guarantee Act *. was passed Dec, 21, 1979. | spokesman,” ‘sald “John. Morrissey, a