Dwyer departure delayed
American writer Cynthia Dwyer's release
from Iran was delayed Monday by lack of a travel
document, but the State Department said the
problem apparently was resolved and said she
might leave Tuesday.
Dwyer was detained at the last minute Mon
day by Iranian authorities and the plane that was
to carry her to freedom after nine months in prison
on espionage charges left without her.
Swiss Ambassador Erik Lang in Tehran de
scribed the problem as “lack of a travel
document.’’
Lang said Iranair is flying Tuesday to Kuwait
or Dubai in the Persian Gulf and Dwyer could be
on that flight.
The next scheduled flight by the Iranian
airline is Wednesday to Istanbul, Turkey and
Frankfurt, West Germany.
Her departure appeared settled when a
Revolutionary Court convicted her Sunday of
spying in Iran, sentenced her to the nine months
she had already served and ordered her deport
ed.
Reporters gathered at Mehrabad Airport
watched her arrive in a Mercedes limousine.
Dwyer, smiling and looking excited, got out and
ran for the door of the terminal accompanied by
three Revolutionary Guards.
Airport employees said Dwyer boarded the
plane before it took off. But later, Swiss officials
reported she had been detained, missing the
flight.
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Rep. Hinson
plans to quit
House seat
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - Rep.
Jon Hinson, R-Miss., arrested
last week in a Washington
men’s room and charged with
attempted oral sodomy, intends
to resign, an aid said Monday.
“His intention is to resign,”
administrative aide Marshall
Hanbury told the Jackson Daily
News from Washington. “We’re
in the process of getting the
paperwork done now."
Hanbury, Hinson’s top aide,
said the 38-year-old congress
man had "no option other than
resignation” after his arrest in a
men’s restroom of a congres
sional office building last Wed
nesday.
“I’ll advise him on the timing
and the proper way to go about
it and the other things involved
with terminating a career,”
Hanbury said.
Hinson originally was
charged with oral sodomy, a
felony, but the charge was
reduced to a misdemeanor of
fense of attempted sodomy.
Authorities said Hinson had en
gaged in oral sex with Harold
Moore, 28, of Oxon Hill, Md.
Hinson pleaded innocent to
the charge on Thursday. His
trial in District of Columbia
Superior Court was set for May
4. The maximum penalty upon
conviction is one year’s impri
sonment and a $1,000 fine.
He has been in seclusion at a
Washington-area hospital since
Thursday. Hanbury had said last
week that the congressman was
hospitalized for mental and
physical fatigue.
Hinson had been re-elected
to a second term Nov. 4 despite
acknowledging during the cam
paign that he had visited two
homosexual hangouts in the
Washington area. He had den
ied being a homosexual.
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—making the news—
From Associated Press Reports
ATLANTA — Police began searching for another missing
black child as volunteers combed surburban neighborhoods
in two separate searches for clues to the slayings or disap
pearances of 17 black children.
Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said Sunday that
the police department's missing persons unit has been
searching for 11-year-old Patrick Baltazar since he was
reported missing Friday night.
Brown said Baltazar's case had not been turned over to
the special 35-member task force created to investigate the
15 slayings and two disapparances of black children since
July 1979.
SALEM — Over the objections of Gov. Vic Atiyeh, the
Senate Energy Committee approved a bill Monday forbidding
Oregon’s appointees to the Northwest Power Council from
working for utilities within three years of leaving the council.
Gubernatorial aide Pat Amedeo said Atiyeh would rather
let the federal government take over the panel than go along
with the restriction.
The so-called "revolving door” clause says a former
council member cannot work for or have a proprietary interest
in any business which purchases electrical energy directly
from the Bonneville Power Addministration. This includes
working for a law firm or consulting firm which does business
with a utility for three years after leaving the council.
Atiyeh had proposed that instead of an outright ban, the
committee allow former council members to work for such
companies as long as they don’t participate in the phase of
their employers’ operations affected by the council.
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