TWAS A TYPICAL GEORGETOWN SOIREE
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01315R000300400011-6
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
2
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 9, 2004
Sequence Number:
11
Case Number:
Content Type:
NSPR
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Approved For Release 2004/10/13 : C P R 61 00011-6
ie
fly
anger om
em to substi-
"more cost-
/can be found.
,tested, would.be to
and improve access
A D.C. Superior Court
jury that yesterday con-
victed a 56-year-old North-
west Washington woman in
connection with the 1974
shooting death of Louis A.
Sisler; a National Rifle As-
sociation lobbyist, may
have to deliberate a second
time if a court hearing
determines the woman may
have been insane at the
time of the murder.
mit murder"
death.
The 47-year-old Sisler;
an Indiana resident, was
killed in a hail of bullets on
July 13, 1974, when he went in#
!w~
Johnsoi
an insani
Harris,
another
Carter, to
cus duriai
court, to
sanity def
schedule'
T1 'jt
tide-- to
resume
new verc,
,,i .to come up with a study
,6 next month.
e.et Staying in. NE
.,,vollege has agreed to permit an outdoor
,aarket to stay for the next two or three years
.so one-half the two-acre market site that Gal-
,et bought last summer next to the college at 6th
Penn Streets NE.'
the arrangement worked out in consultation with
endors s and District government officials erased for
the time being fears that the market's fresh food ven-
dors would be evicted so the college could use the tract
as a storage area.
"We are interested in our community, and we are
interested in having the market there," said Gallaudet
President Edward C. Merrill Jr. He said the college
and the dwindling market operation would. share the
site for the present.
P.G. Police Get a Raise
Prince Georges County police have moved up the
pay scale of area jurisdictions to fourth place with the
base pay for patrolmen being set at $11,659 now and
$12,592 starting in September.
The agreement was reached yesterday between
county officials and the Fraternal Order of Police
Lodge 89, which represents 90 percent of the 811-mem-
ber force. Negotiations were stalled back in October
and resulted in a slowdown described by police as "ex-
pressions of dissatisfaction." A Circuit Court judge,
issuing an injunction against the protest, called it "a
strike."
During resumed negotiations, it was claimed that
the county had the lowest police pay scale of seven
jurisdiction in the area. The raise is exxpected to cost
county taxpayers about -$3.4 million over, the next two
fiscal years. It could mean, an increasr t eyro2erty
tax.
Appeal Balks Release of Agnew Papers
U.S. District Judge June L. Green has decided to re-
lease two of the four documents relating to the 1973
Spiro T. Agnew investigation that were submitted to
her Friday by the Justice Departmer-
However, she held up her ruling pn Tuesday to give
Justice lawyers time to appeal, and: 'esterdayiey did
just that.
Release of the documents, requested b two George
Washington .University law students 'tin the Free-.
dom of Information Act, now must await a ecision.y
the U.S. Court of Appeals.
The documents - submitted by Justice to see, if the
edgge agreed with its contention that release ?night
hinder current probes in Maryland or preJudicf the
rights of innocent persons -- reportedly consist o affi-
davits given to prosecutors by Lester Matz and ' lien
Green, two design consultants; I.H. Hammerman II, a
mortgage banker and land developer who pt aded
guilty 15 months ago to obstructing federal tax Yaws;
a`nd' Jerome D. Wolff, the state roads chairmaon in
Agnew's administration as governor. i
Judge Green refused to release two of the state-
ments altogether, and said the other two could onz be
released "with the names of third parties deleted.`'
After six 'hours of aelib-
eration, the jury found
Mary E. Harris of the 4200
block of 16th Street NW
guilty of first-degree mur-
der and conspiracy to com-
UTILITIES
Continued From B-1.
Doyle said, "Some may
claim asking the PSC to do
the study is like putting the
fox in to watch the chick-
ens, but it makes sense be-
cause that commission is
the only one who can handle
the complexity of the
issue."
PSC Chairman Robert L.
Sullivan added: "Consum-
ers do not regulate utilities.
That must be done by us.
The entire structure . of
rates is a complex one.
Sure, we're going slowly
we have to."
But while the wheels of
the commission grind ex-
ceeding slow, smaller utili-
ty users find the bills
mounting fast.
"I am now using a lot
less electricy than I used
five years ago when we
first moved in here," said
Mrs. Delyea, whose home
thermostat is set at a cool.
55-60 degrees. "And it
ae,ems as if I'm getting
penalized for trying to cut
back. We're paying over
$125 a month in utility bills
and that's twice as much as
we were paying two years
ago."
-MRS. DELYFA, a widow
ith five children; lives on
a fixed income an is afraid
of losing her 411-electric
home.
Mrs. Safe als lives on a
-fixetFinebme'=a?#ixed by the
government at $150 a month
from Social Security -- and
says she can't afford her
utility bills of $50 to $60 a
month. She washes her
sheets by hand these days.
"I'm afraid to use my
washing machine because
it uses up too much juice.,
,At night I don't look at TV
anymore and I close the
rest of the house up and live
in the bedroom and living
room, which I heat."
to the front door of his
father-in-law's home at
4407 16th St. NW, where he
was visiting. He confronted
a group of about 20 persons
searching for a man who.
they believed had raped
Mrs. Harris' daughter.
Before the jury reached
its verdict, Judge Norma
Johnson held a hearing in
which two psychiatrists
testified that Mrs. Harris
suffered from a mental
Some driegates from usinf 1
Prince Gee,ges, Montgom- electricit
ery and 'iattimore Coun- ? Provid
ties, actirg, they admit, be- tive for
cause of increased pressure electricit'
from their contituents, will ? Provic
sponsor legislation this ses- of elects
sion to help the small con- cover th:'
sumer. ' for resid
The legislation would, low cost.
according to its consumer "We
advocates: offer pe
? Correct the inequities of a able am,
pricing system which while a
charges between 4 and 6 some fir
cents per kilowatt hour for conserve
the smallest user while said. ":
charging as little as 1.7 quickly f'
cents for residental users gy crunch
RACE
Continued From B-1
The injection ? of Man-
kiewicz's name as a possi-
ble candidate in the con-
gressional race shocked
some of those who have al-
ready given strong
indications that they would
run.
"Oh, wonderful," gulped
Del. Charles A. Docter, a
veteran Montgomery Coun-
ty legislator, "Ye Gods!
.. I figure we'll have a
whole bunch in the race.
But my reaction is, the
more Democrats the merri-
er."
THE DECISION on Tues-
day by the 52-year-old
Gude, a liberal, to give up
his seat after five terms has
planted visions of a victory
in the minds of a pack of
potential Democratic
candidates.
Democrats in the district
hold a 2-to-1. edge in voter
registration over the GOP,
but Democratic opponents
have consistently failed to
oust the popular Gude.
Yesterday afternoon
news of Mankiewicz's possi-
ble run had reached the
State House in Annapolis.
But a Democratic State
House s
kiewicz
him as
operat
knows
identifi"'
tials fo.
Mear.
can Ce
nounce(
has for
commis
encourr'
licans
seat.
THE
ting th.
state S,
Jr. The
can off.
trict is
Execu!
son, wi
tobe~
for goy
The
file fol
for Gi
Kalist
retire;
and i
Defe
Schoo
Tw
Davis,
whol la
prirpl
John'
plan
nour
runt,
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Approved For Re ; t ~4~ ,, /13: CIA-RDP88-01315R000300400011-6
"
tt 4 ..nnedy had die
a $
t
s
'tar i e':ien
. ,tttiroa2iolis, n- gullet.,
k?. id
i
!I
_,_osier, as. ii, indy souk on the
.,tt was going; on. We have no
,
., ~A With Lt. at..
?+ee ji,rIILt IES, R-2
an ie
'
would make public
whether he will run
a few weeks.
"I'm seriously court.
said. "I've already star
some, people in, the di
.........__--_
yfews at. hr aring; stn plan tt:o )hams commuter parking in Georgetown.
ew,wetl+a~r;at uesx i offers his
Typicat Georgetown o i
~m moos 1 ytes
v.. ,,. ,t,t'Fk.i4RiFS,,ssi7 Ai8?':
=:.rt er's were i i there out
t, yia tic xt-joor neighbor was. The
fl gr r , sa i i ito nave agents there
r ., 4iif y uP uba'biyy (lido t 1 ha: rest or
9 e OO u .or',?,etown residents who
r :m?t to iiuruon junior High School
l 't r?i 4iat seemedd to enjoy Lite chance
tr s;a?~ak ot'J.
it was their first opportunity to ex-
their deep feelings about one of
A
1' .was pretty stuffy at
.. stuffy I ~
;eorgetovn that, can't 'last long.
t:t:tir of James llohannjn, the
istrict`s hearing officer for the
. _-_.
ts:,i'r r`a.tt:+t.oa'YE: ahead of scheduled
t.,?,rk esF s.
"1 W.IT lo? the others."
"N 4*
phis is the first time I've
'n the witness list and it's a farce.
~?Ia~eat of the names aren't real. People
air fuos to come here and so was
v the: e. A balance was st.ruck be-
+r.eti theiuros and cons of estaulish-
*int~` ?a ekdaay r'ush`h Lull riling at it over and trYaise yUUi own t,,:;4. n'
in for nort IGeor> etown rests .tats - ing loi'" ion
e,nlorced through car stictc~?:rs aisti.ng a ~llo L oftthefunivers I erdfromtthe
groups and Georgetown Um ,'ersity
inst it
.
were aga
Edward E. Hastings II director of
the Aje;t nder Graham Bell " ssocia-
tion at re Iifta-'tldffM :Piz ;
spats--f'fli empT y s .K ,;a Ts ng
ban, aac said, would weaken the work
of the association, which proviides
services for the deaf.`.
which supports the ban, took tilt,
stand.
The association president. Gros
venor Chapman, noted that the
Georgetown students asked for pa-
tience, "We've been patient for Iii
years," he said. "Now is the time for
action."
"Were a nonprofit of ga%Jzataon. John Lawrence, the Kissingers
We cannot afford to pay thr: cast of neighbor, said that
while he was new
"Pa ?ig' "` * ., to the area, he was sorry the nneetinr
the. col
o
s frm o
o e
The grey-haired woman got up ..
again to say she had hears the as- didn't send an official representativ,.
sociation was a CIA front" I.C. Councilwoman Polly Shack)
row's laugheed.. tort closed the meeting with the hol' :r
Th
e c
Ir.t ~, ersitY sticker parking. I will support. it and
EORGETOWN I
.
G
proven the biggest ihori)i it the side I urge the Trar.:;portation I)epa t
1
,tr may,; of Georgettown. )t5w,vid Rai- meat to put in a favorable report
ston, president of the un iv: t sity stu- see that no resident? no taxlx,ayt:'r? K,i.
dent bodyy, said a parkins, t ,..n would poses it."'
disruppt the university. To date, two tress parking bb ,as
only realistic st flu on is no
commended by Ma; or
have been re
ba at
looktii''.g for more Walter E. Washington -- Friendst tp
n at all. We're
p
to^n a parking place. ))fibs: looking Hi,ig;hts in upper Northwest and 'he
"
for an education.
Gateway area near the Natii i
To which one oservr , :'rrot:ing the Training School for Boys. l~eil;lac V;
expanses of universiUy grass, an in ei'fect yet
swered, "Why don't wcrlt)r pave some
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