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People
By United Press International
‘Tony’ indicted in tax case
NEW YORK (UPI) — Anthony “Tony” Ulascewicz, the
paunchy former New York City policeman who added a
measure of comic relief to the tedious Senate Watergate
hearings with his tales of Watergate bungling, has been
indicted for filing false tax returns while employed as a
White House investigator.
Ulascewicz, 55, was named in a two-count federal
indictment Tuesday accusing him of underestimating his
earnings for two years, reporting income of about $16,000
in 1971 and $27,000 in 1972.
Halderman not excused
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI) — A federal judge Tuesday
refused to excuse H.R. Haldeman and three other former
Nixon administration aides as defendants in a civil suit
growing out of a 1971 presidential visit to Charlotte.
U.S. District Court Judge James B. McMillan rejected a
request for removal from the case by Haldeman, Ronald
Walker, William Henkle and Michael Duval.
The four are among 26 defendants in a $1 million
damage suit filed by 18 persons who alleged they were
blocked illegally from entering Charlotte Coliseum for an
address by then-President Richard Nixon in October,
1971.
Walker, Henkel and Duval were White House advance
men for the visit and Henkle still is an advance man in the
Ford administration.
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Ulasewicz Queen Halderman
Queen to visit Honolulu
HONOLULU (UPI) — Honolulu, which has sheltered
British ships since the whaling days of the 1830’s, will offer
days’ haven to England’s Queen Elizabeth and her
husband.
The royal couple, en route between official trips to
Jamaica and Hong Kong, will rest at Hawaii’s secluded
Kahala Hilton hotel, arriving early Thursday.
The queen changed earlier plans to travel to Guam,
feeling her presence there might pull attention and
resources away from efforts to care for Vietnamese
refugees on the island.
Publisher honored
LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) — Otis Chandler, publisher of
the Los Angeles Times, has been named to receive the
William Allen White Foundation 1975 national award for
journalistic merit at the University of Kansas.
Chandler was invited to the campus today to be the 26th
recipient of the national citation, presented annually to an
American journalist “who exemplifies William Allen
White in service to this profession and to his country.”
Chandler also is vice chairman of the Times Mirror Co.,
parent company of the Times, Newsday on Long Island,
N.Y., and the Dallas Times Herald.
Governor vetoes death bill
By JAMES R. DORSEY
BOSTON (UPI) - Gov.
f Michael S. Dukakis has vetoed
a new capital punishment law
in Massachusetts, saying he
found it impossible to “reconc
ile the willful taking of a
human life.”
Dukakis vetoed . the bill
Tuesday less than 30 minutes
after it was enacted. A check
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Page 7
with Senate sources indicated
his veto would be sustained
with no votes to spare in the
state Senate.
The bill called for mandatory
capital punishment upon con
viction of nine categories of
first degree murder. It was
nearly identical to measures
filed annually since 1972 when
the U.S. Supreme Court in
Griffin Daily News Wednesday, April 30,1975
l validated death penalties in
I most states as unconstitutional
s ly capricious and arbitrary as
meted out by judges and juries.
’ Dukakis’ veto, which he
- promised several weeks ago
f while the bill was still in the
> legislature, was given “for
i three very fundamental rea
l sons.”
“I cannot reconcile the willful
taking of a human life by the
state with my own moral and
ethical beliefs,” Dukakis said.
“I do not believe that this
commonwealth has the moral
authority to execute human
beings.
“I have never seen any
convincing evidence that the
death penalty is a deterrent to
crime.