Page 6-Tuesday, August 5, 1980-The Michigan Daily CITED FOR CONTEMPT OF COURT Widows disrupt Klan trial .4 GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Shouting that the trial was a "sham," the widows of two leftists were led from a courtroom and sentenced to 30 days in; jail yesterday for disrupting the opening of the murder trial of six Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis. Deputies put adhesive tape over one woman's mouth. Marty Nathan, widow of Michael Nathan, one of five Communist Workers Party members killed at a "Death to the Klan" rally last Nov. 3, was gagged when she refused an order by Superior Court Judge James Long to be quiet. Long ordered her and Floris Cauce, widow of Cesar Vinson Cauce, to serve 30 days for contempt of court. THE COURTROOM also was briefly disrupted by a false fire alarm, but, there were no evacuations. Don Pelles, 36, of Durham, was charged with set- ting off the alarm. The outbursts by the two widows oc- curred as Long was giving an opening ststement to the all-white jury of six men and six women that will hear the trial, which is expected to last about three months. Jury selection took six weeks.. The Klansmen and Nazis are charged with five counts each of first-degree murder in the shooting deaths. They also are charged with felonious rioting. IN HIS opening remarks, Assistant District Attorney James Coman said, "The eyes of Greensboro, the eyes of North Carolina, and the eyes of the United States are focused on us here today." Coman said prosecutors will try to prove that the defendants deliberately planned to kill the CWP members or that the victims were slain during a riot. He said that would make the killers guilty of first-degree murder under a state law that provides a first- degree chargefor any murder commit- ted during the act of a felony. When the trial began, security was tight in the courtroom and around the i.. Guilford County Courthouse. Police were stationed on the grounds of the courthouse and atop nearby buildings and sheriff's deputies patrolled the halls and courtroom. SHORTLY AFTER Long began in- structing the jury, Nathan jumped to her feet and shouted, "This trial is a sham and a farce. "The U.S. government is trying to en- force-fascism," she said. "They con- spired to kill members of the CWP, in- cluding my husband." At that point, the judge told the jury to leave. Deputies, holding Nathan's arms securely, took her to the front of the courtroom, where they gagged her with a wide band of adhesive tape after she ignored the judge's orders to be quiet. Deputies removed the gag to allow Nathan to explain the outburst, but she resumed her criticism saying, "My defense is that my husband was mur- dered November 3rd, 1979." 4 LONG ORDERED her gagged again, and she continued to mumble through the tape. A deputy clasped his hand over her mouth and took her to jail. After the jury returned and Long resumed instructions, Cauce took up Nathan's criticisms, saying the deaths were the result of a government con- spiracy. Cauce was taken to the front of the courtroom, but she remained silent, as Long ordered. She was then ushered from court by deputies. Long told jurors "not to be influenced by any such outburst." He reminded jurors not to read accounts of the trial or watch television news concerning it. Coman said the state will try to show that the seeds for the Nov. 3 shootings were planted in a confrontation bet- ween left- and right-wing extremists at China Grove on July 8, 1979. 4 Hurricane Allen wreaks havoc on Caribbean isle CASTRIES, St. Lucia (AP) - Hurricane Allen, the most intense storm to ravage the eastern Caribbean in this century, delivered a devastating swipe at St. Lucia island yesterday, destroying hundreds of homes and causing at least eight deaths, officials reported. Planning Minister Michael Pilgrim called it "a national disaster." Weather service officials in Puerto Rico said the killer storm was still gaining strength, with winds peaking at 160 mph. Based on the plunging barometric pressure in the eye of the storm, the officials said it was the most intense hurricane to move through the eastern Caribbean's hurricane alley in this century. ALLEN, ALSO the first hurricane of the season, swept just north of Bar- bados and south of St. Lucia and then moved westward churning the open sea with its fury. Hurricane watches were orderd in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, which share the island of Hispaniola. Weather service officials said the storm probably would not strike any land area for at least 12 hours, but Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands should expect heavy weather. Barbados also was pummeled as the killer storm passed by, and there were unconfirmed reports of two storm- related deaths there. St. Lucia officials said there were eight known deaths on the small island and the toll was expected to rise as rescue teams looked for missing per- sons. The savage winds blew away part of the roof over wards at Victoria Hospital in Castries, the capital of St. Lucia. But Pilgrim said the greatest damage was inflicted in the Vieux Fort area at the southern tip of the island. Telephone service was disrupted, but Pilgrim said reports arriving from Vieux Fort said it was "in a terrible state." He said his own home in the southern district had been "smashed apart." Uprooted trees fell across power lines and blocked roads, Pilgrim said, and torrential rains caused mudslides in some areas. A Venezuelan navy ship visiting Castries ran aground and scores of small boats were swept away, other officials said. Lending rate up at N.Y. bank NEW YORK (AP) - The prime len- ding rate, a key guidepost of interest rate trends, edged upward yesterday at one New York bank - the first increase in four months. The jump has a direct effect only on business borrowers, but Wall Street analysts said it could foreshadow higher consumer loan rates in coming weeks. For example, home mortgage rates are already on the upswing in California. CHEMICAL BANK, the nation's sixth largest, said it boosted its prime rate by one-quarter of a percentage point to 11 per cent because its cost of acquiring funds had risen. "We raised the prime in response to an overall firming of interest rates over the last 10 days," a Chemical spokesman said. "We're not prepared to say anything more than that." Less than two weeks ago, Chemical cut its prime rate to 10.75 per cent while most other banks stayed at 11 per cent. By rejoining the rest of the industry at 11 per cent, Chemical left only Chase Manhattan Bank, the third-largest U.S. commercial bank, at 10.75 per cent. The jump in the prime rate comes amid a general upswing in open-market interest rates such as the rate banks pay on overnight loans from other banks. That has led some analysts to suggest the Federal Reserve Board is tightening its reins on credit. 0 6 6 6 6