Daily Ncbraskan Thursday, October 3, 1985 ews umesi Bv The Associated Press Almaires9s former tasfo&mid f her release is 6d soon Pago 2 N i. jf . . U OMAHA, Neb. The former husband of Stella Almarcz says she i3 being released from a mental health center too soon after killing their four daughters. Mrs. Almarez, who was found innocent by reason of Insanity In the 1980 killings, was ordered unconditionally released from the Lincoln Regional Center by a Madison County district judge Wednesday. She was committed to the center Jan. 9, 1981. "It's only been four years," Anthony Almarez said Wednesday in a telephone interview from his home near Denver. "She took four girls' lives. I think they were worth more than that," Aimarez, wno nas remarnea since others. end up like my mom, all alone and oj Canadian premier calls it quits; Almarez, who has remarried since jji vvutuii) buuvr viy riuy jur kfuvuvu TORONTO Rene Levesque is quit- authoritarian churchmen, erupted in speaking minority and frightei ting politics today, after a quarter century in which he more than anyone transformed life in his native Quebec and came close to making it an independent country. Pierre Marc Johnson, leader of the Parti Quebecois' moderate wing which would rather talk about economics than separatism, is to be sworn in today as premier with a new cabinet. John son, the 39-year-old justice minister under Levesque, was elected as his successor by party members on Sunday. Levesque, 63, who was in power nine years, plans to leave later this month for an extended vacation, traveling to England, Scandinavia and southern Europe before returning home to write a book and take up other projects. "Whatever happens to me," he told reporters Monday, "I'll become again what I once was professionally an observer." In the 1950s, he became Quebec's best-known television journalist, as host of a hit weekly public affairs show, "Point de Mire" or "On Target." When he entered politics as a Lib eral candidate in the 1960 provincial elections, he was the party's star per former. That election was the beginning of what is called La Revolution Tran quille, or the quiet revolution. Almost at once, a previously backward society, ruled by tyrannical governments and Missing official is suspect WASHINGTON FBI agents searched a former federal official's home and car in New Mexico for code pads, microdots and other spy para phernalia under a warrant seeking evidence of a plot to deliver national defense information to a foreign government. The search, which occurred between last Friday and Tuesday, became known as evidence emerged Wednesday that the official, Edward L. Howard, 33, who was assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow as recently as 1983, flew to Texas more than a week ago leaving even his wife in the dark about his whereabouts. M WS HI 3 1 f John Hinckley Jr., 34, who shot President Reagan in 1981 is engaged to be married to a 41-year-old patient at the New York mental institution where they are committed. Elizabeth Cruicksh&nk Kilmer, of Brady, who recently celebrated her 104th birthday, attributes her long life to a balanced diet of meat, potatoes and fresh vegetables from her garden and never touching liquor. Bruce Grummert, 34, of Lincoln, who attends an average of five wrestling events each month and spends his vacations traveling to matches around the country has been named Wrestling Fan of the Year by Wrestling Fans International. Grummert became a fan when he was 9. The 1980s will not be remembered as a conservative period in Amercan history, despite what some social "divorcing Mrs. Almarez, said he would be "a little worried" if his former wife decided to move to Colorado after leaving the mental health center. Mrs. Almarez's attorney, Ron Albin, said she is considering moving to southern Colorado to be near several of her relatives. "There's nothing I can do about it," said Almarez, a night foreman in Denver. "Just so she doesn't come bothering me." In ordering Mrs. Almarez's release, Judge Merritt Warren said there was little or no evidence that the 34-year-old woman is dangerous to herself or others. authoritarian churchmen, erupted in cultural, intellectual, political and social innovation. In 1968, Levesque split with the Lib eral Party and, the following year, founded the Parti Quebecois, commit ted to what he called "sovereignty association" a sovereign Quebec that would retain some ties to what was left of Canada. In its early campaigns, the PQ built on a widespread feeling among French speaking Quebecers that the English speaking minority held all the eco nomic power a humiliation symbol ized by clerks in downtown Montreal who refused to speak French. The new party fared poorly in its first two elections, then astounded everyone Levesque included by sweeping to power in 1976. Some militant party members had wanted the electoral vic tory to be considered sufficient man date for a declaration of independence, but Levesque insisted on presenting the issue for a vote. In the May 1980 referendum that apparently settled Quebec's future, voters opted by a 3-2 margin to refuse Levesque's proposal for authority to negotiate with Canada toward sovereignty-association. Much of what the Parti Quebecois government accomplished in nine years, especially in laws making French the language of private business and pub lic signs, alienated Quebec's English- There were other developments in the case of the missing official suspected of being a spy for the Soviet Union: Colleagues who worked with him in the New Mexico state government said he traveled widely on state business to economic conferences in San Francisco, Boston, New Orleans, El Paso and elsewhere. They also said his work led him into close dealings with some workers at the Los Alamos National Laboratory where top-secret weapons research is done. The CIA, the Justice Department, the State Department and the Senate Intelligence Committee all declined to rS A rounduP f the observers might think, says author Tom Wolfe. The period represents anything but renewed conservatism, Wolfe says, "It's crazed." Miss America Susan Akin, 21, says the arrests 21 years ago of her father and grandfather in connection with the slayings of three civil rights workers in Mississippi should have no affect on the way she is judged. "I'm Miss America and my family is not," she says. Pageant Chair man Albert Marks Jr. says the charges will not affect her relationship with the pageant. Larry Holmes says he's mulling over a rematch with Michael Spinks, who upset Holmes in a boxing match last month, keeping him from matching Rocky Marciano's 49-0 record. "If I do fight him it would be for one reason," Holmes said. "It would be to prove that I ain't shot." Almarez, 35, said he doesn't think his former wife would harm anyone, but added, "You can't ever tell what a person will do." Testimony during Mrs. Almarez's trial indicated the killings occurred after Anthony Almarez told her he was leaving her to marry a friend of the family. After killing her children, Mrs. Almarez shot herself in the head but wasn't seriously injured, authorities said. In an apparent suicide note, Mrs. Almarez had written, "I know what I am doing. I told you I will not raise my daughters on welfare. . .1 don't want to end up like my mom, all alone and old." speaking minority and friehtened Eng lish Canada, and those laws were blamed for driving many corporate headquarters from Montreal to Toronto. Most English-speaking Quebecers who chose to stay now are bilingual, and many say the atmosphere of res entment between French and English speakers that existed in the 1960s has virtually disappeared. Young French-speakers, once virtu ally barred from Montreal's business world, are now founding their own enterprises and enrolling in record numbers in business schools. Overall, Levesque's efforts seemed to convince French-speaking Quebec ers who represent 80 percent of the province's 6 million residents that they could control their own affairs and protect their culture without changing the nation's political structure. Recent public opinion polls have found as few as 4 percent of Quebecers supporting independence an attitude which places the future of Levesque's party in doubt. The new Parti Quebecois premier, Johnson, engineered the decision ear lier this year to drop sovereignty as an immediate goal from the Party Quebe cois' platform. The goal is not dead, but Johnson's interests are clearly else where. Levesque still thinks a sovereign Quebec will come some day but not now, not yet. in spy case discuss the case. The Senate panel and the State Department said they were awaiting an anticipated justice state ment, but justice spokesman John Russell said: "Everyone wants us to make a statement and if we're going to make a statement, we'll make one when we're ready." Although Howard was officially listed in federal government documents as a State Department budget analyst in Moscow, some State Department positions are used as cover for CIA agents abroad. The New York Times said an intelligence source identified Howard as a member of the CIA's clandestine service. day's happenings ,1 ... hji ,. v ,1, ; 1- ... -. .. J- r -'. A:;: in z trr: r to c . t ;.tO) oaclicv re u v v' i . ,: 4 ....t TV . ... - 1 t- ir.i I.,. 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