Word: brigs
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Minichiello will stand trial for kidnaping and hijacking. In New York, U.S. officials filed charges of air piracy, kidnaping and other offenses that carry penalties from 20 years' imprisonment to death. At his Marine Corps court-martial, Minichiello faced a maximum sentence of only six months in the brig without pay and a bad-conduct discharge...
...Brig. Gen. C.P. Hannum, director of Army ROTC, said he saw nothing in President Pusey's letter to Dean Ford--which he has seen, but not officially received--to indicate that the Corporation has reached any decision to remove academic credit or Corporation appointments from ROTC...
Early yesterday afternoon, Brig. Gen. C. P. Hannum, national Army ROTC director, said that he was "waiting with interest" to hear of the decision. Hannum said that the reason he had not been told yet was the "the individual who would do the notifying [Dean Glimp] has been so busy with other things that he probably has not had time to call." Hannum said that he expected a call from Glimp sometime in the afternoon, but last night he said that he still had not heard from Glimp...
...riot's viciousness, the inmates offered no grievances to explain their outbreak beyond the normal gripes of prison life. In that, they were less articulate than the prisoners of the Marine brig at Danang, who rioted briefly three weeks ago. They had complained of cold food, excessive discipline, and long delays before trial. When the brig commander, Lieut. Colonel Joseph Gambardella, promised to look into their complaints, they calmed down and cleared up their cell block; and except for a brief flare-up when 40 parolees and trusties were moved out, that was the end of it. The prisoners...
...Pungo radio log, began the small and unhappy saga that official Washington soon called "the Julio incident." Four members of the Julio, determined to escape from Cuba, had taken guns, seized control of the ship and locked the captain and the rest of the crew in the brig. When the four asked for asylum, the Coast Guard consulted the State Department, then advised the Cuban ship to "approach no closer than the three-mile limit." It dispatched two ships-the cutter Point Brown and a seagoing tug-to investigate...