Show X V ' V f V v s f ' - V V 1 I I Serving Weber North Davis Morgan and Box Elder Counties 94th Year i I - !wSett'S 1 ! 17 r 71 i‘22bS& WJ f i' i k - i c Ogden Utah Thursday March 5 1981 No 64 ' & i- v I ip Y 25$ Daily 50$ Sunday - © 1 ff f (SlGIfiKgd I j leader was behind the embassy Duarte also denied reports he attack but said it was similar to an was traveling to West Germany to Frederick Chapin accused rightists assault last May by rightist gun- open negotiations with leftists leadof a gunfire attack on the American men who opened fire on the US ers fighting to overthrow the n Democembassy and said America (will facility from a speeding pickup not be intimidated" into backing a truck ratic government In Washington Secretary of "I have no plans to make any trip military coup Chapin made the charges in his State Alexander Haig warned that to Europe to negotiate with the left first-eve- r news conference Wed- a military coup in El Salvador nor to negotiate with anybody" Duarte said nesday only hours after gunmen would have "serious consequHe said he would be willing to riding a pickup truck raked the ences’’ and denied claims by US embassy in El Salvador with D’Aubuisson that he had been in talk with guerrilla leaders in San automatic rifle fire There were no contact with the Reagan administ- Salvador and gave the Marxist-leiq ci IQ 11 AC ration rebels 30 more days to lay down "This incident has all the hallshattered arms in exchange for amnestheir Wednesday’s shooting marks of a (Roberto) D’Aubuisson a window on the ground floor of the ty three-stor- y mission in a residential operation" Chapin said was of San Salvador US to The amnesty offer originally section D’Aubuisson a former national exwas but expire Wednesday national tended for 30 more Salvadoran Marines and to chief hinted guard intelligence days as was a protecting the mission did state of siege imposed on March 6 reporters Tuesday he was plotting guards back at the assailants Cha- 1980 when the a rightist militaxy coup and said not fire nationalized junta said the Reagan administration would pinSalvadoran banks land holdings in a and large Jose Junta President "have no reason to oppose it" reform package Napoleon Duarte told reporters sweeping an But Chapin emphatically said Wednesday he issued a warrant for interview with ABC Night-lin- e In no Duarte defended US military "We oppose coups and have D’Aubuisson’s arrest after the as the only way to intention of being intimidated" rightist leader held a news confer- aid to the junta d arms to the a offset Chapin did not say why he ence with foreign journalists at rebels thought D’Aubuisson a top rightist secret location Tuesday SAN SALVADOR El Salvador (UPI) — US Charge D’Affaires US-back- ed military-Christia- i- ''Zsrs’gT 7V i 2$ - -' x? - f&pi? d Bl ! t l & yi"'1 M : 4E1 J IVi v MMpj r apr swsrr feri s- - ‘1 ' - ’£ F£ 7 S ' 1 i i f i Cuban-supplie- From campuses to churches tr?Z 'VS: cs£ s '" 'i ' WASHINGTON (AP) — From campuses to churches a fledgling anti-wa- r movement is emerging in America This one opposes increased US military involvement in El Salvador and it is drawing support from veterans of Vietnam protests a decade ago Already there have been camand protest rallies A pus teach-in-s is scheduled And strike hunger soon the hallmark of the era will return: a march on the Pentagon “There is a tremendous awareness that this (US involvement) looks like what happened around Vietnam" said Heidi Tarver coordinator for the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Slfeww S ' joAl 'k f I ( ' '' 'v 1 m i i anti-Vietna- m i f Clyde Sign-wavi- MuetlerStarxJard-Examin- Salvador er teachers pack the State Capitol to protest proposed budget for public education ng "People are saying ‘We’re not going to be taken Ron Kovic former leader of Vietnam Veterans Against the War said he was surprised when hundreds of college students turned out on the for El Salvador teach-in-s West Coast The protests over El Salvador "have been very sophisticated and have come very quickly" Kovic said "The protest is inevitably going to build and it will involve Vietnam Veterans Against the War I don’t think another American boy should have to die for another mis- take" Sister Pat Haggerty says her Maryknoll order of the Roman Catholic Church has been flooded with requests for speakers on El Salvador The talks have been atof tracting "a wide she said people "There is a very strong feeling as cross-sectio- n" Americans get a chance ta see the other side of the picture in El Salvador" Sister Haggerty said arguing that the State Department has misrepresented the Salvadoran civil war as a power struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union She contends the conflict is a "people’s struggle for liberation and against repression" The protest groups frequently couple their opposition to increased military aid to El Salvador’s civilian-military junta with attacks on President Reagan’s proposed cuts in social programs "US — Hands off El Salvador! Money for Jobs Human Needs Not for the Pentagon" reads a flyer for a May 3 march on the Pentagon scheduled by a group called the Mobilization Peoples’ Anti-W- i ar t By BRAD REMINGTON Standard-Examin- er SALT LAKE CITY — Thousands of angry teachers some carrying poignant signs and chanting for higher pay invaded the State Capitol Wednesday to protest the Utah Legislature’s proposed 1981-8- 2 public education budget Republican legislative leaders have announced plans to increase school funding by Related story Page 6 percent less 1 B than half the 127 percent sought by the Utah Education Association i! t a 1 I i said "60 percent of you Rep Roger Rawson voted GOP" and began outlining "what the Republicans did to you" "We blew it" some teachers shouted back "There is $24 million in severance tax that this body does not have the will to put in place" Rawson said Rawson told teachers that Gov Scott Matheson had proposed the severance tax and an increase of 8 percent in the education budget He said this isn’t what they wanted but is better than what the Republicans are offering The hundreds of signs carried by teachers showed the varying moods of teachers — from almost militant to plain D-Hoo- Staff Teachers packed the Capitol rotunda and spilled over into the third and fourth floor galleries in a massive rally aimed at convincing lawmakers to increase school funding before the Legislature adjourns next Thursday But two Republican lawmakers who were invited to address the crowd said the Legislature has done the best it can with the money available "It’s not possible for us to grant more than we have offered at this time" said Sen Warren E Pugh Lake who cut his speech short because of hecklers Democratic legislators also held out little promise of increasing the budget although they seized the opportunity to blast the Republicans R-S- — alt frustrated "Ignorance costs more" said one sign Another poster depicted a man with a screw through his belly: "The legislature does it again" One poster with a drawing of a little red school house said: "The best little poorhouse in Utah" "They say the education caucus is trying to find money Do you think they’ll find it?" said a poster carried by one man with a picture of a person with a finger up the nose Some posters urged teachers to go on strike if the Legislature doesn’t come up with more money An Orem teacher who moonlights as a tall clown wore his stilts with a sign around his neck saying: "The only Children with flu ! !! Health institutes link aspirin fatal disease WASHINGTON (UPI) — A feder-i- ! al advisory committee says pa- -' rents should use caution in giving 4 aspirin to children with the flu or !:i chickenpox until more is known ji about a possible association with a rare and often fatal disease Three recent population studies have suggested aspirin use in re-- I during fever in influenza B and chickenpox is linked with an increased risk of Reye’s syndrome a condition that can strike children recovering from the viral illnesses j1 i a nurse said parents and physicians should be aware that most medications have potential deleterious effects and therefore "caution in the use of salicylates (aspirin) in children with influenza and those with varicella (chicken-pox- ) is prudent" ) It has been estimated that Reye’s syndrome strikes between 1000 and 2000 youngsters a year in the 10-fo- ot Inside Health care Sen Orrin Hatch is leading the committee debate on' 1 6A home health care Player hooked former BYU and professional football player tells about whipping a drug problem by accepting Christ 2C A United States with about one in five dying primarily from swelling of the brain Pesistent vomiting is usually the The National Institutes of Health first sign of the disease The child panel of outside experts said Wed--I may become listless lethargic and nesday the study findings do not disoriented and sometimes may appear to be due to chance but become hostile and combative could be biased by case selection The panel recommended that all and information-gatherin- g or con- children with such symptoms refounded by reasons for aspirin use ceive prompt iqedical attention ' The panel said aspirin alone could not be responsible for Reye’s j The committee said more studies j because in some cases are needed and their results must syndrome the victims had not received aspi- - be available before ' changes are I rin considered in current practices of The committee of 12 doctors and aspirin use I ’ "non-essenti- al cost-of-livi- USadsif gun Iffy m By PETER GILLINS SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — Av- owed racist Joseph Paul Franklin convicted of violating the civil rights of two black joggers by shooting them to death in city park still faces murder charges and a possible penalty of execution by firing squad After deliberating 14 hours a two-ma- n federal court jury Wednesday found Franklin guilty of violating the civil rights of Ted Fields 20 the son of a black minister and David Martin 18 by killing them in a sniper attack as they jogged with two white girls August 20 1980 drifter a native The of Mobile Ala stood impassively with his hands manacled as the verdict was read His sister broke into sobs Later as the stocky Franklin was escorted by a dozen US marshals out of the Federal Court Build10-wom- an 30-year-- ng j j V y- - — NORTH MIAMI Fla (UPI) Paul Molz was fed up with the ticks and fleas that infested his house and lawn so he sprayed his yard with gasoline The ticks and fleas are gone now — but so is half his house It caught fire Tuesday Molz was rushed to the hospital after the pilot light of a water heater on his porch ignited the gasoline It took six fire units 16 minutes to get the y house fire in the under control one-stor- “Everybody around my house has dogs" Molz said from a hospital bed Wednesday "I got fed up with the problem so I started to spray Next time I’ll get a noncombustible water-bas-e spray" deaths of blacks Franklin is also a suspect in sniper attacks on blacks in Ohio and In- diana including the wounding of National Urban League President Vernon Jordan last May in Fort Wayne Ind In addition he is wanted by authorities in bank robberies in Alabama Arkansas Georgia and Kentucky Before his trial Franklin openly talked to the press denying his guilt in the shootings but loudly proclaiming his hatred for blacks "I didn’t do it" he told a local television station in December "But whoever did was justified They were race mixing and that should be punishable by death Race mixing should be a capital weeks trials three During the seven-da- y witnesses — two jail inmates and Franklin’s former wife Anita Cooper of Montgomery Ala — testified that the defendant confessed to them after his arrest crime" At his sentencing March 23 Franklin could receive a life sentence on each of the two federal counts of civil rights violations However Franklin also faces e murder charges state to A conviction in mumbled in he the reporters: slayings ing — that’s state court could result in the death "Government frame-u- p what I said all along" His attorney penalty — execution by firing said an appeal would probably be squad filed County prosecutors said they A former member of the Amerito arraign him on the plan Klan Klux Ku can Nazi Party and homicide charges within four i l' way I can keep up with inflation" The teachers rally was the second massive demonstration at the Capitol in about a week The crowd appeared to be at least as large as a group of 6000 construction workers who protested the repeal of Utah’s Prevailing Wage Law Teachers were vocal at Wednesday afternoon’s rally booing speakers they didn’t like and cheering loudly for those who called for additional funding They broke out into chants several times with slogans like "6 percent won’t make a dent" and "save our schools" A large number of Northern Utah teachers participated in the demonstration "We want them (the lawmakers) to balance the budget but not at the cost of education" said Jack Suekawa of the Ogden School District "Six percent isn’t anywere near what the cost of living has been in the last year” Asked about rumors the teachers will strike he said: "Noboby wants to strike What we want is a fair shake" Robert Curran an Ogden representative and a Davis County school teacher however predicted the teachers won’t be showing up next fall He said he hopes the local school board will cut programs" such as summer school community school and gifted programs to provide larger raises and avoid a strike Way to lose house: spray gas on fleas first-degre- Joseph Paul Franklin v 7 A i |