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Show The Daily Utah Chronicle - Would & Nation Page Two Mandela's wife calls for more pressure on gov't radio De Klerk issued a statement through government-ru- n that officials Sunday night responding to comments from ANC If the guerrilla campaign would continue. that happened, de Klerk was quoted as saying, "The world would turn against them." , " Monday, February 5, 1990 and went along out of fear. The alleged murder scheme stunned residents of the Morris' mobile home community, north of Fort Lauderdale. "They were good neighbors," said John Brennan, a retired school administrator from Binghamton, N.Y. "He was a good . ' church member." . . Serious obstacles still block DOORL, South Africa (AP) the release of Nelson Mandela, and more pressure must be put on the white-le- d government before he can be freed after nearly three decades in prison, his wife said Sunday. Couple accused in son's legalized African National Congress that the world would turn against the group if it continued to wage a guerrilla war. Mandela met with his wife, Winnie, on Sunday, two days after the government lifted numerous restrictions on the movement. After the meeting, she appealed for renewed pressure on the government to force the lifting of ;. remaining emergency restrictions. "Unfortunately, the obstacles that were in the way, which prevented his release on Friday, still exist," Mrs. Mandela said after the four-hovisit at the Victor Verster prison farm. "It . . . doesn't depend on him when he will be released," she said. But in answer to repeated questions about the obstacles, she said Mandela still demands the complete lifting of the state of emergency. President F.W. de Klerk partially lifted the emergency in a historic speech Friday in which he legalized the African National Congress, placed a moratorium on executions and lifted restrictions on hundreds of individuals and scores of organizations. De Klerk's actions met many, but not all, of the conditions the ANC and Mandela had set for the start of negotiations to nd apartheid and give the voteless black majority a voice in the government. Under the emergency regulations that remain in effect, the government can detain anyone for up to six months without charge, and police have wide powers to ban meetings or speeches and restrict television or photo coverage of their own actions in dealing with political unrest. anti-aparthe- , ur ld anti-aparthe- id id murder double-cros- s The government meanwhile warned Mandela's newly Police say Christopher POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (AP) to collect Morris plotted with his parents to kill his $35,000 in insurance. When they found out the policy had lapsed, authorities allege, the parents killed him instead to collect a $70,000 policy. Theron and Leila Mary Morris, transplanted snowbirds from d Detroit with a poodle named Pepe, kept a yard in their mobile home community. They were regular churchgoers. Now they're charged with murder, accused of killing their Their son was released from prison late last year after serving time on drug and assault charges. Neighbors said the Morrises were trying to help him overcome a cocaine habit They housed him, fed him, bought him a car and found him a place to live. But there was tension. girl Teen-ag- e ex-wi- fe well-tende- son in a deadly double-crosson Police say the Morrises schemed with their to kill his former wife, Sharon, and her daughter for the insurance. But they turned on their son after they learned that the coverage had lapsed, authorities say. The couple and Martin Rector, their son's roommate and one-tim- e prison buddy who is accused of being the triggerman, then conned a drifter with drinking and blackout problems into confessing to the crime, police say. The drifter was released from jail after the three others confessed s. 42-year-- ict ' Wednesday. "I've been doing homicide for 12 years," said sheriff Lt. Tom murder I've ever Carney. "It's the strangest, most seen. It seems they were upstanding citizens, never had a brush with the law. They look just like any other grandparents you would find any place in the country." The Morris' lawyer, Douglas Lambeth, says a different story will emerge in court that the Morrises were afraid of Rector cold-blood- ed I V U A IUi receives CIOOIO I U C VILrC A teen-ag- e SALT LAKE CITY (AP) girl who' was the first human recipient of a pioneering lung assist device remained I in critical condition Sunday at LDS Hospital. The girl received the Intravascular Oxygenator, an inch-wid- e bundle of plastic fibers that mimic the lung's task of operation supplying oxygen to the body, during a two-ho- ' .. Friday afternoon. The hospital would only report the girl's condition Sunday. A nursing supervisor, who would not be identified, said the patient's family insists that no further information about the girl be released. Guidelines approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in September limit the implants to seven days in people with acute respiratory failure who have little other chance of survival. However, LDS Hospital spokesman Tim Madden said Sunday the seven days is considered to be a "rough guideline" by doctors. "It's not hard and fast, although there is a limit they think ' . they can use it for, and that is about a week," he said. - - ur 'V--.-- Marlrlpn ' saiH Vip " from wais -rpstrainsrl " " i HUNGRY GUY 17 3qd0g1 StM(8 jD D o UiT(HrjIii) I I rW.uliK'STO mtS Also, Try Our Hot Authentic Pastas! 273 So. 1300 E. We' skip 582-296- 2 re just a hop, a jump away. & V i V uu hen you sign your name on the dotted line at the University of Utah Credit Union, you can borrow money at rates as low as 13 APR! Simply autograph our signature loan and you'll have the money to pay off your high rate credit cards, to take a vacation, anything you want. All it takes is your approved credit and and you could have the cash your John Hancock in your pocket today! Stop by the University Credit Union and trade us your autograph for some quick cash with our 13 signature loan. 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