OCR Text |
Show Mow in Salt Lake City IFrcanEdin By E. O'NEIL ROBINSON SALT LAKE CITY (LTD Federal delivered marshals Saturday Joseph Paul Franklin to Salt Lake City, where he will face federal civil rights charges and state murder charges in the sniper killings of two black youths last August. Before federal marshals whisked him from a van into the Salt Lake tail. Franklin shouted to newsmen. "The communist federal government is trying to frame me." Franklin, an avowed white supremacist, was moved secretely under heavy protection from Ttmpa. Fla. U.S. Attorney Ronald Rencher said V 108TH YEAR. NO Franklin will be arraigned on the federal charges Monday before a US. magistrate. Franklin. 30. a native of Mobile Ala ., is accused of fatally shooting David Martin, 18, and Ted Fields, 20, as they jogged near a city park Aug. 20 with two teen-ag- e white girls. He is a suspect in similar shootings of blacks in Indiana. Oklahoma Pennsylvania and Ohio. In addition he is wanted for questioning in the shooting last May of National Urban League President Vernon Jordan in Fort Wave Ind., and the 1978 wounding of Hustler magazine publisher Larry Flynt in Lawrenceville, 86 Ga. sit Franklin was arrested bv FBI outside a Lakeland. Fla., b bod bank last week after an intensive national manhunt. He denied any involvement in the slaying and has accused trying to make him a authorities of scapegoat because of his racial views. Relatives said Franklin is a former member of the Ku Khix Klan, the American Nazi Party and other white supremacist groups. A federal grand jury in Utah indicted Franklin on charges of violating the civil rights of the two dead black youths, and local officials later filed a firstdegree murder complaint. PROVO. UTAH. SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 1980 J5.00 MONTH Salt Lake Countv Attorney Ted Can non said he had no objection to allowing the U.S. attorney to try Franklin on the federal charges first Evidence against Franklin in the indictments is mostly circumstantial. Four eyewitnesses placed him in Ealt Lake between Aug. 17 and Aug. 20, and the suspect and his Camaro were spotted at the murder scene less than an hour before Fields and Martin were gunned down. A man whose home was nearby heard the shots. He saw a white male run and climb into a brown Camaro and drive off. - PRICE 50 CENTS Iranians Arrest Ghotbzadeh 7 J i'i (LX fry. ML Wi Susan Holhngworth Photo N. Eldon Tanner (left) accepts. yy Honors Ifdon To finer See related story on Page 3. See related story on Page S. By PATRICK CHRISTIAN Herald Staff Writer "I am indeed to be able to accept this contribution you have made to have my name on it," said N. Eldon Tanner, a member of the First Presidency of the LDS Church. He made the remarks Saturday at the honored ground-breakin- g ceremonies for the new Brigham Young University School of Management building that is named after the business and church leader. Several hundred people attended the ceremony at the western edge of the university's upper campus. The new 81,000 seven story building square-foo- t, will be constructed at the eastern edge of the lower campus where a baseball practice field has been located. Looking frail from a lingering illness, Tanner spoke and moved slowly. He said the new building will be important in teaching students the scriptures and honest management skills. President of the LDS Church, Spencer W. Kimball, praised President Tanner as an example of a man of honesty and dedicated to the service to his fellow man. "It has been a joy to have him in the First Presidency," he told the crowd. University President Jeffrey Ft. Holland welcomed the visitors to the ceremonies and told the crowd how he had met President Tanner while in the mission field, and praised the church leader. is a symbol A ground-breakin- g for those who have labored so hard for the new building to know that is is finally a reality, said William G. Dyer, dean of the School of Management. He said the ceremonies are a time when the man the building is named after can be honored. The School of Management is the largest college at BYU, said Dyer and added that there are now 4,000 students enrolled. The new building, he said, can seat 2,000 students at one time and has its own library and computer center. The seven-stor- y Tanner Building will be completed in late 1982 and will house academic offices and programs of the School of Management, which is comprised of the College of Business, and the Graduate School of Management. . Classrooms and offices will central surround a glassed-ove- r atrium that will extend the full height of the building. The atrium will serve as a passive collecting heat solar collector for the building in winter, and circulating air and reducing the cooling load in summer. It will also bring natural light into the - interior of the building, further reducing power bills. Elder Gordon B. Hinckley, a member of the Council of the Twelve of the LDS Church said that in today's world there is a need for people in the management fields to have personal integrity in addition to business skills. He said that no one exemplifies integrity in his business more than President Tanner. "His influence can be felt on the campus, throughout the state and in the church around the world," Hinckley said. University President' Holland said the new building will allow the handicapped better access to the lower campus providing an access link between upper and lower campus. In closing the formal part of g the ceremonies Holland said there was no way better to acknowledge President Tanner's life in business and in the church than by breaking an apground with dynamite parent reference to President Tanner's powerful influence in the business community and in the church. Music for the ceremonies was provided by the Honors Brass Quintet. The invocation was offered by Glenn E. Nielsen and the benediction by Elder O. Leslie Stone. A. W. Clausen, the head of the BankAmerica was recognized by President Holland. Clausen was named International Executive of the Year by the School of Management at a Friday dinner. One detraction from the ceremonies occurred when a woman was slightly injured by a small rock from the blast. In March of this year it was announced that the new building would be named the N. Eldon Tanner Building. Then University President, Dallin H. Oaks said of President Tanner, "as a practitioner and exemplar of the arts of management, Tanner has had a profound impact on the church and its members and is an appropriate role model for our students in management." The church leader was born in 1898 in Salt Lake City but was reared on a small hillside dugout in an LDS colony in Alberta, Canada. In Canada he was ground-breakin- elected to the Alberta Legislature and was named speaker. After years of government service, he became president of a petroleum company in Calgary. He also served as director of the Toronto Dominion Bank of Canada. President Tanner headed the Trans-Canad- a Pipeline Limited, a company formed to build a pipeline across Canada from Alberta to Montreal. The manager left the private sector to give service to his church and was ordained an apostle in his church in 1962. His church leadership continues today. I PI File Photo SADEGH GHOTBZADEH By United Press International Former Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, under fire since he called for the release of the 52 ' American hostages, has been arrested for criticizing their militant captors and other Islamic officials, a spokesman for Tehran's Revolutionary Court said Saturday. Ghotbzadeh: seized by Revolutionary Guards and hauled off to Tehran's Evin Prison, was a c c u s e d of making "provocative" remarks that allegedly sowed dissention and damaged the Iranian war effort during a television interview Thursday. Another participant in the interview was ordered to surrender himself for arrest and the officials responsible for the program were dismissed, the official Pars news agency said. The exact nature of Ghotbzadeh's offending remarks was not disclosed. But the court's public relations office said Ghotbzadeh criticized both officials of the censored state radio and television networkand the militants holding the hostages, now ending the first week of their second year in captivity. "The arrest warrant for Ghotbzadeh was issued after his provocative television speech on Thursday regarding the condition of Iranian radio andtelevi-siorevolutionar organizations, and the Moslm Students Following the Imam's Line (the militants)," a court announcement said. The court also issued a warrant for Ghotbzadeh has repeatedly called for the release of the hostages and has been openly critical of hardline Prime Minister Mohammad All Rajai, who fired him after coming to power last Auguit. RaJai, a former elementary school teacher with no government experience until his appointment, has been criticized by moderates as an in- n, the arrest of Mohammad Moalegh Eslami, who took part in the television program with Ghotbzadeh. He was ordered to give himself up at the prosecutor's office, the announcement said. The announcement said Ghotbzadeh was "in the custody of the Islamic Revolutionary Court." It did not elaborate but the Islamic Republic, Iran's leading fundamentalist newspaper, said he was in Evin Prison, the same jail where the late shah kept many of his political prisoners. competent. Ghotbzadeh, the first chief of the radio and television network after the overthrow of the shah; apparently spoke out one time too many times and was to face the dreaded "revolutionary" court on charges of "putting forward divisive issues and... creating an atmosphere of anxiety and pessimism." As to the hostages themselves, Iranian officials have not commented on their fate since Ronald Reagan's election victory, which Parliament officials said might delay the captives' release. Iraq, -Iran Magnify Aha dan Clash Iran and BAGHDAD, Iraq (UPI) Iraq intensified fighting Saturday in the battle for Abadan and Iran claimed its gunboats destroyed two giant oil derricks in the Persian Gulf, crippling Iraqi oil exports. The 48th day of the Persian Gulf war saw stepped-u- p fighting on the southern front and more conflicting casualty claims as Iraq amassed its armor around Ababdan for an expected assault on the refinery city it has set its gunsights on almost since the war Iranian An military communique also claimed that Iranian Phantoms began. Iran, following an Iraqi report that two Iranian gunboats were sunk in in a sea engagement in the b waterway Friday, countered with a claim that its navy destroyed two giant oil derricks in the Persian Gulf. The destruction of the derricks had made "it impossible for the puppet regime of Iraq to export oil by the Persian Gulf," the official Iranian news agency Pars said, struck the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, destroying half of its capacity. the war also claimed its first journalistic casualty. Reporters returning to Baghad from Khurramshahr, Abadan's Iraqiheld sister city, said an Iranian sniper shot and wounded a Yugoslav journalist near the Karun River. The journalist, Yugoslav television reporter Slobodan Buckvich, 42, was Shatt-Al-Ara- wounded in the forehead but not seriously hurt. The reporters said the sniper opened fire from a building on the northern Iraqiheld side of the river outside Khurramshahr and was later killed by Iraqi troops. Abadan itself came under heavy Iraqi artillery fire again but Iran claimed the city's defenders killed 140 Iraqis in ground attacks and air strikes along the southern front. The figure could not be confirmed but it was believed to be greatly exaggerated. Strongest in 20 Years Earthquake Wobbles California By LLOYD G. CARTER The EUREKA, Calif. (UPI) strongest earthquake in the adjacent 48 states in more than 20 years rocked the coast of northern California and southern Oregon early Saturday, causing widespread damage, but no known deaths. A freeway bridge collapsed, hurling two vehicles 30 feet to the ground and injuring six persons. Some houses shifted off their foundations, power lines were broken, windows shattered and goods scattered in stores. The quake struck at 2:28 a.m. and was centered 20 miles northwest of Eureka, according to government seismologists. It had a Richter magnitude of 7. The last stronger tremor in the "lower 48" occurred Aug. 17, 1959, in Montana, with a magnitude of 7.1. That quake killed 28 persons and caused $11 million in damage. Disster officials surveying the area after the quake Saturday were amazed at the relatively light damage. "We've - had more damage from smaller quakes," said William Chambers, director of the Humboldt County Office of Emergency Services. A nuclear power station, shut down since 1976 for fear of an earthquake disaster, came through the quake with nodamage, its manager said. The most serious injuries reported were suffered by the family of Thomas Utah State Senator Dies - SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) State Sen. Moroni Jensen, 68, of Salt Lake, died in St. Mark's Hospital of an apparent heart attack Saturday, only five days after his unsuccessful bid to become Utah's lieutenant governor. Jensen wcs pronounced dead at 5:10 p.m., a hospital spokesman said. A former president of the State Senate, and a staunch Democrat, Jensen served 14 years in the Utah Legislature. Jensen had a long career as a teacher, principal and administrator in Utah. He was principal of two junior high schools and Cyprus and Granger highs in Salt Lake County, before retiring to enter politics. He directed federal programs and research, as well as the adult education program for the Granite School District. A mayor and former councilman of Salina, a small central Utah farming community, Jensen was a graduate of Brigham Young University and held a master of arts degree from Columbia University's Teachers College. Jensen began his campaign for the Lieutenant Governor's office earlier this year, defeating Weber County Commissioner Doug Hunt in the September primary. He lost the general election to incumbent Lt. Gov. David Monson by a more than 2 margin. Monson had 386,000 votes to 195:000 for Jensen. 3-- Mariani, 32, of Eureka. He was driving southbound on U.S. 101 about eight miles south of Eureka when the quake shook loose the pillers of an overpass. Mariani's Volkswagen "bug," in which his wife, Marina, 31, and their three children, Gina, 4, and twins Marc and Tom, 9, were with him, plunged through the air, landing upside down on the ground 30 feet below. Firemen had to cut the car open to pry the family out. They were with serious injuries. Earthquake experts said the tremor occurred on a branch of the San Andreas fault, which splits the earth's surface along the California coast and caused the great San Francisco quake and fire of 1906, which had an estimated Richter magnitude of 8.3 and hospitalized caused more than 400 deaths. Smaller earthquakes are frequent in the Eureka area. The last temblor as strong as Saturday's occurred Dec. 21, 1933, and had a magnitude of 7.2. The strongest ever recorded in the area was on Jan. 31, 1922, with a magnitude of 7.3. Sunday: Veteran Offers Aid To call attention to the coming Veterans Day on Tuesday, the veterans employment specialist at Job Service will greet his patrons dressed as a Revolutionary War soldier. Dave Brown, a disabled veteran, is prepared to help other veterans get back into the civilian job market. Story is on Page 3. Landfill Permit Denied The Utah County Board of Adjustment denied Provo's request Friday for a conditional use permit for a landfill in the Elberta area, and the city's attorney and one commissioner say they'll recommend the city take the matter to court. See story on Page 3. Skies to Cloud Increasing clouds are forecast for today for the Central Utah area. Temperatures will continue warm with increasing southerly winds. mid-60Highs today In the For Utah in general, there will be cloudiness In the North, but clear skies will prevail In the South through today with local gusty winds and continued unseasonably warm temperatures. Highs will range between 65 and 75. s. Here's Where To Find It Agriculture 23 Amusements 28-2- 9 Classified Ads Comics 64-7- 2 Commerce 30-3- 1 49 Community Notes Crossword 18 Education Lively Arts 27 National-Internation- al 63 46-4- 8 2,5 Obituaries Opinions Prime Time ReUglon Society Sports 4 50-5- 1 32 54 34-4- 5 3 Wanderlust 22 Youth 19 |