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Show Sunday. August 22 1982 THF HFR AI.P Provo, Ctah-Pag- e31 Miami's Worst Mass Murder I'm Going to Kill a Lot of People Gunman Warned MIAMI (UPI) A mentallv-troi'.ble- husband turned to the boy, Robert Andrew Brown, Thursday night as they were swimming in the pool behind their Hialeah home and said. ' I'm going to kill a lot of people." He carried out his threat Friday when he entered Bob Moore's Weld shop carrying a 12 d high school math teacher who gunned down eight people and wounded three others warned his son the night before the massacre he was "going to kill a lot of people," his former wife said Saturday. "He must never know what happened," said Silva Loynaz Brown, referring to the son of Carl Brown, 51, who had been furloughed from his job gauge pump shotgun and methodically blasted away at the workers. It was the worst mass murder in Miami history. "He'll never understand this tragedy." the mother said, referring to voung Brown. "I will only terror-stricke- as an accounting instructor because of psychiatric problems. Mrs. Brown said her ex- - n THERE WILL BE - Dimension in Terror... T A A A Jason Productions. Steve Miner Film Starring DANA KIMMELL PAUL KRATKA and RICHARD BROOKER as Jason r I LiSJ PARAMOUNT HCTUHE mum " 2:15-4:41 5 II I ri I $2.00 FRIDAY LmVll I that the labor federation will oppose Reagan's in 1984. Kirkland wants the federation to break with tradition and endorse a candidate ahead of the presidential primaries. Because of Kirkland's constant attack on Reagan's programs, the focus for such an endorsement lias been on the wide-opeDemocratic field. Kirkland, however, said GOP candidates might also be considered. "If there is a contest on the Republican side, we are prepared to listen to the case, the arguments, that the candidates might til BARCAIN MATINEE EVEIY VAUD FIRST SHOW OILY BETTER - B0A15 1 MANN THEATRES mSMfrtmSSafmimi U OUTWOSF. CUEC FOR SALE WANT ADS SNOWS CARILLON DAILY. 1 TWIN DRIVI4N 1S I. Itato, rra, 74MI Iwtratir'' 1:30 "f nttf 1:15 1 2:304:45 7:15-94- -- y 5 d mountain. search across the "If the ark is there, its presence is well hidden." he said. Irwin, a fundamentalist Baptist leading the team, said he slipped in a snowfield at a height of about 14.000 feet and fell about 100 feet. He said the fall caused "lacerations on my head and face" but no bone fractured. "I am in good shape. I should be almost the same when I am fully recovered." But he indicated the expedition might not be resumed. Asked if he would try again to scale snow-cappe- I ght before kaammtl Wl 'W your eyes and beyond your wildest dreams. MOVIE GLIDE FOR FAMILIES G: "General Audiences." Film contains no materials most parents are likely to consider objectionable even for younger children. PG: "Parental Guidance Suggested." Rating cautions parents they might consider some material unsuitable for children. It urges parents to inquire about the film before deciding on attendance. .THE. UST 5ECKETn immJ MGMUA Ttffmtr N 9m nm Fnpi it WiSP""!! 'ft I w Li McNICHOL m CHRISTOPHER ATKINS mm k UHVIfi :v,. mm. Wi-ff- af "m inunj I AT the shooting. FL-CI- X: This is patently an adult-typ- e film and no one under 18 is admitted. The age limit may be higher in some places. the 16.946-foo- t mountain, Irwin said, "I don't know the answer to that question.'' He said the expedition members prayed every day. "There were many times when we were greatly inspired. I felt that we actually would find the ark," he said. "But now I don't know," he said. He said the expedition concentrated on the north side, facing the Soviet border 18 miles away "because most of the reported sightings are on that side of the mountain." He said the expedition encountered huge glaciers as it went up the mountain. "It's all ice and snow and at 10,000 feet you find snowfields," he said. "That's a very big mountain. We were only on the mountain for 11 days. It would have been impossible to do it in that time. "I thought we were very fortunate because I know it's difficult to obtain approval to climb on the mountain. Irwin was the second American to go on Mt. Ararat since 1974 when Edward Behling, an airman stationed in Turkey, climbed the peak without government permission. Approval for Irwin's expedition was given by Turkish head of state Gen. Kenan Evren. Brawl Injures 15 Henager Student Now Accredited Is - PITTSBURGH About 15 people who (UPI) engaged in a brawl at a wedding reception, including the maid of honor, were arraigned Saturday on various charges. City Magistrate Donna Jo McDaniel released most on nominal bond after they had spent the night in jail, still wearing grass-antuxedos and wedding attire. blood-staine- d d Motion Picture Association of America KE3J TH ORIGINAL IS BACK. tuawa Main! 4 PG 1:10, 3:10, 5:10, 7:10 i IfTII .Ilia SUNDAY R: "Restricted." Film contains adult-typmaterial and those under 18 years of age are not admitted except in the company of a parent or an adult guardian. e fcMrt KR1STY twice-divorce- in El Salvador. He reiterated the federation's strong support for Israel despite criticism over civilian casualties in its battle against the Palestine Liberation Organization in Lebanon. Kirkland noted that there had been about eight years of "wholesale death and destruction" in Lebanon at the hands of the Syrians and PLO which he said "dwarfs any of the effects of the response of Israel by moving north into Lebanon to deal with this very real and genuine threat." make." he said. Kirkland touched on several foreign areas during the broadcast. ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) Injured former U.S. astronaut James Irwin said Saturday his expedition found no evidence that the legendary Noah's Ark came to rest on Turkey's Mt. Ararat. "I am glad that if anyone got injured it was me rather than anyone else," said Irwin in a telephone interview from his hospital bed in the remote eastern Turkey town of Erzurum, 445 miles east of Ankara. "I feel a little weak but otherwise I feel good," he said. The former astronaut, who went to the moon in 1981. said 11 other U.S. climbers and several Turkish military escorts in the expedition no evidence of the ark" during an CENTUHYFOX TWENTItTM well-like- Expedition Finds No Evidence of Noah's Ark m i months Officials said they ordered the teacher of experience to take the leave because of emotional and drinking problems, and urged him to seek psychiatric help. "It was pretty obvious he had problems." said Drew vice principal Donald Fussell. d father Brown, a of three, had been living by collecting discarded aluminum cans since he was put on leave, neighbors said. He had last seen his psychiatrist two days before He said the administration should have taken a tougher stand against the crackdown on the Solidarity labor union n Poland said is not satisfy with land reform the n - 192 ni ADventures 7:00-9:- 30 3 school system for the last six Former Astronaut is BreivsterBaer. SHOWS DAILY: TMlATwf O KENNY Frank Mancuso. Jr Production Inc increasingly bizarre in recent months, his neighbors said. At times gunshots were heard from inside Brown's home and Brown, a former Navy man. would rant about the United States. Russia, or Fidel Castro sometimes being very pro American, other times claiming Cuba or Russia were better countries. "He was kind of weird, walking around late at night." said one neighbor. Juan Perez. "He went into people's yards and started screaming. He was crazy." Brown had been on medical leave from the Dade County Police initially reported Brown died from injuries sustained when he hit the pole, but a later autopsy showed he died of a bullet wound in the back. No charges were expected to be filed against Kram. The killing probably will be considered a justifiable homicide although the State's Attorney office must make the final decision, detective William "Randy" Baker said. Usually a quiet man. the math teacher's behavior had become sibilities ot a government in a democratic and humane society." Kirkland added on the VOA's "Press Conference USA," broadcast to Europe. Asia. Africa and South America. The program taped earlier in the week at AFL-CIheadquarters and broadcast Saturday by the government agency. Kirkland was interviewed by two reporters and a moderator. The VOA has traditionally sought to present views opposed to official policy, but has been the subject of debate since Reagan took office as to how strong a propaganda role it should play. During the program. Kirkland left no doubt AFL-CIWASHINGTON (UPI) President Lane Kirkland, in a program broadcast worldwide by the Voice of America, attacked President Reagan Saturday for having a "perverse order of priorities" that helps the rich instead of the needy. "We are in deep disagreement with the main thrust of the directions of this administration and its basic economic and social policies its attack upon programs that aim to give a helping hand to the weakest elements of our society; its blatant favoritism for the rich and prosperous and the most powerful and well off," Kirkland said. "We regard that as a perverse order of priorities in the discharge of the respon A New Continental, slamming Brown into a light pole. Blasts Reagan in VOA Show AFL-CI- O NOWHERE TO HIDE. coln tell him his father was killed on a bicycle. He loved his daddy so much." Part of Mrs. Brown's story will be true. Her did calmly climb aboard an old bicy-- . cle after the shooting and pedal away, but metal worker Mark Kram, who witnessed the shootings armed himself with a .38pistol and gave chase in a car. Kram said The when he caught up with Brown. Brown started to raise his shotgun to fire, and Kram fired a "warning shot." Kram then rammed Brown's bike with his Lin AND I 9:10 Mmr before in the entire history of humsn dvi!iutSon has there been Sfe m BORN WITH THE COURAGE OF AN EAGLE, THE STRENGTH OF A BLACK TIGER, AND THE POWER OF A GOD HJ fMfJ MIIYUiaa IAaaM PNAIIam iifwnvil nn ALBERT FINNEY CAROL BURNETT BERNADETTE PETERS - J 'i. T7 I PG 1:50, J WWS 0,1 SUNDAY AT 4J0, 7:05 SNOW TOMJUSTTJI AND i f.35 this much fun just couldn't be legal! STx few gill MONTY PYTHON LIVE AT THE LD SNOWS ALL 2.00, 4,30, IAT SUNDAY 740 AND Uynttj! - 9,00 Sri (lW II IVIIIKl "9 lo 5" ."r UT. MAT. iunirni 7IM4 I2i10.2iS-Si- eb to 6 t Mill 10s ir iismiT w WTIflMHJWWUHiriNW kin rnsnuiu (wimn f iiiw rTw mum nr us m m !f.v;; vdh twi ..nun tuft "m m umr tu sM.it Kwroruruj.rirT.mH-rMirimM..uioi- HOLLYWOOD BOWL ... mt mtsm in mmm s'.' donuh r mi yam mw m m' m m mis vimwmmbJ AT 9:20 QIT'TU' I r x v ""v l 1 U-H- S SNOWS DAILY. 1 9 1,00.1,00.5.00 740.9,00 mm twutT 1M, 4.SS, MOWS Tit KM-TRW- T.l, WIN t .) AT CO-HI-T, ClfVIJN lrl r SNOW 1:30 Dml hi "PURSUIT" 0Q WWUON SQUARE I IIATWMiCO-M- T 1JMi45-TiI$-4- 5 "swott toicittr |