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Show I Page THE HERALD. Provo. Utah, Thursday, October 21, 1982 Lebanon Leader Sets Talks Pertini Pontiff, - World Briefs Parliament Session Set (UPI) -- WARSAW, Poland Military authorities scheduled a Parliament session next week to review a controversial bill to combat "social parasitism," a measure apparently directed against political opponents to martial law. tionally tight following a bomb attack on the Lebanese embassy late Wednesday. One passerby was injured by flying glass fragments in the attack, which heavily damaged the embassy. Asked what he thought about the bomb attack, Gemayel said, "No problem. That's something usual for us." Gemayel then boarded an Italian "Everybody loves him," Gemayel said answering a reporter air force helicopter which whisked who had asked if it would be safe him to the Vatican for his audience for the pope to accept an invitation with the pope. Gemayel is on his to visit Lebanon, reportedly at first foreign trip since being elected Christmas. Sept. 21 to replace his slain brother Minister Emilio Colombo and president-elec- t Beshir, GeForeign met the Lebanese leader at the mayel. airport where security was excep- - A. helicopter was taking him to Lebanese PresiROME (UPI) dent Amin Gemayel said today on his arrival for meetings with President Sandro Pertini and Pope John Paul II that the pope would be safe if he agrees to visit Lebanon because "everybody loves him." "It is always safe for the pope," said on arrival at Rome's top security Ciampin military airport visit. from Paris for a darity. More than 10,000 people Wednesday attended the packed funeral of Bogdan Wlosik, 20, who was shot deaJ by riot police during street clashes Oct. 13 in the industrial Krakow suburb of Nowa emotion-- 24-ho- Huta. The parliament session Tuesday apparently will be devoted to law and order matters and will be followed by a meeting of the Communist Party's Central Committee. The sessions will mark the first meetings of both bodies since the recent spate of unrest sparked by parliament's Oct. 1 passage of a new trade union bill that dissolved Soli two-da- y Sri Lanka The parliament, or Sejm, will hear a report by the prosecutor general on how to strengthen law and order and combat "some aspects of social pathology," officials said Wednesday. n head off possible violence like that which lowed 1977 elections. post-electio- econfavors a omy, won a landslide victory over socialist opponents in Sri fol- et At night, police fired into the air in Colombo to disperse 15 to 20 political agitators in the only major outbreak of unrest during the day of voting. No injuries were re- Lanka's first presidential vote, unofficial results showed today. called out Jayewardene, 30,000 troops immediately after the polls closed Wednesday declaring a state of emergency in an attempt to 76, ported. The president scheduled a national television address for today. Floods Kill Eight in Spain VALENCIA, Spain (UPI) -Flash floods triggered by torrential rains killed at least Cross volunteers joined police, military and civil guards in a regional rescue operation. A government spokesman said early today the Tous dam, filled to the brim and cracked by the floods, was withstanding the pressure and the water level was lowering. eight people and sparked panic in southeastern Spain, but rescue workers safely evacuated 100,000 residents of towns below a cracked dam. The floods Wednesday cut railroads and highways and swept away houses in the town of Alicante. Helicopter But authorities said the panic in the area. floods caused crews, frogmen and Red - Presi QUITO, Ecuador (UPI) dent Osvaldo Hurtado declared a state of emergency and ordered a nighttime curfew in an attempt to head off a general strike today in protest of price increases on flour and gasoline. "We will not permit in Ecuador what has happened in other Latin American countries that have suffered through terrorism," Hurtado said Wednesday in announcing the measures that suspended constitutional guarantees. Two young demonstrators in La- tacunga, 55 miles south of Quito, were wounded Wednesday by mili tary police gunfire. The demonstrators had closed the Highway when they were confronted by the military police. A government spokesman said the police officers fired their guns in the air to try to disperse the crowd, but the two demonstrators were hit accidentally. Desnite the new orders, STOCKHOLM, Sweden Colombian author Gabriel (UPI) e in Garcia Marquez self-exil- because of his socialist beliefs and friendship with Fidel Castro today won the 1982 Nobel Literature Prize. "He has ... gradually confirmed his position as a rare storyteller, richly endowed with material, from imagination and experience, which seems inexhaustible," the citation by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said. Garcia Marquez, 55, was the first Colombian writer and fourth from Latin America to win the prestigious prize, which this year was worth $157,000. The citation said Garcia Marquez won for his work combining fantasy with reality to show "a continent's life and conflicts." "There was no conflict over the choice of Garcia Marquez," Acad- the emy Secretary Lars Gyllensten Unitea Workers Front proceeded said. with plans for a nationwide general "We have had long deliberations strike today to protest Friday's 100 over the principles of choosing a percent increase in the price of winner. It's not our aim to find the flour to 16 cents a pound and of world champion of literature, but to gasoline to $1 a gallon. Quirinale Palace for a working lunch with Pertini and Foreign Minister Emilio Colombo. Gemayel 34 later was to be guest at a dinner given by Prime Minister Giovanni OFF Spadolini. He was returning to Beirut Friday morning. .7 Since Sunday on a trip to' the United States, France and Italy, Gemayel was seeking help in rebuilding his nation, shattered by a 1975-7- 6 civil war, years of factional strife and the June 6 Israeli invasion. ALL D00TS stay Gemayel ended a Wednesday in Paris, where he achieved two major goals. Teay lama, lamia, Jmlia, Fry, Da fait, Acme, Teiai, rVrMfier, Saata lata, faaraja, Herman, TimkeHaae! WE STOCK OVER PR. OF BOOTS 3000 find a good author who merits the prize," he said. Scores of authors were mentioned as possible recipients, ranging from American author Kurt Vonnegut to Japan's Yasushi Inoue. Garcia Marquez had been considered a strong PEAK'S HIKER 6 maa b cWtarea'i ibat, Nylaa Wash. ship burned contender, along with Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosa. n book Garcia Marquez' is "One Hundred Years of Solitude," published in 1967 and which has iiid over 10 million copies in 32 languages. The novel is the saga of a family in a Latin American jungle city. It is an iptense tale that ends with hordes of red ants reclaiming man's dwellings for the jungle. Reviewers had difficulty interpreting the novel. Many readers saw it as a recapitulation of the history of Latin America, but others felt it was a quasi-biblicallegory of the human race. The success of "One Hundred Years of Solitude" changed his .life, Garcia Marquez once said. "At the age of 40 for the first time since I was born, I knew for sure that I would eat tomorrow." 26.00.. Reg. 3 con VERSE I 34 OFF All styles, including, football, basketball, etc. HERMAN BOOTS Tad wantM't kaal wltk t nft warm Ha f big, ayta & aw - 4 sU. Reg. 36.00 offi- were ordered. "Most of the cannisters of ammonia have been expended or burned," Coast Guard spokesman Scott Gordon said. "Six small cannisters of chlorine remain, but pose no great hazard." The ship was carrying 18 tons of pressurized ammonia, an unknown HS3BK HUIS Statistics Professor That America should continue on a free trade course of action and that we must negotiate with our trading partners to get them to abide by this action. a textbook term which no longer exists in America's trading world! For years we have negotiated away our marketplace to foreign governments in the name of free trade, until now the only remaining market that is free to the rest of the world is our own. Fair trade, not free trade, is necessary for the survival of the That free trade That American trade barriers such as quotas and other foreign trading barriers should not be used. self-inter-est ln. That almost all of America's trading partners have erected trade barriers to our products entering their nations while at the same time picking up part of the cost of the goods produced in their countries for our market. These greatly underpriced goods have been dumped to compete in our marketplace. 3 ftcpsi isficgfis, Demoer sts, Independents $6 00 $36.00 172.00 .rti rt&. MEN'S SUITS 3-PI- Great looking wool F blends, polyester gaberdine and V 1 polyester blends. Reg. to 200.001 from 99 f ua ... No-f- . m ai' LSI n Denims , CORDS f& Croat colors RIVITS Cowboy cut, 100 cotton 1 PERM PRESS 5050 blend, also student J" 12" lws BOYS' CORDS Boot cut, 100 cotton 10 BOYS' DENIMS A!0 Boot cut 1 MEN'S DENIMS 100 cotton, boot cut, slim IA Pi m of LADY WRANCLER Cord blaiers, leans, cords, prairie blouses 30oli OFF STATES COVER-ALL- S $7 00 S42 00 $84 00 Month 6 Months One Veor TELEPHONE a 4 reg. lit RATES I CIRCULATION is CHPlSTENSEN. MAIL RATES IN UNITED V basic industrial might of America. by Month, earner 6 Months, carrier One Year, corner Reg. 116.00 ' MEMBER O'HCE Insulated, Waterproof believes: Editor Emeritus Entered as second class motter at the post orttce m Provo, Utah PO ID. 43060 MERAlD TIMBERLAND Businessman believes: fire could continue to burn for several days. Gordon said the Coast Guard United Press International Audit Bureau of Circulation NEA Service w Reg.27.00TT. quantity of chlorine, 10,000 gallons of diesel fuel and 1,500 gallons of lube oil when the fire broke out, the Coast Guard said. Officials said the decided not to tow the vessel to mudflats and scuttle the ship. Fire chiefs of Seattle and Everett and owners of the vessel met with the Coast Guard for two hours before making the decision to let the ship burn. Officials in a fireboat ventured to within 50 feet of the burning hulk and determined it would be best not to move the ship since it could likely burn itself out without it ivies. Uarinr trim. Laata A in a 55,000 people and no evacuations SUBSCRIPTION SJI" Soft, wflk rubber applet cials at Everett Harbor contemplated evacuating citizens on land tor fear they would inhale potentially deadly fumes from the fire. But winds carried the smoke from the ship away from the city of N, IAVERI shaft, 'ber upper HERMAN BOOTS d Published Sunday through Scnpps League Newspapers, 1555 North 200 West. Prove Utah 64601 B E JENSEN Publisher 15 60 best-know- L Puget Sound harbor early today, but officials said the danger from toxic fumes had passed. The Sea, an Alaska-basefish processor, erupted into flames Wednesday when sparks from a welder's torch apparently touched off a fire in the vessel's insulating foam, fire officials said. After the crew abandoned ship, explosions rocked the ship and temfar-labi- a. IVj--1. Fumes Risk Passes in Ship Blaze (UPI) EVERETT, 342-fo- ot & war I blazing I DISCOUNT BOOTS AND JEANS 1350 N.200W.rrtv Colombia Author Gets Nobel Prize Emergency Declared In Ecuador Leader Wins Sri Lanka COLOMBO, Incumbent Junius (UPI) Richard Jayewardene, who free-mark- Riot police patrolled Nowa Huta after the funeral, but the city was calm with no incidents or disturbances reported. II Congressman NUMBERS 37 3 5050 375 5103 cord InsulaUd, N Conor, upper WI AOD ONLY . TO TNESI P,tl( XlllK ,tl Iff MJfKI'tr N tit ry Ml Jl'it f kl iKKlf iKtlftllltlf . a. legs,reg.5S.99....40 10 rtlCIS ' |