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Show oliynl President Kcagan has unul September to act on the ITC ruling while committees on both sides of Congress battle to get the b.ll to the floor for a vote. The ITC ruled foreign imports are hurting us," King explained "But now the ITC. in that ruling, million tons of slabs to be allowed one and one-hal- f imported a year. The limit is allowing more than was ever shipped before " Along with the ruling has come the announcement that Kaiser Steel will open a California plant that will use steel slabs imported from Japan. "We are perfectly willing to compete with them if those slabs are going to be shipped in at fair market value But if looks like they can bring it in at any price." King said Representatives of the various Utah congressmen wishing to testily were asked by the committee to subnet their opinions in writing rather than waiting to testify. So many have expressed an interest in The Coalition to Save Geneva asked Congressmen testifying that the entire session could be taken up Howard Nielson and Dan Marriott not to testify with testimony and no action Nielson has not et before the House subcommittee on trade regarding decided what he will do the Fair Trade in Steel Act, but want the two The coalition wants the bill pushed as quickly as representatives to push the bill out onto the House possible in the light of a recent ruling by the floor. International Trade Commission which will allow for George King, secretary of the coalition, told a more slab steel to be imported, cutting even more meeting of the group this afternoon that letters have into Geneva s market. been sent to the Nielson and Marriott because the "'There is an urgency in the situation." King said group feels the committee is dragging its feet on the "Whatever remedy gets installed, the Fair Trade in issue. The coalition wants the bill before the entire Steel Act or the ITC ruling, it has to be fair and House for action. allow fair market value for products brought in. It A Nielson staff member said today congressmen will be very urgent if that doesn t happen." By KAYXENE NELSEN Herald Suff Writer HOTH YEAR, NO. 306 PROVO, UTAH, FRIDAY, July 20, 1984 $6 00 A MONTH - PRICE 25 CENTS I revenue producer for the city rather than just enough to cover The council will likely grant that review and try to work out an ordinance more pleasing to the business community. The ordinance went into effect July 1 but a moratorium issued last week put a hold on the matter for 30 days while the council and administration the matter. Nevin Limburg, executive vice president of the Provo Chamber of Commerce, said most business and professional people "prefer a straight fee type of license and a nominal fee at that" which is paid quarterly unless it is nominal enough that yearly would not be a problem. Most businessmen attending the meeting objected to the gross X,"" , 4 re-stu- By LEE RODERICK Herald Washington Bureau - N w " v ! .v a du - Provo City's business license ordinance needs another review, according to nearly 70 business and professional persons who met at a council study session this week to voice their opinions. , IN SAN FRANCISCO Walter F. Mondale, already making history by running with a woman for vice president, vowed Thursday to capture the White House and restore traditional values he says have been lost under President Reagan. "My presidency will be about those values," including caring and fairness, Mondale told the closing session of the Democratic National Convention in accepting the party's 28th nomination for president. New York Rep. Geraldine 1. unci N BW Study of Ll0 I1S6 Law I lr Restore Concern i : Herald Staff Writer J .M attended today's meeting to tell the group w -i the congressmen are trying to do for Ge.nex B,il Arseneau, representing Nielson and Hep James Hansen, said the two have been strongly in pport of Geneva. He said Nielson would be "wort g op getting the Fair Trade in Steel Act moved w en he returns to Congress next week. David Buhler, representing Sen. Orrin Hatch, on updated the group on Hatch's most recent wi the issue. Hatch and Sen. Jake Gam wrote leu-th- s to ITC last week asking that quotas not be ret nal but across the board. Buhler said Hatch is w ung for an evaluation from U.S. Steel and the L ted Steelworkers Union as to what recommend his office should carry to President Reagan. nd Garn the Fair Trade in Steel By KAYLENE NELSEN Mondale Vows to 1 ' receipts formula where the amount of the license is determined by how much the business grosses. "It's an invasion of privacy," Limburg said. Other objections centered on the business licensing becoming a the cost of running the program. The chamber will be preparing a presentation that will include some "specific language" regarding just what the cost of the service should be. "We as a chamber don't feel we're in a confrontation with the city. We're in a very amiable level of conversation," Limburg said. John Chambers, a Provo den- tist, objected to professionals being included in the licensing but said "if there has to be a licence it ought to be a low yearly license fee that covers only administration of the program. I do not feel this program should be supporting other areas of city government." Jessie Firmage, a real estate agent, said she was concerned about the city checking into the gross receipts of a firm. She suggests a $20 fee for each business would be sufficient to run the program. Councilman Keith Roos said the council has yet to decide where "to go from here to respond fairly to the input." He said the council would look at more options. "We ought to do something very, very quick and have something on the table by the end of the month." Ferraro was nominated vice president by acclamation. preceded Mondale to the srv6S She po- dium, delivering an impassioned speech received with wild enthusiasm by delegates. Mondale and Ferraro begin the general campaign well behind Reagan and Vice President George Bush in most polls. Their prospects for closing the gap almost certainly improved in San Francisco, however, where the Democrats became reasonably united after a long and often bitter primary struggle. Mondale, 56, a former senator ,ow H 1 Em By VICKI BARKER Herald Staff Writer 8 will be observed as ChildCar Safety Week in Orem to July urge motorists to comply with the new "Law of Love" and equip their cars with restraining devices for children if they haven't already. 22-2- An officer with the Orem Public Safety Division reports that car seats were responsible for saving the lives of three children involved in automobile accidents in July. ilJl 1 from Minnesota and Jimmy Carter's vice president, was in- troduced by Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who called him "the captain of our cause" and said that with Mondale as president, "the dream we share will live again." Kennedy castigated the Reagan administration in the bleakest of terms, charging that it seeks "to balance the federal budget on the sickbeds of the elderly." If Democrats simply is Orem City Mayor DeLance Squire made the week official by proclamation to stress the importance of the Utah Child Passenger Safety Act that went into effect July 1. "The idea is to emphasis the change in the law in Utah, now requiring children under age five to be in special seats, and also the fact that there's a lot of material available now to help parents make a safer environment for their children," Squire said. By law, parents or guardians have to provide safety seats for children up to age two, and seat belts for children up to age five. Violators may be fined $20, a fee that courts are likely to waive if the motorist shows the judge he or she has gotten restraining equipment since being ticketed. (See SAFETY, Page 3) her nomination. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro signals to the crowd before giving accepting tell the truth, said Kennedy, the walls surrounding the "Republican citadel" of special privilege "will come tumbling down." Kennedy's fiery rhetoric left Mondale with a tough act to follow in the most important the Democratic delegates opposed his nomination on the first ballot Wednesday. Mondale followed a theme set speech of his life. Mondale started slowly and never did reach the rhetorical heights touched by Kennedy. His address, however, was generally well received, especially given the fact that nearly half by New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, keynote speaker, and (See MONDALE, Page 3) ass Murderer Went H unting Humans By DENNIS ANDERSON SAN DIEGO (UPI) The wife of James Huberty, who slaugh- - tered people after telling her he was "going hunting for humans," apologized for his rampage by saying he had been crushed by economic setbacks that left him "hearing voices" and even trying suicide. His wife, Etna, said his spiral-in- g plunge from the American dream began when he failed to become an embalmer, lost his Ohio home and was unsuccessful in a series of jobs the last as a security guard at a condominium construction site. She said she foiled his attempt at suicide in Ohio and he told her 21 recently, '"You should have let me kill myself.' I wish I had since he shot all these people." "I think he wasn't in his right he was hearing voices. mind tall He told me God was and had a long gray beard," Mrs. Huberty said in an interview aired Thursday night by 10-fe- KFMB-televisio- n. She said she believed his murthe worst mass derous attack slaying by one person in U.S. was his attempt "to get history back at society. He was trying to make them hurt the way he was hurting." Huberty, 41, described as a loner who loved guns, killed eight men, seven women and six chil came back, he was sitting sofa crying," she said. dren Wednesday in a spree with three weapons in a crowded McDonald's fast-foo- d restaurant at San Ysidro near the Mexican border. Nineteen were wounded. on the "A couple of months ago he said, 'You should have left me kill myself.' I wish I had since he shot all these people," she said. Terry Kelly, a former coworker in Huberty's hometown of Massillon, Ohio, said after Huberty failed as an embalmer and was laid off as a welder, the killer felt it was "the end of his making a living for his family" and it was time to "take everyone he was always talkwith him ing about shooting somebody." Friends said he moved to Southern California after losing his home in Massillon only to be fired as a security guard July 10. It was an hour and 17 minutes after he began the carnage that SWAT Policeman Charles Foster, perched on a Post Office rooftop across the street, fired a single rifle round that ripped fatally through Huberty's chest. Mrs. Huberty said he attempted suicide in Ohio by putting a little silver gun to his head. "I pried his fingers off the gun, I left the room to hide the gun. When I On the fateful day of the massa- cre Huberty took his wife and two children to breakfast and the San Diego Zoo. They returned home, he donned camouflage pants, kissed his family goodbye. "He started walking away," Mrs. Huberty said". "Then he said he was going to go hunting, something about going hunting for humans. But I thought it was just talk ... He turned and walked downstairs and that was the last I saw him." Mrs. Huberty said in an open letter to KFMB that she was sorry for the victims and their families. But, she said, he was a victim of hard times and after if began losing his security job "hearing voices and seemed to be talking to people who were not there." After losing the Ohio home, she said, he became "obsessed with even telling a ideas about war" policeman was a war criminal even though he had never served in the military. In the letter of apology she said that on Tuesday he telephoned a mental health clinic for help. But, she said, "he waited and waited no by the phone for that call one called." She told KFMB that, while at the zoo and after he failed to get a clinic appointment, he told her: "Society had their chance." In Sunday's Herald Friday: 49ers Have Local Stars Former BYU and University of Utah ball stars fill spots on several teams in the NFL. But one team found a gold mine in Utah. The San Francisco 49ers have managed to take nine Beehive state collegians to foot- training camp. Doug Wilks' story on Page 8. Postal Workers Waiting Local Utah County Postal Union officials say they will obey the law and not strike if national union leaders call for that kind of action. Arnold Mellor, president of the local union said members in Utah County will continue to support negotiations, even if management has not contacted them for comment. See related story on Page 7. Some Clouds Forecast Variable cloudiness is the forecast in Central Utah tonight and Saturday, according to the National Weather Bureau, which predicts scattered afternoon and evening showers. Overnight lows will be near 70 degrees and highs on Saturday near 90. More weather information is on Page 6. Where to Find It Amusements Business Classified Ads Comics Crossword National-Internation- Weather All 20-2- 24 26-3- the Nationals To 3 6 16 16 2,7 4 17 al Obituaries Opinions Sports Today Utah-Region- Riding 8-- 19 5 6 Sports |