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Show sgTg' Ao World The Daily Herald, Provo, Utah Thousandls marelh - Pope asks Koreans to end ideological fight ffor YelSsimi Thousands of MOSCOW (AP) Soviets marched in an icy drizzle to the walls of the Kremlin on Saturday in a show of support for Boris N. Yeltsin and two other parliamentarians threatened bosses. SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Pope John Paul II opened an Asian pilgrimage here Saturday by calling for an end to the bitter ideological struggle that divides South Korea and North Korea. About 1,000 dissidents and radical students staged an rally at Sogang University in western Seoul to urge the pope to speak out on human rights abuses in South Korea. An equal number of riot police surrounded the campus, but made no move to halt the protest. The protesters dispersed peacefully after demanding the release of jailed dissidents, including South Korean clergymen charged with visiting North Korea for unification talks. John Paul arrived in Seoul after Dying across the Soviet Union and sending greetings to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev in a sign of they say are by Communist Party "Yeltsin, Gdlyan, Ivanov they are our conscience!" read one sign supporting the parliamentarians that was carried by a protester down Gorky Street, Moscow's most fashionable shopas thick ping thoroughfare, crowds looked on. zk kt silt Demonstrators also opposed the on political power by the Communist Party, and sought establishment of a Western-styl- e democracy. The protest, pn. Constitution Day, a Soviet holiday, also demanded that civil and human rights outlined in the 1977 Soviet Constitution be scrupulously observed. Under President Mikhail S. Gorbachev, a lawyer by training, the Kremlin has acknowledged S monopoly I ; li ' I that constitutionally protected freedoms of speech, assembly and others have been neglected or violated outright in the past. It also ordered a rewrite of the constitution, with Gorbachev himself in charge. As a cold rain fell, thousands of members and sympathizers of the ! ' ''" ' Miiimimiii ' imTlM 'i NEW DELHI, India (AP) bel Mother Teresa U n as Sheremetyevo, Moscow's international airport 20 miles from the Kremlin. Although it was not possible to count the participants, they were far fewer than than more than 1 million residents of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania who formed a human chain Aug. 23 to denounce the 1939 pact that consigned their once independent homelands to the Kremlin orbit. sian People's Front linked hands to form a human chain whose sections stretched for miles along the center of Gorky Street, the artery leading from Moscow's heart to its northwest suburbs. Knots of demonstrators were seen along the road as far away Nazi-Sovi- et est city. MissionIn 1950, she founded aries of Charity in Calcutta, 850 miles from New Delhi. No- was removed from intensive care Saturday, nearly five weeks after she was hospitalized with heart trouble, news reports said. Press Trust of India said the Roman Catholic nun was unit of moved to the the Woodlands Nursing Home, the hospital to which she was admitted Sept. 5 with high fever and irregular heart beat. The Yugoslav-bor- n nun suffered a heart attack Sept. 8 and experienced sporadic chest pains until Sept. 18. Mother Teresa was awarded the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize for her work with the poor and the dying in the slums of Calcutta, India's larg unf ' AP Iaserphoto Eyes streaming and noses running from the cold, the demonstrators stood single file blocking the lane of Gorky Street reserved for limousines of the state and party elite. Many shouted opposimemtion to the ruling ber Communist Party, and some even waved the once banned white, blue and red tricolor of czarist Russia. "The Communist Party is a Addressing himself to the "dear people of Korea," John Paul said: "In the face of the tragic division which continues to separate your own people, do you not have the urgent mission to prove to a world torn by mistrust, strife and hatred that mankind does have the resources to end division and war, and to forge an enduring peace?" Mother Teresa out of ICU the laureate . ' 'i i iiiimT' wiV ; i a"' Supporters of maverick politician Boris N. Yeltsin form a human chain Saturday. Rus- grassroots x V remarkably improved Vatican-Sovie- t relations. He expressed hope he would soon visit Moscow. The pope was greeted on his arrival with a bugle and drum fanfare by bandsmen and young women in traditional silk dresses waving white and yellow papal flags. He immediately took up the issue of Korean reunification, which has divided the influential Catholic community in South Korea. mafia the first mafia in the history of the world to take power," said one protester, retiree Vaiery Kazakov from the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Do"The main thing is to find out who is actually behind that mafia." The protest occurred while Gorbachev was in East Germany to attend ceremonies marking the country's 40th anniversary. post-cardi- n. Trains & Accessories HOBBY STOP 127 E. W 1200 So.. buy 7 0rm, UUh LioiMlAmncn Flyer trains Delegates OK scrapping Communist Party -The resolution presented to the congress stated that the party's "history ... has ended" and named its successor to be the Hungarian Socialist Party. Acceptance of the document, entitled "Position on the Character of The Party," marked the first time a Soviet-blo- c Communist Party dissolved itself and asked members to participate in a democratic party. Reform Communists have for months urged the party to support BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) Delegates at a historic Communist Party congress on Saturday overwhelmingly approved a reform motion to scrap the party; and replace it with socialist party similar to those in Western Europe. Of the 1,202 delegates present, voted for the motion. There were 159 votes against and 38 1,005 their plan to start anew as Hungary prepares for its first free national elections in 41 years. be a Cameo Room ANSif d fur it nfA tlU t I j f r l, 1 TOTHEWORLDTRAVELER! H , i m ' - J 1 ' p" 1 J l f; -- i,;, - -- i r it f f X - ' ; ? r TiiiifflT Willi ill il li if HllliMffif mt fun - f t '( t ti i MlgiliftTn in MBiMtMl n li White dress shirts by Visions Eos', I ' irk I f lii nili I v WELL-SUITE- D could only DAZZLING! 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