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Show - Q- Mart it 1. V R'lj, liailv IkfaW. Provo, National Llah l"t Seafork ffoes continue opposition to liicense - tun 74 ere arreted SEAh'XK, NH AP n &on. MjfNEC At dt in fyxivie. !jro.& z.yjtcs pliS overir cjt-- r4 each l0 Ortijrs protests, kgij CIaI-- Ml, ' esffccutves c i Ujki:! run i cefjse to ed cfcjer after fe cui invest sorters to xpofc op'. p-- al ng, "Surtip ' and rLr-g- , rrrie-l&ij- it e IJrpi-- s booted a sgr. reeli: We Have poiier. "Us a nrstof in tije Lves U ts4o es, more &as jist mor-U- r aid tncki," s:d Edrd oar LcefS. fcjt JUtf.S hCvj tip V weeks. for et kiSt tWO Seatrook opponents r.d svi'.ors wjvtd blocked xJ ppril process pnt sss, gileS canted if!f And t&e dtCi- - brown, pres. lent erator New Stihrook, A Hanpsrre perr-ap- s Seatrock op- VarJcee. the uurs hot) tvAesied niciear the tecixre a syirifti Exvecien, hA its foes ciaed i Principal's firing sparks aiili-nick-- i jit' - cy. The N'RC ruL&g raLf-e- d recco ready to go," said Erowa. Eje&datlons by its tiaff isA several The decision gives opponents sevker-Leve- l boards that the plant is en days to tie an appeal; seven safe and that evacu..Uca plats 4.S after the fuung the license would work. becomes effective unless a judge plari. uJxr Coeiceived m VJt, ft. was pro"I would be happy to Lve within issues a stay. If the appeal fails, two ciies cf this pla.it and I ascension to full poser could Uke posed in 1SC2 as a wouldn't worry about rt at alL" two to three mocs. PultX cosing less than fl tsIiiorL said NEC Chairran rlenneth Carr. Seabrook opponents remained undelays ard cost f"ctd tue caiKtllatioc of Weeks before Thursday's liceri-sLi- daunted, axig the final backs or and reactor in the isid-lft- s now move into an arena more plant operators raised temperplugged lead owner PuhLc Service atures and pressure in the Lkely to rule in their favor. Co. 'J New HarrpsLire into reactor to ready it for Massachusetts AOorney General nuclear fusion. James Shannon and two environreorganizauon is VAX,. Tt plaJt was held up Large'y by "We're going to aay at temperamental groups planned to ask for a concerns over whetrer the area ture and pressure and as soon as stay of the license next week in the could he evacuated in an emergen e get the Ucefise in hand, we're federal appeals court in Washing a broader victory, CfxztrLsji thai as a result of the Jocg tgj aga'ist StzbryJL. Uj utty wofuld risk the costs of trj-- r to trXLi ilA 0-- twis-reacl- ir Oxrfjo 1 t r CHICAGO AP - 0 i , - Police dished cwjtf.vuiiit) w .tool councils. Nine studtmts at Morgan Park ILgh Sttool on the South Side were arrested Inursday, charged under - , .l"iJi KiV tiZl-- K Southern UPLAND, Calif. 0Pj Californians bounced by the largest quake to hit the region in more than two years were sweeping up the damage and fretting that the temblor was but a rattle compared with the '"Big One." City council members in Pomona hardest hit of several areas struck by Wednesday's earthquake said they would meet today to request that Gov. George rukmeji-a- n assist them in obtaining federal or state funds to repair an estimated f 10 million in damage in their city. The state Office of Emergency Services said Thursday the quake, measuring 5.5 on the Richter scale, caused at least $12.7 million damage in the cities of Claremont, Pomona, La Verne, Chino, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Montclair and Upland and the counties of Los Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino. The figure "is very preliminary, based on information provided by cities and counties," said Mike non-votin- AP Ldiserpboto Gone west cov- Tom DeMarco drives his tractor-drawered wagon down the streets of Santa Moni- ca, Cali'., this week. De Marco, 38, his wife and five children left their hometown of Kipton, Ohio, last July 15 in search of work n Those vulnerabilities include what opponents consider the SRC's violation of its own procedures in ruLngs on emergency evacuation plans for the densely populated New Hampshire and Massachusetts communities near the plant. Southern California begins cleanup amid fear of bigger quake - ' i of students, leaving iftjired, ui a Lstjrtianoe apparently sparked by a pnnripai's by one of the city's new released to klijjt y petitions and their part-fits- , police said. At least seven students aid four police officers were treated for injuries, the liiosl serious being cuts that required stitches. The confrontation was the most violent of several protests in recent days against the firing of principals under Chicago's new school reform program. Councils elected for each of Chicago's &40 public schools in October have the power to hire and fire principals, and a handful have done so in recent weeks. Some of the more controversial firings have involved wfiite principals at mostly Hispanic schools. Board of Education spokesman Bob Saigh said lie didn't know if the Morgan Park incident was racially motivated. But it appeared to have been triggered by the local council's decision to dismiss Principal Walter Pilditch when his contract expires in June. T do feel that the local school council is at least in part to blame for it," said Eric Iindahl, a stug dent wiw is a member of the council governing the high school. Of the I ,00 students, 60 percent are black, 24 percent white, 12 percent Hispanic and 4 percent Asian. PildiUh is white. "Morgan Park has been an integrated school since my grandmother went here in the 1930s," Iandahl said. "With the exception of the period in the '60s, there has never been any trouble like this." All groups took part in a protest rally Thursday morning in front of tiie school, where students chanted "We want Pilditch." Iater, a fire alarm was pulled and the school evacuated. Some students returned to the building when no fire was found. But then tiie alarm was pulled again and again, Pilditch said. "That kind of stirs things up," he said. A couple of squad cars arrived and students began throwing snowballs at the officers and at the school windows, said Phonda Wiles, a student. The officers called for reinforcements, and about 20 squad cars pulled up, Pilditch said. Geri Pettis, 15, said she was struck in the head by police as she tried to return to class following one of the false alarms. "It's correct to say there has never been a case where the court has overturned an NRC license, bit it's also correct to say that there has never been a license issued wtuch has been so legally vulnerable, Shannon said- - g, disturbance i:lh hxvireds ton. and a better life. In the rustic wooden wagon, drawn by an old tractor nicknamed "Old Iron Horse," they traveled at about 10 mph down back roads and the shoulder of Interstate 10. Allis-Chalme- rs But the temblor spurred renewed calls for Southern Calif jrnians to prepare for the "Big ed One," a catastrophic earthquake measuring between 7.5 and 8 on Uie Richter scale of ground motion. A I'M VS. Geological Survey report said that a quake that size is at least 60 percent likely by the year 2012 on the southern San Andreas Fault. "This is the handwriting on the waii and we better siaii luokiog at the design of some of our buildings," Pomona Vice Mayor Clay Bryant said Thursday. "We've already been put on notice by a 5.5." Pomona Mayor Donna Smith said city inspectors were compiling a list of how many unreinforced masonry buildings remain in the city, which has several landmark structures more than 100 years old. She said 301 buildings in Pomona were damaged and 17 were declared uninhabitable. Pomona, Claremont and La Verne all declared local states of emergency Wednesday, but the La Verne City Council withdrew its declaration Thursday after determining damage was not as bad as first believed. The destruction was widely scattered throughout the region. In Pomona, for example, part of the south face of the Trinity United Methodist Church collapsed while the brick Pilgram Congregational Church a block away withstood the quake. At the city's historic Phillips Mansion, built in 1875, a chimney toppled onto a roof, causing an estimated $500,000 damage, but surrounding buildings were unscathed. Despite the damage, the quake was far less serious than the one that struck the Whittier area on Guerin of the OES. The quake, felt along the coast from San Diego to Santa Barbara and as far east as Las Vegas, was centered on an unnamed fault three miles northwest of this city 40 miles east of Los Angeles. It toppled scores of chimneys, shattered hundreds of windows and collapsed one building's wall, but remarkably, caused no major injuries or deaths. Dozens ot smaller aftershocks have rattled the area since. There was no official estimate of the number of injured other than "several dozen" from the OES. The most serious injuries, officials said, were a few broken bones. Only one person, a Pomona man, was known to have been left homeOct. less by the quake. 1, 1987. Lawyer, witness spar over Hazelwood's actions Alaska AP) -Joseph Hazelwood's lawyer tried to puncture an expert witness' claim that the Exxon Valdez skipper recklessly tried to refloat his grounded tanker. William Milwee Jr., a marine salvage consultant, remained adamant as attorney Michael Chalos challenged his assertions that risked losing his tanker and the lives of his crew when he ordered the ship forward after it hit a reef. But the witness also agreed that in a grounding, the captain's first instinct would be to get his ship afloat. ANCHORAGE, Chalos suggested the ship's engines did not have enough horse- power to extricate the massive tanker from the reef. "There is absolutely no question this ship would not have moved using its engines alone," said Mil-we- e. matter what Captain Hazel-woo- d did?" asked Chalos. "No matter what Captain Hazel-woo- d did," responded the witness. "But Captain Hazel wood did nothing to try and determine that." Repeatedly, Milwee insisted that Hazel wood should have had more information before he attempted any maneuver in the wake of the "No grounding. The retired Navy salvage expert said a captain should take soundings, by dropping a piece of lead with a line attached to it over the side, to ascertain how deep the water is and how the vessel is grounded. But he acknowledged that soundings might have been inaccurate in water thick with oozing oil. The tanker spilled nearly 11 million gallons of Alaska crude in little more than an hour after it ran aground in Prince William Sound on March 24. It was the nation's worst oil spill, killing countless birds, fish and other wild 987-fo- ot and blackening hundreds of miles of rocky shoreline. The prosecution claims that Hazelwood's actions after the ship hit jagged Bligh Reef worsened the problem and risked more damage to the tanker. The skipper from Hunis with crimN.Y., charged tington, inal mischief, reckless endanger-men- t, operating a vessel while intoxicated and negligent discharge of oil. He could receive 74 years in prison and fines of $61,000. Milwee, the third expert witness for the prosecution this week, said he has a $25,000 contract with the state for his work on the case. life IF THE CLASSIC CAR IN YOUR LIFE DEMANDS THE BEST, SEE US FOR YOUR UPHOLSTERY NEEDS. SHIRLEY WILSON'S UPHOLSTERY QUALITY SINCE 1946 470 South University, Provo Minority leaders praise 'skinhead' convictions DALLAS (API Minority groups hailed the conviction of five white supremacist "skinheads" for racially motivated crimes against Jews, blacks and Hispanics. An jury found all five men guilty Thursday of two counts of conspiring to violate the civil rights of minorities. The defendants, members of the Confederate Hammerskins, were accused of defacing a synagogue and Jewish community center in 1988 and roughing up and chasing blacks and Hispanics from Robert E. lee Park that same year. During the trial, former "skin heads" testified that the Confederate Hammerskins planned to pump cyanide gas into the air conditioning system at Temple Shalom in a reminder of the Holocaust, in which millions of Jews perished. The New York-base- d civil rights division. "They can believe what they want and say what they want, but they better not vandalize or commit acts of vio- lence." Each of the charges carries up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing was set for April League of B'nai B'rith called the verdict "a major victory 19. in the continuing battle against Defense attorneys contended that d violence by skinheads the men, known as skinheads bed around the country." cause of their hair, "This should send a warning were being tried for their beliefs. across the nation that young racists They said their clients merely were cannot commit crimes of hate," exercising free speech. said Barry Kowalski, a prosecutor "It is very unpopular, the things with the U.S. Justice Department's they believe," said Leon Carter, a hate-inspire- close-croppe- REGULAR PRICE Dallas lawyer who defended Jordan. "But they have the right to believe it." $599 The defendants are Jon Lance Jordan, 19, of Garland; Sean Christian Tarrant, 20, and Daniel Alvis Wood, 20, of Dallas; Christopher Barry Greer, 25, of Irving, and Michael Iwis Lawrence, 22, of Tulsa, Okla., Rabbi Kenneth Roseman of Temple Shalom praised the verdict but added, "Just because five people have been convicted, doesn't mean there aren't more radicals and bigots around." UPRIGHT a m Spy satellite in orbit; shuttle mission 'satisfactory' CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (APj Atlantis streaked toward a Sunday landing after its crew put into orbit a spy satellite designed to fly over parts of the Soviet Union never before observed from a craft, NASA sources said. crew The five-mareleased the $500 million, 37,300-poun- d satellite from the shuttle's cargo bay Thursday, a day after liftoff, the sources said. "The crew is doing well and orbiter Atlantis continues to pershuttle-lau- nched forin satisfactorily," the space agency said in a statement. Because of a Pentagon blackout on the secret mission, the only other word from NASA was that the shuttle is expected to land Sunday at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Sources speaking on condition of anonymity put landing time at 1:34 p.m. EST. NASA technicians planned to spend several days assessing the shuttle's solid rocket boosters, which arrived Thursday at a NASA hangar at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, said agency spokesman Bruce Buckingham. The boosters dropped off two minutes after launch, as expected, as the spacecraft lifted off early Wednesday on the highest inclina tion ever traveled by a shu'tle. The boosters fell into the Atlantic 169 miles from Kennedy Space Center and were towed back by two ships. failed joint in a booster was blamed for the Challenger disaster in 1986 that killed seven astronauts. inclination allows The the satellite to cover most of the Soviet Union, including far northern regions with heavy concentrations of ships and submarines and several missile bases. The satellite is designed to take photographs and eavesdrop on electronic communications around the world, sources said. A high-resoluti- satellite and other reconnaissance spacecraft will be important in verifying whether the Soviets are complying with arms agreements. The Soviets have similar satellites over the United States. Atlantis is the sixth of 34 shuttle missions dedicated solely to the military. Navy Capt. John O. Creighton is Atlantis' commander. The other crew members are Air Force Col. John H. Casper, the pilot, and mission specialists Marine Lt. Col. David C. Hilmers, Air Force Col. 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