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Show Educator says local colleges ore good places for research SHE3 ESSSiSJ Attorney: White collar crime cases piling up Central UuVs Uwmttpm tor MS Monday, April 9, 19C0 dies of AIDS Vsrt - Imu No. 2 I V' i Kl' SvMtli'fi Sources: North, Apt FoineHexter may face grand jury Police breachel the tooay 50 Cents It, Prevo, Utah Death toll now at 170 in ferry fire tr ;.. fct tlsiieMti Englishman wins Masters in playoff Ryan White of the Scandinavia Mar Un and found children'! lxii ra s.rig l' e pstunated death n.rn a vmk.w'jd fire to 570, a !'- : si'i spt-s'r.a-- i p WSH:vr,T out ai. was liou it nth at evtirvLjish. j S kt MO yr . v.jj,ye. hfh broke Saturday while the ship ifit f'vn Nnway to Den-m- a vijfi.i.-!....i- aboard, was c..!i f' i:y lirlit-- u. jury H vmroes ari Jo!ji i'ii.re a !edTaJ (rzr.i ar.Mker qjeAmns sU- -t scariijl, accordy.!? h learn vrf uiTivrs today entered blinked by fire caUns pif nu ana heat, said Police Jjof Ski ti and. "When t'M-went inside the boat they saw i..tv xnd )'ts of dead more." said Wises, maybe There may ?0 dead on biard." ht aid. making clear that it was rou;h estimate. Police earlier estimated the num-lie- r of vKtirns on the vessel Hi aroond 1D0 but said thai did not count children who would not appear or any passenger list. The remains of 75 victims were removed from the blackened shell Danish-owne- d of the ferry before the f re was extinguished, Skorlund said Police listed 345 survivors, but it was uncertain how many people had been aboard when the fire broke out. The captain said 395 passengers and 97 crewmen were on board, leaving 147 people dead or missing and presumed dead. But that figure did not include children under age 7. said Onso. An accurate count of the victims was expected to take several days. The ship caught fire before dawn Saturday on the North Sea voyage from Oslo, Norway to Frederik-shavDenmark. The captain of the ship denied improper behavior today, as reports surfaced that he and his officers abandoned the burning vessel as rescue efforts got under way. District police chief Roar Onso said a commission of officials from Sweden, Norway and Denmark would investigate the disaster, parallel to the police investigation focusing on suspicion of arson. "We are working on the assumption that the fire was arranged," said Magnar Aukrust. assistant police chief in Oslo. Norway. '"In that case, it is a real disaster, caused by one or several persons." he said. Onso said Sunday that the investigation would probe all possibilities (See FIRE, A2 A tf!iclait j. ..?.:' is r.t . Pwr.Oi W. lie : lTkne lit 3 v'ji-i'Mn'xT.mi'.y. SjJ i.2 .'! t'r La! it !- r '. k fr:t - LL'tj-- - pro-u- -. pT'CJf Si'iiTtrs IT ir. r.i:sss; e a!jl Nurth ojlsjde Citfislrainls. b m cbutVoum trul set- - on IV amjMM-if . r-- cvint'rJ t.' cifipcrtjnity to mg ittrrtigatiurj wi'ie-f;-.r.-f j-- ?i.-t-. indL'.l tijr m t.'' a!:i..f lit a j.rani cf have natrhed the That noulj s i.t-jjr- i V-rt- close! rslil. officials ari-i- r i ul.,f ulit-i;uit.- a:.'J w.jh.r ji ;..na3 txlp r''jKt siarjij'. i tV i driwa from Ui'Jl tui.'uTVfi can&ilzte lor a a tet;' of uiWiici.'.'KTTiji.'iJ tw hai? grand jun apptsrstfK icllowmg his sn and out Iran-Vitrunt!!-ti(imalittcd cohvk'-lion- s has June on Jl scr.Tic:ng ner IV jiast lfii" j lor cor.sp.ricy, tistrurtion AJ1 1fe cor.irifLJs and 3';ng to Congress, s;.y lite jfiT ff cosiiilidri nt ariiffijUiily on twidjlion i fiiade purees,, and tV Jraret'Vsrtra froswuttr' anonynui) Oand jui-- appearances b Xonh ffVe d'Liied to 'o:urien5 Vi CjC arid iuart prcfbably would consul ul.e tfie final pfiase the lrar-.ontPoiiiJeiter. Lie Noitfi. gave in criminal m'estigatMm, the XiJiiOiij- tu Corigra-s S(ur-esaid. A PoondeKter appear-li7. Pcandtiter testified tha: tie c could include questions atcut Tf.ii! P(;njViT Sko-fluo- is oo'i--Tu- m n t-- .'! rs s Mavel propose new commission for all of Europe tteraid fhow'liriii irccaKkif " to remove loose dirt and rocks from the face of a Highway workers use in the lower part of Provo Canyon, part of landscaping along Provo Canyon Highway. "hydro-scaling- Cliff getting 'hydro n. By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN Herald Staft Writer "Hydro-scaling- " is the term used to remove loose dirt and rocks from the face of the cliff in Provo Canyon as a preliminary stage in landscaping the lower part of the canyon. Dan Nelson, District Six superintendent for the Utah Department of Transportation, said the work is being done under contract. "The Provo Canyon Parkway Committee preferred to see the upper slopes that are too steep to landscape have a natural look," - scaled Nelson said, "The lower areas of the canyon will then be land- scaped." He said UDOT will be spending four to five times the amount that normally would be spent on a highway project to landscape the lower part of the canyon. He did not have exact figures on the landscaping contract, and Larry Buss, project supervisor, was not available for comment. Currently the project involves the area from south of the interchange with Orem's 800 North Street to the section past Mur-doc- k Diversion Dam. "Vegetation will high-growi- BRATISLAVA, Czechoslovakia In a speech to a AP ) conference on Central Europe today, President Vaclav Have proposed creation of a new security commission that would gradually replace NATO and the Warsaw-Pact- 5 ( be planted along the base if the cliffs, ably dill prob- . shrubs. There's a minimal chance of getting things to grow on the steeper cliffs," he said. The hydro-scalin- g is the just the first part of the larger landscaping contract, Nelson said. Members of the Provo Canyon Parkway Committee negotiated with UDOT for a year and a half concerning modifications to the Provo Canyon Highway project and the inclusion of landscaping plans. (See CLIFF, A2i "'It is impossible to return to the Europe of the past" and therefore a timetable should be agreed to shape the Eurofie of the future, Have.1 said in outlining Ins prescription for curbing the continent's historic con-flic'- s. The dissident playwright turned president suggested the Bratislava conference find ways to "build a solid wall against all expressions of nationalism and chauvinism," said his spokesman, Michael Zantovsky. The unique day-lon- g meeting gathered representatives of Poland. Hungary and Czechoslovakia, with Austria, Italy and Htmgyv attending as .observers. It stseiaed trlike-J- y to re.acn any ;in its Hunbroad agenda, partly n:u-gary was represented by olacials .of the reformed Communist le.adrslup that was soundly .defeated in .Sunday's free elections. Jozsef Antall, the leader of the .d:iw victorious Hungarian Liemocratic Forum and the likely new premier of Hungary, was invited but sent the party's vice president, Ferene Kulin. Hungarian officials said. Outlining 20 questions to the closed-domeeting, Havel invited consideration of a proposal to create a new Security Commission tins year, Zantovsky (See EUROPE, A2) or Four decades of Communist rule end in Hungary 1 VC.--j BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) -Democratic Forum defeated its liberal rival in elections that closed the book on four decades of Communist rule, and today the winner sought to form a governing coalition. Unofficial results from the national center showed the conservative, nationalist party to have won 1G5 of 38G seats at stake in a runoff vote Sunday and balloting two weeks ago. The liberal League of Free Democrats was a distant second, with 92 seats. Democratic Forum President Joz-se- f Antall got straight down to the business today of negotiating the formation of the country's first government since 1947. The conservative Lifestyle: between Communication the Japanese and the Americans ill the business world is almost nil, and can make for tense relationships. See Pag- A8, Stocks: first-roun- After a sluggish start today's prennon trading inched ahead, in response to a surge of buying hi the Japanese market. See Page E3. The World: The streets vote-counti- of Katmandu rang with cries of victory as people in Nepal celebrated the establishment of a multiparty system. See Page A3. Arts 'Entertainment Business Classified Ads Crossword Horoscope Legal Notices Lifestyle Movies National Obituaries Opinions State Region Sports Weather AM) ...-B- 0 B8 A9 B3 A8-A- 9 A 10 A5 A4 A6 AT B1-B- 2 B3 long-rulin- g seats or H.55 percent of the vote. ask that question of Mr. Antall." The rest of the seats were divided The 1 ret Democrats warmed to idea ol a union in recent days candidates the among independent, supported by more than one party after no party achieved a clear and one candidate of the splinter majority m the March 25 balloting. Bui the Democratic Forum all but Agrarian Federation. Final results were not expected ruleu out ;'.overnmg with its liberal sidered likely coalition partners and largely share the Forum's emphasis bet ore Tuesday. Voters decided 125 rival and the party's strong showon family and Hungarian tradition. races in March 25 elections for the ing Sundu . appeared to strengthen The Smallholders, in thu d plat e parliament. Eight seats thai stand. with 43 seats, received 11.14 percent will be allocated based on minority The most pressing task for the cf the vote. The Christian Demo- representation. new government will be to impleAcross the Danube river, which ment the free market reforms seen crats won 21 seats or 5.44 percent of ballots, finishing in a tie with the runs through the capital. Free as necessary to revive an economy League of Young Democrats, which Democrats leader Janos Kis concrippled by 42 years of centralized is ideologically closest to the Free ceded defeat and said the Free control. It must also contend with a Democrats. Democrats would lie "a responsible $20 billion foreign debt. The Socialist Party, comprised of opposition party in Parliament." The Forum favors a more gradAsked ii he had ruled out a ual approach to economic reform to Communist reformers who nearly two yeans ago initiated the democoalition with the Democratic Forsoften the effects of inevitable infla-!Se- e cratic changes in Hungary, won 33 um. Kis said: ''I think you better HUNGARY, A2) sign. The crowd also applauded wlier a Forum official read the unofficial tally for "our friends." the agrarian Smallholders and the Christian Democratic Parties. They are con- Discovery set to carry Hubble into space Fla. iAPi Forecasters say the weather probably will cooperate when the space shuttle Discovery takes off NASA's most valuable and f.'ueiiy awaited payload. the $1.5 oi.i.i u Hubble Space Telescope. Vr.is project has been difficult. ... Thee are at least three times when I thought we wouldn't do it." said Charles Peiierin Jr.. NASA's director of astrophysics. "But we're there and it ali works and it's going CAPE Find it d Antall told a news conference his party has "the possibility of forming a solid government with our possible coalition partners." It was the second victory for a conservative party in free elections in the former Soviet bloc. Conservatives won big in Last Germany's March 18 vote, falling just short of a majority. In both countries, the Comremnants of the munists were relegated to a relatively minor opposition role. Eight hours after the polls closed Sunday, the Democratic Forum had 42.75 percent of the vote, compared with 2:i.83 percent for the Free Democrats. At Democratic Forum headquarters, supporters clapped and whistled as Antall flashed a victory CANAVERAL, to be great." The launch is scheduled for 8:4" a.m. EDT on Tuesday. Pellcnn before the inspected the telescope payWd biy rtoo-- s were i4- - closed Sunday. He was pleased to note there was no evidence of midges, tiny mosquitolike insects that had invaded a payload preparation room at the launch pad two weeks ago. "I can teli, yoc there are no mosquitos visible, no midges, no anything. We're extremely clean," ho said. "We're ready to go." Later in the day, however, a short was detected in a heater cable m a strut that connects the shuttle to its huge fuel tank. The heater prevents ice from forming on the strut when the tank is filled with supercold liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen. Shuttle program director Robert L. Cnppen said the problem was not expected to delay tiie mission, which already is seven years late because of technical problems and the !9&i Challenger explosion. "It's not a concern. We don't need it, and we're going to go ahead and fly with it like it is," NASA test director Al Sofge said today. Discoverv's commander. Air Force Col. Ixiren J. Shnver, and its pilot, Marine Col. Charles F. Bol- den Jr.. practiced emergency land- nigs a. the tennem space center on Sunday. They flew the shuttle-traininaircraft again today and g were expected to review their flight plans. Air Force weather forecasters were givmr. 5fl percent odds for favorable weather early Tuesday morning, with the mam threat being a low ciouti ceiling, caused by a warm front moving in from the south. The odds were expected to improve later in the morning to 80 percent. The outlook worsened considerably if liftoff were delayed a day. Discoverv is to elimb to an alti tude of 380 miles, the highest a shuttle has ever gone, in order to put the telescope into its proper omit. wfrwwW1, 'L V'-- 4 iViA Tf,"",", jfm-- ir nnwm ri f, itfi iff- ffil Weather Clearing tonight and a little eooler, becoming sunny on Tuesdav, with highs in the 70s. See I'age IK. Air Quality Today's air quality was list- ed as good in all areas along tin Wasatch Front, with pollution levels expected to increase. 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