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Show r A2 Page - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Thursday, June 14, 1990 PBCB S&Ls: ROMANIA: WOMAN: (Continued from Page Al) brought into Manila's Ninoy Aquino International Airport. Adams was ordered to stand trial and released on an $3,200 bond a few days later. She couldnt leave the country, and lived with a Filipino family in what die described as a shanty. "Just being in that country was like being in jail," said Adams, who wept as she knelt and clutched her daughter, Caprice, upon arriving at the waiting area of the Tom Bradley International Terminal. Her father, stepmother and step- brother brought Adams daugh- ter from Utah to meet the Singapore Airlines flight. Adams maintained she had been duped by a businessman from Modesto, Calif., that she met through a high school friend. She said Richard Dean Pedrioli had hired her and sent her to the Philippines to import rattan furniture and wicker baskets. Pedrioli, 46, last year pleaded guilty twice to smuggling guns to the Philippines and was sentenced to 64 months at a federal prison in Lompoc, Calif. He gave a deposition to U.S. authorities clearing Adams of any knowledge of the shipment. Adams' attorney, Richard Atkins of Philadelphia's International Legal Defense Counsel, said he was unaware of his client's activities until early Wednesday. "I was quite shocked, mainly because, according to my last communication with her local lawyer, Renon Cruz, things still looked extremely good for a not guilty verdict," he said in a telephone interview. Since Adams waived her right to be present at ail court proceedings, the judge could render a verdict in her absence. Her flight could influence his decision, Atkins said. He said that to his knowledge, the U.S. has no extradition trea- ty with the Philippines, although he was endeavoring to learn if Adams could be extradited under the provisions of some other treaty. "What we have is a young lady under extreme stress and trauma, and she may need medical treatment," Atkins said. "Whether this was done to enhance the marketability of her story, I don't know. Even if Adams were found guilty, Atkins said, it was likely his firm could have arranged an inmate transfer enabling her to return home. Adams fled Manila last week with the help of three men who plan to turn her ordeal into a 1 Continued from Page Al) (Continued from Page Al the rule of law." budget negotiations between the workers who White House and congressional The streamed into Bucharest today leaders. heeded a call from President-elec- t He strongly suggested that ConIon fliescu in a televised speech to gress should provide an open-ende- d put down what he termed an at- authorization for more rescue tempt by "fascists" to overthrow spending, rather man a specific the government He repeated the amount that may prove inadequate. call today in a speech to supporters Providing a specific amount outside government headquarters. "means having to face the prospect Thousands of miners packed Uni- of returning at relatively short inversity Square, clubbing reporters tervals as markets change and, and people they thought were op- with them, the estimates," be said. position sympathizers. Brady said the bailout program could continue beyond the end of After the clash, state TV said this year without new funds by Interior Minister Mihai Chitac had down the pace of its S&L been replaced. Chitac, a general, slowing rescue program and gambling that was criticized for alleged involvereal estate markets and interest ment in the suppression of the rates will improve. But, he rejected revolution last year and for the way police put down pro- that "We believe that there is too tests Wednesday. But no reason much speculation already. Our job was given for his dimissaL is to be steady, do the work, and with the Chitac was replaced by Doru take no further gambles he said. Viorel Ursu, chief judge of the taxpayers' money," Brady's assessment of when the three-ma- n panel in Sibiu residing will run out is supported by money over the trial of Nicu Ceausescu, the Budget Office, Congressional the son of the former dictator. He chairis charged with complicity to geno- which told the committee's man, Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, cide. that the RTC "will exhaust During the violence today, people its $50 billion ... early in fiscal year in military trucks handed the gov- 199L" RTC Chairman L William Seid-maernment supporters milk and bread. n, in remarks' to reporters movie. The three independent journalist Scott Osborne, producer Ed Artis and writer Bill O'Ha-ga- n obtained Adams' passport and smuggled her aboard a commercial flight to Sri Lanka. Wednesday, indicated his agency has at least enough borrowing authority left to handle another 95 to 120 failures. The RTC so far has seized 443 failed S&Ls, "resolving" 148 by paying off depositors or by selling the institutions to new inves- WAGES: (Continued from Page Al) tors. ings, Mont. It plans an additional 45 resoluIn general, the informal study tions by the end of June. And, shows fewer employees per thouSeidman said, it expects to handle sand in Provo than the other cities. 50 to 75 . in the "We feel completely confident , Provo city employees produce more quarter. But the agency still is having than other Headman citis," said, (Continued from Page Al) up with the failbecause the same services still ex- difficulty keeping ure rate. Thrift regulators have Thurgood Marshall and John Paul ist with less people to provide indicated at least another 299 instiStevens dissented. them. tutions still operating independently "I do not dispute the immense Paying the average wage "to me headed for failure. social cost caused by drunken drivis saying, all you are is average," appear ers, nor do I slight the governHeadman said. City employee Despite the dramatic increase in ment's efforts to prevent such tragshould be around the 65th to the administration's new SLL cost wages wrote. he But ic losses," Brennan 75th percentile rather than the avestimate, the Congressional Budget added, "In the face of the 'momenOffice is attacking it as too conof 50th percentile. erage the of drunken driving, tary evil' Many city departments are un- servative. court today abdicates its role as the derstaffed, Headman said. A "hapfundamental the right Brady had based his new cost protector py medium" between, staffing and estimate on of individual privacy. assumptions that 925 increased wages should be formed, S&Ls would topple. However, CBO The traditional method police use he said. director Robert D. Reiachauer said to identify suspected drunken drivMayor Joseph A. Jenkins said the that does not include an additional ers is to observe traffic. Determininformal not did into take study 792 institutions that are technically ing that method is not wholly effecaccount exactly what jobs employsolvent but would fail if forced to tive, states in recent years began ees were performing, leaving queslist their assets at market value. experimenting with other detection tions on the data's accuracy. methods. The city's wage study should be Michigan state police first used finished by the end of July, Jenkins sobriety checkpoints, which they said. Employees with wages below 'IP-- : ' modeled after a program in Maryaverage will then receive increases land, in 1986. plus retroactive pay from July 1 in At a checkpoint site, police dia lump sum. in one rected all traffic headed Jenkins said the city chose to direction to a roadside area where employee wages at the avertarget to motorists. officers talked level because while the city has age If there was no immediate evibe fair to it must also dence of intoxication, the motorist be fair to itsemployees, tax citizens. paying was given a traffic safety brochure Most citizens feel government and allowed to drive away. The employees should receive wages in average delay was about 30 sec- the middle of the range, he said. onds. "I don't think we're understaffed. If some signs of intoxication were in one or two Maybe detected, a driver was directed to Jenkins said. The departments," newly-passe- d another area for further questioning 1990-9- 1 includes funds city budget and perhaps a breath test. for some new employees. At one such checkpoint, Michigan All in the city will Look tor it in the state police troopers stopped 126 receiveemployees increases this year, step and hour an than in less cars Creamette cookbook Jenkins said, as well as a 3 percent detained two drivers for sobriety one-tiin today's paper bonus. field tests. One driver was arrested on drunken-drivin- g charges. . . - - - - Six Michigan legislators sued state police soon after the checkpoint program began. Their lawsuit 15-1- 6 alleged that the checkpoints violated the Fourth Amendment's ban on unreasonable police seizures and searches. RESEARCH: COURT: (Continued from Page Al) ; business park developments, Secrist said. . . Gardner also said the maximum , of 12,500 square feet of floor space ' per net acre was not enough. This ; number was calculated without in- ; eluding streets, he said. In his motion to approve the zone, : commission member John Stohlton : raised the maximum floor space allotment to 13,000 square feet per net acre. The adopted ordinance does not - include a suggested perime-- i ter around the entire park. This : would restrict narrow and other ; irregularly sized lots, Secrist said. .. 100-fo- - Language preventing spin-o- ff commercial properties around the : edge of a research and business park zone was also not included. While the city should limit such development, the appropriate place to control it is in the general plan, Secrist said. : The ordinance also includes: A choice of buffers when located next to a residential area: a lanscaped area with a berm or decoraarea with a a tive masonry wall. A provision limiting buildings to two stories, except where the com- mission determines a higher building would not adversely affect the : neighborhood. Parking requirements of four " spaces per 1,000 square feet of gross building floor area. A paragraph disallowing the ' emission of air pollutants in excess of levels permitted by the state ; Bureau of Air Quality. A traffic and parking manage- ; - ment plan encouraging employees : to use public transportation and carpools to cut back on air pollution and traffic. Unified architectural and design themes throughout the park. - 100-fo- ot 25-fo- ' . Air Quality The air quality information for today was not available, due to technical difficulties. Bogota police kill cartel chief of Frag CBE1ETOTH1 GRAND OPENING JUNE State courts struck down the practice, citing "the potential for an unreasonable subjective intrusion on individual liberty interests." Today, the nation's highest court said the Michigan courts were hundreds of people dead, authorities said today. John Jairo Arias Tascon, considered the cartel's No. 5 leader, was killed in a shootout Wednesday night in an exclusive Medellin suburb when police tried to arrest him, said Gen. Octavio Vargas, operational police director. It was the biggest victory for the . government's war on drugs since ' the slaying of Gonzalo Rodriguez ; Gacha, the cartel's No. 2 boss in December. '. Vargas did not say if any police : were hurt in the shootout, but he said four more law officers were - killed in Medellin Wednesday night. '. Their deaths bring to 110 the number of Medellin policemen assassi- nated so far this year. I, Arias, 28, led a terrorist organization that killed scores of Colombians, including an attorney general, a state governor, a judge and a leading journalist, Vargas said in an interview today on the RCN radio network. "He served as chief of the armed organization of the Medellin cartel," Vargas said, and was considered the cartel's fifth most important leader. He said Arias was also responsible for two car bomb attacks on Colombia's secret police chief, Gen. Miguel Maza Marquez. 4 Guided mountain trail rides on our experienced, gentle horses. Bring your camera beautiful views. One Hour Rides The Supreme Court in 1979 barred police from randomly stopping vehi- Two Hour Rides cles to check registration papers. PoBOGOTA, Colombia (AP) lice have shot and killed the mastermind of the Medellin cocaine war against cartel's the government that has left HORSEBACK RIDING IN PROVO CANYON wrong. ljc Daily Herald (ISSN 891 2777) Second Class Postage Paid l Provo, Utah U S P S ID 143-06Published Daily by SCRIPPS LEAGUE NEWSPAPERS. INC. 1555 North Freedom Blvd PO Bon 717 Provo. Utah 84603-071KIRK PARKINSON. Publisher N LaVERL CHRISTENSEN. 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