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Show Page A2 THE DAILY HERALD, Provo, I'tah, Wednesday, December 6, 1995 c Sieve NEW YORK (AP) The Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center burst into a multicolored dream, lighting up the smiling faces of thousands gathered for one of the enduring signs that the holiday season has begun. "There's a couple of things you can't miss in New York. The Fourth of July fireworks at South Street Seaport and the lighting cf the Christmas tree in Rockefeller Center," said Rose Cardona of Brooklyn, watching Tuesday night's ceremony with her daughter. Front and center at the 63rd lighting was a group of New Jersey nuns who donated this year's tree, a Norway spruce. Also on hand were models Naomi Campbell, Elle Macpherson, Claudia Schiffer and Christy Turlington. A national TV audience watched as the lights strung blazed over five miles of wire into color above the center's ice skating rink. Shouts and applause broke out as some children helped David Rockefeller light the tree. "I like it because it has bright lights and a bright star," said 75-fo- ot Pnces Effective Dec. I;, 1"- -.- .v i-- - '. Lm - .5v,re:. , i v " t f 5-- 11 mt ft I f ll 4i 4 A 4 1 M mm SiiS Mites; 330 WEST CENTER ST.. PROVO 1350 NORTH FPEEDOM BLVD., PROVO We Add Only 10 To These Pries 759 EAST! KK) SOUTH SPRINGViLLE rra '. r P fVi if I BROCCOLI .W Fresh, Lb. BANANAS T4 . i s. 2W GRAPErauiir 2. . the Christmas tree at New York's Rockefeller Center. A group of New Jersey nuns donated the high tree this year. Giovanne Gotay, 5, accompanied by his mother, Nutley Gotay, of Walesa, N.J., smiles the moment lights flick on during the 63rd annual lighting of By JANE E. ALLEN AP Science Writer O'Neil said. will give scientists their first view from radiation, heavily charged particles and from electrostatic discharges that can disrupt electronics, said Matt Landano. Galileo deputy mis- of the inner reaches of Jupiter, In fact, threats come LOS ANGELES Galileo's momentous arrival at the giant planet Jupiter is finally at hand, but first it must survive a perilous passage through heavy radiation. Scientists also have to get the probe into spacecraft's Jupiter's atmosphere at exactly the right angle. If not, the probe could be bounced into oblivion or meet a quick, fiery demise. Such errors on Thursday could dash hopes pinned on Galileo"s 2.3 billion-mil- e journey. "We have everything crossed we can cross fingers and toes and all like that. It's certainly nervous time." said William O'Neil. Galileo project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory d r, in Pasadena. As the instrument-lade- n spaceship nears Jupiter's system, it's expected to absorb a radiation dose 35 to 40 times greater than what will kill a human. "The greatest unknown right now is what is the ... radiation environment coing to do to us?" rvn 4 Jml large, Green Skin r . . 2r Farmer Pack, Head g69 FILLETS Pck,Lb. ,I Mid.Coftti.MonLJacKUx .i'8 sion director. "When we were building Galileo, we put in a lot of shielding to offset the expected effects of Jupiter's environment." Landano said. "But we won't know how well ... we did until we fly through it." The $1.6 billion mission hits a high point Thursday afternoon, d when the atmospheric from the orbiter in released probe July slams into the planet's dense, gaseous atmosphere at 106,000 mph. If it enters as planned, it will slow down and parachute through ammonia clouds to a realm never before explored. It will tell the mothership what it sees inside Jupiter's layers of clouds and may lightning-pierce- d even detect water rain. The capsule will eventually melt and vaporize, but the signals it transmits to the 2 12 ton orbiter cone-shape- which is 316 times more massive than Earth. That peek, in turn, promises to yield clues to the formation of the solar system. On Thursday, anxious scientists at JPL, which manages the Galileo mission, and at NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, which built the probe, will have to be satisfied with just a few delayed confirmations that the probe is sending signals and that the orbiter is on course. Radio signals take 52 minutes to travel from Jupiter to Earth. No pictures or atmospheric data will be available until alter information captured on Galileo's tape recorder and its computer is relayed to Earth through Deep Space Network stations in California. Spain and Australia. A first look should be available late in December. The probe could transmit up to 75 minutes of data about chemical composition, radiation, temperature, wind, and atmospheric pressure before contact is cut off and SENATE: (Continued from Page A ) picking up support. "I think we're better off today than we were yesterday," he said. Defense Secretary William Perry gave lawmakers a stark choice today: Send U.S. troops to Bosnia or see the Balkan civil war 1 reignite. "There really is only one alternative to going in and that is a restart of the war," Perry told the Senate Armed Services Committee. Perry, Gen. John Shalikashvili, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and U.S. negotiator Richard Holbrooke testified today as part of a continuing administration campaign to generate congressional backing for the deployment. While lawmakers predicted Clinton eventually would win congressional support. Republican senators pressed to make their resolution of support as grudging as possible. "It's a very difficult set of negotiations." said Sen. John who was workMcCain, with Senate Majority Leader ing Bob Dole. to craft a resolution backing the deployment. "There are people who want to make it clear that the Congress was not consulted." Specifically, they wanted proviiz sions to guarantee the United States will strengthen the Bosnian armed forces, criticize Clinton's refusal to lift the arms embargo against Bosnia sooner and voice dissatisfaction with the way Clinton kept Congress out of the process. In Brussels, Belgium, Secretary of State Warren Christopher said the peacekeeping will take into account the needs of all ethnic groups in the former Yugoslavia. "It is clear the implementation of the Dayton agreement needs to be done with sensitivity to the needs of the parties and certainly that will be taken into account," Christopher said at a news conference with Russian Foreign Minister Andrei V. Kozyrev. The agreement calls for having Muslims control suburbs of Sara decision- jevo, a prospect that has angered Serbs living there. Christopher had insisted previously that the Dayton agreement would not be revised. His remarks today indicated the possibility some accommodations could be made without changing the text of the accord. Aides to Dole rejected suggestions that the postponement of the debate reflected a lack of support for the resolution. Dole said he and McCain "made a lot of progress" toward a draft that would express the goals of lawmakers. "Primarily (we want) an exit strategy so that if there is some way we can arm and train the Bosnians, we can remove our troops, hopefully within a year." Dole said. The concern is that once the NATO peacekeeping force leaves in about a year, fighting will erupt again, with the Bosnian government on the defensive. The Clinton administration hopes that voluntary arms reductions can even the military balance in Bosnia. Failing that, the administration proposes helping the Bosnians strengthen their military. As senators' phone lines callers with overwhelmclogged the to ingly opposed deployment. Assistant Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. broke with Dole and opposed the deployment. "I've consulted with my constituents." Lott said. "I just cannot justify in my mind putting U.S. troops on the ground in Bosnia." The focus on the issue of rearming the Bosnian government echoes a longstanding concern on Capitol Hill. Congress has repeatedly passed resolutions favoring the lifting of the international arms embargo against the former Yugoslavia. Lawmakers say the embargo placed the Bosnian government at a permanent disadvantage against rebel Bosnian Serbs. A draft version of the Dole-McCa- in resolution would demand that the arming and training of the Bosnian government begin "immediately," something Sen. Sam said could conflict Nunn, with the terms of the peace accord reached last month in Dayton. Ohio. D-G- Air Quality PORK PICNICS PIZZA I49 I NUGGETS CHICKEN PATTIES two-yea- r, 2Tjc Pmftj Iktat 49 .. Lb. the orbiter fires its engines for 49 minutes to enter a looping orbit around Jupiter and eight of its 16 moons. Those moons include Io, which is highly volcanic, and Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system. On Monday, NASA scientists sent radio signals to make some onboard software and hardware a little less responsive to disruptions to ensure Galileo carries out its maneuvers on schedule Thursday. They also prepared for an expected disruption in communications when the sun blocks the path between Earth and Jupiter from Dec. 12 to Dec. 28, Landano said. Galileo was launched in 1989 from space shuttle Atlantis. It has overcome several obstacles including the 1991 failure of its main antenna to open properly and a November malfunction of its tape recorder. Nevertheless, scientists predict it will be able to accomplish 70 percent of its science goals using transmissions with a slower-spee- d antenna. ruccee WHOLE FRYER LESS fM Ftoirn's,Lb. 8V Fresh,UJ. SPARE RIBS lCQ OKE, SPRITE l 2 Liter S-- B 70 PetRtePastiy.Reg.100z. &3P Dote. ca;s 9!f Pet Rfc Pasty Deep Dsh, 12 Qz. g W 12 Oz. Asst DINNERS KrrjfA&mH.i7ft....&F!i3 western DINNER ROLLS m if for 1 Western Farrtiy, 16 02. na 0(1$ fmoU ) HI A ML ....I , "AerosoT Cooking 08, 6 Oz. M&M's CANDIES 89v COCONUT Red & Green, Asst. "Holday" 100 V REAL 12-1- MILK Deficit, Makes 20 Qts. Daky CANOLA OIL HOT COCOA & CHOCOLATE 1" .HoPywood,32CL . PAM IMPERIAL SPREAD 1?8g.orLlLb.Qiartes....Hfoii09? CHOCOLATE CHIPS , , PATTIES Swanson7Qz.,Asst Y Flake, 14 Oz. OR ram iuuz... MEAT PIES Country Charm 8 0z Eater's, MSi or ServSweet, 12 Oz. 169 Eggol2Ct(tat,Butten(,ajei)erry) CHICKEN NUGGETS "Ar JL WAFFLES PIE SHELLS . Cans PINEAPPH or FRUIT JUICES PIE SHELLS , AQ( PofLb. Reg., Diet Caff. Free Baker's, . Marat " 139 I Qz.. .W TURKEY BREAST Scientists hopeful as Galileo nears Jupiter -making nirrrn riwni. rillttf 12 AP Photo Foster Farms Cooked, Lb. six-yea- Lb. who Laquaya Jones, came from Brideport, Conn., to watch the tree lighting with her . mother. The tree will be up through Jan. 746-poun- tas, DDHNrC Washing LETTUCE ZUC0H1MI SQUASH Lb. Large Red AVOCADOS .5 rail60 Large, Texas Fink, w 09 APPLES Dairy 179 I Oi ....;... ,M MILK ....5 Dei, Makes 10 Qts. 1555 North Freedom Boulevard P.O. Box 717, Provo, Utah 84603-071- 7 The following information is taken from the Wasatch Front air pollution report compiled by the Utah Division of Air Quality. The complete report is available by telephone at The air quality this morning was ;is follows: Wood burning Today is a "green" day. Wood and coal burnine stoves and fireplaces may be used but residents are asked to use them in the proper manner to reduce their smoke emissions. Overall air quality The air quality today was good for Utah County. 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Drink Hot Ham & Cheese Sandwich & 22 Oz. Drink I29 I29 |