Show 2A Standard-Examin- Friday August 20 1982 er Senate takes up bill supplemental WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate took up a $142 billion supple- mental money bill today and key Republicans warned President Reagan they would vote to override any veto of the measure House Democratic leader Jim Wright said however it was his understanding Reagan would sign the bill which provides money — including $61 billion in military pay — to keep several agencies running the rest of fiscal 1982 It was clear the Senate leadership was attempting to pressure the White House not to recommend a veto despite budget director David Stockman’s public statements he could not recommend the bill to Reagan SUDBURY Ont (AP) — Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau wending his way homeward by rail from a Rocky Mountain vacation got a rude reception here when his railroad car was hit by rocks eggs and tomatoes hurled by 500 demonstrators angry at Canada’s 118 percent jobless rate Trudeau’s railraod car was hit by eggs and tomatoes at several stops in western Canada earlier this week but the protest shortly before midnight Thursday was the first in which rocks have been thrown Many ran toward Trudeau’s train car and chanted “Trudeau must go” and “Go home” Trudeau stayed inside the railroad car during the stop in Sudbury reporters on the scene said There were no indiiations that the car was damaged seriously None of the protesters were arrested Sudbury police said the train arrived at 11:25 pm EDT It left after about 15 minutes for Toronto with stops scheduled at Parry Sound Orillia and Barrie Keith Lovely an official of the Sudbury local of the United Steelworkers of America said he had announced earlier in the day that he planned to meet the prime minister’s train but there was no formal organization of the demonstration “I figured there might be 40 to 50 people there” he said “I guess the word got around and it just snowballed” Sen Mark Hatfield chairman of the Senate AppropriaR-O- re tions Committee and floor manager of the bill condemned the “imperial” attitude of the Office of Management and Budget and said “It’s time we draw the line” “I disagree vehemently with OMB analysis” Hatfield said 15-min- Hatfield said the bill was $18 billion less than Reagan requested “I repeat Mr President $18 billion less” he said emphatically The bill contains Reagan’s $350 million Caribbean basin initiative But Stockman condemned the bill because it cuts military spending by $18 billion while including $918 million in domestic programs he does not want Dominican Republic bans imports SANTO DOMINGO Dominican Republic (AP) — The Dominican President Antonio Guzman on June 11 Most of the other items placed on the import exclusion list were Republic’s new president vador Jorge Blanco today slapped foodstuffs a ban on the import of 100 Jorge Blanco has sent a series of items including automobiles to the Dominican legislature bills He also announced that governon other ment employees would have to asking for higher taxes imported items and on private work an hour longer each day business activity Jorge Blanco said the measures The new president announced were necessary to confront an economic crisis facing the Domini- that government workers would can Republic stay on the job an hour longer to Blanco’s decision limit daily working from 7:30 am to Jorge the import of automobiles reinsti- 2:30 pm instead of the regular tutes a policy abandoned by former quitting time of 1:30 pm Sal- 12-mon- th police stop Chile protests Club-wieldi- ng SANTIAGO Chile (UPI) — Sec- beat two reporters covering the march urity squads smashed the most ferA crowd of some 200 men and vent protest in Chile in more than six months arresting women marched through down29 young men and women who town Santiago chanting “Bread marched through the capital shout- work liberty and justice” before the security squad attacked ing “Bread work liberty” The demonstrators also called anti-milita- ry Military police agents shooting tear gas and wielding wooden clubs broke up the demonstration Thursday Witnesses said police out slogans and distributed leaflets protesting the failing economic policies of Chilean President Augusto Pinochet Toronto hotel fire kills TORONTO (UPI) — One man was killed and 19 others injured two of them seriously in a fire that blackened five floors of a down- town high-ris- e hotel-apartme- nt complex officials said Deputy Fire Chief Walter Shanahan said Basil Campbell 66 was found dead in a 19th floor stairwell where he collapsed while making his way down from the 30th floor of the Plaza II hotel in down 37-sto- ry 7 anti-milita- ry injures 1 9 town Toronto Nineteen people including five firefighters were taken to three Toronto hospitals for treatment officials said Two were reported in serious condition The fire broke out on a suite of the 18th floor and spread smoke and heat damage from the 15th to the 20th floors before it was extinguished by firefighters two hours later officials said Journalist wounded in El Salvador SANTA CLARA El Salvador (UPI) — Leftist rebels seriously wounded a US based journalist in an ambush of a government patrol on a major drive against guerrilla -- strongholds near the Pan Ameri- - can highway officials said Army officers said the rebels also defied the army offensive Wednesday by blowing up two electric al towers situated in the center of the operation outside San Esteban Catarina 24 miles east of San Salvador Other rebels in northern Chalatenango province ripped down power lines blacking out the area electrical company officials said Half the Central American nation was without power NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 8 -2- 1-82 30 00 BOSTON NEW YORK United Press International One of the Boy Scouts faced turned from camera shows his brand Scout feaders charged with branding 6 boys Mo (UPI) — A Boy Scout MOBERLY leader and his teenage assistant charged with holding six Scouts down and branding them on the buttocks with a hot coat hanger apparently told the boys it was a secret “initiation” The boys on a weekend campout with JB Gatzmeyer 37 and Kenneth Willard 19 — both charged Thursday with six counts of felony assault — said at first they thought the men were joking The Scouts claim they were told they would be banned from future outings if they refused to go along and were threatened with mutilation and castration if they told their parents The campers of Troop No 84 claim Gatzmeyer sat on their legs while Willard applied the twisted heated coat hanger All six were branded on the buttocks and one was branded on both arms After branding the boys ranging in age from 11 to 15 Gatzmeyer and Willard gave each other brands on the buttocks the youths claim Prosecutors said the hanger was twisted into the shape of male genitalia Authorities learned of the incident after several parents spotted the brands and met with prosecuting attorney Phillip Brown Gatzmeyer' an agricultural specialist at the University of Missouri Extention Service and a Scoutmaster for only about three months remained jailed late Thursday in lieu of $10000 bon'd Willard posted an identical bond The two face a court appearance Aug 26 “My boy said he wanted to quit the Scouts the last few weeks but didn’t say why” said Michael Williams father of Scout Michael Todd Williams 12 “Now I understand” Williams said the leaders told the boys the incident during the camping trip to Huntsville Mo was part of an “initiation” Ronnie Hunt 15 said he was the first Scout branded “I still thought they were kidding and just wanted to scare the younger Scouts” Hunt said in his deposition “I went and layed down on the green mat and Gatzmeyer sat down on my legs and held onto my arms “Then Ken Willard got the branding wire and Gatzmeyer told him to brand me on the right Hunt said Willard branded him on the other arm after Gatzmeyer said the right arm brand was not good enough Aaron Haley 11 was the only one of the seven boys to refuse despite the threat of castration the boy said OGDEN United Press International Northern Plains Thundershowers are expected Southern Plains Tennessee Middle and South Atlantic Coast States Fair elsewhere tonight in the The weather today Temperatures FORECASTS Vari- of afternoon and highs 90 to 95 evening thundershowers lows 65 to 70 gusty winds near showers p'obability of ram 30 percent increasing to 50 percent Utah: Variable clouds with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers isolated heavy snowers possible highs in tne mid 80s and 90s lows in the 50s and 60s Southeast Idaho: Partly cloudy with widely scattered thundershowers mainly in the mountains gusty winds near showers in afternoon highs 85 to 95 lows in the 50s i?tanriVi!aiiuiu'r 394-771- 1 394-771- 1 394-167- 1 Business 394-771- 1 Weber Co 1 the carrier failed to deliver your newspaper call our of ce before 7 30 p m Monday thru Friday 30 a and before and Sundays Saturdays (Our recorder message cen’er service is m operation after above hours ) 1 js scat- fhe - the Phone ca tered afternoon or evening thundershowers mainly in the south Highs in the upper 80s and 90s Lows in the upper 50s and 60s 1 c rc Jation njmber 399 9611 0- c s o pwD on ed Ogae- - Uc Corporation V Read the Classified y cma oy The The official Tass news agency reported no problems in the Soyuz T-- 7 capsule at mid-daas test pilot Svetlana Y Savitskaya 34 and her comrades flew in an orbit ranging from 141 miles to 174 miles above the Earth The Soyuz capsule was scheduled to meet the Salyut space station late today Gen Georgi Beregovoy the head of the Soviet space program said scientists are interested in seeing how well a “representative of Second C oss S'caa'd Utah Pos’oge pa d o' pubi catior Ogder Utaa Pos’oi lunDe' 4(03840 give him a message what they think about the interest rates and high unemployment” Lovely added Inco Ltd the region’s largest employer announced earlier this week layoffs of more than 1000 in Sudbury effective early next year The in plant second-largethe world is in its second month of a three-mont- h shutdown following a strike by the steelworkers union in June Among more militant protesters was a man who provided demonstrators with eggs embellished with stamps of a rude hand gesture similar to the one Trudeau flashed to an angry crowd at Salmon Arm BC last week Representatives of Survival Sudbury a coalition of church labor and community groups and Sudbury’s People Against Climbing Taxes another disgruntled group were also out in force demanding the federal government help their depressed community and stop extravagant spending Spokesmen for the prime minister’s office say they don’t know when he will be back in Ottawa but his next official function is scheduled for Aug 30 nickel-producin- g st the weaker sex conducts herself in stress situay tions such as conditions” 19 it had been Noting years since the first woman — also Soviet — rocketed into space Beregovoy said the flight included “a number of experiments where a woman’s hand will be quite necessary” zero-gravit- Beregovoy who has flown in space himself said “women are more accurate and precise in carrying out experiments which demand fine and punctual work” Miss Savitskaya beamed a smile and waved to her Soviet comrades Thursday in a photograph sent from the Soyuz capsule after it went into orbit Leader named amid violence Corsica (AP) — Corsica’s new Regional Assembly elected a president today despite 70 bombings across the island by a separatist group pledged to wrecking the voting The blasts caused widespread damage and two injuries assembly Representatives to the chose as their president Prosper Alfonsi leader of Corsica’s Radical Party which despite its name is only slightly left of AJACCIO 61-se- at 62-year-- center elected in a third round of voting de Roccaserra a Gaullist Coris often based on blood ties and sican politics Alfonsi beat Jean-Pau- l family alliances and has long been dominated by the Alfonsi and de Roccaserra clans The new president is against independence for Corsica from France and instead supports the regional decentralization policies of the French government Representatives to the assembly were elected Aug 8 in the island’s first step away from 213 years of French rule Police said there were two minor injuries from the bombs today and extensive damage to banks stores post offices and office buildings in cities and villages throughout the craggy island 125 miles southeast of the French Explosions leave Peru in dark LIMA Peru (UPI) — Suspected Maoist terrorists blew up seven electrical towers leaving half the Peruvian population in darkness and radicals set fire to businesses and tossed dyna- mite at government buildings Some 9 million Peruvians in Lima and a dozen other countries were without electrical power Thursday after explosions toppled the high tension towers outside the capital At least half a dozen additional blasts were heard shortly after the city was plunged into darkness Terrorists struck private businesses AMFM CASS CAR and government property setting buildings afire or detonating dynamite bombs Gun battles between police and suspected terrorists broke out throughout the city during the power failure but no victims were reported Police said they arrested one suspect Peru has been plagued by a wave of terrorism mostly bombings and dynamite blasts since the civilian government of Fernando Be-laun- Terry took office in July 1980 Five stores were destroyed by fires 6"x9" 5V4" 3-W- 3-W- $49 $39 SPEAKERS AY SPEAKERS AY S or"' yec' AMFM CASS HOME STEREOS Daily & 00 motn Svnaoy $84 00 year $ 3 50 montn Sunaay on y $42 00 year Sunday only Aii mail suDscrp ors payab e Odvance Pr 9995 $6995 $1 CT-9- 1 01 19" COLOR TV n ted articles p Cures etters manuscr ps and re ated maner sent ’o ’he Ogaen S’an dard Exam ner ere sent at tre a jvre' s rjK a a The S’anaord Co’po’ation does no assjme a y or 'Te CuS'oay or TDK SA-9- 0 3-PA- S'd-a- cs Ewr o‘ tne Assoc REG CKS 6"x9" ne CONTROL TV 1395 ONLY YOUR CHOICE $9°°perp0ei $995 1 00-WA- TT TRIAX II $9995pr ALL PIONEER CAR STEREO SYSTEMS ON SALE ALL HOME STEREO EQUIPMENT AT CLOSE OUT PRICES — a membe 13" REMOTE CT-303- 1A $79s 3 1 995 $4 1 99S ALL VIDEO RECORDERS AND CAMERAS AT OR BELOW COST JENSEN All unsol c u Pr ALL JENSEN CAR STEREO SYSTEMS ON SALE By Mail Daily & Svraoy $ 7 e au- $5995 $4995 EQUALIZERS 50-WA- TT s aed °'ess Un ed P'ess 'n’eme’ena ang tne Ajd t 3ureoj a C rcu a- Ons f de thorities said One employee was hospitalized with serious burns STEREOS ALL ATARI GAME CARTRIDGES Subscr p on Rcres Carrier Delivery Da y & Soraoy-5 75 & Da $69 00 r n y PANASONIC Sunaay a‘ Odder 3440 The Ogaen thunder- i s 'cola or dep fo ‘h s number cannot be 'anserrea o’her deoorn-en- s storms about Sunday otherwise very warm and dry Highs 85 to 95 Lows 55 to 65 man in space and her two male crewmates headed for a rendezvous with the Salyut 7 space station today in what Soviet officials said would be a test of how well women adapt to space PANASONIC isnnate 399-96- 1 r cross-sectio- SUNBEAM WALL CLOCKS Flora Ogan Ld’tor Only No Davis Co 399-961- 1 363-391- 1 Farmington Tremonton Zenith 961 1 Zenith 9611 Morgan 723-536- 1 Corinne Remen-be- of people “There was a good there not just steelworkers and they wanted to Managing Editor Circulation: on y Utah: Partly cloudy with widely 1 trated” -- Gene Glasmann Hatch I’t evident Robert D Monson (nerd! Manager Randall C Hatch Brigham City Area 723-536- Tsent third Street 455 which has been reeling from the highest unemployment of any metropolitan area in Canada — were showing Trudeau they’re “just frus- WALKMAN TYPE CASS STEREOS WFM (USPS 403840) News Dept Display Adv Classified Ads MOSCOW (UPI) — The world’s second wo- COMPLETE (Oqiifit CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT ONLY EXTENDED FORECASTS Southern Idaho: Scattered R TELEPHONE NUMBERS UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST able clouds with a chance STANDARD-EXAMINE- Lovely said people in this community — Soviet woman in spoee travel arm” Salt Lake Ogden and Provo: firain pelted TfVydecau News briefs |