Show t Vf' m' OGDEN SERVING NORTHERN UTAH SINCE 188B UTAH £ - BERLIN (API East Germa ny ended all border restrictions Friday and cut a new passage in the Berlin Wall at Bernauer Strasse where desperate people once leaped from windows and border guards shot down others trying to flee Work was reported on many more new openings in the wall that divided the city for 28 years More than 100000 jubilant East Germans climbed over and rushed through borders Friday for the first time since 1961 They chatted amiably with d guards who no longer have orders to open fire Thousands crossed back and forth during the day West German television showed East German guards helping East Berliners climb over the wall to avoid congested check points Some border guards were handed stonv-face- roses by beaming girls Communist leader Egon Krenz told 150000 people at a rally in East Berlin that his new reforms “will not be turned back” The party's Central Committee approved a document calling for free elections more restrictions on its security forces and greater separation of party and state Chancellor Helmut Kohl of West Germany flew to West Berlin hoping to speak with Krenz who has stunned the world with rapid reforms — and a pledge of free elections — intended to appease protesters and end emigration to the West Work began late Friday at the Bernaue Strasse East Germans used a hydraulic crane to dismantle the round top of the concrete wall East Ger- man workers could be heard knocking on the wall ed: “The wall must go! The wall must go!” East German border guards watched impassively as some in the crowd used picks and hammers to chip away pieces of the hated barrier for souvenirs Thousands of East Berliners urday On the Western side dozens of firemen dismantled observation platforms from which West Berli- poured across the Glienicker Bridge on which some of the most famous spy trades took place when it was opened in the ners used to gaze across the wall About 400 people watched occasionally setting off fireworks “We are speechless” said Helmut Keuchel 48 “This is a fabu- and 3 Tb Peter Zeisler a West German police official at the scene said: “It will be a pretty hole that will make it possible for people and cars to come through" The new crossing was scheduled to be opened at 8 am Sat- lous 50 CENTS earls evening In West Berlin thousands more streamed along the elegant Kurfuerstendamm shopping d some carrying candles others toasting each other Crowds of young girls could be seen rushing down the street toward stores Bars offered free drinks to East Berliners Police in West Berlin said they See WALL on 2A bou-lesar- overwhelming experience” Several thousand people celebrated at the Brandenburg Gate the great monument that like the wall was a symbol of Berlin’s division Many danced on the wall drank champagne waved sparklers set off fireworks and chant- - Associated Press German youths take a souvenir of 28 years of repression — a chunk of brick from the Berlin Wall Housing Two wars took toll on family Vet wife lost a son By SCOTT BONTZ' - Standard-Examine- BOUNTIFUL The flag doesn’t fly often on the pole in the yard of Elbert and Josephine Day Elbert came home from World in Vietnam wounded seven times and kept returning to fight became a school crossing guard The Days had a boy Twenty years later Terry Buckles Day left Weber State College joined the Marines and went to Vietnam as a helicopter mechanic That wasn't enough for the son of a war hero In his spare time he climbed aboard for rescue enemy-huntin- flights g Sometimes he manned a machine gun About two months before he was to come home at the end of 1968 his helicopter was shot down in a place called Elephant Valley Terry and the rest of the crew died After what had happened to her husband while she was care ing for their infant daughter Josephine said “I just didn't really believe that the Lord would take my son I didn't 'see how he could For a long time I couldn't accept it as the Lord's will I finally acceptJu-di- ed it" But then the bright redhead with a weary voice said “I’ve wondered if it was really his time If his life had been spared he could have done so much ' SALT LAKE CITY AP) — Police thought a suspicious package left on the steps of the University of Utah’s Museum of Natural History might conretain a bomb But an a bones of the vealed 000-- y d mummy Authorities say the remains packed into a Scars color box likely belong to member of the ancient Anasazi Indian tribe Anthropologists and pathologists say the rare find is among the best preserved they have seen Lawmen believe looters carried the mummy from its burial cave in the desert Southwest where the Anasazi or “ancient ones” farmed and hunted from about 600 AD X-r- ay ear-ol- tele-visi- until 1350 AD Anthropologists say they are the ancestors of the Hopi and Pueblo Indians of today ' DALLAS (AP) — President Bush promised Friday to “recap- ture the American dream of home ownership” for all Americans and provide shelter for the poor and homeless with a three-ye$42 billion spending pack- 'V'w J& ar 5 be- age cause we want to keep his memory alive We don't want to bury him” Josephine had hesitated about an interview On the telephone she dragged the words out: Enough had been written about her husband and he sometimes didn't remember well she said But in their home with sun diffusing through the window she poured her son's life and death on the kitchen table For a long stretch there was no need to ask a question She didn’t cry until the part about surprising Terry and his war buddies with a package of vegetables from Elbert’s garden “Of course you can't cry all your life” Josephine said Later she said that after 21 years “You think you’d be fully healed” DREAM: The National Board of Realtors reacts 12C “The true measure of success! isn't how many families we add to housing assistance rolls It's how many families move up and out — and into the ranks of homeowners” Bush said without specifying where he would find the money The secretary of housing and urban development Jack Kemp told reporters he hoped the money would come from a cut in the capital gains tax a proposal that has encountered vigorous opposii tion on Capitol Hill said the would Kemp spending be new money and that it was not his understanding it would come from other housing pro- late-afterno- grams Bush speaking to the National Association of Realtors outlined $42 billion in federal spending for three years starting in fiscal 1991 which begins Oct I 1990! In addition to the $42 billion in actual spending Kemp said' the package will cost the government “several billion" dollars in revenue lost due to tax incenhoustives including ing tax credits and penalty-fre- e IRA withdrawals for home down Elbert sat mosthis wife talked occasionally giving an answer or opinion always brief “I knew what I wanted to do" Gray-bearde- d ly silent as he said of his war experience “I wanted to go and fight for this country" See VETERANS on 2A Mysterious package yields mummy of ‘ancient one’ 1 touted by president II head Partially paralyzed he relearned how to talk and walk with a limp in his braced left leg The infantryman who was and $42 billion package U TROUBLES: Veterans have hard times in Massachusetts 4A after German machine good in the world “We try to talk about him gun bullets took off part of his War program promised Second thoughts and stiff penalties for pilfering Indian artifacts on federal or Indian lands probably led the anonymous finders to “donate” the remains to the museum said University of Utah Police Chief Wayne Shepherd The chief said a museum secretary received an anonymous call Oct from a woman who said her husband had found the mummy knew having it was illegal and wondered whether the museum wanted it The caller told the employee to look on the back steps and hung up Shepherd 1 1 said Police were called and showed vague outlines of bones instead of a bomb's wires and batteries Utah State Medical Examiner Dr Todd Grey said he MUMMY on 2A ys Sf ( Anne Josephine and Elftert Day hold RaupStandard-Examme- r a photograph of their son Terry Buckles Day low-inco- Success enthuses activists payments The program unlike congressional housing proposals does not provide any money for new construction of low income hous- Abortion rights leaders plan rally in Washington Sunday By WILLIAM HERSHEY has appealed Newspapers Kmght-Rtdde- f WASHINGTON — Buoyed by success in last Tuesday's elec- tions thousands of abortion rights activists are expected in Washington on Sunday as part of a nationwide display of the movement's political strength Molly Yard national president of the National Organization for Women said there may be as many as 250000 here for the “Mobilize for Women’s Lives" rally at the Lincoln Memorial joined by millions more at 1000 events from Maine to California The movement across the country had been jolted into action by last July’s US Supreme Court decision in a Missouri case that gave the states some rights to limit abortions The 4 decision sent a signal that the court no longer was committed to the 1973 milestone Roe vs Wade 5-- precedent t which first gave om- - lower-cou- rt -- ing deci- ‘We believe that sions that found unconstitutional Tuesday was a wakeup call for George Bush’ consent for unmarried girls under 18 seeking abortions “There were people who were — Kate Michelman cn the constitutional right to an abortion It also helped shape the decision to rally not only in Washington but across the country where state legislatures now have the “green light” to limit abortions Yard said at a Friday press conterence “We have to be she said everywhere” The Supreme Court will hear arguments Nov 29 in a case involving an Akron Ohio abortion clinic that could further restrict abomon rights The state of Ohio 4 the state law requiring parental sitting comatose thinking thing was every- OK” said Phyliss president of the Carl-son-Rie- Akron area NOW chapter “The (Missouri) decision became a linchpin in reinvigorating and challenging people to come forward" "We believe that Tuesday was a wakeup call for George Bush" said Kate Michelman executive director of the National Abortion Rights Action League While the mood was upbeat for acSunday’s rally anti-aborti- tivists downplayed the notion that their foes suddenly had gai ted the upper hand in the national debate over the controversial issue t The financing levels in the Bush proposal are well below legislation making its way through both the House and Senate but well above anything proposed in the Reagan administration SODAUSllNDEUI |