OCR Text |
Show __TheSalt Lake Tribune SUNDAY PERSPECTIVE Sunday, August, 25, 1996 hain?) al eels Wepresent three somewhat unusual stories today. One, occupying a good deal of front-page real estate, involves a religious tent revival. Another, on the Sunday section front, concerns the Fact is, members of the World Vision Assembly of God have been hold- the Provo Daily Herald earlier this ing revivals in Utah for nine years. ra happy Autman, 29, grew up spending many hours in Southern and Midwestern re- Johneon, who had readers matchless photos for 36 years. third, also on Page One, is Part I of a sickening federal scandal Set aside time to read all three About the A-1 story of CIA involve- spect their sincerity and zeal.” The Vernal experience was just as impressive to Johnson, who finds it fascinating just how other people wor- that’s not easy after 27 years in this ship God. “All these people seem to have a business. You could makea case, if all allegations are true, the CIA launched Wepublished a 15-inch Associated Press summation of the findings last Wednesday. Thefull story is too shocking and important to leave conversion, as reported by the San Jose Mercury News, over the next three days. It will put a numberof issues into perspective worldwide. In the United States, there Jesus in a conversational, I-said-thenhe-said manner.” Autmannotes the U.S. Pentecostal are an estimated 10 million. movementhadits genesis in whatis what is happening in Utah.” ant that sort of growth,” Autman “Tribune readers ought to know called the 1906 Azusa Street Revival. And, sadly, that Vernal happening is A handfulof believers gathered in Los Autman’s swan song. He is leaving what they said was an outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Since then the movement's growth years as an education writer, to join Angeles for several days and nights in oo00 Reporter Samuel Autman and photographer Lynn Johnson capture chap- ter and verse of an honest-to-God, down-homePentecostal revival under When Does Life Begin? Hey, Let Voters Decide see if there is or isn't a consensus,” Rankin said. He said he believes most voters will saylife be- gins at conception. This same region wasdevastated by floodsfrom tropical storm Marty dur- ing the previous week. Tropical storm Edouard formed junds. Lately, he has been boasting of in the eastern Atlantic and cyclone losing 15 to 20 pounds. But even 02Slostforce in the Indian Ocean. his press secretary doesn't believe that “That sounds like an inflation factor to me,” press secretary Mike McCurrysaid, smiling and apparently without fear for his tional Convention than hedid ear- An NBC-Wall Street Journal definitely would back Dole if the election were today, up from 18 percentin an Aug. 2-6 poll “definite” support wasat 32 percent, statistically unchanged from 34 percentin early August. Of course, hestill can get a public opinion “bounce” of his newspaper warned resi- own from the Democratic conven- tion next week. Ross Perot got no bump from the Reform Party convention that made himthe party's presidential nominee. His strong support was at 4 percent, the sameasearlythis Anyonewith a shred of doubt Newsweek poll. It shows that Bob Dole would benefit far more by naming the former head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as his candi- datefor secretary of state than he did by putting Jack Kemponthe ticket The poll also asked whether Hillary Rodham Clintonor Eliza- “better suited to be first lady ous transmittable diseases,” ‘ence of dogs in the streets will also foads were closed due to the rare cracked down on cigarette makers and his aides declared Repub- Crops in Mozambique's fertile districts of Manica Sofala and Tete were severely damaged byan invasion of red locusts. The country’s directorof money,” Democratic convention planners quietly were securing large donations from the coun- try’s largest tobacco company international assistance to Largesse from Philip Morris help savethe Septemberharvest and its Kraft foods and mont-New Hampshire border. Yojean ces Indonesian residents near central Java's Mount Merapi volcano remained on alert for possible evacuation as the mountain produced several more eruptions of ash and flows oflava Three dairy cows in New Zealand's Atiamuri area died from a toxic level of fluorine after grazing on pasture covered in volcanic ash from recent eruptions of Mount fierce forestfire in central Russialeft the city of Voronezh without power or water after the blazes ‘sweptover high-voltage lines. Donkey Sausage Ireland's donkeys could be declared a threatened species following the sharp decline in the number ofthe animais from nearly 200,000, 20 years ago, to fewer than 7,000 today. Glens and farmlands where donkeys were once a familiar sight are now barren of the beast because huge numbers. continued to rumble through the region. Further damage wasdone to buildings in Konista, where more than 200 homeshave been wrecked by the ongoing seismic activity. mad cow disease, and the penchant in Continental Europe for donkey Wildfires meat, which is leaner than pork or horse meat. U.S., forcing officials to call Earth movements werealso felt in Army and National Guard troops Additional Sources: US Climate Analysis in northwest Turkey, southwest to help overwhelmed and weary fire Center, U.S Earthquake Information Center Uganda, eastern Japan, the coastof fighters. and the World Meteorological Organization Muller beer divisions, will be wisi- ble at the Democratic convention. “Guess what? Democrats take our money, too,” said Philip Morris spokeswoman Darienne Dennis, whose company also was a major contributor to the GOP convention. “We are not anywhere we are not rae dential candidate George McGovern and President Clinton's chancesforre-election It’s awful tough to beat an in cumbent president unless they burn down the White House or something. @GOPvice-presidential nominee Jack Kemp responding to William Bennett's suggestion that the GOP ticket go see a movie: “Don't take meto see ‘Indepen dence Day.’ The vice president gets blown up. @ Comedian David Letterman age erin, formaldehyde Researchers Find Plants That ‘Hyperaccumulate’ Toxins Researchers at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory near Aiken, S.C., have used a super- (USPS 478-360) Established April 15. 1871. Published daily By Mail t-week —————’—voo——_ Friday's Science, was made by to clean up contaminated environments, Researchers in the blossoming Doo Craig Venter of the Institute for Genomic Research, Rockville, Md., who developed powerful automated technology for break- field of “bioremediation” us- ing living organisms to clean up pollution — sayseveral species of aquatic plants “hyperaccumu- late” contaminants in theirtissue The plants suck up 1,000 times the concentration of toxins that exists in their native habitat. Re- searchers saya collection of tiny aquatic plants can turn toxins into more benign substance Scientists now believe wetlands plants such as duckweed can be planted to absorb contaminants and then incinerated, meaning tons of contaminated sediments won't have to be removed, which in turn will help reduce disruption to the ecosystem. NOT JOURNALISTS Scientists have confirmed the existence of a third major branch of life — a poorly understood kingdom of micro-o1 that constitutes half ofall living things on Earth. Until now, biologists taught that life stems from only two branches: single-celled organisms with a nucleus from which plants and animals evolved; and singlecelled organisms with no nucleus from which bacteria evolved. The third branch is called archaea, and its members include micro-organisms thatlive on deep ~ sea vents in near-boiling waters, inside volcanos and in bubbling shot springs. The organisms do not Sheed oxygen or sunlight and ing down genetic codes of genes. “Two-thirds of its genes are totally new to science,” Venter says. It's the “equivalent of opening a new porthole on Earth and discovering a wholly new view of the universe.” The Department of Energy, interested in the possibility that the microbes’ genes could be used to make materials to clean up hazardous waste, funded the project. TODAY 000 ZAP YOUR CLOTHES sit A ar picrovarsQothes dryer clothes al 65 percent Tater 5 the commercial version and 15 percent faster in the residential version. These shorter drying times eliminate laundryroom backups where washed clothes sit and wait until the dryer is finished. The Electric Power Research Institute is demonstrating the dryer at technologyfairs around the country, and although the product isn't ready for sale to the pe field testing will begin lat- year around the country. There’'s another important benefit. Although a conventional drygee up to about 170 degrees, er the microwave machine reaches only 105 degrees and heats water molecules instead of fabric molecules. This means less wear and tear on fabrics, and delicate items suchas silks and woolens now can be dried at homeinstead of being sentto the cleaners. — Orlando Sentinel Pepper Provenzano welcomes email at PepperPro@AOL.com. ~THE TRIBUNE ONTHEEWEB The Salt Lake Tribune js on the Warld SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1400 $960 Sunday Only (Utab $1200 Daily & Sunday (Outside of Region) $25.80 Carrier Detivery (4-week period) Daily se. Daily and Sunday nny Sundays Only & Thanksgiving oy 17.00 Member Aud Barve of lettin — 4 ot CIRCULATION NUMBERS 1 -800-862.9076 thrive on chemicals from the 's core. Confirmation that archaea are a separate branch, reported in Compiled by Pepper Provenzano — Gannett News Service Daily/Sunday (Utah ida. Wyo Daily Only (Utah) a tarsionteaecalbefore| icoe wd ea delivery information, new subseriptions, restating crlatiousSaturday ud bling information, Noadaytengh Prey, cum.| pam, 4am to 10m,alSunday 4am tf pm Salt Lake, south Davis counties 237-2000 ECO-REVIEW powerful X-ray device to shed new light on the ability of plants TheSalt Lake Tribune b southeast Alaska and along the Ver- Ruapehu. Another animal had to be agriculture made an urgentplea for on Bob Dole’s — you guessed it — Allother areas tions in years. The chill spread deep into the tropicalstate of Queensland where farmers feared that the Antarctic chill could threatened livestock. it further warned. To cut down on. 3 have been sold for slaughter to Gerin affiuent neighborhoods continue Earthquakes destroyed after it was discovered Strong aftershocks of the thatit too had ingested ash-laden man or French sausage-makers, or July 26 temblor along the fodder. Ruapehu has remained rel- italian butchers. A thriving business known as the “ass trade” has develGreece-Albania border atively quietin recent weeks. LocustInvasion oped in Dublin due to recentfears of Dole says that optimism is in his blood. That's right, along with Geritol, digitalis, nitroglyc F Salt Lake Tribune at the above address * snowfall, but ski resort owners were elated by someof the best condi- leave an undesirable psychological effect, on children and will cause then t0 be more afraid of animals,” ft 4 to quietly keep the dogs as pets. FAT CHANCE, BILL Clinton tipped the scales at 216 ered through one of the coldest days in 100 years as heavy snowstorms bianketed parts of eastern Australia. Several animals into public areas. Families The results: 42 percent named Dole, 28 percent picked Clinton At his last weigh-in, President Residents of Sydney shiv- ‘owners from bringing their “unclean” Former Democratic _presi- voters should review thelatest Austral Winter impure and source of physical and psychological illnesses. “Any con‘tact with dogs could cause danger- nian authorities have banned dog THEY SAID IT about Colin Powell's appeal to : =< dents of Tehran that they should avoid dogs, saying they are decadent western influences, Ira- month. POWELL’S PULL ©1996 Chronicle Features Jomhuri isiami reported. “The pres- which endedlast week — that he » had lost 15 to 20 pounds. But Cos., | August 23, 1996 AnIslamic fundamentalist 0) licans were “addicted to tobacco has more and stronger support a week after the Republican Na- "For the week ending Decadent At his last physical exam May 24, Clinton weighed in at 216 poundson his 6-foot-2 frame, the same as the year before. He had been trying to lose weight. More recently, the president told people during his vacation — survey last weekfound27 percent ofregistered voters now saythey still trails President Clinton but cathweek SS httoww oarnev ei-earhenw! rainfall over already drenched areas lythis month Republican nominee Bob Dole Leyaa Led ofthe northern Philippines, then buffeted China's Hainan Island before making landfall in northern Vietnam. was fudging You have to know what the baseline was you were measuring against on tha e said 006 SELLING OUT? Even as President Clinton BOUNCING BACK Editor Gulf of Mexico, and threatened Mexico’s northern coast late in the week. Typhoon Niki produced heavy McCurrysuggested the president ooo oI new friendships and to catch up on family news. a tion of whenlife begins never has been putto the voters “Let's bring this questionto the voteof the people, andlet's really in your must-read category today. If you want another reason,let me add the story is hozhogo da ‘ino Ith’. Find a fairgoer for a translenpa. movingoverthe warm waters ofthe Compiled by Tribune National Desk ual human life begin?” The four tion. However, John Rankin of Hartford, Conn., an anti-abortion activist who worded the Massachusetts measure, said the ques- eeson to incithis Page 7-1 Sey nonwhite population is growing at a faster clip than that of the Anglos. The fair, Calvin says, has been through many changes since its inception in 1946 as a simple tural exchange. Today,it is a -dollar institution — part commercial and part gathering place for many to re- sula was drench by torrential rains and lashed with high winds as tropical storm Dolly PO CONFETTI abortion.” It reads: “In biologi- have held referendums on abor- iat alone ought to be sufficient is the state’s only county where the The storm regained strength after question does not use the word Through the years, votersin cities and states around the country is Navajo and is conversantin that ~ surely helped in compiling this first-ever (as far as we can.aséerFen)pentane eetey oe tana Roo, Yucatan and Campeche. cal terms, when does an individ. write in toric company, incidentally, purchased where.It is theJargest gathering American Indiafis in the United States. The Navajo Nation extends into three states — Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. Indeed, Utah’s San Juan County is overwhelmingly Navajo and passed throughthe states of Quin- The proposed multiple-choice birth or a termthat the voter can the flagship of the Pulitzer Neen Co. Ourloss, St. Louis’ gain. (That his- The fact that the 29-year-old Calvin quoise and silver jewelry are every- Mexico's Yucatan Penin- Come November, some western. choicesare: conception, viability he grew up reading and admiring an recol past half-century, Since less than 10 percent of reservation resid: have. Calvin's reconstruction of past 50 often was the result of pure —_juck. “Special ents had to be made to catch people atrelatives’ homes, at cafes or in gas stations. Tropical Storms Massachusetts voters may answer opinion, the St. Louis Dispatch, the tnt observations ders, community leaders ors whohave attended faire during the ee Naha hide Odea ae at the ballot box a question that theologians, philosophers, doctors and legislators have debated for ages: Whendoeslife begin? Thevote, proposed byabortion opponents, would amount to a nonbinding statement of public The Tribune this week after four has been astounding. Charisma Magazine estimates Pentecostal and charismatic Christians (the latter an offshoot a pitched tent on the eastern Utah outskirts of Vernal. beth Hanford Dole was of the former) numbera half-billion man Catholic faith. “They talk about densed. We are presenting the original Clinton's Salt Lake Tribune writers Carolyn Calvin and Samuel Autman. dedicated line to Jesus, a directness foreign to manyofus,” says Johnson, no insignificant reaction from a man whois an ordained deacon in the Ro- major street gang activity. Gareae hadNorelyone ss Features writér Carolyn Calvin's overview of the Navajo Nation Fair golden jubilee is itself a milestone. Thousands of tribal members from throughout theIntermountain West migrate to Wiridow Rock to celebrate the passing of another year. Mutton, bread, velveteen shirts tur- agreed with their doctrine, butI re- mentin this nation’s drug problem, I can onlysayit shocked me — and there are no records or Tribune oco vival meetings, listening, he says, to Pentecostal preachers speak with authority. “I may not always have history of the Navajo Nation Fair. The to report no loss of NEWSROOM NUMBERS bate oe Béitorial Writers Fetarea/DayBresk News Desks Newspaper in Ed Photography : mr mm «237-2019 237207 297-265 257-2018 237-2065 keer in:a Rolly & Wells 237-2054 State Desk 2045 Sports (ne seers) 27200 Scores (9Se/min) 1-900-898-1551 Trib Store 539-8742 a ~ Wide Web 24 hours # day, 7 days week at: ~~ ¥ hittp://www.sltrib.com > “YOUR INITIAL-VistTcit not identified: apa some mi ts free 16. bers of The Tribune, subscribers a the print and electronic editions receive full : to the daily newspaper. Special premium ricco:— aconSe ‘or those me Sub- scribers who do not haveaccess to the Internet,a low-cost option is available Tribune subscribers can obtain Internet access for $5.95 a month by calling Source Internet Services at (801) 467-5166. Have your Tribune account number (on your invoice) handy when signing wy Tribune's Internet access includes: Content of The Tribune by 5 a.m. bagel to tothere archive (for a fee). Teen access to p revious wee! k's editions @ 30 hours ofaeSaeciaa access monthly,includ- ing e-mail, gopher, ftp and a personal home page. @ 2¢-hour, aya-week technical assistance (on supported Internet software) from Source Internet Services. Call (801) 467-5166. Questions or comments ge et OnLine can _be e-mailed to: editor@sitri e 5 4 |