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Show THE AMERICAS SOTAane TODAY'S BRIEFING BY TomBaldwin & Kirk Millson Montana: Ciinton discusses + U.S. to Feel Health-Care Cuts: Economists and industry watchers say the GOP austerity plan for health care would lead to closed hospitals, a leveling off in doctors’ incomes andlayoffs in a field that for years has beena leading creator of new jobs. Details: A-1 | issues with Westerners | UTAH A2 Fraud Charges: A 59-count indictmentagainst four ex-Bonneville Pacific figures has beenfiled 36 months after Russia: Earthquake survivors demand to leave Sakhalin Island . —————— ee an examiner in the bankruptcy ques- * Pacific Ocean FRIDAY JUNE 2. 1995 tioned what becameone of the largest financial collapses in Utah history Robert Wood, L. Wynn Johnson, David Hirschi and Raymond Hixson are accused of securities fraud, conspiracy, bank fraud and mail fraud. Not indicted were Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini and husband Yan Ross, Bonneville co-founder and shareholder. Details: A-1 Atlantic Ocean Clinton Talks With Montanans: President Clinton rode a horse, shared a meal with a farmers and prepared for a televised town meeting Thursday in Billings, Mont., in an attempt to demon- Bosnia: Serb leader warns against | to rescue peacekeepers Pacific Ocean attem pt strate sensitivity to Western interests. Details: A-4 | Alabama: Black activist's son Reeve’s Condition Still Serious: arrested Christopher Reeve remained in serious but stable condition Thursday as doctors considered surgeryto stabilize his upperspine, broken Saturdayin fall from a horse. burning of school Tragedy Strikes: The chairman of the drug firm that manufactures Prozac, the best-selling anti-depressant, has morethana financialstakein clinical depression. The CEOofEli Lillylost Indian Ocean | Thailand: Ex-POW makes amends | with former Japanese captor Japan: Female anchors his wife last year when she committed suicide. The firm co-sponsored the seminar at the University Park Hotel. Details: A-1 dominate TV news Details: A-4 $10 Million Gift for Smithsonian: A prolific American inventor of high-tech eomponents has given the Smithsonian Institution its largest-ever cash donation — $10.4 million — to support programs to boost appreciation of U.S. innovators. Details: A-11 U.S. Gear Used to Quash Rights: The State Departmentsaid in Washington Thursday that Turkey committed human-rights violations with the EUROPE/AFRICA ASIA/OCEANIA BUSINESS West Won't Deal With Serbs: While Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic warned that attempts to rescue U.N peacekeepers being held by the Serbs would result in butchery, Western allies refused to deal and pushed instead Thursdayfor a rapid deployment force. Details: A-1 Ex-POW Meets Captor: After nearly50 years of seething memoriesof torture as a POW, Eric Lomax met the man whohadinterpretedthe questions, Takashi Nagase. But instead of anger, the pair grasped hands and shedtears. Details: A-1 Dow Hits Record: The Dow Jones industrial average ended 7.61 points higherat 4,472.75, having climbed back from a morning loss of 28 points and setting a record for the 33rd timethis year Stocks: D-9 Egypt OKs Female Circumcisions: Egypt’s state hospitals have been ordered to perform female circumcisions — labeled genital mutilation by opponents — in an effort to halt the proce- help of U.S. military equipment Details: A-13 Activist's Son Held in Arson: The son ofa black protest leader was arrested Thursday in Montgomery, Ala., on charges of burning down a high school where a white principal's stand against mixed-race dating had caused months of racial turmoil Details: A-13 dure by clumsy amateurs Huge Drug Bustin Puerto Rico:In sweeping raids across Puerto Rico on Thursday, police arrested nearly 1,000 suspected drugtraffickers. CALENDAR Quake Survivors Want to Leave: Survivorsof the monstrous Sakhalin Island quake Thursday demanded to leave as cranes and bulldozers began leveling the rubble of what had been 17 five-story apartment buildings. Details: A-10 | Film Pioneer: ‘Downin the Valley,” a film by Utah pioneer filmmaker Mort Rosenfeld, gets a rare screening tonight at 8 at the Utah Film & Video Centerin Salt Lake City. The 1977 film was the engine for Utah's independent film movementand the legacyof the artist’s short career. Details: C-1 | WomenRule Japan’s TV News: On Japanese TV news shows, women rule the airwaves. In a dual-anchor showdown that closely paralleled the Dan Rather-Connie Chung struggle at CBS, the woman wonat Nippon Television, and ratings havetripled. OPINION DAYBREAK A Good Deal for Bad Water: The Salt Lake County Water Conservancy District joined the state and Kennecott Utah Copper Corp.this week in a $37 million settlement for groundwater that the mining giantpolluted in southwest Salt Lake County. Unlike the $12 million deal protested by thedistrict in 1991, this oneis fair Editorial: A-18 Woman of Cloth: Adriana Scalamandre Bitter is president of Scalamandre home-furnishings company, a firm that has had a hand in White House decor since Herbert Hoover was president. Adriana and her husband, Edwin, were in Salt Lake City to speak at an Intermountain gatheringofinterior designers. Home & Family: E-1 THE RIGHT PLACE In which U.S.state are you? 161,400 — Utah government 18,929,000 — Nationwide government employees in 1994. State Rankings, 1994 U.S. FACTS Bungle in Parks: Yellowstone National Park Superintendent Michael Finley says the parkwill lose $2 for every $1 saved under a budget-reduction plan that Congress is considering. Underthe plan, the National Park Service NBAPlayoffs: Houstonfinally held serve Thursday night, becoming the first team to win at homein its Western Conference Championship series against San Antonio. The Rockets ended the Spurs’ season with a 100-95 win that wrapped up the matchup four games to two. | | | | budget would shrink by 10 percent. Yellowstone’s funding would drop $2.4 million, resulting in shorter tourism seasons. Details: A-8 Details: D-1 Term Limit on Judges: Idaho Republican Rep. Helen Chenoweth told the Coeur d’Alene Chamber of Commerce’s Legislative Committee she is considering supporting a drive to impose term limits on membersofthe federal judiciary. Details: A-8 Did UCLA Bringin Ringer? An Australian who enrolled at UCLA long enough to help the softball team to a record eighth NCAAtitle did nothing illegal, but did herbriefstint violate the spirit of academiceligibility? Details: D-1 HEADLINERS FINDINGS & FIGURES Colon Cancer: Researchers have identified a genethat causes colon cancer, a finding expected to lead to a bloodtestin the next few yearsto find the disease early. Their study, published today in the journalScience, also may help develop gene-therapytreatments for people with colon cancer.It also may help people with inherited forms of ovarian, endometrial, stomach and pancreatic cancer, diseases with similar genetic origins. employees in 1994. INTERMOUNTAIN. SPORTS TEE UTAH INDEX May Showers: May became one of the soggiest on the books, washing away recordsacrossthestate. Salt Lake City finished the month with 3.68 inches of moisture, which is 204 percent of normal butties for the third all-time behind 1977 (4.76 inches) and 1993 (3.95 inches). Details: B-1 No Sale: Zions Cooperative Mercantile Institution, better known as ZCMI, has spentits 126-year history watching other retailers come and go. Thefirm, 52.3 percent owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, has had its share of longing eyes cast by suitors, but it is not for sale, ZCMI officials said Thursday. Details: D-8 Details: A-10 General May Run AgainstYeltsin: Russia's most charismatic general, Lt. Gen. Alexander Lebed, has resigned to protest Kremlin policies and is widely believed to be preparing to run for political office — possibly challenging President Boris Yeltsin in 1996. First in Line: Salt Lake City wasfirst to the trough while other cities were arguing about how to give out a shrinking share of federal grant money. The result was $6.5 million for community service and housing programs, and the distinction as the nation’s first city with an approved streamlined proposal. Details: B-1 Prince Charles: Welcoming Dubliners shouted “Charlie!” and IRA sympathizers threw eggs Thursday at Prince Charles, the first British royal to makeanofficialvisit since Trish independence in 1922. The 24-hourvisit, nine months after a cease-fire by the Irish Republican Army in NorthernIreland,reflects a warming of British-Irish relations strained |, during centuries of British rule. Protesters hurled several eggs at Charles while he was \@ sightseeing at Dublin’s Trinity College, missing t the heir to the British thronebut hitting a member of a welcoming party. “Our goalis to turn this finding into a blood test U.S. unemployment was 7 percent in 1993. TheUniversal Almanac (1995) VOCABULARY Contingent — (kun-TIN-jent) adj. dependent on something that may or maynot happen My plans are contingent on rain. Thursday's answer: Tennessee TODAY IN HISTORY 1851 — Mainebecamethefirst state to enact a law prohibiting alcohol. 1886 — President Cleveland married FrancesFolsom in a White House ceremony 1924 — Congress granted U.S. citizenship toall American Indians. 1941 — Baseball's ‘Iron Horse,” LouGehrig, died in NewYorkof a degenerative disease 1953 — Queen ElizabethII of Britain was crowned in Westminster Abbey, 16 months after the death of her father, King George VI AND WE QUOTE ‘Anger as soonas fedis dead/ ‘Tis starving makes it fat.”” — Emily Dickinson 1966 — TheU.S. space probe Surveyor1 landed on the moon and began transmitting detailed photo- graphsof the lunar surface. in the next couple of years; our longer-term goal is to turn this into therapy,” said Sanford Markowitz, lead author of the study and a coloncancer specialist in Cleveland. The geneidentified by Markowitz and his team is a tumor suppressor — it's the body’s way of preventing the disease. It does so by helping the body shed the innerlining of the colon, a long organ shaped like a distorted M that winds through the abdomen. In just one week’stime, the body naturally sheds this inner lining, much as skin cells are continually shed and regrown, Markowitz said. But people with colon cancer cannot thoroughly shed this lining because of a genetic defect, Markowitz found. Whenthe gene, which he calls RII, is destroyed, cancer develops, he said. Thefinding is a new link in a growing chain of research, in which three other genes that cause familial forms of colon cancer have been identified. — Knight-Ridder News Service NON SEQUITUR Tia Carrere learned to do more thanact for herfirst film role. The Hawaiian native, de| spite a lifetime on theislands, “never surfed, and I couldn't do the hula,” she said in the June 4 Parade magazine, which appearsin The Salt Lake Tribune. “1 learned while making the movie.” The movie was the obscure 1983 picture ‘Aloha Summer.” Since then, of course, the 28-year-old actress has moved on to bigger and better-grossing films: She played the love interest in the ‘‘Wayne’s World” movies and a villain in “True Lies.”” oO Ted Nugent: The Motor City Madman’s imprintin the Hollywood Rock Walk of Fame madesome animal-rights activists mad. Before guitarist Nugent, who is an avid hunter, even opened his mouthto speakorset his hands in cement Wednesday, two women ran past the crowd carrying a bannerthat read, “Ted Nugent Equals Violence on the Walk of Fame.” Then a manatthe front of the crowd began yelling, ‘Killer!’ And another man in camoumporflage gear burst into the middle of the presentation.“I tant that the weenies object,’ Nugent said. “That proves I’m not one!” BIRTHDAYS Poems, Second Series (1891) Today's: TV producer Chuck Barris is 66. Actress Sally Kellerman is 58. Actor Stacy Keach is 54. Rock drummer Charlie Watts is 54. Composer Marvin Hamlisch is 51. Actor Jerry Mathersis 47. NOTHING SERIOUS DEATHS Novelist Stanley Elkin, who suffered from multiple sclerosis andwrote comically of tragic themes, died Wednesdayin St. Louis. He was 65. Jean Muir, the British fashion designer admiredfor the cla: ic simplicity of her clothes, died at age 66. Dallas Town- A study shows that people who drink threeto five glasses of wine dailylive longer than people who don't drink. Perhaps the former group just can’t remember their birthdays. send, a 44-year CBS News veteran, died Thursday. He was 76. WilEYare vestonwn eer ween omit 6-2 TheSalt Lake Tribune (USPS 478-360) Established April 15, 1871, Published daily and Sundayby the Kearns:Tribune Corporation, 143 South Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Second class postage paid at Salt LakeCity Utah. 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