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Show WHAT? A SHORTAGE OF WEDDING GOWNS?/ B-1 CheSaltLake Gribune = on 896- Utah Centennial Human Rights Day VOLUME 251 Utah's Independent Vo ice Since 1871 NUMBER9: Copyright 1999 MONDA TODAY'S READERSHIP: 316,800 Bush’s Gulf War ByChristopher Smith Regret: Retreating On Saddam Hussein By Robert Burns THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — Former President Bush says he underestimated Saddam Hussein's political ing power after the Persian Gulf War and regretsthatthe allies didn't do more to undercut the Iraqi leader's authority. In aninterview with DavidFrost to be aired Tuesday on PBS. Bush said he still thinks Saddamwill be overthrown byhis own people. But Bushrecalled that during the 1991 Gulf V SALT LAKE CITY UTAH 84111 January 15, 1996 .S. Dismayed Robbs on Track of Regaining Lion-Hunting Rights TV INTERVIEW heand others felt a soundmilitary defeat would lead to the dictator's downfall Bushsaid. “'I I miscalculated thought he'd be gone. The former commanderin chief reiteratedhis oft-stated view that it would have beena mistaketo order the U.S. military to hunt down Saddamin Baghdad, and that it was a correct judgment to endthe warafter having evicted Iraq’s occupying army from Kuwait But the formerpresident, in theinter- 1996, THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE When three members of southern Utah's notorious Robb family were convicted by a Garfield Countyjury last August for poaching a cougar, it seemed that their Red Creek Outfitters hunting guide business was fortewmee) The numi of cougars huntedfor preying onlivestock has steadily past 20 years. A state legislator want: After all, three Robbs — Chris, Shawn and Brandon — lost their right to hunt mountain lions as part of the sentence Andtheir father, Val Robb, had lost his Utah lion-hunting privileges in January 1993 as result of another cougar-poachingcon- ‘Numberof HuntersAfield | attorney representing weapons le enriched uranium to oper rs of nuclear the clear Government Traders and Hunters 0 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 judge to reconsider whetherthe state Wildlife Board acted ap- nony The United States has protest And on Thursday, Val Robb will be the first Utahn to get a ed te no a nil to Ru ia and to Euratom, the nuclear agency of the European Community, said Saddamfooled him whenheused his surviving military powerto quickly crush in CedarCityis essentially a new trial to determine if Val Robb Paragonah, have beendeclared a “tragic” situation by southern arranged for an undercover agent to illegallykill a cougarin Utah Rep. Tom Hatch, R-Panguitch. Hatchplans to introduce The travails of the Robbs. of legislation reducing the penalty killing a cc fromafelony to a misdemeanor arguing that there are too many @ See ROBBS, Page A-5 who confirmed reports in the nuclear-industry trade press that a deal appears imminen I'm not optimistic this said Fred mitted to fly armedhelicopters anywhere inside Iraq so long as theywerenot near U.S. forces. Saddam used that air power, combined with tanks and other heavy ground armor that survived the war, to kill thousands ofrebelling Kurds andShiites. Wemight have handled the flying of helicopters differently,” Bush said. “So of Nuclear Energy Affairs By Ch aris Rus: rtillery a’ Cheet holding as many as Gunfi rackled be heard every sec nd wi te fla: sand smoke pourecd from t Shortly before the Russians yeganfir Sunda MST). a Russian seneral said that ne gotiations ad had failed and th e Russ forced to resort tc ilitar solve the weeklong sualties e was no word on ing at 9am miliation and undercut his authority, Bush respondedfirst by saying, “Maybe in retrospect we could have done more. He added that summoning Saddam to Safwan might havebackfired, though, if theIraqi leader had resisted and forced U.S. troops to march to Baghdad to grab him al pe wers searching for this brutal dictator who hadthebest security in the world, involved in an ur The President's Diary:In aninterview scribed his worries about howto end the war andthe fate of Saddam Hope to see the madmanis gone Bush wrote Lynn R. Johns: WSU'sForrest Crawford honorsthe legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., says a good judge: Coretta Scott King. Rights Leader Says King’s Dream Belongs to All By Jennifer Skordas Black Churches Estab] National Consumer Network By Lori Sharn thoughts about the warwhile it was still fresh in his mind. The former president has indicated many times, even at a White House news conference immediately after the war ended, that he regretted seeing Saddam survive In the tions are setting up a national consumer group whoseprofits will be used to boost black home ownership, they will announce today. The of Revelation December 1995interview with ing ending of World War II when J jana leade oarded the battleship USS Mis. Tokyo harbor andsigned the sur of America is a major effort to pool the black population's more than $300 billion in pur Revelationwill offer discou on products fromgroceries to insurancethrough consum: er product as clean as it might have and service companies. The de nominations represent 20 r Luther King it’s this belong We can no longer allow Martin Luther King’s dreamto b ted to aparticular groupor popula tion,” said Crawford 1 associate professor of education 4 at We State Universit Hesaid many people view the state holiday blacks o} lized it dr a holiday for jacks @ See EDUCATOR, been if A-12 THE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CONTENDERS sdeain Hussein had come to ae tent laid dowr Martin Jr./HumanRights Day The manandhis memory to us all @ See REVELATION, Page A-6 render papers. “Imperialism endedrigh e with the laying of a swordonadesk the whole world sawit With the Gulf War. “the ending wasn't f Corp. chasing power Frost, Bush alluded to the moresatisfy e formation If there is one message Forrest rawford would like t give this Utahns befc he passing of th year’s SA TODAY Leaders of five black church denomina Frost said the March 9, 1991, interview was tapedin secret at the Camp David. Md., presidential retreat to record Bush's 10dit @ See RUSSIA Page A-8 PERVOMAYSK AYA Saddam with Frost taped March 9, 1991, but not aired until the Tuesday broadcast, Bush discussed excerpts from his Gulf War diary, including entries in which he de- empire materi On Chechen Kidnappers should have been required to surrender at the Safwan meeting to deepen his hu thing Viktor the are deputy director of State's Office there's roomfor someex post facto criti- ban guerrilla war,’ Bush said. “This is not a formula that I wanted to contem: plate, and history will say wedidtheright sources ¢ McGoldrick Sisoe agreed to an Iraqi request that it be per- And there we would be, minister always ¢ on Russians Fire Other Victims: At that meeting. Gen NormanSchwarzkopf, the commander of the U.S.-led coalition in the Gulf War, whether they surplus 1 yomb-g from dist nantled nuc ons. The « ountry $n going to follow our advice on meeting at Safwan, Iraq Frost ac cording to State Department of ficials. propriately in suspending his hunting privileges. His so-called 7 anding 1 S. nu feration objec odds with lon "Numberof CougarsKilled by their view taped Dec. 12 in his Houston office. cism here. Asked by research actors in Europe a transac i put Moscowat that w Robbsons asked the Utah Court of Appeals to overturn poaching conviction e and as anti-pr olife vutside agreement to sell sub Treed but not trapped, the Robbs are clawing their way back. Shortly before Christmas. an By Thomas W. Lippmar Th } WASHINGTON — Russia Numberof Cougars Killed by Sport H ul ters viction February 1990. andShiites in the south Hetook us by surprise,” Bush said While Bush expressed no regret about his decision to end the war with ceasefire 100 hours after the ground war was launched, Bushsaid he now believes mistakes were madein the March3 armistice penalty f eanor mortally wounded ‘trial de novo" before 5th District Judge Robert Braithwaite postwar revolts by Kurds in Iraq's north At Russia’s Plan To Sell Uranium sport ar illing cougars froma felony to a misd 6 Martin Luther King Jr. Day histhing and maybe left of. Bush By Mike Fe insilbe NE W YORK — Like EAT Ere Yee FORBES, Page A-6 cannot le |