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Show 2 It The Salt Lake Tribune, Friday, March 16, 1979 - Pope Details ( ontinued From Page One wiii not vole utud stamp tin after the signing Israels Cabint t is expel ted to give its endorsement to the full treatv Sunday, and the Israeli Parliament soon afterward Begin says he wants parliamentary approval before he can sign Egyptian Prime Minister Muitafa trat, Penis of New Wars Continued From Tage One rial, monetary, production and commercial mechanisms that, resting on various political pressures, support the world economy Many Vatican experts said the pope, til outlining his policies, sought to avoid letting the church be used politically or ideologically The pope is taking no sides between powers and ideologies but places the church on the side of Christ and of man, focusing on both the rights and needs of people, commented the Rev Robert Graham, an American Jesuit scholar based here. The pope said. "We all know well that the aieas of misery and hunger on our globe could have been made fertile in a short time if the gigantic investments for armaments at the service of war and destruction had been changed into investments for food at the service of that pollution and weapons often turn man into an "exploiter and destroyer of nature. "Man lives increasingly m fear," the pope said. "He is afraid that what he produces ... can become the means and uistrument for an unimaginable self destruction, compared with which all the cataclysms and catastrophes of history known to us seem to fade away." The 18,000-wor- d encyclical was released as the pontiff completed his first five months in office It was addressed to the worlds 750 million Roman Catholics and to all men and women of goodwill " World By Police in this southern Italian town said Bruno Dp Luisa, 23, grabbed the purse of Italia Ianotti, 63, hit her on the nead and fled nght into the path of a truck. De Luisa was taken to a hospital and ended up in a bed next to Mrs Ianottis bed, police said Bernard Gwertzman aipi"a! of the expressed his hope that ' the past enmity hotwc n the two nations will be something of a memory Constant Theme Khalil then took up a constant theme of Egyptian officials defending Cairo against charges that it has sold out the New York Times Writer support for the Egyptian Israeli peace treaty and to discourage Arab action Atsociated Press Laserphoto Transit patrolman, left, escorts Henry Bell who New York allegedly of deaf-mut- e slashed the throat train. on a subway against Egypt for s'gmng the pact Administration officials said the president was deeply concerned over threatened Arab economic and oil boycotts of Egypt for its decision to sign the taken formally Thursday peace treaty with Israel The White House was expected to announce Friday that the delegation headed by Brzezinski, the national security aftairs adviser, will leave later Dozing Subway Rider Kills - A dozing subw ay NEW YORK (AP) rider in Queens woke with a start early Thursday to find several men hovering over him Frightened, he wlupped out a hunting knife and slashed the throat of one intruder. But if the dozen or so men who had just boarded the subway had meant the sleeping rider no harm, they had no way of telling him They were Lying dead with his throat cut was one of the mutes, James Pacheco, 23 As it turned out, he had a criminal record as a member of a street gang called the Crazy Homicides. Blade for Protection Henry Bell, 63, a derelict who slept on subways and said he carried a blade for protection, was booked on a intermurder charge after a night-lonrogation, police said h g Pacheco was the seventh person to meet violent death in the New York subways this year, according to records of the Transit Authoi ity Thp official count does not include a teen-ag- e girl who was killed by a wild shot from the gun of a Transit Police officer who was firing at an attacker on a crowded station platfnrm In another part of the vast suhway system late Wednesday, a woman was raped, sodomized and robbed in a deserted passageway of an upper Manhattan station A few hours earlier, at a midtown Manhattan station, a robber was shot to death by a guard after he and a friend pulled a fur robbery The pace of subway homicides this year, seven in 2 months, threatens to far outstrip 1978, when there were nine all year The rape was the third, about Deaf-Mu- te the same rate as in 1978, when 12 rapes occurred in the subway system Total felonies on the subways areaap about 10 percent this year compared to last, the Tiansit Authority says, but the wantoness and savagery of some of the attacks has drawn wide press coverage and heightened public awareness The new violence followed a declaration Wednesday by Transit Police Chief Sanford Garehk that "the trains are safer than the streets More Officers But the city has come up with emergency funds to put more officers on patrol along the 710 miles of track and the 459 subw ay stations During the interrogation to sort out what happened in Pachecos death, a teacher and resident of the Lexington School for the Deaf were called in to translate for Pachecos companions Others Warren the delegation include M Christopher, the deputy secretary of state, and Air Force Gen David C Jones, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff The presence of Chip Carter in the delegation was meant to underscore the president's personal interest m the missions success Sent Messages Administration officials said the president has already sent messages to Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other Arab states stressing his own commitment to the Eavptian Israeli treaty and expressing the view that if punitive action was taken against Egypt, it would have an unfavorable impact on those countries relations with the United States. Relations with Saudi Arabia nive been strained in recent months for several reasons But the United States took several military actions in the last two weeks to bolster Saudi security and to enhance the military strength of neighboring North Yemen to demonstrate a desire for close relations Saudi Arabia, the worlds largest oil exporter Meanwhile, Israeli defense Minister Ezer Weizman and a large Israeli delegation arrived in Washington Thursday afternoon for talks aimed at completing technical aspects of the projected peace treaty with Egypt and for discussing new American military, political and economic agreements with the United States To Arrive Friday Defense Minister Kamel Hassan All of Egypt is due to arrive Friday for the talks with Weizman As part of the compromise worked out during Carters mission to Egypt and Israel, Israel will withdraw forces from the Sinai at an accelerated pace, with the first contingents leaving the El Ansh area within about three months m Park Relates Cash Amounts MONROE, La. (AP) -Korean nee dealer Tong-su- n Park, under guana due to anonymous death threats, testified Thursday he gave former Rep. Otto Passman $98,000 in cash in plain brow-- envelopes m 1973. As in the case of all contributions to Mr. Passman, there was no fanfare and as I recollect he would just say, Thank you, said the and wealthy urbane businessman. The government contends the $98,000 was a bribe to influence Passman to help Park keep a lucrative job as sole agent for U S. rice sales to South Korea. Park was guarded by U S marshals when he entered and left the courthouse Thursday The FBI said anonymous death threats had been made against Park in a telephone call received by a local television new swoman The Korean businessman is to be cross-examine- d Friday. Park said he raised payments to Passman in 1973 from $48,000 to $98,000 because the congressman and he "had become a great team Passman wanted the boost because he said 1974 would be a difficult campaign year and he needed additional Park added Passman was unop- funds, posed in the 1974 general election, and swamped his Democratic opponent m the primary In 1976, hurt by the Korean nee scandal, he was defeated. In 1973 and 1974, Pass-mawas chairman of a n House subcommittee which handled foreign aid Now 78 and in poor health, he is on tnal on charges of income tax evasion, bribery and conspiracy Shop Park, in his third day of testimony, outlined $98,000 in payments to Passman during spring and summer the of The payments, along with others Park detailed Wednesday, bring to $145,000 the money Park has testified 1973. he gave Duiioti at. rety and in the day and spend the weekend in the two countries WASHINGTON President Carter is sending a high-levdelegation headed by Zbigniew Brzezinski, and including his son, Chip Carter, to Saudi Arabia and Jordan m an effort to seek their deaf-mute- It was a BENEVENTO, Italy (AD bad day for a purse snatcher and his victim Thursday; they were both injured, taken to the same hospital and put into beds next to each other. announced the unanimous Peace Treaty Support He added Its a Small Khalil tat'h't.1 U.S. Entourage to Seek " life Treaty Clears Egypts Cabinet 57So.Ma.nof 0BEXCacES i0LAVAV1AY'H the Louisiana ft 4 Palestinians and otlur Ardh states The Palestinian gin stum can new. I nless be ignored," he told reporteis to face th it ready is the public this wdl hamper the problem chances of future stability It was the second dav of violence in W est Rank Disturthe Israe)-occiip.- d bances were rejioned in six towns and the Arab sector of Jerusalc m Soldiers Fire on Crowd The Israeli command said troops fired warning shots near a crowd of rock thi owing Arabs in Halhoul, 20 miles south of Jerusalem, but the protesters ignored them The soldieis then fired into the crowd, killing a girl man and a 17 year-ol21 year-ol- d d After their treaty is signed, Israel and Egypt are committed to opening negotiations on establishing autonomy hold by in Palestinian jiopuluted areas Israel Arab rejection of the looming Isiaol ersal Egy pt peace has been almost umv of Jordan, regarded as King IMc-eian Arab moderate, Thursday appealed to the world to give "genuine support" to the human rights of Palestinians so that some measure of hope in an eventual just peace in the Middle East Jordan has joined other may remain .Arab states in calling for Arab sanctions against Egypt if it signs the treaty United Forces Urged Sudan's President Gaafar Nimeiry, Sadats closest Arab ally, called on Arab leaders to stop bickering and join d forces to regain all Arab lands and "legitimate Palestinian rights Israeli-occupie- Hammed Shahati, international-relation- s chief for the Libyan Parliament, said Egypt was concentrating troops on its border with Libya and that Libya retains the nght to take any action against the alliance between Egypt and Israel. Libya and Egypt have frequently exchanged hostile charges and threats Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, speaking with ambassadors stationed in Israel, disclosed some new details of the final days of mediated by Carter, anc predicted the treaty would pass by a comfortable margin in the Israeli Parliament Israeli television estimated 90 of the houses 120 members would vote for it treaty-bargainin- |