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Show If" ' The ShH I lake Tribune, Sunday, May 1.1, 1 Memories of Love. Warmth , Humor an d Caring Mother Continued From Page One cleaning business. "I rcim-mlxwhen I was about 1 year- - eld, ittinjg nest to her on a chair watching her iron clothes Don Shula. the coach of pro footballs Miami Dolphins, said hi mother, Mary, of Painesville, Ohio. has been a big influence in my Mo. She was very neat and industrious and I try to be that way. Sarah Jessica Paiker. tire actress who is the latest -- star of the Broadway smash I got from my said: Annie, mother my frankness. Neither of us hold anything hack. We sav what wo think. And I got from her my love of little children except when theyre Associated Press Can you match the stars with their mothers? The mothers on the top row from (he left are: Mrs. Marion Mahoney, mother of Suzanne Sommers, bottom right: Mrs. Ilse Winkler, mother of Ilenry Winkler, Itottom center; Mrs. crying. Her first memory? laserc-- Associated Press Writer Hundreds of demonstrators chanting Stop the war on blacks and poor joined folk singers Joan Baez and Peter Yarrow Saturday in a protest march against the death penalty in the state they called tin capital of the Death Belt." About 500 persons, carrying such signs as Capital punishment is for those who dont have capital, marched from the Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center about a mile to the state Capitol for a rally. Ban on Executions The protesters called for a ban on executions and made a special plea for John Spenkclink, a Florida death who has exhausted all avenues of appeal. Spenkclink has asked Graham to commute his sentence. No date for the execution has been set. We are small at this point, but we are committed, and we will continue the struggle, Rick Reed of the Georgia Clearinghouse on Prisons and Jails told the group before the Capitol stops. Undoubtedly people will be killed, but we will not stop until we have eliminated the practice of state executions, Reed said. Yarrow, of the former Peter, Paul and Mary singing group, said, We cannot allow people to believe that a death penalty will in any way act as a deterrent to crime. All we can know is dethat the death penalty will humanize us all. About 35 groups were represented among the marchers, including Jewish and Christian groups and local antideath penalty organizations. Ms. Baez, who called herself a nonviolent activist, said, I have no right to take part in taking anybodys life" and called on those who consider themselves psychologically sound" to speak out against capital punishment. Gerhardt Ellston, the executive director of Amnesty International U.S.A., said his group opposes the death penalty, which it calls a form of torture. Just as we believe that no one for no reason whatsoever should be tortured, we believe that no one for no reason whatsoever should be killed, Ellston said. You cant be against killing but allow a little killing. Welcomed Protesters h penalty lawyer Millard Farmer welcomed the protesters to Georgia, which he called the state that has executed more people than any other state in the union. Farmer, who has taken part in about 21X1 capital punishment cases, introduced two members of the Dawson 5, five black men he successfully defended in a capital punishment case in Dawson, Ga. Reed said Atlanta was chosen as the site for the National March Against Death primarily because this state has executed more people than any other state in the D.S. and because its one of the three Southern states w it h the largest death row populaton. Georgia, which has executed l.sd ATLANTA Gov-Bo- ... Anti-deat- people, currently has 74 men and one woman on death row. Texas, with 105 condemned men. has the second highest death row- population after Florida. OplKinents of capital punishment in - blue-coll- one-bloc- k Carter Relaxes In Privacy At Hideaway PresiCAMP HOOVER, Va. (AP) dent Carter relaxed in what was described as maximum privacy Saturday at this rustic presidential fishing camp in Shenandoah National Park. About the only excitement reported m Carters stay was the sighting of a bear by one of the park rangers encircling the president's hideaway, according to park spokesman Bill Loftis. Thats not too uncommon," said Ixiftis. He said about 300 hears inhabit the park, which stretches in a narrow band through parts of Virginia's d Blue Ridge Mountains. Park rangers blocked all hiking trails approaching the unfenced and normally unguarded encampment, a cluster of three cabins built as a fishing retreat for President Herbert Hoover and principally by congressmen and other high government officials. Secret Service agents set up another security ring w ithin the rangers circle. But hiking along the Appalachian Trial, which passes within about a mile of the camp, was not interrupted by the presidents stay. Although trout fishing is allowed in the streams that converge to form the Rapidan River a stones throw from Carters doorstep, Loftis said he had been told Carter was interested mainly in relaxing and had given specific that he be afforded instructions "maximum privacy. Carter reportedly planned to make it weekend by flying by a three-da- y helicopter early Monday morning to Virginia Beach, Va., for a day of deep sea fishing. Accompanying him for the weekend are wife Rosalynn and daughter Amy. now-use- Cab Driver Punches Passenger, Victim Dies in Police Station - routine NEW YORK (AP) dispute over a eat) tare suddenly twisted when a frustrated cabbie slugged his passenger on the back of the neck, police say. The man crumpled to the station house floor. Two hours later he died. A manslaughter charge was filed against cabbie William Alicea on Saturday as police pondered how a common fare dispute turned to death their eyes. Lt. Richard Gallagher said the driver's decision to involve police was That's what cab drivers are proper: supiwised to do. If the passenger doesnt have the fare, the cabbie is supposed to drive to the nearest police station." Hits Customer Twice He said the mediation of Alicea's dispute Friday night had been going as smooth as silk." Then, in what Gallagher described as "an act of utter frustration, Alicea allegedly turned on his passenger and hit him with "two shots in the back of the head. A I argue that the death penalty continues to lx- imposed in an arbitrary fashion, pointing out that the 11 Southern states of the old Confederacy currently house 83 percent of the 494 people under death sentences across the country. - The passenger's "knees buckled and he went down, said Lt. Terrence God. Police and paramedics were unable to revive him, and the still unidentified man died at Bellevue Hospital without regaining consciousness. The medical examiner was trying to determine the cause of death. A Strange Tragedy It was a fluke, a strange said Geil. ' tragedy," Only $3 was found in the victims pocket not nearly enough to cover the fare from Kennedy Airport, where the man hailed the cab and asked to be taken to the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Somewhere en route, he told Alicea he did not have the money to pay the fare and the cabbie looked for help from the police. He (Alicea) laid out his case," said Geil. "The guy (the passenger) was drunk and he (Alicea) didnt think he was going to get paid. He realized he was going to lose a $16 to $18 fare. He lost his temper." Wests Calm By United Press International Tornadoes in Ohio killed an elderly CUP I ! E B I I Li in Hospital RICHMOND, Study Proposal 1 10 a m., Sunday befoie Home Delivery Information, IMonday-Friilav- 2 1 News Dept. Sports Dept. Lifestyle 0 a i 1 ! B Ad- - B B Mag. & Aits 8 B 5 9 B 1 1 B fl Salt Lake City and County Elsewhere in Ltah (Dial Toll Free) 5 B B Advertising Departments Adv. Dispatch General Display2-'!7-27l- Classified Ads Retails Display 2 l m B B B Sports Scores B 1 p hi.) Promotion Editorial Page Publisher F.xec. Editor 5 Weekday s before 5 p m. Weekdays after 5 p m. Sundays after2p.m. Saturdays after p.m. 1 Toll-Fre- e in Ilah 4 2.17 2000 B B Obituary Notices B 5 il.,. S.ll, site saul she lu-mother as in t very young and very pretty tit. vti renn-inbere- Fntertamer Carol Burne't said her mother was most responsible for her enjoyment of humor. Her first memory od her mother was heme held in her arms in (San Antonio1 Texas. where Carol was born Frances Davis Burtenshuw, a a? year-olmother of eight from liOgan. Ctah, who was named Friday as the American Mother of the Year, said she romeiulxTS her mother being always at home and always loving and caring She had a great sense of humor. She said she acquired from her my love of children." Margaret Truman Daniels said if she had to name any one tv trait she acquired from her mother, Bess, of Independence. Mo it's probably hav me. my feet on the ground Mrs She was always Daniels said of her nioth r d . tln-tv,- y Continued From Page One eight days before she died, when Cedars-Sina- i released her after treatment for pneumonia. A spokeswoman for the hospital then denied reports circulating that Miss Hutton was living on a diet of Coca Cola. Her frequent travels to exotic places began when her father sent her on a trip to discourage a romance. But Alexis Mdivani. who claimed the title of prince of the old state of Georgia, now part of Russia, pursued her to Bangkok. She married Mdivani when she was 20 years old. A few months later, she came into her $20 million inheritance. Mdivani died in a 1935 auto accide nt, shortly after their divorce. One day after, that divorce, she married wealthy Danish nobleman That Count Kurt Haugwitz-Reventlowas her longest marriage, ending in divorce six years later after the birth of a son. Lance, who dabbled in auto killed in July 1972 in a racing and plane crash in the Rixky Mountains. His estate went to his wife, Cheryl. In 1942, Miss Hutton married British-boractor Cary Grant a marriaee that lasted three years. She later said he was the husband she loved the most but that his career got in the way. He was so sweet, so gentle," she said. During divorce proceedings in 1945, she complained he did not like my friends. When he came down and my friends were there he obviously didnt look amused. Her fourth husband was Lithuanian Prince Igor Troubetskoy, whom she married in 1917. That marriage until 1951. In 1953, she married international playboy Porfiro Rubirosa. the Doir.m-caRepublics minister to France round-the-wor- B 5 I other States) Daily and Sunday (Ail other State 17 SO month Continued From Page One The North Dakota AAA said there would le no more weekend closings than normal. And a check of 197 stations along major tourist routes in Michigan showed 139 would be open Sunday, the AAA said. In the Detroit area, however, it found that 46 out of 96 stations would close Sunday, two stations were dosed all weekend, and three were limiting sales. in California, Pacific Telephone Co. predicted 4 million more people would make calls on Mothers Day than did last year. Demand for flower deliveries al-- o was up, florists said. Im sure that 90 percent of them are calling because they want us to use our said Sylvia gas. instead of them, an employee of Windys Discount Florist in San Diego. n Operators of public transportation reported a boost in business. Amtrak sjwrkesman James Bryant said the railroad received a record 219. Ouo calls to reservation center.-acrothe count rv for this weekend la-t- ss CRPP Homss 3i) evFtns products compftnY FINISH-IT-YOURSE- HOUSE LF Tlc tiiinic you ill.mU - r :e your, - nn.v' Qo.ility coiislrut tiuii BmU you mil,!)-from ynur ele.r, m Lapp a Id tun nf nve, bJ tome ileu-pifm.inrwl mre Avail. liilr Second c1 postage paid at Sail Lake City. Utah. By Mall Deity and Sunday (Utah, Idaho, hevade and Wyoming) $5 75mn. Daily and Sunday (Utah, Nevada. 6 00 year Idaho, Wyoming) Daily Only (Utah, Idaho, Nevada S3 SO mo and Wyoming) Sunday Only (Utah, Idaho, NevaS3 00 mo. da end Wyoming) Daily and Sunday (All Gas Shortage Will Curl) Auto Travel ld s Established April 15. 1871, lv sued every morning by the KeeroTribune Corporation, Salt Lake City. Uiahft4H0. Carrier Delivery 15 25 month Dally and Sunday t&3 00 year Daily and Sunday Sunday Only C. 75 month wen-expecte- Rabs Hutton. 66, Dies In California Oi' subscription Rates we exhaust all evidence that someone might or might not he alive." a spokesman said. The rescue effort was on the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. 57 feet below the surface, 12 miles south of Galveston. We have gained entrance to the and made stateroom under the heli-pa- d a number of searches, but found nothing," said Steve Utthoff. vice president of Schaefer Diving Co. of Freeport. The divers by the end of the day to get into the various airtight compartments on the platform. It was in some of the compartments that officials feared bodies would bo discovered. The Ranger I rig collapsed Thursday night about 12 miles off Galveston and had been partially submerged until Friday night, when a storm caused the platform to sink. Its looking pretty grim, Coa-- t Guard Lt. Gabe Kinney said of fading hopes to find survivors. These air pockets wouldnt sustain life for 40 hours, said Coast Guard spokesman Tommy Clemmons. n W0I All unsolicited articles, menus cripts, letters and pictures sent to The Salt Lake Tribune are sent at the owner's risk and Kearns Tribune Corporation assumes no responsibility tor their custody or return. deck until GALVESTON, Texas (AP) Diving teams reached the wreckage of a sunken drilling rig Saturday but found no sign of eight men missing and feared platform trapped when the collapsed with 34 workers aboard The divers working with only three feet visibility and hampered by debris which snagged their air hoses entered the wreckage late Saturday morning, and continued their efforts all day. Were going to work around the B B New Subscriptions & Cancellations vunce pay Mail Subscriptions 1 - B 8 a m. to 3 p m.) , Information I (USPS4- (Weekdays before Art Dept. I A charCHESHIRE, Conn. (AP) tered Continental Trailways bus carrying vacationers home from an ocean cruise spun off Interstate 84 in an attempt to avoid a crashed tractor truck Saturday. Two persons died in the two accidents, state police said. Officials said at least 44 persons were injured and taken to two Waterbury hospitals. At least four were reported in serious condition. A woman who saw the accident said it looked like people were being shot from a cannon. as passengers were thrown through bus windows by the force of the bus accident. 2bf is alt Take Jribnif HERES WHERE TO CALL I E SAVE Crashes Kill 2 need Information, want sports scores, story or feature you want to talk about? Is your paper missing? Do you want to discuss a classified or display advertisement? & Elizalx-t- DENVER (AP) United Airlines negotiators studied a counter-proposfrom striking machinists Saturday as the strike against the nations largest carrier hit its 43rd day. A spokesman for the National Mediation Board said that study could continue through the weekend. You just dont get immediate reaction. or settlement, or turndown. said Meredith Buel. The carrier is still studying the-- counter proposal and that could go on ... through tomorrow (Sunday), for all we know now. Federal mediator Robert Harris had convened the disputants firrt face meeting Friday. Do you have a news Carrier Va. (AP) Taylor was admitted to Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington on Saturday for scheduled oral surgery-- . A spokesman for the actress' husband, U.S. Sen. John W. Warner, said she would be in the hospital for several days. Tribune Telephone Numbers 1 I & rains forced Richard McGrath, 65, and his wife, Mary, 67, to park their pickup truck on the side of Ohio 13 near Somerset in Perry County. High winds knocked a tree onto the trucks cab and the couple was killed instantly, authorities said. Tornadoes also touched down in Guernsey and Coshocton counties, damaging at least three commercial buildings and a bam. Meanwhile, thunderstorms pounded inch eastern and central Ohio. One-hal- f of hail was reported by a ham radio operator in Bolivar and winds of 61 mph were recorded in a thunderstorm at the Zanesville airport. 140-ye- 1 8 Workers Still Missing Tornadoes Kill Sinks After Rig Drilling 2 in Ohio. Heavy through a plate glass window, police said. One of the victims, Doris Hopp, 49, was crushed by flying debris as she waited for a bus across the street from the site, police said. Witnesses told us there was a black male in the bar who is still unaccounted for, a police spokesman said Saturday. We have him confirmed in the bar 15 minutes before the explosion. The blast leveled George's Bar and an adjoining, unoccupied rnwhouso. It also triggered a fire that burned for about 14 hours and damaged a second row house, police said. The explosion was fueled by gas spewing from a damaged main under the street, according to the Philadelphia Gas Works. PGW spokesman Don Kenley said the slightest spark would have ignited the gas that then collected underground. Within Minutes That sort of thing happens within minutes when you have a major break in a major main, he said. The main apparently broke when earth washed out from under it. creating an underground cavern. Kenley said officials didn't know how big the cavern was, but he noted that a bulldozer helping remove debris sank through the street Saturday. "I smelled gas all day, A1 Green, a local resident, said Friday. But Kenley said the first call about the odor was recorded at 2:49 p.m. 'three inspectors reached the scene minutes before 3 p.m., led by PGW veteran Edward Brown, 47. Occurs at 3:08 occurred at 3 05. Brown blast The was among the victims. Its the first time, at least in modern times, that we have lost an employee, Kenley said. "Its by far the worst accident in PGWs history. The victims, in addition to Mrs. Hopp and Brown, were identified as Henry Traynor, 38; Gerald Ladzenski, 26; Anthony Kasiewski, 54; Harry Smith, 50, and Alfred Kahrklinsch, about 62. Bar owner George Martin, 53, was in stable condition Saturday at the St. Agnes Hospital Bum Center with multiple hums and other injuries. Two persons were hospitalized with serious injuries, and four others were in stable condition, a Frankford Hospital spokeswoman said. Eleven others were treated at area hospitals and released. I l p.l .S . llricfs couple and thunderstorms rumbled across the South and the Midwest Saturday, while the western half of the nation enjoyed mild, dry weather. Police Seek 8th Victim Of Gas Main Explosion Police are PHII.ADELIHLA (AP) searching for a possible eighth victim of a lxwming explosion which rotked a neighborhood and reduced two buildings to rubble after gas from a broken main ignited. Seven bodies have been recovered. At least 18 persons were injured Friday within a radius of the blast, which knocked a passing motorist unconscious and hurled an elderly man wa-abo- ut was I m .tv t think Athens, Ohio, where my family lived and 1 was lost in the snow. 1 was under a snow tunnel that my brothers and sisters had built and my mother found me. That's the first memory I have of knowing she Odessa Clay, Muhammad Ali's mother, bottom second from right; Mrs. Barbara Voighl. mother of Jon Voight, bottom second from left; Mrs. Laurie Williams, mother of Bobbin Stars and mothers. Williams, bottom left Hundreds Rally Against Executions, Call Georgia Death Belt Capital By Steele Holman 1 years old 2 U face that looked down on me tin re because 1 was lost and crying-Beverly Sills, former Met ropolitan Opera star and now director of the New York City Opera Company: T thought she was the most beautiful woman in the whole w orld. I remember her looking into a mirror, putting on this hat that had the most beautiful black veil. I was 3 When I was 2. I remember her seal wearing a big seal fur coat was legal then and I would bury my head into this coat that was jurt the warmest thing." Her mother, Shirley Silverman, who lives in New York, is jut as warm, she said I cot my cheerfulness from her. Shes always cheerful. Shes always htoking .it side of things " Nancy Friday, who wrote the bestselling book My Mother. said her mother. Jane. for my extreme sense of respon-ihihtof which I am veiv proud." fl ui.-- ynui l Law, R To . D jie .eiilalne fur yum fT-- t f RE t UiO page linu'e planning quote CAPP80MFS 4525 Noithpuili Diem DCPT DU 0409 SINO FOR YOUR CAPP D HUME PLANNING 0 0 P'e.ise . . . Pi y 13" eje C nu) H..r-I've Pie Ids,- - .2 fl.l In ever ihe ,i,t a! Semf He ruin I Pi) :VfV.Vi(' , ' .va a liil INFORMATION 'ie"! p, r Guide ,1 h r H'ii m' li'n. eiy lit (limp ly oii H f' nr B ii NAME 0 0 0 ADDRESS year All mail subscriptions payabla In advance. 00 CITY STATE 2IP PHONE eO The Tribune Is a member of tt Assorieted Press T Aswted Pnm is entitled eiclutivety to the use of reoronurttan nf all krai news printed in this newspaper as wHl as all A P news dispatches. Member Audit Bureau of Circu lationa 0 0 0 Color, trio Springs, CO 61)9117 Salt Lake City Office: Bill Hammond and Charles Bowen 7145 South State Street Midvale, UT. (801) 1 For more information call (800) " MiWWTWW,.OTWWMrt,w iHinwfrf mrnWii 561-302- Toll-Fre- f " l'"1 ill 'inum in mn 1 52S-507- 4 v i. I u |