Show glib)? n 11 Vol 238 No 93 China Cites Summit For ?Interference' — I r eLY Associated Press Writer BEIJING — China denounced the seven leading industrialized nations Monday for their "gross interference" in calling on Chinese authorities to stop the crackdown on partici- pants in protests Instead the government made clear it plans to continue rounding up anyone involved in the seven weeks of protests for freedom democratic reform and cleaner government A report in the Communist Party newspaper the People's Daily said those who surrender will get lenient treatinent "All hesitation is useless" it said "Surrendering thoroughly confessing (and doing meritorious work is the only way out for all criminals" i e : I i 4 1 ) ' 1 'kv 14 i )-4- IL4t1 ' II f I i I 'P 4 4 j 1 r 1 4'' vio'-''- di '44or IN' ofit l '' OP V 7P ' wow i 1 I)q fi i 4 ' t4 1 T i 1 t A i ? A 1 't 1 I ll ' 1 ?' ‘stkti 1 ' 1 -- --- I : t -i I i dir4 ) ' ‘ - I I n l 1 i 4 ---- -- r) I 4 v i 1 o geous" Other hand-helsigns criticized US policy in Central America and demanded that abortion be kept legal Bush joked later "I'm not sure about some of those signs I saw coming in It reminded me of my own university however" Bush toured an exhibit of Pilgrim artifacts and was presented with a partial family tree showing he is descended from at least two Pilgrims who lived in Leiden before embarking for the New World in the 1620s Bush arrived in the Netherlands the last stop on his y European tour after visiting Poland and Hungary and attending economic summit talks in Paris where the seven richest industrial democracies received a Gorbachev proposal for integrating the Soviet economy with that of the West Saying that dramatic changes were under way in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union Bush cited Gorbachev's letter as "only the latest example of the Soviets' moving in our By Terence Hunt AP White House Correspondent LEIDEN Netherlands — President Bush rang the curtain down on his European odyssey Monday vowdivisions and ing to end East-Wepredicting that "ultimately whatever the odds freedom will succeed" Bush said Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev already is "moving in our direction coming our way" and he urged the Kremlin to chart a course "that brings itself into the community of nations" Bush spoke hopefully of the prospects for political and economic reforms throughout Eastern Europe in a speech delivered in this historic North Sea city where Rembrandt worked Hugo Grotius formulated theories of international law and the Pilgrims sought exile before sailing for the New World "The challenge we face is clear" Bush said "We must work together toward the day when all of Europe East and West is free of discord free of division" Thousands of cheering Dutch people lined Bush's motorcade route through Leiden waving American and Dutch flags A banner strung over the route read "Leiden is Geor i 4 - 4 —UPIReuter Photo President Bush with Queen Beatrix inspects the honor guard during first visit to Netherlands by a US president endured four decades of privation and hardship persecution and fear" Said Bush: "Today that 'other Europe' is changing The great wheel is moving once more Our time — the exciting time in which we live — is a time of new hope the hope that all of Europe can now know the freedom that you all in the Netherlands has known that America has known and that the West has known" "Our hope is that the unnatural division of Europe will now come to an end that the Europe behind thE wall will join its neighbors to the West prosperous and free" said Bush making the first visit to the Netherlands by any American president He said Poland and Hungary are moving at the forefront of political and economic reform traveling farther over the past year than anyone in the West once thought possible Delivering the last major speech of his European trip Bush spoke before several hundred people in Pieterskerk the Church of St Peter a huge cathedral dating to the early 12th century after conferring with leaders in The Hague the nearby See A-- 2 Column 1 d st I 1 f1 i F t i 0 t ' - I r--- I t4: '414 1 - ritiL amt '' 44'"' et' 1 4i - t 1 - t Chinese reaction to sanctions individually imposed by some of the seven including the United States and France after the Chinese army 2 ' ---- er tk'' !lk - 1 - iiges to End' EastamWest Divisions i ) ' "'1 -- 40 1 (' 11- '- The strongly worded message to The Foreign Ministry expressed "great regret" over the Paris summit's statement which it said "vioColumn 4 See A-- ' - the Group of Seven echoed earlier 10-da- direction" Tracing the rebuilding of Western Europe from the rubble of World War II he said that "the 'other Europe' — the Europe behind the wall Stealth I omber Is 'Nimble' on aiden light By Michael C Tipping United Press International EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE Calif — The B-- 2 stealth bomber the costliest warplane ever built successfully completed its maiden flight Monday morning soaring gracefully into a clear desert sky but an uncertain future in Washington The $530 million radar-evadinbomber shaped much graphite-gra- y like a bat streaked across the Mojave Desert for two hours flying in long lazy circles at 10000 feet Framed by a brilliant sunrise the plane took off at 6:36 am from a runway at an Air Force plant in Palmdale 60 miles north of Los Angeles where it was assembled in -secrecy by Northrop Corp With Northrop test pilot Bruce J Hinds and Air Force test pilot Richard S Couch at the controls the B-completed its first-eve- r flight at 8:29 am landing at Edwards Air Force Base 25 miles from where it took commander of Air Force System Command as "a historic day in avia- off terrent posture" Randolph was asked whether the Air Force was concerned the g super- 2 An attempt to take off Saturday was scuttled by a glitch About 200 reporters and photographers and a handful of invited guests stood along the runway Monday to witness what was characterized by Gen Bernard Randolph fuel-syste- Inside The Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers on A-- 3 AsImov Quiz Business Classified Comics Crossword A-- 7 C-1- -5 C-6- 7 8-- 5 Editorials Entertainment Foreign Intermountain A-1- 0 D-- 7 A-4- A-- 5 Lifestyle Local Local National A-8A-7- 9 B-1- D-- C-- 8 A-2- Obituaries Public Forum Sports Star Gazer 8 3 B-- 4 A-1- 1 D-1- C-- 7 Television Washington D-- 6 A-2- 3 Today's Forecast Salt Lake City and vicinity — Mostly sunny skies and warmer days Highs 90s Lows 60s Details B-2 Moon-Rock- tion" "It's going to be a very simple plane to fly It's a very nimble Price Tag of B-- A $ 1 ' 1 where a $70 billion price tag con- - 7100"1-44)''''- ° $ 1 1 $ for the House ' 4 1 - 4 1 1 B-- 2 4 —Associated Bat-shape- $530 million d B-- 2 stealth bomb- - er lifts from runway at Palmdale Calif I Press Laserphoto Poland Poland is the first Warsaw Pact nation and only the second communist-ruled country — the other being Yugoslavia — to have full diplomatic relations with the Vatican The Vatican statement announcing of relations at ambassador level said it was "in consideration of the noble tradition of many centuries of ties existing between the Apostolic See and the Polish nation" and said both sides were "desirous of developing mutual friendly relations" The diplomatic restoration was seen as imminent July 1 when the Vatican published a letter sent by the pope to Polish Primate Cardinal Jozef Glemp in April saying he intended to send a "diplomatic representative" to Warsaw even though a formal convention governing church-stat- relations had yet to be e signed Today's Chuckle Toupee: top secret Vatican sources said the of diplomatic relations will hasten final agreement on the details of the accord worked out in negotiations between the Catholic bishops and the government in 1 '4 said "Everyone here should be ashamed this thing hap- pened" Rudolph now 84 retired in January 1970 after helping send two spaceships to the moon and moved to San Jose Calif where he lived in relative obscurity for 14 years His tranquil retirement ended when the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations raised allegations that during World War II he was involved in the deaths of thousands of concentration-camprisoners who were forced to work in a V-- rocket factory where he was technical director Those allegations were backed LIP by some survivors Rather than fight the allegations Rudolph left the country returning to Hamburg West Germany A two-yeinvestigation there found no offense against Rudolph and returned his citizenship Rudolph did not return phone calls to his Hamburg residence Monday One of his friends and former colleagues in Huntsville Walter Haeussermann said Rudolph was doing no interviews on the 20th anniversary because "so many things have been distorted" Three weeks ago Huntsville television station WHNT caught up with Rudolph at a scientific convention in Salzburg Austria where he gave his last interview and talked about wanting to return to Huntsville In the interview he acknowledged "forced labor" worked for months underground without seeing daylight but he said that was not his decision Ile said he p 2 '‘ ' B-- : months draft of the convention was sent to the pope in January the sources A Designers Unhappy US Seared et ' - ' s - k B-1- B 1 ' - ' : A 1 I r I i B-- 2 (I' i 1 1 1 1 " B-- 2 Pope John Paul Ills Wishes Are Fulfilled Scientist Away Nazi-Er- a once gave the workers a break because they looked "very tired" "My boss called me on the carpet and said 'If you do that again I'll put you in a concentration camp' " Rudolph said He said the events of World War II must be put in perspective "That was of course a dictatorship If I didn't do what I had been told there was a high danger I would lose my life or be put in a concentration camp" he said Dannenberg 77 said efforts to clear Rudolph's name in the country he served for 25 years have failed Petitions to President Reagan went unheeded and efforts to get the Alabama Reunion Committee behind Rudolph's case were rejected by Chairman David Rumbarger because he feared it could jeopardize the group's status with the federal government All of von Braun's original team has retired from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and half of them — most in their 70s and 80s — are still living Von Braun died in 1977 Stuhlinger said he and some other von Braun members visited Rudolph three weeks ago at the Austrian convention "his physical health is good considering he's 84 years old But he's sad and depressed about the fate forced on him" said Stuhlinger who is 75 Monday's reunion was also a chance for more than 800 12-ho- non-prof- d Several leaders in Congress have such reservations about the cost and House Speaker Thomas Foley DWash acknowledged it faces trouble when his chamber considers the issue next week in the fiscal 1990 defense authorization bill "Right now I would say it's going to be an uphill fight" Foley said after Monday's demonstration He noted however that Defense Secretary Dick Cheney argued last week that the entire 2 program would consume a smaller portion of the defense budget than either the B52 or the bombers The Senate panel's senior Republican John Warner of Virginia has proposed a series of test program hurdles for the B2 and committee Democrat John Glenn of Ohio appeared to endorse those milestones Monday "We should not be going ahead and committing more money more dollars until we have a better definition from the test program" Glenn now said To those who think the will need no further costly changes he added: "I've got a bridge I want to sell you up in New York" Aspin without elaborating said he amendment plans to offer a when the defense bill arrives on the floor next week ---' recent said It is expected to be completed shortly after the arrival of the Vatican's Apostolic Nuncio or ambassador in Poland Along with its announcement of of relations the the Vatican issued a summary of diplomatic relations between the two states dating from Jan 13 1555 when the Holy See first sent an Apostolic Nuncio to the court of Polish King Sigismund I When Poland was partitioned between Russia Prussia and Austria in 1795 relations were severed until the end of World War I when Poland regained its independence - -- - price" voyage may Monday Successful first-eve- r not be enough to sell lawmakers on cost Vatican Restores Ties With Pope's Homeland VATICAN CITY (UPI) — The Vatican announced Monday it has restored full diplomatic relations with Pope John Paul II's native Poland the first such ties between the Roman Catholic Church and a Warsaw Pact nation The pope had no comment on the announcement made simultaneously by the Vatican and Poland Since Wednesday he has been on a private vacation in northwest Italy and his aides imposed a "press silence" Monday of full reBut the lations for the first time since 1945 reflected John Paul's untiring support for the Solidarity trade union movement during the seven years it was banned as well as his frequent public pleas in favor of Polish sovereignty Vatican sources said The return of Solidarity to legality in April coupled with other moves toward democratic "plurality" in Poland fulfilled the pope's wishes for j Armed is t He said the successful first flight should send a message to Congress that the program is worth its price tag in terms of the "value to our de- elai pro- Services Commit- Les Aspin tee Chairman Les after the Aspin bomber spent two hours in the desert sky around Palmdale Calif where it was assembled in years of secrecy by the Northrop Corp "The B-- 2 has still another hurdle to clear — the checkbook hurdle" explained Aspin who has told the Pentagon it will be impossible politically to spend as much as $8 billion a year in the early 1990s that the administration wants for the plane "The issue is whether it's worth the e- - B-- 2 " gram" warnel A e – questions "This is a giant leap for Northrop but one small step : - T tinues to raise performance today" could be made obsolete by advancements in radar "Not in any time that we're going to be around" he replied "We've been working on anti-Se- e A-- 2 Column 3 Hill Capitol Z The test pilots said they kept their maximum speed to less than 200 mph because the plane's landing gear was left down during the flight Couch asked whether the aircraft had any "kinks" still needing to be worked out answered with a grin "It's not a kinky airplane" Randolph beaming about the success of the newest weapon in the nation's arsenal said the B-- 2 "basically negates the air defenses that have been built up around the world We're extremely pleased with the 2 WASHINGTON (UPI) — The B-- 2 bomber's first flight got it past one hurdle Monday but did not diminish its controversy on e airair- craft" Congress Ready To Bat Around 1 i At a news conference about three hours after landing Hinds declared By Phillip Rawls Associated Press Writer HUNTSVILLE Ala — The scientists who designed the rocket that sent people to the moon 20 years ago reunited Monday to commemorate the event and to voice shame that the United States barred their project manager from attend- r ing Arthur Rudolph project manager for the Saturn V rocket at the Mar- iptat r shall Space Flight Center in Hunts- ville remained in voluntary exile in ' rA his native West Germany under threat of prosecution for alleged Nazi ' war crimes if he returned to the Unit- ed States 11 "Many believe this is a sad day" said retired NASA scientist Ernst Arthur Rudolph Stuhlinger who like Rudolph was one of 118 Germans who came with Wernher von Braun to America after World War II and helped start America's space program in Huntsville Another member of the von Braun brain trust Konrad Dannenberg said Rudolph's absence blights the nationwide festivities celebrating the 1969 Apollo 11 moon walk "It's a shame for the United States to send out a man who did so much for the United States" Dannenberg I r? 14:1 Bus Me t - ' ' 17117 1 i ' I sq r----- 41044 t ( I -4 Aor 4 4 r By Kathy Wilhelm 3-- k"f I e---' -- Salt Lake City Utah—Tuesday Morning July 18 19S9 Beijing Says Crackdown To Continue crushed the protests June AS 9 -- 1 ! it k Americans who worked with the German team to gather Many of them also felt Rudolph should be allowed to return Ed Buckbee director of the Space and Rocket Center in Huntsville was press spokesman for the von Braun team during most of the moon program US-bor- n '''øølg11111111117--- : at Pkt One 7 ' ) Stualltfy: es First )loont Valli on toolc N Colorful Coming iVednesdny a |