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Notre Dame Mich St 11 1 21 Air Force 13 L 13 LTEP 26 Ohio St Colorado St 35 35 Tulsa E Michigan )3 It twQ Vol 238 No 163 SC 3 38 Mitbouri 35 33 Mexico Ne 4 Idaho Weber Mate 46 33 Mune L' -- Maud Ha 12 September 24 1989 Salt Lake City Utah—Sunday Utah Teachers Plan Statewide Walkout Tomorrow non tax reduction representatives from 36 of the state's 40 school districts voted unanimously to have teachers stay home and lose one day of pay Utah Education Association President Jim Campbell said the four districts not represented at Saturday's meeting will follow the majority's lead The UEA also called on Gov Norm Bangerter to veto the Legislature's tax-cu- t proposal "if he is truly sincere about making education a top priority in the state" "We can't live on broken promises anymore" Mr Campbell told teacher representatives who attended a special meeting Saturday at UEA headquarters in Murray "Its time this state invested in education" However a veto would do little to help education said Francine Giani By Katherine Kapos Tribune Staff Writer 'Teachers from every school disnet in the state will stage a one-da"symbolic" walkout Monday hoping to convince Utah y legislators that education de- serves top ing priority Many !:4a1 fund- local t:oards of educa- 'ion around the state scrambled Saturday calling emergency meetn gs to see if schools could be Jim kept open Mon- on Final say closing schools day rests with the local boards Retaliating for a recent $384 mil Cbell Parents should be aware that even though teachers may not attend class on Monday the decision to close schools lies with local boards of education many of which planned emergency meetings after Saturday's announcement Most schools will probably be "The governor has not considered that as an option" she said of the veto "And while it would be symbolic in value it would do nothing to get more money for education" Ms Giani said the governor is not happy with the walkout He is pleased however that parents will be notified in advance and that it will not be a prolonged strike "We are not happy with their decision she said "But we do appreciate that they are giving notice to parents who had some frightening moments on Friday not knowing where their kids were and children not knowing where teachers were We are glad it is only a one-da- y thing That will allow us to be more effective in getting them what they want which is more money for edu Rencher with the State Office of Education "But many rural boards need the funding and may decide to keep schools open using volunteers parents and substitute teachers" Most schools will probably be closed but that decision lies with loEileen cal boards of education Rencher of the State Office of Edu- i'' !t': ' boards may decide to keep schools open using volunteers par 01 I - t:'4kiA t'4 ' - " t :1:-:':r- 4:::::- r:-- i:::i:':2 oi:::?r va-1::4::-'::- ' ::1qtY4C-i-- )a?: :v:w : : ':' ' i :::: 44-- f :'":::::: :::::1' ' :utg40m4144-4- Aclir!-tf-:r:A-:':-40x:: 4 "r:ii:::: ::::: 1 i -- fi 1 ' ie:0??i? g-- ' ::::::N:4:!::::':-:'4:A:f'-0ft-0Ziti- ta ! ::::::::::: 4 '''''''''''' :' ' ''tlit' ' i ' ' y 3401''i5 !:: ' :4:1"'"::::75:630rs4:FPe':4 ::: ''''''' '” 00101044411Z44146MigidNo4:'' ''' "::' ::k 4011 r - '''' '11'?:''6'''Pf140404415411 Z:f ? :""" :r1": 4- - :: 716000§4eAtk " :: '' ? :'' :::"-:::'- ' '''''' ::ki e-!- '" 4:' ' :: 7 i:::: ' Nrkitk411 ir - 4 ''' rj: ::::::: j4' ' :'" ":: ' -- 104'!'-3 '"! —Associcyted Press laseirthoto Bush declared seven counties in the state disaster areas paving way for federal help fi l''': ensure a new team of Russian inspectors will visit Utah next year US Secretary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze meeting in the serenity of Grand Teton National Park signed a memorandum of understanding the United States hopes will be a preliminary round to an "vent ual chemical-weapon- s treaty The agreement signed Saturday has two phases with the first phase including an exchange of general data on the chemical weapons capabilities of each side It will include visits to relevant military and civil facilities chosen by the host country The types of facilities to be visited are chemical weapons production and storage facilities and industrial chemical plants The phase one visits according to he agreement will begin by June 30 I 1990 Utah's Tooele Army Depot about 40 miles west of Salt Lake City stores about 43 percent of the US Chenaical weapons stockpile so the agreement will probably mean Soviet visits to Tooele next year Soviet inspectors have been in Utah for verification and monitoring of missile productions at the Hercules plant in Magna since the superpowers signed the INF Treaty Phase two of the memorandum of understanding will begin when the sides formally and jointly acknowledge the possibility that a to multilateral chemical-weapon- s trea- could be initiated within four months of the iime phase two will begin said a State Department spokesman Phase two would include the exchange of detailed data on both sides chemical weapons capabilities and inspections to help verify the data declarations Each side would be able to conduct up to five inspections of facilities chosen from a list of sites declared by the other plus up to ten "challenge" inspections at facilities that were not declared A challenge inspection is a surpr ise inspection calleo by the country doing the inspecting of the ten challenge inspect ions allowed in phase two up to li e challenge inspections pei side can take period be place In the tore a formal ClIonlieni weapons treaty would he initialed tio to five additional challengf Hi See A2 Column I on-sit- e Superpowers Sign Arms Accords By Paul Roily Tribune Staff Writer JACKSON Wyo — US and Soviet negotiators signed six arms-contrand international-trave- l agreements Saturday and solidified plans for a superpowers summit next year The negotiators — US Secretary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze — also broke ground on a Strategic Arms Reduction Talks or START and a US proposal to open up the skies to unarmed aircraft "This is our harvest" Shevardnadze said as he gestured toward the stack of agreements on a picnic table in the back yard of the MK Ranch in Teton National Park "It is very good" The most important agreements were a Memorandum of Understanding to the exchange of information on chemical weapons stockpiles and a promise to notify each other before initiating major strategic military exercises Baker also announced the chemical-weapon- s agreement was a precursor to a proposal President Bush plans to make to the United Nations Monday to eventually ban all chemical weapons in the world Shevardnadze also announced the Soviets would unilaterally dismantle a radar facility in Siberia that US intelligence suspects of having offensive nuclear capabilities But the Soviet official said his side would want the Western allies to consider dismantling similar radar facilities in Great Britain and Green- 2 Arts Business Classified Common Carrier Crossword Editorials Ellerbee Entertainment 5 I E-- 2 W- - I E-- Food Lifestyle Foreign 0 flail Intermountain NV-- 5 A-3- 6 Local Local Jumble W-- 2 National Obityaries 3 Public Forum A-2- 2 Sports Star Gazer Washington Foday s four-mont- A-- 9 A-- l orecast Lake CO and vicinit — Mostly Sunny and continued mild Itivhs 80s LAM'S Fi Os Details It B-- t411-iii- A third important arms-contr- agreement signed Saturday is an "umbrella agreement" on verification and stability measures on nucle- ar arms that Baker called "a major deadlock breakthrough of a on verification issues He expressed optimism that the umbrella agreement on verification and a Soviet initiative to allow the implementation of START without first having a treaty on Star Wars have smoothed the path toward a formal 4 '" ' 7- !: - 4 ' ' c T' i'' iPIK3P16"" :::'::::::101-:1::f:::j:::'!:f ':: - 4 7:ii2' ':'W:311v :''''4 '') 4t ''':: "' t '' 4::i!!!!!7777 4' - ? 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'' il 1041k ?t- - ir 1:t' : : : 15-ye- 4 I: '':'':' it il 4' : ': ': : ) I I : :: §i"' : '' 3 ?' it 4: 1 ' ' ' -- " ' 'i: )! ' t 4 4:- 'T - c - si:- ' : i'i '' '' seek next year Republicans mediocre ' t" 'ec -- '' -3 I :e - - i ' ' ' ' - t ? s ': '4 il ''' gi '1" 0AVPI i ' fo "' 4'4)-- '' - 't 1'L i '' : : - i ' f : l r ' ' :: '''1 ': ' I iv : I fri arms-limitatio- n treaty Baker said it was possible such a treaty could be ready by the time President Bush and Mikhail GorbaColumn 2 See A-- 2 Niss international Photo Secretary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze penned six agreements on Saturday US Will 'Always' Love Irving Berlin By Glenn Fowler New York Times Writer NEW YORK — The marquee lights of Broadway playhouses wefe dimmed 30 minutes before curtain time Saturday night in memory of Irving Berlin the songwriter whose tunes were heard in nearly a score of shows over the decades and who died Friday at the age of 101 A private funeral is planned by Berlins family said a representative of the Frank E Campbell Funeral Chapel where the body was taken from the Berlin town house at 17 Beekman Place A memorial service will be held at a later date Berlin who wrote 1500 songs in a career that began in his teens was serenaded posthumously Friday night by John Wallowitch a composer and cabaret performer and some friends For the last two decades Wallowitch has organized similar serenades outside Berlin's home on Christmas Eve Ile said he planned a larger candlelight vigil Sunday night The man yho w rote the words and melodies of -- White Christmas-Alexander s Rag Easter Parade -- time Band" "Always" "There's No Business Like Show Business" and many other popular songs was remembered on Saturday with words of praise and fondness President Bush said that Berlin was "a legendary man whose words and music will help define the history of our nation" Just minutes be fore the president's statement was released he joined a crowd of thousands to sing Berlins "God Bless America" at a luncheon in Boston Former President Ronald Reagan who had a featured role in the 1943 Berlin musical "This Is the Army" said: "Nancy and I are deeply saddened by the death of a wonderfully talented man whose musical genius delighted and stirred millions and will live on forever: Ginger Rogers who danced to Berlin tunes with Fred Astaire told The Associated Press on Saturday that -like working with Berlin had been -heaven" using a line from Cheek to Todavs Chuckle Mothers know which side the the side the bread is buttered on kids drop on the floor THE UTAH POLL El which have deteriorated since the ® last check by the Utah Poll On the other hand the performance rating of Democratic Rep Wayne Owens has improved and be does not appear vulnerable at this time These deductions were drawn from a recent evaluation of the three representatives The survey was sponsored by The Salt Lake Tribune and conducted by Bards ley & Neidhart Inc an inde- ! : Both have marks - 47 41 ' 0 ": f va ? ?:1: '''''‘1!' ''::?4:'1 '':'l :1 ' if :35:1 ::- l : z : (4 :A4r trouble if they pi"::wci "'-- Wv ': r14!k rc: 4 :y: ' 1 1:: ' ?- : job-perf- -: '?- II '':: :: 1' :f!i ' :': ' ' :4 4 'q '': :i1:°' A-- 2 By J Roy Bards ley Judging from their mance ratings Reps James Hansen and Howard Nielson could be in : :ii:::::: At a Charlotte mall a panicky crowd hoping to get ice in a parking lot started pushing and shoving and police were called There were no injuries or arrests "It wasn't a riot but it could have been" said police Lt Mike Connolly "There was some pushing and shoving cursing just some hot tempers" At another mall motorists turned one lane of a road into a parking lot when they jumped out of their cars to get ice that was being distributed Authorities reported 20 incidents of looting and 30 arrests in North Carolina since Hugo struck: 89 arrests were made in South Carolina Column 4 See Owens Gaining Approval But GOP Duo Slips : i::ttx::14ii::e4r: i t 4 iz:1f eo ' ? i-?tvi- 111 ':Ç't "' lr: ' iti : 1 ::: ::' ': ':: 0-'' $ : ' :: (1z::::tiii(uF4:?1"41ty:?:::::!i land Inside The Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers on A-- :!':?' 11104r7:74 -i- V agreement Saturday to monitor chemical weapons that will almost through Virginia West Virginia western Pennsylvania and western New York state The hurricane which left at least 27 people dead in the Caribbean was blamed for an additional 21 deaths in the Carolinas Virginia and New York In Charleston the hardest-hi- t city on the mainland many residents remained without electricity or telephone service Saturday Long lines formed at the few service stations that had generators to pump gas which reportedly was being sold for alLip to $450 per gallon The state ready has requested federal relief -- Could Be By Paul Roily Tribune Staff Writer JACKSON Wyo — The United States and Soviet Union signed an after progressively weakening v14 :?::1A'vtrr'' 14:::?3 i !'?i i:':2: i:l:4°''it') v More Inspectors Sununit Certain Visiting Utah 2 over Canada's St Lawrence Valley By Bruce Smith Associated Press Writer CHARLESTON SC — Tempers ran high Saturday as residents waited in long lines for ice and food amid damage from Hurricane Hugo that authorities said could top $3 billion statewide Police arrested dozens of looters d Confronted with reports of goods the city later enacted an emergency law to stop price gouging at newly reopened stores In North Carolina Gov Jim Martin sent 200 National Guard and other security officers to Charlotte and asked President Rosh to declare a in 51 North federal disastet Carolina counti Hugo meanw ittit- wore itself out high-price- -- 4z:fy5 '" 4 :4 4i0''5' ::'' Policeman walks down what's left of Ocean Front Road in Garden City SC President t' 4ex :!::::::-fpt::::k:: ::c1:14::—:1 31": 44a :: 7A:itir1:J:v:1::4:"!q3 :::: X4 0:: :!:!:i4:J:7 "' 4":101f:::"ii?::1E:::::ii ir '!''':::':!:::::::'":::""::::14'":: :dr ::::::x '? mi 447":" ::-40":- ' '"4641144Mi p' 1:fe 4'"V:"Y' ::::4:0:::::::::::::::::: ' '''0tir''410rq'i°''Ug'g4''' wii40:' "'':i!'!:!'::'' ' - :"--- ::::::ff61:::: 1' !'5':'''444!-:''':-:'''I:-::"4i?'i-- f and other elected officials to develop a written educational plan before the January session of the Legislature Among other items about $12 million is needed to meet Utah's textbook needs and UEA will fight for a 5 percent raise for teachers Mr Campbell said The organization wants teacher salaries to be on line with the rest of the nation within five years Utah teachers now make about $4500 less each year than the national average Mr Campbell suggested that a mediator possibly former Gov Scott Matheson could be involved in the process l‘ledia representatives were not allowed in Saturday's meeting which See A-- Column 5 Looting Flares Up On Carolina Coast - :' :'::' '11"rreA-- say they will demand a special meeting with Gov Bangerter legislators y "Many rural cation explained A 1:'0e5'f :?:41V:::11 h explained said Eileen closed ' 4 a t ents arid substitute teachers" she said Hoping to unite its members U EA will sponsor a rally on Monday for all Utah teachers administrators and school employees at 2 pm in Liberty Park A vice president from the National Education Association is expected to attend Mr Campbell said The teacher union is also asking litahns who support education to turn on their headlights while they drive After Saturday's vote U EA representatives were told to go back to their respective districts and contact all union members about the one-dastrike The walkout will affect about 20000 education employees and more than 435000 students Mr Campbell said If there is no veto Utah teachers cation" she said Gov Bangerter's spokeswoman Cheek" one of the hit songs from the 1935 film "Top Hat" in which sbe starred with Astaire Morton Gould the composer and conductor w ho is president of the Ameican Society of Composers Authors and Publishers of which Berlin was a founder said on Saturday in a telephone interview -What to me is fascinating about this unique genius is that he touched so many people in so many age groups over so many years He sounded our deepest feelings —happiness sadness celebration loneliness When you say Easter you think immediately of 'Easier Parade' Say Christmas and you think of 'White Christmas' Noting that Berlin had had only a couple of years of formal schooling and no musical training at all Gould said "Its amazing that he could develop such sophistication both from a musical and a lyrical standpoint Ascap which staged a tribute to Berlin at Carnegie Hall last year to mark his 100th birthday is planning a memorial at a date not yet selected said Stanley Adams a former presi dent of the organization pendent and impartial research organization Where Owens was given a good report card by a majority of voters scores polled the of Hansen and Nielson fell below the 50 percent mark Here are the pictures as perceived by Utah voters Job Performance Howard Wayne James Nielson Owens 'Hansen It 7t c Excellent 45 39 35 Good Fair 31 23C'i 31 7 8 Poor I 9 co 15 9 Undecided The job performance of the three congressmen was last checked in November 1987 At that time bolt) Nielson and Hansen w ere rated excellent or good by 50 percent of the district's electorate which is 7 to 8 points higher than their present performance marks Owens score however has jumped from 54 percent to 60 percent a gain of 6 points Owens and Hansen are expected t a next year but run for Nielson who is now 65 has indicated be may retire when his current term expires raLooking at tings by political affiliation Owens was the only congressman commend ed by Republicans Democrats and independents alike Members of all three parties had mixed emutions about Nielson-- performance w hie Hansen was praised by Republicans but criticized by Denmerats and independents These results are based on approximately 200 telephone interview h in each congressional district w ith a maximum error range of plus or triintis 7 percent t |