| Show ::!A 40-t- tc ate 0 4 4t r--- w 1 is-- 27 BYU SDSU 48 Miami-Fl- 27 Notre Dame Air Force Utah 42 38 Michigan Ohio St 16 llinnet‘ota rg hPittsburgh 13 Iowa 28 30 Tennetowe 7 Kentucky a Vol 239 No 43 Baylor Texas 18 - It Zbe l'etin St kl 1 Some Prisoners Freed j I 1111:i t(ir Dubeek Blasts Leaders 4'A "se:::: 9 '4-- ' '0 'AL: '- mgr'- '4 re- - forms 1': ' - I ' k4(f z ' rz:k The 9- belea- :' e guered govern- ment bowed to some of the pro- testers demands Karel Urbanek releasing a group of prominent political prisoners and declaring a willingness to give greater power Also Saturday the entire Communist Party leadership of Prague resigned under increasing pressure for reform There were indications the Prague party chief Miroslav Stepan was leaving the nation's ruling Politburo as well Politburo On Friday the resigned and the party's Central Committee replaced it Politburo containwith a nine-ma- n holdovers ining several hard-lincluding Stepan Another Central Committee meeting was planned for Sunday with the news agency CTK government-rusaying only that the gathering would deal with "political and organizational questions" Dubcek the reformer ousted after Warsaw Pact tanks crushed his ''Prague Spring" movement in 1968 was shown for the first time live on national television as he addressed a sea of roaring demonstrators at Letna field in northern Prague It was the largest rally in the nation's history "Long live Dubcek!" the people cried ''Dubcek to the Palace!" they li 1 n g policy-makin- 23'i'7AVC05-4- chanted referring to the official residence of Czechoslovakia's president Dubcek who was heckled just days earlier for making what some considered overly cautious comments unleashed his strongest public assault on Communist leaders in more than 20 years He said Friday's party changes had failed to go far enough "The changes did not meet the demands of the people" he said "The political leadership has lost touch with the people and the crisis has deepened "We appeal to the Central Committee that those who have caused the stagnation leave their posts and not obstruct further development of this country" said Dubcek 67 speaking putlicly for the third straight day Leading dissident Vac lav Havel welcomed the Politburo resignations but also told the crowd further changes were needed "Although some of the most diswere eliminated credited people we are deeply concerned by the new personnel lineup of our top party bodies" he said In a session that stretched See A-- 2 Column 4 ' k 31 18 31 10 Arizona Arizona St 28 1 t1tL ' : I '''' '' ' r ow I L7'' ' f ' ' itc p' & Czech Changes Get Cautious Cheers in US ' 4t fp t tie: r ' - -- - k 0 f 4 t !: - It : 11 ik - 4 ‘!- jz s3te - ': ty ' ' -- - - ' 74 lit 1IV' r 2' I ' k I iv 4 :' 2':sb: jr il q 'w ' ?- i t !4 ''' 572:- 1AI 40 ir4 '' : : 'I ' 4:- ' It 4 tr ' ' '" 511N1 Czech-languag- s - k vii 4 cfktyi1- A ? '4 ill 0 4:7) '' 4 Press LaserPhota opposition group stage rally for freedom and democracy at huge stadium In Prague e 101st Session Called 'Minimum' congress n By Pat Wechsler the 10Ist Congress which ended last week simply meant enacting enfArgh legislation to keep the government functioning for another year And almost all the bills passed — including the massive $147 billion deficit-re'- duction bill for which there was supposed to have been a deal struck last April between congressional leaders and President Bush — were completed within the last two weeks of an extended session Newsday Writer WASHINGTON — When members of Congress say "We did the minimum this session" they may not be talking about pushing a comparatively small increase in the nation's minimum-wag- e through the juggernaut of a periodically leaderless Congress and a vetoing president Many concede that "doing the minimum" during the first session of flag-wavin- g 04 v A$ 1 i ! yk ' r:ttz e- 0 ) 11oht 4'7'104 ' '' - dtv s 4 4 ' 7:—i': 1 Jr:a ' c - il t c Al''''''A '' :'''": - 7 : i r f e:: :: t''-?::-i017 194: ::: ''': :4 ti9 $ II:ki '4 ' tok ''' '1444--m- 0 '' le ' c ::: '4' 'eI3 ril:::::!:4:':::'''' :i1:4 :'4r-444)1- ' i :: " N ' '' (tz'fff ! '' " ' - ' ::': t i ' :' tif' 3 '" k4-4- 4- :::': ' '1i1 :: ':4):: '':' : tl f'?- :- - : - - " iii- o - t"::t'i i1:i 49- '4I:‘ l?:IP:: ::r :II lig :: 4 r '4: d Mouawad IF: t e ''''' ' (:' ::?: k 4 r - named a new gov- ernment to end 14 years of civil war His predec- cesor slain after 17 days in office was buried In a rare dis- play of national Aunity businesses in both Moslem Elias Ilrawl and Christian ar- eas closed for a nationwide day of mourning for Rene Mouawad killed by a bomb Wednesday Church bells rang and bands struck slow drum beats as his flag-drape- d - —Associated Flag-drape- :':7 1P - : - i fSIfl:::?':'A :4 ::' '::::: '' Associated Press Writer BEIRUT Lebanon — President Elias IIrawi declared the Cabinet of rebellious army chief Gen Michel Aoun dissolved Saturday and -- ? iF ' :: 1'" k b :::: ) ' - j 1 By Farouk Nassar ''' '47141'44 : r D-- best The first five months were dreadful starting with the fight over the 'congressional pay raise then the ethical questions The Democrats had no leadership for a time We were lucky we ended on a high note" The feeling was bipartisan At a press conference last week chairman Rep Jerry Lewis coffin of slain President Rene led past mourners Saturday I Press Laserarcto Businesses in Christian and Moslem areas closed for a day of nationwide mourning coffin inched through crowds in Mouawad's hometown of His widow Zgorta Nayla and daughter Rima and son Michel Success Rate Lawmen Have 100 Imaginary Town May Be World's Crime Capital y 20-acr- e n that our people have a 100 percent success rate solving crimes" At first glance the town is picture book America with its own post office drugstore bank barbershop combination pool hall and bus station laundry movie theater motel and boarding houses All are phony except the Pastime Bar where FBI employees can step inside for a cup of coffee or a sandwich while waiting for the next crime d wave In this town there are no mothers pushing baby carriages or merchants hurrying to work The streets are strangely empty until the silence is broken by volleys from blank-firinshotguns and revolvers the squealing tires of police cruisers and shouts of -- Freeze! This is the FBI!" bad guys and The witnesses who inhabit Hogan's Alley are amateur "role players" hired by the hour through a talent agency They include housewives school g make-believ- f Irowtvmtwwwt6t4p2Ak e g A-- 2 walked sobbing behind the cortege Weeping women tossed roses and waved from balconies Patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir spiritual head of the Maronite community presided over the service and Papal Nuncio Paolo Ponte read a message from Pope John Paul II saying the pontiff was praying for Lebanon's salvation A salute was fired as the coffin was put into a crypt at St Mary's Church where it will remain until completion of a tomb at the cemetery Aoun said Hrawi's election Friday was "as unconstitutional as that of Mouawad Both have been elected under Syrian occupation" "They should have waited to find out who killed Mouawad before appointing a new president" he said in a statement No one has claimed responsibility for Mouawad's assassination lIrawi put himself on a collision course with Aoun by dismissing the Column 1 See A-21-gu- n 2 Inside The Tribune I By Robert M Andrews Associated Press Writer QUANTICO Va — The crime capital of the world may be a small town nestled in a rural Virginia forest where bank robberies kidnappings and deadly extortion plots run rampant The towns mayor however shrugs it off with a serene smile After all as the interminable struggle between good and evil rages outside his office window Jim Pledger boasts a police force that would be the envy of any big-citmayor — dozens of smart square-jawe- d young FBI trainees Pledger is mayor of "Hogan's Alley" a fictitious but strikingly realistic town built on a wooded site at the FBI Academy about 40 miles south of Washington DC where students practice nabbing criminals interrogating witnesses and gathering evidence "This is the most crime-riddetown in the world" says Pledger the chief in charge of Itotraining-uni- t gan's Alley "But the great thing is of the House Republican Conference said this Congress began with the potential of being the "most negative Congress in recent times" The apparent goodwill that developed between Democrats and Republicans in the last weeks bodes well many experts suspect provided the Bush administration joins the new consensus-buildinAs Bush saw so clearly on the pas-Se- e Column 3 firey teachers retirees and fighters and police officers None has any acting experience "In this town crime pays — at $8 an hour" says Pledger A huge sign on the outskirts of town gives visitors fair warning: "Welcome to llogan's Alley City Limits Caution: training exercises in progress Display of weapons firing of blank ammunition and arrests may occur If instrucchallenged please follow tions Have a nice dayLast Wednesday the day started literally with a bang at 8:20 am when the Hogan Bank was robbed Three gunmen fled with about $30000 in play money some of it in $50 bills bearing Pledgers portrait Four teams of FBI trainees — 44 in all sprang into action following a script written by their supervisors off-dut- minute-by-minut- Czechoslovakian-bor- who left e Today's Chuckle If knowledge is power how come teachers get such low pay? While the first team was interviewing bank employees and dusting the teller's cage for fingerprints other trainees quickly arrested the first man in suspect a shaggy-haireplaid shirt and jeans at his hideout in the Dogwood Inn motel Another gunman was grabbed handcuffed and frisked outside his three-stor- y townhouse while his girlfriend loudly complained and a nosy neighbor gawked The third suspect who lives in the local trailer park was caught in an FBI ambush at Will Johnson's Garage where he had left his aging sedan for repairs Case closed in just four hours d "These trainees know they're but their adrenaline really gets pumping" said training play-actin- g supervisor Donald J Gray The nosy neighbor outside the townhouse was Thomas Burkhard a retired Massachusetts dairy marketing executive who now lives in nearby Woodbridge Va Tribune Telephone Numbers on A-2 Arts Barberl Business Classified Common Carrier Crossword Editorials Ellerbee 7 B-- 2 2 A24 0 A-2- 2 W-- 4 Entertainment Food lifestyle Foreign Hall W-- Intermountain I A-- 5 Jumble Local Local National Obituaries Public Forum Sports Star Gazer Washington 4 5 A-2- 4 4 A-- 5 Snow showers and low temperatures Highs 40s Lows 20s Details in 1965 said 2 Shuttle Crew Wrapping Up Mission CAPE CANAVERAL Fla (UPI) — The Discovery astronauts working in secret on the high frontier wrapped up experiments and packed and a Saturday for a fiery dramatic Sunday night landing in California to close out their clandestine military flight While NASA officials refused to comment on the progress of the mission standard procedure called for commander Frederick Gregory 48 John Blaha 47 — both and Air Force colonels — to fire up the shuttle's hydraulic system sometime Saturday night to test the ships reentry steering system They also were to test fire Discovery's small maneuvering rockets to make sure they will be ready for use Sunday A source who asked not to be named said only a handful of minor problems had developed during the flight and that overall Discovery was in better shape after three days in space than any previous shuttle at the same point in a mission "It's just super clean- - the source said If all goes well Gregory 13Iaha Navy Capt Manley "Sonny" Carter physicist Kathryn Thornton 37 and physician Story Musgrave 54 will glide to a Mojave Desert touchdown on concrete runway 22 at Edwards Air Force Base Calif Sunday around 7:02 pm PST It will be only the third night shuttle landing ever conducted and thc first since Columbia glided to a predawn Edwards touchdown Jan 18 1986 just 10 days before the Challenger disaster But high winds at landing time could cause problems The forecast called for clear sky and unlimited visibility with winds gusting from 14 to 21 mph from 290 degrees or nearly due west Gregory and Blaha plan to set Discovery down on runway 22 and if the forecast pans out crosswinds gust ing from about 13 mph to 20 mph could be expected The maximum allowable crosswind for a shuttle landing is 15 knots or about 17 mph The primary goal of the seventh mission is believed to have been accomplished Thanksgiving Day with the launch of a spy satellite reportedly capable of intercepting Soviet military communications from an orbital outpost 22300 miles above the equator y co-pil- top-secr- Today's Forecast Salt Lake City and vicinity translator n her homeland Saturday she visited there several times this year on business and felt Column I See A-- Dissolves Aotm Cabinet 44tot- '' 67— "This will be a year nobody will remember" said Rep Thomas DowY "And that may be for the ney New Lebanese President ' ' "Boy this is great — if it's for W Zajicek former mayor of Wilber the Czech capital of Nebraska "I have to see it to believe it" said Dolores Pavlik who lives at the Notre Dame Convent in Omaha Neb Communist Party The hard-lin- e leadership in Czechoslovakia resigned Friday forced from power by a week of huge protests But the new government is dominated by officials who also served the previous regime "We have to watch the members of that new' Politburo to see what direction they will take" said Jan e editor of a newspaper in the small central-Texatown of West Vaculik who left Czechoslovakia a month after the Soviet invasion in 1968 said the change isn't yet as sweeping as what has happened in East Germany But he said "I'm excited at least that these guys are gone I always feared that they may turn violent against the people" One of the speakers at rallies in Czechoslovakia was Alexander Dubcek the reformist former party leader ousted in 1968 when Soviet troops invaded Dubcek's father had immigrated to the United States early in the century but he returned home after spending 14 months in an internment camp in Texas for refusing to serve in the military Dubcek was born in 1921 after his father returned home In Chicago Dagmar Herrmann a real" said Glenn d iiltsi ": —Associated Tens of thousands of members and supporters of Civic Forum the largest Czech 16-ho- 1 i'd : ENT:t0044ts'—1 ''- ''40i - 4" i& ' v 1 :: 1 a- - r ‘-s: ii $ heritage were mostly cheered by the political changes taking place in the Eastern European nation but many tempered their feelings with skepticism 44 ooR qA17' h - 41 s' The Associated Press Americans of Czechoslovakian ' ervm '' Alt o '' lik' Ark 1z 22: '''' i - ' r:' tio14 ‘ 1z N' t - - 11: - "It A 1 i vei— Attlip A' 1( ' 4111 4 illiitk – sz 7 tp - ' 1x" t411 Kt: - f — ' t folk :1 - 4 Ik tjtio : ' ' - By 13 4 sk t ': t v ' N liktalit rA ''- ' 4 A:: 7 4tV1 "7 ' 4&-- ': ' '' 70110 4 ii'-''f-i ts 01 ''ik' T 21$ ' ' k' : C14 -- '' - in' ft1 - lit 0 ' - ' '''' 11" -9 -4 ' -- r 4eil '' AttrP' - 41' t14 - 4 lic' 4:5 : ?TA Im 1: i' P !t - '' 4:416043 ' Communist I1 romises Eyed With Suspicion 1 - - Ititi:-- ' 4--s- 1 ' -- - i ' - t i t Ai:: - 4 '1' ? 4 i dio kye'' — 1 '''''' 'tA '41:44114ke 't ' - : 41 4(24: I' t 1 ''''' ':ifklttlit ':4414 S 10 November 26 1989 40 ' ' democratic v Long Beach St Utah St Not Enough Say Czechs Shake-U- p p fib I L I Salt Lake City Utah—Sunday By Girard C Steichen Associated Press Writer PRAGUE Czechoslovakia — More than half a million demonstrators Saturday scoffed at a Communist A Party shake-uii:- 2'' and cheered Al- A exander Dubcek as he urged lead- - 'Ar tc-: 1 ers to resign and " )A make way for '('44''L - 1 13 7 B-- I " 4$Ascqw! - esses"o1goAtepk41 ekoti 4"411411-- s) filtolthokom!"""K46-4"400!'"00411- 0' Pom-tito- dl 4"'"- - |