Show hr' r op ' "' -i ' '' ' - "' ' ' - - ' '' '''' '' -- - ' - "- -- ' - '"'' ' ' " — '" -- ' - - - -- ' :k t4 2A 54414-rA- Saturday June 2 1990 The Salt Lake Tribune 4 i li t'''44 ::14 xl S p 0 tlight amowanowstastapavalso 4 Superpowers Sign Tr4cle is4 Continued From AI of each other's concerns" he said As the day unfolded the two leaders hit snags in the outlines of the nuclear-weapon- s pact and sent Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze into a harried round of talks The signing ceremony was postponed as the diplomats huddled Intent on wresting trade concessions from Bush officials said Gorbachev stalled on the grain-sal- e agreement In the end they split their differences Along with the major accords the leaders signed agreements to improve verification of underground nuclear explosions under treaties dating from 1974 and 1978 They also put their names on agreements for student exchanges and cooperation on atomic energy Separately a joint statement was issued on the aims of future nuclear-arm- s talks saying the superpowers will continue talks to reduce their strategic arms and restrict space weapons "We may not agree on everything but we agree on one great truth: The world has waited long enough the Cold War must end" Bush said Baker said the two sides after six s i 11 ' ' 3 T - V I - t Bush- - Gorbachev ' k ' i milliLWolitiicOnaalIMI '' ' ' ' f Schedule of Meetings ---- Times EDT) ($411 1 $ Saturday am: Bush and 1030 Sunday 9:30 am: The Bushes have a private coffee for the Gorbachevs at the White House 10 am: The presidents hold a Joint news conference scheduled for an hour Noon: Gorbachev and his wife leave for Minneapolis 1 The Soviet )eader put a premium on winning a trade agreement from Bush saying tt would be an important political Prize for him "We are not asking fort a free ride" be told congressional teaders at the start of the day He said it would be "humiliating" to beg for concessions 1st Ladies Extol Women's' Roles At Wellesley Commencenlent Continued From A4 Bush said: "Maybe we should adjust faster maybe slower But whatever the era whatever the times one thing will never change: Fathers and mothers if you have children they must come first "Your success as a family — our success as a society — depends not on what happens at the White House but on what happens inside your Asked bow they get along Bush said "I think our husbands have been friends for a long time I simply feel very at home and comfortable with Mrs Gorbachev I have enor mous respect for her" Gorbachev who like Bush is a grandmother but who also holds a doctorate in philosophy told the graduates that women have a special mission as peacemakers in the world "We women have our special mission" she said "Always even in the most eruel and troubled times women have had the mission of peacemaking mercy and kindness' "And if people in the world today are more confident of a peaceful future we have to give a great deal of credit for that to women" she said Gorbachev speaking in Russian said the Soviet embrace of perestroika would make her nation "open to the world" Before flying back to Washington the two traveled by motorcade from Wellesley to Boston The motorcade stopped twice as the women emerged to greet spectators Bush and Gorbachev joined hands and held them in the air - I rl ' ' ''' i-- 14-- t ' ' '''' !II - Kg' 'g - ' ilikiy44-- ' i ' ''' : : Nit :a4:5:tA4k :7i''' ' ''' 00 I'AF'' v s!:!t- 4:r5:140-I- 4 '141'f44' ' t! f-- - i er r Ism 4 a t r1 tw'' -CI -' - 4 -- - ' 'e t':it':' t7!: i ':::'- :" '' !! ' 16: 414444 ' ' ' :E''r'4te1!' 0 W401-- --AmPOCAOSIK1 1 I - CAPE CANAVERAL Fla (AP) — With the hobbled space shuttle Columbia standing silent 10 miles away NASA launched an unmanned rocket Friday with an observatory that will search the heavens for sources of The Delta rocket blasted into a p 1 ' 1 that the fire was intentionally set"Christmas said 1 i Christmas said the crew was evacuated and there were no injuries There were no passengers on board i 1 when the fire broke out Investigators have yet to determine the cause of a fire Sunday in the control room that knocked out power to the ship causing it to run aground in the Delaware Bay off New Jersey and forcing the evacuation of 890 passengers returning five-da- y from-cruise to the Bahamas The ship was freed early Tuesday after passengers were taken off and fuel was unloaded making the ship lighter On Thursday the Coast Guard cleared the ship for a two-da- y cruise 10 miles off the coast of New Jersey but that cruise was cancelled Christmas said police were investigating the latest fire but there were no suspects i t It t Plea Lasorpholo - A' '' a' z -"- --'''' '? f'' ' ' f it IFIrr - :1-- 1'1 1 - ' "00000 ' 4' 0:4- Mario Cuomo David Dinkins Dinkins and John F Kennedy DI night for gubernatorial offspring drew Sen York $at 4 of York arrived in New York Fri- bags before dashing off to the Museum of C"st1o rrio for s Washington but the bachelor bash was set younger brother Chris and New Mike McAlary were hosts but unable to attend: Arnold Schwarzen- his new flick "Total Recall" The big fella is his marriage to Maria Shrivel' for day Jr An- - the bride's side of the farmly Cuomo 32 with Kerry Kennedy daughter of the late SPRINGFIELD Mass (AP) — Gov Michael Dukakis who rose to the peak of the Democratic Party just two years 4 at f:t1$66 mid-1990- t:' 4-1!A ago comes to ' his own party 's state conven- tion this week- - ' dm end as hardly a ' Viva 1"77 ' '! 24 headline act '' w''' As President ' ' fergroz2 Bush basks in popularity and the glow from the continuing summit in the Michael Dukskis town Dukakis hoped to dominate Dukakis will be speaking to his party in the notably unprestigious leadoff slot Saturday morning His popularity is at rock bottom and candidates avoid him His name does not even appear on the agenda of the convention a gathering he dominated through much of his three decades in Massachusetts politics And yet like Jimmy Carter who disappeared from the lips of Dem " : LE1 ' ultraviolet light After two months of instrument calibration Rosat will begin a six month survey of celestial bodies that It will be the first full emit tele sky survey by au imaging scope Information will be transmitted to a ground station near Munich West Germany and then sent for analysis to centers in that country the United States and Britain y toured privately said Jessica when she will be joined by Britain's York I '' the campus Saturday night where more years ago a eollege prank cut short his an athletic career baseball commissioner said his trip to College as a commencement speaker bad memories of the fall : injured thtoabteleufpt p y I college I : Ikti's 9shi6aroev gee:yoamdnumi sillbteot cilhuoIa:m hoofrewand acuthiotoyfn whhaen picturesque a s s v in 41Pr''' cent was the strapping captain of the freshman -football team when he was locked in his room by a friend Climbing out the window onto an icy ledge Fay Vincent Vincent slipped and fell four stories crushing two vertebrae Doctors rebuilt the vertebrae but Vincent must still sometimes use a cane to walk Vincent's career Though he had played some baseball as a teen-age- r hopes had been pinned on football But his love for baseball grew during his long convalescence as he turned to game broadcasts to pass the time - Earl Morris gives the following brief history of his new film: The director of the acclaimed documentary "The Thin Blue Line" wanted to make a film based on the true story of the theft of Albert Einstein's brain and approached Steven Speilberg's production company Amblin Entertainment Also talking to Amblin was producer Gordon Freedman who acquired g "A Brief History of the right to physicist Stephen Hawking's Time" Spielberg liked the idea and quickly decided on the ideal director: Morris Morris had studied history and science at Princeton University but wasn't interested at first He changed his mind after reading the book n "I thought it was an opportunity to push documentaries — film making — even further than I may have pushed in my previous films" Morris said in Friday's editions of The New York Times "I was very moved by Hawking as a scientist and as a man" Morris said of the author who suffers from Lou Gehrig's disease "He's a truly wonderful man" best-sellin- non-fictio- te ing by Soviet citizens "Please don't be frightened be cause it can frighten us too if you get frightened" Gorbachev de- dared Sen Robert Dole the Senate minority leader raised the question of independence for the Baltic nations with Gorbachev and specifically linked it to the overall issue of the 14IFN status which would essentially normalize trade relations between the superpowers Assuming the air of a teacher ad dressing naive students Gorbachev attacked the leadership of "musicians" in Lithuania for leading that nation down the wrong road to independence He accused Lithuania of hurriedly assembling a new legislature that rushed to vote on secession from the Soviet Union in a ighttime session "This caused a very acute reaction in our society" he said "This is a kind of night coup d'etat This is absurd" best-love- JeeAeJtawL"Novor-pFf-e:f-5!Er-lg-!:rwo1fqt!nseofxmgopwpuym-Atyt---- given assurances to the Lithuaniaq leadership that if they chose to suspend their March 11 declaration of independence then the issue could be nego4ted between the two sides As for the law on Soviet emigra- tion Gorbachev said nothing was in- hibiting Jews and others from Inv ing the Soviet Union and it was only a matter of time before the legislature codified the procedure "You know that this is no longer a oh : - ' :I ' :: : J looking for preorder to put a brake on this "Maybe you in : ' Gorbachev insisted problem" were a text ' : ' K i process of adopting treatment" During a briefing later Mitchell said "nothing happened" during the session with Gorbachev to change his mind on granting the Soviet Union status "1 don't think the president should send it up until there is change in Soviet policy with respect to - t - c F 1 : n I I t 1 ( :it I g1 1 - Food Poisoning Bad Ham Blamed! PROVIDENCE RI (UPI) i ----- e I i nously to prevent dehydration caused by frequent vomiting said pecially in Massachusetts" French said Two summers ago in Atlanta Dukakis a three-tergovernor stood before the national convention as the Democratic presidential nominee ahead of George Bush in the polls and riding a wave of successes in the primaries "We're going to win this race" Dukakis declared to the nation A year later the defeated Dukakis had not only lost his presidential bid he had plummeted in his home state - i -- 1 1 elementary schoolchildren were hospitalized overnight after a case of mass food poisoning flooded three local hospitals with more than 80 children hospital officials said Friday The children were admitted to Rhode Island Hospital for observa7 bon Most were given fluids intraveTwenty-thre- d II - ' The Soviet president said he and Prime Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov had 80 RI Pupils Get ocrats after his 1980 defeat Dukakis hopes the years will give him back the stature and high standing he once enjoyed in Massachusetts "Just as Jimmy Carter in his many years out of office has become America's best and its president the same will hold true for Dukakis at the statewide level" said James French a longtime Dukakis ally and one of a dwindling number of aides to stay on in the last months of the governor's administration "Politics is very unforgiving es- I 1 r' I L o :':!:::r1711rt056vonhimowgn" '''' : Athenee hotel and quickly left moBDeAavid at the Plaza Schwartz a Bay State's Duke Takes Last Bow as Quiet Man gram scientist Alan N Runner said M our instruments improve it always opens the door to discoveries" Rosat was to have flown on a shut tie in 1987 but was redesigned to fit into the Delta after the 1986 Chat tenger explosion meant waiting until s the for a shuttle ride "You can imagine how eager we are that we now get the thing Jff the ground" said Joachim Truemper Rosat program scientist for West Germany's Federal Ministry for Re search and Technology About 1000 sources of cosmic X rays are known to exist Astronomers hope 100000 sources will be identified by Rosat as it orbits high above Earth's atmosphere which blocks and makes them invisible from the ground The satellite consists of a powerful telescope and a wide-fiel- d camera capable of detecting extreme y 5000 Continued From Al of a united Germany's role in NATO and Europe The Soviet president said that if the Soviet leadership feels it is being "squeezed out" of rms negotiations Europe could be ham hpered Jabbing the air with a forefinger Gor7vachev also took exception to talk in America that he was in a weakened position and could not expect any US concessions "But I am not going to ask for anything to beg for anything even when I for example raise important mat ters such as trade" said Gorbachev "We will be asking for normal credits and of course we will be paying the interest For us it would be humiliating I we were to ask for — if we were to beg something from you and of course hopeless" Gorbachev responded to a question from Mitchell with a detailed explanation of Soviet economic reform and told the legislators not to be "frightened" of moves such as price reform which triggered panic buy Sources X-R- ay partly cloudy sky at 5:47 pm EDT from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station The $273 million West German observatory called Rosat was to be boosted 43 minutes later into an orbit 360 miles high y "It's the finest telescope that's ever been flown" NASA pro Investigators Blame Arsonist In Second Cruise-ShiFire PHILADELPHIA (UP!) — Fire broke out early Friday aboard a damaged cruise ship docked in the Delaware River and was considered arson fire investigators said There were no injuries The smoky blaze was the second fire in less than a week on the KV Regent Star and forced the cancellation of a "Cruise to Nowhere" scheduled for Friday afternoon The fire started in a storage room a lower deck about 515 am and wo controlled in about an hour Fire Department Lt Jack Christmas said "The fire marshal has determined Amarlkik! right listen Americans found Soviet lea& er confident energetic if a little verbose Unmamied Rocket to Seek I ' Att3449 211:1114LOOrrai lionamorphowspagvelowsvonoLt Mikhail Gorbachev makes point as congres sional leaders including George Mitchell to '00017114$ - 40 ttl: !'1 $4i: - ''''' ' ':' : - 1 ' ' r - i 41 : Si - A7 ' ' ' ft? --- i'lb 0 '' I- - ' ' - Al '''': ' : - - : ': 14- k AP r0' -- of C rk 90-Minu- - ' - -- ' ' 0') -- 4 00 ' 01- 0: w1 ' vii444P - '''''''''' : Gorbachev and Congressional Leaders Hassle at Lvely Breakfast ' !'' 4 1 ' '""1" 4"4'74t ''''zi4h eili--- - ' g yi'i ' Soviet The tiec b tons of Belk existleig chemioal mead os a catolyst tor a global ogreement to ban produclion and possession of thew weapons —A trade ()gement that would move the superpowers eked to 11001101 commercial relations but status Stop short of A protocol spelling out measures for existing treaties that limit nuciear tests the verification protoco4 will permit both nations to rattly the 1974 Threshold Test Ban Trecty and the 1976 Peace tul Nuciear Explosions Treaty which limit US and Soviet underground nuclear tests to 150 kilotons — Aji agreement expanding commercial air tray et between the United States and the Soviet Union by adding tour Arnericcin and six Soviet cities to cur rent °drier routes It olso will allow one more Soviet and six ft1048 US °Mines to run the routes — A new tive-yeatomic energy agreement to provide closer cooperation in nuclear reactor satefusion energy and basic atomic science —A grain deal committing the Soviets to biMng at least 10 million tons annually starting next year of US wheat teed grains and soybeans That is on increase of 1 million tons annually from a current agreement mot took effect in 1983 —A maritime tronsportation pact to make It easier kr' US and Soviet commercial vessels to deliver goods to ports in one onothers country — An agreement to open reciprocal cultural and Information centers in Washington and Moscow —The first gowimmenMovovemment ogreement increase student exchanges between the two countries d Z 0 - : : t f444v: - kl j 4 k - 14-- - — k T 7 a :I 1r t '41'‘ 0t- ' 5 11t 13 t :' : v- " 'k - - ' ci':1 4 !' 4ef Dits44- t 'Al' 0 t and freedom from want "You sir" Schlesinger said to Gorbachev "have made extraordinary contribution t to the realization of these freedoms:" t' es1 —ModdtnQptooJctonoeu1ond einotIng oN but leRoosevelt historian Jr noted the former prasident's speech SO years ago describing a world of free dom of speech etpression worship si: - et chemical weapons and Non-Viole- nt 4 0 US-Sovi- accord on the mdcx elements Treaty or START to nuclear reduce each side's orsenal of long-ranweapons by about orwethird over a severeyear pen Friends World College in Huntington NY and the Man of History Award from the Appeal of Conscience Foundatibn Coretta King's award which included a $1000 stipend was given on behalf of the Martin Luther King Social Jr Center for Change in Atlanta In presenting award ' rt-'t f'7' 3 4 1 f ' I - ri:ViT''' ' c tii t" - WASHINGTON (AP) — Here at a agreeglance are the ments announced Friday by President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail S Gorbachev at a White House ceremony: — A "framework International Peace Prize from Non-Viole- Summit Pacts Range From Grain to Arms d a Strategic Arms Reduction lin Delano Roopevelt International Four Freedoms Award from the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute the Martin Luther King Jr hailed Friday as a man of peace and courage as he accepted five peace awards from American organizations in separate ceremonies at the Soviet Embassy "You symbolize a new era of reconciliation between two nations and peoples" said Coretta Scott King as she gave Gorbachev the prestigious Martin Luther King Jr Peace Prize of 1990 "You have provided new hope that the superpowers can end the arms race" the widow of the slain civil rights leader said as she placed a medallion on a bright green ribbon around Gorbachev's neck They then kissed each other on both cheeks The other awards given Gorbachev were the Albert Einstein Peace Prize which included a 00000 check from the Albert Einstein Peace Prize Foundation the Frank i 1 - WASHINGTON (UPI) — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev was 0 lilt' i 4 it we might have clifloes not change the :11100' ' -1 d tone" 4 - 7 3'' - "I rejoice that our re extremely open endly and that de Gorbachev 8 conversations sincere and spite the fact t ferences that 5 US Organization: Give Gorbachev Peace Akards house" chemical-weapon- s accord imposes a halt in production of poison gas and requires the nations to cut their stockpiles to 5000 tons each Bush and Gorbachev were unable to make progress on cutting troops and weapons in Europe They issued a statement declaring their hope to reach agreement by the end of the year On a related front sources said Gorbachev trying to break a stalemate had proposed creation of a new "Council of All Europe" to play a decisive role in shaping the military future of Germany The United States and the Soviet Union would participate in the deliberations along with other members of the NATO and Warsaw Pact alliances as well as neutral countries A US official sad "It is not something we wouId reject out of hand" The idea will be considered by top diplomatic aides in Copenhagen and Berlin later this month non-nucle- Gorbachev hold a full dly of informal talks at Camp David Md Their wives accompany them days of intensive negotiations had made "workmanlike progress across the full spectrum" of nuclear weapons including limits on heavy mobile intercontinental missiles The negotiations also produced a new ceiling of 1100 warheads to be permitted aboard mobile missiles r' i The ''? '' ' As a price for improved trade Bush and the administration have demanded an easing of Soviet pressure against Lithuania as well as passage of a Soviet law protecting Jewish emigration In the end Bush decided not to send Gorbachev home - v - empty-hande- d - ' A s Pacts - 1 4 WIERWINNINNEntle hospital spokeswoman Geri Spieler- Dr Thomas Gilbert of the states division of disease control said doe tors suspect ham served for lunch Thursday 'at three East Providence elementary schools was contaminated The meals were prepared at the Riverside Junior High School in East Providence and reheated at the ele7 mentary satools The symptoms of the illness voiditing and 'diarrhea are consistent with toxins produced by the staphylococcus bacteria Gilbert said The toxins are not deadly and are usually flushed out by the body within 24 hours he said The first students became ill short ly after 2 pm and many tiy bus to itbode Island iI b : |