Show — -- iwqrwQeg'ei-4t-orv d'it""1"01'4"Re I A25 The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday June 10 1990 Week in Review: a Leaders Skirt Key Points at Summit a that while the two societies are coining closer "they probably will never be Sunday June GORBACHEV BUSH RELAX AT CAMP DAVID — President Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev took the opportunity Saturday "to lean back and reflect" on a year of political upheaval Bush's spokesman said the two skirted of leaders the 1 toughest issues that divide them: Germany and Lithuania ACTOR REX HARRISON DIES g actor Sir Rex Harrison who taught the king's English in "My Fair and talked to animals as the Lady" Iiivable Dr Dolittle during a career died in his sleep Saturday He Was 82 He died of pancreatic cancer at his Manhattan home said his attorOscar-winnin- e6-ye- ar ney Harold Schiff PRODUCTION TO RESUME — As the Energy Department Drepares to resume making nuclear warhead triggers at the Rocky Flats in Colorado concern remains about 62 )yeapons plant pounds of plutonium In the plant's air ducts At issue: Whether has accumulatplutonium enough 6d to lead to "criticality" — the point at which a nuclear reaction becomes and can release deadly radiation REPUBLICANS GEAR UP FOR PRIMARIES — Salt Lake County Commissioner Bart Barker was forced into a fall Republican primary election against radio station executive Henry Hilton in the wake of splintered delegate voting at Saturday's GOP county convention Gov Norm Bangerter keynote speaker continued to elicit grumbling from a fractious convention faction when lodging his Opposition to a general election ballot initiative that would eliminate the food sales tax r FOOD TAX A CATCH 22? — Eliminating the sales tax on food is "the right thing to do" for the poor But advocates aren't fully supporting the effort e hecause people also could be hurt by the resulting revenue reduction "We know it would be the right thing to do It is a bad tax" Utahns against Hunger Director Steven K Johnson said Saturday "But there is a gpncern that if the $80 million is lost to the state programs that are so important to people we work with will be somehow inadequately funded" rn CLEANUP DRIVE COSTS PLANT A BUNDLE — The cost of cleaning up a Plymouth Box Elder County steel mill contaminated with a radioactive Material is approaching $2 million according to Larry A Roos plant manager and vice president at Nucor Steel He said the figure does not include the disposal of 850 tons of fly ash which was contaminated with cesium 137 a e i radioactive material The waste is being stored In eight railroad !cars parked near the plant until a permanent disposal site is found Because the material is radioactive and contains elevated levels of lead it Ifits the federal definition of a "mixed waste" There are presently no disposial facilities in the nation which are authorized to accept this category of waste (ti ' Wednesday June 6 Baltic republics and trouble in the Kremlin In the Ancient red brick walls of the Kremlin the Supreme Soviet legislature unexpectedly postponed consideration of the emigration law that President Bush set as a precondition for implementing a trade accord a move seen as a setback to Gorbachev's sweeping reforms CONGRESS MAY BALK ON SOVIET TRADE — President Bush said Tuesday he signed the trade treaty with Mikhail Gorbachev believing the Soviet leader wants to resolve tensions with Lithuania but without receiving concrete assurances Congress did not fault Bush for approving the trade pact Nevertheless they emphasized that Gorbachev will have to ease up on the Baltic republic before Congress approves any of the benefits described by the agreement A woman sufALZHEIMER SUFFERER USES 'SUICIDE MACHINE' fering from Ahheimer's disease killed herself by pushing a button on a doctor's "suicide machine" and the inventor who watched the woman die in his van is under investigation officials said Tuesday Dr Jack Kevorldan 62 a retired Royal Oak Mich pathologist hooked Janet Adkins 54 of Portland Ore to the device Monday afternoon in his van at a park about 50 miles northwest of Detroit He then notified state police who called in prosecutors DOWNWINDERS BILL PASSES IN HOUSE — Over the objections of the Bush administration the House Tuesday passed by voice vote a $100 million Western "downwinders" compensation bill sponsored by Rep Wayne Owens The bill now goes to the Senate where it faces an uncertain future Bush administration officials in the US Justice Department oppose the legislation which they contend is based on faulty scientific data and would result in the payment of unjustified claims DESPITE President Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev proclaimed "an atmosphere of growing trust" Sunday at the close of their four-da- y summit They left unsolved I nagging differences on German unity and independence for Lithuania A CHINESE DEFY POLICE ON ANNIVERSARY — Students at Beijing University hurled bottles and bricks from dormitory balconies at security tbrces Sunday night and then rallied on campus shouting logans The protest came on the anniversary of last year's June 4 army attack on demonstrators around Tiananmen Square v STORMS LEAVE MIDWEST REELING — Midwesterners mourning neighbors killed in a deadly barrage of tornadoes were hit Sunday by a second onslaught of thunderstorms and high winds that raised the weekend weather death toll to 13 Twisters or tornado-forc- e winds downed trees iknocked out power and damaged homes and businesses from Kansas to Michigan and Ohio In Arkansas thunderstorms dumped heavy rain causing flash flooding that closed roads HURTING — Facing their fourth straight year I UTAH APPLE GROWERS of losses commercial apple growers in the Santaquin Payson and Geno la areas are surveying losses in hopes that Gov Norm Bangerter will ask for idisaster relief Starting with the hailstorm of '87 the Alar scare of '88 the of '89 and now the hard frost of '90 the downward national spiral in profits has discouraged farmers e The frost has stunted the entire economic base of the area About 100 employees will be laid off - -- packaging plants and most growers won't be employing pickers 1 3-- 1 I - 8 dill 3 Sellil fit 00 fag cash° ' - use a classified ad to find a cash sound for the buyer equipment which is no longer used at your house - v):r eve: e 44c:gfts :f 7 vs - :vr " Ak:400: - ::::::':( :4444-- - - ?w-0Mt eo ' At ' 4 :166 !Sf- c- :::f:-K::f- — ' T ' l' 04 5f4'tr - )44MP — 7 " :: 47 :V : :" 74:4444 4' A'4--:i- :::::::f4 iii 0 4 - 0: It' srf - I 0 ' ' - - - ' "'" ge lit '''' 1 zr--- c e 0- i il : ' 4 ' - ' - -- ) I indudes free labor pad 1 & 99 Slil yd Includes tree labor pad D & pad N 0 - 0 0 Or - i - - - - 1:4' iu i9 1 4 4 ‘ 1 1 ' —p4 :tT1 ' 11 -- " ' !- - $350 n all 0 per yard 4r4L '''''' :1'' !SaNWIM&iAMPUM11 - ' - t '! l''' '' - 141 r'- o azwAti"1"3 Ak-- ' 1 oc ' r 46 'toE zat - a44- ip-- ' ' ''' 0c1k ' -- i ' - 04tonitop DE 41 i k1 ii ! - C t : J:: y !: 4 f1 6d19 1 Awn it4owolpmkmorwirlvmpomm" ' slittrd A 4 10-- : : SM - t 04 ' '' Kayevillo Mon and Fri !1 t - T) 'lie pm 11 414 - ± 72 2 0400 0- - tr 4 i 11 k Also : porn 1 - In St a No 093:0 4 44 939 4Etkorstom0—eAmo-owst- 94 Mon4ri msv st T:11445011 via:It Ittayslt t- i- : A210s04:c: :ts::ts01:1PAlia41101ND011341 44 ': MOST STORES OPEN - 1 ' ati4 ' IT' itor 0 - Ay i '''4icii': A li e: t :6 ' at least - - - r- - - - : - - a A 19rE : 'installed rs c1: A S ' stro-n-e- sA : i- Utah advertisers outside the local area Dial TOLL FIZEE le 9 D 0 ' I 4-- --4:-- -y K ' ' i & D -- aria -o' -- 4t: ii Nor N ' st etl la resilient floor: 1 ' - s 99 $ Featuring Ar- ete jhlt Pike Iffikens I i - - ::f i71 LA : - : 0-f::- : Stain Resistant '1 :vfsp?424?::--A:::-:- 0: A 1 --- 4 Velvet Plush Stain Rentstant : - oxy 04 -:y : : Ultra Plush Stain Resistant - VI 1- 44 04 ' -- r :Oilp 44::::: :: :::::K" : "0::: "-- v' 01' : BEST I Ir A?‘--- ' 4492 r-:::- ' ''' ON 4 F0f" I AIR URI' It Nylon Saxsony yd MI Mi- - e PAD 1111-iti- BETTER Includes tree labor bd1& t5 n ‘ ! X41tv : ' ) 444 ?'414 1APIII0 i $ - - CARPET - - dry(' )41144: 7 :44:41:rw- - ' ! 4 a - ' - :?- prkg xx 01'44 1e- 2 - : f e c iiii E - ' GoR ONE 0 j S : e it- 4?- 4 ::11:c f ott: 0ttv 4Aki ttti's - 44P4M :7' 3k :::f- - i - ::: :x ' 1 ' ' : :dectte''"httlie" '4 ' 40?r TI : A 0:4titit:: 45- - VI b !'nT7°!')W it (?: IFIRft - : '4' st VINYAL $1 - S TIE-1- 1 Tlis II ) (I )1 IN Declaring that "the Cold War is now behind us" Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev on Monday é'alled for a more united world in which American and Soviet scientists work 4ogether to destroy nuclear weapons In a speech at Stanford University in othe last hours of his visit to the United States Gorbachev said the two a ca ountries should be partners in building the future though he acknowledged - — MINIIMEINIMILOONOW June 5 Tuesday - GORBACHEV CALLS FOR WORLD UNITY — low-co- — Defense CHENEY Secretary Dick Cheney on Friday ordered the Air Force to remove short-rang- e nuclear attack missiles from its bombers pending the outcome of safety studies of the warheads During congressional testimony two weeks laboratories called for the ago the directors of three US nuclear-weapon- s withdrawal of the weapons suggesting there was a remote possibility the weapons could leak plutonium in an accident CZECHS CAST BALLOTS IN FREE ELECTION — Czechoslovakia the only East Bloc country to once freely embrace communism held its first free elections in 44 years Friday in which voters are expected to reject it in favor Civic Forum At stake were seats for the national of the parliament or Federal Assembly and the parliaments of the Czech and Slovak republics which together make up Czechoslovakia SOVIETS ASKED TO END ETHNIC CLASHES — A state of emergency was declared in eastern Uzbekistan today because of ethnic warfare over the distribution of plots of land and the president of the republic asked the Kremlin to help settle the conflict STATE OFFICIAL GETS PRISON TIME — Former State Handicapped Services Director Theron C Olsen was sentenced to five years to life in the Utah State Prison Friday for his guilty pleas to charges relating to sexual abuse of children Retired 3rd District Judge Dean Conder filling in for 4th District Judge Ray Harding told the former state official the aggravating nature of his crimes warranted prison time Sino-Sovi- 44 1 June 9 Saturday ORDERS NUCLEAR MISSILES WITHDRAWN SOVIET ETHNIC RIOTS SPREAD — Ethnic unrest sparked by a land republic of Kirghizia on the quarrel spread throughout the mountain-lace- d border with thousands of youths massing in the capital Wednesday to call for the blood of more Uzbeks Anatoly A Lukyanov chairman of the Supreme Soviet legislature told lawmakers in Moscow that 40 people had been killed as the violence entered its third day More troops were n two-thir- il Thursday June 7 1 1 ! Friday June 8 FBI ARRESTS EX-G- I IN SPYING CASE — FBI agents arrested a former Army sergeant in Tampa Fla Thursday night on charges he conspired to pass sensitive information about the defense of Europe to Hungary and Czechoslovakia the Justice Department said Roderick James Ramsay 28 worked in West Germany directly under Clyde Lee Conrad a retired US Army sergeant who was convicted of treason by a West German court and given a life sentence earlier this week RAIN FORESTS VANISHING WARNS STUDY — The Earth's tropical forests are vanishing 50 percent faster than previously estimated increasing concerns about global warming a private environmental research group said Thursday "Every year the world loses an area of tropical forests almost as big as the state of Washington" said James Gustave Speth president of World Resources Institute HOUSE OVERRIDES BUSH VETO — The House voted Thursday to override President Bush's veto of an Amtrak authorization bill that drew his objection because of a provision requiring government review of railroad vote takeovers by non-racompanies If the Senate also musters a to pass the bill again it would mark the first time Congress has overridden a Bush veto MORE HEADACHES GREET GORBACHEV — Mikhail Gorbachev returned from the United States on Tuesday triumphantly bearing trade and arms deals but facing ethnic bloodshed in Central Asia an impasse with the Monday June—4 HAIL TRUST CONTRASTS a 10-da- it serves" man-mad- CHIEFS rushed to the Central Asian republic about 2400 miles southeast of Moscow but "unfortunately the events continue" he said SOVIETS VOW TO LET JEWS GO — Secretary of State James Baker received Soviet assurances Wednesday that Moscow does not plan to slow emigration of Soviet Jews despite Mikhail Gorbachev's summit threat that he may delay granting them exit visas to Israel BURR TRAIL BARRIER FALLS — A federal judge refused Wednesday to halt road construction on the most controversial section of southern Utah's scenic Burr Trail and Garfield County officials said crews will complete improvements by the fall US District Judge Aldon Anderson refused environmentalists' request for an injunction that would have stopped construction but he granted a y stay for them to appeal EPA WANTS MIDVALE TAILINGS REMOVED — The US Environmental Protection Agency recommended Wednesday that $226 million be spent to clean up contaminated soil in residents' yards near Midvale's Sharon Steel hazardous-wast- e site The estimated 100000 to 200000 cubic yards of soil which contains elevated levels of lead and arsenic would be dug up and stored temporarily with the 14 million cubic yards of mill tailings left by a smelter which used to operate at the Sharon Steel site EPA has not selected a final disposal plan for the Sharon Steel wastes yet fully alike There is no need for that" SCHOOLS MUST LET PRAYER GROUPS MEET The Supreme Court ruled Monday that public schools generally must allow student prayer groups to meet and worship if other student clubs are permitted at school It does not violate the constitutionally required separation of church and state when high schools give the same access to religious groups accorded such clubs the court said extracurricular activities as chess or scuba-divin- g TROOPS TRY TO HEAD OFF TIANAN MEN RALLY — Armed soldiers beat onlookers and threatened reporters late Monday at Beijing University attempting to prevent a second night of defiant student protests exactly a year after Chinese troops crushed the student-le- d democracy movement President Bush said MonBUSH SCOLDS CHINA BUT DEMO LEERY day that China continues to violate human rights a year after the Tiananmen Square massacre but a Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell said Bush is all talk and no action on the issue Bush incurred the wrath of many members of Congress last month by extending for a year trading status under which Beijing receives low tariffs on its goods TEACHERS ASK IF PETERSON FIT TO RUN U — The University of Utah's Academic Senate overwhelmingly approved a resolution questioning President Chase N Peterson's ability to run the school in the wake of his administration's quiet transfer of $500000 to the National Cold Fusion Institute The resolution requested the U Institutional Council and state Board of Regents "examine the question of whether continuation in office of the current president is in the best interest of the university and the community 0 41100m"1tAwetmt"htsu-dmpow"04--06- 0 4 rr |