Show - ' - - 40misomeirbetwadmoMawmome e vws§eimitiroztaé6a14Wal)ookAi1 WLPLISLA'Ogo$&d06P A 2A : ' Saddam Kie 4 : ' - I 1' The Salt Lake Tribune Thursday August 16 1990 Co-art- Continued From A-sistance to the Iraqi occupation came from groups of women protesting in the streets The Washington Post re- :7 ' :4rli:::::" 5 : f4Jrif r' i ''' '' j 4 1 114 Fit4' t z7rA - ' ' ' ported A Post correspondent - Z - ''747"f' t- saw about po women demonstrate Aug 6 in the Rothaithiya neighborhood of Kuwait City i No Iraqi troops were present "We don't want Iraq We don't Saddam" one woman said Another woman said "All women of Kuwait are resenting this invasion) They are protesting this" The report said Iraqi troops had begun firing at the women and cited one unconfirmed account that four VA- ' - :1 1 Spotlight Iran to Confront s anti-aircra- ft Refugees reported widespread cases of looting in banks gold shops and homes Thousands of priceless Persian carpets and other valuables in the palace of the emir were being removed by trucks to Iraq the refu n war-shatter- - I UN-mandat- 561 4 ) I ' 1 1 - - ' ' 4 : - --1 - - i - ' - — Ii r ' - ly -- weli P r tigmsw0 1 - : ti t 'f ' '''' i '''' 1 ' a diks 7n Nk - r- -' Dvitt -- p - 18:11Z- ' I: ' t-- ' IP ' '54414 r -- 6164'41-Yerie& - '' ' '' : 7'' 51: ':' V4 ' ' 4 P'45:1 ' 'a- -- t WIlat r 4i ‘ ' " r- - ” - 1i 1 - 4" 'i it"1:'4441 I 'f fillItAte LIV11:411'41R g ''T — 4 r k '1151Pam-- - IIPAKOrtr sippopippr : No 0 1 r: T Ili - - 4r I f - 4 t p' 4- 2 : ''' 1 4 4 : ' ' ' - '' ti f t - - I ofvd : Preu laserphoto —Assocrated Trucks wait to cross over into Jordan from Iraq Some go to port of Aqaba to load up 4 4 4 to be-:fo- $ idiversion" Bush also will meet with Saudi Arabia's foreign minister Prince "Saud and Ambassador 'Prince Bandar bin Sultan Thursday :following his talks with King HasAein Fitzwater said Wednesday might "The meeting will allow further consultations between the two countries as agreed to by the president And King Fand" the spokesman aid Bush returned to Kennebunkport rMaine shortly after his Pentagon less than 24 hours after arrivring in Washington for meetings a iew's conference and Wednesday's (speech The president also was expected to Fet cost estimates for the huge opert ' 4t? - o I 0 Navy Plane Crashes Kills 1 and Hurts 1 t BURGESS Va (UPI) — A Navy fighter-bombe- r 0 crashed 35 miles south of Maryland's Pax"tuxent Naval Air Station Wednesday killing one crew member and 'critically injuring another the Navy said The plane which had taken off from Paxtuxent crashed and burst iito flames in a field along State 'Route 360 in Virginia's Northumberland County The injured flier— who apparent-parachute- d from the disabled 'craft — was taken by Virginia State :Police helicopter to the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond He was reported in critical but stable condi:lion The other crew member apparent3y was killed in the crash Navy spokesman Fred Bradshaw caid in a telephone interview from Taxtuxent no identities would be re4eased until relatives were notified night-attac: The has been the Navy's standard carrier-baseplane since the '60s :and saw extensive use in the Vietnam Var It is capable of carrying seven ions of ordnance k d a I ships that may attempt to break a UN- mandated trade embargo on Iraqi goods Bush Tightens Noose on Iraq Lets Navy Use Mhilma1 Force Continued From A-- i :foreigners' travel rights but officials Isaid privately they doubted any lchanges would mean the Americans coUld leave 1 Noting that an Iraqi official had 'been quoted as referring to the forteigners as "restrictees" State De 'partment spokeswoman Margaret 1iTutwiler said "Finally they are ad- that is contrary to milling all international norms" However !Fitzwater said merely "That's not an official description and not what the tgovernment has told us" Bush's remarks came one day he was to meet with Jordan's 1King Hussein iho has continued to :allow supplies to flow into Saddam Iraq despite a United Nations trade embargo The king who as put himself forward as a media-to- r in the crisis was said to be carrying a message from Saddam to the Dpresident's Maine vacation home on Thursday t Fitzwater said the White House rihad no indication there was such a message but was "willing to listen" 4o Hussein The spokesman said Saddam's public peace overture toward long-tim- e adversary Iran "doesn't appear 'have any impact" on the Mideast tIto crisis except as "another effort to rseparate the countries and create a I air-cra- ft ation and to discuss whether to call up the nation's armed forces reserves and National Guard to bolster units depleted by the Gulf crisis In his speech Bush offered no new information on the questions of how many US troops will go to the Mideast and how long they will stay In e the event of conflict the Pentagon has made plans to ship up to 250000 soldiers to the region Defending his decision to dispatch tens of thousands of US combat troops and dozens of warships half full-scal- 1 I -- 1 way around the globe Bush said nothing less than world order is at stake Bush denounced what he called Saddam's "raw territorial ambition" and attempts to portray the conflict as "a holy war of Arab against Infidel" a struggle between "the haves and the have-nots- " The president said the US action was important to maintain access to energy resources that are key to America's way of life and to the world's economy Police Block Koreans at 11i 4 V NI t March Unity G1 4 ' I '''': 0 1 s 447 two-hou- off-limi- 155-mil- 4 ' ti i i !‘' - ''7t it t 1 tis -- ' LI 41'1 I - 1 ( i -: ii ' 1 Ice i 1- 0' r1t 71 " Cy71 4 1 ' ' '' It :' ter 4411 4 " 14147 2 I :1111 " t'kT 2 ' A(42)00Piv111 ' ml -- 11014 ' 117140 -- i ' ' - 1: ')4 k 1 '''' Pr t 4 ittt )1e'l ö lk 4i It Ir ilt 01i r bit I1 04 1 r- ritit:47ift vt 44el--koitT- oktr41011 - :: 1: wa ‘' ' A7 r4 4 d16 411 1s b 24 yr s koa : I4'444 - ttc- 16 rj1414r4e1 04140:S-- f 1 v ateji tkriltt-1':- t if' ai 0 A A tt $1 ut p'" t ti 1) 44t k ' 414 '::4:ekl' 4) a $011 ) lt No tit tdott 4 toc sl a 40'1 it 41 t f its flt (4 kioot'' p At i tyt -i ':Pl- stkl!S 01 Fa to) V"t 'rut a Amt144a"11daP i IP 1 t teg ''S! Z Lai ' di : -- ' 1 t 3 It- AA - -1 ol eV s 1 $ Ititt4' - - - -- ' -- 4 1 : 4: ' i4cMr414 t ilt-:- ' 01A- i) nirt: I ) - - 'V - ? 7 4- 1(!----4 o-- i !4 '7 4 A el i'44- : cirins-4- 1 $ group started a boycott 4 1 A I 1 '4 1i 1 i 1f k 4i u'""-I- L :11 r At 1 :l - so (--- -- ::: 4 4 i''- - It 0 LA Jack Nicholson Sheila E Michael Jordan has called c ! i ) - 1: Michael Jordan civil-righ- ts 1 1-- - N L ) 1 :1 'r "10410:711 t'''47 A of L r 40""Whis- !:ei f i a foul on Operation PUSH of Nike products after the PUSH is demanding that Nike provide more jobs and and opportunities for minorities and asked supporters to cover up Nike logos on their apparel as part of the boycott Jordan who helped Nike create a popular signature line of shoes issued a statement saying he agreed with PUSH's goals but not its methods "While all of corporate America needs to provide opportunities for it's unfair to single out qualified blacks to go up the corporate ladder in the industry" the the of one companies top Nike just because it's Chicago Bulls standout said star Bo JackAnother Nike commercial spokesman baseball-footbaand neither has call PUSH the about boycott son hasn't said diddly filmmaker Spike Lee ll Sheila E has been hospitalized for a collapsed lung The performer a singer dancer and drummer in singer Prince's band whose full name is Sheila Escovedo entered Cedars-Sina- i Medical Center in Los Angeles on Monday hospital spokeswoman Peggy Frank Shaff said She is expected to make a full recovery and get out of the hospital by week's end Shaff said Asked what caused the singer's left lung to collapse Shaff said "It just happens" The condition "occurs spontaneously with no known cause Tall slender people are predisposed to such a condition" Escovedo launched a solo career in 1984 with her hit record "The Glamorous Life" says abortion is a complicated topic for him but against abortion because I'm an illegitimate child myself and it would be hypocritical to take any other position I'd be dead I wouldn't exist" the star and director of "The Two Jakes" said in a Washington Post interview "And I have nothing but total admiration gratitude and respect for the strength of the women who made the decision they made in my individual case But as I say I believe this is the choice of the woman and you know I walk it like I talk it" Nicholson was 38 when he learned that his "mother" was really his grandmother and that the woman he had known as his sister was in fact his mother Jack Nicholson "I'm pro-choi- Charlton Heston says he is quitting Actors' Equity over the union's "obscenely racist" refusal to let a white actor play a Eurasian in the Broadway production ' of "Miss Saigon" ' PA g actor said he would claim only The -"financial core" status in the union meaning he can tAir no longer vote or hold office but retains health I Ae- vbenefits in return for reduced dues The union last week barred Englishman Jona- than Pryce from playing the role of a Eurasian pimp when "Miss Saigon" moves from London to Broadway in March In reaction the show's produc- er canceled the US production Actors' Equity plans to reconsider its decision on Thursday Charlton Heston "This is blatantly racist preference and the Equiand "The Ten ty board should blush for it" the star of "Ben-Hur- " Commandments" said in a letter to the union A call to Actors' Equity in New York went unanswered Tuesday -- 7 -- I'41 r ' Oscar-winnin- - rip Princess Anne daughter of Queen Elizabeth II quietly celebrated her 40th birthday Wednesday with her children Anne who is separated from her husband Mark Phillips spent the day with son Peter 12 and daughter Zara 9 at Gatcombe Park their estate in western England said a Buckingham Palace spokesman The princess was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize lest week for her work for poor children around the world 4 41 b r it to 4 1 2- - P t- - 00 6 —Associated Press laseratioto South Korean radicals dissidents in Seoul gather under a who covertly went to the North giant poster of Im Su-kyon- g Pregnant Utahn Daughter Perish in Saudi Gunfight RIYADH Saudi Arabia (AP) — A Utah mother and daughter were killed when a suspected drug dealer commandeered the car they were riding in leading to a car chase and a gunbattle with police the US Embassy said Wednesday Also in the car were the husband and three other children The mother Kimberley Hinkson was 412 months pregnant with twins her cousin Dennis Hansen reported in Provo Utah Also killed was her daughter Courtney 10 one of six Hinkson children he said The other two were at home In Washington State Department press officer Adam Shub said both mother and daughter apparently were killed by the gunman An embassy statement said the shooting took place Tuesday night in Riyadh the c'apital and identified the man who seized the car as a Saudi More Exiles Win Back Soviet Citizenship MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union on Wednesday restored the citizenship of an undetermined number of exiles and among those re- 741' ported on the list were Nobel Prize-- 4 I winning authors it' k - ' Joseph Brodsky N and Alexander t Solzhenitsyn In his second major human- - 14 rights decree in three days Presi- dent Mikhail Gor- Alexander bachev "canceled Solzhenitsyn the decrees on citizenship concerning a number of persons who are now living abroad" the official news agency Tass reported Foreign Ministry spokesman Yuri Gremitskikh said the order "concerns a rather large number of people Some names were mentioned — Brodsky Solzhenitsyn" "1 just heard that ostensibly Mr Solzhenitsyn got back his Soviet citizenship but I don't know for sure" Gremitskikh said In a statement issued in her husband's name from their home in Cavendish Vt Natalia Solzhenitsyn said: "In Solzhenitsyn's case the original decree was not only a deprivation of citizenship but before that a forced eviction from the USSR that was accomplished through arrest and the accusation of treason Since nothing has been said about that in today's resolution it does not apply to Solzhenitsyn" Brodsky who lives in New York was not immediately available for comment The brief Tass report said the order dealt with "injustices that occurred between 1966 and 1988" but did not say if it affected everyone whose citizenship was revoked Nor did it name anyone Gremitskikh said he did not know the number of people affected but that it was not in the thousands Tass later reported that those people whose citizenship was being restored would be informed by the Foreign Ministry Solzhenitsyn is the author of "The Gulag Archipelago" which depicted the horrors of dictator Josef Stalin's prison camps He was charged with treason in 1974 stripped of his citizenship and expelled Brodsky a poet and essayist was forced to emigrate in 1972 under threat of imprisonment for his political comments citizen Family members in the United States said Kent Hinkson a former student at Brigham Young University and his family moved from Orange County Calif to Saudi Arabia eight years ago to work as a government computer programmer They were scheduled to move back to the United States on Aug 29 and settle in Provo Hansen said the Hinksons were out for hamburgers when a man being pursued by police jumped in their car and shot the daughter in the throat killing her During the chase that followed Mrs Hinkson was shot to death and Kent Hinkson was wounded in the scalp he reported ''The suspect has been apprehended and is in Saudi police custody" it added 71 I ‘ ? —' 11 ''' ii':1'a—:'): 9 - ' - tf : - g' )ty - - t4? : it t 41411'ilitV4 ti'oti 4 4 Ni t i' titet41 1 t 4' i14414 st: p 1 1'1 il) i4fri 4 t 14N:0 l'":t4 IAr SX14 itt' 050737 kI: Pi:a it ti- ' s 'o i $1 a ill"- - : woii ' ' " ' '' k lardterit - ' ' I lt ' ' 1 ''' ' ' 47s14z4?)pir 1 bLVit is1::: 11 t adt CAI -- ' ' '''''' :i $ 0' '' kitc-1‘- ' ' 1 vt r P ' ' c ' ''N f t $ i 'c't' ' -- 1 ' ' s: 4t I 14 f k i t ' Itv 1 - 1 '' r --1 7 1r : ' - 1 2 SEOUL South Korea (AP) — Thousands of leftist students clashed Wednesday with riot police who blocked them from marching to the border for a unification rally Police said 350 people were arrested and more than 100 others hurt But about 2000 people were allowed to rally peacefully near the heavily fortified border with Communist North Korea They were protesting what they said was the North's unwillingness to allow them to visit relatives in North Korea The protests overshadowed whai would have been a festive mood for the 45th anniversary Wednesday of Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule The holiday is observed in both Koreas The leftist rally at Seoul's Yonsei University turned violent as some 10000 radical students and dissidents throwing rocks and firebombs tried to march off campus to go to the border About 2000 riot police backed by a dozen armored vans equipped with tear gas launchers blocked all entrances to the school Police said about 350 people were arrested and more than 100 injured r in the clash at Yonsei and in protests in other parts of the capital The protests were limited to a section of the capital and along the main highway to Panmunjom a border village 35 miles north of Seoul where the rally was to be held to The border village is civilians and no one can enter the area without the approval of the two Korean governments Authorities deployed 16000 police in Seoul and along the main highway leading to Panmunjom the destination of the march "Let's drive out US imperialists!" radical students chanted as riot police blocked their march Protesters demand the 43000 US troops stationed in South Korea under a mutual-defens- e treaty be withdrawn immediately They claim the US military presence hinders dialogue with North Korea "Kill me!" one student shouted ramming against shields held by riot police in front of her Police kicked and punched some arrested students Under a South Korean proposal e border was to have the opened for five days beginning Monday The opening has not taken place because both sides failed to agree on conditions lr-- 1 ti ''i - : F 14 ' A 7 ' : - r Including Nobel Winners? o L ir d Iraq-boun- - I ( 7°I 1 1 est the United Arab Emirates said any Iraqi move to defuse tension in the region was welcome but warned Baghdad against trying to use "an Iranian card" against gulf Arabs Syria meanwhile was "extremely concerned" about a possible rapprochement between Iraq its arch ideological foe and Iran its ally an Arab envoy said Since the suspension of the gulf war and the death of Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini Iran has eased its rhetoric Iran's pragmatist president Hojatoleslam Ali Akbar Rafsanjani has made it clear his priority is revamping his country's economy As part of their enforcement of the trade embargo US and British ships patrolled the waters of the gulf under orders to interdict Iraqi shipping A British frigate has challenged a Cypriot oil tanker thought to be carrying Iraqi oil Two Iraqi tankers also were turned away from the United Arab Emirates The US and British actions were criticized by other UN members and Washington agreed Tuesday to discuss coordinating military actions with its UN Security Council partners The United States with 55 warships sent to the region maintains it has the military and legal authority to board vessels suspected of violating the economic boycott France said its naval forces would not seize Iraqi cargo ships at sea because such a measure would constitute an act of war Besides foreign warships already in the gulf Belgium Italy and Britain announced they were sending nine ships to the Mediterranean Greece also placed its naval facilities at the disposal of West Germany to enable it to station a squadron of minesweepers off the East Mediterranean island of Crete Three British minesweepers were expected to arrive in about three weeks Saudi Arabia also was asking for military assistance from Indonesia and Malaysia a Saudi diplomat said in Jakarta Iraq has called any naval blockade illegal The Iraqi newspaper Al Atmhuriya said Saddam's forces know how to penetrate a blockade and would "make US) troops taste death if they attack" Jordan is permitting its Red Sea port of Aqaba to allow in limited shipments of food and other material which is then sent to Iraq by truck convoy A Norwegian ship's captain said he was forced by Jordanian police to unload grain from his vessel in Aqaba news reports in Oslo said Tuesday Sources said shipping into the port had diminished Wednesday and there was no new cargo to unload Jordan Iraq's neighbor to the west is caught between demands from the West to enforce the embargo and pressure from Baghdad to keep access open for Iraq to the port of Aqaba gees said In Cairo Kuwait's exiled foreign minister said Iraqi occupation troops would have to blow up the whole building to get at millions of dollars worth of gold in the safes of Kuwait's central bank the Egyptian Gazette said "Even if the Iraqis decided to blow up the bank's safe which contains 150 million dinars $450 million worth of gold the central bank's building would sink in the gulf water as the building is designed this way" Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sahhah was quoted as saying A gulf Arab government official in people including a girl had died of injuries received during an Aug 8 protest in the iabiriya neighborhood Iraqi troops are stationed at government installations and most hotels in the capital Soldiers have placed tanks beside the beach and guns near the city the newspaper said 1 -- 41' o ( 4 S Publication of works by both Solzhenitsyn and Brodsky was barred for years in the Soviet Union but the restrictions were gradually lifted under the reform policies pushed by Gorbachev who came to power in March 1985 A 1989 Soviet high school history textbook says 40 million peopte were "repressed" a word used to cover death imprisonment exile and other punishments Under Leonid Brezhnev the Soviet government revoked the citizenship of prominent authors and artists who spoke out against domestic repression However Gorbachev has restored the citizenship of such notables as cellist and conductor Mstislav Rostropovich and his wife singer Galina Vishnevskaya t Firefighters Contain Several Raging Blazes Battle More YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK Calif (AP) — Firefighters contained several major forest fires Wednesday and experts said they were confident the blazes will soon be fully controlled Three big fires in Yosemite National Park were all expected to be contained within lines of bare earth by Friday night officials said The park was closed to visitors Aug 9 because of the fire danger The park will be partly reopened Friday officials announced A highway through the park across the Sierra Nevada range will be opened but Yosemite Valley the main tourist destination will remain closed until at least Monday For the third day in a row fire bosses gave highest priority to the Finley Lake fire in Tehama County California which had burred 21880 acres as of Wednesday and was 70 percent contained There was no estimate of when the fire northeast of San Francisco would be contained said Dwayne Collier of the California Department of Forestry The Finley Lake fire which threatened about 1600 homes earlier this week was within four miles of the town of Manton but it didn't appear to pose a threat Collier said Fires also burned in parts of Alas- ka Arizona Idaho Wyoming Montana Oregon and Washington state said the National Fire Information Center in Boise Idaho I Ia rwmvscww4T01r'4m |