| Show -- 2A The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday September 2 1990 Spotlight Superpowers Set Stmmdt on Mideast "A lot has happened since the two of them met before not only in the Persian Gulf" said national security adviser Brent Scowcroft He mentioned Cambodia and Afghanistan as other areas that needed superpower attention As for the Soviets acting as mediator in the crisis Bush said "I don't see a mediating role at all and I don't think the Soviets see themselves as having a mediating role There are a lot of mediators out there trying Continued From A-- 1 pose sanctions on Iraq but it has voiced reservations about the USled naval blockade Moscow has stopped arms shipments to Iraq but nearly 200 Soviet military advisers and 5000 construction workers remain there Although Bush has spoken by phone with dozens of world leaders about the crisis he has not talked directly to Gorbachev since Iraq invaded Kuwait He said this is because he had hoped he would be meeting the Sovi- He mentioned UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar as "being in the forefront of this" Perez de Cuellar conferred Saturday with the Iraqi foreign minister in Amman Jordan Senior Jordanian officials said the meeting produced some progress toward reaching an agreement that could free all foreigners held in Iraq deploy an Arab peacekeeping force as a buffer between US and Iraqi troops along the Saudi border and eventually re Bush was to spend Saturday night all-da- y Sunday session Aides said that Bush did not plan to visit any other countries on the trip Although Bush stressed several times that there was "no agenda" press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said: "They both know what they want to talk about" Hundreds Jet From Iraq To Freedom sItt4te: N 011 Ile e i ' MEM MI ‘ MO ME MI RAPS 443 South Moth e Established April 15 1871 pub baled doily and Sunday by the Kearnsstribune Corpora lion 143 South Main Si Solt Lake City Utah 84110 Second class postoge pod of Lake City Wok POSTMASTER Send address changes to The Sall Lake Tribune 143 South Main St SoN RATES Carrier Delivery $24 per copy $62 per copy Sunday with dolly SI50 Sunday Only poi copy Newhock 0i Vendor 150 MK ctoPY Daily SI 25 Pin Corn' Sunday (Rats may differ outside the Solt lake Metropottlan area) Iv Priall Dairy and SundCry Mak lOoho Novodo and Wyo(Ting) $12 00 ma Doily Only Malt 1O3ho Nevada Doity mail (Utah where $9613 ma Wednesday by available) Sunday Only (AA other hates) SC 00 ma Daily and Sunday (Ail other $2300 ma states) moil subscriptions peryabie in °doom 2372990 Re III Ste0 ITV fir3fTt'v) Saturday and Sunday by cornet Classified Ads Retail Ads 11111 ME Okt trtibtmt SUBSCRIPTION 2372025 Weekdays before 5 p m Weekdays after 5 p m Sundays after noon Saturdays after 8 a in ME IIIII 0111 1111 Ali unsolicited articles monusori0O 1etters and pictures sent at e the owner's risk and Corporation assumes no responsi Wily tor their custody of forum 2372031 2372011 OBITUARY NOTICES MI III III Lake City INoti 84111 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENTS In 011 SoN SPORTS SCORES I I I i Newsday Writer KUWAIT — Jesse was crying The ambassador was crying Jennifer was crying as she hugged her father goodbye Even the reporters were crying "We had to leave the father the husband" Jesse Jackson said in tears after Jennifer and her mother Bonnie left Richard Anderton at the door of the beleaguered US Embassy "We made a step in the right direction but we have a long way to go" As they made their first humanitarian gesture Saturday releasing 26 sick American hostages the Iraqis appeared cool even as the sight of those left behind the bars of the embassy gate was as wrenching as the view of those walking to freedom was moving "Just get him back by Thanksgiv ing" Bonnie Anderton said to a reporter Her husband and Jennifer share a birthday on that day On a bus on the way to Kuwait Airport with Jackson Bonnie Anderton who lives in Colorado said that the family had flown to Kuwait on the couple's 20th wedding anniversary less than three weeks before Iraq invaded and made them hostages Richard Anderton is an engineer with a company in Kuwait On Aug 3 the day after the invasion the Anderions took refuge in the US Embassy compound and New subsciiptions restarts cancellations and office billing information 2372051 Mail subscriptions 8 a m to 5 p m Monday-Frida- Ad Services General Display :' By Timothy M Phelps (Weekdays before 10 a m Sunday before 1 pml Carrier and Home Delivery Information 2372900 Customers outside of both Salt Lake County and South Davis County please call toll free I I 141'''‘441ratt Nt e Ptess Laserphoto Jackson Weeps as Iraq Sets Ill Hostages Free HERE'S WHERE TO CALL 1 e:e' —Associated elx Salt Lake County Lid Southern Davis County Elsewhere in Utah (Dial Toll Free) 4 The Rev Jesse Jackson talks with President Saddam Hussein Saturday before putting Americans on Jet bound for the US you need information want sports scores have a news story or feature you want to talk about' Is your paper missing! Do you want to discuss a classified or display advertisement! I ' k III 11 Promotion Editonal Page Publisher Editor Photo Dept 1 r - Do Information ' 4 r ' gakt Zilbutte City Desk Sports Dept Lifestyle Entertainment Wire Desk n i ""44- ' ' 4 TELEPHONE NUMBERS I i '' Ltisr CLIP AND SAVE u1t ti - Americans bt ' a 4- neighbor They included 3000 1 1 1 1 414 loamy siitimiiiusokt 0 ts IN2 ' 4a—4: oil-ric- III k 1 2:r Le'r expand the window of opportunity in Iraq adding: "Diplomacy must not take a back seat to economic resistance and military preparedness" In all about 21000 Westerners were trapped in Iraq and Kuwait by Iraq's Aug 2 invasion of its h IMO le'' - "There must be a cooling of the rhetoric in this quest for peace" He urged US senators and congressmen to use their influence to IOI I MO MO The Tnbuste is a member at The Assocroted Press The Sisopoted Press Is enitilect exclusivety to Ihe use os reproduction 01 oll icscol news print ed in this newspoper Os well at oil A P news dispatches Membes Audit Bureau Of Cieculohons EN MB ME IIII MS MI MI MI lin NM I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I a e- again it shows world unity in opposition to Saddam Hussein" he said Earlier Saturday Scowcroft had refused to confirm an Associated Press report about the upcoming summit As Scowcroft answered questions at a briefing Fitzwater took two urgent phone calls — one from Bush and the second from Baker He went to the podium scribbled a note to Scowcroft and whispered to him Turning back to reporters Scow-crosaid "Stay tuned we'll have an announcement at 1 o'clock" At his briefing Scowcroft said: — Ambassador Nathaniel Howell and a handful of diplomatic personnel would remain in the US Embassy in Kuwait as long as possible to assist the 2500 Americans there — Saddam is playing a game with hostages in which "the ground rules change daily and sometimes hourly We demand that he release all innocent civiliRns detained against their have been there ever since felt Jennifer with a hat and a mouth full of braces said that they had been eating "turkey turkey and more turkey" for a month Their food supply cut off by Iraqi troops around the embassy the Americans inside have lived mostly on turkeys from the embassy's freezer But with power cut off and no refrigeration the turkeys were rapidly spoiling the Andertons said Now the embassy staff and other Americans left behind are making "turkey jerky" to preserve what food they have left the Andertons said with disgust "The embassy is out of food and out of water They can't hold out much longer" Bonnie Anderton said "But it's a pretty tough group I think Saddam Hussein underestimated Americans in just how tough they can be" As the Andertons were talking the buses were stopped on the highway by Iraqi soldiers near the airport and freedom Fear returned to everyone's faces as an Iraqi soldier angrily brandished a grenade launcher at the bus The soldiers took film from a television crew and the entourage was allowed to continue Bonnie Anderton said that President Bush should not be deterred by the presence of hostages in Iraq and Kuwait wide-brimm- - - -- - ‘ t 4 A I It - A: I ( 1 --1 k is wet '4 ' 4 '44 VI' 4 't t 4 si-- I4I 'i i j ' A At 44s ‘I t t1-- t oart - I I Bob Weir 1 I Labor Day Telethon after 17 years in Las Vegas will to lounge lizard image this weekend moving Hollywood try in search of trendier acts lower costs and a fresher look fund-raisceleThe 21 long Muscular Dystrophy Association brates its 25th anniversary from the Star Search Theater on Sunset Boulevard where Ed McMahon presents his glitzy talent show The nationwide broadcast begins locally at 10:30 MDT Sunday and ends 5 pm Monday d acts as Among the scheduled entertainers are such cast members from En Tone! Toni! Vogue Hammer Tony! rapper KC "The Young Riders" Fred Savage of the "The Wonder Years" and Bob Saget of "America's Funniest Home Videos" Behind the scenes Lewis no longer acts as one of the producers and and will serve only as a host Producer George Schlatter ("Real People" ' takes sole producer credit "Rowan and Martin's Laugh-in"- ) Lewis' Jerry to shake its ft 1 ! er ' - 1 I i youth-oriente- will" ' Miss America 1990 says giving up her crown this week will be bittersweet but she conceded she's looking forward to lounging around with no make up on But after a week of relaxing it will be back to the books to finish her degree in veterinary medicine Miss Turner a who competed as Miss Missouri after losing in years past in her home state of Arkansas said she has enjoyed the last 12 months She says Saturday her last night as Miss America will be a sad one "It is a bittersweet experience This has been a good year and you Debbye Turner NEW YORK (UPI) — Police arrested two Massachusetts men and a Florida man Saturday in a shooting that injured 10 people in front of a Brooklyn nightclub authorities said Four men and six women were hit by bullets Saturday at 3:29 am as they gathered in front of the Dynasty a club in the Flatbush section of the borough police spokeswoman Sgt Mary Wrensen said None of the victims suffered lif e threatening wounds she said Police later arrested Donovan Andrew Marsh 25 Springfield Mass Delroy Williams 26 also of Springfield and Carl Watson 179 Miami Wrensen said A fourth suspect remains at large she said Police spokeswoman Sgt Tina Mohrmann said one of the men argued with club personnel over their refusal to admit him to the night spot then walked away d He returned armed with a gun accompanied by the other men who also carried automatic guns Mohrmann said Shots were fired into the crowd in front of the club wounding people who were both leaving and waiting to get in police said Wrensen said the gunmen fled the scene in a blue van and went to the Starlight Club a night spot about 16 blocks away A guard at the Starlight had been warned of gunmen traveling in a blue van and refused to admit them Wrensen said The guard took the veil's Massachusetts license plate nufnber and called police she said Police later spotted the van gave chase and caught up to die three men who surrendered Wrensen said The fourth suspect was not with them always hate to see it end" Miss Turner said "I'm sure I'll be a little weepy about it" Among the highlights were meeting President Bush Bill Cosby Oprah Winfrey and jazz great Lionel Hampton "I am looking forward to a week to go somewhere and do nothing but lay out with no makeup" she said "I get tired I'm on the road seven days a week Living out of a suitcase has its challenges" Bob Weir Grateful Dead guitarist once again is allegedly the victim of a harmonica player who has been jailed in the past for impersonating him police say Oakland police are looking for Randall De !piano to arrest him on a warrant accusing him of stealing and violating his parole after serving 15 months on fraud and theft charges Sgt Stan Bricker said Friday Bricker questioned Delpiano two years ago after he was charged with bilking a woman out of $4000 He was accused of gaining her confidence by impersonating Weir He was paroled in April Bricker said Delpiano told him "he gets some satisfaction" out of pretending to be Weir Delpiano resembles Weir who doesn't play harmonica "People like him when they think he's Bob Weir" Bricker said Grateful Dead publicist Dennis McNally called Delpiano "a professional con man who has got an emotional problem" "Bobby obviously objects to him doing so" McNally said "I really hope he runs into sharper Deadheads who recognize him" referring to the nomadic group of fans who sometimes follow the band around the country Bricker identified Delpiano as the man who allegedly has been imperCounsonating Weir in the community of Discovery Bay in Contra Co-tt- high-powere- a Harry Nilsson nocent to misdepleaded counts of drunken driving and driving without proper insurance The Grammy-winnin- g singer of "Everybody's Talkin' " and "Without You" entered the pleas Thursday in Municipal Court A hearing was scheduled for Sept 26 Nilsson 49 was Stopped by the California Highway Patrol at 3:40 am July 6 Authorities said his blood alcohol level was three times the legal limit of 08 percent Nilsson whose real name is Harry Edward Nelson III won the male pop vocalist Grammy in 1972 for "Without You" and he sang "Everyg film "Midnight Cow body's Talkin'" the theme from the singer-songwrit- er Oscar-winnin- boy" Kuwaiti Escape Delays Student DAYTON Ohio (UPI) — A University of Dayton student had a good excuse for being a week late for the start of fall classes: He had to escape Iraqi-hel- d Kuwait a junior travKhaled eled 22 hours by automobile through temperatures to reach because I want to complete school and I will be safe here" said Saturday "Any second there could be war in Kuwait" The mechanical engineering student was born in Kuwait but holds a Jordanian passport which he credits for helping him get out of the country He left his parents brother and sister Abu-al-h- Abu-al-h- 122-degr- Jordan where the government helped him secure a flight to the United States "I'm ilappy to be back in Dayton aj Desert Shield A Boon to Small Firms United Press International When Saddam Hussein's troops stormed into Kuwait Aug 2 Texas bread-make- r Roy Terracina was on the verge of slashing payrolls and product lines "We were looking at 25 percent cutbacks a few months ago the whole industry" said Terracina president of Sani Antonio's Sterling Foods maker of miniature loaves for military rations But the massive American buildup changed all that "With Operation Desert Shield it's virtually 'how many can you make" Terracina's company is not the only one pulled from the oven by war fever In Patterson NJ Norbert Efros's Lite Industries is going into overdrive to produce climatic vests sleeveless clothing designed to keep soldiers cool in impossibly hot cli— like summertime Saudi Arabia The vest is laced with hollow tubes which cool like an air conditioner compressor The vests cost the government $102 The Pentagon wants 4000 a month Roland Mizrahi owner of Sidran of Dallas is preparing for a worse-cas- e scenario His company makes chemical warfare gear The "chemsuit" jackets and pants are equipped with d foam liners to protect against toxic gas Bootmakers too are doing a two- t NORTH KANSAS CITY Mo (AP) — Volunteering soon will become a high school graduation requirement for students in the North Kansas City School District In a pilot program announced last week the 16000-studen- t district will require students to complete 36 hours of community service outside the classroom as part of a new social studies class "the American citi- charcoal-impregnate- genera- tion behind us" Superintendent Gene Denisar said Tuesday at a convocation for the district's 2000 teachers and administrators He declared the North Kansas City district's 1990-9school year which begins Tuesday as the Year of Service The "American riti7en" class will first be offered next semester as an elective in a high school to be chosen later Starting in fall 1992 it will become a required course Denisar said that as far as he knew no other school district in the state has such a graduation requirement Denisar also hopes the course may spur community support The district has been trying since last spring to pass a capital improvements package to improve and expand district facilities At Chicago's lelleville Shoe ihrA De- fense Department orders have poured in for an additional 200000 1 I - 1 !it 1(1 Debbye Turner Jerry Lewis Students to Serve Others — If They Want to Graduate zen" "It's time to put the 'me' - 144-4- 1 ) ' V t 4 ' 4 IA ' ik Aeld '- -- 'IN Shots Wound 10 in Spat At Nightclub ''' t 110) first direction" Jackson said III III 1 1 He said he was encouraged by his meetings with Saddam whom he found ready to talk "When people are willing to talk that is a step in the BIM ' ! Continued From A-- 1 even ambassadors had accurate to tals of their own nationals on board Some of the American and British women interviewed at Baghdad airport before departure said they left husbands behind as part of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's human shield at strategic installations to deter any US attack "Our husbands are being held and we don't want to put them in danger" said an American woman standing in line at Baghdad airport who declined to give her name Another Debby Willis of Park-ma- n Maine said she and her husband Jerry Willis were trying to escape across the desert from Kuwait when Iraqi troops captured them Her husband stayed behind at a military site she said Authorities held the Iraqi flight full of Americans and Britons until Jackson the American activist returned from Kuwait with sick American hostages whose release he gained after meeting twice with Saddam Jackson brought 26 hostages out of Kuwait including 20 people suffering from various illnesses Only one of them required a stretcher — a woman who broke her hip in a car accident while being moved from Kuwait to Baghdad Four people who had come out of Kuwait by car were added to Jackson's party in Baghdad bringing his total to 30 As many as 21 other Americans who had been detained in Iraq also boarded the flight Jackson's departure from Kuwait was delayed by protracted negotiations to bring out an American woman who had called him at his hotel with a plea to take her out with him Jackson was believed to have said he would not leave without her At Baghdad's airport Jackson told The Associated Press: "This is a window of hope and it must be expand civil-righ- Bush voiced pessimism over chances for a diplomatic breakthrough "I haven't seen any flexibility" on Saddam's part he said Asked about Saddam Hussein's piecemeal release of some women and children Bush said: "I don't like I'm glad when any American it comes out of there but there's a certain brutality a certain tawdry performance in all of this" "I've talked to so many leaders and they all agree that this is just a despicable performance" Aides said Bush suggested a meeting last week in a diplomatic cable to Gorbachev That was followed by two phone conversations between Secretary of State James Baker and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard :It evardnadze Fitzwater said Fitzwater said that the very fact that Bush and Gorbachev were meeting to discuss the Middle East could increase pressure on Saddam "Once hard" et leader In Helsinki in advance of the solve the status of Kuwait As he had done before r-- — --7 71------- kit 4511' IP :tr it low- A - 4 - boots a contract worth $7 million — with promises of fatter footwear contracts in the future Food is also hot ? Lite- 0- - - ' - - 3-- - ' -il NI- " L 1 tr - An Iraqi Tank's Worst Nightmare Modern weapons like this may be used by the US in Saudi Arabia against Iraqi tanks if hostilities erupt heat-seekin- g American troops eat a lot and that means a banquetI for firms like SOPAK-CO of Mullins a small town in South Carolina's tobacco belt For now the crisis means producaround the clock makes the modern equivalent of the World War II Today's version called Meals Ready to Eat or MREs excludes cigarettes — deemed dangerous for the health of fighting troops — but includes such freeze-drie- d exotica as pizza burritos and omelets in sauce 4 3 I 1 |