OCR Text |
Show The Salt Lake Tribune 2A Sunday, January Appeals Court Says Story Cain Be Aired HR IB, now, ILiin Huge Storm Slows Down Eastern U.S. Associated Pftks taserthoto Former Vice President Walter Mondale, Democratic presidential front-runne- r, accepts cheers from crowd after address at party convention in Sacramento Calif. Mas-spor- snow-remov- er Volcano Dust May Drop Temperature Continued From Page One gested in "Weatherwise" magazine that atmospheric cooling could have other weather effects, particularly on rainfall. If the weather is cooler, less water would evaporate, he wrote. Expresses Opinion Elliott explained that if there is less evaporation there would be less rain because the atmosphere is going to stay roughly in equilibrium. If you put less in, youre going to take less out. But, he cautioned, the change would be small in response to the small temperature change. Most of the ash and other debris shot into the air by El Chichon has settled out by now, the scientists agreed. But the volcano also produced large amounts of sulfur, which has a more lasting effect. The sulfur cloud extends from near the Equator to 30 degrees North, about the latitude of New Orleans. Ongoing Process That sulfur reacts with air to become a mist of sulfuric acid, filtering out the sunlight and, in effect, allowing the volcanic effect to renew itself as the reaction continues. Elliott said there is evidence this process hasnt been completed, c meaning even more droplets of acid could form. Cardinal Calls On Flock to End Abortion sul-fri- - While it will reduce the sunlight coming tough, the acid should not add to the acid rain problem, he said, because it will settle to Earth very slowly. It went up in a hurry, but it will be several years coming down. You can still go out in the rain, he said. NEW YORK (AP) Noting the 10th anniversary of the Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. Cardinal Terence Cooke has called on Catholics to rededicate themselves to the sanctity of human life." In a letter sent to 1.8 million Catholics in the Archdiocese of New York and released Saturday, Cooke called the Jan. 22, 1973, decision disastrous and a national tragedy. He urged all who are part of the movement to unite our efforts to restore the maximum degree of legal protection possible for every human being at every of existence. Saying there have been 15 million abortions since the decision, Cooke said, It is a devastating loss of human life, and we must do everything in our power to bring it to an end. The cardinal called on Catholics throughout the archdiocese's area to hold special prayer sessions and programs and make the anniversary a time of prayer and reparation and of rededication to the principal of the sanctity of human life." n moveAlthough the ment is often linked with the Catholic Church, Cooke said, Abortion is much more than a Catholic issue; it is a concern of millions of other Americans as well. Not only is it a matter of personal morality; it deals with the most fundamental of human and civil the very right to life. rights I I I I I I I I I a i i i s a i i i i i a ia i ia I I nyl information, want sports scorns, story or feature you uant to talk about? Is your paper missing' Do you anl to discuss a classified or display advertisement' HERE'S WHERE TO CAU. iWeekdass before 10 a m Sunday before Carrier & Home Delivery Information. i Monday Friday. Ham to 5 p m New subscriptions, restarts. canrpllaUnns , Art Dept Information News Dept p m l and Mail subscrip- Mag & Arts Promotion Editorial Page Publisher Mi tor I IMS Sports Dept Lifestyle in t'tah lOialToll Freei 21700 .niOea,2-1.1- ADVERTISING DEPARTMENTS Adv Dispatch (,en Display 02 237-2- Classified Ads 217 2000 Retail Ads Saturdays after Toll-Fre- Ha m in I tah I I I I I I I I I fl I I I I I I I B I I I OBITVARY NOTICES Weekdays belore 5 p m Weekdavs after 5 p m Sundays after noon Saturday. 2T7-2I- 21 lO Soutti wtn I I I I EftfcUhd AoUi 1$. 171. tv bv fht rvto morvtln Kaerfw Tribune Corvoretlon. Salt lake City. Utah U0 turn d Sacond ctaaa poataaa oetd at Sait Lake City. postman TER Sand addrau etww to The Sait LaM Tribune, id Soutti Mam. Sen Lake City, utafttoin wnaoikitad ertketot, Hftara and otefuraa Mnt to The Son Laka Tribuna era ant at ft Owner" t rik and Kaamv Tribune Corporation mnai no raanonalbtilty far tnelr custody or return All subscription rates Carrier Delivery Daily I It oar copy Sutdeywitk dally IS par copy Stetday Only I aa oar copy (Ratae may ba hlgnar outvda the San taka matroooman area I Man v Daily and Sirwtov (Uttfv Ida). Nevada and Annsmina i tfvjrrv Daiiv and Stndav (u'a NavNia. rtaAo, Wvomfnel KO 00 r Deny Onry (Utah. Idaho. hev and rvamno) ti Mrrw SAkAday Only (Utah New da and tAMmlna i CVeMy and Sunday (All d. onw State) Oauy and Sunday lUttnm (An omerSteeei ah man khacriptmrallfl0vear oavaoia In advance The Tntry If mmrr & AMix.etertPre rhtaK.etd it wmiXo to trw id td r enrodurtkft o an tara o nad n it i aa a an a P new oiMchaa P'ea la erv.v., Aid . k Officer Shot By Other Policeman - black citizens during the Mondale, on the pther.hand, did best among those who said they were influenced mqst by the Question of whether or not he can win," the newspaper said.' Seven democratic presidential hopefuls addressed the convention ! during the day. g Mondale, in a speech that broughf .the delegates to their feet, charged that fteagan is dividing us into fwo Americi$. Tax Breaks, Cheese: If you are rich, they give you a tax break, but if youre' poor, they give you cheese," he said, il you are for dense, pack they call you patriotic, if you are against it, you are . .... Moscows dupes. , Mondale, considered the early front-runnfor the 1984 nomination, said if he were president he would chop those defecits down by scaling down the defense budget and would repeal or delay the indexing of income tax. He also drew cheers when he said he w.ould. fire Interior Secretary James' Watt, and Environmental .Protection. .Agency administrator Anne Gorswh and apas point one, of his rivals -- otydall interior secretary. Hart said the nation has fallen in the extraordinary circumstance" that a once popular president finds barn-burnin- A poll of delegates taken by the Los Angeles Times gave Cranston 40 percent and Mondale 15 percent Another 25 percent said they were undecided. The Times poll was taken by telephone prior to the convention. A poll of delegates taken on the convention floor will be tallied late Saturday night. The Times said 1,416 of the approximately 1,700 delegates responded to its poll. Massa-chusett- received 7 percent even though he has dropped out of the race. Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado got 5 percent; Sen. John Glenn of Ohio 4 percent; Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona 2 percent; and Sens. Dale Bumpers of Arkansas and Ernest Hollings of South Carolina 1 percent each. Mondale Was Second When asked who was their second choice, 23 percent preferred Mondale, followed by Cranston with 12 percent, Glenn 11 percent; Hart 10 percent; and Udall 5 percent. There were 33 percent undecided on the second choice. The Times said Cranston's home state popularity was the reason for his strong showing. The I I SPORTS SCORES Salt Lake County l or scores after II p m Flsewhere Democratic State Convention I Do you hasp a news f - fath- Tribune Telephone Numbers office hilling information tions By Clay F. Richards United Press International Home SACRAMENTO, Calif. state Sen. Alan Cranston far, outdistanced former Vice President Walter Mondale as the favorite of nearly 2,000 delegates to the California all-nig- SAVE .i California Demos Choose Cranston work the meaning of nonviolent in the Kingian tradition." and The elder King, affectionately known as Daddy King, reached out About 100 People gathered for A into the larger community to fight Memorial Mass for Peace" honoring against the injustices of his day, she and in so doing influenced his King at St. Patricks Cathedral in said, son. New York and 75 people attended an obervance at Zion Baptist Church. Mrs. King said her late husband a man of ultimate goodness bewas In Baltimore, about 150 people cause he had the example and life of in an participated prayer to emulate. vigil that ended early Saturday at Daddy King St. Marks United Methodist Church. Meanwhile in Las Vegas, shooting broke out between rival gangs after And in Seattle. 400 people gathLuered at the First AME Church on an observance there for Martin ther Jr.s , and one King anniversary Friday night to hear speakers extol was killed, police said. Kings achievements and warn that person Three others were wounded, and gams made by blacks have eroded since his death were reported in stable condition at Southern Nevada Memorial HospiIn a service at the Ebenezer Baptal. The victims were not immeditist Church, Mrs. King said her identified. ately er-in-law and Attenborough are two very special human beings who Police were called to the Nucleus have demonstrated in their lives' Plaza, a shopping center on Las Vegas predominantly black west side, chr ivill Ijkr rihnnr just before 5 p m., homicide Lt. John Conner said (USPS 4. MO) and "People Before Profit. marchers included Shriners youths wearing red berets. the broadcast anywhere and goes far beyond even the relief sought by the defendants, the petition said. The program is the highest rated news show on U.S. television and each week places among the top 10 6hows in the national prime-tim- e Nielsen ratings. Lawyers for the policemen said it was based on interviews of people listed as victims in the indictment of the Algiers Seven, who are accused of violating the civil rights of people they questioned by threatening and physically abusing them. ' , Sen. Edward Kennedy of Relief order injunctive prohibits Too Much The t Continued From Page One mo-frie- nt UP & Top Candidate March Notes Kings Birthday; Holiday Urged in His Honor n f By - Continued From Page One police in Marylands westernmost Garrett County as of 7 p m., but accumulations elsewhere were light as the storm turned northward sooner than expected The storm got off to a slow start in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, as a bit of warm air snuck into the storm system. But by Saturday night, the storm was intensifying, with 5 to 8 inches of snow reported in the Worcester area and the Connecticut Valley. About 2 inches of snow had accumulated in Boston, according the National Weather Service at Logan International Airport. The airport curtailed some operations at about 7 p.m., a spokeswoman said. We opened one runway for landing about 8 p.m.," said Charity t, Brown, a spokeswoman for the airports operator. But we expect to be up and down all night, closing runways for snow removal periodically." Traffic was light Saturday on Inarterstate 91, a major north-sout- h tery usually crowded on weekends with skiers headed north. "People are staying off the roads," said state police Cpl. Tom Burnickas in the western Massachusetts town of Northampton. ! In Connecticut, the states entire trucks was on fleet of the road, and shoreline residents braced for rough seas and high tides. ' Rhode Island Gov. J. Joseph Gar-rah- y advised residents to stay home unless travel was absolutely necessary, and state police also said motorists should be cautious. If you dont have to go out, we suggest you dont, said Trooper Paul Kennedy. ; And although few New Yorkers turned out at the Bronx Zoo, care-fakBill Meng said there were plenty of animals out in the storm. The polar bears love it, he said. . Blizzard conditions were forecast overnight for Boston. In the Adirondack community of Old Forge, where an Indian recently did a snow dance on the village green, there was disappointment Saturday. I I I right of unbridled censorship over the contents and timing of news programs. Janet McConnaughey Associated Press Writer A federal apNEW, ORLEANS peals court ruled Saturday that CBS can broadcast on schedule a segment of 60 Minutes" about alleged brutality by New Orleans police during an investigation into an officers death; A federal district judge earlier ordered the segment, scheduled to be shown Sunday on the popular news show, suppressed. The network appealed to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing that the district judge had overstepped constitutional bounds by censoring the segment. We find that CBS has shown that it will probably succeed on the merits of its appeal . . . and, accordingly, we grant the stay," the three-judg- e panel of the appeals court said in a short, written ruling issued Saturday evening. Supreme Court Appeal Attorneys for the policemen said they would ask the Supreme Court, probably through Justice Byron White, to reverse the decision. They were not certain of the procedure needed. The broadcast was scheduled just three weeks before the start of a trial for seven officers accused of beat-in- g , According to police, two gangs began fighting toward the end of a King rally at which high school drill teams were performing. Officers chased the gang members about two blocks from the shopping center, where the shooting erupted. investigation. Defense attorneys, who had won a motion to move the trial to Dallas because of extensive publicity in Louisiana, said broadcasting , the program before the trial began would make it impossible to find an impartial jury. Handwritten Order U.S. District Judge Adrian issued a handwritten order forbidding the broadcast on Friday after CBS refused to show him a script of the program segment. There was no hearing in open court. CBS said in its appeal that the prior restraint contained in this broad injunctive order is unprecedented in the history of our nation and constitutes, with no question, a blatant violation of , freedoms of speech and of the press. ! It "raises issues of national .importance and priously imperils the freedom ot expression whieh, heretofore, habeen secured to all .citizens for more than 200 years, the network said. If not corrected immediately, and prior to Sunday, January 16, 1983, it will allow the judiciary, a branch of government, the er nt r .. hinjseirwJJjT: country. Saying that the people are witnessing the collapse of the Reagan administration," Hart said, We will have for the next two years government by ad hoc administration." Arms Talks Uqged Many of the contendersjc'alled for immediate talks with the' new Soviet -' leadership on arms confroL- "Will never really straighten' out our economy or our socie(y.-along as our government oontmuee an open ended costly .ahdJJDtlgerpus1 arms race with the government of the Soviet Union, CranstoVsaid. 3 Ronald Reagan practices a domestic policy on privilege and-h- is foreign policy on paranoia. a heart transplant urwjiich he- received a new organ- - from a boy killed in a motorcycle accident. C.H. Neal Duvall, of Roma, Texas, a former assistant state attorney general, underwent heart surgery late Thursday at the Texas Heart Institute of St. Lukes Episcopal Hospital. Hes doing very well and were said .pleased with his progress, Elaine Moore, hospital wqman. 'Duvall was the fourth recipient of a heart-onl- y transplant surgery performed by Dr. Denton Cooley and a team of surgeons as part of a planned series of 35 transplant operations designed to test Cyclosporine, n a new drug, CHICAGO (UPI) The bullet that killed a policeman during an apparent robbery attempt Friday night was fired by another policeman, Police Superintendent Richard Brze-ze- k said Saturday. Officer Larry J. Vincent, 29, was fatally shot in the head in an exchange of gunfire that erupted as two men fled an apparent robbery attempt in what Brzeczek described as a dope flat. Vincent, the first Chicago policeman killed in the line of duty this year, died at Billings Hospital. Five city policemen were killed in 1982. Brzeczek said Vincent, in plainclothes, was climbing out a window after the two suspects when he was shot by an officer who was standing qutside the building, . Vincent was one of four officers summoned to the South Side apart-.mebuilding by a report of a burglary in progress. A holdup was tak-- ing place inside, Brzeczek said. Mistaken for Suspect?. not immediately clear. was It . ' hether Vincent was mistaken for aie of the suspects or whether he -waS1 caught in crossfire between police and the suspects. Officer Clarence. Spraggins", 34,. who entered the building with Vincent, was shot in the arm in an exchange of bullets with the suspects. 4 Brzeczek said the fatal shot was fired by an officer under the reasonable belief that-- . he was being fired upon by a thintpffender.' ' .The superintendent did not name tne officer who fired the shot. Brzeczek said several suspects who were apprehended near the iand originally were be- lfevqd responsible for. the Vincent would be charged with. ' footing home invasion, robbery and' felony murder, even though they did not. fire the fatal shot. Suspect Grazed At least three men were in custo-,- . dy. No charges had been filed early Saturday afternoon. One suspect, Nicky Cozart, 28, was apparently grazed on the abdomdn by a bullet. He walked into the emergency room of Providence Hospital under police guard, waff treated 'and returned to the police ' . .... station. Two other men in custody were identified as Darnell Davis, 24, andv Anthony Pittman, 34, both of - ... . Chi-$g- i Pre-Daw- n Display Anticipated . t.r , ' a . - - ' ' j . Volcano: Erupts Into Hawaiian Sky VOLCANO, Hawaii (UBlfV'Ki-laue- a Volcano shot molteif lava into the air during a five-ho100-fe- et eruption Saturday, then sputtered to a steamy simmer. n The erup'tiori.that subsided by midmernini was the 18th phase of activity in two weeks for the volcano on the island of Hawaii. Reginald Okamura, scientist with the U.S. Geologic Survey team that has been monitoring the volcano since it first emitted fiery jigpa. of . life Jan. 3., said the latesacUvity was what volcanologists .'fcabeen . waiting for all week. This is the other shoe fiflllnS he said. , The persistent volcano quitted, . down after an eruption Tuesday but pre-daw- Dkamura said continued harmonic Iremors in the area south of Puuka-hauale- a gave them a clue the show wasnt over. "We had an. increase in tremors late yesterday morning, so we knew crack, that has been absorbing most of the earlier flow. y Volcanologists have been camped Out on Kilauea Volcanos east flank round- - the clock, watching the steaming vents for signi of renewed . activity. something could be on the way. Okamura said Big Island Civil Defense officials made an overflight of the eruption and found the flow activity to be sluggish and pretty safe since the lava was from a long fissure in the upper east rift.. zone, away from populated Its a lot of fun," Maly said. !It gives us a chance to look at somee thing besides all of our ; things. Hawaii Volcanoes National Park naturalist Kepa Maly said the activity has remained steady since began but the sluggish flow appeared to be" moving east' and northward back intorthe ancient graben, or ever. Scientists have been able to expand and upgrade their instrumentation in volcanic hazard studies that came into being as a result of the Mount St. Helens crisis. 150-fo- ot areas. 1 ' man-mad- ft When Kilauea erupted in the e$st rift zone Jan. 3, scientists were ready, and the recent eruption is (he A k Pope Seeks Pardon for Death Row Inmates Continued From Page One diplomats accredited to the Holy See gathered in the Apostolic Palace's Royal Hall. Most men dressed in white tie and tails and women wore long dark dresses Some African diplomats wore traditional brightly colored tunics. "The church cannot remain silent to the criminal action of making a certain number of people disappear, without trial, leaving their families in a cruel state of uncertainty," the pope said, in what Vatican observers called a reference to Argentinas military junta "The churi h takes inlo its heart all those who are submitted to tor-lurwhatever the political regime might be," John' Phuf skid. He also condemned arbitrary. arrest, convarious centration camps, and forms of oppression. He said the people of Afghanistan, subjected to more than three years of Soviet occupation, are legitimately proud of their independence" and suffer a tragic situation... with so many deaths, so much misery, and such an exodus of ,, On the Middle East, the pope said there must be justice for all interested parties before there is a true and lasting peace, and called on all factions to abandon violence and terrorism. refugees." He said negotiations and dialogue are necessary in such violence-torcountries as Northern Ireland, and in countries where peace has been bodily harm to the entertainer. maintained only by suspending the He said the pall was made around peoples legitimate rights. 7 p.m. Vatican observers said this was The call was made by a female to a'n apparent reference to the situathe Owenboro police station, Detection in the popes native Poland, tive Clyde Thorp said. The caller where the communist government said she knew a man who "hated the " continues to repheks dissidents deground that Dolly Parton walked spite relaxation of more than one on," the detective said. year of martial law Dep. 31. t n Dcaih Threat Cancels Parton Shows - Two OWENSBORO. Ky. (AP) shows by entertainer Dolly Parton c were canceled Saturday. ftcr a threat was made to the motel where she was scheduled to perform, officials said J P. Embry, a spokesman for the Hivrrmnnt Executive Inn of Owensboro, said a male caller threatened telc-phon- r MNi iHm |