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Show 2A The Salt Lake Tribune Monday, November, 14 650,000 Utahns Expected to Vote in Tuesdays General Election Continued From Page One can State Treasurer Edward T. Alter, completing one term, is testing the new scheme agaisnt Democrat Brian Moss, son of former U. S. Sen. Frank E. Moss. Splitting voters is the moral and legal clash over the Cable TV Deceninicy Act, a 1982 petition-sponsoretiative law reaching the ballot after the Legislature passed its own bill seeking to curb films deemed to con d tain indecent material involving offensive nudity and sex scenes. Both laws subject broadcasters to fines and license suspension for viola- tions. The subject has stirred the community for at least four years, and the 1983 Legislatures measure has never been implemented due to a pending court test of its legality The initiative proponents have gone forward with their version, push d year after that, under Proposition 2, departing from the machinery of the last 14 years where the Legislature met in alternating regeneral sessions and stricted budget sessions. While there are a couple of district judges ';eing challenged by lawyers in Tuesdays election, it could be the last of contested judicial races with the judipassage of Proposition 3 cial article revision. That updating of the judicial structure would provide ing it as a kind of referendum to demonstrate community attitudes Opponents argue it is constitutionally flawed, a futile and prospectively costly redundant gesture that will only become mired in more court action. The seeds of new directions in state government are also included in a handful of constitutional amendments on the ballot. The Utah Legislature would convene in January for a y general session, and every 60-d- 20-d- ( for new State Senate confirmation of judicial appointments and only yes or no uncontested judicial elections in the future, a move advocated by rev- isionists to remove nonpartisan judges from political activity. That has proved to be the major bone of contention in the comprehensive revision measure, touching off opposition arguing that it will remove judges too far from voter responsiveness. Surveys Place Reagan Near Landslide Win Reagan, Mondale Campaign to Final Whistle Continued From Page One votes to produce a victory while the confident president decided at the last minute to make a push in bis opponents home. I dont think of it as running up the score, Reagan said at an airport news conference in Rochester, Minn., with his Air Force One jet in the background. "The Gipper would never quit. He fought to the final whistle. . Reagan refused to flatly rule out eliminating tax deductions for state and local income taxes. Nor would he rule out the possibility of taxing unemployment benefits and workers compensation benefits, all proposals that have surfaced in recent days from Treasury Department officials looking for recommendations to forward to Secretary Donald Regan. Mondale says taxes will have to go up after the election to reduce the federal budget deficit, no matter who is elected, but Reagan has always said he has no plans for a tax hike. . - Mondale, nearing the end of a punishing campaign, told parishioners in the church in Tennessee that the president and his aides advocate heartless policies for the poor, even -- while they use military force over-,sea' s. This crowd can hear the faintest drum, but they cant hear the cry of a ' hungry child, he said. He urged the congregation -- to make certain everybody votes. Dont despair, dont give up. Continued From Page One vative Sen. Jesse Helms and Democratic Gov. James Hunt Jr., the latest Gallup Poll put Reagan ahead 62 percent to 35 percent. Three percent were undecided. The poll, released Saturday, had a 3 percent margin of error. From there he went to the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, where he apvotes pealed for Spanish-America- n by vowing to name a Hispanic to his Cabinet. The running mates joined the president and his challenger in campaigning in the final days. Vice President George Bush apThis Week with peared on ABC-TV- s David Brinkley and said that some of Mondales campaign charges have been spawned by desperation . . . Hes said some ugly things about the president. Hes said some ugly things about me. The vice president also said he probably wished he hadnt said during his vice presidential debate that the Democrats had suggested the Marines killed in Lebanon had died in shame. Bush also said he thought Mondale would have been able to run a more competitive race had he picked a southern vice presidential running mate such as Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas. The selection Mondale did make, Ferraro, predicted victory in a radio interview aired during the day, but conceded the ticket would be devastated in some states. Asked in an interview with the RKO and Mutual Radio networks if she feared a sweep, she said, its going to be no sweep. Its going to be a victory. It is going to be a very, very tight race. In Ohio, a Columbus Dispatch poll of 1,617 registered voters showed 60 percent Reagan up by 20 points to 40 percent. Associated Dozens of voters stand in front of a barrio voting place in Managua early Sunday Continued From Page One east of Managua, but were driven away by Sandinista troops. There was no word about any casualties there. There was no confirmation from the Voice of Nicaragua, or any other FBI Arrests Five, New Blood Test Can Detect Including Parasitic Brain Worms - CLEVELAND (AP) The FBI on Sunday arrested accused terrorist Raymond Luc Levasseur, who has .been on the agencys 10 Most Wanted list for seven years, and four of his associates, the agency said. 38, was apprehended with his common law wife, Patricia Gros, FBI Director William Webster said in a prepared statement from I Washington, D C. They were arrested I while riding in a van in Deerfield, where they had been living, said John I Dunn, an FBI spokesman in Cleve- . , land. ' Arrested in Cleveland were Jaan Karl Laaman, 36, Richard Charles Williams, 37, and Barbara J. Curzi, 26, Webster said. Levasseur, Thomas William Manning and Mannings wife, Carol Ann, have been the focus of a "very, very Intensive investigation" sice 1976. according to the statement. , - FBI identified Levasseur and the Mannings as members of the Sam Melville-Jonatha- n Jackson Unit, .which the agency said has financed terrorist activities through bank rob- beries and has claimed responsibility Tor several bombings in New Eng-- . land, including one in which 21 people 'were injured. Dunn described the three arrested in Cleveland as asso-dates of Levasseur and the Man-- ; N.C. (AP) WINSTON-SALE- - A parasite that can cause seizures, blindness, insanity and pork-born- e death can be detected by a new blood test at a cost of about 10 cents, making it possible to fight the disease in underdeveloped countries researchers say. The test, developed by Dr. Raymond E. Kuhn, an immunologist and parasitologist at Wake Forest University, and Drs. John Estrada and Max GrogI of Colombia, is aimed at a disease called neurocysticercosis, the Winston-Sale- Journal reported Sunday. The malady begins when lar- vae from a pork tapeworm called Taenia solium invade the brain. The brain worms are common in many Central and South American countries as well as in Africa and Asia, Kuhn said last week. In Mexico, random autopsies have shown that about 3 percent of the population is infected, he said. About half of those infected are killed by the disease, which also causes epileptic seizures, migraine headaches, blindness and insanity, Kuhn said. Early detection and treatment with drugs can improve the chances of a patient surviving without permanent damage, Kuhn said. However, scans capable of detecting the formations worms and their cyst-lik- e in brain tissue cost about $300. y source, of a report by the Soviet news agency Tass about an attack by rebels across the Honduran border hours before the voting began. It was not known if Tass was referring to the area mentioned in the government radio report. y Tass said that 400 Somozistas, armed to the teeth, made an attempt at penetrating from Honduran territory the northern areas of the republic and other populated areas. Two days before the election, Daniel Ortega, coordinator of the Sandinista governing junta and the partys presidential candidate, repeated a claim that the United States was trying to manipulate the contest. Ortega also predicted that the United States would invade Nicaragua if President Reagan is on Tuesday. U.S. officials have consistently denied Ortegas frequent prophecies of imminent invasion. As he cast his ballot at a polling place near his home in the elegant Bolonia section of Managua, Ortega said, This is a historic experience not only for me but also for the people of Nicaragua. Ortegas vice presidential running mate, Sergio Ramirez, told reporters the absence of major opposition did counter-revolutionar- Kuhns blood test detects an antibody produced by a persons immune system to fight the parasite. A similar test on the spinal fluid can tell whether the parasite has invaded the brain, he said. The researchers said that once the test materials are packaged in kits for rural clinics and doctors offices, thousands of people could be screened each day at a cost of less than 10 cents each. The university has applied for a patent on the test, and the researchers have applied to the National Institutes of Health to get funds for a three-yea- r study to refine the tests. The disease could be controlled if people thoroughly cooked pork and if sanitation measures prevented passage of the worm eggs from human waste to hogs, but poverty and ignorance in the Third World make it unlikely sweeping changes will come quickly, Kuhn said. In Colombia, people prefer the taste of infected pork, apparently because the larvae make the meat sweeter, he said. Americans are not immune to the disease, Kuhn added, noting that 100 cases of neurocysticerocosis have been diagnosed in California in the mostly among immipast 10 years grants or people who had traveled in Third World countries. Manning, accused uf the 1981 mur- der of a New Jersey state trooper and also on the Most Wanted list, and his -- Wife have been hiding in the Cleve- land area but may have fled because Of the arrests Sunday morning, Web-Istsaid. Levasseur was sough! hv the FBI ;for bank robbery and unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for illegal pos-- ! session of a weapon, and Gros was charged witrharbdrihg a federafftbgitive, Webster said. ' .Williams also is wanted for unlaw-- ; ful flight to avoid prosecution in New - Jersey for the slaying of Trooper Philip Lamonaco, who was killed on ; Interstate 80 in northwestern New Jersey during.a gun battle after he . stopped a car, officials said Laaman was wanted by the FBI for ; unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for assault with intent to murder and ; by Massachusetts state police for a shootout with troopers in 1982. Webster said. Curzi was charged with harboring a fugitive, said Webster, who noted the FBI this year has apprehended ; six people on its 10 Most Wanted list Curzi is also known as Barbara Co-- ; lombaro, Dunn said. Levasseur and his wife were arrested about 10:30 a.m.in Deerfield, a rural area in Por-tagCounty, about 50 miles southeast of Cleveland. The other three were arrested about 30 minutes later in Cleveland, Dunn said. er e not But Cruz never registered for the race, complaining that the Sandinistas denied him any chance by limiting press freedom, denying equal access to radio and television, cutting the campaign too short and other restrictions. More than 1.58 million people registered to vote. Voting itself was not mandatory, but some Nicaraguans said they were pressured to vote by neighborhood Sandinista defense committees. But others said they were eager to vote. People say they are voting for peace, sid Gloria Hernandez, a mother of five children in the village of Teotecacinte near the Honduran border. Maybe this will bring an end to the Reagan administrations aggression. Terms of all offices were for six years. 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Utah POSTMAS-TfW Send address changes to t he Salt l ake Tr ibune. 143 South M.un Salt I .ike C ity, Utah Mill JilfiSi'iaLPnJl unsol k ited articles. m,inu scripts, letters and pictures sent to T he Salt I ake T t ibune are pnt af the owner's risk and Kearns Tribune Corporation assumes no responsibility for their custody or of the Utah State Bar Association completed October 16, 1984 return PlPTiON PATE S ( arner (delivery Oa'iv I l per copy 56 per copy Sunday with daily NUBSC 198 per copy Sunday Only Newsr ,u k or Vendor 5 75 per copy Daily 5 75 per copy Sunday Mates may be higher outside fhe Sal t lake Mefropol dan area ) Hy Mail Daily and Sunday (Utah. Idaho. W SO mo Nev.sda and Wyoming) Daily and Sunday (Utah Nevada. 10? 00 year Idaho Wyoming) Daily Only (Utah, Idaho. Neva! 15 75 mo and Wyomng Sunday Only (Utah. Idaho. Neva 15 25 mo da and Wyoming Daily and Sunday (All 16 5Q month other States) ( aiP and Sunday AH other States) 1190 GO year AH mail subsr r iptions payable in advArv e The T ibune is a memher of the The Aavx lated lustvely to the use of reprodoc tion of all loc.t pr .nfed n this newspaper as well as all A P news ritsatr hes C.inUidritt1 lor Judge Member Aydd la Duns District Court T rinl Oil, 'net toijit r Asv iatwt Press Press is entitled ) Toll-Fre- nt For all cone style hats AH WWkdavs Ivfore ill a.m., Sunday before I pan. furrier & Home Delivery Information. Monday Friday. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.) Neu subscriptions, restarts, euneellations and offiee billinu information 217 297, Mail subsrri plums - PrisTALLADEGA, Ala. (UPI) oners, who by law cannot vote, would support President Reagan if they could cast a ballot, if a survey in one federal prison is any indication. The poll of 100 inmates at the Federal Correctional Institute at Talladega gave Reagan an lead, 44 percent to Mondales 33 percent. Fifteen percent favored James Yager, an inmate who conducted the survey and who says hes running for president as an independent. Yager, who is doing time for car theft, escape and impersonating a federal officer, said he didnt get much support because the other prisoners dont think Ive got a chance. PRICES GOOD TO NOV. 10 vThf SAVE Prison Poll Gives Edge to Reagan in stock. Available in small thru large matter. Whats important is that the people vote massively, he said. Five small parties ran against the Sandinistas and some did not field candidates for all the assembly seats. A notable absentee was Arturo Jose Cruz, leader of a coalition of four centrist parties, two labor unions and the nations most influential organization of businessmen. Some observers felt his coalition might have won as many as 30 seats in the assembly, although he was given little chance of capturing the USPS Smoking Is Blamed Four INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) people were killed early Sunday in a house fire that inv&tigators said appeared to have been started by careless smoking. Two of the victims apparently wereTrapped byTlames and two others were overcome by smoke, officials said. One resident of the house, Eric Hart, 14, told authorities he heard his mother screaming about 5:30 a m., saw flames in the front room and esy building caped from the through a side window. The dead were identified as Otis Hart, 39; Janice Emerson, 35, Terrance Emerson, 19, and William Chappell, 27. Chapell, a relative, was staying at the home. The bodies of Hhrt and Janice Emerson were found in a back bedroom, and the burned bodies of Terrance Emerson and Chappell were found in the living room. Visitors to the residence late Saturday and early Sunday told investigators that Chappel had made a bed of cushions on the floor and had been smoking and dozing. No smoke alarms had been installed at the residence, investigators & In Alabama, the latest poll by the Birmingham News and the University of Alabama shows Reagan up 54.8 percent to 32.3 by 22.5 points percent. Blacks in Alabama were the only voting group that clearly picked Mondale in the latest poll. Of likely black voters, 81.5 percent pick or lean toward Mondale while 7.6 percent say they plan to vote for or lean toward Reagan. Two polls in Utah showed Reagan is assured of another whopping victory margin in Utah. Both had him winning with at least 70 percent of the vote. A Baltimore Sun poll showed lead over Reagan with an Mondale in Maryland, 49 percent to 38 percent with 13 percent undecided. The state is one of six that supported Jimmy Carter in 1980. SHEEPSKIN HATS -- nings. . Press Laserphato morning waiting to cast their ballots in the first Nicaraguan election in 10 years. Ruling Sandinistas Confident of Victory In First Nicaragua Vote in 10 Years v Alleged Terrorist Similarly, controversy has arisen over Proposition 1, largely aimed at the uncertainty in implementing the change proposed. The proposition would permit the Legislature to scrap varying property tax rates on cars, boats and airplanes, described as unfair and difficult to administer. As a replacement, the Legislature could establish varying fees for registering the personal property that would be a uniform rate throughout the state. of C u 1 hire! Fuid Kii-b- lb IJrio tor JihIijb Ci 'fT u n 1.,. :i:c-- i i:ib |