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Show XlTTT ''- - ''jjlf 'Hi ft Major Issue of the Libyan Air Clash: What to Do About Khadafy? By George Gedda Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON The major issue underlying this weeks air clash between U.S. and Libyan warplanes is not a dispute over territorial rights but what the Reagan administration can do about Libyas terrorist-minde- d strongman, Moammar Khadafy. Administration spokesmen portrayed the aerial battle off the Libyan coast Wednesday, in which two U.S. Navy jet fighters shot down two Soviet-mad- e Libyan warplanes, as a reflection of U.S. determination to preserve American rights in international territory. The American aircraft were supporting U.S. 6th Fleet maneuvers in the Mediterranean when they were intercepted over the Gulf of Sidra, which Libya claims as its territory. The United States says its planes were over international waters at the time. But to administration officials, the issue of freedom of the seas has been a secondary consideration in the equation for some time. Of more fundamental importance to the administration is whether it can find a wav to induce Khadafv to U.S.-Libya- n News Analysis moderate his international policy or perhaps even to force an end to his rule. All along, the administration has had It Vol. 223, No. Poles Defy : Premier Sunday Morning August 23, As N . Irish Bury Striker IRA Nationalists Fire Salute At Michael Devines Funeral BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) At least 48 people were wounded in Union. et More Talks Due A Solidarity national spokesman said talks between union and government officials on the year-ol- d question of union access to the nations newspap- ers, radio and television were strike scheduled Tuesday. A two-da- y last week virtually silenced the Communist press. Rolls Royce Is a Steal At $ 164,000 For KETHESDA, Md. (AP) Sale: Slightly used 1981 Rolls Royce convertible; ivory and royal blue body; all leather interior; driven once on round-tri- p theft to Philadelphia; asking $164,000. Sound like a difficult car to unload? Guess again. Euro Motorcars of Bethesda, which paid a $10,000 reward to recover the stolen Rolls, fielded four legitimate offers for it only hours after publicizing its safe return Friday. Weve had our regular clients call with serious offers on the car, said salesman Rod Irving. Obviously the fact that it was involved in such an event wont raise the price, but it does raise its desirability. Euro $10,000 part-owne- Motorcars presented a reward to Allen Shemoff, r Chrysler-Plymout- h of Independence of Philadelphia. Shemoff, who drove from Pliiladelphia in a 1981 Chrysler Imperial, called police after spotting the distinctive Rolls in a hotel parking lot at Philadelphia International Airport. Police speculated that the thieves, car Monday, intended to ship the car from the port of Philadelphia for sale overseas. No arrests have been made and an investigation is continuing, police said. who stole the Asked if he would like to own a car like the two-ton- e Rolls, Shemoff replied: Its a beautiful car, but its just a car. I like my Chrysler. 1 Riots Injure & WARSAW, Poland (AP) Solidarity workers in Polands biggest steel mill defied Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski on Saturday and decided to hold a vote on removing the plant manager because he backed the shutdown of a union newsletter that ridiculed the Soviet anti-Sovi- d Price Seventy - Five Cents 1981 Ouster Vote Due On Plant Offieial Reason for Action They said he backed the Katowice prosecutor in seizing printing presses and shutting down the Solidarity newsletter last week after the editors were accused of printing a cartoon criticizing the Soviet Union. The cartoon showed a group of children dancing around a bear with an inscription quoting the children as saying they were not afraid of the animal. The bear is a national symbol of the Soviet Union. The steel workers also showed their contempt for the plant manager by placing a wheelbarrow on prominent display at the plant. During last years strikes, some plant managers were removed from their offices in wheelbar- rows. Jaruzelski warned Friday, If anti-stat- e and materials are printed anywhere, we will shut it (the paper) down. And we will not let managers be wheeled from their plants in wheelbarrows. anti-Khada- Khadafys ouster would tend to give encouragement to his opponents u redouble their efforts. The principal deterrent to a more overt policy by the administration has been the presence of an estimated 2.9O0 Americans in labya, most of whom work for energy-relatefirms. The Libyan government, far from hostilities taking out its on these Americans, seems to have See Page 2. Column tuw In Dispute In Moscow, the ruling Politburo said Poland was faced with acute crisis and that Warsaw Pact phenomena countries must watch out for each others welfare. The principle of mutual concern, dubbed the Brezhnev Doctrine, was used to justify the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Local leaders of Polands big independent union, Solidarity, said the 20,000 workers at the Katowice steel mill, Polands biggest, will vote Monday and Tuesday on the removal of plant manager Stanislaw Bednarczyk. But the leaks make sense if their intended recipient was Khadafy and their purpose was to persaude him that his survival was dependent on pursuing a more moderate foreign policy. One analyst, a former top official of the Carter administration, says a second intended recipient of these leaks forces may have been ihe within Libya. According to this analyst, who asked not to be identified, word that the Reagan administration would welcome ak Salt Lake City, Utah 131 more ambitious goals concerning Libya than the mere assertion of its disagreement with Khadafys claim over the Gulf of Sidra. The most obvious expression of these goals has been what appears to be a series of carefully orchestrated press leaks by unnamed officials suggesting that the administration was intent on toppling Khadafy or at least undermining him. Normally, such leaks would be regarded as a serious breach of security. y If Associated Press Laserphoto Firemen wearing special chemical suits attempt to repair a ruptured pipe that released toxic fumes in South San Francisco Saturday. Some 10,000 workers were evacuated from the area. Thousands Evacuated Big Problem Utahns Feel Chemical Spill Squeeze Of Inflation Jack Schreibman Associated Press Writer By By J. Roy Bardsley Our income certainly isnt keeping Two of the main up with inflation. ways were trying to beat the high cost of living is cutting THE down on luxury UTAH travel and using less energy. Still, I just dont think the federal government should try to control wages and prices to cut the high cost of living. These statements reflect conclusions reached by a statewide poll conducted by The Salt Lake Tribune and conducted by Bradsley and Haslacher Inc. The initial question queried households on whether they felt their household income was keeping up with the rate of inflation. The result was a conclusive NO, as shown below. No, income not keeping up wittl inflation Yes keeping up Undecided Total SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. Confident that a toxic chemical cloud had dissipated, officials reopened an industrial area Saturday where a spill at a chemical plant sent 28 people to the hospital and forced thousands of people to evacuate. By 5 p.m., 25 hours after the leak began, specialists had pumped out practically all of the silicon tetrachloride that had seeped into a drinage system below the M&T Chemicals Co., said Paul Kaufmann, vice president of IT Corp., which handled the removal. Crews used a rubber-line- d vacuum truck to pump out the corrosive chemical, which is supplied to manufacturers of silicon chips used in the electronics industry. More than 10,000 people reportedly were evacuated Friday in the mostly industrial district after a truck backed Hospitalizes 28 into a pipe at the plant, releasing 10,000 pounds of the chemical, which vaporizes when exposed to air. Area Cordoned Off Police kept an area wnere as many as 70,000 people work cordoned off Friday night and early Saturday during work by the crew from IT Corp., a Martinez firm that specializes in control and disposal of hazardous substances. Dr. Richard Wade, deputy chief for health of the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said an inspection indicated that the liquid chemical had seeped only into M&Ts sewer system and not into the drainage of other plants in the district. Wade said OSHAs investigation of Todays Chuckle the post Lets quit we all depend on it to provide office excuses for us. Total Sample 62 Cutting down on travel & recreation less 61 energy Using 35 Spending less on food 30 Using savings Another person in family working 21 12 Going into debt 7 Nothing Miscellaneous 11 1 Undecided The concluding question posed the controversial issue of imposing government controls to keep wages and prices in line. In an effort to control inflation, would you favor or oppose a federal law which would place controls on wages and prices? g 100 Again, results were sharply correlated with income. A plurality of households with less than $10,000 income favored government controls, which were opposed by a heavy majority (65 percent) of upper income families. the accident would probably take about two weeks. While the possibility of personal injury had apparently passed, Wade said, there will probably be property damage to cars, piping and other metal items affected by the corrosive chemical. Mixes With Fog Light fog had wafted over the bay Saturday morning, mixing with the fumes, which turned into highly corrosive hydrochloric acid when mixed with water. The vaporous chemical burns the eyes and damages the mucous membranes of the nose, mouth and lungs. It also has a suffocating effect. The injured treated at local hospitals Friday included seven M&T workers, two South San Francisco policemen and a city public works officer. All were released, Scanzio said. Others went to hospitals to determine if they had been contaminated. Grenades Injure Three Three soldiers were hurt when grenades exploded at a bus depot in Belfasts Ardoyne district, another Catholic neighborhood. Five others were hurt in violence claimed by the outlawed Irish Republican Army in phone calls to newspapers. Violence raged through most of the day, despite pleas from hunger strike supporters that the rioting eroded sympathy from other Catholics in the Protestant-dominated province. In Londonderry, where Devine was buried, snipers on a garage roof shot two policemen, lobbed dud grenades at the injured officers and fled in a stolen car. Military' Honors Devine was given military honors by the Irish National Liberation Army, the IRA splinter group to which he belonged. Devine, 27, died Thursday after 60 days without food. The hunger strike was started by the IRA March 1 to force the British government to grant Irish nationalist prisoners priveleges that amount to status. Britain refuses. prisoner-of-wProminent at Devines funeral was Owen Carron, elected Friday to the British Parliament for the district of Fermanagh and South Tyrone. Carron managed the campaign of Bobby Sands last April when Sands, first hunger striker to die, won the seat. Sands death May 5th left it vacant. ar Proxy Political Prisoner Carron, 28, campaigned as a proxy political prisoner because after Sands victory Parliament passed a law pro-Se- e Page 2 Column 2 byager 2 Finds Storms On Surface of Saturn 1 7. r 72 26 2 100 Results revealed that all income levels are hurting from the effect of inflation, although only 17 percent of households earning less than $10,000 felt they were keeping up with the cost of living, as opposed to 36 percent among the more affluent families making more than $25,000 per year. How are households attempting to fight inflation? This was the second query in which respondents were handed a card bearing six ways of cushioning the high cost of living. The average family named about 2.5 ways they are using in an attempt to balance the family budget. The percentages naming each inflation-fighting method were as follows: Favor controls Oppom Undecided bombings and riots Saturday, while Irish nationalist guerrillas fired a military salute at the funeral of Michael Devine, the 10th man to die on a hunger strike at the Maze prison. The worst violence occurred in downtown Belfast when a bomb blew up a car, injuring 28 people. Another bomb exploded outside a store in Bangor, 15 miles east of Belfast, injuring 10 people, including a policeman who tried to clear the area after a warning was telephoned to police. Rioters also tried to burn a school for the handicapped in Belfasts Catholic district, lobbing at least gasoline bombs at the building until troops and police dispersed them with plastic bullets, said police Sgt. Cyril Davidson. One person was arrested. It was not clear why the school was a target. New Barnsley 70 r I' of the smooth globe of a fly-b- y By Robert Locke Enceladus at 9:45 p.m. MDT, 21 Associated Press Writer minutes after the ship buzzes Saturn Calif. PASADENA, Voyager 2, from 63,000 miles. racing smoothly to Tuesdays reSince Voyager 2 is nearly a billion ndezvous with Saturn, is already findstorms on the ringed miles from Earth, radioed news of its ing planets cloudy surface as well as encounter wont reach the Jet Propulintriguing details of several frozen sion Laboratory here for one hour, 26 minutes. moons, scientists said Saturday. was on The one-to- n As far as the itossibility of finding target spaceship and healthy, said mission director something thats really wild and new, it Richard Laeser, and operations for has got to be Enceladus, Soderblom the last 24 hours have been routine. Enceladus is said in an interview. going to be very exciting. Displays Photos The moon, he said, is extremely Bradford Smith, leader of the photosuggesting it may be covered bright, their graphy team, displayed photos colors falsified by juggling wave with frozen material freshly painted on that See Page 2, Column 4 lengths to increase detail y showed increasing evidence for in Saturns atmosphere. An oval clump of clouds seemed to be rotating clockwise where it is trapped between two jet streams that race in Tribune Telephone opposite directions across the planets Numbers, Page A-- 2 face. The feature, which appears bluish Page Page 6 Nat. against a field of brown clouds, may be Arts 7 Obituaries 8 similar to a gigantic hurricane on Business 3 Pub. Forum Earth. Classified 4 Regional Voyager 2s views of the huge, distant Com. Carrier 2 Editorials Sports planet are much more detailed than H-- 2 Star Gazer pictures taken last November when a Foreign Washington sister ship, Voyager 1, toured the Lifestyle system. AND MORE . . . Full color comics; Parade and Home magazines; TV Alters Flight secWeek; Product Movers Voyager 2, its flight plan altered to tion; Columbia House Records examine many of the mysteries found section and Ernst Home Center last year and to look in places Voyager section. 1 could not see, is also examining more closely many of Saturns 17 known moons. Sunday's Forecast Tuesdays visit to Saturn will also Fair Salt. Lake City and vicinity feature close encounters with nine of its major moons. Laurence Soderblom, with light winds expected. Lows near deputy photography leader and moon 60. Highs in the lower 90s. Weather specialist, said the hieh point should be details on B 3. vor-ticit- p Inside The Tribune n v A.;.. 6-- E-l-- 13-1- B-1- A-2- A-2- A-2- f, . sY; W-l-- '' tty L. D-l-- & t .v Associated Press Laserphoto Copperhead Strikes Copperhead Missile, guided by laser beam, approaches 7 and hits tank target at White Sands Missile Range, M-4- N.M. The photo was taken in March 1978. The Copperhead Missile is expected to enter service later this year. 4 |