Show ga3tm0 ii 2A The Salt Lake Tribune Tuesday i i America Unites To Share in King’s Dream 20 1987 January Continued From A-- Spotlight l Michigan's Liberty Bell replica from Lansing A bell rung in Boston was cast by silversmith and Revolutionary War hero Paul Revere Singer Harry Belafonte joined New York Gov Mario Cuomo in leading a march by about 1000 people through ecumenical Albany before a celebration of the battle for human rights that included Buddhist chants and American Indian dancers “This is not a 'black' event This is an American holiday black and white” Gov Arch Moore said at a ceremony in Charleston WVa where participants sang “We Shall Overcome” Martin Luther King Day came less than 48 hours after blacks and whites Formarching in Georgia’s syth County were pelted with rocks and bottles by a crowd of Ku Klux Klansmen and their supporters Mrs King and other civil rights leaders on Monday said another march will be held there Saturday It was nearly a month after a gang of white youths in New York City attacked and beat three black men chasing one to his death when he ran onto a road and was hit by a car The day was a holiday for federal workers employees of the District of Columbia and most of the 38 states that celebrated the second observance of Martin Luther King Day Some states honor King on his birthday Jan 15 About 150 people turned out despite a wind chill of 18 degrees below zero at the Capitol of Wyoming the “Equality State” to urge adoption of a state holiday there Financial markets were open but the New York Stock Exchange observed a minute of silence at noon Schools banks and government offices in some states were closed was rung by 23 fifth-grade- 2Vi-ho- te —United Press International Photo What used to be a residential area of Bakhtaran Iran is reduced to rubble by i Iraqi air attack Tehran says over 2600 civilians died in similar strikes this year Iran Says It’s Broken Stalemate Sends Troops Driving to Basra Continued From l expanding Iraqi opposition to Hussein’s government Most Moslems in southern Iraq are Shiites as are most Iranians Sunni Moslems dominate the Iraqi government Hussein began the war by invading Iran in an attempt to gain full control b of the his country’s only sea outlet As the war dragged on he began seeking a negotiated settlement but Iran has refused to talk Until Hussein is driven from office Iran’s news agency said its forces crossed the Jasim River about six A-- Shatt-al-Ara- miles east of Basra and had advanced a half-mil- e on the western bank The Jasim flows southwest of Fish Lake a vast body of water created when Iraq flooded marshlands to stop assaults from Iran The Iranians began their latest invasion by sending “The smoke of destroyed enemy tanks and military vehicles could be seen billowing into the sky of the region” according to the agency’s report Baghdad's official Iraqi News Agency quoted Gen Abed Shannan as denying Iranian claims of a drive on Basra IRNA said Iranian forces were poised to seize the Iraqi islands of Umm Beljanieh and East fanatical Revolutionary Guards across the Shatt-al-Ara- and the lake b “Moslem combatants of Iran smashed through the Iraqi defense line east of Basra in heavy fighting” killing or wounding 2000 Iraqis IRNA reported It said Iranian troops encircled a division of Iraqi infantry inflicting heavy losses and West Sindbad civil-righ- Iran claims 31000 Iraqis have been killed or wounded in the fight for Earthly Problems Plague Roberts Continued From A-- l secure for himself the best possible spot upon arrival in heaven “He has no intention of living in the ghetto of heaven or even its suburbs” said Dargatz Neither Oral nor his son and the Rev Richard Roberts according to Dargatz were in Oklahoma or would be available for comment heir-appare- Oral Roberts who will turn 69 later this month has been one of the most public people in America since he recognized the potential of television 37 years ago as one of the first ministers of the video waves A stutterer with tuberculosis that was cured by a faith healer when he was a teen-age- r Roberts claims God spoke to him when he was 17 with the command that he build a university Activists Divvy Up Cash From FBI Harassment Case WASHINGTON (AP) - Civil-righ- ts workers and anti-wa- r activists who were harassed more than a decade ago by the FBI gathered Monday to divide $46000 awarded them after an legal battle against the government Four individuals and a peace organization from the Washington DC area split the money presented to them by the Justice Department in settlement of a suit filed in 1976 against the FBI's Cointelpro program The complaints ranged from break-in- s and printing of a fake student newspaper to harassment of a biracial couple through a government program called Cointelpro "We were all unrelated" said Richard Pollock 35 who is sharing in the settlement “We were victims who discovered our commonality years later ” Pollock was a ' editor on the campus newspaper at American University when the FBI began to follow him Now head of his own public relations firm in Washington Pollock said his FBI file was 248 pages thick He said that while he worked on the campus paper the FBI field office in Washington printed and distributed another paper called "The Rational Observer" that suggested those critical of the war were unpatriotic The Justice Department made the payment earlier this month but the plaintiffs waited until Monday to divide it so they could celebrate on Martin Luther King Jr Day Cointelpro was a counterintelligence operation set up to disrupt anti-wa- r and civil rights groups in the late 1960s and early 1970s Its activities were discovered in the early 1970s by a special Senate committee which also investigated domestic spying by the CIA The late Sen Frank Church headed the committee 1 4 Later he says God not only told him to build a law school dental school and medical school but actually gave him the design plans for the buildings They are there as promised by Oral Roberts through God but have not escaped temporal critics and problems After a battle with the local medical community Roberts finally won permission to open a d d hospital instead of the capacity of the building 294-be- opinions on their medical ailments The law school after a continuing battle with the American Bar Association was transferred in 1985 along with its $10 million library to friend and fellow TV evangalist Pat Robertson’s CBN University in Virginia The dental school was closed that same year but claims Dargatz only because it could not produce enough Christian dental missionaries Only one of 100 graduates she said could escape the heavy debt burden of becoming a dentist to volunteer for dental missionary work in Third World countries And now a similar problem is facing its medical students which is the impetus for Roberts’ latest gambit He wants to send medical missionaries to Third World countries but faces a major financial dilemma ond 777-be- Last year more than 100 staffers had to be laid off with only about 100 to 150 hospital beds occupied on a daily basis Things looked so desperate with medical center losses running at $240000 a month that Roberts in cooperation with American Airlines now flies people — with medical insurance — to Tulsa for sec LUNCH ISPECIALIS1 1' DINNERISPECI ALIS Mongolian Barbeque Mongolian Barbeque Pick your own (one time only thru) or we serve you or Q95 O with soup 2 egg rolls e or bread New Lunch Menu 2” to or r 95 Mongolian Barbeque all you can eat 495 plus free Salad Bar Buffet Fri ts Panel for Iran Probe Condemns Times For Printing Report - WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate Intelligence Committee Monday condemned a newspaper for reprinting the panel’s report concluding that as early as 1980 the CIA was suspicious of a key Iranian operative in arms sales to Tehran David Holliday spokesman for the committee said the summary of the report printed in Monday’s editions of The New York Times was not released by the committee because “no one on the panel thought it was in shape to be issued as a public report” The panel now controlled by the Democrats is in the process of writing a new report and expects to turn it over shortly to the special Senate committee investigating the scandal Iran-Cont- ra George Burns will celebrate his 91st birthday Tuesday with a morning at his office an afternoon playing cards at the country club and a date with a pretty girl in the evening Burns delighted at having extended his title as the oldest active star in show business said he will continue to work as hard in 1987 as he did last year when he starred in his own TV special celebrating his 90th birthday along with nightclub appearances in Las Vegas and Atlantic stands around the country City and one-nig- Kurt Vonnegut John Updike and eight other celebrated since he was run down July 23 after stopping to help another motorist in trouble One of his legs was amputated and the other was shattered from ankle to hip and has been in a cast since the accident The effort suggested by Vonnegut consists of five readings in Cambridge in February and March and a series of five dinners Admission will be $200 for the readings and $350 for the dinners Also participating are Stephen King John Irving Richard Yates Ann Beattie Gail Godwin Tim O’Brien Jayne Anne Phillips and EL Doctorow who published Dubus’ first work “The Lieutenant” while an editor at Dial Press Dubus had just quit his teaching job at Bradford College in Haverhill and his fifth book of stories “The Last Worthless Evening” was due out when he was injured fund-raisin- g John Bitter joined film and television luminaries Henry Winkler Wayne Newton Dennis James and Florence Henderson to raise more than $20 million in pledges to fight cerebral palsy during a telethon over the weekend organizers said The ninth annual United Cerebral Palsy “Weekend with the Stars” was carried by more than 80 stations nationwide Organizers said the show raised $205 million in pledges and that the money will support research and community services for the 700000 American! affected by cerebral palsy Mikhail Baryshnikov who has not performed in ihe Soviet Union since his defection in 1974 will dance again ir his native land the artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet said Monday At a news conference announcing the I lshoi Bal-- I let’s four-cit- y US tour next summer Yu i Grigoro-Ivic- h said Baryshnikov will return to dr nee at the I Bolshoi Theater in Moscow “I’ve met with Baryshnikov and Misha Baryshni- kov will be dancing at the Bolshoi Theater” Grigor-ovic- h said through an interpreter “I’ll be very hap-on that occasion He is a great dancer” py i Since 1980 Baryshnikov 38 has been artistic director of the American Ballet Theater Before that he was a dancer in the company Grigorovich said he could not give out any details of Baryshnikov’s planned appearance at the Bolshoi saying that “complicated” negotiations were still under way " —Tribune Wire Services TOMS) Treadmill Walk or jog indoors with no year-roun- d worry about cold rain snow or traffic! 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Have your boots shoes I Rowing Machine Exercise Bike f MonThurs au- thors are gathering for a series of readings to raise money for a little- known writer of short stories who was crippled by a car Andre Dubus 50 has run up about $100000 in hospital bills "T9 5 1701 So State RESTAURANT King a Baptist preacher awarded 1964 Nobel Peace Prize for his leadership was born in 1929 He was shot to death in 1968 by a sniper on the second floor of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis Tenn the John Ritter George Burns Lady Bird Johnson the widow of President Lyndon B Johnson has stipulated in her will that $1 million of her estate be donated to a national center that studies wildflowers near Austin Texas Johnson 74 helped establish the National Wildflower Research Center in 1982 with donations of $125000 and 60 acres of land “I have been blessed with God’s bounty and it gives me great joy to put it back into God’s green earth” Johnson said in a speech Monday in San Antonio “I have stipulated in my will that $1 million be set aside for the use of the National Wildflower Research Center” Lady Bird Johnson Boots Included J et£1n the Salt take Valle r HniUM EVEN LOCATIONS lit “5 9IEast!BroTdwayl MrU lUt VALTa VAaCt jFAiR uNWOOO MALt MKrrvxhtwi'ftlthiht thlsk'v JO SERV in 'W Salt Lake City Center 2681 M SUCAft HOUSfllMrSQtf I Parley’ Dialed between 466-153- 7 Way & Finn’ CottonwoodSandy Fast 6100 South 278-041- 9 Vh ii tii imins t Bountiful Center in 292-MAT- 390 North Main the Shipley Bldg H -l ith iii'i (6284) |