Show 2A The Salt Lake Tribane Soaday September 13 1967 —United Press International Photo A trio of bishops Spotlight Papal Appeal Calls for Forgiveness Orleans Pope spent much of the day addressing various groups in Superdome reacts with a laugh to comments from Pope John Paul II in New Continued From A-- l healing to so many couples and their children in whose troubled lives there remain a brokenness and suffering that will not go away ‘The plight of the children alone should make us realize that the refusal to forgive is not in keeping wih the true nature of marriage as God established it and as he wants it to be lived” he said “No relationship as intense and close as marriage and the family can survive without forgiveness ‘seventy times seven times’ ” John Paul said quoting the words of Jesus in Matthew 18:21-2- 2 The rain alleviated the temperatures and suffocating humidity that took a high toll in the crowd waiting for the pope especially among the heavily dressed nuns Maj Gary Cousins of the 159th MASH unit Louisiana National Guard said that before the rain began 33 people were taken from the Mass area on the campus of the UnOrleans to iversity of Louisiana-Nehospitals and more than 200 others had been treated on the scene Most d he said were problems The pontiff spent much of the day in the vast Louisiana Superdome He warned the 75000 young people gathered there that "The world will try to deceive you about many things that matter: about your faith about pleasure and material things about the dangers of drugs” Earlier John Paul told black Catholics in another quadrant of the vast domed stadium they must throw off “shackles of the spirit which are even more destructive than the chains of physical slavery” “Far too many of your young people receive less than an equal opportunity for a quality education and gainful employment” the pope said invoking the name of Martin Luther King Jr in a speech to about 1800 black bishops priests nuns and laymen He met with the blacks the educators and the children separately in the Superdome after a triumphal ride in the glassed-i- n “popemobile” down broad Canal Street through thousands of screaming seized by an ecstasy normally reserved for Mardi Gras “I think I’m going to die” squealed Samantha Breaux 16 breaking into a run to get into line to enter the domed stadium "This is the World Series of religion" said a priest in a baseball cap m'Wk mmmmrn " Lynn Redgrave ecvt m'mmif' Eudora Welty Gregory Peck Gregory Peck on Saturday presented Deng Pufang the physicalto be ly disabled son of China’s senior leader Deng Xiaoping with a van used for handicapped Chinese children The van was donated in Beijing to the China Fund for the Handicapped which the younger Deng heads by Variety Clubs International in the name of US first lady Nancy Reagan : “The brotherhood of man is not a utopian dream It is a reality" Peck said States-basecharity organiVariety Clubs International is a United zation of show business people that helps handicapped and underprivi- leged children around the world Deng 43 lost the use of his legs when he was pushed from a third cultural floor window by leftist extremists during the 1966-7d 6 w Reggae Star Peter Tosh Killed By Robbers in Jamaican Home KINGSTON Jamaica (AP) -Thfee motorcycle gunmen trying to rob reggae star Peter Tosh at his home killed him and another man and wounded five pedple when they resisted police said Saturday they said Tosh’s longtime companion Marlene Brown was among thope wounded in th& Friday night attack on the home of the former "Wailer" who was ond of the founding fathers of Jamai- - Peter Tosh ca’s vibrant music of i evolution Outside Jamaica Tosh 42 was perhaps best known for his collaboration with Rolling Stones lead singer Mick Jagger in ‘‘You Got to Walk and Don't Look Back” a song written by gmokey Robinson He was nominated for a Grammy in 1985 for best reggae recording for “Captured Live” Police said the assailants arrived on motorcycles at Tosh's home in the affluent St Andrew suburb of this capital demanded money from those present and fired when the victims refused to comply Officers declined to provide further details and said there were no arrests by Saturday evening Jamaica Radio said the attackers used 9mm pistols It identified the other fatality only as “Doc” Brown whom local newspapers have called Tosh’s wife despite the couple’s lack of a legal bond and three others were in stable condition Saturday at University Hospital But Jeff Dixon a dsc jockey with Jamaica Broadcasting Corp was in critical condition with a bullet wound in the head according to hospital officials Police identified the others wounded as Santa Davis a drummer in Tosh’s band Dixon’s wife Yvonne and Michael Robinson described by Jamaica Radio as another musician A Kingston radio station on Saturday rebroadcast an interview with Tosh in which the s lamented the role of money in society er and concluded it caused more harm than good Tosh an advocate of legalization of marijuana was known to smoke huge marijuana cigarettes called “spliffs” on stage during concerts Jamaicans reacted with sorrow and anger to the death of Tosh who with Bob Marley and Neville Livingcore of stone formed the three-ma- n the The Wailers The group is credited with making reggae popular far beyond the shores of this verdant English-speakin- g island As news of his murder was broadcast fans gathered near Tosh's home and at the hospital and radio stations played his songs by the hour “Peter Tosh gave to Jamaica and the world an unforgettable library of musical works which will be played and sung by many generations of people” former Prime Minister Michael Manley said in tribute In 1978 before a Kingston crowd of e Min30000 that included ister Manley Tosh smoked a big marijuana cigarette on stage and berated Manley for 30 minutes for not legalizthen-Prim- ing “ganja” Brand Iraq as War Aggressor Iran Demands of UN Envoy Continued From A-- l and has said it will comply with the resolution if Iran does But so far Iran has neither accepted nor rejected it Peruvian diplomat The was to meet Sunday with Parliament Speaker Hashemi Rafsanjani and President Ali Khamenei before heading to Baghdad Iraq's capital Sunday or Monday IRNA said Iraqi artillery shelled th& southern port cities of Abadan and Khorramshahr and the northern town of Sardasht The official Iraqi News Agency also monitored in Cyprus said Iran's e artillery pounded the northern city of Sulaimaniyah and six other towns It said 36 civilians were killed and 158- - wounded in Iranian bombardments Thursday and Friday and called the shelling “new proof of Irab’s unwillingness to cooperate with the UN secretary-general'- s peace mission” But Iraq made no threats of retaliation as recent communiques have done Iran denied its artillery was in in the south saying its forces long-rang- ac-tio- d Hospital Officials Say Billy Carter May Gb Home in 10 Days ATLANTA - Carter stable condition (UPI) Billy Satwas alert and in urday a day after doctors discovered he Had inoperable pancreatic cancer and officials said the former President Jimmy Carter’s brother could go home within 10 days “He is doing fine There has virtually been no change” said Judy Smith a spokeswoman for Emory University Hospital where Carter underwent nearly six hours of surgery Friday “He is stable and had a very good night Smith said Jimmy Carter spent 30 midutes at the hospital Friday evening before flying to Columbia SC fora brief airport meeting with Pope John Paul II who is said to have prayed for Billy’s health Smith said the former president is keeping his visits with his brother private g antics Billy whose made him a folk hero during his older brother's presidency was admitted to Emory University Hospital on Wednesday suffering from jaundice Initial tests showed the Carter had a bile duct obstruction A biopsy revealed he had cancer of the paqcreas and surgery performed Friit day to remove the cancer revealed was miserable beer-drinkin- were “sticking to their word not to shell enemy economic installations during the UN chief’s visit to Teh- ran” But IRNA reported heavy artillery exchanges further north along the battlefront and claimed "substantial Iraqi losses” said its helicopter gunships Iraq flew 57 combat missions against Iranian military positions “inflicting losses” It did not elaborate No official comment came from Tehran nor any independent confirmation of either sides’s claims But each side appeared to be observing an undeclared truce in attacks on shipping in the gulf Both sides have raided foreign ships plying each other’s ports Iran singled out tankers from Kuwait which it considers an ally of Iraq The convoy of releft Kuwait tankers Kuwaiti flagged y convoy Saturday the eighth since the escort operation began July 730-mi- le one-wa- 21 The U S Central Command at Mac-DiAir Force Base in Tampa Fla said the guided missile frigate USS ll Rentz was escorting the tankers Chesapeake City and Surf City It reported “no unusual Iranian air or surface activity” Khamenei said Friday before Perez de Cuellar arrived that “we are ready to listen to reasonable words" But Rafsanjani stressed that Iran will "not take the risk" of agreeing to the cease-fir- e because it does not trust Iraq or its allies which it says include the United States Iraq and other Arab nations believe Iran is stalling and wants to separate a truce in the tanker war from an overall cease-fir- e The gulf is Iran’s only outlet for its vital oil exports which it needs to pay for a war that costs Iran more than 310 billion a year Iraq’s oil exports go through pipelines to Saudi Arabia and Turkey Iraq’s deputy premier Taha Yassin Ramadan was quoted by Abu Dhabi’s daily as saying Baghdad will never accept a separate cease-fir- e in the tanker war Without freedom to attack Iran's economic lifeline with its air force Iraq would be left fighting a static defensive war on land against an increasingly aggressive enemy novelist and Mississippi’s Pulitzer ' short story writer will be honored next month with one of France's ‘ highest civilian awards writer will become French government officials say the Chevalier Eudora Welty when France awards her its coveted Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters “It's not like anything I could have ever imagined — to be a knight or a knightess” Welty said after being informed of the honor Isn't it wonderful? It all sounds so alluring” "I consider her one of the most important writers in Southern litera- ture and in American literature” said Jean Charpantier Charpantier ' the cultural attache to the French consulate in New Orleans nominat ed Welty for the honor Continued From Dole's friends said she yearns on the one hand to remain in her increasingly visible transportation job to deal with airline rail and highway safety and other issues yet she is plainly aware that her husband's struggle to wrest the nomination from Vice President George Bush who leads the Republican field in most polls is a difficult one and that her role could be significant especially in her native South Mrs Dole has drawn large crowds in her public appearances and stirred considerable publicity This has led to criticism first made last week by the columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak that with air safety an important national issue she spent 21 days in August traveling to states in behalf of her husband's campaign The audience at the hearing laughed when Redgrave admonished a d nation that she said adores country singer Dolly Partoh but was upset about Redgrave’s "meager endowments” on the set - Continued From with the file number FBI agents returned to the CIA asking to see the material the source said The CIA refused according to the source replying "We’ll see you in court" Sources said FBI officials felt Clar-ridg- e was acting under orders from CIA Director William Casey in withholding the files The FBI dropped its pursuit of the matter because “its real mission was to neutralize Terrell not uncover what the agency was doing” Once it had been determined Terrell was not a threat to the president the inquiry was dropped Reports conflicts on how the Terrell investigation was triggered An intelligence source said the FBI intercepted a phone call from Central Iran-Cont- pro-Cont- ra ra Navy Launches New Submarine the deck GROTON Conn (UPI) -- The subNavy's newest nuclear-powere- d was Pasadena USS the marine launched Saturday as a handful of anti-wa- r protesters watched from outside the Electric Boat shipyard gates k The Pasadena a submarine designed to hunt down enemy surface ships and other submarines slipped into the Thames River as crew member stood a 360-fo- fast-attac- tention on Hundreds of guests and workers cheered and waved hard hats as Pauline Trost wife of Adm Carlisle A H Trost chief of naval operations smashed a bottle of champagne on the steel hull and the Pasadena splashed into the water About a dozen anti-wa- r protesters stood vigil outside the shipyard division of General Dynamics Corp Police said there were no af ests dexter even informed President Reagan about Terrell’s “offer to assassinate the president” Robert White former US ambassador to El Salvador and Paraguay who now employs Terrell at a liberal it think tank based m Washington has charged the investigation was started solely "to blacken Terrell’s name because they were extremely worried about his testimonon-prof- but to say ‘Take early retirement’ ” a source in the Justice Department said In Poindexter’s private congressional testimony released Thursday he alleged that Clarridge knew of activities North North's has testified that Clarridge occasionally advised him Clarridge has denied any awareness of details of North’s activities In 1978 when members of the CIA station in Turkey were expelled because of frictions Clarridge was sent in “to pick up the pieces” and succeeded one colleague said One Justice Department source identified Clarridge as the "mastermind” behind the mining of Nicaral gua's harbors in 1984 pro-Cont- pro-Cont- ra ra " who chaired the hearing said US Rep Tom Lantos chances are fair for passage of federal laws paying for child-car- e centers and offering tax incentives to corporations that provide day- care centers at the workplace -- ' —Complied From Tribune Wires bv Andrea Otanei" Tells Anglican Church Syrian: ‘Good News: Coming About Waite government to intensify efforts to free Waite t Waite 48 vanished Jan20 in after leaving his hotel to keep a nighttime rendezvous with Islamic Jihad or Islamic Holy War a Shiite Moslem faction that holds American and French hostages Twenty-thre- e foreigners besides Waite including eight Americans are missing and believed kidnapped’ in Lebanon The longest missing is Terry Anderson chief Middle East correspqn- dent for The Associated Press yihp ' was seized in March 1985 Waite’s fate remains shrouded in mystery and rumor He has been re ported killed wounded while trying' to escape smuggled into Iran and to be freed only when a ransom of 35 million was paid DAMASCUS Syria (AP) — Syria's defense minister told Church of England envoys Saturday he will have "good news soon” about missing An- west-Beiru- glican hostage negotiator Terry Waite a source close to the British delegation reported The source speaking on condition of anonymity gave no further details nor did he say if Lt Gen Mustafa Tlass elaborated on his remarks to n the delegation sent by Archbishop Robert Runcie the Church of England primate But he quoted Tlass as telling the group that “Syrian efforts to free Terry Waite continue” “t six-ma- -' The mission was led by Canon Paul Oestreicher director of the church’s International Ministry and included Pax officials of the Brussels-base- d Christi movement Since coming to Damascus Thursday the mission has seen other senior Syrian officials The source said Oestreicher delivered a message to Tlass for President Hafez Assad asking the Damascus London’s Sunday Express new's- - paper said Sept 5 there were indica- tions Waite and another missing Briton television cameraman John McCarthy 30 would be released soon1 and taken to Cyprus '' 7chr I 143 ijlt take Jribunr - (USPS South Main i ‘ '' Dial Telephone Numbers need information want a ports scores have a news story or feature you want to talk about? 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