Show Vk: -- iiift'ftrffTTirrjvlfcnpr-- i i nr "'rirs'rrnr The Salt Late Tribune Sunday December A5 13 1987 Week in Review: From Beginning to End Summit Tops the News Sunday Dec 6 1987 ACTIVISTS DENOUNCE SOVIETS AS SUMMIT NEARS — Chanting let our people go" nearly a quarter of a million American Jews and human rights activists assembled Sunday in the shadow of the U S Capitol for a poignant plea to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev for freedom for 2 million Soviet Jews Author Elie Wiesel and Soviet emigre Natan Sharansky were among those leading the march on "Freedom Sunday for Soviet Jews” — a national protest mounted by American Jews and other human rights activists on behalf of refuseniks who can’t win government permission to emigrate The demonstrators carried signs asking “Where is glasnost for Soviet Jews?” and flags emblazoned with the Star of David LAWMEN SUSPECT DRUG SMUGGLERS IN TRIBAL OFFICERS’ DEATHS — Investigators said Sunday the murders of two Navajo Tribal police officers whose charred bodies were found in the back of a burned d police vehicle near the border may have been Investigators believe the two officers Roy Lee Stanley 27 Oljato and Andy Begay 36 Mexican Hat both San Juan County possibly were involved in a shootout with drug smugglers before their bodies were burned However missing weapons and spent cartridges in a recovered handgun have officials concerned the men may have been shot with their own guns after having been taken by surprise The homicides occurred in a desolate section of the Navajo reservation and will be investigated by the FBI Navajo Tribal police Arizona public safety authorities and the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office The bodies were found Saturday morning locked in a "prisoner cage” in the back seat of a police truck which apparently was shoved off a sheer cliff about 20 miles west of the Piute Farms Crossing on Lake Powell in southeastern Utah Investigators say the men were killed either late Friday night or early Saturday morning Utah-Arizo- drug-relate- Monday Dec 7 1987 JET CRASHES AFTER SHOTS HEARD 43 KILLED -A Pacific Southwest Airlines jet crashed and exploded Monday near HarCalif crew after members mony reported hearing gunfire inside the e plane and all 43 people aboard were killed officials said The en on a near route down ranch Los went from to San Francisco jet Angeles here at 4:14 pm about 175 miles northwest of Los Angeles the Federal Aviation Administration said "There’s airplane parts and body parts and area I don’t know how anyone could have luggage all over a survived” said cattleman Bill Hartzell on whose property the jet crashed There were 39 passengers and a crew of five aboard the flight said PSA spokesman Jeremy James GARN TO CHAIR BANGERTER’S CAMPAIGN — Gov Norm Bangerter put to rest rumors that the Republican Party would dump him and run Sen Jake Garn for governor with the announcement Monday the senator would be his campaign chairman for 1988 "I hope this once and for all puts to rest the rumors that I’m going to run for governor” Sen Garn said during a news conference announcing the move in the governor’s office “I don’t understand it I’ve been hearing these rumors for six or seven years and I keep having to tell people I am not interested in running for governor" COMMUTER four-engin- Tuesday Dec 8 1987 REAGAN GORBACHEV SIGN HISTORIC ARMS ACCORD — Presi- dent Reagan and General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev writing a landmark chapter in arms history signed a treaty Tuesday to destroy US and Soviet medium-rang- e nuclear missiles and opened summit talks designed to end the arms race The conservative president and the Communist Party chief signed the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty at a White House ceremony and held two rounds of talks on the opening day of their third summit The treaty already under fire in the Senate calls for the d missiles with ranges of 300 to destruction of both sides’ 3400 miles and provides for a rigorous system of verification to assure neither side cheats It is the first time an entire class of nuclear weapons has been abolished since the dawn of the atomic age in 1945 and both Reagan and Gorbachev hailed it as a first step toward disarmament Reagan whose first term in office was marked by a peacetime arms MX buildup — including the B-- l strategic bomber and the missile — unrivaled in US history called the accord “an excellent example of the rewards of patience ground-launche- multi-warhea- $141 billion imbalance in merchandise trade recorded in September Thursday Dec 10 1987 NOTE FOUND IN PLANE WRECKAGE SOLVES MYSTERY OF CRASH — A note of impending doom — believed written by a gunman before he opened fire on Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 1771 — was recovered from the wreckage Thursday providing dramatic proof that the crash resulted from a recently dismissed airline worker’s twisted attempt at vengeance FBI agents say the note handwritten on an airsickness bag was slipped midflight by David A Burke to Raymond Thomson 48 a USAir official who recently had fired Burke from his job as a ticket agent in Los Angeles "Hi Ray” the message began “I think it’s sort of ironical that we end up like this I asked for some leniency for my family Remember? Well I got none and you’ll get none" The note was one of several pieces of intriguing evidence to surface Thursday as investigators all but completed their reconstruction of what happened in the final minutes of Flight 1771 SUMMIT ENDS IN GUARDED OPTIMISM — President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S Gorbachev concluded three days of summit talks e strateThursday reporting progress but no agreement to curb gic weapons and no deal on the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan Reagan said there was “dramatic progress” on arms control Gorbachev said there was "some headway” toward an agreement and pledged to “work hard” to have it ready for signing in Moscow next spring Both leaders put a positive spin on a summit that produced no breakthroughs but Gorbachev also attacked the president’s stand on nuclear testing and chemical weapons and took a hard-lin- e on would-b- e Jewish emigrants But the two sides committed themselves to another summit sometime in the first half of next year in Moscow and pronounced this one a success FLOOD OF IMPORTS SENDS TRADE DEFICIT THROUGH ROOF The US trade deficit pushed by a flood of manufactured imports widened to a record $176 billion in October the government said Thursday in a report that confounded experts sent the dollar plunging to new postwar lows and prompted a shocked Congress to demand corrective action The October deficit was an astonishing 253 percent higher than the long-rang- Friday Dec 11 1987 TREATY WINS RAVES IN WEST AND EAST — Soviet bloc leaders intermediate-rang- e missile pact and its verificaapproved the tion procedures Friday and credited Mikhail S Gorbachev’s “new political thinking” for agreeing to it Gorbachev arrived to a triumphant welcome in East Berlin to brief Warsaw Pact allies on his summit with President Reagan and the treaty the two men signed Tuesday in Washington Meanwhile NATO allies in Brussels urged the Senate to ratify the intermediate-rang- e nuclear force ban quickly and underscored their support for the pact by pledging to let the Soviets inspect missile bases in five European countries An agreement signed by Secretary of State George P Shultz and the foreign ministers of West Germany Britain Netherlands Italy and Belgium will for the first time allow Soviet inspectors to scrutinize military bases in Western Europe TRAIN RAMS SCHOOL BUS KILLS 57 IN CAIRO A bus carrying schoolchildren on a holiday outing was struck by a train and ripped apart Friday in a disaster that killed 57 people and injured 58 authorities reported They said most of the victims were around 10 years old A senior police officer said 50 children six teachers and the bus driver perished in the accident in northeast Cairo about three miles from the Cairo airport The officer said 58 people almost all children were injured and taken to two hospitals in nearby Heliopolis JUDGE SCOLDS COUNTY FOR RUSHING BURR TRAIL WORK — The federal judge who cleared the way for improvements to the Burr Trail lashed out at Garfield County officials Friday for rolling the bulldozers within three days of his ruling "What purpose does it serve to rush out and start when you know" the plaintiffs will appeal said US District Senior Judge Aldon J Anderson US-Sovi- - Shop special Holiday hours Monday through Saturday Entire stock 9-1- 0 at greatly reduced prices HOLIDAY FUR SHOW AND SALE Through Christmas Eve in our Salt Lake Doumtowti Cottonwood Ogden and Grand Teton Cameo Room Fur Salons d Dec 9 1987 Wednesday GORBACHEV REBUFFS REAGAN FOR CRITICIZING SOVIET HUMAN RIGHTS — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev told news executives Wednesday that he was tired of being criticized on human rights and said he told President Reagan "You are not the prosecutor and I am not the accused” Gorbachev said in an afternoon meeting with three dozen top US editors publishers and broadcasters: "What moral right does the United States have to assume the role of teacher of the world communities? We’re not afraid of criticism Your criticism all too often is unconvincing It’s disrespectful of the people" he said "We shall not tolerate anyone’s attempts to teach us lessons" Gorbachev speaking through an embassy interpreter said he told Reagan "If you want to tell us what to do to improve our society we will listen up to a point” The AUTHORITIES FOIL RANSOM OF INDUSTRIALIST’S SON son of millionaire Utah industrialist Jon M Huntsman was rescued from classmate kidnappers Wednesday following a scuffle in which an FBI abductors agent was stabbed and seriously injured by one of the teen-ag- e according to police James Huntsman 16 was kidnapped at knife-poifrom the driveway of his home Tuesday about 7 pm by two young men wearing masks officials said The youth was handcuffed blindfolded and chained to drainpipes — a knife sometimes held to his throat — in a westside hotel for more than 12 hours before his rescue police said The abductors who apparently had plotted the kidnapping "for more than a week” demanded $1 million for his release said Salt Lake City Police Chief Bud Willoughby FBI Agent Grant Alan Jacobsen two weeks from retirement after 20 years with the bureau suffered a four-inc- h deep stab wound in the chest while trying to separate the Huntsman boy from one of his captors said Bob Bryant special agent in charge of the FBI’s Utah office nt nondanSdfuFdii 83 Tins is the year you can afford y 'g rW to have expensive taste! -- Don’t miss fantastic savings and guaranteed lowest prices on the largest and best selection of the year of these magnificent collections: Strollers sporty jackets and luxurious full length styles by Rcvillon Donald Brooks Oscar de la Renta Louis Feraud Cezzane John Ross Givenchy Guaranteed Lowest Pricing: Vi e will meet or surpass the price of any fur of the same style and quality from any other salon in the City And you may select the payment plan that fits your budget: interest free on purchase of SI GOO or more ZCMI Option Charge Plan Pay Plan MSA MasterCard American Express Diners Club or Carte Blanche or layaway with just a small down 1495 uses Six-mont- 90-Da- Many titles from which to choose including Cartoon Classics starring Minnie it Mickey Mouse Cartoon Classics starring Silly Symphonies Sing Along Songs with The Bare Necessities Sing Along Songs The toliday Fur Show and Sale going on now through December in our Cameo Room Fur Salons at Salt Lake Downtown 1 Cottonwood Ogden and Grand Teton only -H- Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too and Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day See our big selection now in Records eigh-Ho Ofdtr h) phone: Call loti free U hour j dn m sji Ur 01 W rlylim in uli riid llu I ' nw h y nun ac- cording to the Commerce Department figures "It’s an understatement to say these are bad numbers These are startling bad numbers” said Jerry Jasinowski chief economist for the National Association of Manufacturers 2- - |