Show "4 f azil nik ir no Vol 242 No 15 Ey Eats Dart Cgs Ness Stglifie WASHINGTON — Aoserkons are -- ar'slr'xt arp ettir sire moral coder an :ley cane toward a sew votary dal &amens Ls Le lit wild wild West a3 agaus'' accortag to ao estamire nes aatiatat surrey Aston due findogt Oaly 13 panned of tor paps:ate Coss10 of eg mazdekents Nome act of 10 MIMESIS Ikg regOarly Itearty a al soirriert Atiltriven Lyre kierts on 42 it Lai as "Asserieses are 1111211r4 up their owls rules aid lama" thie book roaeladed- - We ettoose Lees of Crod we beirre There is alarAnteiy so moral masensta Lts oistutry — as there woo la the LW and vtt Mk" 4 Americans ete ters" IV La goes for weeks —cares book revlet Day Arienna Tald the Truth Sta Americans personalized moral crusades" wtict indniduals ra1er thus RAADy Mott frerytig That gerZy lattlers Stteduled for peaditstion on At was ortten llama try etairmaa of I Water Ilgoopace sad Peter Kam direrkor at Zagora Serrates and Consumer Work(' fte ese totentobanal advertising firm Tie book is bawd on mist e swages es3 the ''eatharbe method- ot Wang Al 50 rerioualy represesdatire locaces across eg couttry 2012 people click LV I0 queakons The re- Patten spondents sere am-we-t ity sat completed anoryno- net pry Them questionnaires la findings sere augmented by another suroey at 3300 Americans rota agItt old sitorgr forms Were done sinsollaThe moody stems the country durog tee seek lad year Ibis is tbe roost massive sizrve7 of tat AlEtt1iCaii21 is-ar- yl Letgios plays almost orio to sex Ewe reledokus is st3 a toneby subject to Amerkans 'irtZle Exist respondents denied being racists tbeliselves they said some of their friends are There is a bat:kiss-- tegadrat affirmative action Most Americus are very confused about their personal morals rigid now" the book concluded - Slat: Truth" — Wait: e 1 IP — Chad: 52 TEN SLEAZIEST WAYS TO MAKE A LAING: L Drug dealer 2 Organized crime boss 3 TV erartehst REASONS GIVEN DOR GETTING DIVORCED (resp3ridmts could give more than one reason): — Communicatioes problems: 5 Street — Spouse's infidelity 58 — Constant tchting: 58 Iv — Emotional Abuse 52 — l'aning out of 49 go — Unsatisfactory ser 45 — Spouse didn't Mile enough money: 31 Physical abuse: 28 — in lore with someone else: 22 — Boredom: 22 6 Loud poMyna& 7 Congressman 6 Car Saletanan 9 Rock arid roU star -- occurFAnoxs: Fireman 2 Paramedic 3- - Fanner 4 Pharmadst S Grade school leader gatry-sitt- 10- - er Cane professor WHAT ARE YOU HONESTLY WI!LlG TO DO FOR STO MITIjoysi? — Abandon your family: 25 — Become a prostAute for a week: 23 Renounce US citizenitip: — a stranger: 7 e — Rave a 4 ak rig —Odrame3 — - crisis- 3 WITH WHOM? — Friend: 24 — 23 — Old Came: 21 — Stranger: 20 — Friend of sponse: 15 — Prostitute: 9 — Boss: 7 percent -le er operation: Soiree 'The Day An Telt the Trudy Whit People Zeal being About Everythag nag Leeby ItAtttert" IT lams Patents met Peter kne Prentote Ea Pres Pub Inane Lime WHOM HAVE YOU REGULARLY LIED TO! — Parent 86 96 — Frits& 75 - 'Lay 5 minwomme - Church's Liberal Sex Report Doomed N ewsday When Presbyterians decided it impossible to deal sirith the issue for years Soiree members of the committee that produced the report Lave been ostracized in their own churches Old friends with differing beliefs have stopped speaking to one another zany of those the church had hoped to reach with its new approach are now considered likely to more to other denominations -sextility is as powerful an issue now as slavery was in the 19th century said the Pev Marvin Ellison Jr to take a fresh look at their approach to human sexuality in they did so in the hopes of healing their political divisions and bo1f4ing on to church members who were not part of con- lne ventional nuclear families Four years later the member Presbyterian Church (USA) bas produced etactly the opposite result The reappraisal — urging greater sexual freedom for bomoseruals singe people and adolescents — appears to be beaded to an g defeat at the church's General Assembly in June and officials say the bitter backlash it has produced may make an ethics professor who wrote the Presbyterian report "So many 650-memb- er -- anAi Sctool ci Urban and Punt Affairs at CarnecelfleZois 1:nivernty people are bound up by their fears See 7 h taq fatt Zribratt REC a ‘ 41 ' A-- 2 Column 3 I N An expanded recreation section begins today on pages D5 and D6 This weekly chronicle of bow Utah plays — from the hottest fistlirg spots to sor-baresults to y family tours — will be part of the regular Monday Sports section t ll per "Today FBI crime Ulan show that America set 'Am records for murder argt rape last year- - said K Biden Jr the Senate Judary Committee who Las peoprAsed a Democratic eternative to President Seta Joseph CUTIZ111 of D-D- - - a e one-da- 1 The saurder rate in New York City exceeds six per day Busts crime NM Its the availabty of drugs and the arailabilty of handguns- - said New York Qty Deputy Police Chief -- "The president and CANWtSS Ittld pass tough measures to fle--t crime has "L1er Assaf& guns and combat the epidemic of violence against we MA - S- Ilittael blartztan I 0 4 '1"V" ' ii ' ' : Ono iD V 1 V ) ' I ' ' kM AK - 42 t‘ () 4 vmmorrolind001-- ' 214'"' ' t' - 14""'S'''''''4 " '- k ' 44 f I I Ice t wr 1 - ?4 -- — i tk L i -- f r - ci 4 - fir t ka- ) "611"Of '' Sk o11 16 t7: '77Zt s ' r '6At - - P-t- 'tk 4 - ri- i e i I") it! 44' s 'A (a Q t I Li Lci r i Officials tour Rice Stadium at the U during a tour of pro- posed Olympie sites From right to left: IOC President Juan By Russell Weeks Tribune Staff Writer The hues of Thomas K Vi'ekh's face a !wadable larometer of Salt Lake City's fortaines in its bid for the 19g8 Winter Olympics since be began Iding the effort in 19e9 crinkled from Lis smile Sunday Mr Welch had heard International Olympic CommMee President Juan Antonio Samaranch say Salt Lake City is a "very sixong strong candidate- - to be host of the 'V8 Winter Games and that he was confident the city could bold an Olympics if selected Owning from a man whom IOC member Anita DeTrants described as the raaster of the IOC dip- lomatic answer the statement seemed more than enough for Mr Welch Mr remarks came at whirlwind inthe end of a spection of Salt Lake City Park City arid proposed sites of Olympic events The IOC president left Sunday afternoon by private jet for Atlanta the host city of the 19'4 Summer Olympics His tour of Salt Lake City was punctuated Sunday morning by a Sauna-ranch- 29-bo- tail havoiseallat i I Salt Lake Thames Antonio Samaraneh bid organizer Thomas K Welch U President Chase Peterson and IOC member Anita De Frantz telephone eel from President Bush support of the bid Mr Samaranch said he was surprised and honored by the call He also met with Sens Jake Gain and Orrin Hatch and Gov Norm Bangerter at a breakfast Sunday morning The number of buildings and roads the city Las in plus the people in the Salt Lake City Bid Committee for the Olympic Winter Games are two of the bids strengths Mr Samaranch said "The importance of Salt Lakes bid is not in its pmmise' s but in its realities" be said Mr Samaranch also said he didn't know if calls for a nationwide boycott of Utah because of the Legislatures adoption of a restrictive abortion law would have any effect on the 10C's selection of a host city He termed it a local issue ph--c- His only advice to organizers was to invite more IOC members to the city before they vote June 15 in Birmingham England for a host city for the Winter Games Although several members of the IOC had told him Salt Lake City was a strong candidate and 48 members already had visited the city Mr Samaranch I 4 Hymn in SA Makes Bush Walt on Phone The White House put in a prearranged telephone call Sunday for President Juan Samaranch of the International Olympic Committee and got a busy signal Mr Samaranch was in church and couldn't be disturbed In effect George Bush got put on musical hold by David Johnson of the Salt Lake Olympic Bid Committee who was manning the cellular phone at the Holy Cross Hos- pital chapel The "bold" was for the concluding hymn at the chapel's 9 am mass uhere Mr Samaranch a devout Catholic was in the first pew with other members of the corn warned that "48 is not 91" The IOC has 92 voting members He said Salt Lake City did well in a report by the IOC Site Evaluation Commission which toured the area in January Before Mr Samaranch left bid or mittee Just as the mass running late came to a close Mr Johnson put the White House through and hustled Mr &amaranth 30 feet down a corridor yrith the portable phone for privacy And what did the president of the USA say to the president of chat the 10C in their near the chapel? Steeped in the protocol as an international diplomat President Samaranch only shook his head solemnly But he conceded of President Bush: "Hes very supportive of Salt Lake City isnl her ganizers gave him two gifts a quilt stitched by Charlotte Warr Anderson of West Valley City and a framed s set of drawings by showing bow they imagined themselves competing in a Winter Olyto pies sixth-grader- Utah Toward 'Toxic' Train Steaming Soviet Knew Landfill Alay Accept Tainted Cargo 007 Was Commercial SEOUL South Korea (Al') — The Soviet pilot who shot down a South Korean airliner in 1983 killing all 2e9 people on board says be knew be was firing missiles at a commercial plane South Korean television reported Sunday The pilot Gennady Osipovich had told the Soviet newspaper izvestia in January that Soviet military officials lied about details of the incident But the report on Seoul's lilBC television was the first quoting Osiporich as saying be knew be was firing at a commercial plane The account contradicted Moscow's official stand on the downing of Korean Airlines night 077 There was no immediate Soviet reaction to the report The Flight OM incident is still a diplomatic issue between Seoul and Moscow which normaliie- d relations seven months ago Presand Soviet ident Koh Tae-wo- o - President Mikhail Gorbachev N — Motor vehicle theft up 5 23600 — Lipe up 9 percent to 101000 — Eatery up 11 percent to towever don't unchaAged at eett to 1624000 in a few categorxec itaseary — Violent crime up 10 percent to stout 1110 000 — Murder up 10 percent to 10 percent in 17413- -Tte gcrirdi in violent crimes is larger tkas warLd Lre thoont" saki Alfred EtzmitieJi dean of the Eureary down 4 percent to 7812000 been turfy stale in the last devadt The FE1 expressed the na5ocal picture only in percentages Applying those percentages to Last year's tgures these would be the numbers Las men before the death toH grows even higher" Eiden said Attorney General Diet Thornburgh also saw in the statisbcs a need to pass a crime bill — the one proposed by the Bush administration -Never before has the need for the presidents tough crime bill been so pmsing and the consequences of its absence been so dramatiAr Thornburgh said Leading the nation in murder is New York City with 2245 in 1990 up fr3cs 1905 an 18 percent 10 per- tp crimes: non-liole- — Larcety theft which shows the fere! of violent crat airne — murder awavated as1- Overall violent npe mtbery 120111 In — 1C541000 ' IOC Chief Calls Salt Lake 'Very Strong Candidate' - HOW ADULTERY HAPPENS: — Casual meetingfinet in a bar: 28 — Just happenedaccident: 12 — Growing friendship: 10 — Introduced by friend: 7 — Sexual attraction: 7 — Pursued by eventual lover 7 To 6 Yaul carrier 7 Catholic priest 6 Housekeeper 9 73 Loter 69 - TEN MOST ADC:EARLE t — be 10 Insurance salesmati t IntYre before t Rue are some lists retlectog some of the Etetrgs is the book The Day Ameraca Told the pedner ci'es tad rnwlers lad year than In 19e3 The was Detroit istkli tad except 582 mtrdels 42 fever Man the year role is they're beaded to beeves while only 4 permit expert to spend time la Lel Stost people start more time for sex Tte respccidees adm&ed as assortere4 of mat fantasies — am salair utla a famous persica was kitbag this wish list Howevsaid they prefer TV er IS pe-se- nt F I Says till 111' — Aggravated assan1 it cent to tret-al-se corers only reported A more accurate barometer those experts say is the Justice Department's armia1 survey of crsme of all warders in the ljailed Swim the FBI said &May anal pveliminary th relasszng i crime report Six of the seven the annual report a reliable indicate of crie trends one-fou- nt is-a- nt SOME OF THE LISTS Prostitute conser WASHLNGTON (AP) — Seven Arne:titan evdes recorded more than is meet lives the Oat fount Wksat out st every 10 responders said they believe its Got only one la he Lad ever tsl'ked to a peied rataister or ntte ab olds personal problem roar fa every fire sail tley believe la az sited-I- Almost tall believe Salt Lake City Utah The Salt Lake Tribune set the Standard& 270-pag- People "sett to do the ce 199I Violent Crime Up 10 Vtirt"' the lams said so the War or be warted L7secy 1 ILO stouLtain al comtnoreztal data - elitaitZt provide vist tsr '71 — Slat b- Illea I:Jame:at relrows Ltd tames leaders Lave fa:od them Worse yet is the Frew" they wrote 'As a moral arbority la their tims Amerreaus rate the peels todow EICLOCJAI TV earse- or Stay 6 really beLswe that Las ever Yemtacted" the book Tb gansnical lock isto the Mart and soul of a paorle produced a distutent porta--lt of a SLUM lor—toget a commas mart& Tie r sagar Lamefelttrgaat toe rxfres thew boars vary ty ese age at 11 Oar is arras MittelritliS CittrAS itiart2 to pram or as the ear Os Lee WCITECII SITI Ake Las tarn decrypt& Far Ill imam 7 permit of de peopkg anosId la a grail A front a MONDAY April 29 1991 Ilome Edition illany Americans Believe Almost 'Anything Goes' tees b discussed it in talks earlier this month On Sept 1 1983 the Boeing 747 on a flight from New York to Seoul was shot down after straying into Soviet air space Moscow said the South Korean plane had no markings indicating that it was a commercial jet and that a Soviet jet fighter had fired warning tracers before launching a ritcsile attack Combined New York Times And Tribune Staff Reports A trainload of 2400 tons of soil rejected by landfills in at least three states is on its way to Utah for disposal a Tennessee official said Sunday But a spokesrnan for the Utah site said a deal has not yet been made Gary McCurstion director of Commtmity Affairs for US Pollution Control Inc said his company is waiting for test results of the soil before it agrees to store the load in ed Utah USPCI operGrassy Mounin Tooele County We don't have a hang-u- p - with the soil contained in the cars- McCurstion told The Salt take Tribune Sunday Were just waiting at this point for the test results and all the parties to come to an agreement on The Houston-base- d ates the tain site repository state-licens- the terms- ed - Frank Cochran senior member of the Tennessee Public Senice Commission said in Nashville that offiCo told cials of CSX his office the cars of soil were headed for a Utah landfill after sitting in a Nashville train yard for three days last week Greenpeace and other environmental groups whose officials say the soil is contaminated with toxic chemicals have been looking for the train since it left a CSX rail yard in Sumter SC last Monday CSX officials had a contract to deposit the tainted soil in South Carolina but the operator of a site in that state backed out following the bad publicity CSX spokesman Norm Go ing told The Tritiune Sunday He said two environmentalists bad chained themselves beneath the wheels of the parked train in South Carolina Michigan officials went to the trouble of reclassifying the dirt from to a harsirdous material to keep it out of their state be said Going would not disclose the location of the train fearing the safety of the environmentalists who may try to stop the train The 212 weeks of protest activity that has surrounded our effort to move this soil to a licensed industrial landfill has brought serious safety and security risks to the railroad and others as well" Going said The soil is contaminated with a number of chemicals he said but it does not contain levels of any chemical that would endanger human health The soil On the CSX train was excavated from the site of a train derailment that spilled acrylic acid which is used to make plastic cups and several types of solvents in Freeland Mich on July 22 1989 Cochran said the train which includes 32 cars of soil and two cars carrying extra tarpaulins left Nashville on late Friday night or early Saturday morning Wayne Pugh a railroad inspector with the Tennessee commission said the train would probably go to Memplais 210 miles west where it would be taken over by a railroad company that operates west of the Mississippi River CSX operates in 20 eastern states Despite the concern by some national environmentalists Ken Alkema director of Utah State Environmental Health said be is not overly concerned about the contaminated soil "From what I understand of the soil it wouldn't be nearly as hazardous as much of things that are routinely transported through Utah: semi loads of gasoline or crude or other loads of hazardous materials" he said l t Inside The Tribune Tribune Phone Numbers: A-- Ann Landers Asimov Quiz Classified Comics Crossword B-- 5 3 B-- 5 C-- 1 B4 C-- 3 Editorials Entertainment Jumble A-1- 0 A-- 7 C-- 3 a A-- Lifestyle Local 8 B-- 1 C1 Obituaries Public Forum Sports Star Gazer A-1- 1 D-- 1 B-- 5 TV Listings Utah Dateline B-- 5 C-- 1 Toclay's Forecast Salt Lake City and vicinity — Cloudy with snow or rain Highs mid-50- s Lows low 30s Details B-- 2 W t It awmtionbpAlPeaUnliNkoAfa 1 iii 4 Økkgi - 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