| Show tb 1 t 1 rl 1 eee - I to t t q(11'" e- ''''' d VoL 242 N e Edition H rrirl i OC I i rgil p II k4 -- t '011 isi --0 (I) (0) L:14) 'NI 191 ' 1 i 4 '''''' T grA----- il IONA" dmitad6141411 " tl i'l c":1 4 r 1 1 e I :- k' - Hurt SL ' s:1 ''''' ' 4 1 '' ' - t1 ' r LUZ TEIBLIZ ‘14 England — Atlanta 's success appears to have been balt Lake City 's madoMg e Atana's Saturlay :fotriz--( III - A'Yu Lid good buddy" Itr Young said as he embraced 'Thomas 11 eldi leader the Utah Olympic campaip'"We trszt you al least our votes and I ti721 help you nest time We ran start 1012101TM if you mut" and final round of balIn the loting Saturday the International Olympic Committee dismissed Salt Likes bid by a 464o42 vote for Nagano Japan In the second time Salt Lake tin lost Olympic bid to a Japanese city Mr Welch reused to attribute deeat solely to the Georta capital "There were laundreds IA factors I'm sure Atanta was a factor but I L--42- t the decisive in the minds of xnembers was a nonetrit for moving the Gaines around the g:lobe 'The geographical advantage as Nagamo had was strong ple as that" said Anton Geesint lin IOC membsz from the IN etherhaids IOC Related Stories: A2 Sall Lake City's loss was 'purely a feeling In the group that the US Should mot love the Games two times la J row:" said Robert mitt one of two 10C members from the United States Utah OlSO :my lave Dverployed its loind with its final 'presentation Saturday 'Too long and too sure' said Aosta's Gianpaolo Orromano after Mr 'Welch's speed and the tideo presentation Al one point Mr 'Welch toasted the 10C would be able to soy The Salt Lake Games those are the finest Games and so they shall be:" t sounds like something out of See A-- 2 Column la Yeltsin's Win Points Russia To Reforms By Ann Imse THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MOSCOW — The overwhelming victory of Boris Yellsin in the EUSsian republic' s presidential election placed the Soviet Union irreversibly on the path of reform Any Communist Party or military hard-liner- s contemplating a coup now must reckon with 44 million citizens who voted for Teltsin and might resent being overruled With 60 percent of the vote Yeltsin also got a ringing endorsement for his platform: Ending Communist Party domination switching quickly from a planned to a market economy and allowing private ownership of factories and land As chairman of the republic's legislature for a year Teltsin pushed through more than 150 economic See 6 Column 3 ' 1 A-1- I 4 : 1 o 4 fi 1 1 ire- 4 x A ---' (" ) I 1 ' 00t r fo" '' i e $- ' ''' 4' t '740 1: vs '' At t' I k' S 4f it' IF' - ' r-- :' - 4 1 ' ' 4f' - - i t --- v 4 A1 9 ' Ilias - I -- - 4e :2 ' - 4 "N '''t- - ' dangler elista vlpes tears from ryes przis -rTittee vte kis an a brave fate First-Roun- d tie out to be a tough rornitur down the rzetch Sat Lake City ter Na gang!) Japan 0 alerr- Eis ea:league SEVA Orrin lisidid also does ttrA see Saturdays defeat as fatal the people 'sr feel badly soy tort and s7ppwr1 Looter on IrAinter Games bid ay atteptitm:'S to 'ed d 299 Winter Olympics voting bid the Mira bid almost rambled out of foe gate Under the rules of International ee rdte selection a t Olympic Mtyimust pin D absohte majority of the 10C members present to vote city ma gain Buda a ZEIEjOriti on t2ie Ent round of voting the nitylritla the lowed vote total is tropped from (contention and the TPYTIRining nties proceed to the nett F16514:4 (1-- strad a round In the first romd &at Lake City tied for last place 'With Aosta 1114y enclave in a tiny the 'Italian Alps that was considered a long diot for the bid Were it not for its success in a runoff election with Acea &I Lake :would have been the first city tirpppea'from - MST MOONO 1111RD FOURN ROLPra hOUtCt ROUND ROLM art Cr&Irv"rri Sweden iri 21 30 35 15 271 29 18 25 23 19 ' 15 kali if on plat: Egit Aka Cry ant:Mogi liGe for City arlitancee to taw otexarret mare' b$r -- rs 17- -y 42 I tit first rArnt I nevi' voto 5 By John Zeahey Vtah's imuates who :already strain the rapacity of the state prison raay increase by another LUDO icriminals in the nert six years 2 mew report projects Corrections officials suggest they may have to ask the Legislature for millions of additional tax dollars to house the new :convicts The cost of housing an inmate mow averages 117000 per year The Department Corrections estimates 'Projections show rontinued growth in the demand forbed space the dethrough the 110s By mand is epected to increase by over 50 percent" states the report prepared for a citizens' group which recently toured the prison A copy of the group's report was obtained by The salt Lake Tribune "As Ithe prison population increases the need for additional funding will rinv" the document a 17 penal-refor- m tadVit to make longterm detaions The big thaIler-- g e L is is to min-lai- n the Uties:" Sat Lake City Mayor Palmie r said it IMF ittg early to male De-Pao- r2 it bait Luise 7r1buut Cassibac iice prenidmit and preriident ttt Aosta on he Sidelines the VS 0)ympie Committee cvriziy4 the team that was second place after the first round 14 votes in the second roimd vintting and joined says '"A population growth of only $'010 inmates which iE the minimum erpected daring fiscal year 19?2 will increase funding needs by more than $5 But 2 ley legislative leader claims the money will now and only as projections turn to real increases 'This Iproject1on3 is Dot news to the 'Utah Legislature'" said House Speaker B Craig Moody "There's not a crisis here but there is 2 challenge" to use available funds wisely Increased penalties and mandatory sentences for crimes have in- - creased the prison population above the growth in convictions From 1980 through the first three months of 19?1 the number of inmates from just over 10D0 to 1 ( 1' 1 changes made by the Ler)slature See Column I A-- 1 ' -- 4rn NI am"' 10 ' f 2tt 3333 — D Z) - 2333 AL Q -- 154 1 7)3 53 D - i ' RN a it lisp At- - v— Ai I) - 111 1 ' 132 By Andrew M Malcolm THE NEW YORK TIMES i 'Sixty-si- x years ago the National Father's Day Committee was founded and dedicated observance of that infant national holiday "to building a democratic world through wholesome child upbringing" The emphasis then on Dads vital role in his youngster's formative years has been skewed in intervening decades more toward his role as the annual target of a dutiful deluge I 3 - t A 1 t 4 t il gifts all of them some of them even useful That change in the tone of Father's Day observances was perhaps inevitable in an affluent consumer-oriente- d society that so equates material items with lovc But after a generation of official (Jr 4 t i 1 I attention to the rise and problems 'of working moms this past week produced evidence in 'Washington that perhaps the last decade of the 20th century will see a return of at-- Ili Ptciections RII9III Ingrzte Populalon 11111111111111111111111ii mil 1 ?&4 1177SS 1 1 isea i - i 1Sre 1 lItSe 1?:-11?S- 'The bait Lake 'Ilium& Gutphk I: tentiveness to the often-overlook- masculine side of the family equa- lion The scene was the House Select Committee on Children Youth and Families The event was a round of which were hardly ached- uled by chance just a few days be- fore Father's Day and were appro- priately enough presided over by a mother Lep Patricia SchroecifT lo She said the goal of the proeeed- ings was "to examine the role fa- thers play in parenting their chil- dren and how to create a work environnient that encourages them in their roles as fathers:" Last year the Bureau of Labor Statistics has reported 244 million fathers ftilly 36 percent of all men in the labor force had children tmd 18 Half of those had thildrer under C And a million men were single fathers BLit millions of American chil'dren have no 'visible father In the last 30 years while divorces also creased the percentage of Er births involving single mothers climbed from 53 percent to 245 percent in and up tti C22 percent for black Americans The model father for the 1P90s is far from the "Life 'With Father" dispenser of discipline or the friendly and wise but distant Dad in "Father Ilhows Lest" both of whom can seem to be visitors in nr eta wax& -- Irs izaht!ieville Napo° can be reborn bemuse our city will become thron0 boitAg tbe arimpitn'" said an excited Nagazo resident is a televiLlOn interview Nagano 120 'orles racnttwest Tokyo ereb popo:ation of second JapaZ!0073a1:1 be nese itty to host ae W2nter Gkrria followir4 Sapporo we3-know- a 1 b 11172 Xe zit 12j i te art ter To&ad Veto our tk remll" Prime Ifibs- mid in a ratte- 1-ai- fo met& 11 id& the Nagano Olympim b conform to Mt Olympic gtrA in the arze'nay as the Tokyo ISImume Games in 1160 and Sapporo Olympics vIntrTtram to bterzational friexist4p and promotion of sports:7 said Japan Olympic Conrmitee Ctairmm Itironten riaruhath' ot'ho attended the ICC session mid in a television interview 'Now we have bees selected we most stage tie games satell'er4 prrznaes ly We or1 put a2 ' we tare made Mto old Olymp:e medalst Yolio Easaya said in a tt te ski-jumpi- spetal televithon t progam had strongly erperted the IOC to clause Nagano as the lna rep-sae Lot he admitted: AlZy hezit went te3 the 'DC Let-to- n ins announced" pit-a-pa- ! l - The ETEZFeldan l'ELbtla SPEMAL What's Dad Doing for Holiday? Maybe Spending More Time frith Clan 1 i A crowd of iscrA gathered before awn in the cr4ourad wavthe Zenkti Temple -ing ens and stantng Nagano Nagano Nagano" after LearMs the announcement on a live broadcast front girmic412:110 By t t 13 armpits — President 1 latit Bush says be agree to an end to 17111 sanctions against Iraq as long as Saddam Hussein is in WASHINGTON power 'The 1 pretident's continued hold on power Bush adds is a 'major rev7et'" yet he defends the decision not to send !troops into Baghdad to topple Saddam –If we did:' Both says 'wed prObably he hogged dowia is horrible vet an guerrilla warfare In his first interview on Middle tart issues since the Persian Gulf 1471-- Bush ado re Lis vision as to how the area would Ed into tis ''new world order" And he reflects on the consequences of tis decisions during lite gulf war 'Instant democrat'? in Env-sivas not an objective of See A4 Column I one-on-o- a I ed tr-- - 41-- wicter sports aoer betng sklerlSa1 Ube Winter the 11-4- s itilTiiiini 13 lj0 i ' Napa aft mecr of -- Apia topl 1 Ilia 71 1:14"' IN ntit mE grum - 1 Er 2- -' lia- :7 —leek 1017z: Center The mit cif the DesString Land Isluids bnike its and toltaepass mold for the See 429 ClihErsto -- - 1 43 - 101 453 i eret Irliiltext": 11w)Twt WOn't EndCost Millions Bush Tracy Sanetions - p-e- 2500 Speaker Moody agrees that over Im Vlabas danted to 1N:agano proved to tie a moors CMtitteLt rJr2peti1m The Zapzziese city 3sd ne 'voting in LI four rottods beiore barely surpassing the 45- vote Omit) in the iourth round - li 'Obriototly sie rude a shoving so stv can vttt before snaking a decision about Site Were going to do nerr the vzyorrizid think we need to noun a Ltrie Some snemtiers of the state's 243- member delegation were uptiest they gathered at thet rented estate a few milrintes from the Erfrg- bat Salt LOA Rising Prison Populatiort Allay THE EALTIAKE TRIBUNE bte and Ilia- we teve to go tsle a very good lof-0- k ad it Cueltzlg for the 2X72 Catnesr Gov or FAingmtn said i"Totigti's not the conamittment MAt 10C the state setr11 need hill event-ie-1snore oath 45 41"4tis- - tcontention All five d'ties were 'within eix votes cif each Ilthu after the first round unfortunate thick result tf voting for friends An the first round rmd Thinking it doesn't count" said Lobert Helmick ain go toward ma'ziamg the facatiea - ta:ano Japan ISALT LAKE oral g ledfloge 45 Votes Ileected to Van an' speed-skatin- r ski Itinrps and other fadlities Some of tad money s7 in Co-u- - The 02te Las already footitted the 12SOC to create elympit fatilties And in a 1102 reerento sTromd rot d Valhi salwtax revenue to C013- - SL Vote Nearly Floors of itiappejitt dear on bs tam the loss 'Tint taisousemet Nees Tom 14'eleb thatrraan of Salt Lake Qty hYid St Sae Gam the i ' telt e tt-I- - e - L1 t e' j 4' '0o - t ‘It 4 the Saturday Cul 244- Japzc gas stwarled the IgIA PM We-teGamm E riolt overt 4 r to press to- dtoesez stiebtzg tl-- Ltd for ri see Sal and I yoo-K Lilo Lutt aganl'” said Weeds t)4 esmz—e exrzian 'It's ps1 of our flzture' Vtati deiegates tonnd srilatoe hi the city's stzsct thowing arid ate Chrrple Coittee s ortmg Lake slhrn1 a till for the that 2CC2 Winter CALMeL That &dike ViC tie made in Biatzpeit Ilmgary in I'M- '''"We mat to go for it agath "' saifi Sen Were the best 4 25:err-ze- 01"Av oi - m y -- Revels 1 scanoceier---e- d it 41-- saa ccaby ttd v -- tit 4 Nit Bid for 2002 El411 4:17:e:r3--r-tiedrAt- jo 1 t( i i r i 7- '44 - - It 0 1 -- el - 7 LAZE 1117LICE EimmiGHAIL 44 fel YOMMOSt Rzme: W e4b 3 take ) 0 I : 4 7:1 I: - b:- - id S'EtS By ria SALT dr''''" e:'--' 4 the 1196 Summer Games tucked the del against a 1'Corth Ameican bid for the 19 8 trt Games former Atlanta levy Andrew Young said I'm sot sure one" ilvlay - ' TRE SALT But - By Russia weeks "lel tip - -- SL Delegation 'Down' 1 I Zi7 41' arsb Salt Lake City ULah (6)andara') ' A47 g A 0 f - 0 ' The Salt Lake Tribune 0 - - NI i'?1 Alat e :( AN- i tal) T19"314 TTis- eN''11 1 - Atlanta Bid iJay Have S 5 11 v 10-- A 1 SUNDAY Jusle 16 MUM 11 - (- Their families rather than itttive partners lie's even more advanced than some modern television fathers who can seem involved with social issues while remaittint distant even within their own f 'eintil'" es a generation in which two can be Inure a necessity than simply desirable it fortows that the fAmily must become more than ever a Mom and Pop opation Dad nut onJ) haz to know bizt he has to do his best to pitch in with the children and IT Lu actvunts the chill-e-n will benefit Professor Nortna Ladin of the University of Michigan 's School of SOtial Work cited studies showin& perhaps nut surprisingly that tot greater the father 'E involvement in early child rearing the more receptive were the same children later to less traditional family arreagements sunh as both parents holding jobs "There is" she said strong evidence that boys' intellettual developrat is ethRriced 1y Vlatu irvoveruent with father- Eadin said both so:as and LaughitTS with more picturing fathers showed impr)ved 'verbal and math'4-ds- profi6eny as well ItS better problo-solvin- g skfl mo're inematics dependent behavior and social er p-eat- among self-confiden- strangers Schroeder noted some Eipb response by few larr in the areas of th:11 etrptirr-iOn-6 rare flexible working holm and unpaid paternity leev i ne t Inicide The Tribune ?beige Ann Tribune uniberw balder' :: F-1- 2 Artiluteruimnent Lieber! 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