| Show The Salt Lake Tribune Spotlight ' ll A3 Sunday September 8 1991 Soviet Bear Still Has Claws US Military Says Continued From A-- l scale aid by the Group of Seven richest industrialized democracies Russian President Boris Yeltsin speaking in Moscow said the West f? — NATIONWORLD I - must help speed the Soviet Union's transition to a market 4 economy not only to show grati' tude for the Russian people's defeat of last month's coup but also to forestall popular unrest that could destabilize world politics He acknowledged however that the impoverished disintegrating superpower must rebuild its economy largely through its own efforts He said that he fully agrees with Western economists' view that fundamental reforms are needed before foreign aid will be useful The Russian president was not specific as to the kind of help he wanted from the West apart from saying that food aid may be necessary to get through the coming winter He said he had given President Bush six programs in which cooperation could be undertaken quickly between the United States and the Russian federation bypassing the crumbling Soviet central bureaucracy Yeltsin answering reporters' questions in a televised interview also said he believed that the main force behind the coup was the KGB and its chief Vladimir A Kryuchkov He said Kryuchkov now in prison with his awaiting trial on charges of treason had personally ordered the tapping of his telephone calls and constant surveillance on him for the last three years Yeltsin also said he has no aspirations for the job now held by his old rival Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and has plenty to do the 150 million-stronRussian federation In other developments: In the southern republic of Azerbaijan thousands of people rallied to protest Sunday's presidential elections in which the only candidate is the current president t Dave Barry Danny Bonaduce Duchess of York Dave Barry humor columnist will trade his typewriter for a lawn mower to join the Areola Lawn Rangers a precision power-mowdrill team whose motto is "You're only young once but you can always be immature" Barry was scheduled to march with the team Saturday in the 21st er annual Broomcora Festival in Areola 111 Lawn Ranger leader Pat Monahan said his efforts to get Barry to attend the event began nearly a year ago when he began sending the columnist letters and back issues of annual Ranger newsletters e "He's a guy and we just wanted to show him a good time" Monahan said Barry will be the first nationally known celebrity to march with the Rangers award-winnin- g good-tim- The Duchess of York better known to Americans as "Fer-gie- " elicited shouts of delight from elderly residents of a New York City nursing home when they learned they were in store for a royal visit "Three cheers!" shouted Mildred Smith 38 when the member of British royalty stopped by the Mary Manning Walsh Home on Friday Fergie chatted in Spanish with Rosa Perez 91 who is from Cuba Later residents gave her two stuffed dogs for her two children Eugenia and Beatrice The former Sarah Ferguson is married to Andrew Duke of York the former child star best known as the son on "The Partridge Family" doesn't believe his troubles of late will get in the way of his career "I have yet to see any doors I couldn't knock down" he said Friday If people don't take him seriously so be it "I don't do it for anyone's acceptance It's a business I do it for the money" Bonaduce 32 was placed on three years' probation for attacking a transvestite prostitute in Phoenix on March 31 He pleaded guilty in July to endangerment and pleaded no contest to misdemeanor assault charges freckled Bonaduce his job as a disc jockey It cost the on KKFR-Ain Phoenix Danny Bonaduce wise-cracki- red-haire- d Voters Can Forgive Financial Trouble Ayaz Mutalibov In Armenia the republic's Communist Party dissolved itself Saturday the Interfax news agency reported election but he still received more than 100000 votes Late this summer Republican Senate candidate Joe Cannon revealed that during his college days at Brigham Young University he experimented once with marijuana His and other polls showed voters being forgiving on that youthful indiscretion and this Tribune poll indicates the same would be true for other candidates in a similar situation Democrats also have been faced with other calamities similar to the hypothetical situations cited in the poll State legislator Deon was persuaded by her Democratic colleagues to resign from the House of Representatives last winter after she was arrested on shoplifting charges State Sen Darrell Renstrom lost his bid for after he was a on sexual asacquitted by jury sault charges And former Salt Lake County Commissioner Dave Watson resigned from office after his arrest on charges of drunken driving and possession of a small amount of cocaine Continued From l indicate 3 percent of the 34 Protestants surveyed would not vote for a Divorce lacks the political stigma it once had Eighty-sevepercent of the respondents would not abandon a divorced candidate Only 3 percent would reject a candidate for that reason Not having a college degree not attending church and smoking r have marijuana as a negligible consequences for a candidate But youthful experimentation with cocaine ongoing marijuana use and a sexual harassment conviction can be politically fatal Some of the hypothetical questions posed in the survey conducted by Insight Research for The Tribune have actually occurred While only 4 percent of the respondents said they would still vote for a candidate caught soliciting a prostitute many more than that voted for Congressman Allan Howe in 1976 after he was arrested and subsequently convicted for soliciting sex from a police decoy prostitute Howe lost his bid for re- i Mr A-- non-Morm- n teen-age- Hal-verso- n Vatican Albania Renew Ties After Years of Conflict THE ASSOCIATED PRESS h the campaign after World War II under Albania's Stalinist leader Enver Hoxha had anti-churc- VATICAN CITY — The Vatican and Albania established diplomati ic relations Saturday putting been especially harsh The Vatican said that of the seven bishops 200 priests and 200 nuns living in Albania in 1945 only one bishop 30 priests and 30 nuns survived the persecutions be- hind them more than 40 years of h persecution by the Balkan country's former Stalinist anti-churc- regime Even by communist standards CLIP I i I I I I I I I I I I I I §ftt JSalt Carrier and home delivery Information on weekday before 10 am and Sundays before 1 pm Salt Lake south Davis counties All other areas lations and billing Information Monday through Friday I am to S pm Home Delivery Subscriptions Mail Subscriptions NEWSROOM City Desk 5 'I Religion Reader Advocate Editorial Writers City Utah 84111 unsolicited articles manuscripts letters and pictures sent at e the owner's risk and Corporation assumes no responsibility (or Ihek custody or return BATES SUBSCRIPTION Carrier Delivery $24 per copy Dally $62 per copy Sunday with dolly $150 per copy Sunday Onry Newsrock or Vendor $ 50 per copy Dally $150 per copy Sunday (Rates may dWer outside the Sort Lake Metropolitan area) By Merit Newspapers in Ed Photography 237 2078 Publisher Editor and Sunday (Utah Idaho Ne$12 00 mo vada ond Wyoming) Daily Nevodn $800 mo and Wyoming) Saturday ond Sunday by comer Wednesday by mail (Utah where $v68 mo avoiloble) Sunday Only (At other states) $900 mo Dolly and Sunday (All other 00 mo $23 states) All mail subscriptions payable m Dairy scores call AP9O0 SportsFlasb (Sports staff not permitted to give out scores) Kor ADVERTISING Only (Utah Idaho advance Classified Advertising Retail Display Advertising before 5 pm) Obituaries (Mon-Fr- i (After 5 pm weekends holidays) 3 237-29- 1 tal right to marital privacy Thomas' record at the EEOC also is certain to be examined Opponents say he enforced laws he agreed with and ignored those he disliked raising concerns about whether he would respect Supreme Court precedents Some senators are worried about how much deference he would give to congressional intent as a justice interpreting the law Democrats also plan to delve into Thomas' opposition to affirmative action and minimum-wag- e laws and his criticism of the Supreme Court's reasoning in Brown The Tribune is a member ot The Associated Press The Associated Press it entitled exclusively to the use or reproduction ol on local news printed in this newspaper as we ot all AP news dispatches Memtw Audi! Bureau or Circulations i - 12 - f i The Aisacllited Preu- - lar bill The copy which reads "red dollar" at bottom was posted on a Moscow wall A profile of Lenin instead of George Washington graces copy of an American one-dol- Lenin May Finally Receive Decent Burial NEWS SERVICE KNIGHT-R1DDE- MOSCOW — If you've been wanting to see what may be the eighth wonder of the world — a perfectly preserved VI Lenin lying in a mausoleum on Red Square — you'd better move fast Finally 67 years after his death it looks as though he's about to get a decent burial Things are moving quickly here in the post-cou- p Soviet Union and now that the country has killed communism there's a move afoot to inter the man who brought it to power: Lenin crowd of people Saturday a lined up under clear chilly skies to catch what they thought might be their last glimpse of the mortal remains of the Soviet George Washington "I think they may be taking him out of here soon and I wanted my son to see him before they do" said Muscovite Victor Kharin 38 who stood on the cobblestones of Red Square with his son Dimitri 8 "I had a feeling I would be seeing him for the last time " v Valentin Ivanov 50 accompanied by his wife 44 said: "We came by bus this morning from Vladimir — it's 200 kilometers away — especially to see him Sooner or later they're going to rebury him And that's as it should be It's better to put him back in his native soil" Said Ruslan Utyashov 28 of Voronezh gesturing mausoleum: toward Lenin's imposing "What can I say? It's a corpse They should bury it" There have been rumblings about moving the body larger-than-norm- al Lyu-bo- red-grani- te of the Soviet Union's demigod for a couple of years Ever since the coup collapsed a little less than three' weeks ago however those rumblings have turned into persistent demands After all the country bis: only witnessed the demise of the Communist Party' the dismantling of the old centralized Soviet Union and the freeing of the Baltic states It was only a matter of time before the question of sa- -' what to do with the Soviet Union's number-on- e cred cow rose to the surface Last week after the Congress of People's Deputies voted to turn the country into a confederation of independent states Leningrad Mayor Anatoly Sob-- i chak took to the podium to discuss one last bit of business "I suggest that we end our congress with dignity said the respected Sobchak "and pass the following resolution: Fulfilling Vladimir Ilyich Lenin's lasV will we order that his remains be buried in accor-dance with the religious and national customs of our people at the Volkovo Cemetery in Leningrad with? all the appropriate honors" Two years ago a similar proposition at the con-'- 1 gress was met with anger and derision This time suggestion was greeted by enthusiastic ap- ' plause and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev said the new Parliament would take up the matter when it convened later this month Some think he could be ' buried by the end of the year ' " 1 think of your sons your daughters your loved ones and their voyage into a tough world" Bush said in his radio speech "Then think of this extraordinary man who conquered deprivation without or complaint And think cf what it means to appoint to our highest court a man who appreciates the real glories of our form of government and understands the real difficulties our nation faces" Ralph Neas executive director of the Leadership Council on Civil Rights however has called the confirmation fight "a very winna-bl- e battle" for Thomas' vs Board of Education the 1954 ruling that outlawed separate schools for black and white stu- dents Danfortfr said Thomas had an "underlying commitment to equality" and called criticism of his views on civil rights unwarranted President Bush said Friday he was "more convinced than ever that I have appointed the right self-pit- y man" And on Saturday Bush delivered a nationwide radio address extolling Thomas for having overcome a background of poverty "When you hear or see coverage of the confirmation hearings Small Intense Claudette Heads for Bermuda THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MIAMI — A small but intense Hurricane Claudette curved toward Bermuda Saturday its winds roaring at 120 mph and a hurricane watch was posted for the island "It's a dangerous storm it's a powerful hurricane but it covers a relatively small area" said meteorologist Mark Zimmer at the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables winds of Tropical storm-forcat least 39 mph extended about 85 miles from the storm's center "We're looking for a pretty quick turn to the right to the e and reached hurricane strength Friday A gradual turn northwest is expected by noon today A more northerly track could lessen the threat to Bermuda and take it east of the island on a path into the remote north Atlantic "We don't see any threat to the mainland now" Zimmer said "With that turn to the north we don't see any threat right now to the East Coast of the United north That will bring it in the vicinity of Bermuda" Zimmer said "The problem of course is just how close it will come to Bermu- da" Forecasters said it would take until midday today to get a good idea of how close Claudette would be to Bermuda which will be affected late tonight or early Monday With the hurricane's course taking it over cooler water forecasters expected a slow weakening over the next day or two The system zipped from loosely organized thunderstorms Wednesday evening to a tropical storm Thursday States" Labor Day week is the historic peak of the Atlantic hurricane season which runs from June 1 to Nov 30 Wreckage in Congo Crash THE ASSOCIATED PRESS DOLISIE Congo — Rescuers searched Saturday for bodies and survivors trapped in the wreckage of a head-otrain collision that sources said killed more than 150 people A passenger train crashed into a freight train in this central Afri- can nation overnight Thursday and a locomotive and two cars filled with passengers plunged ravine down a It could not immediately be de- termined how many people were on the train Survivors said the train was packed well beyond its capacity with carriages designed to seat 100 people carrying as many as 200 The accident occured near Doli-si- e 250 miles south of Brazzaville the capital The passenger traiq was traveling from the Atlantic ' Ocean port of Pointe Noire andr the freight train was carrying from Brazzaville On Friday Transport Minister Demba Thelo told reporters toll was more than 100 Sources at Dolisie hospital said ' more than 150 people had died The sources who spoke on condi-- ' tion of anonymity said relatives had identified more than 80 n j - tim-be- the-deat- Doctors Put Pacemaker in Marshall WASHINGTON — Retiring All J I I lake New subscriptions restarting subscription cancel- Continued From A-- l cess clause protected a fundamen- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS South Main x X- Pressure's On as Hearings Approach Teams Search (USPS 143 Established April 15 1671 published dally ond Sunday by the Keams-Tribun- e 143 Corporation South Main St Salt Lake City Utah 84111 Second class postage paid at Salt Lake City Utah POSTMASTER: Send oddrets changes to The Salt Lake Tribune 143 South Mam St Salt CIRCULATION Sports Lifestyle Z Library Entertainment I I pint pibtrne TELEPHONE NUMBERS i I &dl $a!u tbunt £3 g mar-agin- 'Ill'2 Su- preme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall was "resting comfortably and in good spirits" Saturday after surgery to implant a pacemaker said a spokesman for the National Naval Medical Center "The pacemaker is functioning all eventually agreed all three of us that this is it and this is it" Marshall told reporters at a news conference then the Ear Aid pNfffiN AH in as expected" said hospital spokesman Lt Cmdr Bill Clyde in a written statement announcing the surgery The device was implanted Friday afternoon "to treat an abnormally slow heart rate" said Clyde "Justice Marshall is resting comfortably and in good spirits" Clyde added in a telephone inter- Salt Lak© Meariiii Speech Center view Clyde said Marshall had remained "awake during the procedure and tolerated it well" He did not say when Marshall 83 who has been hospitalized since Wednesday after suffering would be released Marshall the court's only black member said in June that health was a factor in his decision to retire from the court after 24 years "My doctor and my wife and I have been discussing this for the past six months or more And we Jj Jam V 'f ?wA ft Free Hearing aid $40 Discount on hearing aids for senior citizens money-bacMedicareMedicaid accepted 45-Da- k y Dean Platis phd Licensed test guarantee ccc-as- p Audiologist Professional Audiological Evaluations and Hearing Aids light-headedne- i ''fa v Ji'i - v m mmr 272-123- 2 1377 East 3900 South Suite 201 Call Toll Free in Utah iCCC h |