| Show 'V i 1 i7ftcZn int II News Desk: 237-201- A 1 0 0 11 dtI B1 Tsongas Utah Demos 1 API ow I Phillips ! 4 1 By vt 1 4 4 04 I t ti i 't 1 t I 1 1 A ) : ' A ti '7' ' IA 'i - t - I - ' : e4Ae4: 1 - - --- ' --- -4 ' 0'-' o ' ' '! ' - ' — - - '20' f A K ''"' ' - 1' 7- t d s ' " ''-- 4 7 - " ' No'''' ' - --- - ----- -- --- - 4 tvok n t t' t4 I A r- - r 1 ' 4 - - ttl f - - - ' - ' :''': tI t I i i : ! 2 ' '' 4 tl 0400' 441111115111111111" t t A 4 11 lit t4 f 7 I 4 - - -- -- t 16-blo- I j 4r 'IA 7" - ' ' I 1 ( 1 i --- i - e- I 4 - I - '''' - ' 4-- iiic '''l t '1 ' ' 4 1 k I --- ' 4 '4 - 1 3 1' ' - - Ai c r -- 1 ' 4' 1 I I 1 i 4 1 4 - 1 t ' t I - : -- p - —- 1 I aterials t To Raze or Renovate? That's the Question j e arm of the LDS Church wants to bulldoze this home at Zions Securities Corp the one and N Lake Salt 145 State City just north But the city's Historical Landmark Committee says the company is breaking its promise to restore the structures See story on real-estat- B-- 2 B-- 2 With Police Fuels Trouble Trouble e Chris Jorgensen " 1'1 1 I - ‘ ! ' THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini's goal to meet every city employee turned sour during a recent visit with police officers The police wanted to know why the new officers they were promised haven't been hired The city cannot afford it now the mayor replied If that's true one officer responded why is the city spending $250000 for a giant water fountain in Liberty Park? The embarrassed mayor shrugged It was the first she had heard of the extravagant fountain She turned to Roger Black the city's finance director He hadn't heard of the fountain either "We need cops in the park and a lot of other things not a fountain" said Officer Bruce Smith "During the election Deedee promised us public safety would be her first priority" "Seven Canyons Fountain" The will depict the canyons and streams along the Wasatch Front and be shaded by trees and foliage common to the canyons The fountain and its design were the inspiration of Salt Lake City businessman Obert C Tanner for whom fountains have become a trademark of philanthropy He offered to pay half of the project's 000000 price tag Mr Tanner's vision of the fountain was taken to Salt Lake City architect Boyd Blackner who turned the idea into what one official believes may become one of the city's top tourist attractions Palmer DePaulis was preWhen sented with the fountain plans he endorsed using tax money to pay the remaining $250000 "Those were times when we had the money to do things like that" said Mr DePaulis who now works for a Salt Lake City law firm "At the time the decision was made the police contract had just been signed and they had gotten many of the things they wanted" Still some officers believe the city should renege on the deal The city's half of the money could be better spent hiring new officers paying for new equipment or filling potholes police say I TODA Y ' ' I 11 I i 1 1 i 4 1 I t ! - ' -r"-- -1 '-' t ! -- - ! 6:': -- 1 - q I Sited f i SEVEN 1 CANYONS 1 sn:nt ''t i ! SIZE -28000 1 I 1- I- 1 ! - 1 i -' -s Lt -1 ' ) b 4f I t't 1 - t 1 - i ' e4N 1 t I I I z - - t i i ! t i 1 I I I 4 3 1 i i t 1 ! ) ' i i ' ! i t t t t L ''" 1 I tt ' I ! : - i tlt oPC i it - ir PC:'X - i - t 1 I I a i w 1200 South Ms ( ! I - ' ' - - Students from throughout Utah show their creative stuff in the 1992 version of The Salt Lake Tribune's "Awesome Ad 'Wray aganza" publication The free standing section is included in today's edition Sweden or the Netherlands "boot sector of floppy disk it in a Corradini believes the fountain may actu- ally be doing the police a favor "Parks and recreation give people something to do" she said "If people are enjoying the park and fountain they are not out doing something else" The city's half of the bill has already been set aside by the prior administration she said "These are tight financial times" she said "But this has already been taken care of" computer will walk away with an infected disk even if only a directory from the "healthy" floppy is called up ' i a Newly infected e' floppy can infect i Ail'"-'i " more computers -- tfl‘ User must reprogram the computer ''"''- - - p March 6 the virus will overwrite infected hard disk with random characters All programs and files will be destroyed bl' 4 fu-- C on - : - SOURCE: Philadelphia Inquirer one of many Utah organizations fraught with concern The school will shut down its computer lab early today to have extra time to scan its computers again for viruses said lab director Boyd War-nic- k le Now that she's had a chance to study the pro- ject ' U Anyone using a floppy disk in the infected ruses Viruses are actually small programs that hide inside other software When transferred into a computer they create mischievous effects such as making messages appear on the screen or destroying a report that took months to write The Michelangelo virus falls into the latter category Experts say that once inside an computer and every time the machine is turned on the program checks the computer's internal clock When that clock turns to March 6 the program starts The virus will erase all the information on the hard disk a device on which most computer users keep many of their programs important business and personal files Salt Lake Community College is °c 'Me Salt Lake 'reiburie Graphic t'' 51 4 13 Infected disk is used to start up or "boot" computer If infected disk is in the computer the computer infects itself when started up Mr Kessler said he has personally seen "only a handful" of vi- i I I I I t f At A in created virus hid doubts" I ! of 't 4 C Programmer Kessler computer science associate professor at the University of Utah "There are thousands of viruses to be sure but how widespread are they? I have my I t ft' ' -- -i N: computer painter Michelangelo may strike on his birthday March 6 "It's mass hysteria" said Bob 4 I I I : '' y 1 Begins In April Finishes In July 1 1 '- 1' 1 I ' -------- - t ' e'- A anti-viru- ! sq teal CONSTRUCTION ' i 1 i ' - The Michelangelo virus virus named after the flocking to software dealers to diagnose and vaccinate against the Michelangelo "virus" that could erase the programs in their machines on Friday "We're sold out There's no s more software in town" said computer-stor- e manager Catrina Jensen memWhile computer-industrbers said they have heard of few discoveries of the virus in Utah the fear of the infection is apparently widespread : $250000 donation from O C Tanner $250000 from Salt Lake City 1 1 t LOZIci '-- -- t - STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Utah computer owners are 1 FOUNTAIN I 1- 1 TRIBUNE - I - I I -- I i 1 ‘ - 11 ! - 1 - - Michelangelo Computer 'Vaccine' Sold Out As Midnight Hour Approaches for 'Virus' Al - 1 400-foot-lo- then-May- PLAT 17CA 1 t 1 ' - I s 111 the convention the National Collegiate Masters and Seniors tournaments will follow "Something like 40000 bowlers come in 400 new ones each day" said Mr Pexton "On any given day at least 800 bowlers and guests will crowd the lanes" vention & Visitors Bureau They will make their pitch Saturday and the site selection committee will decide Saturday night Mr Pexton said $30 million is a conservative estimate of what the host city would earn from the convention which opens Feb 1 1996 and runs through June 7 Besides the ABC national tournament held in conjunction with Lynn R JohnsonThe Salt Lake Tribune ov e Up Convention's Alley? Imagine 40000 bowlers — all those "high rollers" in pursuit of strikes and spares — knocking down pins and enhancing the economy in Salt Lake City Boyd Pexton does That is why he and a team of Utahns will leave today for Corpus Christi Texas to make a bid for the American Bowling Congress' 1996 convention It's the one that would turn the Salt Palace's Acord Arena into a bowling alley with some 40 lanes and a $1 million scoreboard Mr Pexton past president of the ABC will be joined by Salt Lake County Sheriff Aaron Kennard County Surveyor Carl Larsen Lt Gov Val Oveson County Commissioners Jim Bradley and Randy Horiuchi and Richard E Davis Dick Gilliland and Diane Binger from the Salt Lake Con- c? 1 4 Meeting of SL Mayor rank-and-fil- I B-- 2 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE t ti f a '5 J - - 5 N a -- 4 able information and maybe momentum "Our mailing list went from about 10000 to 31000 overnight" said the party chairman "We have a lot of excited candidates because of the turnout we were able to attract The morale among Democrats right now is the best that I can remember" One persistent critic of the state Republican Party said the GOP blew a chance to gain the same advantages "If the party leaders were truly interested in gauging the feelings of the See Column 5 By Jon Ure I '' 441 I t i 7: li Az 3k tt ' 1 --- d 1 said Mr Billings The Democrats gathered valu- Utahns Hope to Bowl Over 40000 I 1 i SL Right A 1 - 4 - -- - ' - : - 0 ) Paul Tsongas who won Utah's primary with 33 percent demonstrated he can win away from the East Coast "Utah because of those two factors has been mentioned prominently in national analyses of Tuesday's primaries" Tuesday's first Utah primary played a surprisingly significant role in the presidential race and state Democratic politics While Utah's 17 million people give it few delegates the value of the vote to the winners and the party machiae was much larger A total of 31339 Utahns voted in the primary a turnout far exceeding any expectations said state Democratic Chairman Peter Billings The Republican Party declined to participate Among the primary's effects: The votes in Utah and Colorado qualified Jerry Brown's campaign for federal matching funds To qualify a candidate needs at least 20 percent of the votes in two state primaries Mr Brown received 28 percent in Utah and Colorado Tuesday i S Paul Roily and Dan Harrie THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE 4 John Dehnel sat by the phone Tuesday night waiting for a call so he could put the Emergency Broadcast System to work warning residents of a leak downtown The call never came "Maybe they decided the leak wasn't serious enough" said Mr Dehnel chief engineer at KSL radio and the chairman of the state's Emergency Broadcast Committee because "But I was surprised officials on the scene called it a civil emergency and that's what the system's for" Employees of Great Western Chemical Co moved quickly to plug the leak that sprung in a tank trailer at 1987 S 700 West Salt Lake City shortly after 9 pm Police and firefighters evacuat area while hazardous-med a aterial crews from Salt Lake City threw soda ash on 500 gallons of hydrochloric acid that had spilled Ambulances and UTA buses stood by but no injuries were reported Residents and workers began returning to the area about midnight "But there was some confusion about the Emergency Broadcast System" Mr Dehnel said "Television and radio did the best we could with news bulletins because nobody asked us to go on" The Emergency Broadcast System interrupts radio and television broadcasts so that officials may alert residents during an emergency The system can be activated by the president for national emergencies the governor for state emergencies and by the mayor commissioners or other city or county officials on the local level Radio and television stations broadcast a long test tone every week as required by the Federal Communications Commission Deputy Salt Lake City Fire Chief Thom Tallon said he was poised to alert the system of the toxic gas leak and evacuation but refrained because fire and hazardous-mteams had the leak under control "We moved in preparation one step ahead of the game it came over the air to notify EBS" said the deputy chief "But by then firefighters had plugged the leak Salt Lake City Fire Capt Andrus reported to me that the four See Column 1 By CLASSIFIEDS ENTERTAINMENT Primary Lifts Brown THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE 5000-gallo- II THURSDAY March 5 1992 5 Acid Spill Fails To Activate Alert System By Michael lp7rritt4A 3 eVV4'7i Knight-Ridd- Graphic disk for the invader's presence and destroys it Don't use the computer Friday so the virus will not be triggered Leave the computer turned on from Thursday night until Saturday morning However if the power is interrupted and the computer restarts the virus could be activated Some experts say it's possible to disable the virus by changing the date on the internal clock so the virus doesn't know the triggering date has arrived But others call that a risky maneuver that could accidentally activate the The prospect of losing everything on your hard disk is chilling to most computer users "It's good PR to worry about viruses if you sell the vaccine" said Dana Snow president of the Utah Blue Chips computer users' group Experts suggest the following steps to thwart Friday's virus: s Install an program that searches the computer's hard anti-viru- MhAMV0dKAWIedbWKVa11i:t Drug Confernee A three-da- y "Life Skills Confer- ence" designed to combat drug abuse begins at 8 am at the Salt Palace I Boys Basketball Quarterfinal games for Utah Class Boys Basketball Tournament at Weber State University 230 pm to 8:10 pm 3-- I Girls Basketball Quarterfinal games for Utah Class Girls Basketball Tournament at Salt Lake Community College 2:30 pm to 8:10 pm 4-- I Buffer Zone Sandy Planning Commission decides fate of buffer zone between residents and development at 6:30 pm at 440 E 8630 South I A tkiXLq I Women's Health Panel discusses ethical dilemmas in women's health care Weber State University's Austad Auditorium 10:30 am I Tax Dollars Jefferson B Fordham Debate 6:30 pm U of U Marriott Center for Dance looks at whether candidates should only be funded by taxes |