Show -- 641trittviw cl' rd 1 : 1 1 13 ' 01111 $ -- 41 11 1 I 1 VOLUME 245 NUMBER 146 By Victoria Loe DALLAS — Ever feel like life is spinning out of control? Has the world begun to look strange and scary? Does it seem sometimes that none of the old values apply? Join the club — or the cult When people — ordinary average people get overwhelmed by the uncertainties of life they may gravitate to any individual or or- ganization that promises a secret key to security and happiness So say sociologists psychologists and who professional have studied the origin and dynamics of such groups From age to age fringe groups have flourished in times of social political or economic stress times when average people might fear that the world — as they know it — is falling apart "Down through history whenever there's a breakdown of the social structure there tends to be a burgeoning of cults" said Mar cult-watche- rs 1 c it fii US Again Rebuffs UN e See 44 '- - Or-'10 fr fp LI 1 ? 1- i r - adre- Greek-owne- French President Francois Mitterrand meets with President will try to persuade Mitterrand to support a Security Council resolution for enforcing a no-fl- y zone over Bosnia a senior administration official said Bou- made the comtros Boutros-Ghaments about US forces driving the Serbs out of Bosnia on ABC-Tli V "We have as an objective the withdrawal of the Serbs" he said "and if they will not withdraw then we'll have to take the necessary measures" Some analysts Monday viewed Boutros-Ghall- s remarks as an atnot tempt just to pressure the Serbs into a peace agreement but also to assert UN control over whatever mission international forces end up pursuing in Bosnia i 744 e it OA 4 b crz ' ' -- oto i I i ::: A 'Pt 4 I :' 04 - & '''‘ I 1 1Zii : g 1112 It 477'r7' r 1 ' -- 0 1 - ' rrrIrrl ' - i Lti ' ' 4 Trffr'-'r:47ttlY- c The Associated Press Cult leader says he's "ready for war" But so are law officers as a tank moves toward the standoff site near Waco Texas Story: A-- 3 t '41" ? !- - : 49'4 "-y-4 L1 nt ' t A - -i:: it 0-g-larl- I ' -11-- - :'i) r2 :LI 1 10- Flii I : :I :1t- ' CI I') t :37479-r-- ' ii''''wv t7-- ''ve 1 - - :7'4 i y e lc 7 il't I 0 3:-7- : l1- ) 4 4 bq ' 7 4 1 t 4 i ' 1 14"-At'144- k z1NIA-1- 0 ' 'A0:121-1t- '0N 14 1‘'17Z14y it mrs'13 1 -' '': t AiNr ez 1 A'" 4 A ik 144 '''' 4 oy ! I 4t:r i"' - r t -- ' A—zv42: t! kis i' i- k i 4' - aI 41C11C1114"11:14:i 4: '''"' t!-- It :: :i1 k 1043t4-Q4N5'- ' i eI(S: ‘4' 4:eN:111-- 1 "- - p 1 r '''-- ":: "'17: 7' INtb!c 1" r ‘ "':- t IJ:4ir' 14 141? t - : ki h trol but the United States and NATO which would contribute the bulk of ground forces along with units from Russia want only from the the political United Nations preferring that command stay within the NATO go-ahe- family This is the second time in recent has made comments upsetting to Washington over the issue of who sets the mission for forces authorized by the United Nations When US forces were deployed to Somalia last December to safeguard relief aid BoutrosGhali said the troops also should disarm Somali militias American officials disagreed although several raids on arms caches have taken place since a ! I i -1 f— i) '''' t -- ''-- i ''' 4 - -- " f' '11:L-:'- 'NZ ' ''''' " S0 It41'' 1 - — r -- 4 --- ' A ' 111 ‘"-- r41Ss It 4 7':1: ''' Ir '' :''' '"' ''' I 14 c'T4‘ t Tk vr 2"'2211 NlAillAdirNI ' ll'kik 4 ‘ 'ztl-'1:‘ I'' 7 - 'IN ' t- ''' '''' - - oirolimittPcAAa4 0 '4 ' ' 1sT'' ri'77: 'h12'N' ':' N -- :s ' itte:4--retiZs ATI V4' '' 't?V'- - ''''to 4- — u36 "11104v7 '' !'t ' 1-- '"'-' SmithThe Salt Lake Tribune Christopher 4gno — spending from the president's economic plan during the next five years The cuts which the White House initially opposed were the direct result of pressure mounted by party conservatives and a large number of the 63 Democratic newcomers elected in November "These folks said that they simply couldn't accept a budget with such a poor ratio of spending cuts to taxes" a Democratic staffer said 'The new members insisted on a change in the direction of spending So we had to go and find more cuts" The plan a painfully crafted compromise between liberals and conservatives is expected to bring the federal deficit below $200 billion by 1997 the end of Clinton's first term That is lower than the target set by Clinton Although the level of cuts falls short of what Democratic conservatives hoped to achieve most of them agreed to the deal Clinton said he needed congressional approval of his plan to spur the budding economic recovery and lay the groundwork for long-tergrowth Among the new cuts was $400 million less for NASA and $450 million less for several energy programs — the Rural Electrification Administration nuclear research and development uranium enrichment and the strategic petroleum reserve program — in "By tomorrow we'll have a package that can get consensus support" said House Majority Leader Richard Gephardt after a meeting with Clinton and his staff House Budget Committee leader Martin Olav Sabo said he intends to bring the agreement — in the form of a budget resolution — to a committee vote Thursday then to the House floor a week later His Senate counterpart Demo o ''Ici $14 '''i - VVItt 011A ‘‘ tak4 !Oi OktAi 4 4 NEWS SERVICE 1994 ktLA't43114114 - 4i 0 4 iA )-k4kit:4') 1 4' ''''''ii - 00-- 0 Irv000 'ilr' ' t C - ' ' 1 tiKVktiqA1 - 40 'Itlifil :tt -- "L I: 71t 4 - - ' 7111'-- 1 :' ' i-- :Th - 01SV016'M '"'WV 10mofis0 Sanctuary manager Judah Nasr is the cat's meow The facility near Kanab houses 700 cats oAr-- - 1 F 1: 11 ti ' The Associated Press President Clinton gets a hug from Manhattan Borough leader Ruth Messinger after speaking to mayors in Washington crat Jim Sasser of Tennessee said he also hopes to bring the budget resolution to a vote in his committee Wednesday or Thursday and on to the Senate floor next week "The American people want to give the president a chance and the majority of the members on my committee feel the same way" Sasser said "Some of the additional cuts are from slowing some investment programs in the be- ginning" Sabo confirmed that "there will be less spending over five years than in the president's original budget plan The White house is supportive of what we're doing" Congressional Republicans complaining they have been ignored in the process said the Democrats are not counting on any support for Clinton's package from their side of the aisle "It's obvious their intention is to pass this solely with Democratic votes" said William Pitts a top aide of House Minority Leader Robert Michel "The whole thing sounds like a little bit of cuts a little too late — with too much in tax increases" The budget resolution which will set spending limits and revenue needs for the coming fiscal year will provide a blueprint for congressional committees as they decide in detail how to spend the money budget-writin- g - S Utah Pet Haven Gives Life to Animal Kingdom By :l's:ii'7:1T - ' n st pet-surger- T: ' i TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICES '' ck'4tr I '1 4 ri' 0 ! 1 i k 1i 1(:41 iit 14 f!' 141 ' ' 14'Z '''' I Al ''' ti ri !'t ' ' lk''' - 4ikt k:'"Og'Vt 4'"' 0 V ' Ni 4 '' 4k ::t'' th':: fi A it tk ir f I Vil ' c") CTke t f- '-- t v ti 1A r' r i) S'''' i: :' - ' ' i ilitiix400 i kft' ! I OtTejlf !:r:41 - 111''' '14 Pi s41 -- - ol - C - t I: i : -!- ' -- - 4e ji ': 4 4 41 C' J ' ' 4 t" ' o!' rzif '' ' ' - ' ' '4"it ' ' t ' i4 A ' ' '' ''' ? ' " r' 1 :: ' '9 ' : - y Christopher Smith The Salt Lake Tribune staffer Magdalen Eaton feeds Mollie a potbellied pig from Pocatello Animal-sanctuar- y II See A-- 2 Column 1 law and state officials had said they would not all: peal the ruling But during this year's Legislature physician plaintiffs raised concerns about certain provisiolae and they appealed Feb 17 Tbi state filed a counter-appea- l Both sides however asked tin 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals for an extension to permill exploration of a legislative reme dy None was found during the general session and Gov Mike Leavitt said he may call a special session early in April anti-abortio- — The SuWASHINGTON clear made Court Monday preme that it wants to stay out of the ::! ) spay-neut- low-co- ti i I "no-kill- st 1 i kitit ?:11 KANAB It's as if Noah's Ark ran aground and loosed its creature cargo into the southwestern Utah desert: 500 dogs 700 cats and 300 assorted pigeons pigs burros horses turtles ducks geese and goats But this is Best Friends Animal Sanctuary " which operators say is the largest pet shelter in the United States The noisy menagerie of 1500 animals and 40 staffers is situated a few miles north of Kanab in Angel Canyon the locale for such Hollywood Westerns as "The Outlaw Josey Wales" and "The Lone Ranger" Founded in 1985 Best Friends is a retirement home for sick unwanted and abused pets While many shelters regularly kill cats and dogs that are not adopted Best Friends avoids euthanasia except in cases of painful and terminal illness "Putting pets to sleep so devalues what life is all about but society sees it as an acceptable option" says Michael Mountain editor of Best Friends' monthly magazine "How long before we start saying it's acceptable to put starving children in Somalia to sleep?" A major part of Best Friends Animal Sanctuary is its $20 spay and neuter program for southern Utah pet owners Salt Lake City veterinarian Richard Allen visits the Kanab ranch each month to perform the operations Best Friends is planning a spring campaign in Salt Lake from March 16 through 20 to promote programs available in northern Utah low-co- 1A ' - sm-- Christopher Smith birth-contr- High Court Refuses to Reinstate Strict Abortion Lawr in Louisian& t-ill- THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE wants such forces to remain under UN con- t i Congressional Democrats agreed Monday with the blessing of President Clinton to cut $56 billion in liw' C:) air i ttirt:VV i ---- - - At ''11°1 7000-circulatio- i 1 t1993 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SALT LAKE CITY UTAH 84111 WASHINGTON — 4 444 ' d agenda today when visiting months that 1 1 t KNIGHT-RIDDE- 't:?''''' "6'1)1- - a The administration has offered to send troops to Bosnia to implement a peace accord not impose an unwant ' -- olution "We've had no discussions at all on anything beyond what we've said in the past which is that we would contemplate the use of US forces to enforce an agreement that is already made We are not going to get involved" in a peacemaking operation in Bosnia said White House spokesman George Stephanopoulos In another development Mon day the United States and other countries are taking steps to tighten Serbia's international isolation including blocking money transfers the State Department said Spokesman Rich?rd Boucher also said officials in Malta have taken action against a vessel that had violated the sanctions by unloading a commercial shipment in Montenegro which is part of the Serbian federation The conflict in the former Yugoslavia will be at the top of the Boutros-Ghal- I )- rif7---77:1744---- i 1 'IL iie C -- ministration officials Monday jected suggestions by the UN secretary-genera- l that US troops on to drive Serb be called might forces from parts of Boutros-Ghal- i 1 From Clinton Plan ----- L":41-) 4ti---'': 3 PI - 111Ur I f 7crL: ''' v - - i1 ''tZA7 ria P41'' t L144 4r Yrik iC lyirt!7'114 amin ' eAktte' 4 ''''I ' ''' TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICES al Column A-- 3 i fe''' i 714 White House Rejects Idea Of GIs Driving Out Serbs WASHINGTON — Clinton 1 Demos in Congress Snip $56 Billion oc044:44 '"''''''''''''''''7"":ILIEL12"111 movements such as the Branch Davidians which believe the world is about to end thrive in "times when people's way of seeing the world no longer makes sense to them" said William Martin who teaches the sociology of religion at Rice University Christians don't have a corner on millenarian thinking Martin said South Sea Island cargo cults looked to a messiah who would drive out the Westerners whose MI 1 -- millenarian In particular so -- i- -- - ty of California at Berkeley From the fall of the Roman Empire to the black plague from the French Revolution to the Industrial Revolution from the social upheavals of the '60s to the demise of the Soviet Union scholars say traumatic change is the mother of all manner of peculiar inventions Rift Widens: Secretary-Gener- : garet Singer an emeritus professor of psychology at the Universi- DALLAS MORNING NEWS UN 111?'" 0 MARCH 9 1993 Cults Prey on Others' Weaknesses Prosper as Netv Millenniums Near Clinton Clinton -- TUESDAY TODAY'S READERSHIP: 336800 Bosnia-Herzegovin- g ‘ F abortion debate for the time being refusing to reinstate a Louisiana law that criminalized most abortions Lower federal courts in Louisiana had ruled the law unconstitutional and the justices with no recorded dissents let those rulings stand It was the second time this term that the court has declined to review a restrictive abortion law In November it turned down an appeal over a Guam law found unconstitutional The court's action indicates there is not enough support among the justices for tinkering with last term's decision in Planned Parenthood vs Casey which reaffirmed the constitutional right to abortion but allowed state restrictions Louisiana officials also had asked the court to reconsider its 1973 ruling in Roe vs Wade which said the Constitution protects the right to choose abortion and legalized the procedure nationwide In Utah a federal judge last December struck down a 1991 n - INDEX Ann Landers C-- 7 Births 4 Briefing Business Classifieds Comics Crossword Editorials Family Headliners Jumble A-- 2 B-- 1 D-- 5 C-- 6 D-- 6 A-1-0 A-- 7 A-- 2 D-- 6 Letters Movies A-1- 1 Obituaries Record Scoreboard Sports Star Gazer Stocks Television Utah Dateline Utah News C-- 5 B-- 7 D--3 C-- 4 C-1- 1 D-- 7 B-- 2 11D-- 1 UTAH WEATHER: Northern Utah will be cloudy highs near 50 Utah's Dixie will reach 76 with chance of rain Details: D2 MEMEIMIIIIIMEMEIMMENE Shoe king Report Claims Slavery Rampant Around World With Victims Numbering in Millions By David Briscoe THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — "Child catchers" in Thailand "searchers" in Haiti and "cats" in Brazil are the world's real-lif- e bogymen out looking for children and adults to lure into slavery Despite laws against forced labor around the globe millions of humans still are working in bondage according to an International Labor Organization (ILO) report Monday Antislavery International says accurate estimates of people in slavery are impossible but the number could be London-base- d as high as 200 million working under conditions outlawed by international agree- ments Many have been captured or enticed into servitude by slave raiders known by varin ous names who roam impoverished or regions of Asia Africa and Latin America in search of able bodies to work or be sold for $70 or less ILO says Several governments are to be confronted with a report — to be published in May at ILO headquarters in Geneva Among problems cited in the ILO report: In Thailand the forced recruitment of war-tor- more-detaile- d children seems to be systematic with "child catchers" roaming rural areas buying or taking children from poor families to be put on sale in cities for private households restaurants factories and brothels the ILO report says In Haiti labor contractors known as "buscones" or "searchers" ply the hinterlands for workers including children to be shipped off to the Dominican Republic for forced labor on sugar plantations In Brazil men known as "gatos" or "cats" prowl among poor communities with promises of good wages that evaporate when child and adult workers are tak en hundreds of miles away from their villages where they are given meager wages and charged for travel and food leaving them no way out In some countries children as young as 6 years old are made to work 17 to 18 hours a day kept from being educated and sometimes locked up day and night in sweatshops the ILO says Some reportedly are sexually abused by "owners" or sold to brothels "The forms which forced labor takes on today may be more diverse and better dis See A-- 2 Column 2 |