The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 12, 1982, Page 2, Image 2
-wire;
Criticism grows of
VATICAN CITY (AP) - A growing
cusinfi the Roman Catholic Church r
wasting money and seeking out spe
whether papal trips abroad are necess
Taking Pope John Paul II's 10-daj
ended Tuesday, as a prime examp]
theologians, dissident church groups
bishop cite these drawbacks:
? Security has become so tight thi
survived two assassination attempts,
plunge into a Spanish crowd, visiting
of Alcira for 30 minutes Monday.
AUL?..?L I? 8 1 J x u:_ n
muiuugll lie SKIU |IU?1(JUI1CU IUS OJ.
cusations of political meddling duri
campaign, the pontiff denounced an:
divorce or abortion laws or to change
schools in the overwhelming Catholic
an open disagreement with the politic
Socialist government.
The two trips John Paul took be
fponrfhf tirifVl iin*nnrflAo Ka fw
A & UU^lli TV1U1 pt/uuvai WiOll^ICO, 11V/ U J
June visit to Britain with a whirlwind
the two countries were warring over tl
Nose failure cause
ABILENE, Texas (AP) - Air Fore
want to blow up any more suitcases,
bomb-sniffing dog whose faulty nose
scattered on a street corner.
The 5-year-old mixed breed, Nap<
recertification as an explosives di
banished to routine K-9 guard duty, a
:j
spunesiuaii saiu.
Napoleon's troubles began in Decei
summoned to check out a suitcase
hydrant on the base.
When Napoleon assumed the "al<
police followed standard procedure a
!li- _1 -
wim a special projecuie.
Luckily there was no bomb insid
some explaining to do to the sergeant
lugging his bag around. His underwes
radio were strewn over the street.
Ministers say cult
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) - A groi
claiming the Christian Science religii
Furman University officials to inves
facilities by members of tnat church.
The clergymen, all members of th
Baptist Churches, say they are also c
that a member of the Christian Scien<
the Baptist-supported school in Green
But Lawrence Zelner of the Christ
on publications for South Carolina, s
cult.
In a telephone interview from C
Tuesday many DeoDle misuse the i
"labeling and damning something oi
one knows little or nothing."
The Rev. William Cashion, pastor
Church near Greer, said Monday tha
represents 31 churches in the Greer a
asking Furman officials to report on I
Members of the Christian Science
Daniel Recital Hall three times in
lecture series, Cashion said.
Trnnpln+nr r?i stliu t
11aiioBciiui yuiuy i
LONDON (AP) - Geoffrey Prime
Britain's electronic intelligence-g
sentenced to 35 years in prison Wedr
Soviet Union.
He got an additional three years
three young girls.
"By your treachery, you have do
the interests and security of this c(
and security of our friends in the (1
Lord Lane said in passing sentence
guilty to seven counts of spying over
The British government said P
"Rowlands" and that when he met 5
say, "I believe we met in Pittsbui
would reply, "No, at that time I was
IUSC todaij
| ?RH film: "Star Trek II," :
I onrl Q**?n n m 4 1 Rfl
1(111-4J p?l>Vt; T MV/i
Theatre: ''Buried Child/' 8
Theatre.
5 ? r
papal trips Prpciflp
[ chorus of critics, ac- ?
>f meddling in politics, WASHINGTON (AP) President
ctacles, is questioning condolences on the death of
ary. Brezhnev and declared his adr
, fnil_ nf ... toward an improved relationsh
tour of Spain, which ^ an official message sent t
e, some internatiwial Brezhnev "one of the world's
an even a Catholic nearly two decades."
Reagan said he wanted to coi
ITntf/wl Cfofrvn fA tirnv*lr fAiifoivl C
it John Paul, who has c
had only one chance to a * a
the flood-ravaged town . \ uc
e leadership in the Soviet Union
areas wnere our two nations
anish trip to avoid ac- vantage," he said in a letter
ng the recent election deputy chairman of the presidii
y attempt to liberalize Soviet parliament.
the status of parochial William Clark, Reagan's na
country. This marked the president in the family qu
:ai program 01 me new 3:35 a.m. EST, shortly after I
released word of Brezhnev's
sfore Spain also were spokesman, I^rrySpeakes.
ied to counterbalance a ^ Br^ev, re. ched Wednes,
stop in Argentina while '*?: ?? a' ',?T?: ?.u_ _ !. * .s_'
le Falkland Islands. IU1" U1C 1U V1 '"b "1U1*
Tass said only that Brezhnev
o rlnmnflnn At the White House, a group
S Demotion in the situation room to asse
death. One White House officii
-e security police don't the group was made up of assis
so they're demoting a Reagan did not attend. Spe*
ten an inlu s launary discuss the news in detail wil
scheduled mid-morning nation;
)leon, recently flunked ,, faid f high-level d.
stector and has been at Brezhnev s f
i Dyess Air Force Base highly unlikely that Reagan wo
Rea jting to Brezhnev s dei
said he thinks it is likelv the K
Tiber 1981 when he was toward "a more confrontati
left chained to a fire United States. Carter's pred'
Gerald Ford, expressed hope
ert" position, security not prompt a "wide swing" in S
md blew up the satchel Former President Nixon sai<
world. But he did not want war
*ii nis successor is con vine
le. But authorities had and the will to resist Soviet a
who had grown tired of
?r, shaving kit and clock
at Furman
ip of Baptist ministers, * ^
on is a cult, have asked ^
tigate the use of school r *
* f|pj
le Greer Association of . *Wk
'y.yX'l->/X,X<vlv!wiyv.vXvsy$\%wHw^^*^CTg^^^V^WSTO
oncemed about the fact a
ce church is teaching at ?
ian Science committee
Iharleston, Zelner said > N
>vord cult as a way of " ' - tAfiJ
r someone about whom /:'
the past four years for
\n lore niifd a r
VU IU?I U JJ1UU u ?
r ? The USC band hall got a
>f spying ' . .
, a former translator at W fl 11X1,1 f? UHi
;athering center, was
lesday for spying for the cafk CANAVKKAL, Fla.
The shuttle Columbia, an A
"space truck" carrying four i
for sexually molesting two communications sa
rocketed flawlessly through d
skies yesterday en route to
no inpalfMilaKlo horrn tn * * * "
...v?vu.?u?v .*????. iu cargo aenvery, i?4 mues ai
>untry, and the interests Earth.
NATO) alliance," Judge . f
( on Prime, who pleaded Columbia now in space foi
the last 15years. time- sald Mission Control.
, . The astronauts were i
rime s code name was moving at 17,400 miles an h
>oviet agents, they would mission that is to inaugurate
' ttlTr 3 Prime space commerce. The initial
in Berlin. set for late yesterday aftern<
, the astronauts were to deploj
satellite.
Columbia's Veterans Da]
began in a blinding burst of f]
spreading billow of sir
Columbia's three main eng
2*30 pm $1* 7 two solid fuel rockets flashed
" ' 7:19a.m. EST.
Lift -off climaxed a nea
countdown. It was Columbia
straight on-time lau
p.m., Longstreet something NASA needs to
r y routinely to show paying ci
A * x ii? _ i Ail. * ~ A:.
Iuiai uie Hiiuiue can uifxi u ui
Cheers and shouts
J
nt Brezhne
t Reagan yesterday expressed war and defeat
Soviet President Leonid I. issued by his Nev
ninistration's desire to "work Former Secret
ip with the Soviet Union." in Paris that the
o the Kremlin, Reagan called international ad1
? most important figures for peace offensive
immediate tensi<
nvey "the strong desire of the
in improved relationship with j pj?j|
ting relations with the new }0kQwvSfl
with the aim of expanding the MBIB* "
can pnnnprntp tn mtihuil nH
to Vasily V. Kuznetsov, first |B^R^9a5j
urn of the Supreme Soviet, the f
ttomem- a
tional security adviser, woke ??*>oaid impress
larters of the White House at (trimmed Soviei
urc ouvrci ircwo dgciii-jr *aoo |^w;ttU| vunn
death, said a White House ^ death
day in Moscow at 8:30 a.m.
i a.m. EST today before Tass
i than 26 hours earlier.
n cHHan Hoath " WrP*?WQIMWJ
vuvvi uuuuvn vkvuvAx.
of foreign policy advisers met i;;^|bousancfe of
ss the impact of Brezhnev's the vast afcac
l1, requesting anonymity, said $to!to&$i?80thi
tant department secretaries. 5/ A
ikes said the president would
h mark at a later ranilarlv iMIii *
al security briefing.
legation would represent the uneral,
but it was considered ijteard the
>uld lead the entourage. |HedfAnBtygliMf.j
ith, former President Carter ij|boul(lers aadv
[remlin may shift temporarily ||t$,0U5r middlelonal
relationship" with the (tfficesaidthey
ecessor in the White House, || Asked what?
that the Moscow shakeup will
Soviet policy. t*& luaothf^pe
i of Brezhnev: "He wanted the S
P Asked who tb
ed that we have the strength
. . , " , I ?U1M aOJUy
ggression, we can avoid both I
.' s-ZK'^:'*" . ' " ^
sheer
facelift recently when the notes to the Carolina fi
gins 5th trip with
(AP) - couragement erupted from seven
1 S 1 A * * ?
merican nunarea mousana people wn
men and crowded viewing sites for Columbia
tellites, blazing send-off. The roar of th
eepblue engines sent a thunderclap rollin
its first across the Cape, shaking the grouri
x)ve the and vibrating buildings at Kenned
Space Center offices several mih
-the fifth from launch pad 39A.
It was the shuttle's fifth perfe
lift-off bias many tries; the shuttle
n orbit, April 1981 flight was the first of foi
our on a test missions.
an era of
test was Vance Brand, 51, who returnc
>on when unconscious from the Apollo-Soyi
r the first mission in 1975, is commanding U
mission. Others making up the large
/ launch crew ever assigned to one spaceshi
lame and are pilot Robert Overmyer, 46, ar
loke as two members of a new breed <
JnAC anH n c t r An o nf o > " " -1 ? - ' -
,>n>u U..U vKiauio 11 a 111 C U IU1SS1U
I to life at specialists: scientists William Lenoi
43, and Joseph Allen, 45.
r-perfect Brand, Overmyer and Lenoir roc
's second in the cockpit. Allen rode in a se?
netting, installed in a mid-deck area beneal
achieve the main cabin. They wore NAS
ustomers blue-cotton coveralls that replacc
netable. the awkward brown pressure sui
of en- required on America's 35 previoi
v dies
without war," Nixon said in a statement
v York office.
arv of State Henry Kissinger told renorters
Soviets may want a "breathing space from
ventures. ...It may be we will be facing a
in which they will try to get some of the
inc nut t\( tho U7QV "
71iO VUV VTA WIV- f? WJ
inn 1 Ml ?"IHII 1 U.I mi .1 MM I >>111 11 1^
"(i ; is
kP> The first signs of mourning for
Imetr^ame :wbea;^orke*i|iput up
t flags y^tertfaylithe Kremlin's Spassfcy
Igffltemxmt buildings one hour after hfcfc.
wncedX ilMliil:11
rite* fceard
t i?i?pi;*;wit&f^^ was nof
[pwvuiuuuru^w 91m wm WWJ, i*ww??v
r usual bwslttW^: ; ;: *'
Shoppers plodded from shop to ahopfeido
le? of the stele-owned department
ngi^u^lhadhaiq^d.
I**?*! ??P ? ? ?*????<?"
*ere feemg shown by* $?&; ifes sets were:
NO^erl it* morning' for
lie sound was turned off. g#
announcement <m fcO^sioivf said^t^".
when r?r?Rs#*ri fnr a r^Artinn
aged women la tfeeitore> atol^tr&tiYe
had beard the vm$0gl&
rrtxtidt AMM%a ?u>wf junikS&Mkitft t?4 I?*V. 3*?*^k :
um nvtuAMui UH ?*Wis>
laewttl continue to be the ?^e*ltt*erei?l|I v
rson ?rom the Politburo nominated for
* ; x* v ? . .. .N. n- ss* . :**- *c- s *s\ :
> S S N ^ O N % s Ws \ ^ ? NS
eiiew leacter would be, she shoo*; her head
xlykoows."
i .
Photo by Jim Fielder j
ght song were painted on the building.
perfect liftoff
*1 man-in-space missions.
>A A PA. I A ?i <t
^ /\uer aooui bu seconds, tne space
's freighter, moving swiftly on its
ie towering pillar of smoke, pierced
ig through the most dangerous point in
id the ascent ? an area where the craft
ly is buffeted by maximum
is aerodynamic forces.
The ship rose into a clear sky and
was still in sight when it shed its two
?s 149-foot solid boosters, two minutes
ir into the flight, sending them toward a
parachute landing in the Atlantic
ocean wnere ships waited to recover
?d them for reuse.
iz Unlike Columbia's fourth flight,
le when the parachutes failed and the
pf KAADfavw onr?l* AO A J ?*~ -
k?v r> aaim, m/wrt rcpoiieu wit;
in t? 1 1 t A A
it* iuckcu) lanuea miaci ana were
id floating about 140 miles east of Cape
of Canaveral. Engineering changes had
n been made to correct the problem.
r. Thft astrnnant? lrvnlrinrt fniniior/l
_ y v*aMUM#| ?wnlll^ AVI rr UI u w
five days in space and a return next
le Tuesday, continued driving upward
at under the power of Columbia's main
th engines, accelerating ever faster as
A they plunged into the thinner upper
id air. TTiese engines burned out after 8
ts 1/2 minutes and thrust the ship into
is orbit.