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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 10
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 10

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Bismarck, North Dakota
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10
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Tuesday, November 1 1, 1986 The Bismarck Tribune Record-breaking cold strikes nation The, Forecast for 7 p.m. EST. Nov. 12, Shultz called furious lover Iranian project VI wt III i JU TV V. Kfcj By The Associated Press Snow fell across the nation's midsection today and headed for the Northeast, while record-breaking cold air pushed into the Southwest.

Snow ranged from the middle Mississippi Valley to the Great Lakes region. Travelers' advisories for snow were issued in southeastern Iowa, northern Illinois and much of Michigan. Winter storm watches for snow were posted in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and northeastern New York. Another blast of snow set off alerts in Montana. Below-zero readings were common across the Dakotas, Nebraska, western Iowa and northwest Minnesota.

The low temperatures came on the heels of a day of record lows in sections of Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Minnesota. The cold air was moving into the southern Plains, and by early morning dropped temperatures into the 20s to 30s in northwest Oklahoma and WEATHER WATCH 80 High Temperatures Soe's Rain Flumes Snow BISMARCK DATA Sunglitntt Sunriw Today 7.41 a.m. Sunset Today 14 p.m. Mluourl River Missouri River Stage 24 hour change Missouri River flood stage a-" Precipitation Total this month to date '71 in. Normal this month to date It-Total Jon.

1st to date in. Normal Jan. 1st to dale 14.54 in. OAHE POOL PIERRE, O. (API Oahe reservoir elevation 1,609.24 feet above mean sea level, tailwaters 1,425 .00 feet.

Discharge 33,500 c.f Temperature 55 degrees. STATE FORECASTS North Dakota Tonight, chance of light snow. Some blowing and drifting snow continuing east. Lows zero to 10 below. Wednesday, mostly sunny west and flurries east.

Very cold. Highs zero to 5 below. South Dakota Tonight, chance of light snow. Some blowing and NORTH DAKOTA Great Falls 20 19 to inform either the public or congressional leaders of the details. Sen.

Robert Byrd, who is expected to become majority leader when the Democrats take control of the Senate next year, called the clandestine dealings with Iran "a most massive blunder" that undermines U.S. credibility. If former President Jimmy Carter "had done this, he'd be run out of town," Byrd added. He said he had directed his staff to draw up legislation mandating that all covert activity initiated by an administration be subject to congressional scrutiny, and suggested that the head of the National Security Council may have to become subject to Senate confirmation. Critics said the effort to get American hostages released has been run by the security council because it is not subject to supervision by Congress; the CIA, State Department and Defense Department, all of which are, apparently were deliberately excluded to prevent legislative scrutiny.

"No question about it," said Sen. Patrick Leahy, vice chairman of the Intelligence Committee. Leahy said in an interview that he has long been an opponent of the Senate approving the NSC director, but added that he is changing his mind and also likes Byrd's suggestion of congressional oversight of all covert activities. Last week, Speakes said that the chances of actually freeing more hostages have dimmed, for which he blamed news coverage of the secret operation. He revived that charge Monday, saying: "The coverage of the entire hostage matter and the Iran matter made it extremely difficult.

"Our hopes were dashed once again," he said. Asked precisely when those hopes were dashed, he responded: "All The more time that went by, the more our hopes were dashed." But Reagan and other officials have said that they still are operating on the assumption and the hope that further hostage releases are still possible. "We still hope to get the others out," a White House aide said Monday. ea ai tne meeting cannoi De aivuig- rl It pniil mtlfl nmpidnnl tilt noli i iiv auiu, uiv wiuviiv uju uon that it Ha rAjtmnhgciToH that u.s. nave ueeii ur win tie UI V.

wh) uv.aw VI IlUb mairino pnnntccinne rn rorrnmctc remains intact." mun aaiu uicu a ui udu I aiiKe HI senior administration officials had nnnncinnn rn tno nn imi ui ayyiuvuig actici anus smp- ments to Iran in exchange for the Tehran regime's help in freeing Americans held captive by the pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad group in Lebanon. Sources have confirmed that secret shipments of missiles and aircraft parts have led to the release of three hostages in the last months, including David P. Jacobsen earlier this month. "The fallout from this is going to be a lot worse than anyone ever realized," one aide said. "I think this could lead to the removal of John Poindexter, if they're going to save face for Reagan.

It's a very deep split, both within the White House and between the White House and the foreign policy agencies. "It cuts across partisan grounds. They're getting fire from the right fire from the moderates," he said. "It has to do more with the incoherence of the policy." Some officials, reportedly including White House chief of staff Donald T. Regan, privately have criticized Poindexter, a Navy admiral with little political experience, because of the political problems that disclosure of the secret arms deals have caused the administration.

Others, including Shultz, have charged that the clandestine project went out of control under the supervision of Lt. Col. North, a deputy director of the NSC, officials said. "Shultz is furious," said one aide. "And he blames Ollie North more than anyone else." As congressional criticism of the arms deals has mounted, administration officials have also split over the wisdom of Poindexter's refusal Tr.

Havre 17 12 Tr. Helena 6 6 Tr Miles City 13 1 Tr. Missoula 12 II Tr. Elsewhere Albany.NY. 42 27 Albuquerque 54 26 Amarillo 50 14 Anchorage 36 34 .09 Asheville 58 44 .01 Atlanta 70 53 .03 Atlantic City 54 46 Austin 75 47 Baltimore 52 39 .05 Birmingham 75 61 Boise 35 24 Boston S3 34 Brownsville 86 73 .44 Buffalo 39 30 .03 Brlngton.Vt 42 26 Casper 20 13 Chrleston.SC 73 61 Chrleston.WV 49 38 .21 Charlotte.NC 63 49 .06 Cheyenne 28 13 Chicago 42 23 .01 Cincinnati 45 37 .25 Cleveland 44 33 .10 Columbia.SC 69 56 Columbus, Oh 44 33 .14 Concord.NH 46 22 I I Emma Stewart, Carson: It's kind of hazy this morning.

We have about 7-8 inches of snow on the ground. Monday was clear and cold with a slight breeze. The high was 8 and the low was 9 below. Pope reminds bishops they must obey Rome northwest Texas. A low pressure system over southeastern Alberta pushed snow across the northern Rockies.

A winter storm warning was issued for western Montana amid predictions of up to a foot of snow in the mountains and gusty winds. Snow from this system was expected to move into southern Montana. A winter storm watch was issued there. Temperatures were on the mild side, mainly in the 60s to 70s, from south central Texas across the Tennessee Valley to the South Atlantic Coast. Today's forecast called for snow likely from eastern Washington and northern Idaho across Montana and from northern and western New York into northern New England; scattered snow showers across North Dakota and Minnesota; rain from southern New England across the mid-Atlantic states, Tennessee Valley and the Carolinas into the Southeast; and showers and thunderstorms from Louisiana across the Texas Gulf Coast.

DEATHS Hard Christianson STEELE Haral A. Christian-son, 94, Steele, died Nov. 10, 1986, at a Bismarck hospital. Arrangements are pending with Eastgate Funeral Service, BismarckSteele. Cole E.

Fish GLEN ULLIN Cole Eugene Fish, infant son of Timothy and Carmen Fish, Glen Ullin, was stillborn Nov. 9, 1986, at a Bismarck hospital. Services were to be held this afternoon at Hertz Funeral Home Chapel, McClusky, with burial in the McClusky city cemetery. He is survived by his grandparents, Floyd and Lois Lasher, McClusky, Vila Fish, Bismarck, and Gordon Fish, Las Vegas, and his great-grandparents, Jack Coombs, McClusky, William and Elma Beaver, Rolette, and Anna Fish, Dunseith. FredP.Guthmiller RICHARDTON Fred P.

Guth-miller, 63, Richardton, was pronounced dead on arrival of natural causes Nov. 8, 1986, at the Richardton hospital. Services were to be held this morning at First Baptist Church, Dickinson, with burial in the Dickinson city cemetery. Mr. Guthmiller was born Dec.

8, 1922, in Dunn County, where he was raised and educated. He married Gisela Zmeskal April 13, 1958, at Glen Ullin. He farmed and ranched north of Richardton all of his life. He is survived by his wife; one daughter, Mrs. Mark (Judy) Jordan, Great Falls, one son, Gary, at home; one brother, Jacob, Richardton; one sister, Mrs.

Lena Binder, Killdeer; and two grandchildren. (Price-Gaffaney Funeral Home, Dickinson) Josephine Howarth Services for Josephine Howarth, 90, the Mandan Villa, will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at St. Martin's Catholic Church, Huff, with burial in the church cemetery. Visitation will begin at 9 a.m.

Wednesday at Weigel Funeral Home, Mandan, where a rosary will be said at 7 30 that evening. She died Nov. 10, 1986, at the nursing home. Josephine Solei was born Feb. 18, 1895, in Austria.

In 1906, the family moved to the United States and settled on a farm near Huff. She married Stephen Howarth in 1935 at Bismarck. After their marriage, they farmed In the Huff area. He died in 1958. She then moved to Mandan.

She entered the nursing home In 1979. She is survived by several nieces and nephews. Harry S. Johnson LUDLOW, S.D. Harry S.

Johnson, 73, Ludlow, died Nov. 5, 1986, at a Sturgls hospital after a short Illness. Services were held Monday at the Bowman Lutheran Church, Bowman, N.D., with burial In the FRONTS: Occiuflec-w drifting snow continuing east. Lows zero to 10 below. Wednesday, mostly sunny west flurries east.

Very cold Highs zero to 5 below Montana East of Continental Divide Snow and wind decreasing from the north tonight with colder temperatures. Partly cloudy and cold Wednesday with scattered snow western mountains Highs today 10 to 25 and Wednesday 5 to 20. Lows tonight 10 below to to 10 above zero. Minnesota Tonight, cloudy and windy with a chance of snow especially north. Lows from 7 below northwest to 5 above southeast.

Wednesday, mostly sunny and breezy. Highs from 5 above northeast to 17 above southest. EXTENOtOOU I LOUIka Thursday through Saturday North Dakota: Chance of Murttfclxm zero to 10 below Thursday warming to the teens By Saturday. Highs in the teens Thursday warming to the 20s and low 30s by Saturday. South Dakota: Chance of snow wes Friday tnd statewide Saturday.

Lows 5 be low to 1 0 above Thursday rising to the upper teens to jnid 20s Saturday Highs in the mid teens to lower 20s Thursday rising to the 30s Saturday Minnesota: Continued very cold Thursday with a warming trend beginning Friday. A chance of snow Saturday. Highs in the single digits north to the teens south Thursday warming into the north to 30s south Friday and Saturday. Lows from zero to 15 below north and in the single digits south Thursday warming into the teens north to 20s soutn by Saturday. Dallas Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Flagstaff Grand Rapids Grnsboro.NC Hartford Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland Milwaukee Mpls St Paul Nashville New Orleans City Norfolk, Va.

54 36 .74 43 33 .1 North Platte Okla City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland.Or Providence Raleigh Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis Sit Lke Cty San Antonio San Diego San Fran San Juan, PR St Ste Marie Seattle Shreveport Spokane Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Wshngton.DC Wichita Wilkes Barre Wilmington 29 08 03 46 22 .44 27 01 :07 87 70 .01 50 35 79 52 42 32 .03 46 41 48 28 63 47 .03 57 25 60 43 .05 72 41 44 34 .07 40 23 78 49 78 53 74 54 85 72 .12 34 18 .15 42 36 61 51 .64 27 25 3 29 .01 87 70 40 09 .11 75 46 44 24 .63 54 42 .07 43 11 40 29 .01 50 40 27 17 34 01 40 33 69 39 .06 50 40 19 04 48 21 .28 28 59 47 46 25 74 56 82 69 34 20 .05 43 10 .15 67 39 54 43 .67 84 54 49 40 .33 59 21 57 47 .91 86 76 65 33 37 16 .05 19 01 .06 56 45 71 77 67 2.08 53 38 62 53 Jerry (Fern) Walker, Portland, and Mrs. Menno (Marlene) See-thof, Nolawalla, Ore; four brothers, John Schram, Belgrade, Dan Schram, Mount Pleasant, S.C., Sam Schram, New Leipzig, and Ruben Schram, Denver; three sisters, Mrs. Martha Kallis, New Leipzig, Mrs. Annie Sabado, Seattle, and Mrs. Molly Hintz, Brighton, and numerous grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.

Magdalene Voigt Magdalene Voigt, 79, rural Mandan, died Nov. 10, 1986, at the Mandan hospital. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at Christ the King Catholic Church, Mandan, with burial in Mandan Union Cemetery. Visitation begins at 9 a.m.

Wednesday at Buehler Funeral Home, Mandan, where a parish rosary will be said at 7:30 that evening. Magdalene Bosch was born July 16, 1907, in Crimea, Russia. In 1911, the family came to the United States and settled at Linton. In 1915, the family moved to Halliday, where she graduated from high school. She attended Dickinson State College.

She married Victor Voigt Nov. 11, 1929, at Elbow Woods. They lived north of Werner, where she taught in rural schools. In 1957, they moved to Mandan. He died in 1964.

She is survived by one son, Peter, Mandan; three brothers, Joe, Center, Pete, Bismarck, and Simon, Halliday; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Mudd, Tacoma, and Mrs. Fred Schwartz, Bismarck; nine grandchildren; and 17 greatgrandchildren. 0 FUNERAL SERVICED 3tt Haral A. Christianson, 94 Golden Manor Nursing Home 1 Kl Arrangements Pending DIRECTORS I if CHUCK FASTGA ft Bim cum gwhahui johh i am BISMARCK STEELE I 23rd St.

Divide Bismarck 223-7322 1 1 CLEM OEflHARDT Director I M.KHigiiijnM.'.n.MH:nF:n and would traditionally be elevated to the president's position. But he is opposed by some conservatives who dislike his committment to the idea of an active national bishops' organization something not in great favor among some high Vatican officials who see most authority emanating from Rome. Upsetting the early balloting was the strong showing by conservative Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston who polled 78 votes. Law has been an outspoken defender of Vatican officials in their disciplining of liberal American churchmen. May captured 164 votes to win on the second ballot.

For many bishops, strains between the U.S. Church and the pope fueled by the current Vatican crackdown on dissent from official church teaching underline the simmering debate about the proper -relationship between John Paul and national bodies of bishops. In his opening talk Monday, Ma-lone, the outgoing president of the 315-member U.S. bishops' conference, recognized the right of the pope to intervene in the Hunthaus-en case. But he also emphasized the "collegial spirit" uniting the U.S.

bishops with each other and with the pope. Details of Hunthausen's censure by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican "watchdog" agency for orthodoxy, Bismarck Dickinson Fargo Gd Forks Jamestown Minot Williston SOUTH DAKOTA Aberdeen 12 Huron Mobridge Pickstown Pierre Rapid City Sioux Falls Watertown 12 8 Tr. NA NA 13 3 .02 10 8 -5 5 20 -5 .01 10 -5 MINNESOTA Alexandria 12 I Tr. Duluth 16 -3 Hibbing Int. Falls Red.

Falls Rochester St. Cloud 12 Tr. 11 6 Tr. 18 2 .05 1 -5 .06 19 4 02 Montana 'Billings 12 11 Glasgow 19 5 Black Hills National Cemetery. Mr.

Johnson was born Sept. 14, 1913, at Ludlow, where he was raised and educated. He worked for various ranches in South Dakota and North Dakota. He served in the Army from 1941 to 1943. After his discharge, he returned to the family farm near Ludlow.

He married Hilda M. Aasen June 27, 1947, at Scranton, N.D. They moved to a farm and ranch northwest of Ludlow. He was a board member for the Carmen school district. He is survived by his wife; one son, Dennis, Brooklyn Center, two daughters, Mrs.

Brent (Judy) Gillespie, Dalton, and Mrs. Lynn (Wanda) Thompson, Richfield, three sisters, Mrs. Jordis Cooley and Mrs. Joise Zeller, both of Spokane, and Mrs. Nellie Larson, Eugene, one brother, Elmer, Ludlow; and five grandchildren.

Krebsbach Funeral Service, Bowman) Uoyd Maynard GARRISON Lloyd Maynard, 96, Garrison, and formerly of Wilton, died Nov. 10, 1986, at the Garrison nursing home. Arrangements are pending with Goetz Funeral Home, Washburn. Erma H. Peterson Erma H.

Peterson, 85, Missouri Slope Lutheran Home, Bismarck, died Nov. 10, 1986, at the nursing home after a lengthy illness. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Calvary Lutheran Church, Two Rivers, Wis. Erma Henry was born Feb.

1, 1901, at Afton, Wis. She was raised and educated In Beloit, Wis. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin at Madison, she taught in high schools at Marshfield and Appleton, Wis. She married Julian L. Peterson, July 21, 1934, at Beloit.

In 1936 they moved to Two Rivers, where she made her home until coming to Bismarck in 1981. She is survived by one son, John of Bismarck, and two grandchildren. (Eastgate Funeral Service, Bismarck, to Deja Martin Funeral Chapels, Two Rivers.) Othelia Thorn MOTT Othelia Thorn, 77, Mott, died Nov. 8, 1986, at the Hettinger hospital. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday at Hertz Brothers Funeral Home, New Leipzig, with the Rev. Roger Freeland-er officiating. Burial will be in Odessa Cemetery, west of New Leipzig. Othelia Schramm was born Aug. 22, 1909, northwest of New Leipzig, where she was raised and educated.

She married Oscar Thorn in October 1931, at Elgin. They farmed south of Burt and later moved into town, where he was a rural mall carrier. Due to 111 health, she spent many years In hospitals, finally residing in Good Samaritan Nursing Center, Mott. She is survived by two sons, Donald, Portland, and Mer-len, Canby, Ore; three daughters, Violet Thorn, Washington, Mrs. Stalin's top henchman dies at 96 MOSCOW (AP) Soviet media dedicated scant coverage today to the death of former Premier Vya-cheslav Molotov, and no official funeral was planned for Josef Stalin's right-hand man.

A Foreign Ministry spokesman referred to the deceased simply as a "pensioner." The spokesman, who was asked about funeral arrangements, replied that, "regarding the pensioner, his burial will be a personal matter for his family. We here will not be participating." The official spoke on condition of anonymity. No information about -mr burial plans was reported by the I siate-controiiea media. woman who answered the telephone at the Communist Party headquarters IcoiH cho Hirf nnt ouiu guv uiu iivi know what funer- Molotov al arrangements moioiov were made ignored. Molotov's death Saturday at the age of 96 was reported late Monday by the official Tass news agency, first on its English-language service then in Russian.

Radio Moscow read the Tass report as the last item of its 11 a.m. news broadcast today, but none of the major national newspapers carried any mention of his passing. The low-key notice of Molotov's death was in keeping with the obscurity to which he was relegated after the late Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev denounced him in 1957 and ousted him as foreign minister and first deputy premier. As one of the leaders of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution that established the world's first socialist state, Molotov might have warranted burial along with his fellow revolutionaries at the Kremlin wall on Red Square.

STATE DEATHS FARGO Bernadine Ditmer, 75. HILLSBORO John J. Ollne Ness, 102. KEENE Gordon D. Foreman, 67.

MARTIN Anton Adam Knodel, 89. MAYVILLE Kermit Llveda-len, 76. MINOT Peter Burkhardsmel-er; Nellie Bush, 69; John Karpenko, 89; Mildred Sjaastad. OAKES Lydia Ulmer, 100. PARSHALL Edith Eagle, 68.

STANLEY -Alma Strand. VALLEY CITY Ada Larson, 83; Bernlce Meldahl, 77. VOLTAIRE Moran Stromme, 76. WILLISTON Lester Darr, 70; Amanda came to light after Hunthausen, a liberal on sexual ethics as well as a social activist, disclosed last September that he had been relieved of pastoral authority in five sensitive areas. The duties relating to liturgy, marriage annulments, ministries to homosexuals, training of priests and dealing with priests who have left the priesthood were turned over to a Vatican-appointed auxiliary bishop, Donald Wuerl.

The bishops, in a three-hour, closed-door session today, are scheduled to discuss how the issue might be resolved in a way that would support the Seattle archbishop without appearing to disregard the Vatican's right to take direct actions against him. In order to give the pope a firsthand perspective on the American Catholic Church, Malone proposed that officers of the U.S. bishops' conference fly to Rome "in late winter or early spring." Malone said the bishops of the host dioceses in the six states that the pope is to visit next year and active U.S. cardinals would be included in the delegation. "Wherever you stand," Malone said, "this division presents the church in the United States with a very serious question: How will we move to address this developing estrangement, to strengthen the bonds between the church here and the Holy See?" on could include oil and gas storage tanks, wooden buildings, grain storage bins, power plants and communications equipment.

Herzenberg calculated that a single SDI station could start 10,000 in the 150 seconds that such a station would be expected to be capable of operating. A functional SDI system would require many such laser stations, Herzenberg noted, raising the potential "creating mass fires In all of these urban areas (of the world) within a matter of hours." Such fires would throw so much smoke and ash into the atmosphere that a "nuclear winter" would be almost certain, a number of scientists believe. Another study, conducted by Associates, a California-based defense think-tank that was a spinoff from the Rand reached essentially the same conclusions: "A laser defense system powerful enough to cope with the ballistic missile threat can also destroy the enemy's major cities by fire. The attack would proceed, city by city, the attack time for each city being only a matter of minutes. Not nuclear destruction, but Armageddon all the same." Studies show other uses for 'Star Wars' lasers alone, without a single nuclear warhead being fired, might be sufficient to trigger the ultimate catastrophe a "nuclear winter" that could plunge the world into frozen darkness and exterminate much of the planet's life.

The calculations behind all of the studies are based on assumptions derived from SDI planners themselves, unclassified government documents and basic physical principles. For example, the amount of radiant energy required to burn through the metal skin of a missile in order to disable it is about 10,000 joules. By contrast, the energy required to set fire to a city, (calculated from measurements of the spread of fires after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki) Is about 80 joules. Thus, according to a study by physicist Caroline Herzenberg of the Argonne lab In Illinois, the minimum amount of energy required to meet the SDI's objectives is more than 100 times greater than the amount necessary to ignite urban fires. Possible tarcets for such a weap.

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