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Show An in-dep- look at BYU's defense th Sunday October 15, iiV t 2006 s 111 f www heraldextra.com YOUR TOWN illIft jr ii . rw El 1 vi 1 nn JUL ASSOCIATED PRESS is name was Alex Anthony. He was a jokester; a boy known as one of the best dancers in his family; a loyal companion to his grandmother, with whom he shared the same birthday. Last month, the shot in the head by a stray bullet a block from his Indianapolis home quietly slipped away after his family made the agonizing decision to have him taken off life support. "This is something we will never get over," said Hattie Hunter-Anthonone of Alex's many aunts in his large, extended family. The horrific school shootings in Colorado, Wisconsin and at an Amish schoolhouse in Pennsylvania which left six girls and a "I think III $1.50 Sanctions we've come approved against Korea to expect violence in cities, violence among principal dead, all within a week have caused many to wonder just how safe our children are. Truth is, young Americans die at the hands of other people at an alarming rate, greater than any other Western nation. Every day in 2003, an average of about 15 youth, ages 10 to 24, were victims of intentional and accidental killings, according to 111 YOUR NEWSPAPER YOUR NEIGHBORS American youth are more likely than those in other nations to be killed outside of school Martha Irvine UTAH VALLEY EDITION ii m ii i I ltl III 111 Are Our Kids Safe? THE sports i urban youth, violence amongminorityyouth.lt no longer shocks us. It's the unexpected that shocks us." Dr. Linda Teplin pyschiatry professor at Northwestern University See KIDS, A 7 Edith THE REPUBLICAN MITT R0MNEY V M. lederer ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED NATIONS The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously on Saturday to impose punishing sanctions on North Korea including ship searches for banned weapons, calling Pyongyang's claimed nuclear test "a clear threat to international peace and security." North Korea immediately rejected the resolution, and its U.N. ambassador walked out of the council chamber after accusing its members of a "gangster-like- " action which neglects the nuclear threat posed by the United States. The resolution demands that the reclusive communist nation abandon its nuclear weapons program, and orders all countries to prevent North Korea from importing or exporting any material for weapons of mass destruction or ballistic missiles. It orders nations to freeze assets of people or businesses connected to these programs, and ban the individuals from traveling. ' The resolution also calls on all countries to inspect cargo leaving and arriving in North Korea to prevent any illegal trafficking ir. unconventional weapons or ballistic missiles. The final draft was softened from language authorizing searches, but was still unacceptable vf V1! See KOREA, A4 . Salt Lake papers push sexy tabloid in Utah County w J ' S USA HORNAKBoston ,' Governor Mitt Romney visits the O'Bryant School for Math and Science to personalty deliver 131 and Abigail Adams Scholarship which provides four years of free tuition to state public colleges, Herald students a John high-achievi- Doug Fox DAILY Publishing partnerships produce some strange bedfellows, but it's not every day that one party is tempted to hide the publication under the mattress. Such is the case in Salt Lake City, however, where a marriage was consummated in 1952 for better or worse between rival newspapers, The Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret Morn- AM(mrnmMhB WhiteHouse? Romney 's possible 2008 bid for the White House may turn on issue of faith Elizabeth Mehren Los Angeles Times "YT" n seeking a presidential candidate for 2008, why would Republicans look further than the governor of Massachusetts? Tall and urbane, Mitt Romney has a prime political pedigree, an unblemished personal life and the cool confidence of a CEO. He is a conservative Republican who won easy election in a fiercely liberal state - then streamlined Massachusetts' government and enacted the country's most sweeping healthcare overhaul . ing News. The union's latest offspring is a free tabloid (some would say magazine laced with pornographic) profanity, including unabashed The publication returns profuse of the its to the Deseret Morning News, and to the IDS Church, which owns the newspaper. The news magazine is called In Utah This Week, and it is distributed free across the Wasatch Front in plastic news racks, including many in Utah Valley. While In Utah This Week carries a Tribune logo, much of the advertising revenue is divided with the News through the . I HE IS A PASSIONATE DEFENDER of states' rights and recently has embraced strong views against stem cell research and abortion a reversal of earlier positions. He never swears, and his sole vice is Diet Coke. Not incidentally, the governor boasts Ivy looks.But League credentials and movie-sta- r Romney faces a potential obstacle that has not confronted a presidential hopeful for almost 50 years. As a devout Mormon and a onetime bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints Romney adheres to a faith that makes many Americans uncomfortable. Not since John F. Kennedy, a Roman Catho lic, sought the White House in 1960 has the religion of a potential president been an issue. A recent Los Angeles TimesBloomberg poll found that most religious barriers to high office had crumbled, but that 35 percent of Americans would not vote for a Mormon president. "He starts out with a deck stacked against him," Emory University political science professor Merle Black said of Romney. "Obviously he overcame this in Massachusetts. But he is going to be dealing with a different voting group on the national level." Since he announced in December that he would not seek a second term as governor, Romney has campaigned in key primary states partnership. The magazine's content would make some sailors blush and that's before you arrive at the advertising. Now hiring: escort service, and classiest Utah's busiest where applicants can make $5,000 per week. In partnerships like this one, especially when one partner is associated with a church, the devil is in the details. One need not be a detective to recognize that fundamental differences exist between the adult-oriente- d See ROMNEY, INSIDE EDITORIALS liim "-tt- f- t.. ..t ' t - j a$ i tilt A it W B1 OBITUARIES B6 LIFE i STYLE BUSINESS , ! - ' t,Wi L L 1 L L - ' 67 Kfft LOW 43 VOLUME 84 ISSUE 76 CI D1 SCOREBOARD P7 A8 Sunny C8 SPORTS mtm tite ifc till A5 HIGH A6 OUR TOWNS 0 m TABLOID, . WEATHER See HERALD D8 10551111 6 5 |