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Show GOP abortion Local high schools backers commence graduations quietly piot comeback on Generation X wave Page A3 PageA12 Page Page B5 B1 6uN m . Saturday, May 23, 1994 Cougar nine survive to piay another day Slackers riding in 7 Central Utah's Newspaper for 120 Years, Provo, Utah 50 cents Clinton earns headlines, but not the kind he wants By TOM RAUM Associated Press Writer - The White WASHINGTON House headlines were not the ones President. Clinton might have chosen: a "cave in" on human rights in China and a top aide taking a' presidential helicopter to play golf. And, although overshadowed by the other items, there were new White House disclosures on Hillary Rodham Clinton's trading in commodities markets that suggested that she may have received preferential treatment from her brokerage. The White House tried to cut its losses by quickly announcing the departure of the errant aide who but the epiused the helicopter sode appeared likely to linger after the White House was forced to admit late Friday, after first denying it, that two helicopters were involved. - The fallout on Clinton's China reversal is also likely to hang on for some time. - The president, who goes to Eu- - Drive for show: Two copters diverted off course By The Associated Press Two WASHINGTON (AP) not presidential helicopters just one were used for a golfing trip to Maryland that cost a top aide to President Clinton his job, the White House acknowledged late Friday. After first denying that two Marine helicopters were involved, the White House acknowledged that one helicopter took the aides to the golf course near Frederick, Md., while another hovered nearby on what a White House official called "a training mission." rope next week to participate in 50th anniversary ceremonies, tried to clear the decks before his trip by getting the China decision D-D- Springville to honor city's pioneer founder By JOHN BEST Herald Correspondent In the summer of 1850, just three years after the first pioneers entered Utah, Mormon leader Brigham Young gave Aaron Johnson, who had just crossed the plains, the assignment to start a settlement south of Salt Lake City. Several days later, in September 1850, Aaron Johnson and his William Miller led eight wagons containing 34 settlers to the banks of Hobble Creek and established the first settlement which was to become known as Springville. This site had been selected by Johnson and Miller several days before on a scouting misson-in-la- w sion. According to Johnson's record, "We were surprised at the beauty of the scene. We gazed with admiration upon the vast meadows spread before us, while the bunch grass along the foothills brushed the horses breasts. Never before had I beheld a grander prospect." For many this completed a long journey from the Midwest and finally gave them a permanent place to call home. Two days after their arrival in Springville they began to construct a fort. Aaron laid out the city following designs implemented by Brigham Young for cities in the west. The families that accompanied Johnson to Springville included: Myron N. Crandall, John W. Deal, Willian Miller, Amos S. n Warren, Martin P. Nelson and Crandall and Charles Warren. On Memorial Day this year, the descendants of Aaron Johnson and Lu-cia- the residents of Springville will honor the city founder with a memorial service and dedication of a new gravesite monument. Family and community members are invited to attend the 2 p.m. service at the Springville Cemetery, at 400 South 200 West. But White House Communications Director Mark Gearan said the second Marine helicopter was there because the aircraft usually fly in pairs. David Watkins, director of White House administration, resigned under pressure and a second aide was reprimanded and will be reassigned. Gearan said that taxpayers would be reimbursed for the use of both helicopters, which cost about $2,380 an hour apiece. He added that, in a show of solidarity, senior White House officials had agreed to chip in to help defray the cost. behind him. His action to renew benefits to Beijing was widely expected. But Clinton I The Springville Daughters of Utah Pioneers will open their museum from 4 p.m. on Memorial Day for visitors to view some of Jazzed up " iLJi "This is a gesture of friendship," Gearan said. "This is an . ' WASHINGTON - North Korea is speeding up the removal of fuel from a nuclear reactor, a development that threatens to derail key U.N. inspections in a matter of days, the head of the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency said Friday. , Hans Blix, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency , said in a letter to the U N . Security Council that North Korea's removal of fuel was occur. ring "at a very fast pace." , He said that if North Korea con Angeles Times; "Profit Motive Gets the Nod" and "A Policy Re- -' versal" read two headlines in The New York Times. The Wall Street Journal told its readers Clinton had administered only "a slap on the wrist" in announcing he was separately banning Chinese gun and ammunition imports and keeping earlier sane-- , tions in place. Clinton said there was no point in isolating China, the most populous nation in the world, and that his new approach offered "the best opportunity to lay the basis for long-tersustainable progress on human rights." But the incident mushroomed on Friday after witnesses said they saw two helicopters over the unfortunate event and it has ended Watkins' White House serv- golf course. ice." The White House first said that only one helicopter was involved and that the other one was on an "unrelated" training mission. But another White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the senior aides offered to chip in only after Watkins refused to pay for the entire tab himself. The White House had hoped to put an end to the issue when it moved quickly Thursday to discipline those involved in the outing, which had angered President Clinton and given grist to his Republican critics. But Gearan later confirmed that the helicopters were part of a pair and that the second one even though it did not land at the Holly Hills Country Club at New Market, Md likely would not have been in the area had it not m But his decision to break the link (See GOLF, Page A2) had all but painted himself into a corner by his past strong statements on the need for progress on human rights. between human rights progress and trade benefits for China, a year after he insisted there should be such ties, was seized by critics as a further sign of administration vac- - e headlines everywhere told a story that must have made White House officials wince: "Clinton Reverses Course Bold front-pag- IR (See HEADLINES, Page A2) Nameless dead buried in Uganda V 3-- the Johnson Family relics and memorabilia, including the Johnson Family Bible." The museum is located at 175 South Main. Johnson was born in 1806 in Connecticut. He was the tenth child in a family of 13 children. Johnson had 12 wives and 56 children. The monument being dedicated on Memorial Day will list the By TERRY LEONARD Associated Press Writer - ld goals and accomplishments ix J -- xf1r ?r . Vir-- - - The': KASENSERO, Uganda nameless dead washing ashore outnumber the living in this Lake Victoria fishing village. They died unspeakable deaths in Rwanda and now, in the final indignity, their bodies are collected like so much garbage, wrapped in plastic and dumped without ceremony in mass graves. About 1,800 anonymous dead already are buried here, beside a banana grove on a high bluff overlooking the lake. The lone memorial is a faded purple and yellow floral wreath hung from a crooked stick. W $ of Johnson and each of his wives and children. Aaron Johnson became a convert to the LDS Church in 1836 in Connecticut. The baptism of Aaron and his wife Polly was an event which greatly changed their lives and the lives of many of the early pioneers. He followed the saints to Ohio and built his home across the street from LDS Prophet Joseph Smith in Kirtland. His home stood one block from the Newell K. Workers er earth. The lone mourner was a middle-age- d Hutu woman, Teddy Nalu-bow- a. who cried softly on the beach where the bodies were unloaded. She was hauntdd by memories of a childhood in Rwanda and fears for relatives left behind. "I feel sad, very sad," she whispered. "Why are all these people dying for nothing?" An estimated 200,000 people have been killed in Rwanda since April 6 when the death of the president in a suspicious plane crash touched off a murderous rampage Matthew R. Smith Photo to pull within Rockets seven series. See Page B1. Utah fans were all jazzed up in the Delta Center night as the Jazz grounded the Houston 95-8- 6 2-- 1 in their best-of-Frid- (See DEAD, Page A2) (See FOUNDER, Page A2) produced. Security Council permanent members met Friday night to discuss the letter. Russian Representative Yuliy Vorontsov called the matter "grave" and said that sanctions might be considered if the North Koreans cannot reach an agreement with the IAEA. A senior administration official, speaking on condition he not be identified, said President Clinton's administration nonetheless was sur- A dump truck waited to transport the piles of dead from this village of about 1.200 people 80 miles southwest of Entebbe, to the bluff where a bulldozer scraped a; new hole in rich red and rocky with Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. His journal records he was with the Prophet Joseph just previous to his martyrdom. His accomplishments as a church member and civic leader were an interesting and important part of tinues to remove the fuel at this rate, the IAEA would lose "within days" the ability to accurately measure the amount of plutonium tattered clothes, gloves methodically unloaded about 30 more bodies Friday from three long canoes that gathered the dead from nearby shores of the largest freshwater lake in Africa. Whitney store which contained The School of the Prophets. He soon became a leader in the church and had a dramatic effect on many areas of pioneer life. He became a friend and pioneer heritage. As an early pioneer, Johnson worked as a gunsmith, a blacksmith, an iron worker, a farmer, builder, a stone cutter, a business man, and he served as the justice of the peace in Nauvoo, 111. He and his hroiher, Lorenzo, invented and constructed a new type of covered in gical masks and rubber boots and Nuclear talks in North Korea end in failure By ROBERT BURNS Associated Press Writer on China." read The Washington Post; "Clinton Caves In on Trade vs. Human Rights," said the Los willing to resume its own high-levdiplomatic talks with North Korea. He said no date has been set for resuming those talks, which could set a basis for normalizing U.S. relations with North Korea. el Secretary of State Warren Christopher, in comments after a speech to the Asia Society in New h York, said a new round of Korean talks would be "a difficult and complicated one because we will have to resolve in that dialogue the nuclear issues as well as holding out the prospect of having more normal relations." Christopher said in the speech U.S.-Nort- I PllHli-- i 1 ! I III that "if North Korea Inside rejects these negotiations," the United States will be in a better position to garner international support for U.N. economic sanctions, which would condemn North Korea to "pariah status." Christopher did not mention the Koh breakdown of the rea talks the past week. Meanwhile, Robert L. Gallucci, the State Department official coordinating U.S. policy on Korea, was quoted in an interview pub- Weather Find it I IAEA-Nort- Business AS Classified Ads Comics Entertainment Family B9 B4 A9 B5 B9 A9 A3 A4 Legate Movies Obituaries Opinions Sports Stocks The Mini Page lished Friday in a South Korean Partly cloudy today with a slight chance of showers. Fair tonight and Sunday. Highs mid- - to upper 70s. Ix)ws near 50. See Page A12. Air Quality Friday's air quality was pood for all areas along the Wasatch Front with little change in pollution levels expected. 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