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Show Page A6 THE DAILY HERALD, Prove Utah, Friday, March 20, 1998 Continued from Al to join Cedar Hills that their wishes will be met provided they have contiguous boundaries and those who wish to remain in the unincorporated areas could also do so. Normally, people who want to disconnect from a city must file a district court document, but Sanderson said boundary agreements can be worked out between the two municipalities. Cedar Hills alternative Sanderson explained that he is working on an agreement with Cedar Hills that would allow Manila residents to annex into Cedar Hills if they wish. "If I can't produce and get sewer and water to you, and Cedar Hills can, you will be free .to go into Cedar Hills," he declared. Al Mickelsen, city planner, reported that all land annexed will be classified as Agriculture-1- ; owners can then decide which zoning status they would like to apply for. Several residents asked when they could receive sewer service from Pleasant Grove. Frank Mills, public works director, said the city could the apply through Mountainland Association of Governments for a community development block grant, or a special improvement district could be formed. "We would contact each property owner to determine the elevation of the septic tank and would stub of the line until they want to connect," Mills said. Sanderson noted that if the property owners connect to Despite Tuesday '," .. night's decision, Neil Yerkes, a member of the Manila Township Planning and Zoning Board, said he anticipates Cedar Hills will file a lawsuit over the.vote. Ken Cromar, a Cedar Hills councilman, said the situation is a difficult one and emphasized that a "silent majority of 77 percent of Manila residents" had declared in a county survey that if they had the choice, they would remain unincorporated. Cromar assured township residents that Cedar Hills is willing ber faith w& targeted by Alexander Lebed, former secu SALT LAKE CITY The rify 'adviser to Russian LDS Church created the Russia President Boris ', Yeltsin, as Samara Mission in July .1993. It "jnqld' and filth which have was the third of six missions ome to destroy the state." the church established in thea 'The, comments drew howls former Soviet Union, according &f protests from the church, to the Church Almanac! members of Cpngress The church has about 57,000 and others, including, high-- . e missionaries' sittforld- - ranking officials at the State wide and six missions in Russia Department and the adhiinis-witmore than 5, 000, members, tratipn. Lebed later apolo-Th- e Samara MTssiis'-- ' th'3B ;ghd. i, V V..v,.v Last year, Yeltsin signed a headquarters for between 60 ? and 100 missionaries. proclamation declaring Russian In 1996, the 10 million-meOrthodoxy .his country's pre ', Staff and wire reports " ' full-tim- h ' But when Sanderson asked Cromar if Cedar Hills would let anyone deannex who wanted out of his city, Cromar said is difficult deannexation beet, use municipalities have to make plans for sewer, water and roads based on the number of people within their boundaries. G rover said the survey his office conducted "had all shades of commitment. A majority said of they couldn't stay in the county, they would go to Pleasant Grove. As a County Commission, we were just trying to find out what people wanted,". he said. After the discussion came to a close, Sanderson ended the public hearing by stating that residents who wanted to remain in the unincorporated area should send him a letter. The City Council then voted unanimously for a resolution to annex Manila Township. the accusation and all along," said Michael Superintendent Jacobsen. "That continues to be our position and we'll see where we go." ' , m to provide services for those who want to stay in the county "forever, if they want it." 4 ELDERS Continued from A afternoon. The mission is headquartered in Samara, a city southeast of Moscow on the Volga River. "For reasons of the safety of all missionaries, no other infor- mation about the abduction can be made available at this time," LeFevre said. Rep. Merrill Cook, h, like Bennett and Hatch a Mormon, said the "kidnapping "v s ' ! ' of these two young men is appalling.?. He said he had urged the State Department to take "aggressive American involvement in getting these boys back safely." who Gary L. Browning, presided over the mission that included Samara, said Thursday's announcement was a shocking surprise. Browning, who presided over the Helsinki Finland East Mission that expanded to include parts of Russia between 1990-199said crime against church missionaries is 3, Religious complaints The Justice Department attorney met Thursday with Larson, who filed the religious discrimination complaint, and Provo School District lawyer Mark Robinson. The Justice Department attorney was also expected to meet with Hudnall, who had not heard from her as of Thursday afternoon. Hudnall was not available for comment later in the evening. Larson's complaint stems from his 1993 firing from i Independence High School when he was told he was being let go as part of a reduction in force and an effort to bring ROTC in to teach his courses, he said. Larson contends that another instructor was hired before ROTC was brought on board. ' Larson filed a complaint with the State Industrial Commission in 1994 claiming he was fired because he wasn't a member of the LDS Church. He further contends that his 1992 book, "By His Own Hand Upon Papyrus." was criticized by Hudnall for its content. The book, he claims, initiated Hudnall's agenda to fire him. Larson said the book is a scientific and secular interpretation of a series of ancient "anti-Mormo- texts used by LDS Church founder Joseph Smith. It includes a closing chapter about Larson's own Christian beliefs. Larson said he has witnesses who heard Hudnall tell other administrators to find reasons to fire him, but he wouldn't disclose who those witnesses are. The school district supports Hudnall's denial of Larson's accusations. RESCUE 1 the trail as far as they could before they set out on foot. At that point, a helicopter was called in from Salt Lake City to pinpoint where the victim was and help rescue him. Before it arrived, however, rescuers encountered Krogue hiking down the mountain: He had managed to get out of his predicament by himself, after all. Police mountaineer Mark Troxel was with the team when ' they saw Krogue. "He was very wobbly, his sweat pants were torn and he was very disoriented," Troxel " ; saia. THL BILLINGS GAZETTL Courtesy phoio Construction: Ground will be broken March 28 for the Billings Montana Temple, seen in this artist's rendition. said. In June, a group of 24 employees and former employees filed a grievance against Hudnall for what they claimed were unethical and improper practices. That case was dismissed on technical terms, because it didn't meet time limit requirements. According to Jacobsen - and Larson, the Justice Department is in town asking questions to determine if it will further investigate the matter or turn it over to Larson's attorney. "My attorney and I are perfectly content to allow the Department of Justice as long as it needs to go ahead and complete its investigation to determine whether the government will Ixrome involved," Larson said. Hudnall denied he was being investigated by the Justice Department last October after accusations surfaced in a news- paper advertisement taken out by a group called Ethics 4 Provo. Hudnad said Thursday was the first he'd heard about an investigation. Justice Department officials were not available for comment Thursday and did not return phone messages. Rescuers gave Krouge fluids to drink, sat him on an ATV and began descending with him. By 11:40 a.m., the team had almost reached a waiting ambulance when it radioed to the field command post below, "He's collapsed." Paramedics from the ambulance ascended the trail on ATVs to treat Krogue, who was drifting in and out of conscious- ness. He was brought down the of the trail on a last stretcher. On the way down, he asked if Jaccard was OK. He didn't have towait long to get an answer: His friend vas waiting at the trailhead' and rode with him to the hospital ,.....,. half-mil- e uncharacteristic for that area. know of any other cases where missionaries were abducted."', "I've been there a dozen times. (Samara and Saratov) are wonderful, beautiful cities. The people are especially warm and hospitable," said Browning, a BYU professor of German and Slavic languages. "Our missionaries were safe." During his tenure as mission president from September 1992 to July 1993, Browning said there were no abductions, robberies or any other crimes against missionaries that he could recall. LeFevre also said he did not Construction documents submitted to the city put the total cost of the temple and two ancillary buildings at just under $13 million. Construction is scheduled to begin March 30 and is expected to take 18 to 24 months. The church operates 51 temples around the world. Another 21 are in various stages of design and construction. Elder Hugh W. Pinnock of the First Quorum of the Seventy and president of the 1991. , Holland said the church had been assured "at the highest levels through diplomatic channels that our operations will not be affected." Sen. Robert F. Bennett, said he was working with both church and government authorities to resolve the situation. Mark Teerlink of Salt Lake, who spoke with his son, Jonathan, in the Samara mission, said information is scarce. "But there is an underground element there," he told KUTV. "All I can guess is there is some underground element at work here." U.S. h, North America Central Area of the church will preside at the 3 p.m. groundbreaking services. Invitations will be going out to church members, local and statewide elected officials, neighbors of the temple, area clergy and the state's congressional delegation, but "no one will be turned away" from the event, said Ken Peterson, a Billings lawyer and vice chairman of the Temple T. Committee. The temple will have a spire, topped by a gold sEal-u- e " of the Angel Moroni. 117-fo- ot " OBITUARIES Preliminary work Larson's complaint was referred to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission by the State Industrial Commission. A conciliation hearing was never conducted between Larson and the school district and the case proceeded to the Department of Justice in June 1997, Larson Japan's Aum Shinri Kyo cult to the Roman Catholic Church. Last September, Mormon Apostle Jeffrey R. Holland said the law would not affect the church, which he argued has had a presence in Russia since 1903 even though it was not officially registered with the Russian government until the fall of communism in Continued from Al 7;.. in u ussloj eminent faith and sharply limiting the practice of some religions until they had been established for at least 15 years. was The proclamation opposed by the Clinton administration, the Vatican and human rights groups as an infringement on civil rights and possibly opening the door for religious persecution. ; Russia's Orthodox Church and a broad spectrum 6f nationalists fought hard to pass the law, arguing that the country is being flooded by alien religions everything from Mormons to TEMPLE ' have we Continued from A Continued from A Possible lawsuit? "We deny HUDNALL Egyptian hieroglyphics iamaraisicn isihird of six to mm Cedar Hills sewer lines, "you are connected to them." MANILA Robert Boshard D. Ida M. Smith Robert D. Boshard, 84, passed away March 16, 1998, at home, of a heart attack. He was born -August 4, 1913 in pirUtah to Provo, William Boshard i ft ! and Wilmirth IGreer Boshard. He graduated from Provo High School, where he excelled in track and other sports. - lit Ol tU VYlLllUlC - m lt ' ' 413 signal corpsin India (hiring w4tt ', War II. He retired from Searsan 1972. ftti married Cleone Snow on June 29, 14 lj in Heber, Utah Bob loved his fanjSlyj his communitygolf , and books. He was a good father apd a good man. He will! be greatly missed. He was a member of BPOE849. 3 He is survived by his wife; sons, Nick (Barbara l; and John; two grandchildren, Nicole and Seun. Funeral services will be held Saturday, March 21, 1998 at 11:00 a.m. at the Burg Drawing Room Chapel, 185 East Center Street. Provo. Friends may call at the Mortuary one hour prior to services. Interment, Cemetery. Provo . David Lee Cite City A i David Lee Otte, age 44. passed away on January 24, 1998 at a hospital in San Diego, California. Hours after being diagnosed with an operable brain aneurysm, he suddenly went into cardiac arrest. He was born on May 29, i953 to Alfred Herman Otte and Darlene Flamrhe Otte in Columbus', Nebraska. He is survived by his sister, and confidante, Linda friend, Knudsen; her husband, Doug; and her daughter, Sara Petersen, of Raleigh. North Carolina; Barbara-Otte Jensen and his three children: Jody Otte, Joseph Otte, and Joshua Otte, of Mapleton, Utah; his father, Alfred Herman Otte of Mountain View, California; and two brothers, Dean-- ; Otte and Douglas Herman Otte, of Santa Clara California. He was preceded in death by his mother, Darlene Otte; and an infant son, David Lee Otte, Jr. Memorial services were held in Porterville, California on January 31, Ida Elizabeth Morse Smith, 88, of American Fork, died Wednesday, March 18, 1998 in American Fork, Utah. Ida was born May 18, 1909 in American Fork to Jedediah and Thomas Wayne Sunderland, 83, died at his home in Orem, Utah, Tuesday, March 17, 1998. He was born July 4, 1914 in Lehi, Utah, the son of Thomas Edward and Alice Morse. She married Daniel C. Smith on April 10, 1929 in Provo, Utah. The marriage was sol emnized in the Salt Lake Temple on April 29, 1954. Ida and Dan had three children: Robert (who died at birth), Fae (deceased), and Mark. .Ida graduated from American Fork High School and LDS Seminary where she was an outstarding student. She and her family lived in Orem for over 40 years. She was an LPN at Utah State' Hospital for many years prior to her retirement. In earlier years she worked in a school lunch program in Salt Lake, at Waddies Cafe in Lehi, and at the Tiny Tot Bcnnet Factory in Provo. Ida was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and served as young womens president, and in other callings. She was a member of (Chadwick) Hannah Cunningham the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers. Ida was a loving mother, a superb cook, and homemaker. She enjoyed temple work, and was a friend to many. She is survived by her son, Mark, and his wife, Linda, Valencia, a Elva California: sister, Christofferson, West Valley; her Glade C. Cobbley, American Fork; seven grandchildren: Robin Hart, Gloria Bishop, Steven Cobbley, Glenn Smith, Douglas Smith, Craig Smith, and Allison Smith; and 15 Services will be at 2 p.m., Saturday, March 21, 1998 at Olpin Family Mortuary, 500 North 300 East, Pleasant Grove, Utah.., Friends' may call at' Olpin prior to the services from 1 'tb 2 p.m. Saturday. Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove Cemetery. Ecc3:t,2&4. We will miss you! Elizabeth Sunderland. He attended school in Lehi, Utah and graduated from high school in Lehi. He served in World War II from 1941-4in the Pacific and Rock Hampton. After returning from the war, he married Ruth Rasmussen on June 11, 1946 in the Salt Lake Temple. They moved to Rupert in 1949 where he farmed. After the death of his wife, he married Laura P. Smith on January 1, 1995. They moved to Orem, Utafi where he had resided until the time of his death. He was an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Later-daSaints, serving in many capacities including at one time, bishop. He had been active in the American Legion, VFW, and the Cowboy PoeU of Idaho. He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Ruth; a daughter, Ruth Ann; one brother, Boyd; and one sister, Mirl Healy. He is survived by his wife, Laura P. Sunderland, of Orem, Utah; four sons: Merrill' (Karen) Sunderland, Ogden, Utah; David 5 y Services will be held at Monday, March 23, 1998 at the 1 Third Ward building' with Bishoj(;TJ Sunderland officiating. Burial wiljji low in the Rupert Cemetery. Milttcnry graveside rites will be preformed. Family and friends may call at Hansen Mortuary on Sunday evening from p.m. and one hour prior to the service at the church. Arrangements are under the direction of Hansen Mortuary Rupert Chapel. , J 6-- 8 Provo Payian Orem Tiny Canal $699 Starkey Electone Otosonic Telex Arsosy Maico FREE LIFETIME SERVICE NO HIDDEN COSTS Don&a Slade Lewis, 41, died March 15, 1998. Services will be Friday;' March 20, 1998 at 11 a.m. in the Grove Creek Stake Center, 1176 No. Pleasant Grove, Utah. Friends and family may call on Thursday eveniqg a the Walker Sanderson Funeral Hfjftej 646 East 800 North, Orem, from 6"W p.m. and on Friday from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. prior to service. Please note The Daily Herald charges for obituaries. Death notices, brief items identifying the deceased and the funeral home involved, however, run free of charge and must be placed by the funeral home. change in location of services. The Daily Herald obituary rates are as follows: $15.10 per column inch and $7.00 per picture, for each publication. For further information call Spanish Fork Cemetery. - Marjorie N. Plant, 80, died March 17, 1998. Memorial graveside service at 3 p.m., Saturday March 21, 1998, R. Kent Dean Instrument 3C-HI- S Board Certified DEADLINES , Tuesday Saturday: 4:30 p.m. Day before publication. Sunday: 12:30 p.m. on Saturday Utorttfay: 1230'p:m ,on Sunday Photo deadlines same as above. Hearts Sciences 30 Years Experience , Nationally Board Cartrfied Instrument Hearlns Specialist ' . p.m. Rirnrt and the Community" FREE HEARING TEST r step-son- "Serving cur Families 20 Other Brands OBITUARY FEES Steven (Karen) Sunderland, and Lee Sunderland, (Marje) Sunderland, all of Rupert, Idaho; four daughters: Kayleen (Nick) Darrington, of Rupert; Sandra (Greg) Stevenson, Christine Modesto, California; Sunderland, Provo, Utah; and Linda (Dave) Hope, Rexburg, Idaho. He is also survived by 32 grandchildren and one one brother, Reftd Sunderland, Lehi, UT, four sistersr-AkPowell, Lehi, Utah; Iva Dell Anderson. Claremont, California; Ileen Cook, Cedar Fort, Utah; and June Arave of Gofflan Blackfoot, Idaho; two and John Cooper, SpolgJJJg, Washington; and two Valerie Richmond, West Valley City, Utah; and Sheryl (George) Bible, Provo, Utah. He also has 12 and five SptnUhFork ... 1998. For every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: a time to be born and a time to die; a time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time. to dance. Thomas Wayne Sunderland , Clara A. Nelson, died March 17, 1998. Services will be held Friday WaTB p.m. in the Spanish Fork 4th-7t- h all Chapel, 400 E. 400 North, Spanish Fork. Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary iu Spanish Fork at 187 S. Main on Thursday evening from 6 8 p.m. and Friday at the chapel one hour prior to the services. POOR COPY i ! ' ' . |