Show IjVbtflg Na109 Thursday: AWI19 2001 iVA s Bridgertancfg Dally Inside By Jeremiah Stetder ' staff writer itiii i' Update 13 P®Q® - City administrators woe called on the carpet Wednesday night for underestimating the impact of a proposed fire substation on Logan Sky View shoots out Weber Cemetery What began as mere criticism evolved into threats of litigation by citizen activist Elwin Allred He chided the mayor for presenting false information to the pub- - Workplace Seniors sign on for more work after retirement a project that is not compatible with the lie and for spearheading cemetery Logan councilmembers Janice ' Pearce and Steve Thompson shared his oppbsition They questioned the administration’s prudence in selecting the site and asked where the dollars would come from -- 7 particularly in a tight budget year — to staff ' the station or even to turn on the lights Logan Mayor Doug Thompson admitted that figures concerning die project’s impact were regret-tably incorrect However he said more accurate numbers were being compiled for presentation to the council The Herald Journal and Citizens for Cemetery Preservation esti- mate that the project will eliminate at least 7 12 years of burial plots — a stark contrast to the one year reported by the city The mayor who was criticized heavily by Councilman Thompson for his lack of accurate data emphasized to the public and council that the project is still in its infancy It has not appeared before the Planning Commission nor has it' appeared before the Municipal Council The specifics as such have not been fully calculated he said Funding is a separate matter See STATION on Page 16 Feds: Woman wed to illegal immigrant NEW YORK (AP— Ernest Watts had been retired for a couple of years when his wife suggested he was underfoot and maybe should find a job “My first reaction was who!s man?” going to hire a Watts said The answer was just a mile away from his Philadelphia home at a CVS drugstore Like many other companies CVS Corn 'is courting older workers to work full- - or part-tim- e — Federal here was woman a investigators say kidnapped separated from her young son and taken to Las Vegas where she was forced to many an illegal Mexican immigrant Five people including the alleged victim’s mother were charged iii federal court Wednesday afternoon The alleged victim a Salt Lake County woman identified only as “KLR” in court papers says her mother told her she could make $5000 by marrying an illegal Mexi- can immigrant who wanted to gain legal status in the United States SALT LAKE CITY (AP) : — and are positioning them- selves to attract Baby Boomers who plan to work in retirement A decade ago employees SO and older made up about 7 percent of the CVS work force now they make up 14 percent “Older workers are very responsible They care about the customers They're good examples to our younger employees" said Stephen Wing a director for the Woonsocket drugstore chain She had two grooms to choose from: a dentist and a lawyer The woman’s mother ’ - : - See SENIORS on Page 4 Cache tonight The Logan City School District will a public information meeting at 7 tonight at Ellis Elementary School 348 W 300 North The purpose of the meeting is to discuss enrollment at Ellis Elementary wanted to become a paralegal accord-ing to court papers filed Wednesday The woman refused saying she was already engaged to someone else Then on April 13 the victim asked her mother for a ride to her sister’s house Instead Carter allegedly drove her daughter and her granddaughter to the home of Daisy Aguilar and Joel Aguilar to get tried Although the victim was she restrained by the away Billie and her stepfather Aguilars Carter according to testimony from FBI agent George A Dougherty Jr who investigated foe case' Two days later the victim woke up in the house to find that her son had been taken away Next the matchmakers allegedly drove the woman to Las Vegas telling her that if die wanted to see her son again she would many Jesus Alberto Amaya the Mexican lawyer according to the United States Attorney’s Office ' hold AP photo - V ‘ Bombina9 remembered Page 16 - Shari Sawyer hugs the memorial chair for her mother-in-laDokxes Stratton a! the Oklahoma City National Memorial Site on Wednesday: Stratton was one of the 168 people kijledin the Oklahoma City federal building bombing six years ago today: Report on Page 4 w Index '': She did tie the knot at the WASHINGTON (AP) — The longer young children spend in day care away from their mothers the more likely they are to be overly Implant to set artificial heart ‘first’ 20 Opinion 23 Obituaries it8 Sports 4 12 (AP) — An American on die brink of death soon will receive die mechanical total heart first landmark in a surgery experts replacement hope will lead to new hope for patients with failing hearts Heart surgery teams at five hospitals are trained and poised to remove a diseased natural heart and install in its place an electric-powere- d pump designed to fit inside the chest with no wires or tubes sticking through die skin 7 Officials of Abiomed Inc which developed the mechanical heart arid Wednes--' day that the first surgery no later than June 30 would proceed without prior announcement and that die patient’s identity may not be released Results of the procedure they said would not be made known to die public for at least 30 days : Friday " : Students create their own operas t In Cache wwwhjnewscom See IMPLANT on Page 16 - Mechanical heart For some patients with failing wH soon implant a mechanical no wire or tube outside the hope patients will live at least the experimental device models Here’s how K works: dose-respon- : odsmai O transmits An battery peck power to a col wireless transfer systenv internal col reoelvss ® An the power and sends it to the oontroler and backup rechargeable battery oontroler ©The heart rate ragutates end speeds or stows Its pace source AMomidine aggressive by the time they reached kindergarten according to the largest study of child care and development ever conducted The basic results of the federally financed study were outlined Wednesday at a briefing Principal researcher Jay Belsky of Birkbeck College in London was presenting the findings in more detail Thursday in Minneapolis at a meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development “There is a constant relationship between time in care and problem behavior especially those involving aggression and behavior" Belsky told reporters Wednesday Belsky a research psychologist who worked at Fran State University until two years ago added that children who spend more than 30 hours a week in child care “scored higher on items like ‘gets in lots of fights’ ‘cruelty’ ‘explosive behavior’ as well as ‘talking too much’ ‘argues a lot’ and 10-ye- ar WASHINGTON d 1 ! Research links day care kids’ aggression y 1 ’ t Occasional rain throughout Fri- -' day 1 ' See KIDNAP on Page 4 Weather i Wendie because ner daughter had always are looking for ways to retain or attract older workers “We have almost 60 million Americans who are 55 and older today” said William K Zinke president of Human Resource Services Inc a consulting firm in Boulder Colo “They are followed by the 76 million Baby Boomers who begin to reach 55 this year” Those Boomers are healthier than their forebears living longer and it seems have an intense desire to continue working A 1998 study by the AARP the advocacy group for older Americans concluded that Baby Boomers are redefining what it means to retire “Unlike their parents’ generation fully 80 percent of Boomers believe Comics Classified Movies ' Carter suggested she pick the lawyer ed 0 &&$ 50 $ more Criticism threats of litigation voiced over proposed site RI-bas- Utah a O 2001 Nempapet£&rfMx&03idJOQant EmSySrenrienAP 10-ci-ty se See KIDS on Page 16 |