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Show Tiger's 64 gets him back on Icadcrboard The Daiiy Herald's new TV Kids learn water Magazine safety with parents Inside today's paptr Sporta Bl TOR JUL CI Lifestyles TTVAc'T JL JL JRGV& UTAH - A PIIUTW.R COMMUNITY NEWSPAPLR SI mm lues I)AV Jl IN M. I'i'i V7 Members must re-ena- every ct Mi aspect of trip By TOM McllOKS 'N' ' V The Daily Herald O " - As Wendy HENEFER Sorensen sits in the center of camp scrubbing a dress on a wooden washing board, about a dozen amused onlookers chatter and point. On another end of the small circle of tents known as the authentic camp, a woman in a d dress stirs a cauldron of beans with one hand while holding her baby in the K'-v-..- "t J I ij V. 5. I - VJ -- i ..:A- - ixr - ... .'.vSn. Hit violet-colore- other. - - l,,ll,.n,ll... .rmin in 1.1, ,1 ,, (, .,,,,,. . ,.m. .,,..,.,..,, FRED . i MrtiUIRKThe Daily Herald Elbow grease: Bruce Dixon cleans his grandfather's headstone Saturday at the Provo City Cemetery, doing his part in the LDS Church's Worldwide Pioneer Heritage Service Day. Members of LDS congregations around the world contributed millions of hours of service. For more on the service day, see Page Fl. one pauses and smiles as someone in the AU group of onlook ers asks her a question. For the curious visitors, this is their chance to go back 150 years in time and get a personal look at the lives of the Mormon pioneers. "Just being here, you can The Daily Herald Pleasant grove Some days Mark Walker wonders whom he really works for. Walker's business card identifies him as operations manager ofhis father's Walker Oil Co., yet he spends a lot of time deal- with ing the economy. irnnm envision what the pioneers really did," says Janeen Erekson, who came from Salt Lake City to see the wagon train. "Like that lady over there that's real, holding the baby See BUSINESS, A7 DONALD W. MEYERS The Daily Herald 'i1 ; Business people don't have to navigate the labjrinth of environmental regulations by themselves. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the of Utah Department Environmental Quality both offer programs to educate businesses on environmental regulations and on what options are available to comply. I think what we find is, with requirements, that once (business people) understand what toowith them, it becomes less DEQ 1PRQVO assistance The DEQ offers several pro- grams to help get businesses through the process. One of those is the program, which predesign allows the DEQ to work with new or expanding businesses to determine what kind of permits are needed and to prepare the application, Bradford said. The process takes bet .'em three weeks and six montas. Another program is the Small Business Assistance Program, which provides technical advice consultations. and on-si- te To&sy. Mostly sunny and a little warmer. Highs Lows tonight from the upper 50s to mid 60s. TcfiKMTOw: Mostly sunny. Highs complete weather information. It. COPY 90-9- 90-9- 5. Turn to B8 for scene, it's like you're really there." And for the select group of about 40 wagon train travelers, the authentic camp is a chance I IMI RTh, K.mK II,i.,M to almost literally walk in thoir ancestors' footsteps. Unlike the other 500 travelers on the trail, the members of Sec PIONK.I rvj Associated Press Wmei ks. A? i - 4 V On a CHARLOTTE, N.C. bus barreling down a South Carolina highway in the middle of the night, a passenger lumbered up the aisle, put a knife to the driver's throat and shouted: "I'm not playing!" He took the wheel for an hour early Saturday, ranting about the movie "Speed" and threatening to drive off a bridge, police said. But the calm bus driver forced the vehicle to a stop, and he and some of his 24 other passengers jumped the hijackman er. The wound up dead, though police wouldn't say how he died; he was not shot or stabbed. When firefighters pried open the door of the bus on a concrete median on Interstate 77 in south Charlotte, "the bad guy fell out and he was DO A," said Capt. J.C. Felder of the knife-wieldin- if iiHI fan MARC LESTF.Rrhe Daily Herald Mark Walker of Walker Oil Company watches as Steve Foster, bottom left, and Robert Yates work to modernize the underground fuel storage system at the Walker gas station, 470 E. State In compliance: Street in Pleasant Grove. "We even invite business people to our classes on visible emissions so they know what our inspectors are looking for," Bradford said. The DEQ also offers the Pollution Prevention program, in which the state and industry work together to promote ways to reduce pollution in the industrial process. EPA help The EPA also helps businesses meet environmental requirements with its compliance assistance centers, said EPA spokesman Vaughn Whatley. The centers provide materials on environmental regulations and programs in "plain English" rather than standard bureaucratic jargon, as well as shopcomprehensive ping" for information. The centers deal with metal finishing, automotive services and agriculture. Whatley said the agency also provides planning assistance, as the DEQ does, and recommends ways to meet federal standards. The programs are part of the EPA's efforts to move away from enforcement and toward cooperation, Whatley said. on the For information call DEQ's programs, The EPA's Denver office can be contacted at "one-sto- p cost-effecti- 536-400- 0. Qs&Ri boom Formerly conjoined twins Bessy and Doris Gonzalez., who have been in Utah for 17 months of separation surgeries, are returning to Honduras this week, ft g police. None of the passengers was injured, although five were taken to hospitals complaining Charlotte-Mecklenbur- g of chest pains. The hijacker's name was not immediately released. He was described as a bearded man in his 20s or 30s. It all started about 1:30 a.m. after the bus pulled out of Columbia, S.C. The hijacker had been drinking and had two bottles of wine in his backpack. "He was talking out of his head the entire time. He said he was going to 'stab them before they stab me," said passenger Sherry Knight of INDEX Classifieds A comprehen- Currents A9 sive look at what UDOT Entertainment.. D2 floadworic is working on this week. BS Legal s Local Lifestyles Huacker f ovepowered by bus driver and passenyprs - a ( S.C. f""! V Raloiqh I. w. " h'lai'kPd I to A"entoiilp Chailrflp ..Busle',ves f V GA J i TZrtic Ocran inonnips I 100 km APt' F Charleston. S.C. Knight said she and the hijacker had board ed one bus in North Charleston and transferred to th Charlotte-bounin bus d Columbia. The hijacker ordered the passengers to the hack as north, swerving. "It got pretty hairy for a while. I just started praying." said passenger (.Maude LaKue of Atlanta, on his way to a family reunion in Virginia. "He meant to kill us. lie said he was going to take us to the mountains and maybe let the kids off before he drove oil" with the other passengers, said Kay Lane of Jonesborougli. Teiin. Bus driver H. Gene Sparks, keeping a seat near the front of the bus, kept everyone calm. Sparks pulled the emergency brake and he and the hijackei tumbled into the stairwell, where they fought. Then some of the passengers "took it upon themselves to overtake the overtaker," Fehlei said. THE DULY HERALD CI G4 Business W.VA. VA - INSIDE THE WEATHER Just looking at this whole By PAl I. NOWEl.L Government agencies offer educational programs for businesses of a problem," said Brent Bradford, DEQ deputy director. - jhJ - - - being overpowered yv Cleaning the cleaners Government regulators, say the regulations XX Dishpan hands: Wendy Sorensen of Salt Lake City, center, takes a breather from washing clothing by hand Thursday in the authentic camp of the Pioneer Wagon Train in Henefer. have not only cleaned the air and water, but have also educated commercial operators in environmental protection. however, - MARC John Paystrup When most people hear about environmental regulation and business, they think of big companies like Geneva Steel or Kennecott Copper having to install multimillion-dolla- r devices to keep hazardous ' ) mrnirii "I haven't had any run-in- s with the EPA, but the state has been a little more demanding." U.S. Environmental Protection state and the Agency Department of Environmental Quality's regulations. 1 wish I worked for my dad. I work for the government," Walker said. l(a a feeling common among businessmen who attempt to navigate what they see as a sea ofrgsSrernment red tape and regulations designed to protect the environment more than the i Hijacker dies after Smaller firms strive to play by the rules By DONALD W. MEYERS - G3 Fl Dl Movies D7 Obituaries F2 F4 F6 Bl Opinions Prime Time Spoils State Travel Ccntul Utah'k nrwsrupcr 2 years Onlin: F.1 Gl (( Your paper should arrive hy 5:.W a m on weekdays, 6:30 a.m. on weekends. I oi questions on delivery, call Tli 24-ho- ur Hrald Extra http:www.lHN-aklaxtra.co- |