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Show DAILY B2 TAM VALLEY HERALD Saturday. March IS. 200$ PRICES AT THE PUT.ZP $3.03 Tesoro, 9380 S. 700 East, Sandy $3.04 Conoco, 8600 S. 1300 East, Sandy $3.05 Sinclair, 930 S. University Ave., Daily Digest $3.05 Sinclair, 1223 $3.05 STATEWIDE No one under the age of 8 is allowed to operate any 01 IV on public lands, roads or trails Bureau of Land Managein Utah. Unregistered vehicles ment staff and other federal will be ticketed. and state agencies are busy All visitors to Sand Mounpreparing for an influx of visitors to Little Sahara Recreation tain will be required to park 10 Area for the first big recrefeet from paved roads. ation weekend of the year, Although Little Sahara does Easter weekend. not provide all services, the Visitors will notice an insurrounding cities of Nepbi comcreased presence of law enand Delta are munities. forcement officers for public For more information about safety during the busiest weekend of the year. recreation opportunities at The daily use fee for Easter Little Sahara Recreation Area, weekend is $10 per vehicle. contact the visitor center at 435433-596- 0 This includes use of the area or log on to http JI for one day and camping for one night. All four of the campgrounds will be open. Flush toilets will be working and the html. water will be turned on. Firewood will be available from OREM venders. Wooden pallets are not permitted. Safety flags are Celebration Latinoameri-cana- : La Puerta al Exito (The required for all OH Vs. Flags Door to Success) will be held at will be available for sale on the Utah Valley State College Vendors Row. ionspecialrecre-ationlittlesahararecreatio- Student Center Grand Ballroom on Tuesday. This event will highlight various forms of achievement of Hispanic youth and community members. Dinner will be available from p.m. Traditional Latin American entertainment will be presented from 7 p.m., followed by the Achiever's p.m., Program from where scholarships, commu- nity awards and certificates of achievement will be presented. There will be a dance and information booth walk from 0 p.m. Admission is free for those 3 and under, $3 for those ages and $4 for adults. To purchase tickets, call or visit any Utah Community Credit Union. All proceeds will go toward the Utah Valley University Hispanic Education Scholarship Fund. Exxon, 1395 W. 200 $3.05 W. $3.09 Sinclair, 290 1600 North, Orem 1600 North, Orem N. Main, Springville Exit $3.09 Mirastar, Provo 260, Springville W. Center St., Orem Prices reflect the cost of regular unleaded gasoline at 5 p.m. on Friday. More prices at www.heraldextra.comgas. 6-- 8:30-9:3- PROVO Two KBYU Ready to Learn Workshops are planned the A workweek of March shop about nursery rhymes will be at 7 p.m. Tuesday at 1400 N. State St This interactive workshop will demonstrate how PBS shows use 16-2- nursery rhymes to teach and how parents and teachers can benefit, too. A second Ready to Learn Workshop will be at noon on Wednesday at 51 S. University Ave. This work LEARN liore ... shop offers participants tips on engaging others in a story. Children are welcome at both workshops. Get the full story and other news of local interest in your community newspaper. I The Democratic Women of Utah County will be discussing health care issues in Utah at its monthly luncheon at noon on Tuesday at Riverside County Club, 2701 N. University Ave. The cost is $ 15 per person and is open to all interested community members! To RSVP or for more information, call Lou Ann Talcott at 801489-968- Lehi Free Press Pleasant Grove Review , Pony Express Cathy Allred 756-766- 9 Lehi, Cedar Valley, Saratoga Springs, Pleasant Grove or Lindon American Fork Citizen Lone Peak Press Barbara Christiansen 756-766- Adoptive mother chained with murder in THE ASSOCIATED child had fallen on March 6. The child's adoptive mother, Kimberly K. Emelyantsev, declined to speak with police, court documents said. Doctors also found the son was PRESS ' with one count of first-degre- e felony murder. A second-degre- e TOOELE The adoptive felony charge of child mother of three Russian chilabuseneglect was filed Thursdren has been charged with day. murder in the death of one Fyodor Emelyantsev, 31, child and both adoptive par-- ' was also charged Thursday e ents are charged with abuse in suffering extreme dehydration with one count of and malnourishment. Adopted felony child abuseneglect. the neglect of another. in December, the child was The Emelyantsevs are being Court documents show an held in the Tooele County jail. infant Nikolai, admitted to the hospital three bail was who was adopted in February times in three months. A feed-in- g A $500,000 cash-onl- y set for Kimberly Emelyantsev. died March 7 at Primary tube was inserted in the Children's Medical Center. An boy's stomach during the first Fyodor Emelyantsev is being held without bail. visit to help him gain weight. autopsy determined the child Court records show 3rd Dis- A physician told police the died from a skull fracture that trict Judge Mark Kouris was doctors said was the result of child's condition should not blunt force trauma, police and have declined after receiving to allow Fyodor Emelyantsev to be transported by jail ofcourt records show. The child the feeding tube if he was bealso had a bruised face, head, for. cared ficers to a graveside burial sering properly vice for his infant son Friday. knee and anus. On Wednesday, Tooele Each of the Emelyantsevs County prosecutors charged Fyodor Enjplyantsev, the are represented by a different adoptive father, told police the Kimberly Emelyantsev, 33, third-degre- -- death 14-month-oId's attorney. A telephone message left for Fyodor Emelyantsev's attorney was not immediately returned Friday. Edwin S. Wall, who represents Kimberly Emelyantsev, said he is still evaluating the case. "I can say that in handling these cases in the past, and as I expect in this case, there will be some complex medical information that will have to be evaluated in order to understand what occurred," he said. The Emelyantsevs have two biological children, ages 10 and 5. Those children and an adopted have been placed with relatives by the state Division of Child and Family Services, Wall said. Neighbors say the Emelyant Advertisement Herniated Disc? Sciatica? 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To receive the guide free, call Mill (Toll-fre- e 1 1 1 Spanish Fork, Salem, Payson, Elk Ridge, Woodland Hills, Genola, Santaquin The Springville Herald Pat Conover 489-565- H 1 Springville, Mapleton Daily Herald Angie Parkinson 344-254-7 Provo, countywide Samantha Young ASSOCIATED would trigger economic hardship for them and related businesses in California and Oregon that are still trying to recover from a disastrous season two years ago when salmon numbers were low in the Klamath River. "It's going to have a big effect on our coastal communities,'' said Zeke Grader, executive director of the San Francisco-base- d PRESS The Pacific Fishery Management Council was expected Friday to settle on three potential strategies to protect the dwindling salmon that remain alive in the ocean, including shutting down the season or severely limiting fishing. The council is expected to chose a final fishing recommendation in April at its meeting in Seattle. "I think the likeliest outcome this year is no one will put a hook in the water," said Humboldt County fisherman Dave Bitts, who was attending the weeklong meeting in Sacramento. The Sacramento River chinook run is usually considered one of the healthiest on the West Coast, but this year's run is so weak that most fishermen Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations. A closure of fisheries in California and most of Oregon also could lead to higher salmon prices for restaurants and consumers who would be forced to salmon inbuy Alaska-caugstead of locallyought salmoa In most years, about 90 percent of wild chinook or "king" salmon caught off the California coast originate in the Sacramento River and its tributaries. Only about 90,000 adult salmon returned to the Sacramento River and its tributaries to spawn last year, the second lowest number on record and well below the government's conservation goals, according to federal fishery regulators. That's down from 277,000 in 2006 and a record high of 804,000 in 2002. e MAGAZINE IT 24 Hour backpaininfo.com Debbie Chandler 798-101ext. 10 are expecting the worst. Fishermen say a closure recorded message) or go to: www.9 Spanish Fork Press season from northern Oregon to the Mexican border. and failed? Have you wondered Orem, Vineyard SACRAMENTO, Calif. The sudden collapse of the central California chinook salmon fishery has prompted federal fisheries managers to consider closing this year's salmon-fishin- g injections, surgery massage, 443-326-5 . Salmon collapse may lead to fishing ban THE Have you tried therapy, Orem Times, Michael Rigert sevs wanted to adopt so badly that they took out a second mortgage on their home to finance travel to Russia to get the children. Fyodor Emelyantsev is a Russian citizen. "We don't believe this is true because we all know how much they loved those kids," neighbor Celeste Hansen said of the allegations in an interview with The Salt Lake Tribune. Hansen said both the infant arrived in and the the U.S. with medical problems. The weighed just 18 pounds and Nikolai had suffered seizures, she said. The Emelyantsevs are scheduled to appear in court again on Tuesday. n rij 9 American Fork, Highland, Alpine or Cedar Hills Content does matter ft ! Ill .J?S?x 91 Maple Ridge Spinal Pain Center David Cook, DC . X. v I ? r t I. j j .J .A custom stairway elevator allows FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT in the home of your choice, removing the physical challenges imposed by stairs. Stairway elevator features include: Battery backup for use during a power failure Easy fold-u- p leaving the stairway clear for use by others Swivel seat for ease and safety when getting in and out of the chair Call toll free the ELECTOR 8t5jJP company. xv; vv t LOSEE Jewelers M W Only in CottonTree Square (801) JO iDWfl uwn. wiwwyrwnjij, mm Mon-- . ant 373-1000 FridMi until m km n i V |