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Show L Mil rffm 'Ty&VfTW SO CENTS b;1p;VTJiT)(eHaral4.com VOLUME 78, ISSUE 416 THE NEWSPAPER OK CENTRAL UTAH Online: , FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2(101 I M 1 L73 9 on Countdown to . mm i'. i Winter Garnet OD WE. TRUST 1 140 days I iJ Today's Weather ITT- NlhSS - I vm Low S3 m--r 1 'J ' t .ji ...jA Sports ill.' iiii I' '."'-- - I.HII. - i r Sw6p ( v 'A' , . ! ti " V t " " t BYU's II (I volleyball team made ll quick work of Its rival, sending Utah home In three games. Bl ' ( ""!' m "'"' J ; . 1 f" it i! i" Snipe Remarks Nsw use Provo's new library used to be the Brlgham Vfti in Academy, but the building fell Into disrepair sometime after the Civil War and was being used primarily as a place for kids to sneak Into and make out. A2 . Speaking out: President Bush addresses a Joint session of Congress oh Thursday. Sitting behind Bush is Sen. Robert By DAVID ESPO - Messy situation Santaquln residents packed a standing-room-onlCity Council meeting to demand relief for a family beset by sewer smells and "hordes of flies." A4 y ' Getaway Friday Bit of everything Cowboys and Indians, mountains and desert, still life and water: The Oil Painters of America encompasses a Western epic exhibit of 78 pieces at the Sprlngville Museum of Art. CI THE DAILY WASHINGTON President Bush summoned all nations to wage war on terrorism Thursday night and vowed "justice will be done" against those who killed thousands in last week's attacks. With warplanes and ships on the move, he urged an anxious America to be calm, "even in the face of a continuing threat." Bush issued a series of demands not open to negotiation or disto the ruling Taliban in cussion Afghanistan: turn over Osama bin Laden, the suspected mastermind of the attacks, or share in his fate. Bush spoke as American military personnel began moving out from bases around the country, fully aware they could soon be in harm's way. Fighter pilots and jets from Colorado, bombers and crews from Idaho; Marines from North all were called to duty, Carolina Nine days after the suicide g attacks that leveled the World Trade Center and wounded the mighty Pentagon, Bush addressed a joint session of Congress and a nationwide television once-soarin- NEWSPAPER INSIDE As they prepared for their strike against America, the 19 suicide hijackers spent months experiencing some of the most ordinary facets of American life, A5 te (Olrean's aftloriiey By DONALD W.MEYERS The Daily Herald . ...... C4 Comics ..... Business ........ B8 Horoscope. ..... .C8 Movies ......... C7 Classified . . . . Dl . Obituaries A7 Opinions A6 ........ Bl ........ BIO . lillPcllll 6 audience counted in the millions. "Tonight we are a country awakened to danger and called to defend freedom," he said "Our grief has turned to anger, and anger to resolution." Security' concerns were high enough to keep Vice President Dick Cheney away from the Capitol. The Bpeech won robust bipartisan applause 30 times. And then, in a vivid display of national unity, the president stepped off the rostrum to embraces from the Democratic leaders of the House and Senate. A few hours before the commander-in-chief spoke, New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani sharply revised the number of missing and preto 6,333 at sumed dead upward the World Trade Center twin towers, destroyed by the impact of hijacked An additional 189 are jetliners,dead from a similar attack on the Pentagon, and 44 more perished when a fourth hijacked plane crashed in Pennsylvania. Compounding the nation's woes were concerns about the economy, and Bush pledged, without additional explanation, steps to "put our See BUSH, A5 Provo residents are pulling together to remember victims of the terrorist attacks, A8 U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft Is ordering state U.S. attorneys to form :; TED S. WARRENThe Ansociatcd Proii Captive audience: A couple In New York's Times Square watches President Bush address Congress. task forces, A8 HERALD PROVO, UTAH Sports . Weather right, and Dennis Hasten, tjusn Justice will be done m war on terrorists AP Special Correspondent Local WIN MCMAMEIThe AxiwMited Cm , J3yrd,D-W.Va- ., PROVO Torn Green'B bigamy and criminal case is now moving to the appellate level. ', John R. Bucher, Green's attorney, filed papers with the Utah Court of Appeals on Thursday to try to overturn the admitted polyga-mistconviction and prison sentence. Bucher said he will also file seeking to have Sapers released from the Utah State Prison while his case is on appeal. His attempts to get a new trial failed Sept. 4 when 4th District Judge Guy R. denied the request and ordered Green kept in prison. non-suppo- rt 's five-ye- Burn-ingha- ar m files appeal Judge settles dispute "I'm more optimistic than I was at the trial court, but I'm not so optimistic that I can predict the outcome." John R. Bucher, Tom Green's attorney "I'm more optimistic than at the trial court, but I'm not so optimistic that I can predict the outcome," Bucher said. Green, who has five wives and 29 children, was found guilty in Max or four counts of bigamy and one count of criminal nonsup- He was sentenced to fiort. years in prison and ordered to pay restitution for the child support his family received. Bucher's appeal claims the jury was prejudiced I was when Juab County Attorney David Leavitt showed them birth certificates for some of Green's wives and aajd they were courted over the family dinner table. Bucher also marsaid the common-lariage and bigamy statutes Leavitt used are contradicw tory. Leavitt, during a Sept. 4 hearing before Burning-ham- , said the age of Green's wives was already part of the court record and his See GREEN, A9 over lake's boundary: By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN The Daily Herald PROVO After 16 years of controversy, the boundary of Utah Lake has been settled. U.S. District Judge Dale A. Kimball ruled Tuesday in favor of 40 landowners who had not yet settled with the state, granting them title to the land some have held and farmed for generations. Some held patents to the land granted by President Ulysses S. Grant. "It's a good ruling. It's freedom " said B. Neil Christensen, of American Fork, president of the Utah Lake Landowners Associa tion. "I always felt this was the proper ruling for the I court to give. v; Christensen was one of the 40 landowners involved ; in the lawsuit. The controversy began in when the US. Court granted Utah title to the bed of Utah Lake "up to the ordimark at nary the time of statehood." 1985 Supreme high-wat- er The problem was thai nobody knew ,.here ;thft mark was in a high-wat- er reservoir that fluctuates regularly. Tho Utah Division of State Lands and Forestry launched a campaign to See LAKE, A? |