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Show Page THE HE RAID. Provo, Utah, A2 Friday, September 29. 1989 People 7" 7 j T , ::.:.:-:- fas J" tv" a ill?' AP Lascrphutu Tongue in cheek (Continued from Page Al) he had with Summerville residents. "One thing that touched me very much was a young homeowner there saying that he had had offers of help from all over this country," Bush said. "I think it does bring out the very best in the men and women of America who want to help in a tragedy of this nature." The president then departed for an engagement in Annapolis, Md. Before Bush's arrival, Riley, a Democrat, had complained: "Airplane rides and helicopter rides are nice but everything is on the ground. The buildings are on the ground, the people are on the ground, the stress is on the ground and we need a president who is on the ground." Riley said it was "absolutely ridiculous" that only two federal disaster claims offices have opened in the Charleston area. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has opened five claims offices across the state to serve 17 counties that have been declared disaster areas. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater Television star Roseanne Barr playfully sticks out her tongue at the audience during a taping of the Oprah Winfrey Show in Chicago Tuesday. Barr was joined by her boyfriend, Tom Arnold, while promoting her new book "Roseanne: My Life as a Woman." The show will air Oct. 2. Talk show host to marry third time - Talk-- I NEW YORK (AP) show host Larry King is about to ; be married for the third time, but he doesn't consider himself a two-tim-e loser the losers are those who marry only once, he says. "We are shocked when people marry several times, but if society would admit it, the truth is that many couples who've been married 50 years probably met other people and were afraid to - King says he married his first "because in '61 you got married if you wanted a family." They divorced after having one daughter, King said, because "we really never understood each other." He married his second wife, Larry King Sharon, in 1976. That marriage didn't work, he said, because they competed for attention. His relationship with Alexanis der, who is different, King says. once-divorce- d, "This will be the first time I'm walking down the aisle with not only someone I love but also someone I adore and who is my friend," he said. - LOS ANGELES (AP) Mark Harmon made no secret of his admiration for Elizabeth Taylor during filming of a television " version of Tennessee Williams' "Sweet Bird of Youth." "I'm a tremendous fan of .hers, and I told her that right from the beginning," Harmon said. "I think she was having fun, too. I think she's always .wanted to play Alexandra Del Lago," a fading movie queen who hooks up with a gigolo played by Harmon. An actor's goal should be to reach a level where you can "work with the great people and say the great words," Harmon said, adding he got the chance to do that working opposite Taylor in the TV drama, which will air Sunday on NBC. Harmon, 38, said he deliberately seeks parts that play against his clean-cu- t good looks to avoid being typecast in lighter roles. Mark Harmon "People in this business love to find a niche for you. But I need the challenges and I need to do different things." Richards tells about heroin habit - LONDON (AP) Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards said he kicked his heroin addiction because his children were exposed to repeated police raids. "I was on the run all the time," Richards said about his g in the 1970s when he lived with German actress Anita Pallenberg and their two children. "My kids were growing up getting used to letting in hordes of policemen. There was a knock at the door: Is it room service or is it the cops?" he told British Broadcasting Corp. radio in a New York interview to be broadcast here next month. The group is on a North American concert tour. Richards, 45, known as "the wildest Rolling Stone," also admitted he feared being sent to prison. "The funny thing with that stuff is that you don't particularly notice it until it comes to a huge head," Richards said. "In Canada, I guess I realized this could not go on any more. This had to stop." Richards was charged with heroin trafficking in Toronto in uninsured losses. V (Continued from Page Al) he added. By April 1987 the 12 surviving children of Walker, his first wife, Lydia Ann Horn Walker, and Ada Louisa Phippen Mahoney Walker, had agreed the graves should be moved to the new site in Heber City, said Anderson. Arrangements were made to move them to the lot next to their parents. The original burials took place more than 100 years ago, said Anderson. "We found bones, skulls, buttons, and boards," she said. Nevertheless, each of the five children were teeth, accounted for and all of the remains found were moved. Walker built two log homes for his two wives and their families. Ada Louisa had been divorced and brought three children with her. She and Walker had seven children. Lydia Ann Horn and Walker had 10 children. Even though each of the wives had a child die before the family moved to the Provo River location, there Bush, governors seek to aid public education CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) President Bush and the nation's governors sealed a "social compact" to rebuild American education. Now they face a more daunting task: marshaling educators' and public support for rigorous standards and radical new ways of running schools. Still to come from the governors and the White House in the months ahead are the specifics of the first national education goals aimed at reducing the steep dropout rate, shaping students up in math and science, reducing adult illiteracy and getting more young children physically and mentally fit to begin their education. But as they headed home Thurssummit at day from their two-da- y the University of Virginia, the president and state executives agreed that the success of their strategy rests on galvanizing public support for what Bush termed "an America of tougher standards." There were no promissory notes signed, but Bush did commit him- - Air Quality 1 (yjd self to the principle of targeting any future funding increases toward needy preschoolers, for both Head Start, health and nutrition of 1879, Murry Kimble, 4, son of Ada Louisa, died on July 7. Sarah, 5, who died July 9, and Josephine, 7, who died July 14, were both children of Lydia Ann. "Because of the fear of the disease, the undertaker in Heber City would not come to the Walker Ranch," said Anderson, "so he brought three little coffins halfway where William Henry Walker Jr., 19, rode on horseback to pick them up." Both Ada Eugene and Caroline, the stillborn daughter who died in 1885, were children of Ada Louisa. moderate Sljc moderate good good 58oz 44 co 33 co PROVO Ogden Forecast change in pollution levels. The Scale moderate; good air; A ( Keith Richards unhealthful; co and escaped a heavy jail sentence by agreeing to a free concert for the blind and treatment for his addiction. "I can't even imagine it now, some of the things 1 used to go through with that stuff," he said. - 200-29- 9 very 101-1- un- 300 ozone sulfur dioxide pa - particulates The State of Utah has (Note identified the following as primary sources of pollutants in Utah County: co - vehicles; oz - vehicles and gas vapors; so - heavy industry; and pa - heavy industry.) so The names of the children were once on a board nailed to a cedar tree at the gravesites, said Anderson. "The next time we visited there the board was gone." Leon Anderson and his brother, Mark, were two of the family members who watched while the graves were dug and moved. "It was a very interesting rience," said Leon. expe- their warnings about "alternate voices" within the church, "sought to inflict upon us a kind of spiritual lobotomy in order to keep us docile and submissive." ssnsfis O J A) 375-16IT DAVC FLAT RATE CASH PRICE 16 Trt AUBADe PRICEaaaiS II (Christmas not included) FLUORESCENT SWEATSHIRTS ADULT Fire Retardant 6 Rt( $20.99 -- Ref $16.99 POINSETT Retf. $1.79 Sale 99 $ 7 75 $46.50 $93.00 County FIR w842 tloi (SALE $59.99 RED GARDEN $2.99 Reg. DOUGLAS 12' SIERRA PINE w542 tlpt (Your Choice Reg $129.99 CHRISTMAS MUGS $ 7 50 $45 00 $90 00 12' 6 SALE $10.99 8 Different Styles 5 VMr warranto CHRISTMAS TREES SALE $13.9 YOUTH HOME DELIVERY RATES (by youth carriers)' 1 Month, carrier 6 Months, carrier One Year carrier 'Rates may differ outside of Utah Toscano said his paper was prompted by three sermons delivered by general authorities at the faith's April conference which, in 12 OFF 9 1 Month, carrier 6 Months, carrier One Year earner "Who is it that has divided the church up into leaders and followers, intellectuals and mainstream members, believers and liberals, true voices and alternate voices, active Mormons and inactive Mormons?" he wrote. "You have done as much of this as anyone." ALL SILK FLO WE MOTOR ROUTE AND RURAL DELIVERY RATES and above hazardous. Abbreviations carbon monoxide healthful; oz 1977 51-1- and 1979.: Utans largest Selection MEMBER Audit Bureau ol Circulation NEA Service I ittle 0 presented it to BOR in May SPECIALS HONORED AT ALL STORES Entered as second class matter at the post office in Provo. Utah P.O. ID 143060 By City Salt Lake information historical LAYTON HILLS GRAND OPENING Das Herald 1949-198- 67oz 67oz pro- Published Sunday through Friday by Scripps League Newspapers, Inc. P.O. Box 717, 84603 1555 North Freedom Blvd Provo, Utah 84604 KIRK PARKINSON. Publisher N. LaVERL CHRISTENSEN, EditorEditor Emeritus good 60 oz moderate er husband, Lindsay Anderson, who worked for the Bureau of Reclamation at the time, gathered the (Continued from Page Al) lyting among the Indians of Latin America. "I think the fallout of this may reach south of the border," said of DiaRoss F. Peterson, logue, a scholarly periodical devoted to Mormon history, belief and literature. While acknowledging the vast majority of Mormons felt Lee's ouster was probably justified, Peterson said many wrote expressing deep concern about the fact and manner of his erasure from membership rolls. Mormons on the Navajo Indian Reservation in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, speaking on condition of anonymity, said church leaders sent from Salt Lake City to soothe alarm over the Lee affair had tried to muzzle local leaders and managed only to confuse the doctrinal issues. However, they knew of no plans by Navajos to demonstrate at Temple Square during the two-da- y conference. Lee's parting broadside had recalled several themes raised by Paul James Toscano, a lawyer and Mormon writer, in a paper delivered at the Sunstone Symposium in late August, an annual gathering of Mormon scholars and artists. Toscano blamed the church's leadership, not its critics, for fostering contention. grams. Bush, standing in the sunshine on the lawn outside the Thomas Jefferson-designed Rotunda, pledged his "determination to follow up in every way possible. We just cannot let it sit here and end here, and I ' promise you that I won't." Earlier, in a keynote address, Bush declared, "A social compact begins today in Charlottesville, Virginia, a compact between parents, teachers, principals, superintendents, state legislators, governors and the administration." By County UTAH (Lindon) Weber gran-daught- MORMON: A group of students decided to us some new textbooks so we can leave and walked through the hall- have a better education," said Darways encouraging friends to join bro. "Didn't the forefathers say freethem, said Roger Darbro, a participant in the walkout. Matthews an- dom of speech was for everyone? nounced that those leaving school They didn't say adults only," said would be given a sluff in keeping Margaret Dunning, a parent of a with the school's attendance policy. Provo High student. Most of the students remaining Dunning said she was in complete said they had been suspended from support of her daughter. Salt Thelma, daughter of Elmer Clarence Mahoney and of Ada Louisa, and her children living 20 During the diptheria epidemic The following air pollution readings were compiled by the Utah Department of Health as of 8:30 a.m. today. Listings are in the following order: locale, air quality, today's reading on a scale where 101 or Higher is unhealthful, and the abbreviation for the day's most common pollutant. drug-takin- tion and were at the site. school. "I have been suspended for (Continued from Page Al) assistant principal at the school. a week for trying to get this school Nevertheless, by Friday morning a better education," Darbro said. it was still an "iffy" issue, said "This demonstration is to get our Shackett. rights back as students and to get Harmon says he's great fan of Liz " low-inter- Many did not require hospitalizatreated at the scene or at a nearby school, while dozens were transported to nearby Prince William Hospital in Prince William County and Fauquier Hospital in The truck was responding to a Warrenton. car fire call, WUSA-Treported. One firefighter and two passenNo warning lights were at the were in critical condition at gers crossing and none was necessary Hospital Center, because it was a private drive, Washington, D.C., said. Caldwell idena spokeswoman WUSA reported, citing state police. as Michael An unidentifed resident told tified the firefighter Kirk. acciWQRA Radio his son saw the Another firefighter was in critical dent. He said it would have been with head injuries at condition to not difficult for the truck driver in Fairfax County, Fairfax Hospital have seen the train because the Stuart-Riz- k Mary spokeswoman was had train its light on, visibility identified him as Caldwell said. good and the crossing is on a flat, Ernest James Colbert. straight stretch of track. Passenger William Roby of BowThe truck was shattered by the flatMd., who was sitting toward the ie, was The biggest piece impact. tened across the front of the loco- front of the train, said he heard a motive and the only clue it had "big thump. ... Then, I could tell been a fire truck was its color: red. the train came off the tracks.; I State police spokeswoman Lucy started bracing myself." "Luckily the train wasn't going Caldwell said firefighters Mark both fast," said Roby, who was very Matt and 22, 23, Smith, Miller, traveling with a group to New of Catlett, died at the scene. to see Sunday's professionOrleans Sheriff's Deputy Fauquier County football al game between Washing150 more or R.R. Crawford said ' ton and New Orleans. were on the train injured. people (Continued from Page Al) call and had turned onto a private road off Virginia 28, which parallels the track, when the accident occurred, authorities said. STUDENTS: nt wife, Alene, in South Carolina to nine. There were long lines at those offices Thursday as thousands of people applied for grants and loans to help cover storm losses not covered by insurance. An angry Sen. Ernest Hollings, ., also criticized FEMA. "We've got to make sure everything possible has been done at the Washington level. FEMA is still the bottleneck," he said. But U.S. Rep. Arthur Ravenel, a Republican whose district includes Charleston, blamed partisan politics for some of the criticism. "It's very easy to find fault and point fingers," Ravenel said, adding he believed FEMA was moving as fast as it could to speed storm relief to the state. Meanwhile, an insurance group estimated Thursday that Hugo caused $2.5 billion in insured losses in the state. The preliminary figure, released by the Property Claim Services Division of the American Insurance Services Group, does not include PIONEER: 29-O- King is confident his marriage to Julie Alexander, 41, who runs firm in a Philadelphia, will last. "What Julie and I both know and this is what experience is there can never you S'ves ! after this, or anything as strong," he said. said today the president would increase the number of FEMA offices was a total of move on. King, 55, writes in the 1 issue of "USA Sept. Weekend.' lawyer-recruitme- TRAIN: HUGO: 59 12 lb. pkf. of Colorful L AUTUMN LEAVE! mi Ref. $3.99 mi Sale I t MAIL RATES IN UNITED STATES 1 Month 6 Months One Year HERALD TELEPHONE ADVERTISING DEPT EDITORIAL DEPT BUSINESS OFFICE CLASSIFIED DELIVERY SERVICE Utah's Favorite . Creative Superstore (((CM i! for Home Decor and Gifts $ 9 00 $54.00 $108.00 NUMBERS SALT LAKE 373-505- 0 OREM 373-505-0 484-270- 373-645- 0 M-- 375-510- 3 Copyright Scnpps League Newspapers. Inc., 1989 374 2707rulcjriWir 373-505- n I H S32 E. 224-944- 0 0 571-360- 9:30 9:30 Sat 9:30 9:30 M-- 0:30-9:3- Sit 9:300:30 SANDY lb State I M-- I (t ri v OGDEN 9400 S. 2232WuklBtoa 0 9:30 9:30 9:30 9:30 rrtfifii LAYTON UftoaHIUiMall 394-916- 0 M 1 F 9:30 6:30 Sat 9:30-6:3- 547-973- 5 M-- Sat 10:00 9:00 10:00-7:0- |