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Show c Monday, October 10, 1994 The Daily Herald Violent sex offender escapes Dsccffc Racial tensions on nmate climbed rise at Union High fence of countv iail it- - ROOSEVELT (AP) American Indian students at eastern Utah's Union High School say racial sion is making their campus thing but united. SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Law officers were on the lookout today for a violent sex offender who escaped from the Garfield County Jail over the weekend. Jack Ford, spokesman for the Department of Corrections, said that Harold James Dreyer, 29, walked into the southern Utah jail's yard to smoke a cigarette late Saturday night and then climbed a fence laced with razor wire. He was discovered missing about 1 a.m. Sunday during a cell check. who authorities believe Dreyer may have left the area in a stolen car remained at large this morning, a Garfield County sheriff s dispatcher said. "This is the ultimate nightmare," Assistant Salt Lake County Attorney Greg Skordas said, recalling the crime that sent Dreyer to jail. Early in 1992, Dreyer hid in a Salt Lake business building, waiting tenany- The Native American Student Council charges that the school's 138 American Indians have been targeted by others in the student body of 1 , 100 for racial slurs. And when the school's Ute, Shoshone, Bannock, Pima, Paiute and Sioux pupils fight back, the council says, administrators react with an uneven hand. "In other words, I could call you a bunch of names," said Sage Cesspooch. "So you come and hit me, and you will be suspended. ' ' ' The Salt Lake Tribune reported Monday that the council is calling for the Duchesne School District to include a policy on verbal harassment. Union High Lloyd Burton, for a woman to close shop. Once she locked up, he began beating and choking her despite her pleas for mercy. According to Skordas, who prosecuted the case, Dreyer told the woman, "Listen lady, I'm a School principal has been meeting with the students periodically to discuss the policy since a Sept. 30 student walkout. He acknowledged the current policy, has been a source of frustration for,Indian students: when a student strikes another, the hitter is suspended. Period. ''Those kids are really tremendous kids," added criminal-scienc- e teacher Jeff Stagg. "If they have gripes, as far as 15- - and gripes go, they are legitimate. Bui, it is hard to try and explain away '' 1 00 years of oppression. creep." The woman grabbed a broom handle, hit Dreyer on the head and sprayed him in the face with ammonia. He eventually fled, and was found by police later hiding naked in a trash bin. He pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual assault and was sentenced to a minimum-mandator- y prison term of 10 years to life. Last summer, a parole board wrote to the judge to complain the sentence seemed too harsh. Skordas called Dreyer one of the most violent sex offenders he ever prosecuted. Dreyer had called his mother in Salt Lake City recently to complain about "having problems" with another inmate at the facility, said Ford. Kids presenting probation officers with new dangers Dreyer is "a wimpy kind of guy," Ford said. "He's not one of those bodybuilder types." Ford did not know the details of Dreyer's crime, nor did he know why the man had been removed SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Hodges once spent a tense day in her office while police tracked down a teen who was fantasizing about killing her. "They found him sitting in front of his television with a BB gun in his hands," Hodges recalled of the incident several years ago. "It was scary." Once in custody, the boy told Hodges, his probation officer, that he never intended to carry out his fantasies. He was angry from the San Juan County Jail and placed in the Panguitch jail, one of the state's smallest lockups with just 10 inmates. But Ford said prisoners usually are "farmed out" to county jails for one of several reasons: the inmate's safety is in danger, the inmate requests a move, the jail offers a special treatment program or prison facilities are full. blue-eye- d, 10-ye- ar d weighs 150 pounds and has a bulldog tattoo on one shoulder. 1 MoSALT LAKE CITY (AP) in Roosevelt torists pulled finding a peculiar brand of justice -they can buy their freedom from rr zi - ' VM SALT LAKE CITY (AP) If you want to know what sparked a growing trend of installing video cameras on school buses, you need oniy look back two years and into eastern Utah's Duchesne County. It was there that a student, belittled as a coward by classmates, tried to prove them wrong by strapping dynamite to his legs and putting detonators in each pocket. Then he caught the school bus. ' Horror stories involving student passengers on buses are not rare, leading school officials to mount the cameras to capture the youths' misdeeds. The 1992 dynamite incident led Duchesne District to place video radios in its .cameras and two-wa- y first is the It districts jxjses. among iri Utah to do so. "That (dynamite) was old and unstable. And I told that student he the bus," could have transportation director Dean Peterson recalled. In Davis District, bus driver Patricia Leany says some of her riders have set fires and pelted her with empty soda cans and snow balls. But, she says, a female student "mooning" motorists through a back window is her worst experience in fouryears driving. members of the Sa!t Lake City Sheriff's department check out the wreckage of a small custom-buil- t biplane that arrest on minor drug or traffic SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Air Force officials, in designing an atomic plane it knew wouldn't fly, simulated nuclear reactor in Utah's west desert during 1950s tests, according to a newsmelt-dow- paper. The eight tests spewed potentially lethal doses of radiation into the night skies above Dugway Proving Grounds, the site of dozens of r chemical, biological and open-ai- radioactive tests during the Cold War, according to a copyright story in Sunday's Deseret News. Documents obtained by the newspaper through the Freedom of Information Act showed radiation clouds were tracked by sensors placed up to 20 miles downwind area and across a ' ' ) The Home Occupation is conducted ertirely a dwelling. The physical appearance, traffic, parking space and other activities In connection with the home occupation are not contrary to the intent of the zone in which the home occupation is located and do not depreciate surrounding values, as determined by the Administrator. Add Part Business activity may be conducted by the residing family and not more than one (1) person not residing In the dwelling where the home occupation takes place, subject to the following: On an annual basis the Individual holding the 1, business license must make a statement on the business renewal application regarding the number of employees working In the home and If the nature of the business has changed In any manner. All business licenses are subject to Inn provision upon renewal. 2. The holder of a home occupation business license Is responsible to comply with all County, State and Federal regulations such as, but not limited to, fire codes, building codes, OSHA salety requirement, EPA. FICA, the Disability Act, etc, which are applicable to their business. within 2-- J. of Kenneth having claims gainst the above estate are Required to present them, to the undersigned on op before 90 days from the ffst publication of this 'notice of said claim snuii 'jam forever barred. of first publication: !sptmber ! follows: 2-- All persons ; . 1994. Amendment to the Development Code, Section Becki Deceased. 'Date JeHery Mendenhall, Director No. 8620 Published in The Daily Herald October 10, On Tuesday, October 25, 1994, the Elk Ridge Town Council will hold a public hearing, in conjuction with the regular Town Council Meeting, at the Elk Ridge Town Hall, 80 East Park Drive. Elk Ridge. Utah, for the purpose of hearing public opinion on a proposed 4TATE OF UTAH ESTATE Details of the proposed amendments are on file in the office of the Utah County Planning Commission, 100 East Center St., Room 3800, Provo, Utah, during regular office hours (8 A.M. to 5 P.M.) until the day of the hearing NOTICE OF HEARING -- ' 21, 1994 Marylln R Beck Michael Beck 291 N Chlpman J American Fork, Ut 84003 , ' Personal Representative No. 6600 Published In The Dally Herald September 20; October 3. 10, 1994. NOTICC OF HKARINQ Pursuant to Section of the Utah Code Annotated 1963, as amended, Is hereby given that the Utah Coun-;fPlanning Commission ,wlH hotd a public hearing cur-,rntl- y y West Jordan were killed in the crash. The plane apparently crashed shortly before 1:30 p.m. while doing stunts. at Dugway. But the clouds traveled beyond that. When last detected, they were now spreading toward U.S. 40 Interstate 80. The town of Knolls, Utah, and border Utah-Neva- community of Wendover may have fallen in their path. The newspaper estimated, based on government figures, that total amount of radiation released by the tests was 14 times more than the near meltdown of a reactor at Three Mile Island near Middle-towPa., in 1979. "It is large enough to be significant, but it's not the worst thing they've ever done," said Daniel Hirsch, former director of a nuclear policy institute at the University n, of California-Sant- a Cruz. His assessment is typical. Several scientists say the releases we.e probably excessive, likely were useless given the program they were used for, and may have wittingly endangered citizens. un- Interested persons shall be given an opportunity to be heard. All Dated this Sth day of October, 1994. Janice H. Davis, Town Clerk No. 8612 Published In The Daily Herald October 10, 1994. in recent Icm revealed there years. "It makes you wonder what all did happen out there," said Preston J. Truman, president of the military watchdog group Hirsch, lor example, says the tests mayt have caused an extra "tens to hundreds" of cases of cancer downwind. Others say the tests, conducted on a remote portion of the desert military reservation, posed virtually no public danger. Activists are upset that yet more secret tests at Dugway have been revealed. Thousands of other se- cret radiological, chemical and germ warfare experiments have Down-winder- s. Court decision ST. GEORGE (AP) Supreme A state means that St. George residents will not be voting this year on w hether their southwestern Utah community's population should be limited. Utah's high court has denied a petition filed by Citizens for Moderate Growth asking for the initiative to be placed on the November ballot. An election bill amendment passed by the Utah Legislature May 2 prohibits city initiatives to be placed on general election ballots. The citizens' group, through member Bob Owens, lost a challenge to the amendment in July when 5th District Judge J. Philip Eves ruled the amendment merely clarified an existing law. Owens appealed the decision and the case was heard by the Supreme Court Tuesday in Salt Lake City. He argued the law was unconstitutional because it unfairly limits voters' rights. But the court found "unreasonable restraints" were not placed on the right of voters by the Legislainitiature in limiting city-wid- e tives to every two years. "Adding a municipal initiative to a crowded general election ballot may not have seemed wise," the court ruled Friday. Owens also argued that the tiative process had been begun in ini- February long before the so the amendment was passed law did not apply. The court disagreed, declaring Mountain America (toil n n i Mountain America Credit Union will be relocating their Provo Branch at 363 North University Avenue to a new, facility located on the corner of 500 West and 100 North. The relocation will take place early Spring of 1995. full-servi- those passing through. Either way, it is the way the Roosevelt Police Department has been doing business for several years. The practice has angered defense lawyers and civil libertarians, who claim it violates due process, and worse. Even the former city attorney called it questionable in court documents. It has also sparked an investigation by the Utah Attorney General. "It's flat-oextortion," says Kathryn Kendell, attorney with Utah's American Civil Liberties Union. "This is the classic Boss ut Documents show the tests were ordered because the Air Force and the Atomic Energy Commission d were trying to develop a aircraft and decided they should assess the hazards of a meltdown in an airy-reaction plane reactor. Critics such as retired biochemist H. Peter Metzger, who has studied the program say the military had long known that such airplanes were unfeasible. nuclear-powere- runawa- Hogg routine, where a guy wearing a badge takes money from individuals with no finding of guilt and with threats of more serious consequences if they don't pay. "If anyone else did this, they'd be arrested and thrown in jail." The city's power structure, from Mayor Leonard Ferguson to Police attorChief Cecil Gurr and y refused has to ney Craig Bunnell, ex-cit- St. George growth limitation initiative derailed 2-- I out-of-to- f Tests spewed radiation into Utah desert on Tuesday, October 18, 1994 at 7:00 P.M. in Estate of Elvera Bass Room 1400 of the County Adnministration Building, .Kirkwood, Deceased 100 East Center St., Pro-vUtah, for the purpose Pfobate No. 94 34 00445 of taking public testimony All persons having concerning the proposed Land Use claOrvs against the above change in the of the "Utah County estate are required to Plan Master Plan 1980" from: present them to the under"Greenbelt Area" desigol or to Clerk the signed the Qourt on or before the nation to "Dense Residenin 16th. day of January, tial Area" designation, 1915: or said claims shall Section 32. T4S R1E, north Lehi City area. be 4o;ever barred. as ''.. AP Photo in Herriman, just south of Salt Lake City. Pilot Weldon Glines, 63, of Sandy and James K. Sullivan, 13, of crashed Saturday '' , charges with cold cash. The arresting officer sets the price and releases suspects and their vehicles, court records show. The cop, too, is the cashier. Sometimes, even the Zions Bank branch pitches in. At the officer's request, Zions verifies motorists have sufficient funds in another bank to cover a check, confirmed bank Manager Kevin Van Tassell. Is it a seamy shakedown in the small Duchesne County city 150 miles east of Salt Lake? Or an expedient form of justice so as not to inconvenience NOTICE TO CREDITORS Richard Q. Kirkwood 673 North 400 East i American Fork, Utah 84003 . Hot 6618 Published In The Da fly- - Herald October 10, ,17. 2n, 1994 NOTICE TO CREDITORS ' ' ' - Two Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices ; " Plane crash . ; . Town using peculiar kind of justice - are over ; I Bus cameras keep children in line ', Oldroyd said none of his officers ever has been injured seriously by a juvenile in their charge. But the potential always is there. "Our probation officers carry nothing but their voices" for defense, he said. It was not the first time Hodges, a probation veteran with 3rd District Juvenile Court, has been threatened. But for her, it brought to light just how dangerous the streets Ur",a Kcome for Utah's juve friend, but she had moved. is Now, officers like Hodges must work with children who have easy access to handguns and are not afraid to use them. Ten juveniles in Utah have been arrested so far this year in connection with homicides. Seven allegedly used a gun. threats. Police on Sunday went to the Sandy apartment of Dreyer's girlblond-haire- had been arrested for petty crimes like shoplifting, smoking and breaking curfew, said Ronald Oldroyd, chief of 3rd District field probation. and decided Hodges would make a good target for the Jails also are cheaper. Holding a convict in prison costs $57 per day. Jail only costs $35. The Dreyer nile probation officers. Ten years ago, most kids supervised by probation officers -P- robation officer Marsha comment, according to The Salt Lake Tribune. that initiative boosters should have filed their petitions and submitted the proposal to the St. George City Council before the amendment became effective in May. The City Council did not vote on the proposal until Sept. I . raster any pubHc commont concerning tk auitwnarfie nMMrina eiwarisMH rnntmaMrta To mndi Critics especially are irritated at dubious seizures of vehicles from motorists, who are then allowed to "buy back" their own cars from police. Officers complete these transactions, sometimes with the bank's help. ttomt, pmm cN 37M120 and toav tfl CoUflCM inombtfl. mtaMfft on m fmnamlttMl PROVO MUNICIPAL COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA DATE: October 11, 1994, 7:00 P.M., Council Chambers Ptotp AMgianot. Opening Ceremonies invouooo 2. Approval of Minutes: no inutMtwaprea a s 3. Employe of the Month: Dm snrtor, Putottc SwvtoM Dwtnwnt - fmuMi by Sttty Srtgg. 4. Proclamation by tha Mayor: 1. Mtbrrton of Lift Dty, Octobw 11, 1M4 fm Prmntlon WMk, Odobw 1l, 1tM 5. Content Agenda: OnbstANCC 1H4-- . An OfdkwnM swittna IM iootrovd of ThouMnd Otk Milk SuMMaton, ftvMon of Thouptn Otk HUM lubShMon, Put I. whfch It I ravWon of Lol 11 ant Lot 12 MWt wbdMMon, 1Mt Ettt 2740 North Hi Bit Pitt I, locaMd pUno Family ntnaanBal) lent. Rook Canyon IWghtortioog' at Prow City, 1H4-- . An ortflnanc b. PROPOSE!) ORDINANCE franttng final approval to Tarranea VW CaMta lubdMakm, Pitt I, which la a itvlawn ol Lot I and Lot at Tarranea Vtow EttMoa Subtfhnaton, Pitt A, localaC at 1420 (Smsto PawHy Rnmmm) mnt, tndton MUto NttohbwtwoC ol Prow City. North ttoui Carta m Sit M Htrnt Iron tht Stptnbar 21. 1M4 Planning Com Horn Matting: 1H4-- . An ordtnanoa amending ttclona 14.12.070 14.1S.0T0 and 14.14.070 of 1 PROPOSED ORDINANCE ITEM tht Provo CHy Ordmanet aMnatmg atmtty bonut alkwancaa and othorwlat timpllhmg (antral tor tha IV4. and M aonaa, raovtrtmanta Impact (Approval 7:0) dtntity 104-AItcHan ITEM anjtnanot raottallng taction 14.17 .00 and anactlng a (PROPOSED ORDINANCE 14 )7 00 at tht Prove CHy Onjmaneee eetabwhtng new etanearde and requktmenti tor I PROPOSED Pi f, which to ol ThouMnd CM m n parking. ITEM M Impart (Approval 7:0) enananoi granSng eeneent to tha vacation at Ileal City Plat A, (PROPOK0 ORDINANCE 114-.A0 and approving MiMaan, Plat A. toottad it 1171 South Stat m the l amende, Meet t, Lota Provost South Malshboihood at Prove CHy, (Approved Aommtetrtttve- (Medium Multiple Rmeewmel), 5. Action Agenda Uodele on the Morton plan tor 1700 North (Lolend) Denetty m tht oevetopment ot oonooe (Letojnt) i Future dovatopmant plena tor Sia IM twee at orchard ftiend) fiiiiiMMa I ant A 171)1 Welti prams intnrnimiTl i tuMii Itcettt en eenecant Pit aand MtoreecPen at 1700 H CDlymtii ce I (Latond) Line (toctj Pfeoontatan en tutum IreAe penem Nv CVanpinev; ana (Nletc) Update on Mievelli preteeM In Ste North West area (took) Update on Oeofoetown Per (Tom) Concern atom hole m tonee Uween Ml and tostivi itt-o- t Removal ot weeoa on 000 North (Tom! 6. 7. Questions for the Mayor and Council. Mpnr't evwini. Requests for Information. an October M. 114, at IM &!$!ZZlnm he neboad. 'a. mm bpnpMten, tTom - ). In tie " tncS Chamber!. Ml Weal Caunpl On. Ml I7MH0. HUM |