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Show Rising stars expected to challenge at Open r Payson father jailed for taking kids camping 14 V Experts: Trash dangerous baby walkers Nation A9 Local A6 Sporfr Bl TTHE1 ffiY HERALD A PULITZER COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER PROVO, UTAH 50 CENTS too Minsa ranmrM Hay aosipd Fredrick Laird last spotted in Anaheim The Daily Herald The FBI said TIBURON, Calif. the Utah man who allegedly kidOrem girl last napped an month raped a woman on Monday, stole her car and went on a shopping spree with one of her credit cards. As of Wednesday night, Fredrick Sydney Laird, 38, had not been cap- tured. The FBI said Laird was last seen in Anaheim, Calif., Wednesday morning. He is still wanted in connection for the June 25 abduction of his second cousin, Chelsea Lund, 11, of Orem. The girl was freed her five days later near St. George. The FBI and the Tiburon Police Department conducted a joint press conference Wednesday in Tiburon to share the details of Monday's crimes. The city is located off the coast of Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. According to Tiburon police, the suspect responded to a newspaper ad woman had placed a seeking roommates. He showed up at the woman's apartment about 2 p.m. with an kitchen knife, police said. He entered the residence, punched the woman, tied her up and raped her, police said. He then stole the woman's 1992 Nissan car a black, four-doMaxima GTE with Georgia plates and one of the woman's 86605QF credit cards, police said. ld or The car has a rusty antenna and a scratch on a passenger door. A neighbor of the rape victim said her license plates were stolen around the time of the rape; police said Laird may have swapped the plates, which are from Virginia and read to holp Fredrick Sydney Laird, 38, stands feet tall, weighs about 6 200 pounds and has brown eyes. He shaves his hair. He has tattoos on his right forearm and back. Police said the victim eventually untied herself and called police. She was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for cuts and bruises and released Monday night. lift High: Luis Garcia, a student in the Secondary Migrant Program, gets a look at Utah Valley from the air Wednesday. raps Now ZFC8551. UVSC aviators give migrant teens JULY 16, 1998 THURSDAY, If you have informa tion about Laird, call the Orem Public Safety Department at 229- 7372 or the FBI at (301) 477-656- See SUSPECT, A7 Dssooedl Warnings to Mp Valley deal vmh heai Hr Common sense, water a necessity By GIB TWYMAN - The Daily Herald PROVO For Chloe Langston, it was a close kind encounter of the first-ai-d during the current heat wave. Langston, health and safety director for the Provo branch of the Red Cross, was returning Nation: The to her northTexas heat Provo wave has east when home caused she saw a runnearly 50 ner collapse in deaths and her front yard. withered She quickly crops him throughout got hydrated and the South. applied cold A4 towels for heat prostration. He recovered and returned home. But he was a classic case of how not to handle the heat we're having. "Running at noon," Langston You have said. "A definite to use a little common sense." when Physical exertion is one of the and how much main things the Red Cross cites in its tips for surviving the heat wave in one healthy piece. no-n- MARC LESTERTht Daily Herald ' Next: Rich Crandall, instructor of aviation at UVSC, escorts a student of the Secondary Migrant Program to his ride-alon- g flight Wednesday. ' o. v. V JASON OLSONThe Daily Herald Slip sliding: Hudson Snarr slides to the bottom of a hill at Rock Canyon Part In Provo Wednesday during a friend's birthday party. Park officials ask sliders to move the slides periodically to avoid damaging the grass. "Stay away from strenuous physical activity in the iniddle See HEAT, A7 Nebo students look into flight and firefighting careers By ANN POTEMPA The Daily Herald ROVO ll Jesse Margaret and played a little role reversal Wednesday afternoon that put them at each other's mercy. Jesse Renteria and 48 other students with the Nebo School District's Secondary Migrant Program rode in Margaret Gonzalez's school bus to the Provo City Airport Wednesday to try their hands at flying airplanes and putting out fires. Utah Valley State College coor 7T J Today: MtfhlOS, LowCS Today: High 108, Low 67 dinated the Fire Science and Aviation Science programs to show children of southern Utah County migrant farmers what kinds of careers are available in the technology MWHIWW, ' ! , -, Crain, a UVSC flight instructor, took the pilot's chair. Jesse, 12, of Payson, became the copilot. And for five whole i field. Once they arrived at the airport for the program, how 1 Gasper Velarde is dizzy flight over Provo. Margaret took the back seat in the Piper Arrow four-seairplane. Jason ever, at minutes, Margaret of .... Payson let Jesse take the controls. Jesse took after his full advantage. "We're ready to go, Crain yelled to Jesse. partner "Ready, Margaret?" Jesse f yelled to the back seat, throwing his bus driver a big smile. Only a handful of the 49 students who came to the UVSC Fire and Aviation Science program Wednesday had flown in an airplane before. Jesse joined the majority of the 12- - to who hadn't, talking about the "tickly in the stomach" feeling he had before climbing 2,000 feet into the sky. Margaret doesn't have a lot miles herself. of frequent-flie- r Several years ago, she flew for the first time from Texas to Utah after she was grounded overnight due to problems with See FLIGHT, A7 Developer keeps up pressure on mall deal the city, University Mall and ZCMI, while People for Fair The Daily Herald Taxation is mounting a grassroots publicity campaign to OREM Opponents of the raise opposition to the deal. city's agreement to help "The difficulty we had was University Mall are mounting a who is the plaintiff and to overturn attack whether it is a battle of Provo deal. the By DONALD W. MEYERS two-prong- versus Orem," Jones said. Attorney Bruce T. Jones said defendant said But one Price Development Co., a division of J.P. Realty, is the sole See MALL, A7 plaintiff in the lawsuit against - . ID numbers defended Some local higher education officials say not using Social Security numbers as identifica- tion is becoming a national trend, but BYU and U of U staff and faculty say they're not worried. A3 flPOOR COPY L::ngu2l ed ban OX'd Cowboy poets coming A federal judge refused Wednesday to block Proposition 227, the initiative that bans The Third Annual Peteetneet Creek Ranch Hands Cowboy Poetry and Song event will be bilingual education and requires all students to be taught in English. A3 Utah Valley Briefing. A2 Classified Comics Crossword Friday at the Peteetneet Academy, 110 S. 600 East, Payson. A2 INDEX Ann Landers ....C3 Horoscope 6 IIIB61 055 0005 0" " Movies 8 C5 A18 A18 C3 C3 Obituaries A6 B5 Opinions Bl Sports Stocks B10 TV listings ....A18 Weather B12 Onlln: http:www.lMraktoxtni.coni -- f |