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Show A, f The Daily Herald Thursday, January 23, 1997 Driofs Hinckleys unhurt in auto accident SALT AM CU V (AIM Chun li I'lvsiilonl (ioidon H. Iliikkti-- cscaVil injury and Ins wile. Maijoric. received only minor scutches when iheir ear ran into steel beams loaded on a ttuck in Nicaragua. The lliikkleys were on then way to the Managua airport Tuesday when a pickup carry inj! steel beams slopped abruptly. Some ol the beams struck the Hinckleys' rental car. the church's public affairs office reported Wednesday. Hinckley. 86. president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints since 1995. and Mrs. Hinckley, 85. and their party are on y a tour of six nations in Central America. The party continued to the airport and traveled to San Pedro Sula, Honduras, for scheduled meetings with church members. Elder Russell M. Nelson of the church's Quorum of the Twelve and his wife, Dantzel, were in the car following the Hinckleys and not involved in the accident. I 10-da- roads may be funding option Toll SALT LAKE C1TY (AP) Toll roads and the public-privat- e partnerships they foster may offer Utah a practical way to finance construction of new highways. Gov. Mike Leavitt told transportation industry leaders. Leavitt could have reviewed his proposal for funding S2.6 billion in highway improvements planned for the next 0 years. Instead, when he addressed the annual breakfast gathering of the Utah Highway Users Conference on Wednesday, he talked about his Christmas vacation. When the Leavitt family visited their California beach house, they drove a new eastern corridor highway through Orange County. The trip from the airport to the beach that used to take 75 minutes took only 20. Leavitt said. anJ it only cost $2. 1 Mayor recalls more friends who gave gifts I.AM, SALT ( in Ituas (AIM Mayor iKvdee Conadini has remembered a couple ol mimic friends who pvc hei money when she needed it When she released 20 names ot wealthy donois who gave lur more than S2(I,(KH) to pay personal debts last year, she omitted Barbara and Norm Tanner of llolladay. who gave hei 'S 10.000. The Tanners are longtime friends of the mayor and her husband. Ron S'engich. Corradini's lawyer, said the mayor simply forgot about the donation when she provided the list last November. "When the mayor and were going over everything. I sent her back to look through things. She remembered this one." Yengich said. "There was no effort to hide. It was a name she 1 forgot." Norm Tanner, nephew of the late O.C. Tanner, owns 35 percent of O.C. Tanner Co. and was its v ice president before retiring. "We just helped her as friends would." said Barbara Tanner. "She was in a very tight financial position. We were w illing to come to her aid. We had nothing to gain from it." In another development Wednesday, a prosecutor said that if Salt Lake Buzz owner Joe Buzas refuses to honor a subpoena in the Corradini investigation, authorities can haul him before a judsie. Bud Elicit of the Salt Lake District County Attorney's Office said that if Buzas carries out a threat to defy prosecutors, the county can force and Ins w ile r,iv e groups Wade anniversary pro-choi- rally on Roe v. By KIMOf PI r A '.oi i.llt"! I smi be !v ol i MtlMI'H Y CV' tin all I'io I l ( "ill ll' I' si il I' .id. nl inn;', hi'i none "I iii" sii eJ ji lo lli llin-.- Y I.e. - l ' ' i ' v a. ! ill o,i, - ji i . ' liuas seveial is among It lends of the m.iyoi who have been oideied b I lien's ollue to explain the fills and piovide business and peisonal tevoids Piosecutois arc living to determine il Conadini bloke stale laws by accepting gilts that could influence her decision- I ' I the mayoi ik '.Milt wliK l 'i1 v Imm l.ilci. Nil I I sponsored' ly, j by the Pro-I.il- Coalition, brought their children and some carried Mpiv including one that tead. "My mom chose life, so did youis." Bishop Get iigi.- If Niedeiauei ol - Gunnarson believes the council will only be able to require the donois or the mayor to testify and it cannot demand personal financial records. Gunnarson also says state law limits the amount of information he can give to the council's Rep. Lowell two-third- Nelson, I'l Ilioie ill in aboitioii oes pa-- led the Capilol lolimda and law nial.eis lined up one alter aiioihei io vondeinii the piaetiee. "I'io life is alive in Utah." ileclared Hep. Lowell Nelson. R Highland. Both of Utah's senators and Rep. Merrill Cook. IM'lah. sent representatives to talk about their opposition to abortion. Rep. Chris Cannon. R Utah, who attended the rally, pledged to for the prinei stand "four-squar- e of life." pies Ile recalled his firs! meeting with Henry Hyde. R III., chen man ol ihe louse Judiciaty Committee "Before even hit the chair he asked. 'Are you pio life.'' and then said. 'Ol course vou are. vou'ie from Utah." Cannon said. Many of those attending ihe ral- making. Buzas has until mid I ehniai v to turn over three years of the baseball financial team's records. Two past presidents of the Utah Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Loni DeLand and Stephen McCaughey. say there are arguments Buzas could make against providing the information. Buzas could assert his Fifth Amendment right against or could argue that the records are private, privileged documents. DeLand said. McCaughey said the battle "could drag on for awhile." and he recalled a similar case that went to the Utah Supreme Court and took years to resolve. Meanwhile, the City Council's power to issue its own subpoenas is being questioned Attorney Neal Gunnar-son- . of community services of Planned Parenthood of Utah and a menibei of the coalition. "W'e need to put money into programs where it makes a difference. We just feel (another appeal ) is a waste of taxpayer dollars." Ion referred to a Lake Reseat cb poll that surveyed 500 Utah tesj dents last summer. s It indicated of Utah voters agreed the federal govern ment should provide funding foi family planning services. Seventy-fou- r percent of voter; said they strongly favored inctvas ing public funding for family plan ning services and counseling, and 67 percent favored requiring schools to teach sex education. "We think it's time Utah voters stood up and made their views known." Ion said. Amy Fetter, director of the Utah Women's Clinic, said family p! inning services prevent an estimated 17.000 unintended pregnancies and 1.500 abortions yearly in Utah. "As educators and providers ol family planning, we know ihese services work to make abort on safe, legal and rare." Fetter said. But at the rally sponsored by die e Utah Coalition, aboit-osaid far too many aboropponents tions have been performed. In I95. 3.292 abortions were Utah." Wade. - "We have spent enough money on this." said Ly nda Ion. director I v. is alive in "Pro-lif- e le.'alied apoilion li . pro-choi- t ( I ,1, i Ih'ih ihe pio hoiee and .aiheiin'.'s weie held a !.iv ailei kepul'lu ,ai (io. Mike We.liw.l a lust people in no I. mn attended lite i mIhh n ne leiein e lo m.iik lit ' lib ;.. s.n o Uie laitiliii.uk I s Supieine Ih-- i I o :li inn , ihe I . I,, in.li lii.il'. ce ilholi, )0 uh a piavel ei op, pii 'i. , t Im'iii ,n hie at e.H li ol s Mid li ol its eireiilli ... ih-.- i m li S i1 ' ki I in held m ( Vjit.tKH) and loaned aiioihei N20.IMXI. aci online I. Mini leaviii and Democratic Attorney General Jan Giahani deciiled the stale will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to hear an appeal of a lower conn's ruling striking down as unconstitutional the last leg of the state's restrictive iuul n law. The appeal io the high court would be Utah's second involving the law. Last June, the L'.S Supreme Court tiled in a decision that the appellate court wrongly struck down the entire state law after finding most of it unconstitutional. In recoiisideiing the case last i 4 month, a panel of the 10th C'i v u it t'ouit focused on ihe law's han of abortions after 20 weeks gestation and reversed a decision by I S. District Judge J. Thomas Greene, who had upheld the ban, Not surprisingly, abortion opponents were pleased with the governors decision to appeal the circuit com! ruling, while the Cioiip was not. three-menibe- r Pro-Lif- in Utah. "It can never be that the right ol privacy comes anywhere close h the right to life." said Rep. John "I wani lo Swallow. encourage everyone here to con in tic tolluie for life." f ADD to your untlerstaiKling 1 A K E AW AY am fusk hi MLITIP1A wurskilLsina inv estimator. ft AU Ages A 7 Ik." 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S tn Scipio UUt-- to cet-ial- Johnson, a student majoring in business at Westminster College, said he has made successful leaps from 56 buildings, bridges and cliffs. "If wanted publicity. I would have done it at :30 in the morning." Police Officer IX'bbie Graham said the two told her they had hung around inside American Towers until they could jump off the roof without am bodv seeim:. s' Special Hot Special He rp AUCTION of the lime. Sky divers charged after jump SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Two men have been charged with misdemeanor distutbing the peace and trespassing after allegedly parachuting from the downtown 350-foAmerican Towers condominium complex. Jay Johnson. 20. and Frank Gambalie. 26. were stopped by a Capitol Theatre security guard after they landed in a parking lot about 2 a.m. Wednesday. Anti-abortio- n, Prt-- A alculus T7" rw j Bn 225-958- 5 Don't Wait. Call loday! 1 learning to learn mm tti r r FFi f n SAVE UP TO 75 OFF SELECT MODELS OF HUNTER DOUGLAS WINDOW COVERINGS. 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