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Show i; i ; . j Hiltlon at UVSC set for increase Toddisr left to dio under old house Birth control works only when It's used Page A3 PthH Page Csutrsi Ufc&s kpM tSf IS?? B1 ft'wpsfr fer 124 Yssrs, i Prave, Utah Masters lead Page C1 Page D1 - & PiiSJfcsw tei8sirt Kssaptr By DONALD W. MEYERS The Daily Herald tle money, one of them shot Elder Voorheis in the head. LDS missionary from A Wayne Voorheis, Elder Voorheis' father, Pleasant Grove remains in critical condition said he was told that his son had about a 20 in a Buenos Aires, Argentina, hospital after percent chance of surviving the wound. he was shot during an attempted robbery v Voorheis said the reports indicate that the , Wednesday night. shooting was accidental. The gun discharged Elder Orin A. Voorheis was returning to his while one of the robbers was removing Elder apartment with his companion, Elder Armonda VoorheisVbackpack. J. Barry of Cleveland, Ohio, when they were , "They hoped they could find money in their accosted by three men, LDS Church spokesman backpacks," Voorheis said. He said his son and Don LeFevre said in a prepared statement Elder Barry cooperated fully with their attackThe trio attempted to rob the missionarers' requests and did not offer resistance. Elder Voorheis entered the Missionary ies, and after finding out that they carried lit Orin A. Voorheis Huston grabs 83 cents Training Center in May of 1996 and was assigned to the Buenos Aires South Mission. "According to the mission president, he is one of the finest missionaries. He follows all the rules and does his work," Voorheis said. Voorheis said his son is a hard worker, having graduated from Pleasant Grove High School through an independent study program that required more work than a regular classroom program. He is one of seven children in the Voorheis family. "His older brother said, of all the brothers and sisters to take, he was the purest," High school 'home ec' classes fight for Voorheis said. Florence Voorheis, Orin's mother, said the family will fly to Argentina if his condition improves or church officials feel that they need to be there. She said the Church's First Presidency remembered Elder Voorheis in its prayers during their weekly meeting in the Salt Lake, Temple. The Mormon Church has approximately 52,000 missionaries at work in 310 countries. Two missionaries were killed during political unrest in Bolivia in 1989 and another two were shot to death in Peru in 1990. - space By BRANDY ANDERSON The Daily Herald There's a food fight brewing at Timpview High School between Principal Randy Merrill and proponents of family and consumer science classes. Merrill has suggested clothing, food and a slew of other "home ec" classes start to share classroom space with science classes which are high in demand and hurting for room. Two years of science is required at the high school but additional science electives are consistently filled, creating a need for more science classrooms than already exist. Merrill said there are 53 sections of science being taught and 53 rooms open for science instruc-"- ? tion. Teachers don't have time o prepare or set up their rooms k. because classes are in them "I don't want to tell kids they can't take science," Merrill said. "We're not going to turn kids away from science, math and applied technology." Meanwhile, family and consumer science classes are experiencing declining enrollment, Merrill said. Eleven times during the day those rooms are open. "The question raised by the principals here is, 'We have these specialty classrooms which are huge and only used a portion of the day and we have a need for science rooms,' " said Provo Superintendent Mike Jacobsen. "Rooms are sitting vacant when other rooms need space." But Timpview teacher LaRae Mason points out other areas of the school sit dormant as well. ' "Is the auditorium, cafeteria, photo lab or commons area a waste?" said Mason. "I think they want to move here because we are the least valued. They feel that family sciences is something that can go." Rod Crockett, director of secondary education for the Provo School District, said Merrill approached him a couple of weeks ago to ask if the science classes could make use of the foods room. ' Crockett said he told Merrill he doesn't want to cut into this program. He'd rather see it expand. "My concern is that there is a real opportunity in the commercial Wilderness bill prompts visit t f, ) :.,(-- X Picante sauce made in New v f ! I 1 ' 1 j-- ; - ' - r tit j --I .n- I f J Daily Herald photosMarc Lester Eleventh-grad- Ryan er Rice, above, welcomes a student at the start of r occupational preschool class at Timpview High School Wednesday. Left, senior Clare Morris plays g a game with a preschooler during the class. Timpview High School family and consumer science classes are struggling to keep hold of their space in the school as their enrollment decreases and the demand for other classes increases. rt? X' it' 7, . . .r ' J; . Legals Lifestyle Movies Obituaries Opinions Weather Dl Tonight partly cloudy with near record cold again. A 30 percent chance of snow showers. Lows Saturday partly cloudy. Local breezy north winds. See Page Highs 20-2- 5. mid-40- s. A4. D6 ...B2 ...B4 Sports CI State Television World B3 .D4 A7 Cannon says in his prepared remarks, "I have come to New York to ask the people of the 26th. District to urge Mr. Hinchey not to introduce H.R. 1500." j In that Utah is 2,200 miles away from the Empire State, Cannon said Hinchey has needs in his owri district for which he should be givi ; ing his undivided attention. "The bottom line is that Mrj Hinchey should spend his time on (See CANNON, Page A2) ; Cities wait for river to crest ii J ' By TED ANTHONY AP National Writer Find it 11 Hinchey not to introduce a House bill. So Cannon was holding press conferences in New York today. Hinchey plans to reintroduce his House Resolution 1500 designating 5.7 million acres of federal land in Utah as wilderness. Hinchey first introduced the measure in 1993, however, it nevef advanced to a vote on the House fruit-tastin- IldllUlIgii maty MllflllIiij rare niMeraBs on i Crossword If you think that's weird, Utah's District 3 congressman was in New York today trying to influence voters. Republican Rep. Chris Cannon .is hoping to convince New YorK floor. I B"i. Business Classified Ads Comics ' By PAT CHRISTIAN The Daily Herald (See HOME, Page A2) D4 C4 E3 E2 E8 E3 ; York City! back-to-bac- Arts gfa 111 Air Quality The air quality today was good for all areas along the Wasatch Front See PageAl put By NANCY BLISS Daily Herald Business Editor Ever wish you could walk back in time and talk to slaves on a Southern plantation, see what early America looked like before skyscrapers and ATVs, rub shoulders with Civil War soldiers or sing along with vaudevillians? Now you can, thanks to a donation from the Ameritech Foundation to the Library of Congress. The gift is making it possible for the average Joe to view rare materials that once were only available in locked archives. Ameritech Library SerA year ago Provo-base- d vices, a subsidiary of Ameritech Corp., and the Library of Congress teamed up to announce a compe wihatiiniHMftnv ; N.D. Troy' FARGO, Krabbenhoft camped out early; in his own kitchen, with today his girlfriend, his dog and a big red sleeping bag. Ten feet away behind a towering wall of bagged sand, a swollen river was knocks i ing. They slept in shifts, a half-hou- r, each, and kept the radio on. If 4 Related story, Page A3: - tition to determine which institutions would be awarded grants to digitize their rare Americana materials. The materials will be included in the Library's Internet collection. The first cycle of winners of the Library of National Digital Library Competition was announced Thursday. The 10 winners, including libraries, universities and historical societies, will be able to digitize rare materials to be included in the Library of Congress' National Digital Library. This will be the first time materials not held by the Library of Congress will be included in the National Digital Library. fell silent, they knew the electri3- ty powering their three watrr pumps had failed and a basement flooding emergency was at hand: ; "If I'm asleep for five minutes too long, it's all in here," said Krabbenhoft, a logistics officer fof the North Dakota Air National Guard. His 150-foback yard was" under 5 feet of water this morning, as was most riverfront property in Fargo and neighboring Moorhead, Minn., where the Red River rose to (See AMERITECH, Page A2) (See FLOOD, Page A2) If ot |