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Show r Clinton's knee delays summit with Yeltsin Arches proposal Home decor looks awaiting review outside for style Page C3 Page A4 keep 0etrswaSh to Sweet Jrpapr for 124 Years, Provo, Utah - A Pulitzer Page (ll') Community Newspaper pressdleimtt Clinton faces strict schedule By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON His right leg wrapped in a flexible brace, his active lifestyle on huld. President Clinton faces a diet and a regimen of vigorous exercise to prevent his weight from ballooning as his injured knee heals. "We're really going to look closely at what he eats, what people give him to eat because they like to give him nice things to eat because they like him so much," said Dr. Connie Mariano, the president's persona! physician. She told reporters that Clinton, who returned to the White House from the hospital Sunday, also is concerned about the possibility of weight gain. "1 need to limit what take in " she said the president told her. "I will be the enforcer in the White House," Mariano said. "I'm just going to say no." Dr. Marlene DeMaio, an orthopedic surgeon at the Bethesda (Md.) Naval Medical Center who helped repair Clinton's torn tendon, said his stumble on a stair at golfer Greg Norman's Florida home early Friday could be a bit of blessing in disguise. "You know, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade," she said. 1 House r ' Clinton will not be golfing or jogging for months, and DeMaio said: "We on his medical team are going to take this opportunity to help him out and get a different type of training regimen for him." "So when he's able we're going to get hirn in the pool and get him swimming and doing some water aerobics," she said. But that is not all. The president will also be put to work on leg presses, squatting, biking and walking and exercises, she said. "So he's got that to louk fomard to," DeMaio told reporters. "When he's not answering questions from you all on affairs of slate, he'll be working out." The Navy medics gave him a head start on his diet. His final hospital breakfast: strawberries, bananas and skim milk. Clinton returned to the White House at midday Sunday, smiling, wearing a black nylon running suit and riding in a van equipped with a wheelchair lift borrowed from former White House press secretary James Brady. Brady has used a wheelchair since he was wounded in the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan.' "1 feel fine today, and I've done two days of therapy, learned to use my crutches," the president said as his wheelchair was rolled down the van's Panel demands g probe By JIM ABRAMS Associated Press Writer stair-climbi- 3 K gra-nol- u, i V t fund-raisin- AP photo Aloanian refugees wave from aboard an Italian ship after they were rescued from an Albanian gunboat, which was carrying more than 600 refugees when it started taking on water in the Adriatic Sea, near Brindisi, in southern Italy, today. For more on Albania, see Pages A6 and C3. (See H ATCH. Page A2 ramp. footsteps great-grandfathe- r's Police work today isn't what it was like in the Old West but. for one family, the principles of law enforcement remain the same. JD Boyd, who was the Utah County Sheriff and Provo Police Chief in the late 1800s and earh into this century, believed in treat- legislation By DARLENE SUPERV1LLE Associated Press Writer pro-choi- n, (See ABORTION, Page A2 WASHING TON Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch contends the White House, under scrutiny for accepting questionable donaforeign tions, knew of Orrin Hatch China's inten tion to buy political influence. "They knew that the Chinese government was going to come into this country and attempt to purchase influence." said Hatch. His committee is demanding that Attorney General Janet Reno seek appointment of an independent counsel to investigate g Democratic activities. "Since 1W5. the FBI has told the State Department, the CIA. the Justice Department, both intelligence committees of the House and the Senate ... that the Chinese were trying to buy influence in this Hatch said Sunday on country CBS' "Face the Nation." He added that he believes the two National Security Council By TOM McHOES The Daily Herald WASHINGTON Competing sides in the emotionally charged abortion debate rarely agree on anything. But as the House gets ready to vote this week on banning what sponsors call a "partial birth" procedure, they are in accord that the real battleground is the Senate. That is where abortion rights advocates scored a victory last year when senators sustained President Clinton's veto of a similar bill. Opponents of abortion fell eight votes short of the required two-thirmajority. The battle involves a procedure in which a fetus is delivered feet first through the birth canal until only the head remains inside. A doctor then kills it by suctioning out its brains. Advocates of abortion rights use the medical terms "dilation and evacuation" or "dilation and extraction" to describe the procedure. The House voted to override Clinton's veto of the ban last year, and it is expected to again pass the bill by a substantial margin. That vote could come as early as Wednesday. "It's a closer margin now (in the Senate) and if we lose any of our friends it will be Kate Michel-maconceded tough," president of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League. "It certainly looks like we can sustain the president's veto, but it is closer." side. Helen On the for the Alvare, spokeswoman National Conference of Catholic Jf "',',lllIWf rf. ' 1 htm ing people with respect while maintaining law and order. Now Boyd's daughters want to make sure his who have become peace officers in the past couple of years, cam on that tradition. "My father was a police officer to be proud of." said Provo resident Sadie Peay after she presented her father's badges to her grandsons, w ho are peace officers in Midvale and Uintah County, respectively. "Everyone loved him. no matter if he was taking them to "rison or not. He was a friend to everyone w ho knew him. Everyone respected the way he treated people who might have been enemies to him." Peay remembered a time she accompanied her lather to take a young man to jail. great-grandson- s, : ' V J rv I r Oaily Herald photoMatthew R. Smith Sadie Peay sits next to her grandsons, Officer Vance Norton, left, and Officer Jason Norton at the East Lake Care Center in Provo. The badges displayed were Peay's father s, who was a sheriff long ago. The sons were presented the badges at the care center. Insi Find it Weather Arts B7 Business Classified Ads C5 Comics- cents fund-raisin- Officers follow considers abortion SO B1 Hateh: Clinton knew Saved! !se if 6 1 Page B6 3 Centre! Utah's Utah advances - Dl B5 Crossword D2 Legals Lifestyle Movies - A5 Obituaries Opinions C2 C4 Television B7 B6 B7 Tonight clear. Lows mid to upper 30s. Tuesday sunny and warmer. Highs mid 60s. See Page A3. Air Quality The air quality is good for all areas along the Wasatch Front. The forecast calls for little change in pollution levels with a clearing index of 1,000-plu- s and there is little change in the trend. See Page A2. After Boyd arrested the young robbery suspect, she and Peay escorted him to his house, where he would gather his belongings and his mother would say her goodbyes. "She was cry ing the whole time he was packing his clothes." Peay said. "But my father handled the situation so respectfully. I was very proud of him." Until recently. Boyd's sheriffs and chief's badges had been displayed in the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Museum in Provo. But Boyd's daughters felt it was time to pass the heritage along to his who so far in their careers, have been fine officers in their own right. "We just wanted them to have something to remember their b." said Bonnie Shaefer. adding she is proud of her sons Vance and Jason Norton. "It's a way for us to keep the tradition in the family." Both officers have achieved accolades for their work in law enforcement. in just his second year as a police officer. Jason. 29. was great-grandso- er (See POLICE. Page A2l sraeiis, Palestinians ready for battle over building plans By SAID GHAZALI Associated Press Wnter JERUSALEM Readying for a showdown. Palestinians pitched tents and Israeli snipers and troops in not gear set up positions today on land in disputed east Jerusalem where Israel plans to build a Jewish neighborhood. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his government would not reverse its decision to start construction of the district this week. "If 6.500-apartnie- nt we do not stand up to threats over Jerusalem, we will not stand up to threats over anything." he told his ruling coalition. Netanyahu also warned that Israel was prepared to deal with possible Palestinian violence. "We are preparing for all possibilities," he said. A senior Palestinian official said violence was imminent, and Palestinian hospitals discharged some patients to make room for casualties from anv riots. In the West Bank, doens of Palestinians stoned Israeli troops to protest the construction of Jew ish settlements. The Israelis and Palestinians both missed today's deadline to begin talks on a permanent peace accord that would define borders the future of and address Jerusalem, Jewish settlements and Palestinian refugees. However, prodded by the United Stales and Jordan. Israel and the Palestinians sought to avert vio- (See ISRAEL. PageA2) 1 n tfir - wit Mnnriirrfr' J |