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Show The Daily Herald Sunday, January 21, 199S 'ffl puDiicity irKs re-execut- ion Waldholtz still voting on issues mother of victim, murderer SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Rep. Enid Greene Waldholtz has managed an 82 percent House vot- in, record aunne tne past two months despite personal and financial problems. However, her record in the powerful Rules Committee is at only 58 percent. Thirteen of the 15 votes she missed there were related to the budget. On the House floor, 10 of her 26 missed votes involved the budget and government shutdowns, according to the Deseret News, which reviewed records since Nov. 1. that month, the husband, Joe, dissix for days following appeared checks and of bouncing reports financial impropriety. Rep. Waldholtz also filed for divorce and has blamed her financial woes on her husband. By MATTHEW BROWN King said she moved to the Ogden bedroom community, located about 35 miles north of Salt Lake City, to be closer to her work as an assembler at airbag manufacturer Morton International. Living in the same apartment complex was Taylor, who had returned to his hometown of Ogden a few months earlier after serving 10 years in a Florida prison for robbery. At 17, he was portrayed by a Florida sex offender program as a "remorseless pedophile" and a "danger to society." In contrast, Charla King's uncle, who will be a witness for the victim's survivors, is anxious to see Taylor die. Unlike his sister, Elliot King harbors considerable anger. "I don't know how I will feel (after). But I want to see him airgone," said the craft mechanic at Hill Air Force Base, who doubts Taylor will go through with it. In 1992, a despondent Taylor dropped his appeals and asked the state to carry out his sentence. He backed out several weeks later, however, after defense attorneys buoyed his hopes of winning an appeal on deficient counsel and improving conditions at the prison. appeals, but can still request a federal review of his case up to the time the order is given to BRIGHAM CITY, Utah For different reasons, John Albert shoot. The execution would be the Taylor and the mother of his first by firing squad in America victim shunned media attention shortly after Taylor, since 1977, when Gary Gilmore hiatus on capital demanded his death sentence be ended a carried out this coming Friday. , punishment by demanding his execution at Utah State Prison. Taylor said he didn't care to satisfy the public's curiosity over his Only Utah and Idaho have firing choice to die by firing squad. And squad options in their death senSherron King feared that recalling tence statutes, but only Utah the horror of finding her daughter allows the condemned to make naked and dead in her bedroom the choice between rifle fire or would rekindle the hatred that lethal injection. took her five years to purge. Either method seems merciful But now King says the attento King, when she compares it to tion generated by death penalty what she saw after coming home from work on June 23, 1989. opponents outraged by Utah's firing squad has forced her to talk. Calling out her daughter's name, "They say executing him is so she walked into the master bedbarbaric," King said. "Tell me room to find Charla King lying what's barbaric. My daughter was on her bed naked, a phone cord alive (while being raped and then wrapped around her neck, panties choked with a telephone cord). stuffed in her mouth and a nightHe won't even hear the sound of gown tied around her head. She would have been 12 the the bullets." Unless he changes his mind, next day. "We've never had anything Taylor will be strapped to a chair like it before and I hope we never early Friday to face a firing squad aiming do," said Washington Terrace rifles at a target pinned over police Detective Marcia Chris-tense- n, his heart. who was first on the He has exhausted his state scene. Associated Press Writer 10-ye- ar Court: Paternity suit filed late SALT LAKE CITY (AP) A woman suing a man she believes is her father filed the paternity lawsuit about 30 years too late, the Utah Court of Appeals has ruled. r.The appeals court, which dismissed Audrey Lynn Dow's suit on Friday, said a four-yestatute of limitations, or legal deadline, had expired. Once Dow turned 18, she had that four years to bring her suit before the window closed on Oct. 5, 1965. ' Dow, who now lives in New Jersey, was born in Salt Lake City on Oct. 5, 1943, at Holy Cross Hospital. She said her late mother, Audrey Athay, told her F.K. Gilroy was her father. Gilroy, a retired businessman who is in his late 80s and lives in Salt Lake County, denies being her father, according to court records. five-memb- er er ar Senator seeks Segal CFC use , t - . ' ... - - ' AP Photo Sherron King poses in her Brigham City apartment Thursday with the notebook in which she has recorded feelings of both hatred and forgiveness since the rapestrangulation murder of her daughter by John Albert Taylor. Taylor is scheduled to be executed by firing squad this week for the crime. Jzszl,i.. .. Visibly Revitalizi olution . I SALT LAKE CITY ( AP) A rural legislator wants to lift all restrictions on chemical compounds that scientists believe are eating dangerous holes in the Earth's atmosphere. Sen. Eldon Money, Fork, says he is undaunted by an array of federal laws and international agreements cracking down on chiorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which are thought to destroy ozone. His bill would bar any penalties within the state for the use, manufacture, purchase, transportation or sale of CFCs. The chemicals once were a common component in air conditioners, refrigerators, insulation and cleaning solvents, and were sold under the trademark name Freon. Restrictions on CFCs, Money said, are another example of federal mandates imposed on states vVith little regard for the impact. than vo AOVtHMSLMfcNI Swiss Scientists Discover New 1 Energy Product - - Nanocapsule and a . skin-compati- perform simultaneously. The appearance of lines and wrinkles c6 25 years of Lugano, Switeriand-Afl- cr research Lightning 828 was developed with the help of Swiss Laboratories. After Now, Lancome's exclusive with Botanically Pure Vitamin E is extensive testing with amazing results, Lightning 828 is now available in the United States. Scientists are amazed at delayed and diminished. 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