OCR Text |
Show fgfi A2 THE DAILY HERALD, Prwo. iil imwwwwii I tab, Sundaj, (kluber U, 19 n immiiii m Yeltsin names n ew security chief MOSCOW (AP) Seeking to reconcile his unruly administration. Piesident Boris Yeltsin picked a flew security chief Saturday who is 8 low-ke- y politician and the apparent antithesis of Alexander Lebed, the maverick fired lor trying to uke too much control. ! Yeltsin's choice of Ivan Rybkin. a former speaker of parliament, deemed designed to bring a conciliatory, pragmatic figure into a Kremlin riven by infighting since the president retreated to a government rest house outside Moscow to await heart surgery. ' During his two years as Duma , speaker. (Rybkin) became a symbol of obedience to Yeltsin." said Andrei Piontkawsky. director of the Strategic Studies Center, an independent think lank in Moscow. "The main consideration for Yeltsin, after so unpredictable and defiant a person as Lebed. was to name a person w hom he can trust completely." he added. Yeltsin, unlikely to return to e work before the end of the year, moved decisively in recent day s to halt the feuding that gave the appearance of a government sliding into disarray during his absence. full-tim- Ephraim teen CAMPAIGN: hospitalized (Continued from Page Al 700 hospital that would be after shooting fied hardest the GOP plans but some would e been forced ) hit by ; ;A Ephraim boy remains in serious condition after teing accidentally shot in the stomach by a friend who was cleaning out a handgun, according to Robert Marshall, an officer with the Sanpete County Sheriff's Office. ;LDS Hospital identified the vic; tim as Nicholas Madsen. Madsen and his friend were in Midsen's room in the family when the accident hapMarshall said. The clip had pened. been removed from the 9mm gun. but one bullet remained in the ihamber, he said. ! Madsen's brother and a friend, frho were both downstairs at the rime of the shixrting. called 911, Marshall said. ' Madsen was transported to Sanpete Valley Hospitai and then to LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, where he apparently underwent surgery. resi-deh- TRAGEDY: ; ( Continued from Page A1) dency spoke privately with the family to console them. ! "The church leaders are very sensitive to families' problems," says Joe. "It was a neat experience for our family. President Faust told us there is no tragedy in death, only in sin. We know we will see both Nathan and Julia again." In addition to their beliefs, the Smiths say they have always placed top priority in taking time ATTORNEY: (Continued from Page AI) as women than some of the guys." A woman often feels much safer talking to another woman about being raped than she would telling it to a man. If there's one area that infuriates these prosecutors, it's child abuse. It's also tl.e area w here they feel they can do the most good. 'The child abuse cases anger me always," Laycock said. 'Their lives (the victims'), in some cases, are just ruined. There's nothing I can do but put these guys away so they don't hurt them again." O'Bryant said she also finds the child abuse cases the most difficult, yet the most rew arding. "Seeing justice done." O'Bryant said, "sending a child molester to prison those are the leases you get emotionally attached to." The combined efforts to fight crime started long ago. Laycock and Ragan began working together after Ragan referred Laycock to a job at her office. The two knew each other previously. "I wanted another female in the office." Ragan said. Laycock had just graduated fiom Brigham Young University's law school after teaching school for seven years. "I went through classic burnout." Laycock said. "I wanted to do something where people assumed I had brains." Thus the move from English teacher to the public defenders of fice and then to her current position as a Utah County Attorney. Through the job changes. Laycock has seen some of her former students in the courtroom. At first she was defending them. Njw she's prosecuting them. They're alv ys embarrassed. Laycock said, but she hopes she's helping tliem. Maybe the criminal charges will trigger something to make them want to change their lives. "It's one of the fulfilling things of the job," Laycock said. "Helphelping as much as ing people you can." Joining in team efforts has worked well for the four women though they admit they get along just as well with men. But Laycock said their friendships have more to do than gender. "We work well together," Laycock said. "It's not the women. It's the personalities.""You tend to gravitate towards people you share interests with," O'Bryant said. Yeltsin and Rybkin held a meeting Saturday at the Ban ikha sanatorium, during w hich the president look a dig at the ousted Lebed. whose bid for greater authority put him in constant conflict with other top officials. The president called on Rybkin to act "within the bounds of the powers given to the Security Council by the president." Ye'tsin w as quoted by a spokesman as saying. Yeltsin's decree also named Ry bkin the president's chief representative in negotiations w ith separatist rebels in Chechnya. A sepa "we're putting 00,000 officers on the streets." In the 1994 crime bill. Congress authorized 100.000 new officers by the year 2000. So far. 20,000 of those officers are on the streets, according to the Justice Department. The administration says it has provided financing for all 44.000 of the positions for which Congress appropriated money. WORST ECONOMY Dole frequently tells v oters that the economy under Clinton is in woeful shape. In his last debate, he went even further by saying it was "the worst economy in a century." Not even close. Aides later said Dole probably meant to say "productivity growth" was the lowest in more than a century. 1 hav only to consider closing. BIGGEST TAX INCREASE Dole continues to blame Clinton for the "biggest tax increase in history " in 1993 even though it has frequently been pointed out that the claim isn't trje when the f are adjusted for inflation. With that adjustment, the largest U.S. tax increase since World War II came in 1982 under Reagan. And it was written principally by Dole, then chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. Using 1993 dollars as a measure, Dole's 982 tax increase cost S260 billion over five years. Clinton in 1993 proposed 5266 billion in tax increases over five years, but congressional negotiators cut that to about $241 billion. 100,000 COPS Clinton repeatedly boasts that Under Clinton, the economy has grow n at an annual av erage rate of 2.7 percent, about tw ice that of the Bush years but below the 3.0 percent pace during the Reagan presidency, according to the Commerce Department. The single-woryear for the economy since Commerce began keeping records was I98Z during the recession of the early Reagan years when the economy shrunk by 21 percent. for their children. "We take our children on v acations at least two or three times a year," Joe says. "No amount of money or time can replace the precious time we get to spend as a family on those occasions ... The one thing that really comforts us is that there are no guilty feelings about not having spent enough time with Nathan." That time has not only helped the Smiths' grieving during process, but has also helped their children become develop into quality people, the couple says. Judging from the nearly 100 pumpkins that line the walkway to the Smith residence, it w as evident that Nathan was one of those people. Children from his fourth grade class at Orchard Elementary School painted and delivered the pumpkins, along with handwritten notes from each student, as a show of support for the family. One note, written by Nathan's friend Devin Moss, included a poem that seemed to reflect the feelings all of his classmates shared: Nate the Great, that's his name; LAWSUIT: state a procedure they had created and allowed many to become legal- es 1 st ized in the country. "We have no (Continued from Page Al) cessing criminal aliens." Rogers added. "That means those criminal aliens will go back out on the street." The INS official also said the application for suspension of deportation is only a privilege for those arrested by immigration agents and not a tool immigration attorneys can use by placing clients on deportation proceedings to then apply for the suspension of deportation. "They're putting their clients in the position of possibly being deported." Rogers said. "One thing that should be remembered is that these attorneys are treating this process as if it were a right. It's not necessarily a right, it s w ithin the discretion of the Immigration and Naturalization Service who we place in deportation proceedings." Moak stressed those wanting to become legalized in the country aren't those immigration officers want to deport. "These are people who under the law qualify to become legalized. They have a lot of connections to the community. They've been here a long time. They have a lot of family members who are either U.S. citizens or permanent residents. They have more than in the foreign country. him to deport the criminals the expense of the innocent ties here We want but not at people." The attorneys say they don't care how long the INS takes to process their clients' applications, as long they're accepted. They say they're asking immigration officials to rein choice but to file this lawsuit on behalf of those clients and others similarly situated," Moak said. Rogers said Moak and Flores have been putting between 10 and 15 clients on deportation proceedings a month, w ith all applications granted. The threat of the lawsuit comes after months of negotiations with the Utah congressional delegation and the INS which agreed to hire nine more agents to work in the Salt Lake City office in May. Early this year. Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch wrote the Justice Department asking for more than 20 agents. Republican Rep. Enid Greene also sent a letter. Republican Sen. Bob Bennett has been a vocal critic, often linking the state's crime problems on undocumented immigrants. The comments have infuriated Latino advocates. Rogers said the INS office deports more than 1,200 people a year who have felony convictions. Salt Lake City Police Chief Ruben Ortega has said of the more than 3.600 felony drug arrests he made last year. 2.900 were undocumented immigrants, most Mexican nationals. Of the 27 homicides in 1995, 30 percent of the suspects were in the country illegally. The attorneys have placed an advertisement in the Spanish-languag- e publication "Mundo to attract others affected by the change in the law and who would be interested in joining the class-actio- n suit. Those interested may call His-pan- 221-900- 4. rate decree Saturday dismissed Lebed from that position. Lebed, ousted Thursday as security chief, negotiated a truce with the Chechen rebels in August. Rybkin said he planned to uphold "the peaceful settlement in the Chechen republic." "I think very' difficult work has been done, and it should be continnews ued." he told the ITAR-Tas- s agency. Rybkin, a former Communist Party official w ho turns 50 on Sunday, wa serving as chairman of the president's Political Advisory Council before his appointment. DRUG CZAR Clinton and Dole both fail to mention important facts when they use the White House drug control office as a political sy mbol. Clinton showcases his appointment this year of a former general, Barry McCaffrey, to head the office. But in 1993, Clinton slashed the size of the office by about four-fiftas part of his effort to reduce White House staff by 25 percent. Dole criticizes the president daily for those cuts, saying it is proof the president has been "AWOL during the war on drugs." But as a senator. Dole voted against creation of the drug czar's office during the Reagan administration. FAMILY LEAVE Clinton repeatedly declares that 12 million Americans are taking advantage of the Family and Medical Leav e Act he signed into law. It is true that about 12 million of the 14.5 million people who took leave from work in the first 18 months of the law were covered by the law. However, most would have gotten the leave anyway under preexisting company policies. cx mm 5li .57 i Cdfafefcoa,. fttaSlB Cftt mZ& r Lip (fed, ft. so-- H ,.3m.m I Meat I APPLES hs ,af CAESARSA1A0 Me,7V2t. 3 111 i I Afk Bonless, Top Sirloin 1H C0T3&EEF ferial, fe. FRYER ESASTS botes. safes. h. POLLOCK i in Sfew,eU Vim LOH 14l ns ma wnj pa, j k. LO SAUSAGE .....i HHjnK. w. ........ 1M i f:t i ..aWT ltaOT,lk ...arW k. f! BAC03 I ffct$.k i- - . APPLES I Nalley's OHDiLO Being nice is his game; 'Cause his name is Nate the 15 ol Reg, ',1 1 . ICECREAM CHftiCtanLSfjL Pieman. 1 (Mfepfeifo 2r SPICED CIDER mb FRETZELS T B CERAMIC TILE AND MARBLE E INSTALLATION i.MJtksnr ctrrsisstiii MCHtAT ql .urnr uihime taubasty First Quality CARPET starling at usl t Jr?" picTiwrriT .S3 A tX SjT, kOtteM SPAailTI SAUCE, A iiivAvtiiicE ;feei22o,Ral,&t,fcec... SYRUP fehilfjata I2CE-A4O- I Hot or Thick T. Great, everybody liked Nate 'cause he had no hate. The outpour of community support has helped the Smiths cope with the family's latest trial. "To have one of Nathan's friends write that is really comforting," Joe says. "He wasn't the captain of the baseball team or anything like that, but he was a great person. He was always helpful, always the first one to offer help to someone who needed it." mam AFrtfS 64 oz., All Varieties r- -j A EUROPEAN-STYL- CU? O'KOODLES $499 37343331100 W I foods asst, 3 tares PANCAKE L'.IX Seneca, 1555 North Freedom Boulevard P.O. Box 717, Provo, Utah 64603-071- 7 Classified Advertising Retail Advertising Subscriptions and delivery service Newsroom For Departments not listed above FAX 0 .373-50- 8 itsnetcom Pub- PRICE SPIDER WEB Lats(lSktoW)4Ciaiit L0N3ELACXWIG $.50 $1.25 lELACKUGHTEULB ail , WekfeUfe. Ci w in 1M jJ, 3r LIGHT SET (icrights) Ptnakin. Ghost Sldl. Rtf. 7.99 IULI IMMU1 11 B, luJ HNb, IKg. aV inw l 1M I. IS .u IncAl EUC&EId 6lofUI)eMSQUti86S88 TRICK UK I STICT I SPRAY . 2.99,1 fmR,HV Daily Weekdays and Saturday Sunday SPREAD m CAM 8T; 3 USPS (ISSN: lished daily Monday through Friday evening: Saturday and Sunday morning by Pulitzer Community Newspapers, Inc.. 1555 North Freedom Boulevard. Provo. Utah 84604. Periodicals postage paid at Provo. Utah. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Daily Herald. P.O. Box 717, Provo, Utah 84603-071Established August 1, 1873. NEWSSTAND V &MMKoM.24ff. SMWEt3Y ! Pumpkin or Witches 5 0891-277- 143-06- 1 ii rrvjr. rfi mm ME .S3' RarstoalSoLctft. 12 oz. hzea 0 373-54- .edifl .4 tasta7fctautmft APPLE & GRAPE 8e Dotty Retail FRtTOS&CKEETOS 1M1 a gf EfiEAD UI1WW VVVUH Provo VWCCrtOOttW-49- 2mE& Hiaa,214K. IIAIIIllA LAUWtiTili Jotbon, iinvjkii HHWn HUV-1- 1 V jj J ; ,;Mf . SUBSCRIPTION RATES n Monthly City zone Rural or motor route $9.00 $9.25 $13.00 Mail, in USA On Year City zone Rural or motor route" 'Rates may Aw Guaranteed ouImm VXV $108.00 $111.00 $156.00 Mail, IN USA EVIL EYES LJ Reg. $5.99 ; Ulan CouMy delivery: Your newspaper should arrive by 5:30 p.m. on weekdays and 7.30 a m. on weekends. If you do not 3 rece ve your paper, please call by 7 p.m. weeKdays and 11 a.m. on weekends. Delivery is guaranteed. For new subscriptions, restarts, home cancellations or de'ivery information, billing information, call week- 3 days from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. I STEAM TRUKX tuasizE TrUDRe&loi3 STEAM TIWiVXiewszE) ttCntftalp, i STEAM Reg. 26.99 an HAIR SPRAY 9 J oz. for tbe price of 7 oz. (1.49 Value) .oSl ADVIL TABLETS 13 TlKXiuHoq.i,. 15 iTirCoest.0esiris,Re.319 !SH:?oocRC(ixnoo or GELCAPS (lXctte25rTffiW125ct,lle.9J9...5 CREST fM! UclffTlrTE.ftlaKJSlii ...1" baxiis soda to0t?aste ;m TARTAR CONTROL , Member: Audit Bureau of Circulation Mi Qualify The follow ing information is taken from the Wasatch Front air pollution report compiled by the Utah Division of Air Quality. The Complete report is available by telephone at I The air quality this morning was as follows: Overall air quality The air quality Saturday was good for all areas along the Wasatch Front. Outlook The forecast calls for little change in pollution levels with a clearing index of 1000-plu- s and there is little change in the trend. Friday's Highs North Provo oz....37...good pa. ...60.. .mod. Lindon The Scale 0 moderate; good air: I0I-I9- 9 unhcallhful: 200-29- 9 very unheallhful: 300 and above haz0 ardous. pa For retail display or commercial classified 8 or advertising, call The fax number tor advertising materials is j. carbon monoxide ozone sulfur dioxide particulates Note The Utah County residential area reading is taken from the Lindon monitoring station. na NEWS We welcome news tips. To report a tip or if you have a comment or question regard3. ing a news article, call DEPARTMENT HEADS Publisher Parkinson Editor Paul C. Richards Mike Stansfield Advertising Director Clark Linford . .Business Office Manager Circulation Director Larry Hatch Brian Tregaskis Prepress Manager Kirk Abbreviations co oz so Laredo Boot ADVERTISING 0 To place a want ad, call between 8:30 a m. to 5:30 p.m. weekdays. Steve Steele pm u..i. i.j n. am A 1 t it fij V iu t- -s Kk,9 it m M. jPJH ST .41" lxtyi Ret 70.00 LEVI'S SOI JEANS 'MM a, SMI-Tof- ' ui. -- -- LADIES LAREDO COVERALLS OVEHALLS .tedstt ten -- nf mine UN 9 3St, W9, LEVI'S 23 JACKETS toi!(!8Cvi,RiW) ...55 Pressroom Foreman OFFICE HOURS Monday through Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Closed Saturday and Sunday CopyngN . it" & Li PuMmtoTmrtyNtmcapm. me, IMS SNACK BAR Hot Ham & Cheese Sandwich Fresh Hoagle Sandwich 1 22 oz. Dtink 1 29 99 J POOB |