Show —r7 iwQiwnswai Saving a teen’s privacy May 22 1939 Today's forecast: High 77 Low 43 j What’s reasonable and unreasonable for parents Sunny Celebrating Jazz do it their faith the hard way Local congregations Utah faces off in Blazer-lan- d 1 pm NBC Channel 5 observe Pentecost 5A 4B xaminer mwm THE TOP OP UTAH 6INCE 1fi88 Adams taKes on A tough loss in the finals a new challenge ¥ in Ogden city lx- New school superintendent arrives from a rural assignment in Oregon i By JENNIFER Standard-Examine- I GALLAGHER refugees enter Albania NATO air strikes staff r More Kosovo blacks out Belgrade power plant hit GDEN - Ted Adams is undaunted by the idea of going from a rural 4000-- I student Oregon school district to superintendent of Ogden schools with its mixture of inner city and middle class schools It's a challenge he feels well prepared for because 25 percent of his students in Jackson County School District No 9 are from an unincorporated town that is similar to an inner city Adams said The 15000 residents of densely populated White City Ore near Medford are mostly Mexican-Americaand other Latinos “Our most populated area also has the highest incidents of poverty and ethnic diversity” Adams 51 said in a phone interview He thinks the lessons he’s learned in his six years as superintendent of the mile district will work well in Ogden Adams has spent the last four years decentralizing his district so that schools manage themselves without a lot of interference from the district But his philosophy of decentralization didn’t sit well with some in the Jackson County School District according to reports in the Medford Mail Tribune Newspaper articles last summer reported that some parents and staff felt Adams was doing too little to lead the district and requested that he resign Subsequently School Board member Rick Chamberlin resigned saying that Adams would not accept direction or scrutiny by the board But according to School Board member Alan Bates Chamberlin simply disagreed with Adam’s philosophy on the best way to run a school district “It was a difference of opinion” Bates said in a phone interview Friday The concept of decentralization is an idea that seems at odds with Ogden schools strategic plan which seeks to bring all Ogden schools up to the same level But Adams disagrees “In my experience there will need to be many different views of how to reach goals depending on the population of the school” Adams said “What will keep us focused on true north is that we have these shared goals that are the mission of the community” Ogden Education Association President Linda Visscr said she hopes Adams will understand the needs of the district especially when it comes to school safety and teacher morale “This is a very urban district that has lots of high-ris- k and students” she said “Safety has to be an issue And it’s been hard on morale to lose a superintendent The Associated Press BELGRADE refu- gees riding tractors poured across Yugoslavia’s southern borders into Albania - breaking a weeklong lull ' Alliance bombers rained low-inco- missiles in daylight across Serbia and returned in the evening Planes roared over Belgrade late Friday and early Saturday and heavy fire resounded across the capital There was no immediate word on casualties or damage but widespread power cuts blacked out Belgrade and nine other cities early Saturday anti-aircra- ft 600-squa- re NATO jets dropped carbon wires bombs short-circuiti- that conduct electricity Yugoslav media reported Earlier this month the alliance started using the special cluster bombs that disperse carbon filaments across wires that conduct elec- tricity the short-circuiti- transformers dent Slobodan dreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians After days of reports of mass desertions by Yugoslav army reservists a Foreign Ministry spokesman said troops who showed up in two central Serbian towns this week were just “regular sol- diers returning home” as part of a reduction of Serb forces in Kosovo "There are no desertions” Nebojsa Vujovic said Some 400 army reservists returned this week to Aleksan-drova- c and Kruscvac saying they would not go back to the front-lin- e said news reports in Montenegro the republic that along with Serbia forms cials hope Cabela’s By MEUSA ANN WILSON Standard-Examine- While some Box Elder County small towns are just beginning to find ways to attract businesses to stay alive others have charmed companies like Wal-Maand Malt-O-Me- rt KORT DUCEStandarct£xammer consoled by senior Kade Boyer after the Boys State championship game loss to the Bountiful Braves during the Soccer tournament at Hillcrest High School in Midvale Friday Story4B AGOKY OF DEFEAT : Lakers’ Bonneville’s Brock Blake is 4-- 0 a huge outdoor catalog and retail staff f la’s al In Perry they are courting Cabela’s LL Bean Bass Pro and others “We are in dire need of a tax base We have none We’re anxious for it to work out here” Perry Mayor Hal Allen said Friday workers began cone struction on a truck 155-acr- chain will anchor Developers are also courting LL Bean a clothing and outdoor equipment store and Bass Pro an outdoor chain similar to CabeWith the development Point Perry developer Ray Morley of M13 Construction hopes to capture some of the 7000 trucks and over 30000 vehicles which pass by the marshy lands west of Interstate 15 at the Brigham City 1100 South exit every day on their way north - to Yellowstone Idaho or the Yukon If he succeeds it could 4-- A Games pin celebrates Salt Lake’s ‘bribery’ tmim S i -- ! f t' Mffc Radio personality says his trinket offers up humor for locals By BOB WARD StandarcTExamtner staff LAKE it or not Salt City is now as the Olympic bribery capital of the world And those with a sense of humor stand to make a little money from it Hank Hathaway a longtime Salt Lake radio personality has created a new lapel pin that reads “Bribes R Us” The pin resembles a Utah centennial license plate with Delicate Arch but includes a prison inmate in stripes The pin hasn’t even been publicly unveiled yet but he’s sold nearly all 500 of them already “I’m getting calls from all over the country for ‘Bribes R Us’” 1 lathaway said SALT mH Certified nurse midwives find it’s a job you can love A listing of high school graduates throughout The Top of Utah IlSytonHIHfno Bivert? Hilfii But for some wannabe Davis County residents they may as well be More than 900 families arc on a waiting list for rental assistance from the Davis I lousing Autlmrity and the fear is those numbeis will swclL “I’m getting calls from all over the country for ‘Bribes RUs’” -- Hank Hathaway Radio talk show host black-and-whi- te I KOHT DUCE'Standard-Examme- r SEiTIMEWT: KKDS talk radio host Hank Hathaway holds one of the Olympic pins he designed outside the radio station in Salt Lake City Friday The FBI even contacted I lathaway recently - not as part of an investigation but to buy as many of the pins as possible Hathaway only sells up to 10 at a time KKDS-A- With 18 years in the radio business Hathaway is not a by trade o The host for an idea one day and decided to follow it through The 1060 just had 08773 "- - 1 ' T —iV-l- ti fffi Tiii Wnli id oooof Printed on recycled paper pin-mak- er talk-radi- See BRIBE4A r HR COPY Milosevic blamed the “NATO aggressor" for the mass exodus of hun- Box Elder asks firms to stay awhile in town at-ri- See ADAMS4A Yugoslavia - A new tide of Kosovo Two missiles also hit Kolu-bar- a power plant 20 miles southwest of Belgrade injuring nine employees there private Panccvo radio reported Many in the wave of 3700 spoke of Serb security forces banging on their doors and ordering them to immediately leave their homeland Presi- t - ifr |