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Show D2 The Salt Lake Tribune UTAH Saturday, August 14, 1999 FOR THE RECORD ACCUSED RAPIST REARRESTED ASouth Salt Lake man police accused of preying on mentally disabled women was arrested Sundaybut rere a leased Wednesday after prosecutors failed to chargehim withi hours. Patrick James Kolloch. was arrested again Thursday and BYU President Goes Outdoor Enthusiasts Staging Protests Up the Mountain to Hail $313M Success Rallies across countrywill urge Congress not to reauthorize program BYHILARY GROUTAGE charged in 3rd District Court with rape and forcible sodomy, both first-degree felonies. Police say the womanhas the mentalcapa‘ ¥ - e ty of a 4-year-old. South Salt Lake Detective Dave Browning said two people have said they saw Kolloch leaving the woman z. Patrick James apartment the night she was S Kolloch raped. During Kolloch’s arrest Sunday, police found a diarydating back to 1993 that «detailed nearly two dozen sexual crimes against wo“men — all mentally disabled, Browning said a r SQUAW PEAK — Brigham Young University President Merrill Bateman could have danced jig and clicked his heels with glee while marking a mile- stonein the school’s five-year “Lighting the Way” fund-raising campaign. But that was waytoo dangerous. Instead, the 62year-old Bateman stood stately in a dark blue suit and white shirt at the edge ofa cliff and listened closelyto directions being fed to him through a microphone at his feet. He turned and changed his stancea little when he wastold to, but never, ever looked up or down Three men on a prison work-release programare five-hour ordeal was over. Thefilm, shot some 4,000 feet above the Provo back inprisonafter being accused of raping a woman campus, will be shown at a massive celebration Sept. Police investigated the three men and a 16-year-old boy in connection a Wedne: in which a 19- 24 at the Marriott Center. Membersof the community, students, alumni and donorswill be invited to year-old womansaidthe foursomebeat and rapedher. ‘Thefour gang members picked her up, druggedher, attend used the moneytoinitiate 80 projects. In Utah, revenue has been used to improve campsites,instal] trail and interpretive signs, main tain trails and improve parkiny BY TOM WHARTON THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE cannot afford to recreate on pub- Anexperimentallowing federal agencies to increase fees charged to outdoorrecreation enthusiasts with moneyand industry support will have a greater voice of management of recreation on public is drawing fire from groups attending this weekend’s Outdoor lands. We do not wantto see that and restroom facilities. “In an ideal world, we woul happen. Thereis too much access have all the appropriations we downtownSalt Lake City more.” need to take care of recreation The truth is we don’t,” said Un ALT LAKE TRIBUNE ‘I kept myeyes on the campus,” he said when the INMATES ACCUSED OF RAPE Over Increased Fees at Forests, Parks lic lands,” she said. “Those such as the motorized recreation folks Retailer Summer Market Showin for ATVs. Wedo not wantto see An organization calling itself The Public Access Coalition in- to stage a protest this morning at cludes outdoor industry giants such as Patagonia, Kelty and the Public Access Coalition plans 8:30 in front of the Salt Palace. It is one of 30 rallies scheduled around the United States today The fee demonstration pro- gram began as an experiment in 1997 and is due to expire at the end of this year unless reauthorized by Congress, It allows more than 100 national forests and parks to implement new entrance Grabberas well as environmental organizations such as The Access Fund and the American Canoe Association. But the fee demonstration program has its industry supporters as well. “We like fee demo,” said Bob Hall, executive director of the Outdoor Recreation Coalition of dersecretary of Agriculture Jim Lyons, who oversees the U.S. Pér- est Service. “Recreation fundiny has declined over the past 10 years. We are dealing with in creasing use and a backlog of maintenance.” But Scott Silver of Orego}ibased Wild Wilderness who helped organize today’s National Day of Action protests views the program as a way to commerciu! raped her several “Wereally hopeit will be grand,” Batemansaid. Andit shouldbe. Thecapital campaign, launched limes,” said South Salt Lake Det. Dave Browning. The victim was taken to the hospital and released. The woman told police she was friends with one of her publiclyin 1996, was meant to raise $250 million for the university. Today, six months beforethe official end of the effort, the total is close to $313 million where theyare collected. manufacturers, educators, a camerawas mountedonthe rented helicopter, Ba- putin placeat popular U.S. For- poseof fee demois to tryit out in age spiked with a date rape drug, Browning said. The has donetheuniversity. Among the totals are more than $55 million for scholarships and grants; $17 est Service sites such as Mirror Lake, Flaming Gorge and American Fork Canyon. Salt Lake Coun- a variety of locations for a couple of years to collect information. was beaten and raped special programs. The university endowment is creek Canyon. kind of money is generated? And said Silver. “They want to turn recreation into their next business. To do that, the public must pay to recreate.” Doug Hoschek, director of mar. keting for Concept III Textiles the reaction of the state and fed- and the inventoroffleece used. in eral agencies involved. outdoor clothing, has been one of heat her up quite a bit and then attackers. The suspects allegedlytold her they would drive her to an apartment to get someof her personal belongings. On the waythey stopped at a local conve nience store and coerced the womanto drink a bever- men purportedly took her to an apartment whereshe Oo KiDDIE-PORN CHARGES STAND \ ashingtonTerrace man’s attempt to have Utah's sexual exploitation of a minor statute struck down has been denied bya judge. Gary Davis Peterson, 39, had askedfor dismissal of nine counts of the second-degree felony charges for allegedly downloading kiddie porn on a Weber State University computer last October. His attorney, Neil Kaplan, argued Utah's law is too broad, lacking languagerequiring specific sexual acts be depicted before a prosecution can begin. Kaplan saidevery other state and federal law regardingchild pornography mentions sexual acts and defines them. But inadecision released this week, 2nd District Judge -arley Baldwin denied the motion,siding with Deputy Weber County Attorney Sandra Sjogren's argument that the statute’s wording says photographsareillegal if meant to sexually arouse. Peterson's trial will be scheduledat a later date. BYU Unearths Bones of 1857 Massacre Victims @ Continued from D-1 Church spokesman Dale Bills Seatedona folding camp chair undera tree while temantold storyafter story of the good the money million for buildings; and more than $36 million for morethan million richer than it was in 1996. The school’s Freshman Academy, designed to ease young students intocollege life, was started with the donated funds. Undergraduate research opportunities have been created by someof the funds when they were used to boost faculty research projects Student enrollment was expanded from 27,000 to 29,000, “A blessing we did not think possible when we began the campaign,” according to a newsre- established. liftedthis university to newheights.” FRUIT ABOUT TO’) FALL? ~~ So Gee In Utah Woman Co Sale ee Price oS need it. I just can’t tell you how ton County Sheriff Kirk Smith who was on handfor the excava tion. “It just really touched me Jarvik-7 heart, but that he wanted to do what hecould so otherswith Steamer/ Juicer tery, and bones of adults and chil he would make it. It was an ex periment and it was thefirst tpemorial wall 4 feet wide and 2 feet tall: a dedication ceremony is scheduled Sept. 11 It will follow aseries of reburi als. ceremonies and makeshift monuments for the slain pioneers who originally were buried in shallow graves exposed by ani mals, erosion and flash floods troops led by Army Maj. James H. Carleton of California rounded up the ex posed remains o} of the pio neers and reburied them under a heart disease might benefit i don't think he ever thought wholost their lives. Wearetrying not to let this (discovery) disturb the positive strides the church has taken to memorialize the place he said \ The only person ever held ac Water Bath Canner Reg, $29.00 third-generation device than Absent fromFriday's o~ Sale Price Csfl 17 $2499): tradeinhis left-ventricular assist device for a human donor heart “The fees are discriminatory towards lower income people who e CANDY e CAKES « MEATS « FISH GREAT SANDWICHES event was nected toaccess to nature. 485-8727 963 E. 3300So. PRICES SLASHED 20-40% OFF!! LARGE SELECTION & MANY SIZES Open FRI: 8:30am-9pm, m. 260 SO. MAIN Bed Sa, COMPARE FOR YOURSELF: TCI DIGITAL CABLE VS. SATELLITE Avoid upfront costs that may exceed hundredsof dollars. ficial heart. Marsden, who missed A Apple/Potato Peelers dioWest pump 133 days before a became available. ClampStyle Reg $2999 Sale Price nearly dying from a degeneration of the heart muscle Asked how a person so young could get heart disease, Longre. caused bya sale Price ™ ie $69.99 — we : “Sometimes we don't know what causes it, but when it hap pens, it’s life-threatening. Hefi nally ended up truly on death's Long continued. Suction Style Reg. $3499 Sale Price $2499 $29.99 = ~ Grain Mill Vs v tificial-heart program The two womenalso met 21 sponded it likely was as's KWIK MART 355-3335 tC Sy et | 80 AUTaahae ma thefirst cardiac patient in Utah since Clark to receivea total arti den, who in April 1995 became door,’ quality of life in Americais con Handmade oriental rugsfrom Afghanistan Local channels included. virus. fee demo, In a handout, he argues that public lands and waterways should remain free. He said the success of his business and the TODAY & TOMORROW ONLY Boise, Idaho developer Al Mars: year-old Mike Cross of Layton who was also implanted with a HeartMate pump July 17 after cheologist. “The LDS churchis The U.S. Forest Service hascol- lected $30 million since the program started, including $21 million in fiscal year 1998. It has are subsidized. 21 qt said he would rather wait a few years to be implanted with a That operation revived Utah's ar spot as a respected place for those $34.99 Reed Clark, from Provo and no relation to Barney, is so confident in the latest technology that he that the bones were found working in goodfaith to make this grazing industries using forests the industry leaders in opposing Reg $3999 Sale Price downonthis I'm sure Glen Leonard, director of the Church Museumof History and Art in Salt Lake City. was able to determine the number of men women and children associated withthe recovered bones, accord ing to Washington County Attor about it. We're doing everything wepossibly can to remain sensi tiveto that,” said Baker, the BYU lie facilities when the timber and sions or recommendations for the future based on howit goes.” to pay to use previously free pub- Steam Canner HeartQuest, Clark Farrer “My husband will be looking donor heart This was # very tragic event then make better informed deci- Reg $139.99 After seeing and holding the replaced. It was under that wall and many still have deep feelings We can wrong for recreation enthusiasts Sale Price an answer to this problem his planeFriday, beat Clark's re cord by surviving on the Car neyEric Ludlow $219.99 30 qi holds time.” shesaid. “Hejust couldn't satisfy himself not to tryit Ever sincethen, I havealways said that someday, therewill be largepileof rocks A masonry wall built in 1932 to encircle that cairn is now being Leonard was not allowed by church authorities to comment does the public react to it? What portunities on national forests, 19 ps4 as Aso avalable n 15 ot much that means to me.’ Shesaid her husband knew he new said: The results will include: How commercialize recreational op. The All American Pressure Cooker/Canner Delux Cast Aluminum Stainless Steel Jence of disease or trauma \ private for the bones’ reburial \ contractor working for the church has resumed building a “The pur- the national forests. We object to currentefforts to. SALE PRICES was not goingtolive long on the what really hit me hard BYU archeologists are examin ing the fragile bones for the sex and age of the pioneers and evi tributors and suppliers. ize recreational opportunities o1 (With this Coupon Offer expies 8/27/99) tual experience,” said Washing deeply. I saw buttons, some pot Denise Boggsof the Utah Environmental Congress said it is outdoor companies including sales representatives, retaile) EXTRA 10% OFF gravesite dren. But the children — that was ty charges a fee for using Mill- America that represents 1,000 ALL CANNING GEAR IS AN the Mormon church erected a granite wall listing the names of the slaughtered pioneers ry wall that had encircled the It was a very humbling, spiri- In Utah, day-use charges were COME AND EXPERIENCE THE DELIGHTS OF EASTERN EUROPE @ Continued from D-1 Working by hand, BYU arche- Eighty percentof thosefees are to be used in the park or forest “Those funds becomesacred when theyare given to this university,” Bateman said. “And they have Is Implanted covering the bones fees. LUYBOCHKA grave site as a dignified, iasting memorial to the victims of the 1857 massacre.” ologists spent twotedious days re- existing Donations ranged from $1 to $25 million, Bateman said. Repeatedly, he said “Lighting the Way” is not the end of fund-raising campaigns for the school. Rather, heprefersto thinkofit as the beginning. Artificial Heart The pioneers’ bones were exposedlast week by a backhoe re movingthelast of a crude mason double Leelibraries have been expanded with funds from the donations. and the School of Family Life was saidFriday that the church is “restoring the Mountain Meadows or lease. Both the Howard W. Hunterand the Harold B. countable for the 1857 assault was MormonconvertJohn D. Lee, a majorin the Iron County Militia. He wastried, convicted and executed 20 years after the slaughter. In 1990, fees “a “We knew we only had a few hours. really, before we knew he'd be gone. Now we'rewaiting to bridge to transplant. Cross said all he remembersis feeling verysick. “It was quite a what happened. grateful for this But I'm very surprise to wakeup, I didn't know - ~ oon coma KitchenWare = 4700 5. 900 E788 £. 9400 S. IY PLACE SANDY MALL 263-1898 553-1988 Watchdifferent channels on different sets at the same time without buying expensive equipment. 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