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Show lila Sata cc hhtaiaaialinenem + SECTIONC Ut Salt Lake Tribune SATURDAY, December 30, 1995 > MOVIES oy: Wéper Davis SaltLake Utah Page C-4 d - Wood Burning Prohibited Yadfow - Wood Burning Discouraged reen - Wood Burning Allowed 44 they believe Joe may have pilfered from theestaie of hisgrandmother, Rebecca Levenson. otion to Enid 1 a D ; 4 ures: Love ’ sn t Turn Off’ E D « TRIMYNE STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS AcMevver for Joseph. .Waldfather seid rldey hewn holtz staal the estranged husband oe tance,” Bruce Gelman. “Joe has done nothing to remedy the situation. You'd think he'd do some explain- Their lives, as well as their personal and campaign finances. have fallen under intense scrutiny To yy Tom Wharton lands important to water quali- said, “and I know shares that opinion. It’sbeenhard 4 on lot of people. It's been very hard on ourfriends, our families. for six days holtz y PP’ : disappeared amid accusations he was at the centerof a $1.7 million check-kiting scheme. Waldholtz nowis the subject of The Army5 Corps gi F of Engineersissued a cease-and-desist order to the brother of Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt this week to stop work on a newfish hateh- Wegave him until Jan. 12 to provide us with any information we should consider,” said Schwinn, who plansto inspect the damageon Jan. 8. ° Techni- Theyhave no permits to do the and I can only imagine what it will ing to his father before he'd go belike for Elizabeth.” public.” nid pleas Waldholtz is Rep. grantthg interviews to the nae media, while keeping desperate familg meniberd ty So ask < In a 20-minute interview aired Friday on Utah's KUER, 32-yearold Waldholtz said little he hasn't said publicly before. He repeatedly has declined to comment about The GOP organizer and Pittsburgh native said he remains devotedto his wife despite the accu. _sations and blameshe has heaped on him in the past two months Harveyy Waldholtz, a Pittsburgh 8! dentist, and Joe’s cousin Steve Slesiniger still are fighting to recover-up to $1 million in assets matters, which he says “belong in acourtoflaw,notacourt of public opinion.” Waldholtz did answer personal going through said. “We're each going 8 a very difficult time. We have a__ child. We have responsibilities. Our livesaretied together.”” Attorneys representing father “Love doesn't turn off,” he specific accusations andall legal ork on Project Halt questions about his own goals, his wife and their 4-month-old daughter, Elizabeth “It has been a deep, deep pertragedy,” sonal y he : andpolitical most of Utah _ Levenson, now 87 and mentally “needs assisincapacitated, pa said Pittsburgh lawyer ae Leavitt’s Brother Ordered woe ays DU eakS — ° andwildlife ty 1995, THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE since mid-November, when Wald- : +N te a federal grand jury investigation ery adjacent to the Sevier Riv- violation. ta leged financial improprieties And the congresswomanhas accused him of theft, forging checks, embezzling campaign moneyand defrauding her father Mike Schwinn, chief of the Utah regulatoryoffice of the Army Corpsof Engineers, said the order was issued to Mark Leavitt to stop work on the work. I've looked at photographsof thesite The workis all being done on wetlands.’ eonaces at his Cedar City office Friday, Mark Leavitt + 3 4 a a million in illegal contributions into her 1994 campaign. Ranch because the construction wasinviolation of federal law designed to protect wet- he had been named in the or- in + o said he was disappointed that Bulberry Road Creek Aqua into unwittingly funneling $1.8 they are cally, er nearCircleville looking into a wide range of al- @ See BROTHER, C-3 @ See WALDHOLTZ,C-2 + 43 se 4 if i 1% if ; a 4 i}4 q | | lel ‘Al Hartmann/TheSalt Lake Tribune 7 GOODBYE AND GOOD RIDDANCE : snow, according to forecasters. Will it be a white New Year? See weather: C-8 The smog and fog that shrouded Salt LakeCity this week maybe history, replaced todayby rain and i in Ph.D. Hoaks eds Rankings oaks C Charged U. Humanities Passed Over > 1 ; & oax on < or OCI ers By Nancy Hobbs pean TAca Teun » ; na. gl é fi gue that Birdie oa needs intervenee oe ea don ae Ae C ee District oMiedey Near Gunnarson aa : 7 bréught two charges against the 25-year-old for representing herself as an abanwoman doled 13-year-old boy. oaks has beer charged with one third-de- gre felony count of forgery and a misdemean- “J wouldn't wantto minimize therelative rankings that appearthere,” Mc_Intyre said of the National Research Council's Research-Doctorate Prothe UnitedStates, “There’s intruth.” grams ing of . But U. officials were puzzled that English was not evenrated— itis possible no one sent in the paperwork. By Joan O’Brien LT LAKE TRIBUNE TH Whenthe National Research Council ranked doctoral programsrecently, not officials were Utah hel University ton of Rhd and ties surorised eir genetics an 0 fin Pp biochemistry programs listed among the top in the country. But where was English? Or any oth- Nor was communication — it did not inprogram thought er humanities Prog 8) house to be highly reputed? The National Research Council's 740-page report examines the quality doctoral programs of more than 3,600 ‘onwite. Bi . t 274 fit any of the survey categories “Andit would clearly be one of the more highly ranked programs,” said ae statement, though + ald writtenfalse orfor makinga there was sufficient evidence to charge her U. humanities If it were complete, Pp programs might havefared better. ene Friday. State Acce at all. That mayalso be attributable to the fact that many humanities pro- are now awarding is doctorates. The numberof Ph.D.’s awarded each year tionIn general, many of the hard sci- said Jerilyn McIntyre, vice president programsin 41 fields at met by3,634 prog: : 274 universities in the United States. encesat the U. were favorably ranked, ti while the humanities were not ranked for academicaffairs at the U. grams award few doctorates each year. Highly rated programs, accordingto thesurvey, tend to have morefaculty members, teach more students and award more degrees § To be considered in the ranking, a doctoral program must have awarded three Ph.D.’s between 1988 and 1990 and one in 1991. That criterion was including the U The National Research Council last when ace Pec 39 325 institutions were awarding doctorates The update reflects the dramatic growth in Ph.D. programs Mcintyre, whose field is communica- nationwide. But universities 274 that, atevenat “it’s not very complete, conducted the surveyanein 1982, of Youth Services Dec. 20, telling workers sidm sh@ was a 13-year-old boy, abandoned by a st@pmother and a father with AIDS. Her deception wasdiscoveredthis weekafter a court or@ered a physical exam and she confessed i rafper than undergoone. e Gunnarson Kid,”oa the Kid or Billy se Dillinger eeBil n Bil a oe Although he will ask the court to take saffl. he’s not . curtail to that ac¥fons the answer time ischarade jailHoaks’ cofvinced Monetheless, Gunnarson said he alsowill ask colsidereda flight risk help her, but want to make sure geting psychological counseling and commu- the parcelto the state. mas Day, evoking sympathy. gifts, donations and offers of adoption from around the country. It also eer taiene fromother states upyait (iainbcid Sits TAYesvveaianc heeyGunnarson wes ee os 4 a ae lon Foundation, which will The Conservation Fund, a Vir- ginia-based non-profit group, is helping coordinate the transaction Bob Valentine, Utah directorof wildlife resources, said the donation is an important stepin a long- term effort to protect wildlife them by promising to allow area ranchers to continue to graze the land during thespring grass off the permits more palatable to deer.” “There are many winners,’ | added Ted Stewart, director of the Utah Department of Natural Resources. ted during the holidays. Crimes perpetrated privateland will be managed with teigery chargeis It will be a “showcase of multi- : from these ge at — Y ona similar level often aren't even discovered ‘and, if theyare, usuallyare not consideredseTidus enough to consume police and court time But becauseof nationwideinterest inthesituation and Hoaks’ history of deceit, it has been treated seriously an eye toward improving habitat for deer, elk and other big-game species tah Gov. Mike Leavitt P public: ly thanked the Mellon Foundation, Texaco and The Conserva- countyto replace the Sopyteneee enue, and it will work to continued access on area Texaco will . retain the rig develop an oil-shale deposit beNeath the surface: tion he Fund for their “generous responsible use of mar- P COPY The state wildlife agency will make annual The payments to the donation was made through the Mellon Foundation's» an 0 ae di ff. S ulcl e ’ nit oo Magy es ollaps was collapsing life was. rial lle Gasparo’s ipersonal xerard Gaspar Gerard Thursday when hetook out his frustrations on Sandy police officers dispatchedto help his estranged fian- . i cee A custodydispute over his children drove the 33- . with Gasparo’s suicide at 11:38 p.m. Thursday, just wouldn’t surrender, said Sandy police spokesman David Lundberg. LundOfficers “heard a shot inside the house,” berg said. “We weren't sure if he was setting us up. so they wentin with special mirrors. They found him 1. fF deceased 2 Se tes ort °; = ed | donation Ouray Indian Res. bw Thedivoree in aot ee bel mayve diporded Cea Sta e i 993 f ive stn i os Ee SS: 4 9-vear-old gir decree requiredjoint custody of the according tocourt records. Tae ough Pridgye, ago, Susan Gasparo filed a motion to lays throu Ci ple-use management,” said Val entine, in which government and (POOR 8 tobe ane Teme, sparsely inhabited re: fined gazing "ought sccevity cuneate Gunnarsonalsostressed that Hoaks’ crimeis hardly amongthe most heinous frauds commit- Hoaks’ arraignment is set for Tuesday > He said the combination of im- encnatenie lands for ( eo vhich —— Land di St after hecalledhis fiancee, Tamara Wilson, to say he = f Hill Creek oo jon werevuagea = @ See RANKINGS, PageC-2 Q = ° . | cecentsankingy fe Tecent Tankings Were AREW.OR a9 =! . | growth of other forage that is rife year-oldelectrical contractor to shootit out with ing lot, then hole police in a convenience-store up in his Sandy home afterstealing a patrol car A three-hour standoff with SWAT officers ended 6h “Spring grazingis really benefithe r Pl SRA 97 cial to us,” said Valentine. “Tak1g % ase | State officials tried to reassure 2°" videt m7) lose its economic value. igence on which the oreast Weedgaidtisthe-ev based is 800kCliffs. } COmmUSS UST? proved wildlife habitat and con- ents, 2 ; e Theland, valued at about $1.3 Uintah County skeptical of the proposed were donation, fearing the land would habitat on 455,000 acres in this writen etter Hoaksgaveyouth-serviceswork. ‘ \ the million, will be acquired from MelTexaco by the Richard Kingdonate Hoaks embellished her tale with details of how she was born during a blizzard on Christ- i A donation of 10,903 acres of habitat in big-game prime Cliffs of eastern Utah has Book been accepted bythe U tah Division of Wildlife Resources sider ‘ ket-based mechanismsto protect at i e o M: P Creaea By Jim Woolf Rin ‘3 er eee. Programs included in the 1982 tended to have a similar rating study 49 yearslater Custody Fight Leads « ote T 0 jesources has accepted a donationof 10,903 acres of primewildlife habitat in the d L k Cl ff: an S 1 thcourt to quintuple the $10,000bail previ- nity serviceas alternatives the court could con- k 00 0 | T . f B ft I ougly set for Hoaks to $50,000 becausesheis We wantto thievictims are addressed also,” he said, sug- : ; ( ; e i EUR EIy | no UtahDivisionof plaid ts Texaco’s has gone up dramatically, with an alltime high of 39,754 degrees grantedin 1993 according to the survey Otherfindings of the survey ak longer x to earnaeee doctorW It is taking ate at almost every institution in almost everyfield; however, it takes programs. lower-rated the in _Jongest Women and minorities are still 0 ‘ among, doctoral Fe underrepresented hey ere iui om ‘ikely Anaidelng however, to graduate from highiy . ranked programsas Anglo men. Of 3,600 colleges nationwide, 364 with more, Gunnarsonsaid at a news confer- oaks appearedat Salt Lake County's Divi- e e e,e@ qi : But a year ng to cou ecords win sole custody. A 3rd District judge was to decide the dispute at a Jan. 18trial any The ex-wife was very reluctantto allow her hus- ee ices seiceestiees ; ; American Land Conservation ffort to ac. lands for ridays, ac parks, wildlife space and historic sites tody of their two children,” said hand to share Gasparo’s divorce attorney, Byron Fisher. “It was sure bitter depressed over the custody Gasparo was deeply a‘ issue which caused friction in his relationship with his fiancee, Lundberg said. The night before the @ See CUST@DY, Page Qe i | z |