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Show he DailuxHerald UTAH VALLEY EDITION $1.50 YOUR TOWN * YOUR NEIGHBORS * YOUR NEWSPAPER LIFE & STYLE SPORTS OUT OF SIGHT MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE BALANCING ACT _ WELCOMES TSU IN MEMORY OF GARRETT A story of thelife he lived and the lives he touched Heidi Toth ing bride, a family picture in front of an DAILY HERALD woyearsago, four children ages 11 to 18 kept Kevin and Heidi Bardsley running be- tween football and baseball practice, schooland church ingand going at ll ours ofthe day and night. Today the house is quieter, less active and more than Heidi and Kevin Bardsley wé like. Cameron, 14,is still at home. Courtney,at 20 the oldest, moved away and got married. Jared, 18, leftMondaytostart college at BYU-Hawail. The house is filled with pictures from favorite vacations,a portrait of a beam- LDS temple and scrapbooks documenting the family’s growth, while playground equipment andtoystake up the back at. Dogs and catsloungelazily around, inside the house andout, and horses ae leisurely in a field. But there's a hole in the family that used to be occuped by Garrett, the baby of the family, who walked into the wilderness a year ago while camping and never came out. “Wehavetwolives,” Kevin Bardsley said. “We havea life before Garrett, when Garrett was here, and we have a life after Garrett.” On Aug.19, 2004, several teenage boys and their fathers loaded camping gear into vehicles for a trip to the High Uintas in Summit County. Scoutmaster Wally _Trotter brought his son to the meeting site that Thursday morning to help pack the trucks; he wasn't going because he didn’t have enough vacation time.It wasn’t an official Boy Scout activity; they didn’t want the boysto feel pressured to earn any merit badges that weekend. “Wejust wanted last, end-of-the-year campingtrip to go have fun before school started,to give the boys a chanceto relax and to enjoy each others’ company,” he said: On Friday morning Kevin and Garrett wentfishing at one of the many nameless lakes that dot the mountain landscape. Garrett got his shoes wet, and because morningsarecold, Kevin sent him back to campto change shoes. The camp was See GARRETT, A6 Garrett and Heidi Bardsley, Christmas 2001. ‘Bush plan ‘Mayoffer EYES SHUT, EARS WIDE OPEN Visasto ‘someillegal immigrants Ron Fournier Es AE PHOENIX — Struggling to pacify his party’s warring wings, President Bush is moving toward allowingillegal immigrants who cametothe U.S. before February 2004to qualify for guest-worker visas. People smuggledin after then would be deported State leaders in Arizona and New Mexicohave stepped up pressure on the Bush administration and the Republican-led Congress to better police U.S. borders and deal with anestimated 10 million people whoare livingillegallyin this country. See IMMIGRANTS, A10 LDS chureh JEREMY HARMON/Daily Herald Charlotte Blake Alston tells a lively story about Martin Luther King Jr. during the 16th Annual TimpanogosStorytelling Festival. See Our Townsfor more festival coverage. INSIDE ourtowns UFEASTYLE Bt C1 | oe SPORTS D1 Sunny, HISTORY | BUSINESS OBITUARIES B10 Movies G oo s WEATHER warm ce = VOLUME 83 ISSUE 28 Women’sfitness study useslittleunderstoodlevel in guidelines Carey Hamilton improved herdiet, quit smokin; toned up underthe guidanceof nae Streeter at the 24 Hour Fitness center UTAH FEATURE EXCHANGE SALT LAKE CITY — Disheartened by a failed marriage and years of weight gain, Ellen Bowden decided to turn to a personal trainer to help re- shape her body and lifestyle. i MN Ml, Since January, the 47-year-old Salt LakeCity court mediator has lost 11 percent body fat, shed about 25 pounds, Lonte: «Rsk in Sugar House. Streeter designed an exercise program for Bowden using the Karvonen formula, which calculates a person's target heart rate by a person's age and pulse. Three or four days a week, Bowdenhits her rate of 144 on theelliptical machine. According to new research on wom- en andfitness, she also should be able to reach about 8.5 METs — but that means little to her. MET stands for metabolic equivalents.It is displayed on most elliptical trainers, treadmills and other cardiovascular exercise machines,andis a measureofa capacity for exercise based on the level of oxygen a person See STUDY, A9 YASS AWWAWLHERALDEXTRA.COM ’—CAMIES7S509 To sunscRiRE Visit Goodwrench.com for Service Offers, a Dealer Near You, and Mo! rerere OKsdrinking at newmalls SALT LAKE CITY — The LDS church said its redevelopmentplan for a pair of downtown malls will allowa fewofthe restaurants to obtainliquorlicenses, butit’s draw- ing the line on Sunday shopping. The arrangementsweredisclosed during a radio program hosted by Mayor Rocky Anderson with an official of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daySaints. Church spokesman DaleBills said it was the church’s “goal” to allowwinesales at restaurants that | open afterthe $1 billion redevelopmentof the Crossroads Plaza and See ALCOHOL, A10 ede |