OCR Text |
Show ii,H'ijiij.irti'ii.y..,miitjfaiirl(. Holland Savs By Kim Kaatinan Tribune Correspondent PROVO Outlining truth and virtue as the goals to be pursued. Brigham Young University President Jeffrey R. Holland issued a call to high adventure in the Marriott Center. It was the president's open-- g message for the 1981-8- 2 RIVERTON. Wyo. expert on aircraft structures has been called to help investigate the crash of a airplane that twin-engin- d Denver Photo by Tribune Correspondent Ann Shields t ceiling beams lie across remains after a fire raced through a Provo fruit packing shed. Damages were estimated at $365,000. No one was injured. of equipment Fire Causes $365,000 Loss By Aim Shields Tribune Correspondent PROVO Fire caused an estimated $365,000 damage to an a fruit packing shed and equipment here about 4. 15 a.tu. Tuesday. The cause was still not determined late Tuesday said Dyrell Barney, Provo deputy fire chief. Cherry grower Gam Baum said his plant is at 4100 N. University. Mr. Baum is trying to revive an antitrust lawsuit he filed against a number of Utah County cherry growers and a company owned by the Church of Saints. The church-owne- d Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y company owns Mr. Baums property, but he has refused to move off the land or turn over the processing plant. Mr. Barney said damage to the building was $65,000. Loss of equipment and two vehicles inside was listed at $300,000. Fireman were hampered by not having hydrants nearby, Mr. Barney said. Water was drawn from an irrigation ditch. Lorraine Robinson, Bluebell, Duchesne County, district commanhas been named an Wars for of Veterans of Foreign the der achievement in membership growth, youth activities and community improvement programs. Ms. Robinson, commander of Utah VFW District 6, is one of 25 district commanders in the U.S. selected status. for Friday shortly before eight federal agents raided the home. The woman, who has a diamond-studde- d gold tooth, had been described as armed and dangerous. She was arraigned before U.S. Magistrate George Juba, who set bail at $10,000 and set a Thursday hearing. Porter said earlier he refused to believe she would back out of an agreement to surrender, saying he expected hel' to give herself Up after Hie Labor Day weekend. A downpour of rain also was credited by fireman for helping put out the blaze. The fire was reported by a passing motorist with a citizens band radio. Twenty fiiemeu were on the scene for about two hours. The fire was under control in about 40 minutes. Fire was confined to the southeast comer of the building and appeared to have started in a shed where the two vehicles were located. Flames spread to the next section. Firefighters were able to keep the fire from spreading to other sections, separated by walls. The roof on the one section was destroyed. Firemen returned to their stations at 7:30 a.m. NTSB Inves- tigator Verlin Trantner at the scene for two days, said a representative from the Mitsubishi Corp., which manufactured the craft, also was in Riverton to help seek the cause of the five deaths. Meanwhile, Fremont County authorities still had not released the identities of those assumed aboard the aircraft when it wook off from Lander at 8:45 Sunday morning, but Hinman said relatives in New Jersey of the aircrafts owner had been contacted. Earlier, authorities said they only assumed five people were aboard because the flight plan listed a pilot and four passengers, but they were unable to confirm that total from wreckage. the UPSTAIRS -R- ATED X- Starts Sept. 18 - Fourth District Judge George E. PROVO (AP) Ballif Tuday deferred a decision on a lawsuit filed by Brigham Young University, pending the filing of statements. BYU is seeking to have some of its property removed from Utah County tax rolls. The property, which includes several vacant lots, a parking lot and some recreational property in Provo Canyon, was placed on the tax rolls in 1976, Deputy County Attorney Guy Bumingham said. County Assessor Harrison Conover placed it on the rolls because he believed it was not being used exclusively for religious or charitable purposes. Bumingham said. ; Dexter Dexter" womens shoes are the leather classics that go back to . 4? 5-- 9. . n, "EXPECTATIONS Derirea West X 2nd Feature "JOY OF LETTING GO" Constance Money 3rd Feature "SENSUOUS T ALK" Rated Ginema I 45 WEST BROADWAY ore 11.46 (4 TRIPLE FEATURE ''THE TALE OF TIFFANY LUST" DESIREE COUSTEAU X DAILY AR-- 364 3647 1 -- ' RATED X OF DIAMONDS" RATED X BEETHOVEN" MONEY CONSTANCE RATED Since its beginning, Classified has been the one form of advertising people turn to when they have a need. The Classified columns serve for many ads...and for many as a catch-al- l types of ads. Youll appreciate our service even more when are trained you call in your ad. Our to ask plenty of questions to be sure they understand the purpose of your ad and your intentions in running it. They want to help you get maximum response to your advertising message. Our readers are accustomed to reading Classified daily. We want to keep them satisfied. Were in the People Business.. were here to help you find the answer to your needs. X 111 I All FRI.1SAT. Advening r Policy Salt Lake Tribune s basic advertising poke it to accept the t. steful advertising ol all lawful ervices. end of all products th it are legally manufactured and distributed. The Sail Lake Tribune does not accept advertisements of films legally adudged pornographic or legally died as pornographic in formal complaint. Consiatent with this policy. The Tribune accepts no advertising matter in which tne exhibitor himctSI proclaims a film The 'pornographic by specific description. double entendre, suggestive illustration or any other device. MOVIE AUDIENCE GUIDE -- Th roiooioti El rmfi aa Affly to Aim 1. 1970 SIM THIS la an mtiictfit approvM Gj im; Utah advertisers outside the local Dial TOLL FREE LATE SNOW Open Daily 11:30 A.M. 368 So. State 363-U4- 0 Tribune area h Suggni'rd 'mu AH Cotit 0' Of Nf SAL uud odmiMcd lo MAUjgf Uw(l pnept (porpntol gudontf w( qnt'ndl All ognt odrruHod Amom undf ISTtJCLlU J OfJmitlpd u'tlrss Oi Suqqrtfpd Shop Monday through Friday 9:30 to 9:3f Saturday 9:30 to 6 Sunday Salt Lake City: Brickyard Plaza, 1154 Brickyard Rd. at 3300 South, nl (OmponmJ yyO'd'On Pe'VO'H Daily Newspaper Classified Want Ads do more things for more people at a lower cost than any other form of advertising! utirtfd art Am IM Mol ton Ftctoro til Soil fctfiatioa untit' by y"dt ( V. Tax Suit Rule Delayed 3 SMASH HITS! lUJOttfctfUillttU .'I first-degre- n, T7T7 WE'RE IN THE I SH'eial to The Tribune Second District Judge Ronald O. Hyde (HiDEN Tuesday reduced bail for Mohammed Shabata, 35. a murder, Libyan national accused of second-degre- e from $500,000 to $100,000. The judge lowered the figure at the request of Ogden attorney Roliert A. He hard, who is defending Mr. Shabata against a charge that he shot to death Nabil Mansour, 32, another Libyan, July 9. No Hearing Mr. Erhard said the original bail of $100,000 set by 3rd Circuit Judge E. F. Ziegler was later raised by Circuit Judge Roltort V. Phillips "without a hearing and without notification of my client." According to Mr. Echard, the hail was raised based only on a rumor. He declined to elaborate, but apparently was referring to reports that the Libyan government might provide funds to free Mr Shabata. The FBI stated in July that the death of Mr. Mansour, whose bullet-riddle- d body was found in the trunk of his car July 17, may be a political assassination connected to Libyan strongman Col. Moammar Kliadafy. Arrested in Chicago Mr. Echard asked Judge Hyde to reduce the defendant's bail to $10, (XXI, the average figure on a e felony case and noted that Mr. Shabata has no criminal record and his passport has been seized. Chicago police arrested Mr. Shabata at O'Hare International Airport only hours after the body of Mr. Mansour was found. The defendant, en route to Tripoli, Libya, via London, was carrying $3,300 in cash. books. They look great with pants or pleated skirts, and keep you feeling comfortable. Sizes A. Tassel slip-obrown. 36.00 B. Libby oxford, brown. 36.00 C. Heather slip-orust. 36.00 STAIRS, Rated .p1".WliiyM,yrt1 school every fall, along with your DOWN- :r p- 9, 1981 Commander Named Accused Widow Turns Self In CHOPS) gressman. Mrs. White, often reported seen toting a shotgun, vanished from her log cabin near Bonners Ferry, Idaho, a investigator for the Federal Aviation Administration, said Tuesday an exjH'il from the Washington, D.C., office of the National Transportation Safety Board was a skint to determine the cause of the fiery crash alxiut 28 miles southeast of Riverton. Hinman, who helped truth and virtue to a world con- i Sun- Paul llin man. Casper-base- i Oregon Democratic t : unidentified people day, officials said. He said, We have answers fi to very significant questions now being asked. We can offer former e killed five :ru year- A widow PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) accused of harboring convicted spy Christopher Boyce turned herself in to the U.S. marshals office Tuesday afternoon, as promised by her attorney. Gloria White, 40, mother of six children, was accompanied by her attorney, Charles Porter of Eugene, a An (AP) Burned-ou- 'fj-- luly The Salt Lake Truth, Virtue which desperately needs it. But we have to demon- strate both here, in our private lives, and at BYU, he said. I ask you to join in this high adventure. Of the goal of truth, Dr. Holland simply said, "That goal can speak for itself. The truth will make you free. But, of virtue," he said, Dallin Oaks, former BYU president, fought to keep our institutional independence intact. If I am equally free to pick my battle, then I wish to fight to keep our institutional virtue intact. We have a chance to make a difference, to stand for something. If we miss this chance some future historian will ask why we became part of the ethical drift, rather than seeking to shape it by our own strengths and scholarship and moral convictions. Dr. Holland concluded his message by reminding attending students of the 4,500 applicants BYU turned away due a lack of places. Give It Everything "Don't miss this opportunity. It won't come again, he said. Give it everything you have right now, this and every semester,. Forecasting an unsympathic attitude toward students who may demonstrate a careless at1 am going to be pretty he said, titude, unsympathic with a student who wants to come to BYlJ in this decade to play, to loaf in and out of class, to defy our standards and expectations and values. He said. Students who come to BYU, and stay at BYU, will be those who love learning, who love Christian living, and who want to make a constructive contribution to the world. "We are moving out and up at BYU, and we ask you to do the same in your attempts to learn. Loam how to learn and love it. Kimball Can't Make It Xhe main body of Dr. Hollands speech was prefaced with the announcement that LDS President Silencer W. Kimball would not be able to address the students Sept. 15 as scheduled due to recuperation required from Saturdays surgey. ,The LDS president is scheduled to dedicate the Spencer W. Kimball Tower sometime in October. A brief explanation of new dress and grooming standards which allow women to wear modest, dressy jeans and men to wear hair that "brushes the top of the ear was also given by Dr. Holland. Mrs. Holland also welcomed the students back as did Kasey Haws, associated students president, who encouraged students to strive for academic excellence, to represent the university well, and to obtain a vision of the university. ''.nr Tribune. September w vommu lilmui Suspect Crash Bail Lowered Puzzles Officials In Slay Case 1 Goals of BYU: I r pQ'prrt O' odglt 487-Midval- e: IB mqi cut Family Center, 7200 South at 900 East. REMEMBER Adults Only Un rated iVso'rt u'xln 18 not od"iillod Pflup oeifhi' by Motion Pm tie e C.(i'K'l "U Olibllo 566-725- 1 West Valley City: Valley Fair Mall, 3500 South at Layton: Layton Hills Mall, Hillfield Rd. at Orem: University Mall University Pkwy. at State St. 967-722- 8 766-344- 1 f 226-260- 1 |