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Show 1oci mu iah Mn I : I Imblmi act Human Citizens Dav at Legislature Attracts 300 A willingness uuifrunl human impel Gm Noun Bangerter said Wt'ilni-Miaas he urged legislator to ileal with eduiating ehildren. protect vulnerable young victims of child abuse, raise welfare grants and aid the homeless nancial status Liuv Hangertcr said he wusn t able to recommend all the initiatives and funding requested by the Departments of Social Services and Health "I don t believe that we are really shurt on our capability to assure all of our people have the necessities of life." he said "We have the responsibility with pubuc programs and private efforts to see that those people who need assistance get it " The majority of ttah s 200.0uu citizens are children whose education and care will impact the state's future, according to Gov who said his programs for dealing with the education crisis will begin solving it t(J un a ht att level is problems Speaking before nearly liUU people during the eighth annual Citizens' IaJ at the Legislate e sponsored by I lah Issues, the governor also said legislators should assist dtsplaeed homemakers maintain the program that helps welfare mothers become selfysuffieient and continue and expand the Emergency Work Program. JJtah is nut immune to the social antf. economic factors that produce poverty, unemployment, underemployment. abuse, neglect, substance abuse, divorce and emotional problem. the governor cautioned. ftecause of the state's austere fi fund account should be organized that matches state money with private donations ' We all continue to feel the pinch of increased costs for food, utilities and housing.'' Gov Bangerter said ' That s why I'v e put in a two percent cost of living increase in public assistance grants " But at least 5 5 percent would be needed to maintain current spending levels, countered YWCA Director Jane Langtord e "Since 1974 when a grant paid rent. nutritious meals and 75 percent of utilities we've seen buying power decreased by more than 20 percent," she said The governor also recommends continuing the state's effort to assist welfare clients in becoming economically independent by continuing to fund the job training 30 Ban-gerte- Protecting vulnerable children from sex abuse is another issue that must be addressed, he said Prevention and treatment services need an extra $140. t'OO and a children's trust- - Suspect Pleads Guiltv to Sex Charges TheSalt Lake Tribune. Oklahoma nun has been coni.i federal court of helping six people file tax returns that listed false deductions to the "Universal Life Church" totaling $70,000. US District Judge J. Thomas Greene found Alfred R. Carter, formerly of Neola, Duchesne County, guilty of six counts of helping others file false charitable deductions. The guilty verdict came after a trial Tuesday. daylong A federal grand jury in Salt Lake City charged Carter in January 1985 with nine counts, but Judge Greene An A Salt Lake City man. charged in December with 13 felony counts stemming from what police described as a prostitution and child victed pornography operation, pleaded guilty Wednesday to two of the charges Charles Curtis Arthur. 53. ol 63 Gordon Place (150 North', pleaded guilty to one count of dealing in materials harmful to a minor and one count of aggravated exploitation of prostitution, court records said Third District Court Judge Philip K Fishier dismissed 11 other counts against Arthur and scheduled sentencing fur Feb 24 at 1 p m. Arthur remains in the Salt Lake County Jail Salt Lake City Police detectives arrested him Nov. 27 in connection with reports that he had shared profits with prostitutes, including minors, eight times between September and non-jur- The Forecast complaint originally filed in the I mid-20- materials harmful to a mifelony and could carry a term of up to five years. The charges stemmed from a Nov. 27 incident in which San Jose. Calif., police found a girl. 15. sleeping in a car belonging to Charles Arthur's brother, Chester Barnett Arthur. 55. of San Jose. The girl told police that Chester Arthur had sexually assaulted her in 1985 and 1984 and that Charles Arthur had driven her to San Jose. After arresting Chester Arthur, San Jose police relayed the girl's story to Salt Lake City where detectives searched Charles Arthur's house and found evidence supporting her allegaDealing nor is a s. liptll -. to L.- Ojidcn Notonoi Aeoir Service 27 uS Deo oCommerte N06A Air Pollution Index Sail I akc Itiia ill emlm rr 20 tu lrm llpilrn u 75 Good (.eilar (.in 2 Excellent 25 07 65 40 CO TP 40 07 M 07 48 CO Source Utah Heolth DcdI. 79 88 M 07 CO S. George I '(. CO t Mantling .'!)( TPTolal Porltculanli Monoxide Area Forecast Thursday and Friday Salt Loke City, Ooden and Provo Forecast A unsettled southwesterly flow will prevail over Utah through Friday. A series of weak disturbances In the (low will move across the state through the period. Conditions will be mostly cloudy, with on Increasing chance of roln through Friday. Locally gusty wind, southerly winds developing Probability of rain will be 40 percent today and 50 percent Friday. Highs will and lows will be In the reach the mld-40- s mld-?0- Northern Utah Forecast Cache Valley: Mostly cloudy conditions today, with a scattered roln showers by this afternoon. Tonight ond Friday will be cloudy with scattered rain. Temperatures should continue mild with temperatures In the 40s and overnight lows neor 25. Most ol the Wasatch Front ond the Western Deserts will be mostly cloudy, with scattered rain showers through Friday. Highs will be In the mld-40s- , overnight lows will be In the mld-tupper 70s. The Unlta Basin will experience mostlv cloudy weather with scattered showers through Friday. Temperawith overnight lows In tures In the mid-OOthe 70s. Southern Utah Forecast Southwest Valley and Sevier Valley: Conditions will be mostly cloudy with scattered showers developing by this ofternoon. Expect souther ly gusty winds this afternoon also. Tonight and Friday will be cloudy with scattered showers. There will be a 40 percent chance of precipitation today increasing to 50 percent Friday. Utah's Dixie will continue to mild, with temperatures in the upper 60s expected. Southern temperatures will be In the upper 40s. Regional lows will be In the low 30s. Recreationol Areas Canyonlonds: Mostmld-50- s ly cloudy, with o chonce occasional of showers through Friday. Winds will be light and variable, becoming southwesterly 10 to 15 mph Thursday and Friday. Highs will be In the upper 50s, lows overnight will be In the upper 30s to low 40s. Canyonlonds will be mosltly cloudy with scattered showers through Friday. Lows will be In the mid-70- s to mld-30highs In the low 40s. Northern Utah Ski Areas: Mostly cloudy today with scattered rain or snow showers developing by mid afternoon. Snow level lowering to near 7000 feet on today. Gusty southwest winds will be developing over rldgetops today ond Friday afternoon. Highs will be In the low 40s to upper 30s. Lows will be In the mld-20Northern Mountains: Conditions will be mostly cloudy with scattered snow showers to 7000 feet. Strong winds over the ore expect today and Friday. Friday will be mostly cloudy, with scattered snow showers. T emperciturcs will be In the Weather Summary Missing T throughout the period. The forecast throuqh the period is considerable clouds ond occasional rain showers. Temperatures will continue mild, with temperatures In the 40s and 50s expected. Overnight lows will be In the 70s to low 30s. Extended Forecast for Idaho Friday through Sunday Northern and Southern Idaho Northern Idaho: Rain ond snow Is expected throughout Northern Idaho. Occasional scattered snow showers ore expected in the mountains olso. Southern Idaho: Southern Idaho conditions will be mostlv cloudy in the volleys, with occasional scattered rain or snow showers. Snow is expected in the mountains to 7000 feet. Temperatures throughout Idaho will reoch highs In the mld-30- s to mld-40Overnight lows will be In the 20s to 30s. Warmer In the North. Yesterday's Troce Yesterdoys W. Montana Yellowstone 37 29 Preclp Denver Blooding 58 26 M 20 Speaks to Panel 53 26 National UEA President Is Hilarious Continued From Continued From l tern from floundering on the rock of B-- "By beefing up funding, we re beefing up our education system." she said. home. 56 Oieenrlver M M other educational HunksvWe Heber Otv Helper Kanob Logan Midway 56 52 49 15 adults, urged committee members to avoid making any budget cuts in adult education funding ... MUtcxd Moab MooticeHo Ogden .... ... ... O'em Poik Citv Puce Provo Randolph Richfield Roosevelt Soft Lake Cltv Snowbird ... Sionishtotk St. George Tgoele of Utah Vernal Wendover Zon Nat Park tjnlv 67 40 50 61 60 53 41 54 51 49 57 39 62 53 66 43 47 39 35 70 55 57 48 fciv Los Vegas Reno Winnemucta 64 62 27 31 30 30 29 30 16 26 44 31 78 39 30 38 21 4J Evanston Laramie 4 74 27 24 55 20 4? 3? 74 28 23 32 Idaho PebotQ Twin Falls ...... 40 43 4? activities for clip-retur- n n each Wednesday, "reinforcing reading and school spirit." Mr. Pawlas said he seeks support of local reporters by meeting with them and informing the media of school events and feature stories. "The media serve as watch dog and provide stories of interest to the community, he said. "I view them as my ally, not as my to Hear Penalty Vrgunients Saturday Jury Finds Mitchell Guilty of Murder Continued From l sold it to Thomas Greco. But Mr. Greco denied he bought the gun and Greg Oliver testified that when he picked up Mitchell from the airport the week before the shooting, Mitchell showed him two guns and two handguns in his suitcase. B-- 46 41 Jude 19 22 Casper Chevenne Ruck Springs Boise Idaho toils Pocatello "Successful people have said is more importhat tant than native ability." he said. "We need to help children form better images of themselves and what they can do. Mr. Pawlas said he and the school's vice principal write individual comments on every childs each reporting perireport card od. The school where he is principal has an enrollment of more than 700 students. Also, during visits to the classroom he writes comments childrens papers and uses a rubber stamp labeled "The Principal's Stamp of Approval." Another good communication tool is the "The Principal's Piquant Partner newsletter. Children give extra copies to neighbors who don't have children in school, and parents and friends sign a slip to be returned to the school. The room with the highest rate of returns gets a treat from the principal. In another school project, students reading a prescribed number of books get a school "super read-- , er" iron-opatch for their school are handed Starred iron-on- s out for reading extra books. Students wear the shirts to school on 16 Wyoming 46 a boost. Officials with Utah's community education program, which provides high school completion classes and 25 20 22 23 26 35 37 29 28 Nevada tlko Today's Forecast 22 26 29 MM 36 47 calls teachers average should be matched by the principal." Mr. Pawlas said a cordless telephone clipped to his belt has been especially effective. When visiting a classroom and seeing good work, he takes a student into the hall, complements him and asks the child to call his mother or father. Parents are thrilled, he added, and is given children's Both Mrs. Condie and Mr. Baum stressed the need to reduce Utah's class sizes the largest in the nation. They also called for an effort to reduce the disparity between Utah teachers pay as compared with that of their counterparts throughout the rest of the country. 29 25 23 26 62 47 47 "The key is often the telephone. he said. "And however many phone "We can t postpone the future of our society. This is an information society and the future belongs to the states and nations that invest in their people," said Mrs. Condie. 53 s l to olds time, but today "can be very selective" about which written messages are taken burgeoning enrollments. Bryce Conyon Bullfrog Cedar City Coalville Delta Fillmore . Conditions B-- 10- - M Yesterday products, the suit charges. Finally, the corporations negligently failed io remove the products from the stream of commerce, despite their awareness of dangers of asbestos, the suit says. Principal Walks Lightly To Guide 700 Students Denies Plan BitgnamCllv MM of 7 Keeping an Eye Out for a Full Moon We're not out grubbing for money just to do it. Well be in the real world of hurt if we dont take some action to shore up our education system," said Mr. Baum. Uloh March mid-1980- Conditions Colorado Conditions .... In the upper 70s. Southern Mountains: Mostly cloudy today, with scattered rain or snow showers. Snow level to 7000 feet. Expect gusty, southerly winds over ridqetops through friday. Temperatures will be in the upper 30s, lows in the low 20s. Extended Forecast tor Uloh Saturday through Monday An unsetNorthern and Southern Utah tled southwesterly flow aloft will continue through Monday. Several disturbances within the (low will move across the state Global Temps lnlermountain M upper 30s, with lows the counts sentencing date was set for Carter, who remains free on bail Internal Revenue Service agents discovered large deductions claimed for contributions to the Universal Life Church After cheeking with the taxpayers, the IRS found that little or nothing had actually been contributed to the church. Carter was charged with furnishing the taxpayers with either a false receipt or other instructions on how they could claim the deduction on their returns A 3 Special to The Tribune FRUITLAND, Duchesne County -A man broke into a woman's home and raped her Wednesday about 11:50 a m., according to Duchesne County sheriff's officials. Two men were being held for questioning in Heber City on Wednesday evening. The men were stopped by lawmen several hours after the crime. The men were not placed under arrest. Mn, ili :t;t. : I :lv.-- Very Good dismissed three Robberies Fruitland Woman Raped at Home Green Kiser 20 PI m Suspect In Up to Six Chester Arthur is scheduled to appear Feb. 3 in Santa Clara County Superior Court to answer 28 felony counts against him in connection with the Nov. 27 incident. 20:m 9H6 Police e tions. il ( Irm ii 2V10 100 Morgmol r sail I ake 20 If, in third-degre- 1 rations. claiming asbestos products they produced and marketed led to her husband's death in 1984. Shirley Stevens Hanrath filed the wrongful death suit in U S. District iNab Court for Utah seeking punitive damof million the from $5 ages corporations that distributed asbestos products for use in the construction zVrmed industry. Mrs. Hanrath's husband. Carl HanDetectives arrested a Salt Lake rath. was exposed to asbestos from 1949-8City man Wednesday who they say "while installing and removmay be involved in as many as six ing insulation and other asbestos armed robberies between early and the states. suit That expoproducts," sure caused "peritoneal mesothelioMoses Hernandez. 23, was arrested ma." or a tumor of the abdomen's membrane lining, from which Mr. without incident about 11 a m. at a home where he was staying near 1800 Hanrath died in February 1984. "As early as the the South 1900 East, said Sgt. Mike Fierro of the Salt Lake City Robbery Investicompanies became aware of the danasgation Division. of nature and gerous propensities asMr. Hernandez was charged with to knew bestos and that exposure bestos dust, especially if breathed or one felony count of aggravated robswallowed, is substantially certain to bery and one felony count of theft tn cause neoplasms tumors such as connection with the Dec. 17 robbery mesothelioma or carcinoma, other of the First Security Financial Parley's View office, at 2286 E. 2100 species of cancer and other severe inSouth. juries," the suit charges. He is being held in the Salt Lake The corporations, "in reckless disregard for human life, marketed the County Jail under $100,000 bail. asbestos insulations and products Mr. Hernandez is accused of entereven though they knew of the injuries ing the office, giving a teller a note caused by asbestos exposure, the suit demanding money and saying he hud a weapon, then taking about $1,500 in charges. The 19 corporations and 10 individcash. ual John Doe defendants were negliThe case is similar to others that gent in the design and manufacture of occurred in December, and informainsulation and other asbestos prodtion gathered after Mr. Hernandezs ucts. the suit claims. Further, the corarrest may implicate him in up to six' more robberies, Sgt. Fierro said. porations were negligent and ineffective in the testing and inspection of Seven detectives from the Salt those products. Lake City Police Department and the The corporations negligently failed Metropolitan Narcotics Strike Force to warn, inform or instruct consumwere involved in Mr. Hernandezs arers about the dangerous nature of the rest. e nercusin shower. today, especially in the north. Mostly cloudy Friday, with scattered rain showers statewide. Gusty south winds developing over the western valleys today. Temperatures will continue mild, with highs in the south reaching the 5()s. IOs in the north. Overnight lows will he y A Salt Lake City woman has filed suit in federal court against 19 corpo- Aggravated exploitation of prostitution is a second-degrefelony and carries a prison term of years. I TO. Suit Blames Asbestos Firms For 84 Death of S.L. Man against him also alleged that he had a minor dance nude before people, photographed another minor nude and showed movies in his house Utah Forecast for 7 p Janua ry S3 Million Sought Nov. 27. Todays Weather . Oklahoman Convicted 01 Aiding Tax Fraud r A T hursdav Note: This intormcition Is received dully liom the Notional Weather Service crt the Salt Lake International Alrpoit. Precipitation readings and temperatures are those recoi ded at the airport. Yestci day's Weather Data None Precipitation Precipitation Accumulative In January dehcencv - since Oct. 1, 1985 Precipitation Accumulative excess 0.80. 0.45. 6.76 78 70 at Z ions Natl. Utah high Utah low ISatRandjIph S.L.C. high 36 degrees. S.L .C. low 77 degrees 39 degrees. Noimal high for this dote 71 degrees Normal low tor this dale 54 Record ' gh lor this dole drgiees. I? degi ees. Record low lor this date Sunrise Today 7.40 MST. 5 44 MST. Sunset Today Uloh Agriculture F orecast. Mostly cloudy, wllh scatter ed showers through tomorrow Highs In 40s, lows In 70s. Mr. Adkins concluded by telling the jury. "The elements Don't let the demurder are proven. with murder." fendant get away Mr. Brown told the Jury the burden of proof was on the state to show that Mitchell had "intentionally and knowingly" killed Mr. Duncan. In arguing the state's motive. Mr. Brown told the jurors that "you arc the finders of the facts." Mr. Brown pointed out to the Jury that the problem with the state's theory of motive was that there was no evidence that Mr. Duncan was deal.ng in drugs. Mr. Brown maintained the shooting was an accident, and asked the jurors "Why this night? He explained that Mitchell had plans with friends on Aug. 4 to go out to dinner and a concert. Mr. Brown pounded the lectern and raised and lowered of first-degre- e . . . his voice, when he told the jury. "This really is a case about love," and reminded the jury that Mi'chell had tes-- . tified he had gone to Park City that night after the concert; because he was afraid that another man was going to hurt his good friend Greg Oliver over a drug deal that went sour. Mr. Brown recounted that Mitchell had testified Tuesday that when he reached Brian Olivers home and saw the lights out he felt something was wrong. It was then that he burst into the home thinking he saw movement ih the dining room and tripped over the legs of Fred Duncan who was lying on the living room floor. He said the gun I accidently discharged and Mr. Duncan was killed. In rebuttal arguments. Assistant Summit County Attorney Terry Christiansen said Mr. Brown had thrown up a number of "smoke screens" in his closing arguments, and reminded the jury "the only thing I have to prove is the elements of the crime." He reminded the jury that Putty Tyrrell said Mitchell pulled a mask away from his face before he shot Mr. Duncan. Mr. Christiansen claimed, "I think (Mitchell) wanted Fred Duncan to know w ho his executioner was." |