| Show N4 a I jLiU 0 0 11 By Jack Fenton national trend more Utahns appear to be using Utah public libraries to look for work "It happens all the time but it increases when the economy slumps: said Becky Butler a librarian at Salt Lake City's main library She guessed that it got busier about 18 months ago "I have nothing to support that Its just a gut feeling" "In hard economic times library use always goes up " Patricia Glass Schuman American Lipresident of the Chicago-base- d told The Associated Association brary Press "We've heard this from libraries across the country" she added "People are using a Higher Tuition Recommended At Universities out-of-sta- times-aretoug- help-wante- 'Robin Hood' School d 1 i ! 0 4 I i I ' ' The ItrOjCP that would take a N-1“- till Friday ! f I coo- Tr 0 1 i - 4 - ACroR 1 4 k 's ''-- - f 1 - e - hi rrv "AMP lion he taken tricti rr in an1 I Firid t consider the measures next I month "The shortfall in enrollment funding will require of some fundamental traditions" e wrote Wm Rolfe Kerr in a ordered the Regents message to the Legislature's executive appropriations committee "The funding crisis simply increases the urgency" As the budget now stands the Legislature has paid only 22 percent of the money needed to pay for new college students Higher Education spokeswoman Vicki Varela said the academic and financial proposals are good management but not a solution "The depressing thing is even if we undertake all these ideas they are still not going to nearly compensate for the huge enrollment it will make dlstrirts 3rj Srt-tsure they meet the itate aerage said Mr Pirrilrigham 1 ir tax- comBut thP miricrity is plampd Sat Lik forced to rricre than share of the riew appropriations 43 By Michael I 41 ! 1 just because it h?F tJeEn fisr2aily prudent For instance he said the city had deided not tr) hAnd a massive project to make Foire Ouirs Sr11661 rrieet standards' If the district had decided to 7o into &I$ it wouldn't See Column 5 C-- 2 I i I e d 5 - - t ton and -- - --- 4 P t I - to o i 3 - 4 ( ' f r - hoo 44: o or - 1 4 o"1 to wooova ‘ - Here is what the Regents will consider: colr The state's four leges could adopt stricter admission standards based on a matrix of grade-poin- t average and ACT scores The University of Utah and Utah State University would admit all students who score more than 100 (for example a 26 ACT and 25 GPA) They would reject those who score lower than 85 the equivalent to a 18 ACT and 25 GPA Those in the middle would be considered on an individual f - -- i 4 - 04 four-yea- - Jeff Allred The Solt I Ake Tribune Building for Tomorrow r at Grant Elementary School in Murray puts the finishing Daniel Hardie a touches on his futuristic space station Friday About 80 students from the school took part in a competition that shows children architecture and engineering are potential professions fifth-grade- c-g 1 to f 0 4 f V 1 el I 14' 1 I v4 I w officials decided Phillips Street should be in Layton Many of us didn't like it at all and refused to change our addresses" said Mrs Galbraith However by 1990 mail delivery problems forced even the staunchest rebels to give in The Galbraith address became 334 W Phillips Layton But the residents of Phillips Street did not give up "Together we wrote a petition to the Kaysville City Council asking to annex our street" she said Thirteen of 17 homeowners along Phillips signed the petition and the City Council accepted it In November the street was back in Kaysville Mrs Galbraith's new address t s A 4 growth" rI 'zA i--- 1 Kaysville In 1988 Layton and Kaysville $ 4 1 Darlene Galbraith who has lived on Phillips for more than 20 years said her original address was 578 N Phillips St - V- ' (41 - back - t t 4 I coe-:::::1- have Kaysville F i I - "moved" from north to west from the even side of the street to the odd and in some cases from Kaysville to Layton and - 4 i t changed their addresses four times without ever moving People who live along Phillips Street which straddles Lay- 1 - I f F i i Some residents of Layton — or is it Kaysville? — have 1 two-pag- Nakoryakov THE SALT LAKF I t in- state's Odds Were Even They Would End Up on Odd Side of Street t I the The bill will riot irrin ualties in all the uf tri 0-- eci -- 1 t year e:-'17- milllun Critical Puilding Aid contended that inequities are inher-nt base in the properly-taThat finances school building funds Property in districts with rrmre industries 13 worth more so taxPs there bring in more money Burningham explained that assessed valuation of property in South Summit tops $1 million per student In tiny South Sanpete district the average per student as - I SI I total of s22 a ovqt the next I - enrollaid tat - 1 1 wealtier dis r fr-7- 1 - e iridc"htel (Iistricts would tie allowed to pase in their increa e more slowlv J alsr) can for the state a::ir- - rrate 31 rr lion that would adcled to a Lake bill-- i ha-- find ar(rrnrritd176? ment Mr Birrr::a71 prrrty rf the property that trolPri 741 trailers to 1 percentage eiri7ti into sel-'-('- money from and wealther 7r1-(it tri in need of more school bu11r:s and other faciities Robin Irr)toln:casf:te intended to redure tax coner frrJrn ti'ns left rf:preentat:'esi of Salt Lke and other 'ilthiPr distr'cts angry qra:liaton is rict thP word for this- - sail Minority Leader a al a tirn raied taxes x t - mended that Utah universities and colleges consider raising tuition toughening admission standards and cutting back on remedial courses The proposals were presented to the State Board of Regents at its monthly meeting Friday After further research the Regents will sessed So rrsby 7PF es Ile and the - ! Declaring the need for emergency action Utah's Commissioner of Higher Education has recom- Cherr:1 The tneasure sponsored by Rep Rim Lurningham rerditributes mnney based on I Wright Lv and MI(hael It s blckod:etting It's taking the lifet1cir“1 of Salt Lake and spending it f2:‘Atere in the state- ! THE SALT LAKE TRiBUNE Bill Gets House OK Frank - 1 Proposzals Next Month See h help-wante- - r- Will Con4der Refrents n hand-delivere- CLASSIFIEDS Cl Butler noted 'California always is popular" The library buys papers from Los Angeles San Diego and San Francisco "We get an awful lot of requests for papers from Phoenix and Tucson Las Vegas is hot hot hot" Requests for Seattle papers dropped as prices increased and the job market tteasks for ned in the Northwest "And nobody job ads from the Boston paperThe library sometimes subscrihes only to Sunday editions Ms Butler said GPTiPrIV speaking they arrive the following Thursday By then jobs may he filled In the ra of Las Vegas deliveries have taken 10 days The library also has a catalog telling professionals which publications advertise jots and there is a listing of state employment offices around the nation libraries to look for jobs It's also a form of entertainment When they cant afford to go to movies they go to a library and get a video or a book" Provo Library's LincIP Brown said numbers "seem to increase daily More and more people are calling to see what we have" In Ogden workers at Weber County's Main Library also said that while numbers of those using employment references seem to be increasing there is no documentation Besides keeping about 30 newspapers on the racks the Salt Lake City Library at 209 E 500 South has a selection of papers and magazines d ads from across the nation with ads Utah job Along with seekers look at rents and grocery prices Ms THE SALT LAKE TELPINE By Lill OBITUARIES SATURDAY February 22 19')2 237-204- 5 Sign of Times: Library Traffic's Up When Economy's Down Reflecting 1 it ‘0 nvant 4‘t Ti49'1 News Desk: 7 r - 1 i i 1 1 v 0 1 1 I i I II I li 1 1 ''' Nt L9 was 334 W Phillips Kaysville In January all Phillips Street addresses inexplicably changed again Now Mrs Galbraith lives at 1697 W Phillips Kaystille moving from the even side of Phillips to the odd side Mrs Galbraith is tired of moving "We hope this address will stay" Column 4 C-- 2 Costs Run High in Attack Aftermath 'Relieved' Mother Freed by US Magistrate y Battle Unresolved But Bitter By Vince Horiuchi Child-Custod- By Jon Ure THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Jackie Nemelka beamed as a federal magistrate told her Friday that she was free to walk from his courtroom "I am so relieved" she said hugging her 2- month-oldaughter Sarlah The federal fugitive warrant against Mrs Nemelka 27 was dismissed but she still faces charges of parental kidnapping in Montana along with her husband Christopher 30 The criminal case stems from a bitter custody battle involving a child from Mr Nemelka's first marriage Mrs Nemelka was arrested Thursday afternoon by FBI agents who found her in west Salt Lake City's Rose Park where she was living in a bus with her husband their daughter and sons Caleb 2 and Brandon 3 Later that afternoon she was released but she was bracing herself for incarceration after the bail hearing scheduled Friday in US District Court for Utah Instead US Magistrate Judge Ronald Boyce told her that Montana had dismissed its federal warrant Judge Boyce then dismissed the Utah warrant "That merely means you're not going to be arrested on the street someplace" lawyer Jerold McPhie warned Mrs Nemelka Kidnapping charges in Rava Ili County Montana remain in effect A spokeswoman for Ravalli County Attorney George Corn said Mr Corn 'does not want to dismiss anything yet He has no comment on Jackie's case at this point" Asked if a arrangement is being a negotiated for kidnapping charge against Christopher Nemelka she said "It is my understanding Christopher will be asked to plead to a misdemeanor At that time the charges against Jackie d court-appointe- plea-bargai- d n will be dismissed" But Mr Nemelka insisted Friday that he will not THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE r71 " 4f The minute Richard L Worthington broke through a window at Alta View Hospital he touched off an incident that will cost more plea bargain "I was thinking about it but after they took my wife I won't" Mr Nemelka said He and Mrs Nemelka were charged with kidnapping in June after they took Christopher's son Joshua then 5 from Montana's Division of Family Services Joshua and Mr Nemelka's daughter Brittany then 7 were placed with family services after Paula Blades Ladenburg took the children from Mr Nemelka who had full custody Mrs Ladenburg and her husband accused the Nemelkas of abusing and neglecting the children The Ladenburgs obtained a court order to place Joshua and Brittany in protective custody Abuse and neglect charges were never filed Mr Nemelka left Brittany in Montana The Nemelkas took Joshua and fled to Oregon Idaho and Salt Lake City After two months on the run Mr Nemelka surrendered to authorities He eventually returned Joshua to Montana where he was jailed for a month After his release in October he was allowed to return to Salt Lake City while his case was under review Meanwhile the charge against Mrs Nemelka remained active including the fugitive warrant After Friday's hearing in federal court Mr McPhie said that "based on what they the Nemelkas have told me I believe there was probably a terrible miscarriage of justice in Montana "I was most shocked that in June they Montana authorities seized the children against what was an apparently valid custodial order from e Cowley Utah" That order issued in 1985 granted custody of Joshua and Brittany to Mr Nemelka after his Utah divorce from Mrs Ladenburg Four years later Mr Nemelka moved with Jackie and his new family to Montana so that Joshua and Brittany could be close to and visit their natural mother Mr Nemelka said Sandy City Council approved $27000 for its police department to cover the cost of running the operation that night said Sandy police Chief Gary Leonard Costs include overtime pay food services emergency services and the use of cellular phones The Salt Lake County Fire De 7:13i1---144- ':t it r 1 JAIL TIME 20 Mr Worthington 40 damaged several doctors offices while looking for the obstetrician who performed a tubal ligation on his wife two years before Later that night nurse Karla Roth was shot and killed when she attempted to run away He then held eight people hostage and planted a bomb in the obstetrician's office The greatest loss was suffered by the family of Ms Roth But unlike the financial losses suffered by the corporate and government entities putting a dollar figure to that emotional loss will require a verdict in the civil suit filed by the family The biggest costs so far which can be directly calculated have been borne by Intermountain Health Care the health-carsystem that runs Alta View !MC will be paying as much as $232000 because of Mr Worthingtotcs actions said IHC spokesman Daron 71111 -- SANDY POLICE than $320000 On Sept f 11 1 (34100) ($27000) ATE ($ - CR71E ?4 SL COUNTY ATTY'S OFFICE i i1:1-'I:- " 4 S 'N ''' - I 0Ail --) "ii ' 1 ($36000) 7-- k- I i 7000) 71-----"1 LAB ETC - L 1 COUNTY 1 FRE (33400) i iHC (3252C00) I The Sait Lake Tribune Graphic ' - Approximate costs Excludes some costs for Nhc then are no estmates partment spent nearly $3400 including $1085 for the 29 hours the county bomb squad used to check the hospital and remove the bomb Other agencies that incurred cost include the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco igt Firearms the state crime lab and several other city police departments A Salt Lake County prosecutor who declined to be identified said the county attorney's office will probably spend about $36000 to prosecute the case "You're going to have ation fees exhibit fees photo enlargements — the preliminary hearing alone had some 80 photographs" said the prosecutor "This one is more expensive psychiatric-evalu- casebcaUSe 1FIC must pay for damage to the hospital overtime salaries the transfer of patients to other hospitals and a medical helicopter that sat unused on 1300 East said Mr I Cowley About $37000 was spent for overtime salary and additional salaries for hospital workers who had to make repairs on the building Employees scheduled to work that nicfht but couldn't because of the incident were also paid The cost of the materials to repair the hospital totaled $1900 It- alone said Mr Cowley Counseling for the victims cost about See C-- 2 Column 4 - I p at AV AI Ao 41 so Ao A e tv Ae e"740 AoLot0 te4r Arfe Alt oft AeLAr ArtAr orA0 40teoe ooto |