Show t' V t - v " ? i' ' '’ i f vv ' i' i Pag 10 — Tha Herald Journal Logan Utah Tuesday June 3 1997 ITHEKWEATHER Utah outlook Cocho Volloy outlook Tho Forecast for noon tomorrow J Logan X£T v national plctaro Temperatures Indicale previous days low to 6:32 am high and MOT 85° I I Lea Vegas Los Angeles SO mi Beach MptojtPauj SO 7S 01 52 81 53 SO New Orleans New York CSy 1 79 to as 51 77 56 61 46 M 1 Omaha SO 10676 WEDNESDAY Sumy wNh near record scnngnignwnptnh turn Fair and very warm tanfahL LooaiVU eefpie high wM reach 86 uJ Ou lum OSQM8 Mol uli mm dropping to 54 (tograsa downtown Partly cloudy and very warm wfth poaaUa thundar storms aHamoon and early evening Logarfs high wl reach 85 — won aaA vis low osgreou Mini to 58 dropping dogmas downtowa con-Inu- ad PortlandOre EXTENDED Rapid CSy Partly cloudy and coot or Thureday trough Saturday wMr a chance 81 Louis SaS Lake CXy San Diego ol ihowem or altor noonfrundamtotma Logarfs high wfl reach SanFrandsoo Benia Fe twipperOOstotow 70s wMh town dropping Into tie bwtomid 50a dr 62 44 m 66 40 m 67 156 cdy 66 cdy m 64 66 61 60 cdy 71 67 cdy m 72 58 67 dr m 70 66 45 70 78 78 83 86 72 PSNburgh TODAY 3 cdy 52? cdy cdy cdy m Tucson 10460 MteNnaloffiACe 64 54 146 dr m Aa of May 30 tfie atatawida precipitation tor Ihe walar year (since October 1) stands at 128 percent of normal compared to 86 percsnl at the same time last year The North Central region which Includes Cache County stands at 136 percent o( normal compared to 111 paroantatlhe same time last year Paroantagsa are provldsd by the Utah CImale Center at Utah 8tale University Almanac Cocho Sun: Sunset tonight at 8:56 Sunrise tomorrow at 5£5 ajn tonporotavos From the last 24 hours High City Hid Firm 74 ‘ LewMon 78 74 Logan KBLQ 73 Logan KVNU 74 Logan USU Mention 78 Moon: New Moon Juno 4 11:03 NW Logan pm UV River Heights SmithfieW Trenton Normal temperatures: The average temperatures tor this date In Trenton are 72 degrees with the average tow dropping to 41 DaNy evaporation: PrestonKACH 51 56 49 On this date: On June 3 1980 Logan's high temperature only reached 49 degrees and 220 ML Login NorthLogan Low 48 43 57 pm WsNavilto Index: MghatO 27 Incheaday Pollen count: Trees moderate brash moderate grass moderate molds high (Courtesy of Dr Free Inflation nmliahlllttea Wednesday 40 nereent mom wm WMomm mum maul mm mum a Mur pcaaupr aout I Local forecasts provided by ContlnentaLWeatherServIces ed me his wedding ring and of course I just lost it" Bud Welch stood in downtown Verdict Continued hem Page 1 family members in Denver and Oklahoma City “We were holding hands and praying and crying" said Katherine Alaniz whose father Claude Medearis was killed “My mom leached into her purse and hand Doctors Continued from Page walk like-mind- ed "I thought it'd all be joy but h isn't" Welch sail “A very dull victory The bottom line is my little girl isn't coming back and I week shortly after FHP and Budge Clinic reached an impasse on insurance contracts with Budge doctors Budge Clinic is without a contract with but continues to see patients " ed re Rich Smith Logan Regional Hospital administrator said he's unaware of WestCaie’s attempts to work with IHC He did say to however he is "curious know what the purposes of West-Ca- re are" adding that the doctors in WestCare "are doctors who have been in the community and of my life to deal Coup Sentiments from people like Oklahoma City near the site of Welch will be presented to jurors the bombing where cheers eruptduring the penalty phase to ed from more than 500 people demonstrate the enormity of a who got news of the verdict on crime that cast a spotlight on America's militia movement and televisions set up on the side- IHC-own- 1 have the rest with that” FHP-insur- ed FHP claims IHC terminated negotiations between FHP and the Budge Clinic The Budge Clinic maintains FHP's most recent offer wasn't acceptable among other things and was rejected for those reasons not because IHC severed relations right-win- g Continued from Page hotel and told him “the trouble is over" It was unclear how many foreigners remained in the capital after today's evacuation of 1217 civilians including Americans extrem- ists Defense lawyers plan to call people who can talk about Briton and Indians McVeigh's difficult childhood The evacuees 10 of whom were carried out of the Cape Siena on stretchers were taken by helicopter to the Kearsage with IHC and the Budge Clinic" said Gibbons "It allows doctors stationed between the capital and neighboring Guinea On Monday Nigerian warships to work as a group to contract with insurance companies and increase the quality of care” WestCare includes almost 40 medical doctors seven mental bombarded positions held by troops loyal to Koroma who responded by targeting the health professionals and 11 physical therapy specialists Western Medical tom more than 30 shareholders Not all Western shareholders are involved in WestCare but the majority are WestCare also includes doctors who are not Western shareholders and who beachfront Mammy Yoko hotel where hundreds of Nigerian fat to back the ousted government had set up a com- troops sent mand posL The fighting subsided overnight and there were no reports of clashes today It was unclear how many people died Monday reports ranged from a dozen to newly 50 After Red Cross workers arranged a cease-fir- e Monday night hundreds of civilians were able to flee the Mammy Yoko have provided competition" with FHP IHC and FHP are two have not yet left IHC’s health before their affiliation with "We respect the skills West-Ca- re of these and all local physicians whether they are independent or employed" said Smith Many of WestCare's physicians are among the 22 Cache Valley doctors who in April announced their pending plans to no longer of Utah’s largest health care orga- insurance network nizations Budge Clinic and FHP Offices for both Western Medrepresentatives were however to ical and WestCare are in the meet again today Cache Valley Medical Clinic It's no secret that both Western 1145 N Main Si Logan but the Medical and many WestCare docmajority of WestCare's doctors tors have been at odds with IHC in recent years And the recent formation of WestCare represents in part many of those doc- health insurance WestCare's sole contract with was reached last FHP-PacifiCa-re Led by Red Cross workers most made their way in die dark to Ihe Cape Sierra Hotel — about a nte walk — where they crowded the lobby awaiting attempts to FHP-PacifiCa-re Coach Equity Continued fkore Page will see patients in their independent offices Western's earlier plans to build a competing hospital in North provide Logan were suspended in favor of establishing health insurance competition in local health care "WestCare is the organization networks such as WestCare now the doctors can use to compete has with serve patients who have IHC tors 1 "They have waited long enough” The law requires that if 35 percent of the school's varsity athletes are women then at the least the school must award about the same proportion of its scholarships to them Grechbcrger said The Education Department will evaluate the complaints within 135 days The information used in the complaints was data that schools provide under the Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act the center said Schools used in the complaint were chosen randomly to represent public and private schools as well as different regions The center found that on average die female athlete receives SljOOO less per war in scholarships than die avenge male athlete Greenberger said Vanderbilt had the highest gap in female scholarships at $6765 the center said Wake Forest had a $3655 gap while Boston University had a $3754 gap the complaint alleges Boston College and Brigham Young had $1792 and $123$ gaps respectively Duke was cited as having a $2303 a statement calling the complaint “inconsistent with the Boston University officials issued facts" Boston Uuiwrsity reached an agreement in 1994 with Ihe federal agency in which it agreed to increase participation of female athletes from 40 percent to 4$ percent by die end of die 1998-9- 9 academic year school officials said It also agreed to increase athletic scholarships for women from 32 percent to 433 percent Joseph Alieva associate director of athletics at Duke University issued a statement saying the university did not believe it was “letting down" its female athletes “Qa the contrary Duke has made great strides” Alieva said 1 Continued from Page 1 those in his stagecoach and others pulling up behind iL The bandit told the driver that Gaskin's life was at ftalr "If you driw on before I tell you I'll kill this fellow" the robber said pointing at Gaskin When a man in one of the stagecoaches offered only a $10 bill die bandit ordered him out onto die roiid searched him and finding a later-arrivin- g hidden wallet whacked die man’s head with die barrel of his rifle which fired at die same instanL The robber finally let the stagecoaches go but continued his gunpoint collections with nine wagons and surreys that came up in die rear He demanded cash watches and jewelry He even demanded some pieces of chocolate from a box of candies clutched by a girl in one of die wagon As soon as die thief had allowed the earlier stagecoaches to move on the driver of die ninth coach hurried to a maintenance building two miles away and called in a report of the robbery Soldiers raced from Old Faithfiu but found only empty wallets at the scene This is how Gen SBM Young die park superintended reported the crime in his annual report: "Fifteen coaches surreys etc were stopped ooe at a time and their passengers made to get down and fall in line and deposit their money in a sack which was placed on the ground in front of the robber who controlled the situation by very forcible language backed by a dangerous-lookin- g rifle which he held in a positron ready for instant use” After arriving at Lake Hotel die victims of the robbery drew up a report listing die names of the 152 victims and descriptions of their losses “At a meeting of the victims of die greatest stage coach hold up and highway robbery in die twentieth century the following proceedings were enacted" All present agreed that Ben Drew of Orlando “being die lint victim Almost six years after the 1906 hoklup another thief executed a similar holdup on the same road on July 29 1914 As 15 stagecoaches stopped at Shoshone Point to admire the view of Shoshone Lake In the distance a robber with a rifle popped out of the woods and ordered passengers to empty their pockets which they did honor of being president of the meeting" And those at the gathering quickly began handing out blame “These travelers were entirely defenseless as by the rules of the park tourists and visitors not being permitted to cany weapons of offense or defense they wrote in their report “They were insulted strum robbed of money and valuables to the extent of about $2100" that Secretary and They future President James Garfield investigate the holdup “with a view to ascertain whether mere has been a neglect of duty on die part of any guardians then-interi- or of the park whether the aggrieved citizens have any suitable means of redress and compensation from the government and what steps are necessary to ensure greater sirfety and defense in die future in Yellowstone National Park" Then the group passed a resolution that hit even harder “Whereas die military authorities in charge of the park have proven themselves incompetent to protect the tourists visiting the park that we urge Congress to provide funds with which to thoroughly police ihe pari: rod to guard against a similar occurrence" the resolution read ' Park authorities knew rtf a likely suspect in the robbery: William Binkley a poacher who had of the holdup should have the I I escaped from dw park jaiL Binkley matched the suspect s description and had even been heard talking about die logistics of robbing a train of stagecoach- es A $1300 reward was offered for Binkley but he was never found Four years later a soldier tracking lost horses near Shoshone Lake found duee gold watches and a handled knife taken during die holdup Almost six yen after the 1908 holdup another thief executed a similar holdup on die same toad on silver-- July 29 1914 As IS stagecoaches stopped at Shoshone Point to admire the view of Shoshone Lake in the distance a robber with a rifle popped out of the woods and ordered passengers to empty their pockets which diey did 1mi mMt “any false The man warned rbw moves because my partner in the timber has you covered" — but again diere was do solid evidence that a second robber existed Ore of die tourists anally dared to snap a fuzzy photograph of the robber picking through his spoils which apparently amounted to about $1000 to cash and jeweary Soldiers determined quickly that die 1914 robber was not Binkley and followed tracks left by die bandit's horses to Jackson Hole where they identified one Ed Harrington as a prime suspecL Harrington was also known as Edward Traftoo one of a gang of poachers who had plagued Yellowstone for years Trafton had spent five years at a Colorado prison after trying to rob his mother-in-la- w of $10000 after which he apparently shifted his focus to Yellowstone stagecoaches A federal agent finally caught up with Trafton after Trafton had sold stolen horses to a neighbor of the man they had been stolen from In December 1915 Traftoa was tried and convicted in federal court in Cheyenne Wyo and sentenced to five years in prison A few other holdups raided Yellowstone visitors die lut 1915 Am more and more visitors took to the national park many of them in automobiles starting in 191& u became impossible for a bandit or two to effectively control traffic on park roads h |