Show s ! t The Herald Journal Logan Utah Tuesday Juty 7 1998 t — Page5 : He! West ' A i v fr-' I? ’T’i - v CREEK Two accused have eluded a - Cola (AP) --- - - rations and things like that” the spokesman said - Piloa and McVean along with who police ' cop-kille-rs five-we- —‘ ek --- - j " ’ ios26 of after five day of probing the desert and canyon country in t KXVdegreeheaL - Lacy ordered firea set in the : re river bed last Thursday to born lo off tifM of the Gallon when he stooped them in that has shielded caves and other a stolen water track May 29 The potential hiding places But the trio wonnded two sheriff’s 4 Federal Bureau of Investigation ’ deputies in a running gun battle declined to send SWAT teams to that ensued then disappeared into assist and the Bureau of Land die desert canyon country west of Management and the Forest Ser-Cortez poUcesay vice refoaed to join in the bunting - The corridor from or to provide mm with chrmfciu Bluff to Montezuma Creek has accelerants that would increase been the focal point of search ' the efficiency of the bunk efforts since a The fires cleared little of the girl spotted two men trying to get mto vegetation and a frustrated Lacy a water track parked In the bock on Friday tuned the search over yard of her uncle's home in the 'to the federal government reservation town of Montezuma Butthe Navajos with their Greek June 28 She shouted at the autonomous government have men who ran back into the near- - decided to conduct their own ’ searches this week with or with- by riverbed The girl identified Piloa and out local or federal authorities “There’s a possibility they may McVean from a photo lincupr adding that Pilon walked with a still be in this area’ said the bmp rake say Pilon limps from Navajo spokesman "And it an old motorcycle injury rained Sunday night so the Sheriff Mike Lacy last Friday ground and any tracks i sent exhausted searchers home fresh" - tr !v Jt a yt k' - '1-V1’’ ' - I Police are looking for two vehicles (hat have been seen fre-- quently in recent days on the Navrio Reservation and the San Juan Rivet in soutiieastem Utah where die search hu been con- centrated for Alan “Monte" Pilon 30 of Dove Creek and Jason McVean 26 of Durango “We’ve had numerous sight mgs of two vehicles coining from Dove Creek or Pleasaatview down this way They’ve beea seen down by the river quite a few times by some of the local people" said a spokesman for ‘ - the Navajo police on Monday Navo authorities describe the vehicles an older white four-- door sedan make unknown and -i v u a dark blue pickup truck Two females have beea seen in the ' vehicles r - “Their friends or whoeverfoev are could be providing themi with 'e: ' "Vv t&‘ Vv ' '7' V ¥ J t i - ' £ 5 ' iffe 4- I n 7 " 1 : V-- ' $ ' ' v? lguns 'C $ - V rjp-5 PROVO (AP) — Utah resi- dents with gun permits win not be allowed to carry them into the V Vft Aj A !v i' r 'V ' w Utah State Hospital ? Utah State Hospital admiiiistm-lo- n presented a revised rule gov- iV- - t- sHflV : f JJ Vrr-- 7j - 1 V' - - erning concealed firearms to a legislative oversight committee on Monday No gun rights advo- cates spoke leaving committee members to surmise the compromise rale was reasonable b will require coacealed-dan- y nwmii holders to either pyk their firearms in their car or proceed directly from the parking lot to the administration building I 'where' the gun can be secured A -- “rtair’ by£ w ' "The'debate over fireanhf at the menial hospital under- - state-ru- n Ill iM scores the conflict between die concealed firearms law and the position held by Gov Mike Leav-- dt and tome of his administrators :tsv sTv t 4 n? - - - EXAMPLES OF THE EXTRA SAVINGS YOU’LL FIND that they can make rules to restrict firearms from some state ww facilities Swindler gets long jail term Wayne Ogden Mena wNIe Ns attorney NaM Kaplan speaks lor him pnOu io wwnQnQ on MoiMQfi uyoifi woo nonocunoo 110 wmmq away by boONh as members of Ns tamMy openly wept in n aanlano- tag hearing In which Ogdon was ordered to spend at least two yam' and aa many aa 30 years In prisoaHe was convicted of having ewtadtadip to SOuiMon from as many as 800 people who Invested h Ns elaborate pyramid schemes 'T-- : Monday several legislators worried about how law enforcement officers would deal with their weapons while visiting the stale hospital Key to any weapons rale is the v ' safety of staff and patients said hospital administrator Mark Payne - IVp Agcnsfraa J jUi Wood fhg 2BjBMUB SriiRLOBSLfli T sense give 'i Mi Should the lake rise to the 4212-folevel of the Carter conceded it will EKlKSm t I I I-- t I cay million false sense of security against the threat of a rising GrolSabLake six - the pumps have sat idle since ?--V Some people however credit the drought of the early 1990s as the more significant factor in the ' lake’s declining elevation indeed foe lake level continued to fell through 1994 to 4198 fed 1993 however the lake ' There is no guarantee that the pumps built is the against the onslaught of historic lake levels will be aide to do the job they were intended to do said Departmrot of Natural y mid-198- 0s Resources pLumer Tim Carter ' has been rising It is expected that after this year’s El Nino- inspired wet winter and spring foe lake level could reach 404 Starting and operating the said hydrologists and businessmen contend the Utah Legislature pin the pumps ES'ii feet Except for routine ' tenance cost-prohibiti-ve ' feet v v Carter said people are already in the wrong place to save money Doing it right? would leginning to talk about turning have cost $30 million more “The Legislature was interest- - - - an foe pumps again “But b’s not that simple” he probably cause millions of dollars in damage again ' But the state he said needs to weigh the pumping costs against the cost of property damage V “How much is the state respon-risin-g sible for people building too close to the lake?’ he asked “The lake’s like a sleeping drag-on which people should knot to get too close to' Peter Behrens retired of Great Salt Lake Minerals would like the pumps turned ou when foe lake hits 4205 fort A lower lake level makes it both easier to extract minerals and protect shoreline property he said"''"-- R2UDSUI mid-198- 0s ' wmmva luaiiMtigMMiki bltoVtertlta itomm v up and running and another S2 million a year to operate them I C into building the pumps as the lake rose to the historic level rtf 412 feet above sea level ' The idea was to pump hua- dreds of millioas of gallons of lake water into the arid West Desert where it would evaporate The monstrous pumps when ran- ning at capacity can lift 1J mil- lion gallons a foinute into a canal leading to the desert : West Desert The four-mile-lo- ng i so-cal- led - nn o tCOPYl That could be foolate for some businesses and the newly rebuilt Antelope Island causewqr which was inundated before ' Davis works County public director Sid Smith said the cause- way sits at 4209 feet and waves r would wash across it The county wanted foe cause-way built higher but Utah fegis- - lators balked at foe cost “b was a difference of spending S3 mil- s lion or 320 million" Smith said "But foe Legidature found foe Conservationists like Ella" Sorenson believe foe state should never have built foe pumps “The lake should be allowed to : function naturally" she said “The up and down cycles are part u ii- - ' SuamPtapmr "A"""1 hrGrtifeBBpW - mnjuwwMa ixnrvounnrsjsu ' ITJftAWRWiiJII bl a t wnuiiiaaa W exijjskkx ntuisitui mnajEr- t- tsnicsauwi lawnumistui mnuMTum I - s - HeiKMtilHoiv pf ts $37 mmim r“Ty IdfeutUfeb - ‘ fegOMSfeUMU looariouMrTjEua ChUnSanoiMnbj OtenPkSc Speedy hHX2UCS8llBttB -- TQCflfVOU MT7J9M1JI ' - ' HNB8BIH9H - ftrGftfltBcisW - hnfcqrtWrt''oReglOIJCSfelWa v - 4 - ' feNrthdHfettGhhrntlsilklsa JCQi tawob dmtltpumudScuflknN u “OMMlhcUilhCfosnui PI visit us at our conveniently located store Mall Cactio Moit-tn- t lOam-Op- valley sun - Closed m ' M (i i - Mj — - unmnmm i coat too prohibitive” - txiKatesiwiOrevrq - 70-tL2-0 ITWWVTH" SST A MA tUHtotsm desert Austin backs Behrens on both of nature’s plan" REglUNUCSfelfettB TOQAf YOU FW tUhmimWiiM should have been built to operate accounts “The pumps were afor designed right fe7MXSahlHB V' a ISaBfailnekMhl on the fresher south arm of the Moreover Carter said the lake rather than the brinier north ' pumps weren’t designed to be arm As a resutt of the earlier businessturned on until the lake readies at pumping 300 million tons of ' lakeside devastation of unrecovered salt is lying in foe es in 1986 pressured lawmakers least 408 feet Gov Norm Bangerter disastrous facing flooding and HIKSlOa unmimui-i- bU&CkSlisXaK1pS ‘ and false ecooo- - -- TOwmtUMUi ' ' v bWIWMh fegl2U5SU mnunwui suw wmm miau ed in doing it fast and cheap" said v"' ' His company lost millions of said state hydrologist Lloyd y For one tiling it win cost die doQare during foe '80s ' - He also contends the pumps f Austin “I believe it was short- - state $1 million to getfoetwnms term ““S" i:r ftgtflOSillfi S£2?jT SSSKS'- LafttCaualSboM' ' II STOCK SunroHStScjmetl MKXIR8MS4119 InRHHtlMfcfc1 -- v teummvvaa locianoumfzrs 'Y " - wiuisat - ot j I tan V DiTK - AgCOHUONllMR (hgflHUOSlUI mrmmtum - i '' - mmimumx immwmx imNlldIM Ooorinfti W ' w i&m :ibissum tre BSMiUMDlHWvU tiwqhvhia - tafepni A 'h ' OTCRESIQCX i IfeqlioMdiSMrti: 4 j vuyb hh 7? |