Show vi ! V V - v I - 'i - - ' ' j" ' v 'J" ' r (' ' ' ' a V IV v '' 1 a i ' ' :V If t : V"- ‘ A' A 1 vf Jr?' ' ' unuci'ij Vi V' ‘v: V: ! “ ' m ' i-- JA It If Meet the man who captured the first TV signal in Cache 'Wiley —A3 Rumors of a local minor league team resurface — B1 Vi’ ' y r‘J J i l1 y & l?-I- ©gl3EJ!a£?Q02S33l ®W t i Coidd we actually get ' more rain? ' A- '- V : - ' NBW YORK (AP)— The Dow Jones industrials shattered their : ist post-terror- — Str6t trSIld TTBCKinQ VvRII V aelloff that began witii news of a govern-- A 86882001116 finish put die average 216 v 9MDokitotolowlmiiMnaimJoiKnnjdww)ntai2 ment investigatiou at Johnson ft fohnson points beneath the Sept 21 dose following y ? and quickly turned into a fiiDtetr by terrorist attacks and at levels last seen ' V t bruised investors in Octc)er l9981E was also the Dow’s v y 'i sevendi Mnest It was die average’s Seventh biggest point drop ever f in' its lowest ufter ever'and 43637 dose point drop point drop on March 12 ' K four die attributed ? ? Anafysts yean lijoo nearj ’ Broader stock indkrion which hmm dedines to WaU Street’s unwillingness make anybeb in a nurket dud below thdr SaL Allows for '' J while also feltThe Nasdaq composite cqiaMe of rmlyfdling farther— stocks' V have now falkm sharply for ninestraight index slid 3780 or 28 percoit to : 'weeks' ?" ?s ’v y" ''r131915 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 index tumbled 3380 or 5 percent to no good news out there V now and people are not willing toget 84776 : ‘P For the week the Dow lost 77 percent ' involved in the market going into a week- ‘V': ’jK the Naklaq fell neariy4Jl percent and the r end” said Bryan Piskorowski a market yaooo 2001 commentator at Prudential Securitiea1 iaea isw u “You’ve got a buyers’ strike going on” Bee DOW on AS aouncE&vwiooowiCMiwiodryOyeKniineAMocidPww y £ ythe i reggy 3 'v- r " ’ I2rqrw - one-da- y: 1 ''if The Dow closed down 39023 or 46 percent at 801926 after falling as much !‘- tov qipe'Vbindiiig ft y' riit ‘I i ' '"''i Kt’r Kra titiS'n'vdies A ’ - - SALT LAKE ' aTY(AP)— ' : Polyguliist author Ogden Kraut who often provided expert and tern-pente opimoa when polygamist issues rose to public attention has died at 75 :v Kraut died at his Salt Lake City home Wednesday After being di- -' nosed with liver cancer in March Kraut spent his last days writing his obituary and planning his funeral His obituary mentioned do wives and listed ms eight children only by their first names' He wanted to be known as a “fundamentalist Mormon H said Anne Wilde one of Kraut’s wives “He considered himself a Joseph Smith Mormon— a follower of original Monnpnism” TheChurchof Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints disavowed polygamy a century ago and now excommunicates thoKwho practice it U also objects to die term fundamentalist t Mormon- - bontendiny pblygamists are not members of church and therefore ate not Monnons In June more than a lOO memben of his extended family duew a birthday party for Kraut who spent his life cranking put books about polygamy and theology Kraut was born June 21 1927 in Shelby Idaho He joined die Mar- - r mon church in his teens and went to Brigham Young University for one t " v'yeatHe late worker for John Hyrum ' Koyle who claimed to have a vision4 of a gold mue in die Wksatch Mountains After sdlins1 stodcin the mine which never yielded a treasure Koyle eventually was excommunicated But Kraut believed fervently in Koyle’s visions until the end of ms life Wilde siud After serving in the military Kraut got ajob as a scientific at the Armv’S Dugway Proving (bound' where he worked for about ' i 24 years retiring in l990 Kraut wrote hu first book “Jews War Married? hr 1969 and by the v end afhis life had published about 65 tides He oftai was sought out by reporters seeking to understand what Was happening in various polygamist sects ' He offered his sqvices as a nego- jiator between Uw enforcement and: p the polygamist clan their during J3Hday standoff in 1988 It was Kraut's way to be a moder-ating influence among pinrate polygamous groups and those who aludyzed thm sud Kenneth Driggs an tianta attorney who has studied " i'1'’ " 'f' n' tjUal'5 '' ? ' 11 " !®obo'Vdlloy b —— 1—1— j ''I-"'- ' ’ c This used to be their -- By HoM Gunned staff writer ‘ & ‘ The Ellis sSKSio i prom leftBAnrwWliBonParfon Marilyn EamesBaicar and Max Elaswi try to identify wtibswtio in their v Viv y ' :‘tdaaspicturoa from the 1940's ' ' r V ’ I :r r'ii 'i i t r ? y i ‘if y "-- " :& i' Ctaasflla(L£8 JObttuarie$A6 ' Comic8u4'C8 OpWoniA4 v ' By Anin Brunson staff writer d j 'y — - ’' v r' ' -- y" i- In girl’s death STANTON Calif (AP) — A factory wotk- er acquitted of molesting two girls two years ago was arrested Friday in the kidnapping v and slaying of Samandu Runnion whose abduction sent a chill across Southern California T: NORTH LOGAN— South Cache Center dropping for new school plothes shoiddbe awarej ‘qf a hew dress code uduch was unanimously mraoved 1 by die Cache County School KstrictBoardpf EduCa- ' I v V: v tkm to go into effect this fall ’f :Vice Principal Sheri Hansen told the Board of Edu--v- ' ‘cation Thursoay niit dial the dress code modifications ' were initiated and had the support rf die Soudi Qovernanipe Committee ' t Cache rV: -- v!: : ' Schod Board fterident Timara Grange said die icy amendments are s reacticnt to concerns by some i P: ' : parents faculty members and administrators that the ''dres code contained some Vagtie areas' V U “These tilings are to make it much mote medfici that parents have a clear Understanding of wnat will OK and vriud isn’t" Grange aaid ' For example die first rule tmder the dress code said gor abbreviated cloduneiconsideied unac- -f Any clodung die admimstortion conaiden 8--9 - f ' v ' : See CLASS on Al Suspect held : i stu-de- nts ’ Orange County Sheriff Michael Carona said a tip from the public led authorities to the suspect Alejandro Avila v “IamlOO percent certain that Mr Avila is the man who kidnaped and murdered Samantha Runninn” Carona saidduring a news confer- - y ence Friday about eight hours - ' ' : -- -- v ' ' Site-Bas- ed pol-V-'- P after ahnoutiting the ariest ' Avila was detained at hiS mother’s apartment in Lake Ekinorp about 50 miles from Stantouandabout IOmiles from where (de body was : found1 ''ypr ' y " forgetwhen Steve John Stuck his tongue to the flag-- see what has dianged and what has stayed localschbolno-no- s 4 jinSaiV':’' If Indon'i i V r services are scheduled for Ellis Elementary ClaSS Of ’46 COUld V- Green hairs’s'v''V among Singer-Swap- : — met on the swings pole — twice! afternoon Friday ' to reminisce about the days when’ recess was die most important part of the day “We did everything at recess”said Rod Jones “Kickhall baseball everything” Classmate Doug Raymond nodded and added that there were “a lot of skinned shins” to be had on die Eltis playground The group started dieir afternoon with - -- v Ele- - town for their 50th nine-chamber-ed world” Driggs saidThursday WasOKstanmng upandbeihg for his views” he wooden slabs serving as seats weren’t the most stable from what the kids of 1946 remember but the steel pdes of die swing set at Ellis Elementary have stood thetect of dine This steel has been holding up through all the winters in Cache Valley at least back to 1939” said Max Eliasonofthe class of 1946 holding onto die chain of a robber And WllO in the "QQ self-publish-ed : -- ' vna : rJ-- r rpP:P--rPp- No charges were annotinced against Avila butCnWaidthecasewas‘readytobe himded over to the district attorney’s ofBde” Avila denied any involve- Amna m iwfermeni wiflii Vr- Before Ms arrest F" pHimaitf in tKm clfltriiiff C I fj v - m-- “ f - - s - : It |