Show A12 —: The Herald Journal Logan Utah Wednesday July 24 2002 m DTEESEIIS Ytyv' Utah outlook Cacho Valloy outlook Forecast for Wednesday AceuWeatherom UMNO i1! jp £v Lj 4 i "ity VV‘y’V! 1“ ' : - - 'jMoabSrJ Uw4vw- - SsghW - r chh ' ' ‘ 4 Up abovo 8unMC8:57' At 10 am Mercury le at ITS hlgheet point in latitude above (north of) the ec8p8c plane: 7 dogmas By 7 pm Hum kitty: 18 percent UV index: 10 (Vary High) tonight the moon will ahow you the location of Neptune The moon wH be of Nep42 degreee tune CondMona: Clear eouth-aouthea- at VMbMty: lOmHes 1 103 doudywtti a 40 percent chance drain Partly doudy As weekend w2ha chanced showers : Ughelnthemld- - MOT astronomy OrocketmeOxorn Lawn WsMr um: 5 days between watering water with 1 inch TOmperaturM Indicate Tuesday's high and overnight low to 8 pm Eastern Time i MamphAj Miami Beach DaikUhR 80 low 8a 80slow55-e- a New Orleane PortlandOre Reno f Richmond fp' ft ' v' ody 90 f 82' 02 ody m 82 73 96 107 87 ' 85 93 84 78 85 66 68 M ody ody cdy dr 73 1 ody "! Worth 87 Dayton Denver Ftagetaff Grand Rapids Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City 83 80 83 79 87 86 83 88 90 105 83 77 73 64 53 63 yj dr 78 77 ody 19 Cdy 72 84 m WashlnghrDXX 97 77 Regional TOmperatuieo r 99 ?61 Brigham City BfyMGsrYCrttR 82 i' 50 87 71 Canyonlanda 95 84 Cedar City Provo 98 66 92-6Roosevelt 8alt Lake City 98 72 106 82 81 George TOO 68 Tboele Wendover : 102 M 19 ody ody dr " 001 000 000 000 t ' 000 001 84 cdy 87 ody 83 dr AccuVfaatherxoniforacaat tor noon Wednesday July 24 Key West LasVOgas Los Angeles rzc :j"7i Oi 000 t 050 a MM 11M wnoSm' eaod OO0 HI E23 ES3 Oib O S3 Cache L added Beagley Green used a combination of state federal and private funds to relocate said Juab County Prosecutor David Leavitt He would not disclose the amount of aid or for what Beagley Green was using he money Leavitt tried the case in which Green was convicted Of bigamy and criminal jiqnsup' port Green is serving a one-- Wife Coatinued from A1 future to reunite with foe other wives” Beagley Green denied to The Associrequests to talk ated Press ' “She felt that she needed to ' be closer to Tom and have greater access to Tdm and that she shouldn’t be so isolated all the time” Bucher said “She wanted to visit Tom more and couldn’t She was frustrated” The family did not have reliable cars to visit Grcen he year tejkxJv" Green was convideoin June of child rape for conceiv- - Continued from A1 An Informal History of Bear Lake Valley” But Wilde knows his “tidbit of time” is likely near an end He requires dialysis three times a week and because there is no dialysis machine in Montpelier he h&w resides lh Pdtitello across the street Time: ttsrJiospitaL’tT to-fi- ve ' from every care where a deputy was accused of ‘ improper weapon use and sex-u- al misconduct but the high Court Continued from A1 ’ “"But while flidy sfill have Access i j 10 T7' Wilde’s fountain of experience the Bear Lake County DUP and Bear Lake Publishing wants to secure some of that knowledge in a new book “A Photo History of Bear Lake Valley” is a collection of about 500 photos dating from the settlement of the valley through prerent time that Wilde acquired during his decades of research With Wilde also providing the commentary the book court ruling says the law restricts which records Young will getto see Young will get access to die records only in cases where the accused deputy has appealed the disciplinary action or given permission to release the documents should be available in about six months “It’ll be great” Roberts says of Wilde’s latest “I can't wait for it" In addition to Wilde’s new book die Bear Lake County Daughters of die Utah Pioneers is also overseeing the publica-tion of three other volumes: "Ihe History of Montpelier from 1864 to 1925” by A McKay Rich is a previously unpublished master’s thesis written by Rich while he was at Utah State University Scheduled tp come jgtrt ' m August tLandofSltifiie Water A History v (rf the LDS Settkment ih Bear Lakd Val- ley” by Dr Russell R Rich was jxevious-l-y published by Brigham Young University Press Slated for a late September release “The Settlement of Monfeelier Idaho in Bear Lake Valley” by Earl F Passey comes from a compilation of manuscripts Scheduled for August publication Once published all four books can be purchased by writing: Bear Lake Publish- - ing PO Box 23 Montpelier ID 83254 “There’s no place you can get these books because some of them are out of print and some of diem have never been printed” Roberts notes “So if we don’t do it who’s going to? ' “With Mr Wilde’s book and there other books we’pe going to keep our valley’s history alive for our children and our That’s die whole object is to have it available for the next generation' Of course current genoatibns'nefalso r— fo die books publica-: the last few! yeart the! ing and growth of the National OregcmCalifomia TYail Center in Montpelier has helped spur a revival of history in the Bear Lake VAlley “That’s been a big factor in attracting people to the area” Wilde says “The history’s here and die history's hardly been scratched We’ve got a lot more to do” But Wild’s one man who has certainly done more dian his share of scratching : National Alliance Recently Pierce began using die Internet to ptmioto his recording labieL Resistance Records — “The soundtrack for white revo- Continued from Al lution” In an interview last July Pierce a ' former physics professor said Us “tog-terAlliance from a steel building on gratis to be die biggest distributor and 400 acres deep in die Appalachians about of resistance music in die worhL V producer four hours southwest of Washington' ' We may be diere now” “William Pierce was by far the most danThe League estimated gerous and effective American extremist and' last Records received ' that Resistance year racist in recent memory ” said Rabbi Abraabout 50 orden a day with each order ham Cooper associate dean of the Simon ' $70 The league won’t say how it Wiesenthal Center an international Jewish Ctuise-I- n comes by its information but Pierce had possible So for Mr humpq rights organization based in Los Hanson to complain about his said the figures were “not too far o£fy That Angeles $35 entry fee is unbelievable make gross revenues about $127 milwould The Southern Poverty Law Crater which Mr Hanson fieely admits be lion a Ptitok said foe National Alliance year tracks hate groups estimated die group doesn’t know where the also has Experts in computers Web site makesmore than million $1 ayear mainly : money goes that is raised durdesign video game techmdogy short-wasales of white power music and through die Cruise-In Apparendy ing broadcasting and video production' literature “This is supremacist ot he is not involved enough to DeMarias said the group would continue foe hate States the United major groupin Irnow He is content rather to to It’s operate “as it did before” He said Pierce die most the best run the and organized ' spend his time as he said ' wealthiest” said Mark Potok editor of the ' left instructions to his associates about how ' “polishing his car in the hot to contimre the group’s operations 7 crater’s intelligence report on hate groups sun” Perhaps the next time Pierce’s death is a significant development The law center in 1995 won an $85000 Mr Hansonstarts cmnplain- because the group has no clear heir Potok ' civil judgmrat against Pierce in A case said “It serais quite likely that foe group V will be led essentially by committee in the1' Creator has Pirare neNaa ChmchoftiK iyathisownactions ' coming months Potok said “The problem said the center raised $10 million with s for this group is diat it is a group that is buih ' funding appeal that presented the caseasa Limna Weston chance to bankropt the around a single man Williiun Pierce” V ’ The Utah Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the state’s open records law gives Young the right to see at least some of those documents A lower court had said Young gets to see documents m : Second: during the Cruise-I- n Logan motel rooms are in 200 percent higher demand Does it dierefore make good busi- -' ness sense to offer a product for a lower price? Not if you believe e American free market system and the law of supply and demand Obviously coti-sumets pay a higher price for the products that they Want than they do for the ones that nobody wants Makes sense doesn’t it? If Mr Hanson is still upset i Logan perhaps he ought to book a ' room id Jackson Hole Wyo during the annual Wcvld Chaimuonship Hill Climbs: By the way Mr Haiuon Come staywitk us atourLodge or ftecreationArea regarding yourobjection ' :v die $35 entrant foe at foe anJ let usKelp you GET AWlXYi ' : Cruise-I- n entrants paytaiinX o:-y dreds of dollars focfoeHill JV : f church groups' family reunions Climb event and they even f : risk life and limb' 'coiporacte retreats j weddingseptions Third: there are a lot of pS V jFxr ReMrvotiop Call : pie beside foe car owners who deserve taedit for making 1247 Cater (or all Occasion)! idle Cruise-l- n happen Many' ‘ high-dema- nd ve v neo-Na- zi in-th- ! : : SlXtoToSkcibse- ‘ ' 1500-memb- er f V stimd foey call you a turkey” mkhLitnu of 1100 people Furthermore die ng adjoining Bullen Center nu he hrating a wedding reception widi many as 300 people Those people need places to park But eadi of foe parking kits behind the theater is privately- owned ? As a result theatergoers are tokL to park in public lots at Logan High SdiOM behind Tony Roma’s Restaurant at the Logan Recre-ation Center or in several other public lots' : Though a parking terrace would addendum to die be a ' downtown Ballam said in the meantime he is turning to a securi- y:ty found and (orange cones to keep J his pafirons from being booted u : ' much-need- to': 1 : ’ y ' : 1 435760 a to ' and preparing this event Local businesses pay dreds or even thouapds of v1 dollars apiece just to make the UmH BEAR RIVER RESCST r- mim t V v: ‘ : ' p s ed v - ’ : -- w The feet of the matter is that the EDra Ecdes Theatre which is owned own " aver-agi- Continued from A4 Contimied from A1 l-- two-sto- ry on - r Pierce i Your view C ( 90' 75 dr ST': 60 ody 8eattor:87 961 68 18' ody Tticson £ - 93? 73' ' Cdy TUaa Sacramento Cheyenne Fifty H0w new Heavy rain swept acrou the Northeast on Tuesday afternoon as a odd front advanced from die Great Lakes Northwest Maine central New York and northwest Pennsylvania saw some of die strongest storms Nearly an inch of rain fell in Wellsville NY Heavy storms were also found in northeast Ohio with Youngstown picking up more than two inches of rain Clouds extended throughout the Ohio and Tennessee Valley into the Valley and southern Plains Some thunderstorms moved into southern Ohio through northeast Arkansas and northern Mississippi Clouds enveloped much of Virginia through north Florida Rain and occasional thunderstorms were found along the Nordi Carolina and South Carolina coastlines Scattered showers and thunderstorms moved over the interior Carolinas Georgia and over the remainder of die Gulf States Clouds were thick over North Dakota and west South Dakota to northwest Nebraska Low clouds lingered along the Pacific coastline The rest of die West and central United States were dry and pardy cloudy to fair Temperatures in the Lower 48 states on Tuesday afternoon ranged from £ high of 99 degrees in Needles Calif to a low of 36 degrees in Silver Ray Minn HO Almanac 1 Mostly 1 Local tomporaturoii Mooie Lest Quarter Aug Becoming partly cloudy In tha after-noon with highs In the mkMOe Lows around 0a EXTENDED From tho nows wire COLO dm 6:11 THURSDAY i national tocsporcturcs Albany NY Albuquerque Atlanta Baltimore BOlIngr' Boise Boston By The Associated Press 02002 AmMMMr Inc Sun: Sunrise: TODAY 8ynopels:Silghtty drier sir wll move In briefly overnight before motsturs Increases again Into tomorrow I'AT-- ) M ''listfv r v V' i ‘ mr 4 ' m ncv: O : toracMl tor (Mvttms condMona htaMow MmosndufM 0 'mm |