Show w The Stangs heat rival Grjzz win playoff berth — B1 Local P E specialists look to keep children active — A3 kyoli95TloX59jSaturdayrjEebruarV 28T2004 Weather Utah shelves No Child rebellion votes good weekend for ‘Skiing A — PageAlO Update 3 Legislature L'oganlUtahl© 20041550 Bridgerland’s' Daily Newspapef Governor and Senate agree State Senate to study bill for now in summer handing a victory to the Bush administration Administration officials have visited the Utah Capitol three times in recent weeks hoping to defuse hostility over President Bush’s education program The Senate’s action came without debate on a voice vote SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah has shelved its rebellion against the federal No Child Left Behind education program at least for now with the Utah Senate voting to study the problem instead of passing a law pronibbing the use of state or local tax money to pay for federal mandates The Senate on Thursday sent the bill to a committee dial meets only House Education Chairwoman said Rep Margaret Dayton the study committee wasn’t a “graveyard" Dayton presides over the Education Interim Committee and vowed to revive the issue for IPd©©® ®r on ed funding Utah Legislature : next January’s legislative session “It’s not dying” Dayton said “It’s ' putting off arid deferring” She noted the bill pasted the Utah House and a Senate committee before being squirreled away despite lobbying by White House and federal education officials to kill the bill in committee' “It didn't die in committee and it’s not going away" she said Dayton was pushing to prohibit Utah schools from using any state or local money to comply with the No Child Left Behind mandates She and many other Republican lawmakers complained the act imposed costly new obligations without providing the money to carry out the goals which include improving all students’ See SENATE on A10 tiDDO QM)§& Bishop to stop sex VOWS SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — With deadline loom- Friday’s budget-bi- ll ing Gov Olene Walker and lawmakers reached an agreement on funding her “must-hav$30 million eleschool mentary reading program by splitting the cost between the state and local school districts After the agreement lawmakers continued to work toward a final document but by presstime Friday were e” abuse still in session Walker and Senate leaders announced the state would provide $15 million The other $15 million would come from leeway taxes that individual school boards would have to pass if they wanted to get the state funding The tax would be about $24 per year on a $200000 home Sen Leonard Blacldiam chairman of the Executive Appropriations Committee said the compromise was reachedwithout having to raid the Centennial Highway Fund which Walker had proposed but lawmakers implacably resisted A sticking point remains however Blacldiam said the House doesn’t like the way the state would figure how to distribute the $15 million with 60 percentof the money allocated according to how many students receive federal free lunches and 40 percent on the weighted pupil unit The formula “has the tendency to help those (districts) that definitely have a lower economic strata!’ so-call- half-centu- ry Eugene and Alice Haycock pose in front of one of three walls in their home covered doing puzzles for 25 years Below a halway wall irithe Haycocks' home is adomed photos by Mitch MascaroHerald Journal with Iheir finished puzzles They have been with some of the puzzles Providence architect pou rs creativity into unique home ' Blacldiam said Walker emphasized that if local districts did impose the leeway tax By Jamie Karris staff writer ' -- the revenues couldn’t be used for anything but the reading proficiency program aimed at kindeigarten through third grade There is more “tweaking” to come Walker said The budget “could be X '' vastly different Wednesday night v than itis today’ she said “It’s a work in progress” PROVIDENCE Haycock 'like most other architects seeks to be original X “An architect needs to do something creative or he’s not an architect he’s just a copy- cat” said Eugene So he’s done just that A step inside his home warps one back to the late 1960s The colors are bright and the fumiture has a retro Quickroad iV Who was the first female mayor of z'c&sfe Logan city? ill 7 - - y " -- tL cally designed by Eugene still fills the house ' It’s a house that is 100 percent his in design color and ddcor ' own story to tell wall its with leaving every “The house was a dream of his” said Alice Haycock X--Eugene’s wife' The home built in 1967 has an roof that resembles a thick piece of paper anchored to the ground at two diagonal points winch Eugene calls a hyperbolic paraboloid The inner walls only extend a few feet above the heads of most almost as : 88-fo- ot Look for the answer to today’s somewhere in todas A section See PUZZLES on A10 Uoh People Index Following are some of the local names that appear In today's Herald Journal: - Sharon Pitcher (A3) Rolayne Wilson (A3) Boonie Luce (A3) Jared Sagers (A3) Teresa Ho&rook (A4) Harry Meadows (A4) Rich Meacham (AS) Mindy Barringer (AS) Robert Franck--owia- k (AS) Brent Pickett (B1) Cam Nymari (B1 ) Adam Beardan (B3) X : Index Cta88ifie(bMB7 0bftuarie8Aa ai m B5 OpWon'A4 B1 wwwhjnewsobm hot-butt- on ffiche peopfe places & things Today Movies KNIIIHHim ASSports WASHINGTON (AP) — America’s top bishop declared Friday that the days of shelter- ing sex abusers in the Roman Catholic priesthood were “his-' tory” as two reports showed how pervasive assaults on minors have been over the last and that church leaders bore much of the blame “The terrible history recorded here today is history” said Bishop Wilton Gregory president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops Victims of molestation countered that they remainskeptical of 'church leaders’ good faith The two new reports repre-sent an unprecedented look at abuse crisis partly because they were done with the cooperation of church leaders They’re certain to lead to months of delate on such issues as whether gays should be screened from the priesthood A panel of Catholic lay people charged by the prelates with investigating the abuse crisis the National Review ' Board issued both a survey ' tallying molestation claims and costs from 1950 to 2002 and a ' companion study explaining how the problem happened v The survey found 10667 abuse claims over the decades About 4 percent of all American clerics who ' served during the time studied ' — 4392 of the 109694 priests and others under vows to the church — were accused of abuse The percentage of abusers in society at large is V unknown because studies are inconclusive The tally also calculated ' d cbsts such as litand igation counseling at $572 million and noted that the fig- ure does not cover at least $85 million in settlements over the past year The survey was conducted for the re view board by abuse-relate- See BISHOP ou AlO Haitian capital descends into move in ' Haiti (AP) — J v A senior US official said the Bush administration has concluded that the best Rebels pushed to within 25' miles of the way to prevent the insurgents from seizing capital Friday as chaos spread with gov- emment loyalists torching barricades contrpl is for Aristide to transfer power to v Supreme Court Chief Justice Boniface hijacking can arid looting President Alexandre his constitutional successor Aristide said he wouldn’t step! He is known in Haiti for his honesty down even as United States urged him to “Wc urgently call upon President Ariscede power ' ' Pentagon officials weighed the possibil-- j tide to issue die iiecessaiy'instructions so ity of sending troops to waters off Haiti to : his supporters stop this violence” the US guard against a possible refugee crisis and Embassy stud Friday night adding dot “his honor legacy and reputation are now to protect the estimated 20000 Americans v ? at stake” The US govenunent urged all that! Americans still in Haiti to seek safe haven Aristide tinder increasing pressure to -But anarchy continued its spread APpOoto step down'from the United States and die amid care Armed at Looms barricades told will in downtown ’T the have CNN that the smoke ef flaming retals Residants walk thugs hijacked descended into anarchy eerfy Friday sibility as an elected prcsidentto stay V ffee HAm on A10 Friday m rebate closed in to take over HaJtr capital v where I am'! -- FORT-AU-PRIN- Jean-Bertra- nd r: Port-au-Prin-ce Port-au-Prin- : - c - A 4 I |