Show A2 — The Herald Journal Logan Utah Saturday EHD Nation Q 2004 April 17 In brief Infant OK vetoes bill to allow concealed handguns Gov Sehelius TOI'FKA Kan governor after liver transplant Kathleen Kan ( AP) — vetoed a bill Frida to allow Kansans to curry concealed handguns saying the measure would have made law enforcement officers' jobs " more difficult The hill would have required the attorney general's otlice to issue a concealed-carr- y permit to any Kansan 21 or older who is a I S citien pays a $ 50 application fee has no mental illness or drug or alcohol addiction and completes eight hours of train-in- g IOWA CITY Iowa ( AP) — Kaylee Lindley gurgling under a pale yellow blanket has good fortune and medical to thank for making her one derring-d- o of the world's youngest liver transplant survivors For reasons that still baffle medical experts she was bom in November without the cells needed to make her liver function including clotting blood and removing toxins Lacking options and time Kaylee’s father Jim agreed to donate a piece of his liver and with his wife Kellie gave specialists at the University of Iowa Hospitals permission to per- form a risky and complex trans- plant on their 1 In her veto message Sehelius a Democrat elected in 2(X)2 said if the hill had become law “Police officers highway patrolmen sheriffs and deputies in Kansas would be forced to assume that any person they stop could have a firearm" “This would make their already dangerous job even more difficult “ she said legislators' could override Sehelius' veto with two-thirmajorities ip both chambers hut the bill passed in the' House on 5 a vote leaving supporters six voles short of the number needed to override ds 7X-4- LA porn industry under voluntary work quarantine after AIDS scare I ( )S ANC il: LH S' ( APj — An AIDS scare prompted adult movie companies to lialt production and bar dozens of performers from the set after two actors tested At least 4? actors and actresses were under a voluntary work quii online and about a dozen companies were adhering to a volh moratorium until new HIV tests are completuntary ed industry experts said "It's very scary" said Mary Carey a porn star who ran for governor of California last fall “This is kind of a wake-u- p call for every body” Carey said she had not worked with the infected actor but as a precaution she was canceling a lesbian porn shoot The last industry HIV scare was in 1999 when a male actor tested positive for the disease He no longer performs and no other actors w ere infected Before that a male actor infected five women in i 99X A nonprofit health group was trying to identify performers actors as well as a “sec- -' who had sex with the two ond generation’’ who slept with their movie sex partners HIV-positi- two-mont- daughter Months later the operation has been deemed a success and has made the Port Byron III toddler — just 19 days old at the time — among this youngest ever to survive the transplant procedure hospital and donor organizations say “We knew there were big risks” Kellie said Tuesday holding her HIV-infect- ed daughter after a visit to doctors Hawaii surf culture undeterred by - recent shark attack missing surfer KAIIANA Hawaii AP) — Sam George can't believe the audacity of surfers who return to the water immediately after a shark attack — although he’s one of them “I'm as silly as the rest"-saiGeorge a San Clemente d editor of Surfer magazine "Surfers build their whole life arourid being there and catching the wave' “liverything takes a back seat" Will Surfers have been undeterred by the death of Mclnnis who was killed by a shark April 7 off Maui's western shore It was the first confirmed shark fatality in the state in' nearly a dozen years Police also were investigating (lie possibility of a shark attack in the disappearance of another surfer Courtney Marcher 22 Her hoard was found with'its leash severed the same day Mein- nis was attacked hut more than 100 miles away off Oahu's North Shore She disappeared April 4 In Hawaii surfing eclipses pastime status It is a culture all its own with obsessed” wave riders centering their lives on the rise AP photo ( NO - d ' Calif-base- of the tide NC prisoner pardoned after 18 years eligible for redress RALEIGH NC AP) — A than who served 18 years in prison lor a murder he didn't commit has been pardoned by the North Carolina governor and could he eligiblefor $360000 in '7 compensation “Finally my innocence isrecognicd"Darryl Hunt said Thursday- after Gov Mike Paisley issued the pardon “For so trying to prove my innocence only to be many years 1 told 1 w as lying and to finally have it official mean's a lot" Hunt was twice convicted of the 19X4 murder of Deborah Sykes who was raped and killed as she walked to her job as a Sentinel copy editor at tlic 'mw:dcfunct Winston-Salelie was freed alter I X years in prison in December when' DN A evidence led police to another man who confessed to the' killing and said lie acted alone A judge vacated the charges ' against Hunt in February Hunt's attorneys asked Easley almost eight weeks ajgo to issue a “pardon ol innocence'! People receiving a pardon of innocence arc allowed to apply to the state Industrial Commission for $2(MXM) in compensation Ibr each year they are imprisoned ( have-bee- m ‘ -- j ' : pasture for tll6S6 hOrSeS Mustangs are lined up for admirers' inspections at' the Mustang 40th anniversary celebration in Gladeville Tenn Thursday The Mustang made its debut in April 1964 at the World's Fair in New York Since then about 8 million people have bought one ' ' here “Every time she smiles at me every time she coos at me I know it was worth it” Annie Moore a spokeswoman with the United Network for Organ Sharing said Kaylee’s liver transplant was one of 158 provided last year for children under a year old According to statistics provided by the network Kaylee is the surviving liver transplant patient with an organ donated by a third-younge- st relative Bostoini ©ys taveleir c©ini(riliuicti Logan airport studies terrorist behavior patterns WASHINGTON (AP) someone at an airport is sweating is it because he's running late or trying to hide something? Could hand signals between people in a terminal be part of an inside joke or a terror plot? A pilot program using “behavior pattern recognition” is under way at Boston's ' Logan International Airport where two of the planes used by the Sept 1 1 hijackers took off Air marshals passenger serceners and state police sta- liohed there have undergone special training in things to look for that could indicate a ' terrorist plot Israeli officials have employed a version of the technique for years to protect ' air travelers against terrorists' At Logan! uniformed and ' undercover security officials ' watch people as they move ' - l&ht v through terminals They look for odd or suspicious behavior: heavy clothes on a hot day without luggage anyone ' observing security methods At the security checkpoints screening supervisors have a score short with a list of behaviors on it If a passenger ' hits a certain number a law enforcement officer will be notified to question the person Air marshals watch the air: port crowds as they wait for their flights they too alert the troopers if they see something suspicious “They're looking for something outside the normal range of behiavjbr" said Jack Shea ' special agent in charge of the rs federal air marshals in Boston ‘‘What I like about it it's very basic it's common sense it’s effective it works” Massachusetts State Police Maj Tom Robbins who over- sees the troopers at Logan said the program has been a suc- cess “We haven’t caught Osama bin Laden but we’ve caught people who are exhibiting the behaviors they're looking for” he said Mostly they catch people with outstanding warrants he said The technique is not new to the government — Customs agents have used the technique to look' for smugglers at bonder crossings But some civil libertarians are wary concerned the program could lead to unlaw- ful searches and seizures and persecution of passengers law-abidi- ng Barry Sieinhardt director of the American Civil Liberties Union's technology and priva- cy program questions whether the program even works “I haven't seen any studies on it” he said He’s particularly concerned behavior pattern recognition might become a pretext for racial profiling’ TheheadoftheACLU’s: racial profiling project aroused suspicions while traveling' through Logan in October He was questioned and lodged a complaint afterward Some privacy advocates prefer behavior pattern recognition to the government’s plan to conduct computerized background checks' on all air travelers1 to try ip identify potential terrorists aiid other dangerous people r-rr im -: - Those heart-warmin- g tunes jromyestentay and today! 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