Show The eraM Ki i Aggies men’s basketball opens a new season — B1 The Lewiston Theatre is still a family favorite ' —A3 November 222003 kVoi94 No?326MSaturday B ridge rtarKfs Deify Weather fi Logan? Utahl© 20031150 Nwpaper iA Get out the snowblower ' ' ' vate-sectWASHINGTON (AP) — The govsecurity personnel) ”alis -' ' 'f: Of particular concern ernment warned Friday of an increased risk of terrorist attacks on Qaida's continued interest n avia- tio'nl including using cargo jets’’ to Americans at home and overseas could attack infrastructure such as bridges and stressed concerns or dams “aswell as targeting liquid try to hijack cargo jets and crash ‘ " natural gas chemical and other haz- them into targets: ardous materials facilities” the '' Terrorist bombings overseas and ' department said in a statement an increased volume of threats It said “increased vigilance here at against US interests at home and in home led the is prudent and may be key to Homeland countries foreign FBI to and deterring or disrupting terrorist Security Department issue the public warning and an attacks” Also Friday the State Department law enforcement to agenadvisory issued a “worldwide caution” for cies government officials and pri- - Americans traveling abroad urging or — Page A10 that they ‘’maintain a high level of’ vigilance" for possible terrorist attacks:“We are seeing increasing indicais preparing to tions that " strike US interests abroad ’’ the State Department said Neither threat warning included any specific times locations or methods for u potential attack' The Homeland Security statement however urges a heightened state of awareness during the finals days of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan " - Update BE Doctors taking 3 aim at ‘chronic daily headaches’ CHICAGO (AP) They are that last for headaches excruciating and at moment’s a return days notice Often they surface in the last through much teenage years and ' of adulthood It's a condition that has existed for ' ' centuries doctors say But only ' recently has it been given a name: “chronic daily headaches” or CDH defined as migraines or neck- - and tension headaches ' that are present IS or more days ' each month Some might thinkjt sounds like just ' ' - ' - da ’ ' which ends early next week and " during the US holiday travel sea- son which begins next week and ‘ ends in early January “We recommend that all Americans Continue with plans for work or leisure” the statement says “Visible security as well as the vigilance of homeland security professionals at al levels of government the private sec- tor and the general public can make a difference and prevent potential terrorist attacks” us disrupt terrori plans" r"’ V' ' See RISK on A9 s ‘ ' head-squeezi- : v-- another excuse to skip school But ' young peoplesuchas Rachel Gohmann an college ' freshman from St Cloud Minn know how serious the condition can be' ' Blinding headaches that often left" her bedridden caused her to miss more than 100 days of her senior ' with her worst year of high school migraine lasting nearly a month: Medication and a tutor helped heir make itto graduation But now a 1 freshman at St Cloud State Universi- ty she’s still missing some classes and making at least one trip a month to the emergency room where she’s given g : narcotic drugs that help hersleepp ' “And that’s a good month!’ V Cache Coiiniy Attorney George Dai nes called them’ ' Gohmann says '' “eyesores’) and utive Lynn Lemon called them “junkyard’They're unlicensed bus- nesses that are skirting zoning ' regulations and operating jle- gaily In response to the prob- lem the county is retixiiing its’wii' business licensing rules and ) plans to crack down ori viola- ' tors by imposing fines of up to $500 and filing lawsuits ip' shut them 'do - : ’ J ? ' : f r 1 ' - ''genders' “It’s really sad because these Quick read Today’s question What is Logan’s population? Last Ssturday’s Answer Five membefs serve on the Logan Municipal Council - are some of the local names that appear in today’s Herald Following ’"Journal: Bruce (A3) Virginia Vanorden Ackerman (A3) Ryan Hal (A6) Richie Cal (A6) Rich Meacham (A6) Steve Sulivan (A6) Quenton Harvey (B1) Ron McBride (B2) Tyler Cano (B2) Indos B8 Obituaries JJ6 Opinion — A6 Sports — B1 A4 we'nee'd s have some teeth to go-after them1” Lemon said to' really - ’ Dairies said the county has been losing money when jt - ’’ r : C' charging for fire inspections associated with the process However he said the real tar-- ’ ?f- Y’ gets of the changes are busi-- ’ £ ' nesses that have never tried get licenses-“The real issue is they're' Conducting abusiness where they’re not appropriately - offers his own ‘ ' - on zoned’Daines said “There’ By Darrell Edward Ehiilck staff writer ’ : Utah State University President Kermit Hall can’t say that he was a grassy knoll buff nor that he bought into the mafia hit-man theory His scholarly research area doesn’t focus on the Kennedy administra- tion And he wasn’t anywhere near Dallas when john R Kennedy was shot He was in Akron Ohio 'Asa sophomore at the University of Akron (majoring in political science arid history) he remembers jgetting off of an ' elevator in Ayer Hall on Nov 22 1963 and hearing that the president had been shot ’' “I had no idea what had just happened but as I looked around the lobby it became immediately apparent that something had' happened” Hall said A couple of days later in what was possibly the first example of a nation being glued to the television Hall along with America watched Jack Ruby gun down Lee Harvey Oswald “I knew the moment I saw it happening that things would never be the same” Hall said :' That momentchanged American politics changed the course of a decade and eventually impacted Hall's life in a very significant way Little did he know on Nov 22 1963 that he would be one of the people responsible for declassifying 45 million documents related to the Kennedy assassination Hall ) a historian by discipline was a member of the John F Kennedy Assassination Record Review Board For years he's given lectures presentations uid interviews about the Kennedy assassination He’s heard all the theories — from the aliens to the Cuba communists — and now 40 years later he looks hack Theories of conspiracy abound 40 years later mail-ord- er ' - ' ‘wrrkTf DALLAS (AP) — Forty years after John F ' Kennedy’s assassination an Overwhelming majority of ' Americans do not believe this official conclusion that a loser named Lee Harvey Oswald iteting alonejdlled the president with a cheap rifle fired from the Texas School Book Depository Thousands of books movies and Intenet chatrooms have fueled dozens of conspiracy theories that it was a plot by the Mafia the Cubans die KGB the CIA even Vice Resident Lyndon B Johnson and Ant other shots came frora the grassy t —1 a— me pnao norm jouma Kermit HaN speaks at the Nora Ecdes Conference Center on the release of classi- fied documents of John F Kennedy1 nation in this April 2001 file photo assassi- with the benefit of hindsight and countless hours dedicated to a subject he never really set out to study “I was not an expert in the field” said Hall a noted historian of the US Supreme Court After poring over the almost infinite number of documents pertaining to the See HALL C(P7 ea Alt Ion ' really are some nasty situa- tions County Clerk Jill Zoilinger ' said businesses must go ' three-ste- p a to process through get licensed First they must get property zoned properly second they must obtain ter- tificates of occupancy from the building inspector and third they 'must get fire inspections Businesses have to go through the zoning and buiid- ing inspection steps just once but fire inspections must be ' conducted annually: Business- es are required to renew their licenses each year by Feb 1 Small businesses are allowed to conduct their own fire inspections and fill out paperwork verifying that they’re in compliance However the fire department must ' inspect larger businesses and that sometimes takes up to three days As a result the : county may start charging for the inspections to recoup its costs All businesses in iinincorpo- rated areas that gross more than $2400 a year are required to obtain license Lemon said Zollinger said there are 146 licensed businesses in the : ‘ - Pooplo Indox wwwhjnewsoom wn? to ilThisis what Brent StevensHerald Journal ir'i'i ii V 'll ' two-jini- : MoviesA7 ” coverage at the game' eeeBl - See MIGRAINE on A6 Classifieds Comics 21-1- ' - ' imp nnan’c hornoc ‘ ' ’ ' The Logan High School fooiball team exits the field after the state champforehip O301® against the Bountiful Braves pn Friday at Rice EccleS Stadium in Salt Lake e 3 to the defending state champs For complete :Clty Logan High fell y - - v and girls suffer from them intheele- mentary years But once adolescence hits young women are about three tinies as likely to have them partly due to hormonal changes related to ' : menstruation Other factors such as a family his- "itory of headaches stress and depress- sion also can play a role for both ' : ’ ' 'Doctors say that anywhere from 1 percent to S percent of the popula-tioni including young pieople suffer from chronic daily headaches Roughly' an equal number ofboys ' CiHinty Exec- - - v By John Wright staff writer ' ' county) In addition to a $10 application fee the county currently assesses licensing charges of $25 for home businesses $50 d for contractors home-base- ' See LICENSES oa A9 : : ' £: : |