OCR Text |
Show 'V" 1 ; 0A DESERET NEWS, MONDAY, JULY 1 2, 1 Probers still studying horse deaths were under consideration He said firing at the two sites might cause the horses "to stand on the periphery of the area they have been accustomed to using while doing without food and water If this occurs, animal conditions will be depressed and the death of a number of animals is probable. More PROVING GROUND (AP) investigation is needed before it can be known whether activities of the Army, the Wyoming National Guard or the Bureau of Land Management might have contributed to the deaths of about 40 horses near uugway Proving Grounds, a BLM DLGWAY 4 spokesman says. But, said Rulon McRae, acting director of the Salt Lake City BLM District, When you add all of the activity in the area together, you can assume that the horses might have been disturbed by something. Officials say their investigation continues into uh the horses died m the remote desert area. No c idence of disease or environmental contamination has shown up m preliminary laboratory test, they said Fresh water was available to the horses, but preliminary tests on the carcasses indicate a lack of w ator McRae said the BLM conducted spring studies m the area where the horse-- , were located from May ll la 21 and might have contributed to disturbing them Were not going to rule out anybody at this point, whether it is the National Guard, the Army or the BLM. he said, adding what caused the horses' deaths ma never be known Col Adalbert E Toepel Jr , base commander, sdid during the weekend there was no evidence that artnlerv maneuvers during June of a Wyoming National Guard unit were connected with the deaths, lie said other artillery units have fired from the same utnerul location in the past with no noted effects on the horses The guard unit's gun placements were originally proposed at sites two and four miles from Orr Spifngs tin herd's primary water source, officials said Dugwav said those sites were rejected because " The ot firings safety and security problems instead occurred 20 miles awa.v from the horses, with the guns pointed away from the herd, the base said lion Hall, a BLM wild horse expert, issued a naming about use of the closer sites at the time they named Sell Bell. U.S. Commissioner of Educae Utah tion and Commissioner of Higher soon-to-b- Education, was named today as professor of educational administration at the University of Utah. The appointment, initiated two years ago. was approved by the U. of U. Institutional Council on a split 3 vote with one abstention. It will become effective Aug. 1. Bell was given an immediate leave of absence without pay while he serv es as Utah Commissioner of Higher Education His term as I tah commissioner will not count toward tenure on the U. faculty and it was stipulated that Bell will assume full teaching re- -- professor you waddot town V Some stallions weighed in excess of 1,0()0 pounds and were strong animals. There was no indication of any malnutrition and many of the herd looked slick, almost fat, he reported. We feel good about the feed conditions in the Cedar Mountain range, the director said. There is normal or above-normforage for the horses in the area, he said. The investigative team continued to grow over the weekend. The BLM added another biologist, another veterinarian and two pathologists to the team. Other agencies also were calling additional consultants in the attempt to learn the cause of the deaths. The investigation at the Orr Springs site, Dugway and analytical laboratories in Salt Lake City and Ft. Collins, Colo , continued through the weekend, officials said. al For the third time this year, flames ted on the charred ruins; in the. Foothill Village Shopping Center, 1350 Foothill Dr., about 8 pm. Sunday, Businesses on the south, end of the complex were ' destroyed in a 8500,000 blaze early April 26. A fire caused by an errant spark from a metalcutting torch fed on those again June 22. Sundays fire was also centered in the ruins and caused no damage, said Battalion Chief Paul George. Salt Lake City Fire Department. The cause has not been deter-- 1 Dr. Bells extensive experience, knowledge and insight concerning thp administration, financing and gover The Rev. Hirofumi Watanabe. minister of the Salt Lake Buddhist Church, 211 W. 1st South, said the event was the annual Obon celebration. The event goes back to an ancient legend about a disciple of Buddha and is observed in gratitude to those who have passed on before, Watanabe said. Members visited nearJapanese graves in the Salt Lake City Cemetery Sunday, burning incense on the burial plots. ly 300 I CononyS'S'p - M Aewaftftdrtwv J, 29 mi 1 486-28- 7 school on or before Sept. Council Chairman Edward W. Clyde said there was no question of Bell's educational qualifications, but said the State Board of Regents ought to look at the problem of possible conflict of in- Tfcj terest. Bell will become Utah Commissioner of Higher Education Aug. 1. He expects to move his family from McLean. Va , to their home on Ensign Downs this weekend. Todays action by the U. of U. council is confirmation of Bells appointment to the faculty in April 1974 which was arranged pnor to his leaving Granite School District to become the U.S. commissioner. His appointment to the U. of U. was to become effective upon his termination as U.S. commissioner, but not earlier than July 1. 1976 and not later than VinCENT is the cf ftft fssr telsst tzzzii t is ta . 1 nnjYto In Assrica BA0Y BLUE PARU1E WALTER mmnms BIB ONEAL MATTHAU II TIMOTHY BOTTOMS . SUSAN GEORGS THE BAD NEWS BO HOPKINS Jxk$L. for consumers. OSHA puts an unreasonable demand on farm employers to comply with regulations that farm leaders across the nation rate as failures," said Hamilton. SbM 7:15 4 Hamilton said complying with rules of dubious value piles up costs for the family farmer, resulting m higher production figures and even driving some farmers out of business. This causes a food production drop and higher food prices, he said. bill s aooftMt 715 UU IPX '47 BICENTENNIAL POPS CONCEIT I kM. PAPER I MOON BEARS" 9:05 Ut-IH- T 7:15 MOON 7ISm4M5 M TM( FREE AVftfS BAYS OF OtympusOrrvHr Gunn McKay, supported the Rep 2W-M- ari WOO mam BHB employment. Both Utah congressmen, and Rep. Allan Howe, jmm AT THEATRES . A Farm Bureau policy statement says, We have seen no evidence that it (OSHA) has in any significant w ay reduced hazards to safety or health at places of ills 241 TUI "Tfti TKt MB OPEN B OO MONEY CottOflWOOd Mall r Featuring Salt lake Philharmonic Orchestra Directed bv EUGENI JEIESN1K with Celebrity Guest In Person tNIWMWtm ilUKIftBfti Mir 7:00, 9:00 J n O&Bah KOWAT "The Salt Lake Tribune aay . . . Gale Storm put on a performance in Cactus Flower to nsftl any (tar . . . and opened her heart to the audience, " Nancy Funk The Deseret New eeyi . . Gale Storm played the comedy for all ita wonderful Howard Paanan laugh. An open and delightful theatre . . 0 0 $ O Mad Order Accepted 9 A DELICIOUS SMORGASBORD FEAST FEATURING BARON OF BEEF CARVED TO YOUR LIKING. O JAZZ PIANIST PETER MENDELSOHN PLAYS YOUR DINNER MUSIC $10.95 Fridays and Saturdays Wed. and St. Matinees $ 8.95 coihc? vi mm rsfo m w?osiT 322-044- r--r 1 ith ir tl.tS SetvM Opn All fif tr?oNrt FREE PARKING wn (ftSouftadSMt tie tauftfta JM8oufta47EMt rs - 3SSwS Rides 9 All You Want475 Roa- fjonL? Djn - TUtS. thru SAT. ' person 6.50 i .vri W'J thru July 31 J Commercial Security Bank presents SING OUT AMERICA vv4.. Free Nightly 7 30 p m at Pioneer Village Saturday. 6pm Ddy D0NT MISS PIONEER VILLAGE! 600 antique guns .yn V Tra'ns depart da,y Heber City 00 am (diner equipped) and 3 1 5 pm Bridal Veil Fails 1.15 equipped) and 5.15 pm 1 pm-(din- 9 9 9 9 9 Jewelry making Glass blowing Carrisga House Metaismith Little Rock Chapel Leather work Wuodcarvtng Old Fashioned Fhoto Shop World famous Ute Indian collection m cas&t 9 u l IIV Ii v WPj iRf idiitnl cheat Thick jucy HmUngur with French FfS. Tomato Lettuc RMsri Chopped Onions Mustard your choice oi oresng $11.95 WNRgpWTW Ride 7i 9 0 9 I Cfta PAY ONE PRICE HAMBURGER C0S3B0 YOUR ADMISSION COVERS BOTH DINNER AND! SHOW CALL FOR ADVANCE RESERVATIONS Dinner And Show Nightly At 7:00 (Except Sunday) Wednesday And Saturday Matinee At 12:30. JT TH'JRS. 2 k ear On Broadway, Now In Sah Lake Citvf A M P.M., SALT PALACE ARENA TODAY and EVERY MONDAY & SUN. (except ho!idays) JBSj TKE... OLD FASHIONED Q -8 7 - 't Scats ma i be puu hast'd in ad tain e Bos offiic open Daily JULY 14- L Free Tickets at Salt Palace ft Doynet Music Co. ft Tribune Bldg O All ZCMI Store ft Belvedere Hotel Music Mormonc Trust Funds of Th Recording Industries cssritSamtE DAYS t"Z Stagg McMann, Billie loukas, Jack Stevens, Bob Davis, Brotherhood TtgOb 6 jfflMBflffnrm 9 BOWlTlfBl WEDNESDAY, rs 7 C fet 1538 iggHll 13,225-memb- i&mi Mon.-Thu- : 29 V. TATUM iih'mi LAST 9:15 tsym a and Elmo W. Hamilton, Farm Bureau president, said if the bill becomes law it will mean lower food prices Were pleased at the prospect of Commis 7 C 6 A COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTATION (OSHAL 1, 1977 wttscmsfiimi lPGj Utah Farm Bureau Federation has hailed action in the U.S. House of Representatives which would exempt farmers with 10 or fewer employes from regulations issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration The URttBQAftSStS JATH.1ICHAEL Farm federation lauds OSHA bill 25. 1979. m 19 2-- mUMMffl at the sponsibilities ' Salt Lake Buddhists ended a two-da- y holiday Sunday in which they burned incense on graves as part of a ritual honoring their ancestors. superintendent of mte District, Bell was deputy U.S. Commissioner of Education and served seven years as Utah Superintendent of Public Instruction. He is a native of Lava Hot Springs, Idaho, is a graduate of Southern Idaho College of Education, the University of Idaho and the University of Utah. the k mined. Before becoming Gra-- . Kennedy administration, currently holds a professorship in the ri Japanese and Ohon will bring great strength in his area of expertise." education administration faculty. Dr. Sterling M. McMurrin, who was U.S. In WKtautftrfwrtisfeg, nance of education at the local, state and federal levels will be most valuable to the department," said Dr. Stephen P. Heneley, former dean of the Graduate School of Education. His teaching and research interests are in harmony with department needs and he Bell will be the second U.S. Commissioner of Education to serve on the U. of U. Commissioner the Wyoming Army National Guard, said the Wyoming Guard did not know there were wild horses m the area or that some of the horses had died, until the AP story came to his attention He said forward observers and safety officers watched impact of the rounds and reported nothing about horses in the area. Before Toepels statement saying National Guard firings were conducted in the same location as m the past, a base spokesman was quoted as saying this was the first recent year m which Guardsmen fired from a position on base. Steve Horan said previous firings had been at Simpson Springs, south of Duguay, with shells falling within the base. There was very adequate water available at the Orr Springs watering area, according to McRae. Earlier reports indicated the wild horses might not have been able to obtain sufficient water to keep from dehydrating From two to three gallons per minute flowed from a plastic waterline into the watering pond for the animals, McRae reported, an amount easily adequate for the mustang herd. BLM personnel checked the herd at Cedar Mountain grazing areas July 1 before the deaths began occurring and found the mustangs in apparent good condition, McRae said. Other water was available little more than a mile from the BLM dev eloped Orr Springs watering hole and the wild horses had demonstrated a distinct preference for drinking at the two sources, he added Stallions seemed to be very susceptible" to the illness that killed so many of the herd, McRae said. Gardner said 5-- Jan Col. Donald Boyer, chief of staff of sioner Bell joining the faculty, said Dr. David P Gardner, U. of U. president. He will bring a wealth of experience especially suited to the teaching objectives of the department and the research interests of his students. T. H Dr U. foothill VHIsgc hit by 3rd fir 976 I 9 y& Night GrOUDS O' gFgZZZXr depart Heber Cl,y Fridays. Saturdays and Mondays (Family Night Special) at 7 30 pm Spec,al aSu'Pment fares and sched- ules available fur groups from 25 to 7C0. For reservations call , 531-602- 2. , . (Salt Lake number) I'sr vJ Vk ... Du souitiing old for u ciien |