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Show Volume Number Tooele, Utah, Friday, March 14, 19C9 Seventy-Fou- r Stirs Disapproval Congressman Lloyd To Discuss Countys Future Council Burned-u- p Over Trash Disposal Statute Trash Miming anil progre on a pro)osul for a new county airport were among the important items of business discussed by the Tooele City Council Monday evening. I Backyard Burning Mayor Frank Bowman informed the Council of a new State Ordinance prohibiting burning of refuse. The statute, which effective March 5, has made such burning bv municipalities or individuals illegal. Now, according to the law, all waste material must Ik. buried. Strong disapproval to the new law was expressed by Council mcmliers of the cost forced iqxm the cities as they Ik?-ca- lie prepared to provide funds acceptable to City officials, to cover the expected increased ONE OF the major exense. influencing a choice of site is the slope of the land. County Airport This must Ik one per cent or Councilman Frank less to meet FFA standards and City WhitehiMise reported to the Cimiii- - qualify for Federal Aid. A sur-c- il on the current status of pro- - vey to accurately determine the posals for a cargo airjKirt in pitch of the ground in all the ToiKle County. projMised areas will lie made Of the five previously sug- as soon as the weather will pergested runway locations, all north mit. of Tooele, only one was judged Mr. WhitehiMise expressed acceptable to the Federal Aviation Agency on the liasis of in- - disa)poiutmeut with the FA A formation available now. As it choice which would place the stands this location is the least runway ajijiroximately five miles to provide the added services. It was felt that perhaps the volume of waste, which now must lie collected, hauled away, and buried, would more than double. Additional eiiiipment would Ik required such as ex- a in- Valorie Ludwig and Julie George will model clothes made by their mothers at the Tooele LDS Stake Fashion Show Friday evening at the Stake Center. Relief Society Building Permits Top $37,000 Building permits issued in Tooele during the last few days of January and through February totaled more than $37,6(X). Three new homes were authorized along with permits to allow remodeling of an existing .house and a business building. A proposal by Gordon to build a new residence at 31 Alberta Drive costing an estimated $10,364 was approved. Another house will be built by Edward Cubicek at 87 Kelsey-vieDrive costing an estimated $11,580. The third new residence will be constructed by Tattersol w Fashion Show Friday Evening Homes at 477 West 5(X) South. The estimated cost of this structure is $14,240. One of the remodeling permits was requested by Marcel-lu- s Lewis, who asked pennission to alter an existing building at 398 North Main to be used as Grantsville maintenance man who superintendent Women from each ward of the Tooele Stake of the LDS Church have been weeks in preparing for a fashion show to be presented at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the cultural hall of the Stake Center. Sew Its Spring is the theme for the program planned by the Stake Relief Society to commemorate the 157th year of their the new Western Auto Store. The estimated cost of this project Members service organization. was $500. The second remodelwill model children and their R. Alfonso issued to ing permit e their own clothes. Heggie would allow an addition And a wide variety of articles to an existing home at 104 Rus- will be shown, from evening sell Avenue. The expected cost wear to play clothes. here would be $1,(XX). foods, which Many home-bakecan be purchased by those who attend' the presentation, will also be featured. The public is invited. hand-mad- d Grantsville Man Receives Magazine Merit Award A merce. Everett DcLaMare, chairman project were undertaken 'I11 ',l7 support ft as of the Industrial Relations Committee, will direct the meeting. It was pointed out that the which will lie held at the city airjMirt could only crest Cafe, 4l I S. Main. Invi-li- e a basic facility since there is tations have Iteen sent to all Tooele County businessmen. no room for expansion. Mr, DclatMare said that the 1 c I meeting will le "bi partisan in LaglCS nature and devoted to Towle an Party County's economic future." The third annual Washington The Second District s)onsored by the Salt Lake gressman will discuss the on Highway 40 is sched- - tential for economic develop-ule- d for April 12. merit of Tooele County, with em- Steak dinner liegins at 7 p.m. phasis oil private and local capi-an- d is $7 per couple. Eagles tal development. He will also disand their guests are welcome, cuss the role of government and Reservations may lie made by military expenditures in Tooele calling Vivian Ness County's future. Tooele Band In Nevada Festival Hie Tooele High band, directed by C. Roy Ferrin is among the 115 bauds participating in the University of Nevada! fifh annual "Stage Band Festival in Reno, March The Nevada event, the nations largest stage baud festival, will feature Don Elhs, trumpeterwho will le -composer, accompanied by the University of Nevada Concert Jazz Band led bv Gene Isacff. BANDS FROM six states, ranging from junior high school through college will perform in "big band ami comlm units, totaling some 25XI sclct t music students from Colorado to the West (mast. Chuck Sillier, of Chicago, is chaireditor of "Downbeat man of judges. Dr. Herb Wong, noted San Francisco area educator ami jazz authority licads the panel of judges. Dr. John Carried, director of University Bands, is festival The Festival was founded in 1962 with but five bands in at14-1- S,K award-winnin- wld Hill-prese- nt y g rin stated that they gained experience from that participation and this year have a much lietter bund. This year they will compete with ten other schools. Bands compete according to the Region to which the school and the size of the student-laxl- y enrollment. Fmirteen bands from Utah schixils are traveling to the Festival this year. Bands from most western states from Washington to Southern California join in the competition each year. Tentative plans call for the Bund to leave Tooele at 94X1 p.m. but circumstances Thursday, may cause the departure time to lie delayed until 3:(X) a.in. Friday. They will travel to Reno bv sduxil bus. It is expected that the return trip will lie made Sunday. The final competition of the Festival will lie held Saturday evening. lc-Imi- founder-coordinato- REP. SHERMAN LLOYD THE TOOELE High Band first for time at the performed the Festival last year. Mr. Fcr- - ward a community school have of developing new programs. Ieen taken, with 400 to 5X) Further development will cost people now enrolled in night additional funds. And the .reschool classes. University courses spousibility rests with the entire are also available locally. Future community, not only with the at their luncheon meeting Wed- possibilities might include open- - schools and the School Board nesday. to the com- - but with the City Council and ing gymnasiums The community school is a munity, oXning school libraries other groups, Mr. Stejihens said, philosophy rather than a school to student use at night, and School jXoplc, he concluded are Mr. Stephens said. It is designed designating a school director anxious for further accomplish-charge- d to encourage more complete use with the responsibility ments. of school facilities bv citizens outside of regidar day school activities. It's purpose is to help solve some of the internal problems of cities. It proposes to do Horse shoeing, as a non- interested xrsons should contact this by keeping school buildings the USU Extension Office in 10 p.m. each credit class, under the instrucuntil 9 or ojen tion of Marion Maniwill at Utah the Federal Building. Those in evening and getting the people involved in after school programs. State University, has resulted in the Cache, Rich, Box Elder and so many popular requests in the Southern Idaho areas may conMR. STEPHENS described the program as it operates in state that it is being offered next tact the Conference and InstiFlint, Michigan. The program in quarter in Ogden, Logan and tutes Division Office, room 202 this city, with the help of a Tooele, according to Dr. Wayne Union Building, on the USU financial grant from the Mott B. Ringer, head, USU Confer- Campus at Logan. Mr. Maniwill, a graduate Foundation, is being used to ex- ences and Institutes Division. Southern Idaho areas may conplore the opportunities and probThe class will be held one Instilems of the concept in the hope day each week for 10 weeks at tact the Conference and 202 room Division Office, tutes of being used as a model for each location beginning at 7 p.m. Union Building, on the USU other school districts. The days are: Tuesday at Ogden, Campus at Logan. In Flint more people are inbeginning March 25; Wednesa graduate Mr. Maniwill, volved in after school activities days at Logan, beginning March in' Agricultural Education than in the regular day school 26; and Thursdays at Tooele, be- major has at USU, proven his skill in for There are programs program. 7 ginning March 27. for five instruction horseshoeing senior citizens, enrichment classes Since class size must be years at Utah Trade Technical for people in the middle age and two previous brackets and remedial work de- limited, registration is on a first School in Provo, come basis, Ringer said. Per- - quarters at USU. He is author for signed young people. How to Shoe a sons in the Ogden area should of the book in cookery, bookCourses - Horse. UniverUtah State the contact athand keeping, hobbies, crafts Fees for the course will be office in the letics are an example of the sity Extension Interested persons should h Federal at $25.00. Building Mr. broad range of activities. re- and for information Street register at the County Stephens described Flint as a Office immediately. Tooele In sion the area, as city of about the same size Salt Lake City, offering a thousand courses designed for community involvement. Education, he said, is a continuous process. With this Horse Shoeing Extended tion. enforced by state authorities. Tooele City will request an extension until a new budget can ry lifl Assistant Sujxrintendent for Tooele County Schools Joseph Stephens discussed the concept of community schools before the Tooele Chamber of Commerce r reasonable form their citizens and change their waste disposal practices to .conform to the new requirements. After that the ordinance will be - R- Chamber Hears Of Community School Concept HOMEOWNERS would have to meet the cost of providing containers for all papers and other Immahles. Many citizens have liccn disposing of such material in backyard incinerators. Rut the statewide statute now prohibits refuse burning in any area where regular waste collection service is provided. The Council requested Mayor Rpwipau to seek information communities relating to what they are doing to meet the added burden of this operawill be allowed time in which to Lloyd. Tratfls To Rnm tendance. s. Cities P. I'tah, will address Tooele Countv businessmen on "The Potentials for Economic Progress in Tooele County," Friday at 7 p.m. at a dinner meeting sjionsored by the Tooele Chandler of Com- 882-198- cavating equipment permanently stationed at the city dump and extra trash collection trucks. Additional operating crews would place an added burden on from-othe- Rep. Sherman from ToiKle. He questioned how far the city should go in support- ing an aiqiort that far away. He further suggested that an attempt lie made to secure a commitment from Wasatch Front officials to the effect that if Con-part- c attempt Number Forty One i Observance Set For National Wildlife Week is at the Bacchus Works of Hercules Incorporated near Magna has been announced as one of 12 winners in the 4th annual maintenance merit awards from Modern Manufacturing magazine. HE IS Merle E. Cole, a nawho spent tive of California much of his early life in Grantsville and has recently returned here to make his home. Mr. Cole will receive the award from the magazine at a special March 25 luncheon at the National Plant Engineering and Maintenance Show in Cleveland, Ohio. A separate award also will be given to Hercules Incorporated and will be accepted by a representative from the home office in Wilmington, Del. The citation, a second place medallion award for maintenance cost improvement, will be in recognition of established Bacchus Works maintenance control systems which have significanthas been maintenance superinly reduced maintenance costs. MR. COLE started at the tendent since 1967. He and his wife have four Bacchus Works in June of 1959 as a maintenance foreman. He children. National Wildlife Week will be observed next week, March all across the nation and this years theme of Provide Habitat - Places Where Wildlife Live is vital to Utah sports16-2- 2, men. Wildlife week 1969 will encourage people to protect wetlands, as well as field and forest habitat areas. THE UTAH Wildlife Fedthe Naeration is tional Wildlife Week along with the National Wildlife Federation. Valuable habitat for deer and pheasants has been lost to increased urban and suburban growth in Utah, often these losses cannot be compensated for by wildlife management agencies. Once an acre of land is taken for development, it means the animals who used it for their home must be pushed into a smaller area. The smaller the habitat area, the fewer the animals for the sportsman. - - 324-25t- Exten-gistratio- Ganic Management Range Rides Set Sportsmen have been invited by the Utah Division of Fish and Came and representatives of Federal land management agencies to join with them in range rides covering deer winter areas throughout Utah range this spring. One of these rides will Ire made over the Stanslmry course Saturday and Sunday, Mar. 22 and 23. Rides are conducted by horseMISS ELKINGTON back and on foot to gain first hand knowledge of conditions on deer 'winter ranges in many critical areas. Range tours are an excellent way for interested persons to meet people involved in deer Diane F.lkington was one of management and to discuss with these people the management five news writers to win a rating at a journalism clinic programs as they look over held last week at the University range conditions. There are rides scheduled in of Utah. all parts of the State, informaThe clinic sponsortion on how to participate is ed by the Universities Departavailable from any Fish and ment of Journalism in cooperaCame officer or from any of tion with the Salt Lake Tribune News the Fish and Came offices. and Deseret attracted In many cases the range rides 170 students from 32 Utah high will be set for weekends to acschools.' It featured instructioncommodate the sportsmen who al sessions and a luncheon. wish to take part in this fact The newswriting contest was based on a jiress conference in finding tour. the For ride which students interviewed SenaStanshury sportsmen will leave from the tor W. Hughes Brockhank, on the Delle Ranch in Skull Valley work of the Utah Legislature. Diane is a senior at Tooele at 9:00 a.m. each morning. Interested persons are invited to High School and is a daughter of Bishoj) and Mrs. Glen Elking-tocall Roy Garrard, Orrin Miller, She also writes Tooele High Kenneth Abbott or Boyd Taylor News for the Tooele Transcript. for more information. Local Miss Kates Tops At U Clinic or day-lon- g Deadline Thursday in mind Utah schools have begun an experiment witn the community school idea. Ogden and Provo now have community school directors. Brigham Young University has received a grant to from the Mott Foundation be used in training such directors. IN TOOELE the program is in the planning stage. But the here are different problems chiefly because the Churches now have a positive influence on leisure time activities. The first steps, however to- - Genealogy Class in Progress Every Wednesday, a class and workshop in genealogy research is held. Classes on March 19 and 26 will be held in the Scout Room of the North Tooele Stake Center at 7:(X) p.m. under the direction of Dorothy Ross. Young people from age 14 are invited to attend as well as any adults. Classes will be held for the next ten weeks, with a tour of the genealogical library among the treats that are in store for the members of the class. Indecision Marks Legislature by Hugh J. Barnes No one was betting on whether the Utah Legislature would wind up its deliberations on schedule Thursday night, at Final action was pending as the Thursday night deadline approached on a batch of important bills as conference committees from both the House and Senate met to reach agreement on their provisions. IT WAS A continued atmosphere of indecision that had marked the session, in the opinion of several observmid-wee- ers, almost since it began. leaders have Legislative been reluctant to make early and firm commitments on both the amount of money needed to fund institutions of the State and the tax increases necessary to fund them. This has resulted in postponing introduction of finance and money bills until the last days of the session. One tax bill that had been requested by the Governor went down to defeat in the House Tuesday, after it had the Senate, which passed would have raised the gasoline tax by one cent a gallon. The money was to be used to build a system of access roads to the Interstate Highways and aid cities and counties in road maintenance. The bill was recalled Wednesday and barely passed, TOOELE COUNTY Representative Jack Smith reported that both he and Representative Chileon Halladay voted against the gasoline tax after conferring with Tooele County government leaders who felt the situation on road funds had not reached the critical level in Tooele County as yet and they could get along without the added revenue 36-2- for a while. Tuesday was a big day for the House of Representatives as they passed bills on narcotics control, and on investment of state funds. Monday evening they severely altered Senate Bill No. 3 which finances public education in Utah for the next biennium. AND THREE bills carried so many amendments that their final form will depend on the action of joint Senate and House committees. One observer stated that it all depends on how much the House and Senate want to agree and to adjourn on time, how long it will take to complete the present Legislatures business. It has been over four years since the Legislature had to to finish stop the clock their business. AS AN example of Legislative problems that eouid slow them up adjournment was the $125, (KM) appropriation for the Utah Symphony Orchestra. The bill passed but no source of the funds was listed in the the bill and whether money is actually furnished depends on where it is finally decided upon it will be obtained. worried One educator, e responsible for an to many service program school districts was anxiously trying to pursuade legislators to give him funds enough to carry on his program instead of eliminating it entirely by denying it funds in the present school bill passed by the House. Representative John Smith of Tooele was honored Tuesday by being the only Demo area-wid- so far this session to have the privilege of occupying the Speaker of the House chair for part of the afternoon session. EXPECTED to come up during the very last hours of this session of the Utah Legislature was an ethical practices bill and a joint resolution on a gateway approach to amending the Utah State Constitution which provides for changes to be voted upon by citizens a few at a time at each general election. As many bills as time will allow are expected to be considered by the Legislators as time will permit before the official closing of the session Thursday, March 13th. Senator Ernest Mantes of Tooele reports that many finance problems in Utah State government will return to plague the 1971 Legislative session. Money will be again a tremendous problem with demand for state services threatening to continue at its present 12 per cent rate of increase, and State revenues needed expected to continue to fall behind in substantial amounts. crat V |