OCR Text |
Show 4' Vwki Page HERALD. Provo. Utah. Wednesday. 16-T- HE Drntx-- 13 r lifT2 H v n Report Studied on Three-Stat- e Oil Shale Development Impact - SALT LAKE CITY 1IPJ1 The executive interim com- A , u,ah lnc,uded Utah Lays Plans for 1976 Fete 11 We mittee formed to iay the ill V 1? I, - DENVER il'PI) The re gorundwork for Utah's par- gional office of the Environmenticipation in America's bi- tal Protection Agency has asked centennial in 1976 met Tuesday for more information on what n Salt Lake Oty to form an the Interior Department called official bicentennial "one of the most comprehencommission. The committee sive" environmental impact also introducec" a pilot proposal studies on whether oil shale defor facelifting a section of the velopment should occur in Colocity for use as the event's sie. rado, Wyoming and Utah. I -- pay more attention to the question of water availability in the three - state area. Green also wants more information on air quality, spent shale disposal, toxic chemi cals from processing and the potential salinity increase in the Colorado River. The Interior Department made the study on the prototype proThe committee, led by Obert John Green, Region Eight EP-- gram which calls for six fedC. Tanner, Salt Lake, sugadministrator, said Tuesday eral leases on which oil shale gested the use of a seven-blocarea immediately west of after reviewing the study, that would be developed, mined and the Salt Palace as a site for the Interior Department should processed. But activities. bicentennial Governor Calvin L. Rampion, who was also present at the luncheon meeting, stressed that the proposal is tentative. The committee said the downtown area would be made into an open park. Various historical, cultural and inarketing facDALLAS (UPI) -- City Attorpark - mall, to chant and solicit ilities would be included in the ney Alex Birkley, claiming that funds from passersby. Shop area. the chanting and finger cymbol-playin- g owners in the vicinity of Stone The park could include such devotees of Hare KrishPlace have complained to the specifics as an international ex- na are disturbing Christmas city council that the singing hibit area, a site for State Fair shoppers and businessmen, Tues- and dancing was hurting their activities, and a concert hall day said he had ordered police business. expansion of the Salt Palace, to clear the robed religious sect Monday four members of the the committee said. sect were arrested and charged from a downtown mall. The Governor said the Fed"Contrary to what I have been with demonstrating in the streets eral American Revolution Bicen- quot?d as saying, I have not without a license. They were givtennial Commission has sug- claimed that I was going to en a Dec. 27 court date. gested creation of federally fi- drive them out of town," Bicley nanced parks in every state. said from his city hall office. The government has provid"They are a religious group 1 ed about $90,000 for planning and have just as much right to of the state's contribution in as this another," city being the celebration. he said. "But this has to do with noise. They're making too much of it downtown and the folks don't like it." Members of the Hare Krishna sect, clothed in robes and with SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -their heads shaved and faces in painted, usually gather at The U.S. Secret Service of a turned total Utah has up small downtown a Stone Place, 12 forged savings bonds in denominations of $500 to $1,000 cashed at local banks. Special agent in charge Tony ( feasUPI -A Utah OGDEN, said Tuesday the fedSherman ibility study for a $7 million eral agency had picked up 10 of Hall of Justice Building Tuesthe bonds last week. He said day received approval by the the bonds were apparently Weber County Commission. stolen in a burglary in Ohio and George T. Frost, commission under forged sigA small fire caused minor were cashed chairman, said a general bond natures. election on the construction damage to the living room area Sherman said the investigaplans has been tentatively set of an apartment at the Monte into the bond incident leads tion 6. for March Vista Apartments at 1325 N. 200 through many states. He said The study also includes a $1.5 W., Provo, over the weekend. million remodeling project for Provo Fire Department the first forgery indiscovered in Cedar City. the City - County Municipal officials said the fire, which was Utah turned up subThe were to confined the living room Building. plans mitted by Northern Utah Archiarea, apparently was started by tects, Inc., Ogden. a lighted candle which had been American Fork Frost said the bond election left unattended. 7: 1 5 p.m. Show will also include a $500,000 proDamage to the apartment was posal for purchase of land at listed at about $300 by Wallace "Conquest of the 25th St. and Wall Ave. for the Okkam owner of the Planet of the Apes" Hall of Justice. apartments, the fire report said. 3 k 1. 1 , iff L' FRIEND is a handy thing t- havf in weather like this, which is what Little Bit, a Chihuahua, would tell you if he eould talk. That oversized head he is nestled Religious Group Ordered Out Of Business Area; Disturbs Yule " i on belongs to Pricilla, a St. Bernard. They are both residents of Salinas, Calif., where it's cold even there, A BIG WARM Train Derailment Fire, Blast Brings 25-Fami- - in to touch off explosions several tanker cars containing propane gas, but another train was brought in and pulled the standing propane cars free of danger. Authorities said they believed there was little danger of an explosion, but since they were not certain what materials all the derailed cars contained, they were keeping residents away from the immediate area. Iuka is located about six miles from the town of Tonti, where on June 10, 1971, "The City of New Orleans" Illinois Central passenger train derailed, killing 11 persons and injuring more than 100 others. which they said could go off "at any minute." Railroad officials warned firemen not to fight the blaze with water because it only provided oxygen to fan the Alcohol foam was flames. to fight he blaze, needed homes. There were no injuries in the officials said, but none was at blaze that il- hand. spectacular When the train first derailed luminated the early morning skies like daylight over the at 4:46 a.m., the fire threatened IUKA, 111. (UPI) Forty cars of a Baltimore & Ohio Railroad freight train derailed in this small southern Illinois town today, touching off an explosion and fire that forced the evacuation of about 23 entire community of sons and surrounding 600 perfarm- 15 Soldiers lands. But firemen said the danger of more explosions remained more than four hours after they began fighting the flames. A tank car carrying naphtha exploded when it rolled off the An avalanche NICE (UPI) track. It started a fire which 5,610 feet high crashed down on spread to cars of fuel oil, liquid a column of 15 soldiers in the tar and glycol, an ingredient of French Alps today, leaving all automobile antifreeze solutions. or missing, dead, injured Firemen extinguished or put authorities saic. under control fires in the oil Following the early afternoon and tar tankers, but gingerly snow slide, police said four worked against flames consumsoldiers were killed, six injured ing the glycol tanker and and five unaccounted for. another car, containing an The avalanche, which ocunidentified explosive cargo, curred north of Jausiers near the Swiss border, was the first of the season in France to claim victims. There were no other details. Buried in French Slide - Coed Likes To Cook, For Free . - PROVO, Utah (UPI) Shelley cooked herself corner, and learned to The Brigham Young sity coed began cooking . . Marja into a like it. Univer- for her brother last year as a favor. Now she feeds 17 students, six nights a week. "Everybody says I'm crazy to do it especially when I don't get paid for it," she said. "But I have too much fun to charge them." Marja, a sophomore from Ariz., began cooking for her brother, then expanded and started feeding several of his three-mont- T Ail Apartment Fire Causes $300 I . g I Ml Linil iMMIS Mi WILL LOVE!! l TICHIIICOLOr-f- ST f One man alone understood the savagery of the early American west. ! - Si ! TISIP pi IIHII lSOHStjtc. i j&J 4F Orew meL- - (si IN 11 s cuivicAsiv.m?oPENfc3o C7-kc- t! ( "PUYMiHY FOR ME" .SHOW 7:00 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES irMMiim SPECIALS I Offer Valid Thru Dec. 17, 1972 fMr f Y4lM V) wsht.j' I IDMEAfArM Hi cai IF SEE m I HOW A OUT OF BU0R HAVE TO MOVIE! THE i NANONAlUNtSAl jThe m MADE YOU'll R 1230 KNOW MOVIE ,n,s - WAMT YOU THEY auTtn, 'OAsi?0 I m- TO about DELUXE i A MOVIE THE WHOLE FAMILY CORAL DIDAUnilWT IP J I ct h 7:30 & 9:30 fAMSr&T Filing Violates Court Rule SHOWS TTTn Loss in Provo To Prison Threat IAl32S.aSM Discovered Plan Okayed A LOS ANGELES (UPI) Salt Lake City man was sentenced to 20 years in the federal penitentiary Tuesday for threatening to blow up 12 Las Vegas gambling casinos in a extortion plot. Nathai. Marks, 28, was sentenced immediately after he entered a guilty plea to extortion charges before U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis. The judge also ordered Marks to undergo a evaluation, after which he will be returned to court for possible modification of the senGILLETTE, Wyo. (UPI) -O- tence. klahoman Merle Zweifel has The government said Marks filed hundreds of mining claims sent the 21 casinos extortion in Campbell County apparently letters last April 23 saying that in violation of a district court unless the $2 million was paid, order. "we will blow you to hell." County Clerk Yvonne L. Hay-de- n Copies of the letters were said in the past 10 days 600 found in a motel room in Santa to 800 claims had been filed .Monica, where Marks was arrested May 11. through Zweifel. friends. The smell of her food got around, and she found herself feeding a house full of 13 males, another student from down the street a roommate, her cousin and herself. "I used to hate to cook," she says, "so my mom just about died when I told her about my job." love to experiment with food," Marja says, "and it's no fun doing it when there's no one to eat it but yourself. Ogden Hall Of Justice Man Goes For " 2 Forged U.S. Bonds Evacuation ly shale industry, and we would like Interior to further discuss the effects of the pollution on air and water quality, vegetation and wildlife in the area." Green said the EPA also would like an evaluation of comparative impacts of alternatives to oil shale, "such as reduced energy demand, increased doWe are also asking Interior mestic oil and gas producton. to further evaluate the effects coal gasification and electricity of anticepted pollutants," Green generated by coal or nuclear said. "Some pollution is almost power." He aJded that his comments certain to come from an oil "do not represent a position on the basic development or of the oil shale resource One of the major goals of the prototype program is to evaluate the impact of oil shale industry on the environment and to help determine whether addiIf convicted they could face a tional leasing of public lands maximum fine of $200. should be undertaken," he said. Green said the department should project in detail how much water the industry is going to need for such development and nhere it will come from. Thousands of water rights in the Colorado River Basin complicate the water availability projections, he said. UiAtneatre at 2nd w N 37 S525 Bring Whole Family i 4 n tMimmmnmmur I ir 1 7m o nlv n" per breakfast LAST2MIIES COXT. FROM 639 P.M. The first time in wkte screen the thrills IC v i s and Vyf.i. if mm if CO-HI- T BURT REYNOLDS mtttM0 r W 7 iiipi ah RAQUtLritLtn IIEXT v "JULIUS CEASAR" AND 'WUTKERiHG (MM rje i HEIGHTS" OVER 16 YRS. vir lf ' H Lh0,ce9''jnd b bur9er wlth 9r,lled rides aaaim II PETER ' Keg. 51.15 M FONDA-DENNI- NICHOLSON HOPPER-JAC- i CO-HI- T 111 r AT BOTH THEATRES r GOULD CANDICE BERGEN ELLIOTT S to UXJLLli4k 5 - ."IK H) 0nly GETTING STRAIGHT" SHOW AT 7.00 1 1 ELEC.IN-CA- SKIM HOLD YOUR COUPONS ' 3SSSSS5!S I im. NATIONAL GfNfBAl RESTAURANTS 365 VV. 1230 N Provo ACADEMY 56 NOSTM UNIVftilTV S Ke !S WO HEATERS STATt. PROVO nan |