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Show Page HERALD, Provo, Utah, Tuesday, August 20, THE 1974 Only Juab Teachers Not Settled Juab School District Supt. M. dark Newell said he is meeting with representatives of the district's teachers association this afternoon or evening in a continuing effort to reach agreement on contract negotiations for the coming year. Juab is the only school district in the state which has not settled with teachers. Granite School District teachers Monday night approved 9.25 per cent salary ft L '" schedule. The couple, one of 6,000 attending wc m ua, . annual event for the past 10 years, VETERAN EDUCATION WEEK attendee, Earl C. naae ana ni wiie, cmma, pause m Provo, their chat with Carol Dangerfleld, concerning a projected change BYU (Continued from Page 1) understanding your automobile, interior design, population and food problems, home gardening and canning, health, customs of other lands, candy making, helps the for parents, exploring universe, dozens of classes on and bowling golf religion, instruction. The weight control classes even included a special low calorie luncheon. Many of the visitors are staying in university residence halls and dining in university cafeterias. There are also exhibits on arts, crafts and .hobbies, a daily newsletter, college advisement center and evening entertainment. The entertainment consists of three dramas by the BYU speech and dramatic arts department, running simotaneously in three theaters in the Harris Fine Arts Center. BYU Education Week was first called Leadership Week and was started in January, 1922 by BYU President Franklin S. Harris. It has been held annually since that time with the exception of a few years during World War II, The week was originally a was BYU affair only and designed to bring residents of the area back to campus, to acquaint them with the university and to give them brief, helpful courses for daily living and church leadership.. The name was changed to Education Week in 1963, and proved so popular that it was placed under the sponsorship of the IDS Church educational .system. This year it is expected to reach 90,000 participants in separate weeks in about 70 locations in the U.S. Sponsoring BYU Education Week are the LDS stakes in the American Fork, Orem, Orem West, Payson, Provo, Provo North and Spanish Fork regions. Congress OKs Task Force on v - Since (UPI) it was President Ford asking, it took only one week after he made the request for the House and Senate to approve his Cost of living task force. Only minor differences divide the two bills, which passed Monday, and final congressional approval of the new agency is expected before Congress leaves next week for its Labor Day recess. In an Aug. 12 address. Ford asked Congress to pass the measure before the recess. no one Although almost expressed confidence that the new task force would hold back inflathe current double-digWASHINGTON in Wilkinson Defends Bircher GOP Right Republican Natinal Ernest L. Committeeman Wilkinson has issued a statement that the notion a member of the John Birch Society is not eligible to be a Republican candidate is "purehogwash." Wilkinson issued the statement regarding comments on the suit filed by Bircher Joe Ferguson, the GOP who is contesting State Convention's seating of extra delegates which, he says, resulted in his loss of a spot on the primary ballot. "The Republican Party has an r policy and solicits the votes of any citizen. The John Birch Society is not a political party, although its members often have pronounced political views," Wilkinson declared. The national committeeman said he was issuing the statement because he had seen the pleadings in the case and "for the first time... learned that Kent Shearer had tried to read members of the John Birch Society out of the Republican Party. "I do not agree with his action on his part, nor do I admit that he represented the Republican Party in making such a statement," Mr. Wilkinson said. A hearing on the suit filed against State Chairman T. William Cockayne and GOP counsel Kent Shearer was scheduled open-doo- today. Wilkinson said no meeting of the state GOP committee was called on the seating of the additional delegates, and Cockayne and Shearer were the only members of the committee involved in the decision. e At issue is Ferguson's loss to Mrs. Dorothy Clark, Provo, at the convention. Ferguson said the additional delegates, who were seated to compensate for an over allocation of delegates to Salt Lake County, was illegal. Shearer, in his defense brief to four-vot- ' The WASHINGTON (UPI) House Judicary Committee's final report on the case of Richard M. Nixon will be accepted by the full House today, possibly to become a footnote in history or a reference work for future impeachment inquiries. Had Nixon not resigned Aug. 9, the House would have begun formal debate Monday on the articles of impeachment recommended by the committee. A was vote to impeach considered a virtual certainity, mainly because of disclosures that Nixon interfered with an FBI investigation of less than a week break-in- . Watergate after the Those final revelations were contained in tapes Nixon made public shortly before he resigned. The case probably would have been sent to the Senate for trial within a few weeks. But the House leadership has decided not to take a vote to put the House on record for or it tion, many congressmen urged passage simply because the new President wanted it. 84601. B.E. JENSEN, Publisher Entered as second class matter at the post office In Provo, Utah. MEMBER court, said Ferguson and falsely" be- "fraudulently came a Republican candidate. Shearer's brief said, "Rather, as a member of the John Birch Society, he (Ferguson) subscribes to a policy promulgated by one Robert Welch, a dictator of that society. Such society is in of Redirect contravention publican principles." Wilkinson said Ferguson told him he "subscribed to the Republican platform and would be happytorunonit." The national committeeman said he disagrees with the procedures of the society but, "nevertheless, the principles of the John Birch Society, in many respects, support the platform adopted by the Republican Par- Boy Dies in Gun Mishap - ) An Salt Lake City boy was fatally shot Monday when he apparently bumped a rifle at a friend's home. The Salt Lake County Sheriff's deputies identified the victim as Troy Zimmerman. Deputies said the boy was visiting a friend in the basement of his home when he apparently bumped the rifle, and it discharged, hitting the victim in the right chest and killing him almost immediately; inDeputies said investigation to the incident is continuing. SALT LAKE CITY (UPI . Registration Set at Orem Junior High Registration for seventh grade students who will be attending Orem Junior High School will be held this afternoon between 4 and in the school 6 o'clock lunchroom. ty." Registration for all new students who have not previously registered or who have moved into the school's attendance area will be conducted Wednesday between land 3 p.m. Eighth grade students also will register Wednesday between 4 and 6 p.m., and ninth grade against impeachment. Instead, a vote will be taken on students will register at the same a resolution commending the time Thursday. committee and its chairman, for Peter W. Rodino Jr., "conscientious and capable efforts in carrying . out their duties." The resolution will add that the' House "accepts the report and authorizes its printing in full in the Congressional Record as a House document," but will say nothing about whether Nixon should have been impeached. The report, which will run about 500 pages, contains a majority report accusing. Nixon laws and of lying, violating subverting the constitution. It was written by committee counsel John M. Doar. Also included will be a minority report by GOP counsel Sam Garrison which also says Nixon obstructed justice, as1 well ' as views of individual members. baby bat is usually out every night hunting its own food by the time it is three weeks old. A Fee Payment Times Listed At Am, Fork Fee payment and processing for 10th grade students at American Fork High School will be held Wednesday between 6 and 8 p.m. at the school. Class schedules also will be distributed at that time. Fee payment will be Thursday for 11th grade students and Friday for 12th grade students, both between 6 and 8 p.m. Pictures also will be taken for 10th and eleventh grade students with the option of a color picture available. Senior pictures will be after taken by appointment school starts. By DAN CROFT FORK -DAMERICAN iscussions concerning school building projects and inflated school lunch costs highlighted the monthly business meeting of the Alpine School District Board of Education this morning. The board also took action allowing district personnel to seek bids for new buses and approved the sale of land for an LDS seminary building. Board members were told that addition an to Shelley Elementary School in American Fork may or may not be ready for the opening of school Monday. Supt. Dan W. Peterson said the contractor is working rapidly toward completion but that plans have been worked out if the addition is not ready. Additions at Lehi Elementary and Windsor Elementary, Orem, will be completed several weeks after school starts, he said. Three new junior high schools in American Fork, Orem and "are pretty Pleasant Grove much on schedule" despite losses due to strikes. Dr. Peterson stated. The schools are scheduled to be completed in about one year. of food items A sampling purchased for school lunches in the district showed increases ranging from 15.3 to 137.7 per cent over last year's costs. The district's cost for a 50 pound bag of sugar jumped from $6.55 to just over $15.57, the largest cost increase listed. Jello prices rose 112.2 per cent. Dr. R. Phil Shumway, board member, suggested that menu two-wee- still the major weapon city merchants have to make the city an attractive shopping place. "The response to the changes already made to parking on Center Street have in the main the positive," plantings,- - street furniture, been very said. "The executive Chamber shrubs and textured pavement area. city's plan is an extension of that I am supportive of the concept concept and I feel people will as it is layed out and feel that at greet it positively," he added. this particular time it is the most Mr. Bullock told the Herald in that can be done for th amount of an interview that he recently saw a similar improvement in Grand money being spent," he said. He called the plan a Junction, Colo., where five "worthwhile investment" but blocks were treated. warned that the improvements Reasonable Investment "That project was done in 1962 being considered should not be depended on too heavily. and the people I visited there Not Entire Answer were very positive about it even "I don't think they should be though their project cost $700,000 considered an end ' in themselves," he added, pointing out that basic merchandising is Provo Plans xGet Tough' Bill Policy Provo City Commission has announced it plans to get tougher on people who don't pay their bills for ambulance service. The commissioners approved a system of hiring collectors who would be paid a commission on their collections. The collector would . get d of the collection before legal action was taken, and a half afterwards. City Auditor Blaine Hall said the city does not have too many uncollectable bills, but there are always some who don't pay for the city 's emergency service. one-thir- Burglars Hit 2 Businesses In with no federal participation. the investment makes This in Provo are owners property being asked to make quite reasonable in comparison," he added. Mr. Bullock said there were a few things he didn't like about the Colorado Springs improvement but the over-al- l concept of trees, landscaping, and treated crosswalks were SUBSCRIPTION RATES $ 3.00 One month, carrier Six months, carrier $1100 . 136.00 One year, carrier In States United Mail, anywhere One month t 3.00 $34.00 One year Herald Telephone Numbers 0 OFFICE 3 CIRCULATION MOB FRESH The board agreed to sell up to acre of ground on the north-eas- t corner of the new one-ha- lf PRODUCE i PEPPERS Lincoln Junior High School site in Orem to the LDS Seminary Sweet M .. Program. Dr. Peterson said that area of the site "is of no practical value to us." He pointed out that the board has taken similar action at all high schools in the district. Approval also was given to seek bids for five or six new buses which will be needed in the 1975-7- 6 school year. Board members were told that delivery time for the new buses is about 0KI0NS t Canning 39 Picking... Meet .41 Pickling. a. I CAULIFLOWER Delicious IT fc Heads.. I PORK CHOPS Tender fc lean,Hormel the Blue Ribbon Protest Hearing hearing on Center Street the of plans the fate has been set for 10 a.m. Thursday in the city commission chambers. Written protests may I FRESH GROUND Sf .69 TIP STEAK SIRLOIN fc Blue Ribbon until noon Wednesday. Oral protests may be made at the meeting Thursday. DREAM WHIP of the If more than property owners protest the formation of a special improvement district, the city probably will have to abandon its plan and return $195,000 to the two-thir- Q OT Topping refresh (nut I I I fI 49 Boneless be filed with the city recorded I STRAWBERRY PRES. The Imperial property owners are the only ones who can officially protest the plan. Mayor Russell D. Grange is not expected to be at the hearing. He is in Texas this week at a drug seminar. 2fcjar government. 1 39 .fc Lean Boneless An official protest I TIP ROAST SIRLOIN city commission conference room at city hall at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday. On OT JLrt OT 1 ARMOUR TREAT 12 7Q IT Disc. Price I I VIENNA SAUSACE WANTED Wilsons SWIMMING pleasing. The city held the second of three informational meetings today designed to outline the POOl mwtunty ExceHent POOL ;41M TOMATO SAUCE hr Western Family fwithentrtloctk FAMILY ...... 4 oz. Residential Location For' Demonstrator CO. 101 ....... jOL 1 BARBEQUE SAUCE Nobody can mate WHEAT AND FLOUR Rose, 5 gaL 199 STORAGE Red f Hermetically sealed CHOW MEIN NOODLES' everything 41 laChoy 2ft size like it was 1 00 I BI-PA- LaChoy 89 , Convienient before. ICECREAM Reams tA( ...OT ft GaL SOCKS Mens ff Ret 69 1.50 DISPOSABLE BOTTLES. ffA But The AID Man can help. 59! GLEAM TOOTHPASTE! at At ?." Bxl.10 V.UT HAIR SPRAY Ik look Dry T a At men OT Reg.l.W I HOT LATHER MACHINE I" The backbone of AID Insurance Services is the man who sells you the policy. The same man who pays your claims. He's the' AID Man. Your neighbor. t to get your He can help by seeing to it that you don wait forever settlement check. Matter of fact, The AID Man is authorized to make settlements on the spot. He's a master at unsnarling complications. Thafe tho um The AID Man does business. Simple? Yes. And that's the to be. Simple. way insurance ought Honest. Direct. YelTalk to an AID Man. He s in the low Pages. Then shop around. You may find that your AID Man can save you acnvicc too. AID Atliad Mutual Inturanct Company money on your premiums, Allied Lla Intttianct Company Insurance Services. Des Moines, Iowa AMCO Intuianca Company 50304. Do it today. OK for your car, your home, your business, even your life Schick trt 8" 1904 HAIR ROLLERS a M g. m ... ml I PITCHERS L7 99 imiMWE m 4 I fc Farmer Pack city's plans. A final meeting is federal k CELERY Crisp one year. for PJL EARLY lunch price. scheduled II AJL , North Provo Two businesses in the. 1250 A and K North State area Cleaners and Quality Motorcycle were broken into Parts sometime Saturday night. Cash and merchandise were taken. According to the Provo City police report, a wallet containing about $40 in small bills was removed from the cleaners and a cash box and motorcycle front end was taken from the cycle shop. The police said the sliding window to the cleaners was broken to gain entry. A common door between the two businesses was utilized by the burglar to gain entry into the motorcycle parts store, police added. I raca fjfectm ncswr out" Chamber Executive Outlines Provo Rejuvenation Support Gordon W. Bullock, executive vice president of the Provo has Chamber of Commerce, come out in favor of a city plan to rejuvenate Center Street and University Avenue with tree mtar Stan Hows down on planners attempt to cut more expensive items wherever possible. No increase is anticipated in the 40 cent school TYPE & FILLER PAPER Protection 1 before You All vu count Risk 10o ml I "eg-M- , . . BINDERS CALL All Reg. 373-282- 9 373-282- 4 Audit Bureau of Circulation United Press International NEA Service Iff JUTS LOWtST F0OC MKU nsOIME-ISOWtstC- SXoT) The House passed the measure 379 to 23, and the Senate passed it 88 to 3 a few hours later. Published every afternoon Monday through Friday and Sunday morning by The Dally Herald, 1555 North 200 W. Street, Provo, Utah the 11 -- Year-Old House Okay on Historic Judiciary Report Seen three, Cost of Living ....v., increase, ending negotiations in that district. Newell said Superintendent salary remains the major issue of disagreement. "We're not very close together," he said, adding, "The budget will only afford a five per cent increase." Mr. Newell said teachers in the district point to other districts which have settled at 10 per cent. ' "I'm sure they need a 10. per cent raise, but the money just isn't there," he said. He noted ' that elementary teachers are scheduled for three days of orientation beginning tomorrow. He said he won't know until tonight if they will be attending the meetings. Mr. Newell said his "only avenue" for a larger salary increase "is to cut staff and services." Construction, Food Costs Reported to Alpine Board In One 1" 129 THEME BOOK 1AA T 375-266- ml 6 I DcaoiBBaiaeii 124 N. 300W., Provo, Utah I 1 Ream's Discount Pharmacy I Registered Pharmacist I tun : uuty 10 TO TK A I |