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Show 9 $vr-- ' 8,K!w8!at pa(fc 12 --THE HERALD, Prove, Uiait, f'riday, Octcter 3, laTa Near Vifro TaSlinqs Around Utah .. r" 11 vrarn fl - has The unprofessional conduct in a iwiiplaint before tlie Board of Gimmissioncrs of the Utah State iter. Pearce was accused of taking fees for legal work which he allegedly failed to do and for accepting retainers for proceedings he allegedly aban- lA'JS CITY (UPI.i -TSenate Banking Committee he Utah Supremo Court has teconunemted passage of Sen. upheld the conviction of WilJake Gam's biil to amend the liam Coleman for possession of a firearm by a felon. Real Estate Settlement ProceColeman appealed on several dures Act. The Utah Republican raised bases, liscJyding vjigrcrwa af the law. violation of his favorable committee tig constitutional rights, and ex report his first "major legislative success," post facto legislation. He was convicted of assault "RESPA is probably one of the worst bills that has ever with a deadly weapon in 1960 been passed by the Congres? of The iaw under which the the United States, Garn said. second conviction was obtained "It interferes with ever)' real was passed by the State in this Luiislature in 1573. estate transaction M'i rojjiiirv. imposing ho tnat totema-- i on an counts. requirements reporting ' place a terrible mi unfair burden en 3" of the nation's SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -financial institutions." A seminar m the hazards of Can's bill would suspend flying in winter weather is portions of RESPA calling for a scheduled Wednesday at the uniform disclosure statement, Division of Aeronautical 12 days' advance noticp of the Operations. Utah Department toad aaiourit of closing costs df Transportation. and disclosure of the previous Experts from the National purchase price of property to Weather Service, the Salt Lake be sold. City Flight Service Station and Garn said the additional time tlie Federal Aviation Agency and expease these provisions will discuss various aspects of cost the mortgage company are flying in the Intermountain passed along to the purchaser. Region during the winter. Lee Robertson of the Utah SALT LAKE CITY (HPI) -T- Division of Wildlife wiU discuss he Utah Supreme Court has survival in tne wilderness. The rejected appeals by two State meeting is open to the public Prison inmates who were and all pilots are urged to denied writs of habeas corpus. attend, The court refused to grant writs to Devon Gee, serving a SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -sentence for murder, and to Attorney John D. Pearce has Ersell Harris Jr., in prison on a been indefinitely suspended forgery conviction. from the practice of law in on based was a Utah Gee's petition by the State Supreme juror's being shown a picture of Court. the victim in his coffin during Pearce was charged with Gee's murder trial for the slaying of a 22 month-ol- d WASHINGTON tUPD SALT 13-- 0 first-degr- baby. The court ruled the woman who shewed the picture did not know the juror would see it , and the juror was not influenced by the sight of the photo. Harris' appeal was based on alleged technical errors in the handling of his case, and on the contention that he was sentenced incorrectly. Tlie sentencing issue arose because Harris was sentenced under a statute which was superceded before he was taken into custody and sent to prison. He claimed he should have been imprisoned under terms of the Lw at the time he was incarcerated, rather than under terms of the harsher law in effect at the time of his conviction. WASHINGTON (UPI) -S- en. Frank E. Moss, says he is pleased President Ford vetoed a bill increasing tobacco price supports, and hopes the veto may pave the way for elimination of all tobacco subsidies. Ford vetoed the bill Wednesday. Moss, a long-tim- e tobacco subsidies, Judgement Due on SALT LAKE CITY (UPI doned. According to the high court's records. Pearce has !eii the state and has not answered or responded to the complaint. KILL AFB, Utah (UPI) -Contracts totaling $1.05 million have warrferi hy Hill Air Force The largest of the 32 contracts was for $238,313 for Mayne Mechanical Systems of Salt Lake City to repair an exiiaust bystcm in u aiutA engine test cells at Hill. IBM of Salt Lake City was awarded a $J31. 448 contract for rental of punchcard accounting machines. A $175,980 contract for janitoriai services ai the base was given to H&F Maintenance cf Roy. Will Begin SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -The State Board of Examiners Thursday agreed to pay the expenses of seven highway experts who will come to Utah and evaluate the state's travel Maurice Abravanel will be or. the podium for the 29th year as the orchestra presents its concerts opening Tuesday night at Weber State College Fine Arts Center in Ogden and Wednesday night at the Salt Lake Tabernacle. The symphony will perform one-ten- th Weather May End By United Press International Aii good utmgs rnust come to an end even Utah's perfect fall weather. the BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -7, state's WK f)W"g f"fi it exposure fortbetsiHngstopose a hoaJth hazard. Local residents urged complete removal of the ban, imposed in the summer of !'J74. ri k i oiu ids it had property worthless. vuos rweecea Although fair weather and mild temperatures were on tap again today, a cloud was said the area around the site, at 33rd South and 7th West, to sign disclaimers exempting the county from any liability if they develop health problems due to exposure to the tailings. County Commissioner William E Dunn argued for partial reduction of the ban, saying its effective was it was a hardship to local residents trying to sell property, and it would take at least 10 to 15 years of constant half-mil- Argentina's taxi drivers, ff caught in the squeeze between soaring fuel costs and western horizon. dwindling clientele due to the economic crisis, are locking to the government for help. Vail H LDS RELIEF SOCIETY PRESIDENT Barbara S. SmiiSi speaks cut on the issues of chastity and fidelity during the f iaa! session of the LDS Relief Society Conference in Salt Lake City Thursday, General conference sessions of the church began today. See story on Page One. A of drivers delegation I asked the economy minister to authorize loans for the purchase of new cabs at low prices to help them stay in business. (UPITelephoto) COFFEE Wish yeur Club 11 Ertssfojt I til 321-611- stilt available orchestra may 224-175- 1 399-596- 0 6 3 in 1 Fifth and BRAND NEW HIPMENT 197 1 3 DIRECT FACTORY AUTHORIZATION FOR THIS EVENT 24 PR0GRAMM MODERN FABRIC -T - l -T - C - H STITCHES the ;3 4 3 55 3810 Slaughter Plants Up ATr race S 0 OGDEN UNIVERSITY MALL SALT LAKE Symphony, Chadwiek's Jubilee and Harris' Third Symphony on both programs. At Ogden, it will also play Copland's "Rodeo," while the Salt Lake concert will feature Robert Cundick's Organ Concerto with the composer at the Tabernacle critic of said after the veto he intended to while providing opportunities reintroduce his bill to end to hear the music created in our tobacco subsidies. That bill has time." failed in the past three but congressional sessions, Muss said the veto may be a charges that Utah-mad- e sign of increasing support. was poor quality Moss contends it is foolish for asphalt the government to spend because of a high paraffin content, chose Karl Spear, an millions making the public aware of the health hazard engineering professor at Utah 1 State University, and L.C. tobacco represents, and then Erickson, a retired Idaho subsidize its cultivation. highway engineer. SALT LAKE CITY UPL -CThe names of the WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Sen. ommercial slaughter plants officials were not yet in I 'lull have turned out more rrank t. Moss, says available the federal Department red meat during the first eight of Rampton also asked the Salt months of this year than during Housing and Urban Development is guilty of administrative Lake County Grand Jury to the same period a year ago The total red meat inefficiency, poor planning and investigate charges made by slaughter during August was 16 3 million wasting of lax money in its the television station that road handling of a housing project in inspectors were being bribed pou'idi. a blight increase over and pressured to approve the July kill but down 8 Utah per cent from August. 1974. Moss said Thursday HUD shoddy construction wofk. relieved an application for construction of 10 homes in flwpah more than three years ago. hut has to begin building. ; He said the agency overli ooked the remoteness of the Tooele County town in its planning, lost the project proposal for three months and put off any action while it became ensnarled in red tape. "I am firmly convinced that administrative inefficiency and bureaucratic morass are the greatest burdens we are suffering in government 'today." Elect Mosssaid. I , hai made It a point to mtt with the people of ?rovo and find out their need and deiirei. SALT LaKE CITY tUPI) O Ha 'elt the pulie ef th r,i,.,.(. 2 I i :zn ;!, farmers rrcci.cu Mier g poution of commiwoncr wi'h a knowledge of the neecti of ths people. prices for their products during Z September than they did a 3 , li the ftdera! take ovf of owf tommunity. month or a year earlier, the 1 -- . I r !o the Otcoppiuy Ordinance Utah Crop and Livestock ai it wai wnttn B th by u pitn! niy tommntion. Reporting Servire said. Tie service said wheat. S tCY HiS KG.7.S TCWJJ AKD WANTS WHAT 1 barley. ,ogs. Jarcts, cows. IS EIST FORTH? WHO i utrC m iff 17. calUe, calves, milk, milk cims, turkeys, wool, eggs, alfalfa hay and other hay brought greater prices last month. Yom'i in good handi with Sheep, steers and heifers &V$ Perfect ' begin its series Subscription concert with a "sold out" season. "It is gratifying to observe the increased interest in great music over the last three decades.5' Abravanel said today. "The unprecedented ticket sale indicates that our symphony orchestra continues to meet the challenge of paying due respect to the great masters of all generations, -- i"u board would require new residents of Ogden. phalt. f around the r?dio3Ctlve tailings at the old Vitro uranium miil site wiii be slowly lifted by toe Salt Lake City County Health Board. Board members voted unanimously Thursday to decrease the size of the ban area, e radius currently a around the site, by mile a year. Tne first cut takes effect Oct 15. But the burd reserved the rlfchi io t instate tlie fuli building ban if the federal government fails to go ahead with tentative plans to remove the tailings. A ferforal study of Us removal problem will be ther, Bonnie,4i, was killed outright in the coiliskm at 33rd South snd 9th West. approaching completed in The health -T- he ban on construction opens its organ. The orchestra will play 15 concerts in Salt Lake City and eight in Ogden during its regular 1975-7- 6 season. Symphony officials said only a handful of season tickets are approved travel expenses plus a $30 a day living allowance for the inspectors the same daily allowance state employes receive when they are on government business. Transportation Department Adminstrative Services Director Vem Stevenson said the inspection team would consist of highway engineers from the states of Oregon, Nevada. Texas and South Dakota, plus a federal highway official and two men picked by television station KSL. The station, which aired the SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Officials at St. Mark's Hospital said Seth Parkinson, son of James F. Parkinson, died 36th season, next week with concerts in Salt Lake City and asphalt specifications. Gov. Calvin L. Rarr.pton asked the independent experts to make the evaluation after a television expose charged that the State Transportation Deused an inferior partment grade of Utah produced asThe board Qwly Line local tospit&l. iliUi Slirty ttfU:f UOOS, IIlS tie Press International the Utah Symphony Shostakovich's Asphalt i- - thee-year-oi- d Weather The National Service said high cloudiness a Pacific by spawned ou!d inove into disturbance Utah the evening, during bringing partly cloudy skies and a chance of a few showers in the west portion. Season By United A boy injured in a traffic accident which killed his mother Sept. 39 has died in a Sif a l Will jan - T hf I liar ft v Reasons I cr V0,R9 '0lj LOW EASY TERMS cabinet or portable series . . . Loaded with modern stretch stitches, button buttonhelder, sewing overlook, blind hem, tricot and garment stitches . . . ALL BUILT IN . . . 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