OCR Text |
Show i ywiwii ' wr-iy- yjiyiyyiiiiTiynn 'jpr qBurqfllii Tuesday, November 7, 1989 5A Emery County Progress circuit court By S.K. DAVIS Staff writer CASTLE DALE In circuit court on Nov. 2 a trial date was set for Tina Marie Snow , Castle Dale. The defen-- . dant is charged with a class A misdemeanor of selling or supplying alcohol to a minor. She entered a plea of not guilty to the charge. Atrial date of Dec. 7 was set. Jed William Davis, 28, Huntington, was arraigned on a class A misdemeanor of driving on a license revoked for alcohol, a class A" misdemeanor of DUI or drugs and a class B misdemeanor of operating a vehicle left of center. Through a plea bargain agreement with the state the defendants plea of guilty to the charges allowed the court to amend the DUI from a class A to a class B misdemeanor, and the driving left of center charge was dropped. The defendant was sentenced to serve one year in the Emery County Detention Center and pay a fine of $1,000 on count one. The court then suspended all but 60 days of the time. The court imposed a sentence of six months in the Emery County Detention Center on count two and a fine of $700 with all but 10 days suspended. The judge ordered the sentences to run concurrently and if the defendant has paid the total fine of $1,950 by the end of the 10 days he is to be released; if not, he must serve trolled substance, cocaine; already served and was fined and two class B misdemea- $500. In addition he is to fornors, unlawful possession of a feit the title to his car and also controlled substance, mari- the hand gun to the county, as juana, and possession of drug well as pay the fme forthwith. A paraphernalia. defendant He was also placed on inforto the court. co- in the case, mal probation Felicia Ann ld Moore, his common-la- wife, w was released on her own recognizance. Silvestre Rodriguez, 21, Long Beach, Calif., entered pleas of guilty to a class A of attempted mis-demean- or . unlawful possession of a controlled substance, cocaine; two class B misdemeanors of unlawful out his full six month possession of a controlled substance, sentence. marijuana Douglas Alan Bolin, 27, and carrying a concealed dangerous weapon; and a Columbus, Ohio, waived his class A misdemeanor of drivright to a preliminary hearing ing on a revoked license. The and was bound over to district defendant was sentenced to court on Nov. 7. He is charged serve one year in the Emery with a third degree felony of Ccounty Detention Center, unlawful possession of a con was given credit for the 9 days Jerome Scott Lambert, 33, De Pere, Wis., was arraigned on charges of possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, a third degree felony; possession of drug paraphernalia, a class B misdemeanor; and driving while his license is revoked for alcohol, a' class A misdemeanor. v Mario Alberto Rivera, 44, Los Angeles, Calif., requested that the $500 bail previously posted be forfeited and the case was dismissed. He was charged with a class A misdemeanor of attempted unlawful possession of a controlled substance, cocaine. UP&L granted 7th price reduction The Utah Public Service Commission approved Utah Power & Light Co.s seventh price reduction in less than two years on Oct. 27. This latest price cut is for $14.9 million, or 2.3 percent. The lower rates are effec tive Nov. 1. The latest decrease is a h of savings on energy which the power company itself must buy. The PSC order also includes reductions which result from the resolu- pass-throug- Men plead guilty In a hearing last week at the United States District Court, Judge David Winder sentenced two southern Utah men for violation of the Archaeological Resources Protection Act. Burton Joseph Rondo of Santa Clara, and Cuave Rod Haverland of St. George were caught by Bureau of Land An ancient Anasazi ceramic pot was found in their Jeep. After pleading guilty to the charges, Rondo and Haverland were placed on three years probation. Each will pay $250 restitution fee to BLM, and a $25 victims fee. In addition, Haverland will pay a $500 fine and Rondo will perform 200 hours of community service work. Judge Winder also ordered that Rondos vested interest in his 1979 Jeep be forfeited to the federal government. Management law enforce- ment officials on March 24, 1989 digging for ancient artifacts at an Anasazi Indian site in Washington County, Utah. tion of several complex accounting issues from the past. Part of the savings result the PacifiCorp merger, which has expanded opportunities to purchase the lowest-copower available. It from st has also led to a greater ability to sell surplus power to other utilities, which helps lower prices to Utah customers. Meanwhile, the cost of the coal that the company buys or produces itself has been declining. At its Emery Coun- ty mines, the average cost per ton has dropped to less than $17 per ton from almost $22 per ton two years ago. New contracts for coal supply at the Carbon Plant near Price have also reduced the cost of purchased coal. The company has worked closely with state regulatory and , consumer agencies and with large industrial custom program be brought into sharper focus and that various efforts be coordinated to prop vide a point of conlest numerous its compotact, nents get in each others way and check the momentum of the overall effect, according to Utah Foundation, the private nonprofit research agency. one-sto- The program, being directed by the Department of Community and Economic Development, is seeking to attract tourist and convention visitors to the state, to bolster and expand existing Utah industries and to build and attract new business enterprises to expand the states years ago. the merger and other improvements in efficiency will continue to bring our prices down over the next several years, he added. The combination of lower prices and an adequate supply of reliable power should be an incentive, for economic development in Utah. based on careful analysis of the natural advantages and disadvantages of the region under consideration and then targeting industries that best fit the local situation, foundation analysts note. A recent study suggests that there is no such thing as an ideal business climate; characteristics that attract some firms are the established international reputations, have developed from research of Utah on One facet of Utahs r i i i COUPON valuable coupon TWO LARGE ORIGINAL ROUND PIZZAS WITH CHEESE & 10 TOPPINGS Prpperoni, ham. mushrooms, green peppers, onions, black olives. Italian sausage & pineapple: hoi peppers and anchovies upon request. i i current program is using two of the states existing assets research programs of Utahs institutions of higher learning and the states educated and highly motivated labor force to develop new high tech industry. A number of successful businesses, some with I coupon TWO SMALL 1 I ORIGINAL ROUND PIZZAS I WITH CHEESE & ANY TWO ITEMS I I $6" I Expires Nov. 29, 1999 m fee 1989 little Caesar Enterprises, VALUABLE r Hi M valuable Hi lot I'epperoiii. ham. mushrooms, green peppers, onion. black olive, Italian sausage pie; hoi pepper Hi coupon MMH PEPPERONI PIZZAS i $799 V 1989 j j Jj hbmmm ume Caesar Enterprises, Inc I - L- -i FI0B i i BOOK i i 1st through 22nd Little Caesars Pizza will donate a percentage of Crazy Bread sales to Nov. the funding of a STATEWIDE Food Bank to better combat the growing hunger problem. I VALUABLE I coupon VALUABLE 1 coupon ! r i i i i i i i i 1989 Enterprises, me valuable coupon Hi H H valuable coupon rrr-- T Hi I ume Cats LUNCHEON SPECIAL BABY PAN! PAN! BONUS BREAD A160Z. DRINK if $975 tad Expires Nov. 29, 1989 PlusTax li I I I I I ume Caesar Enterprises, VALUABLE COUPON I VALUABLE i I !ii 1989 J COUPON li HI mm mm Jl bb LUNCHEON I Plus Tax mm valuable coupon pineap- - I m I L Hi A and anchovies upon request. I SYATiHIBE I I I COUPON TWO MEDIUM ORIGINAL ROUND & i From Nov. valuable coupon Hi H Hi H ORIGINAL ! i i lime Caesar Enterprises, VALUABLE and projection speculation. WITH CHEESE 10 TOPPINGS I Hi results rather than ROUND PIZZAS I I I r- SIM, 1989 concrete institutions. fl0 HELP ramn ume Caesar Enterprises, VALUABLE industry brought an that same characteristics deter others. I Little Caesars. SPECIAL valuable coupon PRICE-116- 9 j Delivery Hotline l-- -- VALUABLE COUPON ImmmmmA E.Main 637-- 1 1 ed estimated $2 billion into the Utah economy; in 1985, Utah manufacturers sold an estimated $51 million worth of goods to Pacific Rim countries where Utah trade development offices have been set up; in 1988, $41 million in federal contracts went to Utah firms, compared to only $7.76 million in 1986. There are many facets of the program that are relatively new and require reasonable time to get into full operation, the foundation points out. However, the time is fast approaching when we should be able to evaluate all parts of the program on the basis of I I I FREE 1989 Utah-manufactur- that efforts to build or attract new industries should be I Identical Pizza i four-to-on- Many economists believe Company President Frank N. Davis noted that the lower prices are especially significant compared with rising prices of other consumer goods and services. We believe that capital must ed valuable coupon Pan! PanlTM or Original Round - Mix or Match 9 Valid only with coupon at participating state-furnish- e be matched on a basis by capital from outside sources. Attraction of venture capital from private sources is a major factor in the state development program. Other aspects of the overall economic development program include campaigns to open and expand domestic and foreign markets to products and to obtain for Utah firms a larger share of federal contracts for goods and services, particularly goods and services consumed by federal installations located in Utah. Some encouraging results from the states efforts have already been seen, the foundation notes: in 1987 the tourist-relate- d 1H rHi TWO MEDIUM GET ONE i i i i known as Centers for Excellence, provides limited funds to the universities, which in turn make modest grants to research projects judged to have potential for significant economic development. Some additional seed capital may later be provided to industries getting started on the basis of these research projects. Such However, economists are recommending that the broad BUY ONE f"Little Caesars Pizza I The current program, Utah is embarked on the most extensive program of economic development which it has yet undertaken and encouraging indications of progress are being perceived. economy. ers to produce a price cut which fairly reflects its lower energy costs. Since early 1988, Utah Power has reduced its Utah prices by more than $95 million, counting this latest request. On average, households served by Utah Power will be paying about $70 less per year than they were only two Economic growth needs unification I BABY PAN! PAN! $1JL 75 PlusTax fo 33 La mnreiuhiaaiiM 1989 Utile Caesar Enterprises, Hi VALUABLE COUPON I J ( |