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Show aswaell P7er The first in a series of public hearings to obtain comment on the impact of two proposed power transmission lines on the arid Southwest will be held Nov, 4 at 9 a.m. in the State Office Building Auditorium. The hearing wall be conducted by Robert Mesch, a Department of Interior hearing Line Hearing Gov. 4 Secretary of Interior Walter Hickel said other hearings will be held Nov. 7 in Twenty-Nin- e Palms, Calif. ; Nov. 9 in Las Vegas, Nev., and Nov. 12 in Phoenix, Ariz. that will be produced in northern Arizona, northwestern New Mexico and southern Utah to meet projected power demands in the Los Angeles and Phoenix areas. The hearings follow the completion of a shidy report on the proposed routes for the transmission lines by a team of Interior specialists. Witnesses are requested to limit their comments to the transmission effect power lines have on land use and the environment in the arid J. examiner. Anyone wishing to testify at the hearing can contact Robert D. Nielson, Bureau of Land Management, 122 S. State, P.O. Box 11505, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. transmit additional adverse enviromen-ta- l effect which cannot be avoided should proposal be implemented. 3. Alternatives to the proposed action not considered in the study teams report. 4. The relationship between the local short-teruses of mans environment and the maintenance and enhance- The environmental impact of the proposals. 1. pow'er 1973 - but Presently, the Ogden center handles individual and business returns from Alaska, Idaho, Hawaii, California, Montana, Nevada, Oregon Arizona and Washington, Utah. the addition of the Fresno center, Utah will lose returns from California and Hawaii, but will begin to process those from Minnesota, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota. With EXPLAINS Burton The changeover in work- Ex-Coa- ch - Kenneth Boedecker, left test driver Max Klevin view empty barrels collision. cushion" that cut damage in "crash Honored Maurice A. Dawkins, . of executive Opportunities Industrialization Centers and Related Enterprises will address Brigham Forum Young University assemblies Thursday at 10 a.m. in the Smith Fieldhouse Provo and at 8 p.m. in the Hall on Temple Assembly Dr. vice-chairm- By Group Tberon S. Parmelee, a forcoach and a veterof local athletic mer tennis an booster events, Monday received the annual Hope Chest, award from the Utah Chapter, National Multiple Sclerosis Society. The award was granted for "c o n s i s tent, outstanding activities in behalf qf multiple sclerosis . . . and was presented at the chapter's Halloween party at the Salt Lake Board of Health auditorium. SOCIETY POSTS Parmelee has served as a board member, vice chairman lor two years and state chairman in 1967 and 1968 for the Multiple Sclerosis Society. He has served as committee chairman and coordinator of MS clinics at the University of Utah Medical Center several times each year. Parmelee was secretary to the president of the University of Utah was manager of student activities at the school and was a tennis coach for 35 veers until his retirement in 3961. ATHLETES GROUP He was a founder of the .Utah chapter for the Old Time Athletes Association and has recently helped organize and sponsor American Legion baseball arid oratorical contests for high school students. He is a veteran of World Wars I and II and retired as a lieutenant colonej in the Army Reserve. Square. former assistant director A of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Dr. Dawkins has also served as an associate director of Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA). Dr. Dawkins, a clergyman for 23 years, was founder and first chairman of the Western Christian Leadership Conference and worked with the late Dr. Martin Luther King and the Southern Giristian Leadership Conference. Steel Crash Barrels Promise Utah Safety Hitting a bridge abutment at 60 miles per hour means almost certain death and complete vehicle destruction unless the abutment is equipped with steel crash barrels. in recent tests by the Federal Highway Administration and the Texas Highway Delarge partment, a two-tomodel car was t ammed at 60 miles per hour into a cluster of empty steel drums. The driver backed the slightly damaged car from the scene of impact and walked away without a scratch. This vehicle impact attenuator system' is soon to be installed on interstate highways in Salt Lake County, acto Quintin Adair, cording Utah Highway Department District Two engineer. When a g vehicle crash into a smashes cushion, the steel drums absorb the impact by collapsing in rapid succession and the vehicle is stopped in a matter of feet and split seconds without injury tp the driver, the Texas Transportation Institute reported. Unbelievable as it is, the car In the recent tests sustained limited damage to its hood, grill, front bumper and a headlight and was used again for another test of the same type, the TTI report said. Typically, the drums are fastened together in a wedge in front of abutments or other stationary objects that could be hit by stray vehicles. The drums used in the test Safety Council today again urged motorists to take the USC Defensive Driving Course to learn how acciavoid dents on the states highways. Leo H. Barlow, USC vice president for traffic, said better good drivers become drivers after completing the course. eight-hou- r If you analyze the causation factors in the more than to 260 death-dealJn- g fatd accidents already re this year, youd find many started from he simple driving errors, said. Four evening classes and a Saturday class will be held in November at the State Office ported In Utah The Auditorium. Building Nov. 2, 3 and 4 classes begin at 7 p.m. and run for four weeks, two hours per session, Barlow noted. The Nov. 5 class will begin at 6:30 p.m. and run for three weeks so as to end prior to h y . ! Located NEV. (AP) Wreckage that could be that of a small plane missing since Friday with three Californians aboard was spotted Monday evening south of here, near Lida Junction. There was no sign of life. The Civil Air Patrol sent a ground team to the wreckage, spotted from the air at dusk by a search pilot. Maps of the GOLDFIELD, Utah Safety Council Offers Classes To Remedy Errors Utah were manufactured by U.S. Steels Products Division and look like those commonly used to transport petroleum and chemicals. They have seven-incholes punched in their tops and bottoms to facilitate proper crushing. During tests, the driver seat belt, wore a heavy-dutshoulder straps and a crash helmet. The crash cushion have already been placed on Texas highways and have been instrumental i saving lives and reducing "ito damage, the TTI report seated. Wreckage DEFENSIVE DRIVING COURSE The so Concern over disOGDEN schools, the genthe cipline in eral permissiveness of society and the court handling of juvenile referrals was expressed by members of the Ogden High School faculty during a Board of Education meeting Monday night. Faculty member Robert Francis, speaking for the grouj). said the incorrigible students were becoming more of a problem and that more to be just punishment needed handed out bv the schools and courts to repeated offenders. mentioned that some students become problem stuare because dents they tyy influenced organizations He lie." Samuel Thanksgiving holiday. The Saturday class begin Nov. 7 at area showed no known wreckage, said CAP Lt. Col. Louis Dellamonica In search headquarters at Hawthorne. The single-engin- e Navion piloted by Laurance Bogert of Salinas, Calif., disappeared on a flight from Saiinas to Salt lake City by way of Toncpah, north of Goldfield. Others listed aboard the plane were Valance Tucker and Roy Grant, also of will Two for four 9 a.m. sessions will run hours each, he said. Registration will be held at the Utah Safety Council, 535 S. 2nd West, phone or at the first class. A small fee will be charged to cover cost of materials, Barlow said. The course is for licensed drivers who want to improve their driving techniques, he explained. from society whose mam objective is to overthrow socie- ty. The courts are too lenient in handling juvenile cases, Francis said. We (teachers) are concerned that society is moving from government by law to government by men, he continued. He then cited an example that law is not the point, but rather, what judge the case goes before. in the As to discipline Francis said the schools, teachers need guidance and therefore request that the beard set down policy and establish boundaries as to how far teachers should go to enforce the rules. Monday night's action by facultymiembers came as the result of recent actions by a male student at Ogden High who was expelled from school on six counts which included striking a woman teacher. Board member Spencer IRomp supported the teachers request for guidelines I hope we, as a stating, can board, support and enforce rules on the school grounds. 3 PCT. INCORRIGIBLE Francis stated that three per cent of the students were and as such, incorrigible, be removed from the presence of those students wanting and seeking an educ- should ' ation. He addei that students be expelled should frm school tor using abusive lanon r smoking guage. school and for premises absent from school too being frequently. The board should tell us how many times a student can be absent from class and still receive credit from the course, Francis said, The board should also tell us if we students to should tmoke on the school grounds or if we should enforce the state law which prohibits a person from smoking if he is under 18 years of age, he t chibald said. Charging the governor with throwing up a smokescreen, Atty. Gen. Romney said there are three basic issues in the senatorial campaign: First, there is a great deal of difference between Sen. Moss and Congressman Burton and in the way they vote. western accent. Third, B- -l Thieves broke into the pickup truck of Garry R. Powell, 3371 S. 7780 West, taking a Take Hunting Gear Thieves stole a $32 pair of hunting boots, two hunting jackets, total value $30, and a flashlight from the car of Sgt. indicated with a would proceed they definite establish to study guidelines for teachers to follow. The possibility of setting comprising up committees teachers, parents and students to study the matter was also discussed. SALE OF TV In other action. Supt. William Garr.rr reported that the Federal Communication Commission (FCC) had denied the board's petition to sell the school disti lets educational television station (Channel 9) a private firm. The FCC would not tell me why they denied the petition, Garner said, so I contacted Sen. Bennett who said he would find out why. 3 Woolley said the was obviously tinged with politics. I wonder who Dr. Terry, Fen. Moss and the Democratic think National Committee they are kidding when they announce with great fanfare the presentation of ar. award to Sen. Moss eight days before the election," Woolley on the heels of Dr. Terryc fund solicitation, with an enclosed envelope to a Virginia post office box. it casts a deep shadow over the enlire However, ceremony said.-Comin- afiair. Woolley distributed copies of a letter soliciting funds ,tor Moss signed by Terry, former Oregon Democratic Sen. Mau-nn- e Neuberger and Emerson Foote, former chairman of y the Council on Smuking and Health. Freeman ridiculed Burtons stated reason for not appearing on the KUED debate Monday night. Burton said he was too busy with arrangeInter-Agenc- ments for President Nixon's visit to Salt Lake City Satur day. ( Is he so important that the President couLnt come- - to Utah unless Burton personally handles all the details? Freeman asked. Who is' he kidding? he said. The AIP candidate charged that Burton and Moss have been in collusion to prevent him (Freeman) from pinning them down on the real issues and thats w'hy they canceled oul. KUED officials said Moss was ready to appear, but declined to do so under the conditions set that Burton be represented by a young man from the University of Utah or Burton be given equal time later. Payments On Support Show Gain A crackdown by the recovery services section of the Division of Family Services has boosted funds recovered from fathers delinquent in support payments and fraudulent assistance cases to $150,096.36 during the first four months of the fiscal year. This is the report of Dean R. Featherstone of the section. The amount is 68 per cent more than $89,093.39 collected during the same period of fiscal 1970, Featherstone said. The increased drive involves statewide coverage by division investigators in cooperation with the Internal Revenue Service, the Utah Department of Employment Security, the Social Security Utah the Administration, Drivers License Division and police officers. If a father does not meet his legal obligation in providing for his family and the family is forced on welfare, the division refers the case to a county attorney. n.ntF'&g.vm. g deer rifle and a scope valued at $300. VV. Sen. Moss, receives a let of campaign from the eastern money liberals and he makes it worth their while. said there ate Romney three or tour hundred votes in the Senate each year, but only a few dozen are on crucial issues. Its on the crucial votes that Sen. Moss opposes the president on ABM, right to Court the Supreme work, nominations, conduct of the war in Vietnam, on nomination of the secretary of interior, he said. Also, said the attorney general, Utah is basically a conservative state, and yet Moss lias the highest liberal voting record of any senator from the Mountain States. Rep. Pace, asked to comment specifically on the telegram-to-rioter- s Issue, said the Moss unfair campaign charges were just a matter of the pot calling the kettle black. The real issues, he said, are liberalism veisus conservatism. Sen. Barlow said the moratorium was organized mainly to embarrass the Preside.it, not to end the war which, he said, Nixon was already in the process of doing. In his charges to the unfair practices committee, Moss acknowledged that he sent a telegram to Utah leaders of the moratorium, congratulating them. But he has angrily denied that he sent one to demin onstrators Washington where some disorders did occur. award Moss came at a meeting of the Utah Commission on Tobacco and Health in Hotel Utah. The former- surgeon general praised him for his forceful and courageous leadership in protecting the health of the in referAmerican people. ence to Moss efforts in getting cigarette commercials banned from television. Loot Truck Board members to Second, Moss speaks in Washington with an eastern accent and in Utah with a prepared the amendment in consultation with the attorney for property owners. The amendment will be a new chapter added to the utility and special improvements ordinances. City officials said the scenic value of the city will be enhanced by removal of unsightly utility poles and structures, and that underground utilities will also provide better public safety. Some new housing subdivisions and other public construction have included underground utilities, but no city ordinance makes it mandatory that they be buried. pei-mi- said. In referring to discipline in the schools. Francis noted that a recent Gallup poll showed that 53 per cent of the the public did not think schools were strict enough in their discipline of problem students. q,4 We leaned over backwards by giving Burton four days instead of three in which to reply to Moss allegations Ar- Utility Lines D. Bithell, 1368 Archibald, execu- es. City Okays Burial Of Continued from Page J. tive director of the Fair Campaign Practices Committee, told the Deseret News that under the committees rules, of which Burton and his people are well aware," Burton was in default and had refused to arbitrate the charg- American IndeFreeman, pendent Party senatorial candidate, showed up, ready to go on, but Mas balked at debating with a student from the University of Utah who was to appear in place of Burton. EQUAL TIME Campbell said the station was prepared to give the hour-lonspot to Moss and Freeman, but it was learned that under rules of the Federal Communications Commission, the station would have to give Burton equal time of one houi later. Moss refused to go on under these circumstances, Campbell said, so the program was canceled 10 minutes before gdesi Teachers Voice Concern Over By BUDD BURNETT Deseret News Staff Writer heavily g two Speaker ws staffer asked if it would be all right to send a substitute for Burton. Campbell said the station answered that it would probably be all ght. He said Sen. Frank E. and Clyde B. Moss, Delay Pleas Y. Forum EVENTS SEND SUBSTITUTE y Smith, 22, Tooele, one of two men slain July 9 in juniper covered mountains west cf over, Tooele County. half-truth- The first-degre- load will be gradual and we said Burton owes an obligation to Utahns to acknowls and edge these extend an open apology to the committee for failing io to this complaint. The gcemor said Burton had softened his television s;.ot on student rioting so that now it amounts to a half-trutrather than an outright with security arfor President rangements Richard M. Nixons visit to Utah that Burton would be unable to appear. involved been calculated, the spokesman said. Of the jobs which are cut, he said, most would be on the lower-palevels. are accused of e murder in the shooting death of Ronald Paul Noting that Burton signed a fair campaign pledge. Ramp-to-n Saturday a campaign staffer of Rep. Laurence J. Burton, R Utah, called and said Last year, the gross payroll at the center for 2,200 permanent and 2,300 temporary workers was $22 million. of the personnel cut Impact on temporary workers has not The Act cf 1965. He explained the sequence of events as follows: want to emphasize there will be no sudden dropping of employes, tiie spokesman raid. Most of the reduction would be achieved by attrition from normal resignations, retirements and transfers. TOOELE Pleas for Bennett Merle Belwood, 25. and Ruth Ruby Breece, 23, both of Tooele, were delayed Monday until Nov. 6 in Third District Court session at Tooele. to soften marijuana penalties; of voting against cutting off federal funds to rioting students, and that Moss was not a sponsor ot the Law Enforcement Assistance voting gramming, said today. Rex Campbell, station manager, said it was the first time this had ever happened in the history of the Civic Dialogue series, which is jointly sponsored by the Deseret News and KUED, University of Utah Educational Television Station. 800 in Ogden none of our ArfiJ p e r m a n ent employes has grjfifs to worry about an nimiiiiiniiiniiniiinm his job, IRS spokesman stated. Completibn of a new service center in Fresno, Calif., will cause a redistribution of the work load involving processing of income tax returns. Continued from Page B1 in proofficials hole station IRS To Trim OGDEN personnel at the Internal Reveiiue Service Center here will, be pared by up tr 800 by lale ilMlIltflliiliiiunimun r i a 1 candidates hour-lon- g 1 Burton Feud a over KUED, Chan, el 7, resulted in many angry calls from viewers and left the station management with a d'fficult-to-fil- l ment of long-terproductivity. 5. Any irreversible and irretrievable commitments of resources which be would involved in the proposed action should it be implemented. 8 October 27, 1970 In Moss , The cancellation abrupt Monday evening of the last confrontation of the three sen-to Tuesday, MfgdgfMqpFpNqpA Charges Fly Ires Public m Written comments on the tollowing points would be appreciated, Hickel said: DESERET NEWS, Canceled TV Show 2. Any Southwest. The study resu'ted ftom a need to evaluate proposals for crossing public lands in the Southwest with high voltage transmission lines needed to iiringBrir inwiri 5th South. IN TIME OF NEED ft DEMAND A JOHNSON cipline an appeal for foris reconsideration being warded to the FCC. Approximately two years ago, the board and school administration decided to sell Meanwhile, WHY JOHNSON? Over 35 yeon of experience guarantees completely reliable Heavy Steel reinproduct forced . , . tong plartic asphalt teal unites cover securely with vault . . . The ultimate in protection and durability. the station to a private concern. The contract specified that the school district would continue to use the station for educational purposes during regular daytime school hours, the station at relinquishing night and on weekends ... Call ar Writa for fUl for INFORMATION commercial purposes. in January 1971. & olindon Glen V. Holley was sworn ip as a board member during Monday nights meeting. He will fill the unexpired term of former member Lyman D. Perkes who moved out of the school district. The term ex- pires ' CEMENT VAULT CO 1726 Jeffcrson-485-34- itllvtry At Ptact - 42 kwr Umtfvy J. , |