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Show v a- - 'Vt'' 'nMr vjaBj- ff ir- - fji ''"tri r l V.vov'-'nvs- t r n i 5 - " " " ilWNWPRc jr M-Da- i 'J r Vtf iXSS!SSSSl?UBS4V asset "r p y? AH t r ahmrf - " it ? - , 5,4'f', sasas.. cr'tRFT NfVS THURSDAY OOOr-C- g3 3, 1774 !' -r-- u-'as? , x a I . IMMSM t fV ft-- r- Ai . 4 i housing 1T4aU V Ia. .11 w u aviktil UUV declared Tuesday Housing Mobilization Day, or , as part of a national program to focus atontion on a depres-vi' i tlic mousing industry Daniel U. Jerman, president of the Home Builders Vssocialion oi Utah, said a Housing Crisis Conference will meet in Washington, D C , that day to demand y i cmeigency government actions. Jerman, who attended a National Association of Home Builders 'NAIlBi meeting or. the housing problem recently in San Francisco, said those auyfiiw it iir5 utauu . 9 Assistance funds to heip Govemnjeut National Mortgage Associatum 'GNMA: purchase more mortgages from balks and savings to inciease availability of ioan money Actions by the Federal Reserve to make more financing available to builders for initial construction ot homes. A tax exemption on the iirst y ,000 interest earned by a sav mgs depositor to encourage flo'.y cf money into savings and loan associations, which make the bulk of mortgage loans. jerman, w.iO attended me San Francisco conference, said NAIIB wants President n i t. i ) r Old tO lUtulC a White concerned soie'y with the housing needs of the American people." The home buildersThave charged housing is , beguuiiug to play second fiddle to urban renewal and community development ia the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD i Utahs home biuldmg industry :4egan slumping a year ago, when home starts m four Wasatch Front counties dropped almost ov in one month advisor; i ptu-ce- i i I nt When Richard Nixon was pardoned, Mayor Garn immediately went on television iq support it. No questions asKea Congressman Owens has some questions. And he thinks Housing permits dropped cent in the iirst quur ter of 1971 compared to the same periocf a year earlier and 9 1 percent in fhe second S.3 pel I quarter. Utahns deserve some answers. The pardon denied justice.' ho says, because those who have told the truth sit in prison while Richard Nixon is set free-ev- en before he is charged. And tie thinks every public official must answer these questions. How can we expect people to respect the law if those in high Utah court reverses conviction The Utah Supreme Court has reversed a Utah State Prison inmates conviction because the Utah law under which he was charged failed to state a crime v places are above it? And what has Watergate taught us if not that the law comes ft before party politics? Sometimes it seems, you can teli more about the differences between men by the questions they ask than the answers they give. Tiie unanimous opinion, written by Chief Justice E. R Cailiatcr Jr., reverses the tOiu lotion obtained in I1 ifth District Court with Judge J Harlan Bums presiding. " Richard Charles Geurts was convicted by a jury of aggravated assault under of Utah law Section Feb. 1!, 1974, and sentenced-t- o prison. Calhster noted that a similar conviction obtained under the same law was reversed last week by the high court, and Geurts conviction was 3 Iil. i reason. f t t FOWLER GAS I DELUXE f ? Gloss-Line- d ' WATER HEATERS f i f $ ? w Handle jnuaitaiisns Connate pus &tesiy Afidwyp OfiwKimiHiysAi, 8:30AJUTil6P.a mmkx 4 UY WI Democrat AT Dv A -- tv Pv t - c i O' Ser! iC' Com1! ite-- ; 21 lli SouW . i i: Y" r jO - v c or.. KETCHUB'S I saitlakiott, OGCSH r i f i i t & 4 reversed for the same i 0 j |