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Show " ,p2Aewt,..,Nik1 .41-- ; DESERET NEWS, FR iDAIr JULlis 1 ni 8, 197 Oiko.4 w 3 krUi c a: Arlittin LJea y 7 iatti W.,11U if State Liquor Control Commission Chairman Gerald E. Hulbert was named in three new indictments by the Salt Lake County Grand Jury Thursday, immediately after he pleaded innocent to charges in four earlier proceedings, during which Norma Giles Thomas, 64. Prey, forrncr Liquor Commission member, also pleaded innocent to five indictments charging ene count of embezzlement, one count of illegally soliciting a gift, and six counts of peritiry. Croft took under advisement Motions to suupress testimony taken from the two defendants during prior , investigations. ' , motion took tmder advisement a He also by James B. Lee, special prosecutor, for a joint trial on all the indictments to which the defendants pleaded irmocent Thursday. Croft gave Hulbert 10 days in which to file motions on the three new indictments and will set a date for his indictments. Third District Judge Bryant IL Croft read the uc-,,- , indictments, which charge Hulbert with tampering with a witness, perjury and illegally,receiving a gift - Hulbert. Waimea Way, was booked into Salt Lake Jail at 2:30 p.m, but released 10 minutes ;later on his own recognizance, as ordered by 44, 4964 City-Coun- ty Croft. , The booking occurred during a recess in court the arraignment at the end of that time.. One of the new indictments accuses Hulbert of writing a threatening letter to J. Grant 'rhurgood September 1974, allegedly to induce him to testify or inform falsely and withhold testimony and information from an official proceeding and investigation. The new perjury count charges that Hulbert made false statements under oath before the Utah Citizens Council on Liquor Control, stating he had no knowledge of such a letter to Thorgood. The indictment concerning an illegal gilt involves three eases of whisky from the Bnckingham Corp., a firm Big apple See MORE on B 3 Ford lifts , ban on use of cyanide , t r wa..,;..mm.amsdoMMop,2,;.1, - By Gordon Eliot While , . e WASHINGTON - go;?Ytif,:tt,,,,dtt,takicei. rt. i,litic..,k,ipt 4 ," , ttt,ti.,i, tz , '! - .1 ?t , . , , - VAOstroma t , , : virOnmental ' 4!f ; ' ' - ;rjr?,,.: , 4 4 , , ' ,,Vc Deseret News photo by Don M Groyston, chief photopropher lines bringing the total on grike to approximately 4,000. In addition, the strike of 175 members of the Operating - Engineers Union continues at seven concrete plants in the state. They were ready-mi- x joined Wednesday by the Teamsters Union closing down additional ready-mi- x plants and idiing an ready-mi- x additional 200 persons. Only non-unito continue operate. plants Solitary picket at Main Street beautification project typifies conditions at major construction sites through- out the state as strike of Carpenters Union continues. The walkout by some 1,400 to 2,000 carpenters on over 125 jobs in Utah, shows no sign of ending with no new talks scheduled between union officials and the Associated General Contractors of Utah, An additional 2,000 construction workers are honoring the picket ,, County - 7 Davis County likely will file a lawsuit of its own next week in response to a suit filed against the county's commissioners late Wednesday by the State Tax Commission. FARMINGTON BELT ROUTE N ossummon Under construction 1112011111111 Existing corridor and project location ' I3-- r7--T4- t H11 Y..... - L 8th SOUTH , 1 ?El . , .. t 215 , ( 111111111 tZ 0 I I I UNDER Iss -I , ! t.t m CONSTRUCTION , told 11 ( ? i12 ,t, t ; u: 1,5,sth Ai, ' are certainly going to respond to that and will probably file our own suit next week on the basis of the "We MLIRR..AY arbitrary RELI ' r ' ''' 1 I ' I SOUTH 62N -- SOUTH - 1 --4 I ,'' t MIDALE toe 0.414' . qt. 6. ' -sea fte .'" .il ' a, , ---- - , it. se. ji- ;02- ' "a ' -I t ; t ,,, : . 6. : . e um t corroNwoon i' " CA NYON , i t "' Broken line marks path of projected ,k heast belt routs. , . metropolis. percent Continued growth is projected through 1995. The majority of potential southeast quadrant users live in a "study area" stretching from about 21st to 102nd South anti from the Jordan River to Wasatch Boulevard, Within that area, five census tracts comprise the "corridor" through which the road itself would pass. Stuntes mdicate most of the traffic currently traveling in the vicinity of the proposeti belt route is bound for ..,.4,......;-,;..4.., "ce 11 oroont rtS onre ,06,,,..,.1".itt 41E,IAL U..7 LAMM, WIUU 01.4404 143111,0",sa ,',. kt va..,, the area were heading out of the study area or out of the city. will is not built. ?rejections:, fer leatenee, ahnw that hi 1995. Van , . ,, : SOUTH JORDAN CNYON bUTLERVILLE a ea5a,' I --- - largest Detween 1950 and 1971, populatitm increased 77 In O., BIG COTTONWOOD .e. , SAWA 90th SOUTH ' The area is the nation'a I ( , s o4 Banditràbs i:!h.101..i:.10...4', HUNTER A bandit iyearing a ski mask and waving boy and an elderly man in a a revolver robbed a young I - - pharmacy today. Lt. Blaine Barnes ,Salt Lake County Sheriff's Department, said Steven Orchard, 14, and Eugene C. Smith, 70, both part-tim- e employes at the Hunter S. 3530 60th W robbed of between $30 ere West, Pharmacy, 1' and $75. ', ' The victims told Barnes the gunman walked throtig,h the front door about 10 a.m.', confronted Orchard and told him to fill a paper bag with money. - Then the bandit walked to the rear of the store where Smith was on the telephone and told Smith to empty the till and give him all the heroin and other hard drugs In the . store. Smith, according to Barnes, told the gunman there were no hard drugs in the store and "would you mind waiting until I finish my phone call before I empty the ' ' , s - : , , - newspaper in i Fate of the student newspaper at the University of Utah was still in doubt today after defeat of a measure to provide financing for the publication. Members of the Associated Students of the University of Utah (ASUU), the school's student government, voted per. against a bill Thursday to fund the paper on an student per quarter basis. In earlier meetings the ASUU had slashed funds for the "Chronicle" in hopes of making it independent of university financing. That earlier action caused "Chronicle" editors to appeal to the ASUU Judiciary Committee. Members of the committee upheld the ktppeal and said the 80 cents per student fund should be maintained. Thursday's defeat of such a financing measure left the ASUU Assembly and the Judiciary Committee holding opposite position. As a remit, financing for the newspaper is sill', unresolved. Break in murder case Salt Lake County authorities say they now have enough evidence to seek a murder complaint against an unnamed suspect in the 1974 shooting of a Brigham Young University cot,d. County Sheriff's Detective Capt. N, D. Hayward said Thursday that he would take evidence developed in the Barbara Jean Rocky case over the last 18 months to tlic county attomey's office within a week. Miss Rocky's nude, bullet-riddle- d body was founA in of Lake Salt east Cottonwood City, March 12, Big Canyon, r, 1974. 22 years old and a senior at the Prgvo schOol of her death. She was from Menlo Park, Calff. Hayward declined to identify the suspect for feat of he was at the time OVERVIEW OF STUDY AREA 0 ,It 1 -- e nd SOUTH? ) ,:0205 I ! 78 x I i te I ,,,ZiraNligIrtaigiiii37 , P' ,, 72nd a- - , I ' ILLCK East, N. i : j r... M CANYON -- M - I -- 64th SOUTH ) cm j 1 N ',1.,. ROLITO ) 1 - ' 0., -- - ' - ! 4- - ' ' - t '' , , i 1' 47th SOU WI ... ';, ,,,,'; . state commission suit "is completely filled with false information and statements ; a- - ;c), -- col ;13 ;, - Cowboys will be testing their grit arid competing for points toward a $:15,000 purse in what Days of '47 ,E6do Chairman Harmon calls, "one of the top 10 rodeos : in the world." nt is a proposed 6,5 mile The southeast quatiaant of ha It route which connects with to link in a three-side- d eirele southern Salt Lake County. ' The present rnute and design were approved in 1961. but land acquisition was halted in 1973 when the Cottonwood Citizens Group filed suit demanding prepare tion' of the environmental statement With the Salt Lake area population projected to almost double by 1995, the belt route would help relieve the Van Winkle Expressway, Wasatch lioulevard, 45th South, 5,3rd South, 59th South, 62nd South. 6 ith South and 72nd South. . ! ' Next, rodeo performers arid cowboy coMpetitors stir up the dust as the Days of '47 Rodeo opens in the Salt Place arena. The engagement continues Saturday, then ' Monday through Thursday, each night at 7;30. Tickets ' are available at the Salt Palace and ZCMI stores. U. INTRODUCTION 31RD SOLITH V't I '' ri 1.. 1 i ? Pk'ta,, 1. sl - 4 , 6u caNaota ., '''' I I PARLEYS 2 ''s : t 1 R c.' f . o , SOUTH - 1,0 t 6 1M1 1 i 3rcl West. - Freeways are dominating fixtures on any city landscape. They shape development patterns, infillf nee the quality of life in neighborhoods and sometmes determine whether natural features will survive ur ban- ization. The draft Environmental Impact Statement on the southeast quadrant attempts to describe how the controversial road will affect neighborhoods through, which it passes and the larger metropolitan region, A public hearing on the statement and alternatives to the present belt route plan is schedialed Saturday at 10 a.m. at Cottonwood High School, 5715 - 13th East Following is a summary of the complete Environ- mental Impact Statement: 1 The annual Pioneer Horse Parade is set for 6 p.m., with former western film PtAr Manty Montimsk 14R qrsbnii marshal. The parade, starting on South Temple near the Salt Palace, will proceed down State Street to Broadway, then: west to West Temple and north to 2nd South, terminating-a- The masked bandit waited patiently until Smith hung up, then took the money from both employes and walked out the store, warning both as he did so "don't call the police or I'll shoot." Deseret News staff writer t 4TH SOUTH ' : till?" By Suzanne Dean Alternate routes , "'N the Deseret News today that the I The gas is kenerally t,sed in See CYANIDE on 5 , praisals. The announcement of the reduction had apparently been made with approval of the State Tax Commission, but commissioners said later they would not allow the reduction, and that the announcement was the result of a "misunderstanding." Davis County Attorney J. and capricious manner in which the reappraisals were put on the tax rolls," he said Palmer said Cache and Davis county assessments were both "way high." "We want our a ssess me nts to reflect the same degree of increase that was allowed in 1Veber County, since Cache, Davis and Weber county asse.,sment s were all put on the tax rolls for this year," Palmer said. Weber County 's assess- rnents are 14 percent kAver than either of the other two Counties" "secondary" effects because it dissipates ' rapidly and bile residue. NORTH TEMPLE The squabble resulted Palmer ti 11 t when county commissioners announced a 14 percent reduction in assessed property valuations after state assessors had completed reap- Duffy - 215 Southeast Belt Route ,... ...., to have Here's summary on belt route impact issues ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STUDY PROJECT 21st NORTH considered on ;',.;., threatens a tax suit , V k - Cowboys and cowgirls get the spotlight in tonight Protection Agency (EPA); In addition, the P resid ent will "expedite" an EPA sur'--vey of other ways to control coyotes and other ' stern predators. '' The White House order does not permit the use of poisons such as 1080 or strychnine, which are cons'- dered potent coyote killers. Such poisons will remain banned because of , their '"secondary" danger mals which eat the carcasses of coyotes poisoned by 1080 for example are likely to be killed as well by the poison remaining in the carcasses. Sodium cyanide gas is not ' How long will work be halted? freeze-damage- DS of '47 activities. - - - - Rodeo iii147 ip6t1.1,01.!. Presi- - dent F ord moved today to allow the use of cyanide traps to control coyotes pre3ring on woetarn 4,..enek hoed& Under terms of the order, fede-- red edator fiers from the Interior De,--; partment will be directed to carry mit, an "emergency" attack on coyotes for a year. I'aeh permit to use cyanide against predators will require approval of the En- ,,,;71 , t e, this year, but other major fruits, especially cherries, are down from last year's levels. , Total fruit production is estimated at 44,150 tons, about 3,000 tons more than during 1974, accordini3 to the Utah Crop and Livestock Reporting Service. Apples are expected to produce 47 million pounds an increase of 27 percent over the previons (28,500 tons) year Pezr..s, at 4,800 tons, are ahead of 1974 totals by more than The outlook for apples across the U,S. indicates e record harvest. Much of the crop in the Mountain West d was last year. About 400 tons of apricots are forecast for Utah this year -- - a decline of 27 percent. The 37 million pounds of peaches represents a four percent loss from a year ago. The tart cherry crop is set at 5,000 tons, down some 800 tons from 1974, and sweet cherries are estimated at 2,700 tons -- only about half of last years crop and the smallest since the near failure of the entire crop in 1972. Nroret hews washimicat Bureau ,, ;.; - one-thir- , 37. pear crops A bigger crop of apples and pears is expected in Utah. , he' e SUMMARY on B-- 3 problems with preticicial publicity, but said the suspect is a man and is not rota Utah. El our slip is OUJinam In a July 16 Deseret News article, it incermetly Included Carbon County as Due of the Utah counties tha would come under !ederal StiperVISiOn because fewer than tiO percent of the eligible voters voted in 071 arifi 5 percent of 'the population were members of minortte group. The Voting 'Rights Act passed by the House will not affect Carbon County because records show 81.8 perci.ut ta the egitetet.1 vtaers voted in lir:f!. Thz: cctrz-rhas been notified of the error. sr |