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Show fowl nwfrnmm iMPH'if 2 ' F DESERET mgUm rmmm$ 1? NEWS, Wednesday, October 18, 1972 Wl.V' w ii Murray School Official IS To Head Telecast Project rtn - 13TH WAS BAD, BUT LUCK CAME ALONG AFTER ALL i i A variety of special programs, such as training teachers, assisting parents and instructing children, will be telecast from the satellite to special receiving stations in remote areas of the eight states. Dr. Arthur L. Bishop, clerK ad- in the Murray ministration School District, today was named Utah coordinator for the Educational Technology Demonstration (ETD.) Project The project will involve telecasts from a satellite to remote areas in the Mountain West. Bishops appointment was announced jointly by Dr. Walter D. Talbot, state superintendent of public instruction, and Dr. Louis A. Bransford, director of utilization and research for the Federation of Rocky Mountain States, Inc. Bishop, who has had radio and television experience, , will serve as the chief ETD representative in Utah and will be responsible for coordination of project activities in . Arthur W L. Bishop coordinator in . . . ETD operate in ijf member states plus For V, U-9- 5 4 satisfactory low bid of for building 14 miles A $2,417,387 in San Juan County of was opened Tuesday afternoon by the State Highway Department. 5 Jeanne Hunter, a Mountain Fuel Supply employe, saw the check blowing in the wind on Edison Street, between 2nd and 3rd South. The check was made out to cash and The Strong Co., Springville, was the low bidder for the job, undercutting the engineers estimate by more than $330,500. had been endorsed. She returned the check to Broadhead, who was ware that it was lost. The Education Commission of the States will develop the projects early childhood component. Bishop is a native of Murray and a graduate of Murray High School and the University of Utah where he earned masters and doctor's degrees. He has served as a teacher, principal and central office administrator in Murray School District. una- Completion four sons. The University of Utah has recieived a $1,500 grant from the professional development fund of the Phillips Petroleum fred C. Emery, indicating the colleges of engineering and business, and the department of chemistry will use it during Co. the Robert N. Sears, member of Phillips board of directors and former chairman of the U. of U. national Advisory Council, recently presented the award to U. President Al The award was made to encourage faculty ?nd students to develop fields of study important to the petroleum and 1972-7- 3 academic year. petrochemical industries. Sears said. of the new sec-tio- n probably next year will section leave only one to be surfaced provid of ing an all weather road from Phillips Company Gives Grant To U. His wife is the former Jean M. Whitehead. They have A Friday the 13th lived up to its bad reputation for Lyndon T. Broadhead, 5561 Elaine Ave., but Lady Luck visited him this week in the form of a Salt Lake City wroman who returned a $200 check he had lost. i)r and director of business - Bid Okayed Mi f'.t' 5 Blanding to Lake Powell and Hanksville. Nielsons Inc., Dolores, Colo., holding a $1.4 million eontr" t for surfacing 8.1 mues of from Cottonwood Wash to Comb Wash, is not expected now to complete this work until next spring. 5 Honor Awards Due For 5 WSc Alumni ft&si OGDEN Five men will receive special awards during the annual Weber State College Alumni banquet Oct. 26. Receiving distinguished alumni awards will be Elder Boyd K. Packer, of the Council of the Twelve, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints; Dr. Gilbert C. Moesm-geOgden surgeon; and Ronald V. Jensen, retired California industrialist. y r, Distinguished service awards will be presented to Samuel C. Powell, Ogden atThatcher M. and torney, WSC Allred, professor emeritus of speech. The banquet will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the WSC Union Ballroom. Elder Packer was graduated from Weber in 1947 when it was a two-yecollege. An athlete as an undergrad uate, Dr. Moesinger has been a booster of the colleges athletic program. Jensen, a 1915 graduate, was instrumental in setting up the Weber State environmental studies program. Powell, a former member of the WSC board of trustees, was instrumental in the effort r status for the to gain school. four-yea- COMING America's Tastiest SPAGHETTI SAUCE Arizona and Nevada. the state. The Federation of Rocky Mountain States (Colorado, The demonstration project will include four major efforts, broadcasting and engineering, early childhood development, career education and utilization and .escarch. Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, will Utah and Wyoming) direct the project which will Salt Palace Raises All-D- ay Parking Fee free, the board decided. Net cash revenue from the Salt Palace is up $57,243 for 1972 over the first nine months of 1971. An increase of 7.6 percent, the board was told. Salt Talace parking fees will be raised from 50 cents for parking, the Salt Palace Board decided Tuesday. The new rates are closer to what is charged by comparable lots, Gerral Manager Douglas S. Borg said. Presently, members of the public fill the lot and no space is left for customers of daytime events at the Salt Palace, he said. ail-da- y Fran Haun, pointed out to the board that the revenue received at the Salt Palace was only a fraction of the income to the entire community which conventions and exhibits at the The fee for people attending Salt Palace generate. Salt Palace events and for evHaun said the number of erybody at night will remain hotel and motel rooms in the at 50 cents. Salt Lake area has increased Also approved by the board substantially over the past was a recommendation that year, and that the major curfees for the southeast comer rent bottleneck to the handling lot will be 25 cents an hour of large conventions in Salt with a maximum of $1. PerLake City is the lack of sons buying tickets at the Salt adequate public transportaPalace may park in the lot tion. City Employe Pay Problem Under Committee Study percent rate, with no salary increase, the cost would amount to $628,457, Lynn J. A request for Salt Lake City to coordinate its efforts with Salt Lake County concerning salary adjustments has been denied because the city operates on a fiscal year, basis, and the county on a calendar Marsh, city personnel director, said. The entire wage .nd salary question is being studied by the citys wage and salary classification committee. year. Two weeks ago, the county agreed to pay employes retirement benefits in lieu of any salary increases. have commissioners City calendar year. The citys budgeting requirements must be ready by June 30, 1973. agreed to refer the question of paying retirement benefits to the committee studying wages and salaries. Marsh said a pay concerning proposal boosts or payment of retirement benefits should be ready If the city were to pay the retirement benefits at a 4.5 to submit to the City Commission by Jan. 1. The countys adjustments will be made at the end of this Board Candidates Speak r Candidates for the term from Salt Lake City Candidates for the State Board of Education from Salt Lake City and Granite school districts will speak Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Lecture Hall at the Salt Lake City Public Library, 209 E. 5th South. The meeting is sponsored by the League of Women Voters. two-yea- in- clude William B. Cannon and Warren B. McAllister. Mrs. Ema S. Ericksen, incumbent, and Mrs. Lila Bjorklund are r term. seeking the four-yea- Granite candidates are Mrs. Helen B. Ure, incumbent, and A. Glenn Christensen, term, and Mrs. Esther R. who is Landa, incumbent, term. unopposed for the All interested citizens are invited to attend, the league says. Opportunities for questioning will be afforded. ON 3 PROJECTS jt Financial Mixup Voids Contract gional council will be billed by the county for the work, with payment to be made directly from the regional council to the count)'.' However, some $26,000 has been delayed because it was routed through the council of governments. the between Agreements Salt Lake County Council of. Governments and the Wasatch Front Regional Council will be terminated due to a payment mixup. Representatives of Salt Lake County governments decided to end participation in three agreements Tuesday after it was learned that payments The financial mixup. is further complicated by ihe lack of concrete data on how much is stili owed on the contracts, since planners kept altering bills as work was done, Moore explained. totaling only $4,000 have been received on work estimated at $55,000 in total costs. The three projects include recreation and housing studies and a land-us- e probe in the Big Cottonwood planning area. a5j clude Lake, to Joe Moore, contracts stipulate that the re-- . Davis, Morgan, Salt Tooele, and Weber county. r .aiiMtH'idMtwia'wwTfti'i wfafc Thermal Girts Flowered Printed or Solid PARKAS FLANNEL Re. 17 99 Boys 2 5 SO Quilted Reg S!4 IS COAT Reg. UH 33' ' 9 Shirts or Drawers OO 2 $4 v Pattern $500 for Quilts, sieeptng Begs Nylon Fleece 1 00Yd - 3 00 2 C Polyester Solid or 188 Ladies Fur Yds UNDERWFAR Double Knit COAT Participants in the Wasatch Front Regional Council in- According dCEEB) P O Pile Lined JACKETS OliOIRB OVER SHIRTS for $ coo Safety Vests m 2 Quilted UNDERWEAR Pc 'EMStOC 5 88c Hunting Knives 10, We Sen Marked Price Hunting License "51 - Schrade Waldtn 6 Set uvrriireranJ Red S poOODtH 88 7 88 Peg SU f Red Fluorescent Insulated Dacron GEEmSausn Q EDU SB SPORJINCf nmnnnnnn u fll&HJ J - i |