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Show w- j; 2D Litter bugged FlVe Years ,0 ,lfe gets Citizen And when Drowning accidents claim two victims Utah County Shariff Mack Holley said the two youths put the mbber raft, into the river above Bridal Veil Falls about 2:30 p.m. Soon after they en- tered the water, workers at the Bridal Veil Tram reported capsized. the raft had capsized and the DROWNED: youths were hanging on to it. Brent Harrison, 16, son of Further down the river at Dr. Betty Harrison, Provo. Rotary Park, caretakers reDoyal Brahe, 53, 2617 Grant ported the youths were in the Ave., Ggden. river without the raft, Holley The Harrison youth was said. The point where they were pulled from the water pulled from the river at Canyon Glen, a city park down L8 still further down the the canyon from Bridal Veil canyon. The river is running espeFalls. full at this time of year cially Ills companion, Julius Glei when a considerable amount Pierce, 15, son of Mr. and of water is released to Utah Mrs. Ralph Pierce, Orem, Lake. onto some limbs that caught extended into the river and Assisting the Utah County Sheriffs Office with the yelled for help. Three Orem were several youths, Rick and Sandy Salgv Lnvestigation Police nab High- way Patrol. Brake drowned in a manmade lake at 1900 West on 12th Street near in Ogden while fishing and swimming wLth two companions Tuesday afternoon. Utah Highway Patrol Trooper Ron Arnold said Brake went under water apd his Clifford Clom-ptocompanions, 25, and John C. Maddox, 40, pulled him from the pond, but were unable to revive him. The three men lived at the same Grant Avenue address in Ogden. Arnold laid the pond, created by excavation during road construction, filled with water from the nearby Weber River. It waa given to the Lake Bonneville Council of the Boy Scouts of America by a construction company working on the interatate and is used for Boy Scout aquatic training. Oavis gets funds suspect in assault case TOT COTQBr -receive search river An all night RIVERDALE in the bottoms of the Weber River culminated tliis morning in the arrest of a old man, following reports of four attempted rapes. Officers from Riverdale, South Ogden, Washington Terrace and the Utah Highway Patrol scoured the area after the first call at 11 p. in. Tuesday. Wes Woolsey, Riverdale chief of police, said the man was FARMINGTON County Schools will federal grant of $115,581 to The board also: Set June 28 at 8 p.m. as the lime to open bids on the new Farmington Elementary School. The Davis schools, in coop- Approved eration with the State Board of Education, will begin a project of emphasis in career education at all grade levels, including two school years, Wrigiey said. The program will be centered in elementary and junior high schools which feed into Davis High School, Wrigiey said, as well as at the high school itself. three-yea- r post-hig- Two young girls who been sleeping outdoors a man had slipped Into willows after trying to indecent liberties with h preliminary plans for addition of a cafeteria, kitchens, an art room and a business education depart ment at Davis High School. Set Jgne 19, at 8 p. m. as the time for a public hearing on the 1973-7budget which has not yet been completed. Bids on four new buses and two maintenance trucks also will be Opened. 4 Learned that Clearfield High Schools application for an Aif Force ROTC ufiit for the 193-7school year has been approved. Explaining the funding Is for one year, Wrigiey said it Is expected the project, if successful, will be funded the fol- - had said the take them. First call came at 11 p.m. Tuesday from a girl who said she had been forced into a house. A man tried to rape her, she told officers. Other complaints came in during the night, police said. prOJBCt lowing two years. Funds will come through the U. S. Office of Education. Davis a conduct a Model for Career Education. the Davis of Education Board was informed Tuesday night by Supt. Berneil Wrigiey. apprehended at 7:30 a.m. today near 950 W. 4400 South as he was returning to a moto-rcyl- e hidden in that area. A member of the search party. Officer Patrick Dooley of the Terrace Police Washington Department, said the search centered around 4200 S. 850 West. Alert award troopers from the Utah and Les Newell, pulled him to safety. Drowning accidents ajm nnain 4 Suspends jail terms BRIGHAM C1TV (AP) Three Intermountain School students have been given suspended sentences of up to five years each in the Utah Prison on charges of carnal knowledge involving a girl. District Court Judge VeNoy Christofferson suspended the sentences on condition that the three sign an agreement consenting to probation. Christofferson said they will be allowed to return to the Navajo Reservation. The three are Elson Begay, Gene Yazzie and Allen Spencer. They were arrested April 30 following the discovery of the unconscious girl in an orchard on the school property. The man taken into custody by police was wearing clothing when he was arrested, but his trousers were wet and muddy, Doolev said. - naniff, Montana woman whose action resulted in the arrest of two New York men on charges of littering has been named recipient of the Deseret News Citizens Alert Award. A The award is presented to individuals for unselfish assist- - citizens alert GOLDEN. Colo. UP!) -Texas carnival worker Sherman McCiary can add another years prison sentence to the two life terms he already has been ordered to serve in Colorado and California. 29-3- 0 The McCarary Tuesday was given the additional prison sentence for the in August, 1971, of kidnaping Lakewood. Colo., doughnut shop waitress Leeora Rose Looney. McCrary earlier this month was sentenced to life in for Miss Looneys prison murder. Moss urges 'nay' : vote on bombing that sentence District Judge Dan Shannon said McCrary would after completing the bfe sentence. But he wont even be imprisoned in Colorado until he comsentence pletes a in California for assult with Sunday declared Shut-In- s Day Sunday has been declared National and International Shut-In- s Day in Utalr by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton who urged Utahns to visit or write their shut-ifriends and neighbors. n Officials requests federal aid for city improvement project Salt Lake City Commissioner Jennings Philoffilips Jr. is meeting this week with housing federto cials in Washington, D.C., expedite al assistance for an inner-cit- y improvement project. The finance commissioner flew to the capital today to meet with Floyd Hyde, undersecretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Phillips will also meet with the National Urban Coalition to disrehabilitacuss means of achieving inner-city tion. The improvement project, involving a section of the city center, became the citys number one priority in redevelopment April 14. when Phillips announced the large scale improvement plans. Those plans took on a new dimension last month when the city school board announced the closure of Sumner Elementary School, and the city expressed interest in developing the school as a central city cultural center. nine-bloc- k Before his departure, Phillips said he hoped his meetings will hasten federal action in funds approval. He said these funds are the key to the entire project, which includes the location of 50 housing units in the tar' get area. Specifically, the money would be used for curb and gutter construction, repaving of alleys and roadways, demolition of hazardous structures and dangerous homes, construction of the new housing and development of a park and cultural center. If the funds are approved, Phillips said the improvement plans would get under way within two months, and tangible results within a e year. He also said the city will apply for funds this fall, if the federal government e continues the allocations. low-co- open-spac- open-spac- This money would be used for development of parks and other open areas for citizen recreation. Phillips said the success of his meetings in Washington, and the possibility of obgrants will determine the taining success of negotiations with the school board for Sumner School. open-spac- e STEP to involvement some interference, Ray Geerdes, environmental eduNationa cation coordinator, Park Service, told the group. FORK AMERICAN We want you to open your Stretch out on the ears and your grass, open your eyes and 'eyes and your all the things about minds to are and ears pretend you your What do, you, he said. a blade of grass. What do you hear? you see? The ecology instruction is a More than 30 high school and part of STEP, which stands college students were feeling for Students Toward Environ-menBy Leo Perry Deseret News staff writer CAN-YO- these experiences here today Participation. during a special environmenPat Stanek, STEP coordinatal workshop. National Park Service, tor, On the way up the trail, I told the students that the purAt of blade a grass. picked pose of the workshop is to infirst, I thought it was a perthe environmental fect blade of grass. But then I crease of the particof all awareness discovered, after closer inipants. dambeen had it spection that If they are trained to be en aged by a foot or a rock or served Ceseref News WoslCngton Bureeu WASHINGTON Frank E. Moss, intent to commit murder.. Y'ou then will environment. find ways to communicate this love to others, she said. Much emphasis was placed workshop during the two-da- y on each participant presenting his personal expression on his study of the environment. want to develop a personal relationship to the envi- Sen. told the Senate Tuesday that New POW's may have been in Cambodia. Shannon denied a defense motion to hold a new tnal before he sentenced McCrary. cap-uture- d Thirty years Is the maximum sentence for kidnapping in Colorado. His attorneys said they He asked the Senate to vote against any kind of support for further Cambodia bombing. He said, If there are no POWs now. it can only be a matter of time." would appeal the case. McCarary's wife, Carylon. was sentenced last week to two years in prison for being an accessory after the fact to His the kidnap-murder. - In calling Camodian bombing. noted that two pilots are ently listed as missing and nine Americans been killed. son-in-la- Carl Taylor, will go on trial next month in Pueblo. Colo., on the murder charges. T, for a stop to the Ts Fi Moss T5 Si pres there Y 71 have - fi ance of law enforcement efforts in preservation of life and of law and order. Racers and lightweights. Sale priced to keep you and your budget in shape. At Penneys. Terry Ler.ore Ott testified before Sevier County Justice of the Peace A. Reed t that she saw two men throw litter from their car on M5 near Paragonah in Iron Countv. Blum-quis- She signaled to the two that they should return to pick it up. "but they thumbed their noses." Mrs. Ott explained. She followed the car for about 74 miles until it left She exited the freeway at Sevier Junction and phoned the license number and description of the car to the Utah Highway Patrol. Two New York men were apprehended near Elsinore in Sevier County and taken before Blomquist in Richfield. Mrs. Ott appeared to sign the complaint and the two men were fined $150 each. 4 ny 9! e be v. 7 !i & IT us ' - Your 4 - choice Utah court turns down . 3-spe- eds theft appeal ,1, - V , , appeal by Elmer Lee who claimed there wasnt evidence to support his conviction for attempted grand larceny in a clothing store, has been denied by the An ! . Burks, Utah Supreme Court Reg. 57.98. Mens and womens 26 touring bikes in easy-ridin- g Front and rear caliper brakes. Great value, great fun! charged with grand larceny, but during his trial he made be the request the jury instructed he could be found guilty or innocent of attempted grand larceny, a lesser offense Mow The jury returned a verdict to the lesser offense, but the defendant claims he should have been found guilty or Innocent to grand larceny, depending on the witnesses w horn the jury believed. The unanimous opihion, written by Chief Justice E. R. Callister Jr., indicates Burks is serving his term at the Utah State Prison. Orig. $88. Mens deluxe 27 Racer. Fine 10-spe- ed construction with center- pull brakes and many other Indicated Callister that Burks and his wife were browsing in a retail clothing store in Salt Lake City when a patron observed him place two leather coats undei his raincoat and walk toward the door Liaht- -. weight, fast! The patron notified a saleswoman who intercepted Burks near the door and recovered the two coats by tugging on them. Burks claimed he removed the coats from a rack and wanted to get more light on them to inspect them since he was blind in one eye. the opinion said. Burks' argument on appeal with his motion to dismiss the grand larceny-chargat the close of the evidence before the trial court, Callister wrote. At that time, defendant urged that the evidence adduced by the prosecution would support only an attempted larceny charge. is inconsistent stretch out vironmental study leaders during the course then they can instruct younger people along the same lines, she said. You get a love for the We is r Burks was originally Dooley said descriptions of the suspect varied. Some said he was nude others that he was partially clothed. Others who served as instructors included Ouida Johnson; and Pete Schaub. Representing the local federal agency were Glenn Clark, environmental education specialist, and Don H. Castleberry, superintendent of Hie Timpanog-o- s Cave National Monument. discus- Films, workshops, sion groups and nature kikes were all part of the two-da- meeting. Students participating in the ronment by developing a feelsessions included workshop ing of wonder and a sense of .those from Alpine, Granite, told the Jordan and Murray School place," officials Districts as well as represgroup. Don't close your mind to entatives from Utah State University. any new ideas, they said. I 1 mirr MAY 30, 1973 DESERET NEWS, WEDNESDAY, claimed the life of a Provo youth and an Ogden man Tuesday afternoon. A companion of the Provo victim was rescued from the swollen Provo River after a rubber raft they were riding mmniiMjirgiiitttir Sale 73" Your Racer. Reg. 84.98. Men s 27" Professional style' features include center-pu- ll brakes with dual levers for fast, even stops. Sale choicer: 61" Racers. Side-puReg. 69.98. Men's and women's pedals, and other professional sleek and stylish features. Sale prices effective thru Sunday. ll caliper brakes, rat trap Orem store closed Sunday JCPenney youre looking for. We know what Downtown Valley Center-Bountif- ul Cottonwood Mall Valley Sugar House Fair-Grang- er Orem-Universi- ty Mall x |