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Show DESERET By Lavor Chaffin Education editor Trans-stre- et It will also go to court, if possible, to recoup busing costs from whatever agencies responsible" for constructing roads with no provision for pedestrian safety. These were the two major actions at Tuesday nights board meeting. Board members said that construction of sidewalks, overpasses and other facilities for pedestrian safety is the responsibility of county and stale road building agencies and not the school district. bus service to continue The state causes Mountain ZCM I area may the problem I The busing across Redwood to Eisenhower will continue for one year and then will be evaluated, the board stipulated. The board also called on a citizen group from the Taylorsville area to report back in six months. C 15 e The group was charged with conducting a public campaign to persuade county and state highway departments to construct sidewalks along Redwood Road and to erect a pedestrian overpass across the arterial street at the school. and the state SEPTEMBER 5, 1973 Appearing before the board was a representative group of parents from the Taylorsville area. Spokesman Norman C. Tarbox, 4848 Woodhaven Dr., assured the board the group will continue to work for erection of the overpass, the restoration of obliterated sidewalks, as weil as other measures to lessen the hazardous conditions which confront students walking to Eisenhower. Mrs. Mary Decker, member of a special committee which evaluates hazardous routes in the district, said citizens ha-got to keep after" county and state to officials get anything done. She also called highway on citizens to insist the county enforce ordinances which require property owners to keep sidewalks dean and clear, including snow removal. should pay all the costs," Grant H. Linford, board president, said. When the school district is forced to spend money for busing children on routes where pedestrian walkways have not been provided, it robs money from instructional purposes, board member Gary C. Swensen said. GRANITE PARK The Granite Board of Education will continue to bus Eisenhower Junior High School students across busy Redwood Road. NEWS, WEDNESDAY, "People need the sidewalks not only to go to school, bui also to go shopping or go to church. she said. fines! quality fabric fashions at everyday budget prices be studied By Suzanne Dean Deseret News staff writer ' LOGAN The Wasatch Na- tional Forest Multiple Use Ad- visory Committee has recommended that the 52,000-acr- e Mt. Naomi Roadless Area north, of . the Logan Canyon highway be Studied as a site for a national wilderness area. Sorry no phone ZCMI or mail orders -- Budget Store Fabrics and Doubleknit Shop all stores . The advisory committee, made up of citizen representatives from the Wasatch Front, southwestern Wyoming, Kamas and Logan, made the lis,tO$7yd. deluxe acrylic Earlier, the Sierra Club proposed that the area be used Osborne Rusfor a 17,000-acr-e sell Wilderness. We famous "foot area The oblong-shapestretches from the Logan Canyon Highway to just south of Preston, Idaho. The Wasatch Mountains with their lakes, moraines and glacial troughs, rise above the lands surface. d . l rk" ,h the area. The report said the area has more than 800 plant species and many deer, elk and grouse. Natural beauty abounds in the area, and there is something of special interest for most, whether it be the appearance of crooked and gnarled trees on ridgelines, or the radiant flower blooming on slopes or jagged and precipitous peaks with picturesque rock formations." the report added. The Naomi area drew attention when the Forest Service inventoried all roadless areas in the nation as part of a study of potential wilderness sites. ride- - 3a?and" list to $J8 yd fabulous fake 'furs' . The report said since most of the water comes from snow, water quality is more likely to be maintained if soil disturbing activities such as road building and logging are prohibited. However Wasatch National Forest Supervisor Chandler St. John said existing land uses, including grazing and hunting, could continue if the area were designated a wilderness. But trail bikes and snowmobiles, which have bee.n popular, would be banned. yd t ok at except''in famous i 60" A U.S. Forest Service report said the areas streams are a major source of culinary and irrigation water for the Cache Valley. The Smithfield, Birch, High Maple, Cherry and Creeks as weD as Logan River tributaries flow through - super checks in doubleknit doub'eknl yd. i list to $6 yd. , poWeS'et. dublelcnits dou' recommendation last week alien,. touring the area on horseback. . 1 yd. four-col-or combinations; Z0V12" 'ns in and Afncn prints. if ha, rs to 04 to 60" wide. (3m list to 6.1" list yd- - famous velvet, jewel tones the moat A rainbow ci tone velvet. shades in Jewel 40" wide. all velous savings; IWtovr- - 99 yd. cashable su.tmg weight yd. ' Mor- - II II " Mk'ondma A p'lds yd 9 l fhed acryH- . tt.rs yd. 'e!or and emf? with c . Scf Tor. Ss r 1 autumn's shed plaids mingle0'" Wows 60" wide. ' St. John said the Forest Service must determine whether to recommend that the area be designated by Congress as a wilderness, managed as an undeveloped-roadles- s VI area or developed for multipleuse. Library plans Children's film a Treasure on Five Island, a film serial for children, will be shown Saturday 15, 22 and 29 at 2 p.m. at the Salt Lake City Public Library, 209 E. 5th South. Two chapters of this mystery will be shown each Saturday and each program will last. about 30 minutes. $ 'i liteasjiitED $?? Ax , |