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Show 2 B DESERET NEWS, WEEKEND OF OCTOBER 6, 1973 Air control committee adopts plan There will be annual inspection and maintenance of the devices, rather than semiannual. Utah's transportation control plan, designed tn reduce carbon monoxide pollution in Salt Lake City, Ogden was modified and Provo, slightly and officially adopted Friday by the Utah Air Committee. d to the E1JA. If the EPA approves it, the will federal turn agency Utahs They're still the same old Agency hearing Aug. 29. with two exceptions: Emission control devices will be required for Salt Lake. Utah and Davis Weber. Counties only, rather than statewide. Meanwhile, however, EPA is required by court order to Public hearJigs on the plan will be held early in November he said, after the required 30 days notice. promulgate transportation controls for Utah by Oct. 15 EPA officials have stated they will try to keep their regulations close to what the stale will propose. EPA and state experts have been working The plan will either be modified after the public hear , EPA officials have indicated they think the plan will be acceptable Rickers, , industrial hygienist for the State Division of Health. The plan is as outlined at an monoxide-contro- l carbon program bark to the state. said Alvin strategies, environmental Protection Q ing or submitted closely to develop the Utah plan. Other provisions of the plan accepted Friday include: For Provo: through-traffiA bypass South First the along thoroughfare; a bike lane for Young University Brigham students; mass transit imof elimination provements; one lane of parking along Center Street and removal of planters to permit free right turns. c For Salt Lake City: Reduction of Main Street traffic and traffic circulation downtown; reduction in parking meter periods and an increase in meter rates; fringe parking areas with free shuttle bus service to the central business district; traffic flow im- For Ogden: to and one linking 20th and mass 21st Street to transit improvements. A provements through of the traffic computerization light system; mass transit traffic bypass from scenE UTAH said today. The victim was identified as S. Sgt. Edward J. Jefferson. 23, attached to the 1550th FMS at Hill Air Force Base. Police said the body was found Friday afternoon by a woman paying a visit. Detective Robert Warren said Jefferson received three blows on the head, though there was no sip of struggle. The officer said the victim apparently was hit with a blunt object, but no weapon was found. but we do no! said. Jefferson had and was very For preschoolers Under the agreement, tha three agencies will develop a management plan for wild horses and their habitat, including an annual inventory of tile wild horse population in the area, a review of their habits and a determination of water and other projects necessary for their developments welfare. S.L. Lions distributing lazy eye" test kits -- horses shall be moved from the area, harassed, captured, branded or killed except under BLM officials provisions of thee 1971 Act of Congress. g The current project for the Lions, International, in Salt Lake City is distribution of a home test kit for to determine whether have they amblyopia. said. Judge agrees to postpone hearing LOGAN (AP) City Court Judge Zachary' Champlin has agreed to postpone a preliminary hearing and trial for City Commissioner Glenn G. Nielsen. in cooperation with the Utah Society lor the Prevention of Blindness, the on request the Lions are sending test, which can determine whether chila disease which is dren have Iazy-cysometimes not detected until a child, enters school. The free kits can be obtained at USPB headquarters. 2033 S. State Nielson, charged with felony counts of misusing public property and the misdemeanor of using his office for personal gain, had asked for the delay. An Oct. 18 hearing date on the felony charge has been moved back to Nov. 29. A trial on the misdemeanor charge was moved from Oct. 25 .o Nov. 28. Nielsen has said he is innocent. He was charged by the Cache County attorney's office landfill on his private property. He with using also was charged with ordering city crews to lay more than 4,000 feet of water line to a point adjacent to property owned by his son. According to Dr. Richard W. Sonntag. president of the USPB, the eye exam does not take the place of a professional but it is an important examination, means of parent education, and hopefully an inducement to early visual care for their young children. city-owne- d Scandinavi- - Scandinavia telling of the rescue of A. Orville Helgeson, the program's executive director, estimated one in 20 S.utfO Lions are hanging posters with order blanks for the free test at strategic locations in the area. Persons who order the test will be sent instructions, as well as information on what to do when a child doesnt pass the exam. The lest can be administered easily by one or two adults. Begin a T gracious leisure h ree t ountains Provo is one of the West's most luxurious communities. Nestled in the foothills of the majestic Wasatch Mountains that offer picnicking, camping, and fishing in Utah summer, skiing in winter. And on near-bLake there is boating and water sports. Brigham Young University in Provo provides a civic and sere- - lifestyle at Three Fountains PRIMS BET M Provo cultural center for the area with outstanding entertainment and the excitement of intense athletic competition. Three Fountains Provo inv ilcS you to enjoy recreation at its fullest, with a swimming pool, club house, and other recreational and social facilities. You can leave the drudgeries of yard work and home maintenance behind. A wide range of spacious units for couples or individu als awaits you. all attractively landscaped . . . with natu re as a backdrop. Visit the scenic and growing Provo area . . . and discover the great lifestyle you can enjoy as a condominium owner at Three Fountains Provo. 'r The diversified operation a has produced profit consistently over the years. The gross income has been from $80,000 to $100,000 a year. Costs run high and the hours are long in the planting, growing and harvesting seasons. Added Daro, I hope my son to stay with will want is The entire operation something of a gamble with weather, water, disease and The Salt Lake Redevelopment Agency has scheduled a public hearing Oct. 17 on prof acre on posed sale of the north side of 1st South at West Temple to West Temple Associates for $259,000. farming. Utah Board of Ed one-hal- Danny Wall, agency director, said West Temple Ass which includes persons who have been involved in development of Arrow Press Square, has already deposited $37,500 on the land. The investors plan to develop a $4.5 million shopping complex and parking area for 190 cars. the city is moving the end of the Wall said toward four-yea- r, million West Temple Redevelopment Project. Nearly all land included in the redevelopment area has been acquired by the agency. He said the agency hopes to pull out of the West Temple area by next summer and concentrate on its new project in Central City. The first appraisals on parcels the agency plans to buy in Centra! City should completed within a week. Wall said. The liearing on the West Temple land will be at 11 a.nr. room 414. City and Countv $3 te Bldg. creates new office grant from the Region VIII of fice of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and will begin operation Oci The Utah State Board of Education, at the request oi Gov. Calvin Rampton, has created an Office of Child Development. 9 The purpose of the newly will be to develop methods of reaching families oi young children in order to involve parents in the developmental processes of their children and to provide for the emotional and training needs of children, said its director. Nancy Abraham. Mrs. Abraham said parents should become more involved in the education! process of their children, especially at level. the created office pre-scho- She said there is a need for a program for all and early childhood development offices at the district level. pre-scho- An interagency program committee will help coordinate efforts by the office. Mrs. Abraham said. The new office has a $40,009 UTA changes Weber hearing - OGDEN Transit hearing Utah The Authoritys public of annexation on County to its service area has been rescheduled for Oct. 16 at 3 p.m. Officials of the UTA originally announced the hearing would be held Oct. 15. Weber County in commissioners, announcing the change, appealed for a large turnout at the hearing. It will be held in the Weber County Library auditorium. of Representatives 11 cities in the county will report by Friday on whether they wilt join the November propose Sion. . vv'r-- r .v rvt4i: , . OPEN SATURDAY TIL 6 P.M., SUNDAY 1 1 A.M. Til 6 P.M. WE PURCHASED A TRUCKLOAD OF EXTRA HIGH QUALITY CARPETS. SPLUSH, BODY SHAGS, MULTI TONES. THESE QUALITY CARPETS ARE VALUED AT SQ. YD. 14 YOUR CHOICE , 'H.v She was one of thousands of patrons of Cottonwood Moll who estimoted t would take for a the fin 400-p- c Hock of ice to melt while on displcty inside the shopping center. CARPETS AS LOW AS vvfV' SQ. YD. Sq. Yd. THE OLDEST WAREHOUSE CARPET STORE THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST ..r'j minutes hod elopsed. The winner expressed qrotitude that she hod -- hopped Stll, insisted the Hamiltons. a good life. If we can keep the development out of this country, wed like to stay The family in agriculture. farm is more efficient than the corporate operations. We ll be here when the corporate farms are gone. This is y Wen- dover. Utah, was declared winner of he Kelt of prime bee! given away by the Cottonwood Mai! Merchants Association during their recent Fall Moil Days celebration' Mrs. Hungate's estimate wes 220 hours or.d 10 minutes. The ice disappeared after 2 19 hours end 20 lor TRUCKLOAD SALE WINS 2 state-wid- World War II. CCNTESTANT Mrs. Randall tEllia) Hungate, viate the situation, he said. The Lions in Salt Lake and Tooele counties are the first to distribute the home exam, Curtis H. although McCullough, district sight conservation chairman, predicts the program may go Jews from the Nazis during pm. Among the most unusual quences will be a filmed Utah children need to have their eyes corrected due to amblyopia. Many of these cases, he said, will not be detected until the child is seven or eight years old, and this may be too late. Helgeson added that while 16 million of these children should be reached, only one million have now been contacted. The Home Eye Test Kit should help alle- the market stacking the deck against the farmers. t the road went recently an acre. hearing set Curtis H. McCullough, left, watches Steve Lund take new home eye test. B-- 82,000 Land sale Officials from the Dugway Proving Ground, Hill Air Force Base and BLM offices in Utah have signed a cooperwitii the Wild ative agreement in compliance Horse and Burro Act of 1971. salte to three Continued from Page a woman who Three federal agencies want to protect wild horses living on Dugway Proving Ground, Wendover Bombing Range and adjacent Bureau of Land Management lands. A Farmer finds it still 'A good life' Call said the rubberized mixture wasnt perfect, but it does retain some elasticity and is better than sand or sawdust which may mix with water and freeze in the winter and become as hard as ordinary asphalt. Pact signed to protect wild horses an natios will open the Uni- versify avel Club film- lecture with Scandinavian Medley narrated Mrs. Hjordis (ittel Parker Kingsbury Halt Tuesday Elmo Hamilton inspects sprinkler lines. He said it may be next year before the remaining work can be done, as it must be done in warm weather. In addition, he said, the contractors will no longer prepare the mixture in small batches, so all the remaining schools may have to be done at the same time. A young airman was found dead in his OGDEN (AP apartment Friday, the victim of an apparent beating, police U. travel movie on two-third- one-thir- d beating victim No wild, of rubberized Installation under playground asphalt equipment at schools in the Granite School District i.c s about completed. Dr. John Reed Call, assistant superintendent oi administrative services, said today. Attention was focused on the use of hard asphalt after a Granger boy, Robert Jensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Jensen, 3754 W. Bawden Ave., was fatally injured at Frast Elementary School, 3444 W. 4500 South, when he fell several feet from a playground bar to hard asphalt. Call said the program of installing the rubberized asphalt had been under way two or three years, but the work still remains to be done at about of the schools. Airman apparent The case is being considered homicide, have any motive or suspects at this time, he A neighbor said the body was found by came screaming from Jeffersons apartment. lived alone in the unit for about three weeks quiet, the neighbor said. Replacing play area surfaces IN OUT OF TOWN CUSTOMERS WELCOME .. , fv sb? BUDGET TERMS THREE FOUNTAINS PROM) AVAILABLE Vt: if. xaCHTTECTS DCvp 1484 South State phgnemsjs !HHE3!aE3!E8I3E3BnSjratl!3QI2nEtOIS332C3nS3BS3 J |