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Show 4B The Salt Lake Tribane, Friday, December 4, Arizonans Act To Regain LDS Acreage 197 Salt Lake in Brief Panel Eyes Park, PHOENIX Pollution Funds Special to The Tribune SOUTH SALT LAKE -Funding for creating new parks, and Wasatch Frontwide pollution control and land acquisition were the main items of business when the Salt Lake County Council of Governments met here Thursday. Mayor 0. P. Davis of South Salt Lake, new council president, presided in the meeting in his city hall. - The (AP) Legislative Joint Budget Committee ordered its legal start members to begin negotia tions to acquire 240 acres of lands the state sold to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints 10 years ago for a university site. The LDS Church paid $1.5 million for the site which had belonged to the Arizona State Hospital. Church officials said they planned to construct a branch campus of Brigham Young University on the site. Church officials indicated last March they had no intention of constructing the school in the foreseeable future and Citv, County Save -- open-spac- ftoud-contr- B- -l under the $9,00027 cents a he added. The draft is prepared to meet requirements of the governor's office. State Division of Social Services, Comprehensive Health Planning Agency, State Merit Board and State Division of Health, Dr. Isaacson said. To enable each county, or district health department to moet practical standards, the measure calls for set payments extending through fiscal 1975 with sums appropriated thereafter . . . to meet economic ... adjusted changes. Departments funded under the proposal would give public health services to all incorporated and unincorporated areas in the district. eliminating any duplication, Dr. Isaacson pointed out. Efforts to merge or coasolidate Salt $100,000 person-p- roposal lh Tr?tMKiN t i-- ffipBt-EM- : I iT'-- j THE I y e and recreation program for constructing a basin park and at 450 E. 3000 South. $800,000 for 400 acres along Dry Creek in Sandy for a park. $60,000 for 40 acres to develop the Jordan River Parkway in the Redwood area. The board also approved recommendations calling for uniform enforcement of laws along the Wasatch Front, and a land-usmodel for the area, to be developed by Brigham Young University, providing the plan is approved by the Salt Lake Continued From Page He Boss ha city-coun- thAP'-oY&E- s'! P TERsfc offered the land back to the state at cost plus reasonable interest and taxes. $200,000 by Health Merger Lake City and . . . County Health Departments began 35 to 40 years ago, Dr. Isaacson said. These endorsements ranged from the Community Welfare Council in 1948 to the Salt Lake County Medical Society in 1953, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare in 1954 to the University of Utah and advisory comm-irte- s in 1959. Led by the Community Services Council, a concerted push began in 1960 and continued into 1967 with a comprehensive health study, Dr. Isaacson said in the city-coun- report. That same year Salt Lake County began its study of the problem. Spurred by the Community Sendees Council, the Salt Lake Area Chamber of Commerce and the State Division of Health, the city and county began talks that ended with the merger. Purpose of merging the . . . departments was to provide a . . . comprehensive public health service by taking the best of each department and offering a better service to the whole county through a uniform program established by representatives of each area, Dr. Isaacson said. Although no one saving has been great, they all add up, he stressed. For example: Use of one building instead of two saved $38,600 on utility bills. Eliminating posts such as a director of nursing, a director of environmental health and one administrator, saved . $39,084. Quantity buying saved $3,809. The greatest amount $96,000 came as grants, including $83,600 from Model Cities for an environmental management study next year and $12,400 from the state for services. child-healt- h e Fund were : requests approved The use of federal funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development West Highs Ex-Coac- 7226-278- 0 as-- s of as- will begin probably some in temporary serving position Monday morning, Dr. Morgan stated. We will have to w'ork out a position for him, since the school He S.L Okavs Reinstated h Former West High School basektball coach Ronald E. Steinke, 30, East, found innocent Nov., 17 of a charge of receiving stolen was reinstated property, Thursday to some type of teaching position in Salt Lake City School District. Dr. Stanley R. Morgan, i s t a n t superintendent schools, said Mr. Steinkes signment is indefinite. County Commission. program was set up from the beginning of the year. In addition, Dr. Morgan said the suspended coach w'ould receive all back pay in as much as he has been cleared of all charges. This was an administrative decision, he reported. Mr. Steinke was found innocent as his trial beThird District Judge fore James S. Sawaya concluded. A jury of five men and three women deliberated 17 minutes before returning the verdict, Mr. Steinke was charged Aug. 21 with receiving tires stolen from Pack Tire and Brake Co., 1161 S. 2nd West. Salt Lake City commission- Public Safety Commissioner James L. Barker Jr., delegated to personally thank the bar and its judiciary commitsaid the commission tee, could not adopt recommendations referring to the courts. Commissioners de ided not to take action concerning the recommendation that the city attorneys office including the office of the city prosecutor, SKIS SS IJORDICA two-da- y 14 Su ggestions ers Thursday agreed to adopt all but two of 16 recommendations by the Salt Lake County Bar Assn, to smooth relations between the city's executive and judicial branches. The recommendations were made last montu at the request of the commission. METAL-FIBREGLA- ALPIIJA PLASTIC BOOTS j SALOMON SAFETY BINDINGS by Bar be placed under the commission as a whole. The office now is under Mayor J. Brack- en Lee. Mr. Barker and Mayor Lee agreed this proposal merits more study to determine whether placing the office under the entire commission is most desirable. A traffic ticket recommendation may be considered, but not at the present. The bar, in part, suggested includthat traffic tickets issued ing parking tickets to an employe of city, state or county government should be paid by that employe. Currently, the city pays these fines if they are given while the employe is on city business.- ' "FALCON TOTAL VALUE COMPLETE ONLY $187.40 community councils, to place 30 licensing on a July calendar basis, and to ask the state to stagger license-plat- e sales were proposed by Salt Lake County commissioners Thursday and sent to the county attorney's office for study. Legal work should be ready commisa week, lame-ducsioners told Chief Deputy County Attorney Leon A. In k Hal-gre- (Commissioners Rcyal Hunt and Cscar Hanson leave office at the end of year. Philip R. Blomquist two years remaining in K. Jr. the has his term.) . Calling for an ordinance tablishing 19 community escoun- - cus, commissioners said the groups would advise the coun- ty on local needs. would Another ordinance put the license department on a fiscal-yea- r calendar, so sales business and would not add to the January crush of auto license-platpurchases. Mr. Hunt, noted, however, that the same could be virtually eliminated if the state would stagger license plate expirations, tying renewals OUTFIT WITH SKITIQUE BUCKLE BOOTS o Falcon WSl with Jr. step-i- Skis by Skitique safety bindings. n Skitique Jr. ski boots from Europe. Metal ski poles. Countv Considers Cars, Calendar Plans to set up advisory JR." "MARK II" ALLAIS ' GP SKI BOOTS METAL SKIS Sensational buy! Wc yecr for $120.00. An recreational ski that is exceptionally excellent Utah mountains. e "PVC" l chloride) plastic laminate boot. Bright blue trimmed in silver. Ladies' has soft, warm shearling lining and men's are reverse leather lined, injection molded soles and "Toba" adjustable buckles with spring loaded bail sold these all last outstanding metal easy handling and for deep snow on and (Poly-viny- swivel loops. Ty into automobile inspections. The county will draft a resolution asking the state to consider such a system. Commissioners also told the legal department to see if the county can set up and fund its own anti-smgroup. 1969 DISCONTINUED MODEL Robberv Rerun Not as Lucrative ,A lone gunman gave a with repeat performance the same cast early Thursday, but the box office take was considerably less. Eugene Dennis. 19, attendant at the University Gulf Station, 904 E. 4th South, told officer Kenneth L. Halterman the same man who robbed him just over a week ago Nov. 24 again accosted him and escaped with $55 and a full tank of gas. During the previous robin his early bery, the man ALLSOP got away with $130 brandishing a German Luger-typ- e pistol. Thursday, Mr. Dennis told police, the suspect arrived in a car, displayed a revolver and told him to fill the tank and empty the tilL After complying, Mr. Dennis was ordered into the car. The suspect then drove east, releasing the attendant a block from the station. En route, however, the bandit's revolver discharged into the car's floorboards. 20s after BOOT-I- N BOOT TREES 00 Provides constant pressure on boot sole during drying to keep boot soles straight and flat. No sharp edges to catch clothes of Trailer Runs Away, Trucker Cited Two citations and a formal eomplaint were signed against the alleged driver of a truck which failed to stop Tuesday morning after an air compressor it was towing broke loose or. Redwood Road, damaging city and private property. Donald Woolsey Hall, 48, 4050 W. 21st North, was cited by Officer G. H. Grant for failure to report an accident and failure to notify, or locate the owner of damaged property. Officer G. W. Blunck, who the incident, investigated signed a complaint before City Judge Paul G. Grant charging Hall with faulty safety equipment in that chains were not present on the towed vehicle in event the trailer The HEAD SKITIQUE EDELYEISS hitch broke. Holds compressor broke loose from the truck, northbound on Redwood Road, at 586 North where it sheered off a fire hydrant and damaged lawn and fencing before coming to rest in a driveway. Water from the ruptured hydrant flooded a large area. 9.000-pmin- SStiqUQ girl was in condition ut LDS Hoscritical pital early Friday from inwhen juries she struck by a car at 277 E St. about 6:30 p.m. Thursday. suffered Debra Averett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Averett, struck by a car driven by Richard Robb, 28, East, according to David investigating officer King. She sustained i fractured skull and a broken leg. Investigation is continuing. T Warm polyester filled parkas fashioned in the latest ski Available in fabrics with new authentic Frost Pink, Bright Red, lemon Yellow, Swiss blue. Spruce Green, Snow White, Apres Rose, Antique Gold, Powder Blue, Orar.ge and Navy. 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