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Show $ ' First v Ses-io- n Committee Speeds uv Board cw Olympics Action wf , -- ,. V, Favorable the cable inviting the 1976 games to Salt Lake City must be sent by Monday, so time is important. told the group all the study material on budget, site He He also noted that Mr. Lentz advised not to make any official monetary connection with any organization until after the games have been awarded and then negotiations will be a three-partaffair, between the IOC, Salt Lake Organizing Olympics television and Committee networks. selections, environmental hous- impact, transportation, ing for visitors and the Olympic Village plus funding -must be gathered quickly, must since representatives leave for Lausanne by Feb. 1. requirements for the games invitation were given the committee as a result of with telephone conversation Arthur Lentz, executive director. U S. Olympic Committee He told John I). Rose, an ad hoc committee member work- - Meet Again Jan. 22 Mayor Garn called another meeting of the committee for Jan. 22 at 10 am. in his office. The mayor advised Verne Environment Iluser, Utah Center and chairman of the steering committees EnvironGarth mental Committee; Pynun, Visitors Housing Committee chairman, and J. Wa- Panel Urges Two-Wa- y rren 2nd Avenue s Construction-Operation- Committee chairman, to gather information needed rapidly. They promised to expedite their reports. that recommendation traffic be allowed on 2nd Avenue from J to N street was passed Friday by the Salt Lake Valley Traffic Advisory Council. A two-wa- King, y new endorseMeanwhile ments of Salt Lake City as the site for the winter games continued to come in. Skiers Rack Flan This section of street is to traffic eastbound, Traffic Engineer Jess Agraz said. now-ope- Stephen P. Anderson, executive director, United States Ski Assn., Intermountain Division, said, "Salt Lake City is the only city able to present a logical format for hosting the games. The master plan will insure that the impact on the r city and adjacent be resorts will minimal. one-wa- y The council also voted to recommend to the city commission that parking be restricted from 7 to 9 a m. and 4 to 6 p.m. on I street from 3rd Avenue to South Temple. In other action, the recommendation will be made to the commission that the speed Umit on 9th East be raised to 35 mile per hour. Mr. Agraz said the speed limit is now 30 m.p.h. out to 24th South and then changes to 35 m.p.h. winter-summe- The Utah Ski Assn., in a statement from William Leavitt. president, said the association "fully supports Gov. Calvin L. Rampton, Mayor Garn and Regional Forester Vein Hamre in efforts to decomme-rcializthe Olympics and return them to a sporting event. The association called for guarantees to ensure removal of temporary facilities constructed for the games ami repair of any ecological harm. It also called for agreements to maintain normal prices on housing, meals, transportation, entertainment, ski lifts and other business to prevent profiteering. C. of ('. Executives Agree e Half & HaJf cniMi 29 Ic Pint at Your HEBER (TALLEY MILK DEPOTS This Sperial Ends Sat,, Jan. 20th 35 LOCATIONS survey of 36 Utah Chambers of Commerce Assn, executives Friday showed they unanimously approve of the 1976 games bid by Salt Lake Citv. A STORM DOORS , Combination 1 Prt Sung 32"x80" or 36"x80" Hvy Gauge (unhot $2995 Screens & G Fatal Special to The Tribune -JGROVE PLEASANT oAnne Q. Brown, 35. Pleasant Grove, was found dead at her home Friday of what Pleasant Grove Police said was a gunshot wound included at-- I d OGDEN SAIT LAKE -- Being a stockbroker is challenging hard work, but it can be Advice on s BLM .lie r financial prilerjlii hii! nn 1. kieknimni 7 tLepxiNGS ? CLOUDY associate Turcott, George is from He ing. .1ii I l' in .we cannot be unduly influenced by value systems of special groups of citizenry, he added. In afternoon sessions the board discussed management considerations such as removal of burros and horses from private lands, management plans and relocation. Saturday they will continue the discussion with any public comments to be made at 10:30 a. m. At p.m. recommendations and suggestions and any future meetings will be set. 1 Members clude Dr. of the board inC. Wayne Cook, chairman. Fort Collins, Colo.; Dr. Flovd W. Frank. Moscow. Idaho, and Mrs. Velma Wild Horse Annie" Johnson, Nev. Reno. Surgery Slated For I .S. .Incite Chief Judge David T. Lewis. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, will enter a Salt Lake hospital Tuesday in preparation for cancer surgery. The operation is scheduled for Thursday at Holy Cross Hospitial. federal court officials said. The jurist suffered an internal hemorrhage Dec 26 and has since been intermittently hospitalized for tests and observation. . U.S. Judge Lewis was appointed to the appeals court by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956 ami is the first Utahn to serve on the court. He also represents Utah. Colorado. Wyoming, New Mexico, Kansas and Oklahoma on the Judicial Conference of the United States, the nation's highest judicial administrative bodv FLURRIES V rrq FCVl 29 East Seeond South TEMPERATURE CHART 12 Hr. 18 hr. low high Utah 24 Blandmg 42 9 Bryce Canyon STOCKS BONDS termountain Region with a chance of some snow, rain showers: wanner. The acres include portions Juab, Sanpete, Millard, Sevier and L'tah counties. of Has Oil Potential Builder of Refinery Dies in California Special to The Tribune RED CALIF. BLUFF, Thomas J. "TJ" Taylor, former Salt Lake City resident and Standard Oil Company of California employe, died of natural causes Friday in a Red Bluff He hospital. was 68. Mr. a Taylor, aid J., Salt Lake City, and all of Salt two grandsons, Lake City. He is also survived by a brother and sister. William. Bakersfield, Calif., and Mrs. Pat (Thelma) Conley.' Long Beach. employe Oil Standard and its subsidiary companies, had served as a project supervisor during construction of tiie firm's Salt Lake City refinery, begun in 1948. Later, he served as maintenance division foreman and as assistant to the chief engineer at the refinery. He retired from the firm in the shortly afterward moving to California. He had been an active of Our Lady of member Lourdes Catholic Parish in Salt Lake City, as well us booster groups of Judge Memorial grade and high school. Mr. Taylor was born June 5, 1904, in Springfield, 111., a son of Richard and Kate Walsh Taylor. He married Lola Belle Etzler on June 20. 1927. in Bakersfield. Calif. He is survived his by widow, Red Bluff: a son, Ger- - O Ulcers Snare Pair in Store Police responding to a burglar alarm at Thrifty Drug. East, apprehended one of two suspects and recovered two of beer 6S0-7t- Police report that the store was entered by breaking a glass door, damage $iu(). and it is believed the person who escaped took two cold packs of beer worth s4 90 1 U.S. Silver Coins Plywood . -- State. .Bus. Ph.. Area Code I have Have not Safety Plan 35 66 19 tr 32 33 03 35 .07 28 5 25 d was announced Approval earlier, when it was noted Utah is only the fourth in the nation to have a state plan okayed under the 1970 Occupational Health and Safety Act. Implementation of the plan means Utah, not the Department of Labor, will handle the state's worker safety program and for this work, will receive a federal grant of 50 percent of the costs, or $281,000 toward a total budget of over $500,000. each year. Carlyle F. Gronmng said the document may not be perfectly polished, but we know what it says and how to use it because we wrote it." V i 1.00 A-- ; J, JcYl CASABLANCA Do it yourself-i- t's - easy with I I Usually, theyre more than a mile away from knowrn production. Sometimes they are situated on top of known fields but are penetrating to uncertain horizons. They are risky and they are costly. They are occasionally profitable. Wide Range period ended Friday of 5 p.m. Precipitation for January, .40. Accumulative deficiency, .14. Precipitation since October 1, 1972, 7.72; accumulative excess, 3.49; Sunrise Saturday. 7:51 VIST; Sunset 5:24 MST. Salt Lake City, Ogden and Provo Considerable clouds with a chance of rain or snow showers Saturday, becoming partly cloudy Sunday. A little warmer days. Lows In upper 20s. H ghs Saturday low 40s and Sunday upper 40s. Light winds. Probability of rain or snow 20 percent Saturday decreasing to 10 percent Saturday night. Utah Considerable cioudmess Saturday with scattered snow show- ers north, matnly in mountains, and large areas fog, mostly in east. Sunday portly cloudy. A little warmer davs. Lows 20s ond low 30s west and teens and low 20s east. Highs both days 40s west and 25 to 35 east. Eastern Nevada Portly cloudy Saturday and Sunday. A little warmer davs. Lows In 20s and highs Saturday and Sunday from middle 40s into low 50s. Southwest Idaho Cloudy with some periods rain showers valleys and snow mountains above about 6,000 feet through Saturday night. Partly cloudy with chance showers mainly mountains Sunday. Mild temto peratures. Overnight lows m.d-20- s upper 30s. Highs upper 30s and 40s both davs. Southeast Idaho Cloudy with seme periods rain or snow showers snow mountains above valleys and about 5,000 feet through Saturday night. Partly cloudy with chance showers mainly mountains Sunday. Gusty winds ot times. Mild temperatures. Overnight lows 20s to lower 30s. Highs m,d-30- s to mid-40both days. Variable cloudiness Wyoming through Sunday. Scattered snows over ond near western and northern mountains. Continued slow warming trend. Gusty winds mainly east Hiqhs Saturday 35 to 45 with 25 to 35 mountains. Lows Saturday night upper teens and 20s with zero to 10 above mountains. Highs Sunday 40s with 30c mountains. Extended Outlook Monday Through Wednesday Utah Variable clouds with chance ot rain and snow at times northwest. Temperatures mud except continued cool some eastern volleys Hiah temperatures 35 to 45 and lows m 20s except highs 25 to 35 and lows 10 to 20 colder eastern vaHes Variab'e clouds Eastern Nevoda with chance of ram and snow ot times north Mild with high temperatures m upper 30s and 40s Lows Occasional periods Wyoming snow liant mountains. Continued mud Highs mostly 40s Lows 20' ond upper teens Sui&Sffl ADHfSlVEBACKED 12 X 12" VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE new floor beauty in just minutes no fuss, no mjss just poet, place and press fuil range of HMasHion patterns and colors our l)i .tinctixe ( !utom-TaiIo- SI IT NOW Sam; YOUR MEASURE kill)' Jlvi wnil Kiixrn faime Ke-t- f! iii Br I pjthrn- - ail In imiruun imliM'l.ia) 99 .Home Ph. traefed commodity options AM) SUITS MADE TO i file 3 (,'1 50 Utah Woolen Mills Fun Poce To Shop OGDEN SALT LAKE A 28 KK.HVRDS STREET i HI'n k Nuth jf Temple UIf Cover Big Area The Anschutz leases cover a wide area. Part of the acreage is within Townships 9. 10. and 11 South and Ranges 3, 4 and 5 East in the Thistle Junction area, and in Townships 13 and 14 South and Ranges 1 and 2 West just to the west of Nephi. Lease applications also were filed over a widely scattered area from Townships 16 to 23 South and Ranges 1, 2 and 3 West near the Sevier Park vicinity. area, west of Salma, southwest of Aurora, and just northwest of Richfield. Reser-voir-Yub- a Sci-pi- Union Oil Company of California also filed applications with the BLM on more than 4,195 acres just west of in Iron County. Par-owa- Wildcats Probing Utah s Oil Fields Wildcat wells, probing the unknown in the search for oil and gas, are going great guns in L'tah. mostly in 20s Continued periSouthern Idaho ods ot ram vaitevs ond snow moun-tomsMild temaeratures. Htghs 30s to mid-40- s Lows 20s through mid-30- &5C Geologists refer to the general area as the hinge line along the Wasatch Plateau Region. It marks the shoreline of an ancient sea. Major peof the troleum discoveries wo: Id have occurred in similar geologic circumstances Although the hinge line play began two years ago, there has been no discovery to date to confirm geologic speculation. 0? tr tr. tr. 19 22 03. Utah industrial safety officials were commended Friday by U.S. Department of Labor officials for creating an entirely job safety and health plan meeting full federal approval. Howard J. Schulte, regional administrator. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Denver, presented an approval certificate on the Utah plan to Gov. Calvin L. Ramp-ton- . .Zip. A RESEARCH ORIENTED COMPANY 10 for Brings New Praise 1 1 MUTUAL FUNDS 16 family suggests to contributions the sister Mary Loretto Scholarship Fund, in care of The Sisters of Mercy, Red Bluff, Calif. Burial will be in Red Bluff. 273XSJ.C Please send me information on Commodity puts and calls. Platinum Cocoa Silver Sugar " tr 9 11 Holy Rosary will be recited Monday at 8 p.m. at the Red Hoyt-Col- e Mortuary. Bluff. Funeral mass will be said Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Red Bluff. MEDALLION'" Dept. Montana 4 Butte 43 Bozeman 31 West Yeilowstone Nevada 41 Elko 52 Ely 53 Los Vegas 55 Reno 54 Wtnnemucca Wyoming 41 Cheyenne 30 Big Pmev 37 Evanston 36 Rock Springs 51 Sheridan Colorado 52 Denver 21 Grand Junction Pacific States 24 Fairbanks 78 Honolulu ?4 Los Angeles 39 Portland The lifelong of PUTS AND CALLS, INC. There has been steady oil and gas leasing activity in the region, viewed as a potential oil province. hr. prec. I Copper The filings are the most made at one time since last March when Skelly Oil Co. filed leases on more than 146,000 acres in the vicinity of Loa and in the southern area of Sevier County. 24 rsj r Applications have been filed leases for 82,635 covering acres by Anschutz Corp., Denver. The firm filed 43 separate applications Friday with the Bureau of Land Management. SHOWN Notional Weather Service Data Considerably cloudy skies will remain over much of the Intermountain Region Saturday, with a chance of scattered ram 01 snow showers. Warmer daytime temperatures. 328-962- Coffee Salt Lake City, Utah 841 TIMKtATUtlS FORECAST 'Balmy Days Soothe Region are unfamiliar with this vast trading media, we have available free, a very osefol trading kit. explaining the commodity options market, their leverage, trading techniques, limited risk, and money-makin- g profit potential. For your free kit mail the coupon below or call (801) 3 Telephone (801) HIGH m FORmfS Not June in January. But For those who ie.l'C l Oiit.iel Companv Inc. (MIAMI The weather forecast map for Saturday indicates eloudiness over the In FREE COMMODITY OPTION TRADING KIT Citv. & Renewed oil leasing is takhinge ing place along the line in central Utah counties. Industrial Commissioner Address Y In Central Utah 73 . Avoid Undue Influence snow Name. Priiiee-Co- ?'W FAIrO SCATTERED SHOWERS WARM FRONT COLD FRONT STATIC FRONT Washington, "The American people's value systems are crucially involved. Some may argue wild that horses are not of some order but mustangs, of genetic determination. The fact that many wild horse blood lines may trace back to ranchers work horses of not so long ago doesn't mean a thing to a large segment of our population, he continued. (H V&z SNOW RAIN DC. ". the advisory field is highly competitive. For your recommendations to prevail, it may not be enough for them to be judgmentally sound. They may need, in addition, a persuasive supporting background and perhaps even Mr. Turcott documentation, said. PARTLY CLOUDY I Lil inlere led W- - las? ! - LEGEND ( University Club Bldg., Suite 1650, 136 East South Temple. Salt Lake City, Utah 841 11 iiumljlorv. K ! u- , CHICAGO X DENVER m nnjitnd.' '...few,' ! NEW MichJ V--- -1 Ls; c - c- Oil Leases Boom Fxeruthe director, BLM, represented the secretaries at the meet- altaiiuil an earning level in eee ol 20,fKKI within their lirl Iwehe mouth' ol emplov nienl with ii'. Il i not uneoiiiinon lor renc:i'el Broker- - in lutvc monlli' when K H , ls.D.; I g hu-in- e" Slll.l A Minn. I of the board was held at the Royal Inn, 206 S. West Temple. The panel was named to advise Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton, and Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz on management, protection and control of wild, horses and burros on public lands administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and U.S. Forest Service. Prince t .ovm X ( mi.m i Imiking for tlmv iitiliv iillial- - who we will liain lo lueoiue - vers loekhroker'. The eeurilieMans have broker exeiting ami lueralive. their income eve fosr Wild Steed very rewarding. -- N.D.l ..Mont. Friday First meeting Mr. Rose noted, However, G' The national Wild Horse and Burro Advisory Board faces a tough job, a representative of the secretaries of Interior and told the group Agriculture This is favorable tc us, Mr. Rose said, since the executive board will rely greatly on the sports federations, rather than the entire IOC, which is highly politically and European oriented. stressed he The mayor would not go to Lausanne, Switzerland, to meet with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which will make the final selection of the city to host the 1976 Winter Olympics on Feb. 4, unless lie had a guarantee of federal funding. Gathers Data Fast IOC to I s ' t A, Gels 4 ing to get the games for Salt Lake City, that the IOC has given permission for the executive board to select the games site. The first official meeting of the Salt Lake City Olympics Steering Committee Friday afternoon discussed problems the facing the committee and first being funding Mayor Jake Garn named three subcommittee chairmen. - f 3 Wildcat drilling depths in Utah now range from 2,000 to 18,000 feet, costing $200,000 to $1 million. Four wildcats in the Uinta Basin are of special interest, according to Carlton Stowe, staff specialist for the Utah Geological and Mineralogical Surveys field office. Exploration, Tulsa, is reaching a full 15 miles from known production b drill a 14,000-fotest about 10 miles northeast of Fruitland. Summit County. Several Tests Apache Gulf Oil is conducting tests at the Blue Bench-Utwildcat six to eight miles north of e Duchesne just off Utah 87. Gulf drilled the well to 12.600 feet. National Treasure Mines, Salt Lake City, has scheduled a 12,000-fotest near the Wasatch County line. In Uintah County, Texaco, Inc., will conduct tests at the t deep Seep Ridge wildcat more than 60 miles south of Vernal. 12,154-foo- Two remote wildcats are to in the Price area. a Inc. Energetics plans t test. Davis Oil Co. will drill a 3, test. be drilled 6.800-foo- 000-fo- In Cisco Area Several wildcats are being drilled in the Cisco area of Grand County. Objectives range from 1,000 to 3,000 feet. One wildcat is being drilled on the outskirts of Moab to 9,000 feet. Mountain Fuel Supply Co. is drilling a 6,200-foo- t wildcat in the Piute Knoll area northeast of Montieello. Two wildcats are projected for central Utah's hinge line area near Salina. Altex Corp. of Vernal and Phillips Petroleum are the operators. State Board Scans Bids For S.L., Dixie Banks have been Applications made with the Utah Department of Financial Institutions for locations of a unit bank in Salt Lake County and in St. George. Mark O Haroldsen, Lowell V. Summerhays, Richard C. Landerman and Milton L. have filed fur location on 3300 South between 20th and 23rd East for a bank to be known as Frontier State Bank. Momiav at I Robert B. Bradshaw', Clarence E. Miller, Dean T. Terry, C. Sampson, H. Van Hafen, Dan E. Schmutz, Kenneth R. Metcalf, Elwood J. Corry and Herman B. Anderson have filed for a location in St. George for a bank to be known as the State Bank of St. George. Doyle Persons with views on the applications may submit them in writing to the State Department of Financial Institutions . Business Adviser Talks Edw ard Lucero, termed one of the countrys most successful minority business advisers, will lecture Monday at 2:15 p.m. in the Mark Greene Hall at the University of Utah. Mr. Lucero is director of the We Kove It ALUMINUM SHAPES Angles, Channels, Squares, Rounds, Corrugated, etc. STEEL & Flats, Small Angles, Straps, Rods, Etc. BUY & SAVE AT Corrugated KETHIS thiSo. 7th W., Salt lak Colorado Economic Development Assn., and is credited with having helped establish more than 400 minority businesses in the past three years. Roy T. Shaw, professor of marketing, said. Parley Awaits Professor at I . Dr. Henry Eynng, professor chemistry and metallurgy at the University of Utah, will address the Utah Section of of the American Institute Chemical Engineers at a dinner meeting at the Buffet, 744 E. 4th South. Thursday, according lo Sam Neslen, newly elected section chairman. Each member been asked to brand a of Chuck-A-Ram- a hs teenager. |