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Show t.41 8 A The Salt Lake Tri ai.e, Sunday, September 21, ,' 1975 v -- Economys Top Problem By J. Roy Bardsley Inflation and economic ills Toads and crime and violence These are traffic. the paramount prob- i. ,'., A VA -- i. .. Tv y v i j. .. , J W H rt y f -- ?- - . -' x Jff' . -- r-w- 1 1? ' ' ,$&tjsswaxi. T ''r - i v ' r fk 111 z 'rV ' i k which generated thieats of floods. Here is a complete accounting of important problems volunteered by a of the tri county ; T? 't as O-U- T 'tfjfi'f 3x1? "? L. DROP CLOTH BARS n cross-sectio- toftetiwi, t THE i VFv-'mA- Crime, vuWrfw. iMiMitwit UTAH H POLL 1 Oof ntM. 2cjJ . s mnitranH Covw anwwt cerTuettn, afewuntten PWfcrtkM OvrwwltiM TttrMt ftf flo0 WtMM toetfart, Other fairly important problems cited by citizens are government corruption, danger of overpopulation and pollution of various forms. Some residents aloe remember the heavy rains acM prafrMHm vutt praeiami iMfcrtnn, Nestles BOOK MATCHES rMtavtty Ctoamy and ffotnclMi af Klwwti stripped other problems, with corn-pric- e spiral plaints centered on the which relentlessly eaU into the family budget. Unemployment is a corollary concern which also keeps family budgets in hot water The second most serious problem is with residents crime and violence, citing cases of rape, shooting, burglary, lawlessness and lackadaisical police protection as examples. Speeding is considered one of the leading traffic problems in the area, mass with congestion, insufficient transit and substandard streets also on the critical list. or z. bars. Fez, Stock up now 3-0- gr 3 MtacaMawaay 2. Plastic. Save! , v , c 6v :? mfrfluararirtfr niwiirtMffft Not included in this count are a few who failed to find any problems. This was the exception, however, as pointed out by a Salt Laker who said: There are so dam many problems that its hard to sort them out." i a a DISHCLOTHS I , gg These findings were produced for the Salt Lake Tribune by a 1,200-cas- e personal interview study of Salt Lake, Davis and Tooele counties. This size sample yields results within 2.9 percent, plus or minus, of those which a complete census would produce. PACKAGE CLL UHi ai f-til CR TOWELS i t 'TvT S (rcis I Wwvwjp, neg. 51 c Our Rj. 132 1.18-1.- 22 j FRESHHER Arri.wA CrtSEIO tcr. Reg. CH0!ct)I z. j f- - If v vp- Reg. r pfd?pamil akasne bettoes. ej ?errz - 1.14 14-0- 2. - ' T9, . : pxy,t - c w vsr mimi i Boston. .nother Front major school front, pros half-millio- n On another pects brightened for a full resumption s in Broward County, Fla. A federal mediator at Fort Lauderdale set Saturday right for talks between the Classroom Teachers Assn, and a school board A judge has ordered the teachers to return to their schools Monday, and ordered the board to resume good faith bargaming. The teachers walkout Friday shut down nearly all Broward Countys 145 schools and school administrators set a teachers work day for Monday to avoid confusion among the 140,000 school children affected by the walkout If an agreement is reached, clashes will resume Tuesday. Keystone State In Pennsylvania, beset by walkouts of 5,643 teachers in 20 districts, idling 112,941 students, there were few signs of progress toward settlements and teachers groups said they were determined to hold out for higher wages and improved working conditions. The New Jersey picture brightened a little. As many as 23,000 students have been out of classes there, but negotiations were going on in walkout centers of Hoboken and Englewood, with teachers officials saying there was a faint possibility that classs would reopen Monday. In Englewood, tentative agreement was reached Friday, with approval expected Sunday, and in Hill talks were slated Parsippay-Tro- y to resume Sunday. Await Court Striking membeis of the Fort Wayne, Ind , Education Assn, and some other stnkmg teachers were ordered to appear in court Monday to face contempt charges for their walkout violating a court order and halting classes for 40.000 students. No talks were on the schedule. Walkouts continued in New York State, Rhode Island, Illinois, Massachusetts, Delaware, California and Washington, and at weeks end the various nationwide walkouts had idled about 484,000 students. of cla 6Eloise Heads Westward For Yucatan MIAMI (UPI) Tropical storm Eloise closed in on the Yucatan Peninsula with heavy rams and 35to-4m.p.h. winds Saturday. A second tropical storm, Faye, moved steadily westward across the open Atlantic. 5 Faye was still 1,000 miles from the nearest land late Saturday and forecasters said it would be several days before the storm posed any threat other than to shipping. The broad disorganized center of Eloise was centered near 20.5 degrees north, 85 5 degrees west, or about 85 miles east of Conzumd Island and an equal distance of the west tiD of Cuba. It was moving west at 10 miles an hour and hurricane forecasters expected the storm to go ashore on the northern Yucatan Peninsula during the night. south-southwe- st ic degrees north, 45 degrees west, or about 1,075 miles east northeast of the Leeward Islands, which form the east rim of tae Caribbean Sea. It was moving west at 15 miles an hour and showed no sign of strengthening Highest sustained winds were at 50 miles an hour with gates extending outward as much as 100 miles. its latest bulletin, the National Hurricane Center reported Eloise remains very weak with highest winds of 35 to 45 miles an hour. 20.5 k are you in a . . . SOCIAL rt: ARE YOU LETTING THE GOOD TIMES AND FUN PA5S YOU BY? Op you wih you could find now one thing to do? Thon ttop wtftHing ond start living , Jon the Meet & Mu Club where you wilt meet new peepie and make many wondeitul new fnend in your own age group. You'll ipend many weekly social ft conversing with them K you're single and over 30, the Meet 4 Mix Club will open o whole new world of fun and popularity for you M7 2XO fan Hoi today, Utah 841 17 PteoM Mod m your booMol twntroul otxigatwn. 1 "HOW TO GfT MOBt FUN OUT OF r; v iCkimi tiff' NAMf J r fX i 't r 9 SAVE PorowUm on mow w coulter wrt easy-t- o .riaan removable cook pet TW "Lazy Day" cooker qSs yaur meaia a potpourri ol Won. AObCC'uS ST ATT CITY I I PHONt ZIP WorM of Do r"e me I ii rftm w.iF' 'iWnTlTttr nil till rngirn It fe - nTTTr A'i - $.r shS. -- - 1 1 ' . J.1 f rf u u 78 e spray. , - . . - negotiated intensively to head off a walkout. The union previously had set a Sept. 22 stnke date, and a meeting was called for Sunday to consider this action again. Salary is a major issue at spray PO'JsH U Kmart brand 42 ,ents fc dishe'oths. Boston Facing Walkout mid-Atiant- d isL V&fF tee rvtach and tua Itttt U.S. Teiicher Unrest centered in - fcuartyMertaaat terry. 2 towels or United Press International Bostonians, their city quieting after sporadic violence over busing in the new school year, feared Saturday that a threatened teachers strike might close its classrooms, auduig ucs thousands to the nearly students already idled in labor disputes in the United States.. Massachusetts state law forbids a teachers strike, and a school committee and teacher union representatives "ft- ai! chocolate Crunch milk 3-o- ne W racraaNanai fecHttiM Marat dacav aai tveree r Polyestercohon was near . v f!i$. 4?c TCund- Lake and !PJ C'JllTtlS Such were the opinions of 1,200 families in Salt Lake, Tooele and Davis counties. The high cost of easily outliving Faye e 5arMv4b0r& - ', x r , ' j ;'rg this year Salt lems facing ' ' f " w Wv-."--- , ' |