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Show Page 14—THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Friday, December11, 1981 Indians Sit on $1 Billion Ore Mine MOLE LAKE, Wis (UPI) — A small northern Wisconsin Indian tribe is sitting on a fortune in copper and ver but the economically troubled members refuse to let anyone develop their resource valued at up to $1 billion. Sokaogon Chippewa Indian tribe is worried about the effects mining of the deposit would have on the environment and the social changes it would cause The tribe has known of the rich ore for at least two years, right after a Survey US Buttribal leaders asked the federal agency officials not to announce the find The ore's existence however, wasdisclosed in a recent article in Forbes, a national weekly business magazine The Bureau of Indian considering for developAffairs confirmed the ing on the eastern edge of deposit was located on the reservation. Tribal chairman Raythe western edge of Sokaogonland. It is only 2 mond McGeshicksaid the short distance from tribal council had not met where Exxon Mining Co since the publication of had drilled for any the Forbes’ article Nov. whether dor further extension of the 9, but he he doubts big zinc-copper vein it is the tribe will change . ‘\ = The 290-member team made 7 drill tests. (_ ae | BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! NOTICE FREE EYEGLASSES Thefollowing corrections are needed for the December8 Sears preprint insert: PG. 13. The fondu set and electric wok may not be PAY THE REGULAR LOW PRICE FOR ONE PAIR OF QUALITY EYEGLASSES. SELECT A SECOND PAIR FREE! SEAMLESS APHAKIC. AND TRIFOCAL LENSES NOT INCLUDED ‘ovailable in all stores. PG.14.The $13.00 tool gift group maybe out of stock On some items in some stores. PG. 17. The #1913 Grinder and the #1070sabre sow may not be availble in all stores. Also the $16.00 too! group may be out of stock on someitems. WS RAINCHECKS WILL BE GIVEN FOR Ai FILLED BY CHRISTMAS, pee males We apelogize for any inconvenience these errors may have caused. David Schultz and wife Mary Lou leave Conran, Accused ‘Popcorn’ Pair Say They Are Innocent DENVER(UPI) — Standing before a traband. Later, an assistant manager ordered them to leave. even though they had faces sumption of smuggled popcorn. Never- OPTICAL \.__ finished. They said that they had paid their wayin, Ms. Richardson continued, and saw noreasonto leave. Thetheater official came back with a plainclothes policeman. whoalso directed them to leave. Schultz was finally handcuffed and taken to the Denver County Jail. He was not released until his wife produced the required $103 bondat1:30 a.m. Schultz denies the assertions of theaterofficials that he was disturbing the peace. “Given our experiencewith theaters, I was shocked when they had mearrested for taking the popcorninside,” Schultz said. ‘‘At one point, sitting in the manager's office. I said, ‘Isn't this sortof silly?’” Schultz said that so far, it has cost about $1,000 to fight the theater's allegations. Magnavox Can Make This an Unforgettable Christmas FOR FORTY YEARS THE NUMBER ONE VALUE IN EYEWEAR $128 Odyssey 2, the amazingly versatile TV game with the apha-numeric keyboard, Every family will enjoy the challenge of Odyssey. $128 Reg. 189.95 Give the gift of music with the AR-506 portable casette player with built-in AM/FMradio. Judge Says Boy, 12, Accused Of Murder, not ‘Bad Apple’ $378 Reg. 429.95 BB-4012 9in. diag- POMONA, Calif. (UPI) — A 12-year- old boy, with a family life so wrecked by violencethatit won his judge's sympathy has been ordered to stand trial for murdering a neighbor boy. Juvenile Judge Donald Fitzpatrick looked down at Leon Anguiano.sitting at the witness table and then explained, ‘They've got a new charge against you Leo — murder.” “Do you understand what is going on?’ the judge asked. “No,” Leo answered. The boy’s court-appointed attorney, Rocky Crabb,entered an innocent plea and Fitzpatrick ordered the boy to standtrial Jan.7 for the stabbing death of JamesDiaz,13. Last month, Leo had pleaded guilty to assaultfor the attack. ‘‘When you look at the kid’s background,I start finding myself feeling little sorry for the guy,” Fitz- patrick said. “I got kids of my own.” In a plea bargain last month, Anguiano had pleaded guilty to assault with a deadly weapon in the stabbing and Fitzpatrick had sentenced him to up to four years in a “‘suitable"’ youth facility. But Diaz died Nov. 23. never regaining consciousness. and authoritiesfiled new charges which. if convicted, could keep Anguiano confined to youth facilities until he is 25 “This kid shouldbeout playing basketball and soccer, not running with hardcore gang members,’ Fitzpatrick said Tree Thief Should Hold His Nose RICHMOND “T don't think he was a bad apple from birth. I think he wastainted byall the apples he rubbed up against.” A condition of Leo's sentencing under the original charge was that he not return to the La Puente homeof his grandmother. Inez Lara. Leo's father and mother ‘‘cameout of that grandmother’s home.” Fitzpatrick said, and both werekilled in gangrelated activity. There are two other teenagerelatives of Leo's living in the home, and both have had brushes with the law and have gangaffiliations, he said. “The grandmother is a very sweet lady but obviously she does not have control,” Fitzpatrick said. The case is forcing hard choices on juvenile authorities. County probation officials have opposed placing him in their facilities nature of his crime, Fitzpatrick said, and the California Youth Authority has nofacilities for 12-year-olds. “Mr. Anguiano fits in the crack. unfortunately,” Fitzpatrick said. “Tt’s not a punishment thing (seeking the murder conviction), it's more of trying to maintain control. to try to help him as much as they can," said Detective Don Garcia “Tf they leaveit as it is, he would be back out with his family and back in that environmentin a couple of years and that would solve nothing.” Two Carats of t Fiery Brilliance Pome? sprayed the trees with a dog repellent that is supposed to give off a foul odor oncea tree is taken ¥ inside. “I don't know how effectiveit will be,” Mayor Robert J. Boyle said “The average person who ° does this kind of thing probably doesn’t read the papers to know what we're doing. “But we're going to make it very uncomfortable for someone." Boyle said he got the 4 idea from a small town in Towa that used animal repellent in a similar fashion. Jack DeFranko, public" services director, said the city loses a fewtrees every year Reg. 469.95 model D-116 19in. diagonal portable TV with famous Magnovoxcolor teproduction. with boys his age becauseofthe violent $999 To $1999 HEIGHTS,Ohio (UPI) — _ Your Choice + Set in 14K Gold Fed up with the theft of evergreens from parks 3 during the Christmas ea season, cityofficials have $388 onal portable color TV operates on AC/DC for anytime viewing. \“lwoCarats of x4 373-4251 theless, they sat down andate the con- who, along with his wife, disturbing-the-peace charges for smuggling popcorn into a movietheater. “Thisis all a new experienceto me,” Schultz said this week after he and his wife, Mary Lou Richardson, both 31, pleaded innocent before County Judge Theodore H. Chrysler. The Parker, Colo.. couple, who met while working in a movie theatre in Annandale, Va., 15 years ago, had carried their own popcorn into a recent showing of ‘Time Bandits’’ at the Tamarac Theater in southeast Denver. They had done so often over the years, believing theater popcorn is overpriced and not as tasty as what they make at home. Ms. Richardson's version oftheincident goesthis way: After they paid admission to the theatre, an employee noticed their sacks of popcorn andtold them theater rules prohibited con- 140 W. CENTER Shop Mondaythrough Saturday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Sunday. familiar process for David Schultz, judge and entering a plea was an un- Sears, Roebuck & Co. ( a8 | Reg. 899.95 model 456 25 inch diagonal remote control color console with dual speakers and beautiful cabinetry. A gift the whole family will enjoy. 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