Show - t 1 I10 Groups Plan Gatherings Salt Lake area hotels have to the Salt Lake Convention and Visitors Bureau that 10 groups are collectively anticipating attendance of 1036 this week According to the International Association of Convention and also visit Salt Lake City Upcoming events at the Salt Palace include: Tiffany Concert and the Antiques Fair Monday — Little America will greet 223 visitors from Pioneer Days Softball Tournament Tuesday — Quality Inn Downtown will welcome 38 visitors from Quest International 75 visitors from Irrigation Association will meet at Snowbird Wednesday — Snowbird will have 48 members of the Pueblo Swim Team Little America will welcome 37 guests of Alta Health Visitors Bureau surveys delegates spend approximately $477 which will bring in revenues of $494172 and taxes of $50652 Two groups each with at tendance under 25 will have an :additional 48 attendees creating $22896 in additional revenues and $2348 in additional taxes out-of-to- : : tours Twentyseven with an attendance of 1051 will travel-relate- d jury Fund) for rehabilitation of injured workers Faced with a rising fiscal drain the funding mechanism was changed at the regular session with more restrictive worker benefits and eligibility standards combined with a hike in worker compensation insurance premiums paid by employers The compromise biU approved then came from "hard-fougagreement" between labor and management after an original version was drafted "and crammed down the unwilling throats of injured worker groups who suffered substantial losses at the hands of a select greedy few" Mr Mayne wrote Any change now comes without injured workers approval nor that of a special task force set up by the governor following the last session with a directive to suggest any further changes acceptable to both labor and management Mr Mayne said The task force hasn't even reviewed the proposed rehabilitation ceiling he added The issue overlaps other complex mechanisms in the worker compensation field and won't get extensive attention in a limited special session ht cautioned the labor leader "It is interesting to note that this change would effectively eliminate any rehabilitation and retraining for handicapped and disabled workers in this state because the minimal amount involved and smacks of nothing short of thoughtless and unreasoned action" Mr Mayne said Role of Attorney Is Corrected Saturday — Snowbird will welcome 120 guests for the Aveda Hair Product Show The University of Utah reports that the Education Through Music Conference will be held on camFor more informapus July 2 tion Contact the University of Utah Conferences and Institutes Tuesday's Nbune as the attorney for Utah Parents for Children's Rights was serving as a spokesman for the group when he appeared before the State Judicial Council Mon day rather than in his capacity as an attorney The organization's attorney is Tamara Hauge DOE Approves Utah's Plans For Overcharge e e 1 ''' '''' ' ' '': ) ! fi people Video cassettes showing methods i to reduce residential energy coni i sumption and costs will be produced ! and made available to the public terstate 70 considered a major route for drug smugglers "We feel the judge applied the wrong standard in determining the stop was merely a pretext to search the vehicle" said prosecutor Richard McKelvie He also said he will oppose any effort to release Mr Fa- McReynolds had used a minor traffic infraction a lane violation as an excuse to stop and search the vehicle The troopers had been intermittently following Mr Fabela for about 40 miles before be was pulled over near the Sevier-Emer- y county line That pretext made it an illegal search the judge said and he wouldn't allow the cocaine found taped to the backseat springs of Mr Fabela's Mercury Cougar to be used as evidence He also would not allow as evidence the small amounts of cocaine found in Mr Fabela's clothes Both troopers denied that Mr Fabela's Hispanic appearance or his California license plates were factors in the decision to stop him Civil-righadvocates have alleged that such "profiles" have been used in the past by authorities policing In bela A trial was scheduled for this week but Judge Jenkins continued it indefinitely pending the appeal Mr Fabela's attorney James Esparza acknowledged the right to appeal but said Mr Fabela should be freed in the meantime "The appeal process could take many months" He also called the appeal "frivolous and without merit They had no reason whatsoever to make ts Reginald Bea les most distinguished Friday at the home Jeanette Holt at the age of 89 k ' Mr Bea les re tired a year ago from teaching vi olin and had been ' that stop" ' ' 4 1 ' i '4 4 s'''' ' ' ' : C '4 96 c v ' ' ': i s: "?: :: s''''' e: - i: :::::4 :w ::(0"''-'''-i'' 4 2'' :!s: ' 4 ' 5!' -- V ' 4: 1 - 4 ' : 1 : t:::: ! i ''' :'' ': ' it Al :: c : :f‘- ' ' 1 t 4 ! 4 4 k ft N 4 It 1 '' F' t ic 1 t ' k ' ' (:4 4 :''''' :' iv ? 'tr ?:!::' '''' '' 1 :444 'v ? t ' 1 '': '' ' ' :::''4s " 1 ''' ' ti'::' '' ': '' :" ' 44 ': i 2 0s 4ti'M- if ::- A 'i ' t' - n 4 i t! 4 4 :' ?" i ' A' 'VI' N''''''' ': ' ''''it 'C' 4 ii :: 1)144 'k i ::: ' ' ': d ' ' V :' ' :( i V't::: :' 104001064PownosviiitowleMildminvambeilimilM11411COIPWAINOSA0f:4SAINOAWeaW0k0400Y44vonotivomaNWOONIWAialiferiC MOM C t ' I toise "This is just more of the same — another example of the unresponsiveness of the BLM to what is now an emergency situation" said Steve Johnson southwest field representative for Defenders of Wildlife The BLM grazing plan covers lands within the 35 square miles of "critical habitat" for the tortoise on the west slope of the Beaver Dam Mountains in Washington County The Utah population of the tortoise was designated a "threatened" species in 1980 after biologists documented a steady decline in their pop Despite the federal protection recent studies indicate the tortoise population in Utah is still declining and "may be reaching a point of no return" according to the Fish and Wildlife Service Explanations for the decline are varied Many biologists believe a century of livestock grazing has greatly reduced the quantity of native perennial grasses favored by the tortoise This theory was bolstered by a recent study which indicated that the tortoises in Utah may be toises for pets and disease radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons testing at the Nevada Test Site The revised BLM grazing plan will allow cattle to use the tortoise areas during the winter when the tortoises are hibernating in underground bur- rows In the spring when the tortoises emerge from their dens and begin foraging for food BLM is required to conduct a study to determine how much "annual forage" is available in the area If forage production is less than 200 pounds per acre cattle must be moved from the tortoise area by March 1 Biologists believe this will reduce competition between cattle and tortoises for the spring grass If forage production is between 200 and 300 pounds per acre cattle will be allowed to remain in the tortoise area until May 31 under two conditions The first is that such extensions will be granted in no more than two out of seven years The sec UTA Boss in ‘ 4 a440ffvoleloalaarPOOMMINWOMUFA'406404011 Special to the Tribune HONEYVILLE Box Elder County — A Tremonton youth was killed Saturday when the car he was riding in rolled on Interstate 15 about 12:25 pm Brian Jay Terry 61 Amber Ave was taken from the scene to McKay Dee Hospital in Ogden where he died at 3:10 pm said Utah Highway Patrol Trooper Leon Jensen Driver of the car Amy Elizabeth Allen 17 518 Windy Way Tremonton was taken to Brigham City Community Hospital where she was listed In satisfactory condition said a nurs ing supervisor Three others in the car Tammie Christensen 17 and Richard Pixton 16 both of Tremonton and Lynette Thompson 17 of Snowville were all taken to the Brigham City Community Hospital where they were listed in satisfactory condition "The vehicle was southbound when it drifted to the right then over corrected and rolled over twice" said Trooper Jensen All the passengers were ejected from the vehicle the trooper said except the driver who was wearing a seat belt SLC Photographer Awarded Grant Carole Galagher a Salt Lake City photographer has been awarded a $25000 grant from John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation in Chicago Ms Galagher a New York City native has been in Utah the past five years working on a book on the alleged victims of the the open air and underground atomic tests in Nevada The grant which is from the foundation's Program on Research and Writing in International Peace and Security is for the completion of the book ond is that extensions will not be granted in two consecutive years The revised grazing plan also calls for such things as a program to control predators known to eat tortoises verestrictions on the use of d hicles in tortoise areas a public information campaign on the tortoise and "consideration to a complete closure to seasonal recreational use of the critical tortoise habitat" Morgan Jensen who recently retired as manager of the BLM's Cedar City District said the revised grazing plan is a "negotiated" compromise between his agency and the US Fish and Wildlife Service "The ranchers can live with it but it's going to be a real problem for them They don't have that magnitude of forage more than 200 pounds per acre most springs so they'll be excluded from that area most of the time" he said Mr Johnson said the grazing plan fails to address the "real problem of off-roa- the cattle themselves" Rather than worrying about springtime grazing extensions he said the plan should have addressed the need for the complete elimination of cattle from the critical tortoise habitat to allow the native grasses to recover the Running for Oakland Job John C Pingree Utah Transit Au- thority general manager since 1977 is considered one of two candidates to head the Alameda-Contr- a Costa Transit District in Oakland Calif He said he did not seek the job and has not decided whether he would accept an offer The Utah position pays $86000 a year T!e California job is expected The book will entail photographs of and interviews with alleged radiation victims The book which Ms Galagher has been working on for six years is due to be published by Doubleday in late 1989 Oliva Ward a reporter for The Toronto Star also received a $10000 grant from the foundation for her investigative essay for the book's intro duction Ms Ward who covers disarmament and foreign policy for the Star recently spent five months in Utah researching the essay to pay between $80000 and $100000 Mr Pingree said he has turned down several job offers during his UTA tenure Officials at the California transit district have said they hope to name a new manager by the end of July Funds Approved For US 89 Traffic Signal The Utah Transportation Commission has approved funding to remodel a highway crossing that will result in the installation of the first traffic signal on US 89 between Farmington and Ogden Commissioners approved $400000 to install traffic signals at Shepard Lane and US 89 where Smith's Food King has developed a large shopping complex Smith's has announced a grand opening Wednesday Ron Delis UDOT engineer for said negotiations have planning been under way for a year to place traffic signals at the intersection but engineers concluded volume and us age would not warrant a signal until the development was opened US 89 known as the Mountain Road splits off at Farmington and skirts the foothills through Davis County passes Weber Canyon and provides access to Washington Terrace and Weber State College The total project will cost $500000 with Farmington City pay costs ing $110000 plus right-of-wa- i i 4 t -- y' 1 ' Mr" Mr England Beales came to ' ''''' ' -- '— 4 All Animals Recovered 1 ment But conservationists say it further endangers an alreadythreatened species starving to death Other possible explanations for the decline include increased predation from coyotes foxes and badgers the illegal collection of tor- ) ' - § Can BLM Livestock Grazing Plan Protect Tortoises While Benefiting Cattle? By Jim Woolf Tribune Environmental Writer Survival of the desert tortoise "is not likely to be jeopardized" by a new livestock grazing plan for the southwestern corner of Utah biologists at the US Fish and Wildlife Service have decided The decision assumes that the Bureau of Land Management will make several changes in the plan to benefit the tortoise Conservationists claim the plan even with the changes offers more protection for cattle than the tor- I ' 4 —Tribune Stoff Photo by Al Hadrnonn 1 I 1 -- 4 1' Desert tortoise habitat is not endangered by new grazing plan declares the govern -- Saints : ii: :' I 4 '‘ ' Beales Utah in 1915 at the age of 16 with his parents and two sisters They settled in Lewiston Cache County He began playing the violin at 8 performing background music for si lent movies in England when he was 14 After moving to Utah Mr Beales a member of the Church of ''? ' 4i ' - ' 1898 in Brad ford Yorkshire 4 7 -L "- Latter-da- y went on a mission to the east coast studying violin in New York City Upon returning to Utah he conducted the orchestra at the American Theater on Main Street in Salt Lake City He taught violin for 25 years at the McCune School for Mu sic until the school closed In the 1930s Mr Beales organized and conducted the Federal Music Project Symphony Orchestra which traveled throughout the state during the latter part of the decade and was the forerunner of the Utah Symphony After World War II he played in concerts and on radio programs and taught violin for many years Funeral services will be Tuesday noon at the LDS ward house at 3400 S 1100 East Burial will be in Elysian Burial Gardens 1075 E 4580 South "e---- daughter's home since that time Born Oct 10 4 ': ' ' f - :il '01 h ''::: I '''' ' i' '' A: 4X ' F ' :'p'k N 1 i 1'3::" t 'CI OtA 1 ° e: - ' ' A'' V'::' ) "46 ''414 lb 4 ::: ' 4ft 40 "' S:'4' ''i ft ' :: '':' I ':-- ' 4 R 1 :' p' :R: 1 11 "r 4 4 '? ' '''' 1 X t ' 2 fft - ' ' '' ': a ': r1!it : f t' 4 ' f' 1 '' C ' l' t ' V 1 4 t i 'i t'04-4-:44'w: f1o01m: 5' :st Nt 4 ' Ii ' e- I :: ' i t ::: :4 - I ' ' 44-- Jesus Christ of one of Utah's violinists died of his daughter staying at his l iv— ' 145 Roll Kills Tremonton Boy Utah's spending plan for $531000 from the Amoco Oil Co overcharge settlement has been approved by the US Department of Energy The plan establishes eight onetime energy efficiency programs four aimed at agriculture and four at residential and driving sectors said Gov Norm Bangerter There will be an irrigation water management program a conservation tillage program energy audits for different types of farms such as irrigated cropland or dairy and educational guides for statewide distribution to agriculture producers There will be traffic light synchronization projects in Ogden and Bountiful to stabilize traffic flow and reduce motor fuel consumption A furnace conversion and replaceelment project will aid derly and handicapped residents living in the new natural gas pipeline corridor in central Utah Personnel will be trained to per form furnace tune ups for elderly and handicapped B15 A Prominent Utah Violinist Reginald Beales Dies at 89 ulation Mark Van Wagoner quoted in Fabela-Garci- nar Cap Benefits? Union Boss Is Steamed Gov Norm Bangerter's proposed legislative special session action to cap rehabilitation benefits for injured workers has been labeled "mean-spirited- " by Utah AFL-CIPresident Ed Mayne The labor leader said it's misleading for the governor to characterize the benefit ceiling as a matter inadvertently deleted upon passage of a revamped law dealing with the workers compensation code Passage took place last February during the regular legislative session "This bill is nothing more than a belated and surreptitious attempt to limit rehabilitation and training benefits under the guise of a technical correction" Mr Mayne said in a letter to the governor Friday The special session convenes Tuesday with a bill drafted to reinstate a limit of $1000 on the amount pay able from the Employers' Reinsurance Fund (formerly the Second In- Federal prosecutors are appealing a Judge's decision barring more than 30 pounds of cocaine from evidence because Utah Highway Patrol troopers had acted improperly when they stopped and searched a car carrying the drugs But the defense attorney for Juan a the driver of the car wants his client to be released pending the appeal A hearing on the release is scheduled for Tuesday Mr Fabela a native of Colombia has been held at the Salt Lake County Jail pending his trial on drug smuggling charges He was arrested April 27 after he was stopped on Interstate 70 in central Utah The prosecution's case was severely hampered June 14 when US District Judge Bruce Jenkins ruled that Troopers Milt Trejo and Jim Thursday — Marriott will greet 200 visitors from Ledbetter International Friday — Snowbird will entertain 45 guests from Intermountain Health Care and 100 members of Celebration of Abundance Semi- Strategies The Salt Lake Tribune Sunday July 3 1988 Lawyers Appeal Evidence Ban in Drug Case SL Hotels Brace for 1036 Visitors - 4 4 -- r y of renovating Shepard Lane and one half the signal cost Farmington will have three years to pay its share Mr Delis said Smith's will pay a part of the costs Utahn Will Stand Trial In Theft of 10 Horses Special to The Tribune West SANDY — A Jordan man charged with stealing horses which were possibly destined for human consumption has been bound over to stand trial following a preliminary hearing in 3rd Circuit Court Dennis Eller is charged with 10 counts of third-degre- e theft for allegedly stealing 10 horses valued at more than $25000 from a South Jordan pasture in October 1987 Mr Eller a south valley horse trainer allegedly sold the horses to middleman Ron Wilson 37 Spanish Fork who in turn sold them again according to Salt Lake County Detective Jack Hill Mr Wilson was charged in 4th Circuit Court in Spanish Fork with three counts of felony livestock theft for receiving stolen horses and two class B misdemeanors for failure to obtain a brand inspec tion certificate on transfer of livestock Nine of the 10 horses Mr Eller is charged with stealing were registered quarter horse mares some of which had been entered in races Eight horses were recovered in Ogden several days after they were stolen when they were brought to Utah Department of Agriculture brand Inspector Bud Fever° for a brand inspection Detective Hill said Mr Favaro immediately recognized the horses as being too high a quality to be marked for slaughter After impounding it was veilfied that the horses were stolen from South Jordan Two other allegedly stolen hors es were recovered in Spanish Fork Detectives believe many stolen horses are shipped overseas to Europe for human consumption State Considering Pavement For Mt Holly Resort Road Members of the Utah Transportation Commission say they're favorably studying a request to pave the road reaching beyond the former Mt Holly Resort to Puffer Lake a popular summertime hangout that could play a role in the ski resort's revitalization Mt Holly is now called Elk Mountain Resort and developers hope to enlarge the facility — already the largest employer in Beaver County — into a major year-roun- d resort commissioners were told e lake at Puffer Lake a 9800 feet elevation used only by fishermen in the summer may play a role in further expansion of the re sort possibly through construction of more than 700 overnight residential units and connection to Elk Mountain runs by a new ski lift a consultant told commissioners Friday morning But Puffer Lake is served by a sec3 tion of that was only dirt Until it was recently graveled backers said The road continues on to Junction Mute County Owners of Puffer Lake facilities Thorpe Waddingham and Derral Christensen Delta gave the Utah Department of Transportation a 100-foy wide through their property for a road seven years road is ago That several-mile-lon- g now on the state's highway system and has become the main lake access road from the west because the for mer access road has been abandoned and left to return to nature The new section of gravel road however has recently been recommended for transfer to county jurisdiction Acquisition by the state was useful because this ended problems with getting permits from the Forest Service whenever the state wanted to do anything said Alex Mansour former highway aide who appeared in be half of the Puffer Lake owners Mr Mansour said a recent recom mendation about transferring to Beaver County jurisdiction scrbe 93 miles of SR- - lri3 froin Junction west wPrd probably was based on mea surements of the abandoned road 110-acr- SR-15- right-of-wa- Thus it is probably a clerical mistake in appearing to drop the Puffer Lake access portion from state control District Five Engineer J R Chamberlain said the cost of paving the Elk Mountain to Puffer Lake segment is estimated at $357000 Consultant Gary Williamson Orem said economic viability of the project is being boosted by a good increase in skier visits which were raised from 11000 formerly to 30000 last season The 12000-foo- t Mt Holly could make it possible to have the highest ski resort in the state and one with the longest vertical drop some three miles exceeding Snowbird 400 South Viaduct To Close for Repairs The Fourth South viaduct (400 South from 300 West to 700 West) will be closed July 11 through Oct 9 for repairs Salt Lake City Engineering Division officials say work by Weyher Brothers Construction Co is needed because of weathering and salt dam age Eastbound commuters at 900 West should turn north to 200 South or turn south to 800 south and continue proceeding eastbound Westbound commuters at 300 West should turn north to 200 South or turn south to 800 South and continue proceeding westbound 1300 East Project To Close Roads As part of the 1300 East roadway widening project the intersection of 1300 East and South Union-CreeRoad must be reconstructed To facilitate the project eastwest traffic lanes of South Union and Creek Road will be closed until July 22 Thc public is encouraged to find alternate routes during the construe k bon 4 I I 1 da Aft 11 4wiLmh-ezo01-A- 41 4--4- '44-- " 4 --AU 144414"4-0- - 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