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Show 2B The Salt Lake Trihune Tuesday, February 5, I Wj Iaffertys Hospital Stay Gets Expensive for Enrolhneiit Decreases at USU Students For Qut-of-Sta- te LOGAN (AP) - Winter quarter enrollment at Utah State University is f only percent lower than last winter, but president Stanford Cazier says he is concerned bet a use enrollment of students is off by 13 percent. This quarter's enrollment stands at 11,171 students, which is nearly the same as last year's total Cazier said Monday the trend of students has been fewer continuing for several years, but he hopes a bill pending in the Utah Legislature will help reverse the situa- USU, because these people have parents working and shopping in Cache Valley, yet they cannot afford to send their young people here because of the high tuition The number of international students also has declined in recent years LaMar Frandsen, International Student Office director, said fewer students from Iran, Central and South America are enrolled at USU, while more students are from the Republic of China, Peoples Republic of China, Malaysia and Korea. tion The decline is due to local economic and political situations, and to A bill sponsored by Sen. Lyle and approved by the some extent a tightening of qualificastate Board of Regents, would reduce tions in some USU academic prostudents living grams, Frandsen said. tuition for within 100 miles of Utahs borders. The report also shows a increase in the number of graduate It would allow students living within that boundary to pay lVi times students attending the university, Cazier said. what residents pay. The current nonresident tuition is more than 3 Departments showing the largest times Utahs fees, Cazier increases include Special Education, said. up 19 percent; Applied Statistics, up If approved, Cazier said more 13 percent, and Communicative Dissouthern Idaho students would attend orders, up 12 percent. one-hal- Hil-lyar- Utah County Residents PROVO (AP) - Ron and Dan Laf ferty have been working up hospital bills to the tune of $10,000 a month, and Utah County residents are picking up the tab, county officials say. Steven Killpack, newly appointed sanity administrator, estimated the cost recently at the request of 4th District Judge J. Robert Bullock. Keeping Ron Lafferty in the jail would cost less, but hospital psychiatrists feel he should be in the hospital, Killpack said. Lafferty was recommitted to the state mental hospital following an apparent suicide attempt. Killpack said when a person charged with a felony is ordered to be committed for compentency proceedings, the county is responsible for paying for both evaluation and City Catalogs ISAAC ASIMOVS SUPER QUIZ Take Isaac Asimovs Super Quiz to a Ph D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points ond the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph D. Level. treatment. Using Killpacks estimates, the Lafferty brothers various commitments to the hospital since October have already cost the county about The United Kingdom island group do these islands belong Skye, Mull, Lewis, and Harris? Answer 7 To which Englands most famous tanical gardens Answer 8 This is Freshman Level 1. This is one of the Queen's residences and is the largest inhabited castle in the world Answer 2. This is Ph.D. Level the name given to the flag bo- thriving seaport is on the River Mersey. Answer - 9. This Answers Name the capital of Scotland Answer Graduate level Scoring This is the largest island in the United Kingdom. Congratulations, Doctor; points Honors Graduate; 14 to 15 points to 10 points Youre plenty smart, but no grind; 9 to 4 points You really should hit the books harder, 3 to 1 Enroll in remedial cources points Who read the immediately! 0 points questions to you? 3. -- 4 Answer These Scottish islands are for their ponies. Answer 5. farri', Jersey and Guernsey are islands in this group. Answer 6. 18 17 198S Ktn Fitter. Published by Tte Tribute with of Rod Dombnor Enterprises permission $30,000. Program Provides Alternatives to Prison Editor's Note: Innovative programs will be needed to deal with an expected 60 percent Increase In the number of people In the Utah corrections system bv the year 2000. In the second of a four-pa- series. Tribune Suburban Editor George A. Sorensen examines Field Operations, which Is In charge of community halfway ond other alternatives to houses, Help rgcogmze Utahs ary and post secondary students who demonstrate the achievement of excellence in vocational and technical education through the cash donations to the Utah Public Education Foundation. Donations of tools and equipment and internships are also welcome second- Incarceration. Field Operations was created in the fall of 1983 during the reorganization of the Division of Corrections to provide responsibility for correctional programs in the community .:d to provide the courts and Board of Pardons with alternatives to incarceration. Under the direction of Stephen V. Love, deputy chief, this section has charge of presentence investigations, diagnostic programs, six community correctional centers (halfway houses), and eight special programs, designed to allow the offender to participate in community service pro- - grams which result in large savings to the taxpayers. For example, the prison has custody of 15 percent of the correctional population and Field Operations supervises 85 percent. The prison requires 61 percent of the corrections budget dedicated to client supervision while Field Operations requires 39 percent. In actual dollars, the prisons budget is $21,967,400 to handle an average of 1,424 persons while Field Operations spends $14,221,883 supervising 7,844 persons. Field Operations had 38.2 percent of the 1,016 positions authorized to the Division of Corrections in November, while the prison required 56.6 percent. The remaining employees were scattered in administration, support services, inspector general and the Board of Pardons. Field Operations began in 1937 when there were three agents who had the responsibility for all persons on probation or parole in the state. Today there are more than 200. The number of persons under supervision has grown from 300 to the nearly 8,000. The first halfway house opened in and today six are in operation, another is under construction and three more are in the planning stage. The first function of this section i3 1970 providing presentence investigations for the courts. These must be completed and delivered to the court 48 hours prior to sentencing. The PSI report is a compilation of the offenders criminal, social and behavioral history. It also includes statutory required recommendations to the sentencing options. After receiving the PSI, the judges have another option before passing sentence. They can, and do in about 10 percent of the cases, order the offender to participate in a diagnostic program for a period not to exceed 90 days. These diagnostic programs are operated at the Diagnostic Unit, the old St. Marks Hospital in Salt Lake City; Utah State Prison, Draper, Parkview Community Corrections Center, Ogden; Womens Correctional Center, Salt Lake City, and in some cases in the community where they reside. Four of the community correctional centers are located in Salt Lake County and four in Weber County. Special programs operated by Field Operations include: Community service restitution where individuals are required to complete community work which will benefit organizations. An internvolunteer program in which an estimated $175,060 worth of service was contributed between October, 1983 and October, 1984. Contract services with outside providers for certain treatment programs. Restitution. From October, 1983 through October, 1984 Field Operanon-prof- it tions collected and dispersed Recovered in Idaho EXCPi I FNCE f , The Utah Vocational Excellence Awards Program seeks to honor the states top 10 secondary (two-yeaand top 10 Police Examine Stolen Goods r) vocational and technical students each year. Recipients will be selected through competition in seven major fields of vocational and technical education The vocational Excellence Awards program is sponsored by The Salt Lake Tribune, KUTV, the Utah Public Education Foundation, the Utah State Board of Education and the Utah State Board of Regents, and contributing businesses, industries, and individuals Special to The Tribune PROVO Utah County sheriffs deputies were continuing their efforts Monday to identify all of between $75,000 and $100,000 in property an Idaho Falls, Idaho, warehouse and believed stolen in the Utah and Salt Lake County areas. The items were brought back to Utah last week, according to David Bateman, acting Utah County sheriff, and officers are now going over records in an attempt to locate the owners. m For additional information, contact the State Vocational cation Offices, Edu- Bateman said Sgt. Lee Fox and a West Jordan police officer went to Idaho Falls to extradite a man arrested there for the sheriffs office on a warrant for changing serial numbers on a vehicle. 533-557- l)r Salt Cakr Hribunr An investigation led the officers to a warehouse full of stolen property, Duchesne Commission Gets New Chairman and additional officers went to Idaho Special to The Tribune - DUCHESNE F. Ted Kappen, Bluebell, Duchesne County, has been named chairman of the Duchesne County Commission. He succeeds Jim Reidhead, Roosevelt, who did not seek Kappen, a Republican, is the holdover commission member with two more years of his four year term to serve. The other members of the commission are Alton N. Moon, Duchesne, a Republican elected in November for a two-yeterm; and LeGrand Gilbert, Arcadia, Duchesne County, a Republican and a newcomer to the commission. In other action, the commission has decided not to construct a road through a planned subdivision adjacent to U.S. 40, southwest of Roosevelt. three-memb- er ar Head-O- n Collision Claims Woman Special to The Tribune PLEASANT VIEW, Weber County A head-o- n collision on U.S. 89 here claimed the life of an Ogden woman Saturday when her car struck a northbound pickup. Elizabeth Ford, 24, was dead at the scene, said Pleasant View Police Chief Rex Cragun. He said the accident occurred when the vehicle Ford was driving crossed the center line and hit the pickup driven by Joseph Robinson, 19, Pleasant View. A passenger in Fords vehicle, Delia Ann Perrce, suffered a broken ankle and cuts and bruises and is in satisfactory condition at St. Benedict's Hospital, Ogden. Robinson and two passengers with him were not injured. "The road was snow packed, with three or four inches of loose snow, Cragun said. Both vehicles were demolished, he said. . r 1 to help transport the goods back to Utah. Recovered were seven snowmobiles believed taken from West Jordon, plus 10 protorcycles, a boat with outboard motor, a $13,000 welding unit, an vehicle, a 1984 model Jeep, saddles and horse tack and other items. in We figure we have recovered between $75,000 and $100,000 worth of property stolen during the past several years, Bateman said. Part of the items, including the welder and the Jeep, were taken in recent months. Bateman said serial numbers had been filed off some of the items, and authorities are now attempting to bring these out so the equipment can old be identified. He said the suspect had been residing in American Fork at the time the warrant was issued, and had allegedly fled the county at thetime. - ResiDUCHESNE COUNTY dents here, puzzled why gasoline prices are so high in the Uintah Basin when there is a small refinery in the county, have sent a petition to county attorney Dennis Draney requesting an investigation. Despite the fact that Seagull Refinery is within the city limits, the price for regular gasoline in Roosevelt is $1.19 per gallon and the cost is similar in surrounding communities. Last week, Duchesne county commissioners signed a letter recommending a similar action be taken to another level of government. The letter asked the Legislature to appropri Land Use Planning Crucial to Deer Life, Professor Says LOGAN (AP) - A Utah State Un- iversity wildlife professor says statewide land use meaningful planning is crucial to preserving Utahs deer population. Michael Wolfe said no one seems to know whether or not to feed deer, who are already munching on shrubbery in neighborhoods around the state. Utahns must face the fact that the problem is caused by homeowners being allowed to move into the animals feeding areas, Wolfe said. Land development forces the deer to higher elevations where snow is deeper. But when the snow piles higher than 15 inches, Wolfe said, the animals venture into inhabited areas in search of food. 30-ye-ar Petition Asks Investigation of Gas Prices Special to The Tribune mer Intermountain ate $200,000 for the attorney generals special investigation. DuRep. Alrik Myrin, chesne County, asked Duchesne and Uinta County commissioners to forward letters asking for the appropriation in hopes of showing both a need for the funds and a consolidated front. He said that the attorney general has received several complaints regarding the gas prices in the Uintah Basin and will be investigating possible price fixing later this year. At a Duchesne Chamber of Commerce dinner last Saturday, Myrin stated that he has asked the attorney generals office for an investigation. n office is alHe said that the other with involved investiga-- ' ready tions and should get to it by spring. one-ma- School and City Recorder Mike Cosgrove said there are several good prospects for the facility since the deed was transferred to Brigham City Monday. Cosgrove reported all buildings are being checked for fire protection, electrical service and accessibility for larger trucks making deliveries. He said the Bureau of Indian Affairs showed a total of 1.3 million square feet of space in all buildings and the industrial committee appointed by Mayor Peter C. Knudson will make recommendations on how each building can be utilized following a review. Cosgrove was appointed as the liaison person for Brigham City to show buildings and open ground to prospective industrialists and developers. He said 89 of the 122 buildings are y structures used for ' large, dormitories, classrooms, living quarters. physical education programs, theaters, a hospital, a library and oth-- . er buildings used for educational purposes. There are 80 apartments and a small number of residences which were formerly occupied by school . employees. Cosgrove said the State of Utah Surplus Division inspected the warehouses at the school. He said the division is looking for square footage to meet their specifications to store equipment and surplus materials for distribution in the northern part of the state. He reported there is an unlimited supply of electrical power available on the Brigham City system and ample supply of culinary water from Brigham City, as well as a well on the grounds which produces 600 gallons per minute at a constant flow over 24 hours. Last winters feeding program, administered by the state Division of Wildlife Resources, contributed to the large number of deer hanging around residences in Cache Valley and other parts of the state, the professor said. With funding from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, Wolfe is researching whether feeding above roadways would reduce deer-aut- o collisions. He also is studying whether feeding above orchards would lessen agricultural damage by deer. Wolfe said the feeding program last year was not a mistake and prob- ably saved many of the older, more experienced deer in Utahs herds. Still, spring counts by the state showed about 80 percent of Cache $1,118,902. Sex offender programs. Intensive Supervision programs. Timpanogos Adult Forensic Program. And, Field Operations supervises the development and operation of three criminal justice resource centers. The first is now under construction in Iron County and the second in either Davis or Utah Counties and the third will replace the current diagnostic facility in Salt Lake City. Snowslide Closes Provo Canyon SpeciaMo The Tribune A snowslide crashed off the mountain in Provo Canyon Monday afternoon, closing U.S. 189 for about three hours. Myron Taylor, District 6 maintenance engineer, Utah Department of Transportation, said no one was reported injured in the slide. The avalanche was described as about 15 feet deep and closed both lanes of the highway. It was reported at 2:38 p.m., an eighth of a mile east of Deer Creek Dam in Provo Canyon. UDOT had three loaders working on the slide during the afternoon. The slide occurred in the same area as an avalanche last year, Taylor said. PROVO CANYON Allstate Update: AUTO Insurance. Does your auto insurance need a tune-up- ? Even with all the money you pay for auto insurance, your coverage still could be badly out of tune. 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