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Show 6A Lakeside Review, Wednesday, March 25, 1987 Clinton receives 3 proposals on sinkhole study having the samples tested, looking at the pipe, and coming up with the cause of the sink- The city has reCLINTON ceived three proposals from engineering firms to unearth the holes. cause of sinkholes appearing in the back yards of homes in one subdivision. But whether the city will accept a bid or stay out of the matter entirely was the subject of a City The sinkholes began appearing in several back yards of one subdivision on 1600 North about a year and a half ago. Residents blame the sinkholes and depressions in their yards on the underground drainage pipe that runs through the back yards of 1 1 homes. The sinkholes and depressions appear above where , the pipe is laid. Not all 1 homes are plagued by the problem. The city, however, says it isnt so sure the pipe is the cause of the problem. One home was condemned to occupancy when sinking caused ceilings to buckle and other dam- - Council meeting last night. Staff photo by Rodney Wnght CHANGE OF COMMAND ceremony at Hill Air Force Base Friday places Maj. Gen. Robert P. McCoy in charge of the Ogden Air Logistics Center. He succeeds Maj. Gen. Charles McCausIand. Gen. Earl T. OLoughlin, commander of Headquarters Air Force Logistics Command, Wright-PattersAFB, Ohio, officiated for the ceremony. on LAYTON The City Council gave City Manager Bruce Barton the to save money whenever he could by refinancing the bonds used to pay for the new wave pool in Layton. Barton told the council the city had missed a chance to refinance the bonds at a lower interest rate because he did not have formal approval of the citys governing council at the time. go-ahe- Richard Dunn of Boettcher sion to begin negotiations as the and Company told the council interest rates dropped, the rate the volatile situation of the eco- could be tied up. The issue would still be put benomic market made it imperative to move fast in refinancing fore the council for final approvgeneral obligation bonds to get al, he said. Council members told Barton lower interest rates. The lower rates could save the to move to acquire lower interest city between $80,000 and rates if he could see that the life of savings would equal at least $100,000 over the $50,000 savings to the city, aside the bonds, he said. ' Barton said if he had permis from the fees of refinancing. CONTACT LENS PRICES GONE WILD!! CONTACTS SOFT(NEW EYEGLASSES PATIENTS) OMB STANDARD SOFTlCONTACfS 20-ye- ar Workshop will feature 3 authors A 1 fxmmz Hi? m Layton may refinance pool bonds Lower interest rates could mean thousands of dollars in savings City officials have remained .neutral on the issue, saying the sinkholes, which residents are blaming on an underground drainage pipe, are not the citys responsibility to correct.' The city accepted proposals and received three bids on the project, ranging in price from $1,400 to $7,500, according to City Manager Jim Smith. The. project would include taking soil samples from the area, age. NEED A FACE LIFT? Basements finished Additions Carports Storage Buildings Kitchens Garages Decks Bathrooms . workshop, sponsored by Association of Childhood Education International and' Davis Education Association Instructional and Professional De- -' velopment, is scheduled for Saturday, March 28. It will be held at the Utah Education Association building, 875 E. 5180 S., Murray. The workshop will begin at 8 a.m. and continue til 2 p.m. fean Utah auturing three thors, Barbara Williams, Ivy Ruckman, and Gloria Skurzynski. The cost is $5 with hour of inservice credit available. Williams has written 40 books for children. In addition to childrens books, she has published plays, short stories, magazine articles, and college textbooks.' Ruckman taught creative writing and English in high school for or : CALL: N.L.M. IW '!& TURN MOWN EYES TO BLUE: Call you need repairs, remodeling or rebuilding If Ji ; w : f.hi a a a 4 The Name Says IT ALL Free Estimates J L. Mecham Morgan, Utah AMERICAS BEST CONTACTS & EYEGLASSES Construction dOQ CQ1Q Ned Oau-D- jI LMfCl ( Call Now For A No Obligation Appointment) nnr rnri MIDVALE OZDD&Dt 26 West 7200 561-130- well-know- : OGDEN , 3735 SOUTH Wall Ave. 627-442- 4 0 one-ha- lf 10 years. Home Line a Open Equity Now she writes for young peoMrs. Ruckman has ple hardback books nine published and many short stories. full-tim- e. Skurzynski has published a dozen books for junior and senior children. high school-age- d The American Library Association named her book, Manwolf, the Best Book for Young Adults in 1982. without opening this. Kaysville cemetery cleanup April 6 KAYSVILLE Kaysville City cemetery crews will do a general cleanup of all grave decorations and flowers on Monday, April 6. According to David Black, Parks foreman, this is when cemeterys mowing season begins. From this time until the first Monday in November, no artificial (dried, silk, plastic) flowers are permitted on the grave sites. The cemetery will be mowed generally on Thursdays and Fri- -' days. Two tires blow out on vehicle carrying tank of liquid oxygen CLEARFIELD Tragedy was 17 when averted March narrowly the two right rear tires blew out on a truck carrying 1,200 pounds of liquid oxygen. The truck, driven by Raymond Wotjasek, was northbound on when the incident occured just north of the Clearfield exit. Had the oxygen leaked out to where the tires were smoldering, the whole thing would have explod- 15 he said. ed, Fire Department officials said the oxygen container was in good shape and had no leaks. The truck was enroute to Atlas Steel Inc. in Ogden from Salt Lake City. think Ive used up my years worth of luck this morning, the driver said. I " T No annual fee. No origination fee. 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