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Show 8A Lakeside Review, Wednesday, June 22, 1988 Watch for your Layton City Newsletter ? containing schedules and activities of the July 4th Layton Riata Days Celebration in your June 29th issue of the Lakeside Review. r1f v . AaAJMMBW... Staff photo by Bruce Bennett Gentile gets a new surface. Directing traffic around the area is Tammy Higginson. CONSTRUCTION equipment and personnel crowd the intersection of Gentile and Colonial streets in Layton as 'Utah needs Sower t Gubernatorial hopeful Merrill Cook addresses chamber LYNDIA GRAHAM Lakeside Review correspondent Cook, an Independent candidate. Cook told the Layton Rotary Club tax cuts could be the tool needed to draw more business to Utah and to encourage local small businesses to hire more em- ship is also needed in Utah, according to Cook. Some state departments could be combined under that leadership and operate at a lower cost to taxpayers, he said. Local foreign trade offices could be set up in Utah to keep the state in touch with trade markets in the Pacific ring. Western Europe, the east and west coasts of the United States, and other ar- ployees. eas, he said. Cook said he has a strong business background and understands the basics of running a business skills, he said, which are needed badly by the state. Young, fresh, vigorous leader Although not a foreign market, Cook said California needs to be seriously considered as a market for Utah services and goods. That states economic power is only slightly below some nations A stronger ecoLAYTON nomic base and lower taxes. Thats what Utah needs to get going on the fast track, according to gubernatorial hopeful Merrill such as Japan and Germany, Cook said, and Utah is within a stones throw of those dollars. He said Utah needs to look at Californian tastes, desires, vacation needs, and about anything else that Utah could produce and sell to that market. But just bringing more money into the economy from that state wont eliminate Utahs woes. Cook said. Taxes must be cut. Cook, who supports the initiatives for cutting taxes, said Utah has some of the highest taxes in the country. Neither of his opponents, incumbent Norm Banger-te- r and contender Ted Wilson, have the slightest inclination to Hill fighter wing to 'go to HILL AIR FORCE BASE The 388th Tactical Fighter Wing here and the 366th wing from ' Mountain Home, Idaho will soon be at war with each other. The twelvth Air Force, Headquartered at Bergstrom AFB, Texas, is sponsoring the exercise which will pit people and aircraft from several bases against each other as they side with either the 388th or the 366th. This exercise known as the See SawOwyhee Roundup 88 is the first such exercise since 1986 and features large, diverse forces for both teams, according to Capt. Thomas J. Carpenter, 388th assistant weapons chief. According to wing intelligence officials, the Hill team will simulate two allied countries known as Wendover and Wasatchland and will defend the Wildcat range here against the Mountain Home teams attacks. The Mountain Home team will the planes we fly with on our side and the ones we fight against will be dissimilar. also assume the role of two allied countries, Saylor and Fallon, and will defend the Saylor Creek range in Idaho against the Hill team. The purpose of the exercise is and ento simulate the build-u- p try into hostilities between two The aircraft for the Sea Saw team from Hill are: 34 6 Fighting Falcon aircraft; two KC-1- 0 Extender refuelers from the Strategic Air Command at 5 March AFB, Calif.; and one Stratotanker refueler from the Utah Air National Guard, Salt Lake City. F-1- fictitious countries and their KC-13- said Carpenter. In this way we test our operations, intelligence and command and control functions with a large number of forces togethallies, The aircraft for the Owyhee Roundup team from Mountain er. The bone Home, are: seven of contention is an area in northern war' Wendover 10 FEF-11- 1 aircraft; jet planes; eight F-1- 7 F-4- G and Control Division, Tinker AFB Okl., will provide one AWACS aircraft for both sides during the exercise, according to Carpenter. A Love rezone request to be continued LYNDIA GRAHAM Lakeside Review correspondent A short City LAYTON Council made it impossible to get enough votes to rezone property near Fort Lane and Antelope Drive. Robert Love requested two acres of his familys property be rezoned from agricultural use to allow him to build a heating and air conditioning plant on the site. A year ago the Love family brought a similar request before the council. It was denied at that time with much public sentiment against the move. Neighbors in the area want the ground to maintain its agricultural use. They claim traffic will increase to unsafe levels, spot zoning will scatter from the site, and the ground would be an unsafe building site. The ground lies beneath the flight path of Hill Air Force Base. Ron Daniels, a spokesman for the base, said the property did fall into a zone which the base officials feel would be compatible with light manufacturing. The Layton planning commission also feels the site would accommodate the small plant and recommended the motion be approved. But with two council members. absent there were not enough present to constitute a quorum of three consenting officials. Jerry Stevenson moved that the request be approved and was backed by Gerald Nebeker. LeGrande Simmons voted no. The hearing was continued until July 7 when it will be voted on again. Buy One Large Yogurt (8 oz.) Get One Large ALPINE FROZEN YOGURT Antelope Square, Layton (Next to Albertson's) 'Hours: 10 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY a.m.-- 9 1 p.m.-- 8 775-072- f 5 Corsair IIs; and Wild Weasel aircraft three The ANG in Boise, Idaho will provide two RF--4 Phantom IIs and the 552nd Airborne Warning Eagles; six claimed by Saylor and Wendover. See Saw will be a learning experience for most of our people since this is the first such exercise in two years, said the captain. The exercise uses different people, units, and aircraft who rarely work together for the composite force training scenario. This adds to realism because A-- p.m, Mon.-Sap.m. Sunday 4 t. ward tax limitation, Cook said. Government, Cook said, must return to its normal, rightful role, of a government more limited than at the present. He suggested the government should get rid of waste and duplication in departments that havent been revised in decades, by consolidating some of them, and said fewer administrators are needed. Cook also said the school sys- tem could be made stronger with fewer tax dollars if more control was centered on local levels and with parents, and he suggested that area of the state could also do with many less assistant MACHINE THAT NEVER STOPS You may not know it, but you have a machine that will keep running as if take good care of it. long as you live. And that can be a long time, you The machine? Your body. The human body is a wonderful machine when it s in good working order. But things can happen to it that throw it out of balance. Poor posture. Muscle strains. A spinal column out of alignment putting unwanted pressure on nerve centers. A general fatigue caused by poor nutrition. that reSpinal misalignments can be corrected; so can the spinal stress sults from the misalignment. The nerve centers can be soothed an pressures relieved. The out of balance" body can be restored to proper balance. deEvery machine has a structure designed for smooth operation. Any fect in that structure can cause problems. In the human body, structural detects can cause aches and pains in the back, neck, and other parts of the body. When these aches and pains persist over a period of time that means you need treatment. In the interest of better health from the office of: DR. JERRY -- J. BULLOUGH Chiropractor-360 S. Fort Lane, Suite 102, Layton 546-373- 1 FREE Initial Spinal Exam |