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Show UNIVERSAL aiCROFILalNO BOX 2603 3-- cm SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH As for Secretary of State Clyde L. Miller this week administered oaths to Utah's three new full time liquor. commissioners. They are Grove L. Cook, F. Gerald Irvine and Norma Giles mini-bott- le liquor Bar President 2 Richard H. Moffat A graduate of Stanford University, Richard H. Moffat, has been elected president of the Salt Lake County Bar Associa- tion. Mr. Moffat is a past president of the South Cottonwood Lions City Auditor Lawrence A. Jones Club and president of South Cottonwood, Inc. took no action' on' thisHproposal. He is also, chairman of. the Budget suggestions were ofUtah State Committee on Juvefered.. by Parks Commissioner nile Courts and a member of the Conrad B. Harrison and includRelations Department Utah State Committee on Alco, ed five guidelines. Because final approval takes holism. Commissioners approved the about 45 days, funding could Other officers named included centage increase. l. guidelines: Mayor Lee said the citys finot be assured unless the appli- Reed Martineau, vice president, That 1) provisions ' be made as not is bad condition nancial S. Hal and Hal Waldo, was secretary. Wedcation postmarked by for any proposed salary adjustas it has been in other years. Waldo Jr., is treasurer. nesday midnight, he added. that increases iipposed I have seen tighter budgets, ment; 2) - The model neighborhood is AFL-- C by legislative action be met by 10 Announces he said. bounded roughly by Interstate natural increases in revenue; 3) I think what we should do 15,. Redwood Road, 2nd South Award Winners that any surplus from this fiscal is place the salary matter on a and 21st South east of the Jordivided among city C. E. Berger of the ballot for the voters to decide in budget be dan River and 33rd South west President AFL-CIpurannounced November," said Public Safety departments for equipment Utah State reof the river. million be that $1 4) winners of the 1969 scholarship Commissioner James L. Barker. chases; served for contract to be signed next awards A capital improvements, this week. WinVwU tt v h o that the remaining estiand month calls for HUD to provide ners of program 5) the two $375.00 awards then we would have to come up mated revenues be used to shape $182,000 for the study covering were Miss Dorothy Carol Pappas source." some new revenue with the general fund budget for opeducation, health, transportation (Olympus High School), daughnot He revdid eration and maintenance identify possible employment, recretaion, housing ter of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Papand other things affecting life in pas, 3585 South 2445 East, Salt enue sources. The commission the neighborhood, Mr. Hansen Lake City; and Miss Debbie L. noted. Duncan (Dugway High School), Salt Lake City and County will daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Far-re- n provide about $37,000 in techJ. Duncan, 195 East Fifth nical servicies, mostly through Avenue, Dugway, Utah. Unions planning staffs, he said. and Collective Bargaining versus Based on congressional ap- Compulsory Arbitration was the propriations, this is worth up to subject chosen by both of the $5 million a year in block grants winners. Each will receive a to the city and county. These $375 award which may be used would be local funds and if ap- at any accredited institution in the United States. proved by the commissions Dr. Reed C. Richardson of the they could be used by the communities as they desire." College of Business and Prof. Ernest Randa of the Department Anthropologist Loren Eiseley says that we do not of Economics at the University need more brains; the need now. is for a gentler, of Utah determined the winners. really Students receiving honorable a more tolerant people than those who won for us against mention were Ron Gilmore of the ice, the tiger and the bear. Payson High School, son of Mr. Writing in Science on this theme and about violence and Mrs. R. L. Gilmore, 45 No. sions the cost for outside reno- Third East, Payson, Utah; Reid as a form of aggressive behavior, psychiatrists Marshall F. Gilula and David N. Daniels of Stanford University vation would be about $365,000 Judd (Kaysville High School), Reic Wm. Mrs. .and son of Mr and that the city and county's School of Medicine say that violence may have lost whatshare would be about $180,000. Judd, Jr., 82 West 600 North, ever adaptive value it may once have had. Violence is Mr. Hansen first told the City Farmington, Utah; Miss Janyce School) not unique to a particular region, nation, or time, and Commission the federal money Middleton (Kearns High would be allowed through a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- anthough man required violent aggression to maintain 5221 South HUD historical preservation fig- ert E. Middleton, became 5120 West, Kearns, Utah; anc his territory when food was scarce even after he ure. Julian C. Barlow (Clearfield (Continued on page 4) i Continued on page 4 (Continued on page 8) Cafmuli, Harrison, Barker Back Model Cities Application James L. Barker joined to endorse a county application for a $182,000 Model Cities planning grant. Opposing it were Mayor J. Bracken Lee and E. J. Gam. The city resohifidn appears to answer two. main questions control of eminent domain and the pecrptes voice in future proj- -- ects. Commissioner Catmull made the motion to 'endorse the application and was joined by the other two supporting it. Mayor Lee said he opposed the Cities ifrom the start because he feels it is wrong in . principle. I cant :understand how cities and .states can ask the federal government 3br aid when the federal government is broke," he declared. The program had been tentatively approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, subject to selection of :a IModel Neighborhood, said Jim P. Hansen, director of the countys Intergovernmental ment in fiscal 1969-7The auditor was asked by the City Commission to provide a supplemental budget showing cost of living salary increases in addition to merit increases. A plan for working out the city employee salary increases was also presented to the commission and referred to Lynn J. Marsh, city personnel director. Mr. Marsh has been meeting with city police and fire officials to reach a fair and equitable" salary increase. Police and firemen have requested increases ranging up to 22 per cent, however, it appears that city commissioners feel that all city employees should be treated the same, with none given preference. ' After the commission meeting said he Lee Bracken J. Mayor wouldnt approve any one segment of city government getting a proportionately higher per0. : City Commissioners George B. Catmull, Conrad B. "Harrison and City Auditor Lawrence Jones Proposes $14.8 Million Budget Salt Lake City Auditor Lawrence A. Jones this week proposed a city budget of $14,892,-)8for operating city govern- sup- plies that are expected to be needed in great quantities: Mr. Cook said they have already been ordered by the commission and are being shipped. Thomas. Governor Calvin L." Gov. Hampton told the comHampton briefed them on their missioners to treat the new law from the viewpoint that they duties. M. was Larsen appoint- are workable" and disregard the Sharp ed director of the commission. camp which has charged that .Mr. Larsen had been serving as the laws cannot be administered acting director on request of the effectively or enforced. Mr. Irvine said Atty. General governor since May 1. Mr. Cook said that so far about Vernon B. Romneys 82 legal 30 applications ' had been re- opinions on liquor questions ceived from restaurants for op- posed by Gov. Rampton were eration of special liquor outlets well written and should provide provided for under the states the necessary basis for Utahns new liquor laws. First licenses and the commission to begin are expected to be .granted in operating under the legislation about 30 days. properly. 81101 FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Richard H. Moffat Is New County 3 New Liquor Commissioners Administered Oaths of Office , , . v - O TODAYS v Violence in a Technological Age City, County Note Possibility Of U.S. Aid for Renovation Balt 'Lake City and County contemplating asking the Housing and Urban Development Department for assistance in renovating the City and County Building as a historical project. 'Jim P. Hansen, director. Salt .Lake i County intergovernmental relations division, told the Salt Lake (City and County Commis pres-ervati- on . -- . CCRP. , 69 |