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Show FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1973 Page.Twelvt Defensive Driving Course Starts June 5 Stansbury Releases Fees for Area Golfers If driving a car in todays conThe greens fees for playing on traffic conditions is get-in- g gested championship length Stansbury you down; if you are finding Park golf course were recently Ter-racmore it difficult to be tolerant released by C. Bruce Miller, vice president and mana- of your fellow drivers, then the ger. of Stansbury Park Division. Utah Safety Council says it is For those desiring a 1973 in- time to consider enrolling in a troductory season long pass the Defensive Driving Course. This eight hour course, offered following fees are applicable. in the evening in four two hour For an individual pass for the week ends only $65; a season sessions, or on Saturday in two pass for playing golf any time, four hour sessions, aids the al$90; family of two week day ready licensed driver to recoguass,; $90;' family of any anytime nize potential traffic accident pass,' $135; family of three on situations, to know the defense week days only $135; family of and to react in time. Utah boasts over 47,000 graduates in this three, anytime $175. who inform the Council course, The. weekday passes wont be that honored on holidays occuring in driving is more enjoyable and they have advanced from teh week, he said. For those wishing, to pay by being a good driver to the status the round;, the following fees are of being a better motor vehicle applicable: guests of Stansbury operator. The next course to be offered Park residents, $1.50 for nine '.n the Salt Lake area will com18 holes. holes, $2.50 for mence Tuesday, June5, or on Lot owners at Stansbury Park June 7 at 7 p.m. It Thursday, will pay $1.75 for nine holes and ivill be held in the State Office $3; for 18. Lot owners wishing to activate their charter country 3uilding. For those unable to attend in club membership are required to pay $10 a month for each the evening, a course will be family member living at home. offered on Saturday, commencThe guests of charter members ing June 2 at 9:00 a.m. This may play, $1.50 for nine or $2.50 course will also be held in the State Office Building. for 18. While advanced registrations .The front nine at Stansbury are Park golf course, is now enterrequested those who do not have time to complete the ensecond season its ing complete of play and .it has been rated by rollment firms may do so just the Utah Golf Assn, as one of prior to the start of the first the finest courses in the state of class. There is a small registraUtah. The back nine is expected tion fee to cover the cost of mato be playable by mid summer, terials used. according to Mr. Miller. The course features 18 circu traps and was constructed at a ' lating lakes and numerous sand cost of $1 million. or . ... THE SALT LAKE Savings and Loan Head Optimistic of Future Growing of Country It is very questionable if any financial fabric will remain from money crunches, said Richard G. Gilbert of Canton, Ohio president of United States Savings and Loan League. Mr. Gilbert was speaking this week at the Hotel Utah to civic and business leaders attending a luncheon held by the Savings and Loan League as part of the annual meeting. He said yo-y- o interest rates, uncontrolled federal deficits and inflation are among the financial problems created by money crunches such as those in 1966 and 1969. We must solve the problem of inflation and we must live within our means. I am very optimistic about the future because I believe we will solve the probun-scatch- ed nancial institutions because of mergers and consolidation. He foresees a greater freedom of choice in the operation of financial institutions and less legislative operation. Mr. Gilbert, whose career in the savings and loan business dates back to 1947, is president of Citizens Savings Association in Canton. He described the U.S. financial structure to be unique in the world. The structure is made up of very large commercial banks to the very smallest credit union. It is a system developed partially by design and partially by happenstance. Mr. Gilbert views the future of financial institutions as a time of change. He said there will be electronics funds transfer system and more specialization by choice. Geographical barriers will be gone. He added, Financial institulems, he said. Mr. Gilbert stressed that he tions must be prepared and al- lowed to serve a shrinking and adjusting world. The annual meeitng of the Utah Savings and Loan League was under the direction of Del F. Stoker, executive vice president is an observer of the future, not an advocate. He thinks the first order of business is to put the financial fiscal house in order. He anticipates that in the years ahead there will be fewer fi Utah Law Prohibits Sale of Wildlife A new law effective May 8 prohibits the sale of any form of wildlife, except the species provided in the Wildlife Resources Code of Utah or under rules and regulations of Wildlife Board. Coyotes, chipmunks and other forms of unprotected wildlife can no longer be sold in pet stores or by individuals. However, John Nagel, chief of law enforcement, pointed out that private fish installations and the wildlife farms operating under existing board rules are allowed to sell wildlife. The new law of the Wildlife Resources Code of Utah prohibits person to use wildlife as a commercial venture for financial gain except as provided in the code or under the rules and regulations of Wildlife Board. of State Savings and Loan .Buy Bonds where you work cr ...now that you can. time ofno credit, a 12-ho- ur Workdfgri&adzuPayraU&OT A The Leaning Tower of Fisa worlds most renowned foundation design failure. ; '.'Professional qualifications cand demonstrated competence ' at fair and reasonable price I L u'the way to select a to do a job right. It saves' both time and money. When its taxpayer money for kind public falarge one-of-- a v is .this cilities, especially Responsible public officials should select engi- -' neers on the basis of their qualifications, experience and approach to the problem or project. Professional engineering planning or design services include: careful studies of environmental protection factors; public safety provisions; the best way to plan and con-- . struct a project considering the many areas of responsibil-.it- y to the public interest. When the project is properly planned and designed, the professional often will supervise construction. This is when contractors properly bid to get the construction job. This is where a lowest bid on a now project pruperly makes for vis the profes-'.slona- im-porta- nt. . well-define- d economy of construction the big cost. The professional, whether he is a civil engineer or another design professional, should be free to recommend that a proposed project not be constructed at all! His professional studies may bring out that a proposed project is not socially or environmentally acceptable, or that the desired function could be best provided by an alternative. It is important and in the public interest that professional design services be selected on the basis of qualifications and demonstrated competence and not on price to school. But its true: todays working men and women buy U.S. Savings Bonds, That way, even if you ' o spend all your pay, youre still building a steady savings. Grandpa would approve. take-hom- have more advantages than their grandparents. One ofthem is the Payroll Savings Plan the easy, safe, automatic way to build a nest egg for the future. When you sign up for the Payroll Savings Plan, an amount you Specify is automatically set aside from your psyched: and used to ' alone. A number of States and the Federal Government have recently passed laws to insure proper procedures. The costs of professional services only a small fraction of total project costs are arrived at by a well established and accepted negotiation procedure in the full public interest. For further information write: American Society of Civil Engineers, 3 15 East 47th Street, New York, N.Y. 10017. I Itfs sort of like your grandfather telling you he used to walk 15 miles through the snow to get -- fWIMIIi HI MM MftfMM MHllWlilii . stock Boy U.S. Savings Bonds biwMil As- sociation and the newly elected president of the Utah League. He succeeds in that position Emerson L. Hardy, president of Deseret Federal Savings and Loan Assn. DESIGNING A BETTER WORLD 1903- -a TIMS taSgrto ' |