OCR Text |
Show Try 43 DESERET, NEWS, Thur.day, April 24, 1969 rea Complaint Filed of-ih- e a Igrious sewage problem will cotitinue to exist. VL S. Mickelson, chairman, Sal Lake County Sewage District No. 1, made this statement in announcing that the districts board of directors Wednesday night requested the County Planning and Zoning Commission to change the classification to urban, A letter has been sent to the commission. Communities affected are Draper, Rivertc;,, South Jordan, Bluffdale, an da portion of Crescent. We feel that persons who Utah To Observe &rbor Day Friday Jderal offices will be open, buity, county and state offices will be closed Friday fod ' Arbor Day. Offices of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSajnfs in Salt Lake City will als$ be open. Meter maids will not take a holiday and will be giving tickets for illegal parking on their regular beats. The holiday, first observed April 10, 1872, in Nebraska, was designated in Utah by Gov. Calvin L. Hampton. 195) D1BECTIVE The declaration follows the directive of the 1959 Legislature in observing the last Friday in April as Arbor Day. Held to foster planting of trees to make cities, towns, farmlands and mountains more beautiful. Arbor Day will, include programs in several Utah communities. In Salt Lake City, the Utah Associated Garden Clubs will present 14 new trees to the Park Authority Sugarhouse which have been planted in the parks Garden Center building area. PROGRAM SET Elgin Arave, Arbor Day chairman, will present the tr ees to County Commissioner memRoyal K. Hunt, ber of the Sugarhouse Park Authority. The Garden Clubs program will be held at 2 p.m. at the y Garden Center on the northeast coiner of the park near 16th East and 21st South. It will be conducted by Mrs. Darr Alkire, Utah Associated Garden Clubs president. City Commissioner Conrad B. Harrison, also a member of the prk authority, will speak.of Miles Labrum, University Utah arborist, will dedicate the trees. A program sponsored by the Garden Artistic Designers Club will be held Friday at 10 a.m. in the Murray City Arboretum. made the master plan made a grave mistake when they put our areas under the agriculMickeltural classification, son said. With a strictly agricultural classification, planners prohibited any growth in the areas and made it nearly impossible to give adequate sewage and water service to homes already built, Mickelson explained. RULES OUT LOANS classification different A would have enabled the sewerage district to obtain a loan from the Department of Housing and Urban Development for installation of a sewage system, he claimed. Because of the present classification, approximately $1.5 million in federal grants is not available to the district, he said. LOSES THOUSANDS Mickelson said the district loses several thousand dollars each year in increasing construction costs because of forced delays in applying for federal grants. He said there are a number of choices in obtaining federal funds, but none would help the district in constructing sewage lines to all homes in the communities. KCC Helps t i,liM Tto" symPh,"y A I- - jjRAPER Unless changes are made in the Salt Lake Cqjljjty Master Plan, which ha classified several small communities in the south part county as agricultural, Ti "'KP"Hp"ip'my-l-(jr,Hji- resident of Cottonwood Heights signed a criminal complaint today charging a Salt Lake drive-itheater and the theater manager with lewdness for screening of he movie, Candy. n Mrs. 7112-215- 5 Dona Bullock, East, juvenile prochairman, Jordan tection Council PTA; member national executive committee, Citizens for Decent Literature, and first vice chairman, Salt Lake C.iy Area Youth Protection Committee, signed the complaint before City Judge Melvin H. Morris. Sheriffs deputies served summonses today against Woodland Inc. and against Ellis Everill, president of the firm, owner of the Woodland Drive-I- n Theater. The complaint charges that youths under 18 were allowed to view the movie, in violation of the Utah Statr Code. The summons require Everill to appear befon Judge Morris for arraignment May 26. check from Kenne-cot- t Copper Corporation was presented to the Utah Symphony at a luncheon Wednesday at the Alta Club. J. P. OKeefe, general manager of Kennecotts Utah Copper Division, made the presentation to Wendell J. Ashton, president of the Utah Symphony Board, and W. C. Allen, of the director executive orchestras Ford Foundation matching fund. OKeete said $15,000 would toward the be fund ($1,000,000) matching and $5,000 to the annual operating fund. This $15,000 brings Kennecotts total matching fund contribution to $50,000, symphony officers said. Ashton said Kennecott has been one of the orchestras largest contributors over the A $20,000 applied years. the presentation, Making O'Keefe called attention to the -urrent issue of Kennecotts Kenne-copemploye magazine, which praises the Utah Symphony for its importan Uta! ole in advertising hroughout the country. Were proud of the Orcl.es -as significant contributio: to the worldwide image of ou sai 'ommunity and state, and wen Mr. OKeefe, proud that Kennecott is a par of this great undertaking. e, r ig nin" 'yrn 1 j Kiwanis Club Names Teachers Or Tie Wonfi librarian and an elementary school teacher have been named Teachers of the Month by the Salt Lake Kiwanis A Club. Mrs. Wilhelmina Randall, lih brarian at Horace Mann Mrs. and School, Irene McBermaid, sixth grade teacher at Whittier Elementary School, were chosen for the Jun-Hig- 4 honor from teachers nominated by Salt Lake City public schools. Mrs. Randall, who has held the Horace Mann post since bachelor's cum laude, degree, magna from Cotner College, Lincoln, Neb. She has also done graduate work at five universities. 1959, received Active a extracurricular in act ivities, Mrs. Randal, serves as sponsor for the per club, school paper, yearboo' nd class plays. She was lauded by her pri ipal, LeGrand Parsons, e 'an educator in every sense e '.he word. He said she has , haracteristic found in mor good teachers, an attitude o unselfishness and a desire t serve others. McPermaid honored by club Mrs. Irene . , . who McDermaid, Salt in the teaching began Lake District in 1953, has received a B. S. degree in elementary education from the 'Jniversity of Utah. She is hree classes away from of requirements for ; masters degree in counseling ind education administrate from Brigham Young University. According to Mrs. McDer Mrs. com-letio- n Mrs. Wilhelmina Randall . . . lauded as educator maid, her greatest thrills center around keeping in touch with former students by personal visits or calls from them and invitations to weddings and missionary farewells. She served as secretary of he Utah Education Association science department one vear and worked on the music committee to write a fourth grade music guide. Putting you first, keeps us first Fire Safety Begins At Home m Parents carry the asic responsibility of teaching their children the dangers of fire and how to respect it, a veteran fireman said today. In many juvenile .arson cases, the problems usually start in the home, according toJames L Smith, arson squad battalion chief for the Lexington, Ky., Fire Department. TAUGHT RESPECT He said it is practically impossible to keep cigarette lighters and matches away from children over five years old, so they must be taught to respect fire. This should be done not only by the parents, but also through lire prevention programs in schools, which must be carried on continually, he added. Smith said children between two and six years old usually start fires out of jealousy, to draw attention of friends, for the thrill of seeing a fire engine and out of anger with relatives or friends. Persons in the six to 18 year group sart fires out of jealousy, to draw attention, anger and resentmentt toward parents, to cover up other crimes, thrills,, hero complex, revenge, mental disorders and through group or gang activities. In a speech at the third annual Utah Fire Investigation Seminar at Rodeway Inn, 154 W. 6th South, Smith said the juvenile arson problem grows daily and is probably attributable to neglect. LACK OF INTEREST The forms of neglect are abandoned or complete rejection by parents or guardians, lack of attention and affection, lack of praise for their efforts, lack of interest in their problems and activities and lack of parental control and discipline. Smith caused said this neglect is by broken homes, large families, working parents or guardians group associations, scholastic difficulties and mental disorders. reo, Tapes Gone ert G, Salerno, reported to police the from his auto of a car and a stereo tape, val-7M-6t- h at $66. A The car at his residence. was the idea that a vacation begins only when you get where youre going. Obviously, they havent vacationed in Camaro, the Hugger. You start relaxing the moment you come in contact with Camarcs contoured bucket seats. You A lot of people have " Vv feel snug without feeling stuffed in. Now youre getting in the right frame of mind to consider some other attractions. Like Astro Ventilation in every model. And, road sense that gives you the feeling this is one car that knows its way around-a- ny thing. Start your vacation early this year. The minute you step into a Camaro. Your Chevrolet dealer will make all travel arrangements. r Sports-Recreatio- n Dept |