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Show lollege Aides Seek Solution On Interest Utah college financial aid officers agreed Tuesday to seek both local and national action to get around the high interest bottleneck blocking the student loan program. The rising interest rate virtually has killed the federally guaranteed program. Federal legislation sets a limit of seven per cent on the loans it will guarantee. The prime in- -, forest rate already is eight and a half per cent and may go higher, according to fiscal experts. It has created a nationwide crisis in the college loan program. Legislative measure ; ;The 1969 legislature passed a- measure making $3 million in state insurance reserves available to the program, but setan interest rate of five per DESERET NEWS, AEC To Retain cent. It appears, according to which mcaey can be loaned to Dr. R. Kent Fielding, associstudents by banks.) ate director of the Utah CoorTo probe the possibility of dinating Council of Higher using a $50,000 contingency Education, that loans from fund to cover loan premiums. this fund will not be available adTo advise high-levbecause of the funds ability ministrators in the U.S. Office to earn much higher income. of Education of the seriousT PROGRAM ness of the situation and to and representa- call on Utahs Congressional Fielding tives of Utahs collegiate insti- delegation to support meatutions, with counsel from sures to resolve the problem on a national scale. U.S. Office of Education repTo seek help from the 1970 resentatives, agreed on a FOUR-POIN- program at four-poi- Tues- Joint Committee on Atomic Energy has approved a request by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, to retain a large nuclear reactor near Idaho Falls, Idaho. James M. Sipherd, Ave., director of the county personnel department, Tuesday was named director of 622-llt- h ment for the past year, has developed a system for registering each employe and had job classification started programs. the County Merit System. merit comThe three-mamission made the appointment during a public meeting in the Building. William n Bennett said the $20 million Materials Testing Reactor (MTR), scheduled to be closed June 30, will be for scientific research by graduate students in the West. City-Coun- ty Proposed merit system rules, regulations and other information for employes were discussed. Sipherd, who has operated the county personnel depart- - legislature. days meeting: JJ 18, 1969 County Names Merit Head - The Wednesday, June M. Timmons, as- sistant dean. Continuing Education, University of Utah, and the merit system chairman, told approximately 60 county employes the system will operate according to law and will not be partial to one individual. n Employes who have com- - with plaints in connection their job should write to the merit commission. An investigation will be made, Timmons said. Anyone fired from the county after May 13 of this year should write tne commission. Details should be given, and the commission will investigate if proof can be shown that someone else filled the position. If merit system regulations have been violated, restitution will be made, Timmons said. CAN YOU STEER & STOP SAFELY? . . . Every vehicle is rood- - tested by management. SAFE LMifrnxffiWf:- - .trTtrr. To determirs at what rate money can be obtained from the state insurance reserve fund. (Colleges could raise other funds to pay a premium to make up the difference between the allowable seven per cent and the rate at ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY iNewsmen Praise f Idaho Legislature SUN (AP) IDAHO VALLEY, The Idaho Legislature drew praise, but one of its! committees was criticized, asnewspaper executives from three state: wound up a meeting here Tuesday. The Associated Press Association coinmended the Idaho for opening most committee meetings to news- law-mi.e- rs man. $u a resolution expressed 2 Women Held tp S.L Slaying Charges have been filed against two Salt Lake City Women in the Sunday slaying of Charles John Ramsey, 44, no address listed. Held on a first degree order charge is Joyce Ann cOmie, 21, 640 W. North TJemple. A charge of being an accessory to first degree liurder was filed against Hilary Jane Jackson, 24, 1899 S. State St were Both - complaints signed by Police Detective it. J. Lang. Ramseys nude body was found Sunday about 10 p.m. ij a motel room at 1659 W. North Temple. He had been shot with a .25 caliber pis- 3 - ; til, police said. Police are continuing their search for a man beloved to have also been in the motel room at the time of the slaying. f f regret that some committees kept reporters out. Specifically mentioned was the House Revenue and Taxation Com- - IE JA Caterpillar had cleared area on the mountainside about 10 minutes earlier, Ira Sdioppman, Iron County sheriff! said. The rock must have been loosened then. The cat ws not even working in that area when the rock broke free and began to roll. th fitnesses IT COOL... GET ALL THE THINGS YOU NEED FOR SUMMER FUN AT GREAT SAVINGS! mittee. The press, as the eyes and ears of the people, has the right to be admitted to the deliberative councils of government, the association said. E. Earl Hawkes, publisher of the Deseret News, Salt Lake City, was elected association chairman, succeeding Eugene C. Dorsey, publisher of The Idaho Statesman in Boise. A. L. Alford Jr., Lewiston, Idaho, Morning Tribune publisher, succeeds Hawkes as vice chairman. Sierra Club Meet At U. What Is Happening to Our is Mountains? the title of a program to be presented by the Uinta Group of the Sierra Club today at 8 p.m. in the University of Utah Union Little Theater, s The public program will feature discussion of plans for Red Butte Canyon, recreation and ecological aspects of the mountains and building and zoning regulations along the Wasatch Front. Speakers will include Dr. Hal Lamb, conservation chairman of the Uinta Group, and representatives of the U.S. Forest Service, the Salt Lake County Planning Commission and the University of Utah. Wasatch SUPER SHADES FOR SUMMER . . . FASHIONABLE SUN GLASSES! Protect your eyes and look smart 'n chic at the same time. See the fun 'n assortfrivolous shapes in glasses ed frame styles and colors. PICKASAAARTNEW WARDROBE OF SUMMER SANDALS! Not available lit Ogdon itore. TERRIFIC SAVINGS NOW ON Short sets sizes sizes x 4 1.69 1.19 Pant shifts sizes sizes 4 1.89 x $1 1.49 Favorite styles for all girls . . . and mothers love the g cottons that take lots of easy-carCrisp, wear and machine wash, little ironing needed. Pretty fresh-lookin- e. give an effective warning. Larson, and employe of Atlas Elec trio, was called to solve a minor electrical problem at the crusher site. The L. A. Co. is Young Construction bepreparing to resurface tween Cedar City and St. George, and they will use the crusher for that purpose. land$2 Available Downtown Salt Lalta, Cottonwood Moll, Sugar Home, Ogden and Provo only GIRLS SUMMER SPORTSWEAR! Odd Accident Wills Utahn &EDAR CITY A rolling bolilder killed a Cedar City man in a freak accident near 10 miles south of here Tifesday. poger Larson, 40, was killed instantly when a rock rolled 200 feet and dolvn a mountainside struck him. 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