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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 2

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VJ Page 2THE KERALD, Provo, Utah Thursday, February Provo City Signs Agreement With County on Fire Effort II Si XX campaign to raise $5 million for a center for the performing arts in Provo. The resolution, prepared some months ago, will be re-typed and presented again for the commissioners' signatures. The resolution also specifies (hat the commission will give consideration to use of city-owned property between 400 and 500 West streets and between Center and 100 South Street as a site for the cultural center. Mrs. Trevor Christ ensen presented a petition signed by a number of residents asking that the street be widened and sidewalk provided for students crossing at the narrow intersection at 800 North and 200 East.

Mr. Thornock also pointed out that some of the money for fire protection in the county area comes from fte U.S. Forest Service to the states, and subsequently to the county. In other action, the commission signed a proclamation setting 1972 as Diamond Jubilee Year for the Uinta National Forest In signing the proclamation, Mayor Vert G. Dixon pointed out that the Uinta Forest was the first forest established in Utah, and one of the first in the nation.

Commissioners gave tentative approva. to a resolution presented by Bob M-ody, representing the Utah ailey Cultural Foundation, seeking city support in the i AA nitt ilni-i Art VAainUfC IIIUIIIwiuiiwii wi ww vitjuio Can Be Cosily to Buyers DENTIST GARY MATTHEWS examines the teeth of Jim one of the dentists participating in visits to 50 elementary Stone, 1-year-old first grade student at the Cherry HQ1 schools, from Nephl to Heber Oty, to encourage students to Elementary School In Orem. Although his front two teem are take care of their teeth. Dental Health Week is being ob- misslng, the rest are intact and healthy. Dr.

Matthew was served this week. Litigation in Maryland, Nevada Indians say Holds Up Liquidation of 4 I St I 4VA i I Hi CLEVELAND (UPI)-Russell Means, director of the American Indian Center here, says he will lead a group of Indians to North Vietnam to conduct separate negotiations for the early release of 80 American Indian prisoners of war. Means said he wants to "impress upon Asia that American Indians should be considered in any international relations established with the U.S" "We have our sovereignty as do other nations because of our special relationship to the federal government," Means asserted. "The Supreme Court has defined the reservations as dependent domestic nations." Means said the trip to North Vietnam was set up in July when a group of American Indian women met with Vietnamese women in Vancouver, British Colombia. He did not say when the trip would be.

Hercules To Build New Plant MAGNA, Utah (UPI) The Navy and Hercules, Inc. Wednesday broke ground for a plant at the missile firm's Bacchus works to house the manufacture of the Poseidon missile's propulsion system. Hercules is cooperating with the Thiokol Corp. at Brigham Gty to produce the first and second stages of the 34-foot long submarine weapon. Rear Adm.

Levering Smith, director of the Navy's strategic Systems projects office, set off a small charge of explosives at the site of a casting complex for the missile. He presented Hercules employes with a flag and said, "As a member of the Poseidon team, you made significant contributions in the design, development, production and testing of the Poseidon propulsion system, thereby contributing materially to the success of the Poseidon weapon system development and production program." Wildlife Group Meets Feb. 25 SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) The Utah Chapter of the Wildlife Society, a 96 member group of teachers, forest rangers, scientists and other professionals, meets Feb. 25 in Salt Lake City for its yearly two-day conference. The society takes an active role in preventing man induced environmental degradation," said Jess Low, president of the state chapter.

"Its objective is to develop and promote sound stewardship of wildlife resources and of the environments upon which wildlife and man depend. 1 By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN Provo city commissioners today signed an agreement to furnish fire protection in the Utah County area surrounding the city. Payment received from Utah County for this fire protection is appropriated to the cities on a per capita basis and also on the basb of service rendered. Stan Brown, Provo Fire Chief, told commissioners mat the city's payment for services rendered to the county during 1971 will total The Provo Fire Department answered 30 fire calls in the county last year, he said. Clarence Thornock, Uinta National Forest supervisor, who was present at the commission meeting, pointed out that Utah County has received national acc'aim as having one of the best integrated and coordinated programs for the protection of wild land in the United States.

Springville CC Seeks Members SPRINGVILLE The Springville Chamber of Commerce announced that its annual membership drive is being held, and invites former and potential members to join the 1972 chamber activities, according to Kelly Jensen, vice president and membership rfuiirman. A letter of invitation has been mailed to all members, former members and potential members, reiterating chamber events of the past year. All businesses and individual dizens are invited to join. Mr. Jensen said mat the chamber hopes to better last year's membership of 100 by many more additional members who can participate in and benefit from activity in chamber work.

Gov. Rampton (Continued From Page 1) attorney general for an opinion on the constitutionality of a section of Utah Law retained in H.B. 13 which reapportions state school boards. Section 53-4-3 provides, "If by reason of redisricting, the boundary lines of any representative precinct are so changed that any member of board from the precinct becomes a non-resident of the precinct, then the member shall be permitted to retain his membership during the term for which he was elected." Rampton said the language of the section would appear to "of fend the one-man one-vote rule." "I am not going to veto the bill," Rampton said, "and I would prefer not to refer it back to the Special Session of the Utah Legislature now in session if in fact the problem can be resolved by interpretation." The governor asked Romney if the language is in fact unconstitutional, and if so, could it be removed so the balance of the act could become operational. If the plan could be made operational, Rampton asked Romney to comment further on whether present board members could fill the remainder of their terms if their they were in a district already substantially equal under the present census.

He also asked whether all the board members in adjusted districts would have to stand for re-election, or if members in areas of the district with a substantially average population could continue to the expiration of their terms. Escaper Says Hell Return DRAPER A 31-year-old convicted robber who failed to return to the Utah State Prison after classes in Salt Lake City Wednesday said today he would turn himself in. That was the substance of a phone call made by Lindell Newton. 31, to prison officials this morning. Warden John Turner said he expected Turner back this afternoon.

The bullsnake, common in the Midwest, is one of the four largest reptiles in North 7 4 1 problem which stands in the way of additional payments Is getting the matters out of court and getting the titles cleared so they can be sold, Mr. Brimhall declared. The trial date for the Baltimore case was set, then postponed, and no additional date has been given. The Nevada case was set for last year, then postponed to earlier this year, and it Is hoped that the case can get into court in March, he said. Provo Temple (Continued From Page 1) Temple in the way it has been set apart to be used.

He challenged parents to teach their children to plan on attending the Temple and to look forward to the spiritual blessings they would receive there. Elder Thomas B. Monson, a member of the Church's Council of the Twelve spoke on the sacred and holy nature of temples and their fulfilling purposes. "It is only when we lose our eternal perspective that we founder in darkness," he said in his appeal for members of the Church to use the Temple for personal direction and growth. In Celestial Room The dedicatory services were conducted in the Celestial Room of the Temple where members of the General Authorities and their wives, along with other dignitaries of the church were gathered.

Over closed circuit television, the proceedings of the dedication were extended to groups seated in rooms throughout the Temple, in the Harriot Activity Center, the George Albert Smith Fieldhouse arid the deJong Concert Hall on the BYU campus. The dedicatory prayer included the following excerpts: "Wherefore, according to the pattern Thou has given, and in harmony with the course pursued by Thy servants who have been before, and acting in the authority of that priesthood which is after the order of Thy Son, and in His Holy Name, we dedicate this temple to Thee, the Lord. House for Ordinances "We dedicate it as a house of baptism, a house of endowment, a house of marriage, a house of righteousness, for the living and the dead." "We humbly pray Thou wilt accept this edifice and pour out Thy blessings upon it as a house to which Thou wUt come and in which Thy Spirit will direct all that is "And now finally we dedicate this temple as an abode for Thee and Thy Son and Thy Holy Spirit and ask that Thou wilt place Thy ratifying seal of approval upon this dedicatory ordinance and upon all that we have done and shall do in this Thy Holy House which we now give until Thee the Following the reading of the dedicatory prayer, Elder Harold B. Lee instructed, then led all those in attendance in the traditional "Hosanna Shout." The Provo Temple is the 17th such structure to be so dedicated since the LDS Church was founded in 1830. It now becomes the 15th Temple in use.

The choir for the first session represented Payson, Provo, and Spanish Fork area. The evening session choir included representatives of Brigham Young University, Orem and Wasatch Stake. The First Presidency said the church hopes to have both the Provo and Ogden Temples open for church ordinances by March 1. tDUrSLOWSTFOOCPflttr reasEmcMTiu.ntLUT. REAMS Hew PHARMACY I CABBAGE Former Pad PEPPERS I Crisp Green Belts tad r.RAPFFRIIIT I rink jmuwwmni mi fresk APPLES D.J 9 I Daliciew .7 BEEF ROAST llHtCibbaa RMmdtww fc.OV I LAMB CHOPS USD ShaLGrt lb 69' PORK ROAST Normal pty i IfsiMlutt lb.

7 I MUTTON CHOPS Utah Grow. 1.39 WUTTOM WtMloorHoH CirtandWroppod lb. 33 COCOA iKorshoy's cfl( A BhstnnUH. 7 I a NOODLES Amorkea loawfy Ac I 254 Ik. Ph 07 I A i FRUIT MIX Miio High 1 for i HASHBROW i Slim Jim 35 i Froion.2lb.Pkg.

Zfor MILK Half Gal. 39 Frosb Dtp. Cut Green Beans DolMonto siocl ilMf.M 5 far I II Cm for I Potato Flakes I I mi. jpi Mr.Smul ICECREAM BaMimC 49 4 17,1 AO Ittbol CAKE MIXES i Ciach $1001 'UOi for I I Salad Dressing i GRAPE JUICE I h. $100 I Freien 12 Oz lor i MUMCDC Chun King taJ Frozen for 1 BUTTER A Hilond Festival Pound Quorttrtd 69' i DETERGENT I Tjmpe 0.

00 liquid tor 7 CHAMP nr. PrellTwia Q( I Potk.Roa.l.W 07 I I All VALENTINES 50 OFF RETAIL I ENVELOPES i AND TABLETS I loving Rog.7r 39c SCREENS I Splatter Reg.2.lt. IRONING BOARD PAD COVER iH.tr ..59 PLASTIC ASSORTAUNT I 7M awjVBBoaowaawewiawi VE ADD OMY 1U TO TKE The manipulation of weights of pre-packaged luncheon meats can be as costly to the buyer as the manipulation of the quality inside the package, according to Troy Mott, Provo City inspector of weighu and measures. A recent bulletin from the Western States Weights and Measures Newsletter stated that the buyer "needs magic abacus to compare relative values among seven different-sized packages of bologna, six different weights of liver susage, and eight different weights of salami." Weights Found In one supermarket was found 16 different sizes of prepackaged lunch meats, ranging from three to 18tt ounces. These included such potentially misleading oddities as 3H Tough Law On Massage Businesses SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -The Salt Lake County Commission has passed an ordinance stiffening the rules that govern massage parlors and making owners liable to lose their license if there is illegal sexual activity on the premises.

The regulations, which take effect Feb. 24, still allow women to massage men and men to massage women. "The old law simply wasn't adequate," said Deputy County Attorney John Avery. "The definition of illegal activity was so vague it wouldn't pass the constitutional test. "It used to simply prohibit operating or maintaining an establishment in an immoral way or for immoral purposes and we have just tied it in with the state code.

We've simply prohibited any violation of state law." Avery said the new rules ex- pand the county health depart- ment's oowers of investieation. Physical examinations and licenses will be required for employes and applicants convicted of crimes of moral turpitude or whohavecommunicablediseases will be denied permission to work he said. Power to license establishments will remain with the county commission under the new rules, which take effect Feb. 24. The commission will act after investigation by the county sheriff and the health department KBYU-TV Gets $33,075 Grant WASHINGTON, D.C.

-KBYU-TV has received a $33,075 grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, according to Utah Representative Gunn McKay, D-Utah. The purpose of the grant is to help the public TV stations strengthen and expand their services to the community. Most of the money is to be used for the production of local, coitununity-oriented prograrnming. Two Ogden stations, KOET-TV and KWCS-TV, also received grants totaling $25,725 from the broadcasting corporation. ounces, i 5, 13, and the ubiquitous 14-ounce packages instead of the' old-fashioned 16-ounce pound, the newsletter reported.

It is difficult enough to estimate in your head the comparative value of the same brand's five-ounce package of bologna for 45 cents against its seven-ounce package for 50 cents. But under the present circumstances, the shopper must also comoare a IVt ounce package of slicedTiam at 59 cents with one of 4Vi ounces at 69 cents. May Seem Illogical The juggling of weights may not seem as illogical to the packer as to the shopper. One packer sells his eight-ounce bulk pieces of braunschweiger for 43 cents. His slicked package is nine ounces for 61 cents.

Unless the shopper stops to figure the cost per pound, he will not reclize that he pays for the bulk package at the rate of 86 cents per pound, but for the sliced at the rate of $1.08. A 4tt ounce package of bologna for 39 cents comes to 11.39 per pound; an eight-ounce package at 52 cents comes to a 14-ounce bulk piece is only 69 cents. Unsliced lun-chmeats also keep better in the refrigerator. The newsletter points out that the magic abacus is at its most profitable when packers combine lunch meats and cheese, or several types of lunch meats in a variety or combination pack. If the shoppers buy eight ounces of pimiento cheese for 53 cents and eight ounces of lunch meat for 57 cents, the pound cost would be $1.10.

If a packer puts them together in one package, you may find the per-pound rate is 31.39. Because of concern over both freshness and price, more shoppers have begun to buy lunchmeats at the supermarket deli counters. A comparison indicates that the prices are no higher for these freshly sliced cheese, and in fact less costly than brand- name prepackaged varieties, the newsletter reported. GRA to Host Square Dance The Geneva Recreation Association will host a square dance this Saturday, at the GRA Hall, according to Dean Clark, director. The dance will begin at 8:30 jn.

and all square dancers are invited to attend. Now the Army starts you at $288.00 a mo. And you may not even have to spend it. SFC Curtis W.Spencer Provo 374-7295 SwTfWshing Rum's Discount Pharmacy ih-vitos you to stop in price quotes glodly given. BUY RlbHT AT REAM'S AND SAVE) OFF I BUM financial institutions, reported today.

Mr. Brimhall said his office is defending a suit in Baltimore, and is engaged in another suit in Las Vegas concerning property held by the Savings and Loan Association. While there are some other matters which need to be cleared up as well these are the main stumbling blocks to closing the case, he indicated. Mr. Brimhall pointed out that they still have book values of over (6 million in assets, in-eluding loans, properties, certificates of deposit, and real estate contracts.

However, these book values do not reflect accurately what can be realized in liquidation, he said. The director said it takes $1,200,000 in cash to make a five percent dividend payment to depositors. So far, the Department of Financial Institutions has paid back 70 percent of the depositors' money. The big Food Prices Continued From Page 1) billion in 1972. This would be a record and would compare to $15.7 billion in 1971.

The previous record of $17.1 billion was set in 1947. A three-day White House conference on business in 1990 ended Wednesday. Sen. Fred H. Harris, charged it had been a "festival of self-congratulation" for big business.

Harris contended that leaders of big labor unions and gadflys such as consumer advocate Ralph Nader and Federal Communications Commission member Nicholas Johnson purposely had been excluded from the conference. About 1,500 delegates participated in the conference. Most of them were corporation executives. Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans disputed Harris' criticism, saving "all points of view were well represented" at the conference.

Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said that United Auto Workers Vice President Pat Greathouse and Einar Mohn, director of the Western Conference of Teamsters, were participants. New Air (Continued From Page 1) the raids today for a total of six missions. They struck 26 miles southwest of Da Nang. The Communists fired nearly 40 122mm rockets into Da Nang air base and its environs Wednesday, killing three South Vietnamese civilians and wounding 10 American airmen and 7 Vietnamese civilians.

UPI correspondent Donald A. Davis, reporting from Pleiku in the Central Highlands, said today that Viet Cong commandos managed to penetrate the My Hoa refugee resettlement center two miles north of Phu Cat, 260 miles northeast of Saigon. The Viet Cong attacked, with dynamite charges, firing automatic rifles. A force of 200 South Vietnamese militiamen arrived and drove off the guerr illas, killing three of them. Two militiamen were killed and two The North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong carried out 41 attacks across South Vietnam in slightly more than 24 hours Tuesday and Wednesday, prompting allied officials to suggest it may have been the opening of a long-predicted Communist offensive designed, to embarrass President Nixon on his Feb.

visit to Peking. litigation in Maryland and Nevada is holding up final liquidation ot property in the defunct Utah Savings and Loan Association, Smoot Brimhall, Salt Lake Gty, Utah director of Soviet Chemist Brings Back Ancient Life MOSCOW (UPI)-A Soviet geochemist has brought back to life organisms that flourished 230 million years ago, the official Tass news agency says. He was only trying to find the origin of the red color of some potassium ore. Tass said "the paleozoic visitors (which) came to life, grew and even multiplied" were a surprise. Tass said Wednesday that an article in the current issue of the monthly magazine "Soviet Union" detailed the work of geochemist N.

Chudinov of the Berezniki potassium combine near Perm, 800 miles east of Moscow. "The discovery of the organic nature of the coloring in Perm's potassium salts also became the discovery of the ability of organisms to remain in a state of anobiosis, or deep lethargy, and, under certain conditions, to return to active life," Tass said. According to Tass, Chudinov discovered organisms "which flourished 250 million years ago, during the Paleozoic era, in the Great Perm Sea, the waves of which once rolled from the north Urals to Kharkov." Tass did not explain how the age of the organisms was determined. "But Chudinov didn't merely discover this ancient and mysterious world he revived it in his laboratory," Tass said. "The paleozoic visitors came to life, grew and even multiplied." Tass quoted an otherwise unidentified professor, B.

Perfi-lyev, as saying: "This is a discovery of world significance and may enable us to penetrate into nature's holy of holies the evolution of life on earth." Mountain Bell Wire Stolen Mountain Bell Telephone Co. has reported the theft of approximately 16,000 feet of copper wire from telephone poles in the Lehi-Fairfield area, according to the Utah County Sheriff's office. The wire was taken from poles running through the fields southwest of the junction of Redwood Road and the route to Fairfield, it is reported. Publlihtd every afternoon Monday through Friday and Sunday morning by The Daily Herald, 1555 Norm 200 W. Street, Provo, Utah 14401.

B. E. JENSEN, Publisher Entered at second class matter at the post office in Provo, Utah. MEMBER Audit Bureau of Circulation United Press International NEA Service SUBSCRIPTION RATES UTAH COUNTY One month, currier 5 2.50 Six months, carrier J15.0C One year, carrier 130 00 Mall, enywhere In United States One month JJ One year 0-00 Herald Telephone Numbers PROVO 37J-5OS0 I HAPPINESS fea Hodrhy Mouth a a Let Ream's Fl Your Family Perscriptidny A I COMPLETE PRESCRIPTION SERVICE NATIONAL CHILDREN'S DENTAL HEALTH WEEK 1 VW2 ttftamiw Pm i upen s.vu H.m. r.m..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1909-2009