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s Discovered 777) o Q r; 77 n ' ' ' l) I II )i !UUCvl 1 rr u Volume 8 No. 11 Suspects Apprehened in UTC Theft By Robin Cross Feature Editor For over two months an organized group of at least 6 males have been stealing textbooks and returning them to the bookstore. One member of this group alone returned over $100 worth of stolen books. Bookstore employees liegan to be aware of a possible theft ring when they noticed the same faces and names returning an unusual amount of books. The policy on returning Ixioks is the student must have a receipt or an official drop slip. If they have neither of these they must obtain approval from the manager. The thieves, all over 18, were stealing the majority of books out of the bookstore and returning them at a later date. They were attempting to forge names County to The chairman of the Utah County Commission says he's disturbed by the i 9M The county will start prosecuting people who don't pay their parking tickets. "I think all these people ought to be given the blessing of paying their bills," stated Karl LymanUtah County Commission chairman- Photo by Randy Stevens. , , OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF UTAH TECHNICAL COLLEGE AT and signatures on drop cards. Two of the six suspects have been apprehended. Brian Harwood, manager of the bookstore stated that it was the special training and procedure the bookstore employees follow that enabled the suspects to be detected. In a matter of two hours on November 14th, U.T.C. police had enough evidence gathered agaiast the suspects to prosecute. Word circulated that the U.T.C. police were looking for these suspects and later the same day one suspect turned himself in. Two days later another suspect made a confession.Those arrested are working with U.T.C. police and paying back the stolen money. The four known remaining suspects are currently Prosecute number of people flaunting the law by not paying their parking tickets. "hH Bookstore employees became aware of the possible theft ring when the same names and faces were noticed returning an unusual amount of books. Two of six suspects have been apprehended. Photo by Scott Hancock. under investigation. The end of the quarter is an obvious time for book theft. This is because of the possibility of obtaining an easy Unpaid Tickets Karl Lyman says the county will start prosecuting people who don't mi J 1 refund from the Ixiokstore. Eric Frame, chief of UTC police, said that the case w ill be turned over to the county prosecutor. pay their parking tickets. The county recently adopted a parking ordinance for county-owned space adjacent to the Utah County building and other nearby buildings. A full-time parking officer issues the citations. "I think all these people ought to be given the blessings of paying their bills," said Lyman. Lyman said he has received about 100 unpaid parking tickets. "I don't think it's right to ignore these. I feel strongly against people who take advantage of situations." he said. The county ordinance imposes a $2 fine for overtime parking, increasing it to $5 if the fine isn't paid in 24 hours. Nov. 30 Dec. 1 Dec. 1 Dec. 3-7 Dec. 6 Dec. 7 Dec. 7 Dec. 8 Dec. 10 PROVOOREM NEWSLINE By Alan TRADE KISSINGER AND ROCKEFELLER FOR HOSTAGES Rep. George Hansen suggested that Henry Kissinger and David Rockefeller should take the place of the 49 American hostages being held in the U. S. Embassy in Tehran. "I think it's time to stop covering up, time to stop excusing ourselves for the mistake we made bringing the shah to the U.S.," he said. "I think what we need to do if we're going to persist in the hostage game is let David Rockefeller, the banker in New York, and Henry Kissinger, who seem to be so involved in this business, come over and replace the hostages and let the innocent people go home," Hansen said. "Some questions need to be answered, by Henry Kissinger, David Rockefeller and others who were instrumental in bringing the shah to the United States. They could be responsible for creating a world crisis and bringing World War III closer" Hansen said. White House press secretary Jody Powell said the administration does not approve of Hansen s private trip to Tehran to seek the release of the 49 Americans being held hostage there. COLUMBIA QUAKE KILLS 44 Bogota, Columbia- The most powerful earthquake to hit Columbia in 20 years left 44 dead and 600 injured. It also caused an estimated $20 million in damage, government officials reported Saturday. Officials said the quake destroyed 1,000 homes and buildings mostly in the coffee-growing region. It left 2,000 vehicles stranded and knocked out electrical, telephone and water services in 50 communities. Scientists said the country was spared worse damage because the quake didn't hit in a populated area. If it had, entire cities could have been reduced to rubble. Damages and loss of life were heaviest in towns and cities in western and central Columbia. KHOMEINI DEMANDS A TRIAL FOR THE SHAII Iran's revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini insisted that they had the "absolute right" to bring the shah to trial Saturday. So the deadlock over the fate of 49 American hostages at the U.S. Embassy heads into its fourth week with no resolution in sight. Khomeini has also accused the United states and Israel of plotting against holy Moslem shrines in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, and said Carter's "big mistake was his failure to understand the depth of feeling of the Islamic movement." He appealed to Moslems to "rise up and defend Islam" against "infidels.""Peace can only be attained if the criminal hands of the oppressors are cutoff," Khomeini said in a message to Moslem national liberation movements. There has been no further word about the condition of the hostages, who have not been seen by any outsider since the first days of their captivity. The United States has failed to comply with Iran's requests and has warned of "extremely grave" consequence if any of the hostages are harmed. This Week. Basketball - SUSC at UTC Basketball . Blue Mt. - Oregon at UTC Senate Tree Decorating Contest Begins Christmas displays and exhibits Window Painting contest The Planemaker CNCC Invitational - Rangley Co Dead Day Christmas Dance Inter-Club Council Christmas party UTCcafeteria Family Night Christmas Program 7 p.m.Student Center November 30, 1979 Jones
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Tradewinds, 1979-11-30 |
Description | Tradewinds was the name of the student newspaper for Utah Technical College at Provo, between 1971-12-14 and 1984-11-15. |
Date.Original | 1979-11-30 |
Publisher | Utah Valley University |
Subject headings | Utah Technical College at Provo--History; Utah Technical College at Provo/Orem--History; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | Tradewinds, 1979-11-30 |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright 2013 Utah Valley University |
Item.Year | 1979 |
Item.Month | 11 |
Item.Day | 30 |
Genre | newspaper |
Description
Title | Tradewinds, 1979-11-30 |
Description | Tradewinds was the name of the student newspaper for Utah Technical College at Provo, between 1971-12-14 and 1984-11-15. |
Publisher | Utah Valley University |
Subject headings | Utah Technical College at Provo--History; Utah Technical College at Provo/Orem--History; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright 2013 Utah Valley University |
Full text | s Discovered 777) o Q r; 77 n ' ' ' l) I II )i !UUCvl 1 rr u Volume 8 No. 11 Suspects Apprehened in UTC Theft By Robin Cross Feature Editor For over two months an organized group of at least 6 males have been stealing textbooks and returning them to the bookstore. One member of this group alone returned over $100 worth of stolen books. Bookstore employees liegan to be aware of a possible theft ring when they noticed the same faces and names returning an unusual amount of books. The policy on returning Ixioks is the student must have a receipt or an official drop slip. If they have neither of these they must obtain approval from the manager. The thieves, all over 18, were stealing the majority of books out of the bookstore and returning them at a later date. They were attempting to forge names County to The chairman of the Utah County Commission says he's disturbed by the i 9M The county will start prosecuting people who don't pay their parking tickets. "I think all these people ought to be given the blessing of paying their bills," stated Karl LymanUtah County Commission chairman- Photo by Randy Stevens. , , OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF UTAH TECHNICAL COLLEGE AT and signatures on drop cards. Two of the six suspects have been apprehended. Brian Harwood, manager of the bookstore stated that it was the special training and procedure the bookstore employees follow that enabled the suspects to be detected. In a matter of two hours on November 14th, U.T.C. police had enough evidence gathered agaiast the suspects to prosecute. Word circulated that the U.T.C. police were looking for these suspects and later the same day one suspect turned himself in. Two days later another suspect made a confession.Those arrested are working with U.T.C. police and paying back the stolen money. The four known remaining suspects are currently Prosecute number of people flaunting the law by not paying their parking tickets. "hH Bookstore employees became aware of the possible theft ring when the same names and faces were noticed returning an unusual amount of books. Two of six suspects have been apprehended. Photo by Scott Hancock. under investigation. The end of the quarter is an obvious time for book theft. This is because of the possibility of obtaining an easy Unpaid Tickets Karl Lyman says the county will start prosecuting people who don't mi J 1 refund from the Ixiokstore. Eric Frame, chief of UTC police, said that the case w ill be turned over to the county prosecutor. pay their parking tickets. The county recently adopted a parking ordinance for county-owned space adjacent to the Utah County building and other nearby buildings. A full-time parking officer issues the citations. "I think all these people ought to be given the blessings of paying their bills," said Lyman. Lyman said he has received about 100 unpaid parking tickets. "I don't think it's right to ignore these. I feel strongly against people who take advantage of situations." he said. The county ordinance imposes a $2 fine for overtime parking, increasing it to $5 if the fine isn't paid in 24 hours. Nov. 30 Dec. 1 Dec. 1 Dec. 3-7 Dec. 6 Dec. 7 Dec. 7 Dec. 8 Dec. 10 PROVOOREM NEWSLINE By Alan TRADE KISSINGER AND ROCKEFELLER FOR HOSTAGES Rep. George Hansen suggested that Henry Kissinger and David Rockefeller should take the place of the 49 American hostages being held in the U. S. Embassy in Tehran. "I think it's time to stop covering up, time to stop excusing ourselves for the mistake we made bringing the shah to the U.S.," he said. "I think what we need to do if we're going to persist in the hostage game is let David Rockefeller, the banker in New York, and Henry Kissinger, who seem to be so involved in this business, come over and replace the hostages and let the innocent people go home," Hansen said. "Some questions need to be answered, by Henry Kissinger, David Rockefeller and others who were instrumental in bringing the shah to the United States. They could be responsible for creating a world crisis and bringing World War III closer" Hansen said. White House press secretary Jody Powell said the administration does not approve of Hansen s private trip to Tehran to seek the release of the 49 Americans being held hostage there. COLUMBIA QUAKE KILLS 44 Bogota, Columbia- The most powerful earthquake to hit Columbia in 20 years left 44 dead and 600 injured. It also caused an estimated $20 million in damage, government officials reported Saturday. Officials said the quake destroyed 1,000 homes and buildings mostly in the coffee-growing region. It left 2,000 vehicles stranded and knocked out electrical, telephone and water services in 50 communities. Scientists said the country was spared worse damage because the quake didn't hit in a populated area. If it had, entire cities could have been reduced to rubble. Damages and loss of life were heaviest in towns and cities in western and central Columbia. KHOMEINI DEMANDS A TRIAL FOR THE SHAII Iran's revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini insisted that they had the "absolute right" to bring the shah to trial Saturday. So the deadlock over the fate of 49 American hostages at the U.S. Embassy heads into its fourth week with no resolution in sight. Khomeini has also accused the United states and Israel of plotting against holy Moslem shrines in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, and said Carter's "big mistake was his failure to understand the depth of feeling of the Islamic movement." He appealed to Moslems to "rise up and defend Islam" against "infidels.""Peace can only be attained if the criminal hands of the oppressors are cutoff," Khomeini said in a message to Moslem national liberation movements. There has been no further word about the condition of the hostages, who have not been seen by any outsider since the first days of their captivity. The United States has failed to comply with Iran's requests and has warned of "extremely grave" consequence if any of the hostages are harmed. This Week. Basketball - SUSC at UTC Basketball . Blue Mt. - Oregon at UTC Senate Tree Decorating Contest Begins Christmas displays and exhibits Window Painting contest The Planemaker CNCC Invitational - Rangley Co Dead Day Christmas Dance Inter-Club Council Christmas party UTCcafeteria Family Night Christmas Program 7 p.m.Student Center November 30, 1979 Jones |
Item.Page | 1 |
Genre | newspaper |
Page type | page |
Extent | 1856720 |
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