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% FEB 7 ^ LAS VEGAS MORNING TRIBUNE attar ge ad 1a- ;a- de re jad a 9 ad ii- 3S. a ng tig R H Swimming Poo! Bonds Slated Approval Toda Protests, if any, in opposition to a bond issue for construction of new swimming pools in Las Vegas, will be heard by city commissioners today in their formal meeting set for 2 o’clock in the council chambers of the War Memorial building. Under the provisions of the charter, the bond issue, which has been advertised for the past several weeks, -will automatically be authorized unless objection is made by 10 per cent of the registered voters in the last election. Should Such opposition be presented, the bond issue may then be voted upon in the next city 1 election. ' Swimming pools planned for construction this year include a regulation pool and bath house facilities at the civic center on the Westside, and tournament-size pool and bath houses, with possible addition of a teen-age recreation center, at the north end of the city park. According to the city plan, construction of the pool will have no effect upon Helldorado and other rodeos. There will be a distance of one city block between the back of the bath houses and the front of the grandstand, which is held to. be ample for all wild west celebrations. The Helldorado itself, is not in jeopardy, either this or any" other year by such construction, planning engineers maintain. __.rnaoii sculpture, ------- Bryan Bunker Going to Utah The industrial development of the west, with particular reference to maintenance of the steel-producing facilities at Geneva, Utah, and Fontana, Calif., will be studied at a two-day council to be held in Salt Lake'City Feb. 12 and 13, and Bryan Bunker, vice president of the chamber of commerce, has been delegated to represent southern Nevada’s interests in the conference. Learning the facts, and form' ulating a program to determine how the steel plants can become an integral part of the West’s permanent economy is the announced purpose of tbe gathering Speakers will include such personages in the industrial field as Arthur J. Boynton, Chicago; Dr. J. R. Mahoney, tjniversity of Utah; Morris B. Pendleton, Los Angeles; F. T. Letchfieid, San Francisco, and Ralph Owen Brewster, U. S. senator from Maine. The first day will be devoted to a tour of the Geneva plant, and on Tuesday lectures and discussions will take up the business sessions of the council. T