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Show , By HAL KNIGHT Gov. Calvin L. omm mpton Deseret News Staff Writer Rampton said today he will ask the 1973 Legislature to create a Jordan River Parkway Authority and appropriate $1 five-coun- ty million to help development of the river get started. In an appearance before the Legislative Council, the governor said that cleaning and beautifying the Jordan River couldnt be achieved without also tackling the problems of Utah Lake and its tributaries. For this reason he said he would recommend that the Parkway Authority include not years or more. Nobody could only Salt Lake and Davis 'make any reliable estimate of the total cost at this time, he counties, but also Utah Counadded. ty, Wasatch County and Summit County, even though the Studies on the proposed early work will be mostly in parkway are still being car-- , the Salt Lake Valley. ried out by Salt Lake County, Creation of the parkway is a but the first phase of the projconstruction of two of high priority and ect should not wait longer. Planning has been going on a long time and now we must make a start, Rampton said. firm operating uu Luc ijuith bide of Great Salt Lake said Thursday it would be put out of business if a proposed 1,500-fogap were opened in the Southern Pacific railroad causeway now diriding the lake. Rampton said he would ask the Legislature to appropriate million to help in land acquisition for the dams and lakes. Other accompanying funds from federal sources 31 matr SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH open-ende- This was one of the claims made by the Great Salt Lake Minerals and Chemical Corp. Four other salt and minerals firms operating on the south shore of the lake have made that just the opposite claim unless the solid-fil- l causeway is opened, they all will be. forced out of business. OUE! MAN 04i sr Four Of A Kind - John Radcliffes world almost stopped about 10 years ago. His wife and three children were killed in an auto accident. He was alone. To keep his sanity, John went to work in the most demanding and challenging job he could find . . . running an Indian School in the Northwest Territory. It was more of a dormitory with very little learning. hard cleaning up the most deplorable tions imaginary, only they werent imaginary, but real. Most of the youngsters were orphans, or unwanted. There was no pride, and not much happiness. There wasnt much hope. It seemed that the Indian youngsters were looked on as savages, and education would be a waste of He worked time. But, not to John. He knew that all people have the same brain capacity. Maybe it came to him in a dream. It was inspiration. It did come from some higher power. John said. He had to show the world that member: of the Tsmishan Indian Nation could walk erect with head high. 1. - - . THE SELECTION John picked four of the youngsters almost at random. There was Jack Wolf of the Niska Tribe, Richard Grayowl, Barry Littlestar, and Billy Thundercloud of the One day," Git-sa- Tribe. They became his family, and remain his family. First he had to give them confidence. He placed a two by four on the ground and had them walk across it. It was easy. He raised the long board to three feet. It was still no challenge. John set the board at 20 feet. Not one of them had the confidence to attempt walking across. Then came days of walking across the board at three feet again. Each day, John would raise the board a fraction of an inch until they were soon back up to 20 feet high. Each with the confidence they could walk it. jUiJohn then took his little family into a conference room. He explained that all learning was similar to the two by four. They could learn to do anything, a $tle at a time. r That is how John introduced Friday, September A LONG HARD ROAD , I There were times when things got a bit scary. They ate cheaply and sometimes slept in the old car. John remembers one; time when they had only 36.30 to their names and had to eat for three days before their next engagement. But, those days are behind them. Success came slowly at first and then rocketed. Fame became them. Because they are proud, because they dont want to bring four any kind of unfavorable publicity to their people, the scandal. or trouble in been never boys have of liquor or immorality has never been a part with John pride. says their lives, It has nibbed off on the audience. They have faith? Dope, hear them nightly at the Utah State Fair when announces to the grandstand audience, Candido Candy , You can Ladies and gentlemen, The southern the Chieftones! B 1 15, 1972 eK'tls 'leilsen closed the door to office about 10:30 a.m. to ift the order after hearing it Jerry Mabie, vice presi-n- t of a firm based in Cedar the store ipid, Iowa, opened Promptly at 10 a.m. this morning, Jerry Mabie opened the door to the store and put 16 magazines in racks, most with price tags ranging from $1.50 to $10.40. Mabie said he hoped to have 500 titles of different magazines and movies for sale. titles on display today were securely sealed in plastic envelopes. All the h The sign on the door of the store said no one under 21 qears-o- f age would be admit five-coun- ty The governor said the Parkway Authority should be an independent unit rather than a agency, state Members would be from the five counties involved and perhaps towns through which the river flow's. of the He said creation Parkway Authority should not be part of a proposed bond issue for state park development scheduled in the next Legislature. 1 dont want the Jordan ell' ffi Air Plan v ' ' t fr y - - '"Vv Tli t Kts x frAto. :T VJ J X. i $ r f; i ( J I A,- A) r. 5 'A ' - Utahs industrial and health agency leaders Thursday protested the federal Environmental Protection Agencys rejection of the state air quality plan. ' S4, -- v i4 , S' -- ' s . - 1 - - fl J- ?!., - s 4 ft r . eJ X i ; 4 -- I J !it i $ SJT 1- - I Jt v "f ; I , tS A - s Monkey Business Growing At Hogle Zoo These attractive lemurs, the primate forerunner of regular monkeys, have become part of Hogie Zoo in special arrangement with Denver Zoo. If any develop, they will alternately go to Denver and Salt Lake City. The rare animals are on endangered list of wild species. off-spri- , Professor Laments Erosion Of Ties By LAVOR K. An era of sweeping and sometimes violent change has threatened and sometimes destroyed these bonds of affection, Adamson said. Noting that college presidents once were revered and that teachers once enjoyed close bonds with their students, Adamson said if he were to start over I would not again enter academic life. Adamson said most of the things which attracted him to academic life are either dead or dying. CHAFFIN Education Editor It is of first importune e that we restore the bonds of affection between the university and the community, between administration and faculty, and especially between Dr. teachers and students, Jack H. Adamson said today. of Adamson, University Utah professor of English and former U. administrator, addressed a luncheon of members of governing boards of Utah colleges and universities. The meeting, in the U. of U. Olpin Center, is a feature of the annual Utah Conference on Higher Education (UCHE). relationships, Adamson said. the criticized Adamson American Association of University Professors for protecting incompetents in the name of academic freedom of adand its intimidation ministrators. Such policies, he in have resulted said, of academic infringements freedom by the radical left. With all the dissent and protest around, Adamson said, I do not feel as free as I once did. Adamson said that if, after I thoughtful consideration, were to decide that the Nixon 1980, College Rolls By May Decline By College enrollment will slow down in the 1970s and likely decline by more than a million students in the 1980s. fellow, 1 reach the zero point by the 1984-8- 7 period. If present tenure practices are continued and no other way is found to place young teachers Into faculty ranks, higher education could become a refuge for the elderly, he said. The dramatic change between today and 1990, under current trends, would be the virtual disappearance of the under-3- 5 age group from the teaching ranks. would No one, he said, wish to see colleges and universities become a shelter for an This outlook was suggested to the Utah Conference on Higher Education today by Allan M. Cartter, senior research Utah, loo, has its modern realities and its loss of human Many scholars, he said, now seek positions in Utah in hopes of finding some of the things they loved, such as the sanctiBut ty of the classroom. Carnegie Commission on Higher Education. He gave the annual conferences keynote address in the University of Utahs Olpin Center. Declining enrollments, Cartwill cut the demand for new faculty which could ter said, ted, and an employe was assigned to check identifications. Mabia said this restriction is observed in all 13 of his companys stores in the United' States. store in Ogden was closed Thursday after a judge signed a restraining order citing the store for selling obscene materials. Salt Lake Citys restraining order being prepared by Neil-sewas expected to be issued or. the basis that Mabie has A Mabie-ovne- d not been issued a license to do business. The order will be served by a deputy of the Salt Lake County Sheriffs cffice, and will ask Mabie to show cause why the order should not be made permanent. If the store continues in business after the order is Mabie signed and served, could be held in contempt of court. n Television, radio and See STILL on Page AS CAR ROLLS ON PRICE James was killed today. bu- reaucracy. education in 1990 is be very different it is today, for the years will require drastic adjustments. . .new funding patterns, new forms of education and new structures of organization, he said. . Higher bound to from what intervening Garth L. Mangum, director of the U. of U. Human Resources Institute, discussed iiicuipLrvLi maugcd. A study prepared for the conference predicts a surplus of teachers and a shortage of health manpower. It suggests such factors should be considered in educational decision making and raises the question whether Utah schools should prepare students for existing jobs within the state or for placement in more lucrative job markets elsewhere. City, Regional R D 1, 7 Sports 6 Financial 8, 9 Obituaries 10 Weather Map j 10 6 W. Trotter, U-- 45, 73 N. 1st West, 10 Price, Martinez said speed was a contributing factor to the accident. . The driver was thrown from the car and killed instantly by severe head injuries. Dr. Grant Winn, chairman, Utah Air Conservation Com- mittee, said f fie i 9 Aud t U blanket federal regulations dont necessarily apply to Utah. Someone a thousand miles away doesnt know our local needs and solutions as well as we do ourselves, he emphasized. Utah Power and Light Company officials protested that EPA emission regulations attempt to single out UP & Ls Huntington Power plant for different regulations than other areas of the country. Verl R. Topham, UP & Loffi-cia- l, said: The sulfur content of the coal that will be used at Huntington in its natural state is far below that of coal from other parts of the country. P He indicated that the same sulfur oxide controls were being required here as in areas of high sulfur content, and shouldnt apply in Utah. State health officials agreed, saying also . ihat technology does not n w exist to gain sulfur oxide control. Utah deems it prudent to delay implementation of trols pending development of adequate sulfur oxide technology. conservationists if technology does not exist to control sulfur dioxide then industry should wait until it does before building power plants in such scenic sectors of the state as the east side, of Manti Mountain and the Glen Canyon area. H. J. Dunsmore, director of Environmental Control for Geneva, argued that the Utah approach would meet federal that See PROTESTS, Page B-- 7 Cry Of 'Urban Crisis' Overdone, Utahns Told By ROGER PUSEY Deseret News Staff Writer Government has the capacity to solve its problems and its time America starts admitting this tne president of the National League of Cities said today. Sam CFrTinkl i LL I IwPs Conservation groups and physicians generally applauded the EPA action as desir-cabi- e and within federal laws. The Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce stated that realistic clean air standards were needed which would allow operation of business and industry in the state. testified Highway Patrolman Ramon Martinez said the accident occured at 6:46 a.m. on highway The car went out of control for 435 ft., swerving across the road and down an embankment on to its top. Massell, of who also is Atlanta, Ga., saiu, I think it is time we ask if Americas current concern about government has com- piete credibility." Massell said in recent years the major theme of civic, po-utical and governmental con- ferences has been the urban crisis and the criticism of government has beep increas mayor Action Ads E-- B-- 7 The plan, submitted last winter, provided for a different method of sulfur oxide controls than that outlined by the EPA. Federal officials also questioned whether state emissions were standars stringent enough in controlling hydrocarhan emissions from coke oven doors at the Geneva Plant in Utah County. However, type of civil-servic- e policy for the Vietnam war he said. Colleges no longer are was the best policy for tne naen loco parentis (in place of tion, I would seek a forum the parents), exerting watchto say it. On camful care over students. pus I might not be assaulted, Most faculty members, Adbut I certainly would be haramson said, believe that the assed and intimidated. here of the en loco paris no question, he said, that destruction has been a great entis concept we have lost ome of our freevictory for liberal thought. dom and. . .we deerately need to regain it. sp? This is one of the trends Even more significant than .which has contributed to the the loss of academic freedom, loss of relationship between Adamson said, is the chaotic the university and the public it state of affairs that now exists serves, Adamson said. between faculty and students. I think the public is deeply The shattering growth of concerned about the direction universities has destroyed the universities are taking, and I affection and respect which believe that concern could desocial war historically have existed bevelop into an all-otween teachers and students, See PROFESSOR, Page PRICE MAN KILLED Million aging Utah Officials Miffed At EPA By HARTT WIXOM Environmental Editor 7 i v , Si 4'- ' s :--n W I t Ss Rejection S J. XI lake. In testimony before the Legislative Council, the Mmerals and Chemicals Corp. said that opening the causeway was the most expensive way of solving the problem. Claron Spencer, counsel for the company, said that changing the causeway would put the firm out of business and a $40 million investment would be lost. He said the denser concentration of minerals m the northern portion of the lake helped make them easier to harvest and was an asset to the state. Firms must pay royalties to the state on salt and minerals removed from the lake. careful Spencer urged a study be made of the costs, v W x 1 . companies N &- i said this continuing trend will make their portion of the lake in another 25 worthless years unless a large section of the causeway is replaced wth a trestle to allow free flow of water into both portions of the V Vv, Opening? Still No License Temporary restraining Jer stopping the Adult Book 4 Cinema Shop, 780 W. iftil Temple St., from selling mographic material was Asing 'prepared today by lant' City Attorney John Rampton said the size of the authority was necessary because the ultimate solution to cleaning the river will be to clean up Utah Lake, he said. Techniques for reclaiming the lake do not yet exist, but intensive research being dor a around the nation wiU probably have an answer within five years, he said. Rampton said that creation of two dams on the river will have some effect in improving the quality of the water. Protests The problem is that since the causeway was built in 1956 it has, in effect, created two different lakes. The brine is thinning out in the southern half and becoming highly concentrated in the northern half. them to music instruments. i- - In the first year, they entertained groups who had been charitable to the Indian Dormitory. It was sort of a repayment and pleased them. They learned to sing in Hebrew for a special group who had donated clothes to the school. them at 'They should go on tour, said thoseto who heard His a take decided John concerts. plunge. So, their little four sons would go on tour. governor stated. The parkway is not someit is thing we want to do we have to do something regardless of the cost, he said in support of the project. Members of the Legislative Council appeared to agree. Rampton said he would not seek any taxing power for the proposed Parkway Authority at this time, but didnt close the door on the possibility later . He said he would ask that the authority be granted the would hope that subse- - 1 River Parkway to rise or fall on the bonding issue for parks, he said. power to condemn properly. This would be necessary for acquisition ofiand for a corridor parkway to straddle the river. quent legislatures would appropriate additional sums of the money for the parkway, DESERET NEWS He said that completion of the Jordan Parkway and cleaning its water and that of Utah Lake was an d project which could take 20 to the Utah Legislative Council as it argued for keeping the causeway in its present condition. the governor said. decided, a tway also will be sought. In addition, Salt Lake County has indicated it will provide another $1 million to acquire land. Some money may be available from municipalities through which the river flows, Rampton said. dams in the southern part of is pretty well the county Arguments Heard On Lake Causeway A chemical 4 ing as time goes on. cant My cuncem is whether we are risking overkill. Is todays crisis as critical as we claim? Have we developed an image Thus it behooves those of us in government to constantly strive for improvements in our he said. operations, of doom which is being fed by our own cries of wolf? he asked. His remarks came at a luncheon during the second day of the 65th annual convention of the Utah League of Cities and Towns in the Salt Talace. If Americans are continually told government cant work then government wont work. Massell said just as true- is that if systems of government arent updated government work. We must not be with the old ways things and we must initiative as a result satisfied of doing take the of a rather than always reacting while under pressure. We must be ready to adjust our thinking to whatever degree is necessary to create confidence in a way that will reflect the responsiveness the public now expects in its government, he told the municipal officials. |