Show I— Tk HtfiUJawmil Lagan Utah Monday Sept 29 1999 Newsboy Covers 'Hard Times' Route Making the Sound Barrier Niagara tourism er pock-marke- 22 1936 nature's way it took four days of work this time to dam the flow over the 182 foot falls with 15500 tons of rock and earth The construction diverted 10500 cubic foet of water per second away from the 1100 foot American brink to Horseshoe Falls the Canadian section of Niagara Falls Last spring after President Nixon authorized $15 million and the loan of US Army Engineers to the American-Canadia- n International Joint Commission responsible for preservation and control of the folia businessmen on both sides of the falls feared dewatering would detour tourists Increased Visitor Flow round-the-clo- Instead creased weekend n recognized as danger of modern life equal to air and water material! for tban $151 million annually la being ipent on I residential and commercial bindings Fiberglass is playing a major role In this area A Chicago bank top left chose flberglass draperies for Its new building because they I trap noise that normally would bounce off windows back Into the room At top right an engineer works ander a fiberglass celling that absorbs up to 51 per cent of the noise that strikes it When a new system drowned out speakers' words at the Miami Beach convention hall fiberglass baffles were hung from the celling to cut the noise level nearly la half for the 198$ Republican National Convention bottom Nolae hu been poUn-itlo- More Travel-Recreatio- sound-deadenin- g n Auto Tours Now on Tape : By JIM CROSSLEY 1 If you can’t tell the players without a scorecard how can you tell a gulch from a butte without a tape recorder? 'Talk about guides to the outdoors Auto Tape Tours Inc has Introduced a new technique that tames nature until it rivals a Disney subject on Sunday night television To thoroughly relish a tour of a national park what is needed is an expert guide in the car explaining as the family moves from point to point Guide books are fine A personal guide is even better Aut3 Tape Tours Inc puts the guide ui the car Rental tape recorders are obtained at locations near the entrances to the parks Slip in the cassette Snap on the recorder Follow directions on Listen to the taped commentary as the windshield scans the scenery like this In the Smokies Sightseeing Is more Uke aa easy-cha- lr experience thanks to Tour Tapes driving speed Turn the recorder off when the car pauses for the occupants to use their cameras or take in a view Turn it back on when the driving resumes The prerecorded tape explains what you are seeing and like a good teacher adds depth and perception to the trip Six North American na- tional parks had the service past summer: Great Smoky Glacier during the Rocky Mountain Grand Teton in the United States and Banff and Jasper in Canada Tourists have accepted the idea so readily that the recorders and tapes should be showing up almost anywhere Tapes pass on interesting comments on the geology and history of the area In Glacier National there's a thorough discussion of glaciers of course how these ice rivers exist even though temperat ires aren't excessively low how they - are formed from snow and how they flow downhill At Grand Teton there are tales of the region's early mountain men and their furtrading adventures The wild life and scenic aspects of the parks are important subjects for the tapes In Glacier it is pointed out that every large and important mammal native to the United States except four species is found in the park Reproduced are the distinctive sounds of birds and animals that might help identify them The fall tour of the Smokies when the leaves have turned is a fantasy of color The tape for the drive either direction between Gatlinburg and Cherokee points out some of the 150 kinds of trees found in the luxuriant woodlands Having a commentator with you in the comfort of your car gives you forewarn 30-mi- ing of sights coming around the next comer of the road Safety precautions information on things to do and even information on where to purchase supplies and necessities are right with you Exploring nature with music scored in (there is background and “bridge" music)! It's the latest and here to stay ?robably dub being formed and a charter membership is rewarded with discount rights and a subscription to a club news- letter Sightseers on the go who want to experience the most they can absorb in a limited time will appreciate the innovation The tapes are not a substitute for a horseback tour or a g hike But they're fun at that (Ntwipam fftterpriw Am) back-packin- India's population is growing at the rate of 22 per cent each year Perhaps The Animals Also Feel That tray l CHESsIXGTON England UPI)— At Chessingfon Zoo Sunday man joined the animals behind bars The sign outside the cage laid “Please Don't Feed the Humans" Two men one painted with Uadi on his face and hands and a woman whose 1 face was colored white sat at a table They sat around a table read newspapers listened to radio and were served tea cheese and biscuits The three Peter Kuttner Stuart Brisley and Janet Deuters of London said they were conducting the experiment for a scientific group As crowd pressed around the cage Brisley said “I began to feel a sense of hysteria and antagonism against the people outside" tourism has Diving after a the 600 NEW HAVEN ConnNEA)— Every day morning and night more than a million boys deliver newspapers to homes throughout the na- -( FALLS NY (UPI)—Engineers in stopping the mighty waters on the American side of Niagara Falls have — suprisingly — of opened the floodgates brisker-than-evtourist trade Their purpose was strictly to study the bed of the falls with the hope of saving them from erosion of the The “dewatering" falls though has exposed to view a bed of rock called Lockport dolomite that is fascinatingly reminiscent of the d moon’s surface and greyish beige in color Twice before in the fall’s known history the waters have been halted blocked by massive ice jams upstream on March 29 1848 and again on NIAGARA Unlike 'em are poor and everything but some of ’em are just trying to beat you out of the collection money They keep telling you to come back next week and after awhile they owe you as much as TIEDE NEA Staff Correspondent Increases Feb TOM By in- first foot cofferdam cut off water to the American rapids on June 12 some 95000 visitors came to the American side alone compared to 75000 on the same weekend the previous year The next weekend there were 90000 visitors compared to 76000 in 1968 Now there are hopes of breaking last year’s record of 11 million tourists Visitors see the Horseshoe Falls thundering more violently than ever with the water diverted from the American ' side added to its own turbulence and plunging over the mark-shape- d crest question measuring about !£M feet long with a drop of 178 foet In contrast stand the now waterless American rapids the brink of which resembles giant sawteeth One of the points eroded by centuries of water flow looks like the profile of an Indian face Visitors watch two cranes lowering geologists and wort men along the face of the dry falls Workmen chip away loose rock and scale the walls whUe geologists photograph cracks make tests borings take samples and map the surface The conservation effort which hu led to the dewatering began in 1965 when Congress authorized the Army Corps of Engineers to study methods for saving the falls The Corps conducted test bores then briefly reduced the water flow in 1966 to take a closer look After the damming of the falls this year financed by the United Statu and a $250000 enCanadian contribution gineers installed a sprinkler system to keep the rockbed moist because a second rock layer called Rochester shale tended to dry up and crumble in the sun Recks Bared A spokesman for the Army Engineers said experts had found much leu erosion at the crest of the American rapids than they feared but more talus or fallen rock accumulation at the bottom of the foils The boulders at the base are huge mostly results of a 1931 rock fall of 76000 tons and rock falls in 1954 involving 15000 tons of earth and 185000 tons of rock Among the largest rocks is one measuring 30 by 20 by 14 feet and weighing about 1200 tons The results of the testing and conservation recommendations are expected to he published in 1971 Roger Repp a Corps id Engineers spokesman cited thru possible recommendations: —A dam at the lower part of the Niagara River below the falls to keep the water level constant and cover some of the detaris -- A concrete shoring to cover the more delicate second layer of Rochester shale —Breaking up the talus and using it to fill holes in the river bed or carting it to the top via conveyor belt The Army already has been asked to give a piece of talus to i" church for use as a monument and E Dent Lackey Mayor of Niagara Falls NY said if the talus were broken into one inch squares he could probably pay for the entire project by selling the pieces for from $1 to $5 The $10-$1- 2 See that house? She never pays me See that one? He doesn't either I don't know what it is but some of 'em just seem to go deeper and deeper They don't pay anybody’’ And across Davenport “I got 129 customers And 45 more papers I put in a vending stand at the eld folks home I got 'em all-b- lack white Italian Puerto Rican A lot of foreigners The Jews get Hebrew papers the Italians get Italian papers It makes it kinda hard to round up any new subscribers "We even got hippies but they don’t buy papers I don't know why Maybe they ain't got the money or maybe they just can’t read People are really funny here” e Funny or not Doug says he likes the people on his inner city jute So much so that he's been serving them for nearly five tion Doug DeLine one of them aged 15 is The job is not altogether kid stun Almost all of the voung entrepreneurs have hazards Rain makes their socks soggy nip dogs at their ankles subscribers who fail to get papers call them after bedtime But for things can Doug DeLine be even worse his is not the grass and flower garaens of For green normal (suburban) newspa- per deliver' His route is part of the crumbling inner city And his routine reflects some woes of contemporary urban living The youngster delivers the New Haven Register in this town’s troubled Hill Section Doug calls it an area of "hard times” "Sometimes” the newsboy says “when I got extra papers I just give ’em to the older people ’cause I know they ain’t even got a dime” Doug DeLine (his given name is Brian but he doesn't use it much) gets out of school at one each afternoon He has study periods De-L'n- years make up for those who don't He says he's saved up more than $1300 in his own bank account He buys his own clothes pays for his own haircuts and is he says after that hour and the school allows his absence He goes home eats rests a bit and begins delivery about 2:30 He uses a cart shopping for transportation And he's off with a brisk confident gait Up Ward Street "The job” he says tossing papers heft and right “really isn't so bad once eaten you now ' He says the ones who pay on you There are some things do around here Like I always stay with my papers I remember once I left a bunch on a corner just for a minute and when I got back they were swiped "Kids are always trying to get your papers They want don’t just to sell 'em on their own They come right up to you and fool around They're just showoffs mostly” Elliott Street “But kids aren’t the big problem The big problem is some of the people in the neighborhood who won't pay Down for papers “pretty independent” And as for his occupational problems: "Well I don't think about them much I consider myself lucky to have a good job I mean a lot of kids around here would like to have a good job” tNmpaftt Enterprise Am) I know lots of DeMave Doesn’t Mind Being Second To Lassie who plays discomfited by the amount of godfather in the traveling he must do with the series “Lassie" is television show can’t own a dog because Ms apartment house shot almost entirely on location landlord disallows pets Various episodes have taken The result is that DeMave— the dog and the cast to Alaska who plays a forest ranger in Oregon Colorado and to nearby and Big series— has made a Lakes Arrowhead the CBS-TBear pet of Lassie on the set “I love that dog” he says It means DeMave must spend fondly “I wish I owned her as many as three months a She is one of the most lovable year away from home Camille animals in the world and is unable to travel with him afraid of nothing” because she is a production assistant at Universal studios Plays Supporting Role DeMave a nigged rough-hew- n New York Start A native of Jersey City NJ man himself is fearless of a heavyweight Any actor who willingly plays a DeMave-s- on supporting role to an animal prize fighter of the 1920s— star has courage beyond the began his career In the New York theater call of greasepaint DeMave stands He and his wife Camille a former model have been and weighs 193 pounds To stay married six years and live in a in condition he swims daily in apartment in the the apartment pool middle of the San Fernando He also plays tennis rides and valley Jack has given the (dace horseback struggles a touch of individuality by through calisthenics every building room dividers parti- morning tions and stained glass bookcaCamille and Jack prefer ses staying at home to dining out DeMave likes his role jt is If you let him DeMave will talk for an hour about his wife’s prowess in the kitchen He claims her roast beef surpasses that of any gourmet restaurant in the hemisphere too A good tiling Her FOLKESTONE England husband eats as if he were (UPI)— Cornelia Parkers marfacing starvation It is not ried Geoffrey Daniels Saturday unusual for him to devour five On Sunday Geoffrey landed in or six lamb chops at a sitting jail or two large steaks The childless couple spends Her husband's friends mem-be- n of a young revolutionary weekends around the pool or to the beach for a day group decided to celebrate and driving threw eggs and custard pies in in the surf On location DeMave works the street Police arrested 50 from sunup until sunset six including Daniels days a week For the few “It was not the best way to weeks the show films pickup spend the first day of our shots at Beverly Hills Studio marriage” commented Mrs DeMave is on call from 7 am Daniels to 6 pjn five days a week He prefers the studio to location— it's closer to Camille's laws and social roast beef dinners although programs are necessary “let us never forget that it is changed men that produce a changed A RACE FOR GLORY society" FOR LOVE AND FOR THE FUN OF m Jack DeMave ) Lauie's i i long-runnin- V m "Nice work! I think wt features with may hart negated the new safety the increased horsepower!“ Nixon Chats With Astronaut Bridegroom Is Jailed WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pr- esident Mexico City in the first of 25 Nixon has asked the tour stops Earlier Sunday the Rev Apollo 11 astronauts to invite Allan R Watson pastor of the countries they begin foreign to become Calvary Baptist Church of touring today “partners in space" with the Tuscaloosa Ala delivered the United States sermon for 250 persons at the The President—in a telephone weekly White House church call Sunday to Apollo 11 service inaugurated by the commander Neil Armstrong at President his home in Seabrook Tex— Mrs Dwight D Eisenhower also the astronauts and fanner first lady wu part of at the the congregation along with a invited their dinner wives to White House when they return their a goodwill tour Nov 5 Nison threw a hup party for g the trio in Los Angeles after they were released from quarantine following their return from the moon The astronauts will visit from round-the-wor- ld moon-landin- and David Eisenhower several senators — including John Strom Thurmond and John C Stennis and Sherman Cooper congressmen mostly from the Julie R-S- C South Watson identical twin of Rep told the C Albert Watson R-S- President that “the making of a man must be our engineers it the moment have new no plans to dole out the talus magnificent obsession” minister said that The Other possibilities include a of abutments concrete system along the edges to help control the flow water A system combined stream dam similar with ENDS TOMORROW CHARLTON JESSICA up- hu reduced HESTON erosion of the horseshoe falls from 44 feet year to about 2 a feet problem hu never the hue of the Canadian Falls because of a 200 foot deep plunge pool at the WALTER A talus arisen at base of the falls where fallen rock is pulverized by the power cascade of the The American foils estimated only 600-70- 0 years old never had a plunge pool Since only It per cent of the water rushes over the brink of the Americu Falls with 90 per cent over the Canadian rapids the water lacks power to pulverize fallen rock The dewatered fails will remain fry until December which has local businessmen hoping their tourist season will extend well past its usual W BXCUTMSBTIMMUn SPUE itewmiunura COMRcihL United Artists frni iwi'Mir HijUWMu nnwm 12000-year-o- u er end Shaw Times Tonight 4:00-7:45-9:- 42 STARTS WEDNESDAY iranartewsor iwhmikui NOW NinM FftULNEWHAN ROBERT RSDFDRD IWTHARWE ROSS BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNOANCE KID MWWBMI Arivrift CfokJOc Ftafura TimM 7:15-9:4- 5 175 |