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Show i I . A STATE FAIR! WHY BOTHER ? See Editorial Pago 4 r--ntr REVIEW PHONE NUMBERS MI? Advertising, News Office 487-740- 1 Action Ads 1A1 Circulation 487 -- New Vivarium Planned At U. Week In Review Humane Criteria Larson Like Bride In Lurch At Church by Ann Bailey District Juvenile Court Judges Regnall W. Garff and John Farr Larson have requested concurrance of the Salt Lake County Commission in a program to assign juveniles to work assignments in public buildings to work off court penalties. In the past, youths have had the opportunity to work as gardeners, on cleanup and other assignments. The judges now would like to extend the program to include the city and county building the new county complex and other public or quasi-publ- ic buildings such as Neighborhood House. The problem, which has been tossed into the lap of the county attorney, arises in the area of insurance coverage, should youths be injured while onassign-me- nt to public buildings. Sometime this month, ct the University of Utah campus, ground will be broken for a $450, 000 complex which will house complete facilities for animal exI perimentation. I Right now experimentation is scattered all over the campus. One of the existing labs is supervised by Dr. Robert G. Weaver, Chairman of the Division of Urology. He and his assistants are experimenting with dog kidneys in an effort to study high blood pressure due to the ' t; lack of blood supply to the kidney. Last Friday, the Review had the opportunity to observe an operation in Dr. Weavers lab. Preparation for animal surgery is intense. The two men who performed the operation were gowned from head to toe. The instruments were sterilized and tray. poured out on to a sterile-coverIt was like watching open-hea- rt surge jy on T. V. The dog had been put to sleep with sodium pentathol. It took about 5 seconds . He was placed on a miniature operating table and covered with sheets which had just been unwrapped from sterile packs. The initial incision was made in Hie dog's shaven side. Keith Gibson, Dr. Weavers assistant, 3111 observed that they had to be pretty careful during these operations because a dog cant maintain his body temperaThere were two empty chairs at Salt ture when put to sleep, as a human can. Lake County Commission meeting TuesThese are routine precautions taken by moming....and one of them made the doctors who experiment with animals. day Wild Bill Larson as angry as a Wild Bull. Dr. Hans Keutel, assistant research prosaid Wild He did this deliberately, fessor in Microbiology, stated that every BilL This is the Kind of thing wildly. done with anesthesia. is "Its he does all the time. Anything to get his operation just like a miniature human operation, mug in the papers. Dr. Keutel told the Review. John... John he? whos Hes And, The fifth floor of the new University was the second His Preston Creer. enHospital has one large area devoted at the commission chair empty meeting. tirely to animal surgery, breeding, and Marv Jenson had been duly excused to ve care. There s even a little attend an meeting. John recovery room. Oxygen tanks sit in the Creer was scheduled to appear at 10 a.m. hallway. There are adaptive devices on at the regular Board of Equalization them so they can be used for animals. ty in the meeting building full-ticm The animal caretaker the He couldnt be two places basement. fifth floor, Bert Robson, can be induced at once. ...and it was at Johns suggestion to show off his mosquitoes, mice, snakes, that the Tuesday commission meeting and flies, chickens, guinea pigs. Each, was scheduled for 9 a,m. A animal has its own breeding roam.AU Bill Larson was also scheduled to be animals at the are bred tjie University . absent Tuesday morning, to ride id the except rabbits. Its too expensive to Youth Parade....but he cancelled the breed rabbits here, so we buy them, Mr. in order to be present parade appearance Robson offered. for the county commission meeting. The This area of the University Hospital had to be approved, among other is used for several things. Its a train- payroll routine business. ing ground for the medical students in At 8;45 A.M., Commissioner Creer surgical and anesthesiology methods. called his secretary to tell her that 1 think the public would like it much he would be delayed. Someone made better if a medical student performed his a bet riLbet John Is riding in tint on than a dog a human, first surgery Youth Parade. Dr. Keutel mentioned. Hed better not be, said Wild Bill, Kidney transplants and studies in Eni wildly. of are the main areas concern cephalitis At 9 A.M. Wild Bill sat alone at the in this particular laboratory. Students commission table. Someone had cancelget their experience and doctors get the led all the other county officials, but statistics necessary for their studies Wild Bill was getting wilder. No one at the same time. to cancel out else had the If you lode out the windows from the county officials authority due at a county commiseast end of the University Hospital you sion Get them in here, meeting. (Continued cm page 2) said Wild Bill, wildly. They came r aA- - - YOUR SUBSCRIPTION HELPS YOUR CARRIER 84101 Ooops.... What Did I Say? Harold Beecher, architect ropolitan Hall of Justice, filed suit against Mayor J. Bracken Lee for two and a half million dollars. Mr. Beecher states that Mayor Lee made public statements questioning his integrity and of the Met- character. Y a j Party Unity was displayed at the Republican Contention when Congressman Laurence Burton and Sherman P. Lloyd were renominated both netting more than 90 of delegate votes. Something Stinks The Slate Health Department and the ControlAdmin-istratio- n told the city commission that effluent from the citys sewage treatment plant is contaminated far above the permissible level. Commission Compromise t Salt Lake City Commission compromised with Utah Air National Guard and tentatively agreed to grant UANG a lease n Sail Lake Municipal 19-y- - Apathy Causes Death The blame for Utah's soaring traffic toll was put on the public. Public apathy, disrespect for construction signs and inadequate knowledge of laws were cited as death causes. Raymond Jackson, state public safety commissioner, noted the extreme numaccidents and cautioned ber of one-c- ar drivers to be more alert. Business Briefs Beginning July 20, as a result of action by the Federal Reserve Board, local banks are restricted as to interest rates they may pay on both short term (Continued on page 2) Dis12 mem- a -- 1 . . . post-operati- out-of-st- ate city-coun- me N alphabet it was first developed in England to get around ths strange English million dollar bond issue board language which has one letter standing 'V bers put a limit of four percent interest for different sounds. . With tee initial teaching Alphabet some tm tee price of borrowing tee money. read Tuesday night board members almost first graders can in some cases ' garde material halfway through regretted teat limit. At tee time tee election was held and the first grade. The transition back to 7 for years prior money had been loose, a standard 26 letter alphabet is , the cost of borrowing it reasonable. The program is now experimental, Last November they sold $4,120,000 at, and may never be used on a total basis - . 3.26813 interest. Tuesday found Alma Burrows, fiscal depending upon results achieved with agent for the board, explaining teat ha considerably more research. A second program revealed to the'; had asked close to 20 large banks to bid on $2,460,000 in bonds - for Granite board was given by Dr. Elwin Cl Nielsen ; . . District - which has an excellent credit on creativity learning. In tee past a pupils learning ability ' rating. In times past most of these banks would have crawled over each was measured by standard Q,: other to bid ths bonds. Last night alt, measurements - including verbal facil- relationand but two groups said Thanks, but no ity, memorization, spatial thanks. First Security Bank of Utah, ships. If a child failed to learn by one N. A. combined with Zions First Na- -. of these methods - he might have been tional Bank to bid at 3,9099654 percent. thought impossibly dumb - and might ; : The only other bidder was tee big Bank .have been left out along tee way. Educators have long known teat there'.' of America - their bid meant an interest cost $215 more than First Security- - are other methods by which children Zions. cpmprehend, by which they learn, and First Security had been, with Burrows, by which they relate to theit environ-- ',' meit. These are involved with chiSmite and Co. fiscal agents for tee district. First Security withdrew upon ob- ldrens innate creative abilities and their taining the bond purchase. George Den- - ability , to communicate ' - these are ton of First Security explained that rarely brought out in tee traditional- : his organization purchased tee bonds processes of teaching. . BUt its one thing for educators to. J for their own investment whereas Eastern banks would normally be expected know the possibilities exist - and quite to purchase such bonds for resale mi tee another thing to put it into practice." Granite School District is starting to do normal bond markets. The higher bid rates are brought about just teat - having experimented with; by pressures on money and the general tests in English departments in Central increase in interest rates across tee Kearns, and Brockbank Junior High board. Superintendent Elmer J. Hart-vigs- en Schools- - tee creativity process win explained that it was necessary to bring about changes in tee English cursell the bonds' now, even at tee higher riculum of all 7th and 8th grade English, rates, in order to continue needed build- training tee Granite Schools this year. Not all teachers find it easy to adapt. i ing programs. . Estelle Tucker - in charge of In tell tee bo rads concern TuesdayMrs.night was money - tee other half was at English for tee district commented about a mure pleasant nature - reports from how difficult it is for most teachers to staff members on innovations and new sit and watch children learn when tea developments in methods of education! teacher is not lecturing or dominating the class in tee traditional fashion, But A report was made on progress obtained with a new 44 character alphabet if it works it promises to allow pupils which teaches children to read faster to devote more skills and more natural and better. Called tee initial teaching abilities to tee learning process. , vote on not.-difficul- Twiddled Thumbs. Party Unity Testing Alters, T e aching Me thd Last year when Granite School h lotffife hi trict asked taxpayers to ed Airport- gnu July 21. 1966 1ft gwA Vivisection Passes A Mop And Hoe Federal Water Pollution 4vr CITY The Weekly Newspaper Serving The Salt Lake Community Nows Briefs Second 10t 05S M UdU uu 819 Vol.ll No. 29 . MTrPnrt, PlfRuriNT SLT L.KE 1 n c-nc7 ptnicfp UNIVERSAL 487-227- 8 -3- ...John Bid ForVotes ......two representatives of the county office, the county auditor, the county purchasing agent (acting), a deputy county attorney, the county zoning director, the county planning director....a bevy of county officials.... ....but no John Preston Creer. Yep! There he was.. ..there was John near the lead of the parade, all alone behind the chauffer.... all alone as passenger in a car bearing the legend: John Preston Creer and W. G. Bill Larson. After 9:30 A.M., Wild Bill adjourned the meeting for lack of a quorum (two members of the commission) and ordered the meeting to resume at 12;15 P.M. clerks S See Picture Feature Pg. A-- 3 MURRAY SEEKS REBIRTH In Lieu Of Flowers Send Customers -- by Jednie Kempe Death is a strange thing, and even when one watches it, one is often reluctant to admit that it actually is happening. Walk down Murray some day. Its one of the few places outside of Italy where you can walk up to a business at noon and see a sign reading: 'Back at 2 P.M." Walk along the street and on every third door you'U read other signs: This building for rent" or This building for sale. . Want to locate a business in the heart of Murray? Offices are available at 4832 South State, 4854 South State, 4863, 4897, 4906, 4911, 4913, 4938, 4942, 4967,4973, and on the upper floors of already occupied businesses. The building space at 4832 South State Street still reads "Type-A-LiOffice Machines although Type-- A -- Line admit t ted moving out of Murray to a new location on 168 East 2nd South two years ago. Thee wasnt enough business in the manager complained. Murray," "Murray citizens just werent shopping. We tried to keep the store open but we were having maybe two or three custom ,ers come in a day. Its a real problem, be said. The manager said his business definitely picked up since his move. N. M, Long Company, selling property at 5049 South State, knew nothing about the original owners or why they moved out of Murray. He oily knew that the building had been for sale for one year. Teinerts men's wear and sporting shop was located at 4863 South State. It closed in April when Mrs. W. A. Teinert, 68, decided she was getting too old to carry on the business herself. She said she had a lovely business and that she liked Murray and hated to leave. Mrs. Teinert reported that she tried to sell the business for a long time, but no one was Interested in locating in ne Murray. 1 tried every which way to ge to come to Murray,, she said. ? that several stores ' She too had noted 1 cant understand it. had closed. Murray could be sucti a lovely shopping place, she said. Tax Service Inc.' had occupied the building at 4973 South State, but closes this particular branch each April. The manager indicated that A lot of businesses are moving out of Murray. He explained that they have opened each year in Murray tor tee last four years. The first year it was difficult to find a place, he said. "But more lots are available eveiy year. Still existing businesses also note - Murray's change. One of tee best solutions to tee problem is displayed by Dyckes Pharmacy. Dyckes closed down tee sundry part of the drug store because of business" and redecorated the pharmacy section, which serves the regular, established customer. The new section is done in early American, and a customer feels he has walked into someones front room rather teen into a pharmacy. Old Colony Paints also noted teat business is moving out and teat many businesses stay for just a short time. The clerk revealed teat their gross had dropped. We make our money from selling frames. he said. "Sometimes we have $4 on tee hobby side. He watched tee traffic zoom by tee store. You dont know whether the traffic is good or bad. he said. He indicated that tee shop owner felt that tee new freeway would be a good thing for Murray. It would take the heavy traffic out of Murray and leave Murray for the people who wanted to shop, 'People drive by too fast to see anything. he said. Speaking as a resident, the clerk felt teat Murrays stores are not well stocked to attract shoppers. He said teat he has looked for items at J. C. Penney Co. in Murray and has never been able to find what he wants. He said teat he can find the same item he was looking for at Penneys in Sugar House. "The city is not well equipped and supplied, he said. He also said teat Murray businesses are not attracting new customers. The same customers come in again and again and you know all their names.There are too many placesnearby.... in West Kearns, Thrift City, Cottonwood Mall.... But tee clerk also felt teat it was a good thing teat a new Albertsons was opening up on 59th South. 'That should help some, he stated. Mary Ellen of Mary Ellens Infants and Childrens Wear, stated teat business had dropped but said teat she was holding up her own. Murray citizens arent supporting Murray businesses, she said. But she felt this trend was typical not just of Murray but of all small business areas. Business is over saturated, she said. Mary Ellens store depends a lot on ' walk-i- n business, and as stores vacate, walk-i- n business is lost. We need one big department store to come to Murray to get other people out here, she said. She indicated teat she felt tee business drop about the time Granite Furniture burned down. The same year the Cottonwood Mall opened. "Salt Lake and tee Mall are too close," she said. Singer sewing machine (now gohe) brought in a lot of business. The barber doesnt help me any, she said. . She also explained that its hard to get around Murray because of tee bad parking situation on State Street. She pointed to tee parking lot behind her store. How many people know teat lot is there? she asked. Ben Anderson, Chamber of Commerce , 1 , member and a member of the Planning and Zoning Board, sat in on a public hearing for re zoning some property adjacent to a freeway. There was very little, opposition by citizens for the change allowing a shopping center business. After mented the meeting Mr. Anderson comteat C- -l zoning is tee only possible use for property adjacent to the freeways but he also confided teat he was tee only member of tee planning board voting against tee rezoning. My only thought was teat we should let existing businesses get a hold before we establish for new ones, he said. Clark Cushing L. Commissioner thinks that tee businesses are putting too much blame on tee community for disloyalty. The businesses are not willing to meet tee competition, he said. He thinks teat they need to develop their services and provide better and a larger variety of products. He also suggested that tee little businesses band together and form apromo-.tio- n group similar to tee downtown Salt Lake merchants. Commissioner J. E. Wahlqulst said teat tee merchants have the Chamber of Commerce. But he also felt teat this problem is everywhere. 'Downtown Salt Lake is having problems, too," he said. 'We're living in a changing world, said Mr. Wahlquist. He thinks teat maybe Murray will have to die first before it can be resurrected. "Some of tee building are 75 years old, be said. Who would want to rent that? He also pointed out the terrible parking problem in Murray. We need more et parking, he'said. As street commissioner he also noted that a few years ago th$ speed limit on state street was 25. "Now its 40 m.p.h. and tee state highway department is still felling us that tee traffic is bogging down in Murray. 4 I I i, ' ' , 1? & Susan K. Smith, to be seen in Coppelia 9 Relaxes as ballet dancers are wont to relax off-stre- ....on her toes... ready So resume the dance. i - |