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Show ' ; .. " lv- y - 'Xf'' ' " f v.i 455th ; I, 4 ' .$ and spectators watched plummeting sky diver in trouble cut himself free . of fairgoers gs porch as a a malfunctioning parachute, dropped 2.500 feet in his auxiliary chute and landed with the chute tangled in a power line. When John S. Baker landed unharmed in a shower of sparks Monday at about 6:30 p.m., it provided a moment of high drama for the big Labor Day crowd at the State Fair. The jumps were part of the nightly fair show. telMr. Baker, a ephone company employe, said he'd ipade 454 parachute from . partly-opene- pm-pare- d d U f John S. Baker (in dark jump suit) tells of high altitude adventure. Tfa SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Tuesday, September 5, 1967 Dimt B1 'I licentious advances, propositions or .salutations. Bv DEXTER C. ELLIS I lose ret News ' 53-da- But Public Safety Coinnus-- I HMipnUta? Dul sinner James E. Barker saidj m Mm, mi the amendment is only a tool designed to do something about rito to Mm, Im .. . prostitution situation until something better can be found. ii is t! jit j Dto-- lt Cl stressed that the new amendment is no cure-all- , observing that it does not deal ;with "call girl" type prostitution or prostitution that is arranged by third parties such as cab drivers. exCommissioner Barker pressed hope that the Utah Supreme Court will change a recent decision or that the city can get power to enact ant prostitution ordinances via an enabling act by the next LegisNO RE-AL- L By the time you tead this. Mrs E.. all will be well. The caused was by the fact that so many people have to delay of completion. These include the teacher, the certificates sign principal, superintendent of Granite School District, the director of drivers education for the State Department of Public Instrui tion. Furthermore, your daughter's teacher was out of town. He was the last to sign the certificates. foot-hal- l? Headman Sam Weller at Zion Book Store at 254 S. Main St . told Do-I- t Man to tell you to drop by and he will show you what he has on these subjects. This includes a big encyclopedia on sports and also several paperbacks on baseball, profootball. How Do You Smoke Game Meat? I would like to find am primarily interested company and union representatives. Also summoned to a series of meetings on subsequent days were Anaconda Copper Co.,, Phelps-Dodgand the American Smelting and Refining Co. WILL MEET AT 2 The meeting with Kennecott and its unions will beat 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Department ot Labor. Kennecott and the other three producers, known as the Big Four. were shut down July 15. Bargaining recently came to a a book on smoking meat and game. I in turkey. L. E., S.L.C. "How to Prepare Game Meat" is a good one. It can be ordered from Jack L. Brimhall, who wrote it, at 3565 Macintosh Lane, S.L.C. - - - e 1 1 lature. BEST AV AILABLE Until one of those things hap- pens, he said, the city will use the new law as its antiprostitution weapon. The new ordinance section will standstill. take effect upon publication. Gov. Calvin L. Rampton was "Sorry, Fang, but they won't let you i n," seems to be the message Deborah, Its passage was the latest! last Lowell School steps. notified by Washington Jeff on and give Cindy Taylor pet move in a series of actions that that unless "meaningful in when the Utah, began July negotiations" were conducted Supreme Court overturned the during the Labor Day weekend of a Salt Lake conviction the factions would be called to w'oman. Washington WIDE OPEN NO NEGOTIATIONS The grounds: that a city may were no negotiations There not prohibit acts as misdemeanand the meetings beginning ors which the state has labeled Wednesday are the result. felonies. In their telegrams, Secys The court's opinion was tanand Trowbridge said the Wirtz School, The sounds of respectively. rur exuberant problems Sandburg major tamount to declaring Salt Lake siddOunrnis- - cren an you,h movec fronvand, with minor exceptions, full Both Murray and Granite will strikes are having an adverse Citv wide open enrollment show hoiise to Schoolhouse Tuesday'staffs of teachers. gains this impact upon the economy of sinner Barker at the time as classwork began in 11 Utahl Murray District opened one year, but Salt Lake City will various sections of the country ls no, no suc? Salt new school, Parkstde Elemen- - continue r to decline. The district and constitute an increasingly c'mel school districts,-includinas prostitution, he said Granite and Murray.! tary at Vine Street and 53rd expects to lose 500 or more serious threat to the conduct of City, He has 6tnee pressed to make it students from last years enroll-- t h e 100,000 students are'South. . procurement a crime. first- - ment of 37.228. Wo now have by the time peak' program of the nation. expected The Salt Lake police force enrollment is reached in the grade schedules throughout the Other districts which began The Western Mining Division Kennecott is expected to be attempted to use three Salt Lake County Supt. J. Easton Par- - classwork Tuesday See SOLIGllNG, Page W tricts. by J. C. Kinnear ratt, reported. Ogden, Weber, Duchesne. : Enrollment is expected to. Granite District "organized" field, Juab, Rich, Washington Jr., general manager, and E J. and and Uintah. School opened last Flynn, industrial relations coun- new schools,-Jacklinexceed 61,000 in Granite xelor. week in 29 disti lets." trict ; 36,000 in Salt Lake CityjArcadia schools, elementary teacher salary Union representatives attend- jand 6,300 in Murray. (More than Neither building, however, is A summer-lon120.000 students are enrolled in yet ready for classes. Jackling dispute which threatened to mg from Utah will be Verne school opening m Uintah Curtis and W. J. Madill, Ijordan District where schools and Arcadia students and teach-dela- y 1, 4, 6, 8 City, Regional of the steelworkers ers are on afternoon double ses- - was resolved only early opened last week ) See KCC on Page Financial 3 Officials in the three districts sions at Pioneer School and day morning. if J Sport Books Available Where can I find hooks of fact about baseball and S.J., S.L.C. Wit-- , by Secretary of Labor W. and Wirtz lard Secretary of! Commerce Alexander Trow- bridge, who will meet with the1 Am He Kearns. Staff Writer y The Johnson Administration stepped into the coper Htrike Tuesday by calling officials of the Kennccott Copjier Corp. and United Steel Workers of America to a meeting in Washington Wednesday. Telegrams to the company and union were signed ' daughter took driver education at Kearns High School earlier this summer with about M other students. Why hasnt she been informed if she passed or not. Mrs. E., Copper on whose members have recently been won The Salt Lake City Commission aloud laws the effective if has passed an anti- dering any city soliciting" amendment Tuesday. My V DESERET NEWS Deseret News Staff Writer Teacher Out Of Town j Schoolhouses Sling With Student Sounds g Lakes, rivers, (Hinds, irrigation ditches, swimming pools and bathtubs have claimed 35 lives far year, greater than any s(mjiar period since 19,55 and more than the total for any full year except two during that span, Qn (he We are interested in taking a beginner's class in art. Arn there any given in the city which are inexpensive? Mra. C. iqr7 496()' R., Salt Lake City. Yes. The Art Center School, 54 Finch Lane, is registering classes for this sort of art instruction Sept. 9 from 10 to 4 p.m. It's A Money Problem Why is the lake at Liberty Park such a smelly mess at it g co-an- d n Warren L. White, superintendent o( pmks m Salt Lake City, says its a problem of money. He says the answer Is to pour a concrete floor for the lake. This would cost over One factor which makes the smell $100,000. Prohibitive. hard to control is the limited amount of water running into the lake. This is the entire stream from Red Butte Canyon. Sometimes this Source runs almost dry. Also, Mr. White says, the periodic lack of water both endourages the growth of plant' life and exposes it to the air. This is when the lake smells. When this happens, park department crews spray the lake to kill the plant life. Man. "Wat 3 lakritrarid' We feel, Mr. White told Do-.country justifies tolerating the unpleasant odor at various intervals. . Boundaries Have Changed Where can I find a map showing the boundary lines ot the tlntah and Ouray Indian Reservations at the time they boundaries," were set aside? Also their present-da- y , . Utah highway map will show the present boundaries of these reservations. They are marked in yellow. The Bu- ' reau of Land Management 125 So. State St., has maps of the have reservations.' The' boundaries of the, reservation laid were first since times dovyn. they changed many editor's Not: Mr. Knltht roconllv Pont Mvtrai doyi Ip Californio ttudv-toftorti to roMMlitoto drut Th toitowtnp Is on of sovirtl rtlctoi M Hit piMitm. do By HAL KNIGHT' Deseret News Staff Writer Trying to salvage drug addicts is a costly and disarranging struggle. turn 'to cite three juana at age 13 and using at 15, said a man 111 the California Rehabilitation Center (CRC). of Availability drugs. Where the supply is large and "Basically one leads to the easily obtained, the number of other. They usually go hand in hand. It made us kids feel like addicts also is large. big shots to drink wine and Emotional problems. smoke weed Then it just ' Drugs provide a means of .snowballed " escape from everyday prob24-A Mexican ear-ollems and stress. Addicts can man said: American run pwayfrom their problems 'AU niv friends smoked and themselves. I wanted to lie one marijuana. Easy satisfaction, Addicts o the eiowcf, to be somebody ran project ..themselves uito to be importEmrTirmT-neig- h and comfortable borhooef. From marijuana to world without having to strug-gl- e heroin is somehow just a or compete with society! short-steand easy to take." How do people start? . In case alter case, the diug T started smoking mari Addict tells the same story Why hei-oi- people drugs? Experts main reasons: d California, which is highly fated in its eftmt, has mea'ur-ablsuccess with about of the addicts it e one-thir- d treats. Other- - states even less achievement, repoVt - The only sure way to eliminate drug addition, is to keep It .from ever getting started. dreamy . . . H and 33 1959' eg and 30- - 34 an( 42. 26 and 32! 957 4() 2l and 25 195.5, cj riv-- niTriiF- Ditches ami canals have prov- especially perilous during drowned, ht)b Ul1' f l',pm toddleis three years old or undci In 196b. the 'otal was six fiTun this cause iluough Labor Day five ea Ii lor 1964 and 1965. The minibei ol swimming See I TWINS, Page B-on pci-o- 6 Salvaging Drug Addicts A Real Struggle It -""-- .Any B-- j - S. F., S.L.C. times? Cant something lie done? , Dis-tw- o 9- a)d -- included J? yer full-da- y y ()f Thp 0,,ly remlt y0dls d,i' proaching the 1967 toll are 1957 and 1958 when 34 and 33 lives were lost in water accidents through Labor Day. Last year, only 22 peisons drowned through Labor Day anfj 2g during the entire year. - defense jariy basls morP1lve!i be up (o w lost before the year's end. al- though the pet il incident to swimming, boating and trriga-uee- k tion ditches rapidly declines afPr Labor Day then-Lak- Art Center Offers Classes lr h By JOSEPH T. LIDDELL , jr . , activated a device that heed him fiom the main parachute. Now he was falling fieely Anti-Prostitu- te It prohibits prostitutes from making paiariitiie 4.0(l()-vo- hope. So he Commission Passes Law . smaller and Mr. open. descent slowed But lie was olf ioiiiv, ' foi sonic lines Third Noilh neai power and lllh Wcsi. several him ks fiotn the taugioumls, The auxiliary chule has no Meenng aids I ducked my shoulder and missed the wnes." Mr Baker said i liute didn't. Ills Thp Impact brushed two wires together. blew a transformer and knocked out the power to residents in the area. Spectators ran up with a laddei t ut Mr. Baker loose, and he i limbed down the pole. He said he hadnt had time to be scared. t era II Oddly, he didn't seeing flic flash as his parathe chute made contact-witPentx of spectatois wires did. though. "If it hadn't been foi Steve Biljanic's training. Id have been in 10 times as much 1 and tiouhle. probably wouldn't have made it," said Mr. Baker. that was nothing to whatr was m store. The six ' about as they fell freely, with" three of them linking. They began pulling parachute rings at about 2,500 feet. Mr. Baker's chute failed to open fully. This was a crisis he'd thought about as long as he'd been jumping. And Club President Steve had Biljamo stressed panic procedures ,inie and again. The he juniper knew couldn't make it alive in the chute. And if he opened his auxiliary chute while dangling from the mam one. it could spin him like a top. fouling the secondaiy chute and killing his last But of peril before Monday. Tuesday morning he said hed be jumping again at Ata Air Park Saturday if he can get his parachute untangled by then. "Yes," he said, Til be That using the "same chute. thing cost me $300, and I m not gonna throw it away." That will be the, chute that opened only about a quarter of its capacity Monday evefive ning after Mr. Baker and other members of the Alta Sport Parachute Club jumped parachute snagged. The death." jumps with never a moment Here's where Baker's again, only 13' seconds drop He from the hard earth. pulled the other ring. A second passed. Two seconds. Tin oo Then POP 8,500 Deseret News Staff Writer Thousands Last from a plane at an altitude of feet over the fairgrounds. Attached to their-leweie smoke bomb devices, whien were ignited. But Mr. Bakers bomb didn't appear to be cooking." All of a sudden." he taler recalled, "it exploded with a ' loud bang. It seared me to By RAY GRASS back Almost he stalled smoking nianjuana while in Ins eatly teens. He did.it because his frifflds'did and turned to heroin for the same reason ' "Not all marijuana smokers go on to hefoin, but nearly all heroin usei-- got started in the drug world by smoking a California official said. , The use of drugs most often beg'iis as a'kind of childish the "adult against wui Id. But it feeds on enio-- . -- tionftl weaknesses unreality w and escapism. Addicts wont admit this, at least not as long as the addiction holds promise for them. Unfortunately, for the majori mari-juana- ,' ty, this attiaction is haul 10 shake. "Were the gieatest liars in the world," young young reformed add .cl said "We lie to ourselves and we lie to the rest of the society " An addict can be tossed into jai! or some kind ol correi tional institution and the habit broken. .He goes ough several days of agonizing "withdrawal from the di ug. hut this is' not a cure. As soon as tie uAmt "oir thf street," as ad'.c'..-- say. lie'll " go right back to dt ugs, "You can't turn oil addic-tiqby simply taking cwv the drug, s'd Richard A. McGee, head of the California Youth and J , r- - ( dr V -- w- -- e.-- -i. a ci Cm lion has in leal n llt.it an addict's piohlems aic so vaiied and so deeply sealed rliat repeated and soinetiiiies pi olonged treatment may he nei essary befoi? he is Itee of his addiction," he said. low to keep youngstois" -It mii Turning nr rtnigs- - av-- a h Mil 01 lehellmn and an easy wax out bl the piobletm of Ido" The themselves, dddttys have siiotig leebngs about tlis "A dose relationship with ins Jatlier is the only sure way to insure that a boy won't See SALVAGING on Fage B4 - at m Ailul' Agent SiK.elv - |