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Show DESERET NEWS, January Tuesday, search coys yf lui' dev plan T'rolmiinaiy Minipi'l 01.(1 uid lie .1 lli't building s ( .s.M jiiumjn ittumt t a svau ation and tfsvting of aiddicial lieai is. The university alieady has lceived a $178,000 grant to beg,n voik on th.e project. Kdwards .said his firm The el- - Cl v 1 Li!1 l.otttoiku in the UmveiMtv (m I lilll ReM'.U(j!l IdIK UCIP ,1,1- t In Morulas pr overt bool's lnstilulioi ill Count ll. The loiinul also approved a t ?U pel (lay boo-- ll, Hjoia Kilrat the Imveisily Hospital, live Thursday. Kesoaidi PaiK plain weir outlined by I)i. Mask I. Money, paik dnectoi, and Ralph Ed'vaids of the Urni of and Hamels and Edwards Associates, Architects. Money said thp fust phase of the load and utility should be under way by March and that constnict'011 on the park's first building could begin in May. tin-s- O u a threepha.se dovclup-men- t of the paik which will - ef-f- vegetation preset ve natural and (irate a park like aiea along Red Eudp Cheek. He said the penmeter area of the park would he designated as development light density and probably would be the lust to be developed. It is this section, near Red Butte BouleCreek and Wasatch vard, that the heart facility will be constructed. An area adjoining the light 111 ret-woi- k e deu ity aiea w..l lie leu density development and the or.t aiea of t'P paik will be icspned fur ' ' hea' y density development. 1' m this area, Edwards is that high suggested, buildings should be confined. Money estimated that full development of the park may take from IT to 20 years. Edwaid W. Clyde, council hairnian, said ultimate design projections anticipate the paik will provide 12.000 to IT 000 jobs, fur this reason, he emphasized, it is imnortr.it that roads and parking areas he given top attention. The raise in hospital fees will boost 100m rates as lot- j.ie-ciu- I n-,- e PSop lows; wards B-- tame my youngest, at least she until lie was a said. Her hunband, now a lotmul-t.in- t for a Halo Alto educational research firm, took her home to await a donor. That means she, like others before her and since had to wait for some tragedy to make a heart available. Not just any heart, but one that would match the peculiarities of her tissues and be the right l teen-age- I went skiing band wilh the and hus- my until hoys ia'er p.rn." Four days 3 she was in a Logan hospital. .Sure it surprised me, she said of her heart attack. I was a woman only 42 and athletic. I had never had heart rouble, although two of my uncles had heart attacks. three years she For nca.-lwas incapacitated. She could lead, weave and paint. Many paintings she crafted while ill. now adorn the walls of the 1 siz. IT I dont remember it or anything until I woke up and there were no tubes in me or anything. My husband said he wrapped me in a blanket and wheeled me out the door to our car, she said. The medical center is about 10 miles awray in Palo Alto. After tissue typing was 1 years. But by Aug. 12, 1969, the grim reaper was lurking at the doorstep. On advice of her doctor, Mrs. Johnson was flown to Stanford Medical completed, she was wheeled into an operating room and a team of surgeons under the direction of Dr. Norman Shumway removed her diseased heart. A second team of surgeons had already taken the healthy heart from a dead man. In a little more than 4 V2 hours the Center; After two ; t eeks of intensive tests a doctor gave her the news. She had two choices death within a few weeks or a transplant. 0 ' w AM. When word came that a donor heart was available it was 3 a.m. on Sept. 3. Mis. Johnson was sitting up in bed eating a banana when the phone rang. family townhou.se. Her husband, then chairman of the department of educational administration at I'tah State University, had to watch their younger sons and do the shopping. A house-keeper was retained. Once or twice Mrs. Johnson. said she read about heart transplants and told her sons 'maybe Ill have one in five . W AS S HESITATION world-famou- I hardly hesitated at all, she said of the decision to have a transplant, made with her husband at her bedside even before the doctor had left the room. Many of my friends have paid how courageous I was to Jiave the operation. It doesnt ake courage to not want to die I thought I was prepared $0 . . . too, but I really wasnt, she said, for the first time a look of sadness moving Across her shining face. I was still hoping, hoping would live long enough to heart transplant s surgeon had tied the last stitch and Mrs. Johnson was taken to an isolation room to to $23. Council member Jos ph Bcrnolfo noted that the new rotes win He genet ally $2 1 event ly above announced for both LDS and Cottonwood Hospital. The Hospital s cases generally are more complex, he said, in noting the difference. In other acticn the council: Approved minor remodeling of the west section of the rates OPTIMISTIC How did she feel waiting for a donor, knowing the only way she would live would be for another person to die through some tragic misfortune that would leave his heart strong and healthy unlike hers? We were tic. We were always optimisapprehensive, to be sure, but always optimis1 wonder if tic, she said. i A Passport Air tsuAyy-i- DAYS - OF GOLFING IN J0WT'-- ' palm jgfrnm 8900 9 9 9 ' X. -- e F J I v,- I PLEASE j J BELIEVE l j ZiP PHONE j BOX a resolution, passed rioting. state department of 2262 PH. WfFir EVERYWHERE t , public R. Landa honored by USBA . . USBA Asks Boost In School Fund Continued from Page B-- l cient in future years to meet the needs of a growing population and also maintain the high standards of its educational system. Gaming Ban Called tion to attract hign technology industry. SIGNED PETITION The petition is signed by officers of the Society of Superthe USBA, the intendents, State Board of Education and the Utah Education Association. In his presentation of the Distinguished Service Award to Mrs. Landa, Gov. Rampton praised school board members and legislators for their willingness to serve with lit- City Atty. Jack L. Crellin today was asked to prepare an ordinance prohibiting possession of gaming devices in Salt Lake City. than does Esther, Rampton said. Citing her service to her commu-it- v and state, Rampton said there is no more fitting recipient for the USBA Distinguished Service Avvaid. During the dinner Senate President Haven J. Barlow, commended board members for their cooperation. MUST House C OINCIDE Speaker Lonn X. Lake, noted that You speak about programs, the we speak about finances two must coincide. Stating there would be no tux increases this session of the Legislature, Pace commented that in the face of the very limited finances Legislature's school program some-v- . probably would be here below your upper limit. Bennion urged that the lequest for funds for teacher top leadership be given priority. Dr. T. H. Beil, state superintendent of public instruction, emphasized the need for categorical funds to provide a program to reduce 2,400 Utah's high school dropouts each year." He also emphasized that the USBA proposals are teque-t- s, not demand4;. Pace, 319-860- 3 lt Birch Founder Tne president and founder the John Birch Society, Robert Welch, will speak at the University of Utah Union at 8 Ballroom Wednesday p.m. The author of four books The May God Forgive Us, The Life of John Birch." Politician and "The New Americanism." he established the John Eiich Society in December, 1958. The talk, sponsoied S', the Aitists and Spewkeis umrnit-teis free and open to the public. e. 1 Present laws require that a show of gambling be proved before such devices are considered illegal. The Salt Lake City Commission askd for the ordinance after a discussion on problems of local clubs and public establishments possessing such devices as dice tables Roger F. Cutler, assistant city attorney, said in an opinion to city commissioners that other states have made mere possession of gaming devices a crime without requiring a showing that the devices were used for grmbling. Because of difficulty in obtaining gambling evidence, the city should resort to such a the attorneys policy, five-ma- tle compensation. "No one1 better leprescnts such willingness to serve iincompensatecj t. 0 I'.UjUl malities available year ba-- to ti.e K t 1 e-- ' n ay pproved list a of Dr. including appointments Julius Miklowitz. professor of applied mechanics at California Institute of Technology, as W. W. Clyde Visiting Professor in the College of Engine-winlor the spring quarter, and Dr. Baldomero M. currently with the University of the Philippines, as associate professor of biology. vne $2 Apnl 2 mentaiy at on Inmate Suit Is Studied In another matter related to the local court system, complaints are still pending in a shooting that occurred at Mt. Olivet Cemetery, 1342 E. 5th South, Friday night. Two men were shot after they had entered the ceme-erfor a fraternity pledge vv ere initiation. Wounded Douglas W. Springmeyer. 1470 Ute Dr., and Ronald T. Branca, 20, 2373 St. Mary's Way. Both are in good condition at University Medical Center. Polite investigation into the shooting is continuing. Grand Central h,J0 ; A. y grounds he wasn't provided an attorney. Robert Hortencio, 45, 548 S. 4th West, was placed on probation Aug. 20, 1969, by City Judge Maurice D. Jones after pleading guilty to public intoxication and disturbing the peace. He was placed 011 probation for six months, but it was revoked a few weeks later and the petitioner was sent 1o jail lor six mouths. y , t'-Hi-a has Christensen Sherman taken under advisement a motion to dismiss a suit filed bv an inmate of the Salt Lake Jail on the under , s Frank Produce Co. v flp attending college. He ult., d member of the chon Sr. Ambrose Catholic Church He married Julia Fnnces Evans on Feb. 21, 1942. Furner is survived h, bis wile, three daughters: Mrs. .g Michael (Mary Jean) Rmim, Colleen Frances and Mane, ail of Salt Lake ! iu two brothers, Clyclp I) a ini Blair O. Furner, both 0! Salt Lake City; five sisters; Yeta F. Hamlin, Franklurt, Gonna-nWilliam S. d'ein) ; Mrs. Roe, Richland, Wash.. Mis. Gene (Theiessj Clay brook. Kennewick, Wash.; Mis. Calvin V. (Jpan) Taylor, Thompson Falls, M011I., ami Mis. Stanley (Blanche) Aiknw, Lebanon, Ore., and one 1954-56- District Court Judge td 1, an' while attending h'gh s, and as a bookkeeper tor Lake Advertising Club since of 1953, serving on the board U.S. atu High School in Salt L,is., ( is ail alumnus Busmens College a 'id sity of Utah. He aho p ceui-- p an accounting LaSalle Extension He sen ril in the liUirj Slates Army Medic d CVrL, during World Wat ii (l'ljj jr,, He vvoiked as a gioccrv r'jvk years, has been a member of the Salt . directors during Born in Salt Lake City 1917. h" cliooN Up 33 Olii-ver- Itahavvi is being held $100,000 bail. Fuinei. p: a hoc Approved commending t'.e univeisity's public relations department and o ai prc". radio srJ television lor favorable pub-IA t olid production usmanager, Gillluini Ad vei died li.c , ing. 7 at today an1, of hen it aiirnent ?f his 1935 It 0 m e, Texas St. Furner, who serv ed h a s with Gillham for more than palt.es pOl.tlcol Rul'd EUGENE JELESNIK PRESENTS ON STAGE' THE NATIONAL TOURING CO. OF BROADWAY'S BEST MUSICAL! ms GUBER and SHELLY GROSS prtstnt tn LEE CARR & HARRIS FRYER. production HI of MAMIE THE SMASH HIT MUSICAL STARRING SHEILA SMITH It asks the Legislature to name a committee to meet with educators and other citizen representatives to phm for long range economic development. It further states that Utah is in an ideal posi- 19-1- The demonstration occurred during a basketball game between Arizona and BYU. About 73 persons took pai t. Gov. Jack Williams a.sked university officials and the tffini SEND ME INFO. ON YOUR CELS. AIR TUCSON, ARIZ. (UP!) -The University of Arizona student senate, embittered by the arrests of nine students, Monday night called for the resignations of two university officials, including the school Mrs. Esther of NAME PASSPORT Resignations 7 ADDRESS I Students Ask Arizona U. Jj 1 SOUNDS HARD TO Although Shumway, who developed the transplant technique first, has been the most successful of the transplant surgeons in keeping patients alive, only six of 18 have survived so far. Raymond Glenn Dodge, 33, Ogden, and Arthur John Gallon, 31, Salt Lake City, was expected to be finished later today. The three men have been charged with assaulting another convict with malice aforethought. The continuance of Hie prisoners trial forced the trial of Michael Rahawi to be put over until Wednesday morning. Rahawi, 30, 1851 W. 33rd South, is accused of assault with intent to conimit murder. An explosion at his home seriously injured his wife, Kaelynn, when she tried to start the family car. To Speak At U. IF YOU DO NOT PLAN TO GOLF DEDUCT 15.00 1 SHRUGS OFF FATE Ever smiling, Mrs. Johnson shrugs off the fate of most heart transplant recipients. - CRAB YOUR CLUBS W GET OUT OF THE SNOW AND GO. r 87. 0M X 50 9 htr on a 1,000 diet with restricted sodium intake. Its everything in moderation, she said of her diet and daily regimen of housework to and calisthentics. I hav keep busy because t.ie doctors dont want me to weigh more than 95 pounds. Right now she barely tips the scales at Doctors have calories-a-da- y safety for reports on the incident. with particular emphasis on faculty involvement. TOTAL PACKAGE WHICH INCLUDES: ROUND TRIP FU0HT BfAUTIFUl HOTEL RIVERA 4 CAYS 2 DAYS GREEN FEE RESERVATIONS MADE ON TWO COURSES ELECTRIC CARTS COCKTAIL PARTY stairs. of springs 9 I havent regained all of my strength, yet, she said, holding onto a guard rail and carefully lifting each foot as she walked up a flight of in WOULD YOU BELIEVE 4 v capping a day in which the students were arraigned and the governor asked for an investigation of incidents surrounding the arrests, made at a demonstration Thursday. The students, who took part in a demonstration against at racial policies alleged Brigham Young University, were ordeied to face preliminary hearings Jan. 26. Two were charged with inciting a riot. The others were accused Airliner Own in Our 11, Asked to resign were dent Dr. Richard A. Harvill and Robert L. Houston, vice president in charge of the schools physical plant. The resignations were urged Departing Salt Lake Jan . 22 F lying Direct of the case three convicts assaulting another Utah State Prison inmate forced the delay of a second trial in Third District Court. The prison stabbing trial was continued when one of the defense attorneys was too ill to appear in court Monday. The trial of Edward Earl Pass, 27, of Fort Worth, Tex., Continuation involving of Utah. Life for a heart transplant patient is not easy. Daily Mrs. Johnson peddles three to five miles on an indoor exercycle. Twice a day sue does 10 ar..oi g He on a Extended Trial Delays Another and James, 17. Son Jeff, 19, is a Utah State student and her oldest son Jay, 23, is married and a graduate student at Univei-sitJarid, he J Wj: maybe thcie Is a leason this happened to me. I dont know how tne boys took it inside. They assumed quite a bit of responsibility, Mrs. Johnson said of sons president. TRAVEL CLUB JgXq f, FTtddhouse us KUlC omces. 'pproved remodeling of the old gymnasium (not tr.e iieldhouse; into a dance studio, including conversion ci tne old swimming pools into dance studios. of Approved remodeling the rehabilitation wing of the University Hospital at an estimated cost of $127,000. A p p roved ptelimmai v plans for ar. additional parking lor at the Medical Center. Awarded a certficate of appreciation to retired Salt Lake Tribune Medical Editor William Patrick. Ruled that the university's bports and Sjreciai Events Center be listed u- -e care unit, $62.75 to $68.75; coronary care unit from S120 to $126 and nursery unit from $17 S recover. ALWAYS Linar Nielsen to 542.75, rooms from fJ9.75 to $45.75, plicate rooms from $41.75 and $43.75 to 47.73 and $50.75; intensive 536.75 semi-privat- e Utahn's Borrowed Heart Is Full Of Exuberance Continued from Page J. Robert Furner, Ad Official, Dies 1970 13, Club To Meet The Welcome Wagon Club monthly luncheon at the Towne House Athletic Club, East, Thursday at 11:30 a.m. A representative of a local hair styling firm will address the group. ill hold its 158-3r- ONE NITE ONLY Wed.r Feb. 11 at 8:30 p.m. HIGHLAND HIGH AUDITORIUM 2166 So. 17th fast. Salt laka City, Utah TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE BY MAIL ORDER All Tom IncMoR popular pricot dll SEATS KESERVED IIor3 Main Cntr Sect. r Parquet 3 center Sect Meti. Reserved Main Pear Side S&ct. $5.75 $5.00 COUPON-- -$4.00 SE --.UTHIS is check or money order in the omount of $ ME SEND - choice reserved Ticket Ne. ef Tcikete For The Broodwoy Musical MAME on Feb. 1 T, 1 970 at $ --.- Me if. Reterve $3.00 Enclosed PLEASE of ,i '1 I Location each. NAME n advised. Such an ordinance would be valid if carefully drafted, guarding against discrimination and from being overly broad, they said. w WITH AN ALL BROADWAY CAST COMPLETE WITH ORCHESTRA STAGE1 CITY. ADDRESS, STATE .ZONE. . PHONE. - !: mil "Ciliknti Artistt. HOTEL NEWHCUSE, Room 1233, Salt loko City. Utah 14101. Encloie a toH oHrosiod, Itampod onnlopo lor prompt return ol tic katt. Plmo till oot thn prior blank completely an carefully. Mika rtmirtmct piyibll to CELEBRITY ARTISTS out ADVANCE MAIL ORDER SALE A OPENING THURSDAY g 3 great big smash hit, treat, a delight tor all. Variety sheer delight -c- harming, tuneful, warm hearted. N. Y Pc-'-love duet to a happy mar-ri- ae" A hje Mag It will undoubtedly run - Cue Mag. Eve. 8:30 Jan. 26 Mat. 2:30- thru - 31 |