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Show ywnj y jJrrppT twfjwwp y Y--- ITyTT ynya jpynyT --- '' tT'tyw'f',' 'jflr They II Have To Hold A Hearing Before They Decide Man intercede for us with Can Dj-the telephone company; We live in the It isolated community of Copperton, population about 500. We feci that the telephone companys proposal to raise our telephone rates is unfair to the people here. We now have Metropac, which has worked very well. But the company say they are losing money because of this. They want to raise the rates. The businesses we patronize are on the Salt Lake exchange, and we think it is unfair to have to pay long distance rates. Can you help ns get Metropac back? Mrs. J.C., Copprrton Metropac, begun on an experimental basis, offered citizens of some small communities the opportunity to have a Metropac line installed for an extra $4 a month, giving a direct line to Salt Lake. This line permitted outgoing calls within a radius without additional charge. But the telephone company spokesman said there was extensive abuse of the privilege by neighbors using the lines, and the numbers of cells escalated almost 10 times. This required a substantial in by the company to install tie lines to handle the extra calls, and the compa-- . r.y proposed to the Public Service Commission that a raise in rates be author- ized. Both sides of the question will be examined at a hearing around the first of the year. Residents of Copperton. t Kaysvillie, Layton and Farmington their arguments at that time. Incidentally. the telephone company is not asking that residents pay long distance rates. The amount would be auout half the regular long distance fee. Parking Problem two-tone- Parking problems on this street ate similar to those throughout the city. Too not enough offstreet many automobiles parking in residential areas. Police issue tickets for overtime parking, but cannot Tops State Fair Winners in to the State y i - Chabrier. Second place: Frank Musgrave, clarinet. 443 West 2nd South, Tooele. Honorable Mention: Sheri Manning, French horn; 191 East 1st South, SLC; Ray Smith, clarinet, 1006 Pinnocchio, SLC. Winner: Christine Winds (Medium So. 1350 in the neighborhood. Only solution is tu notify police when parking limits are exceeded, and officers will ticket cars in violation. er procedure record. Solt Laho City, Utoh 84110 service you can ghe. Wales, Itah. Long wait refund made Mrs. K.H.I.,, short reply. Customer $2.23. Transfer Refund Coming About a year ago 1 ordered some prints from a firm which advertised in Better llomes and Gardens. They were some bLck and white prints of a Roman street scene and cost $1.23. I have not received the prints and cant get my money back. I would appreciate any NO In View lutst spring I bought a membership at Roman Health Spa in Colorado Springs with the understanding it would be transferred to tlie associate Spa in Salt Lake Cily when I moved !o Itah. Now I am in Fillmore and will not be in Salt Lake City until October. I have written CoSora- - ' -- te I East, Provo. from their salting. In any event, the discovery greatly interested fishing authorities in Denmark, Greenlands mother country. And the Danes started sending fishing boats into the Davis Strait between Greenland and Canada to haul in the salmon. The venture paid off immediately. In 1965, the Danes netted 36 metric tons of salmon. Three years later, the total had risen to 548 tons. And last year, Denmark, which has no salmon rivers of its own, hauled in a whopping 1,024 tons of salmon. Delay Not Excessive Gur high school choir, the Bel Cantos, made a record more than two months ago with RCA. W eant understand the delay in getting our records. Can jou help? L. II., Burley, Idaho. Reeords have now been shipped. But ou should remember that school groups in mostly record all at the same time and when the whole the late spring United States school system decides to record all at once, a bottlet.ock is inevitable. Eight weeks delivery is reasonable under the circumstances. reaction might have been less explosive. But, as Canadian T. B. Fraser, executive director of Lie Atlantic Salmon Association puts it, Its like we prepared the land and planted the wheat, then the Danes came along and harvested it. Thats exactly what's happening." Britain has been swept by a wave of sentiment. Scotsmen are boycotting Danish bacon and butter. The British and Danish Prime Ministers have exchanged frosty notes. Letters to the London press have called for sanctions against Denmark for robbery on the high seas. The U.S., while it hasnt participated in the has sided with the Sritish, as have the Russians, It was a Russian, In fact, who proposed the solution that smacked most of cold-wLets rip brinkmanship: name-callin- " fry .A ' , : a native rivers ' (mostly in Great Britain, Ireland, Norway, Canada and the U.S.) and iheir return a year or two later to spawn? About six years ago, salmon began turning up in the codfish nets of Eskimo fishermen off the west coast of Greenland. To this day, no one is sure whether the salmons migratory habits had changed or whether the fish hnd always been around but had been discarded by the Eskimos because, unlike cod, they can't be preserved through Fishermen haul in prized catch of Atlantic Salmon. Icthyologists are worried that if the catch continues to increase at the same rate, the Atlantic salmon may be on the road to extinction. But the fishing interests in other countries have a more pressing concern. The salmon have not been returning to their native rivers in anything like their previous numbers. The U.S. alone has spent millions of dollars on hatcheries and all the accompanying paraphernalia, and the fish havent been using them. Commercial sales have plummeted and merchants, used to having a sur d feit of the (cleaned and dressed) fish, have found themselves with empty stalls. At Londons Billingsgate Market, salmon sales are down a full 50 per cent. Game fishermen, too, are up in arms. The Atlantic salmon is considered one of the worlds best game fish and anglers have always been willing week for to spend as much as $5,000 exclusive fishing rights to private Scottish pools. Now the pools are as barren as a puddle in a city street. Had the windfall come to a country that et least helped spawn the fish, the $2.50-a-poun- g, ar their nets. The Danes have reacted with outrage and anger. Responding to British gossip that the indiscriminate slaughter of living things is an ethnic trait handed down to them by the Vikings, the Danes have replied through their embassy in London: The Vikings may have been horrible people, but they have contributed a lot to the British character. As for the charge that Denmark Is threatening the existence of the Atlantic salmon, the T anish Minister of Fisheries insists that such a view is in no way shared by international salmon biologists. Besides, he adds, who says that fish on the high seas are the property of a country they left two years ago? There have been several international conclaves to solve the salmon crisis. From them have come a few tentative agreements, including one that no country will catch more salmon, or use more boat-ton-s to fish for salmon, than it did in 1969. But as is usual in such bitter disputes, no one is happy with any solution proposed so far. And despite the apparently quixotic nature of the fight, the disputants are genuinely enraged at each other. Perhaps the unkindest cut cf all was delivered in the British House of Commons by Scottish Labor MP Tam Daly-wd- l. There is, indeed, something rotten in the state of Denmark, he said. Selec- 0? nd Sonata for Flute and Piano No. Fantasie for Flute and 2. Bach; Piano. llue. Second place: OUo Johnson, trumpet. 717 West 3rd North, SLC. Honorable mention: Alan Westrope, nd clarinet. ml Richard ADVANCED STRINGS Selections: SLC. 570 Garden Ave., Kay, Suite No. "Scottish Fantasy, Bruch; 3, Sinding; Caprice, Fidrillo. Second place: Sylvia Mitchell, 2822 So. 2228th East, SLC. Honorable mention: Meredith Reed, 1524 S. 6th East, SLC. and Carolee Grubb, 1644 Garfield Ave, SLC. Medium Strings Dana Maiben, 2774 W a r d w a y Drive, SLC. Selections Franck; Sonata, Rode, Caprice, Scherzo from Vionin Concerto in D, Prokofiev. Second place: Scott Ballantyne, 1039 Briar, Provo. Honorable mention: Mark Watts, 1370 Stratford, SLC. Winner: Kelly Elementary strings Clark, 1841 North Oakridg? Lane, Provo. Bach: Concerto No. 11, Selections: Eleethoven; Study No. 2," Romance, tions: fi- - lie he ite of of w- - of ?nt icy ing of ft. or to to MS St. 1180 Garnette. SLC. Kreutzer. Hot vas mol the the int ivas wld ont the 50 he mid e a list-an- ts - I William PIANO ADVANCED Brown, 1260 East 82u North, Provo. BalSonata No. 32, lade in F, Chopin; Beethoven. Second place: Susan Hunter, 1466 South 6th East, SLC; and Bonnie Poweli-on- , 2292 South 23rd East, SLC. Honorable mention: Hyrum Adams, 5856 Brentwood Drive, SLC. Intermediate Piano Christy Childs, ShostakoSonata, SLC; Selections: No. 11, 25, Chopin; Etude, Opus vich; Lisle joyeuse, Debussy. Second place, Ann Christensen, 1111 Briar, Provo; and Jeffrey Moore, 771 5th Avenue, SLC. Honorable mention: Jeffrey Price, 9i7 Mark Avenue, SLC. Max Buhler. SeElementary piano in Ballade F, lections: Chopin, Eeethoven; Sonata," Kha-- : Sonata, chaturian. Second 268 ;,or Huff place: Jacqueline Marshall, 1st South, SLC. Jan Johnson, East, Price; and Wendy Brown, 400 South 483 East. Orem. Honorable Mention: be tux East North 1 V 4th What If Your Child Uses Drugs? - 733 Ann Bv LEE TRUMAN er Copley News Service very serious questions a is what to do if he face parent may finds his child using drugs. The first and most essential thing to find out is wheth- One of the your We attended a Tcrraeor dinner and were told they would pay our way down to see the Bloomington property in St. George. We got dmvn there. They treated us very nicely ami put us up in ,s motel, Bat they didnt pay our air fare, as they said they would. Will you please check oa this? J.S., Salt Lake City. I ! J j n 's was ill at tim- you called about your change of plans and thought you planned to fly your private plane to St. George. Due to bad p weather, at the last minute you bought a ticket on Air West and had the change approved in the Salt Lake cffice. We are nmv informed that a check for your air fa-- e will be sent you from the company's " St. George Office. Principal salesman (Editor't Nutt: Wtrt sorry Iho number of call and tho volume of mail mako it impossiblo to answer every question. Please, no medical or total question.; Don't tend stamps or envelopes as answers can only be in this column. Only qut,. tions of general Interest will bo answered and tele phone calls can be accepted only on the phone at the hours prescribed. Give your name address and telphono number not for publication ' -- but to help Do lt Man help you.) DFSERET NEWS, A Monday, September 14 19 1970 mimy-gc-roun- d Senators Disturb President anti-Danis- h Ironically, what originally triggered the dispute was the solution to a fasciriddle: Where do nating, centuries-ol- d the Atlantic salmon go between their departure transferring You'll Be Paid Causing War Among Friends .! To see them lying glassy-eyeon a bed of shaved ice in a local market, no one would imagine that fish could cause a war. Yet several of history's angrier clashes have been fought over the fragrant, finny creatures. The French and Indians tangled over fish in North America; the Russians and the Japanese went to war in 1904 because of the tasty Pacific salm-oAnd the Peruvians still take periodic potshots at U.S. boats hauling in catches 100 miles or more off Peru's coastlme. But few piscine conflicts have involved as many nations as the one that has been raging for several years now over a delicacy known technically as salmo salar or, less formally, as tiie Atlantic salmon. So far there has been no shooting. But as one of the combatants has observed: You'd think World War III was around the corner if this isnt settled. for A Small Fish Is Nearly n. Utah Fair Music Competition in any of the special classihe has fications won since long them, and no one is eligible to win them twice. But he was eligible to compete for the Grand Prize of $100. And he won it, easily, so say the least, late Sunday afternoon. If you didnt know, Alan spent a part of the summer as a special artist student of the fabulous Vladimir Ashkenazy in a music camp near Detroit. Winners in the various classifications and categories in the 1970 Utah State Fair Music Competitions are as follows: Winner: WiADVANCED VOCAL lliam Goeglein. 2867 Hillside Drive. SLC. Selections: Madamia, Mozart; Early ' In the Morning, Rorem. Second place: Phyllis J. Olson, 1319 Redondo, SLC. Honorable mention: Arden Hopkiri, 82 So. 2nd East, SLC. Medium vocal - Winner: Ruth Ann Nielsen, 859 S. Slh East, Orem. Selec-- 1 tions: O Mio Babbino, Caro, Puccini; .1 Violettas Aria, La Traviata. Verdi. I Jill Bucher, 2775 Second place: . SLC. Drive, Oquirrh Honorable mention: Britt Koeuen, Gunnison. Michael R. ADVANCED WLNDS Packham, French horn. 625 East 10th Concert Selections: South, Logan. Piece, Busser; Larghetto pour cor et. 1970 Mon , Sox 25 Health Spa in Salt Lake City said she will see that you get information abcut the prop- Newsweek Feature Service Alan Ball, undoubtedly Utah's most talented pianist since the student days of our cwn great Grant Johannesen, was eligible t 1 Representative of European By PETER BENCIILEY By HAROLD LUND3TROM Deseret News Music Editor not You moy writo to Do-t- AS Atlantic Salmon: Alan Bail compete IVQn restrict spaces for use by other people d On Post Street a station wagon has been parked for some time. It has been tagged a number of times. There are very few driveways in this block, and it occupies parking space that other people would be glad to use. Can something be done about it? No name, Salt Lake City WHIRL MUSICAL do Springs Spa concerning my move and probable date of arrival in Salt Lake City, requesting a hold and transfer. My payments are up to date. I have received no answer. I enjoyed the month I used it and would like the 11 months this coming year. S.S.C., Fillmore. your teen is experimenting with drugs out of curiosity or whether he is addicted to the use of drugs. The difference between these two is considerable. One youngster may be taking a drug at the insistance of his friends with a certain amount of reluctance, and another will be so far involved that he is dependent on drugs. Experimentation is dangerous whether it is done with dynamite or drugs. To treat it lightly is to be as foolish as to treat a cancer with a bandage. But the experimenter should not be dealt with in By JACK ANDERSON - WASHINGTON With blood in his, eye, President Nixon is directing the campaign strategy that he hopes overthrow the lib- eral leadership of the Senate. But he intends to keep out of the campaign himself. He believes the best politics is for him to concentrate on being a good President. He will give first attenAnderson tion, therefore, to the foreign and domestic problems that ' ought to occupy the Chief Executive. If he can break away, he will continue-- ,, his past practice of taking the presidency" to the people. But his excursions into hinterlands wont be campaign trips. Intimates confide, nevertheless, that the President may not be able to resist the temptation to plunge into the cam- - . ' paign during the final hours. He is so, fired up that he may decide to take a personal hand in defeating his Democrat-- ; ic tormentors in one or two crucial Sen ate races. ,v For in private, Richard Nixon is more, I outspoken than Martha Mitchell against Senate liberals. They not only have har- assed him on military policy, coming close to defeating his appeal for an antii ; ballistic missile system, but they have,., rejected two of his nominees for the : 1' ' Court. feels they wanted to force him to v; give them a voice in the decision-.- : making. He has told intimates petulantly, that his Senate critics probably wouldf-1oppose anything he did but that going to share his constitutional ' He . , powers with them. This was the main reason he made his decision to go into Cambodia without"' consulting a single senator in advance. It is now the reason he is chafing to wifi ... Republican control of the Senate. ' Under Attorney pressure from Capitol Hill, r General John Mitchell has v ' reluctantly concluded that his law stand also applies to some., . corporate polluters. The 1899 Refuse Act directs the Jus? . tice Department to prosecute firms and', individuals who discharge wastes into " rivers without federal permits. But until applied the,; Rep. Henry Reuss, heat, Mitchell acted as if the 1899 Act , and-ord- big-tim- e the same way as the person who is a dependent drug abuser. In absolute fairness it must be said that many thousands of youths every year try the drug scene and never be- didnt exist. come dependent upon it, and in their ow n Finally, on August 31, Assistant Attor- -: way reject it. Many of these youths do ney General Shiro Kashiwa assured not become dependent upon the use of Reuss in a private letter that big, drugs because of the way they were polluters would be prost treated by their parents or adults when cuted along with the small-fr- y polluters they were exposed. who have received some attention in this'' Verbal fireworks is not communicapast. As chairman of a House Conservation tion and usually pulls a curtain between usual causes of elevated blood pressure. you and the youngster. If at all possible, subcommittee, Reuss had complained ' Your doctor should be asked to have conestablish trust which brings about real that Justices guidelines were so negative- sultation with doctors at one of these communication so that you are talking they discouraged U.S. attorneys from larger institutions when he is unable to -- ; with and not talking at your child. moving against big corporations. , the problem. pinpoint s, Justice Unpublished Department Next, get some help. This is not the obtained by this column, bear out! ' Dear Dr. Thosteson : Is it unusual for time for the family sage, or half- Reuss view. , a T.U.R. to be indicated several years thought through opinions, but the time In fiscal 1969, for extunple, only 69 : for an excellent psychiatrist, counselor, .after one has had a suprapubic operation criminal cases were even considered by ., or in whom a have lawyer pastor you S.J. for prostate trouble? the Justice Department under the old ,, great deal of confidence. Plan with him Act. The following fiscal year Justice' It is not common, but sometimes what you should do because each family chalked up 38 guilty pleas, five convicand every child is different. needed. After a suprapubic operation nolo eontenderes tions and 18 from,; . (that is, through the abdominal wall) Next, remember that drug abuse is no polluters. some residual is a that there possibility Since Reuss began squawking. Mitchell place for a parent to be helplessly ignoprostate tissue may enlarge and cause rant. Get the most reliable resources has started to show more concern. Alan obstruction. This could require a that are available in your community-- . ready in 1970 Justice has reviewed more T.U.R., (transurethral resection, or re150 cases. than ' of kind This and needs help counseling moval of the tissue through the urethra). Meanwhile, Reuss subcommittee has the kind of person who has the professional qualifications necessary to help been mailing out thousands of Dear Dr. Thosteson: I have severe you and the teen-age-r. yourself kits telling citizens how to sue,. , You need someheadaches. The doctor has given me sevone who knows the real medical picture to clean v.p streams and collect bounties "?' eral prescriptions, but they do not allevias well as someone who can wTork with in the process. At Justice, lawyers working against wi ate the headaches and instead make me the law eniorcement agencies. They sick and nauseated. I have these headshould be able to tap the resources of the pollution point out that sudden action to ; , aches two or three times a month and church and the community organizations. close dowTi a plant can mean its employees go out of work. The attorneys they last 24 hours. Are these an indicaNext, above all, keep a close hand on have also complained they cant even get' tion of diabetes? Mrs. C. R. your own feelings and be careful what technical help from the Interior Depart-- I see no connection with diabetes. The you say. If you show disgust, contempt ment, where Carl Kiein, an old crony of ! or condemnation, you have just turned the late Sen. Everett description sounds more like migraine Dirksen, is Assistthem off or out. The next move they will ant headache. Some who suffer with that bein charge of water quality. Secretary come nauseated and cant take pills or make is to leave. Footnote: The U.S. Chamber of Com- keep them down. For them the use of They know they will quickly find ac- merce has circulated a warning to ifs medication in suppository form by recair and water interest group warning ceptance and understanding in the drug tum often is the answer. Might suggest it subculture. Its never a pretty picture, so them that prosecutions under the 1899 to your doctor. ret vourrslf in hsmd. High Blood Pressure: Several Causes By GEORGE C. THOSTESON, M.D. Dear Dr. Thosteson: My sister is only 28 and her blood pressure gets up to 240 over 120. The doctor has had her in the hospital for tests but has been unable to find the cause. She has lost part of the sight of one eye because of the pressure. Is there any way to find out what can be done for her? P.W. For a young woman of that age, pressure should be nearer rather than 120-8- 0 240-12- In moderately elevated pressures, controlling anxieties, obesity, and excessive salt intake are the trms in which we think. But in severe cases, and particularly in a young patient, other causes must be considered. One, not unusual in younger folk, is a constriction of the aorta, or main artery leading from the heart (called coarctation of the aorta). This causes elevated pressure in arms, lower in the legs, the reverse of the normal situation. It is cor- rectable by surgery. Kidney disorders also can cause hypertension in the young. Nephritis is one. Usually there is a swelling, and albumin and signs of blood in the urine. Polycystic kidneys may be involved. Physiological anomalies or constriction of the aralso be a cause, tery to the kidney can correctable by surge:--- . Glandular disorders can be causes highly overactive thyroid, or a tumor in YOUR HEALTH the adrenal glands. Also a tumor which excretes a substance called aldesterone, which raises blood pressure. This is not common, but does occur, and the removal of the tumor results in a return to. normal blood pressure. Severe and extensive hardening of the arterie's can cause high blood pressure, but your sister is too young for this. There are even more causes of high blood pressure, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, but to list all the possibilities probably isnt to the point here. Note that a number of the possible causes already noted can be treated ef- and of course fectlvely by surgery should be. Hospitalization in an institution equipped for special studies (a university hospital, or a medical center for example) would be the obvious way to track down rarer causes, for the average hospital may not nave such sophisticated facilities. The human system cannot tolerate extremely high blood pressure without kidney failure, something giving way heart failure, stroke, or others. Your sister's loss of vision is an example. It is no disgrace for the average physician, with average hospital facilities, to be unable to identify some of these fig-ure- do-it- Jl X b I J |