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Show dmt'whi By CLARENCE S. BARKER Deseret News Staff Writer some of the east escarpment of the' rugged San Rafael Reef, and climb a little of it and maybe hike to the Indian petroglyph of a big crouching dragon from which Black Dragon . Canyon takes its Came? And if these tourists get started, they can spend extra hours visiting national parks, national monuments, forests and recreational areas missed by those who spend only minimum time in this state. The U.S. Bureau of Land new (BLM) Management liest routes of trade and commerce, through more or less prosaic valleys and low passes and across deserts. What facilities should be provided along the over virgin stretch of Emery Countys San Rafael Swell to be opened to traffic Nov. 5? This is the problem conabout two dozen fronting state, federal and local officials who drove over this new section of highway Monday. And it is a big problem. Nearly all other sections of interstate highway follow ear But this section touches off a new era in travel bringing breath-takin- g scenery within the reach of the speedy tourist. Utahs Travel Council and Natural Resources Department want to induce some visitors en route from Denver to Los Angeles to stop and study the scenic grandeur. Who, for instnce, would not like to study at first hand . manages virtually all of the San Rafael Swell country. Most is leased for grazing. But its carrying capacity is so low that this has brought few people into the ties in the past has been used beyond capacity as soon as it is completed, he said. BLM is just as anxious that no intrusion of commercial enterprises shall be allowed, other than to fill pressing needs. If and when any filling station or motel is buiit, it must be unobtrusive and in harmony with the area. The state is entitled to select federal lands in lieu of sections due the state but taken in past years by the federal government for special purposes. area. 'belie ves' that BLM campgrounds and side trails must be built. Lorin Welker, district supervisor for Carbon and Emery counties, said anything done to provide such facilities, judging from the past, will be fully used. Everything the BLM has done in providing such facili If the Secretary of Interior allows a state selection, and several sections have been sought by the state along it then will be the responsibility of the state to make sure its lessees use the land to enhance the area. The State Highway Department has built eight view areas along the right of way. Toilet facilities will be provided if culinary water wells are d' 'Ted as planned. This is very dry country and culinary water will be the key to any major develop- BLM has specified that the contractors who have buiit had to take their gravel and borrow material out of sight of the view area from the highway. Scars must be Grand Junction, Colo. Many tourists will want to stop to spend the night in camp areas to be provided. Kenneth C. Olson, state planning coordinator, is chairman of the Coordinating Committee for Developing which drove from Green River to Saiina Monday. Olson now is cataloguing possible developments along the section. A list of these is to be sent to each erased. Another advantage of new still to be completed to freeway standards, is the high forest country within the Fish-lak- e National Forest to be traversed west of San Rafael Swell. This high, wooded country is a far cry from the desert vistas which prevail much of the way westward from ments. le committee member in time for studying it so tentative conclusions can be reached at the next meeting Nov. 16. DESERET NEWS SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Tuesday, October 27, 1970 B 1 5 Shot To Death In Family: Murder, Suicide Suspected - By PAUL SWENSON Deseret News Staff Writer I V;, T. - v. - ' a husband and wife and, three girls A family of five WHITE CITY were found shot to death in their be ds early today in this surburban commu' nity. , Police said the deaths vere apparently the result of a nurder-suicidThe bodies were found about 11 a.m. when a neighbor Visited the home at e. 10238 Vi, Peony Way. PISTOL: FIND OUR MAN : Curtis B. Eskclsen, 43, and his wile, Lilly Faye, 34, were lying in bed with a 22 caliber pistol between them, said i xr , 2 Capt. .N, D, Hayward of the Salt Lake County Sheriffs J ."rp Te Cheers FoE'Sanrfle'Stoirty ' Sears is to be complimented on their efforts Jo get their employes out to the polls. They have also put but a beautiful booklet Candidate Guide for the 1970 Utah V. State and Congressional Elections. candithe of is all The booklet well done and lists dates along with their pictures and short statements. There are one or two blank spots where candidates, failed to send in the required material, i . No one is perfect, so We can forgive them for the treatment of Sanpete County, Vance Aagard from down there didnt send in his material. And Evart Jensens ., i : was misread: 'Sanpile not Sanpete), The representative from Sanpile County must' un- -. derstand the needs and the problems of the people. I will represent Sanpile County, the state of Utah and the nation I have been a farmer and livestock raiser all my life and understand Sanpiles water problem. THEY FOOL AROUND The way the legislature acts sometimes, Sanpile Ive may not be the misnomer it first appears to be. ' seen the legislators play around a bit at times. A check with a member of the county clerks office down in Sanpete shows that Mr. Jensens name will appear under the emblem of the rooster and not a sand pail and shovel! I tried to get to the bottom of it by going to the top. I wasnt able to get through, but when I do, the top man will probably blame Roebuck! Remember those ethnic jokes about the Swede down in Sanpete County . . . now this! EAT nEARTY! ' , v , - r ! t jj Dr.- . - ' Ernest L, Wilkinson, president, threw the switch Monday which started. the, "compressor, activating hydraulic jacks, en 38 upright teel columns. The giant .roof will climb colmns'at .the 'rate ,of the ! SHOOTING T-M-E . .weeks, . .. v. ij about eight feet each day, tak- The big top, is the steel! ing approximately two weeks Investigators, said the shootframework of an enormous for the framework to be ing apparently happened Monroof, being hoisted day nighf or ' early today; The three-aer- e placed, said Sam Brewster, ' .house :is a smallras a Unit to the topof the new. physical plant director, I frame and cinder block struts : Brigham Young University ; He, said the big roof will l , cover an area as large as two ture,.'Activity Center, - j' BYU, ' t ; v . , ( , one-$tor- y U , By JOSEPH TJ LIDDELL Deseret News Staff Writer The Salt Lake City Commistoday unanimously approved an amendment to city ordinances which will allow Salt Lake property owners to get unsightly power lines put underground in their sion neighborhoods. The amendment stipulates that the property owners will pay all costs of burying the lines, but the utility companies will retain ownership of the lines and reKad . equipmnent. NEED To have such work done'in a subdivision or neighborhood at least two-third- s of the owners in the area would have to sign a petition requesting formation of a special conversion district. If it is approved and the work goes forward, all the property owners in the district would be TWO-THIRD- S involved. Officials said the underground conversion would not te Fire Damages Porch, Attic i j $ Fire caused an estimated $2,500 damage to a back porch and attic at the home of Mrs Avard Fairbanks, 1159 Whitlock Ave., Monday about 8:30 p.m., according to County Fire Battalion Chief Karl Has- fl I selfeld. The blaze started when a can of hot ashes from a fireplace was left on the porch material flammable with piled on top, Chief Hasselfeld noted. mandatory and the public be protected through separate public hearings to determine whether districts should be created. The ordinance will allow the public utility to determine the costs involved and submit a feasibility report. TO REPAY BONDS The city would assess property owners in the conversion districts for monthly or annual installments for repaying bonded costs of the conversion projects. The ordinance provides that the title to the assets (power lines, transformers and other equipment) will be , at all times solely and exclusively would No Refuge For Fawn , J good seats for athletic events awaiting donors who contribute a certain amount of money toward construction of the building, Clark said. .7 .; Bury Utility Lines i A friend of ours was always running over and stepping on cigaretttes that people carelessly threw on the ground. He died the other day . . . cancer of the I foot ! Activity Center. . It is anticipated that the Center Activities ready for the first game of the 1971-7- 2 Architect for the Robert A. Fowler, ! wilL be basketball season. ' project is Salt Lake City, who designed the Sports and Special Events Center at the University of Utah. HISTORICAL MORMON wrestlers. They keep on wrestling! WITS END 3 BYU . show technically correct. He was telling me that the Indians had many uses I for the cattail. When the top part was fresh, the Utah I Indians cooked therq something like a hot dog. Hope :they had a lot of mustard! The Indians also used both ,the stem and the dried top for a flour to make bread and to eat like oats. A dried cattail stem made a good n arrow shaft. The Indians also ate the tender shoots which taste like asparagus! After watching the wrestling matches on Channel 5 Ive finally discovered what happens to old broken-dow- n ' cf new .. . , j ) ts!js football .fields fayed jside by States, according to Talboe " ' I . Construction Co. spokesmen . : ; jside, - The structure vyill be After-th- e roof has been than an athletic? center, Wilplaced, workers will excavate kinson emphasized It will another 40 feet,, lowering the be Used for cultur4 and reli- -' .arena. Distance from floor to .gious events, ' rooftop will fee approximately More-- ' than 22,0001 bleacher-type the height of & 10sfory buildseats will be erected in ing. the center along with 10,000 Dr.' DeCosta Clark, who chair seats,' heads the fund drive for the Raising of the pound framework of steel will center, said the campaign is be the' largest hydraulic lift well past the halfway mark. ever attempted in the United There are' still plenty of 1 - Larry Dean Olson of Brigham Young University is an expert on survival. He sleeps under the snow and eats crazy things to stay alive in the wilderness. It all is fun and study. Larry has been hired for a new picture which will star Robert Redford. Robert plays a mountain man, a Kit Carson type; Its being shot in part up at Sun Dance and the Heber Valley. Larrys job is to keep the ' Deter! Newt pnoto by W. Claudell Johnson " , ... i "l WSr ;. - 1 J Werkmeif ore dwarfed by steel framework of threeacre ro of, being raised ds c unit to .X in. the .Head;.' deputies 7 , plained., ' -- . The bodies of 'three' daugft- r ters- were in beef in two 'other i By DOROTHY REA1 rooms. Annette, 10, and. Tina DegereJ; News Staff Write round togetther Marie, Sidewalk : engi FROVQ , v in one .bedroom and Mienellej ' fee treated freq to-- , neers.,wiif i 14, In another.,- All had been the country's most spectacu-la- r r. shot ;Di the, head, deputies big top; show here dur-said. f next two or three the mg " ri.., -:- - V '.j The woman apparently had been shot at close range in the chest. man was-sho- - Staty Of-lic- v.. 'I This frisky fawn thought he had a new way to escape hunting season dangers when he wandered into the back yard of Mrs. Elizabeth C. Young, 2228 King St., this morning. Utah Fish and Game conservation officers had no tranquilizer guns available so had to destroy the animal to prevent injury to area residents. Officers warned that a wild deer, trapped as this one was, could cut someone up rather severely with its hoofs if cornered or if it thought its life 1 was threatened. A - , ONTNIGHT EXHIBIT The special family night open house to the C.C.Ai7 ' Christensen Mormon Historical Art Panorama will be 4 held tonight in the University of Utah Fine Arts Museum,' . Sponsored by the museum and the Deseret News, the open house will be held from ? to 10 p.m: The Christensen exhibit, a group of paintings depicting different scenes in the history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, recently returned from a k showing at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York City. Also displayed in the museums main gallery is a collection of paintings by other early Utah artists, contemporaries of Christensen. vested in the public utility corporations involved.. The conversion ordinance resulted from a petition last July of 22 property owners along Northmount Way and North Hills Drive, high above the avenues, who wanted the utility lines buried. The city commission referred the petition to engineers and legal officers wno See CITY 01 Page 3 ; five-wee- B-1- Plenty Of Company In Moss-Burto- By DEXTER C. ELLIS Deseret News Political Editor n The souabble over campaign tactics widened Monday, with several new parties getting into the candiact, and ? third-part- y date charging that the two are in cahoots to obscure the real issues. The latest developments; On the basis of a telegram Monday from the Fair Campaign Practices Committee, Moss-Burto- , Feud n publicans, accused the gover- nor of attempting to cloud the real issues, one of which he said was Moss liberal vot-ing record on crucial issues, Dilworth S. Wooley, Bur- - tons campaign chairman, an antismoking award was given to Moss Monday partisan and high- He noted ly questionable. last month U.S. Surgeon Luther Terry, who , Washington, D.C., Gov. Calvin L. Rampton found Rep. Laurence ; J. Burton, guilty by default of false and misleading advertising in his effort to unseat Sen. Frank E. Moss, and asked Burton to apologize. Atty. Gen. Vernon B. flanked by State Romney, Sen. President Haven J. Bar-loand Speaker of the House Lorin N. pace, all three Re h, w FPTIflN R 6-- 9 TV Highlights Weather Map Obituaries Action Ads made the award, sent out a g massive appeal for Moss . . . Clyde B. Freeman, AIP candidate for the Senate, saw collusion in the fact that Burton withdrew from a sched-sai- d fund-raisin- uled three-wa- y debate 10, 11 12 14 14 14-2- 1 t Mon- day night over KUED, ly nel 7. Moss declined to appear against a substitute for Bur-thton, and the debate was celed. Freeman said he had finally reached a point where he was two down on the at rpa, fssues and that found a convenient City, Regional ...1, 3, 4, 13, 22 Our Man Jones 1 2 Comics Sports Financial ' out. they way Rampton hurled his charges against Burton at a press con- ference in the Capitol. The governor said Burtons advertising had falsely accused Moss of congratulat- ing moratorium rioters; of See CHARGES on Page 3 B-1- |