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Show v1?? DESERET HEWS, WEEKEND OF OCTOBER 9, N s vS , .W.fttVdf.Mftt JL .i r v 1 jTOTf f ,4 Si g vWAfl ,, f - V , ias y v o 4 V rf'X " &&&& dT JK XJS x. frm'f?. t. Zto" wsHtosew t ' A K&SAtasft&i Ks hxm W ft, 4, Kv ' . tt ? Ji r i ,i n 11 L- $ TJ h r ' C ' - 'V Vs - A David S Monson hunf' on to bis victory after a recount of votes for ihe Republican nomination ior lieutenant governor-secretar- y of state. Id. Gov. Clyde L. Miller s office said Friday the; recount showed Monson scored 79,385 votes to William E. Diran's 78,634. Earlier vote totals, counted after balloting In the primary election, gave Monson, the current state auditor, 80,081 and Dunn 78,496. Dunn, a Salt Lake County commissioner, asked for the recount because a 10,000-vot- e computer error occurred on election night and because the final tally showed him losing by less than one vote per voting district. Salt Lake County s recount, the last to come into Millers office Friday, showed Monson received' 31,682 and Dunn 34,608. An official in the election department of the Salt Lake County Clerks Office said the original vote tally was; Dunn, 34,570 and Monson, 31,692. wsgg T; j sctaskj: jjs f; t, ' i: ii 11 i: tl V4 7' ssrf s 'MtS W JlTi J 1 J "- Monson wins recount U ri :r -- 5 V CA 1 ftTnri ifHf f IL-e- -Trs m tv if , -- "r;r 'ysrsrxvt , w ? ij I . 'Kfefr r JT iff vslCIiv I'i, ,. er 'TSF2C'CSi r: .... ;'.'. tritn; $! l . && , v ' '" x - - ,f lai-- . Xv .j iv .t ' r r ,v e&?4. . w ;Kfcafeag a 'MWK" - 1rA,wt IF ,4j " T" Vis JE. I- S. ' ,T ' iA -4 .- ' v t ? t Todav in the West A. v T 7 r a . 4. s. I .... .. .Vri,(, M J s $ - j? A 7 A S? - !? Xk 9. f w-w-i JW'JWtf v V f- l !' : ..''.,.v - . 976 f y i. 1 s 9rgr - s v y , W,. Sr-" JWWW,A .' 1 i v: A smai! boy shuffles toward his new barracks home on ' r " A V T 4 f r f.'sj ,a j,-- ..' 1-- 13.5-mil- e, A dMMtett: d Utah HiAtortca Society rthoto the first day that Topaz opened for people of Japanese ancestry, during World War il. ns remember Tooaz By Ray Boren cated today on the Topaz site so the barracks city and Executive Order No. 9066 are not forgotten. The monument, a project of the Utah Japanese-America- n Citizen League chapters, stands about seven feet high arid is about seven feet wide, said Mrs. Alice Kasai. Half of the $10,000 for the project came from national, state and local Bicentennial committees, and the rest from donated matching funds, she said. A caravan of cars and buses left Salt Lake City this morning, stopped in Delta to see another monument in the city park Deseret News staff writer TOPAZ, Millard County Topaz today is rubble, a ghost town, although thousands of Japanese-American- s lived here 34 years ago. At its peak, 8,800 people, of five-eight- them American citizens, were assigned quarters in Topaz, 17 miles northwest of Delta, a bleak place with a lovely name, a relocation camp for those of Japanese ancestry who were living on the West Coast when World War II began. As a special Bicentennial observance, a monument was to be unveiled and dedi- - urged a money. Our problem is too many children are getting help which is insufficient, he said. He cited a dearth of leadership personnel in the , program and said a quality program could not be prov ided w ithout the proper leadership. Handicapped children have been isolated or educated as second class citizens in the past, but this law (PL 94 142) changes this, Dr. M, Donald Thomas, superintendent of Salt Lake City schools, said. See PROVIDE on 0 BLUFFDALE Jfak SfB S Wrt lUiCd ft 1 1 X say r - were initiated into Phi Kappa Phi, the scholastic society that honors students who maintain exceptionally high giade point averages. Thats not unusual. Each year the societys local chapter enlists 200 to 3u0 U. of U. students who carry GPAs of 3.6 (A-l- ) or above. What is unusual, however, is that the three men are each serving maximum life sentences at the Utah State Prison. In a ceremony held in the prison chapel, May, Murphy, and Jacobs received membership certificates from Dr. Rex Campbell, professor of communication and president of the U. of U. chapter of Phi Kappa Phi. The three men are enrolled in the Prison College Program, an agreement between the prison and the U. which currently enables 30 inmates to obtain college degrees while serving their sentences at the State Prison. The quarter system, class structure. and grading regulations are identical to those on the campus proper, with the exception that ciasses are taught at the prison by U. of U. professors. May, Murphy and Jacobs, all serving sentences for murder, will See 3 INMATES on New federal Administration Food and Drug regulations brought on by consumer group pressure may cripple development of new biomedical devices in the United States and drive small companies out of business, Dr Willem J. Kolff, said Friday. Dr. Kolff. who heads the University of Utah Division of Artificial Organs, addressed the Utah Science Teachers Association during Utah Education Association sessions in the Salt Palace. Dr. Kolff and his also outlined progress being made at the U. of U. on the wearable artificial kidney, artificial eye1 and ear, artificial arm and artificial neari. Ralph Nader har gone he said of the FDA D one-acr- Topaz was a city with sentries and fences. II had a hospital, an administration nurseries, two complex three elementary schools, high school, and aduit education classes (most education classes pre-scho- See TOPAZ on A-- 9 0 G'- v j' " p s i : - , Nr v 'v. w nppiw ,?SX y Tv 5 xx v r s& , c'lfi . wAfSL.ur iji , " ir STi .'.''V. ' v. f., Nst..rv, .! v :rr,y - ! $, 4 aJ - -- x rf M- - vvr 2W 1 1 . irl r w TV - 7' I tI ft 7-- . c vm M 4 ' - tyv-Mri- A-- A judge from Colorados PARK CITY. (AP) Denver County told Utah prosecutors Friday that if they nave a strung case, they should gel rid of juiois . w ho tend to be Judge Irving Ettinberg said, however, that if a prosecutor thinks he has a weak case, he should fightt to include potential holdouts on the jury. Ettinberg addressed the final day of the semiannual Association of Utah Prosecutors seminar. He outlined the importance of jury selection and how to convince a jury of ones case. In jury selection, prospects should sometimes be asked leading questions that require only a 'yes or no . he said, adding that a juror might be embarrassed by a question he cannot answer. Some prosecutors are reluctant to select mem-btr- s of a minority race to try people of their own race. Ettinberg said. But he said this is often at mistake. Minority members are often eager convict someone whose crime might reflect badly upon their race, he said. tf Monson, Baker lead Convicted murderers Dennis Jacobs, left, Raymond Murphy and Ronald iMay all maintain high grade averages in their college studies. Deseret News staff writer He said the law greatly increases the cost of developing new biomedical devices by extending testing requirements to cover decreases. "It now costs $3 million to market a now drug before youve satisfied all the testing, and how many small companies have $3 million he said. Also, Di . Kolff iiu , it has p very difficult to get FDA advisory ponds of people who See RULES on 4 PROVO The U.S. government will not press ' Brigham Young University to comply with sections of the Title 9 regulations prohibiting sex discrimination, ' President Dallin H. Oaks said Friday. The issue here was government control over private institutions, Pres. Oaks said, explaining the schools challenge to the government in an address' during the BYU Alumni Association's annual awards banquet. Our position has been successfully taken, he said. The university took issue with the regulations one year ago, pointing to its private status and conflicts between the regulations and the schools code of., conduct based on the standards of The Church of.. ; Saints. Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Pres. Oaks said the school looks back on year with satisfaction. Six departments received accreditation or their was, renewed, he said, including the new law school. Significant building programs have included additions to the Lee Library and facilities for thpj Language Training Mission, which he described as a sister institution. A total of 165,000 square feet of additional college j space will soon be added in replacement facilities, he Jury tips for prosecutors s s ' v , v By Joseph Bauman The FD has been regulations given much more power than it asked for. He said it is now a question of time as to how me regulations will So far the FDA be interpreted. seems to be very cautious in use of Dr. these enormous powers, Kolff said. "But in some respects the law will not give them enough leeway to be reasonable. r u wins Title 9 Fight said. Cleanup key to healthy river I biomedical research By Mary Lubber Deseret News medical writer hvv icciioH QAA University of Utah Ronald May, Raymond Murphy and Dennis Jacobs Friday students A-1- B Vrt tis By Bill Klein Deseret News staff writer Handicapped children have a contribution to make to society and it is up to educators to train them to make it. : This was the conclusion of speakers in a Utah Council for Exceptional Children meeting Friday afternoon during sessions of the Utah Education Association in the Salt Palace. Dr. Fred Weintraub, assistant executive director, governmental relations, The Council for Exceptional Children, Reston, Va., explained U.S. Public Law approved by Congress last year lor the protection of rights of handicapped children and their parents. 1 In history, education of the handicapped is not new, the first such law was written under the Articles of Confederation before the U.S. Constitution, he said, but now this law provides for the transition from providing funds to providing protection for the Constitution rights of these children. Dr. R. Eiwood Pace, coordinator of special Education programs, Utah State Board of Education, commended teachers for doing a good job by serving $0 percent of the pupils last year with one-ha- lf enough I rwj,. ViUVi President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on March 17, 1942, directed a forced evacuation of all Japanese-American- s living on. the west coast inland to prevent espionage and sabotage during the war with Japan. The first evacuees, mostly from San Francisco and the peninsula area nearby, arrived in Topaz during mid October. The camp was one of ten to which 110,000 were sent. Japanese-America- n The government purchased property 3 inmates join Phi Kappa Phi Aid disabled, UEA fiom area landowners to establish the relocation camp, then, after the war, resold much of it to the original owners, Mrs. Kasai said. e A site was donated to the JCL hv the family of one landowner, Louis B. Ellsworth, Globe, Ariz., and there the monument has been erected, she said. recalling Topaz history, and continued on to the Topaz location for the dedication ceremonies. LiACV UUTC section okayed 70 The Utah Transportation Commission Friday $10 approved a resolution for the route of a from West Green River to Floy ; million section of Wash, Emery and Grand oounues. The rot te is the seme proposed during a public hearing June 3 and includes interchanges at West. Green River and Elgin. The resc'utlon directed Utah Department, of. Transportation officials to investigate the jusiiifica-- , tion of another interchange at the old Western Canyonlands Road. Department officials will ask the Federal Highway change for consideration in the future. The resolution also directed the staff to complete the final negative environmental declaration reflecting the commissions decision to pass the measure. f v x V Ifc v i'vAt!- : , y j . , ' s' '-- . . 4 A decision important to the future of the Jordan River Parkway will be made Nov. b, when members (if the Soli Lake County t v is.il of v Ov'cr'n.. i.Lo decide whether to consolidate sewage treatment plants in the area. Dr. David W. Eckhoff, director of the County Water Quality Sod ion 208 Study, explained the importance of the decision Friday during a press canoe trip down the river. Eckhoff said consolidation is an important element in the overall cleanup of the municipal vvasie water, and the cleanup is required by both federal and state regulations. We have to do more than we're doing now he said. 'And the cheapest way is to go quality-wise- , to consolidation. He said that the river is much more polluted today than it was in May due to inadequate handling of wastes. Eckhoff said under a program proposed in an earlier "Section 303 Water Quality Study." seven sewage treatment plants that empty into the Jordan would be consolidated into one. The new 203 study reinforces the earlier conclusion, and spells out the mechanics of imolementing it. Plants to be merged out of existence are the Murray. plants at South Salt Lake, Granger-Hunte(Midvale), Sandy and Cottonwood. Trie remaining treatment plant would be the Salt r, Lake City Surburban Sanitary Distinct Number One plant near the Vitro tower at 33ra South. This plant would handle wastes now being processed at six others. Eckhoff said it is possible will also be kept that one oi the six, ill OpCidliCii. Other developments needed before the Jordan can achieve its potential as a clean, park-line- d river. Eckhoff said, are control of agricultural runoff and light dredging to remove silt from time to time. V. Vee Call, chairman of the Provo-Jorda- n River that, Parkway Authority, told the p.ewsmen-paddler- s by the end of the year the authority will have purchased or been given all of the land it needs on the section of the parkway from 2) si South to eight and a half miles. Eckhofl said there are two main problems facing consolidation. One is that some communities in the south part of Sait Lake County tear that if there is only one regional sewage treatment plant, there won't be enough trcanum capaeitj to allow the towns to grow as theyd like-Eckbott said he aid not believe the feur justified. Tiie other stumbling block is empire-buildinamong sanitary districts Any time anyone gets any type ot power ho hates to give it up. even it its only the power to treat sewage,- Eekhoft said. Republican David Monson and Democrat Linn Baker have taken the lead in the races lor Utah' lieutenant governor and auditor respectively, Poll reported Friday. A telephone sampling of 406 registered voters' statewide, taken between Sept. 30 and Oct. 3 by e r ; YZ ftftft rUf LVUSiOu lUdiuiig utlui umuuit uv uuitlvi .vuU, vaul., showed Monson with a 50 to 27 percent lead over Democrat David Duncan, with 23 percent undecided. In the auditors race, Baker held a 40 to 28' percent margin ever Republican Stanford Darger, w ith 32 percent undecided. . - C March of Dimes chairman Roy w, Simmons, Kaysville, has been namea Utah chairman for the March of Dimes, Edward, Fike, national vice president and director of development, announced today. Simmons, president and chairman of the board K 7 k f zions First National Bank, will coordinaie the ef-- r g I statewide w J forts to help advance re-- 7 V;search and medical service programs in the light '' v I against birth defects. Simmons has previously served as the March of Dimes community chairs. V9 .. ... - man in Davis County. Hefund-raisin- J '" '''7 I xs.ros'- 63 salc nation in 1976 led rlmtae and other by collecting $568,361, repres- oiiiiug iM.wvt.'iilf pfi prison. fund-raiseii- A A - the' with the leierama. riaumou g - FUah , |