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Show 11 M n Apartment Owner Willing To Remove Abandoned Car i There's an old car in a field behind an apartment house next to ns. We think its a hazard to the small children who play in this neighborhood. Couldnt you the owner and have him move this old car before someone gets hurt? J.L., Salt Lake City. lights on the freeway at the North Salt Lake cutoff where the freeway intersects going to Ogden and North Salt Lake. I nearly had an accident there the night before last and I think lights should be there to protect that particular spot. J.O., Bountiful. Sure we could, but you could have, too! We talked with the apartment owner who said he 'Wen't own the car, that someone pushed it onto his lot some time ago. He asked the manager of his apartments to move it, but apparently it hasnt been moved yet. Although he doesnt feel the car is the hazard you make it out to be, he is willing to pay the expense of removing it if you or your neighbors will make the arrangements to have someone cc ae out and do the job. Just contact him and he will be glad to cooperate. There will soon be light at that particular spot, according to the Utah Highway Dept. A project is presently under way to light Interstate 15 from where lighting con-fa- There Will l rt Be Light would like to know why tkere are no Poem To Appear Soon In November I mailed a poem to Idlewild Publishing Co., Los Angeles, for publishing. In their letter they said that the deadline for payment of publishing fees would be Nov. and that this fee of The $20 would guarantee publication. publication was to be ia November. I received my cancelled check but so far I Nickel Quiz - WASHINGTON Watching Rogers C. B. Morton and the Senate Interior Committee engage in their pas de deux, an observer could not help being impressed with how times have changed in 24 months. In 1969, Walter Hickel suffered a humiliating inquisition at the hands of the same committee that engaged Morton in friendly if tedious conversation last week. Was it an abberation, two years ago, for the Western oriented Interior Committee to attack Hickel so savagely? The environment was a new, brightly burning issue in 1969. For at least one committee intimately for environmental responsible matters, it is a less attractive one now. Mr. Hickel came to Washington with little record on conservation Rep. Morton has a definite record on the subject, compiled during eight years on the House Interior Committee, and some of that record is negative, or at least He voted against Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore Park, among others, and advocated power dams on ihe lower Colorado River. Have the intervening months led some senators to sour a bit on protecting the ecology so fervently? Did Sen. Henry M. decide that Mr. Hick-el- s Jackson, stance on the ecology helped kill the supersonic transport, Washington States favorite economic project? Are other Sen. Frank senators on the committee Sen. Mark Hatfield, Church, and Sen. Quentin Burdick, also having second thoughts about the degree to which they drove Mr. Hickel to embrace environmental protection? What about Sen. Frank E. Moss, Mr. Hickels chief antagonist, who, two weeks ago, was promising the same treatment for Mr. Morton? Chairman Jackson was short and impatient with the Sierra Club witness, Phillip Berry, who appeared to oppose Mr. Morton. He asked far sharper questions of Berry than of Morton. What the senators were concerned about wfas the possibility that the U.S. might run short of energy sources in a few years if conservationists succeed in blocking pipelines, power plants, and oil IJ i s ; i j j ,,1 rff "fI 1 f i 1 'i I I i I f i I f I I I I tanker operations. They paid some obeisance to the idea that prudent care should be taken not to despoil the environment unduly, but the merest expression of concern for the ecological niceties from Mr. Morton satisfied them. For the unfortunate Mr. Hickel, the most utter expressions of his undying love for nature and his most explicit promises to prevent human despoliation of the sea, the forests, and the snowy reaches of Alaska did not satisfy the committee in 1969. They said they did not believe him, and suggested that he was his real intentions. Last camouflaging week Mr. Morton said occasionally that he wanted generally to protect nature, and no one pressed him for either specific pledges or questioned his sincerity. The only explicit promise he made in two days of hearings was not to export water from Sen. Jacksons home state to an enterprise proSouthern California hibited by law until 1977 in any case, at least a year after the Nixon Administration under the most optimistic circum stances will have left office. a noted Sen. Gaylord Nelson, liberal who has made the environmental issue his own crusade, asked a few moderately sharp questions. His most pointed remarks concerned the predator- control program of the Interior Depart-- ment, which, he said, is killing off hun--- dreds of thousands of coyotes, badger, bear, hawks, and other wild life unnecessarily. Sen. Nelson got no more than a griudging promise from Morton to look into the figures after he was sworn in as secretary. Westerners who were concerned that Eastern Morton might bring a gung-h- o liberalism to Interior should rest more easily. He gave no indication at all that the federal he would rush to lands of the West and to bar ment of oil shale, forests, oil reserves, or resources any of the other of the Intermountain Area. Just as signi- ficantly, the committee did not appear to want much more protection than the area is now getting. over-prote- d j Box 1257 Salt Lake City, Utah 841 IQ havent received word from them. Ive Are You Qualified? tried calling them five times and have Me called the FIIA to see about getwritten letters but have gotten no rea 235 loan and they told us we ting S.H., Piovo.. sponse. Please help me. couldnt have one beeause we already Idlewild informs us your poem will had a loan. But we sold that house in appear in the publication for which you June. The FIIA, however, says as far as paid. The publishing, however, has been its concerned, were stil responsible for delayed somewhat, but you should get it. What we want to know is what we have to do in ordr to get out from under proofs soon. By MALCOLM MacPHERSON Newsweek loan. We are informed that unless you obtained both a credit approval of the purchaser and a release of the sellers obligation, you would still be obligated under your contract for the mortgage on the original house and it doesn't appear you have been released from jour original contract by the mortgagee. There are other issues involved here, and we're sending you a copy of the materials we have received to help explain. Our advice would be to determine whether you actually are qualified for this loan, then present your case again. A Tell-Tal- e Sign Can you tell me how one can I: now for sure if food has been refrozen? I have heard you can buy some frozen foods with a tiny device which registers a change of temperature by change of color. Does this work? X.B., ination They are, moreover, making inroads into the prestige schools. At New York University Law School, this year's entering class of 360 includes 75 women almost 21 per cent. And there are more to come. Nearly half the 1970 graduating class at Radcliffe College applied to law school and an estimated 60 to 80 per cent of the 185 women in Yales senior class are expected to apply. The change began three years ago when the draft began to cut into the enrollment of males and law schools started looking for women. But the tenor of the times has also played its part. There is an increased sense of professionalism among women today. says Russell Simpson, dean of admissions at the Harvard Law School. They want more than just a husband and a family. They know a lawyer can be independent, can do what she wants when she wants to. Political activism on campus and work in the cities have als dramatized the need for a legal education. They want positions in which they can do something, says Dean Paul Moritz of Yale College. As undergraduates, many of them work in the communities. The people they meet need legal help and the students feel irustrated if they don't have the equipment to give that help, Like many of their male counterparts, women law students are turning from the traditional ambitions of the profession. Toung ladies are now part of New York University's law school program Most girls are trying to get into evant things, rel- Yale stusays dent Elisse Walter. Nobody wants to get into tax or corporation law. But pre-la- poverty law is something else. Theres an outlet for your messianic urges in law. You can go out and reform the world. the proliferation of Unfortunately, women lawyers is not pleasing to at least one section of the academic community the male undergraduates who must compete with the ladies for places in the top law schools. Many of these young men are learning the cost of womens liberation at an early age and they dont like the lesson. M.D. By HAROLD LUNDSTROM MUSICAL WHIRL Deseret News Music Critic Dear Dr. Thosteson: Please give me some information on traveling with insul-lias I understand it has to be kept cold. Can you travel with it without out cooling? How long could you use it after taking it out of ti.e refrigerator? Mrs. A glittering display of both faculty and student talent set oft the University of Utahs 23rd annual Chamber Music E.W. ternoon. For short periods, however, ordinary temperatures do not alter its potency materially. When traveling by car, keep the insulin in youi poeketbook, not in the car trunk or glove compartment, because they can become quite warm. In the car, or anywhere, be careful not to put it in direct sunlight, because that can get pretty hot, even at times when the weather is cool. In a hotel or motel room, you can put the bottle next to a window during the night to keep it cool remembering, of course, not to leave it there after the sun comes up. One method is to get a email thermos bottle. Cool it, then keep the insulin bottle inside it. In any event, the average bottle of insulin is used up in from seven to 14 days, and for that length of time, it will not be affected even if nnrefrigerated. Dr. Thosteson welcomes ail reader mad, but regrets that, due to the tremendous volume received dally, he is unable to answer individual letters. Readers questions are incorporated in his column whenever possible. claim Festival Sunday af- - The eight players of the Mozart Serenade were joined by three young artists for a performance of Dvoraks Serenade for Winds in D Minor, Opus 44. The coupling of one of Mozarts two wind octets with one of Dvoraks two affable Serenades was an admirable choice. Equally signifiin cant its high a 1 1 ainments was that the recital the first of the festi- val's three was worthy ot Dr. A. Ray Olpin, president emeritus, to whom this years festival is fittingly dedicated. The second recital will be next day in the Music Hall at 3 p.m. the dilatory side in tiie slow movement this movement responds well to a but ths is nitpickslightly faster pulse ing. There was some very agreeable soio playing nearly every instrument had Sun- The second of Mozait's two octets, Serenade for Winds No. 12 in C Minor. (K. 388), was performed by a team of four faculty members and four student music majors, all skilled and sensitive musicians who blended into an excellent ensemble, indeed. THE LUMPITS (he way the atter-waid- s. People think that women's rights law is a narrow field, limited to abortion and marriage cases, says Yale law But women student Anne Freedman. have a separate legal status that is reflected in all legal disciplines employment law, education law, criminal, media, constitutional and many others. But once out of school, the woman lawyers troubles with discrimination begin in earnest. With depressing frequency, even judges sometimes are moved to gallant remarks about the lawyers appearance which distract her and the listening jury from her carefully prepared case. Other judges make less amiable remarks. And there is frequent difficulty in being allowed to see jailed clients, in being mistaken for somebodys secretary, in encountering sexist hostility from male and sometimes female jury members. Only when the womens liberation movement came, says Eieanor Jackson Piel, a former California deputy attorney general, did I realize how many kinds of discrimination I, as a woman lawyer, have had to sweep under the rug. Mr. Hepworth again took special care so that the ensemble balanced. There was no point at which either clarinet, oboe, horn, or bassoon obtruded, and there were many points at which they combined Into a satisfactorily unobtrusive background for the cello and string bass. The recital continued without an intermission into Brahm's long Piano Quartet No. 2 in A. Opus 26, by the student Richard Kay, violin; Barbara Sudweeks, viola, Carolee Grubb, cello; and Tricia Thomas, piano. quartet-in-residenc- This was a fine performance of the sunniest of the Brahms piano quartets, catching almost all of its beauty, almost all of its impulse. The almosts are not quite entirely a critic's habitual safeguard ; they do cover an occasional lapse, by the way of the mildest scoop or flutter of intonation, and a rather markedly languid Scherzo. If this Is a sin, however, it was .crtainly atoned for in the finale in which the players gave a tremendous impetus to gjqisy music which is not the one of Branrns many essays in this style that plays itself the mest easily. Loel Hepworth,' of the faculty, proved s himself a conductor, and chose suitable tempos and resisted the temptation these serenades offer from time to time to obscure the music in a blaze of virtuosity. For my preference, I thought Mr. Hepworth chose a tempo rather or first-clas- 4 some happy moments and there was considerable distinction in the performance style of Dvorak, as there should be, compared with the style of the Mozart. Perhaps the Menuetto dragged unwarranted-ly- , but equally it is only seldom that the unexpected shape of the principal theme is made so clear. Had there been an intermission, perhaps most of those who left midway through the Piano Quartet would have remained for the exciting final two movements. Throughout there was unanimity of phrasing, and good phrasing at that. their tone was warm a highly desirable quality in music for wind and this was a major factor in only shaping their phrases so poetically. i (Editor's Note: We're sorry ihe number of calls and the volume of mail make it impossible to answer ;. every Please, no medtealor legal Questions. Don't sens stamps or envelopes as answers cart imy be .ven in this column. Only questions of saneral interest will be answered. Give ycur name, address and teleph?ne number not tar publication but to help Ooll Man help ycu.) All 2, 1971 MERRY-GO-ROUN- D Utah Chamber Festival Gets Off To A Glittering' Display Traveling With Insulin Not as big a problem as you might think. Insulin, it is true, should be kept cool not frozen, and not heated, and it is customary to keep it in the refrigerator so you will be sure that it won't accidentally be exposed to heat. they arc going to be one Harvard senior, and lawyers, says he adds suspiciously: There are no statistics to show what girls do after law school. This particular Harvard man scored 630 of a possible 800 on' the tests by which law schools decide which students to accept. On hearing that a girl at Yale scored 773, he could only say: Thats demoralizing. Many men students now say that women are getting preference in being admitted to law school, that given equal educational backgrounds and grades, the female student will be chosen. Few women would agree. They see discrim They .suffers. Tuesday, February Another grievance is be'ng rectified in some schools. Yale, among others, has established new courses in women and the law. YOUR HEALTH C. THOSTESON, in There have been attempts to put devices on packages to test temperature changes but none have really worked. They have to be on the surface to be usable. When the surface warms up a bit. as it will when a package is handled, the temperature device changes color even though the product is still frozen. If ice' has formed a flat surface on the bottom of the package, then jtou know it has been refrozen. The Frozen Food Institute claims tefreezing affects the quality of meats and fish but is not, in itself, dangerous. The same kind of problem often occurs when you buy chickens or other meats on sale and freeze them in your home freezer. They don't freeze fast enough in home machine and the taste DESERET NEWS, At Harvard, women have complained about the humorous or deprecatory comments of some professors. They also note that one professor gives women the job of explaining the facts of a rape case. They complain if they are treated more like women than law students, and sighs Harvard's Dean Simpson, if they are treated like law students, they complain that they are not being treated like women. A particular irritant is the scarcity of women who have been invited to teach in law schools. N.Y.U.s law school has two on a staff of 60. Harvard has two; Yale, one. Half the countrys law schools have no women at all on their faculties. Only a handful have more than one. schools. By GEORGE in admissions, courses are taught and on the job Feature Service A century has passed since the first woman lawyer presented a case in a U.S. court, but the legal profession has remained, by and large, a male reserve. Lately, however, there are signs happy or ominous, depending upon the point of view that women may soon have equality not only by law but at the law. Predictably, the trend is most marked at the source the nation's 150 accredited law schools. One set of statistics shows the tremendous change in the making. There are presently only some 8,000 women lawyers In the country (or 2.8 per cent of the' profession). But there are 4,415 women now attending U.S. law i ; fo 235 Lady Lawyers Are Found Few In Number, Young, Militant Big Change In Dlorfon, Deseret News Washington Bureau You may writ now ends to Cudahy Lane. Tha project should be completed this spring. IN WASHINGTON By GORDON ELIOT WHITE this house so we can get a N.Y., Salt Lake City. Spy Flights Over China Risk U-- 2 Affair By JACK ANDERSON WASHINGTON American crews are flying spy planes over Red China, thus risking another U2 incident, to phoigrapli militaiy on developments the Chinese mainland. The downing ir. Russia of a U2 spy plane, with a sheepish American a b oard, broke up a Big conference Four and precipitated a the with crisis Kremlin in 1960. During the uproar that followed, an embarrassed President Eisenhower halted U2 flights over Russia. pilot Bui U2 pilots with kaleidoscopic cameras continued to spy from the stratosphere upon China. They now, however, SR71 reconnaissance fly jets, which soar faster than 2.000 miles per hour and higher than 80,000 feet. pencil-shape- d The Chinese, meanwhile, are developing more sophisticated radar and antiaircraft missiles, which might bring down a Tenure SR.71 and repeat the embarrassment all over again. Certainly, its no secret to Red agents American crews blast off that regularly from Kadena Air Force Base, on spy fights Okinawa, in over the Chinese mainland. They streak almost straight up until they disappear like tiny black needles into the distant sil ver lining. SR71 reconnaissance planes each can film 60,000 square miles in one hour. two-ma- n In late afternoon, the returning spy planes contact the tower at Kadena with a code signal The controllers immediately warn off other aircraft. Then one by one, the SR71s drop the box on their first pass. Translated from intelligence lingo, this means the film packets are dropped by parachute. The objective is to make sure the precious film, obtained at such jeopardy to the lives of the volunteer pilot and reconnaissance officer, is safe even if the aircralt should crash on landing. At Kadena, the black, SR71s are set apart from B52 bombers. There isn't the buffalo-lik- e a spy on Okinawa who doesnt know the mission of the unmarked spy planes. Communist runners sometimes wait on the roads for the SR71s ot take off so the news can be flashed by clandestine radio to the Chinese. An Air Force spokesman,, not unexpectedly, refused to comment on the spy flights. All he would say was that the SR71 flies so high that most residents along the routes are unaware of its presence. e, delta-winge- d Phony Drug Films Deepening national concern over drug abuse has caused moviemakers to produce scores of educational films on the subject for students, GIs and other audiences. So the government hired an authoritative private agency to examine 83 of the most widely used films and rate them for scientific validity. The results were startling. Thirty-fiv- e of the films were found scientifically These included two of the unacceptable. most popular films in general use, plus films now all four of the distributed by the military. The reviewing agency, the National Council on Drug Abuse Education and Information, submitted its evaluation of the films to the National Institute of Mental Health five months ago. The report, which cost the government $69,000, has been hushed up ever since. Spokesmen gave The classic bureaucrats explanation that the report was being reviewed. Meanwhile, the Pentagon continues to show GIs films which are loaded wiih s and phony misinformation, scare talk. The names of the films are The Hang-ULSD (Air Force), The People vs. Pot (ail ser(Navy), vices) and Trip to Where (Navy). n half-truth- p I |