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Show wl'MPWiaingliri-- "yfiTriiTrTyffi Indian" David Hariguchi likes the whole idea. Klover Fausett, Tracy Evans, Todd Ainsworth watch Teresa Bo!l turn spit at Durrant School in Price. i Wiyqfriitj ycmgMM Rim Elementary School Mary Pendleton and Kris Jentzsch admire mural done by fifth graders at Canyon all this week. it started depicting the First Thanksgiving. Most students learned what Utohns Prepare Traditional Holiday Feasts will go hungry. The Salvation Army will serve its traditional free turkey dinner Thursday in three shifts at its headquarters, 137 E. 1st South, at 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. The good smells of turkeys roasting and pies baking will soon be wafting from kitchens across the state as Utahns prepare to observe that most American of all holidays Thanksgiving. Some 500 inmates at the Utah State Prison will have turkey, waldorf salad, candied yams, potatoes and a choice of pumpkin or mince pie. A few Thursday will be a day of at famitraditional feasting restaurants, ly gatherings, even at jails and the Utah oun Lake Salt Jail County inmates also will be served a turkey dinner with all the trimmings. Most corpsmen at the Clearfield Job Corps Center have been invited to area homes for Thanksgiving. Thursday will also be a day of offering thanks for blessings Tackling MAN Porno I Pilgrims. By DEANN EVANS The skiers ip af Alta are celebrating the arrival of snow and a new season, but they dont celebrate like the men who moiled for silver lap there a century ago. en pornography laws. Members of the Citizens for met with again Decency Nemelka Tuesday afternoon and agreed to assist him in waging a war against the pill culture., Nemelka, in return, agreed to push for the enactment of laws controlling the distribution and sale of pornography to minors. When the nation was celebrating the 100 anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the 2,000 citizens of Alta wanted to do their share. Joe Brandy caled a meeting of the businessmen of the community to plan the big day. They came up with three big , projects. ' ? There would be a dawn flag raising program, an America eagle would be released after patriotic speeches in the afternoon. Fireworks Would cap the festivities. days Committees went eagerly to work. One group cut a stately pine, trimmed the branches and planed the trunk smooth for a flagpole. have reached certain plateaus as to what can be done in both areas, and we are now going forward, the county attorney reported. We One man captured the eagle. taken and A collection was $700 raised for the pyrotech Under the agreement, members of the Citizens for Decency will contact local medical associations and pharmaceutical manufacturers to urge that certain harmful pills be taken off the market. nics. FIESTA A FIASCO Wittrall the planning, the fiesta turned into a fiasco! Jack Parlin, who owned the livery station, was the first up in the homing of the 4th: He glanced up and gasped. Swaying in the gentle morning breeze and in the dawns early light! was the body of a man. Soon, tie entire town was gazing skyward. To make mat-- . ters worse, the rope had come off the pulley. They finally had to chop dow their new flagpole without any ceremony. According to Nemelka, some drugs should not be scribed or sold on market. 4 The towripeople turned their attention to the afternoon ceremonies. Professor Busturich of Salt Lake City was the speaker. He Uso led the singing of The Star Spangled V Banner. . It squawked i couple of times. It reached the heighth of three feet and thm crashed to the ground and while people in thp back row gazid skyward without spotting it, the bird ran off into the brush. FIREWORKS FLOP It r It.. if if it if Alta probably hdi the most spectacular firework 'display in the nation that day, but it didnt last very long. it it, f And. citizens misfed the whole thing as they ran for safety with their backs to She celebration. WITS END it it it it it Dont you wish tthe burglars would doctors refuse o mate house calls! - k 4 meadow. fcback, he stepped if t ; The first rocketwas fired, and as the torch bearer moved in the bare foot of a helper holding a candle. The lad nfljt only jumped, but fell backward and (hopped his candle itto the crate of fireworks. it t ; It had to be thi firework display that would save the day. A large meapw north of town; was selected for the spectacular. By 9 pm. most of the people had gathered in the be more like Train DeraJed West Of Price Railroad ciews PRICE worked today to clear! a seven-ca- r eastbound derailment Denver Grande Western train west of Price. ofan and 29 lio mAp-- s Railroad traffic was blocked for a short time after the der-- , ailment Tuesday at 5:30 a.m. There are double tracks at the location so trains were rerouted while crews cleared the blocked line By DOUG PALMER Deseret News Staff Writer UTAH STATE PRISON m an alcoholic. By DEXTER C. ELLIS Deseret News Political Editor ! New top leadership in the Utah Legislature is likely as the majority Republican party prepares for organizational caucuses in the Senate and House. A new speaker is a certainty in the House where the GOP wrested control from the Der.crats in the recent general election. ' Either former Speaker Lorin -I- Im a drug addict. There are no programs here to help me. I need thera- Wednesday, November 22, 1972 . py and training for a job when I leave the prison. This message was echoed oy To Re-- i women inmates at a meeting here Tuesday night which was attended by more than 30 representatives of some 8 state, county and private so-- , cial welfare agencies. They gathered to discuss possible alternatives for programs for 13 women inmates at the n prison. The majority of the local and private governmental agencies agreed on a need for a comprehensive rehabilitation!., program for the inmates, with" several verbally committing-themselveto working with, the prison immediately. The women inmates, who prepared and served a steak' dinner preceding the meeting,' were unrestricted in the discussion that followed. Several strongly criticized the prisons failure to help them plan release. They are con- -' fined on charges ranging from murder to involuntary manslaughter, forgery and burglars for-the- ir By ROBERT MULLINS Deseret News Staff Writer through and 33 percent turned left to the hospital. It appeared likely( after a meeting this aftemonon, Salt Lake commissioners City would reopen Penrose Drive soon but on a limited basis. The recommendation was that cars using Penrose Drive to get onto Wasatch Boulevard would have to make a right turn onto Federal Way. They would be blocked from continuing southeast on Wasatch Boulevard to make left turns to the University Medical Center. This recommendation, plus several others to relieve traffic congestion in the Federal Heights area, were made at a meeting this afternoon of city traffic engicommissioners, neers from the city and the University of Utah, and residents of the avenues and Federal Heights area. Many residents have protested the increased traffic on their narrow streets after the city closed Penrose Drive on a trial baris a few weeks ago. SteStreets Commissioner phen M. Harmsen said today that the best permanent solution to the problem would be the construction of Bonneville Drive a circular drive start Traffic engineers said this should cut down over 50 percent of the traffic on Penrose because studies showed that of the 2700 cars per day using the drive, 20 percent went on ing from Foothill Drive at Sunnyside Avenue, and going up behind, the University of Utah Medical, Center, traversing the foothills and coming down to connect with 18th Avenue. But in the meantime, more immediate solutions were ing considered! Engineers recommended discouraging the use of Federal Way by the use of stop signs, and encouraging the use of 1st South as a means. of access to the campus. Some recommendations for changes on the campus included extending Union Drive to connect with Medical Drive (the road leading to University Hospital), eliminating a traffic Utah GOP Ready Caucus We The poor bir had been captive too long. the Were manufacturing drug he continued, addiction, See PORNO on Page The crovd was in an angry mood and threatened to punish the villak But, he was never caught, and the dead man never identifed. are atout to unfetter this eagle to sail away into the blue to represeit the liberty and freedom we hold so dear in this country, sdd the professor as the bird was released. pre- I Of Women Inmates SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Penrose $ Prison Hears Call NEWS Deseret News Staff Writer A local citizens group has promised to aid in County Atty. Carl J. Nemelkas antidrug efforts if he will, in turn, help in their fight to strength- and stores Most businesses DESERET . . And Pills Alta Thanksgiving Many schools have presented programs and at least two recreated the First Thanksgiving, with students in costume feasting on such authentic foods as venison; smoked fish, jerky and squash. ft .dicted through Thursday, but there may be a few patches of dense fog along the interstate between Salt Lake City and Tremonton during the night. Daytime highs will be 40 to 50 and lows tonight 15 to 25. Temperatures dropped some as skies night Tuesday cleared. The mercury dipped to 2 above zero at Bryce Canyon. Salt Lake Citys high Tuesday was 41 and low this morning was 27. will be closed for the day, as will all city, county and state offices. All business is expected to resume Friday, with no extension of the holiday over the weekend. However, with the holiday coming near the end of the week, law enforcement officers expect an increase in travel over the weekend and will be out in full force patrolling the highways. Mostly fair weather is pre- - Thursday will be a holiday even for almost everyone the garbage men in Salt Lake City and county. Residents are reminded there will be no garbage pickup Thursday. In both the city and county the schedule will be moved back one day. Thursdays pickups will be made Friday, and Fridays pickups will .be made at area church services. Some members will bring gifts of fed with them to be given to the needy. Most school children have already learned their lessons about the Mayflower and the men will be released for the day to have Thanksgiving dinner at home. State Prison. Hopefully no one By MAXINE MARTZ Deseret News Staff Writer N. Pace, Lake, or Rep. Howard C. Nielson, will succeed incumbent Speaker Richard C. Howe, who successfully ran for the Senate. And it is reliably reported that incumbent Senate PresiHaven dent J. Barlow, is ready to step down after an unprecedented three terms at the helm of the upper house. Barlow was unavailable for comment, since lie and most lt said Bonneville Harmsen Drive could be built with little environmental damage as a rocky shelf already extends around the foothills. The road would circle around behind the University Hospital, Fort Douglas Counsels PENROSE on Page 4 B-1- WINTER OLYMPICS Senate leaders are attending a legislative conference in Tucson, Ariz. It is reported that Sen. Dixie Leavitt, City, and Sen. Warren Pugh, Lake, will butt heads for the Senate other lt presidency. Leavitt was majority floor leader in the last legislative session. Botn are veteran legislators. Another powerful state UTAH on Page light at 15th East and 1st South and restructuring the intersection for right turns only. Forcing cars to make right turns from Wasatch Boulevard onto Federal Way will require constructing a median strip and channels, engineers said. Some construction to align some university streets to city streets may also be necessary in other areas. sen-Se- e TRAIL 7-- 1 yErnest D. Wright, director, Utah Division of Corrections,! who conducted the meeting, and Warden John W. Turner said they are anxious to coop- -, erate with outside ageiicies presently involved or with those who want to become involved. But Wright said he doesnt want any agency, to volunteer for programs at the institution or in the community unless there is assurance they will be continued. He emphasized the need for full acceptance of responsibility by agencies when an inmate is released for classes and other activities. The director requested cy proposal: be submitted in writing before another meeting of the group is held in about two weeks. i . The women expressed WOMEN on Page con-Se- IN POLL Additional Feedback coupons received at the eret News today show Utahns are still 7 to 1 against I e B-- 3 Deshost- SECTION ing the 1976 Winter Olympics, i Out of a total of 614 responses, 538 persons voted no, with only 76 voting yes. The percentage is 87.6 percent no and 12.4 percent' yes. Sentiments on todays coupons echoed those received Tuesday. The project is too costly, would damage the canyons, would benefit a few at the expense of the taxpayers, and would bring more problems to the area. B 3 I Youth Concert 'Excitingly Nice' In Logan By HAROLD LUNDSTROM Deseret News Music Critic The huge audience in the Chase Fine Arts Center at Utah State University (USU) looked the dozen Salute to soloists of the over once; Youth Concert they looked them over twice. And what they heard from' these guest soloists with the Utah Symphony Orchestra and Maurice Abravanel was excitingly nice. We are waxing poetic over the Deseret News and annual Utah Symphonys LOGAN major concert for teenaged musicians that was being given its first performance ever in Logan. The 13th annual performance of the Salute to Youth Concert, featuring the winners of the 1972 Utah State Fair Music Competition, will be given in the Tabernacle on Temple Square tonight at 8 p.m. In Logan Tuesday night, the 12 young pretty and handsome .guest artists were pests of a short reception of Dr. Glen Taggart, president of USU. L. Tonight the artists will be honored at a public reception on the mezzanine Utah immediately, the concei t. of Hotel following The concert get under way Tuesday night when six members of the Utah Symphony came on stage and sat In a small half circle around the conductors podium, followed by Maurice Abravanels bringing on stage Tamara Bischoff, in Ravels imposIntroduction and Allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet, and Strings. With Tamara seemingly perfectly at ease with her small There were those in the audience who seemed temporarily convinced that the other 75 members of the Utah Symphony were still enroute somewhere between Salt Lake City and Logan. given pest soloist ing But not so. Everyone was present and accounted for as it 75 of them were. accompanying ensemble, Ravels Introduction was intimacy and repose.. Her delicate, Jinely . nnanced playing was choice for the French classic, Snd the rippling cascaded in the cadenza scintillated under the harpists facile fingers. The balance between the soloist and her ensemble provided a rare delectation. Saint-Saen- s familiar YOUTH on Page At.,. Hav-Se- J e 1 t |