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Show ,'4 Review Editorials ; Weekly Calendar Page 4 Yes On Granite Bond There is one overwhelming reason to get out and vote for the Granite Districts building bond this Tuesday - were bulging at the seams. This year there were 55,702 children in Granite schools. If estimates are right - and theres every reason to believe they are - this will increase to 70,000 by 1970. To house these seekers of knowledge the District seers presently plan eleven new schools and additions to five. Funds are also required for modernizing older buildings, buying land and purchasing furniture and equipment. We trust that the funds will be used carefully and economically, and the best insurance for frugality is the watchful eye of a board of education which we ourselves elected. With the passage of this bond issue we place the burden of scrutiny in their hands. HAROLD S. SCHONBERG 8 P M, Assembly Hall; N.Y. TIMES music critic. "CIVIL RIGHTS AND THE 8 P.M.. UniverINDIAN" sity of Utah Law School aud- - DO YOU THINK THE . COUNTY NEED6 - HOLLADAY AMERICAN LE8 P.M., Post Home, GION 670 East 3300 South. -7- :30P.M., WASATCH JR. HIGH PTA 7:30 P M., Wasatch Jr. High School. years ago J. Bracken Lee withheld some of his federal income taxes because he objected to foreign aid as unconstitutional. It was a gesture of protest - he put them in escrow and eventually paid up. few This week Joan Baez, the folk singer is in town. She has withheld some of her taxes because she objects to armaments. . . . also a gesture at protest. . Miss Baez is an avowed liberal. We think were safe in stating that Mayor We dont recall that the ADA cheered Mr. Lee; Lee is a conservative. will the Birch Society laud Miss Baez? Oh well, strange bedfellows, thats show "LA BOHEME Kingsbury Hall, Lab technician Theres no reason they shouldnt have one. 1595 Woodland Avenue Housewife ' v why ' X. V ' V thats what we Where 8:30P.M., SL BEES VS. OKLAHOMA 3 P M , -- Derks Field. -Carriage 7 P M., 7, - 5 BAZAAR PM, Winder 9th Ward, 4366 South 1500 East. WARD SPRING FASHION SHOW noon. Ft. Douglas - Hidden Valley Country Club. Saturday, "LA BOHEME Kingsbury Hall, ' PURE A pril James Grandinetti Dik Sullivan 240 Beryl Avenue 1985 South 21st Student, BYU Dispatcher I sure do. I believe there's something wrong and it should be looked into. THE BUTTON 1 clear East would say yes. This would up areas where there's doubt. East 789 Scott Avenue 1518 South 16th Retired Salesman "I think sq. Theyd get this thing cleared up faster that way. really know yet." I'm new in town, so from BOX Idont PAT CUM JWNGS Sunset At Great SaltLake 2i 8:30P.M., U. of U. - THE DRIVEN 8 P M, Silver SNOW Wheel Theatre, Park City. AS TOPS RECOGNITION DAY -noon. Prudential Plaxa, 3300 South State Street. 7) When tourists come to Salt Lake City, the first thing they want to see is Great Salt Lake. Any native worth his salt will offer to show them the T abemacle, the Temple, Brigham YoungsHome, HogU Zoo anything, in fact, except the lake. F or the truth is that thelake has become a civic disgrace if you really want to find it follow your nose. Dirty, pol- luted, neglected. Great Salt Lake sits and waits for someone to rescue it as, each year, It's shore line recedes farther and water farther dirtier. away, Once, many and its lake and dirtier grow its and years ago, the architectural fancy, Saltair Pavillion, were and gay many months n out of the year. orchestras played for dancing until early in the morning at the brightly painted, gabled pavillion. The little open-a- ir train ran back and forth from the city to the lake carrying family parties with busy Well-know- wicker picnic hampers, or 1 There are those who have withheld their taxes on the grounds of the constitutional right to hold private property - their own. Now yes. Definitely there s smoke theres fire. U. of U. (Continued on Page biz - or politics. (asked of Cottonwood Mall shoppers) Street MEETING OE.S. 7:30 P M., Midvale Masonic Temple Lane Apartments; Bethel Jobs Daughters. A 1725 Vine BONNEVILLE JR. PTA -8 P M., Bonneville Jr. High School. POT LUCK LUAU Carriage House, Well, That's Show Biz A GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION? x - Friday, April 23 this Tuesday - we support a yes vote. X UTAH PHILATELIC SOCIETY 7:30 P.M., YMCA. The bond itself will not increase taxes, since it really renews money passed in previous bond issues and paid for over the past two years. Its , t Mrs. E. L. Quick GARFIELD PTA Garfield School. COTTONWOOD HEIGHTS 7:30 P.M., Cottonwood PTA Heights School. believe most Granite district parents who have ever awakened at five to get their children ready to go off to the early stint of a double session will concur with the need for keeping up with the growth. . itorium. The district is due somewhat over two million dollars in state funds, but only if the bond issue is passed. We PLEASE? :xx; ;A. x- OPINION y Thurtday , April 22 April 22 , 196.1 v' r':x DIEP POVDXR call real free enterprise! and DRY SALT of young people off groups for a day at the beach. so important in Reunions, were a daily occurUtah, in the summertime. rence And generations of children grew up knowing the scratchy feel of dried salt on one s back, the odd warmth of the gray water, the indescribable feel of salt In the eye. (You can always tell a native from a tourist in the water. natives lick their Knowing before wiping their fingers Tourists wipe then eyes. scream,) SLOWLY VANISHING Right now, the debate goes on as to what should be done with Pavillion. Charges and counter charges its fly over the state of who is reand neglect sponsible. Keep it or tear Even the newest ,it down? commissioneer is busy on the problem. And in the meana little every day, time, Saltair Here Proof Review Action Ads Get Hip Results! ONE SALE, ONE RENTAL From One Review Ad tfope the Review's SAiTlSFitb NkW! more disappears. Others are busy trying to do something constructive about the problem of the receding shore line. Kenne-co- tt Copper Corporation may soon embark on a trial pro- of dyke building, gram utilizing tailings from the mines. Since tailings are simply ground rock, there is no problem of contamination. According to the projected plan, classified tailings will be put into the lake to make a peninsula whose sides form a sloping beach These dykes could and eventually be planted roads built on them, making the lake a little more accessible for the tourist. As a tourist attraction now, the lake ranks at the" bottom of the Salt pile Lake's main merchandnable item appears tobe abandoned the very groups that by should be promoting not debating it. And, unless he is on the right road to start with, a tourist would have a hard time finding the lake, even though concealing something of that like trying Ho, " 'Tttoutiyr You -- nly the Fenew offers ilay advertising to Its and isified section iln the past six months, lew classified columns e increased more than percent. Illustrations, toy raptis, signature i at no extra cost give r Feview classified ilajr advertisement phant in a broom closet The beaches are closed and the bath houses encrusted with salt The historic Saltair lected Pavillion stands negempty, peopled only by ghosts of what used to be And inSalt Lake City, the dreary debate goes on .... what to do with Great Salt Lake So far, no one seems to have any answers and SMEW Published by Greet Western News, Inc. 22S5 East 4HOO South, P O Box 17377, Sait Leke City. Utah M117, Phone g7g.2WS Member of Utah State Press Association JOHN B. LUNSFORD Fntered as second class matter at the post nffice at Salt Lake Cify, Utah, under the act of March 9. 178 Published every Thursday SVRSCPJPTTr'N FArt OUTSIDE CARRIER DELIVERY AREA - - - - V) (10 per veer THE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERVING SOUTHEAST SALT LA.KE ' 2265 EAST 4800 So. DEPT. is a little hide an ele- managing editor U,nL DISPLAY ADVERTISING rrte zoning. sue to SUBSCRIPT 278-414- 2 ION P Ate WITHIN CAPPIER DELIVERY AREA - 13 00 per year |