Show "vztr w 7! - 4a - 0 - : " te4 a 'Jo bt4 la StateLocal gala Ztibunt zilt i t undozers Coming Tuesday Morning—January 16 1990 Section 11 Page 1 Police Warn Viaduct Camp "mN"'"""ls"a 1 t I 1 1 - ( t' it ' tir - tk i - - i'::!"7"i''''''' 44 I N - 14$ IA" 4'1'"'''''‘14 1 ''' - 1 b t !'l iftli4ot - 4- It - - 4 1 -3- 0 i co - tli ill ' - "S" ' ' ''Itr "11)16 - k Alv' - iFitr- t 4 4-- ' :41tio 0114yrw - At z 4 - - 1618plic -- 4 041 4 ''1 7"4140' t t' ' '''':' kl4' t) tt 0 t' : ipwitt ' ' "'' ' 41 !Lstil4t:4rililliZ ro'r- 4041r e'014f' k 4- "141:tf 11'"F -!- ik 111 "1t - - t) aIt'1154 k ctitYp 1Ny-:- 3tii y'l rk n 4 - (ItI ' t ''41011 '' 4 I' At - f fA tr'lrA - rk 4:t 1 14 lramtnank 46 i t- i''''' 4400- ( t e i : ti 4 w - ' 1 1 1 t' t t:i- ' : 1: N 2t - - -- ! r 1 - -1- - terdtPieltC f --- 4 Staff —Tribune Four men who have taken shelter under the North Temple viaduct watch as Salt Lake City Police Col Ed Johnson 01111 - ok Prieto by Paul Froughton right and Sgt Mac Conn° le post eviction notices "I've got nowhere else to go" said one "They may as well shoot us" 'Quiet Riot' Against Discrimination Minorities are staging a "quiet may not be as alarming or noticeable as the demonstrations and freedom marches of the 19604 but it as insidious and perhaps more damaging" a black lawyer told a gathering Monday as the Utah NAACP observed Martin Luther King Jr Day James O Cole an Oakland attorney who is counsel to Clorox Co and past president of the 12000-membe- r National Bar Association told a capacity audience at Little America Hotel that in the courts 1989 was a bleak year for minorities as several major decisions weakened the gains made by Dr King and others over rf:7'' vis 4 long-standin- g the previous decades The luncheon honored members of the Utah black community and the Rev France A Davis pastor Ca lva 00 :' ' i FP f - ' '' reitt VO''': : ' It:I ' ' ''tt'q tf:!!!:14 4:7 4“ ' '' f:i ': Pf s ' i: :' t :if 74 "-- 4 'reili' : V Vt:Oe' 'Alb i : 1 ' i ‘' ' ' ! t -- ::: 111):tb : i 4 :t : f44 i ! : i 4 4 4'- -: 7' 4:7 : ''' ' 4 :::k: ' ''': :4: ' ot tlye 1 e' ' 1: 4!':: ii 1 ''' Kr:1i? - ' ' i 3 ' 4 te e- - - lir - Graham Humphreys a pa- tient at Primary Children's Medical Center d - 0 g - :' 0 ripia vapg '16-4t- : i t:- :I ''-- 1 tr: "44!''' 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President and Mrs Dan Quayle visited patients at Primary Children's Medical Center Monday afternoon the last leg of the Senators' Cup ski race that earned at least $150000 for the hospital over the weekend The vice president's entourage included his three children President George Bush's chief of staff John Sununu and his wife Nancy and Sen and Mrs Jake Gam Vice President Quayle visited with a dozen or so children on the School Age Unit of the hospital before being shown a model of the new Primary Children's Medical Center now under construction L George Veasy physician in chief led the vice president through the hospital He told Mr Quayle that the new medical center would ease crowding now apparent at the old facility Among those who the vice president and Marilyn Quayle visited was Nicole Meier The vice president admired her earrings and her coloring 611eps1101644kiiA44ie44444014 i The result of this series of unfavorable 1989 decisions is that "all in all it will be more difficult to challenge discrimination in the workplace" Mr Cole lamented "It seems like there's a feeling in this country that Dr Kings dream of brotherhood and peace has been realized" he said Indeed as pointed out in the recent series of letter bombings a feeling held by some that "women and minorities have gained far too much at the expense of white males" has moved some to express their opposition violently Mr Cole said Were Dr King alive today he would see notwithstanding the continuing spread of his message and inspiration poor people who are poorer — who have a harder time overcoming poverty than ever beand a society that is continufore ing to travel down two separate and unequal paths Mr Cole said He said society "has the means to See Column 4 —Tribune Staff Photo by Steve Griffin during executive tour of hospital Monday n thing" and Mrs Quayle introduced Nicole to their daughter Corrine IL They explained to Nicole that Corrine had her ears pierced for her lith birthday After the visit Nicole told reporters she thought the vice president was "nice" Mr By Paul Roily Tribune Staff Writer The Soviet Unions recent policies of glasnost and perestroika have now apparently opened the door for a "Just Say Nyet'' from Utah gives Vice President Dan Quayle "five" Although the earrings were the type the vice president remarked "They look like the real stick-o- 0 rt-4 said program -- Quay les Visit Primary Children's Hospital As Senators' Cup Race Earns $150000 Vice 111 3 0 C-4 —Tribune Staff Photo by Pick Egan Adam Moore 9 recites Martin Luther King Jr's "I've Been to the Mountain Top" speech during candlelight ceremony Utahns Hope to Help Soviet Teens 'Just Say Nyer to Sex and Drugs ' '43eo w : Example: the high court struck Richmond Virginia's "set aside" program that had required a certain amount of city contracts to go to minorities Another example: the high court gave white firefthters in Birmingham a perpetual right to challenge discrimination orders but in a separate case gave white women only 300 days to challenge employment decisions affecting them he '"'” :' r't" :' 77iA 7 :1 e The camp is also littered with broken bottles and trash Mut one of the biggest concerns is the lack of restroom facilities said Lt Vuyk Authorities are reluctant to install temporary toilets because they don't want to make the location more "attractive" than it already is the lieutenant said Police also plan to send a representative to the camp Tuesday to the warnings and make certain everyone understands the instructions he said "We're trying to do this as humanely and sensitively as possible" said IA Vuyk "That's why we've posted the notices We could have just come in here and started scraping things up but that has never been our intent" Police acknowledge the demolition of the camp will only move the problem from one location to another said Lt Vuyk "But its not only the homeless we need to consider in this- - he said "It's also the people who own the property we need to think about" One transient at the camp who said his name was "Boxcar Dan" suggested police set aside five acres somewhere to accommodate the displaced men "What would that hurt?" he asked "They've got so many rules They've got rules about fires and everything else What do they want from us?" Another angered homeless man suggested no one was being bothered by the camp "We eat good here" he said "We have plenty of water to drink and a man brings us pallets to burn" Many of the men said they preferred the camp to Pioneer Park another popular transient gathering place because they felt it was safer down B-- 2 i 0 i i ' : A Seven-year-ol- ' NtI : '4: ) 11 i'' 4: 'itt:k ti:f' t:'!i! t ''' ?!i '' i - 4A i 1 4 2 ' It ' j") i t :::i-- ' ' -- Mr Davis Mr Cole ' 4 i ry Baptist Church was named recipient of the Martin Luther King Jr Memorial Award Also in honor of the slain civil rights leader more than 100 youths from different racial and religious backgrounds held a vigil for peace on the steps of the capitol Mr Cole noted that strides made by minorities have come about more from court decisions than from legislative action and during the last year the Supreme Court of the United States weakened several legal doctrines and cut into the "small comfort" blacks had been able to take in the movement Dr King had started "that By Chris Jorgensen Tribune Staff Writer Police made their first move Monday in a campaign to evict a group of homeless people who have taken shelter under the North Temple viaduct Authorities posted signs at the camp which promised the entire area would be leveled by bulldozers early Wednesday "This area will be cleared and cleaned" state the notices "All items you wish to protect must be removed before morning" The posters also informed the residents where they could go elsewhere in the city to obtain food and alternative shelter While most of the men said they will find another place to camp at least a handful have vowed to stay "Let them go ahead and bulldoze over me I've got nowhere else to go" said one man who has lived at the camp for three weeks "They may as well shoot us" Police and health department officials contend the camp is not only unsanitary but also dangerous Last November a woman was murdered near the camp With the arrival of winter and colder temperatures the population of the camp has grown rapidly as the city's shelters have filled "The one thing this will do is decrease the health problems — at least temporarily" said Salt Lake City Police Lt Marty Vuyk The transients who frequent the camp have constructed shelters using wooden pallets and old blankets Most of the men cook on open fires using anything that burns as fuel 0 Lawyer Says Minorities Still Fight Prejudice riot" against discrimination While on the unit the Quay les visited the play room and joked with young patients who had gathered there hoping to meet the Vice President of the United States The Quay les donated three children's books to the hospital As the entourage departed Sen Garn thanked the Quay les for the visit "I'm pleased that he and Marilyn would take the time to do it" Sen Garn said Two Utahns — one a state sena- - tor — recently ' traveled to Russia to promote a re- search program designed to teach youngsters to ab- 1 stain from sex al- cohol and drugs And according Stephen Rees to the travelers Soviet officials are not only receptive to the idea they are excited about it "We met with a member of the Supreme Soviet the USSR's equivalent of Congress who chairs their subcommittee on health and human-service- s issues" said state Sen SteLake secretary-treasure- r phen J Rees 04 lt of the Institute for Research and Evaluation which hopes to sell its program to the cultures of the Corn morals-promotin- g munist bloc and other cultures around the world "He was excited" said Sen Rees who sponsored a bill two years ago that set up the Governor's Task Force on Teenage Pregnancy Prevention then chaired the task force that eventually issued a report endorsing the promotion of total abstinence from sex among teens and discouraged the promotion of birth control to combat pregnancy and disease "Ile the Soviet official especially liked the part of the program that and future-thinkindeals with types of skills offered to the young people" Sen Rees added The senator along with Stan E Weed president of the Institute for Research and Evaluation also met with the superintendent of the Russian Federation of Schools about setting up pilot programs in certain schools to promote the "Just Say No (or Nyet)" concept in that country The meetings took place last fall when Sen Rees and Dr Weed traveled to the Soviet Union with a group of Utahns on a tour put together by Utah Lt Gov Val Oveson The tour paid for by the individ g goal-settin- g uals who participated was intended to provide an opportunity for Utah business government and education leaders to make contacts with influential Soviets and see how their counterparts in a Communist system do their jobs Sen Rees and Dr Weed have been invited back to the Soviet Union later this year to evaluate research in the Soviet schools and set up their pilot programs "Until the reform movement of recent months" said Dr Weed "the youth in the USSR have had little hope for the future But now with perestroika !reform they have new hope for a better future Our research has shown that when a promising future is seen as attaihable by behavior the youth their risk-takin- goes down" Dr Weed a former researcher for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints who now counts the church as one of his clients said he y founded the Institute for Research and Evaluation after reviewing research done by other interest groups based mostly in the Midwest that indicated pro-SeColumn I e B-- Forecast Calls for Clouds Rain But No Major Storms Predicted Wasatch Front residents can expect unsettled weather for the next several days but no major storms "There will be a little sunshine but probably more clouds than sun" said Ken Ultras a forecaster for the National Weather Service "We should have near average temperatures" That means highs in the upper 30s and lows in the 208 lie said there couki be scattered showers Tuesday morning as the last impulses of a storm move through northern Utah It will be followed by partly cloudy but mostly dry conditions The weather in the southern half of the state could be more slow-movin- lively Mr Labas said a large storm in central California is expected to move southwest through southern Nevada and central Arizona north" he said The weather Monday was unsettled throughout most of Utah Snow continued to accumulate in the northern mountains bringing storm total to about the three-daIwo feet This prompted the Utah Avalanche Forecast Center to extend its "avalanche warning" for y "The southern part of Utah could see another round of snow on Wednesday if the moisture that storm wraps around fro the Wasatch Mountains from 1 Spanish Fork Canyon to the Ogden area Periods of light snow were reporteo Monday in most of the valleys of the Wasatch Front but there was little accumulation The heaviest snow was reported in southeastern Utah Monticello for example received Iwo to four inches of STIOW on Monday El' I V i k AteM i4106"6 af A'"0143944 444D1-- 941Rodotomook-delto- 4 444010144-4041I4- 0 14 APPLAILArt mualLasfit-d- o ‘4 i e97' : |