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Show Page Four THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1966 the LEASED and trail should Sen. Frank E. Moss is asked Sen. Gaylord Nelson obviously be a part of the orithe sponsor of a bill ginal group of trails to be studied still-preserv- (D-Uta- h) (D-Wisc- Are Civil Affairs Activities Weakening the Church? .), Pioneer Trail to the legislation. In a letter to Sen. Nelson, Sen. . . there is Moss wrote that no mention of one of the most famous trails in this country . . . the Mormon Pioneer Forty Niner Pony Express Trail1 Sen. Moss told his colleague that the Pioneer Trail begins at Nauvoo, 111., r joins the Oregon Trail on the Platte River in Nebraska, and (Continued from Page One) then branches off at Fort controversial positions on which its members differ is Bridger, Wyoming, and moves into Utah where the trail comes to divide thev church into warring camps, stirring dis- down Emigration Canyon into sensions in the place where spiritual unity should pre-vaf- l, the Valley of the Great Salt Lake. he writes. This trail still exists, in part, Nor are church members alone in resenting the and at least in Utah the ruts of churchs meddling in politics,. says Few. have a the wagons are still visible and of the Pony file full of letters from members of Congress expressing some of the stations still are standing, Sen. Express i t ' j I resentment over church pressures. One of these notes said loud outcries would accompany any attempt by Congress to put pressure on the church, yet silence greets the churchs maintenance of lobbies trying to dictate to Congress the kind of lesislation. which should be enacted on almost every conceivable economic, social and political subject. In its secural preoccupations the church is also succumbing to a tendency to downgrade the Bible as the infallible word of God, he says. This kind of thinking has a devastating effect on the morals of our time. I am convinced much of the jittery, uncertain mood of youth today is traceable to th elackof something firm and unchangeable to stand upon. While individual Christians have both a right and a duty to express convictions in economic, social and political affairs, the fact remains that action to correct existing ills in the secular society should be taken by secular organizations. Like most laymen, I go to church to hear heralded the mind of Christ, not the mind of man, he says. Are You This Fellow? . He is noticeably overweight, smokes more non-smoki- ng -- The human mind doesnt need to be stuffed with information. It just needs to be. open. Moss wrote. I think that this very historic under terms your bill which provide feasibility studies by the Secretary of the Interior, Sen. Moss said. Some prominent Utahns are now trying to preserve portions of the Pioneer Trail from commercial development which would obliterate the historic ' and scenic significance of this trail, the Utah Democrat m s, . Jazz Workshop Planned in August Federal prison consultant J. V. Bennett will deliver the sixth annual Arthur L. Beley Lecture in Social Work Friday, May 6, at 5 p.m. in the Spencer Hall auditorium at the University of Utah. The free public lecture, entitled Reconciling Legal, Correctional, and Social Values, will highlight the Universitys second annual Social Work day. It is by the Graduate School of Social Work and its alumni association. The annual social work lecture is held in honor of Dean Emeritus Arthur L. Beeley, chairman of the Department of Sociology from 1927 to 1956 and dean of the graduate school of social work from 1937 until his retirement in 1956. Mr. Bennett, one of the nared most prominent social reformers, retired as director of the Bureau of Prisons in 1964; he was in charge of the federal prison system for 27 years. The Washington consultant was born in Silver Creek, New York and educated at Brown University. He investigated the employment policies of federal prisons, subsequently writng the report of the congressional com mittee that led to the establishment of a federal prison bureau. He was appointed as the second director of the bureau in 1937. Mr. Bennett found U.S. prisons all too frequently vast, idle houses filled with a horde of despairing, discouraged men, milling aimlessly about an over crowded prison yard. As bureau director, Bennett defined major programs of rehabilitation. He set up vocational, edu- cational, recreational and re ligious instruction and gradually abolished segregation in federal prisons. He did away with the close confinement of the women prisoners altogether. Above all, Mr. Bennett developed and training programs credited with reducing the rate at which former prisoners get back into jail by GRAPEVINE Leo L. Memmott, 31, this week was named legislative ' analyst for the Utah Legislative Council. The appointmeit was announced by Sen. Ernest G. Mantes, chairman, legislative audit standing committee. wrote. Mr. Memmott replaces Mel-buInclusion of the Pioneer Trail M. who resigned in your bill would be very im- to becomeCoombs, Utah State Budget portant to Utah and it would Director. correct the omission of perhaps our most famous trail; the route Mrs. Calvin L. Hampton will taken by the Mormon Pioneers, discuss the importance of comthe Donner Party, the Pony Ex- bining a career with family life press and the Forty-Ninerat the USU stake cented SaturSen. Moss concluded. day. Her appearance is sponThe bill authorizing the scenic sored by the USU Associated trail system is cosponsored by Women Students. .. Sen. Moss. It has been referred InLewis F. Charvoz, chief depto the Senate Committee on terior and Insular Affairs, of uty city auditor since March of which he is a member. 1965, died of natural causes in a Salt Lake City hospital. He was 58. U. Prison Consultant Will Lecture at Social Work Day than a tions pack of cigarettes a day; his blood cholesterol level is above normal; he has high blood pressure. This unfortunate fellow is a likely candidate for a coronary heart attack, the Utah Heart Association says. It does not follow, of course, that a slim woman with low blood fats and no hypertension can not have a heart attack. It does mean that each of the unfortunate factors listed is known to be associated with Americas leading killer, heart attack and the more factors present in one person the higher his risk. The basis for this portrait for the coronary risk type is not the result of guesswork. It is a statistically valid finding from a research project which has been under way since 1949 in Framingham, Mass. In that year 5,000 men and women were selected at random and given thorough physical examinations. They are being closely followed with frequent fpr a total of 20 years. The data are not complete, but an expert analysis of the information collected to date gives a clear composite picture of those who have had heart attacks among th e5,000. Clearly determined is the typical victim, an obese cigarette smoking man with high cholesterol and hypertension. oOo ed The National Stage Band Camp will conduct another jazz work shop at the University of Utah this summer, according to Dr. William L. Fowler, associate professor of music at the University, and coordinator of the intensive one week clinic. The date of August One hour of college credit is available. The camp boasts a collection of the countrys . finest professional jazz talent. This years visiting faculty includes such noted personalities as Frank Rossolino, Johnny Smith, Russ Garcia, Charlie Mariano, Ralph Rena, Marvin Stamm, Derryl Goes, Ralph Mutchler, Leonard Feather, and Toshika, leading concert and jazz pianist of Tokyo. The National Stage Band camp is a non profit corporation, now in its 8th consecutive year. This summer the camp will be at Trinity University, Texas; University of Connecticut, Indiana University, Sacramento State College, Long Beach State College and the University of Utah. Its purpose is to train performers on stage band instruments, and to instruct in arranging, improvisation, jazz theory, and related fields. There will be actual performances in stage bands and combos and a public concert by Dr. student instrumentalists, Fowler said. Every musician, boy or girl, 14 years of age or older is eliold gible. Last year two Omaha from attended, as boys did a GE employee from Massachusetts who used a week of his vacation to come to the U. For further information cpn-taDr. William Fowler, Department of Music, University of Utah, Gov. Calvin L. Hampton, describing tourism as the one industry we can all share, and afford, this week urged formation of a western travel council. The governor made the suggestion, first made in Portland, Ore., this year, at a session of the western Governors ence in Las Vegas. . 21-2- 7. 14-ye- ar ct 322-676- 2. known penologists in th world. He and Dr. Beeley are personal friends, both pioneers in the area of correction. A public reception for Mr. Bennett will be held in the Union Auerbach Room immede-diatel- y following his 4 p.m. lecture. The annual alumni dinner half. is scheduled in the Panorama Dr. Rex A. Skidmore, dean of Room at 7:15 p.m. the Graduate School of Social Silence is one of the great arts Work, said, Mr. Bennett is, in of one the best of conversation. my opinion, pre-pa-ro- le pre-relea- se . confer- Utah Education Assn., headquarters are moving this week end. The UEA, now housed at 312 E. South Temple, will move to 875 E. 5180 South, just east of Murray. The State Board of Examiners this week approved employment of John G. Avery as new assistant attorney general at $1,011 a month. Mr. Avery holds a masters degree in public administration and a law degree from the. University of Utah. Atty. Gen. Phil L. Hansen said Mr. Avery has been assigned to condemnation work for State Highway Dept. E. Earl Alsop Wednesday filed for the Republican nomination for the Utah Senate from District No. 6. Two Utah companies Wednesday submitted bids for coal leases on 2,452 acres of Bureau of Land Management administered lands in the state. Heiner Coal Co. was sole bidder on 2,212 acres approximately 22 miles northeast of Price. They bid the minimum $3 per acre or a total of $6,636. For lease of 240 acres in Sevier County approximately 10 miles west of Emery, Emery a, County, Southern Fuel Co., submitted the. sole bid of $3 per acre, or a total of $720. Sa-lin- Lt. Orlando K. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Johnson, 2668 Stanford Lane, an eight week signal officer basic course at the Army Southeastern Signal School at Fort Gordon, Ga. During the course Lt. Johnson received instruction in the duties com-plee- td and responsibilities of a signal officer and was trained in communications procedures, administration and use of new signal equipment. He entered the Army in August, 1965. He. is a graduate of |