Show Tfi11 j r 11 “l yr t yyW yrijg wTf" imgraari BfldgrlamjPaNawspapir Inside - s &t')t-- 9L logan UtaltO 19S6‘5Q Cen5?1 Lawyer: Hazing suit based on SV reaction By Phi Jensen When Seamons reported it he was kicked off the team and school officials warning that he could be in physical jeopardy eventually suggested he transfer to another school according to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals documents Robert Wallace of Salt Lake City Sea- in court on a lawsuit filed by Brian Sta- staff writer ntons at the time a high school junior and second-strin- g quarterback on the football team Seamons was accosted by teammates in a locker room on Oct 11 1993 and bound nude to a towel rack with adhesive tape A girl he once dated was brought into the locker room to view him The attorney for a Sky View High School hazing victim says claims that the boy’s freedom of speech was violated are pinned on what happened when the incident was reported The free speech claim under the First Amendment is the only remaining issue and the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver agreed that the claim deserves another hearing Earlier this month the appeals court ordered the US District Court in Utah which had earlier thrown it out to reopen the case No date has been set Wallace also said he may ask the mons attorney said those responses See HAZING on Page 8 denied Seamons his free speech right Retiring teacher ©e ernttfaisiasm Yips for teens on finding a summer job Page 9 Updato ‘If I had it to do over I’d go back and do it again’ Census finds Americans older grayer By Michael R Weibei staff writer '! When the school bell rings on the last day of class this year there will be one teacher who won’t be returning to Edith Bowen Laboratory School A teacher who has devoted a quarter of a century to teaching Cache Valley's young children A teacher many have called remarkable A teacher most have called “Mrs Long” : WASHINGTON (AP) — The face of America will be looking more like the ? Golden Girls” than “Friends" as the War II baby boomers turn the comer into their second SO years ’ A Census Bureau report released today forecasts that the population will grow from one in eight Americans now to one in sis by 2020 and one in five by 2050 g And the segment of the population will be the “oldest old” the people age 85 and over whose numbers arc expected to double to 7 million by 2030 “The sging of the population is changing American society in fundamental wavs noted Richard M Suzman who heads the demography office in the government’s National Institute on Aging “It's the equivalent of the waves of immigrants who came to the country or the urbanization and industrialization of the country” The first members of the massive baby boom generation turn SO this year and “when they turn 65 it w ill have an explosive effect on ail facets of society” Suzman said in an interv iew Some 7S million people were born in the United States during the boon years 1946 through 1964 The estimated 33 million Americans over age 65 in 199S accounted for about one American in eight The Census report projected that the group will number 53 million by 2020 and 80 million by 20501 when its proportion of the overall population w ill level teach the The effects will reach beyond retirecare Suzment health and long-terman said as worhing-ag- e people increasing! v face hard chorees over educating their children caring for their parents and saving for their own retirement On the positive side Suzman saw today’s Americans approaching their retirement years in Nrtter health post-Wor- ld QeonNelgkueri fastest-growin- Edith Bowen Director Trent Hag said he didn't know of anybody else who has worked so tong and kept their enthusiasm “She's like a tittle kid still” Hag said “She loves what she docs” Hone Long is a Washington state native who earned a bachelor's degree in speech from Washington State University In those days she was See NEIGHBOR on Page 8 SPACE CENTER Houston (AP) — A parachute-shape- d antenna inflated outside space shuttle Endeavour today tike a giant orbiting balloon — one that could serve as a model for future spacecraft Astronaut Mario Runrc Jr maneuvering the shuttle's robot arm hoisted a 65-pl- us ve m 50-fo- 180 miles over Australia Commander John Casper then backed Endeavour to a safe 400-fodistance and then about two hours later doors on the satellite swung open and nitrogen gas quickly flowed into the antenna tmeS ahow tor Sw ProOrocwUrer which kmi The Snpered C5ee Ck Logan Tabareada Appearing wU in diameter with 92-fo- ot struts or about the size of s tennis court Exact measurements on the antenna’s shape wool be available for experts to study until after the shuttle flight risk “Wc think it has inflated It al preeere it fw ai Vw yag ta a ocd due Sore Cache VaAay lutomaticilly unfurled It appeared to be its intended size and shape — 50 fret Regard Admiaaian m Sea v ms' to’ ffaAwnan— interior is inflated Curtis Brown Jr said Tt’s a pretty spectacular view from down here” Mission Control said After about 1 12 hours Fndeavovt moved another 2600 feel away and the shiny silver antenna was jet ptaN&A T tlv-wbc- through granule systems PsgaO ts legal victory throwing 11 L‘rs A g-- ax x-p IPK-3-- I CLry r-s- tz TVes FVed 5 £s in Lesnj Ca' cm fre a wy' Ca rvj t vm L'CTjiX-- f !il to e r- - c WL Lvict 6-- gay-tg- " (rr-v- iM prvsrvti w the nw r- - cue tn decade la upheld a Geivpa with- omist for the But by 1994 ltah Department of lligfer education officials adults Tixlay's the kgi'i'jr of believe the expanding y market lures stwdrtRs wIm want to make money raher than pursue an edu- tbe juvinri l that law csiri-aiiim- hmseual kx ru'-ir- imetdrrerl that forbid laws p?r:cctirg homosexuals from rLsirrzL’Ujo The CilrsVi "vid'X"t -- C nearly 10 percent found in thunderstorms in the absence of gravity and bow pofsvni krrncls pop in space cut a Colorado ccevtrioital -- 12 per- wbrn job growth had jumped to 63 percent enrollment growth wav just 31 percent Job growth iv expected to remain steady for the next few years fswuNy spurting agair as the 2 CM 2 Olympics near said I co a Paris Langston durf econ- out gravity polarization of watrr droplets like those as rc grew by 3 cent while enrollment grew by High court strikes down Colorado’s anti-ga- y law b'frrvl fperts dive In 1991 USU experiments include how fungus grows in space how fast sound waves travel around the world at sunrise and semet gay-righ- Mcvtc Statistics show that as Utah's economy heated up in 1994 enrollment growth took a nose return May 29 Scprtiae Court today haeJcd adveettes their It vices Endeavour is scheduled to Washington (An — Tb 13 Weber Stale University’s vice president for administrative ser- I'znphsy merit Security pretty rycynbs Crossword SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah’s colleges and universities arc seeing fewer students than expected and many are placing blame on the robust economy "There's an inverse relationthe economy and ship between enrollment ’’ said Allen Simkins 10-da-y rr-ert- cr pilot bewpon storm systems weaker 3 bu Comes i tisoned from the satellite It'S expected to the Earth’s atmosphere and burn up this aflcnvvre or tonight But depending on bow long tt remains in orbit the reflective Mylar antenaa may be visible from the southern half of the United States and shape to it so it looks tike the For brief periods -4 £ ' ' “Jt1' i AP looks like it has a concave Woclher About Csche- v The space shuts Cndeewka's robot arm holds tfw Spartan safe hie cnrryng an Marabie antenna rwt was tetoased today Pago 4 Other events Robust antenna economy USU team lower may monitoring experiments enrollment University are aboard Endeavour the space shuttle that lifted off from Cape CanivcraL FU mission Sunday he a The experiments arc in a USU canister called the Get Away Special in Endeavour ‘s cargo hay “Wt only have power ersxigh for a few days onoc the switch tv turned on” David real a visiting professor in the USU physics department saiJ today ot at lw Dot Hwgrti Ufcnay U M 7 Eertna ThanM 43 X Unv lagai EnMn mam U induce Warn Srtn Randy BauyThaSmnonafrothare and Tfca Buttock Saan Tttal pnoaa are S3 adults IS youvcandta&atvnfy Preoaada w go la VwtMfcSngofVwtorvy gvud apreg consat al 730 tonis - ir Journey helps students at the school Experiments by Utah Slate satellite that contained the experimental antenna from the cargo bay and set it free Cacho tonight A Retiring Edith Bowen Laboratory School teacher done Long Shuttle astronauts release - one-in-fi- Mach MncaroXaraM did is f r mn-sentm- g dxk ore-- hivwcstA! cation And many talc fewer daws and wock nvvc Ksuv Blake llolmrv a trapvplrt trw Washington state s:udd Le a year at RkLs College in Rtxbtrg Idaho before rrswmg to Utah He vaJ he considered uofOruirg k: enul he ww the vxvg Uih it srre-irs’k- Ihc juvtKc v said the He wow K tNrt Ji us sLre giv Kwj wising as a brat a poiituai right erjoyed by cperncr f r Kio--i — the c x( or"”t tj Col-ors- d aT-csdf- y 'j Sr GMS irtrir p-r- tri L-5r-a -- f Sie - -- Tl TrfMSere Pr:f g |