OCR Text |
Show , d. Or i Jftlfli' jlfcitpl IB nfcwm yifflffM narr Sign Plan Gathers Support By GORDON FLIOT WHITE et Dese-- Nfw Washington - WASHINGTON Bureau Tbe Snarr plan to clear billboards off Utah highways moved Into high gear in the Capitol this week. It gathered sup- port in Congress and at least tacit support from the administration. Under the proposal, put forth by Salt Lake City advertising executive Douglas Snarr, the U.S. would authorize a pilot project by which advertising companies themselves would remove their signs and be compensated for thqpi. After months of careful, if impatient, groundwork here by Snarr, a receptive House Public Works Committee Friday heard a parade of witnesses, led by Henry C. director of the Utah State Highway Commission, support the Snarr approach. Hel-lan- The two-ho.earing was largely to make a record on the plan, wl ich has been introduced as a Senate bill by Sen. Frank E. l.loss, and in the House by Rep. Laurence J. Burton, For Sen. Miss and Rep. Burton potential competitors next year lor the Senate to seat now held by Moss s an uncooperate on a bill usual sign of the preparation that Snarr, almost singlenand-edly- , has put hito his project. In addition, Sen. Wallace F. is quietly Bennett, hill. Moss the supporting has been backing Strong found in the Department of Transportation, where Fred Farr, former highway beautification aide who opposed Snarrs plan, was replaced this week. Next week the House group will hear administration testimeasure mony on a stop-gap tIlinnilllU!llli!lllilllll!millllllllllll!ll)l!IHIHIill:!lllllll!llilli:'!!i!n -- Pressures On which would extend for 'wo years the cutoff date for sign removal. According to Snarr, that bill would just prolong the agony of small sign companies that are, Snarr says, being strangled by the 1965 beautification act. Under that measure, states were to be given funds to buy up most signs along interstate Though tRininiinirHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiHiiiimtiniiiiiiiniiiinniiiiitiiitmiiiiiiii the and the sign removal program has stumbled along of on allocations a few thou- sand dollars per state. Sources here said Friday that the administration might tentatively support the Snarr plan, which would reportedly save as much as 50 per cent of the cost of the current sign-by-sig- removal n approach. Deservt Nw Washington WASHINGTON - Bvrtju Republi- can National Chairman C. B. bill Morton cited an anti-smintroduced in the House by Rep. Laurence J. Burton, Friday, as a good called way to attack what he the rising tide of pornography. Mascher S.L. Marine T. ... S.L Marine Our present laws just dont deal harshly enough with the people who are sending smut through the mails, Rep. Morton said. The President has requested the Attorney General and the Postmaster General to submit to Congress new legislative proposals to attack the rain of pornography and smut. Morton, who will speak at a spring banquet in Ogden Saturday in honor of Rep. Burton, suggested that the new adminstration proposals might be patterned after Rep. Bur- tons t problem, A Salt Lake Marine has been killed in combat with enemy forces near Quang Nairf, Vietnam. Pfc. Brent Thomas Masch-ef- ,, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin L. Mascher, 1849 n Ave., was killed May 13, according to official notification to his family. A graduate of South High School, Mascher joined the Marines in September, 1968. He completed basic training at Camp Pendleton, Calif., prior to leaving for Vietnam. He was serving with Kilo Co., 3rd Batallion, 7th Marines, 1st Down-ingto- Division. Survivors include: parents; eight sisters: Mrs. Betty Dickey, Pomona, Calif.; Mrs. Earl (Lauretta) Hammond, Mrs, Kenneth (Jean) Olson, Shirley, Connie, JoAnn, Colleen and Donna, all of Salt lake City; and six brothers, Richard, West Covina, Calif.; James, Terry, Don, Michael and Leonard, all of Salt Lake City. A brother, Terry, Is currently serving in Vietnam, and another brother, Don, recently returned from Vietnam duty. Morton added. Burtons bill would make it a violation of federal law to knowlingly sell, offer for sale, loan, deliver, distribute or provide to a minor in commerce or i n t erstate through the mails material that is classified as pornographic. Congress has the power under the Constitution to regulate interstate commerce, Morton said. He added, What makes the Burton legislation good is that Service Group Elects Officers Samuel H. Barker, member of the Ogden Civil Service elected was Commission, president of the Utah Association of Civil Service Commissions at the annual meeting Friday at the State Capitol. He succeeds Andrew J. Brennan, former member of the Salt Lake City Civil Service Commission. The other new officers are Frank Pennock, chairman of the Salt Lake County Merit Council for Deputy Sheriffs, first vice president, and LeRoy Johnson, Provo, chairman of the Provo Civil Service Commission. Social Work Can't Control Disorders' u Social workers have little if any control of the phenomena and resulting social disorders with which they deal, a University of Utah professor said Friday. Dr. Sherman Merle, Graduate School of Social Work, University of Utah, made this pojnt during a panel discussion at the third annual Social Work Forum, sponsored by the Veterans Administration Hospital. Dr. Merle, Dr. Lowell L. Bbbhion, associate dean of students, University of Utah; Dr. Melvin A. White, director, Utah, Council on Aging, and DrvJolm R. Ward, head of the Department of Preventive -- : FOR- LOW COST HOME LOANS : SEE : MILLER & V2ELE 1$ Exchange Plata 964-6- 5 71 it is patterned after a New statute which was York upheld by the Supreme Court in the case of Ginsberg vs. New York. Rep. Burtons bill carries a fine of $5,000 or imprisonment for five years, or both. If a person is a second offender, $10,000 the fine is doubled or both. or 10 years in jail But whether the attorney general or postmaster general duplicate Burtons bill exactly isnt of the greatest importance, Rep. Morton said. What Is important is that we get our laws updated to outlaw the present problem of pornography in the maiL Forester Appointed legislation. Burtons bill Is certainly one way to attack this pornog-raph- y Killed In Viet Action first. Medicine, University of Utah College of Medicine, were panelists who reacted to an address by Dr. Ernest F. Witte, dean, School of Social Work, San Diego State College, which opened the forum Friday morning. Dr. Merles statement was In response to Wittes talk, in which he encouraged reflection on the larger responsibilities of social workers" and how they may engage in preventive social work despite the constraints with which we have surrounded social work practice. . . Merle said It may be a problem of semantics, but he questioned hew much of the concept of prevention, when precisely defined, can be applied to social work. It seems to me that the 'Shadow' Area of Social Work with regard to prevention is the murkiness or if you will of the the shadowness concept of prevention when applied by social workers and others to the sovial work profession, Merle said, Chandler P, St. John, super- visor of Coeur d Alene National Forest In northern Idaho 1965, since has been appointed pervisor of suWa- satch National Forest, ac- cording to Regional Forester Iloyd Iverson. . He replaces George W. Tourtillott who Mr. SL John has been transferred to the Rocky Mountain Region, Denver, Colo., as chjef of the Division of Recreation and Lands. St. John began his Forest Service career In 1948 after graduation from the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University. He hp? served in the Coconino, Lincoln, Santa Fe and Apache national forests. In 1962 he was assigned to the Southwest Regional Office and was a recreational survey project leader and assistant chief of information and education. 1-- Car of the entertainment industry would like pay-Tbecause its felt there would be more jobs for entertainers. It is interesting to hear those against pay television claim that inate and then a few seconds later publicize a presentation of the Memorial Day auto race from Indianapolis as being thescheduled on ater television. The public will pay for the race on the big screen. The theater Industry The ky i falling! The ky should at least let is falling! This is a public be tried. It has announcement." it has failed everywhere been tested, but this is no reason It shouldnt be given a tionwide chance. Also, the general public would be unwise to believe no have The movie ads would be telecast on carried ads on their screens. Another pressure on television concerns censorship. This vioalready has been tried to some extent in the matter of lence. The networks have agreed to cut down on violence after warnings of Congressional investigations and action. Two networks have agreed to submit programs to a committee or group that would look them over for violence. One network wisely, it seems to us, has declined. It is to be hoped that the Congressional committee does not become Insistent on this matter. Political censorship could be the next step. Still another pressure on television (NBC, In flits case) has come from the Federal Trade Commission. This is the agency that polices commercials to make sure everything about them is honest. It will be recalled considerable controversy took place when it was disclosed that ice cream being shown in commercials was not ice cream and that commercials for shaving cream, in which sandpaper was used, were not all they were supposed to be. Now comes the FTC with an order against NBC in which n Attack Supported Crash Kills Woman CALDWELL, IDAHO (UPI) Rose Stewart Bunker, the wife of Nevada Sen. Vernon Bunker of Las Vegas, was accident killed In a cne-ca- r n sei-vi- ce the network must subject specific commercials to scrutiny by the FTC. The network didnt respond to the FTCs earlier order by the deadline, so the FTC took the tough action. In the order, the FTC accused the Campbell Soup Co. of televiputting marbles in the bottom of soup bowls used on sion commercials. This practice, the FTC claimed, made the soup appear to contain more solids than were actually in the ingredients. So now the FTC wants to look over selected commercials on NBC. Some of the pressures seen! to be harassments and not worth the time of government agencies. This V That Lucille Ball is expected to do segments of her forthcoming shows at the Glen Canyon Dam area in both Arizona and Utah, She also will produce one on an Indian reservation in made segments in Colorado Springs Utah or Arizona. She-haand win travel to the Sacramento River Delta in California for another. Robert Young will be touring the country to visit major medical centers to indoctrinate himself for his Marcus Welby M.D. series, which will be on television this fall. Tim Matheson, who has appeared in several nfovies, will become a new regular on The Virginian series next season. He will play an itinerant teenaged cowboy who drops into Shiloh ranch and stays on as a wrangler. Both Doris Day and Diahann Carroll are expected to have television romances next season that will culminate in marriage. Widows are expected to be out on TV series. I reruns. Sundays forenoon schedule likely will be in a state of flux O 'i. . : because of the Apollo coverage, which vill begin at a.m. on Channels 2 and 5, and at 10 a.m. on Channel 4. Apparently the only variety show not rerun is the Ed Sulli-.vaShow (Ch. 5, 6 p.m., Sunday), with guest stars including Joan Rivers, Mike Douglac, The Fifth Dimension, Liza Min ielli. Bill Dana, George Carlin and the West Point Giee Club. The controversial ABM is likely to be a subject on Issues and Answers (Ch. 4, 11:30 a.m.), witn Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird as guest. Other documentary - type programs of special note include Guideline (Ch. 2, 9 a.m., Sunday), which focuses on campus unrest; Firing Line (Ch. 7, 7 p.m.), which has William F. Buckley discussing Anti - Semitism with two guests; and Public Broadcast Laboratory (Ch. 7, 8 p.m.), which has a rerun of a highly-ratespecial on ecoloa study of man and his gy environment. Top sports program of the weekend is AAU Championship Track and Field Meet (Ch. 5, 2:30, Sunday), which brings together outstanding athletes from around the world, Including some Olympic greats. The Pogo Birthday Special (Ch. 2, 6:30, Sunday) is an animated musical based on characters from the comic t?AV -- -- - erraii. r a 'RFK's Last Campaign ' 2 "THE APPALOOSA" Marlon Brando A documentary that should have an emotional impact The Last Campaign of Robert among many viewers, will be presented Monday at 9 p.m. on Ch. 7. Kennedy, Although the program follows the senator and Ids wife, Ethel, through man? scenes, It shews the story from several unusual angles. At the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, where Senator Kennedy was shot down, the camera catches tormented faces in the crowd. One man who has witnessed the shooting is asked his name. Three times, he tries to give it and then collapses in tears. The program was produced by National Educational Tel- evision. 5 NUMBER ONE CHANNEL 5 NEWS With Bogarte, Bradshaw & Richlns Top Weekend News! 5:30 Jerry Lewis (c, rerun), on new day, guest stars the Osmond Brothers, Lassie, and Gary Lewis (hour). 4 Dating Game (c). 5 Jonathan Winters (c) guest stars Shani Wallis, Soupy Sales, Bobby Van, Four King Cousins, and The Establishment (hour). 11 Western Outdoors. 2 (e). 11:00 6.30 Godzilla." 12:20 a.m. (c) with host Bill SUNDAY VIEWING 6 a.m. 4 Farm Report (c, hour). 7 a.m. 2 Science In Agriculture (hour). 4 Faith For Today (c). 4 Lamp Unto My Feet (c, rerun), will present a group of werks by Gerard Manly Hopkins, Victorian era English poet, accompanied by a ballet by John Butler and choreographed performed by the John Butler Dance Theater. 7:30 of 5 Cathedral Kin, (c). 9:30 a.m. and 5 Apollo 10 coverage (c). 4 Discovery (c, rerun) visits Grand Canyon. 10 and Mrs. Muir (i, iu,u). 4 Hollywood Palace (c, rerun) has Rowan end Martin as hosts la an show (hour). 5 Petticoat Junction (c, rerun). 11 Upon This Rock. No program will be presented Friday of this week. Preempts Di- 9:20 9:30 Fred Person: Roger,, creater of Mistercoers Neighborhood. 9:55 1 News, weather and spans (c). 10:00 5 News, weather and sports (c). 7 NET Playhouse (rerun), "The Star Wegon," starrring Dustin Hoffman and Orson Bean. and Answer (c) guest will be of Dafens. Melvia R. Secretary Laird. Movie (c), "Lullaby of Broadway," n starring Doris Day and Gene (90 minutes). I KCPX News (c). 4 Movie, "Carry On TV." ii:30 a.m. 4lssues Noon Sex Classes, Home Costs On KSL Pulse the a.m. 4 Apollo 10 (c) launch. rections. 4 7 Creative 2 onoi hours). Mission: Impossible (o rerun, hour). Public Broadcast (c), Laboratory Me . And Subdue "Multiply Earth," a report warning that huof Is chances its Imperilling manity survival through heedless exploitation and devastation of the natural environment (90 minutes). 9:15 9 a.m. delay from network. 4 Buliwlnkle (c). 5 This Is the Life (c). 7:30 (2 S 7 9:00 (c), "Campus Unrest," Part II of a series of panel discussions within the Catholic Church. On (, rerun). N 5 Guns moke (c, rerun) guest star Joseph Campanula and Michael Burns (hour). 2 Guideline salute 8:00 eight rhood Theater. "Th Matchmaker," starring Shirley Booth, Shirley MacLamg and Anthony Perkins 2 Tomorrow. of Tomorrow. Kong (2 hours, 15 minutes). Smothers Brothers (c, rerun), guest stars Liberace, David Frye, Hedge end Donna (hour). has 7Firin Lina (c, Buckley talking with Rev. Mitt on Galimiton, New York City Beard of Education, and Nathan Perlmutter, American Jewish Committee. a.m. 8 Cathedral 2 7:00 2 Bonanza (c. rerun, hour). 4 ABC Movl (c, rerun). "Alvarez Kelly," starring William Holden, Richard Widmark, and Janice Rule ajn. 4 Dudley (c). 5 Look Up end Live (e), "The Week the Screen Went Dark," the results of an experiment in which two families end several residents of a home for the aged went without television for on week. 4 Linus (e). "The Page Birthday Special" (c), an based en the musical animated comic strip. Preempts Mofhn-ift-La- 2 11:30 8:30 a.m. Sex EducaWednesday Does it Belong in the tion Schools?, with Dr. Blaine Porter, dean of the College of Family Living at BYU. What is Being Thursday Done for the Petarded Child with Jeremiah Utah? mental retardation Hatch, specialist, Division of Family Services in Utah, and Mrs. Marcel Welch, an involved fea- 10:30 Conversation Marcroft. 10:30 7 S Joe Pvne Show (c) Decorating Show (c). 11:00 5 Movie, "Bright Leaf," starring Gary Cocper, Lauren Bacall. 11:13 4 Oral Roberts (c). 4 KCPX and ABC News (e). 12:30 11:35 "The See Shell Not Heve 4 Time Tunnel (c, hour). 1:15 I Apollo space. It (c), Part FBI (e, rerun) guest stars John Ericsoo (hour). 5 Ed Sullivan (c) guest stars John Rivers, M.e Douglas, The Fifth Dimension, Uza Minnelli, BUI Dane, Geurge Carlm end the West Pond Glee Club (hour). 7 NET Journal (c, renin), "Human Cargo." 4 Mannlx (c, rerun, hour). 2 5:30 Wonderful World of Color It of "Ktlroy' (nour). 5 Gentle Ben (c, rerun). 2 4 4 KCPX New and Sport W -- eft ling I r 5:00 2 Hock Finn (c, rerun). 4 Land of the Giants (c, rerun, hour). 5 Lassie (c, renr) 6:00 2 "THE D.l." Jack Webb U.S. Marines Hogan' Heroes (c, rerun). Tha World of Genealogy (rerun), parent. 4:30 Wild Kingdom (c. rerun). True Adventure (c). 5 Adventures in Gardening (c). 7 NET Festival (rerun), "The World of Her) Crane,' an American poet. 10:20 5 I 2 4 Howard Bogarte 4 Nightmare Theater, 3:00 Frank McGee's NBC Report (c). Utah Talent Showcase (c), with Eugeng Jeiesnlk. 5 (c, rerun), Century "The Food Revolution," p took at food production methods. Tom Bradshaw Kay Richtns Top Weekend News! 7:00 2- i wenty-first NEWS, WEATHER and SPORTS (C) 5 NUMBER ONE CHANNEL 5 NEWS 4 general manager. Characters from comic strip, Pogo, will be tured on Ch. 2 special on Sunday. 2 TV2 SATURDAY 6:30 5 Calls (c) Amtur Athletic Union Champion-shi- p Track and Fitld Meets (c), first of a series of meeti, begirt with tt Dr, Martin Luther Ktnt international Freedom Games, which features both American and Foret on track stars, including stars Olympic (hour). 4:00 J College Bowl (c). 4 H.gh Roni to Adventure (c). 10:00 6:00 4 Newlywed Gome (c). Thl I the Answer (e). 11 a 5 Jackie Gleason (c, rerun) has Honeynooners sketch (hour). BYU Devotional. 11 11 weekday evening: The Dilemma Monday of Higher Home Costs and High Financing, featuring Hayden Calvert, vice president of Prudential Federal Savings, and two other guests. KSL, Past, Tuesday Present and Future, with Joseph Kjar, vice president and & 9:00 Regional Author. KSL-Radi- A Second Look at the Supreme Court will be the subject of the concluding lecture in the Spring Utah Forum tonignt at 8 p.m. in the Granite High School Auditori- 11 1 Huntlw-Brinkle- y (c). 4 Th. Johnny Ryder Show (c) will have Jacki. DeShannon ai special 2:30 J Adventur The Great ABC Movie (c. rerun), starrlne Joseph Sioux Massacre," Cotten, Darren McGavtn end Phillip Carev (2 hours) The Greatest Gift 4 5:00 J Get Smart 2:00 Colonial National Invitational Golf Tournament (c), from Fort worth (I hours). 4 8:30 SATURDAY VIEWING Home costs, sex education, and retardation are among subjects to be discussed on Public Pulse program next week. Following is the schedule for the programs, which are presented at 9 p.m. each Lecturer Speaks On CourtTonight (hour). Conversation. 11 c' i In Color 4 Carol Burmtt (c, rerun) guet stare Chita Rivera and Vince Edward (Best possibilities os selected by Howard Pearson are listed tn small bold type. Large bo id iisiings are paid advertisements). (c) denotes color 4 Lawrence Welk (c) Will Armed Force Day (hour). J My Three Sons (c, rerun), 11 Around the World (rerun). 1:30 8:00 Among variety series reuns are Jerry Lewis (Ch. 2, 5:30 today), with Utahs Osmond Brothers among the guests; Jonathan Winters (Ch. 5, 5:30), guest starring Shani Wallis and the King Cousins; Hollywood Palace (Ch. 4, 7:30), with Rowan and Martin as hosts; and The Smothers Brothers (Ch. 5, 7 p.m., Sunday), with LIberace among the guests. J AdanvlJ (e, rerun). Fred MacMurray adorned with toddler's paraphernalia for My Three Sons episode, Ch. 5 Saturday. Astronaut Thomas P. Stafford holds replica of lunar module he will use on Aapollo 10 flight strip. 11 wj j ifi d s Patricia deliver the address. Griffins speech will Include a discussion on the Supreme Courts inCuence on law and order, the checks and balances system, and giving aid and comfort to the enemy. 1 guest. Friday near here. Sen. Bunker was treated for minor injuries at a hospital here and released. The couple were on their way to spend several days at their ranch in Oofino, Idaho, with their son William and his wife who reside on the ranch. Survivors Include two sons and two daughters, incudng Bunker Sperry, Provo, Utah. um. G. Edward Griffin, coproducer of the movie documentawill ry, Anarchy, USA, P n n part 10 launch and event programs highlight TVs weekend schedule which is filled mostly with The Apollo close if pay-Tbecame sucfilms cessful. Many first-ruthen would be available to The performing LOG otter current Pay television, censorship, government regulations on commercials are among pressures lacing the industry at this time. They could make as much news in the months ahead as programming. Pay television is being attacked both by the theater-own- ing part of the motion picture industry and some commercial TV. Theater owners are campaigning against pay television because t ev realize that Channel Chuckles could showhouses ir. a n y would elim Burton's Smut :Pfc. Brent By HOWARD PEARSON Deseret News Television Editor pay-T- 1969 May 17, Apollo Launch , AAU Track, Field; Pogo Birthday, Ed Sullivan The Industry law says the signs must go, the federal government has not provided the promised funds highways. NEWS, Saturday, DUSERET, TV Highlights Report (c). Live TV from Sk Them." starring Michael end Dirk Bogarde Paid Advertisement Redgrave 1 CHILDREN CAN REJECT VIOLENCE Are children today really victims of society? Do many of them simply reflect the violence, anger, and frustration they see on television or witness in the home? Thousands of families are finding that children can just as easily reflect the love, peace, and satisfaction of their creator, God . . . if given the chance. Not necessarily. How? Listen this Sunday to a program entitled Helping Children to Reject Violence. It is part of the Christian Science Radio Series heard on 10 Utah stations, including: 6:30 a.m. KSXX 630 KC 7:30 a.m. KNAK 1280 KC 7:45 a.m. KDYL 990 KC 10:00 a.m. KWHO 860 KC THE BIBLE SPEAKS TO YOU |