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Show T noirs y. Prooiir: Little Inconvenience For Lot Of Pleasure By KATHY CRACROFT Deseret News Staff Writer Growing pains are a good sign at the University of Utah. The muck and mire, road g markers and closed equipment that cov. ered the campus this summer are signs of new buildings and lanseaping that will grace the U. of U. by 1971. As the U. of U. enters its earth-movin- year, daytime enrollment is inching close to the 20,000 mark. 121st $27 MILLION In 1965, as campus class- rooms bulged with students, the 35th Utah Legislatature provided more than $27 million for remodeling and new construction to accommodate the student flood. Five projects from the 1965 bonding issue are still under The Physical construction. Education and Special Events Center, which cost $10,392,000 in state, federal and student funds, will open in time for school. The centers arena will be furnished in late Octo- ber. ART UTXG The art wing, art gallery and sculpture wing of the Fine Arts Building will be ready in December, and the architecture wing will open in April 1970. Total cost is $3,947,000. Behavorial Sciences The and Graduate School of Social Work complex will be finished in January 1971 at a total cost . of $4,195,000. Ground was broken this spring on the Mines and Mineral Science Building, which will be ready in January 1971. Cost Is $3 million. Air conditioning installation and a new classroom wing on Orson Spencer Hall will be completed by November. This work will cost $804,000. The dirt and mud where 15th East and other campus roads once stood will soon be grass, walkways and trees. Peripheral parking has been a dream of university architect Bruce Jensen for many years. He wants to exclude the frustrations and disruptions of Fuss, Muss Good Sign the automobile in the heart of the campus. Jensen keeps the 15th East street sign in his office as a memento of its closing. RELAX TENSION On a walk-aroun- d 3y the campus add up to confusion and inconvenp ersity of campus planning and others who have worked on the vision of a more beautiful institution the apparent disruption is a dream beginning to come true. PEDESTRLVN MALLS When the machines have taken their clatter elsewhere, when the cement layers have smoothed the last walk and the grass, shrub and tree planters have worked their magic on the soil, a virtually new campus will emerge. It will be tied together by two named pedestrian malls. Most Interior roads will be closed and a new main campus entrance will bring visitor in from 5th South. MAJOR PLAZA The central hub of the new campus will be a major plaza, with a fountain contributed by businessman professor Dr. O. C. Tanner, between the beautiful Marriott Library and an enlarged Orson Spencer Hall. The north-soutmall will begin at the new campus entrance off 5th South opposite Guardsman Way. It will be anchored with a fountain whose water column will play 40 to 50 feet high. The fountain will be a combined gift of the classes of 1968, 69 and 70. ROAD CLOSED From the fountain the mall will extend eastward through the Library Plaza to a smaller circular plaza at the west end of the Union Building. Fifteenth East will be closed from the north edge of the Union Building Grounds southward. Deliveries to the Park Building, now made from 15th East, will be made over a spur road to be cut from 1st flhuth. A new road also has been See BUMPY on Page yet-to-b- e Kingsbury Hall. GYM CONVERSION Einar Nielsen Fieldhouse and the old gymnasium will be converted at a cost of $92,000 for Reserve Officer Training Corps and Dance Department use. A new Panorama dining room and new offices for the Utonian, Pen and Daily Utah Chronicle are part of Student Union expansion. The publications wing will open soon. The states oldest university is also growing academically. STUDENT BOARD Students are now included decisionin admnistrative making. Each department is setting up a Student Advisory Board to advise on such issues as tenure and curriculum. Education General The program has had a complete h and President James C. Fletcher says the revamped program will replace the former smorgas-boar- d approach, in which students -- took a variety of courses without much dept. overhaul, Deret How a problem? Dial (3544626). 6 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, or write to Box 1257, Sab Lake Gly, Utah 841 10. By DEXTER C. ELLIS Deseret News Staff Writer ' Our student body is beginning a project to promote the educational advancement of lipreading and speech among the deaf. The children are going to organize a learning situation in relationship to a school store. Since Die school is desperately low on funds, we are unable to furnish a badly needed refrigerator. Is there a possibility of finding one or two used ones that could be reasonably repaired? It would be a tremendous contribution to the education of the deaf children Paul Steinfeld, Utah School for the Deaf, Ogden. here. two-ho- ,No Such Animal My son has an allergy problem, and I need a machine that will clean the air and put moisture bark into it. I can find a portable purifier that filters dust, pollen and smoke, but I need one that will do both jobs. Mrs. E. A., Dragcrton. Local dealers do not believe such a unit exists. For moisturizing air, they recommend an evaporator or swamp cooler. Your portable filter is probably the best thing available for the other problem. You Almost Had It Right near Provo Airport dence of failure was discovered, according to a federal aviation official. Technicians are now going into the mechanism which adjusts the pitch or bite of the two-blad- steel propeller. Several persons who heard the craft as it desperately groped for a landing after taking off from Provo Airport Friday evening, thought the SECTION B said that in this type of craft, the pitch is determined by engine oil pressure passing through a gover- City, Regional Comics TV Highlights Sports 1, 3, 4, 12, 24 2 5 nor. If oil pressure in the pro-peller mechanism were lost, the prop would be tree to go Financial Obituaries Weather Map 10, 11 it, 14 14 A spokesman ' Action Ads engine was times. gunned SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Monday, 6-- 9 15-2- 3 September 8, 1969 Charles T. Sheets pf the National Transportation Safety Board, Denver, is in charge of the investigation. He returned to his office Sunday, leaving the mechanical study of the and propeller mechanism other parts in the hands of local technicians. BLADE MISSING an official of the Federal Aviation Agency in Salt Lake City appealed for return of one of the propeller Meanwhile, The propeller apparently flew apart when the craft hit trees and a power line. One blade was found about 75 yards olf to one side of the wreckage. The other has not been found. It was either picked up by See AIR on Page 4 Mayor Seeks Special Patrol For Violators By JOSEPH T. LIDDELL Deseret News Staff Writer quickly agreed to develop the crackdown teams. Special roving teams of traffic officers to patrol State Street and watch State Street and 4th South was mentioned as a principal trouble spot intersections for dragging speedsters, red light violators and slowpoke drivers were called for today by Mayor J. Bracken Lee. In another move to step up law enforcement, the police department will hire immediately 10 new patrolmen, officials announced today. Police Chief Dewey J. Fillis and Public Safety Commissioner James L. Barker Jr. officers from the dispatch station to patrol and recalling high-accide- Medics intend A helping By LEO PERRY Deseret News Staff Writer Several of Utahs medical family are participating in an adventure in significant which extends a service medical hand to the poor in Guatemala. The first team of Utahns conducted a first clinic in the mountain village of Cunen in Guatemala, July 4. The program is conducted under the name of AYUDA, which in Spanish means help. Dr. Melvin A. Lyman of Delta and Mrs. Joanne Cummins, a registered nurse from Salt Lake City, were mem-ger- s of the first team to ojsen the program. Working as a translator in the clinic is Jim Penrod, Lehi, who has been in Guatemala since April. The AYUDA oiganization was the combined ideas of several people who wanted to contribute their means "d d service to mankind, Dr. H. LeCheminant, chairman of the medical committee, explained. Dr. Lyman and Mrs. Cummins are supporting themselves in their services. Donato tions of some $2,000 Maker. I have written to the motion picture company, but get no MAN on Page 3 See DO-IT two to five retired police veterans to active duty, the police patrol could increase by as many as 19 men. CURB VIOLATIONS Lee said the shifting traffic teams of patrolmen could effectively curb part of the traffic violations. 10 PATROLMEN Coupled with shifting of four IHtand AYUDA have so far gone to p u r c h a se medicines and equipment. Most doctors in Guatemala are located in the cities and this leaves the rural areas with no medical help, Dr. LeCheminant said. Cunen, for example, is a small Indio village of about 2,000 Indians and a few Ladi-noIt is located in the highlands of tlie Quiche Department of Guatemala and is about 10 miles from three other villages which will be served by AYUDA. Eventual plans call for a training program which will educate a few students so they ere adept and capable cf treating the major disease problems of the community, Dr. LeCheminant said. The community is supplying two rooms, one for a clinic and the other will soon be used as a small hospital. The use of a large house in Cunen has been donated by Rafael Castillo, a Brigham Young University graduate who is a member of the Guatemalan Senate. AYUDA is a non - denominational Utah corpo-Se- e MEDICS on Page B4 s. Vil-for- Could you help us locate some slieci nmsic for our ward roadshow ? Paramount Pictures put out a picture railed The Dreem Maker, starring Tonfmy Steele. The music we would like is the main song, There's A Man They Call The Dream i several blades. OIL PRESSURE Action In A Few Days may attend. Friday which killed four persons. The engine was dismantled over the weekend and no evi- Many business firms ia S.L. have a heart for worthy causes. Among them is the South East Furniture Co., which since Do-I- t Man has been in business, has been extraordinarily cooperative in such things. So they have agreed to provide you with two used refrigerators for your education program. And you have agreed to pick them up. None in Bountiful area but two in Salt Lake one at p.m., Carpenters Hall, 120 W. 13th South, beginning Sept. 12 and another at American Sportsman Club, 650 E. 21st South, beginning Sept. 18 at 7 p.m. Cost is $1 for four classes and girls and boys 11 years of age and up are paying Investigators special attention to the propeller mechanism in seeking the cause of a light plane crash 'a into flat pitch, he said. Then, use of the . throttle would merely rev up the engine with little or no effect on ability of the propeller to pull the plane through the air. GUNNED ENGINE B-l- S DESERET NEWS i 6:30 News map by Richard Carter, staff artist BuildHeavy black bands on University of Utah campus map show pedestrian malls under construction. Major landmarks are (1) Park ing, (2) Union Building, (3) Orson Spencer Hall, (4) Marriott Library, (5) Behavioral Science Building and Graduate School of Social Work (under construction), (6) Fine Arts Center (under construction), (7) Business Building, (8) Milton Bennioh Hall, (9) Physical Educa- tion Complex, (10) Special Events Center (arena), (11) residence hall area. Cause Of Fatal Air Crash A Mystery; Motor Probed I am wonderbg if there will be any hunter safety courses in the area that will be held before pheasant season is over. K. C., Bountiful. uni- versity architect and director three-bedroo- It of Utah ience. But to Bruce H. Jensen, terns and residents at the University Medical Center. The building will have 151 one, two and units. On the drawing board are a new married student housing project and remodeling of Apparently some problems here because despite repeated admonitions and inspections and the premises have not been satisfactorily cleaned up. Now the S.L. City Health Dept, promises action if not done in few days. Let Do-- Man know if no improvement CHAFFIN To the casual observer the campus, We have a neighbor who has all kinds of animals in a garage near a rental honfe on the back of his property. The tenant there is threatening to move because the odor Is bo bad. These people have Ignored repeated requests to clean out the place. C.II.E E., Salt Lake City. K, machines and chugging churned-uUnivearth on the campus core will be devoted to jademic purJensen said. With poses, automobiles on the exterior, use of land will be more economical and sensible. It will relax the tension of the campus. Other money besides that acquired through the bonding issue is helping expand the campus. APARTMENT ELUDING The Department of Housing and Urban Development is financing a $3 millionu apartment building for students, in- A Worthy Cause LAVOR Deseret News Education Editor Rafael Castillo, left, Guatemalan senator, Beverly Hartman and Dr. rice Baker discuss program for medical clinic. I Mau- non-profi- t, He said many motorists zoom into intersections on yellow lights and complete their passage through on the red light change, jeopardizing cross traffic. As a result, serious traffic accidents continue to occur, particular T or broadside collisions, he noted. RADAR NETS Fillis reported that regular radar nets are in use by the traffic patrol throughout the city. These are especially now in slowing traffic in school areas for the safety of students, he said. of the Running surveys intersecmost accident-pron- e tions will help determine where radar nets will be operated, the chief added. Problems at State Street See SPECIAL on Page 4 B-- ei"iiiiiiiiiiiimimniiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii!ua SHOP 'TIL TONIGHT |