.., wasn’t much to be ex- ’ cited about In Monroe. ".. known as the third- % “ largest town in Sevier ' " States and it is in the ‘* middle of central Utah’s _ ona hillside east of town - will enable many of “next winter and ’ exhilarating. The _ boggling." cots - direct the project, said ‘ the system waa to haye 7 earliest before it le on “ metres beneath the - ‘the city hall, churches, a fire howe. % hook into the system, _ include the whole town. ‘> cant after an initial ‘$900 to convert to geo- - aaintenance,"’ he said. . Jimmy Carter and * Edward Kennedy have ' - flipflopped in- recent § » weeks largely because . pelling some of the ! He’s _logging . his , jo “" Tne., a Salt Lake City- based energy-conaulting rm. : ¥ i ave *' the knowledge there ““* was a good poselbillty of =" overruns,’ ” said. So far, says Nay, ‘ increased costs of ‘ drilling, well pipe and “2 overrun of more than “*. $17,000, ’ behind the project is * elmple, the mayor says: ‘ New Zealander im- age & The Herald, Monday, Gecember 17, 1917 urney HOPE, B.C. (CP) — Geoff Wonnacott knows people have walked acroas Canada before, so the 28-year-old Paris, Ont., resident plans to turn his trek into something Unique by setting up an exhibition of his journey. Wonnacatt, who left St, John’s, Nfld., on May 29, now Is lega than a week from Victoria —- the end of the road. He will then fly home for Christmas. He's trudged through record rain in P.E.L, heat exhaustion in Quebec, monotony Inthe Prairies and blizzards in B.C. without accepting a ride once, Moat of the time he camps in a tent and he has relied on food and changes of clothing mailed to him by his wife, Heidi. Why would a man with a degree in psychology and half a credit away from a degree in fine arta want to spend months on an arduous hike that has been done before? The answer: Wonnacott Is dolng this differently, He has nosupport team with him, as many marathon walkers do, and he's compiling a Jog that will be a detailed view of Canada in words and pic- tures, : He records everything on 687 large-scale government topographical maps — where he stops, what he sees, who he meets, the weather and the temperature. He also takes about eight photographs a day, “I make objective com- ments on everything I see — fil even write down the wording of a plaque on a bridge or the types of crop in a field,’ Wonnacott said in an interview outside this upper Fraser Valley city. His dream is to turn this visual journey into an exhibition about Canada wing the annolated maps and the photos. "A person visiting the exhibitian could almost literally walk across Canada and experience what [ have done every day," he said. Wonnocott also has been picking up things along the way to make his journal more vivid — plants, local newspapers, the wing of a dead bird, a butterfly and even dollar bills. “I Knew I was in Alberta when I found money beside the road,” he joked. Wonnacott, who is carrying everything he needs in a large backpack, has run into little trouble, except for a few snowballs thrown at him in B.C. last week and some language problems in Quebec. “Moat people in Quebec are cautious of strangers, especially a guy like me with a ratty-looking beard and a packback,” he said, “People in the Maritimes and nor- thwestern Ontario are the most hospitable of all I’ve met. ‘ “People on the Prairies are irlendly, but not as open asthe Maritimers. Geography seems ‘to have a great bearing on people.” Wonnacott has had hun- dreds of offers of rides from people wHo mistook him for a hitchhiker, He has been sick only twice, each time it was a result of exhaustion. - He has had no sponsara, and he thinks the trip is well over his original $3,000 budget. Earths heat helps town MONROE, Utah (AP) — Before the hole, thera . Mostly, it wae just County. ry But the hole is about to steam up the- residents. It’s the core of the first elty-run _ geothermalheating system in the United coal fields, The geothermal well Monroe's 2,000 residents to stop shovelling coal joy the benefits of the che ” gwned-and-operated project. “It's something to be excited about,’ sald Mayor Duane Nay. “‘It'a potential is mind- University of Utah geologists studieds Monroe's geothermal potential in 1976 and Upped off Terra Tek The federal energy department has sunk $900,000 into the geothermal well, and Nay said the town will need more to lay the * pipe, Bob Chappell, with the energy department In Idaho Falla, Idaho, Chappell, wages have meant an But the | process “We're just pulling it (hot water) out of tha ground, stealing the heat from it and pai it back in the ground,” Roger Harrison, a ported by Terra Tek to been in operation this winter, but it wlll be next November at the Onee the water 500 |: and all the businesses and residences on Main . Street will be able to : Later, a second well will be dug and the - syatem expanded to Mark Chattl said he expects to cut his heating bill by 75 per investment of 920) to thermal heat fro coal. “It'll be a great thing. There's virtually no Carter pulls ahead NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. voters' opinions of the public belleven | Carter has handled the Iranian crisia well and Kennedy haa reacted to it poorly, an Assoclated ~ Press-NBC News pal shows, Carter seems to be dis- questions in the public mind about his com- petence, P fi MOLINEX ELECTRIC SVU CARVING KNIFE Well balanced knife has stainless steet blades wilh push button release. Wall rack included. White/orange colour. : ws re MELITTA AUTOMATIC — COFFEE MAKER 6 cup capacity heat resistant glass bowl with heating plate. Water indicator and slide-in filter top. Almond/brown colour. 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Concentrator attachment 1% PHILIPS ALL a WED., THURS. & FRI. to 9:30 PM | rs gn Advertised Merchandise Policy Y Our fhomoatenhonias taba esrry advertised (amin slack on ue shelves Pat asvertined tert os 7 notavedabhe tor purbae due to any attureseen reagan Kmart will se a Aan Check on hequeention the mer bandige tobe putehased alihe sate pace whenever avadablt or will SeUTYyoUG compatable qiaddy linn aba comparabte eetus Te pce Que potiry ig to give our custoers eS lde ttt alwys K mart Canada Limited 4 rights | his | cases ‘By JAMES LITKE CHICAGO (AP) — The magazines in his law office range from the moat recent editions of’ the corporate guidebook, Fortune, to those of Christopher Street, a slick journal for homoaexuals. Once branded “the fairy lawyer” by less- tolerant colleagues, Paul Goldman has been battling on behalf of Chleago’s gay com- munity for half a cen- tury. m The 73-year-old Goldman smoothes a Vm tuft of grey hair as he a sits in his offlee and Stalks about the i] 3 homosexual world, 4 mB world through which he moves freely, albeit not a ag “an intimate at their cocktail parties.” = ‘The entire thing was happenstance,” said . “Il was in- 150 people alter a Chicago bathhouse was raided (in 1929), and the exposure waa 4ub- stantial, “People labelled me ‘the fairy lawyer.’ It was & common ex- pression, and they would call my cases ‘pansies or fruits,” His motivation to join legal battle was the result of more than happenstance. He bélieves thé 1926 ‘fuicide .of his:roommate while in law school at the University af Elinols gave him the courage and compassion to chart an unpopular course. 5 His room-mate swallowed polson, Goldman found the note . ff which told of the room- Bmate’s heretofore hidden homosexuality. Goldman was heartbro- ken. “Tinew nothing about homosexuala, except what [I had read in toilets,” he recalled. “I never had known one, at least to my knowledge. s My room-mate's death had a terrific Impact on a mebecause | truly loved the boy.” Goldman worked briefly far several Chicago law firms but Boon opened his own practice. Clients came from the ranks of bar and bathhouse operators whose establishments, catering to homosexuals, were the frequent targets of police raids. In the late 19503, he was @ consultant fo the Wolfenden Committee, appelnted by the Church of England to examine the state of homosexuals in Britain. The commitiee recam- mended, and eventually saw enacted, the lifting of legal penalties for sexual acts performed by consenting adults. Goldman also directed efforts against Illinois’ anti-sodomy law, which required penalties of one to 10 yeara In prison. “It was a crime without a victim, but because of that pro- vision, homosexual couples lived in the pale of the penitentiary," Goldman said, ‘Our desire to change the law waa not prompted by the instance of prosecution, but its psychological threat," In 1961, =‘ linois became the first state ta repeal its antisodomy law. Forty states still have such lawa, Goldman secs homosexual marriages as the next gay legal iasue. “Marriage should be legalized because homosexuals, Uke the rest of us.”