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Show 17 2 DESERET NEWS, Saturday, A1 13, 1969 September evade: Ah msh y. & JfT" V Ii v- - f" . SC ' V y 'W :ju 4 r-V Me V . . r ' . i' ' 'LTW'Sr ? ? " ? ' XX $'$ - 4 A Civil Air Patrol spokesman said the group was headed for Salt Lake City, where three members were to stop over briefly before flying to Provo. r The flight began land, Calif. Phots by Cloyton Aerial photo shows wreckage of light plane in Nevada. Drrh in Oak- Investigators said the blue, black and white Cessna 172 was partially burned after impact. Symphony Rehearsal Orbits By HAROLD LUNDSTROM Deseret News Music Editor If the first number that the Orchestra Utah Symphony al approximately miles of travel. peak. The crash site is not far from the spot where 13 Marines died in the crash of a transport plane about a year ago. Higgins said the ground party would try to reach the crash site today. A helicopter from Fallon Naval Air Station attempted to land at the crash site, but altitude and terrain problems forced the pilot to abandon the mission. c loan' Executive, 64 - attended Brigham and the Sloan served as state chairman of the American Korean Foundation and as chairman of the Portland United Nations Week. Maurice Abravanel welcomes two new Symphony players, netie Seely. Ben Ivey and Lyn- - He was an internationally known public speaker and had traveled the world several times, frequently presenting heads of state with Peace Rose bushes as a good will gesture from the City of Port- land. Scientists Watch Particles By HAL KNIGHT Deseret News Science Writer PROVO Using giganMc detectors buried deep under a mountain, of Utah University scientists are exploring interactions mysterious schools Cosmic Ray described Research Group their work Friday at the fall meeting of the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters being held at Brigham Young the University. be- The located tween particles which bombard the earth from outer space. Two members of the c detector, under a mountain in Pyk City, has trapped rare cosmic particles known as has observed showes of particles from space and has come up with a previously unobserved cosmic radiation process. Dr. Jack W. Keuffel and Dr. Haven E. Bergeson told how the detector consisting of four huge water finks, lightcollecting tubes and is wired to comcylinders puters to track the invisible million-dolla- r neutrinos, GAS FURNACES gas-fille- d Flexaire Deluxe furnaco givts you much moro than superb heating: it is Cat-firt- particles. The trap was built neutrinos, a also half af a central air conditioning system. You get gentle, even heating in cold weather, plus the option of adding on air comconditioning for fort. sub-atom- cle which or Old Homes to track parti- is so lacking in mass or charge that it is almost Since the detector went into full operation early this year, it has rey corded some 168,000 particles, the U. of U. scientists said. Only two of these were identified as being caused by weak interactions with neutrinos, but they were the first in the detected neutrinos Western Hemisphere. The second of these had such high energy that it puzzled the "Maybe nature has played a trick on us, or perhaps there is something in the weak interaction that we dont yet urderstand, Bergeson said. At very high energies, there are apparently new interactions taking place which were of before. undreamed The particles plunging through the Utah detector must be coming from something as yet unknown, Keuffel said. high-energ- researchers. Sloan was bom in Cardston, Alta., Canada, Sent. 16, 1905, the son of William Reid and Pearl Card Sloan, a pioneer family of Cache Valley. He is a nephew of Pres. Hugh B. Brown. He married Clarice Watson Glade in 1927 in the Logan Temple, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. Sloan served a Church mission in the Eastern States and served as a branch president, and was a stake high councilor in the Portland area. Survivors include his wife Clarice ; sons and daughters Mrs. F, Burton (Beverly) Smith Jr., Donald C. Jr., Portland; Mrs. James H. (JoAnn) Rogers, Menlo Park, Calif.: a sister, Mrs. Richard W. (Sybil) Bullock, Salem, Ore.; 11 living grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Monday at 1 p m. in the Portland 12th Ward. The family suggests contributions to the Brigham Young University Development fund. NEW DELUXE PIZZA Thert's a Fodders for every need . . . Attic, Basement or Closet installation. Easy Terms. FREE ESTIMATE NO OBLIGATION FURNACE REPAIRS SERVICE 24-HOU- R CALL ANT TIME 486-871- 1 FURNACE CLEANING B-- Liquor Commission objecting tu a particular establishment that the commission w'ould revoke or refuse to renew the license. There was considerable discussion over the constitutionality of search and seizure provisions of the new 1969 Liquor Control Act. Even Evans was dubious about one provision, that which gives a police officer authority to open any club members locker. However, he felt there were procedures available througn which this could be done in a legal manner. In essence, Evans said the new law continues the traditional philosophy that the state should control and profit from liquor sales. However, he said he new law m?kes it easier to obtain liquor e mainly through privileges and extra package outlets and tightens enforcement. Among convention business to be conducted today, the confinal day of the three-da- y vention, was election of officers and adoption of resolutions. to tradition, According Richard A. Chambers, mayor of Logan ind first vice president of the league, will be elevated to the presidency. Timothy Moran, mayor of Spanish Fork, is slated to step up from second vice president to first vice president. Outgoing mmi-bittl- president is Fred L. Montmorency, mayor of South Ogden. Delegates to the convention Friday applauded the district attorney of Franklin County, when he charged Nevada, that American taxpayers are b e a r i n t a "monumental, tax load because of court leniency with back-breakin- g George E. Franklin Jr. said criminals have become the chosen people of the courts, so wrapped up in a cocoon of restraints placed by the U.S. Supreme Court that prosecutors find it all tut impossible to cut their way through. He suggested several remedies, including a National Police Academy, a ban on concurrent sentences, limitation of bail, and building codes which frustrate burglars. A departmental speaker, Dr. Donald W. Davis, College Panel Ra ps Violence By LAVCR K. CHAFIIN Deseret News Education Editor l criminals. He was president of the Bond Traders Club A Portland, as well as Portland Sales Managers Club and was past prime minister of the Royal Rosarians. FEDDERS Utah State University entomologist, said the threat posed by pesticides has been wildly exaggerated, particularly in the book, The Silent Spring. Without pesticides, he said, Americans could not enjoy iheir present comfortaole mode of existence, particularly the abundance of food as costs which are proportionately far lower than anywhere else in the world. Noting that chlorine-base- d pesticides such as DDT are currently under attack, he said that some of the substitutes suggested by the attackers might create worse problems because some of them are toxic to humans, whereas the DDT group is not. PROVO Utah college and university faculty members believe students should be fr e to express "constructive dissent and share in decision making. They are equally emphatic, dishowever, in condemning cretion and violence. These positions were stated in a resolution approved by a strong voice vote at the fina. session of the 25th Utah Conference on Higher Education held on the Brigham Young University campus. SUPPORT URGED The conference also passed resolutions urging members to support the new State Board of Higher Education, the master plan prepared by the college boards predecessor, the Coordinating Council of Higher Education, ar.d elected new officers. Conference president for the current academic vear is Dr. M. Lee Morrell, assistant professor of chemistry at Southern Utah State College, who succeeds Dr. Armin J. Hill, dean of the College of Physical and Engineering Sciences at Brigham Young University. (VHER OFFICERS Chosen vice president and president elect, to succeed Dr. Morrell, was Dr. Milton C. Abrams, librarian and professor of political science, Utah State University. N. Blaine Winters, project director, Educational Profes- sions Development Act, State Board of Education, was reelected secretary-treasure- r for the 25th time. Winters has served in this position since the groups organization in 1944. Garth R. Beacham, chairman, Division of Education and Social Science, Snow Cowas elected to the steering committee. NEXT CONFERENCE The conference will be held at Ced"r City in 1970 and at Logan in 1971. The resolution on student dissent called upon council members to address themto creating on their selves llege, respective campuses an atmosphere . . . conducive to the of expression constructive Continued from Page Washington County who was not able to cast a ballot because of not owning property, members of the board decided. The Supreme Court decision puts a cloud on our method of conducting bond elections which can only be lifted with Dr. Bell a legal opinion, said. We cqnt sit on this thing very much longer. It needs immediate action, Dr. Bell emphasized. The board took another action Friday on a second bonding issue, passing a resolution opposing sections of a tzx reform bill currently before the U.S. Senate that would permit direct or indirect taxing of municipal bonds. Every community in Utah should immediately get word to Utahs congressional dele ... debate and a -vote, the confer- - ' ence added the phrase but that those who break the law will not be shielded from legal cons equences of illegal action. NEW SUPPORT The resolution dealing with SB10, which created the Statg Board of Higher Education, on council members tq" support the new governance system. It noted that many had been opposed to the concept of a single govern'd board. The action urged member? to support the new State Board of Higher Education and its new Commissioner of Higher Education in Older to After some strong yes attain the shared dream of a more effective and economically productive system of higher education - Marie Mrs. Darling, Kearns, has been elected new president of the Utah State Chapter of the National Welfare Rights Organization. She Mrs, Bonnie Batchelder. succeeds The Utah Chapter has about families as members. The election climaxed a dispute in the organization over the employment of Miss Lorraine Cook, director of the Salt Lake County Community Action Program. Mrs. Batchelder has urged the dismissal of Miss Cook, while the 100 gation voicing opposition institutional autonomy. Members of the groups advisory council, now an official unit, were announced by HJ1. They include Jed Richardson, BYU, chairman; Dr. Stanford Cazier and Wendell B. Anderson, USU; Sydney W. Angel-ma- n and Philip C. Sturgess, University of Utah; Robert A. Clarke and Parry Wilson, Weber State College; Herbert Frost, BYU ; F. Dean Walton, College of Eastern Utah; H. Reed Christensen, Snow College, Ronald Garner, Dixie College, Conrad Hatch, Southern Utah State College, and Dr. W. Fred Arbogast, Westminster College. Winters and memMorrell are bers. Members still are to be appointed from the two technical colleges at Salt Lake and Provo which now are council members. new president, Mrs. Darling, supports Miss Cook. Other officers elected were Diana Herbert, Central City, Sally Kerr, Magna, as vice presidents; Arlene Peterson, South Salt Lake, recording secretary; Glennis Fritz, correspondence secretary, and Joyce Harshrcan, treasurer.-Thlast two are residents of 486-87- 11 ket is demoralized because of action in the House of Representatives on the legislation. The board approved budget requests for three state educational facilities as follows: Utah Schools for the Deaf and the Blind, $1,519,240 as compared with $1,337,127 for this year. Utah Technical College at Provo, $2,105,896 compared with $1,618,533 for this year. Utah Technical College at Salt Lake, $2,893,784, an increase of $600,906 over this Central City. Elected chairman of the health and nutrition committee was lone Wilson, Murray, and Penney Daybell was elected chairman of the membership committee. OBITUARIES Grant B. Thorsted nt OGDEN Funeral for B. Thorsted, 50, who died SeDt 12, will be announced from Lindquist and Sons Mortuary Born May 6, 1919, Ogden, to James and Annia Wilson Thorsted LaRua Pledger Married April 12, 1950, Elko, Nev Lifelong Ogden resident Mail carrier Member LDS Church Veteran WW II. SurvH vors widow; sons, William J , G. Bradley, Craig S , kent J , Robert G , Kevin L , Harrlsvllle; father, Ogden; brothers, sister, Earl, Let Nonevvlliei Nev ; Albert, Vegas, Mrs. Fav Pleasant Wav View; Glen, ment, Warren. Martin Luther Hill Martin Lyltier Hill, w. died at a Hayward, Calif , hospital SeDt. 11, 1969, of causti Incldtnt to LOGAN aae Born July 13, 1879, Wallsvllla. Cache County, a son of William and Georoana Ensian Hill. Married Martha Baxter she died Contractor and builder, ooerated with Hill and Hill; in the Bay built many churches Area of California, member Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. Mrs Aftcn Survivors dauQhter, Schaub, Salt Laka City; sons, Martin B ; Wililam B., Oakland, Calif.; Calif ; two grandchilSacramento, dren, three Grtvesioe services Monday, 19 a m , Logan City Cemetery. Friends call Hall Mo'tuary Sunday pm, Burial services. before Monday Logan City Cemetery. U years expenditure. Attorney General Cites State's Role The state of Utah can act as sponsoring entity to obtain assistance federal planning grants on behalf of the FederMountain ation of Rocky States, Atty. Gen. Vernon B. Romney has held. The state also can act as agent for the federation in use of such funds, Romney held. IDAHO Don Eldredge, 34, (UPI) Salt lake City, was in critical condition today in Magic Valley Memorial Hospital after his truck crashed into a cement pillar on Interstate 80 north at the Hansen Overpass Friday at 5 a.m. 6 e on this matter, Nicholas Smith, vice president of Burrows, Smith and Company, a Utah bonding firm, told the beard. J. A. Burrows, president of the firm, said the bond mar- TWIN FALLS, HEATOtAFT of UTAH ... PRESERVE QUALITIES It implored the new board and commissioner, however, to preserve those elusive and which tangible qualities result from local initiative, institutional individuality, pride, alumni support and identification. In short, it urged the greatest practicable level of Welfare Rights Group Chooses New President Trucker Injured cleaning satisCall today faction assured. noted, however, that academic freedom has never included the right to disrupt The resolution specified that the institutions right and responsibility to deal with campus problems be reaffirmed. Bond Problem Hampers Schools B-- l Jt dissent. Charlotte B. Decker Cher- FALLS, IDAHO otte Brown Oerker, 89, Idaho rails, died Sept 3, 1969 In an Idaho Falla hospital of causes Incident to age. Born Oct 1880, 29, Ogden, a of Charles and Clara daughter ArmeMa Leavitt Brown Married Roy Decker, Oct 25, 1906 Salt Laka 1942. He 4, Temole died Jan Attended Webor Academy, member, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints; spent married life in Ooden moved to Idaho Falls to live with a son, Rex L Decker. Survivors sons, Rex L , Idaho Falls Roy Grant Washington D C i dauahter, Mrs. Collin (Cielia) Low-de- r, La Mesa, Calif , 14 grandchilIDAHO -- dren; IS Gravesde 1 services Monday, p m , Ooden C y Cemetery. Friends call Sunday, - pm. Wood Funeral - Leo E. Moon - ; IDAHO Funeral services were held today for Leo E Mnon, 52, Sterling, who died Sept 10, -1969, In a Pocatello hospital of a . heart ailment. Bom Dec 14, 1915, Malad, a sorr. of Archie and Esther Morse Moon. Lived in Pngree, later moved to Nellie Findlav, -Married Sterling Nov Member of 9, 1944, Blackfoot Tne Church of jesus Christ of Letter dev Saints Survivors widow? sons, daughters, , Dale Duane Donna, ail Darrel, two grandchildren; broths sterling ers, sisters, Cleve, Pocetiilo, Lynn, v Leo Sterling Alton, Alton, Mrs (Elaine) Thompon, Mrs F U Beach, alt BlackfoMI (Genevieve) Mrs Hanta Raymond (Juanita) Glendale, Calif Burial, Grove City Cemetery. BL,ACKFOOT. furnace service. 479 East 21st South 9,000-foo- Young University University of Oregon. He was a member of the board of trustees of Pacific Unwersity, Forest Grove, Ore., and held offices in the National Security Traders Association. high-energ- y Complete Pershing County Sheriff Dan Higgins said he took five men, including a coroner, with him t to the base of the Sloan long-tim- Includes Ne- attack. 1914-16- New Homes Plane crash site at vada peak. DonPORTLAND, ORE. C. ald Sloan, 64, president pi Doan Donald C. Sloan and securities, Co., investment died Wednesday of a heart and Maurice Abravanel rehearsed Saturday morning season at their first 1969-7can be taken literally, Jhen the 63 or so musiciars are now in orbit. The number was Gustav Holsts "Planets (Opus 32, And judmg by the number of times that it is appearing not only on Utah Symphony programs but also on the programs of other major orchestras around the nation, it can be reported that 15,000 NEVADA Dies At Neil Armstrong, Edwin Aldrin and Michael Collins apparently d.d their work last July so successfully that they even impressed musicians. The rehearsal was held in the Utah Symphony Rehearsal Hall at 550 E. South Temple, a building provided rent free by Hogle Investment Co. After Sheldon Hyde, personnel manager, and Oscar C h a u s o w, concertmaster, gave their greetings and some 1 n s t r u c Abravanel tions, stepped onto the podium to e face not only the members but also some brand new oee Musicians new to the Utah Symphony include Ben Ivey, first trombone; and Jeffrey Jones, James Shupe, Lynnett? Seely, Bonnie Mangold, Patti Tiemeyer, Phillip Roch, Patrick Zwick and Phyllis Whitmore, string players. Two regulars were not in their places, Don Bassinger ard Mitchell Morrison, but they are expected within days after completing their armed services commitments. Abravanel and his fellow musicians have 39 weeks or more ahead of them, which Warned On Taxes Continued from Page The victims were identified as Jesse A. Pearson 27, Carlos, Calif. ; Carl Pea-so- n, his brother; Pam Howells, daughter of Dr. Norman Howells, Preston, Idaho; and Bruce Lindorf, Whittier, Calif. Miss Howells reportedly was to have left the group at Salt Lake City to travel to Preston for a visit with her family. The crash occurred on a peak Thursday about 38 miles east of Lovelock near Granite Peak. The plane disappeared after the pilot radioed a flight plan following takeoff from Lovelock. 0 S HUM s LOVELOCK, NEV. Four persons en route from California to a wedding reception in Utah died near here in a light plane crash, the Federal aviation Administration (FAA) said today. a - League |