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Show The Wednesday, September 4, 1963 Serving the Southeast Salt Lake Communities of Holladay, Cottonwood, East A; v. -- Mill Volume Creek Number 35 8 - Skyline PTA Miekelsen Holds Party Is Kiwanis "Coffee Break." toueh of autumn, was sponsored officers and I.T.A. by the chairman Tuesday. Aug. 27, at Skyline High School for all: adult personnel at the schuol. were served Refreshments from an attractive buficl table set in an autumn theme using squirrels, nut shells, and acorn accessories on a burlap cloth.; Mrs George li. Johnson was' chairman of the friendly af-fair. New teachers were wcl-- 1 coined by the staff and introduced to the P.T.A. officers, announced Mrs A. C. Emery. A with a Candidate P. M. Miekelsen. memlMT of Midvale Kiwanis Club, will be a candidate for district goverKiwanis nor of IMaho-Idahclubs at the ami'ial convention Sept. (i. 7, and 8, at Sun Valley, Ida. Mr Miekelsen has previously as lieutenant-guvcrno- r served for Kiwanis Clubs in region 2 of the Ctah-ldahdistrict, lie has also been president of the Mid vale club and has held other offices in the club. o 1 o P.M. Miekelsen Thrift City Plans Store On 900 East 5600 South Announcement of the construction of a Thrill City department An Idaho woman was killed two Salt Lake Women were Sunday in an automobile . ! Architect's model of the proposed Holladay Heights Hospital was released last week. This Plans call for location of the at 2400 East 4500 South. hospital 100-be- d I accident at 7000 South and Wa- satch Blvd. The Idaho woman, La Fcarn. 52. American Falls, was a passenger in a car driven by Fern A. Elder, 24, Salt Lake, Boards Disagree on Auditorium Site d , Votes . . . store at 5000 S. 900 East was made last week. Site prepara-antion and preliminary construct-injure- d ion was started late in August, The new shopping center will be built next to the present Val- liotween Hie only site ever publicly consider- No agreement Icy Shopping Center grocery been the County Commission and Hie ed within this area has store at Hie same location. of the location Bo- - present Auditorium Civic Advisory The new center is expected to abandoned to be hospital, county be completed on Nov. 15. ard lias created a situation mc"1rla !oaP,!al 1,! "T on whith can well bring about do- - Ig,'pn nieied the University ,,f Utah campus. feat or the entire proposal. This 2100 South site, at the Last Thursday the Advisory a downtown intersection of two transcontinitoarrl pntal fI!or hiliw8' ufT to Million reach $2 eomuromise for g C1V1C ccntCr because of the expected site in which will include approximate- - that would have used the pres- - traffic bottleneck and because ly $400,000 in equipment in the sent site of the county hospital, of Hie lack of an artery to reach MThe. -fy hospital. A general contractor UJ, select- - cction came commission was to be appointed in the very up before the ion of board, the Monday, advisory county commission near future. Preliminary archiin favor of a downtown loca- Commissioner Marv Jenson was lcclural p,ans have bccn Prc tion, as yet not specified except the only one of the three n a mile of the down-- . missioners to vote for the 2100 Parwl ty John W. Sugden, AIA. South site. Commissioner Edwin Present plans call for opening town area. On Friday the county comHie Holladay Heights Hos-- ! voted again with two mission pital in approximately 11 6 IT 6 S Brady and Cannon; years, according to Mr Jensen voting ill favor of llie downtown and Mr Robinson. j no site with . location specific recommended and Commission-- j UTQ6 tninUSIdSITl 3 bum j cr Jensen abstaining 100 Bed Hospital Proposed for Holladay N That Flans for a 100 bed hospital patterns hi population shows will provide doctors with all the in the Holladay area were re- - these areas to be among the services of a hospital in con- Cottonwood in Overheard most rapidly growing areas in junction with office facilities. The hospital is designed so that Salt Lake County. The planned hospital would lie it may be expanded to 200 beds Eusl 15110 in the future for the group backing the facil - !,,4a!041 at the hos- Ever ride on a jet boat? If :iy jn making the announce - 1111 l,e ouay an'a 3,141 ,wllM Estimated ultra modern 'pitaI would be'around $750,000 be a complete you get down Moab way don't ment, Mr Jensen and Mr Rob- - j all the lat-- ! contemporary annually. The miss it, provided the river is inson stated that there were siructur(.to employing the minute advanced architecture cst, up and landscaped if we doubt But you "clear," . many motivating reasons for equipment and techniques to gardens will add beauty and could go wrong, care ior medical, va,uc t,, lot.al property i the the hospital in this completely the pilot, says he isn t going to establishing surgical, obstetrical and pedia- - vicinity and the hospital will area. risk his boats again when the trie patients. Included in the lend dignity and quiet to the There presently is no hospi- - building will be an office tow- - area. river is like it was Saturday. cost is Initial construction A Jet boat, wc learned, sucks tal facility in the entire Holla- cr for physicians. This tower water in and forces It out the day, East Mill Creek, Cottonrear with tremendous force. Two wood, Olympus Hills and Sugar-hous- e 1963-- 64 motors driving twin-je- t n areas and with an impellers not only drive a of approximately boat, they plane it water of is hull out in the combined areas, so these the 100,000 up and only the jets arc beneath the need for a hospital becomes the surface. Mr Jensen and braapparent, when very But sticks, leaves, fine and Skyline High Auditorium will nches, and other trash are Mr Robinson noted. They also1 An exceptionally varj(d Jinw.ram win h(. prSenl- - be the noting for the Granite sucked in, they clog the works, jn uie Granite Arts Concert Arts bonus, a date to be an- the jets create a vacuum, the slated that estimated growth season. Inounecd later, when the finest Scrics of the 1903-6motors spin wildly, and the boat Highlighting the scries will aspiring artists in the slate of shuts down till the trouble can lie the Orchestra San lictro of Utah will be presented in con be cleared. Naples, the United States Navy That job goes to a girl She Band, the University of Utah has to have hands small enough Theatre Ballet. Of special local to reach into the small opening interest is the Granite Youth: in 1957 the Orchestra of San She also has to have the stomach to jump repeatedly into the dirtSymphony and combined high j Pietro of Naples was a choirs, and a bonus at-- 1 cess from the beginning, and iest water wc ever saw to clear traction featuring the finalists 'now boasts an international debyis from under the boat. The of the Utah Concert Council reputation, and is recognized as water was cold, and it was carlone of the great ensembles of talent search. rying the 55';. silt it occasionThree individual performers, the world. The orchestra will ally does. Not many people Coaches and schedule fur Leonard Icnnario. pianist, Hal 'appear at Granite High Auditor-Seliutwould go into that dirty brown water so that others might have teams participating in the Salt organist, and John M. hurt the first week in February. illustrated lecturer. Feb. 27 in Skyline High Goddard, an outing. and adventurer, will torium the concert of the Gran-rounTex has been running river Lake Junior Football Council c out the Youth Symphony and corn-grapro-iitcruises on the Colorado for three Holladay District 5 were rebined high school choirs will for the season. years, but this is the first year leased last week by Vcrn Yoho, lie has had jet boats, and he's Opening the concert scries present their concert, under the tickled with them most of the chairman. Coaches, assistants Oct. 7 at Skyline High School baton of Vilem Sokol, guest time. and managers arc as follows: will be Leonard Iennario, pia-- ! conductor. He is first violist nisi, whose (ours of Europe and with the Seattle On our trip wc bounced sandSymphony, bars covered with less than an Juniors, Joe Knowles, coach; the near F.ast have mode him founder of flic Seattle String an international Bob Inch of water. That situation Chuck celebrity, lie Society and present conductor Spalding, asst.; has also won laurels with every of the Seattle Youth Symphony, n would have bogged any asst.; Speed Shelton, major American orchestra. Thc choirs of Granite, Cyprus, boat bigger than a canoe. Bair, Hal Shut comes to Skyline Olympus, Granger, and The Colorado River trip is trainer; Frank Dipictro, manaDec. 6. Ail extreme-- , line will also entertain. Guest beautiful. The sheer red walls ger; Bantums, Bernic Erickl.v versatile organist, Mr Sliutz conductor will be Dr Lee rise abruptly from both shores, ' Chick coach: asst.; Hansen, innumerable sounds son, whose musical endeavors broken occasionally by deep side son, of Midcfinstruments ami other have been largely with youth, Howie the is bank Mitchell, manager; canyons. Aong right More familiar, yet ranking a new blacktop road, construct- gets, Grant Hansen, manager; feels in his interpretations. The Dec. 16 program at Gran-- 1 high in favor with Utahns, is ed from Moab to Fotash. Over part of the mute there is Roy Tcseh. coach; Donnie An- ite High Auditorium will be pro- - the University of Utah Theatre also a brand new railroad to derson. asst.; Bub Turgeson, sented by John M. Goddard, Ballet, under the direction of whose adventuring has taken Wiliam F. Christensen, which Fotash, parelleling the highway. asst. him through some 81 countries will appear Mar. 31 at Sky-anFart of the way the railroad of on the Commenting safely oyer 5)0.(HH land, sea, and htie. Mr Yoho said, the program disappears through a tunnel. The United States Navy Hand Despite these new construct- "The Salt Lake Conference has air miles, cquilivent to 20 times ions, Indian hieroglyphics and an excellent safety record with around the world. Ilis insatiable; will appear the week of Apr. search for knowledge has led 22 at Granite High School. The writings bn the sheer walls have been preserved and arc visible very few injuries. This has him from savage societies to hand is under the direction of been maintained by excellent complex societies from tribal Commander Charles Brendlcr. from the river. coaches and supervisors, and chiefs to chiefs of stall' from since 1941. He conducts the full to spacecraft from hand from memory without The Moab area is looking by purchasing equipment. The witchcrail stone age to nuclear reaeiurs musical score. Each hand mrm-frohave providby parents helped tu forward establishment of blow guns to guided mis- - ber must be a qualified solo-slfitand holh good ing guards Canyonlands National Fark. and from ocean Hour to ist on one or more instruments The editors trip Iasi Saturday ting properly laced shoes. Wc for acceptance to the band. served to intensify the belief recommend a complete phjsiral outerspace. that Canyonlands can he a nat- examination for the boy before ional park and still serve in- joining the program, but this is dustry such as the potash mine, the parents' option." $& the uranium mines, grazing, and Schedule for the coming seawhatever else may be available. son follows: There is enough area for all Sept. 7, Dilworth at Olympus, of these things, with no en- Bantums Rose and Juniors. croachment upon one another. Fark at Olympus High, Midgets. The vast vista from Dead Sept. 14. Rose Fark at RiverHorse Foint does not include side. all teams. the potash plant. From the Sept. 21, Skyline at Granite Foint the viewer would have no High, all teams. idea it was there. This fad has Sept. 28, Jordan at Jordan xerved to convince us, more Fark, and Juniors, Bantums than ever, that there should be Skyline at Olympus, Midgets. uses llie allowed in multiple Oct. 5. Sugarhousc at Sugar-hous- e area. Fark, Bantums and JunThe visitor lias more rocks to iors, Mutiny at Municiplc Iark, , view than he can see, romcin-lieror photograph. A few less Midgets. Oct. 12, Avenues at rocks and a $40 million plant Banlilina and Juniors,Olympus. Mutiny on the tax roil makes better at Olympus. Midgets. sense. Oct. 19, Munny at Olympus, Bantums and Juniors. Hailstones only slightly smaller than golf balls, but ust as Age brackets for the hoys Story from Moab: of Interior playing m the conference 'are: When Secretary hard, dropped on residents in the area Saturday, destroying Udall and Secretary of Agricul- Juniors, 12 thru 14, maximum most bedding plants and shredding leaves on trees. In meny ture Orville Freeman eamc to weight 140 lbs., Bantums, 10 thru 12, maximum US areas the hail stones were so thick the ground looked as if it weight visit the potash plant. Freeman "What do lbs.; Midgets, 9 thru 11, maxnaively inquired: had snowed. imum weight 90 lbs. Uicy use pulaih fur?" By Reverse j Steve Widerburg accepts the transistor radio of farad as a prixo to the Sun carrier who brought in the most year's subscriptions, during a recent campaign. Laura Setterberg, in charge of car:, riers, presented the radio. ' Jay t ! . ' . ( 400-h.- eslima-populatio- com-withi- , ; ltd Girl Scouts Launch New Granite Arts Concert Series Released 4 Jr. Football Schedule Set for Fall z, j r, d d prop-drive- d . 'bVb4 Programs It has been considered obvious In for some time that the people j will not approve a bond issue For most 1 the younger set for either of these sites, so a paradoxical situation has been of Salt Lake City school work created in which the two groups jg being resumed. But for interested in a civic ccn- - cnty-twgirls of Olympus High bclns trm 'ummer prec- certainly bronchi drfeat to Hie Hces. i project. The vote of the advisory i The meetings, called to last Thursday was 6 to 5 dcr by President JuAnn Eard, in favor of the compromise site, Cy, the Titanctlcs main objcct-withis of a mile jvc is to strive for perfection, of 2100 South and State St. The Assisting JoAnn this year iq. leading the Fcp Club are Vice President Carol Wheat; Secretary, Sliirlcy Christensen; CorJanet responding Secretary, The African Violet Society of Lee; Historian, Sharon Laub; Utah will meet Wednesday, Treasurer, Kathy Lattin; 4. at 12 noon, at the north erlcading Correspondent, Ann shelter, in Liberty Fark for a Sargent; and Publicity Growth, Bloom, and man' Babs Fctri. Looking forward to the Habits of African Violets. will be inS of school, the girls work on varieties discussed by a panel of exper- - marches and routines prepared ienccd growers. Mrs Hoyt Con- - by Robyn Andrus, Drill Mis-getPom-Pogirls; Susie Sandy; Mrs William Nay- Ann Sargent, Jann Durham. lor and Mrs Marvin Strong, East Mdlcreck; and Mrs Fred Lund and Carol Wheat, are also Weyland, SLC. They will also working diligently to make the answer questions from the Pep Club a success. Spirit tingles through the girls as they membership, A tour of the gardens at anticipate their victorious year. They urge all Liberty Park will conclude the school meeting, announced the presi- - students Titans or otherwise Mrs Richard dent, Keatley, to plunge into the school year .with enthusiasm. Holladay. sev-mo- o One of the busiest weeks in the history of the Girl Scout organization will start Monday, September 9 for Hie more than 8500 Girl Scouts of tiic Utali Girl Scout Council. The reason in the is the "new design" Girl Scout program. The week will mark the first meetings of Girl Scout troops in four new age levels. New Girl Scout Handbooks developed to correspond to the new age levels, will go on sale fur the first time. All of the Girl Seoul n three-quarter- Che-Scp- t. Chair-progra- Equipment Agencies arc preparing for record sales of the ! new books. While tiie age range for girl members remains seven through seventeen. Girl Seoul troops arc beginning to operate in four age levels: Brownie GirlScouls (7 Girl and 8 years), Junior Scouts (9. 10, 11 cite Girl Scouts ( Cad- 12. 13, 14 years). This is a change from llie three age levels: Brownie Girl Scouts (7, les. Seniors which were ior- mcrly the basis of the Girl Scout troop organization. ( 15. 16. 17 j Before the open-Favori- r, years), 63-6- 4 Blast . . . Editors Visit Moab Potash Mine , cs XU Sij. - I I l,"w(Z 2-- were jolted Wednesday Editors who attended the summer press convention at morning to read about 25 miners trapped in the potash mine beside the Colorado River. The editors visited that mine Saturday, spent a couple of hours looking over the $40 million installation. None, however. was inv'tcd to go down Hie 2.700-foo- t shaft, and none appeared anxious to go down. After visiting Inc properly, editors were not prepared foi a mine disaster. Men who had worked there for two years gave repealed assurance that the only minerals down there were sodium eloridc (salt) and potassium cloride (potash). They talked of the dryness in the mine, the cleanness of the inno, the tremendous amount of automation installed. There was no talk of danger, and the general altitude was interpreted to mean that must of the usual mine dangers were not present in the Moab potash mine. But an attitude of "it can't happen l.ere" is never safe in the mining business, and Tuex day afternoon 25 nrners were trapped half a mile down in llie red rock of Cane Creek where Texas Gulf Surfur lias invested $40 million in a modern mine, mill, road, and railroad to tap a fantastic potash deposit and convert it into Moab And so, in one of Utah, men work but vigil goes on. helplessly while of the remotest an area where do not live, a Families wait men work long and hard to clear rubble, establish clean air and vcnt ltion. siring coinmiiniction lines, test for more explosive gases, and search the drifts for the men. 'loping they may he found alive n spite of explosion, fire, gas. .lid carbon innnox'dc. Wednesday noon two miners .vere rescued, after 19 hours. They reported they knew of at lease five, possibly seven more nen alive, and saw three dead nen on their (rip out of the lrift. Reports Thursday morning indicated that eight dead had ieen discovered hut no trace tad been found of the remain above the Colorado River, amid tnc vast stillness of the desert wasteland. The plant :s not viable from Dead Horse Point. Preparations for opening the mine have been going on for some two years, and officials !ookcd forward to taking out he first ore within 10 days, as .he two drifts from the shaft icarcd the ore body. A blacktop road, blasted in 'ctwccn the sleep red cliffs and lie Colorado River, wvnds from Moab to the potash mine. Though it isn't a town, and here are no plans for living luarters there, road signs it by naming it "Fotash." A railroad spur, laid by the Riu Grande from its ma n line at Crescent, also reaches Potash. The track winds along the base of the rim of mountains, lien goes straight into the red ng 15. Thursday evening the only wall through a tunnel bored remaining survivors were dis- more Ilian 7.000 feet to form a covered and (lie oilier eighteen cutoff that saved 24 miles of 'wd:cs were accounted for, all irackagc over almost impossible terrain, and ends at the dead. The fact that two men got loading dock at Potash. nit alive, and f'at they saw The ni ne installation at Fotother men liv ng kepi hovc ash is spectacular. The over the mine shaft rises alive and kept weary miners winking around the cluck to 18 stories, hut looks little rescue them. against tin mountains behind it, A modern office building, Those who have viewed Hu vista from Dead Horse Feint against the desert can visualize the selling of the heat, overlooks the installation Texas Gulf Sulfur Co.'s mine at from a new green lawn grow-- 1 Cane Creek. It is set in rugged. ing from soil as hard as con-red rock, perhaps 100 feet i crete. areas dig-lif- y head-fram- e 1 Q. Cannon, who has always favored the downtown location. voted for it, as did Commissioner c. W. Brady, who had not com- milted himself previously.' r. Folio wingthe commission! defeat of the boards recom- mendation observers interested civic center for Salt Lake both 1Jounly became aware that the downtown site and the 21st sjhjh, gji,, hwj once been re jeeted, and pointed out that the only site with much of a chance of approval by the people is the 3400 South site, which has never been voted on by the group.- The commission set Nov. 5 as the date for the $15 million bond election. This coincides with the municipal elocUon date. Even with the combining of the elections. the commission was advis-ed that the $25,000 appropriated for conducting the bond election would be inadequate, and another $20,000 to $25,000 would be necessary. Butler Stake Relief Society Slates Roundup On the 13th of September, 7:30 p.m., in the BuUcr Stake House, the Butler Stake sisters are featuring a "Relief Society Roundup with the theme "A Little Bit of Heaven. The Relief Society encourages a friend who is not yet a member of Relief Society to join with Uicm in an evening of enlightenment and enjoyment, and take a part in the joys of Relief Society. There will be a program after which visits will be made tu bixitlis depicting the varied activities of Relief Society, such as scones being made; (and devoured), quilUng, fashion show, canning, cake decorating. and many more. Bring a friend to join with us to get the "icel of Relief Society.-- j Wasatch PTA Council ; i Workshop The Granite Wasatch PTA annual workshop was held Monday, Aug. 26 in the Crestvitw school, 2100 East Lincoln Land, The newly organized Wasatch council was formed earlier -- in the spring by breaking down the former Granite Counci PTA into three groups, the Wasatch Council, the Oquin'h Council and the Secondary Council. The Wasatch Council represents all of the elementary schools on the east side of the district, the Oquirrh Council. the elementary schools on the west side of the district and the Secondary Council , all of the senior and junior high schools within the district. All local PTA presidents and their officers attended tlw work shop at Crestview with Mrs Jarvis Krddington acting as chairman. Mrs Kcddingfon is first vice president of' the Wasatch council. Mrs Ted T. Peterson, president of the council said, "Wc were very thrilled with the enthusiasm of the group and we know we will have one of our best years in 1963-64.- " Alter a general assembly was held meetings were conducted by council chairmen for the local chairmen. In the section meetings action programs ami instructions were given to as-schairman in Hireling Ilieir in lTA for the assignments mining year. Other officers of the council arc: Mrs Jack Schadc, second vice president; Dr Kenneth C. Farrar, third vice president; Mrs Ruby Wchrli, secretary; I Mrs Stanford 'Hale, treasurer. it |