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Show UnivtirsIfT Library L Salt OK SHE RIGHT rf y L.h 1.- - - '1L . i JttJTB Vr C The Serving the Southeast Salt Lake Communities of Holladay, Cottonwood, East Mill Creek Jordan One A plan of action to arouse to thc center of population and voters to defeat the $17 million because no figures on site cost on Nov. 5 was adopted at a could be given. No definite site has ben chosmass meeting of citizens at thc r Wedhall en, South Salt Lake city except within a of 2nd South radius and mile nesday night. More than 100 persons were Main St. Such a site was unpresent, and the vote to organ- acceptable to county residents ize for defeat of the bond issue because of the traffic situation, Before the and because estimates on site was unanimous. costs in this area were nubu-loumeeting adjourned a speakers agreed to work forthe ranging from $l'b million group, bringing the facts be- -' to $13 million without any authwomen j oritative figures being made fore civic clqbs, groups, PTAs, and other public j available. meetings. Roland Davis, Murray, volunSpeaker after speaker indi-- 1 teered the ofiices of the Murray cated that a civic auditorium Chamber of Commerce as headis a desirable thing, but that issue quarters for the they opposed the downtown movement and as a clearing location because it is not close house for assigning speakers to attend specific meetings. The two-homeeting proFall duced many of thc same arguments heard in Midvale two weeks ago, and a number of Be new was angles. Sentiment strong in favor of thc 34th South site, which several citizens staid t would be the center of popula- tion in the valley within 10 1004 Mrs V. It. Hutchens, Princeton Avc., has announced , years. Mayor Henry Beckstead of j the coming flower show to bc Midvale, Mayor Ray Greenwood ' held at the Colonwood Mall Oct. of Murray, and Mayor J. Vcrn 12, 13, by Crysanthcmum SocBolinder of South Salt Lake iety of Utah. Thc exhibition is open to all were placed in charge of obtainresidents of Salt Lake City and ing speakers in behalf of thc d issue movement. the surounding area. Each exTime after time citizens tried hibitor may make only one enand except to obtain specific figures on thc case of try in each class, except in the cost of various sites, but two that entries arc of different members of the advisory board variety or color. Entries will be who were present had no figrcccivcdf from 7:30 to 10:30 on ures to give them. This brought the comment Saturday, Oct. 12. Judging will ex- from Mayor Beckstead that if No 11 a.m. at persons begin cept judges, clerks and neces- we can't get more facts than we sary chairmen will bc allowed have so far, well have to tell our people to turn it down." on the floor during judging. For further information contact Mrs Hutchens, IN Presbyterian Church This is thc seventh annual Holds Pot Luck Dinner fall flower festival of thc society of Utah. The The Cottonwood emphasis wil be put on all Church will feature Presbyterian a pot luck late other and Chrysantremums dinner Wednesday, birthday show. fall flowers for thc Thc show of tre flowers will Oct. 9, in rccognization of its 6th begin Saturday, Oct. 12, 1 to 9 aniversary. Thc dinner will bc held at the p.m. and Sunday Oct. 13, 10 to 1580 Vine St., at 6:30 7 p.m. Thc public is invited to Church, p.m. all church families arc attend. welcome. For reservations and what to bring, call Mrs 11. W. Mt. Olympus Garden or Mrs B. Buckner at Jordan district teams registered twon wins and a tic in games Friday. Jordan rolled over Granger, , Bingham edged Cyprus. 12. 0. and Hiilcrcst and Murray tie. fought to a The week's play left Bingham and Jordan as the only untied and unbeaten teams in region 4. and Hiilcrcst and Murray as the only teams still looking for their first vetory. The Bccldiggcrs of Jordan had too much power for the Graiger team, and romped for a touchdown in the first period, two in the second, and wrapped it up with another in the fourth quarter. Bingham turned up a team with Ilandy Schou-tescooting for 221 yards against Cyprus, averaging better than 10 yards a carry. He spun around end for 47 yards and a touchdown in the first quarter and continued to be a thorn in thc side of the Pirates all game. Twice Schoutcn fumbled to present Cyprus with golden opbut the Pirates portunities, were able to cash in one only one of them. Schoutens gains set up the second Miner TD and Milner went around ned for thc counter. lead over Hiilcrcst took a Murray when a Spartan gamble on 4th down failed and in three plays thc Huskies reached paydirt, with Joe Scorzato driving 9 yards for thc tally. Two Hiilcrcst drives fizzled out on thc 10 and 15, and the Spartans finally put together an campaign with Dennis Hamblin catching a pass for the tying score. half-doze- n have long been America," comprising some 99 influen-- , miiion citizens, over half the ces in the communities, even to ,g Z, the extent that a town without i Hometown definition, a newspaper withers on the vine. is vast thc "twork Anwri" This is true in thousands of cities of rural, urban and suburban hometown" small, the country sup-- . U.S. communities of 25, OUO throughout in numerous ways by thc lation or lcss. Thcsc citizens weekly and small daily press. have an annual . income well over More than 9,000 such news- 47 S157 or billion, tfic percent of the nation papers throughout cuter to their own Hometown total national income, and they of the county's total retail sales. Hometown newspapers carry-accoufur more than 40 percent editorial and product mesing in their columns, influence sages much of this retail spending. They arc important catalysts in thc gross national product to keep America prosperous. So vital to everyday living arc Hometown newspapers that they have become a part of thc family. Virtually every household in "Hometown America" subscribes to and thoroughly digests their contents. To preserve this loyal reader ship the weekly and small daily newspaper must offer more than capsuleform treatment of current news. They concentrate deeply on the strictly local events with a probing, persona coverage impossible for other only a few miles of freeway, but i mcdia to ac,ve it is iikely tO Krow fast, and the small ncwspapcr must bc completely involved in every of community affairs, its bow to deal with situations that phase laff aclivt. in all civic cndcav. all must face on these fast high- ors. way s . Hometown arc newpaper Mos multi-lanhighways still staunch protoctors of commun, while cairy keep right signs, ' i(v rilfllts. aerPKsivi, Knonsnr. Both area high school footon freeways keep left i a Their' editor-mus- ball teams met disaster last dvje 1 lie prosS. thinking of motorists ials frankly reflect thc role of week in conference games. Club Sets Meeting must bc coordinated if utter thc newspaper as a community Skyline riding the crest of confusion is to bc avoided. The Mt. Olympus Garden Club They aggressively en- early season victories was deDriver education is indicated, guardian. content- will meet Wednesday, Oct. 16, in dorse issues best immediate thc interests from posed with 4- - and highways of thc citizens and combat those ion for thc region three title at thc home of Mrs L. G. Cham- -' having a keep left" policy. At which would bc detrimental to when they were dumped 13-- 7 bcrlain, 3821 Sunny Dale Drive. the same time, the experience Thc program will bc a talk South High. their towns by of other stales should be utilized Thc Golden Eagles tied thc and demonstration by Mrs SeyIn tlic past eight years alone, and different speed limits total circulation for Hometown score in the early minutes of thc mour Wells of thc Shade Tree should be set up for each lane. has increased 40.5 last quarter only to have South Commission and also a talk on newspapers Faster traffic should move in Thc officers for thc coming complete a pass to thc Skyline the center lane, slower in the percent! Population shifts from metro- 20 and to score thc touchdown. birds by Mrs William Foust, right. to suburban areas acOlympus scored quick in their year arc president, Mrs Robert This system effectively elim- politan count for much of this increase. game with Highland but that M. Savage; vice president, Mrs inates thc "weaving" which now Industry is moving into rural was al they could do for the rest Burner L. Bale; secretary, Mrs makes Utah's multi-lanhighareas today where farming for j of thc afternoon while Highland Don Madsen; treasurer, Mrs ways a nightmare, and permits merly provided thc only income rang up 27 points in the first Douglas Yidlcr; parliamcntar- drivers to select thc speed that of thc community. half to notch their victory. 'ian, Mrs Alfred A. Willett. is normal for them without fear to running into a slower car ahead or being rammed by a faster car behind, it also has the effect of moving traffic instead of slowing and snarling it. Col. Hyatt expresses worry about ears slopping in the emergency lane, cars running out of gas, etc. . . . and well he may, for this situation recently resulted in the death of three Holladay people, probably because no one knew just what to do about a new situation. On freeways, one motorist must stop to help another, and emergency lanes must hit' so marked, so that other vehicles slay out and do nu4 use them for an extra lane of moving Iraffic. There is no need of a motorist turning Cool Samaritan on a freeway because there will be cither a Highway Patrol car or a wrecker along in a few minutes, and they arc equipped lor facilities Tor help, and warning lights and flares to give protection by warning oncoming trulfic. Slates which have freeway mileage have negotiated contracts with garages along the way to have their wreckers exclusively patrolling a sH'cifird stretch of freeway on a basis. This system takes rare or 4 he lire changing, the motor Iruulilc, the accidents, the situations that always turn up to plague travelers. If the Highway Patrol docs not already have thc power, it should obtain it from the legisA typical, fall hunting scene almost anywhere of thousands of residents to the lush hills and lature. to place strict control over trucks, confining them to in Utah. Next week will again mark the openmountains of Utah. thc right hand lane, prohibiting ing of the annual deer hunt and the migration (Continued from Page 4) Newspapers regarded as sovereign I one-ma- popu-ixirte- anti-bon- d Festival to Held at Mall 6-- 0 , anti-bon- sub-class- 88-ya- 10-ya- High School Football Teams Lose e t. well-bein- i e s, Flower n n d Wednesday, October 9, 1963 j 6-- 0 Serve U. S. Communities Number 41 three-quarte- 28-6- 9,000 Weekly Papers 8 Vote "No" on Bond Issue, Say Citizens at Meeting IPs Win 2 Tilts, Tie in Volume I 262-289- 0 W. llaull at 255-143- Meadow Moor Opens; n Has Bridge-Luncheo- The Auxiliary of thc Meadow Moor Country Club will meet every second Thursday of each month for luncheon and bridge. Members and guests are invited to attend. Luncheon is served at 1 p.m. Word received Tuesday from Lamont Toronto by Mr & Mrs T. D. Mitchell notified them that thc club has been granted a new charter. Cottonwood Mall Merchants Ass'n Elects President Mr Joseph Anderson, Manager of thc ZCMI Cottonwood Department Store was elected as President of thc Cottonwood Mall Merchants Association. Mr Anderson has been a member of the Board of Directors of thc Association since its organization in thc early part of 1962. lie succeeds Mr W. Jay who has presided over thc Association since its inceptEld-redg- ion. Mr Gordon Berggrcn. Manager of the Cottonwood Mall F. W. Woolworth Company, was elected Vice President, to succeed Mr Bill Manzer, formerly of Arthur Frank. For the past ten months Mr Berggrcn has been serving as thc chairman the Promotion Advertising Committee of this Association. Mr Arthur McKell of Zion's First National Bank was reelected to the position of Assist and Secretary and Treasurer of the group. Thc appointment of Wayne E. Richards as Executive Secretary and Manager was reaffirmed by thr Board of IVrect-or- s at the same meeting. Membership in the Cottonwood Mall Merchants Association includes 100' I of thc forty-eigh- t stores and services now doing business in Utah's only shoppiug center. of Members of the Sugar House BPW gathered early Monday morning for their annual Bosses breakfast at the Cottenwood Mall auditorium. Gretting her boss is Mrs Evert Ling wall. chairman of the event. Others in the group are from left to right Mrs Lawrance Cooley, Mrs Lingwall, Wayne L. Sandberg, and Mrs Eveleyn Elmer. Jordan Appoints New Staff Members Several staff appointments, both ccrlifieated teachers and custodians and bus drivers, werc made Thursday night by the Jordan board of education. Two teachers were added to the special education department, William D. Poe, social worker, and Philip E. Hancock, Mrs Nellie speech therapist. Pearce, a qualified librarian and certificated teacher, was aplibrarian at pointed part-timCoppcrvicw school. Resignation of Mrs Vcrgcnc A. Follows, who is moving from the district, was accepted and Mrs Jane G. Compton will replace her as homcmaking teacher at Midvale Junior High. Owen R. Nelson, custodian at Drajicr elementary, resigned and Paul Brown was transferred from Coppcrvicw to replace him. Delbert Naylor was transferred from West Jordan Junior to Coppcrvicw. James II. Leak, West Jordan, and Bryant Miller, licrriman, were appointed substitute bus drivers. Location of an manpower training class in auto body work at Jordan High School for a period was approved. Permission to use space for elections Nov. 5 was granted to Salt Lake County at Union, Mountview, Edgemont, Crescent, Draper, licrriman, Coppcrton. and Lark schools, and thc administration building in Sandy.' Expenses were approved far Jeff Mitchell and Robert Soper, vocational students at Jordan High, to attend thc Future Farmers of America convention at Kansas City, Oct. Marion Penrod, maintenance supervisor, proposed construction of a concrete curb at thc running track at Bingham High, enlarging of the bus loading and asphalt area at Riverton school, and changes and enlargement of parking areas at Draper and Mountview, and he was asked to obtain bids on these projects. He also reported tthat tlie new sound system has bee.n completed at Bingham High, and that work is proceeding on demolishing the Granite school. Thc hoard cuntinucd its efforts to acquire additional land al South Jordan school and for a new school at 700U South and 2350 East. Sandy City was given permission (o drill a well oil the Coppcrvicw school pnqKTty and to have a right of way to the well from State St. The board received a report Unit the Alta View elementary school, already in use in White City, would be ready for inspection and accept ancc in another k Sorority Honors Pledges And Mothers at Luncn e Nibley Park PTA Holds Room Mothers' Tea The Nibley Park PTA following a harvest theme honored Room Mothers Monday Oct. 7 al 3:30 p.m. and (heir room Teachers mothers were introduced by Mrs Lynn Zumhrunncn and Mrs George Buck. The guests were welcomed by Miss Elamac Clark, school principal; Mrs Vaughn Bilner, PTA prescient; Mrs Keith Theobald, vice president; Mrs Roland Pierce, secretary; Mrs Robert Hawley, treasurer. Mrs Sherman Record was acting hostess. A string ensemble from South Several of High performed. werc former them Nibley Park students. Pre-Sch- ool New Delta Delta Delta Sorority pledges and their mothers were honored at the annual Mothers and Daughters dinner Monday, Oct. 7 al the chapter house, 1431 East First South. Mrs D. A. Morgan, alumni advisor, and Mrs Marie Lee, house director, along with thc other honored guests enjoyed thc festive autumn decorations skits by the new pledge class, and songs by active members. Mrs C. II. Larson, president of the Mothers' Club and her daughter, Karen, werc hostesses along with thc following club officers and daughters; Mrs Davis Watkins, Pal and Kathy, Mrs Allan W. Flandro and Gcri, Mrs Rex C. Beckstead and Lee, Mrs C. F. Tcbbs and Elaine, Mrs Howard C. Badger and Julie, Mrs Russel 11. Hendricks and Suki, Mrs Lester C. Walton and Judy, Mrs Joseph L. Murano and Marian, and Mrs Elias W. Smith and Alex. Vision Tests Available for Children one member stays with the child, instructing him as to thc with an ocma Sonuity, and under the dir- eyes alternately so cluder each may lie eye of ection the Utah Committee of tiie National Society for the lrc-ven- t tested. Another member shows on of Blindness, will eon-du- the figures on tlie chart which vision screening clinics in the child iK to identify. Thc third the results thc Granite School in October. member records Tlie clinics are open to all ami of tlie lest and watches the are comnletely free of charge. child for any sign of squinting Mrs Paul C. Evans, general or straining during the test. Thc chairman of tnc project said. volunteers do not prescribe The program is extremely val- treat men! . If the child fails to uable, and previously neglected, mend that him or iier bc takenr because it enables tlie child with pass thc test, they will rcrom-foa complete professional eye a visual defect to Ik- A group of 50 volunteers, by tlie Sail Lake City Alumnae Chapter of Delta Gamspun-.sore- treated early, when there is a better chance for successful treatment, and before the defect ljccoinos an emotional, psychological, or educational handicap to a child. In the case of Amhlyop'a or Lazy Eye Blindness, that condition which exists m 2 to 2';. of the population ill which one eye through muscuair inbal-ane- e or extreme difercnee in visual aeeuity eeases to fimc-tio- n leaving the good eye to do al the work of seeing, it is even more imperative that the child be screened early in life, because, although there is nothing wrong with the ambl.vopie eve. it simply can not tie taught to see much beyond tlie age id seven. And the earlier treatment is begun, the faster the eye can he made to see." The sereening is done with a standard Snellen eye chart using the s.vmliol "K" only. Tlie children taught to play a simple game allowing with their hands and arms which direction thc K" faces. The sereening is done by a three member team, i 30 (lavs. Next board iiuTling will be held Thursday, Ucl. 17. al 7 p.m. Lady Lions Hold Regular Meeting The Holladay Lady Lions w li meet, Thursday, Oct. 1(1 al tlie East Mill Creek Lbrary, 226V Evergreen Avc.. at 7:15 p.m. Mrs Lila Brimliall will review a modern New York play and after the review tlie members will go to Hazel Aldous' 2542 examination. Kentucky Avc.. for meeting and Schools in tins area scheduled refreshments. for the clinics arc: Sherman liosteses will be Hazel Caschool on (ct. 17: and Cotton- vern Shaw, and Viola Livingj ston. wood school on Oct. 23. Bonneville Jr. High Will Cost $2,076,048 Tlie Granite hoard of education last Tuesday awarded bids tutaliig S2.076.U48 fur the new Bonneville Junior High to lie constructed al 5220 South 1665 East. 60 citizens I rum Hie I'.ast ,M Creek area requesting inforn lion on the progress of pl.i lor a new sellout in tlie Upl.i Terrace area. School Inijird olTiciols s. Winning bidders were laulseu that plans lor I lie seiiool mi Const met inn Co., general being prepared as they wi Justin C. White Plumb- scheduled and that plans ing and Heating Co., mechanical properly acquisition had contractor; and Thompson Elec- some delays lint iuciuIhts of t were Impel trical Service, electrical con- administration that problems could lie iron tract. The total price will repre- out before the awarding of n sent a cost of $11.80 per square tracts fur the school. U is an foot. eipated Unit contract will The board also heard from awarded sometime in Noveml a delegation of approximately or December. : I |