OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRI DAY, MAY 1 8, 1 962 ' Page Eleven Army National Guard 2nd Lt. Jerold L. Jensen, 2940 Filmore St., completed the officer orien-tation course at the Quartermas-ter school, Fort Lee, Va., last month. He was trained in the duties and responsibilities of a Quarter-master Corp. officer. He received instruction in signal communi-cations, map and aerial photo reading, unit supply and combat arms tactics. He was graduated from Olym-pus High School in 1957 and at-tended the University of Utah. destroying the enemy. During darkness or bad weather the pilots may never actually see the aircraft they shoot down. Guardsmen to Train In Hawaii, Japan Some Utah Air National Guardsmen will , train this sum-mer as far away as Hawaii and Japan, and two more of the huge aircraft that will help them do it arrived this week at the Air Na-tional Guard's Salt Lake City base. The arrival of the two C-9- 7 planes makes the Utah Air Na-tional Guard's conversion from fighter aircraft to heavy trans-ports nearly complete, pointed out Maj. Gen. Maxwell E. Rich, Utah Adjutant General. With the scheduled acquisition of two more C-9- 7's one May 24, and the other June 14 the Utah Air National Guard will have its full allotment. Used all year round, the planes will see heavy duty during two weeks of summer camp training flights of the 191st Air Trans-port Squadron, 151st Air Trans-port Group, based in Salt Lake City. Transition to the new-typ- e aircraft will be stressed with flights to Hickam Field, Hawaii, and Tachikawa Air Force Base near Tokyo, Japan, in the Air National Guard's new world-wide flying mission. Summer , camp will be June 10-2- 4 for the transport group. Another Utah Air National Guard unit, the 130th Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron, will be the first to go to summer camp, with dates scheduled June 2-1- 6. The squadron will train at the Salt Lake Municipal Airport, al-though some controllers and technicians will go to Reno, Nev. with the Reno Air Defense Sec-tor, said Maj. Roy Stapp, com-manding officer. Maj. Stapp pointed out his unit has the capability to locate enemy aircraft, alert and guide our fighters by instruments to a point where visual or radar con-tact is made, and then return the fighters to their bare after Weston's Sons in Global Horspots Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weston, 769 So. West Temple, have two sons on duty with the United States Navy in trouble spots on opposite sides of the globe. Their oldest son, David, now is stationed with a naval aerial patrol squadron at Gauntanamo Bay, Cuba, and with his fellow fliers eats and sleeps under the muzzles of the big guns on So-viet tanks whic Castro has sur-rounded the land side of the American base on Cuba. A second son Stephen, is serv-ing in the engine room aboard the U.S.S. Sproston, one of the Seventh Fleet detsroyers that is escorting the ships landing the Marines in Thailand. A third member of the family, son-inla- w Ralph C. Gribbin, after having been on duty for the past three years at a Wash-ington, D.C., naval air base, is beginnig a three month period oi re-traini- ng at a Mempnis na-val school, in preparation for re assignment in a probable bat-tle station overseas. The senior Mr. Weston, Demo-cratic candidate for the United States Senate, is himself the veteran of more than five years of active duty during World War II and the national emergency that preceded it . He left the service at the end of that war as a squadron commander of the Air Force with the rank of captain. "Participation in the armed defense of this nation and of its policies has never been an aca-- , with the men of the Weston family for more than 300 years on the North American conti-nent" Mr. Weston said this week. "When the time has Come to bear arms, we have in each gen-eration been among those who were prepared to go out on the first call. I am proud that the entire history of our family has been that each generation has sent its full share of young men to hold the firs lines while others with less fortitude and less fore-sight have been given time to ready themselves for action they believed would never come, but .which always does come." Sflill a royal metal In the bonanza days of Utah mining, silver was king. Before 1900, silver made up 40 to 80 of Utah's total metals value each year. Now the bonanza-typ- e, near-surfa- ce deposits are gone. But the white metal, as a by-produ- ct of copper and lead-zin- c ores, continues to play a vital role in Utah's economy. In 1961, totaled output 4,731,000 ounces, valued at $4,282,000. UTAH MINING ASSOCIATION "From the earth comes an abundant life for all" i rpt yi v '4 , ;i j--' 'vjEi' ' .A .g diZJ: 4 ft :M . ' ' MiiMiiwMMilliitir'ip"(',i m hwti iiiiil iiiinjiM.juLLHiUi.LfrMlfI - Where every choice Is a vote i With every purchase, she votes yes for that product. But how does yyVV she know so much about the eight thousand supermarket items? Ad-- ( S vertising that's how! Advertising builds the mass demand that stimulates mass production. As volume goes up, prices come down. - H-- Markets widen, jobs increase. These are the forces that keep the oucvy economy moving keep your living level rising. Jaycees Will Push Urahn for Office The Utah Jaycees have an-nounced the candidacy of state president Richard H. Headlee for the office national vice-preside- nt of the United States Jaycees. The bid for this national office will be made at the national Jaycee convention, scheduled for Las Vegas, Nevada, June 18-2- 1. Headlee will go out of office as the state president of the Utah Jaycees on June 1, following the elections at their annual conven-tion in Logan, Utah May 18-2- 0, after leading the Utah Jaycees to one of their most successful years. Membership under Head-lee has increased some 500 mem-bers to bring the Utah Jaycees just short of 2500 members. Also new chapters have been extended in Magna (Cyprus), Granger", Tooele, Midvale and Rose Park (Salt Lake City). Headlee, a named account rep-resentative for the Burroughs Corporation, Salt Lake City of-fice, lives at 188 East 650 North in Bountiful, the state Jaycee headquarters this year, with his wife, the former Mary Menden-hal- l of Richfield, daughter of Mrs. Loretta Mendenhall, Rich-field, Utah. They have seven children: Michael, 11; Dougal, 10; Katherine, 8; Bruce, 6; Natalie, 4; Carolyn, 2; and Laura, 1. |