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Show Universal Micrrf ilnin", 141 Piernont Ave Jdlt Lake ity, Utah 4101 Bough Elected To Stat e Post Charles PARK CITY. C. Baugh, 1084 Chevy Chase Dr., Is the new president of the Utah Recreation and Park Assn. He was elected on Friday U during the organization's annual convention in Park City. Mr. Baugh, park director for the Salt Lake County Recreation Dept. and former member of the Murray Shade Tree CommisTgRVING THE sion, has served as presidentelect curing the past year. Several other county recreation PublUhed Weekly at 1SS E. 4905 South officials attended the session, including Gary Sweden, who is term on the Thursday, April 27, 1967 serving a association's board of directors. Representing Murray at the y convention were City Commissioner L. Clark Cushing and Lynn Pett, the city's park and recreation superintendent. The City ComMURRAY. mission here issued several April Shower Provides licenses during a relatively light week of activity which Assist To Firemen included only one session. Here In Dousing Blaze Applications for licenses MURRAY. Firemen here had were approved for Callister's some help from an April shower Nursery, 4849 So. State; WeShop, 5030 in the first alarm to which they bster's Second-Han- d had responded in nearly three So. State; Garrett Sewer and Septic, 5175 So. 935 East; along weeks. Called to 6526 So. State on with electrical contractor's liSaturday afternoon, the fire- censes for A. N. Sisam Co., men managed to get the flames 778 Browning Ave. and Young or a rubDisn lire doused in Electric Co., 1148 So. 2nd West. Contracts for water pipe fitshort order, with the assist tings and fire hydrants totalling of a heavy downpour. On Tuesday evening, memb $5,666 were awarded to Waterers of the department doused works Equipment Co. The commission also authora grass blaze along a fence line near 4281 So. State. No ized a contribution of $40 to damage was reported In either sponsor a Murray high youth to Boys State. fire. AU HUiOLgSS -- two-ye- Ait) Kit?' In Murray, Salt Lake County, UUh. Utah 64107 MURRAY, SALT LAKE COUNTY, ar Commsson two-da- by the Murray Printing Co. Brcond cU Subscription rate' S4 00 a year UTAH postage paid at Bait Lake City, 83 Volume Number 25 JHS Concert In Set Monday Light Week The combined MURRAY. music departments of River-vie- w junior high will present their annual spring concert at 7:30 p.m. on Monday. The cadet band, ninth grade mixed chorus, eighth grade girls and boys glee clubs will be featured. The choruses will sing num bers from current musicals, as well as several religious numbers. Accompanists are Martha Johnson, Shannon Sharp, Cathy Marlene Shields, Nieuwland, Lynda Hadley and Rolayne Pro-be- Ever since the first caveman jumped out from behind a rock and slugged his enemy with a stone axe, the ambush, with its element of surprise, has been one of the greatest weapons of warfare. Our nation will not soon live down or forget the ambush laid for us at Pearl Harbor by the Japanese on Dec. 7, 1941. Perhaps it was not the classic example of the military ambush, since we didn't march into the enemy's grasp. But we certainly slept while they flew into the midst of our Pacific stronghold, rtr! eiifjM w-wtth our-defens- down and recorded a devastating toll in men w. and equipment. All these things are painfully recorded for posterity In a new book on the market called "The Broken Seal. Its author, Las-lsl- as Farago, is a Hungarian who became a world-rovinews reporter and after attain' American citizenship, Ing delved into the story behind what FDR termed the "day that will live in infamy. ng When you put down Farago's book, you wonder whether the Infamy of that December day was Japan's sneak attack or the nonchalant manner in which Americans handled advance in formation which told them as plainly as tomorrow's headlines that the Rising Sun forces In tended to attack. The Broken Seal Is the story of how Navy and Army intelligence managed to crack the Japanese code more than a decade before Pearl Harbor. They continued to, in fact, for so long that virtually everything communicated by their government to their envoys was known to our leaders. Perhaps Farago's book will raise eyebrows. It will, a doubt, revive without those prevalent post-Pea- rl Harbor rumors that key government officials knew we were about to be attacked yet did nothing about it. enough, we Strangely visited only a couple of weeks ago with a survivor of the Pearl attack. He's a newspaperman now, in Calof ifornia; president-ele- ct that state's press association. George figures he's lived on borrowed time since that fateful day. Trapped below decks aboard the Oklahoma in a compartment jammed with 30 men, he was so fortunate as to be one of three escapees. In addition to the 27 others, the Navy lost 2,090 officers and men killed and another 1,836 wounded or missing; the Army had 226 killed and 396 wounded. The Arizona monument at Pearl Harbor is a mute reminder of those statistics. People who silently approach it by boat are as awed as though they were In a funeral procession. The quiet is respect for platthe dead and this open-a- ir Remember how those rumors form built across the bridge of ago? the sunken Arizona 1s a fitting spread a quarter-centuFolks assailed both Kimmel and tribute. But In the light of information Short, the Army and Navy com manders at Pearl, for allowing revealed by "The Broken Seal material known to be authenttheir commands to be so vulmost of it came from because ic attack. the to nerable Japanese Others (or maybe the same Library of Congress microyou can't help wondercritics) voiced the opinion that films the Arizona whether the stand ing nation FDR let Idly a by while the attack was prepared monument Is sufficient tribute because he felt the United States to the Americans swept up In must be shocked Into war. That the holocaust that was Pearl rumor was grounded on the Harbor. Perhaps In Washington, D.C. theory that the pacifists who another monument should be wanted us to adopt a neutral attitude in Europe had substant raised. One dedicated to the ial backing among Americans stubbornness and stupidity of people which Therefore the president felt some in not only the tragic resulted this an attack upon country only could sway public opinion suf attack, but assuredly lengthened war. flclently to get us into the fight' the pacific not our fleet been to Had Inc. To a dngree, we were already devastated, we'd have more in the embroilment across the quickly engaged the enemy Navy Atlantic through our arms and and administered the defeats ammunition aid to England and which td to the downfall of the our lend-leaprogram to pro Rising Sun. Had we been prepared for the vide the embattled British with attack at Pearl Harbor, air badly-needships. what became a Japanese trl While all this was tranumph might easily have been a disaster for their fleet, thou spiring, Farago's book meof tan ds of miles from horn and tells developthodically vulnerable to our counter ments which led to the attack. Pearl Harbor attack. Almost message-by-messaThese things Mr. Farago doesn't write but his readers he relates how our interwill say so to themselves. ceptors decoded Japanese VOTE CHANGED The date for a $112 million school bond election here has been changed to May 23, according to J. Easton Parratt, district superintendent. He said the district's fiscal agent recommended an additional week for advertising purposes. The Board of Education also has named Bengt F.Anderson as architect on revamping Hillcrest junior high facilities. REWARD . . . Eagle carrier Ronald Reed, "armed" with copies of the Murray Eagle, displays the fielder's glove hewon Father-So- A another contest is already der un- way. Area Woman Reports Pool Table Sold With One E-- A Ad ... had sure did sell it a lot of calls and sold it to the first man who looked at it!1 We Mrs. Allen Bain, 7012 De Ville Dr., relating her exper ience with a Green Sheet want ad. 7 FT. pool table, one year old. Her results are by no means unique. People use want ads to buy, sell, Eagle-Adverti- rent, trade, ser look for job-hu- nt, help, find lost items or locate owners. They get results because the Green Sheet is the most widely circulated weekly it reaches newspaper In Utah homes over 31,000 every Thursday morning. You can place your want ad in the A by dialing 1. or Or you can write Box 7187, Murray 84107. mid-vall- E-- ey 266-35- 262-465- . Gathered at the site of Arbor Day ceremonies tomorrow (Friday) are Shade Tree Commission members, from left, Lynn McDonald, Kyle Swallow, L. Clark Cushinq, Boyd BronsonAlrs. Golda Brown, Mrs. Roy Oliver, Mrs. Ray Munlestein, Debut For New Lights - Arbor Day Observance P IU11 Program MURRAY. A father-so- n program Is planned at the Murray Boys Club on May 4, with the Cottonwood Elks Lodge assisting to help call attention to National Youth Week. The 7 p.m. program will Include judo, fencing, trampoline and boxing demonstrations. Cost of admission will be $1 competition as "close for the for adults and 25 cents for lads first quarter of the year, said who do not have Boys Club Eagle Carrier, 12, Wins Prize For Performance MURRAY. DAY FOR TREES . . Friday; Former Mayor Hoi oree Set At Boys Club as a prize in the newspaper's circulation competition. student at McMillan elementary has earned a special prize as the selling-e- st carrier of the Murray Eagle, In a contest conducted by the newspaper during the past quarter year. He is Ronald Reed, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack M. Reed, 373 Hillside Dr. For his performance, the lad won a baseball fielder's glove. which he plans to put to use during the coming spring and summer months in little league winner activity. A first-tim- e In the Eagle competition, the lad has been delivering the newspaper for a year in an area between 5300 and 5900 South and east of State Street. In addition to winning the ball glove, the Reed youth earned a share of his sales under the "little merchant plan employed by the Eagle, accord ing to Mark Prince, Eagle cir culation manager. The Eagle competition is based on a per centage of potential, the circu lation manager explained, in order to make it fair to all carriers, regardless of the number of homes in the area they deliver. Mr. Prince, who described n 23 Dedication of a tree to Clifford Hansen, former Murray mayor, will highlight Arbor Day ceremonies to be held in the Arboretum and Botanical Garden of Murray park. The morning ceremony is scheduled to begin at 10 o'clock tomorrow (Friday), with Miles membership cards. The Elks Labrum as guest speaker. Mr. are to contribute refreshment Labrum, 761 E. 6400 South, Is items for sale and all proceeds the state arbor 1st and on the are to go to the Boys Club staff at the University of Utah. A flag ceremony conducted by fund, according to E. Jay Walk er, Elks exalted ruler. Del National Guard members will Markham is in charge of the be followed by special presentElks portion of the program. ation by Mrs. Viles (Golda) MURRAY. newly-plant- ed New Student Orientation Set Tonight At Riverview MURRAY. A new orienta- tion program is being offered to prospective seventh grade students and their parents at Riverview junior high. Scheduled for 7:30 tonight (Thursday), the event will present an opportunity for students and their parents to hear school counselors outline the junior high school program. They will review requirements for promotion and give information regarding class offerings to help the student in planning his time in the three-ye- ar junior high program. "We hope to alleviate a lot of anxiety on the part of the ' Jaycees here are scheduled to elect officers during a joint dinner meeting with Jaycettes tonight (Thursday). The election will follow an 8 p.m. dinner In the recreation hall at the county fairgrounds, according to Robert L. Prince, Jaycee president. Roger Home and Mrs. Tom (Lorraine) Far- re 11 are coordinating plans for the function for the two clubs Candidates for Utah Jaycee offices are scheduled to speak at the session, Including Rod Beckstead, member oftheMur ray club who Is running for atate president. MURRAY. EAGLES NOMINATE, PLAN CONVENTION MURRAY. Members of the Eagles Lodge here will be fin ed .... NEW PROGRAM Riverview student officer, Listening to Christine Smith (right), explain junior high activities are, from left, Jim Hawkins, Kelly Scallion, Gcorga Harris Wiatcott, Pamela Scott. Jr., Dixie Prison Inmates On MHS PTA Agenda The Arbor ::av program is being arrange;! by members of the Murray sii;n!.-- Tree Commission. Tlv gr ,up includes J. Lynn McDonaH, chairman; City Commissioner L. Clark Cushing, Kyle Swallow, Boyd Bron-so- n, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Oliver and Mrs. Ray (Joyce) Muhle-stel- n. A newly - ippointed M.i Charles mem-ber,'M- rs. replaces ho has moved . Baugh, from Murray. Leading up to the Arbor Day observance, the City Park Department has ; iu!e 71 trees; 50 of thorn in Murray park and 21 In Grant Several varieties have beiM planted, including evei(,T..t.Tis, maples, Japanese paeov;., Linden and ash, according to Lynn Pett, park supcriiifc.r.il.nt. Further development li- tiking place In the arbori'tum, i'h an area of about an acic .r. r.za added to the southwest curh'r. During the weekend, iv.oro than 200 by Murseedling pinps, ray Jaycees, ti flared In the arboretum to iain sufficient growth for pcnr..'uwnt planting in other ;.ri. - m She future. Caldwell Named Chief Of City Fire Department high-ranki- ng se Brown. Mrs. Roy (Betty) Oliver will then recite a tribute to Mr. Hansen, who will respond. Initial operation of a new park lighting system is sched uled when Mayor William E. Dunn flips a switch during the morning ceremony. Use of the The switch will be short-live- d. tlew park lights are to be turned on automatically by photoelect rical cells at a degree of darkness each evening. The new lighting system consists of 26 fixtures, four of them In the arboretum area. inmates MURRAY. Three from the Utah State Prison will be speakers at the Murray high PTA meeting, scheduled for 7:30 tonight (Thursday). A commentator will set the students by giving them this and introduce the men who stage opportunity to become acquain will speak on events in their ted with the program in the lives which led to their being company of their parents," Musical numbers commented Mrs. Aleen Phln- - imprisoned. will be provided by Mrs. Jim counselor. ney, girls Students from Arlington, (Rae) Healy. Longvlew, Grant, Bonnyview and Liberty schools who plan to attend Riverview are being From Family Of Firemen Invited," she said. The Riverview beginning band will present several musical numbers are part of the program. At the conclusion, student body officers will conduct tours of school facilities. Those participating are Gary Dunn, Christine Smith, Helen WaMURRAY. Arthur M. Cald lters and Karen Oliver. The orientation program is well, a veteran firefighter with being initiated at Riverview as a quarter century of experience part of the counseling services In the field, will be the new by Mrs. Phtnney and Thomas chief of this city's Fire DepartD. Hofeling, boys counselor. ment. His appointment to the post came on a unanimous decision At To Elect Jaycees Joint Dinner With Jaycettes Tonight ry ge i- -" Brent Van Kampen directs the cadet band and the choruses are under the direction of Miss Beverly Stevens. I i a wireless communications and provided our statesmen with their contents even before they were approached by envoys of the Rising Sun. It also points up the human frailties which led to inter- service rivalry between Navy and Army cryptographers. Eventually, many messages of importance were not shared with the President on the grounds that some State Department personnel were not to be trusted with them. Long accustomed to distrust of its public officials, Americans should be able to understand that line of reasoning. Few countries have had more untrustworthiness uncovered in key Federal positions than ours. One of the key Interceptions which virtually pinpointed the objective of the sneak attack lay untranslated for three weeks in late November and early When a woman December. translator uncovered its fright ening contents hours before the attack, her fears were brushed off by the section leader under whom she worked. He felt the matter could wait "until Mon day" for discussion. By Monday, Americans were talking of nothing else but Pearl Harbor. n BOW rt. MURRAY. J. ftiu: aluing plans to host the organ Itatlon's annual state convrn tton, as well as nominating local Officers during an 8 o'clock meeting tonight (Thursday). The Murray group is expecting more than 500 persons for the state conclave, slatoM for May according to Wilford Webb, Eagle secretary. Election of officers from among men nominated tonight is scheduled for a meeting on May 4. Current Eagle president is Charles O'Neill. by the City Commission, which acted on the recommendation of L. Clark Cushing, city commissioner in charge ' j I i 1 H .i .:; 1 Monday of the department. Mr. Caldwell, 52, is scheduled to assume his new duties on Monday, taking over a position from which Earl Healy resigned last week. Mr. Healy, the city's first, full-tipaid fire chief, is to remain with the department, servlnf with a Civil Service rank of captain, according to Mr. Cushing. fire The chief, currently with a rank of first grade, began his flrefight-ln- g newly-appoint- I ? r :' - i , ( .(,? ;. Arthur.v ( i ed career with the county in 1941, has served In the Murray department since July 1, 19C5. Prior to that date, he was plant superintendent for Nehl and Royal Crown Cola, serving 25 t with the firms. During the past year, Mr. years Caldwell saved a youngster from a burning trailer home and was subsequently cited for the act by the City Commission. The new chief brings with him Into the chiefs position, a tarn lly name quite familiar In the local firefighting and law en forcement scene. His father, the late J. w. Callweli was a charter member of the Mur ray volunteer firemen's organ Uallon, serving for 30 years, part of that time as chief. He also was police chief here for 20 of the 33 years he was with that department. 'aV.S! An uncle, a brother have and ! lofc,.. respective. , Ernest .i volunteer? E. ' fireman vice in-!-. in! Caldwell t years 4lK.1i f cliiet-ucate- w, the M.d 112 Hart- - ,iv in the ment and a In the ciu tnelils. The sur-a- -- I 1 irs c 4i pjrt- 'd- - 'fiii'Me d In be.il.H, l .1' v.ur-- i (' graduating lour- ray high, . n.Wr sport at!.l"t in Of the 1931 Id'' li.ismi" ill H' 4iSl championship I'! Yws attended Stever s ! '.!! iness Coll'tre yars. n ) tis Mr. Call.' lfe, Donna, reside M 4M7 Oullork j St. Thpy f(J married sons, Ted an ' c ) i 1 ", |