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Show 8A SUNDAY HERALD Civil Defense Roundup - Utah's Job: Overcome Complacency, Provide Protection Against Fallout By JAMES R. GOLDEN United Press International "What about the other 75 per cent? I feel there must be a proThat immeasurable, personal gram for family shelters, with quantity in. human beings we call provision for adequate standards anxiety, the kind which comes and cooperative financing." from atomic tests and atomic If there is any single area in threatsr seeps up quietly and almost apologetically in Utah during Utah where an organized effort these early fall days in year 16 toward fallout protection is being of the Age of the Bomb. made it is in the public schools. The physical signs are there, Higgins said every - school "is proof that fear of World War III considering the safety of its chilis not in the. realm of debate any dren" since most of them could longer The signs are in the varied never reach their shelters at home handwriting on requests for infor? in time anyhow. The state Departmation about commercial and ment of Public Instruction is work government fallout shelters, on the ing with districts in attempting to unsmiling lines of people who rig some sort of protection in each metal school he said. shuffle through ready-buiAt Ogden St. Joseph's School has shelters on display and in the telto Civil of Office calls the begun a program to keep 400 eleephone ' ano Defense Mobilization. mentary grade children fed and OCDM officials, such as state sheltered for four days. director Leonard iliggins, report Bring Food increases in inquiries as high as Students from grades one 20C per cent , during the space of eight each brought $1 through foul weeks. Plans for home-buiworth of food items. With that shelters are being mailed out in each student should have 600 calbatches of 40. ories a day during the four-daOne commercial builder, Fail-Operiod. Security, Salt Lake City, got The school found it had a basealmost 3.000 written requests for ment cafeteria and some crawl- information in the first three days space under the building which its display was at the Utah State was ideaL since it has concrete Fair. walls and ceilings. One 3Q0 gallon water tank in the basement crawl Yet how many of these requests kspace will provide water! Should an attack come the stufor information, either to commercial contractors or to the U. S. dents at St. Joseph, whose parents government, will mean shelters in live in strategic Brigham City, being? How many people will Hill Air Force Base and Ogden, start digging in Utah: How many would eat canned meat, peanut have already? butter, fruit juice and candy. If the plan is complete enough Where figures on overt attempts it to and citizens may be adopted by other speciget plans by schools the are available fications similarly worried about A bale, by attack statistics on what families are building or have built shelters are almost nil. In the Salt Lake City Fallout that silent dust with a area, for example, the sale of con- difference apparently has Utahns crete blocks and other materials more worried than the bomb blast has gone up suddenly but there itself. Since they know planners have been virtually no building have long since abandoned evacupermits taken out for shelters. ation plans because anyone in the May Never Know blast circumference will be vaporA good bet among some offi- ized or die by the heat that folcials, assuming . the government lows the real question is how peonever requires registration of ple a hundred or a thousand miles home shelters, is that the number away will fare. of them existing may never be Half-waProtection known. into one's down Simply going Higgins said the heaviest number own basement, says Higgins, will of inquiries, particularly since give you 5C per cent protection. President John F; Kennedy out- But just how good is "50 per cent lined the nation's stand on Berlin and later on nuclear testing, come from Salt Lake City, Ogden and Provo, all of which can be considered important target areas. Ogden, near Hill Air Force Base, is high in this category. But there have been requests, too, from Richfield, St. George, Delta, Cedar City, all more likely to be worjied about fallout from the north and from Los Angeles. VANCOUVER, B.C. (UPI) Concern is not limited to Dad Justice Minister E. Davie Fulton and Mom's worrying about how to said federal governFriday save themselves and the kids, ment will notthetolerate the percither. It goes all the3 way to the manent sale of Columbia, River top to Gov. George D. Clyde, a power to the United States. civil member of the seven-maFulton said that although it is defense committee of the National "good business" to sell surplus Governors Conferenc. Ottawa does not want to "The main problem is to over- power, sell power that Canada would get come complacency and instill in free under the powour people a will to survive," he er "which will be and treaty said in an interview. "We need to needed in this country in the know how many are willing to future." burrow into the ground to survive. Fulton also said that U.S. exThe way things are going, it may tension of transmission facilities be" necessary for each of us to dig into Blaine, Wash., will lessen the his own hole to keep alive." cost of" developing the Columbia Conference Set River. He said the $110 million Key civil defense workers from transmission line previously was throughout Utah will be summon to be extended from a point on ed into conference possibly next the border further effort to instill inland. week in an all-othat will to surviveThe governor Meanwhile, iin Victoria, British admitted that he was taking a Columbia Premier W. A. C. Ben'calculated "risk" of overalarming nett has been to call Utah's residents by emphasizing an election on challenged the power issue. their danger of being targets-in Opposition leader Robert a nuclear war. said it is stalled in a mesh The chief executive said he had of charges and countercharges. "certain- reservations" about the "I think it is time the general Kennedy administration's congressiona- public had its say," Strachan lly-approved program for a said. $207 million survey of fallout-shelteHe added that Bennett is depotentials of the nation's pub- termined to tie British Columbia lic buildings. to the Peace River development ."These mass fallout shelters "body, soul and pocketbook." would provide spaces for only 50 millior people; about of our population," he explained. ' ; : lt t lt y ut ' , y Canada Averse To Permanent Power Sale n U.S.-Canadi- an U.S.-Canadi- an ut l88"11,24-19s- l De Gaulle Warns Free World Not to Yield to Red Threats Where radioactivity is concerned over a period of time possibly no good at all. - The Office of Civil Defense says its plans for a home basement shelter will provide two weeks protection. That means a family of four or six or more is going to have to live together on whatever it can find to eat and drink inside that shelter for 14 days until the radioactivity "cools." If the food and water is there, pure, and ready, that problem is overcome. There still is the hand air blower to "crank since air is contaminated too, and waste' to worry about. To cloud the picture a bit there then is the possibility of homes on the blast fringe areas being partially knocked down or burned down, thus sealing in the family until a rescue team arrives. Many officials, Higgins included, question the two weeks food supply advice. "If you do get outside after two weeks, what do you do for food then?" he asks. "There's no grocery store to go to. I would think four weeks is more realistic." protection?" - LANGOGNE, France (UPI) President Charles de Gaulle Saturday warned the free world again that it must not retreat before Soviet threats. De Gaulle arrived here by train at 9:50 a.m. to begin the third "whistle-stop- " day of a four-da- y tour of southern France. J-- Navy Stands ., ' " - - - v;v W4r rS mmmmmmmmmmm. ': u :, '.:y. .;.. .:.y'y.: By ots-cu- near-dictatori- .; ; ': al ? threats." He repeated his charge that thd Soviet Union seeks to bring the free world under its "crushing Coburn Will Leaves Cash OLDEST TREE FAMILY The pine family is considered to be the crfdest tree family. This family includes other trees that have cones, such as the fir, hemlock, larch and spruce. LOS authority." "France, with the free world, will not accept this. She docs not feel it1 would be good to retreat today under threats. If she did, if the free world did, every day would bring greater danger. Misfortune cannot, be avoided by pre: ' and undignified concessaid it would cipitate he said. sions," one million was the last full day of Saturday at the depot. on lh presidential sched at least 50 touring De Gaulle returns to before ule the deactivated, A GSA spokesman require an additional feet of storage space For Widow . ei The NaWASHINGTON (UPI) vy Isod by its decision Friday to close Clearfield Naval Supply Depot on Y phased out basis to be completed by 1964. However, the General Services Administration 'announced that about half the big base will be used for storage purposes when it is V. 4 ss " thi" month'. Do Gaulle invoked the powers during the "generals revolt' in ., April. In his speech here, Dc. Gaulle reaffirmed his willingness to negotiate with, the Soviet union on coid war problems "but not un-d- X Decision To Close Clearfield This would employ six-deca- day in Paris, presumably to his promise to relinquish his emergency powers : additional GSA spokesman said. The ANGELES (UPI) late Charles Coburn, whose career on stage and screen ended Aug. 30, directed in his will that his ashes be mixed with those of his late wife and scat tered in several different places. ac The terms of the tor's will were disclosed "Friday when it was presented for probate in Superior Court. "I know not from whence I came or whither I shall go," wrote Coburn in prefacing the 1959 document. "I know that I have lived and thai all things must die. I believe in a supreme power which is beyond the Presidential sources said De Gnulle planned to meet the heads of French political parties Tues- personnel, -- Paris. CIVIL SERVANTS CHICAGO (UPI) Twenty-seve- n state governments now operate un der the civil service system, according to the Public Personnel Association. - de i 'C ld ; first session of the 87th Congress nears .) its end, Rep. Cornelius E. Gallagher compares the. printed proceedings of this session with that of the First Congress which met in 1789. Piled high on a table in his office are this session's Congressional Records, nearly five feet of them and 27,711 pages. He is holding the printed record of the First Congress, only 928 pages, bound in a single volume. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). HOW CONGRESS HAS GROWN (D-N.J- living understanding of man." Coburn then directed that 5 per cent of his estimated $50,000 estate go to his widow, Winifred, who was also left $10,000 in cash. The rest of his property, except for certain art objects left to the University of Georgia, was divided among numerous relatives and friends- throughout the United States. Coburn wrote that he abhored funeral services and asked that after being cremated his ashes be mingled with those of his first wife, Ivan Wills Coburn, and deposited in such places as the graves of his father and mother in Georgia and the Mohawk Trail between Albany, N. Y., and Fitch-bur- g, Mass. CLEAN MONEY An (UPI) activated cleaning solution has been introduced here . to remove dirt, grime, grease and even germs from coins at a rate of 5,000 every 12 minutes. Into a tank that looks like a French-frbasket go old and dull money, regardless of denomination.. The coins are subjected to vibrations up to 20,000 cycles per CHICAGO ultra-sonical- ly y As the What's Playing At The Movies ADULTS DICK INA fXD't f, i ARCH GAZZARA CLARK BAUil ALBERT fl OPEN 7:15 hi 13 niia mniM m NOW PLAYING mil hi ,, iiV wm SPANISH FORK Arch By Love Possessed with Lana Turner. AMERICAN FORK Coral Atlantis The Lost Con- tinent. Starlite By Love Possessed and The Last Time I Saw Archie. second while millions of ultrasonic bubbles are exploded against DANGER AHEAD More than their metallic surfaces, freeing NEW YORK (UPI) 30 women million and chilmen, them of dirt and adhering chemidren will be killed or injured in cal deposits. traffic accidents in the 1960s, acalA dip in a "drying bath" of cording to the National Associacohol completes the process. tion of Indepndent Insurers. ART CITY "Operation Bottleneck" .mi jl iiiMiiii iium iiiinnn rtnnn nrntiliiii- ww iiiiiiiiii ii rnmin iiiif:irmnrT i- T " iiHrMr" ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT I ) ' SHOW 7;30 AT WEDNESDAY STARTS THl ALL NEW and BEAUTIFUL with Leslie Fanny at the PLUS: PAYSON Huish Caron. : Have to Run Fast" yYou w-er- f at the TIMPANOGOS PLUS: Before the 16th century, the chair was a symbol of dignity rather than an article for ordinary use. The chest, bench and stool the seats used by most of the people. r1? 4V. tlis Ulhil a okd "T" ! TIII2 witb no n&sU EARLY SEATING n 'n v n Corp. He was crew stripping waste materials above the mine. nrfn - FREE! BEN ern Contracting working with CHILDREN $1.00 FREDRIC Bingham Worker's Death Investigated BINGHAM CANYON (UPI) An investigation is underway here in the death of a heavy-dut- y 1961 mechanic on a drill Sunday, Sept. 21, PROVO rig on the rim of Kennecott CoAcademy Wild in the Country per Carp's open pit copper mine. and Circle of Deception. Alton (Mike) Angus, Salt Lake Paramount Ring of Fire and City, died Friday. The Green Helmet. Authorities are .trying to deterGone with the Wind Uinta mine whether Angus died of a with Clark Gable. Pioneer Tammy Tell Me True heart attack or was electrocuted. Angus was an employe of West- and Last of the Fast Guns. OREM The Young Doctors Genvea and A Matter of Morals. Closed. Scera The Young DocTimpanogos tors and You have to run Fast. SPRINGVILLE The Young Doctors Art City and Operation Bottleneck. i DEE t II. bit John OPEN DAILY GAViiJ f. I PICTURE A CO-HI- 3-44- 70 R. The Greatest High T mil LAST OF THE' FA! P.M.-F- 1 Adventure Ever Filmed! LINDA CRYSTALGILBERT ROWLAND THIS WAS THE NAKED FRONTIER . RAW . . . WOMAN . . . STARVED! ,4 - f Stra-cha- - A Krs- nThirrnrrii An adventure in terri- . fying suspense actually filmed in the scenic r Lj3 Li Li Ca in 4 STARRING , mm one-four- th .MCW David BEN M - Joyce TAYLOR CO - HIT PLUS EXCITING M AtL Northwest! MetroCOLOR "xSi GORSHiN . o BEAUTIFUL. null! TH -- M.-Fe. NOW PLAYING 70 ipl EiLLTRAYERSiN OPEN 7:00 SHOW 7:30 . m - J mm .1 ENDS TUESDAY .if ltd bp(feaiuAiL. it's all I and yours! v Paraniourt pfeserts Wl" A ;: , suroni 1 mm . rn r?rpi uribM rULULLruI Guest Star JhUA CftAOHtfl Ui m mm w imi 75c 'Til 2 Then $1.00 . Child 25x FIRE: 3:26 - 6:53 - 10:20 HELMET: 1:55 - 5:22 - fi:49 Titi JbCMf ' , 's GEORGE 'RICHARD J .'.LtZ. ARTHUR LUANA O'CONNELL BOONE HAMILTON - PATTEN LAKGEl WWW , r- It V, USUI'S m AND AT y - & M llj J 0FHIS CQMBiNir '9 -- V- ;m ...rr. raasazNiCKS mooocuo of y :. t SfQKt Of THE VIND W V 5 v ... l v v LESLIE rlOVARDOUVTA WINNER V L. PLUS "CIRCLE OF DECEPTION" HANDS : LIFE AND DEATH RUGGlfS MERRILL-CHARLI- Produced by WIUlAil PESLttfffi (greeted by GEORGE SEAIOM Screenplay J -- I DICK CLARK- 1 EDDIE ALDERT : inside them raged desires snd fears screaming 111 "1 by mm 'tm ' & L u Lwrft VkLJ SAMUEL WYIOR ADULTS 50c TILL 2 THEN 73c FEATURE: TWO SHOWS TODAY 2 7 CHILDREN 25c P.M. and 8 P.M. TENSE CO-HI- T A MATTER OF MORALS" fl 'Mw ...111.;- ) G1ASCALA - i A 1 IDCMC DADAC 1 1 ; hi; 4; - 1 IMADALIII ' M if VSTANLEV BAKER ' tnBH inTECHNICOLOR ;L;1 FREDRiC MARCH BEII GAZZARA THEY HOLD ClARK GABLE f Ml rt l"l f VI All 0 deHAMD IN THEIR ' '"I f AKrT11AkrA!TAVirf fl K 6M 1 VITfl GONE NOW.Ts.RUN OPEN 6:15 START 7 p.m. jy MnCHEUS tm OLO sow MARGARET A 7? i mq v-- fflllllllflK 5 REGULAR PRICES! i ' af..--Jiaw- FRIDAY THE j Witi I IfiiVlirJilllnif . STARTS THIS IS THE BIG ONE! 11 trirtr D EDDIE nEYIIOLDS UlU PALMER TAB IIUIITER 1 : - wm 3 s0,ys - mm II if 1:30 - 5:00 - 8:30 ADULTS Ctnrljvitc Weekday Matinees ... Evenings Sat. & Sun. Weekday Matinees . . Evenings Sat. & Sun. CHILDREN, Anytime $1.00 1.25 .75 COLOR end CINEMASCOPE 1.00 J5 V) |