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Show -- V"" iw "S yy..yy. trrsr yw l,JH SHASTA, THE ZOO'S WORLD-FAMOU- for the ' liger, will be S friends of Shasta will provideTfie"fun. THE TRIBUNE HAS AN array of prizes to give away, the zoo has some ice cream and soda pop to give away, and the youngsters should have birthday cards to give to Shasta. Activities will start at 10 a.m. and continue all day. A GIANT BIRTHDAY CAKE also will be on hand. But since cats such as Shasta are not supposed to eat sweets, a special servirjg of heritavorite steak will be served. Actually, Shastas birthday is May 6, being born in 1948 at the Hogle Zoo, the daughter of Huey, a male lion, and Daisy, a Bengal tigress. But her birthday party will be Saturday so all her young friends can attend the fun. IF YOU HAVENT DONE SO already, start working on those birthday cards now. Itll mean a free admission to SO the zoo grounds and a chance at some valuable prizes. Sports Spotlight Second Section Nothing Serious It bothers . me whats a doorhugger? I was walking . . along Main Street afterTuesday noon pretty behind teen-ag- two e girls, and fol-It overheard the lowing conversa- tion: First girl "I hear youre going around with Ronnie. Do you like Dan Valentine Second girl: I like him all right, but I wish he wasnt a Thats all I heard, and its wor- door-hugge- r. ' ried me ever since. Will some astute young teen-age- r please ? tell me whats a door-hugger- Now that the mass meetings down to the are over, lets get real dirty AROUND AND ABOUT: I read the other day about a great grandmother back East who is famous in her neighborhood because she makes gingerbread men. Is there any Utah grandmother who can bake gingerbread men? . . . HERES A TIP to Salt Lake supermarkets: A supermarket in Buhl, Idaho, offers to pay a customers parking ticket if he or she gets it while buying groceries in the market! .. , Members must be getting rough at the First Unitarian Church. Pastor 'Hugh Gillilan had to send out an urgent bulletin requesting church members to stop pushing thumbtacks in the walls. . . . of Utah June (Okeh, Ill take a mar- tini, very dry!) A reader wants to know how to get a Todays Valentine in the column. Very easy. Just write a letter telling why you think somebody deserves a Valentine, and send it to Nothing Serious, Box 867, Salt Lake City and wait for the Valentine to appear. . . . AND HAVE YOU seen the bumper stickers on some of the local Democratic automobiles? They read : 'On to the San Francisco Worlds Fair with . . . Which reminds me of another Goldwater story making the rounds. It seems that Barry was asked by a newspaperman what he would do If the country was attacked. Goldwater reI would immediately plied: order all wagons to form j circle! Gold-wate- r! The trouble with political mass meetings is that yon never know that the delegate you commit to whatchamay-call- it will actually vote for whatchamaycallit . . . Chopsticks are no problem for Charles Layton. He just picks np the food and then . . . Heyl Wbered that fork come from? County to Meet On Bond Issue The Salt Lake County Commission will meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday in its chambers to vote on the adoption of a pro posed bond ordinance for the Eating with chopsticks is fine, Id rather eat this way than but its hard to pick up the with a fork. John Johnson, 10, ate not only rice, and the only real advantage is that chopsticks are good his rice and chicken, but his for spearing chicken. sandwich, with chopsticks. And Charles Layton, 10, combined THESE WERE among opin- the two methods, holding a fork ions of Mrs. Judith Goodfel-low- s in the chopsticks. fourth graders at Newman MOST OF THE youngsters, School as they tried the Oriental method of eating a Chinese especially the girls, did dinner in their classroom which good job of maneuvering the eatculminated their study of the ing utensils. Asked why she thought the Orient The menu Moo Goo Gal Pien girls were doing so well, Mary (chicken), sweet and sour pork, Ellen Perkins, 10, said, I think shrimp fried rice, white rice and girls are smarter than boys. fortune cookies were prepared THEN SHE looked ruefully at by Mrs. Goodfellows husband, her chopsticks which no longer James Goodfellow, a Universi- held even one grain of the rice ty of Utah student and she had just picked up. civic-minde- ... ... old-tim- MR. GOODFELLOW once fulfilled a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Free China. For the most part, the youngsters liked the meal. Each of the children brought a sandwich to school, so that if Based on experience, Mr. Paradise said he he didn't enjoy the Oriental food, expects those firms not represented by NAUA he would not A construction worker at the go hungry. and NBCU to file similar revised rates. . Most of them, however, pol- site of an addition to' South High MAJOR CHANGES IN the proposed rates ished off both the Chinese menu School suffered multiple Injuries and the American sandwiches. were listed as: when he tumbled three stories 1. Age and marital status will become facBUT THE MAIN interest was Tuesday shortly after 2:30 p.m. tors in setting premiums for women as well on use of the chopsticks. IN FAIR condition at Salt Lake as men. For some, It was difficult General Hospital with laceraDRIVERS MALE 2. YOUNG will be rated Valiantly trying to tweeze abrasions to tions, and possible exact instead of some from rice his Kevin being age according plate, Clark, 9, said with exasperation arm fractures was Gary Angell, grouped in the "under age 25 category. it takes all day to get 22, 7247 S. Orchard Dr., Boun3. Unmarried male car owners ages 25 that one. 29 as be will youthnewly designated through tiful. ful operators. KIM GEIS, 9, saw the only Coworkers said Mr. Angell 4. MARRIED MALE drivers under 25 will advantage of chopsticks as their was stripping wood forms from ability to spear chicken. receive reduced rates in most cases. a concrete wall when he lost Karen Newkirk, 9, was eating his balance It was further pointed out that comprehenand fell about 35 sive car insurance also will be rated on the with a beautiful pair of mother-of-pea- feet. trimmed chopsticks basis of age, sex and marital status if the new which her daddy had brought HE LANDED ON a plank he Schedules are approved. from Japan. had Just dislodged and the plank THESE RATING considerations are now IT WAS FUN, she admitted, buckled a wooden sawhorse applied to liability and collision Insurance only, ' Mr. Pgradise said. aryl she thought that right now upon whlc) ft fell. John Johnson either has the biggest piece of rice that ever sandwich. graced a paddy, or hes smuggled in an countys arena - convention ADOPTION OF the ordinance will allow the county to offer bonds for sale to obtain money for construction of the facility. The ordinance has been prepared by Chapman and Cutler, Chicago bond attorneys, outlining the authority and duties of the already appointed board of directors for the facility. Fill Powell? Udall Says Wait Facts By Frank Hewlett Tribune Washington Bureau - InWASHINGTON, April 28 terior Secretary Stewart L. UdaU declined Tuesday to hazard so much as s guess on the prospects of filling the Lake Powell Reservoir behind Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River this year. "I WOULDNT want to prejudge that at all, the secretary said in response to a question at his press conference. He did promise an answer, however, by May 1L THEN WE will face up S.L. School THE PRESS conference was called primarily to explain the 10 proposals received by in terior to construct portions of the proposed Pacific Northwest-Pacifi- c Southwest power intertie, but the problems of Lake Powell ran a close second as far as the questioning of the . secretary was concerned. Mr. Udall called on Reclama-Se- e Page S3, Column 1 , Salt fake (Tribune WESTERN WONDERLAND ITbc (MEtfmi MAY 17 out-of-to-wn Friends The Salt Lake Tribune Circulation Dept 143 South Main St, Salt Lake City, Utah Please send specially Salt Lake Tribunes 1964 wrapped souvenir Scenic Edition to: copies of The rl Not? Foetal mutations prohibit sender name on souvenir Pleat advise your friends that you are sendinf this edition. Enclose 25c for each copy to be mailed In UrScm, 40c for each copy outside of U.S. or possessions. .a to-th- facts whatever they are and make a decision at that time, hd added. The secretary said the decision whether to stop or continue the drawdown of Lake Powell would be based on the Colorado River Basin runoff forecast after the May 1 snow' survey and other factors, including the availability of replacement power for any reduced production at Hoover Dam. Worker Hurt COMING SUNDAY Send it to In Fall at Surety Rates: Teen Target Young drivers, both male and female, pot He lives at 340 Wilson Avd., matured by the responsibilities of marriage, and he raises worms in his base- stand to have their automobile insurance prement. Just got an order for 100 miums raised if new rates filed with the Utah dozen! ' Insurance Commissioner are approved. Mark Kimball, writing In the THE REVISED RATES are part of a naUniversity of Utah Chronicle about women the other day, tionwide overhaul of private passenger car Womena role today is insurance charges announced by the National said: precisely what it was when Bureau of Casualty Underwriters and the NaAdam lost a rib and bad that tional Automobile Underwriters Assn. Both bureaus filed their proposals In Utah, apple crammed down his throat, and that is to rule the world. Insurance Commissioner E. Virgil Norton said. (My, my, how can a man beTHE NAUA, HE SAID, has 102 subscribers come so bitter so young?) . and 81 member companies licensed in Utah. The 13th annual Utah School The NBCU has 78 member companies gelling of Alcohol Studies will be held insurance in the state. Both provide rate services for the same - noted John T. Paradise, State Incompanies,To Honor . Employes surance Department property division head. Awards to outstanding men MR. PARADISE SAID THAT more than 500 and women employes for 1964 will be made June 6 at the an- casualty and property companies write private nual meeting of the Utah State passenger car insurance in Utah and these Public Employees Assn, at The include 28 mutual companies and a larger ' number of independents. Terrace, 464 S. Maij, L NEVERTHELESS, Mayor J. Bracken Lee and Commissioner Herbert F. Smart insisted that it would be impossible for their departments (finance and public safety, respectively) to operate next year within the budget of the current fiscal year, while granting proposed wage increases averaging about four per cent Mr. Oliver said be will appear before the City Commission Thursday morning to present proposals for application within one, two and three years to be considered for dissolution of the salary increase burden on the proposed budget THE TENTATIVE budget for 1964-6- 5 included 3430,000 for Pub-li- e Affairs and Finance; 34,229,-80for Public Safety; 32,632,925 (approximately 337,000 decrease from the current year) for Streets and Public Improvements; 394,640 for the city auditor; 31,827,900 for general government and 3524,035 for appropriations to the deficit account Karen Newkirk has a method all her own with chopsticks: open ESTIMATED revenues for the your mouth, close your eyes, dig in . . and chew thoroughly. See Page 33, Column 3 Tweeze Pass th Rice And Use the Sticks ... ... Likes This Time of Year) Chop, Chop, Kids TODAYS VALENTINE A collective Valentine today to all the folks who opened their houses to help the American way of life Monday ivenlng. Its not easy to open the doors and have scores of strangers flood into the living room, But thats what happened Mond citizens day when volunteered the use of their AND HAVE you seen the sign homes for Republican and DemIn the front window of the bar- ocratic mass meetings. ber shop on Regent Street? It reads: On vacation for two PEOPLE PLACE a strain on the carpets take a a home months! . , . the air gets blue at beating Unless a TV announcer times with controversy . . . and speaks plain these days yon theres the cleanup job the next dont know whether hes talk- day. ing about civil rights or civil So a Valentine to all who riots. hosted the meetings Monday. . . A recent column item men- SAM, THE SAD CYNIC, SAYS e tioned that rolltop desks Dear Enid: How about a speare becoming more valuable cial section at the ban park for each passing day. So John H. people on diets so they dont Toolson of Bancroft, Idaho, have to sit next to a guy eatwrites that he owns a rolltop ing peanuts? desk that has been through two How much Is it Idaho floods. worth? he asks. . . Talk about odd borne badness ventures, take the ease of Wallace, Bracken. y Halt falte Sribune at the University 15-1- 9. ,gHJ1' ni'",'mni (It By Dan Valentine TEEN-TER- j Spring, Its Here! four-year-o-ld Salt ' THE GENERAL FUND BUDGET for next fiscal year as pro posed shows an excess of expenditures over revenues of 5292,824 Mr. Holley and Mr. Oliver explained. This deficit will be eliminated by a decision of the City Corn mission, with agreement by Commissioner Conrad B. Harrison, to permit the water department to repurchase its original ao counts receivable, amounting to 3308,770. MR. OLIVER explained that by law the city budget must include an apportionment of 3524,-03- 5 toward elimination "of the legal deficit created when the : . city adopted the current fiscal : system. ' At the time the water departtwins, get The Salt Lake Tribune, the zoo and an expected 9,000 friends Stacey, left, and Stephanie Herrin, a preview of the fun in store Saturday at the Hogle Zoo when will help Shasta, famous liger, celebrate her 16th birthday. ment two years ago was estabTuesday was all that ai lished on a utility basis, acspring were turned counts receivable day In Utah should be: over to the department to pro- Sides were blue and tempera atures warm in the high TV Fare, Page 32 vide operating funds. 60s and mid-70- s in most areas, BY HAVING THE water deBusiness WARMTH now sacrifice IS departpartment predicted to mental capital funds by trans- continue Wednesday, but skies 1964 Lake City, Utah 23 Wednesday Morning Page April 29, ferring the amount to the gen- will be partly cloudy across eral fund, the legally required Utah with some showers or deficit appropriation Is cut thundershowers in most seS from 3524,035 to 3231,211, Mr. tions of the state. Oliver explained, thus eliminating the tentative budget deficit be Local News nv j'rJ''fjt' 'f'J 1964-196- hand-draw- le ij ') f By Jim G. Baldwin Tribune Staff Writer A tentative general fund budget of 310,828,108 for including half a million dollars to help terminate the citys origi nal legal deficit of 32,021,733 by June 30, 1965, was proposed Tuesday by Fred M, Oliver, fiscal consultant to the city, and Louis E. Holley, city auditor. ADMISSION TO THE ZOO is free for youngsters 13 years of age and younger, providing they bring an original, n birthday card for Shasta. The regular price will be charged for older friends of the big cat For the best birthday cards, The Tribune will give away prizesr Boysuand girls bicycles will be the grand prizes that will be given away soon- - after the judging . ends, abouy 4 p.m. So get your cards in before the deadline, ry General Fund Bid Calls For Deficit End in 65 jcelebratingher l6th.birthday Shell be providing the roars. The Saltl5keTribuneJHogle Zoo and about 9,000 young several-valuab- T0Tky Budget for $10,828,108 A roarin -- ji City Receives' ISalute to Liger: Shes Sweet 16 fun time. The Salt Lake Tribune is planning Hogle Zoological Gardens Saturday. ,g f Tribune Party Saturday Thats what p "n1"- - : e s |