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Show ra DESERET NEWS, WEEKEND OF MAY 31, 1975 4 US. --Soviet trade main topic of talks, 1 t Today in the West Gov. Rampton says 1 1 New s De-er- et L -- housing is subsidized and they get free medicine Essentials, such as food clashing and elementary clothing, are cheaper, but luxuries like cars are much higher their tuti w riter it a ne I mted States was olten on toe minds of Sov officials when they met mn Amei Iran governors I tail Gov Calvin Fijiie w Governor Rampton answers newsmen's questions concerning Russia trip Set RAMPTONS on VS - Rccetn events in Southeast Asia lnclud the lad of South ietnam and the Mavagnez incident are not aniorg the topics ocsiUsseu oe didti l bung the in lip add the x did:1 1 mine, Oom up Rampton explained Trade between the two countries was leguldi'lv mentioned bv the hosts special topic vvas the eongrtssn.r.a! decision to limit trade with Russia while tne suvici I mui maintained its harsh emigration restrictions on people of Jewish ancesi y Mv dominant impiessioi. is that the Sc x let Lnajn wants very much o improve hade relations with the 1 nitea States Ra.njton sdJ 'I s,iy th uashruch' up m almost every meeting we Pad The local Russian leaders aie coni rented wi'h mobleni- - similar to those facing nu ric an officials, tht gov ei nor noted They have pietty much the same problems we do with local government, including the i ui al to urban mov ement," he said The Soviets have a fauly good standard of In mg but nut as good as ours " Rampton R averages about $2(H) a month, but said uiev yc nianv ti.nigs e have to pay for Meanwhile who allegedly Ueorgo ft oilman h oi Mm neapohs, Mmn a fugitive in was m a a kidnap cases others saved hospital patrol trooper a highway s life iiienn c,oss ui Ticuiontoii iathei of seven was killed w hue try mg to help a Nev ada recovering from Two Glenda Postma wife ol Trooper Kandv Posinia who w as vv ounded as Goss entci ed the stmggle with Wellman wept through iut the funeral Patrol tiooper Highway struggling with a motorist Monday He was buried at his In metown after heme euloe ized as a good Samaritan and botst typical tiucker-rough- , ions but always ready to lend the shirt off his Rack Lucille Mrs as did Twenty eight highway pa ' smokies ' in trol troopers at truck driver jargon tended the funeral, along with several officers from police departments through out northern Utah acidized ha 4' old as the good Samaritan ol Tiemouion lim eston ol the ti uc king hi in Goss woi ki d foi said at Gciss Nevada Uaig Haws to trade in Ford model1 A See HOW E on "A, - I if v' : s ej 4 , V A 1 of the A-- 4 W, ft f 4'- ? lack overwhelming majorities House and Senate He said the legislation would have treated 15 million jobs m A. mm the of in - In -. J t A-- e St . V & ZL y ,.,4 77? .A - Wn , A ft.-- of Cal Tremotiton 4 I 15 just outside St e uh s I A i s & A two week mock insurgency and at Dugway Proving Ground based here opeidtmn Tooele County, opened the Utah National Guard s summer camp season today Lt Bi uce Bollinger, military personnel officer for the Guard, said that approximately 875 men at Camp Williams and approximately 900 at Dugway w'ould leceive their annual readiness training and instruction k periods Training camps will be held for through Bollinger said, with National Guard units and reservists from Utah and surroundmg states participating A number of Special Forces units will also be involved, taking their two weeks training and then mov ing into the mountains for guerilla training, Bollinger Hed tell you instead ol telling someone else, what he But if anybody thought needed help hed give you the shut oil his bac k He was quite a man foi helping people two-wee- Tieinonfon Police t, Ciucl Roil It he Ogboin agiced saw anybody in tumble, he'd stop In my opinion he died a hem " Nevada tioopers have said ucille Goss Trust Fund' in Las egas Bill Days of the Nev ada Highway Patrol Association says more than $1 Of i h,ui been received and another $1 600 has been started a 1 Utah farmers praised Utah farmers were commended for their stand on fiee enterprise by a former secretary of Agriculture Friday, who said subsidies are good for neither America nor agriculture President Ezra Taft Benson of the Council of the Saints, Twelve, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y told members of the Utah Farm Bureau Federation, ' Government subsidies mean government control In ribbon cutting ceremonies to dedicate the new Farm Bureau Center, 5300 S 360 West, Elder Benson called the Farm Bureau an organization he said Fai m Bureau believes in free enterprise, Free enterprise is under attack today, but it is the best sy stem anywhere m the world Free enterprise has given us the good things m life He commended Utah farmers for providing consumers with high quality at reasonable prices This, he said contributes to Americas high level of living pledged Five ol the Goss children still liv e at home Goss had no life insurance and friends and i datives said Mrs Goss is going to have a rough tune So manufacturers are responding by printing better instruction manuals, better warranties and listening to consumer complaints, said presidents of three major national appliance trade associations at a consumer roundtable conference today at the University of Utah In response to a question by Deseret News columnist Rod Decker, Guenther Baumgart, president of the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers, said the population explosion and conespoading explosion ir. consumer goods m the last 20 years has increased the gap The manufacbetween consumers and manufacturers turers found that they must communicate more directly to the consumer The movement shows how sophisticated consumers have become," said James Williams, president of National Retail Merchants Association In regard to the current recession, Harry Paynter, president of the Gas Appliance Manufacturers Associa (ion, said factory shipments have seriously declined in his business Dunng the levcssiou lean la purchased and ve lose the advantages' of mass production, that is, lower costs for everyone, Paynter said Frank McClafflm, a representative of President Ford's consumer division, said the recession has forced consumers to make more discriminating purchases McClafflm said the most frequent complaint his office Lears is a lack of product servicing standards, especially with automobiles Paynter sa,d his association estimates tnaf a miiion appliances are in use m this country, an average of four major appliances and II portable appliances in Frank of the E Moss, son Am on written warranties, spoke at the meh-on this aftrn'mn ;r a reari--d Mvr-'i- j Mess said that now, more than ever, consurneis not be misled to spend their deflated dollars on shoddy goods and services But Moss also cautioned against putting fruitless industrial and commercial burdens on Mo;; The Chain Gang much reifrarnl it the Nat dll crsalure required show Fridav. There School Park fcieme.lary a qoar and even a were also cats, birds, fwiles, hsh, 1 mi!hn vsito CAMP WILLIAMS M a gnu hard-presse- d iSr 5 The consumer movement awakened manufacturers to the grow mg depersonalization which consumers feel about many products on the market Sen , 1 on By Christine Kotchi Deseret News staff writer foie sight on the part of the present While House Ford, said Howe, is veto of the emergency employment bill which, he noted was passed by &&& .4 located Mock war for Guard Appliance firms awakened to consumer woes Also awaiting consideration by the delegates was a list of resolutions, including one expressing support for the Equal Rights Amendment, and urging the election of Democratic legislators who are committed to that support example 0 He was a rough spoken man " said hisbruther-in-laand former fellow trucker n IH d hollei tlie st ices He d ust. stiong wolds but nevm m the office ami novel An Mike Gov laghan V T ' US. needs the Neva t'apt Carl Lewis, a one commander tor the Nevada Highway Patrol piesenteda mciitonous citizen" award to Mis Goss on behall ot the rejection bid of County Chairman John C Brewer, a businessman They are Mrs Phyllis Frankel, cochairman last year for Wayne Owens delegate search, and Neil C Stealey, a retired railroad employ e The present Republican leadership m Washington is afflicted with the same faults as the old Model-Ford, Rep .Allan T Howe, D Utah, said today Addressing the organizing convention of the Salt Lake County Democratic Party, Howe said the latest White House Ford is hard to start, lacks power, won't go very last and doesn't see far enough down the road We need to trade it m, and step up to a better model with a new standard of excdlence, he added Howe, a freshman congressman, keynoted the convention, the main business of w hich was to come later This is election of party officers to serve during the ensuing two years Two candidates arc challenging ol the funeral home and again at the cemetery Goss vear some Eight police cars led the General cortege The officers saluted the casket when 't left Postma umamed hospital ied in Nev ada local chinch leadoi c chartered planes bi ought in da ohuei s OadblcK k i Dexter C. Ellis Deseret New s political editor T Waltei gun gunshot wounds after polce shot and ai tested him at a By Jjfi. s tiooper mound anybody who would be oil ended by strong wends In short he was a trucker It docsii t suipiise me of the manner m which he died He was alwavs helping someone else " the motorist shot Goss with Doz TREMONTON (AP) ens of Utah and Nevada smokies ' paid their last respects Friday to a tough talking trucker whose final ehort in a lift of helping a fjuliiv is expected to S"rvc '",or2 walk Troopers eulogize a trucker iih hi 1 'Good Samaritan ' s.ud i ii 1 ll the places we went were so dif Mrs Rampton said We visited lerent hamai Kami and Leningrad and they arc-- as diffident as Central Asia and Versailles The traveleis were also treated to ballet recitals dancing exhibitions, and other cnteitamment They avoided the theatre Ramptons wore also gieeted by them daughter Mrs Margaiel Munk andnertwo children Laura, 4 and Danny I a son adopted in the Philippines rbs governors met with seveial Soviet .coders inching Pits NikoLu Iccdt u n m ,1 senes of confcren ts alihe ugh most of tne were vdh local othna's Rampton hi 1 1 The-- x.'ii vear Smnlai icnteis are planned for Vernal, Thompson uke Point and Rngham City The visitor lenteis arc the most dneit attempt we have i vi r made at keeping visiims m 1 ah ail t xtra one two oi thi ee (lavs, ' said Mu hael I) Gulhvan director ot the I tah Tiavel Council 'The increased tom ism levenues the center will i.eiu1 ate make Hum a sound investment by and tor tht t 'tieiis ol the state he said The laulity leatuies thioo slide presentations suspended bum the ceiling on a siiuwilake shaped mount and wired to pnvate telephone receiver-,- , spotlighting 500 tom 1st attractions throughout the st it( The e foot also ature htei als. contains mui building squat map distubution idvks and test rooms The adjacent grounds Icatuie panic aieas a gazebo and a scenic overtook When they wercnt meetings the m transit were or 'chwls vished Hamptons or were wting anous egions of the USSR Hampton said Friday Howe says The Gi.-ig- at chairman ol the National Hampton Governors Conference, and his wile ' ue; both journeyed to the ISbR witn eignt .ah! governors and their wives for two weeks oi meetings and sightseeing The couple returned to Salt Lake City uDout 5pm Friday and met with newsmen ,it the Itah Air National Guard operations t j nktv north of the Eecufi e Tet nunal ; open Niter six yours ut planning by the I tub Trav 1 mmiil uinl stale ami ledeiai highway nlficials. the fir I oi nve major Utah visitoi mloimation venters will have Us ami opening Jun 1 1 Ray Boren f'.v Visitor center to is black widow spider, which kept to itself. The trfio "Most Faithful Animal" went fo fhe seemg eye dog of a special education teachar, Mrs Mary Ann Fiether. Properly eonccved consumer laws and organizations and he regulations are both said Speaking on no fault msurance, tne senator said there would be no drop m Utah's no fault premium i at-- ; until the level at which z person can cue is set higher Moss said le has proposed legislation to allow suits Sec RESPOND on A-- 4 I Goodby, and thanks Two years after she arrived for operations on her polio inflicted legs, Rita Valda, right, left for her native Bolivia Friday But even with one so handsome as Eider Sc oh Smith, who is serving a mission in Bolivia, as a travel companion, Rita was unhappy about leaving her friends ai in Piimai ChiIJrers Hospital. Authorities j say her seven operations were successful. 5 pet. more food stamps Implementation of a five percent increase m luod imp allotments and eligibility levels effective July 1 wav aruivwr.ccd Friday 6y the rt-.department of Social a 1 Sen lu't This is birg done in accordance with a US Department of Agi iculture semi annual adjustment required by law house-'- 1 Under the new requuements, a single-perso- n u htjv m f vvd farm's a 2 increase tor the same puuhase price aw ui piee..t It will be easier lor the single person to become eligible since the maximum income el'g'Bihty standaid will he changed from $194 to $215, art increase of $21 PaulS Rose, department executive director said a torn per, on household will receive an increased allotS3 m foul sUmp.v foi the present ment puuhase prut J Hum $154 to $162 The new maximum net income eligibUty standards efitcuve July I ai c one person household, $215, three-perso$427, foul peisoii $540, five pt! son, $040, six person, $740, seven person $83,5 two-pers- and eight poison $926 i I I f A . 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