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Show 3 . 4 : 1 $ i I i t h Below U.S. average OCTOBER 3, 1977 DESERET NEWS, MONDAY, Germans coax encore from symphony Utah tax rate favorable Utahns paid $386 46 per capita in state taxes during 1976, compared with the national average f $417.17 per capita. Jack A. Olson, executive vice president, Utah Taxpayers Association, said Utah ranked 2sth among the 50 states in state taxes per capita. He said this is favorable compared with our ranking of 17th ten years ago. In 1966, Utahns paid $166.86 in state taxes, somewhat higher than the national average of $1.50.60, the report showed. The major state taxes in Utah are income taxes, corporate franchise taxes, sales taxes, and motor fuel taxes. The state ranks 18th m the nation in income taxes per capita and 13th in sales taxes per capita. Olson said Utah ranks considerably better than William S. Goodfellow Deseret News staff writer most of its neighboring states in total state taxes per capita Wyoming ranks 10th with $195 13 per capita; New Mexico 11th with $492.36; Nevada 12th with $481 84, and Arizona 16th with $448.33. Idaho ranks very close to Utah. 27th, with per capita state taxes c. $395.67. Colorado ranks 30th, with $373 38 Alaska ranks No. 1 among the 50 states, with per capita in state taxes. In 1966 it ranked sixth, with only $194 11 per capita. Hawaii was second in 1976 with $720.63 per capita, and Delaware was third with $616.12 per capita in state taxes. New Hampshire ranked 50th in 1976, with the lowest per capita state taxes of $223.57. $1,567.55 2 Utahns named to hospital foundation board Farmers urged to file - HOECHST. GERMANY Nearby, in the Taunnus Forest, Mendelssohn composed some of his music for "A Midsummer Nights Dream." And downstream from the Main flows the Rhine, its high boundaries topped by magnificent castles. But for the Utah Symphony, Hoechst will also be memorable for its fourth sell-ocrowd in as many nights pleased aficianados coaxed an encore and several more bows from the symphony and its musical director, Maurice Abravanel, during a performance Friday. The event was another in what is proving to be a long string of popular successes as the symphony moves north through Germany. Performing at the Jahrhunderthnile m this Frankfurt suburb, the orchestra riveted more than 100 patrons in the aisles with a poised and refined statement of the "Adagietto" from Mahler's Fifth Symphony. The players demanding schedule has pushed them from city to city ahead of the reviews. But it hardly matters what the critics think in the face of such audience acceptance. A similar ovation was won by French pianist Claud Kahn, the orchestra's ut early-departin- g Utah farmers who suffered drought loss and are Federal Crop Insurance Corp. policyholders must file insurance claims within 60 days after damaged crops are harvested or by the end of the insurance period, whichever is first. U.S. Department of Agriculture officials said northern Utah, Washington, Oregon and Idaho farmers lost about $15 million, Two Salt Lake women have been named members of the Deseret Foundation for Medical Education and Research, g agency ot the LDS Hospital. Florence Smith Jacobsen and Diane Dixon Tempest will begin serving on the board immediately, said Hugh W. Pinnock, foundation president. Mrs. Jacobsen is curator for art, artifacts, memorabilia, buildings and sites for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints. She is a member of All for jUs, touring partner through solo work m Rachmaninoffs "Piano Concerto No. 2." And he, too, obliged his listeners with an encore. His performance of the concerto seemed to have settled down a bit following a more highly strung perhaps even nervous rendition the preceding ev enmg with conductor Ardean Watts (the latters only sehtxiuled appearance with the orchestra this tour). The same could almost be said of Abravanels direction Friday of Bruckners in Mainz posthumously-publishe- No. Symphony d "0" (zero). While the first two movements have yet to find the shape and continuity they need under his hand, the last two were all one could ask and far more cohesive than they had been in Linz. The Mainz concert Thursday was notable for two things: W'atts occasionally frantic vigor on the podium (his headlong readmg of the Schumann "Spritm" S recalled Erich Lemsdorf's old Col- umbia recording and that really moved along') and the brass sections electrifying embellishments on their part in the Handel-Hard- y "Water Music" finale unexpected after several nights of s the standard parts Posteis glimpsed in Main, promoting more-or-les- this conceit bravely proclaimed. "The first U.S. orchestra appearance of a in Mainz" a beautiful city with some fine musical traditions of its own. No one seemed at all disappointed with what he heard. The same, to a lesser extent, was tree in Numberg, perhaps the loveliest German city on the tour to date. And there, tradition spans the medieval lyrics of the famous "Meister Singers" (Yes, there really was a Hans Sachs), as well as the opera on the same theme the city itself inspired Wagner to write. Beholding the early turrets and walls not to mention the metal and clock works one could understand the citys spell. The grandeur of Germany's high Middle Ages also was recaptured for many members of the orchestra Friday in a Rhine journey of their own past that river's ancient castles and the famous Rock of the Lorelei the legendary Rhmish sirens. That excursion was marred only by a mishap when a window pane broke accidentally, cutting into the string hand of violinist Don Kramer. Apparently no permanent damage was done, but the bandages will keep him offstage for several days After that, he is expected to rejoin his siction. top-rank- fund-raisin- N," .x , !Y Is 45, From Western's world - - i j . A n tj Jf.'J V Stan will give you a Black &. Decker Drill and a Mortgage Loan from Western A V'j v J Mrs. Jacobsen i A f - I i I i A eanne will give you a Corbell Silver Tray and IR or KEOGH Virginia will give you this handsome pillow and free parking at any Western office Mrs. Tempest the Utah Governors Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee. A delegate to the upcoming International Womens Year conference in Texas, Mrs. Jacobsen is a member of the National and International Council of Women. She received the councils Woman of Conscience Award in 1968. She has also received a Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Utah and an Exemplary Womanhood Award from Ricks College, Rexburg, Idaho. Mrs. Tempest is past president of Womens Associated General Contractors of Utah and of Delta at the U. of U. She attended Gamma Mothers Brigham Young University and the U. of U. and is active in civic, church and educational organizations. 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