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Show J The Salt Ixke Trtbimepriday, January 1, 1965 No College Integration, Nor Cash WASHINGTON A r ( t 0 ' .yovW.'ts , X 4 s fte These include' among others, loans, the purchase of science equipment, adult education, classroom and dormitory construction, vocational education, library services and construction and programs for handicapped children. The UJS. Office of Education is advising colleges, universities and state bdards - - legislation. - . From the colleges and universities, the office is demanding' immediate' compliance rights across fte board. Local school boards, on the other hand, have been, given some teeway in completing de- segregation. A letter of explanation sent to all colleges says flatly that no institution may be given federal assistance of any kind if there is racial discrimination in its admission policies or in any other prao tices of the institution. school lunch program, research grants, aid to federally impacted areas, student college-sponsor- k of education that no new funds win be available after Jan. 3 without an assurance of compliance with fte civil rights on some Northern and Weston schools and colleges. - Unless they comply with the letter of the law of the 1964 civil rights legislation, the government will cut off fte dollars which support a wide range of acti vines. schools (AP)-Sout-heni and colleges stand to lose millions of dollars In federal funds if they dont agree to wipe out every trace of racial discrimination. And for fte colleges this means not only open enrollment but integrated dormitories, swimming pools and social events. The schools and cdBIges have been generally aware of ' this for several months. Only now, however, are the details becoming clear. Although this is primarily a Southern problem, there may also be an impact - I VA a Copters Race o' I t t a ? " Dennis theMenare By Hank Ketcharri Iii Offing New Storm? Aid Hamlets 'y a),. xbt afTxVjk frVA,' ;r N -XJ New York Times Service By Associated Press A dozen helicopters finally got through Thursday on food supply and evacuation flights to Californias Salmon River Canyon hamlets isolated for 10 days by flood and snowstorm. On the Pacific Coast an snow rkre along the Pa cific shore covered Californias Humboldt and Del Norte coun- t, MONTREAL --rr The planet Jupiter will usher in fte Jew year with a burst of intense radio signals, beginnihg at 2 a.m. (EST) Jan. 1, it was predicted at a scientific meeting here Thursday. That prediction surprised experts because -- themysterious radio emissions from Jupiter have, up to now, been almost completely unpredictable. that-ende- d t- over-nlgh- ties.' AiiocUted Press Wlrepboto Coming Up for Air LITCHFIELD, MINN. Two firemen, standing on wreckage of freight train, stick beads up out of cload of smoko to catch I new j jmrtgUtiw dams raised flood threats In fte redwood lum- ber region, hardest hit by the billion-dollChristmas week flood which ravaged areas of five western states. Autos Stranded ar of fresh air Thursday. At least five carloads of ap pies and lumber were ravaged by blaze. No one was injured. breather In the Sierra a fierce snowstorm stranded motorists over and night at Truckee on the east Interof west the to Auburn at vr His dent has expressed confidence in state 80s crossing of Donner WASHINGTON (UPI) Decked is with Summit work feel and black hair j gray me, I enjoy my , ' here and there, and his ruddy completely competent to carry Renewed heavy snow was fores out now. of heavier why the job-little all a are demands for the Sierra and the Siskimy jowls cast ' should I think about retireBut one day short of his 70th Mountains. WASHINGTON Sen. Wal- you ' ; birthday, John Edgar Hoover ment? A snow New Years Day was anBennett F. lace flood- I intend to continue to serve seems as fighting fit and deternounced Thursday he will rein- promised .. also for the.i. Washmined as he was the day he took my ' country as director of the troduce early next week 'his stricken states of Oregon, ' over fte FBI more than 40 years FBI as long as my health and Great Salt Lake, shoreline bill ington, Idaho and Nevada. ago to make it and himself the confidence of the President which would confirm in the The break in .the storm at and the American people will something close to legend. state of Utah title to lands lying Yreka after four days of snow permit. below the meander line of the turned loose 12 helicopter pilots Join th Banks Great Salt Lake. Florida Holiday for shuttling flights to the isoMost men are retired at 70, lated canyon towns of The made Utah Republican .'and some newspaper editorials Hoover, who is spending fte this known when he sent letters Sawyers Bar, Forks of Salmon, suggested recently that Hoover holidays outside Miami, Fla., reto the other three members of Cecilvffle and Findley Camp. ' might well join their ranks. But plied to written questions sub- 300 to 500 Residents the Utah congressional delega-- f mitted to him by UPL . he replied Thursdays tion to them asking Between 300 and 500 hardy peoMy health is good, the Presi- - He said he expects to spend . his bill his on normal ple live In fte lonely river gorge day quiet, United Stand region. birthday Friday, New Years The Utah delegation was unitThe weather man says its goVia Transfers Day, watching televised football ed in the last Congress in sup- ing to close In again, said Jim bowl games along with millions of other Americans. port of a similar measure, S. Jones, Yreka civil defense 2230, introduced by Sen. Bennett spokesman. Were going to get Naturally I will be in touch for himself and Sen. Frank E. in as many" flights as we can. with my office as I am every Moss. Reps. Laurence Burton Some of the helicopters staged day dunng the year, and I will and Shaman P. Lloyd offered from Happy Camp, a Klamath spend whatever time Is necesidentical bills In the House. River town of about 1,000 resisary in handling official matSen. Bennett said that when dents, 70 miles west of Yreka. ters, he said. Associated Prn Wlrephoto Utah was admitted to the Union Tribune Washington Bureau A hunter and his Hoover will be able to stay Edgar Hoover . . . Still fit, in 1896, title to fte bed of all na- son were evacuated from SawWASHINGTON -- The De- on as FBI director thanks to J. hell keep right on working. vigable lakes in the state, infense Department is planning to President Johnson, who praised yers Bar. cluding fte Great Salt Lake, . transfer s im last May as a "magnifithe contracting was given to the state of Utah of its surplus pales offices cent public servant and waived for the benefit of its schools. In Seattle and Pueblo to Ogden, the requirement that public servLake Secedes ' Sen. Wallace FI Bennett ants must retire at fte age of 70. However, the lake was not reported on - returning A few weeks ago, Hoover tanhere Thursday. surveyed for many years and in Rev. Dr, Martin the meantime has receded. Exactfigures werent availa-- . gled with theover leadLuther fte of the Departments of King Negro Lawyers RoANGELES LOS ble on now many new jobs this (AP) The Justice and Interior claimjthat WASHINGTON (AP); would mean at the departments ers Intimation that fte FBI was nald Baker, the who nation'? first not could in enforcpost all the to is state it entitled the doing only Ogden. Depot, but the senator ran away .from home rather land beneath the Civil Rights Law, present lake, office is proving successful and estimated the employment of at ing the than - have - am operation - that now greatly reduced in size. the --experiment - may - soon-Peace Meetiig least10 additional technicians. bill provides that title to spread across fte nation. Postwould cost him his left leg, unMy Included in fte program will be Hoover called all lands below the mean- master General John A. King the most derwent surgery Thursday that der line lying the placing of computers in the notorious liar in the said Thursday is confirmed in the country. In sacrificed the leg to save his state oLUtaluThis surplus sales office in Ogden, he the subsequent furor, some were at would mean It provides ' said. that Utah schools would receive postal jrindow. prices. demanding Hoovers ouster. The life. The Ogden surplus sales office controversy died down at a Ronald entered the operating revenues from ' about 400,000 The pilot project sits on a conhas 30 persons handling con- peace meeting between King and room at Los Angeles Orthopae- acres more than they worn! othcrete island in a parking lot In and merchandising Hoover in Washington. dic Hospital at 1:30 p.m. and erwise if the Department of Jus- suburban tracting Md4 Its Wheaton, tice and Interior claim that the from military and government Hoover took occasion Thurs- was taken out at 3 p.m. of a shopping center despart installations in Wyoming, Wash- -' day to reply again, in his His mother, Mrs. Lois Eisen-beis- state is entitled only to the land cribed as the second largest ington, Colorado, Oregon, Utah, 51, and several of his sis- beneath the present lake. emphatic style, east of the Mississippi. , South Dakota and Nebraska. to some of his critics. ters stood by In a waiting room. Private Bights Bearing a U.S. Post Office - The senator also reported that Under the 1964 Civil Rights Doctors said fte operation The Bennet- t- bin sign, the unmanned, plywood expressly fte General Services Adminis-- : Law, he said, the FBI has no au was well tolerated and that Romachines that valid existing unit includes vending provides tration has been attempting to thority to make arrests for vio- nald was in good condition. that stamps, envelopes dispense or Interests of any private over the entire surplus lations, nor can it protect indi; take The amputation was above fte rights or and post cards. It has machines person corporation will not be sales operation from the De- -' viduals or demonstrators, , to make change for coins and knee, well above fte cancer affected in any way by the bill fense Department but both Dearea. , No Authority The Utah senior senator stat- bills. Theres a scale for weighthe of and' Bureau fense fte letters and parcels up to 50 A day before the operation, ed, The bill could have ' provid- ing One of the major reasons for Budget have been opposing the Ronald had quipped: I guess I ed that Utah should receive title pounds. ' this misunderstanding is fte fact wont dance the old The unit was installed Oct. 17 proposal out." to all lands that were underwat' He said GSA is considering that some civil rights His attitude had year con er as a supplement to not a subchanged in 1896 which would give the taking the proposal to the Con-- 4 leaders have deliberately ac- siderably since he first learned .state another 200,000 acres or stitute for regular post offices. gress and should Congress back cused the FBI of not peaform-in- g hed have to lose fte leg or die more. I think we have gone a Gronouski said business has He estimated it will its duties In protecting civil of cancer. them there might be a whole long way toward meeting fte been heavy. J sale reorganization with possible rights demonstrators. His first reaction was Td objections of the Department of produce $71,00(1 in annual reveWe know we do not have fte rafter die than have my leg cut Interior and that it is a reasona-bl- e nue, a figure he described as elimination of a number of surmuch better than we expectoffices. off. sales bill that all could accept plus authority to do so, he said. , y ed. Senator Asks Passage of Shoreline Act 70 Too. Old? Hoover to Stay on Job - , (R-Uta- j Tl-Ba- r, j I " A New Theory The new theory on which the prediction was based is expected to advance understanding of atmospheric phenomenon on Jupiter and possibly on earth as well. The prediction was made by A. Dulk, a graduate stuGeorge I i" Three whole days and he hasnt done one bad thing . . .' dent working with James W. Warwick, a radio astronomer NOTHING! Whats he np to, Martha? and leading authority on Jovian radio emission at the University of Colorado in Boulder. It was based on data collected over the past few years with the Tribune Washington Bureau Research Laboratory at Utah radio telescope of the NaWASHINGTON The selec- State University be designated tional Center for Atmospheric tion of Logan for one of the na- as one of fte first institutes, Researchs High Altitude Obtions first water research Insti- Sen. --Moss pointed-othat It servatory in Boulder, Color; tutes was urged Thursday by was already operating a water Found jn 1954 Sen. Frank E. Moss in research center of great compei Radio emissions from Jupiter a letter to Secretary of the In- tence. terior Stewart L. Udall. He noted it had already been were first detected in 1954 by An institute for each state was scientists at the Carnegie Instirecognized by two other federal tute in authorized under the Water ReWashington, D.C, fte National Science Made audible, the signals search Act enacted by the 88th agencies Congress but fte funds ap- Foundation and the National In- sound like static on a radio durpropriated will take care of only stitutes of Health. Each has ing a thunderstorm a kind of 14. USC development frying sound with occasional In urging that the Utah Water grants of $200,000. surges and cracks of activity. 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All sizes ZIP-OU- T beat available 100 .WOOL , By Congressional Quarterly WASHINGTON Hie typical member of the 89th Congress, which convenes Jan. 4, Is younger, of a different religion, but of the same -- profession as his counterpart in the preceding Congress. A Congressional Quarterly survey shows that fte average age for a member of the 89th Congress is 5L9 years, lower than the 52.7 years average at the beginning of the 88th Con. 4 gress Jan. 3, 1963. A- - The average age, for a senator has risen from 56.8 to 57.7 years; but for a representative, it has dropped from 51.7 to 50.6 years. The youngest senator jn the 1965 session is Edward M. Kennedy 32; the youngest representative is Jed J, Johnson Jr. who became 25 on Dec. 27, 1964. Legal minimum age for a senator is 30; for a representative, 25. The oldest senator is Cart Hayden 87 ; the oldest representative is Barra tt OHara ), f f Asserts tH Press Wlrephote i rirtri Eaawdy Ljs jexrst b U3 . . Bennie. (D-HL-), 82. Since committee ranking and chairmanships by seniority, the average age are determined i for committee chairmen is higher than that for fte average member. The average age for the 18 Senate committee chairmen in the 89th Congress is 66 years; for the 21 House committee chairmen, it is 65. Roman Catholics replace Methodists as the largest religious group In the 89th Congress, 107 members. Methodists, who had the most numerious membership in the 88th Congress with 102, move to second place with 88. The Roman Catholics held second place during 1963 and 1964 with 92. 'As in the 88th Congressjfte 69 have the third highest representation. In the 89th Congress, however, Episcopalians who ranked fifth numerically during the 88th Congress are tied with the Presbyterians. The 51 Baptists drop from fourth place to fifth. 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