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Show Storm Thunders Into Area, Drops White Calling Card blust-reacross the Area Sunday near noon and while storms left only light amounts uf snow ard rain in valley areas, they plastered mountain sectors with heavy snows hich blocked passes tn some places. U.3. 40 over Daniels Pass east of He-bCity was closed for several hours Sun- n snow day afternoon when drifted across the highway. The Utah Highway Patrol ordered the read closed. A storm in Spanish Fork Canyon left icy roads along US 50-- from Tucker to Soldier's Summit, and at one point 75 to 100 cars were reported off the road. A cold She ialt front The twHer, highly uni ml for the area, cut a path 40 feet wide and moie than a mile long. A house trailer measuring about 12 by 52 feet w as lifted from its wood foundation and turned around about 90 degrees. Windows weie biokcn in another nearby trailer. Logan, Salt Lake City and Provo airports ail reported up to .20 of an inch of precipitation, as did most valley stations, Minds at Salt Lake International Airport reached peak gusts of 39 miles per hour, and at Hill Air Force Ba.-- e hit top speeds of 44 m p h. er wind-blow- ihniu 6 TV Today, Local News Page 22 Report .20 Inch Telephone Sere ice Disruptions The Precipitation Alta, Brighton and Park City reported snow falling intermittently throughout the day, with periods of conditions. Up to six inches of new snow was reported to have fallen since Saturday night in the ski areas. Annabella. in Sevier County, was hit by a small tornado which whipped Mrs. Dons Willden off her feet, carried her several yards and dropped her. Sports near-bhzzar- d Monday, April 20, 1970 Page 19 Second Section Y. ASH LINE: The Utah apparently influences political thinking all around the western area. Saturday night In Bui ley, Idaho, a Vernon beautiful blonde with long red fingernails. Beautiful blondes with long red fingernails, most of the time, do not make good secretaries. They don't like to type because it ruins their long red fing- ernails. siieclai dinner was held in honor of So I suppose I'll just go on opening my own mail . . . Raven-scrof- t, announced TODAYS VALENTINE candidate for the Democratic nomination for gover-ro- r of Idaho this I consider it a privilege and an honor to give a double Valentine today to two seniors at Granite High School. Dan Valentine 5-- ar. During the Mr. Ravenscroft asked for questions from the audience. One of the questions was: What do ou think of a Day of Rest law for din-re- r, Idaho? Candidate Ravenscroft answered saying he was against pollution by of Idaho's rivers! The world is not only facing a popi'la-- . it is also lacing a Rotation explosion ry explosion. According to the current bulletin of the Salt Lake Rotary Club, 278 new Rotary Clubs have been organized in 48 countries since last July. .SUDDEN THOUGHT: Is there a Rotary Club in North Vietnam? . . . WRITES h the most popular mans name in the United States. Its John . . . One out of every 12 American males is named John. Next in line comes William . . . one out of 14 males goes by the name of William . . . Charles, James and George tie for third place. Rounding out the top 10 in the most popular male name parade are: Robert, Frank, Harry, Joseph and Walter, in that order. Dan is down around 75fh place. A recent report says a good secretary r executive can make a worth $40,000 a year to his firm. But before all you executives get bigheaded, the same report says a bad secretary r executive can make a worth only $10,000 a year to his firm. How time flies. Way back in 1938, David T. Stowe made the fmzt surveys of the area that eventually became Hill Air Force Base. The other day, Mr. Stcwe retired as general engineer in the industrial engineering branch at the base . . . A READER to a-- Their names: Kevin Greer and Don Christensen. When school for Monday for calls Close Meet, Nothing Serious MONDAY forecast partly cloudy skies with a few snow flurries over the region and high temperatures in the mid-40- s and lows near 30. In spite of the thunder and lightning, Utah Power and Light Co. and American District Telegraph Co. reported only a few' disruptions of service in their systems because of the storms. A few homes Were without telephone service and then just briefly during the Western Demos Dan Valentine's State Legislature V . , started last September, Kevin and Don noticed that no one raised the American Flag on the school's flagpole the first few days. They asked for the job. Since then, Kevin and Don have been responsible for keeping Old Glory flying at Granite. Each morning, they see it is up . . . In the evening, they see it is taken Select Leaders Llod Kenneth Graham, 63, Washington national committeeman and Seattle businessman, Sunday was elected chairman of the Western States Democratic Convention, succeeding Nevadas former Gov. Grant Sawyer. Director and president, Savesco Mortgage, Inc., Seattle, and a member of the executive board, Bank of Tacoma, Mr. Graham was elected during the concluding session of three days of meetings and discussions in Salt Lake City which drew participants from 13 Western states. A former treasurer of the convention, Mr. Graham was chairman in '1964 of President Lyndon B. Johnsons WashingHe also has ton Finance Committee. worked for several newspapers, including the San Francisco Examiner; Columbian Daily, Vancouver, Wash., and the Seattle Post Intelligencer. Mrs. Norma Keil, national committee-woma- n from Montana, was elected down. She succeeds Mrs. Jean West Jordan,' Utah national A small thing, some cynics would say. I disagree. I find it refreshing to find two young Succeeding Mr. Graham as treasurer Americans who have enough love for is John H. Klas, Utahs Democratic their country in their hearts to honor the chairman. A meeting of the executive committee flag of their nation. And a Valentine to you, Kevin and in June will decide the dates of the 1971 n. West-woo- Don. SAM, THE SAD CYNIC, SAYS: The Democrats met in Salt Lake City last week and to hear them talk, youd think President Nixon had started the Vietnam war! convention in Washington. In other business Sunday the delegates approved a resolution introduced by Guy Stillman, national committeeman from Arizona, condemning high interest rates used to control the nations econo- my. Getting ready for Arbor Day activities Friday are Assistant State Forester Clyn Bishop, sons winner of that drawing will receive $2,000 tor the college education cf a member cf his family. Meanwhile, a coupon is drawn fiom The Tribunes collection each year. This annual winner receives an eight - foot spruce, officiates at the Arbor Day observance and tosses the switch which turns on The Tribune Christmas Tree lights in downtown Sait Lake City. Drawing In 2000 Meanwhile, the public is invited to participate at the mass project at the Mountain Dell Golf Course. Participants are urged to bring shovels. Trees will be provided by the Utah State Board of Forestry and Fire Control. Activities will begin at 4:30 p.m. at the golf course clubhouse, and several valuable prizes will be given away to lucky participants. 1970 IN ALL MY YEARS in the newspaper profession, Ive never had a secretary. I open my own mail, answer most of my own calls, do my own lying. Ive always wanted a secretary. Except, if I had a secretary, Id want a Sarah Neal, 30, biology teacher at the Intermountam School in Biigham City, related some of her experiences during her three-yea- r stay at the Bureau of In-- degree. In Newberry, Fla., she taught the seventh and eighth grades for one year. In 1967, she taught at the Matthew W. Club will dedicate a tree to Mrs. L. W. Hillam, rosarian and widow of the late L. W. Hillam, garden consultant for The Tribune. Assist Planting In addition, the Utah Nature Study Society will cooperate with the big planting session. Leaders and youth of the society will assist in the planting of the spruce seeding at the grove. It is hoped the grove, 100 yards dow n the first fairway, will begin jielding community Christmas Trees for downtown Salt Lake City by the year 2000. The winner will be announced prior to Arbor Day. Public Welcome g the vault will be In the year from it. The drawn and a coupon opened 2000 Teacher Helps Build Future for Navajo Children dian Affairs institution and reported on how she attempts to teach, lead and assist the Navajo students. Miss Neal was born in Alabama and raised in Florida. She received her degree in biology from the Edward Waters College in Florida. By working her way through school, it took Miss Neal seven years to earn that Russell, 7, and Loren, 3. The Tribune sponso.3 Arbor Day contest, and 200 trees will be planted. could be the year in The Salt Lake Tribcontest. The contest will be one- of the highlights of The Tribunes annual conservation-day observance Friday during w hich 200 spruce seedlings will be planted at Mountain Dell Golf Course. The contest was started in 1930, as w as The Tribunes Christmas Tree grove in Parleys Canyon. Then, some 3.000 youngsters submitted two coupons. One was kept by The Tribune and the other was buried in a vault at the grove. Feel lucky? youre a winner unes Arbor Day Knows Frustration of Minorities By Nick Kozak Tribune Correspondent ERIGHAM CITY As a teacher and as a member of a minority group, you have to prove a lot of things to the Navajo students and help to make them understand that all things are possible through education and work. I Arbor Day Puls Yule Into April $20,000-a-yea- $20,000-a-yea- I Gilbert High School In Jacksonville, Fla. Both schools had an enrollment and proved to be a satisfying experience to Miss Neal. At Intermountain School, Miss Neal teaches six classes daily with an averagp student load of 25. Avoid sophistication, relax, listen and inject humor where and when applicable in the classroom with the students, Miss Neal said, and this will lead to debate which is extremely important to the student and the class. o t spruce will be planted grove by the Wasatch Mens Garden Club. They will be dedicated to deceased members Dr. W. R. Worley and William Sedglev. The Men's Garden Club of Salt Lake will dedicate trees at the grove to deceased members Dr. W. R. Worley and Preston Budge. And the Salt Lake Flower Garden eight-foo- at the jjalt ak gfibunr In comparing the Navajo student with the Negro student, Miss Neal said from her experiences, the Navajo student finds himself in a groping position that a Negro student has experienced for years. TIip Navajo is searching for an emulation whereas the Negro stuoent sees members of the Negro community excel in sports and advancing rapidly in me arts and in the academic world. TRAVEL VACATION ground. Rides Back ct Buses That background included riding la the backs of buses, picking cotton, drinking from marked fountains ard beirg baTmd from business establishments durlife. ing her teen-agThe Navajo student, according to Miss Neal, is taught from childhood to respect his elae.s and to avuid profanity. In teaching the Navajo student, profanity is rarely heaid. The use of drugs and narcotics is unheard of at the school. e Alcohol problrms are cf a minor at the school and dweiplinary action falls heavily on the oficndcis, 25c Delivered by Carrier in 35C Utah, Southern Idaho. U Nevada and Wyoming AKO GUIDE Send a ropy to a friend anywhere Coming Sunday, May 24 the Negro student in By comparison, The Identity of the mother of a newborn boy abanodned at St. Mark's Hospital Friday, remained a mystery Sunday but authorities still are attempting to find a woman who was seen at the hospital earlier in the day bolding an infant wrapped in a blue blanket. The baby was found in a restroom in the obstetrics ward by a maid who had gone into the room to clean. Tne baby, only a few hours old when it was found, was reported in good condition. For tiie time being, the baby will remain at St Marks, hospital officials said. Special Plantings Two Finds llimseif Groping the classroom displays an aggressive attitude mingled witn frustration. At Intermountain School, Miss Neal said the student is attentive, well disciplined and inquisitive about her back- Infant's Identity Baffles Officers 50c S or anywhere in the its possessions Mailed anywhere in the world Fill out and mail this coupon to: The Salt Lake Tribune Circulation Dept, 143 South Main Street Salt Lake City, Utah 841 1 0 Enclose coin taped to card, money order or check - No stamps, please. Please mail copies of The Salt Lake Tribune 1970 Scenic Trave1 and Vacation Guide 1 Name Address e City 2. Name . State. .Zip. . State .Zip. ... Address Citv . ra-tur- My Miss Neal said. Ning Catchy tele-vioh- or zV.or.dmg I J City. Miss Neal is a graduate of Alabama and riorida schools; teachestslx classes each day. movi1 come to class singing ,Z.p. City Commercials The students have an opportunity to learn profanity by simply watching Lena Cly, left, and hep teacher Sarah Neal, study pWera at the Infrmountaln School in Brigham Phone. name is Address Instead, they catchy commer-- See Page 32, Columa 1 may telephone your order s directly to the circulaGive us the names you tion offtce Poor. Vh to Urrt tha Stemc tdition to and your vawer will coHtcL You b t sender s name on Postal regi ations souvenir edton Please advise your friends you art send ng th.s edton. H add tnai space s needed attach sheet ot paper. Code must be included on all addresses in the United States and its possessions. ly -- y |