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Show - y r rrr r-rr- -- 9 m 9 rr r Local News Business rv r rr'rrrrrrrrrrrr'rrnrrrrrtnrrr rrr alt Second Section Salt Lake City, Utah fakr f iliiiiw Saturday Morning r,TTr-.rrr- r - "rrr vr T'T'r rm-- r rr TV Fare, Page 3p-T- ops in Sports May 15, 1965 Page ' rr rr V.v ' I, 25 Due for Reservoirs x Above-Averag- Runoff e Mfic To Lift Powell, Gorge Toll Records in the amount of water stored, in two of the Colorado River Storage Project reservoirs probably will be broken duringf the Aprii-Jul- y runoff of snow melt while still maintaining Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam at its rated head elevation. Frank M. Clinton, Region 4 director, Bureau of Reclamation, released these facts on the basis of the expected 11 million acre-feof runoff predicted as of May 1. ' ?;Above-Averag- Runoff Assured e He said the annual spring runoff, which accounts for about of the year's total runoff, has started and a good, ' e . average year Is assured. . Lake Mead will be returned to rated head elevation of 4,123 three-fourtwell-abov- feet by mid-Jun- e. Inflow to Lake Powell is being bypassed to bring Lake Mead to rated lev$ as soon as possible. But, Mr. Clinton said, We expect the Lake Powell inflows soon to exceed the 50,000 discharge capacity of bypass facilities at Glen Canyon t, Dam so that Lake Powell will begin to rise. ; Salt Lake Courtly . New High Level at Lake It is expected that Lake Powell will reach a new high level of 3,522 feet in July and then decline gradually to its present level by next spring. Spillway , level at (he 27 million acre-fo' capacity lake is at 3,711 feet . in water of more Storing ot ' To May 15, 1965 To'MaylS, 22 17 70 1965 All of 1964 -- ' (See Story, Page 18) ' This was the scene Friday afternoon as combined units of the Army, Navy and Air Force went on parade as part of Armed Forces Week observances. Other events are scheduled for Armed Forces Day, Saturday, and on Sunday so citizens can see the strength of the nations military might available. Armed Forces Day Today . Utah Events Spotlight U.S. Preparedness Observances of many kinds throughout Utah were rapidly coming to a climax this weekend, marking Armed Forces Week and Armed Forces Day on Saturday. A three-hou- r open house at Tooele Army Depot, Friday showed off the depot under actual working conditions, with special statfedisplays of equipment "at,, tie nations second largest general supply depot and its largest ammunition depot, ' Guided Tours ' : Guided bus tours took visitors through the sprawling plant. Also on Friday was the annual combined review of Army, Navy and Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps at the University of Utah. 'iJBig events are scheduled for Base and at Orem Saturday with the concluding event of the week Sunday at Ft. Douglas. Friday night, charter ceremonies for the Utah Chapter of the Naval Reserve Assn, were held in the Ramada Inn. Capt. Robert L. Barto, Seattle, was guest speaker. Gates to Hill Air Force Base will open to the public Saturday at 10 a.m. Officials indicated the west, southwest and south gates will be entry points, and guards along the route will direct visitors to parking areas. Skydiving from 15,000 feet, flyovers by an assortment of aircraft, and a demonstration by Strategic Air Command sentry dogs will be on the bill of fare for visitors, officials said. Ground displays of aircraft Hill Air Force large and small, missiles and rockets also will be featured. At 10 a.m. the Utah National Guard Drill Team will demonstrate tactics; skydiving will be featured at 11 a.m. and the sentry dogs will perform at 11:15 a.m. The flyovers and parachute drops will begin about 12:15 p.m., with another skydiving exhibition at 1:15 p.m. Another sentry 'dog exhibition will begin at 1:15 p.m., and at 2:30 p.m. a mock attack on a fortified emplacement by the U.S. Marines will begin. A firefighting exhibition will wind up action at 3 p.m. Survival Food Shoppers at the Cottonwood Mall, Salt Lake City, will be given a chance to sample military survival food Saturday. The Utah NationaGuard will set up water purfication equipment, and the public will be invited to sample the purified water and survival rations, courtesy of the guards 11th Ordnance Co. A military ball at the Terrace Ballroom will begin Saturday at 8:30 p.m., under sponsorship of the National- - Guard and Reserve. Tickets are available at the National Guard headquarters, or from members of the guard and reserve. Evaluation Test The 15th annual evaluation of the Utah Wing, Civil Air Patrol, will get under way at the Salt Lake Airport Saturday, according to CoL Joseph Bergin, commander. The test, conducted by a team of Air Force officers from Lowry AFB, will last all day Saturday and Sunday, and will consist of search and rescue exercises and a civil defense preparedness test, Col. Bergin said. An observance Sunday at Ft Douglas will wind up Armed Forces Day events. Static displays, including tanks, personnel carriers, howitzers and field kitchen and field Federal and state agencies range a moratorium on pay- hospital facilities, will be in Th&aP between state expenwere asked by Gov. Calvin L. ments at least in part. ditures and tax place at 1 p.m. at Soldiers Ciry mock attack arrived at by projecting Rampton Friday to give WasState Obligation cle. A biennium figures, atch Front fanners injured by It appeared that relief from at tiie Ft. Douglas Firing Range the 1965-6- 7 deferwill total $378,700,000 by the recent frost H two-yethe state obligations would be will begin at 2:30 p.m., and ac1973-7- 5 biennium, Sen. Ernest G. ment on irrigation water pay- easier, quicker and more liberal tivities will wind up at 4 p.m. Mantes told a Utah ments. than from, other agencies. The with a retreat parade and The damage to this years Water and Power Board deals award ceremony at Stilwell Council subcommitLegislative harvest was suffered chiefly by with individual water companies Field. tee Friday. The present property fruit growers in Box 'Elder, making an assessment of loss Honor Guests tax levy would provide 119 mil- Weber, Davis, Salt Lake and and need for deferment not too of honor at the 2,000--, Guests lion dollars and cut the gap to Utah counties. Sugar beet crops difficult, Mr. Bingham said. v in and review will be damalso some sections were conwhich reparade troop would revised $259,700,000, In each case, a s aged by the severe cold. tract would have to be worked Gov. Calvin L. Rampton and quire another 17 and mill property tax levy or Frank M. Clinton, regional di- out, approved by the Water and Maj. Gen. Michael B. Kauffman new source of. revenue, he said. rector, U.S. Bureau of Reclama- Power Board and by the State (ret.). Also on the reviewing tion, and Jay R. Bingham, di- Board of Examiners, he said. stand will be Maj. Gen. Maurice Utah Foundation rector, Utah Water and Power The Bureau of Reclamation L. Watts, adjutant general, Utah The figures were prepared for Board, said they will try to ar- - contracts mostly with basinwide National Guard; Brig. Gen. Ray him by the Utah Foundation, water districts serving many D. Free, commander, 96th Com Sen. Mantes told the subcomdifferent types of users, suffer- mand Headquarters, and other mittee which assembled tp set 100.000 ing varying degrees of damage military officials. even among the same crops, goals for the state government More than 300 Army, Navy over the next 10 years. Mr. Clinton said. . 65 'Air Force Reserve Officer and Rep. K. Gunn McKay That, he said, would make it corps cadets at the training is chairman of the much more difficult to figure a marched in committee which includes Sen. moratorium than in prior cases University ,of Utah stand in of the front reviewing Samuel J. Taylor of a drought affecting every There 1 are motor100,000 Utah Column See Page 26, House Speaker Kay Allen lt user throughout a large area. who ists have 1965 to obtain and yet Jensen ' Lake), Boyd Promises Effort with Lewis H. Lloyd, council di- inspection stickers before the Mr. Clinton promised to aid In Saturday midnight deadline. rector. to effort defer ait repayments on This was estimated met in the Senate Friday by They investments by injured capital the Utah Highway Patrol, based Lounge to hear Robert Heufner, aide to Gov. Calvin L. Ramp-ton-; on an estimate of cars inspected fanners. But" payments for maintenance and operation of irDr. T. H. Bell, state super- to date. would have to intendent of public instruction; Lt. Russell Cederlund, safety rigation projects sw. said. he -.continue, Mitt E. Rich, executive vice inspection division, said only ' He said payments made by president and secretary of the 400.000 of the states served by federal recSalt Lake City Chamber of Com- vehicles have gotten stickers so farmers lamation projects run between merce; Dr. Arthur D. Browne, far. $1 and '$7 an acre a month and Utah Coordinating There will be no extensions, that' about one-haof that goes Council of Higher Education, after the deadline, Lt. Ceder- to the federal governrepay and Wendell L. Hansen, Weber lund said. ments capital investment. A County Clerk, express their Meanwhile, service station op- postponement of repayment, Mr. as of goals for the age- erators had backlogs of as much Clinton reported, would have to nda theji represent. as several days, Lt Cederlund be approved by the secretary of said. the interior. No Projecting . Demo Solon Sees Utah test To Aid Farmers Governor Urges Delay For Water Payments Money Gap tank-infantr- 8',4-mi- ll three-tenth- Utahns Still Need Safety Stickers ), . (D-Sa- Showers Caper Over Region, Then Vamoose Partly cloudy to cloudy were over the Intermountain Region Friday and brought scattered showers, but mostly in the east and south or in mountain areas. While Salt Lake Gty had only a trace of precipitation at the airport weather station up until late afternoon, heavier showers, were recorded on the east bench and in the mountains. Late Friday evening, area was downtown the drenched by short but moderately heavy rainstorms. Afternoon temperatures were generally in the 60s and 70s over the region, but about 10 degrees cooler in the south. Utahs forecast for Saturday calls for, fair weather, but with some 'cloudiness : and,, showers in the south. . . r , skies Flaming Gorge Lake, which has capacity of 3,789,000 acre-fethis summer will be made possible by additional flexibility just worked out for the coordination of Glen Canyon and Flaming Gorge power production. We are now able to move Glen Canyon hydropower north into Utah so that full dependence on the Flaming Gorge plant for Utah loads is not necessary, Mr. Clinton said. We expect this circumstance to prevail for some time, he added. Operation plans by the bureau call for Flaming Gorge Lake to rise steadily from 5,909 feet on May 1 to about 5,964 feet by Aug. 1. After that, the lake will continue to rise from one to four feet per month through next David P. Jones, Salt Lake County auditor in federal prison in Arizona on an income tax charge, asked through his attorney Friday and was given permission to :be away from the safely. more than 30 days. When'Milled, Fontenelle will county for Marvin G. Commissioners of water acre-fehold .345,000 and releases should equal the Jenson and W. G. Larson voted to granf the leave ' to Jones. incoming river flow. Commissioner ; John Preston Creer voted against it. , followed presentations Thursday and Friday by nine companies agency. David W. Evans and Associates, Salt Lake City, former Gov. George D. Gydes campaign firm, has had the state tourist and publicity advertising business. Evans, Jumey and Gillham Advertising Agency, Inc., Salt Lake City, had sought the entire fiscal 1966 account. Council Director . Emanuel (Manny) Floor Friday said additional projects concerning t and travel promotion will be let out to professional firms during the coming fiscal year. The other agencies that appeared before the council the last two days, Mr. Floor said, will be eligible to handle any of these miscellaneous projects. He said money allocated for this purpose totals approximate- Campaign Job interested in all or part of the councils fiscal 1966 account Sought Account 1961 - tract. Bailey is to manage the coun- cils winter sports promotions i Utah-touris- for $75,000. The council, . explained Chairman MuiTay Moler, expects a $25,000 grant from Ski Utah Associates to help' boost tile winter : sports program. . Selection of advertising firms ly $50,000. gap. Increased taxes are the usual answer"he said, but suggested thaj, property taxes could be held down by taking advantage of unused bonding capacity, about $56,400,000. We can reduce spending, reduce capital outlay, bond more or increase taxes, he.said. Our big problem- in the next four years is higher education. Then public education, which, including buildings, will require - See Page 26, Column 1 - - Mr. Jenson cited an opinion delivered earlier in the week from, the County Attorneys Office which stated it would be a misdemeanor if Mr. Jones remained out of the county for more than 30 days without the commissions permission. The 30 days would have been up May .19. On Mr. Jensons recommendation, Mf! Larson and Mr. Jenson voted .to give their permission for Mr! Jones to remain away. In a prepared statement, Mr. Creer said later, I consider David Jones one of the finest persons I have met in Salt Lake County. To my knowledge ,he has performed his official capacity as county auditor in the hi ghest tradition. i a separate higher education facility. It previously was a division of Utah State' 'University, Logan, and was administered by the USU board of trustees. Members of the new board are: - r v; ' ' ' v A - Xg 1 a Q Eu- gene Overfelt Gunnison; John T. Vernieu, Richfield, and R, J. Former Gov.George D. Clyde, second from left, chats with Potter, Tremonton, guests at dinner in his honor Friday, night. With governor ! He cited these charges against the Democratic Administration r A rising cost of living, caused, by excessive federal spending. Inflationary loss in a dollars; . u purchasing power. An increase in mortgage for-- ; closures. ; A gain in farm debt to record! and; heights the lowest farm parity prices. Even with - storm signals! flying, the administration con-- ; tinues to push for more huge He atspending programs. tacked specifically the Medicare and programs. Crime in Streets . , anti-pover- ... g Gov. Gyde, accepting the paraccolade, said his administration paid our way as we' went. We left the state free of bonded debt and it had a bright future. He praised the officials' of his administration and the tys Lula Isaacson and Edmund J. Flynn, all Salt Lake City; Mrs. Doylr Sampson, St George; 4 Demos 4 . Gov. Calvin L. Rampton FriLowell Sherratt NJr., Warren 12 persons to the FarnsBulloch, Dr. Reed College of Southern Utahs first worth Kumen S. Gardner, and board of trustees. The 1965 Legislature estab- ail of Cedar City; Marion D. Wheelwright, Mrs. lished thg Cedar City school as Hanks,-Lori- n - Submits Request We Republicans know that of Americans would millions not concur could I However, with my fellow- commissioners like to see the administration in allowing a county official to demonstrate as much concern have a leave of absence while over crime in the streets as it incarcerated in a penal institu- does over demonstrations. A great society. Sen. Fannin tion. My regard for Davey Jones must be built, not legsaid, made my vote doubly difficult Brant H. Wall, attorney fra islated. Instead of great society Mr. Jones, appeared before the promises, let us offer the people commission Friday morning to a program for a safe and sound society. make the request. Sen. Wallace F. Bennett presided at the key Utah Republic ' cans. , Paid as We Went Rampton Selects Twelve As First CSU Trustees .. day named - Accuses . lf We have done no projecting in the Legislature, Sen. Mantes said. Traditionally we look at the income, look at the budgets and tax to close the gap. The trend has been for an increasing -- Opinion (R-Uta-h) half-milli- .J- Gtcs banquet,-introducin- w A director Sen. Paul J. Fannin governor of Arizona during most of the years Gov. Gyde was in office, told his audience that throughout the nation, Republican strength is growing. He said that the partys mission is to develop clear and constructive alternatives to the administrations race toward the total welfare state. Where we Republicans disagree with the administration is our insistence that progress is compatible with the Constitution, Republicans know that real compassion consists of helping and! others to help themselves not addicting them to a perman- ent dole. ), Fontenelle Reservoir on the Upper Green River 40 miles northwest of Green River, Wyo., will be filled for the first time this year. Filling is being done gradually to allow earth fill structures, to absorb the water Since ' Strength Growing Flow to Equalize Allocating $375,000 of a fiscal 1966 budget totaling $710,000 to professional advertising help, the Utah Tourist and Publicity Council Friday changed its Ross Jumey, handlers of Gov. Calvin L. Ramptons 1964 gubernatorial campaign, was designated the basic media advertising firm, with a $300,000 con- The memory was of the eight years under the governorship of George D. Clyde. The anticipation expressed by the speakers was that Republican principles would with sufficient effort, bring that party back to state and national office. The dinner in honor of Governor Gyde drew 590 Republicans to the Terrace. It was a preliminary to the partys organizing session at the same place Saturday.' March. Tourist Council Appoints New Utah Ad Agency . For the first year of its most generously financed biennium, the council awarded its advertising and promotional accounts to Ross Jumey and Associates and Bailey and Associates, both Salt Lake Gty. Utah GOP Honors Clyde In Organizing Prelude are from left. Rep. Laurence J. J. Fannin (R-Ari- Barton- and Sen. Wallace - party, workers and declared of Novembers defeat for the party, Weve got to stop blaming someone else for our failures.' We must become a positive, constructive force and Ive must recognize change without abandonment of principle. He attacked legislation serving minority1 groups as taking rights from some to give to oth--. ers and described the Supreme Courts ' reapportionment - decisions" as "a travesty on justice.. Presents Gift A silver tray, presented to Gov. Clyde by Royden G. Der- rick, recognized eight years of; distinguished services.. Before and after the speeches," candidates for posts of state chairman- and vice chairman were, busy counting delegate, votes? The Republicans will choose, their state party leaders' at the ; Sen. Paul organizing convention beginning Bennett Saturday at 10 a.m. f ? (R-Uta-h) F,- - Hit (R-Uta- |