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Show Metropolitan Opera Slates Auditions For S.L. Feb. 12 THE SALT LAKE TIMES Combined with. The Salt Lake Mining & Legal News Published Every Friday at Salt Lane City , Utah Entered at the pot toff ice at Salt Lake City as second class matter August 23, 1923 under the act of March 8, South West Temple 711 Telephone 364-846- 4 1879 GLENN BJORNN, Publisher "This publication is not owned or controlled by any party, clan, clique, faction or corporation " ' Number 32 Volume 45 so Red China and the UN ' (Continued 'from Page One) If Red China is admitted, it will mean that the Free Chinese on Forlegitimate and mosa will be forced out. Since this will be contrary to the provisions of this Charter, it will further contribute to the spirit of lawlessnes which the UN was set up to pro-democra- tic counter. Annual Dexterity Test is Scheduled , A Nation of Movers i We seem to be, by inclination, a nation of movers. Each year a substantial number of us pack up bag and baggage, leave the key behiiid, and go off to find a new place to live. . . Within the next 12 months some 37 million people are expected to change their addresses, estimates the Institute of Life Insurance. , They will move for a number of reasons because they get married and. are setting up their own households,' because of their jobs or beckoning job opportunities, because they want better housing, or simply because they become restless. Of the people who do move in the coming year, a majority-7-a- n expected 24.8 million will settle down in another home near their present one. The rest some 12.2 million --will move a longer distance, to another county or to another state. Since 1948, when the U.S. Bureau of Census first began keeping tabs on how many people move in this country and where they go, the annual mobility rate of the population has hovered at around 20 per cent of the Salt Lake City, Utah: Metro- in dentistry are offered the oppolitan Opera auditions for the portunity to take a manual dexUtah District will be held Feb- terity test on Saturday, Feb. 26, ruary 12, 1966, at 2 p.m. in at the University of Colorado in Kingsbury Hall on the Univer- Boulder. The test is given under the susity of Utah campus, it has been announced today by the Junior pervision of the University of Californias dental school at San League of Salt Lake City. and is required for enApplications may be secured Francisco school. However, by contacting Mrs. Web Adams, trance to that 1457 Uintah Circle, Salt Lake anyone interested in entering test for City, or Mrs. David Noall, 2561 dentistry may take the its predictive value, regardless Lynwood Drive, Salt Lake City, of where he wishes to attend the auditions chairman. school. District auditions are open to dental who are interested in Students all Utah singers of operativ prothe test should make resmise within the following age taking ervations at once with Mrs. Mary limits; sopranos, 19. through 30; Monti, School of Dentistry, San altos, 10 through 32; tenors, 20 Francisco Medical Center, San through 32; baritones 20 through Francisco, Calif. 94122. Dead33; basses, 20 through 35. . line for applications is Jan. 31. Entries will be auditioned be- Fee for taking the test is $5. h fore an There are no schools of denpanel of judges, and winners will be eligible to tistry in the Rocky Mountain enter the Rocky Mountain Re- area. However, information of gional Auditions to be held in the schools where dental stuDenver, Colorado, February 26, dents may receive consideration 1966. under the WICHE Student Exwill winners receive Regional change Program may be obtained $300 in cash and an expense paid from the Western Interstate entry to the national finals in Commission for Higher EducaNew York City in March, 1966. tion, University East Campus, Prizes of $200 and $100 will be 3t0h Street, Boulder, Colo. awarded to second and third place in the region. Applications must be in by January 30, 1966. Scholarship. In addition the New The winners of Regional Audi- York Community Trust will tions will be sent to New Yprk again give the Schoon-Ran- d to be divided City to compete, for the follow- Award of $3,000 three finalists in the form ing prizes: A Metropolitan Opera among cash of awards and to underwrite Association contract plus the a public recital. $2,000 Stuart and Irene Chambers scholarship; a Metropolitan U. S Savings Bonds easily are Opera National Company contract the $2,000 John S. New- the most indestructible securiberry award; the $2,000. Fisher ties on earth. Every bond is regFoundation the istered in the name of the purScholarship; $2,000 Anne Rosoff Memorial chaser; microfilm copies of that Award; the $2,000 Virginia Mar- registration are kept on file; and vin Stoughton Award; the $2,000 and Bond lost, stolen, mutilated W. Frederick Weyerhauser or destroyed will be replaced. . . LIFE IN THE ROAR fyKANE GRAPEVINE Approximately 295 of 350 persons examined for jury duty for the January term of Third District Court were qualified this week by Presiding Judge Joseph G. Jeppson. Judge Jeppson said the jurors would serve for a three-mont- term. h Business was brisk this week in the basement of the City and County Building where 1966 Utah motor licenses went on sale for the first time. C. County Assessor Clifford d Cockayne said crowds went through lines picking up their new plates during good-size- the week. About 200,000 applications for plates have been mailed to county motorists. The plates were being mailed out this week. Three new mayors were sworn into office in Salt Lake County towns this week. They were O. P. Davis, South Salt Lake; William E. Dunn, Murray, and Ravell T. Beckstead, Sandy. . E. Ross McDonald, who retired Nov. 1 from the Utah Highway patrol, this week was named Murray police chief to succeed L. E. Deland. LeRoy H. Griffiths was named Murray city attorney to succeed Robert R. Dansie. Richard T. Bennion, president of Bennions Boyd Park Jewelers, has been named Salt Lake County chairman for the 1966 Heart Fund campaign. The Utah Tourist and Publicity Council this week submitted an inventory of recommended highway tourist-directin- g signs to the Utah Highway Department. The report recommends 1500 signs for 309 separate scenic or historic sites in Utah. . Third District Judge Stewart M. Hanson said this week he had reinstated a suit to block Salt Lake Countys transient room tax. In a summary judgment last week Judge Hanson dismissed the suit filed by R. A Menlove seeking to have the tax declared total. If curent patterns hold, here is how the probabilities shape up for the coming years crop of movers, according unconstitutional. ' to the Institute. The biggest single group of movers will be young people in their early 20s, and the reason, of course, is that this is the age when a majority of people get married and leave the parental wing to set up their own Mrs. Louise Lewis Burton, an employee of the Utah State headquarters of the Selective Service System for the past 17 years, households. In the 24 to 34 age bracket more men will move than women. Since women tend to marry earlier, there are more eligible bachelors in this age group than there are women not already spoken for, and so more men will be establishing a new home. Married couples under 35 will be more likely to move than single people under 35. It usually takes a few years 9 oonY look now- - But theue's of married life before a couple find the home they like Some men fouomnct vdu in the community they like. After age 35, people tend j to move les as their, age increases. A change in marital status is also a factor in the mobility picture. People who are or become widowed, fessions will be among the most mobile, while people who divorced or separated, either voluntarily or involuntarily farm or who are self employed are naturally most likely will be more likely to be among the movers than people to stay put. who are either married or single. Where people are living now will influence their People with an income of less than $5000 a year are tendency to look for another place to live. more likely to move in search of opportunity than those Those who live in large metropolitan areas will be with higher incomes. more likely to move than individuals in In occupational categories, people who work in pro areas. ; -l EASES the- College students and high school seniors considering career all-Uta- There is general agreement among political observers that the campaign for Red Chinas admission would come to an abrupt end if the United States made it clear that I) it would demand the disqualification of all countries delinquent in their payments to the UN, and 2) that foreign aid would be cut off to those voting with the Reds. But this will not come about without mass pressure from the American people. . THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY. JANUARY 7. 1966 Page Four 1 j non-metropolit- an has retired this week. Mrs. Burton began her federal service 31 years ago with the U.S. Finance division at Ft. Douglas. , The State Depository Board this week increased interest rates it will require banks to pay for public funds deposited from three to 18 months. The new rate is to be four per cent yearly compared with the old schedule of 3 per cent for funds on deposit from three to six months and 3 per cent for funds on deposit from six to 12 months. PFC William L. Henderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Henderson, 3698 So. 4445 West, arrived in Vietnam with the Armys new 1st Cavalry Division. He is a crew chief in the unit which was ordered to Vietnam when President Johnson, an- nounced that U.S. troops would be increased in Vietnam. He was graduated from Granger High School in 1964. |