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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES Telephone Company Expects Big Day Sunday, May 10, Mothers Day will be one of the busiest days of the year for the telephone company. Mountain Bell is already geared up to handle the record volume of calls, according to Mr. Clifton H. Totten, district manager. Totten offered the following suggestions: Call by number If you do not know the number call universal directory assistance before Sunday and it will be provided with no cost. For numbers within Utah, dial 1 plus 555-121- 2. To reach out-of-sta- te directory assistance, dial plus the area code, then Page Three FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1970 1 555-121- 2. Customers can speed calls by dialing direct, thus taking advantage of automatic equipment which seeks out the fastest route for the call. Also, call at times other than on the hour or half hour, since calling peaks are highest in these periods. The lowest long distance rates apply from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday and 8 ajn. to 5 p.m. Sunday. During this period callers can dial direct, to any point in the continental United States (except Alaska) for 70 cents or less for the first three minutes. Symphony Wins Unique Plaudits On Recent West Coast Tour Utahs musical ambassadors, Civil Music Assn., sponsor of Maurice Abravanel and the Utah Symphony have won high praise from unusual sources on the West Coast tour which ended last week with a concert at Brawley, Calif. Alongside the predominantly have reviews of their artistic prowess carried in the local press the 85 traveling musicians received rave reviews from still another quarter, the local impresarios and innkeepers en route. Never in my many years experience in the hotel and motel business has it been my good fortune to have a finer group as guests, wrote A. H. Hansen, the manager of the Manchester Motel in Fresno. We only wish all touring were half as well organized and cooperative, wrote G. L. Triber of Everett, Wash., 3-w- the nations best. The Everett, Washington, Herald reported that Under the precise baton of Abravanel the orchestra performed with power and a briskness producing a grandiose sound. Utah Symphony Rated Superior, was the headline in the Oregon, Salem, Statesman, and the review noted that Maestra Abravanel has a very superior musical ear, and said his conducting was totally without ostentatious display. This is a glo-roexperience when a beauty of music can speak for itself. Commenting on the West coast tour, the symphony board president, Wendell J. Ashton, said, Utahns can well be proud of the reputation of their orchestra and its distinguished conductor. The enthusiastic reception they have received on this tour is not East Carbon Teen To Present Paper Frank Burdis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Burdis of Dragerton, will represent Utah at the National Junior Science and Humanities Symposium held in Knoxville, Tennessee. He was one of six participants chosen from the western states to participate at the symposium. Mr. Burdiss paper, A Fish Sustenance Study of Grassy Trail Creek, is the result of a study started last spring under the direction of his East Carbon High School biology teacher, Mrs. Lois Gibb. Personnel from the regional Fish and Game office in Price assisted him on the study in an advisory capacity. The study included a creel census of fishermen, effects of beaver on the stream and the also is but presence of plant and animal only heartwarming a further evidence of their na- life in the stream. the Utah Symphonys two appearances in that city. He added, We have had a great many phone calls from our members who were so greatly pleased with your wonderful prgorams. Orchestra members headed for home Sunday following nearly 4,000 miles of traveling which took them within 69 miles of Canada on the north and 24 miles of Mexico on the south. The 23 day tour included 23 concerts in Idaho, Washington, Oregon and all of California. Enthusiastic praise for Utah's orchestra and its maestro was not limited to hotels and concert managers, however. The Lewiston, Idaho, Morning Reviewer ended his critique as he began tional stature. it by saying, It was easy to understand why critics have acTaxes: Status woe. claimed this orchestra as one of us ' A father is a banker provided by nature. French proverb. out-of-sta- te, Schools Association Seeks Memberships Applications for membership in the Utah Private School Association by private educational institutions in the Salt Lake City area will soon be considered, according to LeRoy R. Stevens, president of the newly organized association. Mr. Stevens, who is also president of the Stevens Henager College in Salt Lake City, was elected the first president of the association which was organized recently at a meeting attended by representatives of private schools in the state. The Utah Private School Associations objectives are to promote the interests and general welfare of private schools; to promote high educational standards and ethical business practices in order to better serve the public interest; to cooperate with local, state and federal authorities, business, commerce, and industry in the maintenance of high standards and sound policies in the field of privately-operate- d schools; to engage in publicity and public relations activities for the purpose of increasing public interest and a sound undertsanding of privately operated schools; to engage in such other activities necessary and proper for the accomplishment pf these objectives consistent with the public interest of the privately operated schools; and to encourage and assist the members of the privately operated schools to seek and achieve national accreditation. 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