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Show Mapn Buy my. 8 jmMrf 000 'TrgjriTrT njw 0m Brin By JOSEPH LUNDSTROM ; Deseret News Staff Writer When political leaders realize that key citizen groups are not content with the present state of affairs, many will modify their opposition to local modernizing government. The opposition will decrease even more when officers and employes of outmoded units visualize the opportunities for recognition and compensation of able public servants modern government. John Anderson Jr., president, Citizens Conference on State Legislatures, and former governor of Kansas, made these comments Saturday morming. He addressed the opening session of the Forum on Modernizing Local Government held in the Salt Palace. Resistance to change will always be a factor, but it may not be all that impassible to overcome in modernizing local government. Anderson said. "Weaknesses can be over come in a democratic society whenever the people under- stand the situation and know about reasonable solutions for their difficulties. This takes hard work, time, and intelligent application, but it has to he warned more be done, busithan 200 government, ness, industrial, and civic make mos heavily is the need for modernization of our coun- terms are badly in need he said. modernization, ty governments." If county boundary lines could be redesigned in rural America, and county governments reformed for this purpose, they could he a real force in opening up new channels for economic growth and development in such fields as education and tourism, as well as in improvement of all tne basic public services," Anderson said. Counties have a high but undeveloped potential for solving the problems of rural, urban, and most metropolitan communities. But they need to be reformed in two basic before they can serve with optimum effect. They need larger legal powers, including borne rule authority', to meet i. iwide range of local problems, jand their structural orgairzatiiim and staffing pat- - leaders from throughout Utah gathered for the forum. Representing the Committee on Economic Development (CED), one of the sponsors of the forum, Anderson outlined a summary of CED studies on and government, stressed : The point I would wish to 'oca! Original Gold Spike Returns For Utah Display , Ceremony of adAnderson's were givpn by three Utahns, B. Z. Hastier Following dress. responses Mountain Supply Co.; Henry R. Pearson, executive director, and Neal Utah Foundation, executive vice A.Maxwell, president, University of Utah. Too many citizens in Utah sxak out of both sides of their mouths regarding local said Kastler. government, They want government to be close to them, but at the same time they want efficient government. We are not getting close to the people with the continued proliferation of spe- - Jr., vice president, F.uel Soc REFORM on lage B-- 2 ' John Anderson Jr. "modernize government" DESERET NEWS SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Saturday, April 26, 1969 By DOROTHY O. REA B1 t: Deseret News Staff Writer i: OGDEN The golden spike used in the ceremony uniting railroad the transcontinental at Promontory Summit 100 years ago returned to Utah Art Theft i Prompts An Appeal today. I understand we have to give the spike back, but we are indebted to California and Stanford University for permitting us to bring this priceless relic back to Utah, Gov. Cavlin L. Rampton said in accepting the spike at the Union Station this morning. Throngs of Utahns waiting at the station for the Utah delegation to return with the historic memento were entertained by military music played by the South Junior High School Band. Calling Inle's 2 Missing Planes Object Of Search a er U J Vm : ! The Azevedos were to de- plane at Eagle while the Wy- went on to Colorado Springs for a conference of the International College of Sureeons. Wyman was re- ported missing when he failed in to keep an appointment Colorado Springs. , A few hours later, CAP offi- rials were asked to join in a t Zl JlZ && isz 0- 7 C ' Obituaries Weather Map Action Ads Wpmens 0 4 4 7 4 unwelcome cold front lingered in Utah today, poranother sleepless tending night for fruit growers. Generally, damage was considered to be light from last nights frost, but in Utah County there was genuine concern for the cherry and apple crops. with Growers, equipped beating systems, fired up as An early as 8:30 Friday night and kept their smudge pots and natural gas systems going all night as temper d Construction will begin in June on a $5 million buildng to house the telephone compa-man- s nys data processing center. 18 until daylight. Smaller operators, not able to afford orchard heaters, just sweated it out. They were examining blossoms today to try to assess damage. The U.S. Weather Bureau advised orchardists to continue to monitor temperature forecasts today, so they can take precautions. Another night of readings in the range is indicated. This is low enough to cause serious loss if prolonged. The lingering storm, the 25-3- 0 The drawings Temperatures were expect- ed to warm up to today Front, along the Wasatch from Provo to Logan, then 48-5- 2 Sec COLD on Page B--2 were loaned x :Miia al EAST SCENES Marin, who died in 1953, was known widely for his and oils of New York buildings and New England seacoast scenes. rs Layton P. Ott honor . . . business Sanguinetti 14,000 96 others all wired securely to the wail. He said the staff has increased its surveillance. Photos of the missing drawings are being sent to dealers. Sanguinetti said two other items have been stolen from the museum in the past year one a $75 drawing and the other a pastel valued at Rampton predicted 1969 will be Utahs most successful year in industrial-economi- c growth. Nearly is exhibiting non-far- jobs have been created by the Utah economy since last year at this time, he noted in a summary of progress in the state's industrial growth. We hope to announce very soon a plant which will employ 1,000 Utahns, he told the group of business, industrial, and government installation representatives. James L. Barker Jr., lett, chats with Douglas Bisehoff and Sen. Wallace F. Bennett during the Salt Lake County Republican convention ot Terrace. $1,000. Our experience is by no he sighed. means unique, We are seeing a major rash of thefts from museums and commercial galleries across the nation. County GOP Fuels Up By M. DeMAR TEUSCHER Deseret News Political Editor Sherman P. Lloyd told the Salt Lake County Republicans today that the Nixon Administration has made beginnings which bring hope and encouragement for solution of our major problems. Rep. Congressman Lloyd keynoted the county organizations convention at the Terrace Ballroom. Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, also spoke briefly to the delegates and issued a for patience with our plea new President who has a difficult job under difficult cir- cumstances. 5 Miitiam Building Pop HlIST&T , v ',5 illiPWK . bulk of which moved into Wyoming, Montana and Colorado Friday, is expected to produce clouds and a few snow flurries over the mountains in northern and eastern Utah. Skies are expected to clear tonight, with fair and warmer weather Sunday. Southern Utah was expected to enjoy fair weather today, with warming temperatures Sunday. for a circulating exhibit Sanguinetti is gathering for showings around the country to celebrate Marin's centennial. The missing drawjftgiare insured. But money can never replace the work of an artist, especially one who Is dead, said Sanguinetti, who added: This theft was an antiso-.ciact, an offense against the public. It is taking something for ones own private pleasure; the pleasure that should belorg to everyone. ' .&. v The building will be on the northeast corner of Second Second and East South streetSi said Erie C. Aaberg, Vjee president and general manager oI Mountain States tomer billings. Several offices in the building at First South and State Street will also be moved to the new location in order to provide space for additional telephone equipment there. Excavation and piling has already been struction completed by Western Piling and Sheeting,'' Aaberg said. This preliminary work included 82,000 lineal feet of piling, 3,186 cubic yards of concrete for piling caps, and 808,000 pounds of reinforcing steel in footings and pile caps. Telephone .Co. h lgh it constructed that it Folsom and Hunt, architects and engineers designed the structure. Bids on the structure will be let in early June. It ."ill hoiise equipment to handle the firms computer- lzed record syster and cus- - atures slid to 27 degrees in some areas and stayed low the-fweu- The building will contain approximately 216,000 square feet of floor space and will be completed late next year, he said. rpTlQM nu IV Highlights f if Parks. In remarks prior to making the award presentation, Gov. Deseret News Staff Writer By DON C. WOODWARD ret News Business Editor -- w B 1 A plaque was presented to Ott by Gov. Rampton and William G. Bruhn, regional director, SBA. A native of Tropic, Garfield County, Ott has been an instructor in accounting at Stevens-llenagCollege of. Business and at the University of Utah. He acquired Vista Liner three years ago, reorganized the company and moved it to Salt Lake City. In that time, the firm has expanded beyond the manufacture of campers and trailers Into folding camp trailers and fiberglass products. It also has acquired Freeway Coaches, Inc., of Idaho Falls, Idaho. This year, the firm is inaugurating a nationwide system of deluxe overnight camping International areas, Vista do By DEXTER C. ELLIS They disappeared Tuesday morning from their places on m, the walls of which is located on the fourth floor o f the University of Utahs Park Building. er flight from Blackfoot, Idaho, to Scottsdale, CAP spokesman in Salt Lake City said Sheehan asked the Flight Service station at Pocatello, Idaho, for weather information to Scottsdale by way of Salt Lake City, Officials said neither pilot filed a flight plan. Maj. Morrison said the Utah concentrate would planes north of Salt Lake City for the plane out of Blackfoot and would be making again for the plane out of ifornia. 7!f Ij I Top AAan Layton P. Ott, president of Vista Liner Coach and Trailer, Inc., was named Utahs small businessman of the year today. The Small Business Administration (SBA) honor was announced by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton at the luncheon session of the American Production Inventory Control Societys annual seminar. The event was held in the Prudential Federal Building, 3261 S. State. people things like stealing art without awareness of the significance of their acts, he said. My hope is the thief or thieves will feel Impelled to return the drawings. TAKEN OFF WALL In (Business Legislature. So, for the next six months, Utah will join 46 other states in uniform time which gives an extra trur of daylight in the evening. Only Hawaii, Arizona and Michigan have exempted themselves from DST and will remain on Standard Time. Maj. Bert C. Morrison, comof the Utah CAP Wing, said no word had been received on either plane during the night and the search was resumed at 7 a.m. today. The search began early Fri- day for the Cessna 180 piloted by Dr. E. B. Wyman of Los Banos, Calif., on a flight to Eagie, Colo. The plane also carried Wyman s wife, and Mr. and Mrs. Tony Azevedo. Sometimes Gov. Calvin L. Rampton lifts golden spike from its traveling container on arrival in Ogden as Sen. Frank E. Moss, throngs of waiting Utahns look on. Utah goes on Daylight Saving Time Sunday at 2 a.m. with most of the rest of the nation. This means clocks should be turned AHEAD one hour sometime tonight For example, if it is 11 p.m. when you retire, set the clock ahead to 12. DST has engendered strong feelings both for and against among residents the past few years, but a measure to exempt Utah fronf DST was defeated in the last A dozen Utah Civil Air Patrol pio.ies took to the skies today in search of two single- engine planes missing with five persons aboard. CAP planes from at least three other states, California, Nevada and Colorado, have joined in the search for the two craft, one missing on a flight from Fresno, Calif., to four with Colo., Eagle, aboard, and the other on a flight from Blackfoot, Idaho,to Scottsdale, Ariz. phone call to the anonymous FOR DAYLIGHT TIME ' theft of $8,000 museum. TURN CLOCKS AHEAD . the worth of drawings from a Salt Lake exhibit an act of cultural barbarism, an official today described how the thief could return them without danger of arrest. E. F. Sanguinetti, director of the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, implored the art thief to place the six missing John Marin drawings in a bus terminal locker and make an Milton L. Weilenmann, executive director of the Utah Department of Developmental Services, handed the spike to Nathan H. Mazer, field director of the Golden Spike Cen-Se- e GOLD on Page B-- 2 . Frosft Nips Fruit, Liragers AwMe ; .M Telephone company's data procetsing center d lIJ 1 1 be four stories high and cost about $5 million. Company officials said the facility will have no immediate impact on employment,, but will provide room for the firm to keep up with the area's growth. Lloyd said the Republican in both domestic and foreign affairs are just getting off the ground, but programs will prove very significant. said a combination of fiscal restraint and tight monetary cvntrols is needed to deflate inflationary pressures and this is the Republican He program. On Vietnam, he said the administration is dedicated to an honorable peace, but urged his listen- ers not to expect instant miracles. He accused Utah Democrats of playing politics with the ABM antimissile system and said the plan of the Nixon Adis ministration valid and reliable. On domestic issues, he said that tax reform, particularly that aimed at closing loopholes through which the rich paying their just escape share are top priority items of the administration. Delegates to the convention had a three-wa- y choice for county chairman and two candidates for vice chairman. Seeking the chairmanship were Jack Bowen, C. Cash Rampton and William A. Stevenson. Douglas Bisehoff, the incumbent chairman, did not seek vice chairman Incumbent Lois Lcbb was opposed by Chaffos. Norma Elections were slated during the afternoon session. achieving |