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Show ' noir s IWX.VV' X"";.V."--- v E'v,sf 'vs-$- ' c ' ... . i '';-'- . Vy O' ' ' "V "' , ' v ' s'S"". KhMk Loveless. The Choir was seated on a special bleacher back of where second base is located on the baseball diamond. EVEN BALANCE Two batteries of speakers were placed fac-- . ing the audience near first base and third base. Yet the balance between these two sets of speakers was so even that from the lowest to the highest tiers the music seemed to be coming directly from the singers stage. Though San Diegans were also celebrating the founding of their city by the Franciscan padre, Junipero Serra, in July 1769, with several other major celebrations Shakespeare Festival, San Diego Symphony concert, plays, and musicals, among many other attractions the Tabernacle Choir attracted the unusually large audience. INTENSE ATTENTION Not only was it warm and receptive to the choirs program and to Elder Evans appropriate commentary, but also its intense attention Sunday-beand its appearance even caused many of its own members to express seemingly surprised admiration. Sen CHOIR on Page By HAROLD LUNDSTROM Deseret News Music Editor SAN DIEGO Everything came up bright California flowers for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir's concert that helped San Diego celebrate its 200th anniversary Friday. One of the biggest flowers was the audience, estimated at nearly 30,000 persons, that gave the 300 singers, their conductor, Richard Con-dithe accompanist, Alexander Schreiner and narrator, Elder Richard L. Evans, two standing ovations and long rounds of applause. summer Another rose was the evening foil ving a hot day in which the temperature had reached 93 degrees. COLORFUL STADIUM In a very literal sense, the most colorful flower of the birthday bouquet was the specSan Diego Stadium tacular new 52,000-sea- t with its different seat sections in bright and complimentary shades of yellows and oranges. Outstanding for the birthday party was the temporary sound system set up for the concert under the direction of Paul Evans and Ray e, near-perfe- '", ,n- - , ' mrn . st Deserst News Photo by Ray G. Jones Nearly 30,000 persons in the beautiful new Stadium heard the Tabernacle Choir honor San Diego's 200th anniversary. B-- 3 58, ? Fmed Inmate Wearing Killed - A UTAH STATE PRISON Mondied who inmate prison day had been scheduled to appear before the Board of Pardons this week, according to Ernest D. Wright, executive director, Board of Corrections. LeRoy S. Manning, 33, was dead on arrival at University of undetermined Hospital causes, but a prison employe told the Deseret News Manning had taken an overdose of an inhalant intravenously. Warden John W. Turner said there was some evidence of this, but official results of a toxicology report will not be received for, nearly DESERET NEWS MANTI Is 3,000 fare from Aomo- s ly ri, Japan. teen-ager- One contributor offered be Tomikos pen pal. Tomiko was just a tiny child when she was prevented from immigrating with her mother, Mrs. Arlo Moulton, to the United States. DENIED ENTRY The girl was denied entrance to America again several years ago when the Moultons tried to bring her here y The pageant was presented on the south slope of Temple Hill. The Manti Temple provided the backdrop, towering and above the sky. One of the dramatic moments was when the spotlight caught an actor representing the Angel Moroni at the top of the Temples west tower and his trumpet sounded forth the familiar strains of the Latter-da- y As Angel Saint hymn, From on High, across the valley. The Temple, dimly seen in Its massive beauty for most of the pageant as episodes from LDS history were played in the foreground, was suddenly bathed in total light as the performance ended, with the Oh, choir My singing, Meanwhile, Tomiko Hatakeyama ... the U.S. Springville. That was months ago. Immediately the people of Utah responded to requests for donations from the town Chamber of Commerce. The Deseret News management So the lonely girl wrote a letter to a San Francisco newspaper with an office in Tokyo, asking for help in ing her lost family. at last The story appeared in the West Coast paper, and appeared later in a Casper, Wyo., newspaper. From there, the Moultons were located in Left with her grandparents, Tomiko maintained contact with her mother over the years. But after the deaths of both grandparents, Tomiko lost touch with her mother, too. cloud-flecke- d dol- n Survivor 'Tells to Of Lost Plane Moultons were busy preparing necessary papers for the American from Japan. d the find- 10 One occupant LOGAN of a light plane that crashed 12 miles north of Monte Cristo Peak in Cache County walked to civilization from the wreckage site today. Fate of the other passengers was not immediately known. An air search was to be organized by the Civil Air e Patrol if the Navion was not located at counsul in Tokyo for review by immigration officials. Mrs. Moulton and Tomiko continued to write. VISA GRANTED I can stand on the shore and as the tide goes out I am with my parents," the girl wrote in one of her letters to Springville. The visa was granted, and Tomiko, now 17, graduated from high school. Mrs. Moultons husband is as anxious as she to have Tomiko with them, and both will fly to San Francisco to meet her. Then the family's children will number four with Tomiko, Loran, 15, Jess, 14, and Sally, 10. Carbon Canyon Mine, six miles southeast of here. It was 3 a.m. today before fellow miners could remove the coal and recover the body of Jesus (Chi Chi) Flores Lopez, 58, 318 S. 1st West, Price. The accident happened at 11 p.m. Friday. It was not immediately known if Lopez suffocated or was crushed to death. R. M. vonStorch, superintendent of the U.S. Steel Geneva Mine, said Lopez was working the second producing shift (there are two producing shifts, one service shift at the mine), and operating a joy loader behind a continuous mining machine. The Utah Highway Patrol said Lopez had apparently climbed out of the protective cage of the loader to remove a rock or other object blocking the machines path when occurred. the cave-i- tributions accompanied by notes such as, Im sorry I cant send more. Im on Social Security. Some donations were anonymous, but many nevertheless included statements of concern for the lonely high school student. in Commerce cooperation with the Deseret News, raised upwards of $500, more than enough money to pay the lone- IDosemiinig WASHINGTON The ticklish job of disarming nerve gas weapons stored Price father of 11 killed under in Colorado will be done near Denver, instead of giving them a burial at sea or was trapped and a fall of top coal Friday when a rail trip to Utah. the earth shifted in the Horse MANY DONATIONS The money poured in from all over the state, some con- Tomiko Fund, set up the Springville Chamber of by y single-engin- any intermediary airports. The craft, piloted by Kirby Ginger of the Flying ' Saddle Lodge in Alpine, Wyo., left Logan at 8:15 p.m. Friday and was due in Pueblo at 1:45 a.m. today. Clinger was piloting the craft, with three unidentified passengers . board. Utah's congressional delegation, skittish about the possibility of a rail accitrain in Nevada, expressed satisfactdent after a recent explosion on a bomb-lade- n with the Armys decision. Still undecided is the question of how the Army will get rid of another large supply of obsolete gas weapons at Dug-wa- y Proving Ground, according to an Associated Press ion dispatch. SAFETY RECORD The Army said it chose Rocky Mountain Arsenal near Denver for disarming the bombs in Colorado because employes there have safely disassembled more than 2,200 bombs in the past. It's a hazardous process. clustFirst the thousand-pounmust be ers of bomblets taken apart. The assembly is full of springs which could cause the bomblets to fly apart from each other and detonate. is Once the dismantling complete, the GB nerve gas inside will be chemically d detoxified. The resulting relatively harmless product will be pumped into a three million gallon sealed lake, at Rocky Montain Arsenal. SAFETY STEPS The lake is lined to prevent seepage into ground water, but is open at the top to permit slow, safe evaporation. These weapons are part of 27,000 tons of obsolete bombs the Army Jiad planned ot haul by train to the East Coast, where they were to be placed on ships and dumped in the Atlantic Ocean. The Army abondoned that plan after a volley of congressional outcries. Members of Utahs congressional delegation and Gov. Calvin L. Rampton served notice on the Army earlier that they didn't want Utah used as a dumping ground for the obsolete gas. Harold P. Fabian . . . commencement speaker. . . to be awarded degree Pres. N. Eldon Tanner Honor 2 S.L Men U. To A church leader and a prominent attorney will receive honorary degreees at the University of Utahs summer commencement ceremony Aug. 16. University President James C. Fletcher announced the recipients as President N. Eldon Tanner, second counselor in the First Presidency, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints, and Harold P. Fabian, Salt Lake lawyer who pioneered the development of the area now known as Grand Teton National Park. President Tanner will also y '47 Rodeo Opens With A Boom By KATHY CRACROFT Deseret News Staff Writer Father. SPLENDID SETTING It is our opinion that is there a set- else ting that lends itself so superb- ly to music, drama and pag- eantry," said Miss Grace Johnson, author of The Mor- mon Miracle. Her narrative lines were spoken by Macksene Rux and Francis L. Urry, whose trained voices, familiar to audiences, gave heigh- tened effect to the eloquence of Miss Johnsons writing. Although tableaux pre- sening such familiar scenes as the Prophet Joseph Smiths See PAGEANT on Page ... L Dies A County B-- staff contributed the first lars to the fund. The Saint history and doctrine was presented at Temple Hill in Manti Friday might. It is a deeply moving and Elder inspiring presentation, Mark E. Petersen of the Council of the Twleve, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints commented after the performance. Reliving the great events In the lives of our forefathers helps to preserve our faith, he said. TEMPLE BACKDROP Womens Page like the general public some of them want to see change and help inmates, be Tomiko Hatakeyama and her mother. The two will be reunited Aug. 15 in San Francisco. 3,000 City, Regional Obituaries Weather Map Action Ads In many instances we find that staff members are much separation of, An audience esti- rTlONJ In1 said. Utah dollars stretched thousands of miles to end tfie long B-- S 11 DRAGERTON, come rehabilitated. Some believe this is an expression of weakness on the part of the administration or a kind of a softening up and the avoidance of punishing inmates," he said. I think it would be wonder- See INMATE on Page 2 Tomiko, Mother To End Long Separation Aug. 15 paid The Mor-the perfect tribute of rapt attention and almost total silence as the pageant portraying Latter-da- C are interested in developing is more emphasis on treatment than punishment, Wright two weeks. Wright said Mannings attorney hrd petitioned the board, asking that Manning be released to go to a federal in Ft. narcotics hospital Worth, Tex. The prison is in a transitional stage now, and what we Miracle mon Father Of B1 In Carbon Mishap By BRUCE JENNINGS Deseret News Correspondent mated at 19, 1969 Saturday, July Viewed By Cave-I- n SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH AT MANTI Pageant In . R Friday nights Days of 47 Rodeo was a really big show- Veteran rodeo ' action with a boom. The rodeo, with its special guest the Lone Ranger, ton Moore, continues through July 24 at 8 p.m., nightly except Sunday. Clay-Uta- 4 4 5 16 h HALF THE R0UE0 For kids, half the rodeo is the refreshment stands. One tiny blonde downed a hot dog, sno cong g syck jce cream before the last Brahma bull was corralled and the ' grandstands 3 announcer Pete Lgaa promised, Salt Lake City, we start with a and wll end the bang aama way, as an 1841 muzzle loader cannon that saw action Ibe Civil War started rodeo vacated. Cowboys got downed, too. In bareback and saddle bronc riding, clouds of chalky as buckaroos lifted dust slammed on the ground with a Two Brahmas whump. had a ready to pick a fight notion to ride the riders they ranch-stylplaid shirt, also attended the rodeo with Mrs. e Rampton. Parade and rodeo audiences saw Days of 47 presidents Kate B. Carter and Wilbur Parkinson and Days of ?7 Queen Janis Tennant and her attendants Marilou Dyreng and Anne Holley. festivities were Fridays loveliness. with packed Queens and attendants at the parade and rodeo numbered dumped, but the cowboys leaped fences to safety. LINE STREETS Before crowds began swelling the fairgrounds, Utahns lined Main Street and North Temple to watch 1,100 horses dressed in Sunday best strut along in the Eighth Annual All Horse Parade. One freckle-nose- d 33. eight-year-o- Long before the Wheece" of police motorcades stopped the chatter and started the parade, people toting portable lawn chairs and blankets lined the streets. NOT SADDLE-SHGov. Calvin L. Rampton proved he wasnt saddle-sh- y he trotted along behind Miss Rodeo Utah, Julia Ward. clad in a The governor, history of the University. President Tanner served as a Canadian educator, government and business leader before his appointment as presi-deof the West European Mission in 1961. Upon his return he became president of the Genealogical Society of the Church, later served as member of Councii of Twelve Apostles and Assistant to the Twelve. CANADIAN POSTS Before Church accepting appointments, he was a distinguished Canadian citizen. He served in the Alberta legislature and was later selected as the Minister of Lands and Mines in the provincial cabinet. His business career included the presidency of Gas Association, a Pipe Line, Merrill Petroleums, Ltd., and director of Toronto Dominion Eank, Mr. Fabian, born in Salt Lake City in 1SS5, received his B.A. degree from Yale University in 1907 and his LL.B. from Harvard University in 1910. H? was admitted to the Utah Bar and began practice nt Trans-Canad- that same year. 23 HORSE POSSES who couldnt remember when she hadnt sat in a saddle burst out, Do you like horses? I do." deliver the commencement address to the estimated 1,000 the largest sumgraduates mer graduating class in the About Utah posses famous for their search and rescue work graced the parade with precision drill marching, their horses obedient to each pull of the rein. PARKS ROLE 23 Kathy looked 1 McMastcrs, shiny as 13, a new clime her outfit as she rode in the parade on her first horse. Glen Thurston, Morgan County, showed off his Clydesdale horses, a breed he has been raising since 1936. The See 47 RODEO, Page in Descrst Cowboy hangs on tight News photo bv Davtd A. Conlsy his try for saddle bronc prize money. Serving executive positions since 1934, he was appointed ir. 1957 by Gov. George D. Clyde to organize and set in motion a State Park and Recreation Commission. He was elected chairman for eight years and was recently reap- -' pointed a member for another', r term by Gov. Calvin B-- 3 tour-yea- L. Rampton. project in which he takes great pride and satis- A local See U. on Pag B-- S |