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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • 15

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-v-v iii i lT--w mm pot Get Science OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY MORNING MARCH 21 1965 IB Fair Honors START REGISTRATION 0(Dcln) 'Msiiiier FOR LDS INSTITUTES Several special interest classes are being offered in the spring squarter at the Ogden Institute of Religion 3810 Tyler Evening school class registration will be conducted Monday from 5:30 to 8 pm Day class registration will be held Tuesday Classwork will start Thursday 1 I 'w 1 1 1 "S3 JISi Ilk pi ft vp mmm i-1 v' A (' 1 1 1 -U Hood Sees 1966 Start Nine senior" and junior high school students received superior ratings at the Weber Regional Science Fair which ended Saturday at Weber State College-' I Students receiving superior ratings the title of their project and school are as follows Senior High: zoology Douglas Pohl "A Study on Hatching Brine Shrimp" Bonn eville chemical Kirk Nielson "Chemical Analysis of Ogden River" Ben Lomond Physics and Computers Scott CampbeU "Meteorological Sounding Rocket" Weber Seventh Grade: biological Sci- ence "Kirk Lindsay "A Rat in a -Maze" 'Roy Physical Science jjloria L- Russell "Crystallography Wahlquist and John Hales 'Static Electricity" Mount Ogden Eighth Grade: Biological Science Douglas Brown "Anatomy of the Frog" Roy Physical Science Jerry Van Belk Seeing with Sound" South Ninth Grade: Biological Science Christine Kemp "Effects of Treating Hair "3 South: Physical Science Dewey Solomon 'Electromagnetic Spec TOP Kirk Nielson 17 son of Mr and Mrs Paul Nielson of 513 16th checks his superior rated displaythat won him a trip to the National Science Fair-International May 5 to 8 in St Louis trum South- WINS TROPHY Bonneville won the Ogden Standard-Examiner Sweepstakes Trophy for having the most stu dents placing tne top three STAN DELAPLANE'S POST CARD at the fair A On Program By CLIFF THOMPSON City Manager Sam Hood has started a study that could launch an urban renewal program in Ogden sometime next year This is the first effort in the state to implement the urban redevelopment bill passed by the 1965 Utah Legislature and signed last week by Gov Calvin Rampton I While urban renewal opponents succeeded in weakening the legislation somewhat most officials believe it will permit cities to undertake projects to upgrade areas of slum and blight Amendments tacked to the bill by its opponents will make fit more difficult for cities to launch urban renewal projects "It is going to take a longer time and a bigger selling job -to get an urban renewal project under way' Mr Hood told the Greater Ogden Chamber of Commerce civic affairs committee THREE KEYS There are three key provisions in the legislation adopted by the Legislature to enable cities to undertake urban renewal projects and to participate in federal South Junior High took the junior sweepstakes trophy pre sented by Weber County Other individual top winners in the senior high school exhibits were as follows Medicine Dental and Health: Palm Springs Oldsters Wouldn't Know the Place John Blasko "Project Bonneville excellent Randall Morris "Respiration in Oxygenated Isotonic Solutions" Bonneville very good Earth and Space: Jeff Han sen "ttFKE 11" uonneviue excellent Stephen Madsen "Map Coloring" Bonneville very i The government gave the alternate square miles back to the Indians Thus making the 105 tribal members today the richest Indians in America Each Indian owns $350000 worth of individual land And tribally owns 30000 acres of the most valuable desert in the Nation good LIGHT PRESSURE Physics and Computers: Stephen Scambia "The Pres sure of Laght Weber excel in tm-- -nr1 lent Don Hughes "Elementary Particles" Bonneville ver urban renewal funds good One of which the bill's Seventh Grade: Steven Enck- son junects of bmoking- residential area at bottom A study is under way to determine the feasibility of such a project in Ogden as a result of urban renewal legislation adopted by the 1965 Utah Legislature sponsors fought hard to save empowers cities to acquire property for urban renewal BENEFITS OF URBAN RENEWAL are shown in this drawing by Standard-Examiner staff artist Len Borozinski Slum area at I upper left is being razed at upper right to permit rebuilding of beautiful Wahlquist excellent Louise Petterson "How Temperature Affects Mold" South very projects py condemnation However opponents succeed good Brent A Evans "Rocks ed in tacking on amendments and Gems" Roy very good A sunny day on the million dollar California desert The day is a little cool cooler than usual at this time of year in Palm Springs Nonetheless the Eastern visitors fleeing the snows are out beside the blue pool Wasting nq precious moment of the desert sun In May the season ends The hotels halve their rates the desert day boils up to 100 degrees And the winter homeowners ($25000 a half acre for sand-and-cactus ilots) hop off to cooler lands They leave the all-year residents 18500 r- pouring a million gallons of water a day on the 18Jg0lf jcourses' And topping up 97 million gallons of water in the 350 swimming pools' lZl' "The time we like" said a local resident "is the summer When the tourists all go home" SURVEY PARTY In 1853 Lt Williamson led a survery party through this arid desert He discovered the canyons of Wild fan palms and the 30-foot pool of mineral water "Vv: In 1877 the Southern Pacific laid the rails through here to the Pacific Coast The first white settler ar that substantially expand po ccidenfs 3 A Eighth Grade: Roxanne Pet Huntsville Mm roves erson "Hiftect of ivion-Living Weber TV Will Seek 1 Environment on Plants" Bell excellent Russell Sim tential damage payments in condemnation and which weaken a city's position in negotiating for property Sponsors of the bill also were forced to accept other amend In jure Three mons "Earthquakes" Washington excelent Daniee Rae Lar- 2 STOP SIGNS Oddly enough the very things that built Palm Springs are now changing its face "This is becoming a convention town" a hotel man told me "People from Los Angeles can come here in 20 minutes by air They can come in two hours by divided highway With only two stop signs on the whole route i i "It used to take four hours And they hit 226 stop signals going through towns "People can come here from the East in four and a half hours From snow to sunshine "But as fast -as they can come in they can get out just as fast And easy If the sun doesn't shine for a couple of days they go "The 1 convention is where Palm Springs makes its money today" WOULDN'T KNOW IT Part' in Fire ans sen "The DNA Thread of ments that doesn't necessarily On Safur make urban renewal impossible day US Funds The Weber Board of Educa the Huntsville firemen except If the Huntsville area should but does make projects more difficult to launch on weekends when traffic blocks be selected by the county for the location of a branch fire the roads" he said One of these requires that a Three accidents Saturday hos tion has voted tor make applica The fire building in Huntsville I 1 1 redevelopment agency cannot be created without approval of voters in a city-wide election pitalized two men with a third treated and released for minor station the town would willingly participate in the project Mayor Leon Sorenson told the Webtr commissioners Life" Central Davis very good Beverly Jane Jones "Thermoelectricity" South very good Ninth Grade: Stephan LaFren- iere "The Central Nervous Central Davis excellent Karen Kay Dilley "Sound As Heard and 'Seen' Wahlquist excellent Linda Layle Robins "The Development of the Teeth" Central very good Tim Bailey "Solar Energy" Wahlquist very good injuries The other amendment pro Clyde Untersmger 32 of is a convened aouoie-car garage which has been insulated so that water in the 350 gallon fire engine tank won't freeze during winter weather The commissioners questioned the mayor as to the possible value of ra small recreational 5862 2200 Roy was in Dee vides for public hearings on' each proposed project And if The officials said that of 91 calls to bona fide fires" since the Hospital with possible back in three-fourths of the property juries after his car went into owners object the agency can volunteer orgamza tio was formed several years ago only 21 of them werd in the incorpo an irrigation ditch on 3500 and about 4600 5 at 7:10 cm tion for federal funds on a participating basis to update equipment of the district's television station KWCS-TV Channel 18 Station manager Ben Van Shaar told the board members that one switcher costing $10-000 is absolutely essential if the education station is to keep operating Some of the television cameras also require repair or replacement since life expectancy of the tubes has been reached Mr Van Shaar said The station would have to cov We are staying this morning rived in 1884 probably much not proceed until the project has been approved in another city-wide election Highway i Patrolman Cliff to the surprise of the Agua at Ray Ryan's desert-pink El Green said Mr Untersinger was Caliente Indians lviuciuux vrteuuui wiui ui eye to convention trade) driving west on 3500 when he apparently hit a hump in The first garage was opened rated town The other 70 were in the county': v-I Commission chairman Bud Favero told the maypr that a fire survey now being conducted by Chief Bert Cookin cooperation with the fire underwriters would determine the lo gymnasium built adjacent to branch fire stations Mayor Sorenson praised the county and the ward recreation Erograms in athletics primarily ut- said there -seems to be a group which could benefit from such a i gymnasium and some kind of a program by the firemen II the road where it passed over a Willard Bay Project ditch His car went off the left hand side of the road and accord Piped music filters through the sheltering palms Drinks are served beside the sky-blue pool (If the sun ducks behind a momentary cloud the pool-side guests stir restlessly and the manager bites his nails) The menu is excellent And a lobby poster announces that Yasminna the first belly danc ing to the patrolman Mr Un- cations of the branch stations Ward to Present Fireside Tonight A fireside tonight at 8:30 in the Forty-ninth Ward Chapel is the first in a series of events planned to denote M-Men and Gleaner Week in the Washington Terrace and Riverdale stakes All those 18 years and older and unmarried are invited Guest speaker Sunday night will be Nate Tanner in 1913 ine iirst scnooinouse in 1915 And the first newspaper published in 1927 INDIAN LANDS At that time you could have bought half the desert for a couple of thousand dollars (Which was the actual down payment made by Mrs Nellie Coffman when she built the er a larger area if the application is approved he said If available the money will tersinser either fell out or climbed out of the car WORKED WELL The town official said the vol come from the Health Educa tion and Welfare Department Motorist Pays $200 in Roy unteer system worked well with GAVE AID He said a passerby John Bull 10 men usually answering tire calls except at midday when er to perform under the Palm ard 2240 Jefferson saw the Desert Inn It sold recently for Springs palms performs three man helpless in the ditch face R0Y-A 31-year-old Roy man most of them worked away from In other business board members voted to make a seven period day available to high school students The seventh period would be an elective course The junior high schools in the Weber better than $25 million) times nightly down in the mud and strug the Upper Valley pleaded guilty in Roy City Court and was fined $200 SEEKS PROOF A primary objective of Og-den's first urban renewal project will be to demonstrate urban renewal Can work "We are planning a moderate beginning io urban renewal geared to a meaningful success" states Mayor Merle Allen Mrj Hood told the Chamber of Commerce members that "people who have been in urban re- newal projects tell you they've been treated fairly" The manager said three steps are required before an urban renewal project can be started "We have to determine if the legislation permits us to put together an adequate program and if it i satisfies requirements for federal funds" Mr Hood said This is the study Mr Hood has started3 The next step is an election to authorize creation of an urban renewal agency to handle such a project Members of the agency would be appointed by the glinff He jumped in and held "Strange as it might sound Tuesday at the same location Mr Untersinger's face out of engines of the Weber Fire De The defendant Felix Ochoa Jr of 4977 2675 had been Lt William son wouldn't know the old place And probably neither do the million-dollar Indians beginning at 7:30 pm there will be a square dance with Southern Pacific owned a checkerboard system of land: every other square mile along the right of way the mud until Moss Ambulance partment can reach Liberty and District already have the option men and the patrolman arrived charged with drunken driving Drew Whitney as caller Eden areas nearly as quickly as al choice of seven periods Robert I Williams 43 5896 5050 was in satisfactory FABULOUS EXHIBITS condition at St Benedict's Sat urday night with lacerations and chest injuries He was reportedly driving i I i I- Mimt See It to west on U79 at 9:55 am when he lost control of his vehicle on the first curve where the new highway is being construct ed and crashed through a guard 4 4- i 1 i ma) i 4- if rail kl Qmi Miimeral --Exposition Arthur Jorgensen 68 330 City Council "Thirdly we have to make a detailed survey of the city to pinpoint deteriorated areas that can be -improved by urban re- 1 By ED HUNT 9th was knocked out in a third accident at Wall and 29th and was treated for a bump on the head at Dee Hospital and released at 3:26 pm newal" Mr Hood said i CHURCH COUNCIL DISAPPROVES EXCLUSION PORTION OF BILL 44 "The 1965 Utah Legislature should be commended for its legislation on Civil Rights" said Rev! Charles Mccarty president of Utah Council of Churches Saturday "The Utah Council however feels it must disassociate itself from the church exclusion portion of the Public Accommodations Act commonly known as Senate Bill 44 "This exclusion' portion of the Act in effect leaves tot the individual churches decision as to whether they deny II Spike Gem and Mineral Society which spon- sors the show set up then stone cutting saws 'all kinds of polishers from tires to small cans -and demonstrated how dull rock becomes beautiful gem stones There are also displays of stone spheres of every color and combination of colors In- dian artifacts including unusually graceful: arrowheads chipped from the hardest rocks Slabs of vari-colored stone are seen set on table tops encased in plastic for unique coffee tables Jewelry made with semi-precious stones as centerpieces are displayed in specially constructed cases to show their gleaming beauty HUNDREDS AT SHOW Hundreds of persons interested in collecting "rocks and fossiles jiolishing stones to gemlike smoothness and creating beauty from rough jagged rocks visited the exhibits at the annual show And other hundreds who do not have rockhounding as a hobby but like to see what others do with their spare time jammed and packed the huge auditorium Saturday Ivan Rudd president of the Golden Spike Gem and Mineral Society said that the 15th annual show promises to be among the best shows yet sponsored There's always something I new at the Golden Spike Gem and Mineral Show and the 15th annual show concluding tonight at the Browning Armory is no exception A fabulous merry-go-around I made of exquisitely carved and polished obsidian horses with white manes is a showpiece of the 1965 two-day show that opened Saturday morning i Mr and Mrs Kenneth Shurtz 1832 Child started the ambitious project in October 1963 and completed it in time for this year's gem and mineral show I RUN BY MOTOR! The carousel is run by a large motor A tape recorder adds music as the highly polished animals rise and fall on their metal stands Other exhibits gathering crowds included a huge log of petrified wood that required days of labor to pull loose and bring back to civilization The center of one large piece is of loosely packed white crystals the wood is blue and the bark green There are trilabite fossils some 200 million years old beautifully polished stones of every color and value and silvercraft of all descriptions Many of ths 100 members of the Golden access to worship or membership in its fellowship to persons because of race color or national original in the state of Utah" In recent executive board action the Utah Council went on record by officially stating "The Utah Council of Churches Executive Committee does not desire request or expect to make use of the exclusion of churches provisions of the Public Accommodations Act "We in the Utah Council do not feel that taking advantage of the exclusion privilege is in keeping with the standards of Christian conduct Churches should lead rather than be exempted from practicing Christian brotherhood" Rev McCarty stated UNBELIEVABLE A merry-go-round in polished stone fascinates Courtney Kyle 5 of Ogden at the gem and mineral show- The 24 small ebony horses with flowing white manes riding proudly in a small circle to circus music attract iho ycimtcr's full attention i -A.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977