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Weather Considerable ; ClbUdiriess-— ^ (?g4|N0^362 Four Americ Charged Wii Spy ing in Ri II^COW, April 10 —The soviet gi .ccused fopr members of the U. S. enibas! .ctivitiea smacWnsr of espionage but h ihem from the Soviet Union. Instead the haired the quartet from traveling in the Tuide Moacow for 90 days. There was why they were notexpellpd, the usual pen »itihas 3 V said the seniw British air attac Air Commddor^A. N. Dav- is was involved in one of 1 he incidents with the l> lU ei I Americans. But the British ^ refused to confl^ or F aS S S g rf.nr this or to say whether he O been restricted to-Mos* .‘R irt-l-.ta 'w e V. e. embassy said the Soviets rigged Incidents to make -WASHINOTO th. Americans look like spies. President John An embassy spokesman, con- day night pass nnnlng t>'« -han today, af- righfw hill ntnnl U t news ot It leaked out, said tlon “on the sldi nfl Charge d’Affalres -Walter the btg peak st; I S toessel had lodged protests with Johnson said the Soviets and denied tho Amer- peak would reqi Icuu were*engaged Iti any mia- atlon, the good conduct or spying. courage, the d( The spokesman said the Sovi- good sense end Its rejected Stoessel's request to every single An lift the travel ban, which doea Addressing s< bnoi forbid the men leaving the business leadei country. room of tho Wt. The Americana weratwo naval son said enactr ittachea, Otndr. S tua^ Savage, rights measure Alma. Kans.. and Ueut. Leonard bated In the s Bmcken. Philadelphia, ond two automatlpally el »lr attaches. Ueut. Col. Edgar problems. Smith and Capt. Edmund Sve- Tho Ppslden Una. both Dayton, O. success In this Hie embassy spokesman said upon "men like the Soviets accused Savage and John.son re Bracken of making Illegal photo- year he sat In jraphs and Smith and Svetlna ol ond heard Pr< ptnetratlng military . territory. Kennedy and ' The spokesman said tho occu- Gen. Robert P. : Btloni arose from separate Incl- to community 1 dents In which the Americans South to get I w»re surrounded by ongry crowds rights movemeni In Leningrad and Tula, aouth pf Tho Presldeni Itocow, In February and March, most two-thirds DS. diplomats bellevo Soviet desegregation a aiiUuiltkaJnaiaicl*d UwlcIMmm SoiHh dates fror bcfonhand to pick out the the Kennedys Americans and create a disturb- round of Whlt< tw AMICTt^NS, Pago 2. CoL « erices^ District R otary! Opens Here Sm Eight hundred Rptarians and Rotary pecfed to attend the 48th annual Distric International convention here Sunday, Tuesday, with headquarters at Twin Fall forty-eight clubs from throughout the d extends south to St. George, Utah; eas •Hole, Wyo.; west to CaldweU, and north t be repi'eseiited, with^^Arthur Rojserts,^M( governor, ser jjgiuiiig--— sv sr g Breaks Oiit 1 ~ In Viel Nam SAIOON, South Viet Nam, tournamenL April 10 wU-Communlst gucrrtl- Ther® will be i lell back Bouth of Sftlgon to- the golf tourn dW after* a heavy engagement until 6 p. that took a severe toll of casual- echool. lle» -on both sides. Including thc A fellowship of a U, 8. pilot. ^^rom 6 p.m. to The baUle Thursday was the ' •wnd major clash In as mnny buffet sup] tn Bn area considered by ,,, k** '”' Vletname«, government to *">*>« provided be one of the moat crucial In long war against tho Vlet . convontlo Conj. to order offlclaU p^rzTTor^byTo^- I; n & t?>e recovery of the I ^ of th. pilot, tho 123rd X i, *2frtcan killed In action alnce *. An address ^ ^pU otw M Identified by tho .^ ! o n In Washington aa Air Capt Rot>ert N Rotary Co wife, Lee, lives In Bethea- 'J ^ Md. HU father, Horold N. lives nt Moses Lake. Coui “ n., and his mother, Mrs. The aftemoor mTj*.* S'^met. In New Plym- ers will, bo Ray ________________ Seo ROTARY, V Six Major Chi rr«, IntemaUoiuI sultatlon were h natlonj »in "’“J®'' denoml- lege of Preache N J Princeton, ton. D. C.. In^l9< '|deitVo? „,'‘fK resume con- Iln College, Obei V churrJ ■"‘re prog Thli monly realized, dra, the third fuU- year, the delej tkr ^he coiuulto.- skeptical observe Church union. prised themselve lUhS “ '“ '■"■ltlon was estab- consensus explor?^ “ y of “’e Blbl uniting 2» million Portonce of tra *«»'il . " ‘^'’“rch Which Next week's m the CatM- ton Theological evangelical begin Monday a Of ChrlsUanltV. Thursday. Some •be S . '1^ “ BToposal o f *»ylng m at « the Dnlt- ■"‘»«^er the mi church. ' ^ eventually.bear talks are the ff*™ " ^=>JWch. a rf I*®* the delevat ft tfea. ‘he Methodist 1 Church of ««=™ment., Onltea ' ------- J I L Z ........... . 1 The Magic ^ _________________ ericans .. K With :■ I Russia IB le soviet government has J. S. enibaasy of improper lage but hasn’t expelled Instead the Soviet Union Bling in the Soviet Union There was no indication le usual penalty. The U. S ' ah air attache in Moscow, ]liief U rges ^assageof ^ghts Bill WASmNOTDN, AprU 10 W — -esldent Johnson aald Thurs- ly night passage of the clvU hill wniiM IJOVO t.h« Tia- m “on the side of the hill, with 0 btg peak stUl above us." JoHmon said scaling of the ok would require "tho cooper- lon, the good wUl. the moral urage. the determination, the od sense and the patriotism ot ery single American." Addressing s e v e ra l hundred islness leaders in the East om of tho White House, John- n sold enactment of the olvU [hts measure nBw being de- ted in the senate would not tomatlpally eliminate r a c ia l oblems. The Ppsldent said ultimate ccess In this area would rest lon "men like John.son recalled that last ar he sot In the some room d heard President John F. snnedy and "the great Atty. st ANDIN< sn. Robert P. Kennedy" appeal gtrUco 1s community leaders from the Both uth to get behind tho civil of Lat ;hta movement. rhe President said t h a t a l - e«KSuasS2fi!l£aa: wt two-thirds of tho voluntary ^ segregation achieved In the | jS Uth dates frorh Ia«t May when C ~ s Kennedys b e g a n such a E HOLLIS^ and of Whlto House confer- S Plow Into 1 ces. ___ J! has. been -- ---------—— --------- ------------- g OfflclaU c 1 - lft AT I B River Can< tary Meet "1 n day's readl 5 Sunday I A night are nd Rotary Anna are ex- m keeping ti riual District 542 Rotary i Thursdays e Sunday, Monday and t Twin Falls high school. ;] night prob rhout the district, which i* the flow b Utah; east to Jackson '•] ficiais addt and north to McCall, will lijTTK-jjc’-tr Rofrerts, McCall, district " veroor, serving as host. II le convention -will start * * 8 a^m. Sunday a I If tournament at Blue -I- J kes Country club. The winner , , ll receive a trophy and an ex- I rts6-p«ld trip to St. Andrews, otland. in August to play In WAStHNOa > Rotary International Oolf „any farmer irnoment, coast to the rhero will be regU tra^n after ^^^^d a dec s golf toumomeiit from 10 -heUier to d 1. untU 6 p.m. at tho high „eres V fellowship hour wDl follow ‘’'xhis'^l^oTve im 0 p.m to 7 p m at Blue go kes Country club, with a no- ^read grafn N Bt buffet supper from 7 p.m. approachina S p.m. Music for the supper ^ llt^^ provided by .the Sun Val- Ske^lsc, qulU rho convention will be called ^a’^S'mUai p la n te d ‘•*’1^ ' y by Gordon Gray, conference Jgram chairman. Hlghllghu These decis Monday’s sessions ore wel- growers by ne speeches to be given by T h u r^ y m c ty. Oen. Allan O. Shepard, slon“J acUon ( on Kroll, chairman of Twin ‘•‘°"» ~ ll» boanJ of commfsslDnem, eoUon WU.-T d EarJ E. Haroldsen, Twin 0PPJ»«'1 Ils club president. ^bllcans. It tn address wtll be *l-ven by "on* D. Monroe, past director of ^ president Jc ;tai7 international entUled house'action Rotary Could Speak." A .„noml8 proi icheon and style show for the ng-ted to sign tary Anns wUl be held at the io Lakes Country club. growers whfc rhe aftemoon session speak- would give the 1 will, bo Ray Jenkins. Rotary jars more for » ROTAR-y, Page 2, Colnmn 7 otherwi.’ie woul Churches to tation were held at the Col- Are bUhop e of Preachers In Washing- whom may a . D.C.. In^l962 ^nd at Ober- dalned? Musi College, Oberlln, O., In 1863. ders be traced 'ar more progress was ac^klev- cession bnck ti at these ses.ilons than Is cam- In order to t nly realized. At Oberlln last any-biblical n ir, the delegates astounded baptl-'im? In ptical observers and even sur- Christ <jeally sed themselves by reaching a bread and U ad consensus on the author- communloh? of the Bible and tbe lm- o n these anc ■tance of tradition. doctrinal qui Fext week's meeting at Prince- nominations / Theological seminary wlU merger talks in Monday and run through historical dlffi arsday. Some church-leaders no one expe saying that It will be the ferences to be n olal test which det«(nnlnes toii. But nex ether the merBer plaa will slons may sh< n tually. bear fruit. is enough cot ta mmw^a*-ia*SKTiemfR!iBi» perhips m o^ ns from the fact that thU wlU to '«“‘y- 0 the delegates win be talk- tlnued effort about the ministry and the actual plan of ramentx. At tlie most here Is unlversU agreement, it will ta)ce flvi t the blnest baiTlen to unity ot' patient ne ba encountered la theM rtro sommate t^ n r n—VJ..-rr--——===.r-r ||YWFg-7M ll -f ... ' . S rhe Magic Vallejr Newspaper jDedicat . . t W IN ~ Kwtessf-'- STANDINO BY after making lib telovbed rail strilco 1s President Johnson, as Wayne J« ■peaks. Both tbe railroads and fire sffeoted retary of Labor W^ Willard Wlrta Is behind tl """“ s> w I D m HOLLISTEat, AprU 10— 0 __ Plow into Salmon reservoir S ' 1 ' L 1 haa. been slow this week. Li ^ I OfflclaU of the Salmon g * River Canal company said fi One of th JPrlday. The gauge reading H Falls Starcl has been climbing only H the Twin V •about .15 foot per day. To- B baa been tr day's reading was 24.30 or fi wore corpoi I 37,805 acre feet. g to legal pai Cold temperatures each f. The formi night are credited with Mrs. George keeping the flow down, -j Coiner. Geo Thursday's warmer weath- ment on th er jjnd the rainfall In the i The starcl Twin Foils area Thursday r. Industrial sl night probably will affect U Huge quantl the flow by Saturday, of- ri »« tho raw i flclals added. « There waj H Interested h ^ a E S ^ gTCT»PCT1B«rTrma tion-has-bet U another flra r recent i • k7« i d l lllC ;! » perfume coi FacePlow in~s i F S D ecision A n # WASHINOTON, AprU 10 (m — X X lH lany Jarmers from the East oost to the Pacific Northwest B aced a decision today on K hether to plow under several union acres of land' they txth lanted to winter wheat laat fall. . MUUr^ J This involved perhaps 40 mil- im priaonn: on to 60 million bushels of the ^he secret read grafn. Much of this wheat np_nnn~i I approaching the heading stage 1 thc South ond Southwest, ine Charg Ikewlsc, quite o number of cot- on A nders >n formers wero confronted J_, W ir 1th a similar decision on land lanted this spring. COnstllUtK •Theso decisions wero forced Ci-'3»2!Eac« n growers by house action early S; / hursday In completing congres- H - J onal action on the odmlnlstra- on's controversial wheat and f HAtLET >Uon bill.-Th* legislation was- f and -.one pposed almost solidly by Re- t snow fell jbllcans. It passed 211-203. I Thursday arm organizations wero sharp- [ toree fee divided on It. | Thursday President Johnson termed the t warmest ouse action "good Judgment and | 24 de^ee »noml8 progress." He Is ex- [5 'ena lodg ected to sign the bill shortly. grees th« It offers payments to wheat 0 l^K- rowers which, sponsors say. i; About < ould give them 450 million dol- ii Inch of r ,rs more for their crops than *;„1Jiuj?day Jiera-l."jo would be pos.sfble»_ to Discuss J Are bUhops neces.sary7 By denomlnatlo hom may a clergyman be or- to work tog alned? Must nvlulsterial or- basis? ers be traced In unbroken sue- The Unit* ?sslon back to the first abosUes wUl raise tha I order to l>e valid? Is there ton by pr ny -biblical warrant for Infant steps" to po iptt'sm? In what sensa Is overseas and hrlst ((really present" In the slon fields a read a!hd the wlno of holy The Unlt< jmmunloto? also calls 1( On these and dozens of related “ ’e six jctrinal questions, tho de- *^e lelatioi uminatlons . lnvolved;~ In the education i lerger talks have deep-seated radio and Istorlcal differences. rt. No one expects all of the dlf- rences to be resolved at Prince- ii. But next week's discus- " ons may show-whether there' enough common ground—or. ^ ^ " « Thaps monrteiportant, enoi^b ^ lU to xn^ty-to ju s ^ a con- nu«d effort to work out an :tual plan of union. - At the most optimistic effort, Christ." he will ta^e five to ID more years forming > patient negotiation to con- brought to Bpmate the meny. ■ JBut. Is church MfUn —— . . , » *1 •> ! * * J J er iDedicated to ServinK and Promo ' tWIN FALLS, IDAHO, FRIDAY H : ----- : Jf.' ■ B U t’:'’ Ills teloTbed annonncement of postponemi as Wayne Johns ton, left, president of the III ire affected nnl ona agreed to negotiate for Is behind the President at rights (AP wirei Drug Campau T. F. Starch I One of tile nation’s largest corporations 1 Falls Starch factory for a prlco in excess tho Twin Falla c<^nty clerk's oftlce show i has been transferred to Chas. Pfizer and < wore corporation.. The prlco 1s indicated i to legal papers transferring ownership. The former owners are Mr. and Mrs. Pt Mrs. George Detweiler, Mrs. Theresa M. I Coiner. George Detweiler, operator of the i ment on the sale. The starch plant was established on the Industrlol site south of the city, on the edge Huge quantities of starch are processed at tl U tho row material. There was no indication of why the Pfize Interested in tho pototo starch plant here. tlon-has-been expandlntr“EH’dTecehOy anno another firm. A recent acquisition announced by the Pl perfume company. —qpi>e Pfizer corporation is listed as manufn the leading companies In the dr<<|^ln^stj Anderson Sut Force for $25 MOUNTAIN HOME, April 10 (/P) imprisonment and invasion of priva the secretary of the air force and n personnel today by former Airman G The charges were contained in a $2£ on Anderson’s behalf in Idaho’s thir A. L. Wirin, a Los Angeles attorney constitutional law, and Gooding a Bscker. ' air fore p ' Snow It Mountai HATLBy. April 10—One i f and -.oneJiaU- inches of k Si w ™ S I snow fell at Oalena lodge » « I Thur«lay nrght, making ft I three feet on the ground. U I Thursday night was thr h j warmest thto spring, wllh g * * I 24 degrees reported at Oa- ff ' ra lena lodge. Itw as 40 de- 0 t grees there Friday mom- n The sul Ing. : the course About one-quarter of an i': il Inch of rain fell at HaUey ; Lo^ursday night. :! - ... ........................ said, -were mate natt 5s M e r g e r denominations can’t begin now to work together on a practical extended, basLn? »nd haras The United Church of Christ Usted j wUl raise that question at Prince- tween Api ton by proposing "immediate 17 , IB62. c steps" to pool misslonery efforU Anderson overseas and in such home mis- rlods of u: alon fields as the inner city. , Anderso The United church proposal damages also calls 'for uniting activities damages 1 of the six denominations in scribed ai race relations, recruitment and imprlsonni education of ministers, and yoslon of 1 radio and television program- j, mlng. —r h e co Tho Rev. Dr. Ben M. Herhtter. - q ,, president of the Dnlted Church, , « laid he u confident of "ultl- “J nate success” In the merger “ ir® aaks,.but “It wlU not be achlev- * , •d ^ ay or- tomorrow.” , "WhUe wa tallc and plan f o r^ ^ ^ ’ormal organlaattonal union, we ‘*” “ 7 Ihould not wait years to begin *“5^^'“ ,? ictlng toeether u the church of Jf Uhrist," he . said. •TTie trans- United Sta 'ormlng power' that can be arbitrary a nought to bear only by the Defendw ihurcb MfOng a m itY t. nx-H- goroe Beer 1 Promoting: the Growth of Nine 1 FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1 9 6 4 ^ S B Jl WA! openec invitee confer with Se lard WBHmBHD "'e direct a V G G H iiH K fi In the hoi solution Aft<Tr before In (or the ceed th< said thf son^ em lectlve to collecth UI systetn Reedj for tho I The I the Wl B:30 In tostponement of tbo Impending aftemo< t of the IlllnoU Central railroad. to nego otiate for another 15 daya. Sec- None (AP wlrephoto) would -------------------------------------------------- aaked i stateme pany3uys h Plant « )oratlona haa purchased tho Twin In 15 di in excess of $750,000. Records at :ice show ownership of the plant T J Wzer and company, Inc., a Dela- JL Q 8 indicated by tax stamps affixed ershlp. Id Mrs. Paul Detweiler, Mr. and \_F1J reso M. Detweiler and M arietta _ >r of the plant, declined to com- 1 3 1 ) !d on the Chamber of Commerce ____ n the edge of Rock creek canyon. J essed at the plant, using potatoes '“ ®ch. compan r tho Pfizer corporation would be lant here. However, the corpora- 5hOy announced tho purchase of I by the Pfizer firm was tho Coty 8rie^*°*' u-^pwdiicfa. The flrm 1s ona of ^ ____________ long Sue^Air $250,00,0 il 10 i/P)—Charges of false ^a'ting of privacy were leveled at tion ir ce and nine other air force tion an lirman Gerald M. Anderson. "We in a $250,000 lawsuit filed p „ ? i ‘ia^ ho’s third district court by neorly attorney who specializes in »ets. ne )oding attorney Philip M. Becker. It is based on an air force investigation at proof u Mountain Home that led to neviiie Anderson’s being held for nine months in the knife slaying ° ot Mrs. Nancy Joy Johnson, wife ^hi^i, oF another airman, and her son. Anderson, now In a mental tremMc hospital in Provo, was released tg „gw a year ago, two months after J another man confessed to the -n mnrders. iSra. Tho suit charges that during a ^ the course of Its Investigation the A H L air force secretly made record- „r,tc Ings of conversations between Anderson, his wife and others. ~ “ J'" Tho conversations, the suit said, were of a ''prlvMe and-inti- mote nature" and were recorded "5urreptltlou.sly, and without the knowledge Of the plaintiff.” —The^ <ult-al»o-ehafges- the -de- ^ty—of fendants subjected Anderson to hours i "extended, excessive, oppressive gresslon and harassing Interrogation."' de Lon Usted are alx occasions be- commur tween Aprll II, 1862, and Aprll from B 17, 1962. on which the suit u ld ment ai Anderson was questioned for i>e- rlods of up to II hours. A -I*. Anderson asks $100,000 general F damages and $150,000 punitive damages for.,what the.suit de- scribed as "false and unlawful l O lU Imprisonment and oppressive in- vasion of his privacy and abrldg- BURL ment of his liberties," crease 1 "The conduct of the defend- Burley ant-s." the complaint .said, "was I>ooi In utter and complete disregard contlner of tho rights of the plaintiff as her of_C a citizen as a member of the charged United States air force; it the govi htirldg^ his right to privacy and aerviee i liberty in Tiolatlon of the Con- Some stltutlon of the State of Idaho, persons and of tlie constitution of the service^ United SWtes: It .was opp^esslTe. meeting arbitrary and mallcloas.” «mor'« Defendants named were \Alr chamber nvoe Secretary SageiM Zuckert; Olen U ■M '-Al*nKlt«OM,:J« r»~VCntn* atttSPgi ^Jine Iirigated Idaho bounties Johnson 15-Day ’ 'X ^ 1 WASHINGTON, April 10 Pt road work rules dispute is a crucial i major labor disputes in America. Ji wide rail strike less than two hour Dpened new negotiations betiveen th personal talks. First, he -------------- invited them to meet at the rTI "1 White House. Then, after a I J conference in his of fic c with Secretory of Labor W. WU- TTVI lord Wlrtz and four other fed- 1—^ I f irol mediators, Johnson mode o J. JLC lirect appeal to tho negotlocors >n tho rose garden. ' John He told them that ho wonted M ont ( 'an honoroble solution — not a , . lOlutlon Imposed by decree."_____ o^*ore a After the rose garden session. Falls cil Johnson mode another brief talk long she Mfore tho negotiators got to a water work laying down ground rules !or the talks expected to pro- :eed the next two weeks. City. II Presa Stcretory Georgo Re^il lold that In this meeting Jolin- »» ion' emphoslzed ogoln" that the Iwi Jif* llsptite was o teat of free col- ectlvo bargaining ond that the legotlotors hod "o responsibility p 01*1 :o continue to try to moke thc collective borgolnltig system r r i 1 vork unless they know a better I o 1^ lystepi they want to try." caaa. Reedy snld there were no plorui -WASHI tor Johnson to propose solutions xwo form lo tho problem. laa jjaci The lobor representotlves left sides Thu the White House at 1:05 p.m. whipped and sold they would be bock at quoting V 9:30 In the morning, leoving the 1054 that afternoon free for the mediators his Korei to negotloto with monogement. Chinese c None of the union officials q would tolk. Ono sold Johnson MocArthu aaked them not to moke ony associate statements untU tho negotiations fantosy"' are concluded. uted (<, In hU rose garden talk, John- British son expressed confidence that sold the i the outcome of tho emergency by Script bargaining sessions would.bo In entrJIm < tho Interest of all Americans. nonsense.' Ho urged an agreement with- »».. r In 15 days "If not sooner." loghby \ M ah o P o w er & |s O fficial R aps J. deal new B P A C ontract ofh3 ten by B< BOISE, Aprll 10 (iW — T. E. Headline Roach, president of Idaho Power Wednesda company, described thq Bonne- See MacA vllle Power odmlnlstratlon an ----------------- nouncement os o "carefully stag- ___ ed—propaganda move” m the 1^ effort to gain a federol oppro- II prlatlon for tho transmission line. ^ . ^THiis-daaV Jtoaah »ald,"wonl<V give BPA ft clAlm-^to_aa Indus- 1 -Jrtn trial customer In southern Idaho long served by a taxpaying util- WAS! Ity at mutually agreeable rfites n„„_ p, opproved by the Idoho Public 'L * '‘ Utility commission." Far Eas He os-serted that whOe Bonne- South \ vUle would get about two mil- be a stc llon dollars a year from Mon- p,., sanlo for the power provided, It 1 J ^ Would "poy out over four mil- Uled a t llon dollors In Interest ond gen- earthqU BTOtlng cost alone, not to m en- -------------- tlon maintenance, admlnlstra- _ tlon and other expenses. "We doubt," Roach added. J "*• ^ "thot Mon.sonto. a flnanclolly •*-»-«-» i profitable Industrial giant with |-{ I-' A nearly I S million dollars In as- sets, needs or Is entitled to any ... Juch government subsidy at the I ^ V| expense of the taxpayers . . . ••■3 " "The Monsanto contract Is g . T] proof that the purpose of Bon- neville Power administration's tran.smlsslon lino Into southern Idaho Ls to Uke customers away gotlon t from the taxpaying __ utilities nqunceme which have for yeara supplied Bonnevilli tho power which haa sparked the to delive tremendous phosphate growth up compi^y to now." But jlj Tk ^7”r r Jordan si Brazil Launches Anti-Red Drive JJ’sTem'tS BRASILIA. Brazil. April 10 UP be wrong. — B r a z 11 i'h n armed forces "Bringli launched a drive Thursday ap- Columbia BorenOy aimed oxjweepjng ex- treme leftt-its from positions of IW' Influepce they enjoyed under mission a Jono Goulnrt's admlnUtratlon, outloys ol Troops searched tho Dnlver- rity—of—Bncrttta—within—a—few »on-Unes tiours after mllltftTy and con- He said fresslonol leadera agreed In Rio better tot ie Lanelro on a law to purge . jommunLsts and fellow travelers rrom Brazil's congress, govern- main stei nent and armed forces. river. A ir S ervice P roble S tudied at B urley BURLEY, AprU 10—The de- ducted tt Tease in dally passengers on this mom Jurley air flights Is caused by It was p he jxxn; connections with trans- trouble in ontlnental lines, Burley Cham- flights is I *r of _ Commerce representa^ves port canni harged today at^ a meeting ot has to rel; he governor's committee on air of tho Bi ervice at the ponderosa mn'. euased an Some two dozen Magle Valley this is a leraons Interested in better air cause the ervlco'for their communities aro the north oeetlng^erfe today with the gov- on the sou mor'a committee. The Burley the rallroi hamber la. hosting the meeting. _BurIey i Hen Lungren. Boise, chairman out that u t<i>:ii^wnoiS^iMniiTittte«,-aop-tg«e-AIB-g S r a f . ' *' gSI ■IM ies -------------------------------------- ft )n W iqp 7 Delay adhStrik (ff ")—President Johnson warned t( crucial test of whether collective b lerica. Johnson, who won a 15-day wo hours before the strike deadlii rtveen the railroads mid the five op< T.F. Is Told> Plan Not Fea John Morrison, Morrison-Mairle Mont.. .outlined the existing domes before an informal meeting 'Thursda Falls city commission and it becar long shot wasn’t going to pay off. a water engineering firm which haf study of securing additional dome city. The long shot was a proposi domesti M acA rthur’s S e°' F orm er A ides the. city c nn 1 O* I rlson. th( la k e hides j^Kthat ble dike ■WASHINOTON. April 10 (fl — from the Two former aides of Gen. Doug- yon. los MacArthur took opposing "It’s tl sides Thursdoy In a controversy rlson toU whipped up by on interview There quoting MacArthur os saying in evidence 1954 that the British betrayed and tho his Korean wor ploiui to the moro evl Ohhiese communists. were sun MoJ. Gen. Courtney -Whitney, hit wote MacArthur's close friend and the cost associate, denounced os "pure or driUli fantasy" tho statements ottiTb- tunnel a uted to MacArthur about the canyon ^ British government. Whitney orbltant. said tho report of the Interview if the by Scrlpps-Howard correspond- quarter c entr Jim O, Lucas was ''flotlonal lection-1 nonsense.'* - ' construct fifaj. Oen. Charleh A. WU- rim. The loghby, who wa* MacArthur’s the nort chief of, intelligence. sald.,^e was enttec} e .''In.^ubntantlflU^Dcr^ent wltl* the wate thir aocuracy oi Jlor'liUcas' in- and Twt tervlew . . . " a largo i Despite the sharp reaction, mestlc there actually was not a great rates, deal new In the general content But' It of either tlie Lusac story or an- Manager other 10-year-oId Interview writ- "Wo cot ten by Bob Consldlne of Hearst ’Twin Fa: Headline Service and published ent size. Wednesday. , "The i See MacARTBUB, Page Z, CoL 6 See WA' IRusk LeavMI E ast Conferie] WASHINGTON, April 10 (UPI)- Dean Rusk left today for a round o] Far East and an on-the-spot inspei South Viet Nam. Also included in be a stopover on Formosa for a m' alist President Chiang Kai-shek. Er uled a two-hour stop at Anchorage earthquake damage. Rusk said Thu m e e t i Jo rd an Says j ecutive B PA P ow er Is W rong. By Tbo Associated Press gins M( The three Democratic members through of the Idaho congressional dele- Inally ht gatlon today opplouded an- the Unit nouncement of a controct for tef stopi Bonneville power odmlnlslrallon Tlusk to deliver power to Monsanto his trip compiyiy In eastern Idaho. Indicated But Hepubllcan Sen. Len B. Jordan sold that even with the contract, BPA construction of a hoped t< transmission line to carry BPA "'hai power from the Columbia river system to southern Idaho would “is neu be wrong. Tre^W "Bringing of kilowatts from the ^u^y Columbia river would result In ^ heavy line loss^i in such trans- mlnislen mission as well as require huge nations— outlays of dollars for transmls- jJ^ilarTl He said tho .money would be clpally t better si>ent to build a large dam South at the Bums creek site on the The S main stem of the upper Snake _______________ - ■ - France's —. . Pakistan •oblem s A re RE rley Confab , ducted the Informa] discussion left by this morning. , It was pointed out much of the trouble in cotmecUons with other vf. flights is because the Burlw air- port cannot handle the F 27 and m has to rely on DC-3s. Ejtpanskm I V fl of tho Burley airport was dls- cussed and It wa* potated out this is a difficult problem be- laxj cause the airport Is bounded on ' the north by the Snake rlTor and 1963 9n the soutt by highway So and the railroad. i _Burley representaUvea pointed ] 9 ^ - ~ IV 63 * Final * . • E^dition . TEN CENTS ^ m ike arned today that the rail- lective bargaining can solve L 15-day delay in a nation- 5 deadline Thursday night, five oporatrng unions with Id W ater Feasible i-Mairle associates, Helena, g domestic water situation Thursday night of the Twin it became apparent that a pay off. Morrison-Mairle is 'hich has been conducting a al domestic water for the I proposal to find adequate domestic water in a well field on the north side of Snake river canyon. Al- though there is ample wa- ter below the surface to supply the city of Twin Falls, said Mor- rison, the long shot was in hop- ing thot it was within on Invisi- ble dike less than a holf mile from the north edge ot the can- yon. "It’s there, but where?” Mor^* rlson told tho commission. There is a lot of geographlo evidence to support tho belief and the city literally dug up moro evidence. Three test wells were sunk on the north side and hit water, but It appears that the cost In drilling a well field or drilling a water collection tunnel at right angles to the canyon wall would be too ex- orbitant. If the water table had been a quarter of a mllo closer, the col- lection - tutmel could have- been constructed high on the canyon rim. The drop from the top of the north rim could have gen-, ewtec} enough power to pump the water bfccit up the south side and Twin Falls would have had a large supply of additional do- mestic water at Inexpensive ratea. But' It Just wasn't so. A* City Manager H. L. Derrick put It, "Wo could Justify the coet If Twin Foils waa double Its pres- ent size. "The city did find out one See WATER, Page 2, Column 8 reslof Far erences';i^=si ) (UPI)—Secretary of State round of conferences in the ot inspection of the war in uded in the 10-day trip will for a meeting with Nation- shek. En route. Rusk sched- ichorage to Inspect Alaska’s said Thursday night after a meeting with President Johnson that the chief ex- ecutive had asked him to go on to Viet Nam after at- tending the ministerial meeting of the elght:-nation Southeast Asia T r e a t y organization in Manila. Tho SEATO conference be- gins M onday and continues through Wednesday. Husk orig- inally hod plonned to return to the United States Thursdoy af- ter stopping briefly at Formosa, ^ilsk sola the extension of his trip to include Vlet Mora Indicated "no speclol emergency or crisis" there. At the SEATO meeting, Rusk hoped to get more information on whal French P re s id e n t ; Charles de Gaulle is up to with his "neutralization" p ro p o s a l for Southeast Asia, which ap- parently conflicts with Ameflcon policy. ■nio meetlng^^ tho foreign ministers of the eight SEATO I notions—the United SUtes, Brit- ain. France, New Zealand, Aus- tralia, the Philippines. Thailand - ~»na»~Pg1[Jstaii—lTTleslgrn!a~pnn^ I clpally to consider the question 1 of Southeast Aslan security. The SEATO pact was formed In 1954 as an antl-Communlst ' front but has been weakened by France's aloof attitude aild Pakistan's growing ties with Red China. RED BEADS BOME BUDAPEST, Hungary, Aprfl Ip (XS —Soviet Premier Khrushchev left by train for Moscow today after a iO-day visit during which ^ he repeatedly blasted the Chln- ese communists. ______ Traffic Deaths IdoHe ■ 1964_..-L_ _____ 51 1963___________™ 43 Mofllc Valtoy 1964._^ ___________ 9

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Page 1: Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3waeagles220.weebly.com/uploads/8/4/3/7/8437155/... · Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3 1 Directions: These vocabulary words and examples will

Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3

1

Directions: These vocabulary words and examples will be used in the fill- in –the blank quiz for Chapter

3.1-3.2. Review the terms and if you can’t explain them, go back to the power point slides that specifically

mentions them to review.

Directions: These vocabulary words and examples will be used in the fill- in –the blank quiz for Chapter

3.1-3.2. Review the terms and if you can’t explain them, go back to the power point slides that specifically

mentions them to review.

Active High Osmosis

Amino Acids Hydrogen Oxygen

Atom Inorganic Passive

Beans Lipids(2) Pasta

Bread Long Proteins

Carbohydrates (2) Low RNA

Carbon Meats Saliva

Compounds Membranes (2) Selectively Permeable

Cytoplasm Molecule Starches

Diffusion Nucleic Acids (2) Sugars

DNA Nuts Vegetables

Elements Organelles Water

Enzymes Organic

Active High Osmosis

Amino Acids Hydrogen Oxygen

Atom Inorganic Passive

Beans Lipids(2) Pasta

Bread Long Proteins

Carbohydrates (2) Low RNA

Carbon Meats Saliva

Compounds Membranes (2) Selectively Permeable

Cytoplasm Molecule Starches

Diffusion Nucleic Acids (2) Sugars

DNA Nuts Vegetables

Elements Organelles Water

Enzymes Organic

Page 2: Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3waeagles220.weebly.com/uploads/8/4/3/7/8437155/... · Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3 1 Directions: These vocabulary words and examples will

Practice Quiz Vocabulary: Chapter 3

2