Color Country Spectrum (Newspaper) - June 2, 1976, Saint George, Utah 252- S. J r. ST. three to go T V I It Reagan wins 2, Ford 1, Carter 1 I Press International Jimmy Carter suffered in defeats in the Rhode Island and Montana primaries but salvaged South Dakota in hts drive forthe Democratic nomination President Ford lost tw o of the three primaries but padded his lead Ronald Reagan in pledged delegates Carter's defeats were his sixth and seventh the last 12 primary and came once the hands of a of liberals seeking to cut short campaign for a first ballot Delegate summary 1'aited Jackson of RI SD MOD Pis Del Del Del Tot Tot 9 0 7 3U1 JUS 0 0 0 245 245 0 0 11 Cand Ford Kl sD Man New Del Del Tot 19 H 0 If No 0 JE 132 wUs 1 lu 1.130 Bruwn Slupp Walker No total lu 49 66 42 33 0 (I 0 U 3 I 1505 nomination the consen alive crusader from w on the Montana and South Dakota primaries but Ford increased his delegate lead with a landslide in Rhode Island The primaries set the stage for the grand finale June S when Ohio and New hold their About of the delegates to the two national com entions will be at stake next week of pledged delegates over the 900 mark as he continued his battle to come into New York's Madison Square Garden in with a lead that would make it impossible to him the nomination Ford gamed 1819 delegates on ing him an edge over Reagan with 1.130 needed for nomination At 12-S a m the primaries looked like this With 37 per cent of the precincts Reagan had or 60 per cent to Ford s 12.SOU or 3S per cent There were no Republican delegates at stake Church had 23.J41 or 61 per cent and was leading for 11 delegates while Carter had 10 4M or 24 per cent and lour delegates There were two uncommitted South 99 per cent of the Reagan or 51 per cent and 11 delegates while Ford had 36.329 or 44 per cent and nine delegates Carter had 24.573 or 41 percent and nine delegates while had 20.055 or per cent and delegates was one uncommitted delegate Island With ail of the ballots Ford picked 19 delegates with ati 'm 419 w er Reagan In a the slates receded 32 per w 19 JO win or for Carter and 2> per torn Iti Dakota Keagan beat Ford a of in two spin On Carter 24 v3 to pet i dall 99 per of counted j of 32 ILi to had While at who i no win the nonunion tm ihe ballot manager C B Morion Ford did than in Rhude and the will and 1 of ami whu a- ilw for 11 Hi nomination In- march through the earh w as a serifs of in use of the hist going The 51 former bounced ith a soad ti in beating SAW j s 1-b-s ai I It a I Uvn on i in w m an Vn uKle and m .i u liim and and an- be Catter rushed Canes but to a i in 1-Jand tn nation's Church who entered the e nf three M. isi Idaho and Montana added in ru of the ills to his appeal in Color Country Spectrum Volume 13, Number 73 Biggest history The printed voice of Utah's booming Police crack million robbery MONTREAL Police cracked the biggest armed robbery in North American and todav are on the track Hw S million cash taken in the danng hijack of a armored truck last March In a of 30 raids police three women and three men and 5100.000 of the Brinks Soot The Criminal Investigation Bureau said further are expected shortly This was Hie break we were looking The case is broken but by no means Inspector Jean-Claude Rondou of the CIB that as a result of Jackson named news editor R. Gail publisher and editor of the Color Country Spectrum has announced the appointment of Gaylen Jackson as news editor of the Jackson replaces LaVarr who has accepted other em- ployment Jackson joined the Spectrum a year ago as general manager and has been active in the newspaper field in various positions for over 15 He will be responsible for the editorial content of the Spectrum and will continue to place emphasize on local news occurring in southwestern Tuesday's raids and other classified tion now looking for specific persons said to are being Rondou while a number of firearms were seized in the the six persons arrested offered no The veteran policeman said there is no doubt the was part of the Brink's saw the way it was stacked and I am sure it was from the Brink's he said w as seized in a number of places Some of it was loose and some of it w as stacked and m elastic bands He would not say police feel they can recover all million still just hoping vte can get that other he said guess there was quite a bit that was but 1 have no idea how The break in the case came almost two months to the daj since five men using a heavy artillery weapon hijacked the Brink's car March 30 outside the Royal Bank of Canada headquarters Since the record armed police had conducted a massive investigation with up to 30 raids a at times trying to get a lead on the Inspector Rondou said the raids were based on information gathered in earlier raids He would not be had definite leads but we were waiting for the right time to start the he cannot say why today was the right time to start It would involve some of the information we would have to use in court June 2, 1976 Analyst says will's okay LOS handwriting thu of Howard Hughes because raim are rare m the desert An attorney for Noah named executor m the contt called for assembly of panel of experts from all the to weigh Us The Harold said Tuesday he had been assured telephone by Michael Kradz a handwriting worked for police and the that ihe is Kradz said a three-week investigation left him with no that Howard Hughes scrawled tho document secretly left on a desk in Mormon Church headquarters in Sail Lake City after hih according in Not only is the handwriting identical to two know n of Hughes showing the but a slight running of the ink ihe paper was moistened Records show that on March 19 lass Ihe date on the mil one hundredth of an inch of rain fell on where Hughes was living at the time Kradz Kradz was the third to bay the will appeared genuine Two others have declared it a w ell executed forgery If accepted by the the will would distribute 5 billion including a of more million to MeK m a Utah gasoline station operator w ho e a a quarter to a old man w ho he was Howard Hughes Rhoden he was still waiting for report to arrive mail before acting on his but that his conclusion would influence Dietrich to claim City to air zoning plan J oHan Bennion demonstrates her technique of spinning wool during the Works 76" on the SUSC campus over Memorial Day Arts Guild holds Open Arts Festival Hole In roof of office shows way In burglars apparently entered Denny's Burglary nets III ST GEORGE About in cash was taken from the manager's office at Denny's Restaurant early Tuesday cording to a police department Jerry police said burglars entered the building a skv and got into the attic of the A hole was cutin the ceiling of the manager's office and the money was This was all done during business People were working in the store when the burglary took Sandberg Richard manager of the said he suspected that some former em- ployes were responsible because they would have had to know the layout of the place very well to pull it off. Cooper said he would like to get the money but what mattered to him was that it wasn't done at gun point He said he was happy nobody was in danger or CEDAR CITY An Outdoor Festival of the Arts entitled Works was held on the Southern Utah State College Campus Memorial Day The Works 76, an open air festival of the related areas of and is sponsored by the Southern Utah State Fine Arts The festival was designed to make possible a creative exchange amid the beauty of southern Utah and to offer local and in- people a chance to display their arts and crafts The display booths were set up on the campus quad by participants Friday through Monday showing pottery print lithography and spinning of wool JoHan Bennion of Las Nevada demonstrated the art of spinning for those who visited the quad during the weekend She is an elementary school teacher in Las Vegas and buys the wool she spins for SLT dollars a pound and then dyes it for who runs a pottery operation she calls the Dome Pottery west of Cedar was another displaying Walter Knottingham a professor of art at the University of Wisconsin presented tures on fiber manipulation during the Works He has shown in major exhibitions throughout the world and is represented in numerous fabric art books Music activities included a bicentennial concert by the SUSC Symphony Band and the A The University of Utah also performed as did the Deseret String Band and the Cedar City String Quartet Dr. John an accomplished and presented a lecture entitled Opera as an Artistic An interesting Environmental Theatre performance was viewed bv a good crowd of interested people on The En- piece was Elephant and is an original work depicting a historical account of a circus freak Europe in the late 19th The Cedar City National Art Exhibit was open and remains open through the 5th of June dunng The The Exhibit is the 35th annual and shows some of the finest contemporary art and sculpture in the The Exhibit is in the Braithwaite Art Gallery on the campus The SUSC Drama Last of Mrs. also highlighted the works with performances on Friday and Saturday nights Steve director of the outdoor a tribute to the cultural tradition of Cedar City said that the festival did receive good response from the community and visitors as well as Local people and visitors to the campus were able to learn about various art see excellent drama and listen to some of the finest music making up our American ST. GEORGE Residents of St George will be able to express their views on a master zoning proposal for the west St. George in a public hearing at the city council meeting Thursday at 4 pm at the city offices The proposal includes zoning the recently annexed area north and west of the Black niB to the east Santa Clara Other council items to be considered at the meeting -A request to the city to have property east of fee city hall offered for sale of Nevada Power and the Los Angeles Department of Water Power will be present in order to meet the city council and discuss the agreement on the Warner Valley Power project removing truck traffic from Middleton and Diagonal street except delivery -A discussion by T. concerning assessments on school public hearing dates lor the 1975-77 a request trom Fred Hobson for an encroachment -A discussion of ihe status of the Golf Course and Sugar Loaf Dee Soil Conservation district Utah weather summary June in with hoi summer time temperatures popping up across the southern the state recorded a 95 temperature in the region It was 94 in Moab 91 at Bullfrog 9! in St George and 90 at Green River Elsewhere hign temperatures were in the into the 40s and Local forecast Cedar fair and continued warm through locally windy highs both low tonight 53 St fair and continued warm through locally afternoons highs both low 60