OCR Text |
Show 12A SUNDAY HERALD Sunday, December 31. iwi Utah County, Utah Steel ma Ice rs To E nd U p Coast Fire With 1962 Output At Hiahest Level In 5 Years Ohio CLEVELAND, in 1957, the industry's third best (UPI) but will end up with 1962 output at the highest level in five years, Steel magazine said today. The metalworklng weekly said that about 2.2 million tons will be poured this week. The magazine said steel sumption will, increase by 8.5 "per cent, or 6 million tons, requiring steelmakers to pour at least 105 million ingot 'tons this year. The industry poured an estimated 98 . million tons in 1961. A strong inventory buildup in the first half, followed by only moderate liquidation . in the second half, may result in an output of JilO million tons. This would be close to the 112,714,996 tons poured . 11.5 million tons. By June, they will top '20 million; tons more than three months' supply if perfectly ... balanced. Steel predicted that higher pric es are on the way. Barring a steel labor, settlement that doesn't in crease production costs, look for a selective price hike after the new contract is signed, it said. fn taking a look at, what, is in store for the new year. Steel said demand will be greater in all ma jor markets, - but the boosts will be biggest in three industries. . Autos Lead Way The publication said the automo tive demand will show a 3 mil lion ton increase, while construction and machinery, will be up 1 million tons each. Steel also expected improve ments,in railroads and the ' pil and gas industry. Galvanized sheet shipments are expected to break the 1961 record of 3.3 million tons, and there is an outside chance that ; cold rolled sheets shipments will surpass the 1955 record of 15.2 million tons. I Bob Hope Back From : . North Tour . . : , Comedi- (UPD , are currently estimated at . an Bob Hope returned to Southern California Friday night following a holiday ,tour of American military bases in the far north. It was evident the comedian was tired after the nine day tour of Newfoundland, Baffin- Island, Labrador and Greenland,' but he .. . was still joking. Hope and his troupe of entertainers arrived af International Airport eight hours late. The group was delayed by bad weather in Thule, Greenland, where a d ice storm prevented By the plane from taking off. They sat out the j blizzard in U.S. Air, MENLO PARK, (UPI) ' The Force : quarters and shared emer- United Nations should bolster its gency sagging finances taxing com Included in the party were ac- mercial ventures by in outer space, tresses Jayne Mansfield and Dor- the ocean depths and polar re othy Provine, Jerry Colona, sing- gions, according to a Stanford Re er Anita Bryant, "Miss World" search Institute economist.Rose Marie Frankland of England Dr. Eugene ' Staley made this and Les Brown and his orchestra. proposal in a memorandum to It was the 14th . consecutive U. N. officials. He said it "would Christmas that Hope has ' been be relatively painless for member away from home on entertain- states to authorize exclusive Unit ment tours. ' ed Nations tax rights to such po Saturday night the comedian was tential sources of wealth." master of ceremonies at the Big Within at decade or two," he Ten banquet end said he would "the U. N. might have very attend the Rose Bowl gane as said, substantial 'revenues" from such a guest of Minnesota. taxation. The international organization, Staley said, should also be given Fears. Racial War exclusive authority to license and regulate space traffic and satellites relaying telephone and tele vision signals. . . - . - ; Finance Plan For UN Proposed Economist wind-whippe- j x,: - - .' Australia Warns CRUZ of students. . i The youngsters this week pre day when their three - bedroom sented the Santa Cruz Transit Co. ranch home was Jorn by a fire with a plaque inscribed: driver and explosion. we Jove you. From the The fire department said the ex "Ed ." , . plosion was probably caused by gang, newsmen told The that students a "backdraft," an accumulation crosstown his Maghakian delays of smoke and gas. bus waiting for students who are The victims were identified as late,' and has proved to be a real C. W. McCredy, about 30, believed friend. to be a beer salesman; his wife, Maghakian explained that his Constance, 28, and their two sons, success with the youngsters may Matthew, 4, and Alex, 2. stem from the fact he ' has five The fire department said a bar children of his own. ! 'I know" how rage of calls came into the sta it is. The kids come to me with tion at 12:36 a.m. reporting an their problems. If I feel qualified explosion at the McCredy home. I try to .help them." Firemen were able to enter the house ir imediately and found the .Venison is the most highly prizfour victims dead. Mrs. McCredy ed of all game meat. was in a hall and the two children were in bed. McCredy was in a laundry room in the rear of the home. Officials surmised that he was unable to enter the rooms and was trying to get out when he was overcome. The explosion blew most of the roof off the house, which was valued at approximately $30,000. Cause of death was tentatively listed as asphyxiation, although a further investigation was to be made by the coroner's office. The cause of the fire, which apparent ly touched off - the explosion, was . unknown. '61-62- The publication said the buildup is starting earlier than most steelmakers expected,, with January shipments slated to be 20 per cent higher than last month. Inventories are expected to increase during January by at least 1 mil. lion tons'. h Steel said consumer inventories . LOS ANGELES Starts Earlier Ed (UPI) is the favorite bus 32 Santa Cruz High SANTA Maghakian ORINDA, Calif. (UPI) -- i- A driver School family of four was killed Satur Steelmakers are starting out the year. new year on a rather mild note, Wrong Landing No Surprise to Government Aviation Agency School Bus Driver Rates High With Kid Family of 4 Killed In By ROBERT J. SERLING UPI Aviation Editor It did WASHINGTON (UPI) not partiouiarly surprise the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) when an airliner landed by mistake at unused Mitchel Air Force Base instead of Idlewild Airport Tuesday. FAA officials said landing at wrong airports is one of the most frequent violations of civil . air regulations. FAA records show at least a dozen such incidents involving scheduled airliners in the past two years. Most of them, an agency spokes- , NEAT TRICK Air transMONTREAL (UPI) . is governed by many thouport of laws and regulations. One sands recent addition to the list reported by the International Air Transport Association reads: "No person shall enter or attempt to enter any aircraft in flight' man said, take place at smaller airports "which tend to look pretty much alike." Even veteran and extremely capable pilots, he add ed, have been known; to pull a no comment on why the pilot of the Eastern Air Lines' DC7B with 55 persons on a Montreal-NeYork said Friday .that Eastern pi lot Richard H. Haman "mistook" w 'boo-boo- " on occa- Mitchel for Idlewild, which is : 10 sion. miles away. "It's as simple as The FAA still is investigating that," he said. But he would not the Mitchel Field boner and had say what caused the mistake. Similar errors have resulted in punishment ranging from, a1 one week license suspension to as high as six months, depending on the circumstances and whether any lives were endangered. UPI interviewed several ' airline captains who, for obvious reasons did not want to be quoted by name on the Eastern incident. All of OGDEN (UPI) The majority them expressed mystification. of persons appearing at a public hearing Friday night urged that council decided to withdraw from Ogden's crime laboratory be op the operation. erated jointly by1 the city and We Dr. Merle Allen, Ogden Mayor, ber County. said further hearings will be held The lab was operated jointly un on the issue before any decisions til shortly before the November are made regarding the future of city election when the former city the crime lab. wrong-airpo- rt , Majority Favors Crime Lab. In Joint Operation "I don't think there's- - a pilot who hasn't landed or near living at a wrong airport at landed ly some time in his career," one captain said. "But these roCks are pulled when you approach two neighboring fields with the same surrounding terrain, similar layout, almost identical ground identification points and so forth. How the hell you could mistake Mitchel for Idlewild, I don't know." . HE'S NECESSARY. ST. LOUIS (UPI) To , the question "are you Necessary?" the owner of the name, James E. Necessary naturally says Vyes." "It's an old family Irish name," Necessary adds. Necessary, local sales manager of KTVI here, was born. at Lone Jack, Mo., 30 miles east of Kansas City. . -- 1 Try dill seed with potatoes. s other v : 1 - Menshikov Takes Leave Of U. S. Post WASHINGTON (UPD The Ber lin crisis can be resolved very quickly if only the West takes "realistic approach" and agrees to two Germanies according to outgoing Soviet Ambassador "Mik hail Menshikov. He was interviewed at a fare well party at the Russian Embas sy Friday night. He is being re placed by Anatoili Federovich Donrynin, head of the American section of the Soviet foreign min- istry. IN ; Menshikov, known as "Smiling Mike" because of his relatively sunny nature, since taking the post in 1958, was asked about the Berlin question. "If the Western countries take a realistic approach, that problem can be solved very quickly," he said. "It has to be' solved very quickly." Asked if he agreed with Soviet Premier Nikita S. ' Khrushchev's prediction that this generation's grandchildren will live under communism, Menshikov guffawed and said "I agree entirely!" SWEETIE PIE &f(TJiT fpPnP TLB H Tt II I Now is the time ttf bring your 1 1 1 Sayings to Deseret Federal Our earning rate on your savings By NADLNE SELTZER is GOING"UP,! This means your savings earnWore than ever Indonesia ONE-FOURT- H ... a profitable PER CENT MORE, now 4 per cent. So save now and get the extra bonus of free gifts at this dependable 56 -- year old institution where 13,000 savers acclaim its unexcelled record of safety and: integrity. Save today for more of the good things in life. Each account is insured to $10,000 by a U.S. Government agency. 4-1- CANBERRA, Australia (UPD Australia issued an urgent warning to Holland and Indonesia Saturday not to start a war over Dutch New Guinea, declaring it could turn into, a racial fight between white and yellow men. In diplomatic notes to the two nations, the government said a war in this part of the world could "create intolerable burdens for all the peoples of the area and their descendents for generations ; to come." Prime Minister Robert. G. Men-zihanded Australia's note to Brig. Gen. Saudi, the Indonesian ambassador. Dutch Ambassador J. G. De Beus got his copy from External Affairs Minister Sir Gar-J field Barwick. P The note to Indonesia said the use of force by Indonesia in its campaign to "liberate" Dutch New Guinea would violate the "unqualified declaration" of Indonesian leaders that' they would seek a peaceful settlement. (In Jakarta v President Sukarno scheduled a meeting Sunday of 25 military and civilian officials to "discuss various aspects" of the liberation campaign. (Sukarno and Foreign Minister Subandrio breakfasted Saturday with U.S. Ambassador Howard P. Jones, who has been acting as an intermediary in the sian dispute. (The Indonesian campaign so far has consisted largely of tough talk, but Dutch sources in The Hague have said intelligence reports indicate Indonesian forces in the Molucca Islands off new Guinea are preparing "pinprick" attacks on Dutch territory for the next year. (The Dutch said these attacks n were expected Jo follow the infiof this year's "armed ltration" of Dutch New Guinea by Indonesian "jungle fightabout, ers" equipped with mortars, hand guns grenades and submachine within rounded was up That force a week.) Australian officials have said rere- cently that Sukarno has given not use ated assurance he will force to take Dutch New Guinea, which Indonesia claims as a part of her territory. Earlier, it had been .reported that Indonesia had refused to allow Qantas,.the Australian airline, o fly over its land. . -- I : OPEN OR ADD TO YOUR PRESENT ACCOUNT IN THE AMOUNT OF 5200 OR MORE AND TAKE YOUR CHOICE OF VALUABLE GIFTS. ; - , es - . Y e- e 1 top-ranki- ng Dutch-Indon- 1 7M. h 1M2byNH.In. iI Rf, VX. rt Off. J resolved to get n J&m N """'lf,w,," a bigger allowance this year I" I I ' v P R ::iif:i;xi':i XV O Limit One Free Gift Pres. Clarence H. Tingey, Vice Pres. Joseph E. Kjar, AiJj Per Account! , furniture company pat-ter- North End of Town on Hi way 91 0 t-- TTT s i .... enirstMre Ei rs 3 dJ LuZ3 nr nn n ' nl a TT f I A n TA t- o i ft AM AQQM - Salt Lake City 44 South Main street Provo 95 North University Avenue Emerson Hardy Manager Provo Branch Lz3 x |