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Show Volunteer As U.F. pens Campaign or to complex for us to how too difficult or handle, we surrender a precious heritage. He said, We have, in fact, come to take voluntary service so much for granted that perhaps we fail to notice how Important it is to us as individual Americans and to the whole American scheme of things." Suppose; he said, rthat all our voluntary agencies and Institutions were suddenly taken from the community. What, for example, il all the 38 agencies supported by your U.F. went out of existence? Orwhat if there were no voluntary hospitals, no art centers or symphony orchestras, no citizens groups or neighborhood associations?" All of these activities are supported by volunteers. If they ceased to exist, or even if they ceased to be supported on a volunteer basis, it is easy to visualize the void that Would be created and how shamefully irresponsible the " community would become." Obviously, no community could continue to exist foij long under silch circumstances. Some force would have to move in to fill the vacuum. And that force, he said, all of us are' quite aware, would be government Government has an obligation to v See FUND on Fage B-- It is more important to solve community problems voluntarily at a local level than to allow a strong central government to step in and do the job, Salt Lake United Fund officers and workers were told Tuesday, John S. French, general manager of the Autolite Division, Ford Motor Co., Detroit, was speaker at the U.F.s at noon at Hotel Utah. annual appeal kick-of- f event was sponsored by Salt Lake ChamThe kick-of- f ber of Commerce, Salt. Lake Jay cees, Exchange Club, Salt Lake and Bonneville Kiwanis, Salt Lake Lions Club and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 57, This year, U.F. workers will try for a goal of over a million dollars." Last year, Fund solicitors collected $983,000. of a $998,000 goal .:. The first, attempt at collecting more than $1 million, this years U.F, slogan is Good Guys Give a Fair Share," Mr. French told .U.F. personnel that we in this country have built a successful, highly productive society because we have shown a sense of initiative and interest in the welfare of our families; our institutions, and our own ' communities. The minute wedrcide xunrwn' problems' are some . -- - I 3 UnitecJ Fund General Chairman Neal A. Maxwell rolls a million dollar strike, as U.F. i President .Richard C. .Williams cheers him on. Drive, with goal of "over million," was launched Tuesday, $1 a Mull Proposal- Children 3 Pilot, Utcalhi:Siroy Survive (rash; flights Of Cold 5 . B SECTION FORT BRIDGER, WYCX A SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH and-til'father tbrpe small survived an '"'airplane crash and five nightsin Utahs high';Uinta Mountains and, didn't even need a doctor afterward. David Brophy, Silverdale, i Overwhelmed by the Vast" number of birthday mesWash., the pilot and greetings received on the occasion of his 90th sages climbed in another planer Monbirthday, President David O; McKay of the Church of Jesus to thd survey day. wreckage Christ of Latter-daSaints Tuesday expressed his sinfrom the air. cere appreciation. through-th- e. Deseret News. : , His children, ? Donald, The Church leader expressed his joy for the many Donna, 5, and Michaelr 4,- - just. -- messages-of loyalty and love sent in birthday greetings ' ate.'r .front loyal friends and members of the Church both - A . and abroad. Provo,. Utah, fisherman, .. Don Simms, 4 found a barriThere are so many messages received, President cade on a nearby road that McKay explained, that it would be impossible to acknowl- - f, Mr. Brophy. had placed there e.dge all of them personally i with & note telling of the little Messages have come from the islands of the sea, from Europe, the. Orient, South 'Africa, South America and .v family? plight from all parts of the United States and Canada. That was Sunday, just a half These messages in the form of telegrams, letters, hour after Mr. Brophy made and cards all helped to make my 90th birthday a most his way to the road and placed memorable one, President McKay said. I take this opporthe barricade there. Jovetunity 'to extend slncereappreciatiorUdoF-th- e To Walk JJnable of frieffift' associates find the loyal Churdh memblessings. Hed been tunable to. wak bers everywhere, , ; ' that far before Sunday because v."" ( of "a king-sizecharily horse in a leg muscle he suffered in the Tuesday crash. Mr. Simms had some milk and; sandwich makings in his - car. The kids couldnt wait to make sandwiches, recalled Mr. - Brophy, so they just ate bread and milk. The questjon of whether a ho.spffcljHriidirig, and some ' He said he and the children physician should be a hospital of, of the facilities,, are planned as war? "two or three pairs of owner was mulled Tuesday by proprietary, or private, hostrousers every night to pro- the Utah State Medical Assn.s pitals. , tect themselves against the council. Other proposed resolutions chill. - . This was one of several mat- include pleas for a speed-uIt got .the coldest just be- ters ynder discussion at the of the program for fore sunrise, said Mr. Brophy. Hotel Utah by the USMA community water supHouse of Delegates, which met plies and a i Cookies,- - Candy study Ih a prelude to the associations of legislation- to curb highway They ate cookies, candy and three-daannual meeting. deaths. - apples their grandmother gave The states 1.000 phvsicians The USMA committee 6n them before they left Hastings. will hear scientific papers dur- sanitation and pollution singled Neb for Silverdale, Wash. s Mr Brophy had been work- ing sessions of the meeting out several Utah water and'Fn-dafor congratulations on ing there at an aircraft shop. Wednesday. Thursday He and a partner owned the installing complete s e w a ge Almost certain to be an issue treatment plants, including plane that crashed after hit.... ting a, downdraft over .. the is the resolution that would,, jf chlorination; T hoseeoffirnhn Jtle are adopted, oppose physician ownmountains. "The plane settled into the ership of hospitals. The state Kearns. Nephi, ,6unnyside. said Mr. Brophy, is tiding the crest of a wave Brigham City, Monticello. treetops, Amencan Fork, Murray. Heber and hit the 'ground bottom-first.- pie trees acted as a County Sheriff listed City. Kanab ahd the Central Weber Sewer Improvement cushion, and they braked the Critical After Seizure plane. They helped a lot. ... District. .. ..... ( - Afterthe crash, Mr. Brophy Utahs senior sheriff. George In his report to the House found a little stream nearby. Beckstead of Balt Lake Coun- of. Delegates, the USMA presi A first the water was muddy, ty, was . reported in ; ' very dent, called for a study to debut later he found some- - that crticial- - condition Tuesday, at termine if a committee should ' LDS Hospital- .- v was almost clear. be appomted-t- o insure -- closer "The children drank a lot, veteran Utah relationship between physicians The he 'said. law:.. euforcemerjL.ofllceL.jwas and other professions. Mr: Brophy "saiT'He"'Ts 3i stricken' with a heart attack - Dr. John F. Waldo especially vorced, and that he has had Sunday while attending a fam- cited the need for more liaison the children for about two ily barbecue in the back yard between physicians and minis-See CRASH on Page B-- of his Crescent residence. ' - ters. s chil-drfi- TUESDAY, ICC Backs n CONGRATULATIONS BRING Olpin To Retire PRES; MCkAY'S THANKS As President y , , -- ad d Medical Council Mulls policy-makin- g state-approve- d four-agenc- y -- y sys-term- y , .:. ,. -- 3 7 By Santa KILLED,-ON-E BLANDING-YOUT- H Purchase - , ; HURT BY LIGHTNING Fe BLANDING. San Juan County A bolt of lightning struck the San Juan High School football field Monday and injuring a" second evening, killing a team " By DEXTER CELLIS v teen-agDeseret News Staff Writer manager, Killed was Dexter Noonan, 14, son of Ralph and Utah interests Tuesday were : Noonan, Blanding. By HAL KNIGHT assessing the effect of an In ; Hospitalized for treatment of shock was Jeff Perkins, Deseret News Staff Writer terstate Commerce - Commis14, also of Blanding. Dr. A. Ray Olpin, seventh resuscitation by Coach Morris Swension examiners recommendapresident of the University of tion that the Atchison Topeka' son,' Blanding police and an ambulance driver failed to revive the boy. Aphysician said death occurred when the Utah who has served in that : Santa Fe RAilroad be aland capacity for nearly 18 years, lightning struck. lowed to acquire control of will retire June 30, 1964. The two boys had been on the field with the team Western Pacific. Dr. Olpin, who joined 4he practicing when rain began to fall. Coach Swenson sent the teatq inside for a chalk talk until the rain stopped. U. of U. in 1946 and led It Hope was expressed that the . .When the rain stopped, the two managers went-out-ruling would not be upheld by through its period of greatest ..side full submitted his commission, the although resignatp collect equipment left by the team, when the storm growth, no such recommendation has struck": While they were outside, team members said they tion Monday at a meeting of been overridden heard, the, clap of thunder. the schools Board of Regents. "When the coach and players went outside merger cases. they found rTheboard.j:eiuctantly acIhe two beys, lying on the ground. The recommendation was ancepted the resignation and exThe Perkins boy was knocked unconscious by the nounced Monday by Paul C. pressed Its appreciation for the TpfCA.ay Olpin presideut H and ? acknowledged retires Albus, veteran ICC examiner bolt, but soon regained consciousness. Coresident who heard testimony In the his great contributions to the marathon fight between the university during his years as , its leader. Santa Fe and Southern Fa P. cific over the-W- . To Retain President . ; ; Recommends Authority comThe Regents executive mittee recommended that Dr, He recommended that the Santa Fe be given authority to Olpin be retained as a Con- 2 W.P. sultant to the schools developacquire the 1,193-milment program and its Internaline through a common stock tional relations' after he gives exchange. The commission Secy, of State Lamont F. ToAt a hearing last week, 50 estimated W.P.s total assets up his administrative post. nts Sandy-residecontroronto a denied protested the Tuesday " as $180,360,753. , was The recommendation r clubs locker applicaliquor - -of club versial a Sandy request Fe the peSanta In favoring The radio patrol and the unanimously approved. tion. Dr, Olpin, who turned 65 traffic divisions of the Salt tition, Mr. Albus - said the for liquor locker privileges, Third District Judge Marcel-Iu-s would preserve but granted the privileges to a last June 1 had brought up the Lake Police Department will acquisition K. Snow had earlier issued com- Vemal club. question of his retirement be combined to obtain a better and strengthen inter-rai- l an order requiring Mr, Toronto club PaChief-Ralplocker more than a year ago, but in control of manpower, Application .for petitive; influences In the to grant liquor privileges to the : C. Knudson announced cific region, .contribute to privileges by the Meadow Moor club, since it had a unanimous vote of confiposted a -dence was asked To continue Tuesday. hpaithy industrial growth, tend: Club, 1818 Sie ta Dr t7400 $5,000 bond. : was refused. in his post The division: unification will toward a better competitive South), Judge Snow currently has U. Policy, be effected Oct. 1 with Capt. balance of rail systems, and Such privileges would allow under advisement a motion by of and liquor economics and drinking storing savings Mr. Toronto to stay this order. Policy of the university is Calvin C. Whitehead, present on club premre- Control Opposed to retire all persons from ad- head of the radio patrol, in Residents Protest to me it the that ministrative posts at age 65 command, the chief said. Utah and most Mountain same appearswho own the club Home owners in the area people although they may continue to Lt. Donald B, Pearson, traffic West states , vigorously op- are developing property in the protested at the hearing against teach and engage in research division commander, will re- posed control of the smaller area, Mr. Toronto explained. "boisterous parties which kept until 68. main in the division, heading line by either Of the ran gianxs. them awake until early mornProfit Incentive Royden G. Derrick, chair- traffic' until the phaseout. They contended that the pubIt appears that this promo- ing hours.. man of the Board of Regents, Under the new program, each lic interest and the Welfare of Meantime, Mr. Toronto grantread the Tetter from Dr, Olpin uniformed officer will be as- the W.P. would best "be served tion is for a profit incentive. in which he asked for. retire- signed .one particular section, by an Independent status for Liquor privileges ' can only ed the application of the Vemal be granted to clubs which prove Petroleum Club after a Monday of the Chief JCnudsoicjsaid- ;- In this Western Pacific. ment, and listed-so- me .motive, he added. hearing. ch anges whfehha ve taken section, the officer will handle, Next step In the fight, which a Attorney Hugh, Colton, repplace at the school during his both crime and traffic prob- began more than two years administration. resenting 'the club, requested lems. ago, will be filing of 'exeep the organization be allowed to Gives Reason SECTION B It eliminates a system where tions with the Interstate Com take over, unoccupied Empire oral merce and Commission will permit one officer will be investigatMy retirement Club premises in Vemal and recomover the installation of a new ex- ing a, burglary dr petty lar- arguments the; club with - 1, 2, 4, 7 operate a ecutive officer in ample time ceny alongside a second offi mendation of Albus. - . 2. 3, liquor locker privileges. . Thnr-theTCfor- - --him- to- prepare- a willIssue an eer investigating Mr. Toronto said facts indl-cate- d 4,5 We feel that under the order that will likely become request for presentation to 4 Farm it was "indeed a bona fide Roundup the next biennial Legislature. program, both traffic and pa the subject of long court litiga- Radio-T6 club for the benefit Highlights It will give him a year to trol will be made stronger and tion. 8 of the members, and that he Obituaries Chief finKnudsoir If the recommendationcomplete plans for handling more effective, 'Action Ads would issue a charter the large crop of war babies declared. ally prevails, the W.P. will be to has in and vast Pearson At enroll 1965, Sant? into Lt, the expected present, integrated, it Will enable him to partici- 50 merf under his command and Fe system, which has lines exWhitehead has 86. It will tending from Chicago through pate in the formulation of policies governing the open give Capt. Whitehead a con- the Southwest into California, tion of the integrated Medical tingent of 136 men. There it 'teams up with the Center which" will In the past, if Lt. Pearson Western Pacific to compete needed to borrow- men from with the S.P. for traffic into for occupancy nexjgummer. The university has been in Capt, Whitehead or if it was the Pacific1 Northwest a state of flux during most.of the other- way around, they During the hearings in San -assistant superintendent of By DEL VAN ORDEN See OLPIN on Page B-- had to get permission ' from Francisco, Salt Lake and other someone in administration. cities, the Santa Fe pledged to Deser.ct News Btaff Writer buildings and grounds,- - , , Mr. Stott will serve under This will be eliminated under maintain the corporate strucC. Max Caldwell, a budget Ed Shockey, superintendent of the new system, the chief ex: ture of the Western Pacific. It examiner with the' State De- buildings and grounds, for th $500 also insisted that traffic would plained.. the two divisions partment of Finance, was duration of the fair. B-Combining See RAIL on Page For Bus is a trend in all the major cites, named acting secretary:rfian-age- r - Kenneth J, Hansen, chief ache added. of the 19G3 tate fair at countant for the finance Salt Lake: City Tuesday The present system was put an emergency meeting .Tuesacted as chairman to as pay $500 agreed part of into-effein 1942. Prior to 14 of , meeting. day. Tuesdays the cost of a study to be made that time, the two departments Mr. Caldwells appointfhent Recommends . . ; .Hopkins Buof Utah' the University by were combined. followed the unexpected I illBy He said the appointments of reau of Economic Research reWe have been working on ness of fair manager Waolas ' garding prbposed fare- in- the program for abour'eight A23member federaPgrand A Macey, who- - suffered a Mr. Caldwell and Mr. Stott were recommended by Clair creases for the Salt Lake City months and we feel it will give jury Tuesday began deliberat, heart attack Monday. state fin4r.ee direcLines, . Salt Lake City better protec- ing 14 cases in U.S.' District Mr. Macey was 'listed In Hopkins, extor. Total cost of the study, ; tion in law enforcement, Chief Court.' condition Tuesday "serious In his temporary- - position, pected to be completed in. 30 Knudson said, Federal. Judge A. Sherman morning in Salt Lake Veterans Caldwell will be .; responMr. Lewwould be A: $1,500, days, Christensen appointed Hospital. sible for-a- ll matters pertaining The possibility of downtown 1636 E; is Elggren; To Delegate Authority to .the fair with the exception merchants refunding the "cost Police Hunt Vandals as foreman anjK6nneth ,E. 2522-3rFair board, khd state offi- of policy, Mr. Hansen said. as of bus trips in the same manEast, police Monday were looking Farnsworth, ner as is now done with park- for --vandals who entered the deputy jury foreman, Mrs. cials called the meeting to delePolicy matters will continue ing lot validations will be in- home of the late Andrea Gordon Huggins, 152? 23rd gate authority for this years to be decided by the Fair Board, which will meet cluded in the study to 'see' If Tropea, 859 W. 4th South, and St., Ogden, was appointed sec- operation of the fair. Officials also named .Don daily during the state; exposi' bus trip refunds would help scattered property and garbage retary. r build up business down "town throughout the house. The adThe jury is expected to con- Stott, a former state road shop tion. The fair will begin Friday and increase patronage on the dress was erroneously printed sider the cases lor about three employe and now a member of the finance department, as and continue through Sept 22 : bus lines. as 1660 Blaine Avet'previously days. 01 U. In June '64 e Col-lee- n Mouth-to-mout- v -- Combine S.L. : Division- s- Locker Club Privileges Denied To Sandy Club e For Police Work : h - , . - non-prof- non-prof- traffic-accident- non-prof- - 5 VOICE m THE WEST Jazzed-U- p LIVING can be fun, but this jet age in which, we live can often be dangerous, too. he was without a. pushbutton on his magic lamp. The harried housewife has no guarantee in her haste that the pushbutton world of little cans will produce hair spray on her coiffure instead of spray starch. ' head once in a while by an abstract j, mobile hanging from, the ceiling, chances are youre' the guy who walks into a pole lamp every other time you turn around. . . ; Or maybe youre the petite young thing -who get? lost In flying-sauceliving oom-chairs fellow who has or the to wedge himself gently if not gracefully Into Danish contemporary furniture, ' - Perhaps youre even the poor Soul who malted milk treatgets the ment every time you joust with a vibrating lounge before finding the panic but., ton which stops well-shake- n the-thin- g. breadwinner - ; Anyway, you get the point. But possibly the greatest hazards of the space age are the- - deceivingly entombed modem genles in "spray cans. Aladdin decorator-minde- cans. But maybe All is not Beyond hope. Detroit auto manufacturers spent millidns of dollars to perfect automatic transmissions (pushbuttons ahd all), only to be faced with the newv rage of stick shifts in cars again. - Who knoivs? It could be that we " may., eventually shake ourselves of other modern conveniences and go t back to the good old days wc try to convince our children once, ex- - d v d to---.. ward unmarked r- i..,? sleepy-eye- of the household know for sure whether hes going to get a face full of shaving cream or a lung full of air freshener in - the morning especially with the trend , broad-beame- Nor does the , i isted. - Either that or well learn to live albeit dangerously with progress Acting Chief Named For '63 State Fair dy didnt know how well off MODERN If you dont get knocked in the Jungle Bob Koenig. - - Earmarked Study -- ct Cases Studied Federal Jury - . , . 9th-SoU- th, |