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Show 1 - -- r fW t Stirnk' taouinnieini r , j , By RAY GRASS titty rr Two bank robbers madetheir intentions clear Friday when tone threatened to pellet one bank with machine gun fire and the other threatened to shoot an employe of another I .bank. f ?vv I Deseret News Staff Writer " on u ' ! ft V? yyritVtI yv 'i - & . . .Tie looked 'unusual' - - ,11 Miss Marnefte Grube t - . . . saw him first Miss Terri Boardman gun and said. Don't push any buttons. Fill the sack with' the money and start with the 100s, Mrs. Arns said when she got to die ones he told her t forget therar He asked lor . ; ' u Guery I. Fratto i jv -- a Mrs. Elaine Arnl . . . handed over money . . , was threatened money from a second drawer, but, she showed him it was empty. " -- . , Then he moved to the first cage, produced a gun and' Dont anyone look at me and turn to the wall." ' Query Fratto, 3121 S. 8280 West, bank manager, said he was talking with two customers and heard the mans He said .he stood up and the bandit raised his gun And said, If you don't face the wall, I am going to put a . bullet between your eyes." . "From the corner of my eye I could see die man give one of the girls a sack and tell her to go to all three cage and collect the money," Mr. Fratto said. "He then told us , to lie on the floor and to stay there." Mrs. Viola Wilson, 1163 S.West Temple, the teller who collected the money, said the gunman was calm end definite. She told police she thought she smelled alcohol on his breath. Mrs. Wilson has been in the bank on six occasions whetr It was robbed, the last previous one'on Dec. 2 last year. - J As the gunman ran from the hank, Mr. Fratto followed almost immediately, but was unable to spot him on the street. said, e d , ; East). 4 vfl a break. Inthe downtown holdup, the man first went to the mli dig window of teller Marnette Grube, 3841 Birch Dr. (3330 -- fi - J, . j The Salt Lake City banks were robbed of approximately . $6,000 in separate holdups at 4:15 p.m. and about 6 p.m. Both gunmen, one described as a shabby older mas and , - the other as looking like a college student, ran from the banks on foot and escaped without being detected. - - Police said Saturday there appeared to be no connection except for the similarity of circumstances. Police and FBI agents arrested a suspect Saturday at 1:20 p.m. after a tip by an informant that he had bragged ' about one. of the holdups. , - -- The first First occurred the at holdup Security Bank, 1396 Foothill Dr. (1960 East), where a yeung gunman brandishing revolver with a bone handle took $3,400 from a woman cashier. , . : The second holdup was at First Security Stata Bank, 381 E. 3rd South. The shabby gunman forced the manager and several employes and customers to lie on the floo while a woman teller handed over $2,592. It was theixth robbery at this bank. , In tha Foothill holdup, Mrs. Elaine Arns, 1892 E. 4500 South, said as soon as die young man entered the bank she -- knew what was going to happen. The same man'came into., the bank last Wednesdayand looked very suspicious.. Friday afternoon be walked to her counter, produced a by the bank in about 10 minutes and if anything!! different, ' we will pellet the bank with machine guns. Mrs. Arns, told police that as the gunman was leaving she shouted to a girl on the front desk that they were just' ; robbed. " L. Ronald Folkersen, 7156 S. 2220 East, bank manager, i had gone to the basement lunchroom of . the bank Just be--' fore the robbery, and several other employes were also there ' The gunman then warned, "My friend and I will walk" dun f.mrj H - ft. 1 Nurse Issue Old Ivy Towers I was talking to Fred Woltera about pictures he has of the old LDS College. For you newcomers, LDS was just north of Hotel Utah, and as you can see, not only has the ivy gone, hut the buildings, too. 'Fred la alumni president and has run across some old campus pictures. Former students can get them for just the cost of reproduction which is nominal. The alumni list reads like & Who's Who of Utah. That is how Fred and I got to taking about By PAUL SWENSON Deseret News Staff Writer A committee appointed to study the salary of 23 resigned Salt Lake County publift health- nurses went into executive session Saturday to formulate recommend&itons. After a three-hou- r morning session with testimony the nurses, committee members and Salt Lake County health department officials The committee asked to meet sepa- from Gks. Balance ft Gas was about the nicest guy who ever cut classes and made the honor roll He made both the basketball and football teams. 1 1 h Money Bill Double Date m To show how Gas was respected on the campus, the popular captain of the basketball team withdrew as a candidate for studentbody president because Gas was going to pun. It was while he was student president that a snake dance following a teand win got out of hand. Gas went to the front of the line and guided it back to the campus from the business section. He worked his way through school by doing lath work. He worked for his brother and Judge Mel Humpherys of South Salt Lake. Deputy Sheriff Occie Evans, an athlete of some note at the school while Gas was there, double dated with Gas. Occie had an old flivver and drove Gas around. returned for a visit a few days ago and a was assigned to drive him around sheriff deputy Occie and Gas were double dating" again. I said he made it pretty big. Let me give you an He idea how big. BIr. Humpherys found some old checks which Gas had endorsed a while back. He Is hanging on to them just for the signature. Before you get the wrong idea about Gas, I asked a fellow who used to work with him nailing lath if Gas ever hit his thumb. If he did, what did he do? The fellow worker answered: v is human! Thug Helps Self At S.L. Store One of the most widely read Bonneville Salt Flats, and studied publications of the! The maps are printed on high state of Utah was off the press 'gbss paper that gives depth and ingj' ..May j help you?" was to the color photographs. iswered with a yes" and a gun jclanty It is the 1967 highway map,! Rand, McNally and Go., Chi-ji- n the ribs Friday about 9.25 circulation TOO, 000. 'cago. printed the maps for,pm- - at Robert Hall Clothing, 2930 S. State St. Not only does it show newly $52,000, a cost per map of 6.9 cents- After the exchange of greet- of sections highway, completed but the scenic pictures on the They will be distributed free ings, a man escaped with about back are examples of the best .from Highway Department of- - $188. in art and craftsmanship. fices, the Travel Council, at The employe, Phil Nielsen, and national parks. High- 4411 state On the front is a striking color Holladay Blvd. (1715 East), way Patrol checking stations, described the photograph of Angel Arch, robbery: of commerce, motels chambers National Park. Other The man told him to keep his and stations. checking color pictures show Lake Powhand down and to walk back to The first large shipPS. ell, Bryce Canyon, Zion Nationa cashier. al Park, skiing, hunting, boat- ment is due to leave Chicago I walked back to Lloyd Olson and on the Monday. racing ing, temples, (210 S. 6th East, Sandy) and the! man threw down a sack on the counter and said, Fill it up. As Lloyd was taking the money out of the till the man reached out his hand and took the money Big. Yes' For Inlead Start. By TWILA VAN News Staff Writer Deseret Last years Head Start students are now busy kindergarten youngsters, and their teachers are able to assess the results of their experience. Did Head Start really do s the name suggests, and give these youngsters a running f leap into their educational experience? consensus of teachers, principals and others now working Vith Head Start graduates is a resounding Yes!" These children come to kindergarten better prepared," Miss Adeline Hill of Washington Elementary School says. . "They are ready socially and emotionally to go to school." Mrs. Hill, who has worked with the children in Head .Start as well as teaching them In regular session, is in a po- -' sitxm to see how Head Start works to prepare the youngsters to meet school experiences more readily. Besides the social and emotional development that comes to these children, they receive medical, social and psychological help. They come to school better prepared from a health " standpoint, Mrs, Hill says. Mri Myrna Mottonen also taught in Head Start at Sum-- , tier Elementary School, and now has many of the same chil ; dren in her kindergarten class, pre-scho- Another child at Sumner benefited from the physical examination she received in Head Start. Glasses corrected a "lazy eye condition and the little girl did not have to start school with a built-ihandicap. nThe n At Jefferson Elementary School Miss Donna Wheelwright described her first day in September as very smooth. Only one child cried," she recalls, "and she wasnt a Head Start child.,r . Miss Eva May Green, who directs the program for. Salt Lake School District, works closely with administrators and teachers in Head Start and has observed growth in the youngsters as fhey leave .the program. They show marked progress in the use of materials and equipment and in their relationships with teachers and other children, she says. Most of those who are associated with the program agree that one of Head Starts greatest accomplishments is not pre-scho- - ihe reports. "They come to schooT with a better feeling about them own self4roportance.rhey.already,have. friends when, they get here, and school isnt such a frightening experience ' to them." Ordering the cash drawer One very shy little boy Mrs. Mottonen taught In Head Start was In the habit of leaving and going home before class was over. After a few weeks, he had adjusted to the situation and disciplined himself to stay the duration. Mrs. Mottonen was spared the problem in kindergarten because it had been solved beforehand. LEER IklE-cmdren- , . J b uTWIfKpaTenTi; " re- moved and seeing nothing under it, the man pocketed the cash, picked up the empty sack and left the store. Wounded Utahn Returns To U.S. Lance Cpl. William Daniel (Danny) Hill, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hill, 2590 E. 2900 South, has been returned to the U.S. for hospitalization Wounded In after being Vietnam. He was hit last Saturday while serving with the Third Battalion, 9th Marines, near the Demilitarized Zone, and was later flown to Oak Knoll Naval Hospital, Oakland, Calif. Cpl. Hill attended Judge Memorial and then Skyline High School from where he was graduated in 1965 Friends may write him at Ward 76B, Naval Hospital, Oakland 94627. .. . BefT . Association, Kata-Strehc- h, j It would ease the committees problems considerably if the Senate concurs in a House reduction of $950,000 in state aid for school building programs, he said. If this is not done the rewill be recalling the school bill and reducing the amount to be allowed per distribution unit, he said. course SECTION B City, Regional Comics Radio-THighlights 1, 4 2 Obituaries Weather Map 4, 5 Action Ads Womens Page 3 5 5 .M6 Allen Says Council Proposed Tuition IHlike Mr. Nielsen had Just taken about $250 from the cash register and placed it in a safe when the bandit entered Dr. Merle E AUpn, duector The bandit was about 27 years of the Coordinating Council of old, 5 ft. 8 in. tali, 170 lbs. and Higher Education, said Friday wore a hat and a gree rain coat that increased resident and He wielded a .38 caliber pistol tuition at umversi- ties and colleges was recom- mended by the Council and not by the Legislature. Mr Gaines noted that when income upon which the budget recommendations to the Legis- - he started at the University of lature were based." .Utah, tuition for residents was Dr Allen said the feeling $65 per quarter and that it is among students that the fee in- - now $125 per quarter, crease proposals were generat- - Senate President Haven J. ed in the Legislature are Barlow, R Layton, told the founded upon misunderstand-Ident- s that even if we did not (pass any legisiahon', fees would Dr. Allen said that student inf, leaders of some institutions of! He, said the increases still have been increased by the would not Produce ihe anticipat-- j schools as recommended by the "apparently ed revenue contained Dr. Kenneth L. Cook, Univer- higher education m the Coordinating Council. some have misunderstanding sity of Utah professor of geodedicated "The only reason the Leglsla- of estimates auncd these tuition increases physics, will present a paper at about credits which were a part of the fure figures in this matter at ail the Symposium oh the World The House bill which raised higher education budget. is to set a uniform schedule to in Zur- tuition at the Institutions of Rift System Sept. The question came up after maintain a semblance of control ich, Switzerland. higher learning was a .recom- - fj8 student leaders from the'and keep the fee schedules' of Utah Professor Prepares Paper 27-2- 8 ' terns in the Basin and Range Allen said. Student Body President John concerns jrift sysbefore the Province, He added that the increased Gaines, appeared tems in UtahrAraona, Nevada, fees "are essential if the TnstitiPjSenafe FridajTTfl protest the BIG 'YES on Page B4 New Mexico and California. of higher learning get the creases. Head Start emphasizes the involvement of parents and "families. They are asked to participate m field tripsrspedal . are are no funds id the county the Travel Council budget for a raise. appropriations which stood at At the Saturday morning ses$1.4 million has been cut to sion, Corail een McKean, execuaround $1 million; higher edu- tive director, Utah State Nurses cation has been cut half a miland lion, and various other agencies leen one of the have been reduced. nurses, putlined for the The Welfare Department, on committee proposals other than the other hand, had $150,000 'salaries that the nurses would added in order to obtain $6 mil- - kke to see enacted. PROPOSALS lion federal matching money, he said. They included: The inclusion of a miring The sum of $890,000 to pay for additional Highway Patrolmen, staff representative in meetings must come from higher fees for where revision of county health driver licenses, rather than pohcm is anticipated. Definitive policies on Work-Se- e from the general fund as preNURSE on Page B-- 4 viously recommended, he said. He said Utah Road Maps Off The Press Gas A Goer After Gas left school and went East, he made it pretty big. as well as road guide. Some 750,000 of the major Utah tourist publication distributed. Ann P. Brown unfolds 1967 Utah maps, which provide tourist with pictures of some top attractions Once Gas fell off a ladder. His brother said he fell .rjght on his head but broke his ankle.. He cast and all. went right back to work "Lets just say that George Romney rately v Dr. Edward O. Moe, temporary committee chairman, said the committee would recommend late Saturday ways to settle the dispute and possible 'corrective measures to prevent situations. jsimilar of the committees reo The "hatchet committee ts'ommendations will refer specifi-with$500,000 of reaching anally to salaiy structure while balance between appropriations others will suggest broad and estimated revenue, after guidelines for improving comslicing many proposed appro- munication and meeting the requests of the nurses in other priations Friday. areas. A completed General ApproThe Salt Lake County Compriations Bill, it is hoped, will mission must eventually, act to be presented the Joint Approthe recommendations in af- upon Committee Monday priations order to settle the dispute. ternoon for its approval ASK INCREASE Sen. Wallace H. Gardner, The nurses have asked for an Fork, chairman, in starting salary to increase announcement this made Friday afternoon after a meeting of the $515 a month. County Commissioners have indicated that there hatchet group. Near On think the old school didnt have spira it, couple of the alumni get together. a Theyll rig gold and blue banner. Theyll not only sing school songs, but give out with a couple of "Saint yells. And if you just-watc- balance," Sen. Barlow said. It ' is not the Legislature which is fes,-1want the you. to, raising understand thi& V 1 , I :i;v |