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Show Ffte Pickets W ere Picketed teachers turned 'to'Striking picket out most schools in the Cranite District Monday, but fn many places, students showed up to picket ' two hours of school including four subjects for each child. Mrs. Whitemore prepared lessons plans for each of her seven children, an Indian child living with the family and two neighbor youngsters. They studied biology, English, and social math, Spanish g the teachers. 1 h i n g s were generally peaceful and there was no trouble between the two groups of pickets, but in several. areas roving bands of older youths threw eggs, firecrackers and other objects at teachers. - Most of the incidents were fninor, but for a time there were more than the Salt Lake County Sheriffs Office could handle. The most serious situation occurred ' at Valley Junior t studies. I really learned to appreciate teachers, Mrs. Whitmore said after her home school. She is not a piofeAsiouai teacher herself, but her husband is. He teaches in Granite District. I just made out a lesson plan for each child based on liis registration for classes at school, she said. On hand for the classes were the Whitmore children, Robert, 15; Rachel, 14; Earl and Elaine. twins; r High, 4195 S. 3200 West, where a teacher was squirted in the face with a liquid believed to be ammonia. Harold J. Richards, 45, was standing in the driveway of the school when a truck containing several youths drove past and fired a squirt gun, splashing him in the face and on the coat. Deputy Sheriff Gary Anderson said it was fortunate that Richards was wearing glasses. The victim entered the school and washed his eyes after he was hit. The teacher said the youths appeared to be too old to be students at Valiev Junior High. with Youngsters picket Michael, jk Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Whitmore, 2239 Atkin Ave., hold school at home for their eight youngsters, including Indian child, and two neighbor youths. At the home of Mr. and signs showed up at many turned out to see their teach- teacher strike, marching alongside the teacher pickets. The signs carried such sloTeachers Care gans as, Than More About Money We Need School Too, Me, Why Not Teach and Talk? and Kids Are the Losers. At many schools youngsters CLOUDS DUMP RAIN, MAKE GRAND EXIT . . Generally fair weather should return to Utah tonight and continue Wednesday with a few isolated afternoon showers in the east portion. Numerous thundershowers persisted this morning in northwestern and west central Utah but had decreased by noon. Showers Monday evening left .11 of an inch at Salt Lake City, .08 at Delta and .01 at Green River. By tonight the probability of rain will drop to 10 per cent. . Temperatures will remain warm with highs mostly in the 90s and lows tonight in the 50s and low 60s. Salt Lake Citys high and low Monday were 92 and 64. High for the state was 103 at St. George and low was 46 at Bryce Canyon. , t- .jCZT Jfc schools to protest against the ers picket. They played football and other games on the school lawns, rode bicycles or just sat dovn and watched the teachers. In at least one enterprising home, children were given school lessons by parents to make up for the lack of formal school. Blomquist had s Robert S. 2239 Atkin Ave., 10 Mrs. Whitmore, youngsters 10; DESERET NEWS, Tuesday, Ann, 9, and Gene, 6. Also at school were Doreen Smith, 13, an Indian girl living with the famiand two neighbor boys, Bryan Higgs and David Asay. Mrs. Whitmore said she plans to continue her homemade school as long as the ly, strike lasts. Traffic Case Gains Delay City Judge Paul G. Grant has Ciiv Judge Paul G. Frant has approved a motion to continue the trial of County Commissioner Phillip R. Blomquist on two traffic charges. C o mmissioner Blomquist innocent to of to failing charges yield right of way and leaving to scene of an accident, stemming from an incident June-2at 363 E. Kensington Ave. when an eight year-olgirl was hit by a car while riding a bicvcle. has pleaded d The trial was continued on the motion of the City Prosecutor after it was learned that the city policeman, D. G. Lord, who had issued the citation to Blomquist, is on vacation. me trial has been reset for Dec. 15, the earliest date on the calendar for the jury trial that Commissioner Blomquist has requested. September 1, 1970 B5 Orphaned Boy in Utah Care - FARMINGTON Jeffery Bass, 11, orphaned by the shooting death of his parents last Wednesday night in Lay-towas placed in custody of the Ctah Department of Family Services Monday after a hearing in First Juvenile Patriot Court. Anderson Judge Roland granted temporal-- ' custody to a maternal aunt, Mrs. Joan Kaufman, New Wilmington. n Pa. She was to leave Utah today, so the boy pan attend school. FINAL DISPOSITION Judge Anderson continued the matter until the conclusion of the school year for final disposition and will receive periodic reports on the boys progress. Meanwhile, the case of the deaths of his parents, Harry Bass, 40, and his estranged wife. Patricia Jane Runk was closed after murder-suicidtermed a Davis County attorney Bennett Peterson said it had not been necesuiry to conduct postmortems on the bodies, although they had Bass, being 32, e. nl'inrirtH PHYSICAL EXAMS Alter physical examination of the bodies by the state medical examiner and consultation with him, Peterson said it was decided Bass had fired the five bullets which ended the life of Mrs. Bass and had been killed himself from a single shot from a rcvoler. Funeral services for the two were conducted Monday. Eggs Pelt House Donald G. Paget, 3998 Emigration Canyon, told deputies four juveniles pelted his house with eggs, then fled in a station wagon. Model City Issue Solved Past problems as to responsibility for financing Model City Programs in Salt Lake County appeared to be settled Monday afternoon at a conference of state, city, county and federal officials. City Commissioner James L. Barker Jr., who had resented an earlier statement by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton, and County Commissioner Royal K. Hunt met with the governor and members of his staff. L. C. Romney, director of the state Housing and Urban Office, particiDevelopment pated. It was agreed that he and William H. Bruhn, director of local affairs for Ramp-toi- t, and Kenneth C. Olson, state Lawyer Drops Search Fails Writ On Sheriff For coordinator, planning would work with the city and county on Model City matters. - FARMINGTON A writ of habeas corpus charging Sheriff Kenneth Hammon with of a illegal restrainment mdn charged with first degree murder was dropped Monday by the defendants attorney, according to a court spokes- man. A hearing on the writ sched- uled Monday in. Second District Court was called off last Friday by John Blair Hutchinson, Ogden attorney. Hutchinson is engaged as defense attorney for Pedro Luis Crispin, 22, New York City, charged with first degree murder of a Clearfield Job Corpsman last July 25. Spanish Classes Open To Public Spanish classes, open to the public on a basis, will begin Sept. 9 at Westminster College. An elementary class will begin at 7 p.m. An advanced conversation class begins at 8 p.m. The classes taught hv Simeon Manzano, will be held Hall. For Information call in Converse 2 Crispin is accused of stabbing to death Gregory Bellamy, 17, Philadelphia, Pa., during an argument in a dormitory at the center. Hutchinson told court officials that he did not wish to seek the writ further at this time, according to the court spokesman. The writ against Hammon alleges that Crispin is being held in Davis County Jail without bail illegally because presumption of guilt of first degree murder is not strong enough to hold the defendant without setting a proper bail. District Second Judge Thornley K. Swan ruled that it was premature to decide a matter of writ until after the defendants, prelimi- Earlier, Escapees UTAH STATE PRISON -Sto find who walked earchers have failed Two trustees away from a milk crew here Sunday about 9 p.m. The escapees are Richard Anderson. 28. 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