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Show h i 0 ' t IV ts ' v V Bandit Kills Delivery man, Shoots Woman at Market . iH itX , J Second Driver 1 Spared Death v 7 r a By Tribune Staff Writers David Beck, George A. Sorensen Max B. Knutson Jr., Steve Wayda and Hazel Parkinson 1 o , !fr5 At 1:48 pm. Thursday, Ann Draper went to lunch. She always went about that time. When sue did Carohn Kingston would till in for her at Natters Maiket, 30C5-7tEast. Mrs. Kingston didn't mind, because her uncle. John Kingston, owned the maiket, and she lived right next door. She took her young boys with her. This time things were different. A short uark man with a gun came in and shot Carolyn Kingston. Then he shot and killed a bread truck driver. He robbed the store and the driver, tried to kill a second bread man and then fled. Late Thursday he was still being sought. Roadblocks had stopped several suspects without result. Here, so far as h ? v 4f rf v V ' n vga offiInvestigating cers have been ible to piece it tois what gether, happened: Mrs. Kingston, a Shocked and bewildered, Mrs. Ann Draper leaves Natters Market with Deputy R. G. Sperry. Mrs. Draper, the regular clerk at the store, was out to lunch during the bloody holdup Thursday. Suit Asks Court to Annul Utahs Reapportionment inlf M A suit challenging both the proposed Utah Legislature reapportionment approved last mom" during a special session and the appportionment enacted in 1965 was filed Thursday in U.S. District Court for Utah. Plaintiffs are State Rep. Brian Florand Edward M. Barton ence, and Jean Leedy, registered voters in Salt ffilmiw Local News TV Today, Gasified C-- 6 Page cunit Lake County. The suit asks a declaratory judgment against S.B. 1, the reapportionment act - Friday, September 8, 1971 Section B of the special session, and injunctions prohibiting Gov. Calvin L. Rampton and Secretary of State Clyde L. Miller from carrying out certain statutory responsibilities in preparing for the 1972 general elections. Page One Dan Valentines streams . . , and dirt in the air. Its a mess . . . But luckily folks are some something doing about it. With humor! Theres tins committee to keep America Beautiful . . . and theyve published a special brochure listing ways Americans can help clean up the nation. Some of the suggestions are not only useful and practical, they are hilarious. Here are a few ways jou can help to keep America beautiful . FILL UP T1IE CIIUCKIIOLES in jour street with foreign sports cars. "Upgrade your neighborhood. Hire 30 penguins to walk around the lawu The neighbors will think you're giving a for- mal party ..." Go to a motion picture throw soap suds at a dirty Plant a tree in your beautiful and a great way from driving." These are all ways to beautiful. Some more suggestions theater and movie. driveway. Its to keep wives keep America from the com- Keep a littei bag in jour car. If you dont own a car, hang it on your ear! stiave & hippie!" paste a Keep your home beautiful of Sophia Loren on your wifes picture mirror . . . . All good valid ways to keep America beautiful. Some mote: Put slipcovers on ugly downtown buildings. Combat pollution by offering a $100,000 prize to the fnsi scientist who creates Keep motley! to Hong Kong. Refuse to open mail addressed to Occupant. Never live next door to anyone who owns a motorcycle. Never ask a woman who believes in womens lib to wrestle. "Always kiss your own wife first when the clock strikes midnight on New Years Eve . . . then race around and kiss all the other wives . . . mother-in-la- suggestions on Well, there they are how to improve America and your own personal life. Use em . . . TODAYS VALENTINE A Valentine today to a kind lady. She is Mrs. Kareb Hansen. She lives at 7885 Thornlon Cl. in Sandy. dog. The dog is a b e a utiful black air . . ." America green spend m .a j. s. v wo- Karen found the ( dog roaming lost I and puzzled near 60th South and Foothill Drive. The dog has a tag. It belongs family named Clifford that lives in a Hod-enfiel- d, N.J. Mrs. Hanson tried to call longdistance the other evening. There was no answer. Obviously the Cliffords are touring in Utah. If they read this, be advised, Katen Hanson has your dog. And a Valentine to you, Karen Hanson, for taking all the troutile for a little lost dog. THE SAM, SAD CYNIC, SAYS: I think the world was a better place to live when ever body got paid on Satur-d- a ! m A . nderful animal. . and leave Gift wrap jour garbage It in your automobile for somebody to steal THE COMMITTEE ALSO says that the average American male has .tea much nervous stress in his everyday life. The committee suggests American males simplify their lives. Here are a few suggestions on how a man can simplify his life: send your Keep America beautiful Labrador. mittee: Get rid of unsightly hair Tiie Keep America Beautiful committee believes there is a great need for Americans to become more patriotic. The committee suggests that one of the nicest ways to show your patriotism is to teach your parakeet to sing, America the Beautiful. rescued Shes lost somebodys t one-ma- principle, amounting to 37.34 percent in the House of Representatives and 40.22 percent in the Senate, based on the optimal district size determined by dividing the number of legislative seats into the state population of 1,059,000 in e 1970. result of the disparities among the various districts in the House of Representatives and Senate, prescribed by the SB1, 1971 First Special Session plaintiffs herein will suffer discrimination and debasement of their voting power and of their effective representation in the State Legislature if that act is implemented, resulting in a denial of the equal protection of the laws in violation of their rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, Constitution of the United States, the suit alleges. As a ... Remedies Asked Nothing Serious1 GOOD IDEAS: A huge national campaign is under way to keep America beautiful. , People are getting mighty bred of trash along the highways, polluted water in the nations lakes and It cites variations from the one-vot- Filed by attorneys William J. Lockhart, Ronald N. Boyce and Parker M. Nielson, the suit asks these specific remedies of the federal court: That the first three sections of the 1971 special session legislation be declared void; That the currently effective 1965 reapportionment be declared void as it, wide obviations from a mathematical optimum district size; That Article IX, Sec. 4 o' the Utah Constitution, providing that no senatorial districts cross county lines, be declared void as it makes impossible the creation of any apportionment plan meeting the too, one-ma- contains one-vo-te criterion; Party Provision Attacked That Sec. 4 of the 1971 legislation, ve ting the entire power to allocate districts within the counties to the two political parties named therei" (Republican ard Democratic) and denying to mem- bers of any other parties or to persons not members of any designated political party the opportunity to participate in the establishment of said districts te declared void; And enjoining the governor and secretary of state from issuing election calls, handling candidate filings, etc., in pieparation for the 1972 elections. Appendixes tc the complaint point out of specific figures as documentation claims that the 1971 Act and the current apportionment do not meet test of equal representation. Salt Lake Countys current apportionment on this basis is a 10 percent under -representation, with each of 11 senators renresenting 41,691 persons, the suif said. Weber County is under - represented by 11 percent (42,093 persons for each of the three districts) and Utah county is 21 percent under - repiesented (45.925 persons per each cf the three senatorial districts.) The suit finally asks that the federal ccurt retain jurisdiction until the legislature adopts a constitutionally valid legislative apportionment. di- vorcee, was alone in the store with her boys, Jerry, 4, and Erin, 2. Where she was when the gunman entered and what happened next, no one but she knows for sure. She was shot in the head, probably as her children watched. She must have been shot a minute or two before the bread track driver came in, because the driver, Michael Preston Bown, Woods Cross, went right to work, not suspecting a thing. Mr. Bown, a had returned missionary, been driving for Famlee Bread, 734 E. 4th South, for a couple of months, trying to help support his seven brothers and sisters. He was th . oldest. He w'as over by the bread rack, notebook and pencil in hand, when the gunman came up behind him and shot him in the head. He fell where he was shot, blood staining the narrow aisle. The gunman already had cleaned out the till; now he w'ent through the drivers pockets. He took his wallet and his change. Drivers also collect, so it may have been a fair amount of money. Exactly how much Was taken from tie driver and the market was not N Cartridges Found Suddenly the door opened. In walked William J. Bryant, Salt Lake City, a driver for Peter Pan Bakers, Inc., 935 Denver St. Damn bread men! the bandit told him. Okay, drop to the floor! Mr. Bryant did. The man put a gun to Mr. Brvarts head and pulled the trigger. It clicked. Again: another click. Then the gunman left. Officers said he ran south into an alley and then east. Presumably he got into a car. It didnt dawn on Mr. Bryant at first how close he had come to death, what the clicking had meant, he told a reporter later. He thought it was a Luger-typ- e automatic. But it must have been a revolver because investigators found no His nWlier, her niece, was shot, lies Erin Kingston, 2, By Clark Lobb Tribune Staff Writer More than 50 skeptical and angry migrant farm workers from throughout the West Thursday afternoon took their demands for immediate action on proposed housing units to the Farmers in the federal Home Administration Building, 125 S. State. The crowd had swelled to nearly 100 by the time a meeting with Clarence Anderson. Utah director for FHA, was completed shortly before 4:30 p.m. The group marched on the sidewalk from the Utah Migrant Council, East, to the Federal Building to make what was supposed to be a surprise ap724-3r- d pearance. Surprise Spoiled Either security guards had been tipped off or saw the group coming toward the front doors. By the time the workers were in the lobby, a barred barricade kept them from the elevators and a locked side door kept them from tb Victim Unconscious Tired of Promises It was Jerry Kingston in the back room, holding his mothers bloody head and sobbing. She was unconscious, leaning against some crates. It didnt take long for officers to arrive. Deputy Tom VVavman was first, on his motorcycle. He got the call at 2:07 p.m. and was there a minute later. Then more officers, and the ambulance tc take Mu. Kingston to Cottonwood Hospital. The crowds began to gather. Two neighbors, Mrs. Marie Jansen and Judy Builer, took care of Jerry and arrived. That Erin, until their great-aun- t was Mrs. C. R. Gustafson, whose home and office both are nearby. Later the family gathered at Cottonwood Hospital where Carolyn, still critical, was in surgery. They said they were tired of promises and assurances that something would be done to provide adequate housing. And New Project Coordinator H. Edward Doelle, former project specialist for the Salt Lake City public service careers program, was promoted Thursday to project coordinator, with a salary increase from $720 to $756 a month. The project eoordmator post has been vacant since July 1. ' St. Louis Meetings Leon DeKoiwer, Salt Lake City fire chief, was authonzed Thursday by the to City Commission expenses of attend the International Association of Fire Chiefs convention in St. Louis Sept. S-- 19 through 23. Chief DeKorver was also authorized to arrive one day early to discuss plans for the 1974 convention to be held in Salt Lake City. they received three assurances from th director: That a meeting would be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. at St. Peters Episcopal Church, 1274 E. 1450 South, Clearfield, to ' discuss a pending application of a $1.5 million housing center at Roy. The Weher-Davi- s project would provide .. one to five bedroom homes at $30 to $60 a month. Mr. Anderson said he would move the meeting date ahead if the , group wanted him to, but It was left at least tentatively for Tuesday evening. That Mr. Anderson Would call FHA . headquarters in Washington, D.C., Fri- day at 9 a.m., with migrant workers pres' . ent, to impress upon national officials the need for all possible speed in gt .ting the project under way. We must start construction .this fall &o the units will be ready next summer, said Charles F. (Chuck) Brenner, housing director for the migrant council. 120-un- it -- Arrange D.C. Visit That Mr. Anderson would arrange for a visit to Washington as scon as pos-- 1 sible and to arrange for a migrant work- - ' i er representative to accompany him. The director told tie workers bids . houshave been let for a $264,000 center at Beryl, ing center and day-ca- r Iron County. But this did not make much of an impression. Several said the hous- - ing problem;; in that area are not nearly I as great as those in northern Utah The Iron County project is on an 80 . percent federal grant and 20 percent loan at a 1 percent interest rate. The Roy . project application calls for a 90 percent grant, 10 percent loan, Mr. Brenner said. , Promises Assistance Well work with you, Mr. Anderson told the group. Well do all we possibly ' can to speed up housing units. We know you have serious housing problems and we want to help you solve them. At the end of the session he returned with the committee .o the entire delegation. The barred gate was lifted, and Mr. Anderson told them of the Tuesday meet- -. ing and the Washington phone call and meeting. He urged only a representative few to attend the session in Clearfield ' Tuesday evening. Maybe More Tuesday Late Thursday she was In intensive care after three hours and twenty minutes in surgery. The bullet had penetrated just in front ot the right ear and fragmented. As far as they could tell, doctors removed the fragmenis. For the Bown family there was grief. If we get nothing but promises Tues- day well have 500 or 1.000 migrants here, a committee representative told . Mr. Anderson during the session in the ' directors office. Another said migrant housing in Utah is the worst in the nation and that many families have none at all. They sleep", outside, rain or shine, he said. Another worker said about 2,000 mi- grant woikers liv in substandard housing in Utah with up to nine to a room. In a press statement issued by the workers, the delegates charged that as . many as 28 workers reside in a ' shack with outdoor plumbing. -- two-ye- Fire Chief lo Attend cradled in arms of Mrs. C. R. Gustafson after the holdup. Migrants Protest Housing, Fill FILAs Office in S.L stairs. spent cartridges. However, within a few minutes they Mr. Bryants first thought was fe- call told a committee would be allowed were the police and it wasnt until he picked to Mr. Andersons office on the fifth up the phone on the wall that he saw Mr. .up floor. Fourteen were selected, including Bowns body. Then he knew what those clicks had iwo women. meant. That was at 3 p.m. During the next He called the Salt Lake City Police hour and a half, the committee memDepartment, but the market is technicalbers, many of them speaking and underly outside the city limits, so police notistanding only Spanish, expressed their fied the sheriff's department. While he concern, using one or two of their group was still on the phone, he heard a cry. as interpreters. Michael was dead. He had graduated from Viewmont High in Bountiful, gone to Brigham Young University foi a year and tnen mission to Texas for served a the Church of Jesus Christ of latter-daSaints. He went back to BYU and was studying art. He liked to draw. Even in high school, he was into art, said his brother. Lynn. He was always having a pencil in his hand. Mike was the oldest of the eight children of Preston and Olive Bonn. He 915 W. lived a home in Woods Cross 5th South with his mother, five brothers and two sisters, and had no plans to marry. His father may be in Las Vegas; the family isnt sure. "He was always on the ball. said Lynn, never late for anything. He was a far ou? brother. I y -- two-roo- Ornate Pole for Park yjj ! Michael Preston Bown Dies of Bandit's Bullet The city commission Thursday author- ized the Utah Power and Light Co. to in- stall 26 mercury vapor street lamps in the Arcadia area east of Sugarhouse on ornate rather than the standPark ard wooden poles. Area residents said the, would pay the increased costs. - ; |