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Show 4 It "Tie Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday, November 14, 1971 Thats Bracks Retirement -- Shotgun Wound Takes Life of Genola Boy, 15 View Lee to Step Down --Theyll Never Shut Him Uji i.; Continued From Page B-- George D. Clyde, the eventual winner and But Mayor governor. Lee still had the option at that time of Petitions running as an independent. were filed on his behalf and he had to make up his mind. In a tense scene, the day before the deadline, in a broadcast, the governor said he was going to run. He then launched into a slashing criticism of Sen. Arthur V. Watkins, who he saw as the engineer of his defeat in the earlier primary election. I intend to expose him and his manipulations in the campaign ahead, said Lee, who jumped into what one writer described as a d campaign that left a political whirlpool. l Moss. The GOP lost its Senate seat and Sen. Moss is still there today. The worked for a while between elections as the national chairman of For America, a conservative political action group which had been by Clarence E. Manion, former law school dean at Notre Dame, and Dan Smoot, Texas publisher and radio commentator. Cut off from the governors seat and the U.S. Senate, Brack turned toward the mayors job in Salt Lake City. In a rambunctious campaign in 1959, he beat State Sen. Bruce Jenkins, now a federal bankruptcy referee. The election induced voters to come out in record numbers in the primary and general elections. It hasnt been surpassed. He looks to January with a great deal of relish. Hes eligible for a lifetime pension as a former governor (a law just passed this year) in addition to some other retirement income. His family is nearby. He has four children : Mrs. Helen Nelson, living in Price ; Mrs. Margaret Jon Lewis, in Seattle; Richard L. Lee, an assistant golf pro in Las Vegas, and Janies B. Lee, a Salt Lake City lawyer. two-ter- ijonal. He bojeotted United Nations ob- servances. One day in the of agents May, internal Revenue Service showed up in ing at the governors mansion and asked or else. The him to pay his income tax governor refused. By that afternoon, the agents had filed liens on his bank deposits 'to get the money. V Then came a turning point 1956. $is term as governor expired. No other igovgtnor had been elected to a third fern.-- At he same time, a U.S. Senate Seat was up for election with Sen. Wallace F. Bennett then ready to run for his fecwid term. radio-televisi- two-fiste- Emotional His Big Mistake Sign-Of- f the emotional broadcast ended, with spectators on the edge of their seats, the governor turned to his wife and a son and said: Lets go home now. I know Ill sleep better tonight than I have in a long time. The governor polled more than 90,000 votes and lost. He came back two years later to run as an independent against Republican Gen. Watkins and Democrat Frank E. As Against the advice of some key the governor opted to seek the third term, and the eventual results, as 4een by many observers, found the governor's chances for seeking higher office gone p in smoke. Today, Mayor Lee that decision probably was biggest mistake. Republicans denied him the nomina-Jioas a candidate for a third term as nominated instead governor. They lieut-ftnant- s, rt Special to The Tribune GENOLA, Utah County An accidental shotgun wound fol- r, $6,000-a-yea- lowing a Saturday morning pheasant hunt took the life of a Genola youth. Inmate Mends After Stabbing at Prison prison were abdomen Fridv night at the prison. Warden Deputy George Brown said the victim told Mr. Brown said the inmate was serving a 3 to 20 year sentence for assault with a concurrent weapon, deadly Utah County Sheriff Ralph (Dick) Chappie said the victim was Barry Lee Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell L. Thomas, Gench. WMr f for sodomy. Sheriff Deputy Jerry Thompson reported Saturday investigation will continue. A bloody blanket was being examined and several inmates at the prison were being questioned, he said. SINGLE VISION ONE LOW PRICE ONE LOW PRICE INCLUDES: CLEAR SINGLE VISION LENSES, vv KETCHUM'S investigate." with a five year sentence your family vision center He was taken to Payson Hospital where he was pronounced dead by a physician. i to officials . . . The sheriff f aid the youth was on the back porch ot his home Saturday at 11 a. m. with his shotgun. His parents, inside the home, heard the shot, ran to the back of the house and found young Barry. m wounds but we weie unable to find the instrument, so we called the Salt Lake County Sheriffs Office the Patrick Perez, 29, Ogden, an inmate of the Utah State Prison, was reported in fair condition Saturday at University Medical Center. He suffered two stab wounds in the YCJR 4 OR ANY OF OUR CHOICE FROM TINTED FRAMES 4 DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE CITY 4 OPEN SUNDAY i Everything for the Builder 4th So. 7th West MAIN STREET 246 SOUTH 355-4656- 4 THRU OPEN ALL DAY MONDAY SATURDAY jUSU Adopts New Rule ' lit General Education ; ; - X change in philosophy education general requirements was adopted 'Saturday in the form of a new polipy by the Utah State University Institutional Council, which met in the USU Exten-Isior- ) Service office at 4465 2nd West, Salt Lake City. t; USU Provost Gaurth Hansen , told the council students currently are offered general education "cafeteria style, In to fa piecemeal approach to designed requirements rinsqre that each graduate will - rfoward -- Checker Holds r : Suspect in I, Store Robbery rM i Thinking he was chasing a shoplifter, a store clerk at fSkajjgs Drug Store, 150 N. 8th .West) stopped a woman and held1 her until police arrived afternoon and Rooked the woman on suspicion of armed robbery. Police Officer C. L. Rockel-ma- n said another clerk, Revo-3)- a Gleason, 704 N. lltn West, Mas checking articles about jJ:25 p.m. when a woman confronted her with what ostensibly was a gun in a coat pocket and said give me all i Youve got, before you get . . , hurt. The checker surrendered $175 and the suspect ; Sajurday Seft. But Kenneth Allan, r, 3615-185- 0 East, responded to the call for 'help by chasing the suspect and asking her if she had .forgotten to pay for some-Ithin-- g. She responded with profanities and he grabbed her iand too, her back into the storeoblivious of possible danger from the gun, which .turned out to be nonexistent, according to Officer Rockel--nia- n. 5 Killed bv Gunshot ' r tr Special to the Tribune I: MT PLEASANT, Sanpete County Beverly Nelson, 1, 1810 S. Main. Salt Lake City, T former ident Mt. Pleasant res- was found dead early Saturday morning in her car in a field west of Mt. Pleasant .of what police officers termed gun shot wound. a have a broad background in basic subjects. He said the new policy is a process, not a specific curriit aims at fulfilling culum student needs rather than institutional needs. Provost Hansen said under the plan each department would contribute instructors to a central pool for general education, rather than create a separate college of general education, as some other universities have done. Then, each course now required will be reviewed carefully for suitability, and probably others will be added by the coordinator of general education and his advisory council. Named coordinator was Dr. W. Farrell Edwards, head of the Physics Department. Glen USU Taggart emphasized that the : AT President success of increasing individu- al options in general education will depend largely on the counseling process. "We will try to guide each student to what he needs to learn, he said. Council Chairman W. B. Robbins described the policy as one of the most significant changes in a long time. The council also voted Saturday to replace the Ph. D. degree offerings in agricultural, civil, electrical and mechanical engineering with a single doctorate of engineering degree in order to reflect the type training graduate engineering students receive. V'" TUBA CITY, ARIZ. (AP) -A St. George, Utah, man was killed and his passenger was Friday afternoon when their car left a highway near here and slammed into a creek bank. The highway patrol identified the driver and deceased as Whitney K. McFarlane. 27. His passenger, Randolph E. Maudsley. 21, also of St. George, was hospitalized here injured in I v r pP ,4 ar$ sorry forth : " f ' JT? ,1; P - n Seat as National Director directors of the National Safety council the fifth Utahn named to the national organization in 59 years. Mr. Pinder, Mr. Pinder 54, 2410 Blaine -Ave., is a past president of The-Jometals Committee, section, National Safety Council, and chairman of NSCs mining section. He also is vice president. Region II, American Society of Safety Engineers fUtah. 'Colorado. New Mexico. Arizona, southern Nevada and Southern California) and .past national representative and past president of the AS3E Utah Chapter. , He is safety ebairman, b -- "Si m, s Mm and a Mining member of Veterans for Safety. He has been with Kenneeott since 1959 and has served in safety jobs in other He received a companies. Mr. Safety award in 1969 from the Utah Chapter. Utah 17b i - ' YY'.t-- service officand canvtake Care of your ; .,Yt' . ' every need, Z, Utsh . , .S- "'S'' ' 7' - . I j I , ' j A., ' - - , t. YfA v ' 7 v S V , Btiiidisg, Y; - nilERETOSEilVeO! Street-- ' Y : : Y , M T ' '' FUTURE LOCATION iCM! - 7 , '7;, OLD Mr. Pinder said he feels Utah representation on the USC board (for ,t least four yeais) will help the state with its safety problems. We will have a closer working arrangement with in national headquarters I he explained. Chicago, hope to be abie to develop new safety programs, work-i- i g closely with Mr. (Robert Utah Safety G.) Ingersoll, Council manager. will no: The appointment affect Mr. Pir.ders present 1 ' v t ' LOCATION w 177 X f . . i TEMPORARY LOCATION 127Ls:Jd 11177 MAIN STREET - and Loan Association Offlc duties or necessitate a move from Salt Lake ity. There are 207 members of the national board from across the nation. jo xX r - :.5 ASSE. KCC v te?crsry Iccstion Assn, - . v Si Gsd Atssrican Savings i;aS tli ' I. - , 'Vn v 7 c . he drove along U.S. 89 about 40 miles south of here. , ' to' use '': temporary location, .Vou11 receive requesieeJ artef service nations: the courteous of 235 South Main; how- highest ctfur 7 address : ; ; 7 7 on, Your insured savings ever;a!l mail addressed to our old. address, : Ail of Ou t five branch 'offlceSjSugarhouse ; 63'Sguth' Maln'yvlll be immediately deliv; ;,eredtOus. ,'7 Granger, Bountiful, foothill and Prbvdr-wi- U; : . ' , - f I .aiiaas il downtbwn'fSerldng showi aboye, 'and wwilt vail tHdlngyRljbe a and'we'Wift'tave'ourowA;v;at3MGrar7t'Auto venient ptaca paVkiiaaiHWs fdfVoRita thf Wpleaafe askA'buf pationcef'at fTKHre' j rj rj rri Cl1 n pdj n 1 fair conJlion. Investigators said McFar-lan- e apparently fell asleep as KCC Safety Director Earns Theron T. Tom" Pinder, ? safety director for Kenneeott Copper Corp.s Utah Copper Division, has been appointed to the board of - vv Av'tY Utalin, 22, Dies After Accident KossniisriS, 1!?i y .'tf)' Granger , - 4A Jk 0 jm. A West 3500 Soutn Branch-27- 27 29B-354- 6 Sugerhouse Branch 2157 A J. ,Jfc l ' 235 South Main; Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 Foothill Branch Drive 484-80- 1400 Foothill Drive 4 582-816- 6 Bountiful Branch Phone: Provo 521-333- 0 Branch-3- 10 North Univeisily Avenue 606 South Morn, Bountiful iff Oh 4k 205-850- 521-336- 4 1 At 0k |