Show alt Snk't Local News Sports Comics Nothing Salt Lake City Utah — Monday Morning Second Section Serious Traffic Crashes Take 3 Lives On Utah Roads TV Fare —- November 18 1963 War Babies Now Seniors By Harold Schindler I Granite Sees think animals than people No some ‘ animals are oretty nice Take a cocker Sandy for ’ Boy 9 Youth Perish in- By George A Sorensen Tribune Staff Writer been in the Lynn GRANITE PARK—With the first big group of war babies Walker for a dozen expected in the 12th grade next year Granite School District ofears But two ficials are beginning to see their way clear to eliminate double Iweeks ago Sandy day sessions I was struck by a WITH THIS WILL COME THE kindergarten and stance He has family car and ran ofL Mr Schindler “ye tried to catch him and couldn’t”- - Mrs Walker said s For two weeks there was a sadness around the Walker home at 329 E 720Q South Midvale Then the other day as Roy 15 walked from Ilill-cre- day full-da- y first grade Since World War II ended in 1945 the district enrollment has more than tripled with yearly rapid growth DR WILLIAM L HUTCHINSON director of pupil personnel services said Sunday estimated enrollment for 1965 is 60395 including kindergarten students Projected figures forecast 67000 in 1967 and 75000 in 1975 he said Special to The Tribune TOOELE— A boy was killed and four other persons were injured Sunday about 5:30 pm when a car overturned seven miles east of the Dugway Proving Ground st High School there stood his pet eyeing each student STATE Highway Patrol Trooper Neil Bishop Sheriff’s Deputy James Park said the automobile was westbound toward proving ground when it rolled over All of the injured except the dead boy were thrown from the vehicle and scattered as far as Gas Tax Cut Utah Roads-- — There is sunshine in the er household once again has come home Walk- Sandy Mrs David Rashoff assistant to the president of Pyke Manu- was driving facturing Co home As she proceeded east on 9th South 'she tried to 'make a left turn on a street west of 2nd West “Five years ago surveys indicated that 12 per cent of the population moved in or out of the district Today it is becoming much more stable” he said A strong point in the stabilization of the population is found on the west side of the district where new homes are nearing the price of many east of the Jordan River he pointed out A FEW years- ago it was possible for a family to move into the homes stay a few years to build up equity and then move into another area Dr Hutchinson said “Now many of the homes west of the Jordan River cost as when I saw the train “That’s much as the homes elsewhere in she said coming” the district and families are Fortunately the engineer saw staying” he said the automobile on the tracks TO STRESS this point Dr and skidded the train to a halt Hutchinson used a chart showing “Lady would you mind that from 1953-5through 1957-5- 8 the number of high school car? he shouted students living west of the Jordan River varied little in the “I’d love to but it per cent of total high school budge” she explained students to tried Several motorists push the ratio has in Since 1957-5the stranded auto from the creased from 24 to 35 per cent No tracks soap Dr Hutchinson said THEN JUST along came a two minutes latow truck ter Mrs Rashoff was on her way home again BUT THE CAR behind her cut Inside the turn and Mrs Rashoff was forced to veer right to prevent a collision She drove onto a set of railroad tracks and her car hung up - 4 moving your 8 “It was quite an experience” she said I am willing to accept that How about you? Crystal Sky Chills Utah Mrs Jay Edmonds 2549 ComSunday was a clear but chilk monwealth Ave is a good Presing day in Utah Temperatures byterian And as such she donated a box of costume jewel- generally didn’t nose over the mark ry to a Wasatch Presbyterian Church rummage sale LITTLE precipitation was reThe next day she noticed corded at the major weather her watch a $100 stations throughout the state Gruen was missing You Provo reported a trace guessed it In general skies over Utah Someone got a heck of a bar- were clear with only a few light high clouds A brilliant gain at the rummage sale belied temperature highs of That someone may not be sun 40 in Salt Lake City 39 in Logan she he if or but Presbyterian is a good Christian the watch and 45 in Protfo will be returned THE ONLY “warm spot” was It’s really the right thing’ to St George with 60 degrees do you know Teeth - chattering lows were recorded at Delta with 15 MilI notice a special civic beau- ford 12 Coalville 13 and Provo went tification first place award 19 to Salt Lake City’s Riverside FORECASTERS say a storm Park which I think is nice except I didn’t know there was is heading toward Utah from the Pacific Northwest promissuch a place ing to bring showers and snow OF COURSE that isn’t too unMonday’s skies will become usual since there probably are a cloudy with occaincreasingly lot of places I don’t know sional snow late Monday light but a park good afternoon and about during the night grief everybody ought to know TEMPERATURES should where a park is On the there are range from 36 to 50 maximum other folks who haven’t heard with lows from 24 to 34 Monof Riverside Park it is in the day night neighborhood of 13th West and 7th North and 10 years ago it was a weed patch Pencil Points I usually don’t like to print blind items but regular readers will understand It goes something like this: What Ipvely young girl in the Kearns Building received a dozen roses from what young psychiatrist ? LNJURED department accountants are trying to determine whether a recently effective gas tax allowance to governmental agencies will continue to give a bigger chunk to departments A tabulation by highway acIn charge of the Salt countants shows that the per Officer Dale Lazenby cent of gasoline tax revenue Lake City police evidence room looks over going to other state departments rose from five to nearly 12 per cent from 1951 through 1962 six-ce- only a part of the many BB guns and rifles which have been confiscated in police drive Store Bandits Fire Shots THE 1963 Legislature passed a statutory provision for city county state government agencies and school districts allowing them not to pay a state gasoline tax when buying in amounts above 1250 gallons Mr Steed said that since the allowance became effective in July accumulative increase in tax revenues has dropped as low as nearly one per cent in September but currently is at 2 and hundredths per cent six-ce- HIGHWAY three miles north of Scipio when his car ran off the highway and smashed into a dirt embankment Juveniles Weapons: Alarm Mounts guns vandals shooting out winBy Stan Bowman dows and car windshields and Tribune Staff Writer of the indiscriminate Guns fascinate youngsters firing But the growing number of deadly weapons is causing poHowever the 1963 Legislature appropriated to other depart- reports on youngsters firing BB lice increasing concern ments nearly a million dollars more for the biennium from gas and motor vehicle fee funds than in the previous biennium REVENUE from motor fuel taxes which provide nearly all of the highway department’s state funds must increase to decrease the proportionate share of gas revenues to other departments Dean R Steed the highway department’s chief accountant said a predicted increase this year of three per cent in gas tax revenues because of more traffic has been revised to 2 per cent in planning for future new state road construction Flee With ‘Empty’ Purse Two armed bandits attempted to hold up Carl’s Market 279 E 3rd South late Sunday night grabbed the purse of the proprietor’s wife and fired three or four shots at the store owner as he pursued them sonal papers and other effects but no money and he and his companion fled on foot up 3rd East with Mr Blackwelder in pursuit THE SHOTS WERE fired back at Mr Blackwelder as he ran after the suspects and threw INVESTIGATING Richard W Greenhalgh said the a heavy padlock which appartwo youths described as about ently failed to hit them 20 appeared at the front door vThe two youths leaped into a d sedan and of the market at 11:04 pm 1951 Black-weldCarl the owner as escaped just 76 W 1st North and said MR BLACKWELDER his wife Mary were leaving at the bandits intended apparently the close of business to for officer light-colore- er take the store's receipts ONE OF THE youths bran- the day but were surprised dished what police believe was a when they met him and Mrs e in the 22 caliber pistol and pulled up Blackwelder a cloth mask on his face as doorway Mrs Blackwelder stepped out One of the bandits was described as 5 feet 6 weighing the door He snatched Mrs Blackweld-er’- s about 130 pounds and wearing a trench coat The other was of purse containing keys per- a similar description but with bushy black hair face-to-fac- Aulo Burglarized 7 who was transferred from the Dugway Hospital to LDS Hospital Salt Lake City in poor condition Sgt Seifert who investigating officers believe was driving the car Sp4C Harold D Blackard 19 El Cajon Calif and Pfc William F Hulsey 23 El Paso Tex The other two servicemen also are stationed at Dugway SCIPIO Millard County— A boy was killed about 1:45 am Sunday on US 91 Police Warn Parents on Law UTAHNS IN the fall of 1962 voted for a constitutional amend ment that provided for funds from the gas tax and license fees to be used exclusively for highway purposes except for statutory refunds and costs of collection and administration WERE the boy’s sister Robin AND DESPITE a constitutional amendment designed to limit the size of the piece highway STEAVEN FRED Johnston rifles and son of Mr and Mrs Ralph F even derringers are part of Johnston Beaver was proAmerican heritage and natural- nounced dead at the scene from ly youngsters want to have the a crushed chest according to Gayle Rasmussen Utah State opportunity to fire them The problem according to Highway Patrol Trooper The wreckage was not reportCapt E G Cederloff youth bu- ed until 3:30 am althouth the reau commander Salt Lake Poits nose in the air was only car too is few lice Department that about eight feet off the busy people train youngsters in the The youth was discovproper— and legal— use of a BB highway ered by Robert Lindley Fillgun rifle pistol or shotgun more who was traveling to Salt MANY HE SAID do not even Lake City know the law Proof of that is the great ACCORDING to the boy’s parnumber— 40 to 50 at present— ents he had left Beaver Friday of BB guns now in the Salt afternoon to visit friends in Roy Lake Police evidence room un- They thought he was returning der the surveillance of Officer home to Beaver when the accident occurred Dale Lazenby There were no skid marks on THE GUNS WILL remain the highway and the road was there six months Then unless dry and clear according to claimed by the parents of Trooper Rasmussen He said inyoungsters from whom they vestigation is continuing were confiscated they will "be STEAVEN FRED Johnston given to the Utah Fish and Game Department for training was born Feb 15 1947 in Fillmore a son of Ralph Fred and purposes The department Capt Ceder- Janice Brunson Johnston loff said is the only sponsor He was a junior at Beaver of training in the use of guns High School and had attended Weber High School Ogden outside of private sources when he and his family lived in FISH AND GAME sponsors k Roy gun safety and training courses a YOUTn THE was for young men old enough to go priest in Ward Church the Beaver as a First a for hunting requirement of Jesus Christ of Latter-Dalicense e Otherwise few organizations Saints He was a part-tim- e See Page 33 Column 5 Page 42 Column 4 GUNS PISTOLS y em-Se- department offiNed Erickson Moroni Sunday cials seeing the tax allowance as somewhat of an indirect told police his automobile had funds been broken into and about 40 diversion of highway label legislative appropriation of articles of clothing luggage and gas tax funds to some other personal effects stolen The theft departments a diversion of occurred near Main and 5th South highway funds How’s business? the experts And how’s business going to be in 1964? - “Greats say THAT’S WHAT THE SALT Lake Tribune and the University of Utah College of Business plan to find out next Monday during the annual business forum forecast for the coming THE PROGR1M HILL BE moderated by J Whitney Hanks professor of economics at the University of Utah who will give a thumbnail sketch of the present economic Dr posture Douglas N Thompson former professor of economics at the University of Utah and now manager of Hogle Investment Advisors Inc By William C Patrick Tribune Staff Writer “One of the most important observations which five years of study has yielded is that the of traffic death investigations cases carried out by public agencies is a national dis- grace” THE CONCLUSION is that of Dr Alfred L Moseley of Harvard Medical School director of perhaps the most comprehensive investigation ever conducted of the “Anatomy of Death by Driving" The summary is based on a series of detailed reports of individual accidents in the Boston area going back over a period of five years Part of the research has been financed by a grant from the US Public Health Service THE STUDY team which has been on call at all times has of automotive consisted me- chanic automotive engineer human engineer traffic engineer sociologist psychiatrist physician optometrist ophthalmologist attorney and pathologist “The formal title of the project ‘Research on Fatal Highway Collisions’ ” says one of the reports” "provides a hint of the basic philosophy of the group’s approach to the problem is deliberate indeed for titling an event an accident immediately sets up the presumption that chance is the controlling factor” Dr Moseley declared that “the resistance to a scientific scrutiny of the problem is astonishing” will present the probable outlook for the nation in 1964 “IF YOU ARE shot with a gun and found dead” he continued it is a matter of the utmost urgency that no stone be left unturned to see that the manner of the death be factually determined — “If the death be by suicide or due to a defect in the weapon or murder appropriate steps are taken to close the case LEADING OFF A SERIES of discussions on what’s ahead in 1964 for Utah Dr ElRoy Nelson former director of the University’s Bureau of Economic and Business Research and now vice president and economist for the First Security Corp will discuss construction and finance Robert W Bemick business editor of The Tribune will survey the mining and minerals industriesin Utah for the coming year “IF YOU ARE killed while driving your car the death is automatically accidental and if there is any investigation it is concerned only with the immediate circumstance primarily as it affects the license registration and the rules of the road “In short society places a very high value on you if you are murdered and a very low value if your death is by driving” IN THE FIELDS OF manufacturing and trade Frank K Stuart assistant professor of accounting University of Utah and director of the South Davis Industrial Commission will peer into his crystal ball for the 1964 outlook Highlights of the five forecasters’ predictions will be presented in capsule form by Dr Hanks and then questions will be invited from the audience NO MVTTER WHAT YOUR interest in the business field even if it's only finding out how much interest you’ll probably pay on loans next year there’s something for everyone at the annual business forecast presented by The Tribune and the U of U College of Business Probe Laxity Decried in Auto Deaths “TnE WORD ‘accident’ does not appear in this title and this Tribune U to Preview 1964 certainly Strarige Isn’t it that with ail the foreign aid we gave South Viet Nam to have Ma-- dame Nhu’s hair styled she would havb to run out on her California hotel bill? The dead boy was identified as John R Seifert son of Sgt and Mrs Gerald R Seifert Cincinnati Qhio stationed at Dugway - sixty-sevent- h feet away The child was pinned beneath the overturned car and was pronounced dead at the scene by a doctor” from the government installation departments cut an increasingly bigger piece out of the state gas tax pie for the past several Springville Wayne Wilkinson got a dime in change the other year The 1964 business preview which features day and one side peeled halfway off The bank says it isn’t coun- five of the area’s leading experts in the busiterfeit and the Federal Reserve ness field will begin at 7 :30 pm in the main would like to exchange it but ballroom of the University of Utah Union Wayne decided to keep it AND BEST OF ALL THE business foreGene 'Frost 274 N 2nd West cast— the type of tiling for which big corporasent me a want ad clipping cost a cent It's which offered: “Lots — 6 left tions paying money— doesn’t of The Tribune to service a as free the public near school gooJ rich soil ideal for raising children” Says Gene and the University’s College of Business Discussions wilj cover the entire economic “Soil With such 'qualifications merits consideration” picture for 1964 Nobody Asked But: 30 The Utah Department of High ways has watched other state years and Tooele the Shrinks for ing” a d AS THE BIG CLASSES of war babies began graduating the difference between those graduating and entering the first grade each year will diminish During past years this differSandy had never been to the ence has averaged approximateschool before You tell me how ly 3500 students Dr Hutchinfind there he’d he knew Roy son said Mrs we all know” “For STABILIZATION of residents Walker said “the dog went also is a fact&r in helping the in school area the to every district catch officials up to the during the time he was miss- pupils Walker Utah automobile accidents claimed three more victims Sunone each in Box Elder Tooele and Millard counties THE BOX ELDER FATALITY was the second resulting from a train-ca- r crash early Saturday two miles south of -The Tooele death was that of a boy who was-passenger in a car on its way to Dugway Proving Ground when it rolled over late Sunday afternoon The Millard County crash killed a 16 year-olyouth when his car hit an embankment on US Highway 91 north of Scipio full-ye- a Victim Dies Car-Trai- n Nearing as Rolls Level named spaniel ‘Full-Days- y Preparing for The Salt Lake of Utah business preview left Doug from jre Tribune-Universit- las Thompson Frank K Stuart Dr Whitney Hanks Robert W Bernick Dr ElRoy Nelson 1 i i r i ’v vt THE INVESTIGATORS reject the concept of single causation and also the presumption that See Page S3 Column S |