OCR Text |
Show DAILY HERALD 1957 County, Utah Sent First Rocket Up in 1926 ¢ Rocket to the Moon? ‘Grandfather’ -_ Cc if S § merry ae war w-s J D. ! a C..— Xn Edw | 1 Sess __Utah el Kre-v it All Along eee MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1 teetatac ESRinks 6 his pioneer beginning of a new era in rock1€20’s and] etry. » with having In its design Dr. Goddard had to dovelooment cf broken away from the limitations able of lavaching arti- of solid fuels then available and ol sete": invented a successful liquid-fuel rocket with the potential of powerFone" Ltqaid-fo-) 7 >> et ful jet thrusts. A] uric Goddard rocket wobHis theory of fuels proved sound. syward in 1£°3 from a farm The Germans used many of his conclusions in developing World : Mas:., the Naticnal { War II's :o ng-range V-2. re recalls. The Dr. Goddard produced the first sis el device rose gyro-stabilized rocket. In 1935 one t its flight was the | of his rockets rose 7,500 feet above | |where the average was 13.2 per | oy tv GRANT B'NDIXSEN | | One Goddard invention, a recoil|less rocket launcher which the | American military ignored in 1918, gave a short ta'k and film strip turned out to be the famed bazooka of World War II. In all, he on th» .dvancem~’ at program. Jack Hopkins, Cubmaster, pre-| held some 200 patents. Curiously, Dr. Goddard's work, sented the follow ng awards: Ed-| ward Miller, wolf badge; Tom.ny | got little attentiog in his own coun- Sutton, bear badge; ° Stanley ||try until shortly before the war. Smith, lion badge: Jerry Hintze, | He ser¥ed in wartime at the Navy bear badge and several bobcat | research laboratories in Annapolis, helping develop jet-assisted takeawards, and silver and gold aroffs for aircraft. He died at Baltirows. | more in 1945. Like many pioneers, Dr. Goddard| Slides were shown by Mr. Dain Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Richards walked a lonely road, often igto show the successful effects of nored, often looking for financial Layton, the research which the company | and three children, of aid to continue his work. He was has made on the fluoride problem Utah, were recent visitors in the born in Worcester, Mass. He spent | at a cost of $8,681,000. He stated home | of Mr. Richards’s parents, much of his professional life there, | that the ‘‘Operation Good Neigh| Mr. and Mrs. Herman Richards. first as an instructor at the Worbor Program'’ of the company! The Herman Richards recently cester Polytechnic Institute, then | has been very successful. | {as physics professor at Clark Uni-| The meeting was under the di-| attended a family dinner in Salt | versity. Local alarm at his exrection of Lion Everett Weeks, || Lake City at the home of Mrs. | periments finally drove him to the president. Richards’ brother, Byron Billings. wastes of New Mexico — not far Plans were made for the club’s Alle members of Mrs. Richards | from today’s White Sands Proving annual Christmas party which | Grounds. will be in the form of a dinner family meet once a month for a Exploration of the Atmosphere © dance ‘o be held at the Skyliner family get-together. Cafe on Dec. 20. Bob Noyce was a special guest of Lion Bob Gillespie. Dr. Orem to the Edgemont Pack 3038. MH is the responsibility of parents and sons to work together for cub scout achievement, Harold Hutchinson, committee chairman, told parents and members of pack 3038 at a meeting in the Edgemont Ward Friday evening. Skits were presented by Den One and Den Five, Leo Perry Goddard was chiefly inter- David Garfield has transferred ested in finding a way to explore from Cub Scout Pack 3032 in the upper atmosphere. In letter to the National Geographic Society in 1916, he wrote of the ‘‘vast amount of information that is to be gained by the sending of apparatus into the region that lies above 100 or 200 miles from the surface of the earth.” In a “classic, slim monograph, Residents of Utah county pur- published by the Smithsonian In- County Bond Sales Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur McDaniel of Alpine and Mrs. Eva Bellon of Roosevelt, by MAYFLOWER RETURNS TO HOME PORT—..n estimated 2,000 persons line dock at Plymouth, Mass., to see the MayflowerII return to her home port for Thanksgiving. A tugboat towed the sailing vessel to Plymouth from New York City where she had spent the summer and early fall. The Pilgrim replica will be towed to Telephoto) grandparents i never gel to ¢ e, according toa vy made { e National Science Found oD The loss to the country is te:med enormous.” to —s Mrs. Keith Beck entertained nine members of Club 13 at her home Thursday’ evening and Emily Beck and Marjorie Burgess were special guests. Turkey and all the trimmings was served to everyone and the remainder of the evening was! spent playing games with prizes | going to Marlene Avery and Emily Beck. In Guam Accident John Scott Kirkwood, eight-year- Mr. Kirkwood, a former Provo resident, i§ stationed with the U. S$. Government. Details of the accident are not yet known. youngster’s grandmother, The Mrs. Hattie Keeler Bent, is also formerly of Provo. Other grandparents are living in San Francisco. Provo Squadron Of CPASlates Tuesday Meeting County GOP ‘Workshop Is Postponed report before an executive ses- sion of the Salt Lake City Commission today on his study of revenue sources in Phoenix, Ariz Ellis said the Arizona city collected more than $1,300,000 a year through a 2 per cent cut of the state's 30 million dollar annual sales tax collections, $646,000 from gasoline taxes, $682,000 from auto taxes, and an estimated $2,508,000 from a 1.5 per privilege’’ levy. cent ‘business Winner Listed In Speech Meet Of Sharon Stake: OREM — The superior rating for the Sharon Stake Speech The Repubican workshop, origi-|| Meet went to nally scheduled to be held Dec. ; Sharon Jacklin the Orem 7, will be pcstponed until after of Republican mass meetings to be Sixteenth Ward Friday evening held early next year, Orville in the Orem Gunther, Utah County Republican | Thirteenth - Sixchairman, said today. teenth ch apel. ; The other contestants for the © meet were Mary Watters, Utahn Plans Trip To Antarctica Orem Twelfth; Peggy Pace, ‘ Orem Fifteenth; ke oh | Mavonia Olds, Miss Jacklin SALT LAKE CITY (UP)— Veteran Utah mountain climber Rob- Provo Seventeenth, ert Goodwin, 30, Salt Lake City, will leave here Wednesday on the Jcan Bell, Orem and Robbie Nineteenth. The contestants each gave a first leg of a trip which will take | five-minute talk on the theme, | him to Antarctica. Goodwin, a giaciologist, is one day at 7:30 p. m. at the home of of a party of nine scientists and 30 support personnel who have Lt. William Keith, executive offibeen employed by the Arcti¢ Incer, 326 E. 9th N., Orem. Usual stitute of North America. squadron meeting will be held In Antarctica the party will conGene Dut-! Wednesday, said Capt. | duct sciéntific studies as part ct son, commander. the International Geophys ical Squadron PA-18, in for repairs, will be ready to fly Tuesday, he Year. The studies will take two years to complete. said. A graduate of Bingham High School and the University of Utah, The oldest known map is a Goodwin is considered an expert clay tablet made in Babylonia | ahout 2300 B.C., according to on avalanches and mountain climbing and has studied 51 different \"Rand McNally’s Atlas of World ' glaciers in Alaska for the IGY History. |‘‘Man Shall Not Live by Bes Alone.” SURVIVED U.S. SPACE TESTS—Laika, the doomed Russian pooch, hurtling around in space aboard Sputnik II, isn’t the first animal! to have invaded space. These two Java mon- keys spent 65 nours at an altitude of more than 95,000 feet in an Aero Medical Field Laborato’ ry Stratosphere Balloon capsule in 1955. The monkeys, who showed no injury or impairment of performance ability, are pictured in the hands of their Keepers at the Holloman Air Development Center, N.M., just after their 242-day exposure to primary cosmic radiation. Greatgift idea: 62 GIANT BOMBSHELLS BLAST THE SCREEN! MARLON ington in January, 1956. 7 THE REAL BATTLE FOR THE BULGES? | Florida for the winter and return here for permanent exhibition in the spring. (UP Wash- -NOW MACAMENDYSHOWING! | : Staff officers of Provo Squadron, released the | Mrs. Elry Wild ie ‘Civil Air Patrol, will meet Tues- previously are also responsible for the fact that about 179.900 h bility students Phoenix Finances old son of Bud and HulaLu Bent Reserve Bank, were $2,009,182, the et action.” Kirkwood, was killed in an accihighest for any month since July Dr. Goddard in 1919 set forth dent on the Island of Guam, where in “a pressurized helmet and windblast suit, a “space monkey” is shown above after being placed in a high-altitude chamber during tests at an Air Force research center. The monkey, anesthetized to avoid pain and possible meddling with instruments, was one of many animals sent into the atmasphere by the Air Force in rockets and balloons during the past 10 years. This picture was University, Makes Stuay of Provoan Killed SPACE MONKEY -— Outfitted Harvard S. L. Comm ’ssioner chased $148,679 in series E and stitution in 1919, Dr. Goddard ex- By KATE OSANN of | Mr. and Mrs. Andrew C. Wolfe {and sons, Andy. John and llugh have movedto Alpine from Carlsbad, N.M. They are living in the | home of Mrs. Will Healey | Mr. Wolfe is employed with the | National Parks Service. | | Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lynn Bennett and son have moved here from | Salt Lake City andare living with SALT LAKE CITY (UP)— City | Mrs. Bennett's parents; Mr. and Commissioner Oliver G. Ellis was Ehild of Former 1956, according to Frederick P. the principle of multi-stage rockChamp, State Bonds Chairman. ets, which the Russians have so Uintah County becamethe third successfully demonstrated in Occounty in Utah to exceed its 1957 tober and November. 1957. He quota, along with Kane and theorized that with the employWasatch counties, according to ment of more than one stage, a rocket could b& sent up specificalChairman Price: Total 10-month purchases in ly to 580 miles—roughly the point Utah County amount to $902,593, at which the first Russian satellite or 90.3 per cent of the county’s went into orbit—and ultimately could reach the moon. 1957 goal, he reported. president who claims that an insuffic:ent investment of time, effort and money is producing results here ;that are far below the European By LORNA DEVEY level.-He points out that less than ALPIivE—Mr. and Mrs. Arlin yne percent of our gross national K. Bellon are parents of their prod ct is being devoted to edu first baby boy, born Nov. 18 in ca n the American’ Fork hospital, Money, or the lack of it. is ol veighing six pounds, nine ounces. Near ‘57 Quota H savings bonds during October, plained, ‘‘A search for methods of according to Sterling E. Price, raising recording apparatus becounty savings bonds chairman. yond the range for sounding balTotal purchases throughout the loons (about 20 miles) 1 the state, as reported by the Federal writer to develop a theory of rock- Be! lons Welcome Child At Alnine 2 -~ 20 MRS. EL, LONT Geneva is now takin sicps effectively to control the discharge of fluorides from its plants into the atmosphere,” Frank Dain, superintendent of Industrial Relations. Geneva Works, Columbia-Geneva Steel Division, told members of the Edgemont Lions Club recently. Invents Bazorka | ta 0¢t & of 700 Ani BAXTER DANA ANDREWS TERESA JACK BRANDO - WRIGHT - WEBB -| BATTLE STRIPE Z Me x. ‘* Salecsed by NTA 4-25 © 1067 by MEA Gorden, tna. “I'l toss you for it—vutch treat or nothing!” aramoun{t Center of Attraction . LAST 3 DAYS FEATURE ears Attack 3:00—6:00—9: oe Battle 1:30—4:25—7:20—10:20 Last Complete Show 8:55 LS By ie k 7 | speed & oe jthe then incredible {miles an hour. In this country, a child's chance |cent. Provo's average is above of getting a good education dethe state of Utah, whichitself is pends on where he lives, on iis finances and on is | above national average at 21 per- parents’ teachers’ ability, says the NEA cent. Most educators in the country _In _Provo, the average indiviagree with Dr. Nathan N. Pusey, | New Mexico. Still another reached| _ of NEW YORK—Provo stands well dual has had some 12.3 y> above the national average in | schooling. These figures “we.e br at proportion of residents getting | l |higher education, according to a out this week by tne Nati Associai.on, in e| survey by the National Education Education sponse to the campaign launc 2d Association | A total of 4,280 local residents? by the presidert to awaken ie -s |have received one or more years American people to the reali | of college training, 30.9 percent of posed by Sputnik It appears that America n edu;the local adult population. Of | these, 1,675 have gone for four cational standards are far below | years or more, according to the those of the Russians in tie scientific field, ‘yhere maupo er latest federal count. This compares with the propor- of superior quality is being projtion getting higher education in duced by them at an enormous Most parts of the United States, rate. a UTAHS MOST DISTINCTIVE NOW SHOWING VENICE PLUS: WINNER FILM FESTIVAL “A MOVIE CLASSICY THE MOST CHALLENGING STORY OF FAITH EVER TOLD! THEATRE Thaalesaieg a Ql -) Enjoy a bountiful Thanksgiving feast, prepared just the way you like it by our master chef! Our pleasingly modest prices further cause for thanks. are El Camino Restaurant Phone FR 3-9172 Call us now to reserve your table. CINEmaScoPE AcouaU PCTRE oe — S: eee 0s 205 10 REGULAR PRICES— COLOR by DE LUXE Great gift-wrap! This is the package you give. Exciting. Differént. Specially designed. Great bourbon! This is the whiskey Great drink!. This is the pleasure: you give. Kentucky's you give. Smopth top‘bouronin Old Stagg makes; every drink great! a great gift bottle. KENTUCKY FRANKFORT, COMPANY, DISTILLING STAGG « ‘86 PROOF |