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Show &;& i,B , 4 - f -- fi -Tr - V '- 1 x?v lieiates fei"tigg j Second-Han- d - W : 'ill' vV .'VLrTr Cvv-f- l . rm i'IA . . c' - f ! v; 7 jp'h V . . Cr. n I ' V. x- - - ; f'x - li' 7'' V- v v-& i OI Testifies Suspects In Highway Patrolman Case Ex-Frie- nd By George Raine Tribune Staff Writer A former friend of COALVILLE Emery Dean Beck, alleged to have murdered a UUh lawman, testified k.t Friday that he had heard secondhand that Beck had done away with tar cop. In its fuller context, Ernest J Tisdale, the witness, was saying that fbr C 1 X 1 nm Page 15-- 7 lif h & u it Tu-dan- v to Thwd Distnct Court Judge Stewart Hanson is presiding et the trial, which has a jury of nine women and three men The prosecution will resume Us case Monday In Mobile Home id lagc One Commission Rescinds irmnr Ullli The Utah Liquor Control Commis- sions relatively new honor system for reporting by incoming airline travelers of personal liquor importations hasnt worked and was rescinded Friday Director Wayne J. Bussell indicated in a prepared release that the policy, adopted in December so passengers coming into the state by air could keep their occasional bottle of rare or expensive wine rather than face confiscation, didnt work because the persons getting the forms failed to return them for processing No Returns In fact, while customs officials at the Salt Lake International Airport handed out many blank forms, not one was returned to the Liquor Control Commission, said an employe. By reporting the importation to the commission, the owner of the liquor or wine could keep the bottle, having made it legal rather than contraband by paying markup on the liquor to the commission, and getting in return an official bottle sticker. Confiscate Liquor It means a return to the old policy: Customs officials will confiscate liquor turning up on out-o- f state flights. Commissioners took the policy action Thursday afternoon in executive session but released the decision Friday Hie Tisdales resided in a mobile home in Lyman, Wyo , at this time in 1074, and Beck rented a room from them in the trailer The men were employed by Allied Chemical and worked at a mme outside Lyman Tisdale, 25, also testified to other factors involved in the case the prosecution has raised He swore, for example, that Beck told him that he had stolen goods out of the Evanston City Jail after borrowing his (Tisdale's) car earlier in the day Dec 8. Bock also told Tisdale, the w ltness said, that he (Beck) had let a prisoner out of the jail. (That v,as Wayne Tague, who the prosecution says, wa driven by Beck to Salt Lake City, m Tisdales car, on Dec. 8 ) Stopped by Trooper The state alleges that Beck was stopped by the UHP trooper while en route back to Wyoming from Salt Lake City. It is alleged that Beck murdered tne trooper as he was airaid that tne lawman would see the stolen goods in the car. Tisdale said Friday that Beck had told him that Becks motive in taking the goods was to remove evidence against himself stemming from a drug arreot in Wyoming. But the witness said Beck did not report to him what he had done after the incident at the Evanston jail Tisdales testimony differed in parts on Thursday. from that of his She claimed, for example, that two large green garbage bags (part of the stolen property) were bulging with marijuana On Tis- n, dale said that was not the case, that there wasnt that much marijuana. Brought to Trailer woman also said that the properThe ty, which was brought into the trailer, d included two handguns. Tisdale he only remembered there being a shotgun in the cache. Tisdale also said he helped Beck hide portions of the goods. The other witnesses Friday were: Robert W Sibert, with the Firearm Identification Unit, FBI, Washington, D C , who testified he found four entrance holes and three exit holes m Trooper Antoniewicz clothing Charles Nixon, an Allied Chemical foreman over Beck at the plant where See Page B-- Column 1 tes-tme- 4, Child Care Expert Finds It Pays to Listen More Tubune Staff Writer Margot Edwards said she became a more effective maternity nurse after I realized I was full of prunes "I used to talk a lot when I was a young nurse, but now I do a lot more demonstrating and listening 1 thought I knews - Vj everything,! 27- said the year Pacific Grove, Calif, N u r s i n gj veteran. She was at t the Salt Lake; Hilton Friday j to address daylong workshops of the Utah Section of the Nurses Association of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology Mis Edwards, mother of seven natuial, step and foster" children, is author Communications of a book Dimensions in Childbirth Education W ot; -, - . , , ' ii, '? - M - ' a i til 447 rtr . t X c i t ' . I is&i , x f ,V 1 4" Wr V ' 1 m. Sf i t- ',! - 2 II V .t , -I ;r: t 4 . -- 'A, -- x? A X ft s I f yv k'N J' r- J- s -. x. vJ- r ' ''sri , w. . j4 ' -- w, M J1 VN. stejgzrrs bnunl o ir. - " , 'L. x jt 'Xf" - r" 5- T' .xyC J'1 Vr fr .1 r - -- v- : z ' v4- - W -- " ti, wv- I' ? - v- r ,j vW "x , s - 4 v - - j. vo , 4; T a beautiful scene for motorist traveling along Evergreen Avenue at 2700 East. The Vhile it could hardly be called a typical spring day, Fridays snowstorm did create ibure Matt Photo ov Frrtnn R PorschaH stormy conditions should ease Saturday, but more snow is possible again on Sunday. Storm Hits Most of State Utahns Keep Snow Shovels Handy Handy Peterson Tribune Staff Writer By Tins is spring9 t the time of jear when many Utahns arc working the kinks out of their tennis backhand, or tunung the soil fur the vtgctable garden, the snow shovel and window scraper remain in use. Utahs topsy-turv- y weather pattern continued Friday, with many ski resorts receiving more than a foot of new snow, with valley areas getting several inches. The storm, which was expected to bring most of the snow on Thursday, saved its punch for early Fnday morning, when snow finally began to collect on the ground as temperatures dropped Ease Drought And unlike many recent snowstorms, this one extended across most of the state, helping ease slightly southern Ltahs severe drought s.tuation Miliord. Weather bervice ic ported Friday that a heavy snow warning was in effect for central and southern parts of the state, with four to six inches of snow already on the ground m man areas, with much heavier amounts in higher elevations The National Stoc kmen were advised to take necessary precautions to protect newborn calves and lambs Salt Lake City received .62 inches of precipitation. Partly cloudy skies, with some clearing is forecast for Utah on Saturday. Increasing cloudiness, with a chance of more snow, is seen for Sunday. Saturdays temperature will be in the mid-40with some light winds expected Seamung the state's precipitation picture, the following areas reported significant amounts from the storm Coalville, 1 04 inches. Delta, 39 inches, s, inches, Nephi, 71 inches, inches, St George, 41 T ixxie, 87 inches Drivers Do Well Despite the snowstorm, motorists seemeu to have the situation under, cuntiol. as Salt Lake City and count; lawmen resonded to only an average ' number of tender-bende- r accidents The Utah Highway Patrol reported only a few minor accidents resulting from the slippery conditions 61 Richfield. inches and 42 .Hid Snow new bud 69 total, with 12 inches Skiing is reported excellent on both and powder surfaces High Reaches 41 Salt Lake Citys high temperature fiidaj was 41, 13 degrees below normal The low was 34, four degrees above normal for the date Total precipitation for March is now 2 52 inches, 1 26 inches more than normal for the date the Utah Highway However, looking at precipitation lute Friday, Department said that most roads were figures from Oct. 1, 1976 to the present, Salt Lake City has recorded 4 60 inches m good condition, but that motorists of moisture, which is 2 98 inches below should be advised that high mountain passes could become very slick as normal. temperatures dip Utahs lowest temperature Fnday Ski resorts reported the following mormng was 22 degrees at Bryce snow depths Alta : 80 total inches, with Canyon. The states high mark was S3 14 new, Brian Head 82 total, with 18 degrees at Moab. Looking beyond the new, Brighton 61 total, with 8 new. weekend, forecasters say that unsettled Park City 60 total, with 8 new; Park weather will continue, with some imWest 60 total, with 8 to 10 new inches. provement possible by Wednesday. pui ki ex-wi- J Was Full of Prunes By Clark Lobb , v I M Local News Comics IS , and named Sherriee Sundbloom, testified Thursday tnat Beck had told her of killing a lawman. Siie also said he talked of killing Mr testified Tisdale, m the ms'-oc- r Saturday Morning, March 2f. UJ77 ion that the woman relayed to Tisdale what Beck had told her. Tisdale said that his wife, Sheiriee, quGted Beck as threatening Tisdale, and sgid, Hp would do away with hnei, he had already done away with the cop Now Remarried Tisdale, now div orced from Sherriee, took the stand Friday afternoon at Summit County Courthouse in the case that alleges that Beck shot and killed William Antoniewicz, a Utah Highway Patrol trooper, on the night of Dec 8, 1Q7 1, in Echo Canyon Tisdales remarried Sritnuu TV Today Beck had made a proposal of marriage to his (Tisdale's) wife, was refused, and She works with parents before, during and after childbirth in a variety of settings She is an associate editor and regular contributor to Birth and Family Joui nal and is a past director at large of the International Childbirth Education Assn Nurses are kind of into an advocate role, handling emotional problems as well as the immediate physicial challenges," said Mrs Edwards She said the period immediately after childbirth is critical for the mother and child and that separation of the two brings real problems When babies are bom prematurely they sometimes are separated from the mother for a week or so while she's out there pounding on said the infant care the glass, expert. It would be better for both if the mother could at least touch the baby before it is hauled away. Im not as absolute as I used to be and dont give as much adv ice, said I tell them what the Cahlomian seems to work for me and show them more how to do what seems to work for (hem I talk less and lit the parents talk moie while I sit u.id jiggle the baby. Utah Patrol statement Irks Union The executive committee of the Utah Public Employes Assn. Fnday reacted very strongly against a recent assertion by the Utah Highway Patrol that the UPEA didnt represent the patrols membership. And members asserted that a recentsince quelled ly hinted strike threat by UPEA officials didnt, in any event, extend to state law enforcement personnel Patrol Supt. Robert J. Reid had told legislators in a letter, during the last days of the session, that Patrol officers wouldnt back a stnke, were the UPEA to allow one to occur, over salary increases the UPEA has said were too small Not Suggested Said Executive Director Richard B Kinnersley, In the first place, ro one in UPEA has ever suggested, even if the membership voted to withhold services, that it would include any law His (Col enforcement personnel Reid's) assumption that we would include these employes shows a lack of understanding on his part of UPEA and the uitegnty of our leaders. Attempt to Downgrade His statement that UPEA doesnt represent the Utah Highway Patrol is a malicious attempt to downgrade the great impact and support we have given to UPEA members in the Utah iiighwav Patiol over the past decade including substantial salary reclassification and benefits and passage of two major pieces of legislation in this session which benefit only the Utah Mr KinHighway Patrol members, nersley said The Executive Committee also formally rejected any discussions of services bewithholding emplojes cause of the pav increase issue Earlier, officials indicated the idea proba-bl- j would be dropped 10,000-memb- Yebterday'b Chuckle Any wife with an inferiority complex can cure it by being sick in bed for a day while her husband manages the household and children Police, Fire, Emergency Medical Telephone 911 In City and County Garn Fights Banning Vehicles Off-Ro- ad By Frank Hewlett Tribune Washington Bureau Concern over the WASHINGTON possibility of off road vehicles being banned from public lands was expressed Friday by Sen Jake Gam, in a letter to President Jimmy Carter Sen Garn said he does not have an official account of the rumored executive order but that he has a copy of an issue paper from which the order is purported to have been written. Sen Gam said he was concerned with the language in the issue paper which vehicles says where the use of d may cause undue adverse effects on the soil, vegetation, wildlife, wildlife habitat or cultural or histone resources of particular areas of public lands the respective agency head shall immediately close such areas to the use of vehicles While this language is not, on its face, as restrictive as some user groups claim, wrote Sen Gam, "it is apparent from its breadth that it very well could result m a blanket prohibition of off road vehicles I neednt tell you w hat that would mean to the sportsmen of my state which is 67 percent public land It is apparent that some protection must be afforded the public lands against possible damage caused by off road vehicles. The user groups themselves recognize this need and support reasonable restrictions But they feel, and I agree, that a regulation prohibiting use where such use may off-roa- cause undue damages is loo vague and broad Legislatures are ideally suited to the tak of performing the kind of balancing that is involved in tightening such language and I suggest it would be more appropriate to formulate and administration position, then ask Congress to act on it. It appears to me that unilateral action by executive order can only offend legitimate interests and result in widespread opposition to the action I would be happy," the letter concludes, to work with you and your administration, interested user groups and environmentalists to achieve a satisfactory solution to this problem eels i.rPor Dip in Skiers Lack of skiers caused only a minor dip last month in the number of passengers using Salt Lake Citys International Airport. Thats what Airports Director Paul B Games said Friday-aJife discussed figures which showed a 4 per cent drop in scheduled airline passengers for February There was some ski loss, he said. "But last year February had 29 days . . . that also showed an effect in the figures He pointed out the airport had nearly 6 per cent more passengers this year than last and freight handling is up another 14 per cent. Likewise, car rentals, concessions and parking are also doing well this year off-roa- d Guide to Vacstton Recreation InfcrtnaUhiM March z?, Send a copy to a friend anywhere 75 r 9QC Muled arywt-er- m e the worl J 1 84110 Please mail copies of The Salt Lake Tribune 1977 S enir Travel and Vacation Guide Name 1 battery of experts agreed Friday the bats have left the Salt Lake Building Departure was credited to a program which includes the use of ultrasonn bat chasers The win.xd mammals lived in tne buildings walls often squeaking and sometimes thing tlinmjh lom'.'i 1' u Mdiled anywhere in the U S or its possessions Fill out and mail this coupon to: The Salt Lake Tribune Circulation Dept., 143 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah No stamps piease Du lose coin taped to card, money order or checx No More Squeaks Bats Depart, Too Noisy? 1977 Address Stite Pity 7p Name 2 A Ad lie jS City-Coun- rooms think theyre gone, said building services director Ciaig E Peterson The nose machines ran all night and we havent lu ard a squeak today, he said I housing C t - (ly state dm r . t, ,p L. may Ultphone your onJr duactly to th circulation oHice Pbo 5?4 284U Gtvt ut tN you wufi to tend ttio Sctiitc Edition to md your earner will collect You nmn Zip NOTE edition edition Postal regulation) prohibit sender t name on souvenir Please advise your fnendt you are sending this tf additional space is needed attach sheet of paper Cede must be included on all addresses in the United States and lis possessions, iimi gjoeuumBimne |