| Show tS -- li k c ' ‘ r L he gall '1' 1-- aktZrribunt"1 7 7 '-°- If 0 g 11 tZep Zif 1 '1 - - 67 ''s -- ii: iT' 'r01:1-- I It " III iilti l''''71 -- --- jtv t ii-- -s 4 j ' yi 1 - 1(-1 - 74 A ' ' ' I I Al L ( -t ii ---- 1 1 t 1 ifi ! I i 41 ' - p 7 r 1 if t7 7 4' I : - -"- "m""11"'"-' ' -i- r''-- '- "'"'"'-'- i - -' tern n--7:- -- I i is I r:-I- 1 I N ri 1 I I 1 tem - Le t Fil pI11 Ili u n nii LI r3J' 1 1 1 2)htzaq 0 ti N 1 P '' aa A Aor-o-- I s 1 m --:- :--- r 1 w ' ' J 11 17 I P-11-- I Li A y 1 e444 1 LIN' - '' - 't 1 ' 1 " 1 - '" LI 1 - - 1 i 1 1 - 4 ' ' 4 1 - ' ft ) i IA --- rA 1 A I I - ' a 4 !-- t ' - s 1 - 1 o04) i i 4 I t 4 By I ' ! ' I '10 t I ° 00°-- ' - 4 - : 000 I 1' r ' ' i $ I -k I: 4 ' I 1 "" -: S r tt -- - I ter- e?" oola - ---- - "'' 3‘ 1 '' ) 4-41- ' ' rt—' 1I t S1 k -'- 13 : i Il I 1444 4ki ! I - - -- 4 - it T r ' ' 1 t 1 '' N - '' i l 11 - f- - - A ' fr ' y sk 0 - ' - : - t Al 't 1- - JrI 41 t ''''°"""'"r - 4!1' Id (4- ‘i : r7r i t 'I) t t 1 i '' 1 tr411 17""it 1-- 1 k1 S 11 p 'll Certainly Owner of two antique vehicles a 1954 Packard sedan and a 1948 Chevrolet pickup truck she took a night class in auto mechanics at East High Schoheol so she would be able to m work not a new romance cars are The mother died my father "After my so he could an car bought antique have something to do on weekends with his four children I was 12 Every weekend we would get the car ready and go to a car show We each had our tire to clean with a toothbrush "We never won but it brought us together as a family" The car her father bought was a 1939 Alvis — to her knowledge one of three ever made I 44 1 - 11 F : 1 El ttk‘- - f $ t i - -- : t' 1 i: See D-- 4 Column 2 ' 4 97 17r ( t - i - 4 ? ' lk AtuarbmJoa sa61dtosgAsLity41 - - - - -- -- - " -' - - - ti :: -- 441 t 4' '1 4 140kmj 1 - i --- ' - s di 46 4 1 ' - - - - - - ' ' 1' ' ' - v 4 - - ii - - - I - t - N- - ' " - Ilt -- 1 - i - - '' - ' ' tor 1 - r- - - tr ‘ if 'i 11t 1'‘ - 't t t '1 t i t ' - (400 t - 0 - g- ' 14 ‘ t t 1 I Tvt '1- 1 r Ir I - ' V Liy74i4itm' '"fil44 :07'7711N-- if ' ---- '- ": -- - '4-- - - 4 -- 'v '- 1 -- -94 a '''- ' 1 4 -- ‘ - ------------ L -- --- "03 - t ao ' i ' -' gif 9 1 Paul FraughtonThe Salt Lake Tribune A 1954 Mercedes Benz Car-sho- w might do 110 mph in third gear gull-win- g rule: Look but don't touch 9 pearance functional design engineering features finish care and operation Extras and accessories must be in good taste functional and in keeping with the car's vintage Scoring is based on interior and exterior appearance engine and chassis appearance and authenticity Trophies are presented to the first- - second- - and third-plac-e ners in each class Best of Judges' Choice and Peoples' Choice trophies will be presented Admission is $5 for adults $2 for children Having a meaningful relationship with an antique car is not a prerequiste for entering it in the Concours d' Elegance Senior Citizens' Car Show competition Sept 19 — but it couldn't hurt Sponsored by Salt Lake County Senior Citizens' Recreation Center and The Salt Lake Tribune the car show begins at 10 am on the University of Utah campus south of the Union Building and Orson Spencer Hall Cars are judged on a points system based on elegance general ap- - win-ho- under — I w 12 i k ' f'"'" IA k'"""""Nt - - - - Rick EganThe Salt Lake Tribune Sue Drechsel has gone from hauling mail to driving for the Mailman Karl Malone Meet Sue Drechsel Karl Malone's top trucker By Nancy Melich THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Sue Drechsel boasts that she has the best boss in the world Karl Malone brags that he has the world's best truck driver A match made in heaven? Perhaps but also the newspaper The ad in February's The Salt Lake Tribune stated simply: Drivers needed Contact Malone Enterprises Drechsel who had a dream five months earlier that she was driving a truck for the Utah Jazz basketball star read the ad with interest — and no intention of applying Though it did not specify gender Drechsel a veteran truck driver assumed the employment was for males only Her friends convinced her otherwise They also insisted tthat Drechsel personally drop off her resume — just in case the mail was not delivered to the man The next morning the phone rang "Is this Sue Drechsel?" "Yes" "This is Karl Malone I read your sume Could you come over?" Drechsel asked when expecting a appointment re- laterin-the-- week ' 0' - formance" N of ' N A t--- K 1 ' - Nti Judy Magid arm-thin- g - I 1 44 :--1- ) I I - i tiro 1100 - - 4 i - --- -- (07771' Ili 11C4 ' 1 i self-servi- -- I- - f: ' gas-pum- j -- I - i T f 0o00000 '' I- oo'n° ' ' It will take more than a tax to end America's love affair with the automobile Two world wars the Great Depression the 1973 Middle East oil embargo with a gas shortage leading to long lines pollution stations gridlock and have not diminished the passion Though Americans drive 2 trillion miles a year the automobile is more than transportation It symbolizes coming of age independence and freedom its mystique transcends age and gender Take Kim Souvall Salt Lake City She loves to sit on her porch and gap her spark plugs "It sounds a little erotic" she said with a chuckle "Th ere that comes over the bump on the top of the spark plug The space — the gap — between them has to be perfect for a car's peak per- - 4 L - L THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE it f I:t tif - 4 00 1 1 - The car is more than transportation it's an American passion - ' ( - l1' ' s ic- - eL f mr 1 itotC 10 4 1' ' - 4 : 4 - '' r t I if :L- ' t t' i! ! i -4 e i ? OsiallbM84ssaLLIAti4141110Aasw4AlsasstimmoAle VI) ) ' - ' i t: 70 - E: 7 E4 -Tp - i - 7 I 4' : 40 ' 4 i ''AS"'''7' ' L 1111M1" 4 I t - "'-i- 4 ir aiMilk - : - pa' gis Jack Plumb says a car should drive as good as it looks like his red 1957 300SL Mercedes Benz roadster I —- - – - -- -- vv: - -- - - 1- V :'1 - 1 Pg i7:::1 L 1mat - I ) - TINI1 1 1: 1 Vr k1 A The founder and president of the newly formed Malone Enterprises preferred "Right now" She jumped in the shower and like most people anticipating a job interview debated about what to wear She opted for a silk shirt slacks and newly polished cowboy boots One last look in the mirror met with disapproval — a bad hair day Sue Drechsel 35 has an affinity for big trucks heavy equipment and things "I'm not the secretary type and I can't even thread a needle I used to come home every night after school and ride my horse I've always been a tomboy and as a kid would get in trouble because I didn't want to wear a dress" The youngest of eight children Drechsel was raised on a Salt Lake hog and cattle ranch She began baling hay at an age when most children are learning to ride bicycles At 12 her father who had inherited a business from his father to a garbage truck down Sue back taught r when one of her an alley As a older brothers got sick "my dad would haul me out of bed at 3 am to go on the garbage runs I remember driving down the alley behind Lamb's restaurant and drums of wet garlifting their muscles I have" how I the That's bage got rs waste-dispos- al teen-age- n See 0-- 2 Column 3 Fallow CARSON LEAVE September is 150th birthday of exploratory trip to island By Harold Schindler THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Oil ISLAND a ' y: 2 e- "04' r: '''' )(---t- 6 e ::: r ee' :7 770:7:70q' - :4 1lofk : ll ''' A- 16''"fir '1 I ' : ' - 14' ' e ' ' ' 4t 0 $ '1'ac '' 4 : "4441c el ' ' ' ' l4' :::lzi :tc 41t: ft: ' : 4: i: t' 4 ' - ' k':::'i :" ' - ' "Nti' — D''':!! l': 4"1 - : i wJ '' - ' Ac" '' -- ' ': - )- $0- '! 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''' 'ittt' 1 :t ' ri wsfir - 7i ev 1: fe 7 J'0ftr: :171' 1 ri: ilt iw i''''''' ' : ”! 1A1:1770 : One hundred and fifty years ago last Thursday Lt John C Fremont of the US Corps of Topographical Engineers with four members of his survey expedition paddled an inflatable rubber boat from the mouth of the Weber River due west to a small island in the Great Salt Lake Hungry and short of provisions Fremont hoped to find game while surveying the lake from the island summit This was the second of the explorer's military expeditions — the first in 1842 had taken him to South Pass and the Wind River Mountains along the Continental Divide He was becoming famous and ambitious With Fremont on this September morning in 1843 were Christopher (Kit) Carson an intrepid hunter and guide who already enjoyed a position of respect among men of the mountains and Charles Preuss a gifted literate mapmaker who kept careful diaries written in his native German but whose outward demeanor rarely mirrored his waspish personal thoughts Two employes French Canadian engages Baptiste Bernier and Basil Lajeunesse had served with Fremont before and constituted what the lieutenant regarded as his "small family" HMI 4 - ' tc": '1 N Harold SchindlerThe Salt Lake Tribune This cross scratched in the surface of a rock on Fremont Island is the work of scout Kit Carson Before setting out for the island eight of the party of 17 were sent north to Fort Hall a Hudsons Bay Co trading post in present Idaho for supplies and four men were assigned to remain ashore to guard the baggage and horses while the survey party did its work The decision to land on the smaller island was Fremont's choice because of the food shortage After a meal of yampah root seasoned by "a small fat duck" the expedition was tiring of boiled birds and becoming restless The men warmed themselves at the campfire on the night of Sept 8 and wondered what the new day would hold in store II See D-- 3 Column 1 ti |