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Show 'E FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1975 Page Eight Noted Salt Lake Lawyer, Civic Leader, H. R. Waldo, Jr., Dies Jr. an eminent on April cancer lawyer died of 1 1975 in a Salt Lake hospital. Mr. Waldo was widely recognized as an expert in the fields of municipal bonds legislative draftsmanship, corporation banking and business law, public utility financing, trusts, wills and estates. Mr. Waldo contributed his talents, advice and services to many public causes. From 1970 until his death he was a member of the Board of Trustees of Westminster College. Beginning in 1968 he served as a member of the Utah Agencies and played a significant role in developing air policy for Utah. He served for several years as a public member of the Salt Lake City Civil Service Commission. He worked as an assistant Attorney General for the State of Utan from 1953 to 1955. He joined the Salt Lake law firm of Jones, Waldo Holbrook & McDonough and at the time of his death was a Managing Partner. As a member of several Bar associations he played many significant roles, in 1963 as President of the Young Lawyers of the Utah State Bar in 1971 as President of the Salt Lake County Bar Association, in 1961 as a member of the Special Committee of the Utah State Bar on the Model Corporation Code, and in 1962, as a member of the Special Committee of the Utah State Bar on the Nonprofit Corporation Code. He served Judicial Council Supports Voice For Judicial System Legislation AnTshopnfHngToush Bill Into Law Utahs new tougher bill became law today as anti-shoplifti- ng H. R. Waldo, Governor Rampton officially signed it into being. The law goes into effect May 12, 1975. I hope the new law is more 'than a finger in the dyke, Atty. Gen. Vernon B. Romney said, adding, it promises to be an I i i important deterrent to this skyrocketing crime. A provision holding the SALT LAKE TIMES shop- lifter civilly liable for three the value of the merchan- -' The Utah Judicial Council agreed this week it needs a recognized representative to get matters concerning the states judicial system before the Legislature. Council chairman Thornley K. Swan said the judiciary has difficulty getting legislators to sponsor legislation for the courts. Some legislators are genuinely not interested in sponsor-time- s ing our bills, an there is nobody to follow them up, Swan said, Council members agreed that the state court administrator should be the recognized repre sentative, not as a lobbyist, but as the voice of the third branch of government. He suggested that the judici- ary be separated from the Evec- utive Compensation Commission. Court Administrator Richard V. Peay repcrfed 43 nieces of legislation passed by the Legislature have an effect an the judicial system. Council members said a representative of the judiciary should be present to brief legislators on the impact of the laws. In other matters the ccuncil instructed the court administrators staff to study option available for use of mechanica' devices (tape recorders) in the courts. It also: Asked the councils Personnel Practices Committee to investigate possible conflicts t f interest of two justices of tin peace in Weber County and one in Juab County who hold other criminal justice positions. Deferred until next month more discussion on the need for a standing legislative committee within the council. The advisory committee to the Judicial Council was authorized to work in four areas: Assist the council and the court administrator in contacting members of the Legislature between sessions. Provide the council with a list of recommendations or observations for improving the judicial system. dise up to $1,000 was excluded before the bills passage. Key steps forward in curbing shoplifting through the new law include strong provisions protecting the merchant against suits for false arrest and a provision that parents or legal guardians of minors caught shoplifting are civilly liable for merchandise taken, court costs and attorney fees. The law states that, no merII. R. Waldo, Jr. chant shall be criminally or civfor many years as a Bar Exam- illy held liable on account of iner of the Utah State Bar. having made such a request. The statute gives the merHe has been the principal draftsman of significant legisla- chant liberty, without fear of to hold a suspected tion affecting the public interest, lawsuit, shoplifter in custody to retain including the Utah Municipal the merchandise and inform the Bond Act, the Utah Special Im- police. Wayne Bentley, president of provement District Act, Utah Retail Merchants Assn., Utah Industrial Facilities Development Act and the Utah Special Serv- said enforcement of the new to CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 law is expected ices District Act. state need to drain runoff from He was a member of the State seriously curtail retail theft. cited a changing system freeways and other major road Less Than One Half Bar of Utah California and and ,ne values and disrespect projects. Kaa Of Eligible Utahns As state engineers begin to deorder in the nation and for law Continued from page has necessitated strong anti- sign neded drainage work, cities or counties are approached on ther reviews will be made of shoplifting laws. From Washington to Florida, the possibility of a joint project those cases too. from Maine to California, shop- to drain adjacent lands, via inOf the 27, 10 have applied for lifting losses cost American stallation of a larger system amnesty. In most cases final debusinessmen nearly $4 billion han needed for the highway termination had not been made a year. alone oficials said. of how much time the men must Phrase-Mak- er While behaviorists and psyMr. Kay said the oint ventures spend in public service jobs. chologists research the whys and benefit the taxpayer because the Air Force Commander Del-mocrime shop- county would eventually have to John acting director of the Francine Heninger has tossed for example, the higher its tone. wherefores of the fastto be the continues a the Selective in Service system in Utah tuild a life jacket into that musical And the nails rooting bars to lifting drainage system est growing larceny violation in affected areas, and joint projects said he has the resopnsibility of muschool called )oards demanded pounding at grade barrage sic class. Follow her line, she specific nodal points, to pre- the nation, according to the eliminate duplication of facil- placing the young men into work Bureau of Investigation, ities. programs after theyre certified says, and any grade school child vent sound change. A cost of Federal out. Be claims McGlochlin that Mr. for amnesty. pointed ntley (and, for that matter, adult) can paint lowered a bars pitch, and statistics show crime a must install state Utah has had no draft evaders since the Existing learn to read music. Not colors the holes drilled for nails raised a 221 cent increase in shopthe certified per yet, but nine deserters drainage system anyway or magic dots, but real music. it. lifting since 1960, he said. county should be obligated only have been refered to him by the Ms. Heninger, violinist in the 18 hours a day, Common reasons why people to pay costs of increasing that branches of service they left. Utah Svmnhony, weary of the Ms.Often working Heninger tuned the first We had eight working and shoplift include temptation, sup- systems capacity to handle abstractions and second-han- d habbars alcoholic and of one still in the time period where paint port drug county runoff. fundamentals cluttering text- them and herself, helped 10,000 kleptogroup official pressure, its, said the The peer county knowledge they're all Utah books she used in her classes at covers and known and mania bits of plastic 10,000 contracts were from professionals, hes looking for a job. To my negotiated Blane, Woodrow Wilson and felt padding, all the while main- as boosters, who steal to order, 1970 to 1972 to cover eight joint men. Eight live in the Salt Madison schools, decided to ina said. taining The Bentley rugged symphony countys total con- Lake City commuting area and projects. vent a teaching aid of her own. to added He and that schedule, to be about $2.5 the other is in the most southern according was teaching tribution raising She called it cent I her of 90 children. sources official on it gave up per million. part of the state. I developed my first model a dozen amateurs with are she but said, times, shoplifters at Blaine, when I noticed that the idea had its own momentum. boosters making up the remainthe children with some piano It back. kept bouncing ing 10 per cent. experience were much further At last the invention reached Everybody pays for the shop- ahead than the others, Ms. Hen- the and soon found a lifter with higher food and mer- (SffliiSlBlBiEBim QBSfl (B Many of the chil- placemarket, inger said. in the music classes of chandise costs. The average dren couldnt possibly afford Granite, Davis and Murray shopper in this country is actufifltThsfomwnfflnTrjgro pianos, and had very little mu- School Districts, where teachers ally subsidizing shoplifters to the sical influence in their homes. I needed something to simulate Draised it. Fame and fortune? tune of about $35 a year, the Not quite. Some complained Utah merchant chief said. a oiano, something that would No one can turn their back that the mechanism was too He invented a great Vodka. actually teach them how to play, bulky to move around on Finan It's this clean and crisp and makes a great problem. easily, how to read notes. And I had to and a diminutive effect cial repercussions young magnificent mixer. Try Old Mr. advertising build it from scratch nothing budget e farmand businessman and Boston Vodka on the rocks or in the old, kept like it existed. a Utah state secret. concluded. he martini. Its so good, the Rusa er, Aided by Dr. Ormon Weight, sians may claim they invented it. Still, Ms. Heninger has plans now music director of the Salt For Counsel for her invention, which she says Special Lake area's Granite School tv stforproved of and eminently practical. A Grand five rict, the mother Jury Selects smaller, lighter model, riding a mer Miss Utah fabricated a musical hybrid mixing a xylo- crest of advertisements could Two Attorneys phone, a piano and a musical easily reach a national market. Available in Fifths (Continued fom page 1) It does what I hoped it would score. teach music, she said. Id Axland and Armstrong as assistShe started with eardbnd do start out in my own classrooms ant special prosecutor for liquor models, wrestling with complexities of physics and engineering, with a central sound, like Mid- matters. Mr. Ellett practices with Robfollowing what she calls a mad dle C in the key of C, and Id curiosity, a fascination with give them a set of notes that ert Dansie in Murray and is Let Mr: Boston be your bartender was nothing but letters to them, criminal defense attorney. making it work. like EDCDEEE, and let them She gathered her materials Mr. Anderson is associated He makes more fine liquor produces metal, wood, nails, paint, each play it. Suddenly, theyd dis- with the law firm of Ray Quin-ne- y than anyone else in the world. of them affecting the tone of cover a familiar tune in it, and and Bebcker and his lega Whiskies.Vodka.Gin. Rum. Scotch. Brandy. Cordials. Cocktails. each key. The longer and thick- the joy of finding it was a per- work is mostly with corpora 80 Proof. 100 Grain Neutral Spirits. Mr. Boston Distiller, Boston, Mass. 194. er one of the xylophone bars. fect reward. tions and tax cases. I , 15-mem- ber Salt Lake County Must Pay $1.7 Million In Contracts To State anti-shop- lifting a,- Symphony Violinist Heninger Coins Musical re 5,-0- 00 die-punch- ed Scale-o-Phon- e. j Scale-o-Phon- |