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Show Friday, September 22, 1961 SOUTH SALT LAKE HERALD News of Our Page Broadway Play Hunting Safety ;To Be Project Servicemen ComingToU Lt. Col. John W. Pritchard, Of Utah Council In October Hunting safety will be the October project of the Public Traffic Safety Education Committee of the Utah Safety Council, which is usually concerned mainly with traffic safety. In cooperation with the Utah Fish and Game Department, the committee will carry on a comprehensive campaign aimed at assuring that all hunters will return home safely to enjoy their venison, UJ3. Army Reserve, of 2652 Mountcrest Drive (3820 South) has been promoted to colonel. Col. Pritchard is a graduate of the USAR command and general staff school, Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. He is a graduate of the University of Utah in civil engineering, and is an engineer for the Allen Steel Co. Capt. Carl O. Holmquist, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Holmquist, 1647 8th East, has been assigned as a special assistant in the office of the technical director at Naval Ordnance Test Station, China Lake, duck or pheasant . The campaign was outlined by G. Ernest Bourne, manager of Utah Safety Council, as the committee resumed meetings this month after a three-mont. Calif. turning from hunting areas. Mr. Bourne pointed out that there w'ere 32 firearm fatalities in Utah last year. Although 21 of these occurred in the home, he said several of these were connected with hunting. Steps being taken by the Fish and Game Department to cut down on the hunting toll were explained by Lee Robertson of the Department. He said the first full year of hunting under the new Hunting Safety Law had been marked by a 50 per cent cut in deaths. He said the number of gun accidents in the 3 field dropped from 83 to 52, although the number of hunters increased 20 per cent Mr. Robertson said department officials are encouraged to believe that the reduced toll is due to the new law. Classes Being Held He also told of the gun safety and survival classes being sponsored by the Department to. qualify new hunters for licenses and to teach all hunters how to protect themselves and others while in fields or mountains. A person between 16 and 21 who has not hunted before must successfully complete an eight-hou- r gun safety course before being allowed to purchase a license. The course includes familiariza-(Conon Page 4, Col 3) t. . h Capt. Holmquist is a 1939 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. and reported to his new assignment from the office of the assistant secretary of the Navy, Washington, D. C. Completing recruit training, September 5, at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, Calif., were Marines Pvt. Keith L. Barr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jasper L. Barr, 2302 Iake Street; Pvt. Fredrick C. Schroeder, son of . Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick C. Schroeder, 2245 South 7th East, and Pvt. Brent A. Peterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Peterson, 3157 West 3100 South. The training cycle, divided into four phases, emphasized physical conditioning, weapons marksmanship, history and tradition of the Marine. Corps, customs and courtesies, hygiene and sanitation and other basic mili11-we- ek tary subjects." The new marines are scheduled to report to Camp Pen- dleton, Calif, for advanced combat training. Departing from September 2, Camp Pendleton, Calif., with the First Battalion, Seventh Marines, for a tour with the Third Marine Division on Okinawa, were Marines Pvt. John A. Marion, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Marion, 3161 South 10th East, and Pvt. Robert W. Fagg, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Fagg, 176 East 3790 South. The battalion departed from San Diego, Calif., aboard the transport USS General W. A. Mann. 12-mon- th Sound Health Aim Of Fitness Program Sound Health, ability to endure and perform ones tasks efficiently, rather than development of Tarzan types, will be emphasized in a statewide fitness program physical the current school year during by the State Department of Public Instruction a news story in the Salt Lake Tribune said. This will follow a new line adopted by the Presidents Council on Youth Fitness in an effort to raise both the physical and mental abilities of the nations youth. Some girls not only keep their girlish figure double it. they Dana Andrews University of Utahs Kingsbury Hall will be the scene of. the showing of a new drama, The Captains and the Kings, on November and starring Dana Andrews. will be Charlie Ruggles, Peter Graves, Conrad Nagel, and as yet an unannounced female lead and 17 featured Broadway players. It is the first play to be announced' for the coming season by the University of Utah Theater. In a modern setting the play involves the conflict between the new and the old order of the U.S. Navy. The new order centers about a desire to modernize naval , weaponry, of nuincluding clear submarines to the fleet, while; the old order is opposed to the change and desires to continue the Navys fighting traditions. The pre-Broadw- 20-2- 2, Co-sta- . ay rs the-additio- time-honor- ed Do We Think Along Communist Lines? Apple Valley, Calif., New's: If a stranger were to ask a random group of Americans if they favored the Communist type of government, the majority would react with an indignant certainly not. Yet too many people these days, those same people who profess to be violently opposed to totalitarian forms of government, are thinking and acting in a manner that must put a glow on the face of the Kremlin. As long as there are people who favor the acqquisition of financial support from the government and people who prefer to have the government control and operate any type of business that should be handled by private enterprise the threat of government control which is a totalitarian type of government will be much too much in evidence. summer recess. The committee also unanimously elected Howard L. Blood, public relations manager of the Mountain States Telephone Company, as chairman for the ensuing year and assigned projects for November and December. They will be pedestrian safety and prevention of home and holiday hazards. Attack A attack will be pressed against hunting Two-Pronge- d two-pronge- d casualties, Mr. Bourne told the committee. One phase will concern act- SPECIALIZE! ual hunting hazards use of guns, camping, hiking, overexertion, and getting lost. The other will stress caution in traveling to and re- i Three Youths Held On Burglary Charge Three youths, charged with burglarizing the residence of Kathleen Janas, 2477 Haven Lane (5180 South) were arraigned last Monday in City Court and preliminary hearing date was set for October 20. The three were arrested last Sept. 15 by South Salt Lake police and turned over to the Salt Lake County Sheriffs office. The complaint was signed by Salt Lake County Deputy Sheriff N. D. (Pete) Hayward before City Judge J. Patton Neeley. Bail was set at $2,500 each. With the arrests three burglaries in the Holladay area were said to have been cleared up. Property valued at from $15,000 to $23,000 was stolen in the burglaries, according to South Salt Lake Marshal Henry Dipo, who added that most of it has been recovered. The three youths charged are Martin L. Hobbs, 18, 710 South State; Parley Dwayne Bird, 19, 1611 West Russett Avenue (2790 South), and Wayne D. Thompson, 19, 736 East 1st South. 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