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Show The Salt Lake Tribune. Monday. September 24. 1.J- Its The Season Dr.A.L. Beeley Dies; Noted Criminologist Autumn Brings Cold, Plenty of Moisture Notionot Weott ter Service Goto Wechor over the Precipitation for period ended Sunday at 5 p m., 1 01. Preootothrt 3 tor September. Accumulative excess. 3 09 Precipitation $nce Octg 21 67, 197?, accumulative 1, ber excess. 7 56; sonnet 7 1? o m. MDT; sunset 7:22 0 m, MDT. R. Iniermounto-- or, ctoy ,M ror.ge from oart'v cieor to cloudy, w.th showers eoect-elote in the day. Temperatures wui remom cool. A.' TEMPERATURE CHART Soft Lake City Ogden end Provo Portral cleonrg wtih 0 change ot but showers increasing Monday ckkjos lote Monday with showers ond tows Tuesday Monday night Monday night neor 40 Highs boh doss 60 to 65. tight winds Probability of ra n ?0 percent Monday ond 50 percent Vendor night. Utoti Partly cloudy with widely sphered showers Monday exceot tor increasing clouds west late Monday Showers beomning n the west ond spreading into east Monday night and Tuesday. Cooler east Monday Lows Monday n ght most'y uoper 50s and 40s. Highs Monday and Tuesday in 60s, Eastern Nevcdo increasing c'ouas Modov with showers lote Monday into Tuesday, tows 2$ to3$. Highs Monday ond Tuesday S5 to 6. Southeast tdano Scored showers decreas ng early Monday with partiol clearing Showers SDreod mg over area ogam late Monday ond Mondov moht decreasing Tuesday Continued coc Overn'aht lows j$ to 4S. Highs 5Cs to lower 60s both days. cloudiness Variable Wyoming Monday. Scattered showers and thvn dershowers mostly northeot. Hghs 50s end low 60s. Monday night, increasing cloudiness with o Chance f showers or snow showers west. c'oudv east, tows m JCv Partly C nonce ct showers Tuesday. Highs 50s west. 60s ond upper 50s east. Dr. Arthur Lawton Beeley, 83, founder of the University Extended Outlook Wednesday through Fndoy Dr. Beeley, East, organized the School of Social Works curriculum and was named its first dean in 1937, a position he held nearly two decades before retiring in 263-12t- h Generot'v fair with e stow Utah warming trend. Hghs Wednesday In 70s. rising 7$ to 85 by Friday, tows 55 to 45. Nevada Generally fair with slow wormmg trend Highs VVeJnes oay in 70s, rising 75 to 85 by Frigov Lows m 30s 1956. his Although inquiries spanned sociological implications of both the Depression and Atomic Age, Dr. Beeleys was in criminolfrom crime prevention ogy to rehabilitation. Variable cloudiness Wyoming rew higher periods ot ram, elevations. Hiahs ns te 6S, warmmo to 65 to 75 bv end of period, tows 30s except 20s western valleys. Southern Idahg Clearing but loot and Dry Wednesday. warding tOAards the end of the week. Hk?h oCs 0"d lower 70s Weanesdav. wdfm-m- g into the 70s b Friday. Overrent lows 30s and lower 40s Wedne rising to the upper 30s and 40s day morning. ators an even break with commodity traders. - II I N G T O X Agriculture Department economists think world demand for major crops will help keep prices at the farm level relatively higu through much of next year, even with the possibility of record harvests W A S indication of USDA thinking came last week with the disclosure of 1974 harvest projection figures which for jears had been kept under wraps as working estimates used by farm policymakers. The projections were described cautiously as tentative and subject to drastic revision as situations change. They were released to give farmers and small grain business oper- An ;; Weather .".Indicates forecast map for Monday fair to cloudy skies over the Intermountain Region and more rain arriving during evening. b: Use Own Methods Officials said the large commodity companies for many years have used experience and sophisticated methods to put together their own projections on future crop production. in 1974. to the analysis, According farmers will be encouraged by strong market prices and a relaxation of government acreage programs to boost plantings of 1974 crops. That could mean about 10 percent more wheat and corn next year. Soybeans might decline as producers switch to corn and cotton, but officials admit that since the figures are tentative, another record soybean year also might be in the w orks. Don Paarlberg, director of economics for USn., says the new target price concept included in the new four-yefarm law which goes into effect in 1974 will not have much bearing on how much fanners get for crops next Sf4 a , year Target Friees The target prices for 1974 and 1973 are set at $2.05 a bushel for wheat; $1.38 a bushel for corn and 38 cents a pound for cotton. If the nationat average market prices for those commodities fall below the targets during the first five months of the marketing year July through November for wheat, as an example the difference will be paid to farmers by the government. Here's proof Alurray first Thrift pays higher savings rates! yCTnwawiri jtfcaftvtf FULL SERVICE BANKS SAVINGS & LOANS in.1 if sw. 4r. MURRAY FIRST THRIFT Paarlberg, speaking at a National Public Policy Conference in Brainerd, llinn., last what week, talked about might happen if market prices decline so that the government is forced to subsidize farmers under the target mechanism. One effect, he said, would be an embarrassment for the United States during trade negotiations. Chief Complaint of our chief complaints about other countries is that they subsidize their agriculture, overstimulate the larm plant, and then rush the excess supply into world markets on a subsidized basis, Paarlberg said. One But suppose a combination of what Paarlberg called the new affluence" in the world, a spectre of population outgrowing food supplies, poor crop, and devaluation inflation, other factors lead to U.S. farm market prices above the target levels? This seems likely at least for the 1974 crop, Paarlberg said. Futures markets now quote prices for the 1974 crops of wheat, corn and cotton. These prices are all above the Dr. Arthur L. Beeley Advocate of Awareness Sociological Problem Crime, he wrote, is primarily a sociological problem, and only secondarily a legal As of Sept. 14 the price of wheat for delivery in July , 1974, was $4.08 a bushel. Corn, in December, for delivery 1974, was $2.13 a bushel and cotton for delivery in December. 1974, was 34 cents a pound. Prices Soften Although above the target levels, the futures market prices still point to some softening cf pnees from peaks the past six months or so. If prices of key crops can soften enough without hurting fanners who grow them, the result could mean benefits to livestock producers who have Woman Found Dead OREM OFFICE 420 So. State Orem. Utah Ph. 225-923- LAKE OFFICE 135 South Mam Street Salt Lake City. Utah SAtT Resources in excess of 525,000,000 Member American Industrial Bankers Association FOR ALL OFFICES PHONE 521-654- Edward I. Vetter, President issue. been reluctant to expand output because of high feed costs. halls of prestigious universiof the confines ties to U.S. in both the penitentiaries and Europe. A strong advocate of public awareness and involvement in broad social issues, he conof ceived the University Utahs annual Reynolds Memorial Lecture and delivered the first address in 1928. And the universitys chapter of Phi Beta Kappa elected him its At least that is the plan seen by Nixon administration officials worried about retail food costs. A big question: Will livestock producers really expand enough so that the huge crops seen by USDA next year will be utilized? If they do not, there is a (chance that the record grain tops seen now by USDA first honorary faculty member. ould lead to some future buildup o? stockpiles and ultimately further planning problems for farmers and administration officials. In 1961. the university inaugurated the distinguished Arthur L. Beeley Lectures in Social Work in his honor. Here's Analj sis As seen by department analysts, here is how 1974 production and use for key crops shapes up: WHEAT; of nearly 1.9 Production billion bushels in 1974 from 5S.I million harvested acres, compared with a record 1.7 33 7 billion bushels from million acres in 1973. Exports iu the year beginning next July 1 would be about 1 billion bushels, down from 1.1 billion officially proIncluding dojected for 1973-7mestic use, wheat needed to meet all demands in 1974-7would be 1.79 billion bushels, compared with 1.8(5 billion seen for the current year. That would mean a slightly reserve or larger wheat carryover on July 1. 1975 of about 405 millions bushels, with 301 million compared expected next summer when the 1974 harvest is ready. 5 CORN: Production of more than 6.3 65.5 from billion bushels million harvested acres, compared with a record 5.7 billion from 61.5 million acres the. year. Exports' in the marketing year to begin Oct. 1, 1974 would be 1.05 billion bushels, clown front 1.12 billion seen now for 1973-7Counting corn needed domestically, total use was projected at in 1974-76.08 billion bushels, compared with 5.819 seen as the use in 3 the coming year. The corn carryover by Oct 1. 1975 was projected at 1.0 billion bushels, compared with, a reserve of 725 million "xpected a ve$r from now Special to The Tribune Eh.ora K KLKO, NEW Baugh, 39, ElkoTormcrly of Tremon'on, Utah, was found dead Sept. 29 m Elko of what the Nevada Highway Patrol termed carbon mnro ule - g Active Spokesman But beyond the campus, he was also an eloquent spokesman in the community. A prolific contributor to The Salt Lake Tribune, he wrote on topics ranging from economic in the 1930s to recovery of Utahs reorganization probation and penal systems. To cooperate intelligently in crime control, the public must be informed as to the facts and guided as to their interpretation," he believed. He was the author of dozens of books and monographs and of hundreds articles. His studies were scholarly but not ponderous. . In the early 1960s his doctoral thesis was reprintwritten in 1925 ed by the University of Chicago Press at the specific urgthen-U.Atty. Gen. ing of Robert F. Kennedy. Early Career Dr. Beeley's first attraction to scientific criminology came in 1923 when the young assistant professor of psychology left the University of Utah to join the staff of the Institute of Juvenile Research. Chicago. Concurrently, he was instructor and later professor o7 social economy at the University of Chicago. During the next three years, his research included an probe of Chicagos bail bonding system, a prelude to a new county constructing The detailed jail. study innovative methods of deterthe numbers of mining persons who might be detained or released on bail while awaiting trial. Definitive Work Basis for his doctoral dissertation, the study today still is considered the defini-Hvwork on bail practices .SOYBEANS: Production In 1974 of 1.54 billion bushels down from the record this year of 1.60 billion. The acreage for harvest next year was put at 53 million acres, down one million from ' i973. The pioneer criminologists pursuits took hir from the spacious lecture i for the Soybean export year beginning' next Sept. were projected at 650 million bushels, up from 600 million . expected in 1 1973-74- targets. MURRAY FIRST THRIFT & LOAN CO. 1916. of Utahs Graduate School of Social Work and internationalcriminologist, ly prominent (Led early Sunday after a long illness. World Demand Keys Price By Don Kendall Associated Press Writer - In the early 1930s, Dr. Beeley spent a year in England studying Great Britain's bail system while pursuing postdoctoral studies at University College and University of London. Later in his career, lie was lecturer for several years at the National Police visiting Academy, Washington. D.C., invitation of the late J. Edgar Hoover. on A Cattle, Singers e familiar figure at interna- tional conferences. Dr. Beeley traveled to London at his own expense in 1948 as delegate to the International Congress of Mental Hygiene. In 1929, he was named delegate to the White House Conference, for Child Health and Protection Fair Lists More Winners Utah State Fair Officials nounced Sunday winners in two more fair events, Heran- eford beef cattle and barbershop quartet competitions. Heretrd Winners ore Bef Cottle Bull. Grand Chomotons, Champion ReMolmgrcm Heretords, Gunmson; serve Grand Champion Bull, Jensen Brothers, Loqan, Grand Chompion Maimgrem Mnrefords, ond Re serve G'and Champion Femae, Mg'fTigrem Heretords BarbershoD Qjarfcts, Mens group Beehive Mnrmonv Lads, Solt Lake Four lent Clovers, Count, fir Two and f ache Counv, second Counties Four. Dovls Couny, thrd, Aomen's BaekDorch groups, Garg f rst Oavls Beoutvshco County, O 'arte, Aoshtrgon Ccm4v, second Co- n ono Davis Qjartft , hird Native of England Dr. Beeley was bom on Aug. 28. 1890. at Manchester, England, a son of John William and Elizabeth Ann Lawton Bcelev. A convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he came in 1908 . where he continued his education at Brigham Young University, graduating in 1913 Shortly afterward, he served two years as an LDS missionary in Liverpool and was secretary of the LDS European Mission Returning to Itah. he married a BYU classmate, Glenn Johnson of Moroni, on June 8, 4 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. After a jear as principal of Emery Academy at Castle Dale, Utah, he joined the University of Utah faculty in 1918 as assistant professor of psychology. A year later, he obr leave of abtained a exsence to serve as ecutive secretary of the LDS Social Churchs Advisory Committee. two-yea- full-tim- e In the summer of 1918, he was awarded a master of arts degree from the University of Chicago. And seven years later, he received his doctor of philosophy degree with high honors there. When Dr. Beeley returned to the Utah campus in 1927, he was appointed professor of sociology and director of the Bureau of Student Counsel, retaining both positions for the next two decades. Named Dean When the Board of Regents authorized formation of an school of social advanced work, tho professor who had shepherded it from concept into reality was designated its first dean. Today, it is recognized as among the foremost graduate schools in the coun- - try. Dr. Beeley also was direcor of the Institute of World Affairs from its inception in 1946 until his retirement from the faculty. The institute has attracted scores of distinguished internationally scholars o campus. Visiting Professor During sunmer sessions. Dr. Beeley was visiting professor at the Universities of Chicago, Southern California and Minnesota and at San Francisco State College Among numerous community involvements was membership for more than three decades on the Family Service Societz board of directors. He also was past president of the Utah for Mental Society Hygiene and Utah Conference of Social Work. Dr. Beeley founded the Utah Branch of the English Speaking Union and served on the board of directors of the English Speaking Union of the United States. Many Affiliations The Utahn was a fellow of the American Ortho-Psychiatri- c Assn., and a member of the American Sociological Society, the National Association of Social Workers, the American Correctional Assn., American Judicature Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science and National Association for Mental Health.-Halso was chapter president of both Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi. Dr. Beeley served on the State Department International Exchange of Persons committee which advisory screened admission of foreign students and scholars into the U.S. U.S. Honorary Doctorate Recipient of an honorary-doctoratfrom the University of Utah in 1955, he had been cited in 1937 as Brigham e Young Universitys Distin- guished Alumnus. In 1954, he accepted the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters Distinguished Service to Social Science Award. During World War II, he was educational consuant to the 9th Service Command, an adviser to the War Relocation Authority and member of several Navy examining boards. Years before, he had enlisted in the U.S. Army although still a British subject. (He was naturalized as an American citizen in 1919.) and writing Continuing lecturing after his retirement. Dr. the Beeley accepted American Society of Criminologys August Vollmer Award in 1965 and was appointed to the executive board of the National Conference on Bail and Cnminal Justice Administration in 19b4 Dr. Beeley is survived by his widow and a son ' and Mrs. William R. daughter: (Mary) Christensen, Salt Lake City, and Stephen J. Beeley. Bountiful. Also surviving are four grandchildren and two Funeral services will be con ducted Wednesday noon at LDS Stake Center for the UniFirst and Second versity Wards, 1920 Hempstead Rd. (590 South). Burial will at Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park. s The family suggests: to the Graduate School of Social Work Development Fund at the University of Utah contn-butmn- |