Page 6 THE BATTALION Monday, December 17, 1951 From National Records Accidents By PAUL JONES Director of Public Information National Safety Council (From, Public Safety Magazine, Dec., 1051) Do you ever have the feeling that things in this good old TJ.S.A. may just possibly be a little wacky? Well, take it from the National Safety Council—you’re right! The Council has just completed its annual roundup of odd accidents, and dazedly reports some mighty queer goings- on in the field of freak squeaks. A dog who’s a hot rod driver ... a fish that caught a fisherman ... an airplane that crashed a red traffic light ... a horse and wagon that collided with a sailboat . . . a garden rake that shot the raker—these and many other dizzy doings indicate that things have been slightly screwy in 1951. THE POOCH WHO PINED to drive a hot rod was riding in a truck with his master, William C. Hollis of Denver. As Hollis drove through Topeka, Kan., at a prudent pace the dog stirred impatiently, reached over and planted a heavy paw on the accelerator. The truck leaped forward, went out of control, collided with a passenger car. Four persons were injured. The dog hasn’t driven since. POLICE IN MIAMI, FLA., are used to seeing all kinds of traffic on busy U. S. Highway 1 during the tourist season. But even they were startled when Robert Sim mons, of Dayton, Ohio, landed his airplane on the highway one Au gust afternoon, rolled, through a red traffic light and nudged a truck before he stopped. Simmons had been forced down by carburetor trouble. Nobody was hurt. No traffic ticket. SPEAKING OF DOGS, they say it’s news when a man bites one. Then it must be hot stuff indeed when a fish catches a fisherman. But it happened in Edwardsburg, Mich. As David Quinn, Jr., was ice fishing, he suddenly let but a yelp. Hanging on to his leg for dear life was a four-pound pickerel. It took Quinn and two friends several minutes to pry the fish loose. It had leaped at Quinn as he had hauled it up through the ice. In Chicago a sailboat got on the wrong tack and collided with a horse and wagon driven by Randolph Johnson, a non- nautical pilot who found himself a little at sea when confronted by a boat traveling along a busy street on a trailer. Damage to the boat was $500. The land forces suffered no casualties. Many a tired and perspiring gardener has moaned “I’m shot!” as he finished his raking. But Lincoln Stewart, of Colum bus, Ohio, really meant it. He was raking trash in a dump when the rake struck and discharged a bullet in the trash. Stewart was shot in the ankle. And all of us who have greeted a new day by groaning, “I feel like I’ve been run over by a steam roller,” can get a first-hand report on the feeling from eight-year-old Stanley Willoughby, of Portland, Ore., who actually underwent the experience. Fascinated by a three-ton roller, Stanley grabbed on to a pipe at its back and walked along as it rolled. Suddenly the roller backed up. It knocked Stanley down, passed over his legs and hip, and imbedded him neatly into the hot, soft asphalt. He was injured only slightly. EVERY DIRECT MAIL ADVERTISER yearns to turn out copy that smacks the recipient right in the eye. But few achieve it so literally as the writer of a letter addressed to Policeman Joseph Green of the Chicago traffic detail. The envelope was blown off the top of a filing cabinet by an electric fan and hit Green squarely in the eye, sending him to the hospital. TO SKEPTICS who believe chivalry is dead, here is a note of comfort: Cab Driver James Deeds, of Des Moines, la., gave up his seat for a lady—and did it the hard way. Helping a fair passenger unload a big sack of groceries from his cab, Deeds backed into a passing car, felt a draft, looked up in time to see the seat of his pants disap pearing down the street on the door handle of the offending auto. • “THIS IS going to hurt me worse than it hurts you,” said Ellsworth B. Wilson, of Mishawaka, Ind., as he started to spank his 10- year-old son. It did. During the spanking Wilson knocked over a' lamp, suffered a head cut, was taken to the hospital. The boy’s injuries were not visible. Auto Accidents Aren't Bloodless Horrible And in Boston, Mrs. Catherine Meenan was injured in an automobile accident as she sat in her second floor apartment. In the street below, a car had struck a pedestrian, knocked off his shoe, hurled it 25 feet through the open window of Mrs. Meenan’s living room. It hit her on the head, inflicting scalp wounds. In Gouverneur, N. Y., Sterling Tait beat out Harold Murphy in a hot Republican primary race for town clerk. A few weeks later, Tail’s car hit Murphy’s dog. Tait stopped to investigate. The dog bit him. Murphy rushed Tait to the hospital. On the way he had to stop so suddenly that Tail’s head banged against the windshield hard enough to shatter the glass. An hour later, Murphy’s dog died. Republicans Tait and Murphy shook hands, agreed the New Deal must be to blame for it all. Every year a few lucky people survive fantastic falls. In 1951 the champion freak squeak faller was two-year-old Tommy Paiva, of New York City. Tommy fell 15 stories (120 feet) from a window in his apartment, landed in some shrubbery and escaped with a broken thigh and assorted cuts and bumps. AND IN RICHMOND, IND., Steeplejack James Swootan went to the hospital with injuries suffered when he fell—not from a steeple, but off a bar stool! IN CINCINNATI, Clayton Busch’s car was struck by two trains traveling in opposite directions. He was left standing on the tracks, steering wheel in hand, suffering only from cuts and bruises compli cated by acute amazement. DRIVING ALONG a highway near Fort Wayne, Ind., Mr. and Mrs. Jaines Gibson of that city were having one, of those sprightly little chats husbands and wives sometimes have about the hus band’s driving habits. Mrs. Gibson ended the discussion by throwing the car keys out the car window. Mr. Gibson slammed on the brakes, and two cars fol lowing him piled up in a three-car collision. Gibson was charged with reckless driving. The driver of the second car was charged with operating a car without a license. His companion, owner of the car, was accused of permitting an unlicensed driver to operate the car. The driver of the third car v r as charged with improper car regis tration. No charge was placed against Mrs. Gibson, who had merely thrown the keys out the window. (Reprikted from the Reader’s Digest, Aug., 1005) (Like the gruesome spectacle of a bad automobile accident it self, the realistic details of this article will nauseate some read ers. Those who find themselves thus affected at the outset are cautioned against reading the ar ticle in its entirety since there is no letdown in the author’s out spoken treatment of sickening facts.) Publicizing the total of motoring injuries — almost a million last year, (1934), with 30,000 deaths— never gets to first base in jarring the motorist into a realization of the appalling risks of motoring. He does not translate dry statistics into a reality of blood and agony. FIGURES EXCLUDE pain and horror of savage mutilation—which means they leave out the point. They need to be brought closer home.. A passing look at a bad smash or the news that a fellow you had lunch with last week is in a hospital with a broken back will make any driver but a born fool slow down at least temporarily. But what is needed is a vivid and SUS TAINED realization that every time you step on the throttle, death gets in beside you, hopefully wait ing for his chance. That single hor rible accident you may have wit nessed is no isolated horror. That sort of thing happens every hour of the day, everywhere in the United States . If you really felt that, per haps, the stickful of type in Mon day’s paper recording that a total of 29 citizens were killed in week end crashes would rate‘something more than a perfunctory tut-tut as you turn back to the sports page. An enterprising judge now and again sentences reckless drivers to tour the accident end of the city morgue. But even a mangled body on a slab waxily portraying the consequences of bad motoring judgment, isn’t a patch on the scene of the accident itself. NO ARTIST working on a safety poster would dare depict that in full detail. That picture would have to in clude motion-picture and sound ef fects, too—the flopping, pointless efforts of the injured to stand up; the queer, grunting noises; the steady, panting groaning of a hu man being with pain creeping up on him as the shock wears off. It should portray the slack ex pression on the face of a man, drugged with shock, staring at the Z-twist in his broken leg, the in sane crumbled effect of a child’s body after its bones are crushed inward, a realistic portrait of an hysterical woman with her scream ing mouth opening a hole in the bloody drip that fills her eyes and runs off her chin. Minor details would include the raw ends of bones portruding through flesh in compound fractures, and the dark red, oozing surfaces where clothes and skin were flayed off at once. THOSE ARE all standard, ev eryday sequels to the modern pas sion for going places in a hurry and taking a chance or two by the way. If ghosts could be put to a use ful purpose, every bad stretch of road in the United States would greet the oncoming motorist with groans.and screams and the edu cational, spectacle of ten or a doz en corpses, all sizes, sexes and ages, lying horribly still on the bloody grass. Last year, a state trooper of my acquaintance stopped a big red Hispano for speeding. Papa was obviously a responsible person, ob viously set for a pleasant week end with his family—so the offi cer cut into papa’s well-bred ex postulations: “I’ll let you off this time, but if you keep on this way, you won’t last long. Get going— but take it easier.” Later a passing motorist hailed the trooper and asked if the red Hispano had got a ticket. “No,” said the trooper, “I hated to spoil their party.” “Too bad you didn’t,” said the motorist, “I saw you stop them—and then I passed that car again 59 miles up the line. It still makes me feel sick at my stomach. The car was folded up like an ac cordion—the color was about all there was left. They wore all dead but one of the kids—and he wasn’t going to live to the hospi tal.” MAYBE IT will make you sick at your stomach, too. But unless you’re a heavy footed incurable, a good look at the picture the artist wouldn’t dare paint, a first-hand acquaintance with the results of mixing gasoline with speed and bad judgment ought to be well worth your while. I can’t help it if • the facts are revolting. If you have the nerve to drive fast and take chances, you ought to have the nerve to take the ap propriate cure. You can’t ride an ambulance or watch a doctor work ing on the victim in the hospital, but you can read. The automobile is treacherous, just as a cat is. It is tragically difficult to realize that it can be come the deadliest missile. As en thusiasts tell you, it makes 65 feel like nothing at all. But 65 miles an hour is 100 feet a second, a speed which puts a viciously un justified responsibility on brakes and human reflexes, and can in stantly turn this docile, luxury into a mad bull elephant. COLLISION, turnover or side swipe, each type of accident pro duces either a shattering dead stop or a crashing change of direction —and, since the occupant—mean ing you—continues in the old di rection at the original speed, every surface and angle of the car’s in terior immediately becomes, a bat tering, tearing projectile, r aimed squarely at you — inescapable. There is' no bracing yourself against these imperative laws of momentum. Anything can happen in that split second of crash, even those lucky escapes you hear about. People have dived through wind shields and come out with only su perficial scratches. They have run cars together head on, reducing both to, twisted junk, and been found unhurt and arguing bitterly two minutes afterward. BUT DEATH was there just the same—he was only exercising his privilege of being erratic ... a wrecking crew pried the door off a car which had overturned in an em bankment and out stepped the driv er with only a scratch on his cheek. . . . his mother was still inside, a splinter of wood from the top driv en four inches into her brain as a result of son’s taking a greasy curve a little too fast. No blood- no' horribly twisted bones—just a gray haired corpse still clutching her pocketbook in her lap, as she had clutched it when she felt the car 1 leave the road. . . A trooper described an accident (which occur when improper pass ing of cars on the highways is at tempted). . . five cars in one mess, seven killed on the spot, two dead on the way to the hospital, two more dead in the long run. He re membered . . . the quick way the doctor turned away from a dead man to check up on a woman with a broken back; the three bodies out of one car soaked with oil from the crankcase so that they looked Persons Killed—By Age Groups Aices 0-4 Per cent Agf-s 5-14 Per Cent Aires 15-(i4 Per , cent i ^Kes 65 fe over Per cent COLLISION WITH: Pedestrian 470 37.9 970 44.1 5,630 20.7 2,330 48.3 Automobile 410 33.1 530 24.1 10,010 36.8 1,460 30.2 Horse-drawn vehicle 30 .1 10 .2 Railroad train 50 4.0 50 2.3 1,250 4.6 80 1.7 Street car 30 .1 10 .2 Other vehicle 100 .4 20 .4 Fixed object GO 4.8 70 3.2 2,680 9.8 190 3.9 Bicycle 10 .8 280 12.7 140 .5 20 .4 Non-collision 240 19.4 300 13.6 7,280 26.7 710 14.7 Miscellaneous 80 .3 TOTAL 1,240 100.0 2,200 100.0 27,230 100.0 4,830 100.0 like wet brown cigars and not hu man at all; a man walking around babbling to himself, oblivious of the dead and dying, even oblivious of the dagger-like silver of steel that stuck out of his streaming wrist; a pretty girl with her forehead laid open, trying hopelessly to crawl out of the ditch in spite of her smashed hip. . . . OVERTURNING CARS special ize in certain injuries . . . cracked pelvis, broken spines, smashed knees, (all which guarantee agon izing months in bed, motionless, perhaps crippled for life) . . . and the lethal consequences of broken ribs, which puncture hearts and lungs with their raw ends. . . But all that (injuries from fly ing glass, driving through tele phone posts, careening cars rolling over banks) is routine in every American community. To be re membered individually by doctors and policemen, you have to do something as grotesque as the lady who burst the windshield with her head, splashing splinters all over the other occupants of the car and then rolled with it down the edge of the windshield frame and cut her throat from ear to ear. . . . None of all that is scare fic tion; it is just the horrible raw material of the year’s statistics as seen in the ordinary course of duty by policemen and doctors, picked at random. . . it’s hard to find a surviving victim who can bear to talk . . . for when you stop scream ing it all comes back—you’re dying and you hate yourself for it. . . AND EVERY TIME you pass on a blind curve, every time you hit it on a slippery road, every time you step on it harder than your reflexes can safely take, every- time you drive with your reactions slowed down by a drink or two, everytime you follow the man ahead too closely, you’re gambling* a few seconds against this kind of blood and agony and sudden death. Take a look at yourself as the man in the white jacket shakes his head over you, tells the boys with the stretcher not to bother and turns away to somebody else who isn’t quite dead yet. And then take it easy. Seventeen of every 100 drivers involved in fatal traffic accidents during 1950 were reported to have been drinking. Motor vehicle collisions with rail road trains killed 1,520 people last year.