Show 4— Th Herald Journal Logan Utah Thursday November 30 1972 Fletcher Speaks Study Of Aging Grant Presented At Meet Great take train students to work in the field gerontology ( the study of aging) is the purpose of a $15000 grant to a Utah State Kesearch Water Utah Utah State Laboratory University said that was the forecast as of Nov 1 assuming normal precipitation from here on Speaking today at the American Water Resources University professor from an agency of the US Department Education and of Health Welfare DeHart Dr William A professor of sociology and social work at the Iogan school will direct the research sponsored by the Social Rehabilitation Service of HEW Five Utah colleges and meeting program planning committee communicative Jensen in Hotel disorders Eldon J Gardner graduate school and Margaret B Merkley food and nutrition Six scholarship trainees will work with the program at USU this year They are Susan Christine Abbott daughter of Mr and Mrs Ionard E Abbott 6856 Cathedral Birmingham Mich a junior Robert Arthur Bylund a senior son of Mr and Mrs Bruce Bylund tagan Renee Ellen Engstrum a junior daughter of Mr and Mrs Robert C Engstrum 416 East 6815 South Midvale Kristy tawis a junior daughter of Mr and Mrs Richard S tawis Soda Springs Mrs (formerly of Lewiston) Diane B Rugg a junior daughter of Mr and Mrs five-scho- ol George D Baldezy It game 7AM E ST 12 - I - 72 CITY (UPI) -Copper Carp employe was reported in critical condition at University Medical Center today after he was burned over 75 per cent of his body by molten metal Maxwell W Steele 50 Salt Lake City stepped onto a platform at the Magna Smelter as a ladle of molten metal was being lowered into position He was to place a hook into the ladle so the molten metal could be dumped into a converter The ladle tipped as it was being lowered spilled the material onto tlie platform and splashed it over Steele He sustained third-degre- e bums over of his body Company officials said Steele was performing his regular duties when the accident occurred The incident was reported unthree-quarte- with Minaco Later on this year the Logan team will travel to Minaco to play a game This will be the first real chance that many people will have to see the 1972-7- 3 Grizzly basketball team It should be a great game Friday night the fantastic Letterman’s Club will sponsor a dance It will be either date or stag and will be held in the Girl’s Gym Cost is $1 per individual and “My Friends" will be playing The tatterman’s club has so much talent and can arrange great dances therefore many people should attend Dancing is a great exercise as most of the Lettermen can testify It is second only to football and basketball UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY President Glen L Taggart is shows Wednesday night with Professor and Mrs H Reuben Reynolds at a reception in their honor They were presented a plaque from the USU Alumni Association noting their significant personal achievements and their contributions to USU and citizens of Cache Valley A special exhibition of some of Professor Reynolds' finest photography work was displayed i Obituaries 10 children One brother survives her Lor in Elmo Wilcox of Columbia Falls Mont She was an active member of the Great Falls PTA serving as president a number of times A member of the LDS Church she had an active career in church auxiliary organizations For nine years she served as the Relief District Society president in Great Falls rs der investigation by federal For the past several years she made her home with her daughter id Hyrum Mrs Ruth state and company authorities During the week three clubs and organizations have been selling things The DECA dub is selling candles that look like all sorts of strange things These can be bought in the bookstore There is even a real live (candlewax) hamburger for sale The Chauntaires are selling chocolate bars to help finance their trip to Hawaii this spring Possibly they might be part of a conspiracy to make all Logan High students FAT!!! The Pep Club is selling crazy bulletin boards They glow in the dark when a black light is on them There are four choices of such things as butterflies frogs large moths and turtles If Christmas shopping seems to be a problem just come down to Logan High and one of the many willing dubs or organizations will sell something that will make a very nice Christmas present Annie Bair Miller I Births She married John A Nelson Jan 1 1917 in Cardston Alberta The marriage was later - RYAN Mr and Mrs Kelly Ryan 56 West 1st South Richmond a daughter on Nov 29 WIIJJS-MrandMrs- Willis Iogan a £iSNOW UTI WEATHER I SHOWERS N Flow FOTOCASjft By United Press Interna tioul NATIONAL Mix Mia Rain fell in the South and snow spread through portions of the Midwest early today - Ebeneser In City Offices? Jacksonville Fla received an inch of rain Wednesday lighter rain spread from the lower Tennessee Valley to the Florida Panhandle today ocWidely scattered s' curred through the remainder of Florida and a dense fog caused hazardous driving in the Tampa Bay area early today A Forecasts By United Press International Snow flurries fell in the Ozarks Wednesday night A narrow band of light snow extended from north-centrMissouri Iowa to today and was moving east Elsewhere cool and fair weather prevailed Temperatures early from 9 degrees at 78 degrees Philipsburg Pa at Key West Fla Salt take City Ogden and Provo: Mostly sunny through Friday clear tonight fog and smoky- at times warmer highs today and Friday mid 4US lows tonight mid 20s probability of measurable precipitation near zero through Friday light winds patchy-mornin- north-centr- today-range- Valley Weather Logan: Mostly sunny today and Friday with patchy morning valley fog warmer highs today and FruLy 49 to 45 mid 20s light winds probability of measurable precipitation near zero through Friday Utah Fair through Friday except for patchy night and morning valley fog: highs 35 to 45 north and 45 to 55 south low tonight 15 to 25 Southwest Idaho: Considerable cloudiness northern mountains with chance of snow flurries otherwise mostly fair south through Friday patchy night and morning valley fog little warmer days highs today 38 to 48 and Friday mostly in 4te lows tonight upper teens and Does the infamous Ebenezer Scrooge occupy logan City Hall? A decision this week by the mayor and city fathers might have Ixigan children convinced that city commissioners are in reality the mean old Dicken's character the Why? Because commissioners ruled that Santa Claus will not pay a visit to the city by the latest mode of polar transportation the helicopter The request actually from came the management id Walgreens Drug Store Manager Jerry Miller hoped that this Sunday St Nick could raise a few eyebrows by winging into the Walgreens parking lot perched in a chopper Miller said that the request had been approved by the Federal Aeronautics Administration and the n pilot to be hired was a and experienced crop duster flyer from well-know- lYemonton said Nothing doing Mayor Ted Perry explaining this wetk that a city ordmann- prohibits aircraft within a 1000 foot air space oxer the tagan City linuts T dangerous agreed L“'h iity cm-missiifle- rs 2te Southeast Idaho: Considerable cloudiness through Friday with chance of snow flurries mainly northern mountains: some ar- eas llink Mjde At i:ii am Haler Year Starts Ort 1 of right and morning fog cr little warmer days low clouds highs 3iS to low 4‘fe in terns arJ low lows to-rig-ht What Miller Seven children survive Mrs Nelson They are John Lovell 9th North son on Nov 29 Pep Heavy rains drenched the south Atlantic Coast Wednesday dumping 3 inches of rain on Charleston SC and 2 inches of rain at Savannah Ga Temple on Nov 23 1923 Mr Nelson died Dec 9 1963 East PAINTER Mr and Mrs Wayne Painter Bloomington Idaho a son on Nov 29 UTAH—IDAHO Max Min Pep solemnized in the Cardston Reed 442 will Santa do" rather eplunrd d:sap-pcin'e- d bxlay will be at Walgreens as scheduled but just w 'l make tis dramatic entrant that Sunt For everyone who is wondering Minaco is a school in Idaho! Badly Burned taKE meet Srhi Employe SALT team On Friday there will be a home basketball game will be dismissed at 2 for the Kennecott A Kennecott wrestling Pocatello for a r 45 Colony and Rochester NY Roger Elmo Tanner a senior son of Mr and Mrs Doreas R Tanner 417 East Market St York Penn the starts its home season by hinting Ben Lomond This will be the first chance that we’ll have to see the team in action Then on Saturday they will travel to tane Nation’s Weather NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST Today PROVIDENCE Building in Providence for 1972 thus far totals $564000 Councilmen Blaine Olsen in charge of zoning and building permits reported to the council this week Evaluation for 22 new home building permits is $549700 one commercial permit was issued for $10500 eight storage sheds two home remodelings $3265 $975 and building permit fees collected have been $112050 In other action Jay Hicken was appointed chairman of the variance committee and Glen Daniels was appointed as a new member of the committee Other members of the committee are Carl Spears Lloyd Nyman and Hal Hatch Logan Motor Co was at $570662 to provide a new two ton flatbed truck to be used for snow plowing and general use for the city The council met Tuesday and Wednesday nights for the program include Wesley T Maughan and Nile D Meservy sociology Jay R universities and numerous Utah Salt take City he students and faculty will provide reported the forecast as one of input for the grant the essential management tools Other schools participating for the Great Salt take He are the University of Utah explained that this forecast is Brigham Young University highly important to the people Weber State and Southern Utah manufacturing chemicals from State College the lake They must know the “I see USU's role in the level of dikes required to avoid program concentrating flooding out their ponds The on nutrition and aging and in Highway Department and the research in biological and social recreation people also are sciences and family life” said vitally interested in anticipating Dr DeHart “Our Extension the lake level Service will provide an avenue Information on precipitation for contact with aging people in per cent of normal reservoir rural Utah” Each school will storage and amount of stream provide input in areas where its flow into the lake all go into the programs are most developed forecast Data from the Jordon While admitting that part of Weber Ogden and Hear River his interest in the study of aging watershed areas are included lies in the reality of his own The first forecast is made Oct 1 increasing years Dr DeHart's in chart form and then is upenthusiasm for the project goes dated monthly and made nwch deeper available fur those requiring the "I have certain ideas and information Fletcher explained theories on how to deal with the Association By Linda Holdredge - social problems of aging There is potential among the aged to develop their energies into a productive role in our society So far our approach has been treatment of aging without much thought to prevention of aging" he said USU professors serving on a To SALT LAKE CITY The peak for next Salt level of year is expected to be 140 per cent above normal Joel E Fletcher hydrologist with the Logan Hi Highlights Building Tallies Listed Emcline Kidman Vera Nelson Emeline Kidman Vera Nelson Vera Wilcox Nelson 83 forFuneral services will be held Friday at 2 pm for Fmeline B merly of Great Falls Mont Kidman She died Tuesday in died Wednesday in an Ogden convalescence home following a Burley Idaho at 81 The service trill be held at the short illness She was born Mai ch 25 1889 in Hall Mortuary Chapel under the direction of Bishop Kenneth Sunnydell Idaho a daughter of (Tithbert Friends may can this Samuel Allen Wilcox and Julia Ann Laughlin The family evening at the mortuary from 7 to 9 pm and Friday one hour moved from Idaho to Alberta Canada and later to prior to the service Sacramento Calif where she Burial will be in the family lived until the tune of her plot in the tagan City Cemetery marriage She was the eighth of Bruce Allen Lee Carland Robert Dale all of Great Falls and Mrs Ivan (Ruth) Miller of Hyrum Mrs Leon (Verda) Jensen of Salt take City and Mrs Earl (Joyce) McMaster of Columbia Falls Mont Also surviving are 37 grandchildren and 15 Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 1 pm at the Hyrum 3rd Ward Chapel with Bishop Seymour Nielsen officiating Friends may call at the Thompson Funeral Home in Hyrum Friday from 7 to 9 pm and Saturday one hour prior to the servvice Burial will be in the Hyrum City Cemetery Idaho PRESTON dark Bair - Annie Preston died Wednesday of natural causes in a Preston hospital She was bora Jan 15 1890 in Glasgow Scotland to James and Annie Cammeron Clark She married Eugene Bair Oct 14 1914 in the tagan LDS Temple Mr Bair died Oct 7 1969 Mrs Bair was active in the IDS Church particularly in MIA and Relief Society She was also noted for her singing Survivors indude a daughter Mrs Voris (Reba) Johnson of Preston a grandson and five 82 Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 1 pm in the Preston 7th Ward Chapel Friends may can at the Webb Funeral Home Friday from 7 to 9 pm and Saturday from 11 am until the services Officiating the service will be Bishop Wayne D Bell Burial wiU be in the Richmond City Cemetery A Re rte ir Brown Pelican Has ‘Merit By John Mark Sorensen Professor Floyd Morgan’s cast and crew presenting George Sklar's “Brown Pelican” found a receptive audience faring the idea of man and nature in the survival quandry The play obviously oriented age-oltoward the necessity of conservation of all natural resources including mankind was adeptly handled by Professor Morgan the director Although the play concerns itself with the gravest kinds of situalions fared by man's destruction of his own environment it paints this picture with a type of ironic humor This might be best characterized I suppose as a type of “black humor" since although the personalities and dialogue are often light frivolous and fun they represent far more than slap-stic- k comedy The lead in the play is an ecological protagonist facing a odd selfish and materialistic world with courage bolstered by parallclsof highly moral yet capricious points of view As usual Professor Morgan's long experience with a variety uf scene situations leads his characters in portraying the dangerous era in which we live without letting it slip too far into a one sided overdone ecological lecture The challenge of trying a play quite different in many ways from Die usual" might tie one of the reasons which prompted IViJcssor Mirgan to give it a try aside from its obvious theacUTs who do hare a good time on stage i and apfH-altthe current inlrrojlmnal concern for our serious environmental problems Tlit simple but effective stage cmstnirtion and the tvrdmatim J lighting sound and visual backups deserve rial praise A sc nr projecting a car striking the lead Jeff TinagtT and Inter a view of Tanagcr's return home to his vircwhat inebriated :fe are particularly goti as is the fi mating id laps tie tench of the Judge Colin Johnson h:r Brandt and their colleagues d some very good things wrh 'he -- et if the burial impact-t- he wirrx scru-ux ruin- - f the cai’le 8e prove mien the protagonist Jim b:rth : ntn! the need for Titwer the argjiM'Ws the tur:vbit soiue 'ale- - r- led Opening night of d o yifu! sics s r " - - man being caged instead of animals These and other situations give rise to the archetypal yet topical questions of what or who is God and what is the relationship and responsibility to God from man and from man to nature and to his fellow man The supporting cast of Robin Sudick John Stoner James Booth Richard Arrington Dan Farnsworth Mary Schultz and Mitzi Anderson share much of the action in different characterizations with talent and enthusiasm The Voice James Edwards and the zoo director Ranleigh Johnson provide consistent strength to the production Opening night laurels for acting fall to Tim Vrontikis the Prosecutor and Nels Carlson the Judge Their roles provide wide avenues to display their talent its true but their fine performances exceed expected boundaries They are both well suited to play these strong personalities Pat Williams is very capable in the leading role His ordeal makes a bit of “Doubting Thomas's” of us ail Richard Arrington who plays the Pope among other Dungs i gains credit Taken with more than a few grains of sacrilege i which is the writer's intent) the Pope along with Die Judge and Prosecutor establishes a warm rapport with Die audience The message of Die play is important but far from subtle— perhaps it was never meant to be— the theme is constant but loosely structured and at times Die music animation and varying scenes seem inconsistent to the overall seriousness of the play However the complete product is unusual and in many scenes mast impressive Many concerned people hare used energy and talent to voice justifiable concern over mankind's suiridal rare toward the final eternity George Sklar reinforces these efforts with his Drought provoking play “Brown relican” iYofessor Morgan and his cast translate this to the audience in a meaningful and incisire manner less than two hours is a small space to pack so much important philosophical cargo but the perf'irmers do well by themselves The show his real merit and is well worth seeing “Brown Pelican” rjrs through Saturday night Curtain tunes is 8 pm in the (ae Fine Arts Center of ' f ) |