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Show Orem Library Exhibits Works Of Max Weaver The Max Weaver art exhibit has moved from theBYUSecured Gallery to the Orem City Library Lib-rary where it will be shown through the remainder of May and during June. Mr. Weaver, of 216 East 1864 Souty, Orem, is a faculty member of the BYU Department of Art and Design. He is at present chairman of the Orem Art Advisory Advis-ory Board. He is a graduate of Utah State University where he received both his Bachelors and Masters Degree. He has studied at the University of Utah, South-ern South-ern Utah State College, University Uni-versity of Southern California and at Long Beach. Max Weaver has widely exhibited ex-hibited pottery, jewelry, paintings paint-ings and printmaking and has received numerous awards in all these medias. He was selected to make a large pottery piece for the governor's mansion. Following up his pioneer heritage herit-age he continually seeks new meaning in his art forms, always exploring new conventions and processes. His oils reflect his vigorous response to the red rock country of Southern Utah and other western settings. He has worked with granite, studying the light and dark edged shadows shad-ows found in the mystery of the medium. His perception of life finds its way into his pottery, jewelry and paintings. The exhibit in Orem consists mainly of oil paintings and ceramics cer-amics but he also produces many other types of art works which include jewelry, macrame, rub-bins rub-bins of Indian pictographs, nosaics, and metal sculpture. Boy Saved From Canal Seven-year-old Todd Walker was rescued from the Murdock Canal by a neighbor last Thursday Thurs-day He was swept about 200 yards before Carl Bailey, 938 E. 970 N. was able to get him out. The boy had slipped through the back fence of his home near the canal to play by the water when he fell in. Mr. Bailey heard the boy and his ten-year-old brother cry for help and was able to extend a stick to Todd and pull him out of the water. Todd is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Walker, 890 N. 10th E., Orem. LPH's To Meet Thurs., Friday Orem-Geneva Times May 22, 1975 I - i w x-, ... LULA PARKER BETENSON, now 91 years old, is shown, checking check-ing photos for her book during a recent visit to Brigham Young University Press. Butch Cassidy's Sister Makes NY Appointments Lula Parker Betenson, sister of the famous outlaw Butch Cas-sidy Cas-sidy and the author of a new book, "Butch Cassidy, My Brother," will make several major appearances appear-ances next week in New York City. Mrs. Betenson will travel to New York along with several members of the marketing department de-partment of Brigham Young University Uni-versity Press, publishers of the book, to attend the American Booksellers AssociationConven-tion. AssociationConven-tion. The convention, May 25-28, is the largest commercial bookselling book-selling event of the year in the United States. Mrs. Betenson is scheduled to sign books at two special autograph sessions and to talk to booksellers who stop by the BYU Press booth. On Monday (May 27) the NBC "Today" Show will send a remote camera to the Hilton Hotel, site of the convention, to interview Mrs. Betenson about her new book and her famous brother. Leo Durocher, author of another popular new book fromSimonand Schuster, will also be interviewed. interview-ed. "The "Today Show segment with Mrs. Betenson will be shown ! ' r , .'if I t , I f ; i 1 ) it w. A(fm ( () DR. LOWRY HARRIS DR. ANTOINE HARRIS Pain Is The Signal; Bursitis The Problem Recent sports stories have indicated that in ever increasing number of athletes have been sidelined due to bursitis. It this a new disease caused by modern day diet or stress: "Of course not," says Dr. Lowry A. Harris of the Harris Chiropractic Center. . "For a long time baseball players, golfers, etc., have been taken away from their games because be-cause of 'sore arms,' 'frozen elbows' and 'still knees,' Dr. Harris notes. "Many of the difficulties were, in fact, bursitis," he says. It's just that only recently the sportsmen have begun to call the problem by its right name." It should be noted that many trainers and coaches are calling on the modern doctor of chiropractic for treatment to get men back on the field or . links as quickly as possible. Of course, bursitis isn't a condition experienced only by athletes. Persons in their thirties and forties, especially the housewife, are particularly vulnerable to attacks. And it isn't a condition that an individual can effectively self-treat through time and inactivity. "Nor can you 'work an affected limb back into condition," says Dr. Harris. "As a matter of fact," says Dr. Harris, "bursitis left untreated un-treated gets worse with activity and the pain can become so intense that throbbing discomfort can occur even when the limb is at rest. Many feel that modern chiropractic treatment and care is the only answer for fast relief and to get to the source of the difficulty. "Remember," says Dr. Harris "we've been talking about sportsmen. Naturally, when persons who are less active encounter the problem they are more prone to serious difficulty. diffi-culty. A nd you don't have to be on the golf links or at the bowling alley or on the baseball diamond to have a bursitis attack. A person can be afflicted by merely stretching in the morning after arising. A slip or trip can do it, or lifting something overhead. "The long and short of it," says Dr. Harris "is that bursitis bur-sitis can affect almost anyone. And once it does, treatment is necessary. "The thing that troubles me the most," says Dr. Harris "is the fact that untreated bursitis can lead to serious, permanent disablements such as arthritis," "In other words, don't take a chance with bursitis. Let the pain be your reminder that you need effective treatment that is aimed at permanent correction of the pro-lem," pro-lem," ays Dr. Harris. Dr. Lowry Harris and Dr. Antoine Harris Maintain an office at 1250 South 350 East - Esplanade Suite 35 Orem - 225-9190. Paid Advertisement. live that morning on national television. tele-vision. Viewers in most of Utah can watch the program over station sta-tion KUTV, Channel 2, from 7 to 9 a.m. On Tuesday (May 27) Mrs. Betenson Bet-enson will travel to Philadelphia where she will appear on the "Mike Douglas Show." This show is nationally syndicated and will be taped to air later in various parts of the country, Utah viewers view-ers will see the show over station sta-tion KCPX, Channel 4, in Salt Lake City some time in July. In her book, Lula Betenson tells her story of Robert LeRoy Parker, who later took the alias "Butch Cassidy." She describes his homelife, his boyhood friends, his slow drift into crime and his escapades in the West and South America. She offers a close-up personal glimpse at the man behind the headlinesa man who could never quite outrun his reputation. rep-utation. Many of the myths about Butch Cassidy are laid to rest by Mrs. Betenson's personal account. For example, she relates that Robert Parker was not killed in Bolivia as popularly portrayed in books and movies. Some 16 years after the shootout shoot-out in San Vicente, he returned to his home in Circleville, Utah, to hold a touching a memorable reunion with his family. During that homecoming, Lula talked personally to her brother and gathered the information which has now been published in this book. A number of old photos are published for the first time in the book. Robert Redford, the famous actor and a personal friend of the author, supplies a unique foreword. Lula Betenson, now 91 years of age, lives in Circleville, Utah, and is still active in community affairs. She spends much of her time hosting visitors who stop by her home and answering the hundreds hund-reds of letters she receives annually an-nually inquiring about her brother. LDS Leaders Create New Korean Missbn A new Mormon mission in the Republic of Korea, with headquarters head-quarters in the city of Pusan, will be organized in July, the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced. The new mission will be formed from a division of the Korea Seoul Mission. The First Presidency said that In San Han, 35-year-old Church member who resides inSongDong Ku, Korea, has accepted a call to serve as president of the Korea Pusan Mission. In San Han is manager of the Church's distribution distri-bution center in Seoul and also serves as second counselor to Eugene P. Till, president of the Korea Seoul Mission. When the two missions are fully staffed approximately 150 missionaries will be assigned to each. Korea was dedicated for missionary mis-sionary work in August, 1955, by Elder Joseph FieldingSmith,who later was the Church's 10th president. pre-sident. The country was at first a district of the Northern Far East Mission and the first missionaries mis-sionaries arrived in Korea in April, 1956. The first baptisms had taken place, however, inl952 as the result of missionary efforts ef-forts of Mormonservicementhen stationed in Korea. Approximately Ap-proximately 10,uuu memners oi The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints now reside in Korea. Pusan, headquarters of the new mission, is the nation's second largest city, with approximately 2 million population. Some 15 million people reside within the boundaries of the new mission and some 18 million in the KoreaSeoul Mission. Seoul, the nation's capital, cap-ital, is a city of more than 5.5 million residents. President InSan Han will be accompanied ac-companied on his mission by his wife, the former Kyu In Lee, and their three children. Meeting the Challenges of 1975" will theme the annual meeting meet-ing of the Licensed Practical Nurses' Association of Utah as they meet May 22 and 23 in Provo. Conference meetings will be held at the Elks Lodge andRode-way andRode-way Inn, according to Audrey Price, conference chairman. George H. Vincent Funeral service s were held last Thursday for Geroge H. Vincent, Vin-cent, 69, of Spanish Fork, who died of a heart attack Monday May 12. Mr. Vincent was the father of James Vincent of Orem City. He was born Sept. 9, 1905 to James and Eliza Stanley Vincent in Spanish Fork. He married Ora Warner Jan. 29, 1930 in the Manti LDS Temple. Survivors include his wodow; two sons and three daughters, Mr. Vincent of Orem, Glen G. Vincent, Greenwood, S.C., Mrs. Ed (Rosalie) Simeo, Hawaii, Mrs. Richard (Joyce) Daybell. Provo, and Mrs. Blaine (Carol) Dixon, Modesto, Cal; 16 grandchildren, four brothers and three sisters. Mr. Vincent was buried in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery. George first came to Orem under the Indian placement program pro-gram when he was nine years old. He joined the household of Joan and Glen Harker and their family and returned to live with them each year until he had completed his first year of college. He was a brilliant student at Orem Jr. andOremHighSchools. He was student body president of the Jr. High and was elected president of his class during his senior year. After he attended on year at BYU, the Harkers helped George to realize his dream of serving a mission for the LDS Church to the Indian people in Arizona. While on his mission he worked at translating the Book Of Mormon Mor-mon into the Navajo language. The Harkers have since moved to California, but Mrs. Harkers father, Elvis B. Terry, still lives in Orem and is very proud of the fact that George Lee calls he and his wife granddad and Keynote speaker wumeCoral-lene wumeCoral-lene McKean, R.N., repiwsenting the National Assoc. of Practical Nurses. She will discuss 'Economic 'Ec-onomic Security" at the Thursday morning meeting. Other speakers include Dr. Carter M. Ballinger, University of Utah Medical Center, who will discuss "Acupuncture," "Acu-puncture," and Stan Fillmore and staff members of the FourCoru-ers FourCoru-ers Mental Health Association, Price, who will treat the subject "Man's Search for Meaning-A Drug & Alcohol Approach to Life." Barbara Bliss will discuss "Certification." Registration will open at 8a.m. both Thursday and Friday, with morning, luncheon, afternoonand evening sessions planned. The convention will close with the annual an-nual banquet on Friday evening. Elections for the organization will be conducted on Thursday, said Mrs. Price, with a second vice-president, two directors and three members of the nominating committee to be named. Friday has been designated at Student Day, with a student luncheon to be held at 1 1:30 a.m. WITH FISHING SEASON less than two weeks away, it looks like the fishermen are going to need ice breakers to fish at Strawberry Reservoir. This picture was taken from the highway during the weekend, and it did not look too promising as a spring -time fun spot. Since the most recent snow storm this week, the reservoir no doubt is covered with another layer of snow. Coming Soon Heathman - Brown Chevrolet May 30, 31 grandmother. Pesticides Hurt Bees Pesticides are wiping out honey -bees at such an alarming rate i"iat agriculturists want themde-clared themde-clared endangered. A 20 percent drop in American bee colonies in the past 10 yeacs is particularly troubling because of the important im-portant role bees play in increasing in-creasing yields, not only of fruits and berries but also of key crops like soybeans and alfalfa. Presenting Utah Counties Best New Car Values On All 1975's In Stock Find Out Why Heathman-Brown Deal Is A Better Deal Sales Do pi. H:00 a. m. lo 9:00 ruti. HeathmanBrown Chevrolet-Buick-Qpel Sales-Service-Leasing 1 75 North 1st West Provo,, Utah Service Dept. ' '-8:00 '-8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.nC Weekdays 8:00 a. in. to 1:00 p.m. Saturday i V - t . Y : r ) ! ! i . ,-sV. f ' - v . - i ----i y - (f ,1. -V ; ' - ... ' i " i 1 - ! ? i ' ' . . if ;f5fplp Shirts for the Grad--Wow What selection Gants, Hathaways and Manhattan. From $13. ROYAL if V I N I S 1 SSAf IS. i J 1 1 1 - p ; .. n ii )W u ( .T"' 'JZ-wr- "" "' " " A gift every Grad will enjoy- a new leisure suit and sport shirt from Devey's-Great Selection-Drop in Today Colognes-the gift sure to please Royal CopenHagen, Elsha and Brute. gjy gju Two Great Stores v Am. Fork and University Mall |