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Show Universal Kicrofilning Ihl Pierpont Volume 30. No. 16 - ... Sugar House. Utah Thursday, April 24, 1958 Price 10 Cents Kings Continue Role As Paper's Publishers ... . , ' ' I -- J ( W f tf Clair and Emma King, this week, introduce to the many readers the new staff af the South East independent. Brought about by the grow--i ; ing area, the great need for ' expansion and a bigger paper the Kings, who purchased the paper 3 years ago, were faced with the necessity to increase their staff to better serve the area. In the short time the Kings have owned, the paper it has literally grown from p, one man operation to the present requirements of managing editor, sports editor and society editor with a complete back shop staff. As publishers, the Kings will not take an active part in the paper in the future but the qualified staff will continue the program of increased cir-culation and added features and sections to the paper. THE KINGS, Clair and Emma, Publishers of the .South East lnutpenueiu. Publishers Add To Staff Of South East Independent "'' "'" s-- t : ' - 1 4'' ' s ' r t; y ?. I ' :' " - t LA I -- -I" 'r. : . - . "1 J " - r " ; ... y- - , incompatiable with the state, he came to Utah. Lee lives right in the heart of beautiful, fast-growi- ng Cot-tonwood. The small - school spirit is enjoyed by the 4 Lange children at Woodstock. Millie, Lee and children take active part in the South Cot-tonwood Third Ward, but most of Lees time is taken up with that ever-growin- g publication the South East Independent, Two and one half years at the University of Utah is the background of Cynthie Silver, our girl Friday around the office. While at the University of Utah, she was Society Editor for the Utah Daily Chronicle and worked in the business office as Classified Ad. Mgr. Sue also served on many cam-pus committees. She has hopes of picking up a degree in Fashion Mer-chandising and Journalism in the near future. Sue was born in Salt Lake City and graduated from Olympus High School. v Marion Dunn a Master's degree. He was then . employed by Kennecott Copper as Magazine editor of KENNE-SCOP- E, employee publication. He was so successful in this position that within a few months two national awards were presented , to him, one from the Society of Associated Industrial Editors and the other a Freedoms Foundation Award. In 1956 Mr. Brewer struck out on his own as a free-lanc- e writer. He is contributor to THE INSTRUCTOR Magazine of the LDS church; has written several motion pictures for the Brigham Young Motion Picture Department and has appeared in two others. He has also had articles and stories appear in national ; publications. .? : In January of this year Mr. Brewef " started, his own adver--' tising agency He has moved his advertising office, in the same building with the Sauth East Independent. Each off-ice will be a separate operation. Cynthia Silver Copper to the writing staff of the Industrial Relations dept. He is married to the former Hertha Sirstens. They have three children: Eileen 8; Gary, 6; and Robert, 4. The long way around wTas the route Lee Lange, our printer-operato- r, took to come to Utah . . . the reason for his coming to Utah was the L.D.S. Church He came from Texas by way of Pennsylvania and Indiana. Lee was baptized a member of the L.D.S. Church when he was eight years old in the very gulf coast washing Texas. He again returned to the sea and served 6 years in the Navy. In between thqge two sea ap-proaches, he grew up and at-tended school, and Business College at York University and Milo Bennett's Linotype school in Indiana. He married his wife Mildred in 1916, and moved to Penn-sylvania. But finding himself Lee Lange Marion Dunn, editor of the South East Independent has an impressive list of journal-- , ism credits behind his name. Starting out a career of writing after graduating from Bingham High School in 1941, he went into the Army and served from 1943 to 1946. After completing his serv-ice work, he decided to enter the field of Journalism at the University of Utah. He served as Sports Editor on the Daily Utah Chronicle. From the University, he went to work on the Deseret News sports desk. Marion then moved to the Salt Lake Tribune sports desk and city desk. He joined the United Press in 1952. Marion worked the city de(sk for U.P. in San Francisco. He returned to Salt Lake City in 1953 working the sports and editorial desks of the Des-eret News. A short time later he was hired by Kennecott Courtney II Brewer Here are the new staff members of the South East Independent, headed by Court-ney Brewer, managing editor. Mr. Brewer, started out his vivid career in advertising and magazine editing on the Idaho side of Bear Lake. Reared in the center of one of the states most beautiful ares, he attended grade school in St. Charles and High School in Paris. In 1938 he was called to serve an LDS mission to the East Central States. Upon his release in 1941 he entered the Air Force where he served for five years; almost three of these years were spent in the South Pacific. Upon his release from the service he entered the Brigham Young University where he earned a B. A. Degree in Radio speech. In 1947 he attended " UCLA-N.B.- C. Radio school in Hollywood. He married the former Ruth Marshall in 1949 and upon graduation from BYU they traveled to Calif where Brewer wrote radio scripts for C.B.S. He was also employed bj Douglas Aircraft as a Technical Writer. Not too fond of traffic and smog the Brewers came back to Utah where Mr. Brewer attended the U of U and earned Lenin Bird has something in common with the Easter bu-nny, he was born on Easter Sunday, in Salina. Utah. The second of eight children, he attended school in Granite District where the family mov-- ed from Salina. Probably one of the most in-teresting ex-periences and the one that Lenny talks a-bo-ut the most, is the three years he spent in the service. Two and a half years of Lenin Bird this time was spent in Germany and France. He was discharged in 1957. A year later he married Sandra King, daughter of Mr and Mrs Clair King, Independent Pub-lishers. He is now making his home here in Salt Lake City and odd-ly enough is learning the print-ing business, hmm, guess print-ing Just uns in the family. t Sk Around The Town Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Sorensen, just returned from the east where Mr. Sorensen was pre-sented wth the brand names award achieved by the South East Furniture. In Sun Valley this week were Rotarians Dr. Stanley Child, . and Holger Larsen. " Roaming around Europe are Mr. and' Mrs. Paul L. Pehrson. Mr. William Harvey of the Franklin Insurance Company, who spent the week in Idaho, reports "the wind" was blow- -' ing. Mr. and Mrs. Clair King and daughter Beverly spent the week end in Idaho Falls and the Retail Paint board meeting. Firth. In New Zealand for the dedi-cation of the LDS Temple are Mr. and Mrs. Garn Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ottley, and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Lam-bert. Warren will leave on his return from New Zealand for Chicago where he will attend |