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Show ?r ! " to c O , $ Ml ititttotlte July 13, 1978 The Springville (Utah) Herald Section Two mtm The Springville Lions Club installed new officers for the 1978-79 year June 29. The installation was conducted by District Governor Dale Peterson at the Lion's Fireplace in Kelly's Grove. Approximately 60 Lions and their ladies enjoyed steak dinner with all the trimmings and an impressive slide show, presented by Kent Kellar. Front left to right are Virgial Peterson, first vice president; Charles Porter, president; Willis K. Johnson, second vice president: Marvin "Mog" Warren, secretary and treasurer. Second row are Paul Haymond, lion tamer; Wilford Manwaring, assisstant tail twister; Joe Miller, director; Eugene Palfreyman, director; L. Woodrow Hatfield, third vice president; Robert E. White, past president. Absent were Kay Johnson, tail twister; Guy Wilson, director and E.J. "Ted Haymond as director. eff Warren icipafes in riaean Elder Jeff Warren, 21, a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, has been chosen to participate par-ticipate in the 1978 Hill Cumorah Pageant to be held in Palmyra, New York. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean B. Warren 1027 East 2nd North in Springville, Utah. He is currently serving in the New York Rochester Mission of the church. Before accepting the two year call to serve for the church, Elder Warren attended Springville High School. He was active in golfing and was chosen Most Valuable Golfer in 1975. While attending high school he took two years of seminary, thru the churches educational program. Elder Warren comes from a family of three children. He has one sister and one brother. Mr. Warren works as a Chief Accountant and Mrs. Warren works as a secretary. Elder Warren enjoys hunting, fishing, and golfing. Concerning his first eleven months in the mission field, Elder Warren said, "I love doing missionary work and I'm looking forward to participating in the pageant." After his mission is completed, he plans to attend Brigham Young University. The epic story of the 1978 version of the Hill Cumorah Pageant is scheduled for its 41st production, under the direction of Dr. Jack Sederholm, on Route 21 South in Palmyra, New York at 9 p.m. nightly July 21, 22 and 25-29. A recorded one-hour concert by the Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir precedes each performance. Following the practice established with the first performance per-formance of the Pageant in 1937, the Mormon Church makes no charges for admission or for parking, sells no souvenirs, programs or refreshments, and neither solicits nor accepts ac-cepts donations. The outdoor pageant unfolds on twenty-five stages by a cast of over six hundred who voluntarily volun-tarily donate their time to participate. A five-track sound system has been specially designed for the performances, and the musical score has been composed by Dr. Crawford Gates, conductor con-ductor of the Beloit (Wisconsin) Symphony Orchestra. The pageant tells the story of a young man growing up in the Finger Lakes region of New York State, who was visited by a heavenly messenger and directed to the engraved golden records that tell the history of the ancient people of the American continent their struggles and triumphs. i (J Jeff Warren FOR FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE BROOKSIDE 411 E. 400 So. Grocery and Picnic Supplies 2 MILK $1.33 GAL. anngB-.cniSffiEfls tmt&Sii Otaaufjh 3Ufi&!ty istaire " aiM . 'B)jjffi Census Bureau to take survey Local representatives of the Bureau of the Census will conduct a survey of employment in this area during the work week of July 17-22, 1978, Richard C. Burt, Director of the Bureau's Regional Office in Denver, announced an-nounced today. The survey is conducted con-ducted for the U.S. Department of Labor in a scientifically designed sample of approximately 70,000 households throughout the United States. Employment and unemployment statistics based on results of this survey are used to provide a continuing measure of the economic health of the Nation. For example, in May the survey indicated that of the 100.3 million men and women in the civilian labor force, 94.1 million were employed. The Nation's unemployment rate was 6.1 percent, up slightly from 6.0 percent the month before. Information supplied by individuals participating par-ticipating in the survey is kept strictly confidential by law and the results are used only to compile statistical totals. Westmghouse will build Utah plant President Theodore Roosevelt shook hands with 8,513 people at the 1907 New Year's Day White House presentation. Western Zirconium Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Westinghouse Electric Corporation, announced it will commence building a $50 million zirconium manufacturing plant in Weber County, Utah. In making the announcement, an-nouncement, Westinghouse executive vice president of Nuclear Energy Systems, Joseph Rengel, said, "We are warmed by the tremendous reception the people of Weber County and the state of Utah have given us in helping to facilitate plans for this new plant." The zirconium plant, which when completed will employ approximately ap-proximately 430 people with an estimated $1 million per month payroll, will be located on 1000 acres in the Little Mountain area, 12 miles west of Ogden. Construction Con-struction of the new plant is expected to begin later this month which an ticipated plant start-up time for late 1979. The process buildings at the Utah site will have approximately 160,000 square feet of enclosed manufacturing area with 50 to 110 acres of the site allocated for buildings. The company expects to produce three to four million pounds of zirconium zir-conium per year. Depending on future growth of the market, the company has room at the site to significantly increase in-crease the plant capability. "We at Westinghouse feel that nuclear power will play an increasingly larger role in helping to provide the energy this nation needs," Rengel added. "We were especially proud of the role electricity produced by nuclear energy played this past winter when nuclear plants kept homes heated and thousands in jobs in America when a shortage of coal occurred. Mike Groneman, left, received a plaque for his outstanding service as the president of the Springville Rotary Club this past year. Craig Taylor, presenting presen-ting the plaque, was installed Rotary president at the installation banquet Wednesday, June 29. Contract awarded Award of a $1,058,728 contract for placement of approximately 64,000 tons of riprap on Soldier Creek Dam was announced today by Bureau of Reclamation Regional Director N.W. Plummer. Mr. Plummer stated that the contractor, Van Staveren Construction, Inc. from West Jordan, Utah, will begin work this summer to excavate a total of 84,000 tons of riprap crushed rock and large boulders at the Strawberry River quarry site located about 10 road miles northwest of the access road cutoff to . Soldier Creek Dam. Over 64,000 tons will be placed on the upstream embankment em-bankment of the dam which will provide added slope protection and enhance embankment stability. The three-foot depth of rock will be placed over the existing rock on the upstream face of the dam. Almost 20,000 tons of riprap will be stockpiled at the quarry and used later to construct con-struct boat ramps and other recreation facilities planned for the enlarged reservoir area. Soldier Creek Dam was surveyed by an independent in-dependent Safety of Dams team, commissioned com-missioned by the Secretary of the Interior, to analyze all possible deficiencies which could jeopardize the safety of the dam. Though no real clanger exists at Soldier Creek Dam, the additional ad-ditional raprap reinforces and protects the earthfill dam and upgrades the structure to standards set by the Safety of Dams Program. A |