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Show it r. Orem-Geneva Times Thursday, March 7, 1968 A Dr. Glen Taggart USU Announces Dr. Glen Taggart New President LOGAN-The Utah State Uni-. versity Board of Trustees Thursday Thurs-day named Dr. Glen L. Taggart to be the 11th president of the University. Dr. Taggart is now dean of International Studies and Programs Pro-grams at Michigan State University. Uni-versity. He will assume his duties as president of Utah State University Uni-versity July 1, 1968. At that time he will succeed Dr. Daryl Chase, who has been president since November, 1954. The Board of Trustees designated designat-ed President Chase president emeritus and said he will continue con-tinue at the university as emeritus emer-itus professor of history. He will also have administrative responsibility re-sponsibility for the Center for the Study of the Causes of War and Conditions for Peace, and will work on development of the Man and His Bread Museum at Utah State. President Chase reached administrative ad-ministrative retirement age of 65 in 1966, but at the request of the Board of Trustees accepted an additional two-year contract as president. He will retire June 30, 1968. ' ( ' . The new president has had a distinguished career in education, government service and foreign relations. He has been in his current' post as dean of International Studies and Programs at Michigan Michi-gan State since 1956, exception" , leave of absence in 1964-66 to serve as vice-chancellor (president) (presi-dent) of the University of Nigeria. Ni-geria. He joined the Michigan State faculty as professor of sociology in 1953. Prior to that time he had been in government service. He was rural sociologist for the Bureau of Agricultural Economics, Econom-ics, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Ag-riculture, 1934-44. From 1944 to 1953 he was with the Foreign Agricultural Service of theUSDA serving as social scientist (1944-49), (1944-49), assistant chief (1950-52) and chief (1952-53), Technical Collaboration Col-laboration Division. Dr. Taggart was born January 16, 1914, at Lewiston, Cache County, only about 20 miles from the Utah State campus. He is a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Taggart. He was graduated graduat-ed from North Cache HighSchool at Richmond, Cache County, where he was studentbody president. In 1940 he received a B.S. degree in sociology from -Utah State. He was a research assistant assist-ant at the University of Wisconsin Wis-consin from 1940-43, and was awarded a PhJ3. degree in sociology so-ciology by that institution in 1946. AIRMAN JAMES C. OLSEN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon W. Olsen of Orem, has been transferred from Lacklund AFB, Texas, to Shepherd AFB, Texas, where he will be trained as a jet mechanic. mechan-ic. While at Lacklund he trained ' in the ammunition and demolition squad. He recently received three bars for expert shooting and was reported the only one of 1500 with a perfect score. He graduated graduat-ed from Orem High School last spring and also attended Utah Technical College at Provo before be-fore entering the service Jan. 19. He will serve four years. Orem Sailors Home On Leave John David Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Alexander Pace, 202 S. 800 E Orem, Utah. Michael Mi-chael Howard Gordon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Gordon, 1490 S. 800 E., Orem, Utah. Edward Lowe Short, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Frank Short, 660 South Cherry Drive, Orem, Utah. These men have just completed com-pleted recruit training at the Naval Na-val Training Center, San Diego, Calif, and will be going to the various school, shore stations, and ships. HILLCREST PTA HONORS TEACHERS, ROOM MOTHERS Hillcrest PTA board honored Hillcrest faculty and room mothers with a lovely luncheon Friday during the Parent-Teacher Conference. Corsages and bou-tonniers bou-tonniers were presented to the teachers. About sixty teachers and room mothers were served at the luncheon. -ex x" V Florence Ellen Johnson Funeral Friday For Flora Johnson, 77 Florence (Flora) Ellen Johnson, John-son, 1385 S. 1100 W., Provo, died at Utah Valley Hospital, March 5, of causes incident to age. She was born September 6, 1890, in Doncaster, Yorkshire, England, a daughter of James Thomas Johnson and Elisebeth Cooke Johnson. She received her early education educa-tion in England and was converted and baptised to the Latter-day Saint Church at age 19. She moved to Provo in 1909 with her aunt, Sophia Leaning. She married mar-ried Joseph Peter Johnson, September Sept-ember 20, 1910, in Provo. She later received her endowments in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Johnson died March 4, 1959. She was employed in Provo many years. She was a member of the Sunset Third Ward and was active in Relief Society. At the time of her death she was employed at Deseret Industries. Her hobbies were gardening and handiwork. She is survived by one son and five daughters: Fred Johnson, Mrs. Clyde (Beth) Edwards; Mrs. Robert (Josephine) Keith; Mrs. Wallace (Hilda) Prestwich, all of Orem; Mrs. Merrillene Me-cham, Me-cham, Provo; Mrs. Boyd (Stella) Dennis, Springville; 34 grandchildren grand-children and 54 great-grandchildren. Services will be held at the Berg Drawing Room Chapel in Provo, Friday, March 8, at 11 a.m. Friends may call at the mortu- Inflatable Ward Saves Men Wounded in War The Army Medical Service has been involved in important advances ad-vances in science and skills since World War 11. One of the newest new-est inovations came with the introduction of a mobile field hospital, technically called Med-cal Med-cal Unit Self-contained Transportable Trans-portable (MUST), This unit is composed of an inflatable ward unit, surgery, power unit, patient pa-tient receiving and disposition, emergency treatment, clinical laboratory and oral surgery. The complete hospital facility can be assembled and ready for patients in 30 minutes by six men. The inflatable ward is composed com-posed of separate air ribs so it will not deflate when under attack. The ward provides in- ary Thursday evening from 6 to 8 and Friday prior to services. Interment will be in the Provo City Cemetery. tensive medical treatment for 20 combat casualties. The entire Must unit is completely com-pletely climitized and is comfortable com-fortable in extreme hot and cold climates. C ur rently, five MUST units are being employed in Vietnam. The use of the new facility was e-valuated e-valuated bySergeantRussellJahn of the Army Recruiting Station, Federal Building, 1 West, 1 North Provo. "I, as a soldier, am greatly impressed with the fact that a complete hospital can be close to action and care for the wounded immediately. Fewer seriously wounded men die in Vietnam than in any other war. Certainly, with the Army Medical Service and Army Nurse Corps using these new mobile units, this trend will continue. The success of the MUST unit in Vietnam has insured its future use. ' for J1 Occasions Gift of Beauty, for the Home.:. Potted plants Arrangements Cut flowers Corsages Rohbock's Sons' Floral 1042 South State Orem, Utah JOHN DAVID PACE TO BE ASSIGNED TO ENGINE SCHOOL John David Pace, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Alexander Pace, 202 S. 800 E, Orem, is home on leave after completing 12 weeks basic training at the naval training train-ing center, San Diego, Calif. John's next duty assignment will be approximately 12 weeks of schooling at Great Lakes, Illinois Illi-nois at the Navy's class "A" engineman school. There he will receive instruction on diesel and gasoline engines, air conditioning condition-ing and refrigeration, distilling plants, and other engineering equipment. ROBERT A. STONE , IS MEDIC IN OVERSEAS OUTFIT . PLEKU, VIETNAM - Army Specialist Four Robert A. Stone, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Stone, 726 S. Sunny Lane, Orem, was assigned as a medic with the 4th Infantry Division near Pleiku, Vietnam, Feb. 6. by Debbie Peterson "Let's make our school a better bet-ter place. This is what we tried to do in our homeroom president's presi-dent's meeting which was held last Monday. Some of the things we discussed were: conduct in the assemblies, litter on the campus, and the coming elections. Last week when the student council was discussing the coming com-ing ninth grade dance they decided that it would be fun to have a computer dance. They took a vote in the ninth grade to see how many students would like to do it. 290 of them voted to have it, so the Spring night dance will be a computer dance. All during the week model cars have been on display in the main hall. On Monday they were judged by a few members of the student council. The winners were: lst-Gary Jacobsen, 2nd-Mark 2nd-Mark Veteote, 3rd-Joan MitcheL, 4th-Tony Quilter, and 5th-Ross Paulson. The Citizens of the Week are: eighty grade, Susan MacRae, daughter of Mrs. Laverne MacRae, Mac-Rae, and seventh grade, Patsy Hideshima, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tad Hideshima. for pcopb skiing places like: Stowe Squaw Valley Vail Mt.Snow Cannon Mt. Aspen Sun Valley Stratton Jackson Hole Mt.Hood Traveler fifth KENTUCKY STRAIGHT 60UBO WHISHT 86 PK00F DISTHIE0 HO I0TTUD Vt OLD C0 OISMKRT CO .HUKKFMT. 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