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Show Orem-Gflnova Times Thursday, October 7, 1971 Evidence indicates that pesticides pest-icides have helped make deer more numerous. Without chemical pollution-fighters, food would cost nearly twice as much. MGMS FABULOUS FUR Weekdays 8 PM Sat. - Sun. 2 and 8 PM i WINNER OF 10 ACADEMY AWARDS! GOWEVITH THEWIWDT Student Matinees THURS. FRI. 2 PM ONLY Students $1.00 C NEXT WEEK: the ultimate trip 2DOI:ASFftCE ODYSSEY m -NATIONAL GENERAL'S LrQDyitneatre 1230 N. at 2nd W 374 5525 STANLEY We urge special parental discretion because ol strong language demanded by certain dramatic scenes u co-hit 3itwwr MteNMUjy BOTH A JAMES iff THEATRES g-WL3 Hi. ' tN .f Nik ACADEMY tS Show 7:30 & 9:30 Mat. Sat. 2:00 THE WALT DISNEY'S ThB Lin lUanisiiing DESERT L Prairie SCERA, Thursday, Fri., Saturday 2 pm Continuous REPRESENTING the Timpanogos District of Federated Women's Clubs, Mrs. J. D. Pyne of Orem; Mrs. Odessa Cullimore of Provo, president of the organization; and Mrs. Faye Loveless, also of Provo, (1-r), extend an Club Backs Ecology Concern With Can Recycling Project TIie Timpanogos District of f ederated Women's Clubs has joined in the metal can collecting collect-ing campaign throughout Utah Valley. It's not a project just to have a project," says Mrs. J. D. Pyne of Orem, past president of the organization. "It's to back Geneva Works' can recycling effort ef-fort and to demonstrate our on-cern on-cern for the ecology. X The Timpanogos District is comprised of 11 clubs in the communities com-munities stretching from Lehi to Provo. "We're interested in contributing contribut-ing to the welfare of our various communities by engaging in worthwhile activities," states Mrs. Odessa Cullimore, president presi-dent of Timpanogos District. And we feel that Geneva, which is the valley's major industry, KRAMER'S Production of BARRETT - ANDREW V.MclAGLEN production HJMkVi: m.33 1 TIMP THEATRES . Show 7.30 Heaters Under 50 Deg. MAMMOTH EXCITEMENT! THE GREATEST WILDLIFE SPECTACLE OF THEM ALL! and largest employer, deserves our support." Geneva Works, as part of a nationwide ean collecting campaign cam-paign by the steel industry, has established can collection stations. sta-tions. They are located at the four main gates to the plant on Plant Road ... at Gates 1 and 2 and the entrances to the Nitrogen Nitro-gen Plant the the Pipe Mills. The collection 'containers are located outside the gates to eliminate the need to enter the plant. Employees at Geneva Works are already involved in this can collection campaign. The steel industry is interested in doing its part to reduce the volume of litter and solid waste and also to preserve the supply of raw materials. Scrap metal, including metal cans, has always been an important ingredient in making steel. Reclaimed and re- melted, the scrap is given new life as new and useful products. No special preparation of the cans is necessary for collection, although rinsing them would insure in-sure cleanliness during the collection col-lection period before they are placed in the furnace. Thomas Edison won a S2 when sound came from phonograph he had invented! bet the Walls Are Buldging Utah Tech College Utah Technical College at Provo has a 19 percent enrollment enroll-ment Increase in its Day School this year, according to President Pres-ident Wilson W. Sorensen, from 1492 in the fall of 1970 to 1746 as of now. The increase, the president said, has taxed the physical facilities of the existing campus tothe limit in the vocational-technical vocational-technical areas, and compelled the college to put some 200 applicants on a waiting list. The 200 will receive first preference in openings which may result at the start of the winter quarter, or at the start of school next year. There is still room, he said, for additional students in the academic fields. "We have reached the limit of our facilities in the vocational- ' technical field which of course is our basic mission as a college," col-lege," said the president, "and we are caring for a great many more students than our present campus was meant to handle. We have opened new sections in many areas to take care of the increased in-creased enrollment and have Invitation to homemakers ana everyone to collect used metal cans for recycling at Geneva Works. The recycling effort is to help reduce solid waste and preserve raw materials used in steelmaking. Outstanding Biologists To Lecture at Seminars Eight of the nation's outstanding outstand-ing biologists will be featured in a series of monthly seminars scheduled by the Brigham Young University College of Biological and Agricultural Science this school year. Each lecture will begin at 3:10 p.m. in room 456 of the Martin Building. The public is invited to attend the seminars which are geared especially for students and faculty in the life sciences. Opening the series on Oct. 12, will be Dr. George W. Beadle, president emeritus of the University of Chicago, speaking on "The Origin of the Maize." Other speakers will be Dr. Telford Tel-ford H. Work, professor of preventive pre-ventive medicine, School of Medicine, Med-icine, University of California, who will discuss "The North American Arbovirus Encephalit-ides," Encephalit-ides," Nov. 9. Dr. Frits W. Went, professor of botany, University of Nevada System, "Desert Ecology," Dec. 14. Dr. Lawrence Bogorad, professor pro-fessor of biology at Harvard University, Uni-versity, 'The Greening of a Leaf," Jan. 11. Dr. Nyle C, Brady, professor of soil science at Cornell University, Uni-versity, 'The Compatability of Agricultural Chemicals and a Clean Environment," Feb, 8. Dr. William N. Eschmeyer, chairman and associate curator of the Department of Ichthyology of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, Scorpionfishes: Their Venom, Biology and Systematics," March 14. Dr. Thomas R. Forbes, professor profes-sor of anatomy at theYaleSchool of Medicine, 'Plague in Shake- added to our faculty. We now have over 100 fulltime instructors in-structors in the Day School." President Sorensen emphasized em-phasized the announced enrollment enroll-ment figures are for the Day School only. Final totals are not yet In for the Evening School. The 1746 daytime students (the figure will possibly increase before all registration for the fall quarter is ended) breaks down "St thinner jiiJaicEr am Medical Center Zoning Denied By City Council Two public hearings garnered m-wt of the time at the regular meeting of the Orem City Council Coun-cil Tuesday night as consideration considera-tion was given to approval of a planned dwelling group and a re-zoning for a medical complex. Walter Wellman presented his plans for the Cherry Hills planned dwelling group to be constructed on about 200 South between 400 West and 600 West. The Orem Planning Commission Commis-sion had previously recommended recom-mended approval of the new 12-acre 12-acre development which is scheduled sche-duled to include 43 homes and four four-plex apartments. A group of residents in the area appeared at the public hearing and asked a number of questions regarding the development, with concern being expressed by several sev-eral citizens. Following the discussion, the Council voted to approve the Cherry Hills development on condition con-dition that no parking be allowed on the 30-foot streets, that satisfactory sat-isfactory arrangements be made to obtain easements for water and sewer, and that the owner of the adjacent property be advised ad-vised regarding the nature of the development. In another public hearing, consideration con-sideration was given to changing chang-ing the zone of a three-acre site at 200 East 400 South to permit construction of a medical complex. Dr. W. Doyle Cranney, representing rep-resenting a group interested in developing the complex, showed a plot plan of the area and explained ex-plained how the project had come about. Initially, the complex would have room for six dentists and four medical doctors, Dr.Cran- spear's London," April 11. Dr. George A. Bartholomew, professor zoology at the University Uni-versity of California, "The Physiology Phys-iology and Ecology of the Galapagos Galap-agos Marine Iguana," May 9. Bank Of A.F. Appoints Vice Pres. A new assistant vice-president his been appointed at Bank of American Fork by the bank's board of directors. Sterling Harris has been named assistant vice president, whose responsibilities will include supervision su-pervision of installment loans for auto, trucks, winners, home improvement im-provement and personal loans. He will also supervise dealer contracts. Mr. Harris, an AmericanFork native, comes to Bank of American Am-erican Fork from General Motors Acceptance Corporation, with two years experience in their loan department. . Prior to that, he was assistant manager for the Fidelity Industrial Credit Company Com-pany of Provo. After graduation from American Am-erican Fork High School, Mr. Harris attended Snow College, the Church College of Hawaii and Brigham Young University with a business major. He completed a mission to Australia for the L. D.S. Church. Mr. Orville Gunther, president of the bank, said the bank was very pleased to have Mr. Harris join the Bank of American Fork staff. "Sterling Harris is a very personable person and a specialist in consumer financing. into the following categories: 1534 fulltime day school students on a college level; 87 high school students released from their regular high schools to get post-high post-high vocational-technical training train-ing on a full or part-time basis; 125 in vocational-technical training train-ing programs conducted by the' school at the Utah State Penitentiary. 2nrj2iiiis ney said. A number of citizens in the audience, many of them residents resi-dents in the neighborhood, expressed ex-pressed their objections to the re-zoning, saying that they felt their residential property would be de-valued thereby. The argument mentioned several sev-eral times by citizens and coun-cilmen coun-cilmen was that there is much commercial land still undeveloped unde-veloped in Orem on which such facilities can be built. It was also pointed out some residential lots adjacent to the Cranney property had been included in-cluded by the Planning Commission Commis-sion in the re-zoning recommendation. recommen-dation. The owner of this property, pro-perty, present at the meeting, objected vehemently tore-zoniig his property. The Council voted to deny the re-zoning request the Councilman Council-man Robert Dove voting "Nay on the motion to deny the re-zoning. re-zoning. Mayor Winston M. Crawford said he thought the Council had made a mistake in stopping the construction of the medical center cen-ter on this site, since the facilities facil-ities are badly needed in Orem. Orem Woman!; Mother Dies Funeral services for Veva McClellan Mc-Clellan Fonnesbeck, 79, Logan, who died Sunday in a Logan hospital, will be held today at noon in the Hall Mortuary Chapel, where friends may call Thursday prior to services. Burial will be in the Logan Cemetery. Mrs. Fonnesbeck had several relatives living in Utah County. A native of Payson, she was born Nov. 21, 1891, to Jasper J. and Elmlrea Elmer McClellan. She married Victor C. Fonnesbeck on Dec. 14, 1915, in theSa-'tLake Temple. She was an active member of the LDS Church in the Logan 23rd Ward. Survivors include her husband, hus-band, Logan, five daughters and two sons, Mrs. LaMar (Phyllis) Esplin, Fort Collins, Colo.; Mrs. Barbara Clayburn, Orem; Seymour Sey-mour Fonnesbeck, Layton; Mrs. Lloyd (Kathelyne) Metcalf, Salt Lake City; Wayne and Gen evieve Fonnesbeck, both Logan; Mrs. Heber (Joyce) Jacobs, San Jose, Calif.; 26 grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Flint McClellan, Pay-son; Pay-son; Lynn McClellan, Calif. HfeU34 4mYfc tifflfi- iftTM- IIIIIK ItoUpmwz Ilia S rfljuiK daw. mft if?y Noah Pulley Rites Held Funeral services for Noah M. Pulley, 85, 445 S. 5th E., American Am-erican Fork, who died Thursday of causes incident to age, were held Monday. Burial was in the American Fork City Cemetery. Mr. Pulley was born Oct. 4, 1885, in American Fork, to James and Lydia Hall Pulley. He married Rebecca Goates on June 24, 1909, in the Salt Lake Temple. Mr. Pulley was a farmer, mechanic and carpenter. He had served as president of the Farm Bureau and secretary of the American Fork Grazing Association. As-sociation. Active in the LDS Church, Mr. Pulley was a High Priest, had been president of the Elders Quorum and was a home teacher for many years. He had served also as president of the Farm Bureau and secretary of the American Fork Grazing Association. As-sociation. Survivors include his widow, American Fork; three sons and two daughters, Clifford N. Pulley, Leo Pulley and James Pulley, all of American Fork; Mrs. Verlond (Thelma) Hooley. Lindon; Mrs. Robert (Verda) Anderson, Orem; 12 grandchildren; grand-children; 15 great grandchildren; grandchild-ren; one brother and one sister, sis-ter, Ether 0. Pulley, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Marie Cassey, Red-lands, Red-lands, Calif. Idaho Man Dies At Orem Home Funeral services for Raymond Eli McEntire, 82, Rexburg, Idaho, who died Sunday at the home of a daughter in Orem, were held Wednesday in Rexburg. Burial was in the Rexburg City Cemetery. Mr. McEntire was born April 19, 1899, in Harrisville Weber County, to Eli Coleman and Elizabeth Jane Taylor McEntire. McEn-tire. He married Sara Ann 7nllinrKr nn TW 91 IQIfl intho Salt Lake Temple. She died March 24, 1971; For 32 years Mr. McEntire had served as a- ment intheSantaquinCityCeme-city intheSantaquinCityCeme-city official in Rexburg. tery. Survivors include four daugh- ', '. '. . " ; 3tt333 felt- W- t30IK - fid i AslSia (Q)l?(3jfflteHJ ters and two sens, Mrs. Max R, (Marilyn) Curtis, Orera; Mrs. D. 0. (Afton( Welker.TwinFalls. Ida.; Mrs. Robert A. (Elma) Erickson, Rexburg; Mrs. Mar-jorie Mar-jorie Smith, Coalville, Utah; Nolen R. McEntire, Phoenix, Ariz.; Reed Z. McEntire, American Am-erican Falls, Idaho. Berg V Mort Mortuary I Services f PROVO WILLIAM KENNETH ROSS Funeral services were held Friday Fri-day at the Berg Mortuary at 2:00 p.m., with interment in the Provo City Cemetery. PROVO CLARK NEWELL - Services were held Saturday in the Berg Mortuary at 11:00 a.m., with interment in-terment in the Provo CityCeme- tery. . -:-:-r-': PROVO LEROY DAVIS - Services were held Saturday in the Berg Mortuary at 2:00 p.m. with interment in-terment in the Provo City Cemetery. Ceme-tery. LAKESHORE , CAVELLE X. BOYLE - Services Ser-vices were held Saturday at 11:00 a.m. in the Lake shore Ward Chapel, with interment in the Payson City Cemetery. - PROVO ' . : ' . BEVERLY GEAN ' ALLMAN GARDNER -Graveside services were conducted Tuesday at 11:00 a.m. Interment in Provo City Cemetery. - v provo . ' ". ' . ARTELL S. DRAPER - Services Ser-vices were held Monday at 11:00 a.m. in the Sunset Ward Chapel, with interment in the Timpanogos Timpano-gos Gardens.: PROVO ' ' ; H. FRANKLIN MADSEN - Funeral Fu-neral services were held Wednesday Wed-nesday at 2:00 p.m. in Provo. Interment Provo City Cemetery. PROVO EDNA SORENSON BAUM -Funeral services were held Wednesday Wed-nesday at 11 a.m. in the Beg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Interment Provo City Cemetery. SANTAQUIN SHARP JOHNSON - Funeral services were held Tuesday at the Linde Mortuary, with inter- ffrwau |