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Show Dr. Boyd Larson To Retire From Geneva Benson Condemns For more than three decades Dr. Boyd J. Larsen has served ser-ved as a physician, friend and medical counselor to one of the largest families in Utah Valley. The members of this family are the nearly 5,000 men and women wo-men who make steel at Geneva Works. In announcing his retirement, Frank S. Dain, superintendent, personnel services, paid tribute to the Lehi doctor for his 'skill as a physician and his personal concern for the health and well-being well-being of every Geneva employee. "His contribution 'has upheld in every way our commitment to the importance of people at Geneva and our dedication to strengthen and improve our industry in-dustry in this valley," Dain said. While Larsen's retirement is a step-down from full-time service, ser-vice, he will still continue to serve in industrial medicine at Geneva on a part-time basis. Coupled with semiretirement, Larsen will continue to maintain his private practice in Lehi, as well as pursue community and other medical interests in the Valley. This may be retirement, but it's more in words than actions. ac-tions. Larsen enjoyed working at Geneva, 'it's always been my family practice." Keeping a limited practice atGeneva means a lot to him, Medicine has really changed at Geneva since Larsen started at the plant in 1946, the same year U. S. Steel purchased the steelmaking operation from the Federal Government. 'It's not an all-night-and-day job anymore," he said. Geneva's emphasis on safety over the past 31 years, according accord-ing to the doctor, has practically eliminated job-related emergency emer-gency treatment. "Medicine, now, is mostly preventive pre-ventive because the steel plant is safer and more healthful than in the early days," he said. A native of Lehi, Larsen earned earn-ed a B.A. degree in zoology from Brigham Young University and a two-year certificate from the University of Utah's Medical Medi-cal School. He completed his medical studies at the Washington Washing-ton University School of Medicine Medi-cine in St. Louis in 1043 and interned in-terned at the Salt Lake County Hospital. During World War II, he served ser-ved with the U. S. Navy on a destroyer in the South Pacific, attaining the rank of lieutenant. Following his discharge in 1946 Larsen returned to Lehi and joined join-ed Geneva Works. His principal medical responsibilities have been at Geneva, with some industrial in-dustrial medicine activities at U. S. Steel's WesternCoal Operations Opera-tions in East Carbon, Utah, and Somerset, Colorado; and Western West-ern Ore Operations near Lander, Wyoming, Cedar City and Pay-son. Pay-son. Larsen is a past member of the Lehi Lions Club and the Provo Exchange Club. He also received an honorary life-time membership from the Lehi Jay-cees. Jay-cees. He is Lehi's City Physician, a member of Lehi's Chamber of Commerce and vice president of Alpine District School Board. REPORT OF CONDITION First Security Bank of Orem, N.A. In the state of Utah, at the close of business on March 31, 1977 published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, Cur-rency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161. Charter number 1 66 1 5. Statement, of Resources and Liabilities ASSETS Cash and due from banks $269,000 Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock $24,000 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell $1,225,000 Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) $603,000 Loans, Net $603,000 Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises $66,000 Other assets $5,000 TOTAL ASSETS $2,192,000 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps, and corps $565,000 Time and savings deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps $317,000 Deposits of United States Government $3,000 Deposits of States and political subdivisions $286,000 Certified and officers' checks $23,000 TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS $1,194,000 Total demand deposits. $617,000 Total time and savings deposits $577,000 Total deposits in domestic and foreign offices $1,194,000 Other Labilities ..$4,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) $1,198,000 EQUITY CAPITAL Common stock ... a. No. shares authorized $4,000 b. No. shares outstanding $4,000 (par value) Surplus TlnHitrMoH nrnfits TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL $994,000 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL $2,192,000 MEMORANDA Average for 1 5 or 30 calendar days ending with call date: Cash and due from banks $190,000 Fed funds sold and securities purchased under Tota Time deposits of $100,000 or more in domestic offices $250,000 Total deposits U78.000 Time deposits of $100,000 or more (outstanding as of report datel Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000 or more $250,000 I, C. Daniel Covington, Manager and Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct cor-rect to the best of my knowledge and belief. We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement state-ment of resources and liabilities. We declare that it has been examined bv us and to the best of our knowledge and belief is true and correct. Thomas F. Hawkes Directors: El Roy Nelson Wesley R. Dickerson Published in the Orem-Geneva Times April 28. 1977. -$400,000 . $400,000 .$194,000 U iV i) ii M V .Jill . M I I 1MJ i MM iJj i t ft : it i- ii n i r i i i r is i iiir . ii . u ii ' 1 1 6"d,a.657 8'W S3 10" OK. 9" 12"d!a,1225 OTHER SIZES 4" TO 24" CONCRETE PIPE. IRRIGATION and DRAINAGE, ALL SIZES ALL PRICES ARE PLANT PICK-UP SALT LAKE: 333 So. Redwood Road North Salt Lake, Ph. 532-1 1 1 1 Og6eN: 801 West 12th St., Ph. 399-1171 LOGAN: South Highway 91, Ph. 752-6310 PROVO: Ph. 373-8600 (no toll charge) r ' j ' i - II K! J BOYD J. LARSEN, M. D. He has served on this board for 14 years and is a past president. presi-dent. " Larsen is a past member of the American Industrial Hygiene Association, Western Association Associa-tion of Railway Surgeons and in 1974, he was awarded the degree of Fellow in the American Academy Aca-demy of Family Practice. He is presently a member and past president of the Utah County Medical Society, a member mem-ber and past chair man of the Utah Occupational MedicalCommittee (state appointment), a member of the Industrial Medical Association, As-sociation, American Medical Association As-sociation and Utah Medical Association. As-sociation. He also is a member of the medical staff at American Fork Hospital, where he has been president three times, and is an associate member of the medical medi-cal staff at Utah Valley Hospital in Provo. Larsen is married to Roberta Ball of Lehi and they have two married children. Erica Fuchs Named Outstanding Trainee At Ft. Jackson Army Private First Class Erica S. Fuchs, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Alan W. Fuchs, 53 West 1200 North, Orem, recently was chosen an outstanding trainee at the end of her basic training cycle at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. She was named by her in-, structors for her ability and initiative ini-tiative in classroom and field instruction throughout the training. train-ing. The private entered the Army in February of this year. Fuchs attended the University of Utah at Salt Lake City and was graduated from Orem HighSchool in 1973. Utch Students to Study Drought Unit Do not be surprised, kind father, if you emerge from the bathroom and find your 11-year- ' old son staring intently at his wvistwatch, clucking his tongue and shaking his head in disap-, proval. He may have just graduated from a new short course that is being introduced in elementary schools across the state. It's a dry subject: Drought. This "unit on water conser vation is teaching fjurth. fifth and sixth-grade students everything every-thing from making rain to com puting the amount of water Dad used while taking that shower. The "textbook" for this course i.3 presented partly incomic strip form: but that's only half the story. This book is stuffed with pro jects aimed at making kids aware of something' we adults know, but often forget to practice: You don't have to drench to quench. Students taking this course will learn how to read the home water meter, measure rainfall, how much water it takes to grow a bean plant, and figure how many gallons of water escape through the nozzle of your garden gar-den hose. The course encompasses such subjects as arithmetic (finding a leaky faucet and calculate its rate of water loss each day); climatology (plotting the water needs for two cities using temp erature graphs); science (distilling (distil-ling ocean water); social science (if City "A on a map were settled 50 years before'City "B, what effect would the development of C have on A's water supply?); language (a water use crossword puzzle); and even music (a song on page 29). It's a good example of making lessons significant. Besides all' the water conservation con-servation material in the book, there's a message on the back cover from Governor Scott Matheson. He asks the students to relay their ideas on saving water to him via the teachers. Who knows? Youngsters are surprisingly bright, and maybe we adults will be helped through the coming dry spell by those who are wet behind the ears. Why not sit down and discuss this matter with your child? In learning, learn-ing, you'll help the drought situation. oe the death knell of freedom ind all we hold dear. Communism? WcrnS "The gospel of Jesus Christ Against Takeovers can prosper umy - atmosphere of freedom," he said. Ronn called detente a "I pray that God will bless "fraud," and asserted that time you to see communism for what will prove it to be so. it really is the greatest system He cautioned tnai meie i of human slavery that the world has ever known. May you not be deceived into believing that the communists have moderated moder-ated their goal toward world domination." This warning was expressed to Brigham Young University students stud-ents in an assembly Tuesday by President Ezra Taft Benson, president of the Council of the excuse for any BYU teacher to grant a forum to an avowea communist for the purpose of teaching communism on the BYU campus. "It may be done on other campuses in the United States, but it will not be done here," he asserted. He lumped collectivized socialism with communism call- twelve of the LDS Church Benson opened his address, ing it communism in practice, the last of the current semester "Both communism and social-at social-at BYU, with a description of ism have the same affect upon the Law of Consecration and the the individual-a loss of personal United Order, which he called property." celestial laws lived by the anci- He explained that socialism ents in Biblical and Book of cannot work except through an Mormon times, then attacked all-powerful state. system, a process which he called socialism. "Compulsory benevolence is not charity. Today's socialists--who call themselves egalitariansare egali-tariansare using the federal government to redistribute wealth in our society, not as a matter of voluntary charity, but as a matter of right," he stated, and warned BYU students not to contribute to the welfare problem by becoming state welfare wel-fare recipients. "The Church's view on this is well known. We stand for independence, thrift, and abolishing abol-ishing the dole. The aim of the Curch is to help the people to help themselves. Work is to be re-enthroned as the rul- Orem-Geneva Times Orem Residents Trip Awarded Orem residents Fred and fclma Hewitt, of 1714 South 200 East, have earned a muskrat and leather lea-ther coat and a vacation at the site of their choice from the Neo-Life Neo-Life Company of America. The award was given in honor of outstanding recruiting and sales efforts throughout 1970 ing principle of the lives of our Church membership." He noted that the members of the LDS Curch today are living apart of the United Order by paying t tithing, fast offerings, offer-ings, going on missions, and making other contributions of money, service, and time. April 28. 1977 AF Class Of '52 Pbns 251h Reunion Tha American Fork Class of '52 is planning their 25th year reunion which is set for July 9, 1977 at "the Alpine Country Club at 7 p.m. For reservations and information infor-mation please contact: Larry Miller, 6819 South 2485 East, Salt Lake City, 943-6017; Clyde Strong, 1783 South 1750 East, Orem, 225-5393; or Ross Nicholes, 267 Orchard Avenue, Ame.ricanFork,7 56-48 61. Please contact these classmates by Wednesday, June 1. communism and socialism as "counterfeits." " "I have been on both sides of the Iron Curtain several times," he said. "I have talked to these godless leaders face to face. I say to you with all 'The state has to be supreme in everything. When individuals begin to assert their God-given rights, the state has to suppress that freedom. So belief in God must be suppressed, and with that gone, freedom of conscience sincerity of my soul that since and religion must also go. 'Those 1933 this godless counterfeit to the gospel has made tremendous progress toward its objective of world domination where over one-third of the human family-are family-are under totalitarian subjugation." sub-jugation." The Church leader continued, "Today we are in a battle for the bodies and souls of man. ' It is a battle between two opposite oppo-site systems: freedom and slavery, sla-very, Christ and anti-Christ. The struggle today is more momentous than a decade ago. are tne nrsi oi our iioerues mentioned in the Bill of Rights." Benson stated that this country has marched a long way down the : , soul-destroying road to socialism, pointing out that government spending in the United States at all levels amounts to over 40 percent of national income. "If we continue to follow the trend in which we are heading today, two things will inevitably result: (1) a less of our per sonal freedom, and (2) financial yet today the conventional wisdom bankruptcy. This is the price is that you have to learn to we pay when we turn awav from live with communism. Tell that God and turn to .government, to to the millions who have met do everything for us. It is the death or imprisonment under the tyranny of communism!" Benson stressed that learning to live with communism would formula by which nations become be-come enslaved," he said. He warned that many are now advocating the distribution of wealth through the federal tax Something For You . . . Mill Cumorah Pageant Eastern States Tour This Tour Includes At No Extra Cost: SPECIAL UNITED AIRLINES CHAK'fKR FLIGHT round trip Salt LakeCleveland. GROUND TRANSPORTATION via deluxe, air-conditioned, restroom equipped bus. excellent hotels for 1 1 nights. BAGGAGE HANDLING for one piece. SIGHTSEEING and professional local guides. ADMISSIONS and tickets where required. SPECIAL MEALS as mentioned in the itinerary. EXPERT ESCORT - friendly and knowledgeable. ALL TAXES AND TIPS on services included. DEPARTS JULY 26th-RETURNS AUGUST 6th 12 FULL DAYS! Total cost of this very special tour. per person based on double occupancy, plus $24 tax. 225-7600 Travel Agency 270 S. State, Orem The scene from the Hill. It's up to him fo inform the rest . f r. . of us, and in these complicated times, that isn't easy. But ACSHUS LOr CCTB inebllenf sjob is communication, to get the facts, to give therr i to us VVarS Within .. . . He represents a Freedom... one of those precious gifts ,nnw.... V n guaranteed ro us under our Constitution. The Church Fep- nm nVh9 ni.w C l resents another Freedom. Orem, Utah 225-0839 V A These Freedoms, and the word itself, 'have special 1 meaning just now when we're celebrating our Bicentennial C n. Let's not lose sight of them. FtflA 1 00 Hnmo jf :f It's a birthday present we owe ourselves mic MJC IlUi.iC ) 41 For Youth S jp.,.'"v v 450 West Center Box 325 i s S Provo, Utah 84601 375-0880 mmr ' i j 'th:!p , Bill's Appliance. J i( I Sales & Service ; . 1 ' I " C.I 538 South State St. if svv4J, ' ' , ' Orem, Utah 225-0796 - ( V ' I I P iii C Universal Rent-All ? I ' ' 354 South State 4f ,1 ' , Orem, Utah 224-1270 SflWlef - f"x 7 1 ' Pavlova Restaurant! tK 3 t 1 I 1074 South State C 441 f; j Orem, Utah 224-5961 J j! s r Compliments of 1 j v II i( ) ,s M-tAsr Figurettes I ....x,. .um. ' isl fefv.tf: ;siKw A-sss-se., 5-wia 933 East 840 North f - Orem, Utah 225-8432 . raudiTr) n rivrnvir?!., 2 1 "In reading world history," wrote Harlan House, "we are impressed by the exploits of daring men leading mighty armies and conquering great nations. Yet how often do we consider the magnitude of those silent wars that rage within the individual in his campaing to master himself ..." It is those silent wars that rage within that are the cause of much concern. It is the war within that often weakens and wears us away. True, there are outside struggles, physical obstacles, ob-stacles, unfriendly conditions, con-ditions, quarrels, and contentions con-tentions - but even these come partly from our inward attitudes. Too often there is within us the battle of jealousy, envy, resentment; the feeling of wanting to cut someone down to size - our size, perhaps. There is the silent wearing inner war when we burden oursleves with wrongdoing, with the friction fric-tion of an unquiet conscience. conscien-ce. There is a war of stub-borness, stub-borness, resistance to counsel, coun-sel, rebellion against even the most reasonable restraint. There is the silent war within that cannot reconcile itself with sorrow, the loss of loved ones, with irrevocable events. These silent inner struggles deep in the human heart may be more destructive destruc-tive than all the wars on the battlefields of history, impairing im-pairing as they do the peace, the health, the happiness of countless people - the wars that know no time or season. and rage against an enemy unseen. Who hath a harder battle to fight," asked Thomas a Kempis, "than he who striveth for self- mastery? ... Oh, if thou knewest what peace to thyself thy holy life should bring to thyself, and what joy to others, me thinketh . thou wouldest be more zealous for spiritual profit. . ." Blessed is he who has conquered envy, appetites, and the warring inner enemy. Blessed is he who has made his peace and found a quiet conscience, and relief from the silent wars within the human heart. Richard L. Evans Copyright 1968 Atesons Salt Lake City, Utah Used by permission (flo Other Success Can Compensate For Failure In The m m Clegg Construction The image Maker Co. 475 West 2000 South Orem, Utah 225-6771 Johnson Electric 190 E.400S. Orem. Utah IMen & Women Cutting and Hatr Styling) 483 East 800 South Orem, Utah 225-9142 (The Family That Prays Together Stays Together) Naomi's Beauty Shoppe 79 West 400 North Orem, Utah 225-3241 Kill Top Auto Work 1775 South 700 East Orem, Utah 225-0401 All Coach R. V. Center 1374 West 800 North Orem, Utah 224-1180 Pete's Auto Repair 1135 North State Orem, Utah 225-2755 Compliments of A&K Cleaners 1250 North State Provo, Utah 375-261 1 Ace Rents Inc. 1745 South State Orem, Utah 225-4816 Corbet Trailer Sales Inc. 1562 North State Orem. Utah 225-0807 Walker Monument 565 North State Orem, Utah 224-1181 A-l Vacuum & Sewing 355 South State Orem, Utah 225-8181 Batley Plumbing & Heating Inc. 667 North A Street Orem. Utah 225-8359 Chlsm Cafe 1620South State Orem, Utah 225-8022 Bill & Iva's Cafe 225 South State Orem, Utah 225-0332 Goodwill T. V. 798 South State Orem, Utah 225-7550 .A A A A A.A.AA.O. ttr -yr -r 1 A c |