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Show " '""":ys:tf" i:-::S:i.:: 1 ,' V If H -A !r;S ; ' i i I r T. '"" if r j U ! , Glen Reese Pulham retirement award he received last week on the occasion oc-casion of his retirement from the Orem Post Office. Of-fice. Postal Veteran Takes Retirement . Friday, May 30, was the last day on the job for Glen Reese Pulham, superintendent of postal operations at the Orem Post Office. Mr. Pulham retired from the U.S. Postal Service after 30 years of government service. ser-vice. During his lengthy career with the Orem Post Office, Mr. Pulham has worked in four separate postal facilities in Orem. He worked as a postal clerk when the post office was located in the south wing of the old Orem City Hall, located on the northeast corner of mi wofflz eiecraciiw budget COFFEE MAKER, 25C a month ELECTRIC FRY PAN, 140 a month Just count kilowatts instead of calorics. Estimate your energy costs with the new UP&L publication, "Your Energy Budget Guide," available free at any Utah Power and Light office. Find out how much it costs to use all your electrical appliances by job or by the month. Skinny up your budget by cutting down on the kilowatts. displays the special State Street and Center Street. Mr. Pulham worked for eight years in the new post office which was located on the northwest corner of State Street and Center Street (where McDonald's is now located.) For the next 18 years he worked in the Orem Post Office located at 98 West Center Street, and for the past year he has worked at the present postal facility located at 222 West Center Street. For many years Mr. Pulham served as Superintendent, Delivery 4 100-WATT BULB, 60 a month 30 VACUUM HAND IRON, jjj Ufv 1 CLEANER, 150amonth ELECTRIC HAIR ROLLERS, 210 a month Li and Collection, and in 1978 he was promoted to his present position of Superintendent, Postal Operations. Postmaster Clyde E. Weeks has high praise for Mr. Pulham and the quality of the service he has rendered over the years. "We will certainly miss his postal expertise and his ability to deal effectively ef-fectively with both employees em-ployees and customers," Mr. Weeks said. "We wish him well in his retirement and hope that he has many years of enjoyable activity ahead of him." At an open house held for Mr. Pulham last week, Mr. Weeks presented Mr. Pulham with a special retirement award signed by Regional Postmaster General J. F. Morris. of the American Red Cross as Outstanding Volunteer of the Year -1979, according to Robert Ph0t0graphy Fun Eddington Executive r ' Director. He was officially Planned At BYU draeydInMnay 28 at the A good summer vacation vaca-tion picture is priceless and a bad one is costly, especially since the price of silver has caused a dramatic rise in the cost of film. To help amateur photographers improve their skills, BYU is sponsoring a "Fun with Photography" workshop June 24 to July 29. Session will be Tuesdays Tues-days from 7 to 9 p.m., according to Jim Walker, a photographic consultant at BYU and instructor for the course. Interested persons should contact the BYU Department of Conferences Con-ferences and Workshops, 378-4903. In addition to teaching teach-ing the basic skills of good gt gt ICECREAM FREEZER, TOASTER, 140 a month L 3 s month I a month ELECTRIC CLOCK, 90 a month The booklet that helps you decide where to save! Come in or write for your free copy. IF. hi & LIGHT COMPANY .Vs :-; ; ' "I WALTER G.WILLIS Willis Honored By Red Cross Walter G. Willis of Provo has been named by the Central Utah Chapter "The service given by Mr. Willis over the years is incalculable and in the finest tradition of the Red Cross," Mr. Eddington Ed-dington said. "He began in 1957 at the age of 66, when most people head for the rocking chair, and he has served every year since then - 23 years in all. Every week in all of photography, Walker will survey the interests of class participants and teach them what they want to know. He has taken thousands thou-sands of pictures over the past 25 years and has SUNLAMP, 450 a month RADIO, 70 a month n LJ American Red Cross : CMtnl iflio Carer those years Mr. Willis has been on the job as chapter treasurer and volunteer bookkeeper - writing checks, preparing reports and budgets, and maintaining main-taining accounts." Last year, when Mr. Willis mentioned it might be time to retire, (he was then 88), Mr. Eddington and his associates were dismayed. "We explained that he surely couldn't think of retirement - he was not yet 90," Eddington Edding-ton explains with a smile. Mr. Willis was born in Wembley, England, in 1891. He came to America in 1905 and to Provo in 1936. He married Ivie Farmer in 1923. They have three children. also been involved in teaching, studio work, equipment design and testing, and high speed and research photography. W8AM Wt J " Ed ijw R i o. it n n , c - l 24! Hotf BaMdre MadhiEei Quicker Easier to use 0 More Reliable The new generation of Day & Night Tellers from Walker Bank is here! Now you can... Get cash in any amount Deposit to your account ; from $5 up to your daily limit Transfer funds Check your balance Make a loan payment Anytime and just about anywhere, statewide. Oiche Valley 102 North Main, Logan Cedar Cily 444 South Main Cenlerville 92 East 1000 South , Granger 2797 West 3590 South We're open when we're open and WICAT Develops Computer For Medical Training , Scientists at WICAT Inc. of Orem recently completed the world's first commercially-supported, computer-controlled videodisc program for training medical personnel per-sonnel in the field of gastroenterology. gas-troenterology. Dr. Dustin H. Heus-ton, Heus-ton, chairman of WICAT (World Institute for Computer Com-puter Assisted Teaching), said the new program was tested last week at the Utah Juije 6 tljrouglj July Ask Uiilker Bank Introduces The Nsw GeEsrsiticii 71 Murray 4920 South State North Provo 66 East 1650 North Ogden 3602 Washington Blvd. Price 82 West Main St. national conference of the American Gastroenterological Gastroenter-ological Association in Salt Lake City and will be officially introduced to the medical profession at the International Congress Con-gress of Gastroenterolo-gists Gastroenterolo-gists June 8 through 13 in Hamburg, West Germany. Ger-many. Dr. A. Fred O'Neal, WICAT instructional psychologist psy-chologist and project director, said the videodisc video-disc program was deve- fageaift $5.00 $6.00 $5.0o Seating for Pageant about Our Biscouijts &njericaij fork Higlf School Theater 510 Nortlj 600 East Curtail?: 8:00 p.ip. Call 756-3541 or 533-0601 (SLC toll-free) Sin Exciting Tradition! Walker Bank A Western Bancorporation Bank Member fdic Riverlon 1750 West 12600 South Sandy 115 South State Salt Lake Cily Main Office 175 South Main Orem-Geneva Times; loped under an educational educa-tional grant from the international in-ternational marketing arm of smith, Mine & French Corp. of Philadelphia. Phila-delphia. Through the use of movies, still frames, computer-generated visuals and other audio-visual aids, students are exposed to life-like learning situations situa-tions in which the computer com-puter generates literally millions of patient management man-agement options for consideration con-sideration and diagnosis. Smith, Kline 4 French chose WICAT for the pilot of tlje 11, 1980 Foothill Office 1344 Foothill Drive Highland Drive Office 3776 Highland Drive Hillside Plaza Office 2330 East 7000 South Redwood-North Temple Office 1955 West North Temple even when we're closed. June 5, 1980 project because of the institute's in-stitute's reputation as a world leader in computer assisted instruction. The institute has already al-ready developed Innovative Innova-tive training programs for the Department of Defense, De-fense, the National Science Sci-ence Foundation, Ford Motor Co., McGraw-Hill Book Co., the Heinrich Hertz Institute of West Berlin, Miliken Publishing Publish-ing Co., the U.S. Office of Education and others, Dr. Heuston said. 8jrts i- if. J j State & 33rd Office 70 East 3300 South Sugarhouse Office 1030 East 2100 South University Office 235 South 1300 East ZCM1 Center Downtown . . . and more soon! New location |