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Show Sunday Hercfd Map Shows Temple Site; Tips Given if ; r i o KOtK rr; ijWL r I K . . NJ219Jill E t 5 3 J I II f o to r , a service to readers in Central Utah, the Herald presents this map to assist participants planning to attend the groundbreaking ceremonies for tiie new Provo LDS Temple Monday at 4:30 p.m. As site is bounded on the north by 2320 North Street and on the east by the diajonal Rock Canyon Road. It is just north of the BYU residence halls and near the Provo City water storage tanks. The map shows the access roads. The services, with the church LDS officials offered this tip: first presidency and other general authorities in charge, will Plan to walk a little. If you live be held at the temple site at in the northeast section of the mouth of Rock Canyon. The Provo, leave your car home. district Ritchie, board president, said the district .recognizes that its own planning should be done in harmony with the needs and planning of other areas which also rely on water from the Colorado. The district includes all or part of 12 counties stretching from Salt Lake to the Sevier Clyde River Basin. Edward Clyde, attorney for the district, reported that negotiations for the purchase of 114 acres of property in southwest Salt Lake County, needed for construction of the Jordan Violence Is Condemned County United Fund Gets Big Kickoff Toward Goal Uh The Utah County Resources Development Committee heard Steve Penrod of Provo, head of uir .u- riuu D;nin TwimQnf i "'H' ,.ont Committee, . in tneir regular meeting anu later voted to invited him to eprvp nn one nf thp sub-comittees being created. Mr. Penrod s appearance .o- ot nf ,4 .said Mr. Jensen. business, Sl.EOO from the re-He pointed out that all the tired but active community, The United Fund Campaign nthpr Vnited throuehout S2.CC0 fr, m the rural areas, and for 1970 Masted off at a lunch-!tl,- e C0Un;ry are as different fromj$7,000 from the professional eon Friday on the BYU campus eacn as porc is fr0m groups. amidst the sounds of the 2001 Timex ..Jt ?ollows irora this; Mood Atmosphere ... Snaee Odvssev. the- chal ense of t,, uidl uie suara ui( catu w iuuu tho mniiH fnr th Warf Coitina a $za,toz goai. and a pep taiK , , Dick wu, Stone, head of the i Ki'A ri n off, riT k iiinvii e the ability of the citizen it Ilnitpfi himd was titled with a er oi uie uau . ... serves to fleny individual Or ... . . u .,.u;i mis is our uniiea runa. me nv,,m intor0ot anH nut thP -sakp niglll uciniei wiuic uie suuiili u room me ltn ine w ub o6'"T system niiea oeiongs responsiDiiny community first. overture to the motion picture, ui uuimc i guveinun-2001 Space Odyssey, and selec- aeencv stands bv to make ud c ununwuv nere e laa, mi. jciiscii dlu iut goai wc to the assembled workers ana day is tne minimum amount. aciu in a positive note, F. M. Hay- necessary to support the health, recipient agencies. Puttin gthe officers and divi-- youth guidance and welfare Coc!;, i man cf the avar. e sion chairmen on the spot. Mr. services of Utnh County during division, reported that the This paign was s.art.ng cut wi n reminded them that the the calendar year 1970. of Utah County have goal is realistic important to 545 pje jjed or paid in cash and vital to our com- - an undisclosed amount collected responded to the call for sup-- all citizens said. Mr. Jensen five years, by the retired group, which jmunity," port for the past the amounts to 92 percent of that di- into down various Bioken to 'Way Pay "This campaign presents once areas, the $228,652 goal will visions goal. It was also reported that each year tho only clear, com- - seek $37,000 in advance pledges had already reported in pelling way for each citizens to $10,500 from the commercial in 100 with tne from terests. common our percent fulfillment of of $1G8.(00 chap pav his portion obnqalion to this community," ter division, $:y)32 troni sm ;H Bv JERRY YOING At Meeting m nt-ra- . t- j c.-.i- one-ha- Water Treatment Plant, have been completed. The plant will treat water for delivery to Salt Lake County residents from the Central Utah Project via the Jordan Aqua-duc- t. Palmer Delong, CUP project manager for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, told the doctors the Starvation Dam near Duchesne has ben virtually completed The dam has 'been "topped out," he said, with the spillway finished, soid cement being placed on the upstream fact, and fine grading of the downstream face of the dam now being done. Ellis Armstrong, assistant director, Region Four, USBR, appeared before the board and assured the district that President Nixon's construction cutback orders does not affect Bonneville Unit contracts already signed. In other action, the board authorized its vice president, &3,-citize- ns San-taqu- in " ' " ' , bed. DeVere Wootton, chairman of the committee, reported on PROTEST NOMINATES BROWNE WASHINGTON (UPI) --Pres ident Nixon has nominated Secor D. Browne, 53, head of an aviation instruments firm from Lincoln, Mass., as chairman of the Civil Aeronautics board. who must be con Browne, firmed by the Senate, said some airline fare increases will be necessary but "just how much I can't answer." CUTS the proposed list of year. LONDON - v O ! ' i Vina -- tWtSMAl J 3ATv lf Leo Brady, Duchesne, to attend the ninth annual irrigation workshop in Denver later this managing en cam-Jens- '1 nt i --- the overall assignment made 'them by the Utah County Com- -, mission, unde- - whom they work as an advisory body, The young insurance execu- the told the group he has been involved in an effort to "save the lower Provo River from being completely destroyed as a recreational outlet" for the past several years. VWMOUNr " Saw Dredging i , "I first came into this when I someon saw dredging the river," Penrod said. "They went down the channel of the river bed and filled in all the natural fishing holes I used to swim in and fish when I was a boy." He referred to the work (ione on the river by the U.S. Corps J of Engineers m past years in their flood control program. Parley Neeley, professional advisor to the resources devel opment group said that what Penrod was speaking of It's an easy stroll. along access roads undoubted Mr. was just another part of the will be heavy. Remember, the site is still BYU Security officers and whole problem involved in Utah undeveloped. A grader has lev- Provo police will assist in di County's water problem, more eled a few places in the field recting traffic. They will keep particularly in the area of stabi near the site, but most cars traffic one way on Ninth East lizing the level of Utah Lake. Discuss Pollutants will have to park a little dis- and Rock Canyon Road. On tance away. A good idea is to those streets traffic will move Further discussion by the hour before group centered around pollunorth only park in some area like View and south only af- - tants carried into the river by the services, Terrace, Pleasant the return flow of irrigation First-Thir- d Ward chapel park- - ter the services. waters and the necessary mini- (For full information on ing lot, stadium, etc.. and walk to the ceremonies. Parking! groundbreaking ,see Page One.) mat now required to carry such pollutants through the stream Water Planning To Be Correlated in State Directors of the OREM Central Utah Water Conservancy District Friday approved the formation of a committee to correlate plans for Colorado River water use with areas of the state which are not in the 3 1969 "1 II t i !tmplc1 14, Pollution Discussed I . SEPT. Provo. i ... - SUNDAY. Victor director Lownes, of the which would be staffed as soon as possible. The subgroups encompass the entire scope of responsibilities held by the committee. "Anything that can be considered a resource in the county is our concern," Mr. Wootton said. '7l '? ;:r 1 OFF Fund Campaign speaker for the and Dick Stone, BLASTING a - i and shooting for the moon (goal of $228,652) in this year's United B. E. (Bye) Jensen, publisher of the Daily Herald, and kcynot campaign kickoff; Jack Gridley, Spanish Fork, United Fund president, general campaign chairman. (Herald staff photo) are London Playboy Club, reacting unhappily to a report that a picture of a "bunny" is being used to promote an internation al blind-datin-g scheme: 7 OPEN EVERY MONDAY AND "I understand they're using a picture of a bunny girl . . . it's an unwelcome association. The bunny girl is our registered trademark." FRIDAY NIGHTS MADISON, Wis. (UPI)-T- he Mifflin Sree TREES ANYONE? Grocery Cooperative operated Mont. (UPI)-N- ow by students and hippies near LIBBY, the University of Wisconsin that school has started, can campus will give 6 per cent Christmas be far behind? discounts to the poor on The U.S. Army Corps of Community grocery purchases. Tne group said the move is a protest of "barbaric budget cuts" by the Wisconsin Legisla ture. Engineers Friday announced availability of more than 74,000 Christmas trees for commercial cutting on portions of the Libby Reservoir Porject. By Educators A resolution "condemning disruption and violence on the was ap nations campuses, proved at the business meeting of the Utah Conference of High er Education Friday morning, on the BYU campus. At the same meeting, Dr. M. Lee Morrell, of South Utah State College was moved into the presidency of the conference automatically, for the coming year, and Dr. Milton Abrams, W. - ' fiffl ill " , 'I pi pi si librarian at USU was elected vice president, and will take over the presidency in 1971. The resolution passed by the group not only condemned campus disorders but stressed that such disorders should be dealt with ". . . within the campus community as far as possible, but that those that break the law will not be shielded from the consequences of illegal action." About 1200 faculty members, administr a 1 0 r s, Institutional council and governing board members of the 10 Utah colleges attended the two day 1 SUPER ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL SALE 100 DELIVERY SERVICE At the turn of the centurv mule or combines were the latest in harvesting machinery. In that era, UNION PACIFIC steam ermine ti?.eJ2!le" ham$ t0 waing markets. Today, new, nigniy evident equipment works umuri with modern harvesting techniques to insure dependability, service and market supply. Today, as in the past, western growers know that total distribution depends on total transportation . . . they ship UNION PACIFIC. 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