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Show SUNDAY. Sunday Herald 2 SEPT. Pro. 28, (Second in Series (Jtftfe Heavy Water Pollution in State Park V Ail t f . v 1 $ s. I J . A j . lv S? "Or ' ' Lu j . , lJ tfj tljM I I DOUGLAS MAYNE T A.F. Demos Select Three (Continued i from Page One) pressed their willingness serve the community and a desire to engender harmony and in the council. Mr. Binnall Mr. Binnall is an insurance executive in business in American Fork for 20 years. He has served in many community posts, serving as a president of the American Fork Chamber of Commerce and of the American Fork Rotary Club. He was also a member of he American Fork Jaycees, serving as secretary and director In that service or- ganization. Prominent in church affairs, Mr. Binnail is a member of the LDS Church, serving on the Alpine Stake High Council, as a counselor in the bishopric of the American Fork Sixth Ward and is presently serving as branch president of the Training School Branch. He and his wife Roberta are fte parents of liree children and also have a foster Indian on. Council Hopefuls Rodney Turner is a graduate of Brigham Young University and served in the United States Navy in World War II. He is active in civic affairs, especial- - j1 J X , y f ihr . i I I If J. V I!'' -- J jO RALPH BINNALL Interested in youth activities. He is a former member of the bishopric of the American Fork Ninth Ward. He and his wife Myrna are 'he parents of three Iy children. Mayne is a school- teacher by occupation, presently on the faculty at Forbes Elementary School. He graduated from BYU with a B.S. degree and is currently doing graduate work in the field of outdoor education. He is active in the Boy Scout organization and in you'h athletic activities. He is mar ried to the former Janice Dean, of American Fork, and they are the parents of four children. Orem Appoints City Manager Assistant H. Odell Miner, 27, E. 4000 N., Orem, a native Utahn and graduate of BYU, has been named administrative assistant to the Orem City Manager. Mr Miner will assume his duties Oct. 1. Mr. Miner was born in Mt. Pleasant, a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Edwin Miner, and attended school in Fairview and North Sanpete. He graduated from BYU with a degree in elementary education in 1963, and completed work on his MS degree in 1967 In public administration, with emphasis on personnel management and city OREM 681 0m) 1 CO"0011 seat- - - : i Mr- - Sav8?e - . Haws Durfey, who declined re-nomination. He was unsuccess- ful in an earlier bid for city .S'i Y , 4 , XZ J Z j j j j Dump Ground He shakes his head and says with a tiffM siifli "Ppnnle shove use this river as a dumping to their everlasting ground shame." ! Leo Cox is the head rarger for 'Jtah Lake State Park. He has a staff of six men working , with him during the peak months of the year. Not far i 1 I i i l from tna bridge is where a row X' I I of concrete camping pads have I I been laid, complete with picnic tables and benches, fire pits K'EAL SAVAGE and a large grassy lawn beyond. ed form four years ago. He is Visitors also a member of the board of About Many 300,000 people visited of the Junior Achieve the directors park during the past sumMix Lavton. Construction Ma ment of the Greater Program mer season. Some came to terials Corporation and a chemi Salt Lake Ci'y area. camp, visiting from every state cal division of C.M.t. are also He is married to the former in the union. Others came to Brothincluded in the Savage Dona Cleghorn, of American launch their boats. It was not ers organizations. Fork, and they are the parents uncommon for more than 500 The candidate has served as of two daughters. boats to be launched in one an officer in the U4ah Air NaMr. Wootton Some stayed overnight. All day. tional Guard and has formerly Mr. Wootton is a pracficing of them came into contact with the for officer been a training attorney in American Fork, the water. Air Guard. presently serving as city attorn Dr. David White, head reCivic Worker ey for Pleasant Grove City, Lin-- searcher for the BYU Utah He has been an active civic don City and as deputy Utah Lake Research Station, has worker and is especially Inter- County attorney. found that again this year the ested in industrial development The son of former American of the community. Fork Mayor and Mrs. 0. De coliform count at the mouth, Married to the former Gaylie Vere Wootton, the candidal is of the Provo River is at an rate. In 1968 the same Anne Brockbank, of Salt Lake a graduate of American Fork alarming City, he and his wife are par- High School and attended BYU. count at that station was highents of two children and also With his wife, the former er than it was in the same test have a foster Indian daughter. Irene Barnes, of Lehi, Mr. of water going into the Provo A second foster daughter is Wootton makes his home at 862 City Sewage Disposal Plant. Sheltered Cove presently serving an LDS mis N. 100 E. They are the parents The mouth of the river is sion. of two children. native of Twin Falls. Ida., Mr. Savage has made his home in American Fork for the past 23 years, graduating from Amer-- j ican Fork High School. He is an alumnus of university ox Utah and also attended BYU. Fresident and general of Savage Brothers, Inc., business American Fork-base-d enterprise, with divisions in Nu- cla and Craig, Colo. Weal rock Products, Ogden, Ideal Ready V ,f - c i Mr. Pierce The son of George D. and Ida Manning Pierce, Mr. Pierce was educated in American otk have one chili His parents re schools. Serving in WWII in the side In Provo Pacific Theater of Operations Mr. Miner will replace Rael- - with the Corps of Engineers, he don Barker, who has served as was discharged with the rank of assistant to the city manager 1st Sergeant Mr. Pierce helped for the past two years. to organize the first National Guard Unit in American Fork in 1943. He later served as com- mandinff officer of the unit and subsequen'ly served on battalion LDS Church Sets Up New Services Program Sears Formation of an overall Uni Social Services Program for the LDS Church was an nounced Saturday by the First Presidency. The new unified program will include three of the principal special child and youth services of the Church, namely, the Indian Student Placement Program, the Youth Guidance Program and the Relief Society fied berta. Youth Program The Youth Guidance Program formerly operated under a committee consisting of Elder Monson, chairman, Robert L. Simpson of the Presiding Bishopric and S. Dillworth Young of the First Council of Seventy. This committee has had the responsibility of helping to prevent problems occuring among the youth of the Church, and has provided foster care ud day Social Services. The First Presidency also an nounced formation of the Uni fied Social Services Committee with E'oer Marion G. Romney ot tne council of tne Twelve as chairman, and Marvin J. Ashton, trrmerly first assistant general superintendent of the YMMIA, as managing director. Indian Program An advisory committee is also announced consisting of Elders Spencer W. Kimball, and Thomas S. Monson of the Council of the Twelve, Presiding Bishop John H. Vandenberg and Mrs. Belle S. Spafford, general president of the Relief Society. The new Unified Social Services Commictee will function under direction of the Church Priesthood Correlation Commit- h, the executive director C. Taylor Burton. For the past year he has been employed as administrative assistant to the Public Works Director in Scotts-dal- camp activities. The Relief Society Social Services had been under the direction of the Relief Society General Presidency consisting of Mrs. Spafford and her counselors, Mrs. Marianne C. Sharp and Mrs. Louise W. Madsen. Their principal services have been child adoption and foster home care for disadvantaged Water off the beach of Utah Lake Park supports a 500,000 count and above during the hot summer months after the flow of the river is shut off. No one wants to close down the park, least of all Leo Cox. He's anxious to expand, so that all of the total 320 acres can come under use. He wants to extend the present breakwater out an additional 1,000 feet, and put another one on the south side of the river. He hopes this will keep the pollution away from the shore enough so there can be safe swimming on the south side of the river, away from the boats. Supposedly, then, since no official actio.i has been taken, to swim at the Lake Utah State Park depends on parental permission is like an "M" rated movie. The nexe question to be an- swered then, is what makes Utah Lake so badly polluted? How come there is relatively pure water in the middle of the lake and on the west side? After that, what effect does the Provo River have on the lake, and of course, on the state park? cnildren. tee. The Indian Student Placement Program, previously under the supervision of Elder Kimball, this year involves more than 4,000 Indian students from eight to 18 years of age. These Indian children are brought into foster Times As High BREECHES BIBLE" The Genevan Bible is often referred to aa the "Breeches Bible "because it says that Adam and Eve sewed fig leaves together and made themselves breeches. WANT TO READ FASTER & BETTER? See Ad on Pag 9 SPECTACULAR BEDDING BUY! FEATURES QUALITY on All Sears Bedding mattresses are Sanitized for hygenic freshness. AH mattresses have specially designed foundations . . . with posture-mat- e firmer coils in the center where the body weight is greatest. All ' les, Inc. Ac'ive in civic affairs, Mr. Pierce is past president of the American Fork Junior High School PTA and his interest in youth has extended to organization of the Utah Valley Football Conference, which he help- - e, Ariz. Mr. Miner is married to the former Dorotby Cook, and they 500 homes durine the school year (man. .An..tn.iMv.a iu mnnn uuiu icaci vauuua lk uiauy nqrlt jjoi ta of the United States and Canada. The placement program operates in Utah, Arizona, Idaho, California, Colorado, Washington and Georgia and in the two western provinces of Canada, British Columbia and Al- i staff for many years, in isss he was instrumental In organizing and implementing the Special Forces (Green Berets) in the Utah National Guard. He commanded this unit for several years, retiring from military service with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He is presently employed as purchasing manager at Hercu- planning. He worked for a year with Inc., as assistant to Pro-Uta- M beach has an excessive coliform count And the old adage, that sometimes government is the greatest oftender of its own rules comes U mind. For if it "We have found dead dogs and sheep in every stage of de composition," he says. Then he drags the hulk to the edge of the stream, bags 1 it in a plastic garbage can sack, and seals the top with a piece of wire were days. However, even the swimming By JERRY M. YOUNG Leo Cox lears over the bridge spanning the green waters of Provo River He reaches a long handled boat hook into the water and snags the carcass of a dead sheep floating in the thick water. j a private operation in- mean there are any communistead ol a State Park, there is cable diseases present in the little doubt bv many but what water. And secondly, such acno swimming would be allowed. tion might ter.d to create some kind of panic which might do Reluctant to Act to the Lynn Thatrtier, director of irreparable damage the State DeDartment of Health, park's future knows about ihe high coliform The coliform index represents situation. His department works the presence of bacteria which the colon of a closely with Dr. White's group. has come from But he's reluctant to take any mammal, either man or beast action to close the park to swim-min- e. The intensity of it depends on In th first place the how many organisms are countpresence of coliform does not ed in one milliliter of water. According to state health stai? dards, a 1000 count is enough to close down a municipal or private poo.. separated from the park bathing beach by a breakwater which extendi some 1,000 feet into the Lake. This is the same area which is a sheltered, man- made cove for boaters who want to stay out of the lake on windy Park.) A I I Douglas Candidates '- , cooperation GOP Council (Contlnued from Page 1 ' to 1 y , NOALL T. WOOTTON WILLIAM M. PIERCE Huu.sLY 1URXER This is the (Editor's Note second in a series of articles about the pollution that exists in Utah Lake. Today's article discus ;es the degree of contamination at Utah Lake State H. ODELL MINER News of People You Know The Center Camp of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers are chartering a special bus to take its members to the annual convention on Oct. 4, in Salt Lake City. Those desiring to attend are asked to meet at 8 a.m., at Sowiette Park on Saturday, Oct. 4, to board the bus. Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. Lawrence Stone. Members of the family of Mrs. Glen L. Larsen, Provo, who underwent surgery at Utah Valley Hospital on Thursday, who are in town this weekend to be with their mother, include Mr. and Mrs. John L. Larsen end Mr. and Mrs. Glen larsen Jr., Riverton, Wyo. Expected also are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Larsen of Riverton, who have been vacationing at Lake Tahoe. The John Larsens will also visit Mr. and Mrs. Page Peerv in Published tvery iftrnoon Monday through Friday and Sunday morning by tht Sunday Herald, lte West 4M North Street. Provo, Utah 14401. B E. JENSEN. Publisher ntered as Second class matter at Ihe post office In Provo, Utah. MEMBER Audit Bureau of Circulation United Press International NEA Service SUBSCRIPTION RATES UTAH COUNTY Payson. Mr. and Mrs. Gary County with their parents, Mr. Long of Goshen, who are also and Mrs. Arthur Hall of Spring-vill- e and Mrs. Nettie Dennett vacationing at Lake Tahoe, will host the John Larsens when they of Provo. Lt. Hall recently comreturn. pleted a six - months aircraft maintenance course at Chanute Air Force Base at Rantoul, 111. Mrs. Russell (Esther) Dickey his leave the family Following of Gresham, Ore., was a visitor will go to Loring AFB, Me. of some the in Provo during past week, with her daughter, Rita and husband, Clair Bingham Mr. and Mrs. James L. Hortt and baby; with parents. Mr. have announced the arrival of and Mrs. Arthur Andersen, and their first great - grandchild, with numerous brothers and sis- born to Kenneth and Sherree ters. Mrs. Dickey was on the Brlckey Josephson at Salina, home from New Mexico and ArijKan., on Wednesday. The local zona where she had bocn lecturgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. ing or. survival foods. She re- Donald L. Brickey of Orem. ported that her book, "Passinclude Mr. book to Survival" is now off the and Mrs. Hortt and Mrs. Arvel-d- a press and family members were Brickey, all of Orem. able to see some of tho books. Mrs. Dickey also assisted her sister. Airs. Gene (Ruth) Laugh-li- n of Salt Lake City in a similar lecture while she was here. Amway Army Private First Class Kelly Davis and his wife, are visiting in Orem with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Davis. After completion of his leave, Private D;ivis expects to have duty at Fort Dix, N.J., prior to going overseas. .Mrs. Davis will return to Ely. Xev., where the couple have resided, for the pres- ent U. Amway Distributors by bring-irr- ? exceptional nroducts and service to North American homes. Call Scientifically designed to given you firm posture support. foam latex mattress Choose the exclusive dimple-to- p 5-i- n. or the resilient innerspring with 720 coils in full size and 504 in twin size. Queen Size Full Size 99 Regular 109.99 Regular 1 69.99 AA99 7 King Regular 1 Size-T- win 99.99 Size Set 11 A99 V 7.99 ED FRAMES AT SEARS AS LOW AS ROBERT BARLOW 1600 N. 665 WEST Air Force Lieutenant George R. 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