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Show Page 1 THE HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday, June 7, 1970 Timpanogos Cave. Is Observing Summer Hours for Opening Murder Trial Jury Not Complete - ditional 35 drawn to be available is formerly of Eureka, and his for resumption of court Monday. grandfather is a resident there The case started with an now. original jury panel of 75. AtRedford, an inmate of the trition has been unusually high Utah State Prison on a forgery because of two principal for which he was concharge obto trial reasons, according victed last year, is transported servers. One, many say they daily to and from the prison for formed an opinion the trial. Judge James P. KcCune have already Friday ordered the drawing of 12 concerning the case which would The murder charge resulted extra jurors, many of whom affect their judgement as a jury. lived in Eureka and could not be And two, a considerable number from the death of Anne Christine contacted before court closed have said they are relatives or Levanger of Spanish Fork, that day. Before the day was friends of the defendant's whose body was found near the over, the judge ordered an ad family. The defendant's mother ghost town of Silver City in Juab NEPHI Difficulty of selecting a jury in the murder trial of Clark James Bedford, 25, Springville, has resulted in a call for 47 additional potential jurors who will be available as the trial resumes here in Fifth District Court Monday. - rnr County some two weeks after her car was found abandoned on in Utah County last Oct 10. Before court adjourned Friday for the weekend, Judge McCune denied a motion for a mistrial made by the defense. The trial began Thursday. The state has indicated it has a considerable number of witnesses to examine after the jury is selected, and indications are that the trial will last several fzr p ,rH rV America Is r i i YYonaerrui ztM in Lady Says ' i ; M Rocky Mountain region, into Oregon and Northern California. Sweden. They sold cookies, candies, Christmas trees, held a banquet, put on an entertainment night, and did yard work to raise the $7,000 needed for the trip. They will return July Pictured are Explorer leader 5. Gordon Weight, former Bishop of the Seventh Assistant Gunnar Ward, Explorer Christensen, native of Denmark, Paul Christensen, Danny Thomas, Howard Thomas, David Strong, Randy Strong, Steven Harris, LeGrand Feher, Craig Shakespeare, Darwin Long, Jimmy Coroner Kim Parker and Oran Pyle. (Herald Staff Photo) She began to talk with women's groups, then high school groups, and has since token at Her speech is 3ways thecolleges. same and is quite "America Is Wosimple nderful." What it amounts to is a story of her life, which in many ways seems to be an extended miracle. She compares the life she knew in Europe under communism and Maziism with the life here in the United States. The home of her parents in a fertile region of the Ukraine was a shell, where the whole family slept on piles of straw. Later, when she was in a concentration camp, she slept with many others in a room on a board. In. the displaced persons camp, she was given an army type blanket. On her arrival in the United States, the Mennonites provided Mrs. Iwanowski and her family i Activities Of UTC Nursed Aid People in Graduation Slated exercises for program is especially W. Mountain firstGraduation Nurse's Aid Class prepare comes for better jobs. complete training under Sixty students attend the - Vocational Improvement be June program Tanner returned last charge Program By RUBY MEREDITH Mrs. WEST MOUNTAIN week Dale from Hawaii where she spent a week with her husband, Dale Tanner who was on a Rest and Relaxation leave from Da Nang, Vietnam. Mrs. Tanner, her two sons, and a sister-in4a- the to the designed people with low in- to which does not tuition. They receive training in various vocational areas. This summer, training will be offered in autobody repair, business, Spanish Fork; Inez Clark, building and grounds main- Mapleton; Janean Weight, tenance, and welding. Nurse's left for Leland; Linda Manning, Lehi; Aid classes are scheduled to Delyla Tanner, Alamogordo, N.M., where Miss and Bonnie Woolsey, Provo. begin again in September, Instructor for the course has Tanner will visit for a month. Anyone wishing to enroll in the been Mrs. Darwin Veteto of school should contact Owen Burton at the Employment Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Finch Orem. attended a wedding reception Speaker for the exercises will Security Office or Jose Arlast week at the Springville Art be LeRoy Williams, owner and ch uletta at the Vocational Im-Gallery honoring Mr. and Mrs. manager of the Phillips Nursing Sovement Program Office in College at Roy K. Bird. Mrs. Bird, the Home. Refreshments will be Provo. former Penny Cherrington of served. The Vocational Improvement Midland, Tex., is the daughter of conducted 9, at 7 pjn. in the Faculty Lounge at the Utah Technical College at Provo. Graduates are: Majel Lee, will 1 Sir Winston Churchill was Texas missionary friends of the Program is conducted at Utah Technical College under born in Blenheim Palace, Finch family. the funding of the Office of seat of the duke of MarlMr. and Mrs. Oran Finlinson Economic Opportunity. The borough, in Oxford, England. were among the large crowd who attended the bull fight at Nephi last weekend. Later the Finlinsons went to Oak city to visit the cemetery with flowers, and to visit Mr. and Mrs. Dwain Finlinson, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Neil3on, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Neilson, and Mr. Tom Pratt. the1 Fifteen West Mountain Daughters of Utah Pioneers attended the June Jubilee for & uth Utah County last week at the Spring Lake Cultural Hall. Mrs. Alta Rowley and her daughter, Diane Johnson, furnished two musical numbers for the program. The group enjoyed a chicken dinner. Mrs. Ethel Hirst received special recognition for being over 75 years of age. Mrs. Iva Nay spent a day at Utah Valley Hospital last week with her grandson, David Peterson, who underwent ear surgery. David is the son of 4 Mrs. Helen Bray of Belmont, Calif, and her daughter, Mrs. Ann Brendlinger, and three children Kurt, Eric and Dina of Aspen, Colo., visited with Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Finch for a day last week. They were on their way from Colorado to California. with a was months house. It before the im- migrants were able to realize that no one would come and try to take it away from them. One cf the first things they did was to look over the flat terrain to find a place to run and hide. There was no place they could go and they became nervous about not being close enough to some woods to hide in or an army base to protect them from the comfour-bedroo- munists. Mrs. Iwanowski has managed to escape many situations which might have caused her death. Her family somehow survived a family massacre which was planned and executed by communist strategists in the Ukraine. In 1945, after having been liberated from a Nazi concentration camp, she heard that all Russian displaced persons were being sent back to Russia. Many of her friends slashed their wrists, some hung themselves, others threw themselves out tail buildings. She and her family slipped out of the huge building where they were being held and walked some 200 miles, sleeping in bushes, and living off of roots and what ever they could find in order to escape. In 1952, at the displaced persons camp at Stuttgart, Germany, the nearby Mennonite Camp turned up six extra visas for immigration to the United States. Mrs. Iwanowski and her family were given the visas. That was the greatest miracle of them all. It was also the end of a terrible nightmare which would recur from time to time during many sleepless nights. It was always the same, a great hill in front of her with nothing on it to hide her. She would run up the hill knowing that America was just on the other side. The dream would end when she was shot in the back just before reaching sanctuary. x:.mmmmmtm Dallis and Mary Alice Peterson of Provo. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Tanner received a telephone call from their son &nd his wife Mr. and Mrs. Lyle J. Tanner of Mesa, Ar iz, announcing the arrival of a son born May 16. The Tanners have a daughter Deanna, 10, and a son, Curtis, 2. Lyle is employed as an accountant. one-roo- m iylv lUHiyir-HliW-l- Tifii l ELEPHANT JOKES are pretty old now, but maybe Prince Aya just heard a new one. The 4 year-ol- d son of Japan's crown prince and princess seemed to enjoy his first trip to a Tokyo zoo. By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN OREM Four years ago when Vilnah G. Winn, 468 E. 700 S., Orem, returned to the ghost town of Knightsville, where she had lived as a child 48 years earlier, she located the site of her old home and found a rose growing in front. Mrs. Winn took a slip from the rose, and on her return to Orem, placed it under a bottle in her garden. Today, the rose, which turned out to be an cave. Pets are not permitted on the trail or in the cave, according to officials. Evening slide programs at National Timpanogos To would have pink blossoms. interest: "Man, Monday her delight, the slip she placed under a bottle proved to be the familiar yellow rose. Winn Mrs. has fond recollections of Knightsville and her life there, although it has been 52 years since she moved away. Mrs. Winn retired this Park year from Scera elementary school, after a teaching career of 35 years. Workshop Feature Noted Speaker Tuesday Mountain," - "Wildlife of the by Scott Squires; "Caves and Wednesday by Mike Sherrod: "Your Mountain Thursday Watershed," by Lowell Baum; "History of Canyon Friday and Caves," by Wayne and Saturday "Plant Life of the Mountains," by Alio Shelley. The visitor center is located in American Fork Canyon on Utah State Highway 80 and local residents are cordially nvited to spend an enjoyable ening at the visitor center and view these Cavers," informative planned, programs. Cordelia is a Latin name meaning "warm-hearted.- " Council To Meet ulbeSuniniiHeralo. Published every afternoon Monday through Friday and Sunday morning by The Daily Herald, 190 West 400 North Street, Provo, Utah 84601 B. E.JENSEN, Publisher Entered as Second class matter at the post office in Provo, Utah. Wednesday A meeting of the Central Utah Water Safety Council will be held Wednesday at 2 pjn. in the room of the U.S. of Reclamation Building, 160 N. tod W., Provo. According to Myron Fulrath, chairman, national water safety congress presidential citation awards will be presented. The agenda will also include conference Bureau MEMBER Audit Bureau of Circulation United Press International NEA Service SUBSCRIPTION RATES UTAH COUNTY short committee chairmen reports, films available on water safety and water safety posters. in interested Anyone connected water preventing accidents is invited to attend this meeting. 2.25 One month, carrier $13.50 Six months, carrier $27.00 One year, carrier Mail, anywhere in United States One month $2.25 $27.00 One year Herald Telephone Numbers 373 5050 PROVO Sil's Seafood Grotto 1425 South State Phone 373-735- -- Provo 2 8-- Mendelssohn From The Seven Seas FAMOUS DISHES FOR YOUR EVENING DINING Chorus Sets 6 p.m. to 12 p.m., Mon.-Sa- t. Open Sunday 12 noon to 10 p.m. Orem Concert LOBSTER STEAX NEW YORK STEAK GERMAN CUSINE LUNCHES CLOSED FOR SUMMER Wt will wot serve lunch hm June 1st to Stpttmlw lit. r 225-793- 4. SPRINKLING SYSTEMS IW 1 DESIGNED and INSTALLED CRAGHEAD PLUMBING HEATING PROVO DIAL 373-100- 3 56 North 2nd Wt$t H " li jf ijf . X V - U yI I , f hy ( West 3rd South, Provo OPEN SUNDAYS I I I V" Great Savings YA On Every Ti;pe Of Diamond: TA Bridal Sets Solitaires Loose DicmonrU Dinner Rings Men's Rings Trin Sfe V Duo Sets nnrJ mnra It's o stunning offer -- one we've never mode before. One we may not be able to tnoe ogain in the near future. So. ..if you're planning to marry. ..becoming engoged. ..celebrating an anniversary now's the time to buy; 'fer ,'une " Pricel 9 Js Wedding Rings back to regular. FbrExKJPl: f' I faI YOUR CONVENIENCE MARKET - OPEN 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Farm Fresh Vegetables - Luncheon Meats - Sundry Items RUSSETT 59 ICE CREAM LEAN and GROUND BEEF . POTATOES. 10 ib, 49 GOLDEN RIPE FRESH 39' WE GIVE and 12-2- j HOLLAND DUTCH Earth Change," by Lloyd Jacklin; Monument Visitor Center will be presented each evening at 8 well pjn., continuing each evening Will rose, is blooming profusely in her yard. Mrs. Winn said she lived in the old mining town for four years as a child. Knightsville, named after Jesse Knight, was located southeast of Eureka. Now there "Behavior Modification in the is nothing left except the foundation of the old elementary Classroom," will be the subject school, part of the old water of a workshop to be held June 0 at BYU with Dr. Steven R. tank, and a few recognizable - Hommel, landmarks. pediatrician, as the From the school foundation, featured lectuerer. The BYU Department of Mrs. Winn was able to determine the location of the A.Z. Robbins Special Courses and Conference farm, and from there, she will be presenting the workshop located the site where the frame in cooperation with the Alpine, home in which she had lived Nebo and Provo School once stood. It was May when she Districts. The workshop classes will run visited the site, so the rose was a.m. each day. Two t not blooming. She knew it would from either be the old yellow rose she semester hours of graduate from remembered her credit will be offered for the childhood, or a wild roset which class in either Health Science 503 or Graduate Education 515R. Dr. Hommel is a specialist in childhood and adolescent behavior problems. He appeared in Provo earlier this year to speak at the Utah Institute on Drug Problems. During the workshop, Dr. Hommel will emphasize how behavior may be The Mendelssohn Male Chorus classroom through group will present a summer variety changed concert next Friday, st 8 p.m. at techniques. Such problems will the Sharon IDS Stake Center, be taken up as drug abuse, smoking, sexual experimen645 S. W E., Orem. Elvis B. Terry of the BYU tation, and gang functions. music faculty, formerly music director at Orem High School for many years, will conduct, with his daughter Sherrie Balser as accompanist Mrs. Colleen L. Winger and Joseph Hunter will be soloists in the variety concert which will include popular, patriotic, and other selections. The concert is being presented river trip as an Explorer-Ensig- n fund raiser in the Orem 23rd Ward. Tickets may be purchased at the door or in advance through the committee, with Dale McCann, ensign leader available for contact at yellow In Springville Earl Nay, son of Mrs. Iva Nay, left last week for two weeks of Army Reserve summer camp at Registration will be held June Fort Lewis, Wash. Mrs. Nay and 8 at Springville Middle School their daughter will remain in from 9 ajn. to 3 pjn. for all ages from junior high through senior Spanish Fork. high. Karl Barton, high school Orlan Tanner, son of Lyle and band instructor, will assist in Thelma Tanner, was advanced teaching the summer classes. from a Bear to a Weblo at Cub Students planning to take the Scout Pack meeting last week. Mrs. Marion Seaman's Den Five class should provide their own won the Cubby Award. Ray instruments. Those who do not Hansen's frog have instruments and wish to race proved fan, and the cubs, prrticipate may contact Mr. leaders and parents enjoyed Schaefer for further sack lunches. p.m. The visitor center is open from 8 a.m. until 9 p.m. with tours conducted every day of the week, including Sunday. The round trip to the cave normally requires three hours over the surfaced trail and cave. Visitors should bring a light coat or sweater for the trip through the Rose from Ghost Town Is Blooming for Orem Woman Water Safety ""X MARKET-5- 86 J EXAMTNING AN OLD FASHIONED YELLOW ROSE grown from a slip of a rose which once blossomed in the town of . KnightsvuMe, near Eureka, 52 years ago, is Annette Bylund, 1L daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Bylund, Orem. Tr i rose was started by Mrs. Vflnah G. Winn, who lived in the old inking town 52 years ago. Summer Band Classes Set SPRINGVILLE Summer band classes for beginning and advanced students will be held June 8 to July 17, according to Donald Schaefer, instructor. eft. ft ) whose life seems to have been AFTER NINE MONTHS of planning, Explorer post 47 of Prove IDS Seventh Wvd, will be leaving today for Europe and four weeki of traveling in Denmark, Germany, Holland, Belgium, France, England and II days. one long miracle, warned audiences in Provo and Payson last week that what happened in her own country could easily happen here in the United States. Mrs. Iwanowski is on an extended speaking tour sponsored by the TACT Committee, (Truth About Gvil Turmoil) which will ultimately take her through the except Sunday during the entire summer. This will be a cooperative program by the National Park Service and the U.S. Forest Service. The following schedule will be of AMERICAN FORK CANYON Con H. CaUeberry, new superintendent of Timpanogos Cave National Monument, has announced that the summer now in effect. The cave hours cave and cave trail open at 8 ajn. Cave ticket sales close at 4 ut By JERnY M. YOUNG Katnaryn Iwanowski, a naturalized American citizen I y?u 1 BANANAS GOIO STRIKE STAMPSC Jj M ays (SS9 I I I I I I I I |