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Show PAGE TWO THE BINGHAM BULLETIN of West Jordan FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, .962 for the pact six yean wn appoint-ed principal at Hillcreet High, and named to succeed him a principal of Bingham High next year was Donald J. Parr, vice principal at Bingham High for the pact five yean. Richard Courley wu appoint ed vice principal at Hillcreit and C. Wayne Simper at Bingham. Kennacott Copper Corp. honor-ed 188 employee! for 20 and 30 yeara of service with the Utah Cop-per Division at a banquet at Hotel Utah on Wednesday evening, April 25. 12 employees were recognized president: Stanlie Sullenger, vice president; Kathy Crellin, secretary; Sharon Schmidt, historian; Gary Kubota, business . manager; Beth Wesrwood, yearbook editor; Bar-bara Jo Rub right, editor, and Margie Susasta, head cheer-leader. James W. Bingham and Howard Hausknecht of the Bingham High School teaching staff, announced their retirement at the end of this school year. (Continued on page four) C for 30 years of service and 176 for 20 years of service. Married in the Salt Lake LDS Temple, April 20 were Miss Ruby May Serassio and Lester H. Healey. MAY 4 R. O. (Rod) Chapman, manager of First Security Bank's West Jor-dan branch, was elected president of the Bingham Canyon Lions Club for the coming year. Pupils of the Jordan Area Kin-dergarten held in West Jordan en-tertained tlheir parents on April 27 at a special program marking end of a very successful school year. The kindergarten had a total en-rollment of 50 youngsters. Chosen to represent Bingham High School at the 16th annual American Legion Auxiliary Utah Girls State to be held at USU at Logan from June 24 to July I were Misses Sharon Schmidt and Betty Gardner from West Jordan and Kathy Crellin of Copperton. They were sponsored by the West Jordan American Legion Auxiliary. Mrs. Helen Quinn McMurray, 49 of Salt Lake City passed away April 27 in a Salt Lake hospital of na-tural causes. F. O. (Ollie) Bemis, 63, died of a coronary occlusion in a Walla Walla, Wash., hospital April 28. Dance classes at Bingham High School presented their annual dance concert the evening of May 7. The program included 23 numbers. Richard Higham was elected president of the West Jordan Lions Club for the coming year, succeed-ing Ray Copeland. Miss Julia Menna of Bingham Canyon and Julian Garmendia of Kearns were married April 30 in Immaculate Conception Church at Copperton. Crestwood Villa was setting on April 25 for the wedding and re-ception of Miss Kathleen Barker of Murray and Richard E. Zdunich of Midvale. MAY 11 Joseph P. Scussell, 56, longtime Bingham Canyon resident and well known Bingham civic and business leader, passed away at his home in Bingham on May 8 after a long illness. Bingham High School student body officers for 1962-6- 3 were elected as follows: Jeff Sutherland, 1962 IN REVIE- W- (Continued from last week) A chronology of main happen-ing in Bingham Canyon and West Jordan and surrounding areas during the first ten months of 1962. . APRIL 13 Mrs. W. A. Fike, Copperton, was reelected president of the Woman's Society of Christian Service of St. Paul's Methodist Church, Copper-ton- ,, for the coming year. West Jordan American Legion Post 119 announced it is sponsor-- . ing the annual Easter Egg Hunt for children ages up to and inclu-ding 6th grade of the West Jordan area on Easter Sunday morning at West Jordan Park. New student body officers for next year were elected at West Jor-dan Jr. High School as follows: boys Jay Sil,cox; girls Zina Phelps; business manager, Niel Walker and Cathy Berrett. APRIL 20 Mrs. Einner Sutherland, 51, of Copperton passed away April 18. Ned Miller of Midvale was elect-ed president of the Midvale Junior Chamber of Commerce for the en-suing year. Charlie Rodney Bates, 46, of Copperton died April 1 2 in a Salt Lake hospital of natural causes. Former Bingham Canyon resi-dent A. E. (Dot) Mitchell, 63, died of a heart ailment on April 15 at his home in Los Altos, Calif. Funeral services were held Tues-day afternoon for Mrs. Mike Var-daki- s, 71, of Salt Lake City, form-er resident of Bingham Canyon for many years, who passed away of natural causes. Dean D. Kerr, acting superin-tendent of Kennecott's Bingham Canyon mine, will study industrial management next academic year under a Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship. The grants are for a full year of study at Massachusetts Institute of Technology at Cambridge, Mass. Bingham Chapter of the Future Farmers of America held its annual honor banquet on April 18. Marriages of mid-Apr- were Miss Sharon Rawlings of West Jor-dan and Melvin Dennis Bru, April 14; Miss Lynn K. Longfellow of Magna, formerly of Bingham Can-yon, and Donald S. Marlor Jr. of Magna, April 14; Alan Joseph Ly-on, formerly of Bingham Canyon, and Miss Dorothea Jane Cass of Charlotte, N. Car., on April 14. APRIL 27 Appointment of principals and vice principals for Bingham High School and for the district's new Hillcrest High School which opens for the first time this fall was an-nounced by Jordan District Board of Education. Joel P. Jensen who has been principal at Bingham High h Stagnant SuUrtin of West Jordan! Formerly at Bingham Canyon, Utah Issued Every Friday at West Jordan, Salt Lake County, Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at West Jordan, Utah, Under the Act of March 3. 1879. JOHN ADAMEK, Editor and Publisher GLADYS L, ADAMEK, Assistant Editor Subscription Rate, per year in advance $2.50 Advertising Rates Furnished on Application r ' P r ' ' " , L - I K , ' - - ; r lilpsi Wi ir 1 IfW-v- - ' v ,'s' v-- - iv:tf - GOBLIN VALLEY IS FUTURE UTAH PARK "There's no place on earth quite like hi" That's the way ' visitors describe Coblin Valley in south-centr- Em-ery County,' one of Utah's most unusual and little-know- n scenic at-tractions. Its name is apropos, because when one walks among its eerie, fantastic, formations, goblins, giant birds, reptiles and all manner of strange creatures seem to jump out from all sides. Coblin Valley is located at the southeast corner of the San Rafael Swell, a short drive away from State Highway 24 between Creen River and Hanksville. To get there, visitors must drive over some 10 miles of dirt road, portions of which are impassible to the ordinary ve-hicle at certain times of the year, especially after a heavy rain.. Visitors should also be caution-ed that there are no camping fa-cilities at Coblin Valley. One should also carry water with him as there are no developed wells or springs in the area. Coblin Valley is being featured in this week's "See Utah" series because it is a proposed state park and needs to be called to the public attention, according to D. James Cannon, director of the Utah Tour-is- t and Publicity Council. A visitor to Goblin Valley in south-centr- al Emery County looks up in awe at one of the "gob--' lins" of this fantastic scenic wonder. The giant, bird-lik- e figure is just one of literally thousands of strange ' nature-mad- e statues in the area. "At the present time Goblin Valley lies in the public domain and is unprotected from vandal-ism," Mr. Cannon aaid. We are hopeful that the State Park and Recreation Commission can acquire enough land in the near future to make it a part of the Utah Park system." About 600 acres of land, a small portion of' the scenic area, is held on lease by the state park agency from the U.S. Bureau of Land Man-agement which administers the mining and grazing rights on the surrounding domain. The discovery xf Coblin Valley is attributed to Arthur L. Chaffin of Teasdale, Wayne County, Utah. Chaffin, now a retired river runner and former operator of the Colo-rado River Ferry at Hite, stumbled onto the site about 35 years ago while looking for a road route be-tween Green River and Hanksville. Mr. Chaffin was intrigued by Goblin Valley's unusual formations and called the area "Mushroom Valley" because many of the fig-ures were bulbous on top and did indeed look like mushrooms. The name was later changed to Goblin Valley because the witches, spooks and goblins won out. Goblin Valley did not come into public prominence until 1949. In that year, Mr. Chaffin took some friends, including photographer and businessman Philip W. Tomkins of San Francisco, Calif.,' into Cathe-dral Valley and Goblin Valley. Mr. Tompkins took the first known photographs of the "goblins" and these pictures' were later widely circulated. Actually, Goblin Valley is a cliff rimmed basin, filled with thousands of unusual, goblin-lik- e formations. The number of crea-tures one sees is limited only by the imagination. These formations have been sculptured by wind, rain, frost and sun over millions of years. To the geologist, the formations were eroded out of reddish-brow- n or chocolate colored Entrada sand-stone of the upper Jurassic series. This erosion is constantly going on today. Hontit Injun, now Is a good timt. For what? For shopping local stores, that's what. You can get your year off to a good start by getting some real bargains in items that you have been wanting or needing. Why January? Simple. Many of our local merchants will have special prices on merchandise carried over from last year. In many busi nesses, January is "clear-ance" month and the shop-per who knows where to look can find some real values. How about you? Isn't there some item that you have thought about getting and just haven't gotten around to seeing about? If so, tele-phone or visit your local mer-chant who handles this item and see what kind of bar-gains he has to offer. We think you'll be glad you did. Experimentation... fei.tfi fw ip i lite " , At Kennecolt, today's mining and processing Jjh) operations are only part of the copper production f rr story. Equally important is the constant effort ( .""X ky management to assure a sound future for V ar S n's major tTtah industry. The foundation for the future is a vast program ,. r. I I I , i JJ to improve all operations and meet copper III J production's most serious problem ... handling JJ 07 more ore and overburden to produce the same f s--W y amount of copper. "r Experimentation with the type of equipment " (" pictured on this page exemplifies the program. ' I i Success in any one experiment is never accepted -- 1 ""7 I I as a permanent solution. Rather it is treated as a , fS I I , Xy 1 spur to achieve even greater improvements. Y Continual experimentation at Kennccott h provides Utah with the best possible foundation vs ' fr 8UCcessfu' foPPcr l)rJuc''n for " many years liff V ra Copper Corporation . ' p Drill at Binghom Conyon Mine being tested to improve drilling operations j Utah CbppCT DVJSIOO Lopr crt rf hts;use copper in pon electrolytic tanks. - lili 3 - bvHd VP beach to prevent undermining dike. 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