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Show Sunday, November 13, 1968 THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Cook, UEA, debates hurt Wilson By MICHAEL WHITE Associated Press Writer SALT LAKE CITY Democrat Ted Wilson was unable to persuade voters that he was a - n fiscal conservative or appear sufficiently "gubernatorial" during his unsuccessful campaign for governor, political pollster Dan Jones says. Jones, founder of Dan Jones & Associates, conducted the X Deseret polls and ran tracking samples for News-KSL-T- V Republican Gov. Norm during the nearly yearlong campaign. Bangerter won a second term by edging Wilson 40 percent to 38 percent in the three-wa- y race. Independent Merrill Cook finished third with 21 Ban-gert- er x percent. - Students learn honor rant Officer Robert Bailey, a member of the Readiness Group at Fort Douglas following a Veterans Day ceremony at the school Friday morning. Bailey and other military personnel visited the school to take part in a flag raising and to speak about how important it is to honor those who have served their country. Allshouse gets honor By ROSANN FILLMORE Herald Staff Writer The first Walter C. Orem Award was presented to Jack Allshouse at the Orem City Council meeting Thursday eve- ning. The award will be given quarterly to Orem Citizens who give outstanding service to the community. Allshouse has been involved teaching hunter safety on both state and local levels. In 1987, as president of the Utah Hunter Safety Instructors, his organization won the North American Championships. This year he was named Hunter Safety Instructor of the Year for North America and Cananda. Allshouse was the first person to receive such recognition. Allshouse was one of the tax-cutti- ballot initiatives. on Wilson, by contrast, appeared to be the least conservative on fiscal issues. money. "The greatst reasons Cal Rampton and Scott Matheson were elected governor is they were considered fiscal conservatives, and Ted Wilson is not," Jones said. The combined terms of Rampton and Matheson, both Democrats, spanned 20 years, Jones said voters "never knew what Mr. Wilson stood for, other than he was a darn nice guy. They never really knew what Wilson would do. They never really got to know Ted Wilson as governor." To an extent, Wilson was linked in voters' minds to Democratic presidential nominee Michael Dukakis, who was preceived as being liberal and too willing to spend taxpayers' ending in 1984 when Matheson declined to seek a third term. Jones said there were three developments in the campaign that helped Bangerter overcome a staggering deficit in the polls, as high as 30 percent in the spring. The first came when Cook supporters tried to draft the independent during the Republican state convention in June. Page The attempt angered many hard-cor- Republicans and e thus ensured toe governor a base of support and a cadre of volunteers. Jones said Banefforts imgerter convention. the after proved A second boost came when toe Utah Education Association invited Wilson to speak at it3 state convention in October, but denied the podium to Bangerter. Jones said Bangerter received a boost in the polls in the days that followed the fund-raisi- ng UEA's snub. "That was not a smart tactical thing to do," he said. Finally, Jones said BangertWilson in a er debate sponsored and televised statewide by KSL-Tin the final week before the election. V organizers of the American Fork Sportmen's Association, president of the Pleasant Grove Sportmen's Association; president of the Utah County Sportmen's Association, member of the Forest Advisory Board; member of the Big Game Board, member of the Boating Advisory Board and has served with the Central Utah Project. Allshouse served 20 years in the military then worked 30 years at Geneva Steel as an electrical supervisor for the central maintenance department. The council also recognized first and second place winners in the city yard beautification contest. First place was awarded Bea Pinkston of 907 E. 1100 S., and second place to Lloyd Uttle, 372 W. 550 S. ReMOAB, Utah (AP) mains of an ancient Indian structure and artifacts recently discovered on private land is the first documented site of a community in the Moab Valley dating to A.D., said Julie Howard, a Bureau of Land Management archaeol900-13- 00 ogist. Howard said it could be either Fremont or the Anasazi. The Fremont culture disappeared about 1200 A.D. The Anasazi are believed to have abandoned the Four Corners region around 1300 A.D., Howard said. "My gut feeling is, it's Anasazi. It would be significant either way," she said Thurs- day. Archaeologists and volunteers have dug at the site three days and have found a semicircular pithouse about 13 feet in diameter 3 feet below the surface. The structure had burned roof beams collapsed in on the floor, which commonly sug- gests deliberate abandonment by the inhabitants, Howard said. How extensive the find is remains to be seen. After the dig, soil and charcoal samples will be analyzed along with plant and organic matter and artifacts. Findings include plain and corrugated gray pottery, grinding implements and stone tools, and projectile points.- "We're coming into a central fire hearth now," Howard said. "As we keep finding out more information, it's like reading a book. You're not to the end yet, so you have a lot more to cover. We have a lot of questions to answer about this area." The site Is beyond the confluence of Pack and Mill creeks. A lot of people in Moab have said they found burial artifacts and other evidence of early Indian cultures buried in their back yards. Archaeologists know the area is probably rich in buried sites and cultural artifacts, Howard said. "But we've never known what they ate, if specifics were hunters, and gatherthey ers also. We've never professionally excavated anything before; it was all on hearsay. So I think it's real exciting," she said. News of the finds earlier this week generated a lot of interest, plus reports of vandalism. "Mostly there are broken potsherds and flakes from Overall, people are not going to find any treasure. Nothing is very valuable," Howard said. tool-makin- 95 9 New MirfrPortraits aaaaaaaaa j I (S3 ! 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