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Show va X; vv wji s 'XCyV. V.s A ... . V y?s. c . , Xx-- OCT . 6 CEREMONIES " ...- --WT: 'jv&' L--- ' i3 " 4Y- tLMjmAicw9 ? - " $ Vw ' "'f " ft S , . ikii I' 'i? ', T r. V". . fs fU ' . ,'V'' ft O'-- 0 .xl 'ft .;., ' ' '"V '' ' ' '' X"Varc . v.v. ? : VI I ' xxx xi...-- 'fs? ? Vv. ;v. ' v xxx To Be : .'H Xs s's Sv$ ' V ivs 0$ ft 1 ' - WAM. ' 'yw. v s - " ' Widtsoe Building, left, and Martin Building are among 37 buildings on BYU campus to be dedicated. PROVO, UTAH it at Brigham buildings University, including the new nine-stor- y Life Sciences Center, will be dedicated in ceremonies Oct. 6 in the George Albert Smith Fieldhouse. n Thirty-seve- .I Pres. Ernest L. Wilkinson of BYU said General Authorities will be present to preside, speak and dedicate the buildings. ceny The newest building, the ter, will be named for the late Dr. John A. Widtsoe, a member of the Council of the Twelve as well as a renowned scientist and president of two universities. Its classroom wing will adjoining three-stor- y be named in honor of the late Thomas L. Martin, a dean at BYU and noted agrononine-stor- mist. Both buildings were recently completed and are now in use, serving the College of Biological and Agricultural Sciences. The classroom wing contains 24 classrooms. These have student capacities ranging from 40 to 251 persons and are equipped with the latest lighting, seating and visual and electronic teaching aids. The Widtsoe Building has two stories below ground level and seven above. It has such features as classroom laboratories, faculty offices, electron microscope, housing for experimental animals, fresh and salt water aquaria, and a hot room for. disease study. The new stadium, indoor tennis courts building, and faculty office building will all be dedicated, but will not be named for persons. stadium was comThe new 30,000-sea- t pleted in 1964 with substantial amounts of money, equipment, labor and materials donated. There are 4,800 chair seats includ all-ste- el ed in the 30,000 total, and a pressbox on the west stands which provides space for 120 newsmen. The stadium is utilized for purposes other than athletics. Under the stadium are offices, food preparation facilities, team dressing rooms and storage. The tennis building is just south of the fieldhouse, and was completed in the fall of 1968. It holds four regulation-siz- e courts in addition to space for bleachers. The faculty office building has 16,061 square feet of space and was completed in 1968 at the top of the old stadium and provides office space for faculty members, secretarial space and conference-semina- r rooms in five interconnected sections. Of the 37 buildings to be dedicated, 32 are residence halls. The largest group of buildings involved in the ceremonies is Wymount Terrace. This group is northeast of the .campus and is comprised of 24 three-stor- y buldings con- apartments for taining 462 family-typ- e married students. The buildings are in quadrangles around enclosed lawn and play areas to protect playing children from traffic. Others in the housing group to be dediaddition to the Hela-ma- n cated is a three-stor- y Halls, and the Deseret Towers complex consisting of six modern, seven-storresidence halls for board - and - room students. This has a total housing capacity of 1,758 and a central dining hall. The Helaman Halls addition brings the number of buildings in that complex to eight, served by the Cannon Center for administration and dining. This adds 234 board - and - room spaces to the area, for a total of 1,872. y Board Is Named For New Health Services Continued from Page Lake 6 trustees, consisting of not more than less than seven members. 12 nor These trustees will be appointed by the First Presidency when needed at each April meeting of the board, ; with the incumbent Presiding Bishopric of the Church always as members of the board and serving as chairman and vice chairmen re- I i spectively. Officers of the corporation are the commissioner a secretary and treasurer. Principal offices are at 47 E. South Temple, but the commissioners office is in the University Club Building until the new Church Office Building is completed. Hospitals under jurisdiction of the corporation include the Cassia Memorial, Burley, Idaho; Cottonwood LDS at Murray, Utah; Fillmore LDS, Fillmore, Utah; Fremont General, St. Anthony, Idaho; Idaho Falls LDS, Idaho Falls, Idaho; LDS at Salt City; Logan McKay-De- e LDS, Logan, Utah; (two hospitals) at Ogden, Utah; Panguitch LDS, Pariguitch, Utah; Primary Childrens, Salt Lake City; Sanpete LDS. Mt. Pleasant, Utah; Sevier Valley, Richfield, Utah; Star Valley LDS, Afton, Wyo., and Utah Valley LDS at Provo. The board will appoint advisory councils comprised of persons with experience and training in various aspects of health care and administration. These councils have the principal responsibility of assisting and advising the commissioner on all health service and organization aspects. Ten physicians and surgeons will be called to serve as a special medical advisory council. Tills council includes Drs. Richard A. Call, pathology; Frank F. Daughters, general practice: William P. Daines, internal medicine; Walter D. Gaisford, surgery; Richard Hebertson, obstetrics and gynecology; Richard H. Keller, radiology; Don H. Nelson, internal medicine; Homer E. Smith, ophthalmology; George L. Veasy, pediatrics, and Homer R. Warner, medical computer. Another change in operations of the hospitals is in the creation of hospital governing boards for each of the 15 hospitals. Before the forming of the corporation, boards of trustees at each hospital had as chairman one member of the Presiding Bishopric. Now a governing board composed of not less than four members of the community area wrhere the hospital is located will serve on the board. Two members of the governing board, other than the administrator of the hospital, are called by the board of trustees to serve as chairman and vice chairman of the boards. The hospital administrator acts as executive secretary of the governing board and acts as chairman in the absence or disability of the chairman and vice chairman. In most cases, the chairmen and vice chairmen are stake presidents in the immediate area of the hospitals. The chairmen include Cassia, Pres. Rodney A. Hansen; Cottonwood, Pres. Marlon S. Bateman; Fillmore, Pres. Roy D. Olpin; Fremont, Pres. Robert D. Orme; Idaho Falls, Pres. Paul W. Ahlstrom ; Logan, A. George Raymond, who is not presently serving as a stake president; Salt Lake, Pres. Douglas II. Smith; Pres. A. L. Bott; Panguitch, McKay-Dee- , Pres. Stanley E. Dalton; Primary Childrens, Pres. Joseph A. Kjar; Sanpete, Pres. Ralph S. Blackham; Sevier Valley. Pres. Blythe M. Gardner; Star Valley, Pres. F. Doyle Child, and Utah Valley, Pres. G. Marion Hinckley. WEEK ENDJtMG. OCTOBER ; 1 1 aWiSSii 1970 O, CHURCH-1- 5. -- O 3 .a. |