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Show Page 10B—THE SUNDAY HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday April ‘2, 1970 1970 Promises to be Banner Year For New A we, om ‘* Ser OF a) Seeread Construction Activities in Central Utch XN bd "Be vie YU'S Iw NE! ACTIVITIES CENTERisone of the many big construction projects in Central Utah now underway or pianned to start in 1978. Above, foundation work goes ahead on the new athletic complex and activities ee Central Utah Rated TopArea | In State For Dairy Industry The year 1970 promises to be a Center (including a new athletic development. top year for construction in Utah arena), a multi-million dollar New Gas Building County, with numei ous projects Project, has been started, and is Mt. Fuel Supply Company in underway and in the planning dve for completion in Provo has announced plans fer a new building to be constructed September, 1971. year the total A maior“destruction” project on the site of the old Elks Lodge construction figure -eported in is the dismantling of the old directly adjacent to their Utah County was $25,340,000. In Ironton Plant of present operation. The Elks the first two months of 1970, Springville, to make way for Lodge is completing a new building permits totaling in a BYU Industrial Park. building on South University excess of $12,000,000 were Three banks are planning new approved. branch buildings in Provo,all in In ProvoCity, construction of the northeast section of the city the new $3,000,000 City Center near campus. has started on West Center St., They are Zions First National, while in Orem,the city plans to Walker Bank,and First Security Moveinto its new $900,000 City Bank. Zions new dank i Center in May. The Orem at 100 North and 200 West will structure is located just north of soon be ready for occupancy. the present Orem City Hall, Mails which will be reraoved. Orem looks forward to the New Temple construction of three shopping A major project in the malls. construetion stage is the new Groundbreaking i3 scheduled Provo LDS Temple, scheduled soon for the new University Mall for completion in March 1971 in Shopping Center near Orem's the northeast section of the city. 1300 South Street. This mall is Brigham Young University planned to include space for 70 has three major building businesses. projects in progress. The new Directly westof the University Life Science Building, part of Mall, wil' be the Esplanade, a which is now in use, wil be TSI development announced completed by September, 1970. recently. The mall will have The structure consists of a three- space for retail outlets, offices, story classroom wing, plus the and industries. laboratory section which has two Third developmentwill be the floors underground and three Mini-Mall at Orem’s 1600 S. above. State, first unit of which has Activity Center already been constructed. This Also due for completion this will be an enclosed mall. In year is the Math Science and connectior with this center,it is Computer Building on BYU planned to build 200 apartment Campus. The new Activity units in a planned dwelling > State President WASHINGTON (UPI) —Later this year the government hopes to have people living the first of several thousand experimental homes to be built in 10 communities around the nation. In effect, the new residents will be engaged in a widespread “field test” of new building techniques, materials, utility servicss and other elements which the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- BS WELBYW. YOUNG ELAINE REEDER Utah Princess Dairy Leader A large portion of Utah's honor Miss Reeder this year will roll Grade A milk comes from preside over major promotions dairy farms in Wasatch, Utah of the state’s dairy industry tour. and Juabcounties. The area also On this tour she and her contributes some of the attendants will tell the benefits outstanding leadership of the ot eating dairy foods to thousands of school children state’s dairy industry. Since 1936 Utah’s Grade A. across the state. milk hasrated on the honor roll No longer are dairy of the United States Public foods limited to milk, ice Health Service, and muchofthis eream and cheese. Ice milk is milk comes from the lush becoming a competitive rival of valleys of the area surrounding ice cream and the number ofice Provo. Over fow'r million pounds cream novelties is expending. of Utah milk is now delivered Consumers are finding ice monthly to the surrounding cream and ice milk a year-round states of Nevada, Arizona, dessert. In 1968 the Colorado, Wyoming and even largestamountof ice cream ever Idaho. processed in Utah (4,569,000 Dairy Leader gallons) was recorded. Ice milk Welby W. Young, Heber, has production was 2,381,000 gallons, for many years been a leader in also the largest amount ever dairying not only in Utah but on processed in the state, It is the national scene. He now estimated 1969 out-put will equal serves as president of Federated the record of 1968. Dairy Farms, the largest dairy ManyFlavors farmercooperativein the state. Choice flavors have increased For a number of years he was also and it is not unusual for presidentof the American Dairy consumers to find a choice of Association of Utah,andnowis a over thirty different flavors of member of the ADA of Utah’s ice cream and ice milk on the executive committee. Mr. dairyshelf. Young, former national Utah is noted for its cottage secretaryof the American Dairy cheese and increased production Association, is now a memberof proves consumers are using it its executive committee. He is more for salads and snacks. also a member of the board of Figures for 1968 show 8,250,000 directors of the National Dairy pounds of creamed cottage Council. The Dairy Council Servesthe industry in nutritional tesearch and education. The ADA promotes dairy products merchandising oublic relations and cheese was processed in Utah, an increase of 2 per cent from 1967. Output in 1969 will about equal 1968 figures, it is estimated. Cheeseis Best Of course Utah’s cheese is regarded as amongthe best in the world.In 1968 American and Swiss cheese processed in Utah was the highest ever with 12,209,000 pounds of American and 8,077,000 pounds of Swiss cheese manufactured. Estimates for 1969 show cheese volume up 19 per cent over 9368's Utah's greatest asset in its dairy products is milk itself. Provo G. Kent H this ye manage: y Association native of Provo, « marketing at Brigham Young University. For 10 years he served with John Morrell & Company, a packing compa in Great Fal Robert Wri president of Dairy Wives. national meat Provo and ntana. Mrs. Orem is Long enjoyed for its superior Utah County flavor and purity, Utah's milk While her homeis in Brigham City, Utah’s 1970 DairyPrincess spends mostof her time in Utah county. as a stu: WASHINGTON (UPI)—The memberof BYU's International Fok Dancers. Elaine has one sister and three brothers, and ether the family drink “a lon of milk a day”’, according to her father, Frank Reeder, who operates a Holstein dairy t = procgssing plant. its 196 1 hy will in- crease home production and lower cosi+. Harold B. Finger, HUD assistant secretary for research and technology, said the department plans continuous inspections of the experimental homes for at least two years— with spot checks after that—to find out which innovations work and which do not. “The only way to test these concepts, to see how they would perform, is to build them and have people live in them,” Finger said. People living in the homes will not be just guinea pigs. . Finger said they will get plenty of house for their money and probably will enjoy better services than other persons in Contractors and financial institutions predict a bright building future for Utah Valley, the new a critical housing shortage. newspaper began printing with as the area moves to take care of photo-offset process the samearea. Forinstance, Finger said, the department hopes to try out experimental methods of garbage collection. The program is called ‘“‘Operation Breakthrough” by HUD. The idea is to find ways to smashbarriers to volume home production like outmoded building codes, restrictive union work rules, scarce land and tight money. Protytypes Prototype houses will be built in Houston; Indianapolis; Jersey City; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Seattle; Macon, Ga.; Memphis; Sacramento; St. Louis, and Wilmington,Del. Present plans call for construction of between 100 and 200 housing units on each site, but Finger said more than 200 may be built at several locations. The units will include singlefamily hornes, townhouses, garden apartments and some high rises. The high rise units will be intended primarily for single persons and childless couples. No three and four bedroom units are planned in the rises, “Highrise living is not good family living,” Finger said. Herald in Modern NewBuilding ‘The Daily Herald’s moveis The photo offset printing pictures which will be much now completed. method being used for the past clearer and more detailed. three , is a marked Huge Press Since Monday, the Herald departure from the old The Goss Urbanite press— has been published at new process, which required the fabricated during the past year offices, using photo offset casting of lines of type and by the Goss Company of printing, the most modern of illustrations in lead and the Chicago—has a 40-page newspaper production of each pageinto a 40- capacity, can print up to 40,000 method. The new offices are pound cylinder to be placed on papers per hour, and can print le press, four sections at onetime. Provo. Other Herald offices Advertising and headlines are Offset Process are now closed,including the produced on two Photon 200 ones formerly occupied at 190 With the new equipment, all machines.Each of the machines W.4th N, and the Orem office. type, including news and has capacity of producing 16 The move into the new aqvertising, is now composed different type faces in 12 difbuilding in north Provo is the ferent sizes. culmination of more than a News matter is produced on year ofplanning for the threeCompugraphic machines, which quarter-million dollar The page-size paste-up is produce more than 25 lines of project, according to B. E. transferred by photographic type per minute on photographic (Bye) Jensen, Herald processes onto a sheet of publisher. Groneman Con- aluminum 007 ‘nch thick, vhe new building includes struction Co., Provo, com- which is mnounted on the press. sufficient storage area for a pleted the building Feb. 14. Each plate contains two pages four-months supply of and weighs about a half newsprint. Customer Entrance Sometimelater this spring the ‘The new building has 16,400 pound, Herald is planning a grand square feet, andis of brick and ‘The imagefrom the plate is concrete construction with a imprinted on a rubber- opeing andoper house at which series of buff brick panels covered cylinder and then the general public will be invited separated by sculptured offset onto the web of to tour the new facilities, The new building andprinting concrete columns. A glassedint. of “cold facilities will enable the Herald in area at the southeast corner "Ths This new provides an attractive type” composition offers to expand its news operation to maximum to ad- better service the Central Utah customerentrance. vertisers in the use cf in present andin the years to Customer parking is illustrations and unusual come. available at the front of the that are practically building. Employee parking is impossible under the old at the south and west. Land- process. scaping, pyA yet to be accompli ; paving of One of the most noticeable some parking areas not yet items of improvement readers may expect to see is in the surfaced. located at 1855 N. nd W., fh New Plant Helps JoLene Company Make Up To 3600 Garments A Day 19 company, Jolene movoffices and production The wide open design and temperature control, makes step forward. Including Still just a young, gr sand playwear are designed ndsold through our fivld sales office there and general offices in Provo, We have representatives serving inde; endent department stores and specialty shops throughoutthe country in addition to the contracts we make with international choin stores. Known for years as @ manufacturer of infants and small girl's weor, our recent expansion into girl's sizes 7-14 is beginning to get substantia! morket recognition, compared wich $16.6 million in }, ogus bills seized the year before. Of the $18.2 million seized last year, $15.7 was captured before it couldbe circulated, and $2.5 million after it had been passed to the public, the department said. Stages throughout the valley. building at 1555 North 200 West was completed, and the Photo Offset Printing Process BOGUS MONEYSEIZED Treasury Department says of Brigham agents seized $18, Young University. She is Elaine Counterfeit money during Reeder, a sophomore and a has been on the honor roll ratings *ince 1936, according to Wilbur C. Parkinson, chief sanitarian of the Salt Lake CityCounty Health Department. new plants. In Februaryof this year, the new Daily Heraiu Experimental Homes Will be ‘Field Tested’ ment (HUD) G. KENT HENDRICKSON Avenue which should be ready Numerous apartment for oecupancy soon. buildings and home The Daily Herald, too, joined developments are in the the ranks of businesses building planning and construction the JoLene Company,Inc. Manufacturers of Exquisite Children’s Apparel Provo, Utah Reprinted from the Feb. 19, 1970 Issue of The Daily Herald |