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Show &~THE HERALD, Provo, Utah Sunday, October 10, 1971 3 Boy Scouts Receive . Page National Awardsat Annual Council Meet ‘Three Boy Scouts were the Nationallifesaving awards recipients of, national awards were presented to Scott A. Berry eeting and Teddy Haynes, both Boy Scouts of Eureka. The boys . received certificates and medals awarded in a national court of honor for their part in saving the life of the custodian of Tintic tificate from Ralph Felker ofthe High School. They saved the Soil Conservation Service. Zane man’s life when a blowtorch was one of five national winners exploded while he was working in thescout photo contest held as ‘on the high school roof and set a part of Project SOAR (Save fire to hot tar. Our merican Resources) conducted by Boy Scouts of ‘The awards were presented to America. Mr. Felker reported the boys by Dr. DaCosta Clark, there were over 2000 entries in president of the Utah National Parks Council. the national contest it Stanley A. Peterson NATIONAL LIFESAVING AWARDS are given to two Eureka Boy Scouts and their mothers by Dr. DaCosta Clark, president of the Utah National Parks Council. From left Namedto Dean’sPost are Scott Berry, Mrs. Max Berry, Teddy Hiayses, Mrs. Theodore Haynes, and Dr. YOUNG PHOTOGRAPHER Zane Hess displaysthe certificate and check he won as a national winner of the Project SOAR photo contest conducted by the Soil Conservation lark. Society of America. Left is Ralph Felker of the Soil Conservation Service, and right, Cecil J. Zimmerman, Council Project SOAR chairman, Education Weeks, Off-Campus Lectures and four extension centers located in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Idaho Falls, and by President Dallin H, Oaks. Los Angeles. Stanley A. Peterson, who has ‘The organization, with 75 fullbeen serving as an assistant time empioyees in addition to the aid of hundreds of faculty members, last year had an enrollment of more than 149,214 Appointmentof a new dean of the Division of Continuing Education at Brigham Young University was announced today students, half of whom were Soak up big savings on terry towels. O% Off. served by credit courses through all of the 13 BYU academic colleges. Last year the Division served an equivalent of 8,463 full-time students (30 semester hours ® STANLEY A. PETERSON dean,will assumehis new duties Oct. 16, succeeding Dr. Harold Glen Clark, retiring as dean % years to serve as president of the new Provo Temple of the Church of Jasus Crhist of Latter-day Saints. Wide Responsibility Departments under the direction of the new dean include Travel Study, the new Bachelor of Independent Studies, Evening Classes, Home Study, Special Courses and Conferences, each) which is com- parable to a third of the regular daytime student body. Some areas,such as HomeStudy, rank among thelargest in the nation. Dean Peterson received the B.S. degree at BYU and the M.A. at Los AngelesState College. He taught in West Covina schools five years and held positions as school principal in Monterey Park and administrator of the University of Southern California Federal Teacher Education Programs. He was appointed chairman of the BYU-California Center in 1968 and has served the last two years as assistant dean offield services, responsible for the operation of Continuing Education Centers. Active in the LDS Church, he has served as bishop of the Covina Second Ward, Charter Oak Stake, and is presently Bishop of BYU 74th Ward. In California he also taught in the LDS Seminary and wasa stake missionary. ProminentIndian Leaders To Conduct ‘Y’ Workshop Four prominent national Indian leaders will conduct a workshop Mondayand Tuesday, Oct. 11-12 at Brigham Young University on current Inaian — and national Indian Discussing various epee of Indian affairs and involvement of Indian young people will be Tom Etsitty, vice-president of the Navajo Community College; Dan Honahni, president of the National Indian Advisory Committee, Mrs. Helen Peterson, a Sioux from South Dakota presently working in Wi , D.C., in Office of Indian Affairs Commissioner Louis R. Bruce; and John C. Rainer, a Taos Pueblo and presentdirector of the American Indian Graduate Scholarship Service. Sponsored by the BYU Tribe of Many Feathers,the workshop is ing held especially for the morethan 500 Indian students on campus, as well as other interested students, faculty, and the public. Center so that participants can hear atleast twoof the speakers. Mr. Eisitty will speak on “Navajo Education”; Dr. Warren, ‘Educational Needs and Development”; Mrs. Peterson, “Current Indian Affairs”; Mr, Rainer, ‘Indian Bills and Legislative Process”; and Martin E. Seneca Jr., a BYU graduate and special assistant under the White House Fellow’s program to inembers of the White House staff, ‘Nixon’s Legislative Packet.” In addition to showing motion pictures both days on the con- ZEORGE W. BEADLE NobelPrize Winning SpeakerSet Nobel Prize winner George W. Beadle, president emeritus and Distinguished Professor at University of Chicago, will be the first speaker in the Brigham Young University College of Biological and Agricultural Sciences seminar series Tuesday, Oct. 12, The public, students, and faculty are invited to the lecture which will begin at 3:10 p.m. in fae Room A456 of the Martin Building. Dr. Beadle will discuss ‘The Origin of Maize.” Prior to going to the University of Chicago, Dr. Beadle was professor and chairman of the Division of Biology at the California Institute of Technology from 1946 to 1961. He received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from the University of Nebraska and his Ph.D. degree from Cornell } University in 1933, In 1958, he shared the Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine with Edward L. Tatum and Joshua Lederburg, for his and Tatum’s research in the role of genes in controlling specific biochemical reactions in bread mold. He is co-author of two books and has published a number of technical papers in genetics. He has served as president of the American Association for the Advancementof Science (1955) and of the Genetics Society of Sale 4 reg. 1.75 Bath towel Lush andthirsty cotton terry, sheared on onesidefor the touch ofvelvet. Have your towels in a choiceof temporary American Indian, participants Monday evening will eat a traditional Indian supper sponsored by the Tribe of Many Feathers and wi be entertained at 6 p.m. in the America (1946). Joseph Smith Auditorium bythe all-Lamanite entertainment Early Patent group, ‘The Lamanite Thefirst patent granted in Generation.” A question and answerperiod the United States was to Samuel Winslow of Massawill be held T:esdayat 11 a.m. by each speaker, followed by a chusetts in 1641 for a nove luncheon attended by President method of making salt, acTwo worksliop sessions will be Dallin H. 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