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Show Doctor of Naprapathy Will Discuss City Edito r Trapped Proteins Tonight in Provo of Trapped Proteins The Beg Degenerative Disease will be the subject of four talks to be given next week by well-known doctor of naprapathy. C Samuel West formerly of Mesa Robert D McDougall was named city editor at The Daily Herald today Ben Hansen. managing editor, an nounced “Bob is a man of considerable ex perience and ability Ariz., and nowa resident of Provo. Dr. West will speak at the Holiday Inn in Provo tonight at 7 o'clock; in Payson at the junior high school Wednesday at the Holiday Inn in Ogden He has extraor- dinaryenthusiasm and wants to be the best at what he does.” Hansen said. ‘I am looking forwardto seeing him apply Thursday, South Temple in Salt Lake City on Friday. He will also discuss the loss of energy. the importance of the lymphatic system, and how trapped all of those abilities to the challenge of providing more and better news coverage in all of the communities served by the Herald plasmsproteins can cause heart disease. cancer. obesity, stroke, high blood pressure, hardening of the McDougall returns to the Herald after an absence of about four years He previously worked here as a arteries, and otherkiller and crippling diseases Dr. West obtained a pre-med backgrovnd with a degree in chemistry at the University of Arizona reporter. During the interim, he was a manager at Doug's TV Appliance. his family’s business in Salt LakeCity. He ing that period Ascity editor, McDougall will direct Dr. West is a memberofthe International Society of Lymphology and recently returned from attending the 7th International Congress of Lymphology in Florence, Italy. ROBERT D. MCDOUGALL He said he and his wife, Sonia decided io moveto the United States because they both wanted to attend BYU. After they got here, Robert's parents decided to cometo the United States — with the entire family. His mother and sister have become naturalized citizens and the other fami ly members are working on it Heis active in the LDS Church, hav. ing served as a high councilman in the Orem Stake and a bishop's counselor in Taylorsville. He current!y serves as a the Mountainland Community Action Agency. he said ‘Only those households with income no higher than 125 percent of the Community Services Administration poverty guidelines will be considered eligible for assistance,” according to LeeAnne Stanley, coordinator of the Energy Crisis Federal tax dollars are now availableto low-income Central Utahns for home heating fuel bills. the Mountainland Community Action Agency reports The federal government has ap propriated $154.317 tor Utah, Wasatch and Summit Counties to use for energy as sistance The money will bedistributed by the agency to such low-incomeprople as elderly and handicapped citizens Assistance Program, DR. C. SAMUEL WEST Assistance Program started by Congress three years ago, according to Milton Fletcher executive director of the agency The money came directly from the federal Community Services Administra tion to Utah, and the state passedit on to May Get New Jobs property taxes. The manager declined to comment about the salary schedule at Barbizon. “T would like to keep this information confidential,”’ he said. ‘Disclosing it might hinder the bargaining power of our employees when theyinterview for other jobs.” The closure will affect 320 employees at the plant. Barbizon Corp. and the International Ladies Garment Workers Union will discuss the proposed plant closure Dec. 12, in New York City. Barbizon employees at the Provo plant are members of the Garment Workers Union. Jernigan claimed Barbizonis one of the best paying sewing plants in Utah Valley. Unionization of its employees is just one reason for the company’s competitive salary schedule, he said. costs and a poor western market as Bayly sewing plantalso is unionized, Teasons. Patterson said. Employees belong to Tom Jernigan, plant manager of the the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of Provoplant,told the Herald this morn- America. ing employees at Barbizon will gross Bayly ManufacturingCo.is situated approximately $2.8 million this year. Since economists estimate a payroll at 350 W. Center in Pleasant Grove. will turn five times in a community, The company currently employs 206 the payroll at Barbizon is a substantizt people, Patterson said. amount for Utah Valley, he said. Barbizon employees accepted at The Barbizon plant will pay $43,000 Bayly will need to be trained for Bayly for utilities this year and about work, Patterson said. inexperienced ,000 for services and supplies, Jer- and experienced people will be hired niganrevealed. He estimated the plant and trained on the job, Patterson aswill pay Utah County $23,000 in sured Plans for construction of a 25.000 square - foot addition to the cafeteria and food services areaof the Wilkinson Center at Brigham Young University were announced today by BYU President Dallin H. Oaks. The two-storystructure, to be built over the loading dock on the south side of the Wilkinson Center cafeteria, will increase seating from 500 to 750 places, double the size of the serving area, enlarge the kitchen andutility areas, and add a dozen multipurpose rooms to be used for meetings, luncheonsand specialfunctions, according to Robert H. Moss, director of the Wilkinson Center. with energy cut-offs may also apply The assistance programis designed not Theprojectis scheduled tobe letfor bid in February and should befinished by the summerof 1981. The architecturalfirm of Markham and Markham Architects and Engineers of Provo has designed the project so that construction can be carried on without interrupting services in the building. Wells P. Cloward, director of BYU Food Services, said the new addition is needed to adequately serve BYU's large student body. When the Wilkinson Center was completed in 1964, it was designed to accommodate a student body of 15,000. Now the total stands at about 26,000. The addition to the second or mainlevel of the Wilkinson Centerwill include eight given later on this month to familiarize the applicants with the examination. The positions available are for Salt LakeCity office only, and they are for Letter Sorting Machine Operatorsonly. Again, the applications for the exam should be postmarked between Dec. 10th to 14th, so request for the forms should be sent this week. Vets Urged to Tell Medical Expens es to the cafeteria where students and faculty can meetfor luncheon seminars and informal discussions The third-level extension will include a formal dining area called the President's Room and four multipurpose rooms for luncheons, meetings and receptions. The new addition will extend south from the second and third levels of the Wilkinson Center to the sidewalk next to the loading dock area. It ill bridge the dock, protecting it from uw: veather but permitting large trucksto enter the area Lengthwise, the new structure will extend from the existing pedestrian bridge on the east to the end of the loading dock on the west. A pedestrian ramp for general traffic and handicappedpersonswill lead into the southwest corner of the addition, eliminating the need for the pedestrian bridge which currently spans the dock area, Without advertising, a terrible thing gone happen: Nothing. ays der what is nowcalled the “‘old’’ VA pension plan becauseit was to their advantageto do so. Their pension rates were frozen at the end of the year. Colorado; 3.000 in Wyoming: 6,300 in Sportable Mode! 120 $99.95 RCA 12"aagona black & white lure the most sens moments of r Published Sunday through Friday by ScrippsLeague Newspope's, Inc 1555 North 200 West, Provo, Utah 84601 JENSEN,Publisher N. LAVERL CHRISTENSEN, Editor Emeritus Entered os second closs moter at the post office in Provo, Utah P.O. 106143060 MEMBER Audit Bureau United Press NEA of Circulation International Ser vice SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Month, carrer 6 Months, carrier One Yeor, corrier MAIL RATES IN UNITED STATES. 1 Munth 6 Months One Yeor HERALD TELEPHONE NUMBERS OFFICE CIRCULATION y of the worlds most beauntut peopie to be wornby someof the world’s smartest [ (B&H OLEG CASSINI OueG Cassini’ Sportable TV—ComPact 12 CheBailPrraia F Dray Drucs Pharmacy 286 West Center-Provo Phone 373-7288 CODENAME SECTOR © % Sates 934" 2 cn STARBIRD & eee ne f XYLo DRUM a9 mos.-3 yrs. 56" fe — . BABY SUSAN § Doll, drinks os Z ies ; WES ease 578 wets, rooted hair ROLLER SKATES Neary duty & & % wrboe ... 33% MESSAGE & CENTER & Fisher Price 2 fore : tees 4..... B98 For a Sportable DENVER — Upto 28,000 elderly Veterans AdWyoming, Utah and New Mexico area maybe shor rt changing themselves because they haven’t report fed all their 1978 medical expenses. Those pensioners could lose as much as $100 a month. They have only until Dec. 31 to advise VA regionaloffices in Denver, Cheyenne, Salt Lake City and Albuquerque of those expensesorlose forever pension money to which they are entit led, VA officials advised. The pensioners are primarily vetera ns or their survivors who chose at the end of 1978to remain un- JOVAN INTRODUCES THE SIGNATURE FRAGRANCES OF OLEG CASSINI om $22" § It's Time ministration pensioners in the Colorado, Those ‘‘old’’-plan pensioners total about 16,000 in Utah, and 11,600 in New Mexico. “Up to 70 percent of those pensioners should take another look at their medical expense tepoi ting,” VA officials stressed A smaller group of pension recipien ts chose to switch to a morerecent plan whichof fers higher rates to somepensioners, depending onindividual circumstances. Those approved for the newerplan‘o taled about 1,700 in Colorado; 260 in Wyoming; 524 in Utah, and 1,450 in NewMexico. HECTRIC & BATTLESHIP 25 modern twist people who mayqualify to consider the ple in the state were reimbursed for heating fuelbills. The money was given to them in the form of food vouchers. the Provo Office, Steve Sotuyo, is handling applications for that exam through the Provo area. Application requests can be obtained by writing a card to Steve Sotuyo, Tour No. 3, c/a Provo Post Office, Provo, Utah 84061. Please do not call personnel because this is a separate service being offered through the EEOC. Special training will be L.NHOOPSIE : learn to conserve and to moreefficiently Fletcher said, so low-incomeelderly peo- ~ ‘ ate. 12" es Americans. but also to heip applicants multipurpose rooms adjacent 498 & RUB-A-DUB © DOLLY use their home heating fuel, Stanieysaid Fletcher said the agency will counsel Prioritywill be given to elderlyand handicapped citizens, the agency informed the Herald, but households meeting Postal Service Seeks Applicants The Salt Lake City Office of the U.S. Postal Service has announced that the Clerk/Carrier examination will be given the first week in January. Applicationswiil be accepted during Dec. 10th to 14th only. Applicants will be notified by mail as to the exact date of the exam. A representative of the Equal Employment Opportunity Committee in Face Ae only to meet the immediate needs of federal government's home weatherization program. The program makes money available to low-income Americans for weatherstriping and insulation. Last year, federal money for heating bills arrived in Utah in the spring, and other types of public events “These added facilities will greatly reduce the pressure we are experiencing in demand for roomsto presentlectures, hold conferences and workshops, and conduct other meetings.’ Moss explained The new addition will also serve as a church meeting facility for four student wards, he added. In addition,it will be possible to use the cafeteria for evening gatherings where students can meet and eat while attending impromptu-typetalent concerts, lecture and discussion sessions, © £o COCKIE JARS eligibility requirements that are faced BYU Cafeteria Services To Be Enlarged Barbizon Workers 56" get.13" mentonly through the next 10 months or until grant moneyis exhausted, she said Appointments can be made by contacting the Mountainland Community Action Agency at 160 E. Center St. in Provo. Applications will be taken by appoint- The money is part of the Energy Crisis con CHRISTMAS CARDS 8 oon tee 51.19 7Q° of energy, and degenerative disease To Aid Needy Utahns With FuelBills gospel doctrine teacherin a Taylorsvildid graduate work in journalism le ward Shortly after his graduation, Mc- He and his wife have five children Dougall became a reporter at the ranging in age from seven weeks to 13 Herald years Barbizon employees who will be without jobs when the plant closes in January found cause for hope today from the world's largest producer of tennis shorts. Bayly Manufacturing Co.in Pleasant Grove told the Herald this morning thatit has a numberof large contracts and needs to hire 50 workers immediately. “I've never seen so many contracts,” Dorothy Patterson, Bayly personneland trainingdirector,said. ‘‘We could gain 50 seamstresses almost immediately and ‘hire 10 people a week from now to next May.” The news comesata critical time for Barbizon employees. The company, headquartered in New York City, said Friday it plans to close the Provoplant after Jan. 31, 1980. The women’s apparel manufacturing company listed escalating shipping ireSTICK Hewill also graduate from the Arizona Collegeof Naturopathic Medicine in Mesa next February During the past six years, he has been giving selfhelp pain relief and prevention seminars throughout the nited States and Canada. Heis internationally recognized as an authority on the causeof pain, loss Money Available from Federal Agency also worked as a free lance writer dur- local news coverage through the nine membersof the Herald reportingstaff and 15 correspondents. He says hewill supervise the coverageof local news good and bad — to help better inform the Herald's readership. “The Herald is part cf the communityand, as part of the community, we have a special role to play in informing people, fostering community spirit and enthusiasm and loyalty to the area,’ McDougall commented. ‘I'd like to see us do all we can to continue to makeit a greatplace to live.” Hewasborn in Hobart, Tasmania a state of Australia — May 20, 1944. He andhis family left Australia in 1969 to attend Brigham Young University, where he was graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in political science and journalism in 1972. Ee also and at the Airport Copper Kitchen on During his seven years of teaching chemistry. he obtained a master’s degree in public administration at the University of Arizona and a Doctor of Naprapathy degree at the American College of Natural Healing Sciences in Mesa, Ariz. You get a sharp,bright picture. the ereaty Of 100% solid state...with these important © Low power consumption ~eeoat 28 watts. @ RCA’s "New Vista 200" VHF tuner provides excellent fon, even in many weak or fringe signal areas. PERS RRO Post FELASA NSNANSNMOMEOG McDougal | Takes Kelete) 1979 ba Ba ny NG SCD OG D6 OS December 4. aNd ne EOE SSHNESAD Tuesday » Utah RENMEI RM SAERAERMERIRANARREST Page 2—THE HERALD. Pro |