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Show sage 10—THE HERALD. Provo, Utah.. Monday, January 7, 1980 | Sp. Fork CC Slates Installation SPANISH FORK — The annua! in- stallation banquet of the Spanish Fork He and his wife. the former Bernice Warner. are the parents of four 7 30 P.M. The public is invited to at the Oak Crest Inn on January 10, 1980 at children. He feels that the success of the smaller cities depends upon the friendliness and service given by the tend and honor the outgoing and the loca! business people He has several Chamber of Commerce will be held at new officials of the Chamber. Tickets may be reserved by phoning Mrs. Thea Grotegut at 798-6459 Mr Keith Bradford is the president elect of the Chamber. Hesaid he is proud that heis a strictly local produci His office with the Smith Auto Company is within a few hundred yardsof his birthplace and Mike Stone Directors presently serving who will continue in office are Richard Roach ideas for improving the Spanish Fork the incumbent president, Ray Powell Jay Hughes. Dr Brent Hansen. Dave Oyler. Dr Jon Hunter and Dale Johnson community which he will presentin his acceptance speech at the banquet ecutive secretary and Thea Grotegut as Otherofficers to be installed include Tony Christensen, president-elect plus two year directors Marvin Stewart Judy Dimick, Randy Jensen. Douglas Barber. Mack Griffin, John Tuckett J.C. Henderson will continue as ex. secretary-office manager Dean Edwards and Hal Johnsonwil! also continueas directors, having been recently appointed to fill the positicns vacated by others Employee Discovers ‘Hot’ Garbage SPANISH FORK — Scott Aitken driver of one of the Spanish Fork gar- bage pickup trucks, will not forget Wednesday morning. January2. 1980 When he stopped for a pick-up he saw smoke and flames coming from his Mr. Aitken says he was very lucky in thatthe fire wason the side of the truck where the diesellines are located and not on the side where the gasoline is stored, otherwise he would have had a serious explosion trying to stop picking up ashes. Now they are convinced they must ask homeowner to dispose of their own ashesat the city dump. The city maintenance department arrived in minutes andput outthe fire, butnot before oneside ofthe truck had Apparently some one had put out ashesin the garbage witha live lumpof was ableto repair the truck, but actual costs plus wages plus timeout of service made the accident cost well over been badly damaged coal in it. The city officials have been $1,000. load. Fortunately the fire department Classes Told for Legal Assistants More legal assistants are being trained at Utah Technical College at Provo and Orem to meetthe increased demand for trained help in Utah law firms. Winter quarter classesarestill open for interested students as registration continues this week at the Provo campus. PROVO CITY Commissioners last Thursday issued a special proclamation of appreciation to long-timeresident Victor Bird, right, for 42 years of service to the city as secretary of the Metropolitan Water District. Commissioners Anagene Meecham left and J. Earl Wignall are shown presentinga special plaque to Bird and his wife Josephine look on. Bird gave hundreds of volunteer hours to the city over that period of time. Renn ew RRR ED Magers EER Teleei‘aGuieweeweenee fs ie iz i oP B. GENTRY LEE Voyagerthat dominatehistory books of the distant future and not Carter. Kennedy and Khomeini,’’ Mr. Lee observed. “In an historical and anthropological context, the results of the Voyager mission will be shown, complete with beautiful photographs of the giant planet and its major moons. But how muchdoes it cost and is it worth it?” he asks. The scientist will discuss the benefits to man of exploring the solar the network's most ambitious project ever. Mr. Lee is series manager. Heis also involved in the creation system. and development of other efforts to From 1966 to 1975, Mr. Lee was an aerospace engineer with the Martin Marietta Corporation. His final position was director of science analysis and mission planning for the Viking Flight Team in Pasadena. This executive position involved the operational management of all 200 scientisis and mission planners associated with the first landing on the planet Mars. Earlier Viking managementpositions included mission operations manager and navigation saat While working at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory from 1975-78, he was managerof the Mission Design Section and responsible for top-level design of all U.S. lunar and interplanetary missions. Currently he is managerof mission operations and missions. Currently he is manager of mission operations and engineering for Project Galileo which will be an in-depth investigation of Jupiter and its moons during the middle 1960s. Late in 1976, Mr. Gentry joined with Carl Sagan to form Carl Sagan Productions, Inc. The corporation's largest and most well-known venture is the creation and production of ‘‘Cosmos,”’ a 13-hour series on astronomyin the broadest humancontext. Theairing of the series is scheduled makescience both entertaining andinteresting to the layman, including a nationally syndicated planetarium show and sciencefiction project that will be developed into a major motion picture in 1981. Forthe past three years, Mr. Lee has been lecturing about science and exploration. Hetalks on a widevariety of subjects using every-day language. His book. ‘The Creation of Cosmos.” will be published by Ballantine next September. The speaker earned the B.A. degree summacum laudeat the University of Texas in languages, literature and mathematicsin 1963 and was admitted to Phi Beta Kappaat age 19. Thefollowing year he earned the M.S. degree in math, physics and aerospace engineering at MIT. Hehas also been a WoodrowWilson Fellow at MIT and a Marshall Fellow atthe University of Glasgow, Scotland. In 1977 he received NASA's top medal — the NASA Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement. vs Jaynann Morgan Payne is the featured speaker on the Brigham Young University AlumniCollege Lecture Series Wednesday {Jan. 9) at 8 p.m.in the Alumni House. Mrs. Paynewill speak on the topic, “Be it Ever So Crumbled, There’s No Place Like Home.’’ In her presentation, she commemorates the LDS Church . Sesquicentennial by recounting the ‘‘happy and sometimes hilarious memories’’ of Mormonfamily life from the pioneerera to the present. A popularlecturer at BYU Education and at LDS Church functions, Mrs. Payne has written numerous articles for Church magazines and has coauthored three books, “To Fulfill Her Promise,” ‘‘Beauty for Keeps.” Senator Orrin G. Hatch will give his Third Annual Report to Utah on the night of January 10th, 1980, in the Cottonwood High School Auditorium, 5717 South 1300 East, Salt Lake County. This event is a FREE, non-partisan, apolitical event which is open to all of the citizens of Utah. Because seating capacity is limited, SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — Utah's economy should continue to prosper despite any effects of a recession but whether the state can cope with a development boom due to the Intermountain Power Project and construction of the MX missile system is another question, says a University of Utah economist. R.Thayne Robsontold the Salt Lake tickets are being given to those families, neighbors, and friends who would like to makethetrip to Salt Lake City that night for this special report. Citizens who heard Senator Hatch speak at the Kiwanis banquet in jovember felt much better informed about whatis happening regarding the security and well-being of this country and whatis being done with thetax dollar in Washington. As a memberof the Senator Hatch Citizens Advisory Committee, Mrs. Lavinia Kanigwill be available io h p secure seating. Pleasecall herat ti W. 100 S. Spanish Fork.forticketsto this very informative and vital Report meeting. Annual Kiwanis Ciub Thursday that the recession is alreadybeingfelt in Utah, mainly through the decrease in home building. However. he said, the record non-residential construction in 1979 may continue. Robson, executive director of the University Bureau of Economic and Business Research,said the population of the state will jumpbyat least 500,000 people in the next 10 years and moteif the MX system is built The IPP coal-fired powerplant. the MX and synthetic fuel development could bring problems which thestate has neverbefore faced, Robson said. “These possibilities present planning challenges the state has not had to cope with before and I question whether we can cope very well,” he said. A Provo woman told police $5,000 money including foreign and comworth of coins and antique furniture is memorative coins was missing from a missing from a storage unit she was storagearea she rented from Dean and renting. Peay at 1640 S. State Street in Provo. Jo Ellen Palmer, 260 E. 100 S., Shetold police the items were stored Provo. told Provo police 14 bags of in the area but becauseof no rent pay- ment, Dean and Peay secured the Storage unit and sometime between August and December the items becarne missing. Police are continuing investigation into the report. 35 Utah Iranians Face Questions SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — The director of Utah’s Immigration aud Naturalization office says at least 35 Iranian students at the state’s schools will be ordered to show cause why they should not be deported. Gerald D. Fasbender also said additional Iranian students could face deportation if they do not reportto his up 35 who apparenlty have not maintained the required credit hours to remain in the United States on student visas, or have otherwise violated the conditions of their visas. Thosestudents wili each have a hearing before an administrative law judge. Theywill be able to appeal should the judge decide to deport them. Some Iranians have been missed in the blanket check of Utah schools, and they must report voluntarily to the immigration office, Fasbender said. Failure to report. he said, is grounds by itself for deportation. The check of Iranians is an action ordered by President Carter in responseto the hostagesituation at the U.S. Embassyin Tehran.A federaldistrict judge had ruled it was unconstitutional for Carterto single out Iranian students for investigation. But a federal appeals court ruled Thursday that the programis legal. Sources Say Berkowitz Didn't Act Alone and “The Joy of Being a Woman.” She is the motherof 12 children. She graduated from BYUwith a major in English and minors in Spanish and music. In 1967, she was chosen as Mrs. Utah and waslater named second runner-up in the Mrs. America Pageant. She has appeared on many radio and television programsto speak on family life, youth and women. In 1977,she waselected as a delegate from Utah to ‘te National Women’s Conference in Houston, Tex. Thecity of Provo awarded her a Commendation of Merit for her contributions to family life. The Alumni College is open to the public. Admission is by season pass. : out-of-state decrees. The Legal Assistant in Practice — Thursday, 6-9 p.m., taught by RandyS. Kester. While a student at Utah Technical College, Mr. Kester was selected as the outstanding Legal Assistant, then was the Chief Student Defender at Brigham Y: University, has been employed with several attorneys, and now works with the law firm of Howard, Lewis and Petersen. Kesterstatesthatthis class will cover basics of the principles and procedures in a lawoffice. Registration continues through next week at the Provo Campus. For more information, contact Maxine Christensen at the college. Thieves Steel $5,000 in Coins, Furniture NEW YORK (UPI) — Aninquiry by life in the state prison in Attica. N.Y., authorities has found evidence to sup- said he acted alone when hekilled six port the theory that ‘‘Son of Sam’ kil- women and wounded seven other peoler David Berkowitz did notactalonein ple with a .44-caliber revolver in 1976 his year-long spree of slayings, sources and 1977. close to the investigation say. Sources said, however. an assistant district attorney and at least one Queens District Attorney John San- county detective are still assigned to tucci and membersof a task force he createdin Octoberto take anotherlook the special unit Theinvestigation has found evidence at the case declined comment Thurs— thoughnotsufficient yet to introduce day on any aspectofthe investigation. Berkowitz, whois serving 20 years to in a court of law — that Berkowitz had an accomplice. perhaps a man named John Carr. when he wentonhis waveof killings, the sources said Carr, who was 31 when he wasshotto death in Minot, N.D., in February 1978, was the son of Sam Carr, a Yonkers. N.Y., neighbor of Berkowitz. Berkowitz said after his arrest Aug. 10, 1977, that the elder Carr washis “master,’’ who spoke to him through a dog and ordered him tokill. SNOB eee ee AFEITE custody, adoptions and enforcementof Utah to Face Future Growing Pains office. Hesaid a check ofIranian students at Utah'scolleges and universities turned To Feature Jaynann Morgan Payne s private practice. He is now the Chief Attorney in charge of Legal Services. Dr. Ferrerro explained the class as handling the procedure of a case from the verybeginningof filing a complaint to the endof the case. and hewill use a mock-trial for realism. The “Legal Assistant’’ is a new careerfor those specially trainedto assist the lawyer in his various skills — drafting legal documents, legal Family Law 1 — Wednesday, 6-9 research, representing clients before p.m., taught by Judge Ivan E administrative agencies and in courts. Lawrence, who practiced law in California for 21 years, was an AsThere are three classes offered this sociate Professor of Law and has a degree of Juris Doctor from the UCLA winter quarter Civil Litigation — Tuesday, 6-9 p.m., School of Law. This class covers taught by Attorney Gary Ferrerro. Dr. divorce, separation, alimony, child to begin next September on Public Broadcasting System and represents BYU Alumni College Lecture Series tS te Young University Law School in 1977 taught legal research, and began a Hatch Sets Annual Report to Utah ‘Y’ Forum Talk at Marriott Center B. Gentry Lee, one of America’s leading space engineers, will present an illustrated lecture on ‘‘Man and the Cosmos" at the opening winter semester Forum assembly Tuesday (Jan. 8) at Brigham Young University. The public is invited to the 10 a.m. lecture in the Marriott Center. ill be telecast twice on SYU-TV, Channel 11: Sunday, Jan. 13, at 8 p.m.; and Tuesday,Jan.15, at 2 p.m. Using color slides and motion pic: tures to illustrate his points, Mr. jill discuss what events in our lifetime ao dDelieves will be written in history books 500 years from now. “A powerful ary t will be made that it will be r, Viking and Ferrerro graduated from the Brigham January 20% neeetiert Clearance 0 off st wicker baskets Platter+ Salad Bar+ Beverage =§2,19183.2 9 | LunchOy> i expBa FP ‘Agult Lunch served Mon. thru Sat.till 4 P.M. Sree ot Sretprsrresan Tae Ma ac, Al 1 ul ul ¢ dried flowers e wicker ¢ baskets A SE 700 North State, Orem oo Mon-Sat 10 to 6 p.m. EE? LS ee 2 ee ee ee | ty —— Malibu es Lunch Ny plus many more lunches At the Sizzler, we're cooking upthe best lunchdeal in town, The Adult Lunch. You choose yourfavorite Sizzler lunch, anything from a hamburgertoa steak and we'll includeall the salad you caneat fromour salad bar, a baked potato or french tes and your chok a soft drink. That's an Adult Lunch. Ata p 1240S. State, Grem at Carillon Square sens |