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Show j Review - Wednesday, July 30, 1986 - Page 4 - t Janice Ellen Bowman to become bride 2 of Michael D. Peterson in Temple I ! i Vj tri f , 1 I ' ' 1 : c ' I ( I i am Janice Ellen Bowman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester W. Bowman of Eugene, Oregon, and Michael DeFriez Peterson, son of Dr. and Mrs. James M. Peterson, American Fork, have chosen to seal their love for eternity in the Salt Lake LDS Temple Saturday, August 9. Teresa Alloway, a sister of the bride, will be the matron of honor. Bridesmaids will be Laura Kesler, Carol Franson, Leslie Peterson and Amy Peterson. Arnold Haskell and Karl Peterson will share the honors of best man. Ushers will be Benjamin Wood and Todd Gillis. Special guests include the grandparents of the groom: Mrs. Karl A. Peterson, Price; and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Jones, Hun-tington. Receptions will be held at the Fitzen Gardens, 280 S. Center, American Fork, August 9 from 7 to 9 p.m. and at the Junction City Chapel, 1530 Rose, Junction City, Oregon, August 23, from 7 to 9 p.m. All friends and relatives are invited to attend either of these receptions. The bride-to-b- e graduated from Sheldon High School, attended BYU, and served an LDS mission in the Chicago South Mission. She presently teaches at American Heritage School in Pleasant Grove. The prospective groom graduated from American Fork High School. He served a mission in the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission and currently attends BYU. After honeymooning at the World's Fair in Vancouver, the young couple will make their first' home in Provo. Michael D. Peterson Ko Janice E. Bowman 1 ser Leslee Hansen, Kenneth Fisher to exchange vows in Temple " """1 ' , 3 ' - .!,, 1 - 1 L (, i I V Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hansen of Lindon are pleased to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Leslee to Kenneth Fisher, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fisher, Waldport, Oregon. The couple will exchange vows in the Provo LDS Temple on August 1, 1986. A reception will honor the newlyweds on August 1 from 7 to 9 p.m. at The Bungalow, 235 South 100 West, Pleasant Grove, Utah. All friends and relatives are invited to attend. Attending the bride will be Shellie Eggett, Lisa Hone, Barbi and Heidi Hansen. Best man duties will be per-formed by Marc Nicholes with Frank, Kevin and Jim Fisher serving as ushers. The bride-to-b- e is a graduate of Pleasant Grove High School. She has been employed by Bucks and Bulls of Lindon. The prospective groom is a graduate of Pleaant Grove High School and LDS Seminary. "He has been employed by Hansen Con-struction. The couple will make their first home in Eugene, Oregon. Kenneth Fisher Leslee Hansen Wedding bells to ring for Cheryl Ann Cook, Jeffrey T. Hoyt Sat. Cheryl Ann Cook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Cook, Pleasant Grove will marry Jeffrey T. Hoyt, son of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Hoyt, American Fork on Saturday, Aug. 2, 1986. A reception will honor the couple that evening from 7-- 9 p.m. at the Bungalow, 235 S. 100 West, Pleasant Grove. The event is open to all friends and relatives. Bridal attendants are Cindy Smith, Julie Hoyt and Cari Cook, with Chantell Cook and Alisha Hoyt as flower girls. Best men will be Randy Hoyt, Wade Bennett and Chris Cook. The bride-elec- t graduated from Pleasant Grove High and is em-ployed in Provo. The future groom graduated from American Fork High School and is employed in orem. The couple will make their home in Pleasant Grove. Jeffery T. Hoyt Cheryl Ann Cook a.n Lucille Walker celebrates 80th birthday the " ' ' ' f V" ' 'V ' H 6. ' i ' ' f The family of Lucille Walker honored her with a family dinner and picnic on her 80th birthday Saturday. She was born on July 26, 1906 in Lindon, a daughter of Hyrum and Mary Bezzant Wright. She was raised in Lindon and Pleasant Grove and graduated from Pleasant Grove High School. She graduated from Brigham Young University and received her teaching certificate. She taught school for three years and then began her family. She substituted as a teacher over the years, however. She married Calvin Walker on ' Aug. 29, 1929 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. They lived in Duchesne, Lehi, and Pleasant Grove. Calvin died on April 18, 1980, after the couple had been married for nearly 51 years. She has always been an active member of the LDS Church and has served in various positions in the auxiliaries of the church over the years. She served in the Timpanogos Stake Relief Society Presidency for several years. She served in the PTA in various capacities, also. She and her husband were set apart as temple workers when the Provo Temple opened and served in that capacity until they had to be released for health reasons. Lucille enjoys doing handwork and likes to spend time with her family. She is the mother of eight children and has 55 grandchildren and many Her children are Dee Walker, North Augusta, So. Carolina; Mary Jean Caldwell, Snowflake, Ariz.; Nancy Spurlock, Mesa, Ariz.; Glen Walker, Kaysville; Jim Walker, Delia Davis, and Jerry Walker, Pleasant Grove; and Kent Walker, Springville. She has one sister, Emily Tyler, Salt Lake City. Three brothers Lucille Walker ; Clifford, Harold and Donald Wri: I are deceased as are several k brothers and sisters. Open house to honor Alice L. Johnson on birthday On Friday, August 1, the family of Alice L. Johnson will honor her with an open house to celebrate her 80th birthday. The event will be held at the Provo 23rd Ward, 1398 E. 800 South. Mrs. Johnson is a retired school teacher, having taught in Minnesota and Oregon before moving to the Provo area 15 years ago to live her her family. For seven years Mrs. Johnson ' lived in Pleasant Grove, where she was a member of the 2nd Ward of the Timpanogos Stake. She has three living sons, Richard (Rick) K. Johnson, Provo; Larry Johnson, Orem ; and Edgar (Ed) A. Johnson, Aurora, Colo. Mrs. Johnson has 12 grand-children and four great grand-children, most of whom live in the ProvoOrem area. Her family invites all her friends to this open house which will be held from 4 to 7 p.m., with a short Alice L. Johnson program scheduled at 6 p.m. No gifts please. Local students named to honor roll A total of 200 students earned honor roll status spring quarter at Southern Utah State College. Thirty-fiv- e of the 200 students named to the Dean's list earned straight "A" averages. To be named to the SUSC Honor Roll, a student must be enrolled fulltime, taking 15 credits or more, and earn a quarterly grade point average of 3.60 or above. . "SUSC grades on a plus and minus system," Registrar Barbara ' Young indicates. "A 4.00 GPA is a straight 'A' average while a 3.60 GPA is approximately an 'A- -' average." Local students on the honor roll include Sydney C. Lundberg, home economics education from Lindon and Katherine A. Larson, theatre arts from Pleasant Grove. New weed threatens Utah agriculture A weed that has gained a foothold in Utah could cause tremendous losses unless it's controlled soon, warns a researcher with the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station. The weed, leafy spurge, has already infested millions of acres in the U.S. and Canada, and ap-proximately 1000 acres in northern Utah, says John Evans, a plant scientist with Utah State Univer-sity. "It's nearly impossible to kill the weed once it establishes extensive carbohydrate reserves in its roots," Evans warns. The weed, which is two-thre- e feet high, throws seeds as far as 20 feet when seed pods burst, and also spreads via roots. New shoots develop even after topgrowth is removed. The drought-toleran- t, herbicide-resista- weed eventually crowds out other plants on pastures and ranges. It is somewhat com-petitive with cultivated crops. Currently approved herbicides offer only limited control, and more-poten- t, restricted herbicides are required. Researchers with the Experiment Station are testing new herbicides and helping develop effective biological controls. Cattle won't eat the weed. Sheep will eat the weed early in the grazing season, which apparently doesn't control the isolated patches of the weed, but may help limit spread on remote areas where the weed has crowded out other vegetation. The weed appears to be a hybrid of at least two species, a factor which has made control more difficult. Several types of insects have been released in other states in an at-tempt to control the weed. "These insects do a reasonably good job in the plants they attack, but unfortunately they don't attack all plants," Evans says, an in-dication that insects detect dif-ferences in the chemical com-position of the weeds. USU researchers are using a unique type of mass spectometry to detect these chemical differences, information that will help evaluate the feeding preferences of insects considered as biological controls. USU weed control specialists hope to stem the spread of leafy spurge and avoid the damage associated with Dyer's woad, a weed that has spread rapidly over the state and is now found even on remote moun-taintop- Leafy spurge seeds are not wind-born- e so seed dispersal tends to be slower than with Dyer's waod. Actions during the next few years will determine how far the weed spreads. Evans says the weed probably has the potential of moving over the entire state, and will be particularly difficult to control once it infests rangelands. So far, most infestations are found on more accessible agricultural land. While it's too late to control the weed this year, Evans recommends identifying infested areas now for treatment next year. A leafy spurge conference in-volving researchers from several states was held July 10 in Wyoming. The threat posed by the weed is reviewed in the Summer 1986 issue of "Utah Science," a quarterly publication of the Utah Agricultural Experiment Station. Shop at home in PL Grove! IT I mm pany, 650 E. State, American Fork 756-246- Natii Fine Ladies Apparel 8 rer The and avi ate J IvinsA S mcrm ( 13 East Main, American Fork 756-580- 6 Jr. Size Fashions 3 mi ails vm mimm (amsmi (THE AWESOME MUD BOGS COMING AUGUST 10TH.I o ' zzzzzziz: ilSSS? frk SARATOGA RACEWAY f "KAMIKAZI" w0- - water slide --Coming Nex- t-nkl,? J y Western National Sang Drags! Relax and Enjoy Aug"st lst' 2nd' 3rd j 0" Giant Hot Pool. !ife?)rti SARATOGA h ' OPEN DAILY NgQAGUIW 10 AM-- 9 PM lvN ..A b 4 Natural Warm Spring Vx' J yC r Swimming Pools, Kiddie y-- Rides, Mini Golf, Camp- - rTTTTtTir; in9' Arcade, Go Karts. UjjLlijLty S Snack Bar |