OCR Text |
Show ee = Class Notes a_ business MRS. BRIAN M. THACKER, who received a Management-Administration degree from Weber State College in 1969, has been appointed to the Hospital Administration at Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, Calif. WATKINS has been C. appointed DELAHUNTY has MRS. been USAF JOHN H. DEAN has been named manager of the Hill Air Force Base branch of First Security Bank of Utah. He joined First Security as a night teller and enrolled in _the First Security management training program of 1974. He is a graduate of Weber ‘State College and completed courses through the American Insitute of Banking. eee ee —_—" SMITH graduated with a medical degree from George Washington University in Washington. He specialized in obstetrics and gynecology. Upon receiving his degree, he will be com. missioned a captain in the army and take up residency at «Fitzsimmons General Hospital, Denver, Colo. He received his bachelor degree from Weber State College. PARLEY N. BUTLER, a Weber State College graduate, has been named assistant manager of Commerical Welding Co., Provo. He was formerly controller for Magic Pan, Inc., San Francisco. GEORGE MAXWELL has been appointed as first full-time property master at the Unviersity of Utah Pioneer Memorial Theater. Mr. Maxwell is a graduate of Weber State College. oa fe eS Ea a E. LAMAR BUCKNER was chosen RUSSELL (PHYLLIS BROWN) ROBERT B. (NORMA CREER) as president of the LDS CaliforniaSacramento mission. He assumed the position in July . A president of Buckner Insurance Counselors in Ogden, Pres. Buckner is a graduate of Weber State College and BYU. He is a past-president of each school’s alumni association. CAPT. CLARK CARL JOHNSON, a 1967 graduate of Weber State College, has been awarded his MS degree in human resources management by the University of Utah USAF in Europe Campus program. He is now assigned at Bitburg ae Germany, as an administrative oficer. FIRST JOHN A. MEDINA has been named the state’s Chicano ombudsman. His goal is to broaden opportunities for Utah’s 53,000 Spanish-speaking citizens. He was named to the position by Gov. Calvin Rampton. Mr. Medina, a 1969 graduate of Weber State College with a degree in marketing and business management, is the owner of La Tiendita Variety Store in the Ogden IRS Center. He will provide liaison between the governor and Spanish-speaking community in all areas of the state. He hopes to broaden the economic base, promote democratic law enforcement and develop better school services for bilingual children. D. the HARBERTSON will accompany her husband, who has been called to preside over the newly organized LDS California Fresno Mission. Mrs. Harbertson received an associate degree from Weber State College and a B.S. degree from USU as well as graduate work at BYU. named to the staff of the Utah Law Review at the University of Utah College of Law. He will be law and book review editor. He attended Weber State College and is a graduate of Ogden High School. WALLACE started MARRIOTT is national ‘“‘Mother of the Year.”’ A resident of Kensington, Maryland, Mrs. Marriott is a former Ogden resident and a graduate of Weber State College and the University of Utah. She is the sister of Mrs. Ross L. Olsen and Doris M. Wright, both of Ogden. Her appointment has brought her to the Ogden area on speaking engagements as well as to other locations throughout the United States. She is the mother of three sons. director of the Clearfield Job Corps Cent ‘r. Mr. Watkins who has a bachelor’s degr2e from \Yeber state College and a masters dezrze fio. 1 the University of Utah, has b2en a:sociated with the Clearfield Job Corps Center for the past. eight years. His most recent position was director of group life. ROBERT MEREDITY RICHARD G. DIAMOND has been named “Outstanding Young Man of 1975’’ by the Ogden Jaycees. He is the Pleasant View Mayor and Police Chief and is currently chief administrator of the Meridian Publishing Co. Mr. Diamond is a Weber State College graduate with a degree in business administration. ad- ministration graduate of Weber State College, has been named general manager and assistant treasurer of Lombard Mortgage & Thrift, Salt Lake City. He has been a loan officer, licensed realtor and former general manager of the Lomas & Nettleton C. Branch office in Ogden. MOSE T. LT. MICHAEL D. RICHARDS The WSC museum Allosaurus seems tickled to have his ribs painted. has been named Outstanding Junior Officer of the year at Craig AFB, Ala. He is a member of the Air Training Command. A 1970 graduate of Weber State College, Lt. Richards also received a MS from Utah State University. His wife is the former ‘Janice Patterson. DR. C. GRANT BURTON, executive dean emeritus cf San Jose State University, recently ~etired after 35 years as an administra: xr and teacher in Utah and Galiforni:. Dr. Burton received his early « ducatio:: and training In Ogden, where he was a student at Ogden High School, ’34, and Weber State College, ’36. He taught at Ogden and Lewis High Schools and at the University of Utah before moving to California. C. M HEFFERNAN is a peace corps volunteer in Sierra Leone, West Africa. He graduated from Weber State College in June 1973 with a B.S. degree in political Science. EVELYN DUSSOL has been named branch librarian for the Southwest Branch Library under sconstruction in Roy. She has worked at the Weber County Library since it opened in 1968. She is a Weber State College graduate and is presently working on her master’s degree. DON L. JARDINE, two-time graduate of Weber State College and the University of Utah, received his Ph.D degree from the University of Minnesota in July. Don is associate educational director for Art Instruction Schools and is editor of the Illustrator and Palmer Writer Magazines. Mr. Jardine was art editor of student publications while at Weber and is listed in Who’s Who in the Midwest among others. He and his wife and two sons live in Minneapolis, Minnesota. DAN, THE GORILLA JOINS EXPANDING Se te nn te VACULIN, JOHN ties ati PATRICK DR. practice of medicine at Presbyterian University of Pennsylvania Medical Center in Philadelphia, with a specialty in internal medicine. He received his medical degree from Washington University School of Medicine in May. He graduated from Ogden High School in 1967 and from Weber State College in 1971. lel 6 pt G. JAY BUTLER has opened the Gilliam County Health Clinic in Concon, Oregon. He received an AS degree in nursing at Weber State College and a BS degree from the University of Utah. He has worked as a nurse, pharmacutical salesman and assistant physician. He is currently a Medex and Family Nurse Practitioner at Condon. He is married to the former Carole Parker of Ogden. Thy have three children. MUSEUM by Arlene Wilson Dan, Weber the gorilla donated to State College by LaMar Farnsworth, Hogle Zoo director, will make its home in a museum that is developing by a gorilla and an allosaurus. Earl A. Jenne, assistant zoology professor will reconstruct~ the skeleton. It will be several years before it is completed. If it is possible to preserve the skin, it will be mounted next to the skeleton. The animal died of uremia in July and there was some damage to the skin in attempts to save its life. There are many projects at the museum under development as well as many newly completed ones, according to Dr. H. Keith Harrison, WSC professor of botany “museum and director in the WSC Laboratory Building. All are interesting. of the Science _ Among the completed displays is a 22 foot Allosaurus, plaster cast from an actual skeleton discovered in the Cleveland Quarry, Emery County. Dr. Harrison said the allosaurus was assembled piece by piece and has taken many months to com- plete. The Allosaurus lived 180 million years ago and wasa Car- nivore (flesh eater). While it dominates the museum a much smaller 250-million-year Dimetroden draws attention with its unusual winged back. The museum has purchased a Camptosaurus which is also 22’ in length. It was more sluggish than ~ the Allosaurus and was a_her- bivore (plant eater). Its teeth are not much molars. larger than human Funds are not yet available for the assembly of the Camp(Continued on Page 7) |