
25 minute read
ON DREAMINGS AND TRANSCENDENCE
Abstraction and Symbolism

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Singular Exhibitions Offer Cross-cultural Dialogue at NEHMA
two complementarY exhibitions exploring abstraction and sYmbolism in 20th and 21st century artistic practices from very different areas of the world — the Australian Western Desert and the American West — open this fall at the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art (NEHMA) at Utah State University. Abstraction and the Dreaming: Aboriginal Paintings from Australia’s Western Desert (1971‒Present), featuring historic and contemporary works from private collections, is on view September 12 to December 12, 2015, and Transcendence: Abstraction and Symbolism in the American West, drawn from NEHMA’s distinguished collection, shows from September 1 to May 7, 2016.
Katie Lee Koven, NEHMA Director, said, “Abstraction and the Dreaming and Transcendence propose a reexamination of how we understand and experience art of the last century, shifting away from cultural or geographical siloes toward rich cross-cultural dialogues and multi-cultural histories. These dialogues across cultures exist less as the exception and more as the rule, especially over the last century. Both exhibitions help us understand artists and their work more individualistically, with layers of identity that are complex and distinctive yet, in some ways, connected.”
p Bush Tucker Story, 1971–72 Anatjari (Yanyatjarri) Tjakamarra.
t Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi (1920–1987), Mystery Sand Mosaic, November 1974. Synthetic polymer paint on canvas board. 25.875 x 24 inches. Collection of John and Barbara Wilkerson. © Estate of the artist licensed by Aboriginal Artists Agency Ltd.

Because some of these designs were associated with sacred male-only ceremonies, women were not allowed to participate in art-making. Over time, Papunya artists moved away from the use of symbols toward greater abstraction. The scale of artworks on canvas grew and women began painting, using a markedly more gestural and vibrant style than their male counterparts.


Abstraction and the Dreaming includes more than 50 artworks spanning the emergence of painting at Papunya, a remote Australian Indigenous settlement, to the present day. With fewer than 600 in existence, the “Papunya boards” (1970s) have a singular status within the history of Australian Aboriginal art. The works include both the early paintings on boards and later paintings on canvas and are on loan from collectors John and Barbara Wilkerson, New York (John is an alumnus of Utah State University); Dennis Scholl, Miami; Julie Harvey, Idaho; and Stephen Luczo, San Francisco.
The first Papunya painters were men whose extensive cultural knowledge of ancestral stories, referred to as “Dreamings,” provided the subject matter. Encouraged by a Sydney schoolteacher who provided materials — acrylic paint and masonite boards and, later, canvas — to create permanent works, the artists employed symbols used in other contexts. These included drawing in the sand to accompany storytelling or body painting and constructing designs on the ground for ceremonial rituals. The early “Papunya boards” are descendants of mark-making that dates to well over 100 centuries ago and are the beginning of the Western Desert art movement.
Because some of these designs were associated with sacred male-only ceremonies, women were not allowed to participate in art-making. Over time, Papunya artists moved away from the use of symbols toward greater abstraction. The scale of artworks on canvas grew and women began painting, using a markedly more gestural and vibrant style than their male counterparts. Today, these works are interpreted and experienced as contemporary abstract paintings, stimulating a rich dialogue about indigenous art in the contemporary art world.
Among the artists included are Long Jack Phillipus Tjakamarra, Tim Payungka Tjapangarti, Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Kaapa Mbitjana Tjampitjinpa, Shorty Lungkarta Tjungurrayi, Johnny Warangkula Tjupurrula, Eileen Napaltjarri, Johnny Yungut Tjupurrula, Kenny Williams Tjampitjinpa, Naata Nungurrayi, Walankura Napangka, Makinta Napanangka and Ningura Napurrula.


Left Page Water Dreaming at Kalipinypa, ca. August 1972, Johnny Warangkula Tjupurrula. Top, left Yam Spirit Dreaming, March 1972, Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri.
Top middle Water Dreaming, late 1972, Mick Namararri Tjapaltjarri.
Top right The Trial, 1972, Charlie Tarawa (Tjaruru) Tjungurray.
Bottom Emu Corroboree Man, February 1972, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri.


Showcasing NEHMA’s important collection of modern and contemporary art made in the American West after World War I, Transcendence: Abstraction and Symbolism in the American West includes over 45 works spanning painting, photography, sculpture, works on paper, pottery and mixed media. The exhibition surveys American Indian and non-native artists who employed abstraction and symbolism to convey their experiences and interpretations of the American West. Artists include Edward Corbett, Deborah Remington, Robert Irwin, Sibylle Szaggars Redford, Judy Natal, Jean-Pierre Hebert, Harold Cohen, Raymond Jonson, Helmi Dagmar Juvonen, Julian and Maria Martinez, Lee Mullican, Nampeyo, Henrietta Shore and Takako Yamaguchi. Complementing Abstraction and the Dreaming, the exhibition explores how these artists utilized these genres in various ways to convey responses to place, spirituality and cultural identity.
t The Ninnekah, 1951, Lee Mullican, oil on linen, 50 x 25 in. Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, Marie Eccles Caine Foundation Gift. Photo by Andrew McAllister, Utah State University.
t Raymond Jonson, Watercolor #10, 1938, airbrushed watercolor on paper, 21.75 x 20 inches. Marie Eccles Caine Foundation Gift, © University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque. Photo by Andrew McAllister, Utah State University.
The Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art
The Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art (NEHMA) is dedicated to collecting and exhibiting modern and contemporary visual art to promote dialogue about ideas fundamental to contemporary society. NEHMA provides meaningful engagement with art from the 20th and 21st centuries to support the educational mission of Utah State University. NEHMA offers complementary public programs such as lectures, panels, tours, concerts and symposia to serve the university and regional community. Admission is free and open to the public. Hours are Tuesday‒Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and by appointment. artmuseum.usu.edu/

International Limelight
Two unusual things occurred on Aug. 3: an international cycling event was hosted in Logan and it rained. Hard. All day.
This was the first time a cycling tour stage of this importance had been held in the shadows of Utah State University, and while the unusual mid-summer drenching was not in the plans, it did not dissuade the 211 professional cyclists from competing, nor USU from taking advantage of the spotlight beamed internationally. This included a stunning aerial photograph of the campus posted on the official Tour of Utah website, postings on the university’s social media pages, a university welcome tent at the event expo and serendipitous live helicopter footage as the men made their way past the campus to and from Bear Lake and as the women cyclists raced on a technical 1.5-mile course close to campus. It also included a first-glance at USU’s newly named athletic director, John Hartwell, who participated in the trophy presentations.
The annual event, now nearly a decade old, is one of only five UCI (Union Cycliste Internationale)-sanctioned races. It showcases world-class athletes at various Utah locations for seven days in August, attracting widespread attention as the top international cycling event to follow the Tour de France.


1960s For eight weeks this summer, Peter Kranz ’65 M.S., ’69 Ph.D., was a visiting Professor at Naresuan University in Phitsanulok, Thailand. He was invited by the faculty of nursing to teach basic counseling skills to first- and second-year nurses as well as to do some consulting with both faculty and students on their research projects. In addition, he held classes for students in their development of oral and written skills in English. Roietta Goodwin Fulgham ’71 M.S. was recently elected Western Business Education Association (WBEA) Director to the National Business Education Association’s Executive Board at its convention in Chicago. Fulgham, who began her three-year term in July, will develop and implement plans to advance the importance of business education in strengthening the country’s economy. A professor for nearly four decades at American River College (ARC) in Sacramento, Calif., Fulgham has interacted with students in the business and computer science area. In 2014 Fulgham received the Postsecondary Business Teacher of the Year Award. She also serves as the Small Business Knowledge Communities Convener for the Greater Sacramento area under a grant from the California Community College Chancellor’s Office. Fulgham has been an active member of the NBEA since 1976 and has served on several NBEA committees and held offices through NBEA affiliates at the state, regional, and international levels. She is an active member of the Sacramento Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., and has participated with the local NAACP as a youth advisor. John Stephens ’74 was raised in Vallejo, Calif., and landed at Utah State University on the advice of dear neighbors. He met legendary Coach Ralph Maughan and was offered a scholarship for cross-country and track. Stephens says he loved his time in Logan and cherishes the many friends he made there. After graduation he went to work for the LDS Church in the Translation Department and in May retired after 41 years of service. He and his wife, Michele, then moved to Dammeron Valley, Utah (near St. George), to enjoy the great outdoors with their three horses. Rod Miller ’75 is winner of the Western Writers of America (WWA) Spur Award for his novel, Rawhide Robinson Rides the Range, published by Five Star, of Waterford, Maine. He was also recognized for his poem, Song of the Stampede, a Spur Award finalist. Since 1953, Spur Awards have honored the best in Western literature.
Accessible to adults as well as younger readers, the novel is set on a trail drive from Texas to Kansas. The book is available at many libraries and from booksellers and in December, Five Star will release Rawhide Robinson Rides the Tabby Trail, the second novel to feature the teller of tall tales. This is Miller’s third WWA Spur Award, having previously been recognized for Best Western Poem and Best Western Short Fiction. The League of Utah Writers named him Writer of the Year in 2012. David L. Hutchinson ’77 was recently promoted to executive director of the Sarasota/ Manatee Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO). His multidisciplinary background spans more than 30 years and combines planning, policy and public affairs. Hutchinson served as the agency’s planning manager prior to being appointed executive director.
Before joining the MPO staff in 2011, he served as director of planning for the Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council, and worked for the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) as a senior policy analyst in the Office of Policy Planning in Tallahassee and as intergovernmental liaison in FDOT’s District One Southwest Area Office. Before that he worked in the private sector as director of account services and public relations for Tweed Advertising in Fort Myers, handling accounts related to tourism, planning and engineering and economic development.
Before moving to Florida in 2000, he served as county administrator and as administrator/assistant road supervisor for Grand County in Moab, Utah. He worked as a legislative aide to the San Diego County Board of Supervisors for seven years and as National Public Relations Coordinator for the San Diego Convention and Visitors Bureau. Hutchinson earned a bachelor of science degree in Environmental Studies from Utah State University and a certificate in Gerontology from the Rocky Mountain Gerontology Center. He and his wife, Lupe, reside in Sarasota, Fla., and recently became grandparents.
1970s
Through July 31, 2015
1930s
Cleone S. Boshard ’39, Jun. 16, MO Walter H. Gardner ’39, ’47MS, ’50PHD,
Jun. 11, UT Helen Gudmundson (Burns) ’39 Att,
May 6, UT Maurine Henderson (Criddle) ’39, Jul. 19, UT Louis M. Stuart ’38 Att, Jun. 2, UT Jack C. Thompson ’39 Att, May 6, UT F. Marion Warnick ’38, Jun. 13, ID
1940s
Grant F. Andersen ’43, ’54MS, Mar. 31, CA Phyllis W. Anderson ’46 Att, May 15, UT R. Grant Athay ’47, Jun. 10, UT Bernice Christiansen Baugh ’48, May 1, UT Ross I. Benson ’44 Att, Jul. 21, ID Elaine Stanford Brockbank ’48 Att, Jul. 19, CA Donna Carlson (Burrie) ’41, ’60, May 19, UT LuJean H. Carver ’45, ’74MS, May 23, UT George H. Champ ’49, May 11, UT Carol Clay (Wennergren) ’42, ’64, May 23, UT Ruth Delapp Coates ’43, ’64MS, Jun. 13, UT Ladell Tankersley Danielson ’48, May 2, UT Lola D. Evans ’49 Att, May 19, ID Douglas Farrow ’49, May 8, ID Earl Clark Greenhalgh ’41, Oct. 9, CA Julien G. Griffin ’49 Att, May 14, UT Seth D. Griffin ’48, ’50, May 8, UT Carlene Lindquist Humphreys ’43 Att, Jun. 20 Marion June Knudson (Smith) ’49 Att,
Jun. 14, UT Mary Nelson (Christensen) ’47, May 6, UT O. Edward Ogilvie ’44 Att, May 8, UT Afton G. Pace (Gibson) ’42 Att, Jul. 6, UT President Boyd K. Packer ’49, ’53MS, Jul. 3, UT Donna B. Pendleton (Berton) ’47, May 26, VA Elder L. Tom Perry ’49, May 30, UT Scott Rice ’42 Att, Jul. 4, UT Afton Thompson (Danielson) ’47, Jun. 15, CA James L. VanDerbeek ’42, ’49MS, May 13, UT Clifton J. Wadley ’43 Att, May 23, UT Dorothy Wallin (Jorgensen) ’43, May 5, UT Lydia Willmore (Baxter) ’43 Att, Jun. 16, UT
1950s
Richard C. Baldwin ’58, Jun. 30, UT Rulon Don Banford ’56 Att, Jul. 3, UT Robert S. Bergen ’59, Jul. 27, UT Kenneth G. Broadhead ’57, May 24, UT Grant J. Budge ’51, May 11, OR Maxine W. Burgess ’58, Jun. 3, UT Kendrick Campbell ’56 Att, May 26, UT Barbara Capener (Ward) ’54, Jun. 26, UT Jolene C. Clayton (Call) ’52 Att, Jul. 26, UT Richard B. Clyde ’53, Jun. 13, CA Colonel Robert A. Conlin ’50, May 17, CA Edsel L. Corpe ’51, May 5, NV Russell M. Crawford ’59, May 18, WA Emerson Eames ’58 Att, Jun. 4, UT Bernell W. Evans ’51, Jun. 14, UT Doris Falslev (Hansen) ’59, May 13, UT James D. Fowers ’59, May 15, UT Margaret Alice Foy (Willis) ’57, May 28, UT Bruce K. Gardner ’53, ’61MS, Mar. 4, CO Keith Godderidge ’59 Att, Jul. 24, UT Reed H. Gunnell ’51 Att, May 20, UT Richard Duane Guymon ’57, Jun. 5, UT Arden M. Hansen ’51, Jul. 2, ID Max D. Hodge ’52, May 5, NM Judd Killpack ’50, Jul. 8, OR Theodore B. Larsen ’53, Jun. 30, NM John Sewall Laurie ’50 Att, May 13, NC Laurel W. Lindsay ’58, Jul. 10, ID William Orson Merrell ’55, Jun. 11, UT Floyd G. Meyer ’52 Att, Jul. 13, UT John B. Millard, Sr. ’51, Jun. 15, UT Louis L. Nelson ’55, ’59MS, May 15, UT Marva Lou Niederhauser (Jenkins) ’55 Att,
May 17, OH John C. Paulsen ’55, May 6, UT
Utah State Magazine • 1422 Old Main Hill • Logan UT 84322-1422 • mageditor@usu.edu
Carlo Milton Perkins ’54, Jun. 1, UT Douglas V. Peterson ’58, Jul. 24, UT Vern Gordon Petty ’57, May 2, NV Glenn S. Porter ’54, ’75ME, May 19, UT Leslie W. Rader ’58, Jun. 25, UT Donald L. Rasmussen ’53, Jul. 23, WV Eugene U. Ricci ’58, Jul. 8, FL Veryl Roberts (Hendricks) ’57 Att, Jun. 29, UT Connie Crandall Rudy ’52 Att, May 17, UT Fran L. Sessions (Johnson) ’50, Jun. 24, CA Lt Col Gloyd R. Stanton ’55, Oct. 26, TX Vernal W. Thompson ’53, Jul. 8, UT Lovell J. Turner ’52MS, Jul. 10, ID Monette Welling (Anderson) ’57 Att,
Jul. 5, UT Doyle T. West ’54, May 19, CA Ned A. Whiting ’54, Jul. 21, UT Charles E. Woodbury ’50, Jun. 5, UT Delworth Keith Young ’58, ’67MS, Jul. 6, UT

1960s
James Franklin Allen ’65, May 9, UT Marvin Jasper Anderson ’66, Apr. 29, ID Terry E. Anderson ’62, Apr. 26, MO Cheryl Baker (Patterson) ’69, Sept. 17, AZ Milton Baker ’64, Jun. 9, UT Nadine Bastian (Hunter) ’61, Jul. 13, ID Dean T. Bennett ’63, ’88MED, May 7, UT Marilyn Gee Black ’60 Att, Jul. 26 Garrick R. Bowen ’67 Att, May 5, UT John H. Boyce ’69 Att, May 25, UT Delbert Gene Briggs ’61 Att, May 13, UT Kendell W. Brinkerhoff ’64MS, Feb. 26, UT Marlowe Norvell Butler ’62, Jul. 20, UT Lynn A. Cope ’63, May 7, UT Stephen J. Crane ’65 Att, Jul. 1, ID Louise Degn ’68, May 8, UT Dee Donaldson ’62, Jun. 2, UT Deanne Ercanbrack ’65, May 14, UT Larry W. Holmstrom ’64, Jun. 5, UT DeLoy Johnson ’67 Att, Jun. 18, UT Bruce Jones ’66, May 15, UT Kenneth A. Mangelson ’67, ’68MS, ’72PHD,
May 31, UT Joyce W. Marriott (Walker) ’69, Jun. 2, ID Barbara A. Mcgrath ’67, Jun. 3, CA George Wayne Nason ’61, Jun. 13, NE Richard K. Neves ’68, Jul. 1, ID Caroline B. Patrick (Birdwell) ’66MS,
Apr. 15, AZ Michael W. Perkins ’68, Jun. 14, UT Terry Richard Price ’60, Jun. 28, UT Clair S. Reese ’60 Att, Jul. 18, UT Alan G. Richens ’61, Jun. 7, UT Richard T. Rowley ’65MED, ’70EDD,
Apr. 15, NV Edison Schow ’65, Apr. 23, UT Michael B. Sweet ’63, May 10, ID Karl G. Thurber ’61, Jun. 11, UT John R. Ward ’67MED, May 11, OR Parley Nyman Winn ’66, ’67MS, May 26, UT Rodney E. Wright ’61, Jul. 14, AZ Earl Reed Wyatt ’60, Jul. 23, ID
1970s
Arvil G. Banks ’70 Att, May 1, UT Coralynne Helen Bergstrom ’70 Att,
Jul. 23, UT Cloe Brough ’73 Att, Jun. 26, UT Eleanor Frances Capener (Merry) ’73MED,
Jul. 16, NV Clara Elizabeth Cox ’71MED, May 9, TX Robert L. Gwilliam ’73, May 2, UT Lorraine J. Martinez (Jensen) ’70, Jun. 12, UT Dennis D. Palza ’77 Att, May 25, UT Richard M. Raba ’77, Jul. 26, VA Richard S. Shepherd ’75, Jul. 19, UT Timothy J. Spencer ’75, Jul. 22, UT Cheryl Stone (Palmer) ’72, May 9, UT Francis M. Urry ’74PHD, Jul. 12, UT Clark Willis ’72, ’73MAI, May 8, UT Richard H. Wilson ’71PHD, Jun. 18, FL Colleen Clifford Wirth ’70 Att, Jul. 21, UT Thelma Woodland (King) ’77 Att, Jul. 5, UT Roland L. Zollinger ’76, Jul. 15, ID Walter Gardner
A Return to Earth
Dr. Walter Hale Gardner passed away on June 11, 2015. He was 98 years old. Gardner was awarded the first Ph.D. from the Utah State Agricultural College (USAC), now Utah State University, in 1950 (Dr. Than Myint, deceased, also received his doctorate that year).
Gardner was part of an accomplished era of soil scientists that sprung from USU, originating with his father, Dr. Willard Gardner, a physicist from the University of California Berkeley, who was lured to Utah by noted scientist and author John A. Widtsoe, also an apostle for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Widtsoe maintained his own interest in irrigation and science to help further agricultural development in the West. Willard Gardner applied traditional physics to soils and irrigation, transforming the agricultural industry.
While chair of the physics department at Utah State, Willard Gardner coached and challenged his son, who of his own merit, developed a remarkable talent for math and science. After completing his bachelor’s degree at USAC, he elected to do graduate work at Cornell University, perhaps the preeminent agricultural school of the time. His love for Cache Valley lured him home prior to graduation, however, and he finished both his crowning degrees at Utah State.
Walter Gardner relocated to Pullman, Wash., where he pursued a faculty position researching and training aspiring scientists. Both he and his father directly influenced other Aggie soil scientists, including Dr. Gaylon Campbell (’65), who went on to found Decagon Devices, and Eric and Evan Campbell, founders of Campbell Scientific, Inc., both multinational companies with Cache Valley ties.
Gardner’s contributions to soil science include the ubiquitous and ever-relevant text Soil Physics, as well as the time-lapse movie, Water Movement in Soil. His contributions changed the way many scientists and industrialists understand the non-intuitive way water moves through soil. He was likely also the inventor of the tension infiltrometer, a scientific instrument widely used in the field. Gardner constructed the device as an undergraduate student running the physics shop at USAC. Soil Science at Utah State University is still internationally celebrated.
— Joshua Paulsen
1980s
Robert F. Chandler ’80MS, May 5, ID Tom Madill ’85, Jul. 14, CA Michael Scott Maughan ’89 Att, May 15, UT David Leroy Ottley ’84MS, May 16, UT Eric T. Peterson ’82 Att, May 6, UT Blayne G. Rounds ’84, May 2, ID Jeannette E. Spencer (Robison) ’87,
Jul. 10, UT Garth Stockton ’85, Jul. 23, UT Lois Thomas (Doran) ’81MED, Jun. 27, UT Max Tolman ’87, ’90MED, May 19, UT Leah P. White ’84, May 21, AZ Lynnette G. Wolfley ’87, Jul. 9, NV
1990s
Ronald Banks ’92MSS, Jun. 14, UT Doug W. Beutler ’90 Att, Jul. 13, UT Michael E. Devenport ’91, ’93MS,
May 17, UT Amber Edwards ’96 Att, Jul. 28, UT April Barker Jensen ’98, ’09MS, Jul. 26, UT Kent P. Johnson ’91, Jun. 3, UT Donna-Lee Massine ’91EDS, May 19, CO Carlene V. Montgomery ’95, Jun. 22, PA Monique Penman (Greenwell) ’90,
May 13, UT Verlene Rae Schafer ’97 Att, Jul. 25, UT Karen Whiting ’98MS, Jun. 2, UT
2000s
Bart Bateman ’06 Att, Jun. 11, ID Mitchell M. Bennett ’08MAC, Jul. 26, WA Jamie Brown ’00, May 1, UT Mark W. Izatt ’01 Att, Jul. 24, UT Trevor Barton Linderman ’08, May 29, UT Christopher Jordan Manning ’07, Jul. 22, UT Melanie M. Thorpe (Monk) ’00 Att,
Jun. 27, UT
2010s
Jamie J. Abshire ’14 Att, May 15, UT Anthony Asay ’12 Att, Jun. 26, MT Tiffani Renae Balling ’13, Jun. 19, UT Kelsi Shawn Craven ’14, Apr. 30, UT Matthew Del Grosso May 21, MD Alex J. Eastvold ’10 Att, May 31, UT Jesse D. Fetzer ’15 Att, Jul. 27, UT Richard George McKenzie ’11, ’14MS,
Jun. 25, UT Hayden Wariner Morgan ’15 Att, Jun. 22, UT Gloria Louise Nudelman ’13, Dec. 20, CA Jennifer Tran ’13, Apr. 29, UT Anthony C. Wyatt ’13 Att, Jun. 23, UT
FRIENDS
George Abeyta Jun. 13, UT Ruth Anderson May 30, UT Sharon Baker May 12, UT Gene Barbiero Jul. 28, UT Roger Barker Jul. 29, UT Charles R. Batten Apr. 1, CO Paul A. Beck Jun. 29, UT Gary Bent Jul. 3, CO Carolyn Brauer May 7, WA Clark M. Brenchley May 14, UT Marylyn Brush Jun. 26, UT Jack Adin Byers May 3, CA Don Call Jul. 10, UT LuDene B. Campbell Jul. 14, UT Miriam Cochran May 17, UT Kaye Coleman Jun. 26, UT Fay Cope May 9, UT Ann Crandall Jun. 20, UT Cline Dahle Jun. 25, UT Jerry Downs Jul. 17, UT Seth L. Downs Jul. 28, UT Rosetta M. Duncan Apr. 26, UT John Echer May 19, UT Wilfred Ellis May 29, UT Bud Fausett Jul. 11, UT William N. Fenimore Jun. 21, UT Nannette M. Ford Jul. 23, UT Linda K. Frodsham Jun. 22, UT Gene Fullmer Apr. 27, UT Dan S. Gardiner, Jr. Apr. 29, UT Mary Ann Gardner Jul. 23, UT Steve E. Garner Jun. 12, UT Max G. Gibson Jun. 26, ID Nina M. Goodrich Jun. 2, UT Douglas Gottfredson Jul. 11, UT Zane R. Gray Jun. 2, UT Ora Etta Gubler (Hoffman) Jul. 12, UT Stella B. Hampton (Bitton) Jun. 26, UT Darel H. Hansen May 21, UT Nils Harris Jul. 10, ID Wayne M. Hebertson Jun. 9, UT Margaret Herrera Jun. 12, UT Dennis Hicks Jun. 28, UT Marilyn S. Hill Jul. 5, UT DeVone Hoggan (Andreasen) May 14, UT Ray Horsley Apr. 28, ID John Hottel May 10, UT Katherine M. Hunter Jun. 14, UT Boyd Ivie Jun. 18, UT Lowell D. Jenkins Jul. 10, UT Craig H. Jessop Feb. 9, UT Beverly J. Karren Jul. 2, UT Danny B. Kilpatrick May 13, AZ Janice Marriott Lamb Jun. 8, UT Susie Larsen Jun. 30, UT J. William Lindauer Jun. 11, UT Douglas J. Lindley May 8, CA Steven C. Lindley Jul. 9, UT Ralph Eldon Long Jul. 20, AZ Enoch A. Ludlow Jun. 3, UT Albert Martin Apr. 30, UT Walter Masuda Jun. 12, UT Rosalind J. McGee Jun. 16, NC Donna B. McKay May 17, UT John W. McMahon, Sr. Apr. 28, MT P. Irene Mendini Jan. 9, UT Sherm Miller Jul. 2, UT Helen B. Mixa Apr. 16, UT Jon R. Moris May 30, UT Timothy S. Morley, Sr. May 26, UT Evelyn Morrow Apr. 26, UT Tony Nelson Jul. 2, UT Joy Nieman May 3, UT Bonnie A. Olsen May 24, UT Nalin R. Patel Mar. 2, UT Ronald S. Patterson Jun. 6, UT Isabelle B. Peterson May 6, UT Lloyd M. Pierson May 4, UT Virginia Potter May 24, UT Peter Prier Jun. 14, UT Laurie Pritchard Jul. 3, UT Randell Ranson Jul. 1, UT Juanita G. Reed (Bachman) Jun. 23, UT C. Lavar Rockwood Jul. 23, UT Kelly Roll Jul. 19, UT Robert S. Rumel Apr. 28, UT Dale C. Smith Jul. 6, UT Leone S. Smith Jul. 2, ID Barbara Smoot May 11, UT Glenda Sorensen Jul. 7, UT Marilyn H. Stevens Jul. 20, UT Elizabeth H. Swan Jul. 21, ID Lorraine B. Tatton (Bellodi) May 17, NV Trudie Taula May 23, KS Jolene C. Taylor Jun. 8, UT Susan Thackeray Feb. 28, UT Wendy Tillmann May 20, UT Judy Turner May 7, UT Charlene Udy Jul. 25, UT Richard Vega May 15, UT Lynn Walker Jun. 16, UT David W. Warner Jun. 2, UT Loren D. Westenskow Jun. 29, UT Shirley V. Williams Jul. 21, UT Carl Woolsey May 5, UT
ATTENDERS
Elaine Letteier Aikens Att, Jul. 18, UT Doug C. Aldridge Att, Jul. 14, UT Myrle Elsie Allen Att, Jul. 15, UT Iven Lowell Alsop Att, Jun. 3, Edward Frank Aspitarte Att, Jul. 20, ID LaPriel P. Barraclough (Palmer) Att,
Jun. 24, UT Jennie R. Begaii (Willetto) Att, Jun. 16, UT Donna R. Bell (Richens) Jul. 5, UT Lillian Best Att, May 20, UT Danny Bordea Jul. 11, UT Richard K Brock Jun. 24, UT Delores Burton (Birch) Att, May 25, ID Doris Karren Burton Att, Jun. 17, UT Larry J. Christopherson May 12, TX Bruce J. Clegg Att, May 19, UT Boyd Jay Conley Att, Jul. 16, UT Mary A. Davis Att, Jun. 19, UT Toni H. Day Att, Jun. 12, UT Cleve Merrill Dibble Att, Jul. 4, UT Danny D. Dufur Att, Apr. 15, UT Marva Johnson Empey Att, Jun. 23, ID Jeff L. Eskelsen May 20, UT Stefan B. Feichko Att, May 24, UT Marilyn K. Fielding (Kelley) Att, Jul. 22, ID Ethel Leone Fletcher (Woolley) Att,
Jun. 16, UT Darlene W. Frandsen (World) Jun. 22, UT Larry Freeman Att, Jul. 21, UT Chet Goodrich Att, Jun. 3, UT Doris Duvall Goodrich Att, Jul. 7, UT Milan Grant Att, May 19, UT Richard Gunderson Jul. 8, UT Wayne Robert Hagg Att, Jun. 30, IL Gerald D. Hanes Att, Jun. 9, UT Collin L. Hansen Att, Jun. 27, UT Larry D. Hatch Att, May 15, UT Richard Obed Haycock Att, May 6, UT Mildred M. Heaston (Madsen) Jun. 29, UT Shanna Lee Hemmelgarn (Wheelwright) Att,
Jun. 29, UT Gary L. Hone Att, Apr. 28, ID Rosanne Jewkes Hooley Jul. 28, UT Lois Savage Hugie Att, May 21, UT Ira J. Jackson Att, Jul. 24, AZ Treva Johnson (Harper) Att, Jun. 13, UT Eleanore Montgomery Jones Att, May 8, UT Bernard Elden Knapp Att, May 29, UT Richard Kosec May 30, UT Gloria Mazie Lee Att, Jun. 6 Pearl Frost Lewis Att, Jun. 3, UT Marie Loosle (Spencer) Att, Jul. 23, UT Edward R. Lopez Jul. 20, UT Dewean S. Lund Att, Jul. 16, UT Bonnie Brooke Mahlum (Campbell) Att,
Apr. 29, UT Jacob Martin Att, Jul. 8, UT Charles H. Menzer Att, Jul. 12, NJ Susan Migliori (Waterman) Att, Jun. 24, UT Hans Miller Jul. 2, UT Stanley Ray Moore Att, Jul. 20, ID Eldred G. Mugford Att, Jun. 22, MI Ken Nelson Munk Att, May 26, UT Stacee M. Norton Att, Jun. 24, UT Wendy Smith Nuffer Att, May 30, UT Dale Clair Okelberry Att, May 31, UT Michael G. Pecorelli Att, Jul. 8, UT Charles E. Pettersson Att, May 5, UT Ruth Williams Polatis Att, May 13, ID John E. Popejoy Att, Jul. 4, UT Shawn LaVell Powell Att, Jun. 17, UT Max D Putnam, Jr. Att, Jun. 23, UT Bernell W. Rhoades Att, Jul. 21, UT Reed Leroy Roberts Att, May 30, UT Barbara June Robison (Child) Att,
May 23, UT Mary Corinne Roring (Nielson) Att,
Jun. 4, UT Bruce D. Rusby Att, Apr. 27, PA Lane L. Russell Att, May 22, UT Jamie J. Sanchez Att, Jun. 27, UT Donny T. Sawyer Jun. 21 Beverly Jean Schubert Att, May 14, UT Ted Justesen Scow Jun. 14, AZ Loni Sehrgosha Att, May 14, UT John Lee Smith Att, Jul. 26, ID Russell B. Smith Att, Jun. 21, UT Theron Eldon Smith Att, Apr. 30, WA Joyce McCleery Stauffer Att, May 21, UT Randy M. Stevenson Feb. 25, CO Theron Oleen Stokes Att, May 14, UT Preston D. Tilley Att, Jun. 30, ID Patty Ann Tollis Att, May 30, UT Dennis Tuttle Jun. 15, UT John R. Voorhis Att, Jun. 19, MT Buddy D. Ward Att, Jul. 19, ID Georgia Warner (Jerant) Apr. 24, NV Vern Weiss Att, Jul. 1, AK Vivian Niel White Att, Apr. 25, CA Clair Montell Wickham Att, May 16, Kerry L. Willardson Att, May 9, UT Reid Wilson Att, Jun. 28, UT Emily Wright Jul. 8, UT Yoshikazu Yoshimine Att, Jun. 9, AZ Troy Young Att, Jun. 13, UT