OCR Text |
Show Pas;e Ten The Springville Herald January 17, 1974 II , - J I - J If i i ' Speaker at the recent meeting of the Springville Rotary Club was Dean Madsen of Provo. He is shown with Kent Palfrey man, Rotary program chairman. Special classes being offered The Utah Valley Branch Genealogical Library at BYU is offering non-credit classes, requiring no exams and designed for persons desiring a basic approach to genealogical research in specific areas. This is a non-profit arrangement between interested persons and the Utah Branch Genealogical Library. Students can register until January 21 even though classes began January 15. For further information contact Roger Flick at 374-1211, extension 3934. Beginning January 15, 16, and 17, the Utah Valley Branch Genealogical Library will sponsor several classes in genealogical research. They will be taught one night a week for two hours and will last for ten weeks. The registration fee is $10 and can be paid by mail or at the 4th floor Reference desk at the BYU Library. Checks should be made payable to the Utah Valley !IK Me K ?re U I - T I income i ax ana Services END YOUR INCOME TAX WORRIES AND SAVE YOUR MONEY. HAVE A QUALIFIED ACCOUNTANT PREPARE YOUR TAX RETURNS THIS YEAR! Glade E. Binks - 489-5721 ACCOUNTANT AND TAX ASSISTANT 960 East 100 South Springville Thurs., Fri., LADIES' KEDS I lpair$tOT Ladies', Girls' FASHION BOOTS Men's HOUSE SLIPPERS Branch Genealogical Library and sent to the Utah Valley Branch Genealogical Library, 405 JRC Library, BYU, Provo, Utah 84601. Please indicate the name of the class you wish to take, your name, address, telephone number, ward and stake. The following classes will be offered: Beginning Research Ronald V. Jackson. Class began Wednesday, Wed-nesday, January 16, 7-9 p.m., Room 448, JRCL. Research in England Alan Phipps. Class to begin Thursday, January 17, 7-9 p.m., Room 565, JRCL. Research in Ireland Stephen Kendall. Class to begin Thursday, Thur-sday, January 17, 7-9 p.m., Room 526, JRCL. Research in United States-Kip States-Kip Sperry. Class began Wednesday, Wed-nesday, January 16, 7-9 p.m., Room 526, JRCL. Research1 in Denmark Gunnar Christensen. Class began Tuesday, January 15, 7-9 p.m., Room 448 JRCL. f DouiMieepmq Sat. Jan. 17, 18, 19 - 9:30 a.m.to BIG CHOICE OF STYLES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY D. W. Stimpson teaching for USAF in Europe Dr. David V. Stimpson, associate professor of psychology at Brigham Young University is now in Europe where he'll be teaching master's degree classes at three U.S. Air Force bases under contract from the University of Utah. While on leave from BYU until the end of the summer, Dr. Stimpson, will teach at three bases during the winter, spring, and summer terms. They are Bitburg AFB, near Frankfurt, Germany; Upper Heyford AFB near Oxford, England; and Torrejon AFB, near Madrid, Spain. He will teach courses in organizational behavior and management. The well-known social psychologist spent a year in Washington, D.C., three years ago with the Internal Revenue Service as a management development specialist and organizational development consultant with the national IRS office. A native of Provo, Dr. Stimpson Stimp-son earned B.S. and M.S. degrees from BYU and the Ph.-D. Ph.-D. at University of California at Berkeley in 1964, joining the BYU faculty the same year. He served a New England States mission for the LDS Church and was drafted into the Navy during the Korean War. His wife and three young sons will join him next week in Germany. Utah hosts winter birds Some of Utah's winter bird visitors that one might look for are the American bald eagle, rough-legged hawk, snowy owl (infrequent), Barrow's goldeneye, common goldeneye, ring-billed gull, winter wren, Bohemian waxwing, northern shrike, evening growbeak, gray-crowned gray-crowned rosy finch, common redpoll, slate-colored junco, Oregon junco, tree sparrow, Harris sparrow, golden-crowned sparrow, swamp sparrow, McCown's longspur, Lapland longspur, chestnut-collared longspur and snow bunting. Research in Sweden Carl-Erik Carl-Erik Johansson. Class to begin Thursday, January 15, 7-9 p.m., Room 524 JRCL. Using Libraries for Genealogical Research Don Howard. Classes began Tuesday, January 15, 7-9 p.m., Room 524, JRCL. original 160 No. Main, Sp. " FOR MEN nnd YOUNG MEN " -fp'jt 3$ n ftp f mf Toastmaster H. La Mar Weight (left) talks with Darrell and Georgia Wilson of Springville who were speakers at the Thursday Thur-sday night, January 10, meeting of the Kiwanis Club. They talked to the group, which included the wives for "ladies night", about their experiences during the two years they spent in Tonga. The next meeting is tonight, January 17, at the Memorial Hall. Toastmaster J. Keith Robinson will introduce the speaker, Ralph Harper, director of the region 4 task force. He will speak on drug abuse. HP C) (18 Tami Harding and Julie Hopkinson Junior high honor At the Junior High we have four new honor students. For the eighth grade girl we have Julie Hopkinson, daughter 6 p.m. price! Fork Gary Huntington and Miles Kimball citizens named of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hopkinson. Hopkin-son. Julie enjoys swimming and horseback riding in her spare time. She also sews many of her own clothes. Julie has six brothers and three sisters. For the eighth grade boy we have Miles Kimball, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kimball. Miles likes to read and play chess in his spare time. He also was on the Snow Dairy football team. Miles plays the violin in orchestra and the piano at home. Miles has three sisters and three brothers. For the ninth grade girl we have Tami Harding, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Harding. Tami is one of our freshman cheerleaders. She also enjoys waterskiing and riding her horse Lady in her spare time. She was on the softball team last year and the volleyball team this year. For the ninth grade boy we have Gary Huntington, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Huntington. Hun-tington. ' Gary enjoys playing basketball, and he was on the Quality Cleaners team last season. Gary plays the clarinet in the band. He has one sister and two brothers. Mid-Month Specials FILING SUPPLIES W-2 FORMS FILE CABINETS Utah Office Supply If I South Main Strati SPRINGVILLE 69 Eait Cantar Siraat PROYO Students search Wasatch Front A search for fossilized Ice Age mammals along the shores of old Lake Bonneville in Utah will get under way when weather permits per-mits Dr. Wade E. Miller and some Brigham Young University graduate students to begin digging thir; spring. Dr. Miller, a well-known associate professor of geology and zoology who has done considerable research at the Rancho La Brea tar pits in Southern California, has received a grant of $4,555 from the National Geographic Society to search for the early Utah mammals. "Little research has been done up to the present time concerning con-cerning the Pleistocene (Ice Age) vertebrates contained in deposits in old Lake Bonneville," Bon-neville," Dr. Miller said. He and his crew will begin looking in sand and gravel pits, as well as rock quarries along the Wasatch front old shorelines of Lake Bonneville. Interestingly In-terestingly enough, all three major universities in Utah are built on the old lake shoreline. Dr. Miller, since coming to BYU in 1971, has acquired the skeletons of many modern animals including bison, wolf, musk ox, camel, mountain lion, and others that have lived in the area. Since not much work has been done in Utah to find Ice Age mammals, Dr. Miller will try to find specimens to compare with animals that appeared on the scene later. "Lake Bonneville, of course, was a Pleistocene lake that filled many of the valleys in the area including Utah and Salt Lake valleys," Dr. Miller said. "Both Utah Lake and the Great Salt Lake are remnants of Lake Bonneville which existed during the last Ice age which ended approximately 10,000 years ago. Evidence suggests that the lake existed for a period of about 100,000 years." Dr. Miller explained that as the lake developed, some of the lower mountains became islands. "There is a strong possibility that animals may have become isolated on these islands in a situation similar to that which developed during the formation of the Mediterranean Sea. "For example, mammoths became isolated on the islands of Sicily and Malta. As a result, a dwarf species of mammoth formed in which the adult animal reached a height of only 2xk feet or a little shorter than a mature St. Bernard dog," the geologist said. Pharmacy Talk by Jerry Ollerton SAFETY CONTAINERS CAN WEAR OUT This new year we are most hopeful that deaths due to accidental taking of medicines by small children will be drastically reduced. The one major reason for this hope is the increasingly widespread use of the new safety containers for most medicines. But, along with this major development in pharmaceutical phar-maceutical packaging comes a new danger. A false sense of security that the safety cap will automatically stop accidents. ac-cidents. But, after prolonged use the closure mechanism on the safety tops can wear out Be aware of this and do not reuse these containers. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people rely on us for their health needs. We welcome requests for delivery service and charge accounts. City Pharmacy 164 South Main Phone 489-5618 Springville 0 ' Current(ly) speaking, about 100,000 of them watts, that is in this large electrical alternator for a diesel-electric railroad locomotive. It's part of a generator set capable of producing 1300 volts for lights, fans, controls and other components as well as the main traction motors. Several hundred of these large cores with 700 feet of wire in 144 individual coils are built each year at Detroit Diesel Allison Division of General Motors in Indianapolis. Nearly 1,000 yards of special tape is used in wrapping the coils to assure extended reliability by preventing exposure of the wire to dust and moisture. f"Cash 'n i Carry I D OIL CO. 875 N. Main, Springville ;KEJ i |