OCR Text |
Show Page Fourteen The Springvillc Stye gprmguttl 3f?ralii MEMBER: UTAH STATEjgASSOCIATION Published Weekly by ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY at 161 South Main, Springville, Utah 84663 PUBLISHER, MARTIN CONOVER Second class postage paid at Springville, Utah 84663 Entered as second class matter at the post office in Springville, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. Springville is a city of 9,000 population. It is particularly noted for its famous art exhibit and road building contractors. Springville has a greater concentration of these contractors than any other city its size in the United States. Its chief industry consists of a cast iron pipe plant, creosote plant, extensive farming, cattle and sheep raising and fruit growing and various types of construction. A state fish and game farm is located in Springville as is a federal fish hatchery. The city has several parts and recreation arras including a beautiful new golf course, and the area is served by two railroads and an airport. Springville is located near the center of Utah Valley at the junction of U.S. Highways 91 and 89, 50 and 6. The scenic Wasatch Mountain Range with many recreation, hunting and fishing areas cove around the east edge of the city; the picturesque City of Mapleton with 2500 population adjoins Springville on the south; beautiful Utah Lake is at the west. Subscription in advance, per year $5.00; per copy 10c EDITORIAL The spirit of liberty "The name of America must always exalt the just pride of patriotism." What better words than these to commemorate the anniversary of the signing sign-ing of the Declaration of Independence! From the lips of George Washington came many admonitions and statements of faith that all of us would do well to recall on this Fourth of July when our nation is fraught with dissension. As for example: ex-ample: "While we are contending for our own liberty, lib-erty, we should be very cautious not to violate rights in conscience in others . . ." And to those who resort to violence to force their viewpoints upon others, or to voice their displeasure dis-pleasure by destroying property, we commend these words of General Washington: "The very idea of the power and the right of the people to establish government presupposed the duty of every individual indi-vidual to obey the established government. . . . Every valuable end of government is best answered by the enlightened confidence of the people, and by teaching teach-ing the people themselves to know and to value their own rights... to discriminate the spirit of liberty from that of licentiousness cherishing the first, avoiding the last and uniting a speedy but temperate temper-ate vigilance against encroachment, with an inviolable invi-olable respect to the laws." Today the President of the United States is seeking seek-ing to end dissension in this nation to bring peace and harmony both within and without our borders. May the American eagle proudly soar aloft a symbol sym-bol of "liberty and justice for all." And may that phrase become a living reality! Any one of a million hotel rooms throughout the world may be reserved by making a 15-second free telephone call. Reservations World with six computer centers, five in the United States and one in Canada, confirms space almost instantly. in-stantly. On request it will determine the availability of a rental car. Spearheaded by James N. Sowers, former American Airlines executive, this new service at One Park Avenue, New York, has a pair of RCA Spectra 7045 computers operating at all times in connection with six reservation centers. Now call your U.S. Savings Bonds pay higher interest. 4 JS 1 Now it's official. Now one of the safest investments in the world brings you new and higher returns. Now your U.S. Savings Bonds pay the highest interest in history: a full 5 per cent when held to maturity of 5 years and 10 months. (4 the first year; 5.20 thereafter to maturity.) Previously, these Bonds earned you only 44 if you held them for seven years. The new interest began June 1, 1969. So all of the Bonds you own, no matter when you bought them, have been collecting higher interest since that time. Those Bonds are still replaced if lost, stolen or burned. You can still buy them through Payroll Savings or the Bond-a-Month Bonds are safe. If lost, stolen, or destroyed, we replace them. When needed, they can be cashed at your bank. Tax may be deferred until redemption. And always remember, Bonds are a proud way to save. Take stock in America. With higher paying US Savings Bonds. t Herald July 2, 1970 - .'C tf"T St plan. Regardless of your other investments, invest-ments, can you think of any easier, better, or safer way to build a nest egg for yourself? It's nice to know that you are doing a little something for Uncle Sam, too. The $52 billion in U.S. Savings Bonds now outstanding in the hands of' millions of Americans go a long way toward keeping your country financially strong. There never was a better time to take stock America. There's a man the place where can start you on jjT' the Payroll Sav- ings Plan right now. vfS pV Looking Ahead by Dr. George S. Benson President NATIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAM earcyrkansl WHO DID WHAT AT KENT STATE? The death of four students involved in mob riots at Kent State University near Cleveland Cleve-land on May 4 gave leaders of the Communist apparatus in the United States a mighty mobilization "cause" and they can be expected to exploit it to the limit. Their big demonstration demon-stration on the Ellipse adjacent adjac-ent the White House in Washington Wash-ington five days later was an open display of their strategy of disruption, rioting, and revolution: first, to bring about unconditional withdrawal of U. S. troops from Vietnam; and, second, to paralyze the normal functioning of American Ameri-can society for ultimate Communist Com-munist takeover. The story of Kent State has not been told. The Communists two years ago chose this mid-America mid-America school, with its more than 20,000 student body drawn mainly from the "middle class," to set a pattern for campus disruption, involvement involve-ment of non-Communist students, stu-dents, and takeover. They began be-gan early in 1968, with their SDS and other revolutionary groups, to create campus strife with non-negotiable demands. de-mands. The revolutionaries were a mere handful of students stu-dents and former students. With the Approval of the Student Stu-dent Affairs Council, and the Faculty Senate, President Robert I. White formulated a strategy for controlling the expected ex-pected trouble the setting up of a protective force including Campus Police, Kent City at From the superintendent's desk As principals feel a need for upgrading the use of materials and equipment, they make a request to take their faculty to the I.M.C. or have personnel from the I.M.C. come to their school to conduct a faculty meeting designed to help teachers improve their skills in the desired areas. Many educationally oriented companies have staff consultants con-sultants for the purpose of instructing in-structing teachers in the use of their materials. This is a fine service which our district is continually using through the I.M.C. Next year, the staff plans to conduct many workshops throughout the year. Teachers may choose to attend a predetermined number of these workshops. It is our hope that through such a progam, instruction in-struction will be upgraded. Production of materials to be used with the many types of equipment currently being used in our district, is a large program in and of itself. The I.M.C. has an up-to-date laboratory which is to be utilized by teachers, students, and citizens. Each school has a smaller production laboratory Police, Sheriff forces, and the Ohio State Patrol, and instant recourse to injunction procedure proce-dure against the troublemakers. trouble-makers. Enemy Offensive The Communist SDS and the Black United Students (BUS) combined and struck the university uni-versity on November 13, 1968, seeking to disrupt the recruitment recruit-ment visits of police departments. depart-ments. President White said: "Campus tensions were on the fringe of large scale disorders for several days. Unfortunately Unfortunate-ly some aspects of the confrontation con-frontation was distorted in the public press. . . . Toward the end of the Winter quarter it became clear that the University Univer-sity would be the target for planned disruptions." Planned disruptions occurred that spring on April 8 and 16, and May 22. President White said: "The SDS is an enemy of democratic demo-cratic procedure, of academic freedom, and of the essential university characteristics of study, discussion, and resolution. resolu-tion. There has to be dismay over the extent of advocacy of property destruction and violence vio-lence on our campuses, coupled with threats of personal per-sonal harm." Communists At Kent During the April (1968) rioting riot-ing at Kent (in which there were arrests, damage, arson, injury to police), self-identified Communist- Bernadine Dohrn, SDS national official, appeared on campus to further incite the revolutionaries. In a firey speech, she called for "radical change through revolution," revo-lution," and said the students needed to carry guns. "I would murder for self-defense, or for. revenge in a sense," she said. She distributed an SDS pamphlet entitled: "The War is On at Kent State." Mark Rudd, who was later to lead devastating attacks on Columbia University, went to Kent State to apitate revolt. Other revolutionaries hurled threats against Kent. Kent State has been in a turmoil since then. There have been many uprisings led by SDS and their comrades, "confrontations" "con-frontations" in which laws were broken, police attacked. Usually fewer than 10 per cent of the student body were involved in-volved in the rioting and attacks, at-tacks, with clubs and bricks, upon police forces. After 62 arrests, a student-faculty plebiscite ple-biscite gave the Administration Administra-tion and its stern but inadequate inade-quate policies an 80 per cent vote of approval. "Kill Your Parents!" But Kent State had been marked as a target by the Communis ts. When they gathered at Oakland (Calif.) last July to push plans for a Communist "Liberation Army" within the U.S.A., Kent State was spoken of as an example of sustained revolutionary activity. In the preparation for the long series of outbreaks out-breaks leading up to National Guard firing into a menacing, brick-throwing, club-wielding and perhaps gun-firing mob, buildings were burned, property pro-perty otherwise destroyed, laws were wantonly broken. Jerry Rubin, revolutionary firebrand convicted for fomenting foment-ing riots in Chicago, was at Kent State at the beginning of the trouble this spring April 11. He told 1,000 students (according to the Associated Press): "We have to disrupt every institution, break every law, we've got to all become criminals." He called for a revolution to overthrow the government, and he challenged his student audience to "kill your parents" as a first step toward the "liberation' of America's youth. A clear-headed examination of the mob attacks upon law and order at Kent, after Rubin's incitations, gives an entirely different picture than the one being beamed to America by major TV and news agencies. Next week we will document each law-breaking activity of the mob at Kent which preceded the firing upon the mob. ( -Hi Dr. Joe A. Reidhead with less specialized equipment. It is our hope to eventually have every teacher knowledgeable of the production skills necessary to function in a modern school situation. College courses are taught regularly at the I.M.C. in the fields of media history, media utilization, media administration, ad-ministration, production of media, and use of audio-visual equipment. Our teachers, as well as interested citizens, are welcome to enroll in any of these courses. As you can see, the program of selection of media, as well as the task of keeping educators current in their instructional practices, is an important responsibility of the I.M.C. During the past five years educational technology has been increasing at such a rapid rate that keeping teachers up-to-date and knowledgeable of their proper use in education becomes a difficult task. This is another responsibility for which the personnel at our I.M.C. has been charged. The I.M.C. has the responsibility respon-sibility of keeping abreast of the many new items of equipment being introduced to the educational market. In a time of apparent prosperity, as well as a time when an emphasis has been placed on educational technology, many good, and some not so good, items of equipment are flooding the market . There are those who would exploit the school's taxpayers for their own financial gain. I have felt that to have one member of the staff who would be responsible to study, evaluate, and recommend certain items of materials that could be purchased for the schools of our district would be worthwhile. It is this responsibility respon-sibility that Mr. Argyle, as director of the I.M.C, has. The I.M.C. is also attempting to have on display all new items of equipment that principals may wish to evaluate for purchase. This, alone, saves hours of valuable time for our principals and teachers. Along these same lines, we are initiating a program this fall whereby every company wishing to introduce their materials to principals and teachers with ultimate purchase i (Business ANIMAL BY-PRODUCTS John Kuhni Sons, buyers of dead and useless animals. Phone 373-7600, Provo. APPLIANCES G. E. Authorized dealers, Hoover vacuums. Friel's, Inc.. Phone 489-5621. AUTOMOBILE REPAIR Overhaul, welding, front end align. Brakes & trans, fluff's" Garage. 38 V. Cen. 489-5621. Tune-up, brakes, wheel bal., lubes, wrecker, welding serv. Springville Garage. 489-6171 BANKING There is no substitute for money in the bank. Central Bank &- Trust Co, 202 So. Mn. CONCRETE Thorn Rock Products For Your Building Needs Ready-Mii Concrete Sand Gravel Road Gravel Fill Dirt Roofing Chips DIAL PROVO 373-6100 DRUGS Prescriptions, fountain. Free delivery. S.O.S. Drug, 214 So. Main, 489-6041. ELECTRICAL WIRING Small or large jobs. Free estimates. es-timates. Williams Electric. Phone 489-5349. TV REPAIR SPARKY'S TV The best in Black and White or Color Repairs Also Radios and Stereos PHONE 798-2571 FLOOR COVERINGS Rugs, carpet, linoleum & tile, expert installation. Friel's 213 South Main, 489-5621. FURNACES FURNACES New and Used COAL OIL GAS A&A Round Oak Furnace Co. Springville 489-6681 Regulations for 'homes' listed Upon request for clarification from the Division of Family Services concerning soliciting money to establish youth homes, boys' ranches and homes for neglected children, the Attorney General has ruled it a misdemeanor to solicit funds for the purpose of receiving or accepting either temporarily or permanently a child for placement for adoption or care without written license from the Division of Family Services. The exception would be if the child in question is a relative as defined by law or has reached the age of majority. The requirement for the issuing of licenses will be strictly adhered to, according to Richard P. Lindsay, Director, Division of Family Services. The requirement is designed to insure adequate living standards, stan-dards, programs for good care of children and proper accounting of donations which has been questioned by individual con-triubtors con-triubtors in the past. Persons contacted by such fund raising organizations are to assure themselves that the soliciting firm is properly licensed. Thelife you could save could well be your own or even that of a loved one if you take the time to learn life saving techniques, says Liberty Mutual Insurance Companies. Many drowning victims could have been saved had someone known the correct safety procedures. More than half the drowning victims in pools are under the age of ten. Liberty Mutual Insurance In-surance Companies advises that children be watched very carefully when in the water. It only takes a few seconds for a child to be in over his head. 1912 US. Coast Guard beings. International Ice Patrol following Titanic disaster in North Atlantic. in mind, must have a clearance from the I.M.C. to visit our schools. This will tend to eliminate the transient salesman as well as the so-called shyster. Many of you may think these rules are somewhat unnecessary, un-necessary, but in a day and age when so many questionable materials and equipment are being infiltrated into school systems, we think that every precaution taken is worthwhile. With the many new items of material and equipment coming into our district, there comes the problem of continually upgrading teachers' proficiency in the use of these materials. It is for this reason that the I.M.C. conducts workshops, faculty meetings, seminars, and college classes. GIFTS China, glass, silverware, small appliances, figurines, etc., at Friel's. 213 So. Mn., 489-5621 GLASS TED'S GLASS 16 North Main Auto Glass, Mirrors,' Window Glass, Shower Doors, Tub Enclosures FREE Pickup & Delivery FREE Estimates 489-6950 GROCERIES Westside Mkt. 241 South 100 West & No Stamps & Cheaper Prices & Friendly Service Hrs.: 7:30 - 9:30 weekly Sundays and Holidays 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. PAUL BEALS, MGR. 489-5411 KEY LIMOUSINE SERVICE TO AND FROM YOUR DOORSTEP DOOR-STEP AND SALT LAKE AIRPORT For information call 374-1402 Fight the heart and hlnnrf vessel deseases by giving generously gen-erously to the Heart Fund. JEWELRY Duke- Jewelry. Watches, Diamonds, Dia-monds, silverware, gifts, watch repairs. 220 S. Main 489-4221 LUMBER Coal Lumber Caitle Gate Dustproof Coal Bennett'i Paint Builders' Supplies Known for Dependability Kolob Lumber 489-5614 33 West 200 South, Springville Wallace R. Alvey Wallace Alvey training at Forbes, Kansas Wallace R. Alvey, son of Mrs. Ivan Felix of 1155 South 700 East, Springville, is participating in a U.S. Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) field training encampment at Forbes AFB, Kansas. During the encampment, cadets become familiar with the life and activities on Air Force bases and can examine career opportunities in which they might wish to serve as officers. Other highlights of the course include survival training, aircraft air-craft and aircrew indoctrination, in-doctrination, small arms training and visits to other Air Force bases. Cadet Alvey is a member of the AFROTC unit at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. He is a 1963 graduate of Springville High School. His wife, Sharon, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Storrs. MDDED& NOW MOVE IN 45 DAYS! Custom factory-built homes can be delivered to you in 45 days, complete with built-ins, carpeting, and custom features JJQQ Financing 275 North 200 West Provo, Utah 374-261 1 Directory LUMBER Utah Service 400 South and Main 489-5686 Coal-Hardware-Lumber Industrial Supplies Tires-Gas-Oil-Stove Oil FREE DEUVCRY Prompt Courteous Service Xickel in pure form, plus eight alloys of the metal are in use today to-day for coinage. MONUMENTS Complete resident shop, low overhead creates high value Memorial Art, Richard Johnson, John-son, 190 N. Main, 489-6440. PAINT. TAPER Treasure Tones Paint at Sanford's Paint & Glass 397 East 400 South, Springville Phone 489-6578 Complete line of GLASS Paint and Wallpaper Do it yourself or save the fust and call us! PICTURES WEDDING PICTURES FAMILY GROUPS F. Keith Davis 489-6017 COLOR from $10.00 I LNEVER HM A TRASH FIRE J I Roger Anderson earns new rank Marine Corporal Roger B. Anderson, husband of the former Miss Susan F. Carter of 236 North 1040 East, Springville, was promoted to his present rank while serving with Marine Force Logistic Command, in Vietnam. Mark Brailsford earns badge One of the Army badges that soldiers wear with special pride is the Combat Infantryman Badge. It recently was awarded to Private First Class Mark K. Brailsford, 20, in Vietnam. Pfc. Brailsford, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Brailsford, 144 S. 200 East, Springville, is assigned as a grenade launcher crewman in Company A, 3rd Battalion, 506th Infantry, 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile). The CIB has been awarded since late in World Ward II for sustained ground contact against an enemy. Mapleton men on USS Detroit Navy Fireman Aprrentice Ted D. Lockhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lockhart of Route 1, Mapleton, is serving aboard the V.S.S. Detroit, a new fleet oiler scheduled for completion July 31 at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Washington. I'ts a good idea to divide home pools by depth lines, suggests Liberty Mutual Insurance Companies. Swimmers suddenly finding themselves in over their heads may be in more than just deep water. readily available Write to STAN ROGERS, our Springville representative, for further information. NAME ADDRESS City PHONE RUBBER STAMPS Rubber Stamps "made to order" "ready-made" or "repaired." All sizes. Prices low. Also official seals and supplies. Art City Publishing Co. "Your Rubber Stamp Center in Central Utah" 161 South Main, Springville Phone 489-5651 UPHOLSTERY Norman's Upholstery, 278 So Main. 489-4387. Free estimates, and delivery. mi Repairing Restyling Recovering WE SHOW SAMPLES IN YOUR HOME CARPET SALES DE'S UPHOLSTERY 1284 EAST CENTER 489-4552 WELDING John's ; Bros. : Welding Spanish Fork ,798-3770 For an estimate on your Ornamental Iron Job PORCHES-STAIR RAILS STEEL FABRICATION GRILLS STEEL ERECTION GATES CUSTOM WELDING BLACKSMITHING 465 West 100 South ; ' Spanish Fork The best way to avoid skin cancer is using caution in the sun. Cover up; wear a hat; use protective lotions. The American Ameri-can Cancer Society says it's just common sense to prevent a common form of cancer. |