OCR Text |
Show Page Six - The Pyramid - December 31, 1997 Nora Lynn Shelley, James Booher plan temple wedding ampete Life FAIRVIEW Bryan and Ruth Ann Shelley announce the marriage of their daughter, Nora Lynne Shelley, to James Edward Booher, son of Dan and Sharon Booher, Bountiful, on Friday, Jan. 2, 1998, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. A reception will be held in their honor that evening from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Fairview First LDS Ward, 122 South State Street. An open house will be held on Jan. 10, from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Bountiful LDS Tabernacle, 51 South Main Street. The bride is a graduated from North Sanpete High School and LDS Seminary. She also attended Snow College. She served in the Argentina Neuquen LDS Mission. She works in Salt Lake City. The bridegroom is a graduate of Viewmont High School. He attended Seminary and served in the Bolivia LDS Mission. He is employed :" Magna. They will make their home in Bountiful. Anthony Vogt, Penny Ballow to say wedding vows NEPHI-- - Brad and Betty Ballow announce the marriage of their daughter. Penny Jean Bal- Penny Ballow, Anthony Vogt low, to Anthony Michael Vogt, son of Michael and Janette Vogt, Fountain Green, on Friday, Jan. 2, 1998. An open house will be held in their honor that evening from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center, 146 North Main Street, Nephi. The bride is a graduate of Juab High School and is currently enrolled at Von Curtis Academy in Provo. Her grandparents are Pete and Melba Ballow, Levan; and Melda Fackrell, Nephi. The bridegroom is a graduate of Hunter High School and is currently employed by Allumax in Spanish Fork. His grandparents are Elwood and Elisabeth Justice, Leland, NC; and Dwight and LaVerda Bingham, Moreland, ID. The couple will make their home in Nephi. Suspects at large Continued to page 1 vehicle the traveling in. Suspects include. Santiago Nunez Mendez, 26, a male Hispanic, 5 8" (68") tall and weighing 170 lbs.; and Santiago Garcia. 22, 5' 5" (65), 145 lbs. Both men have brown eyes, black hair and mustaches. Their vehicle is believed to be an '82 to 84 brown and tan Ford 250 pickup with a missing tailgate and broken wing window. The license plate is unknown. Anyone having information about the suspects is encouraged to call the Sheriffs Office Nicholas W. and Janet C. Welch, Fairview, have been called to serve in the Hawaii Honolulu LDS Mission. They will speak in the Fairview First LDS Ward, 122 South State, on Jan. 4 at 12:50 p.m. They will enter the SMTC on Feb. 17. Looking back at 1997 Continued from page 1 Salt Davis, Morgan, Lake, Utah and Weber counties are the only areas with the 801 area code Fairview business award Central Utah Telephone Company was named Rural Utahs Business of the Year during the Rural Summit Awards Banquet sponsored by Center for Rural Life at Southern Utah University Sept. 3. The award was accepted by Branch Cox and Eddie L. Cox, company owners. The company was begun in 1903 and was purchased by the Cox family in 1919. Local man makes hall of fame Mt. Pleasant resident, D.A. "Swanny" Kerby, was inducted last August into the Pro Rodeo Cowboy Hall of Fame at Colorado Springs, CO. He is the founder of Bar T Rodeos, Inc. New Sleep Inn A new Sleep Inn Hotel which offers additional rooms to those needing overnight accommodations, opened in October. The Ephraim facility offers 57 rooms for guest as well as a hot tub and free continental breakfast. Wales nixes subdivision The first subdivision in Wales is still up in the air after months of disagreements with the developer about plans. Several issues bothered Wales residents and members of the Town Board. Fairview Museum on TV Items from the Fairview Museum of History and Art were included in a documentary that aired on KUED-TSome sites around Fairview were included in the program as well. The show "Gathered in Time was inspired by a book by the same name and featured quilts and quilt makers. Library 80 years old Mt. Pleasants public library celebrated its 80th birthday this year. The library staff hosted an open house which featured old relics from the area and the newest including technology Internet and new materials. Voters approved bond Green residents Fountain approved the overwhelmingly issuance and sale of $300,000 in general obligation street bonds to cover the costs of improvements and repairs to city streets. The first theater in the colonies opened m Williamsburg, Va in 1716. A sense of humor of proportion. -- is a sense Kahlil Gibran at THE GIFT BASKET New Years Sale 4 West 1 00 South, Ftn. Green 1 January 2 & 3 - 2 to 6 p.m. off all crafts , scrapbook supplies , books, balloons , gift baskets & toys 10 Receive a free scenic calendar just for coming in! Free Scrapbook magazine with $15 purchase oiy Friday & Saturday 2 to 6 p.m. m Nora Shelley, James Booher Kristen Kerttula to recite vows with Jake Merrill CEDAR HILL- S- Reino and Maxine Kerttula announce the marriage of their daughter, Kristen K., to Jake T. Merrill, son of Terry and Elona Merrill, Chester, on Friday, Jan. 2, 1998. A reception will be held in their honor that evening form 6 to 8 p.m. at the Wales LDS Chapel 80 South 200 West. The bride is a graduate of American Fork High School. The bridegroom is a graduate of North Sanpete High School. He is employed with Evergreen at the Salt Lake City Airport. They will make their home in Salt Lake City. Hawks fall to Wasatch by Doug Johnson MT. PLEASANT The visiting Wasatch Wasps used a deliberate style of offense and excellent execution to knock off the North Sanpete Hawks 53-4last Monday. Dec. 22. Coming on the heels of losses to Ogden and Bar River in the 2. SUU plans open house RICHFIEL- D- Interested high school and junior high school students from central Utah who may want to attend Southern Utah University (SUU) are encouraged to attend an open house from 7 to 8:30 p.m.. Monday. Jan. at Richfield High 15, School, 510 West 100 South. For more information, contact Sandra Lord at (435) "Parents of potential SUU students are also encouraged to attend, said Sandra Lord, director of high school relations. "We want anyone considering SUU as the place to continue their education to have accurate and timely information about the university. The open house is one way for those interested in SUU to get direct information and to have questions addressed 865-801- 5. face-to-fac- e. Open houses aie especially designed for high school juniors and seniors and students completing work at community and junior colleges Information about university demographics, scholarships, financial aid, on- - and housing, admissions, clubs and and registiation organizations, procedures will be available. Richfield, Dalton, Mindy alumna of SUU and a members of an admissions adviser program established at the university, will be hosting the Richfield open house and helping to provide assistance in understanding programs, policies and procedures of the university. Other open houses are scheduled throughout the state and in Nevada and Arizona. big game Once-in-a-lifeti- me applications due February 2 SALT LAKE CIT- Y- Although Utahs 1998 limited entry bucks, bulls and big game hunts are still months away, applications will be available in the near future. Applications will be accepted, through the mail only, until 5 p.m. Feb. 5. Those with questions may call their regional division office or the Salt Lake City office at 538-470- 0. "Those who applied last year should receive a personalized application in the mail the first week of January," said Judi Tutorow, wildlife licensing coordinator for the Division of Wildlife Resources. Those who received an application in the mail are encouraged to use it when applying and are reminded they are the only ones who can. "Personalized applications contain that persons bonus point hunt status and and may only be used by that person, "Tutorow said. "Hunters may not make photocopies of their personalized application for other hunters to use." Hunters that do not receive an application in the mail by Jan. 7, may pick one up from license agents statewide and at Division offices in Ogden, Salt Lake City, Springville, Vernal, Price and Cedar City. MP Seniors MT. PLEASANT Seniors January calendar is as follows: Jan. 5, Monday, 9 a.m. quilting; 1 p.m. canasta club and blood pressure clinic. Jan. 7, Wednesday, 1 p.m. foot clinic, 3:30 p.m. matinee, followed by treat night at 6 p.m., bring own dishes. Jan. 14, Wednesday, Provo service trip, make reservation by calling Jan. 21, Wednesday, 6 p.m-- . potluck social; membership re- newals will be accepted. 462-267- 0. Jake Merrill, Kristen Kerttula Delta Tournament, the Hawks dropped to three wins and five losses. Still in the before league games begin, the Hawks look to be a much better team than their early record shows and should be a definite force m Region 8. The Wasps raised their record to 4 and 5 with the win. The Wasps were led by senior Jeff Carpenters 21 points, ins. In cluding three the game the Wasps were seven for 15 behind the three-poiarc. The Hawks had balanced scoring with Luke Jorgenson netting 1 1 , Kirt Nunley with nine and Troy Reese adding eight. North Sanpete got off to a quick start with Reese tapping the to Nunley, who opening tip-o- ff fed T.J. Brotherson for a lay-u- p only four seconds into the game. Hawk defense kept the Wasps off the scoreboard halfway through the first quarter, but the Heber City team showed great patience and stayed with its offense until it found open shots. The Hawks couldnt get their short shots to fall in the first half, and that allowed Wasatch to stay in the game. Just before halftime, Luke Jorgenson threaded a gorgeous pass to an open Kirt Nunley under the basket, and North lead at the Sanpete took a 20-1- 7 intermission. Near the end of the first half, Wasatchs 67" center, Travis Vinsentin, sprained his left ankle and could not return the rest of the night. This forced Wasatch to be even more deliberate with their offense in the second half, taking a lot of time off the clock and not wasting any scoring opportunities. In the third quarter, the methodical Wasatch offense forced Sanpete to be more aggressive defensively. The Hawks started to get into foul trouble as Brotherson picked up his fourth personal and Reese was whistled for his third. As the third period ended, Wasatch went ahead, 32 pre-seas- three-pointer- nt to 30. 53-4- 2 Three minutes into the final stanza, Brotherson fouled out of the game, and was followed 30 seconds later by Reese. Playing the Hawks with a smaller lme-ukept the game close. With 1 :28 to go, Jorgenson drove for a lay-u- p and was fouled. The converted free throw put the Hawks down by four at 44-4But the Wasps four corner offense kept the ball away from the Hawks who were forced to foul continuously. The Wasps kept the Hawks at bay from the line, hitting 18 of 23 free throws in the fourth quarter alone. Eighteen of the Wasps 21 final period points p, 0. well-execut- came at the free throw line. In the game Wasatch was 22 of 31 from the stripe versus the Hawks 16 of 26. The Wasps rode their free throw accuracy to the final score of 53 to 42. In the Junior Varsity game, Jeremy Morses 28 points led the Wasps to a 66-5- 5 victory. The Hawks started sluggishly, but closed the gap scoring 28 of their 55 points in the fourth quarter. North Sanpete was led by Garrett Olson with 14 points and Dustin Wardle with 10. After leading 43-2- 3 at the half. North Sanpete sophomores held off a Wasatch second half comeback to beat the Wasps 81 to 71. The Hawks top scorers were Shandon Shepherd with 14 and Devin Shepherd with 12. Sanpete freshmen ran their record to six and one with a 52-4- 2 win over the Wasatch freshmen. Landon Bailey was the high scorer in the game with 18 points, followed by Ben Kamalu with 11. The week before, the Hawk freshmen played Payson in Mt. Pleasant and won 58-4After trailing 25 to 24 at the half, the better conditioned Hawk freshmen outscored Payson 34 to 17 after the break for the win. Landon Bailey again had 18 points to lead the Hawks with Jason Lusty adding eight. 2. The Firm Body Workout is expanding! We can replace auto glass in a flash . . . for less 0 Rock beginning January 6, 1998 Chip Repairs 0 Side, Back & Vent Glass Windshields 0 Insurance Claim? We can handle it! Christiansen Blass & Paint 951 S. State, Mt. Pleasant (801)452-243- Night classes will be offered Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursdays 8:30 - 9:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday - 5:30 - 6:30 a.m. Mt. Pleasant Recreation Center $25 monthly membership fee 6 Heidi. (800)834-243- 6 1 For more info call: 0 or Debbie. 462-018- 462-91- 36 |