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Show m Siftoitrille let aid December 10, 1970 Springville, Utah 84663 Section Two i s s 'ill lp' ''' nil I tllS, ti. "h Ir ' i Kisfw lip. l&J v ' J lltl st KH Telling; high school students about the prisoner pris-oner of war treatment U. S. prisoners are being: subjected to in Vietnam is Mrs. Franklin Frank-lin A. Caras whose husband has been missing for nearly four years and no word has been received concerning him. Like situations in hundreds of other homes are causing national nation-al action to bring about a change In the communication concerning missing U. S. soldiers taken prisoners. I . J i , ft , i I : t A" .tow- t , t,,! 1 ... f -5 , I , Among the high school students who have signed the long scroll regarding the treatment treat-ment of prisoners in Vietnam are the above students checking over names and expressing their concern regarding American war prisoners. Over 700 students have signed the list which will be sent to the North Vietnam Viet-nam delegation in Paris, France. The writing writ-ing was spurred by the sponsoring of Mrs. Franklin A. Caras of Spanish Fork, whose husband has been missing without word for nearly four years. Join Ihe Fiddi Crowd! jUNUANU wfrs with JUNIOR BOUNOUS' SKI CLASSES CLASSES FOR ALL AGES DEPENDABLE TRANSPORTATION SMALL CLASSES INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION SKIING EQUIPMENT Broadening Skiing Abilities Slciing with New Friends Rapid Progress SKI LESSONS for CHRISTMAS! DRYLAND SESSIONS and EQIUPMENT CHECK December 24 4 to 6 p.m. Spanish Fork Junior High, 200 S. 100 W. LESSONS BEGIN at. Sundance December 28, 30, January 9, 23, February 6, 20 BUS LEAVES SPRINGVILLE CITY PARK AT 9:15 LESSONS 10:45 With Bus $25.00 Without Bus $15.00 Daily Registration at G. S. Wood Mercantile PHONE 489-6331 OR AT CLARK'S IN PROVO The family of Major Franklin A. Caras of Spanish Fork, recently presented a program at the Springville High School to make the students and faculty aware of the treatment prisoners of war are receiving in Veitnam. Mrs. Caras has not been contacted as to the whereabouts of her husband for three years and eight months. Through intesive research the Caras family has found that the prisoners of war are the recipients of inhumane treatment treat-ment it was learned. Some of our soldiers have lost as much as one hundred pounds in the space of only a few months. Correspondence by mail is useless because letters never get to their destination. Mrs. Caras figures that had the mail gone through, she would have over 250 letters from her husband. At the present time, she hasn't received one letter in almost four years. The students at Springville High School have taken action to prevent further apparent cruel treatment of our prisoners in Vietnam. A scroll has been made and signed by over 700, students, which will be sent to the North Vietnamese delegation in Paris, France. A similar scroll will be sent by the junior high school and middle school. The Caras family will be sponsored by SHS to perform at the junior high school, the middle school and also the elementary schools in Springville. The students have also sent letters to Senator Bennett, Senator Moss, Represenative Lloyd and representative McKay urging them to put politics aside and work for the release of America's more the 1500 prosoners of war. Mike Stansfield, student body president of Springville High School, urges all region four schools to get involved in similar programs to help our American prisoners of war. G. Wesley Boyle finishes course George Wesley Boyle, Springville, has just completed and Intermediate Tax Auditors Seminar held November 29-December 29-December 4 at the University of Colorado. The seminar was presented by the university through a grant from the Branch of Staff Training and Development of the U. S. Department of Labor Manpower Administration. Boyle is a field auditor with the Utah Department of Employment Em-ployment Security. He attended a basic tax auditors seminar in 1967, also held at the University of Colorado. The objectives of the intermediate in-termediate seminar are to increase in-crease the participant's depth of understanding and extend his professional development within the agency. The curriculum, designed specifically for tax auditors, included study in communications, human behavior, business law, interviewing in-terviewing techniques, auditing by electronics data processing methods, and professional development Former resident stake president Kenneth R. Metcalf, former Springville resident and now residing in St. George, has been sustained president of the St. George Stake following quarterly quar-terly conference held the last Sunday in November. Elder Boyd K. Packer of the Quorum of the Twelve and Regional Representative Harold Matthew Wright were in attendance officiating. of-ficiating. Mr. Metcalf is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Metcalf of this city. He married the former Beverly Robbins of this city. He is in the mortuary business in St. George. 1heO(rt1ynm More rain, snow listed on weather report Additional rain and snow occurred during the past week with light to moderate accumulations ac-cumulations in the valleys and quite heavy amounts over and near the northern mountains. Logan at Utah State University reported 10.5 inches during a 24 hour period on the first and second of the month, the largest 24-hour snowfall of record for the month of December. Temperatures continued 2 to 8 degrees above normal in most sections of the state and as a result, the snow which had accumulated ac-cumulated in the lower valleys melted quite rapidly. Since the ground was not frozen, however, there was little runoff and the storm was thus quite beneficial to agriculture. The storm on the 2nd was quite unusual in other ways besides the heavy snowfall. Tom Walker, who recently retired as the superintendent of Tim-panogos Tim-panogos Cave National Monument, is our weather observer ob-server for the storage gage at the Timpanogos divide. Tom reported that he and a companion were at the site reading out the month's accumulation ac-cumulation of precipitation when their dog, which had been chasing porcupines, suddenly scurried under a sheltering pine. A moment later a roaring sound attracted their attention and they saw a huge funnel cloud come agross the Timpanogos divide and dip down to contact the 38 inches of snow just a short distance away. The path of the tornado was about a quarter of a mile wide and nearly a mile long. It carried snow up to well above 1,000 feet and snapped off 1 foot diameter trees like they were kindling wood. Tom's companion com-panion was knocked off his feet by the wind; but, fortunately, he was not hurt. Tornados are very unusual in the high mountains, but this one was even more unusual because of the fact that the temperatures were below freezing freez-ing at the time. Provo Canyon high max. 53 on 29th, low min. 12 on 1st; average temp. 34 degrees F. Precipitation total .63 inches; .09 on 28th, T on 29th, .08 on 30th, T on 2st, .10 on 2nd, .08 on 3rd, .28 on 4th. If&fel If t W IM fet 4lflTl4 I Fiw Milton L. Weilenmann, left, executive director direc-tor of the Utah Department of Development Services; Governor Calvin L. Hampton, cen ter, and Jack Alston, right, director of the Utah Industrial Division, discuss Utah Fact Book now published. Utah business, community leaders work in industrial development, offer facts book as guide in projects I wake up every day convinced that something exciting is about to happen. Utah business and community leaders involved in industrial development are being offered a UTAH FACTS book which is a basic tool in furnishing them much of the basic information needed by an industry contemplating con-templating locating in the state, according to Milton L. Weilenmann, executive director of Utah Department of Development Services. UTAH FACTS contains general information concerning the state's education, natural resources, land ownership, industrial buildings and warehousing, transportaion, utilities, communication, recreational facilities, industry support, financial institutions, taxes, business laws and government. Distribution of the fact book, in loose-leaf form, will take place this week. These copies are assigned to state and regional industrial developers, and will be periodically up dated, according to Jack H. Alston, director of Utah Industrial Promotion Division. A soft-bound book containing the same information will be available for sale to interested parites the first of next year, Mr. Alston added. UTAH FACTS is part of an Industrial Development Information In-formation System. In 1969, the Utah Legislature appropriated an initial $50,000 for the information in-formation system and another $50,000 was appropriated later to continue work on the information in-formation system. Initially, only 50 books were published to be marked for suggested corrections by key Utahns who recieved them. Now KiwanisClub Alan Stewart will be the toastmaster for Kiwanis Club this evening at 7 p.m. at Memorial Hall announces President Edward Boyer. Featured speaker for the occasion oc-casion will be Major General Maurice L. Watts, Adjutant General of the State of Utah. General Watts is currently serving as president of the Adjutant General Association of the United States. He will speak on Pearl Harbor. There will be special musical numbers. the corrections and changes have been made. Updated information in-formation will be continually fed to the business and community leaders who obtain the fact book. The fact book was prepared under the direction of R. Thayne Robson, executive director of the University of Utah's Division of Economic and Business Research and Services; in cooperation with Howard C. Nielson, Brigham Young University professor of statistics; and Dr. Selworth Gardner, Utah State University professor of economics. PROTECT YOUR HOME WITH FARMERS HOMEOWNERS POLICY This one policy gives you the coverage you need at low rates. Eliminates costly gaps, expensive overlaps. Check today. Farmers Insurance Group FORTY-FOUR REASONS FOR ENROLLING IN BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY EVENING CLASSES. Check ( ) your favorites, fill in your name and address, mail the whole business busi-ness to us -and we'll send you Spring Semester registration forms by return mail. Mail-in registrations will be accepted accept-ed until January 22. Send us the coupon or call 374-121 1. ext. 2873. and we'll put you on the catalog mailing list; or come to the multi purpose area of the Smith Family Living Center on February 1. 2. or 3. between 12:00 noon and 8:00 p.m. and register in person. Classes will start February 4. l. To improve my mind 2. To get a better job 3. Both of the above 4. Because the Government will pay my tuition on the G.I. bill 5. To earn a degree 6. To find a wife 7. To find a husband 8. Both 5 and 7 9. Neither 5 nor 6 10. To learn to cope with a changing world 11. To enhance my economic mobility 12. To learn what economic mobility means 13. To meet a returned missionary 14. To meet the girl who wants to meet a returned missionary 15. To study Child Development and Family Relationships 16. To discover the joy of music 17. To study philosophy and religion 18. To study business administration 19. To study history 20. To learn how to use popular words like ecology, synergistic and ongoing in the same sentence 21. Because I'll meet new people 22. Because I'll meet old people 23. Because I'll meet all types of nice people 24. To get my M.R.S. degree 25. To get out of the house once or twice a week 26. To take just one course that interests me 27. To take a series of courses that interests me 28. To take courses that bore me. BYU EVENING CLASSES thereby slowing down time and giving the illusion that life is longer 29. To study engineering 30. To study criminology 31. To study literature or a language 32. To study international relations and other subjects that make life worth living 33. Because the glory of God is intelligence 34. Because you let me register by mail 35. Because I want to learn to golf at night 36. I'll enroll for aesthetic reasons 37. I'll enroll for economic reasons 38. I'll enroll for social reasons 39. I'll enroll because you offer biological sciences 40. I'll enroll to fool my mother into thinking that I now take life seriously 41. Because I'll learn why the chicken crossed the road 42. To study chemistry 43. To study psychodrama and economic statistics 44. Because you let me fill in my own reasons anywhere in the space below "It's not those who lie awake nights that succeed, but those who stay awake days." D D Mail your reasons and this coupon, or at least the coupon, to Brigham Young University. Department of Evening Classes, 225 HRCB. Provo, 11 Utah 84601. .,.. U Reasons(Numbers) Name Regardless ot my reasons, please send me easy mail registration lorms. City State Zip D 0 J |