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Show I I I t Eagle Review-Advertis- er Sun Thursday, June 24, 1971 Chronicle-Advertis- Thursday, June 24, 1971 er MIA Dance Festival plans final program The All Church MIA dance rapid growth of the organizafestival which is being held tion, it has made it quite difFriday evening will feature 6000 ficult to sponsor such an event. dancers and is being held the People from around the first night of the annual three world have viewed this dance day MIA conference in Salt Lake which has been held every other City. on the stadium grounds at Conference sessions will be year the University of Utah. Those ' held in the Mormon Tabernacle viewing it for the first time are on Temple Square when some amazed that so many young and of the general authorities from far and near could people MIA leaders will be heard. get togehter with a couple of The dance festival, which practices and present such a for years has been one of the well organized and perfect most spectacular affairs ever dance festival. sponsored by the MIA, will bid farewell to its viewing public It is truly a sight to see and as the dancers go into the fi- remember this will be a last nale Friday night. Due to the chance to view such and colorful performance. WATERFOWL biologists Mr. Taylor and Mr. Neilson are shown banding geese to help in studies on aging and sexing of adults and ju the Your veniles. Approximately 150 geese were banded in the areas of Willard Spur, Howard Slough and Harold Crane waterfowl area. By Verla Hull UTAH COURTS HEARD MOSTLY FISH STORIES DURING MONTH OF MAY stories outnumbered stories two to one in Utah Fish hunt courts during May as 63 wildlife law violators explained outdoor activities to judges of the State. The 63 wildlife cases resulted in $2,525 in fines and 378 days. One case was dismissed. Juveniles were involved in five cases. Fishing without a license and fishing out of season accounted for over half of the May court cases. Several vio- were processed for lations shooting game birds out of season and the illegal possession of game animals added up a few more. One man was arraigned for hunting elk out of season, while two adults were charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. CHEESE AND CORN FOR LUNKERS? With preparations underway for another Independence Day celebration, it behooves us to ponder the meaning of our inspired Constitution. An excellent book to peruse on the The Elders of subject is: Israel and the constitution. by Jerome Horowitz. Mr. Horowitz, LL. B., a practicing lawyer in Ogden, has an incisive mind and clearly expostulates the current situation regarding the Constitution. Big fish may not be as tempted by cheese and corn as some anglers think. Natural baits and artificial lures catch practically all of the trophy fish brought to a noted Salt Lake fish taxiderHe suggests that anmist. after lunkers should glers aboid the unnatural baits and turn to worms or lures. Rap-petype lures have taken a good many of the fish he has la prepared. Anglers interested in hav- ing fish mounted should remember a tip from the taxiderThe key to preserving mist. the natural color in a fish is in the way it is cared for im- h- An individual or a people, when handed a blessing on the . . .. J '".MV." wr&c "A . "tX , . 4 : k-.-v ';s; set for Friday and Saturdy, during special youth leaders conference. This year 8,110 youth from throughout the United States and Canada will participate. THOUSANDS of young people gather in the University of Utah stadium in Salt Lake City for elaborate Mormon youth dance festival. This years featival is event. three-da- y - aJ Banking Institute elects Salt Lake Chapter officers Lamp Fishing season causes problems, more wafers open ' The MIA conference will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday. One act plays and roadshows will also be a feature of Light aA Jerald D. Cedar City, Utah, he graduated from the University of Utah prior to joining the banks staff in 1946. Mr. Holyoak and his serve Bank) were recently wife, Ann, are parents of three elected officers in the Salt Lake children. A. Marlon Andrus, newly Chapter of the American Institute of Banking. elected first vice president, has been with First Security Bank Mr. Holyoak, vice president since 1963 when he graduated and regional loan supervisor at from Brigham Young University He managed the the Sugar House Branch of Zions in Provo. First National, will be the Cha- Industrial Center office for two pters new president. Born in years, then the South Main office Holyoak (Zions First National Bank), Marlon Andrus (First Security Bank), and John Peace (Federal Re- r proverbial silver platter, seem to lack a real appreciation for that blessing. Unless one puts forth his own sweat, he deems the blessing to be of no value. Xi for two and years before moving to the downtown office as a commercial lending officer. John Peace, new second vice president for the chapter, is a native of Hurricane, Utah, and has been a member of the Federal Reserve Bank staff since 1960. Mr. Peace joined Federal Reserve after attending college at Dixie in St. George, Utah, and the University ofUtah in Salt Lake City. Mr. Peace one-ha- lf and his wife Karen have one son. F.lected to the chapter's board of governors were: Jim Fraser (Walker Bank); Helen W. Ingles (Farmers State Bank); Lynn J. Christensen (Granite These three National Bank). will serve on the board for a period of two years. The American Institute of Banking, with its current nat- of over membership bank employees and officers, provides an opportunity for all bank personnel to acquire a broad and comprehensive education in banking. Local units of the Institute, although largely autonomous, are bound together in a nationally coordinated network, the hub of which is the national office in New York City. ional 220,000 lota Regarding the blessing of the Constitution, Mr. Horowitz deSometimes when a clares: person receives a gift built by others, he takes for granted the fact that it works, and doesnt realize what makes it work. holds club Our inspired Constitution brought not only freedom but its twin, prosperity, and other countries tried to pattern their constitutions after ours. How- ..ever,... in these countries the same degree of prosperity was not realized as we enjoyed here in America. Why? The annual summer breakfast of Xi Iota was held Monday at the home of Gennie Bingham with Wilma Stewart, June Hei-se- r, Marcelle Weaver, Katharine Young, Mona Nebeker, Carter, Katherine Shirley Stromberg, Mary Chino and Maudene Androse in attendance. mediately after catching. Entrails and flesh -- may- be re moved (though, not necessary) by cutting along the lateral line on the side opposite the side to be displayed. The fish should be frozen as soon as Alex possible or dried in the sun de Tocquevilij, a until freezing can be accom- Frenchman who visited theU.S. in the early 1830s and travelled plished. over 7,000 miles interrogating FISHING OPENS JULY 1 discovered the Americans, ON SOME WATERS essential ingredient of a sucJuly 1 opens 1971 fishing on cessful free republic. From several Utah waters, according his classic work: to notice given by the Division we Democracy in America, of Wildlife Resources. read: Fishing begins July 1 on: Strawberry River from Willow Religion is America takes Creek downstream to its conno direct part in the governfluence with Red Creek (artificial flies only, limit six fisn); ment of society, but t must be West Fork drainage of Duchesne regarded as the first of their River; Red Creek drainage in political institutions; for if it does not impart a taste for freeDuchesne and Wasatch Counties from Highway 40 to source; dom, it facilitates the use of it. Creek Current drainage; Indeed, it is in this same point Reservoir in Uintah of view that the inhabitants of Crouse County; Swan Creek in Rich the United States themselves County; and all tributaries to look upon religious belief. I do not know whether all AmeriStrawberry Reservoir. cans have a sincere faith in Information on the late openfor who can their religion ing waters and other particuI lars of the 1971 Utah fishing search the human heart?--bseason are published in the am certain that they hold it to fishing proclamation available be indispensable to the mainfrom hunting and fishing license tenance of republican institutions. This opinion is not peagents. culiar to a class of citizens or to a party, but it belongs to the whole nation and to every rank of society. (Vol. 1, p. , breakfast Jerald John Peace Marlon Andrus D. Holyoak two-volu- ' ' - 'K: j hy , fcw .. bass are being caught in several GOOD SIZED local waters in Northern Utah, according to officers of the Division of Wildlife Resources. Both Willard Bay and Mantua have been producing some good fishing. Several areas waters will also be restocked for the July 4th weekend. Q Roy Conoco is giving away eight different Betty Crocker cookbooks. Each book has a variety ut of recipe ideas and hints. Come in today for your free copy and start your collection today 316). As Mr. Horowitz explains: Freedom is not an absolute concept, but is a kind of balance between two extremes. One extreme is the lawlessness and disorder of anarchy, which is the total absence of A or suspension of government. The other extreme is the absence of liberty resulting from complete control of the people by the government. i:.) J . This balance, called freedom, can exist only as long as the people involved, by their own inward motivation, act righteously enough for it to continue. If their inward motivation toward righteous action is not strong enough, then freedom automatically degenerates toward cither anarchy or dictatorship. In God We Trust, on coins, and one nation under God, in the pledge of allegiance, are not just empty phrases, unless we render them thus by our refusal to conform to truth. The Constitution cannot be outmoded, unless our people become unworthy of it. ft ! ! USED couple of nice bass at Willard Bay are Bob and caught Terry Helms, sons of Mr. and Come and Get It , FREE Conoco Litter Bags HELP KEEP AMERICA CLEAN! Roy Conoco has everything for your car Tires Batteries Wheel Alignment & truck Lube Jobs Car Wash VACATIONS ARE MORE FUN fnWH EN YOU 3 rrjpr-fill f) If . vY' FAST, FRIENDLY SERVICE i SHOWN with a with each fillup. Mrs. Clifford Helms, 4697 S. 6300 W., Hooper. Fishing has been pick- ing up in northern Utah waters. KIRBY $39.50 with attachments. For information or home trial call 394-272- 9. V CDMGC 5600 So. 1S00 IV. CAD rJASCO Opsn 24 Hears |