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Show Page Four THE SPRINGVILLE (UTAH) HERALD May 7, 1970 mv llfi Xrl fKITll '( I - I , k ' k j a RANCH iPTirin X M DEL MONTE fi M.D. i 4m MMM fl CATSUP gg jfii ! c; 'p. v 'JX ( A Jl lllSID I 4-ROLL PKG . 1 1 DRHVA fl D F M , , V- - Pauline Taylor 1 V V " V II k 11 " X T7 J7 Mike Preston Junior high names 'Good Citizens' Chosen as a Citizen of the Week at Springville Junior High School was Mike Preston, a friendly, very likeable ninth grader. He is the son of John and Loretta Preston and is the third boy in a family of five children. As a family they enjoy en-joy many pleasant hunting and fishing trips together. Mike has many interests which include playing trombone as second chair in the school band, and was in the orchestra orches-tra for the high school production pro-duction of Camelot. He also plays the accordion. His large ,tfmp collection haa proved t be another interesting hobby for him. Also to his liking are basketball, basket-ball, swimming, horseback riding, rid-ing, tennis and most other sports. Two years ago he played play-ed forward on the junior basketball bas-ketball team of the First Ward, Kclob Stake. In school Mike maintains a good scholastic average of B and likes all of his classes but especially math, English, and type. He has been active in scouting scout-ing and is serving as a second counselor in his Teachers' Quorum Quo-rum in the Tenth Ward of SDrine-viHe Stake. He has earned an Individual Award. Pauline Tavlor. a pretty brown-eved brunette and ninth grader was also a choice for Citizen of the Week at the junior high. She is the daugh ter of Wavne and Janet Tay lor and the third of their six children. Their family is one which enjoys many outings and good times together. Reading, sewing and cooking a ;- soma of Pauline's hobbies and during her 4-H club days she won a blue ribbon for her seeking in the county contest. She emoys such sports as hiking, basketball and softball and played on her MIA softbaH team one summer. Her quiet friendliness is ap predated by her fellow class mates and teachers and she maintains a good scholastic average. She enjoys most of her classes and especially her home ec. and seminary. Presently she is serving as a counselor in the Bishop's Youth Council of the Thirteenth Ward of the Springville LDS Stake and has earned two Indi vidurt Award!. Well, WW Do Vou Know 2 fun, games and knowledge Dy MARTHA GLAUBER SHAPP, Editor, The New Book of Knowledge What do you knoiv about James Watt? There is a well-known story about the boyhood of James Watt, the great 18th-century Scottish inventor. Young James, so the story goes, spent many hours watching his mother's kettle on the fire. Sometimes the steam was so powerful that it lifted the kettle's ket-tle's lid. Sometimes he would hold a spoon at the spout and watch the steam condense into in-to water. Fascinated by the steam, James often thought that if he could trap enough of it in the right way, he could make it do mighty things. The story may or may not be true. But later in liTe James Watt did make steam do mighty things. He harnessed harnes-sed its power in the steam engine for which he is famous. Do you know what neon is? Neon is an inert gas that occurs in the atmosphere in very small quantities. It can be made to glow orange-red when an electric current is forced through it. Glass tubes containing this gas (and other inert gases) form the "neon" lights with which we are all familiar. Do you know where the idea of an alphabet began? We use the alphabet of the Romans of 2,000 years ago. The Romans based their letter let-ter names and forms upon those of the Etruscans, who got their alphabet from the early Greeks. The Greeks had borrowed from the Phoenician alphabet. But the Phoenicians had no help. 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