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Show ; Page Two The Springville Herald July 26, 1973 . Striking a graceful pose from one of her new and exciting routines in ballet is Mrs. Teddy Anderson, well known expert and instructor in dance. Mrs. Teddy Anderson announces plans for new dance classes Of special interest to all girls announcement of new classes to interested in dancing is the be taught in Springville PANAVISION" United Artists pSj''? TJ i. 00 MANN MANN THEATRES FOX 374-5525 1130 HOUTH 111 WIST NOW PLAYING TWO THEATRES J MANN THEATRES rfrfflffi (Jr academy! 255 ISTATf.PROVCn HHHHI373 4470illlllM 3Tm 1 irf IIH r c.nnn.An n i.az Show 9 :00 They had the perfect love affair. Until they fell in Iwe. A Joseph E Lcvint rJ Brut Productions Prcwniau.n. George Segal Glenda Jackson A Touch Of Class TSfqtin.il SHjnJttnk vi1iNf on Brvt RKordtj An Avco Embassy rUx- TihrtKi4x riravitHtn' ,PG Co-Hit at Both Theatres steve McQueen ;n "The Reivers" Hurry! Must ftAffitfu 489 5401 1Pen 8: End Tuesday! YsSft1! Show 9: 30 15 BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND TWO OF THE YEAR'S BIGGEST MOVIES!! Robert Redford -Jeremiah Johnson' some say he's dead... some say he never will be. FILMED RIGHT W - A. V W HERE IN UTAH! i I J f W iTIl . TECHNICOLOR pr;T INTlGulMIKfJUiHTU-5& PLUS BIG SUSPENSE AND ACTION-PACKED ACTION-PACKED EXCITING CO-HIT: i CfTTY FROMKESS EHARTt.cu f"mel1 VISION" D WU COLOR 9 4-11 Community Day planned here August 2 Springville-Mapleton 4-H Community Day will be held Thursday, August 2nd, at the Memorial Hall, it was announced an-nounced today. All interested persons are issued a cordial invitation to attend. Exhibits on the handwork and projects of members of the various local clubs will be displayed. Judging will be held in the morning and awards presented. All exhibits will be open for visiting from 1:00 to '3:00 p.m. There are twelve active clubs currently operating in this area, two of them being animal project clubs. beginning Monday, August 20th. The instructor will be Mrs. Teddy Anderson, at whose residence, 1190 East, 180 North, the classes will be held. Mrs. Anderson recently participated in a Dance Caravan at Salt Lake City. This was a three-day convention at which workshops were held and instruction in-struction given by national and international experts in all phases of dancing. Supervising the meet was Art Stone, world famed tap and jazz dance specialist. Many new and colorful routines learned at the meet will be taught by Mrs. Anderson. Registration for her classes will also be held at her home, on two Saturdays, August 11th, and August 18th, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. Girls interested may contact her at that time or phone 489-6662 for further details. The snow-covered barren wastes of the Artie were once covered by lush tropical jungles. The discovery of coal beds there, in which were found the remains of many kinds of tropical trees and plants, convinced scientists that "the top of the world" was once a country like Africa. Why does every one want to be in the front of the bus, iir the rear of the church, and in the middle of the road? I heard a noise in an old sycamore tree. I looked up, and it was a woodpecker delving below the outer bark with his bill doing the digging as his head would fly back and forth. 1. realized that he was using his head. If a lot of us would do that, some conditions today might not seem as bad as they do. Tom L. Gibson WEEKNITES 7:30, 9:40 Sat., Sun. from 1:30 p.m. BURT REYNOLDS Twowomenloved him. One died for him. One killed for him. I 1 J IPG PANAVISION METROCOLOR MGM Robert Redford stars in the title role of Warner Bros.' "Jeremiah Johnson," as a man who decides on the (only life of a mountaineer in the 1800's. Redford is pictured as he braces himself in a fight with an Indian. Now playing at the Art City Drive-In on same bill with George C. Scott in "Rage". Heart-warming story: state rehab, agency sets employment record Slightly more than three thousand people with handicaps of one form or another were placed into useful and productive produc-tive employment during the 1973 fiscal year by counselors of the Utah State Board of Education's Division of Rehabilitation Services. Division Administrator Harvey C. Hirschi said this year's 3,003 successful case closures represent more than a twenty percent increase over the number of person rehabilitated during fiscal 1972. Dr Hirschi added that this year's figure represents the largest number of persons rehabilitated in Utah in the history of the S3 year old vocational rehabilitation program. "It's equally pleasing to note that 767 of these people were receiving public assistance either before or during the rehabilitation process," said Dr. HirschL "The employment . of these people and-or their placement in useful and productive positions removes this additional tax burden on the state." The Division Administrator indicated additional information is being compiled about the record number of successful case closures and this will be available in a comparative report sometime in August. The report will show rehabilitation client characteristics and other data, such as a breakdown of handicaps by disability WEEKNITES FROM 6:30 SAT. & SUN. FROM 1:30 JOHN i WAYNE WML UNITED STATES MARSHAL PANAVISI0N' TECHNICOLOR trMtaf Wanwf tnt. MM AtMrtmiy i A WarMf CflMwinlcaww Cawaani ALSO A CO-HIT James Stewart "Cheyenne Social Club" LTrs ami r w. wm II JOHN W WAYNE VJ 4 4. UNITED STATES K. MARSHAL fi (pel m a-. "Skin Game" fy. lampc II r BH riwuiiri in m i k i oiunuif hi i ... i?jl50 M State. Oram Fflfmilral 'BArt nr,f w:;.v i rTJ: t.t Lflvt-iN iftWHt w 'a catagories, age ranges, sex, race, and other such information. in-formation. Dr. Hirschi pointed out that such information is helpful in planning and determining deter-mining the type of services needed by the some 12,000 clients in ongoing rehabilitation programs. At present the Utah State Division of Rehabilitation Services operates in 36 locations around the state which are Fun to share at Utah State Fair "There's fun to share at the Utah State Fair." That's the theme of the 1973 State Fair, and this year the state's king of expositions includes in-cludes a roster of daily activities that will please everyone. Opening day will see a new Miss Utah State Fair crowned. Then such famous musical performers as Lynn Anderson, Dawn, Danny Davis, Jody Miller, Donna Fargo and Mac Davis will star during the Fair's run. Holiday on Ice, to be held in the Salt Palace in conjunction with the Fair, will present a new and exciting show. Ticket holdei-3 to Holiday on Ice may enter the Fair free. All shows at the Fairgrounds are free to persons paying admission ad-mission to the Fair itself. What else? Hundreds of exhibits, the Farm Bureau Talent contest, Junior Livestock Sale Kid's Day, Family Day, horse shows, an Indian program, horse pulling, 4-H Awards, a pet contest and barbershop quartet competition. The State Fair is always a rich panoply, from the Capell Brothers Midway to the Aerial Beratis High Act There will also be Grandstand and bandstand musical events daily and the Dave Merrifield Helicopter Act. Admission for persons over 12 is only $1.75. Children 6 to 12 pay SO cents and children under 6 are admitted free. Come to the Fair. There's a lot to share. manned by 97 rehabilitation counselors. Hi i What started out as a pipe dream in the mind of Leland W. Sprinkle, in 1954, formed one of the world's most extraordinary extra-ordinary musical instruments, the Great Stalacpipe Organ in Luray Caverns, Virginia. The organ provides concert-quality concert-quality music by gently tapping the stalactites with small rubber-tipped hammers. Acoustics are enhanced by million-year-old stone draperies on all sides. Visitors to the "Cathedral" "Cathe-dral" of the cavern, 164 feet down, walk into the heart of this remarkable instrument, for they are surrounded by stalactites that play the individual tones. Visitors stand enthralled as melody and chords play all around them. No tinky tunes these, but full-throated music rolling through the cavern. The Great Stalacpipe Organ at Luray Caverns is not only a unique musical instrument, but also the largest organ in the world--and still growing! My Neighbors Snakes in the Garden of Eden are still doing business. They are Hurry and Worry. Hypertension kills more people than all the wars and disease put together If wrinkles must be written upon your brow, let them not be written upon the heart. The Spirit should not grow old. ' James A. Garfield net , z- 41 "I washed notice?" the windows, I would like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives, I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. Abraham Lincoln The Springville Herald published weekly by Art City Publishing Comany at 161 South Main Street Springville, Utah 84663 Martin Conovor, Publisher Entered as second class matter at the post office in Springville, Utah under the Act of Congress Marclf 3, 189. Subscriptions in advance per year, $5.50; per copy, 15c. (fir's! )j 1 TIBIL.. LI Ji ma; te m fen Op you It's never too early to plan for your family's future. Let your attorney and our TRUST DEPARTMENT help you make the right plans before it's too late. 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