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Show Page Twelve The Sprinirville f 3SK 1 1 ySmMmt , LJU I 'ill, ' WV Kiwanis Club last week introduced the Utah Association for the handicapped child with learning disabilities. The speakers were Cleve Swenson, Bill Rust and David Brown. Mrs. Blair Sargent was toastmistress for the ladies night program. Mr. Swenson is left, Mrs. Sargent, Bill Rust, and David Brown. Tonight Mayor Kenneth Creer will discuss the plans for the new city industrial park. O O B Tony and Joel Ahlstrom, Bicentennial runners, speak to school students in front of the Springville Museum of Art last Thursday afternoon. They gave copies of the Constitution to schools which were represented. The schools will be responsible for mailing signed copies back to the Ahlstroms' headquarters. They, in turn, will deliver the copies to President Gerald Ford in Washington, D.C. on July 1, at the conclusion of their 2,959-mile run from San Francisco to the nation's captitol. , 3S Bicentennial runners Tony Ahlstrom, left, and Joel Ahlstrom, right, are entertained at lunch by ReU G. Francis and Yvonne Johnson representing Springville on the Cultural Enrichment and Cultural Relations of the Community Progress Committee. The runners stopped here last Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Joel Ahlstrom is second from right. Running Ahlstroms stop here Joel and Tony Ahlstrom made a stop here last Thursday on their 2,957-mile Bicentennial run from San Francisco to Washington, D.C. They spoke to school students and were hosted at lunch by ReU Francis and Yvonne Johnson on behalf of the city and the Cultural Enrichment Enrich-ment and Cultural Relations .Department of the Community Progress Committee, i" They asked the students to sign copies of the United States Constitution recommitting themselves to the Constitution. They carry a copy of the Bible and a personal copy of the Constitution along with them. Schools will be responsible for mailing copies of the Constitution Con-stitution back to the Bicentennial Bicen-tennial run office in Chicago. The copies will then be presented to President Gerald Ford on July 1 at the conclusion of the run. Joel and Tony Ahlstrom are graduates of Trinity College in Deerf ield, Illinios. As students at Trinity they organized and carried out three other projects of significance to their community com-munity and to their nation. In the fall of 1970 they began their running career in what was called the "Solution to Pollution" run. That was a 10-.day, 10-.day, 265 mile run from Chicago to Detroit. They carried with them Chicago's newly passed phosphate ordinance and a letter from H.W. Poston, commissioner com-missioner of environmental control, urging Detroit's mayor NOW! A new copier uses bond paper! Still only 10c each UTAH OFFICE SUPPLY 191 SOUTH MAIN SPRINGVILLE Herald May 20, 1976 1 J rflf Mn to pass a similar ordinance. Along the way, the Ahlstroms talked with other mayors and distributed literature to dramatize the nations environmental en-vironmental crisis. Not only did this run receive national at-. at-. tention through the news media, it succeeded in prointing Detroit to pass a phusphate ordinance which was almost identical to Chicago's. The Ahlstrom brothers followed up the "Solution to Pollution" run by organizing the '"Chicago.. .We Love You" campaign. On April 21, 1971, known as Earth Day 11, they mobilized 500 students and faculty from Trinity College, at the Civic Center Plaza. In a brief rally the students dedicated themselves to demonstrating God's love to Chicagoans in word and deed. From there they dispersed into ; eight Chicago neighborhoods to do clean-up work at 48 locations, many in ghetto areas. These projects were, however, only warm-ups to what lay ahead for the Ahlstroms the following summer. On May 31, 1971, Joel and Tony set out on foot from Long Beach, California, destined for Long Beach, New York. They called it the "Save America Run." After 94 days of running, 2,958 miles, and five pairs of shoes each, they splashed into the Atlantic Ocean on September 16th, right on schedule. The purpose of the "Save America Run" was to spread the word about pollution - "both environmental and spiritual." The brothers carried with them some of the most progressive pollution legislation from across the country. Along the way they met with government officals in 110 cities to share this legislation. They also spoke to 86 service clubs, and in churches each Sunday - as many as seven in one day. Their purpose was not merely to inculcate and motivate, but to regenerate. "The problem," they would say, "is people, and you can't regenerate society with unregeneratetyeople." Since college Joel, who is 30 years old, moved to Minneapolis, Min-neapolis, got married, and has been working in the grocery industry. Tony, the younger, at 27, stayed in the Chicago area to organize and direct the Plymouth Foundation. He too is now married and in 1975 was ordained to the ministry. Optimist: one who tells you to cheer up when tilings are going his way. 8w ... Wl V I w Value Ilk? ' nun ikaHaaM4i Ivisinc IllJf I 5US3 jfliiiiiiiRiiH MEDICATED SOLARCAINE SPRAY SOLARCAINE SPRAY tops pain $2 39 Value SUNBURN AIM MI4LIIM ALLBEE . . uau mmmmmummmmwmmmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmm .iiiiii.::iiiiiiiiii::i:.;iiiiiiiii High-potency formula of B complex vitamins with C. 30 CAPSULES $11 66 $2.39 Value ,MiiiiliiE I MASSENGILL DISPOSABLE DOUCHE Scpnt of Country Flowers NEW ECONOMY 4 PACK Four units 6 nun llllll IllHilllllZ ll Two-speed swa iUlilll iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lining Jiiigiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiilik MEMORIAL1 DAY WREATHS AND FLOWERS i inrc LAnuL i rr AnTk iirkiT DROPS j mr ii, u .,.1 p iiinih. vw irnuD ,ii . bp "liiin , , u , iiii my&..jr VISIHE V ' Gets the red out Soothes irritation Clear non-staining l2 A- oz. STOPS PAIN OR SUNBURN! 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