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Show I July 7, 1977 The Springville Herald Page Thirteen 'STICK or TWIST SALTED PRETZELS n TREATS THAT ARE TO ..PLEASE ..ALL YOUR GUESTS. xmt 9-OZ. PKG. utJ KAr VAI I IF in .1 APER OWELS wrapped Culls nied Quantity 36 UU HIT E KING LD CREAM 5 0 A P EACH Limted Quantity SIM E-PIECE UMINUM ESS KITS h Carry Case $" -SJsj llli UnST FASHION RACE SSj 1 Vl1 HAIR FLOWERS ? ' P Super selection of life-like polyester I LINDY 1 if flower attached to Clear combs for - I rtIT Tin AB ' T I easy placment in your hair. Asst. of I rSLI TIP OK ' 1 I flowers, sizes, colors. I I BALL POINT PENS I 00 VAluE I 1 Super assortment of smooth I 1 0?lK m 1 writing pens. Wide selection of ji ,Jl s dt M M colors and point sizes for JFVpl R J Cl whatever type of writing you If IkV 'tiV I I J IlfflB ROSE LOTION Dishwashing Liquid 22-fluid oz. 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VjP BANANA NvH FOLDING CHAIR I Soft vinyl tubing on a zinc .u N " I plated steel frame. White bands ! 1 I combine with an assortment of . I I colors. With padded headrest. JlilBSflBfiH9; 1 $12.50 Value ife Ajf COMFORT TOP $ KNEE HI'S r They really hold their shape Top- A II ped off with a no-bind wide con- fort top band. Pack of Tjp. A 4 pair for ) -A- jj WEN'S OR LADIES' Ar COOL & COMFORTABLE Y BEACHCOMBERS J II Thong style sandals with 5 layer, , II multi-color soles in assorted com- A binations. Perfect for the beoch or If casual wear. 11 4.98 VALUE amendment depriving we are invited to fur-women fur-women of many of their ther STUDY the issues, present rights. The IWY study is always COM-national COM-national committee's MENDABLE. To be avowed no. 1 goal is to informed is VITAL. I, too, have the ERA ratified as horje that each of us will quickly as possible. I quote, "As our main commitment com-mitment to the observance ob-servance of International Women's Year, we pledge to do all in our capacity to see inai me equal Kigms Amendment is ratified at the earliest possible moment We urge all Americans to join us in this effort. (Taken from uieiroooK lororma muic rcucu umon , r. X. , lL i Many of their 21 other proposals, I felt, were equally Uireatening to our basic freedoms, and many were demoralizing. Most would give the Federal government strong jurisdiction m nearly every iacei oi our lives in education. child-care, federal jobs, mass media, etc. etc. and all proposed under the guise of giving women more rights! ! The group meeting I attended in Provo two days prior to the Salt Palace conference was attended by hundreds of women. We were NOT instructed how to vote at that meeting. One of the early stipulations an- nounced as that this meeting was NOT for the purpose of telling women how to vote. One of the freedoms and privileges of our democratic system is to attend meetings prior to any final voting in order to discuss and better understand the issues. The IWY com- mittees sponsored meir meetings in May. Much of that month I was out of state and therefore did not attend, and was grateful for an opportunity op-portunity to attend this meeting. A friend who attended a meeting here in Springville tells me that at their meeting, one of the first announcements an-nouncements was that the purpose of their meeting was NOT to tell anyone how to vote but to discuss issues. I firmly believe that the women of Utah were NOT instructed how to vote. An assumption that they were, and then that they complied, is unfair to the intelligence of Utah women! Rather, women were well acquainted with some issues and sought valid information from various sources on others, and then voted their individual in-dividual and honest convictions! Neither do I believe for a moment that Utah women were "misled" or "misled" themselves. Many of these issues have been before the nation for many months. Education has always been highly stressed and endorsed ih Utah, and Utah women are well-educated. Any "pre-conceived" notions we may have had are a result of analyzing issues and supporting what we know to be right, and firmly rejecting what we recognize would be destructive to freedom, morality, and family life! On the other hand, I strongly feel that many national officers of IWY, many of whom are well-known well-known for their strong support of ERA, abortion, homosexual rights, etc., are trying to mislead and deceive the women of this nation by using the taxpayers' money to promote their radical resolutions under guise of such titles as "liberation", "freedom for women", etc. when in most instances the opposite op-posite is true. Evil usually robes itself in innocent-sounding innocent-sounding titles and in half-truths in order to deceive and appeal. If the IWY refuses to seat the Utah delgation in its national convention in Texas, I feel that it will be because we rejected their resolutions. Had we voted for them, I'm sure there would be no such ob-believe ob-believe that our delegates are not representative of the women of Utah? Any and every women of this state could have attended the convention at the Salt Palace. The national committee seems quite willing to seat delegatons from heavily populated states who had only a small representation at their state convention in comparison to Utah's attendance, but who probably voted for their proposals. Where then is their democratic justice in such reasoning? keep informed, and not be complacent, but will consistently seek reliable sources of information and from men and women who have proven worthy of our confidence and trust through their examples of high ideals, expertise, service, love of country and family, and worthy accomplishments, Tnen, may we all work together through due ac- process of law to complish and protect rights not only for women but for aU and may we constantly aiert and on guard against the insidious forces that are working to destroy the freedoms we hold so dear Beth S.James BYU prof attends zoo meet A Brigham Young University nrofessor and tw0 graduate students in zoology will leave July 5 to attend meetings of the World Association for Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology m Sydney, Australia, They are Dr. Ferron L. Andersen, a specialist in veterinary parasitology m the Department of Zoology, George Conder 0f Albuquerque, N.M., who is working on his doctor's degree, and Graham Bullick of Provo, a master's degree candidate can-didate who immigrated from Australia in 1963. At the world conference, con-ference, the BYU delegates will read papers on research conducted by the two graduate students in cooperation with Dr. Andersen. They are "The Endemicity of Hydatid Disease in Utah" by Andersen and Conder, and "The Effect of Irrigation on Survival of Infective Larvae of Sheep Stomach Worm" by Andersen and Bullick. After the meetings in Australia, the scientists will fly to New Zealand, where they will spend a week visiting important research laboratories in parasitology. Dr. Andersen received the B.S. Degree at Utah State University, master's degrees from USU.and the University of Illinois, and the Ph. D. degree at USU. Before joining the BYU faculty in 1967 he was a researcher and professor of veterinary parasitology at the University of Illinois. He has published SO scientific works. Dr. Andersen said that patholgenic stomach worms in sheep are common in the West and cause anemia and other serious diseases. They are prevalent in pastures which are irrigated and in lowland pastures. The scientist is internationally in-ternationally noted for his research on hydatid disease in sheep and dog populations in the West. Since 1971 BYU research teams have found hydatid cysts in the liver, lungs, and other internal organs in a high percentage of sheep (12 percent in 1975). The cysts are fluid filled cavities which contain larval stages of minute tapeworms. The adult stage of the tapeworm develops in the small intestines of dogs, coyotes, and wolves that eat dead sheep (an average of 15 percent of cases). Dr. Andersen has worked extensively with U.S. and Utah State Agencies on control measures for these diseases. There were 30,065 share owners of Mountain Bell common stock at the end of 1976. They owned a total of 67.7 million shares. Mountain Bell invested more than $540 million in 1976 to provide new service as well as to upgrade and improve present service. This represents an increase of $35 million over 1975. Boys were employed in the first telephone exchanges ex-changes until they proved to be unruly and somewhat unreliable. They were soon replaced by bustle-clad ladies. |