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Show Home culture February 11. 19S0 The Springville Herald I'ae Nine Cub scout history compiled I club to meet The Springville High School wrestling team came in 15 points behind Pleasant Grove to win second place in Region 6. Team members (left to right) are Scott Harmer. first place; Bruce - Jenkins, fourth place; Kendall Wilson, first place; Trent Harmer, third place; Mark Wilson, fourth place; Richard Elton, seventh County holds hearings on families , , The Utah County commission is holding hearings on the White House Conference on Families this week and next. . The first of the two public hearings was held Wednesday. The second will be held Feb. 20, 6 p.m., in Room 310, of the County building, 51 S. University. The objective of the hearings, according to commission chairman, Karl Lyman, is to identify the key issues and concerns con-cerns the public hasv regarding the family and to make recdm-' mendations concerning public and private policies to strengthen families. Recommendations for the hearing will be ad Supreme Courts OH tiM March t, I4S0 Mi 2 twtfwm i! PLAY 2 FREE ELECTRONIC GAMES taffime racquitball f&WArt of Springville fl 0pen6am-10pmMon.-Sot. ' 11 20 So. Main 489-5298 Space Invaders Pintails r Great new quartz watches with a battery life of up to 5 years from Seiko. Here, Seiko combines strong contemporary design with unerring quartz accuracy and dependability that can operate up to 5 full years on a single ordinary battery. Plus convenient precision details, like an instant setting date calendar. Exceptional qual ity watches that are water-resistant to 100 feet. In stainless steel, with a white or blue dial. Seiko Quartz dressed at the Utah Conference on the family March 24 and 25 in Salt Lake City and at the National White House conference in Los Angeles this summer. Persons desiring to speak at the hearings are asked to have their names placed on an agenda. Each speaker will be given five minutes. A Speak Out time will also be allowed for those wishing to speak, no longer than three .minutes.,,, ? ... "A "written" copy "of The ' testjrnQnies should, be furnished to the Panel members before the hearing. To be placed on the agenda, call 373-5510, ext. 303, in the county commission office. Supreme Court! DM !iim March f,tW) Electronic Football Footballs & more OVER 30 YEARS IN SPRINGVILLE 220 SO. MAIN SPRINGVILLE ilflilP illlilll ilillflii ' I Sim (Hi ttiilPliSK, I y :.; " r In honor of the National Vocational Education Week, the Alternative High School has selected TY Tingey as the "Employer of the Year" in his work-experience work-experience and cooperative education programs. Bank gives hospital toys Utah Valley Hospital's Same Day Surgerical Unit has received a donation of more than $2,500 in toys and other items used in entertaining small children while they are waiting for their turn in the operating room. F. Calvin and J. Brent Packard of Central Bank and Trust Company made the presentation to Grant C. Burgon, hospital administrator ad-ministrator and Jerry 100 i. place; Danny Duncan, fourth place; Steve Wilson, tenth place; Andy Ferguson, fourth place; Mark Boyer, tenth place; David Doty, first place; Jeff Roylance, first place. The score against Pleasant Grove was 179-164. The state tournament will be at the University of Utah today. M Sorensen, public relations director, while touring the medical facility. Children and adults can take advantage of low-cost low-cost medical assistance through the Same Day Surgery program, which allows patients to return home following a few hours of recovery. Some 120 surgerical procedures have been approved by the hospital staff for use in this program. "We work mainly with minor operations requiring little recovery time," Sorensen said: "Same Day Surgery reduces medical costs because room and nur sing care is virtually PAINT & GIASS 397 EAST 400 SOUTH, SPRINGVILLE TO CHOOSE FROM 2 ffo 3 FOR AT ALL WALL COVERINGS Tingey has hired ten students every Wednesday this school year at the Spanish Fork Livestock Auction. Pictured (left to right) are Rick Thatcher, Russell Peterson, Tingey and Brad Crandall. eliminated." The majority of patients treated are children, with 10 of the average 15 patients per day treated being teen-aged teen-aged or younger. Parents usually stay with youngsters the entire day, reducing anxiety for the child. Patients come early in the morning to be prepared for surgery and then wait for their appointment. ap-pointment. During this waiting time children must be entertained and the items, including coloring books, paper dolls, height charts, an animal ark, building blocks, punch ball balloons and medical 120 BOOK 0AV BGLIVOHV FOR PAINT FOR GLASS Cfc A WHOLE LOT MORE SHOP AND SAVE THE SANF0RD STORE -COUPON CLIP AND :9 off i The Home Culture Club will hold its monthly meeting Friday at the home of Mrs. Howard Sumsion. Mrs. William DeHeer will be co-hostess. The club will meet at 2 p.m. and serve luncheon before the program. Mrs. May Groesbeck will give the program. BYU opens clinic Brigham Young University's new Comprehensive Com-prehensive Clinic building has opened, offering counseling services to the community com-munity from a central location for the first time. The building, at 1190 N. 900 East, located next to the BYU campus but away from much of the university traffic, now houses six university disciplines and one professional social service, ser-vice, according to Dr. Gawain Wells, acting clinical director. i j rings will be provided by Central Bank on an ongoing basis. Philip Perlman, director of Public Relations and Marketing for the bank and his staff have coordinated this project with Sorensen and other hospital personnel. The 1980 census will probably be the first census since the civil War to record that blacks moving to the South outnumber those leaving. The 1980 census is expected to show a nine percent increase in the U.S. population for the past decade, the smallest increase in the Nation's history except for the 1930s, the time of the Great Depression. SAVE' 1 The cub scouting program was fifty years old Feb. 8. In celebration of the programs' first half-century, half-century, cub scout officer Gretha Andreason has compiled a history of the program in the Hobble Creek District. The cub scouting program has been in the area for 25 years, according ac-cording to Mrs. Andreason. An-dreason. The first Cub Scout Pack charter was issued to the Kolob LDS Stake Primary in April 1954. Among the first cub scout leaders were Victor Frandsen. Leland M. Hatfield, Frank Johnson, Albert Mitchell, Burton J. Wa rren, Golden Stephenson, Leland McKenzie, J. Leonard Harris, M. Fred Erickson, Renee Snider, Vera Bartholomew Stokes, Merlene Beardall, Kathryn C. Harris, Helen D. Campbell, Zora Hales, Cora H. Ellis, Lillian Russell Girl gymnasts win competition The girls' gymnastics years old. The boys will team from Art City learn beginning routines Creative Dance and to compete with boys Gymnastics won first from other private clubs place all-around for each in Utah. Boys' gym-age gym-age division in a com- nasties meets will be held petition with Alpine regularly at Brigham Gymnastics Saturday. Young University. Tavi Sillito (eight years and under) Jennifer iNaCKOS kd-ii years.;, anu Jan Tuttle (12-14 years) also received ribbons for individual events. First place winners from Art City Gymnastics were Jenny Jarman, floor exercise and balance beam; Tavi Sillito, uneven parallel bars and vault; (8 years and under), un-der), Jennifer Nackos, bars and vault (9-11 years); Jan Tuttle, Balance beam and vault (12-14 years); and Kim Gavin, bars and floor exercise (12-14 years). The class III routines, which were done in the meet, are being changed this year. New routines for girls are more difficult dif-ficult and demand greater strength and excellence from beginning begin-ning gymnasts, according to Ann Brown of Art City Gymnastics. Girls interested in-terested in competing this fall in state championships cham-pionships are training now. A boys' gymnastics team is also forming for boys eight years to 14 LOCAL NEWS LOCAL ADS LOCAL COMMENT S(o)00 2s PER YEAR f0 McKenzie, LeOra P. Hackson, Janet Crandall, Jane Nielsen Strong, Hortense Harward, Mable Wright and Verla P. Stephenson. The following are memories some of these people have of the scouting program. Leonard Harris, cub-master cub-master of pack 3061 in 1954, recalled, "The way I remember it, there were two packs in Springville and one in Mapleton. Within a year ... there were about five packs in the stake ... "Extra nights were spent with parents and boys painting scenery for a western town. We walked the plank at a pirates ship and found treasure in an old trunk. Our one bathtub was filled with reeds for four days so that the cub scouts could start their basket weaving at a weekly den meeting." Fred Erickson, a cubmaster of Pack 3061 in 1954 and currently district GRAND OPENING SPECIAL COUPON I ! TUNE UPS ALL MAJOR AND MINER REPAIRS FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CARS NORMS AUTO REPAIRS 396 EAST 400 SOUTH, SPRINGVILLE 489-8512 CUP OUT I BRING IN TO SAVE EXPIRES FEB. 29, 1980 THE RED TIP TOP 530 NO. MAIN I at ubscribe TO TCSi PfffMGVfUE PER MONTH CALL IN YOUR ORDER 3 scouting chairman, remembered that the cubscouting program began with 42 boys and 12 leaders. It has since grown to 25 packs, with 450 boys and 200 leaders, plus 14 men and women to direct the program and provide leadership training for the district. Renee Snyder, a den mother in 1954, remembered that scouting was begun in Springville even before little league baseball. "I remember one of the skits (out of many which we really dressed up for) where we made a big cardboard train with an engine and all. We had an engineer all dressed up and each boy behind in a car. The train was all painted and everything." Sydna Strong, a current den leader and Hobble Creek District officer, indicated leaders' feelings about cub scouting haven't changed over the past 25 years when, she said, "Cub scouting is fun, rewarding, rewar-ding, interesting, hectic, challenging, stimulating, tiring, growth promoting, discouraging and still fun and rewarding." Current district staff officers are Gretha Andreason, An-dreason, Roy Bartlett, Gary Riding, Sydna Strong, Glenda Osborn, Dean Tew, Lee Bate, Richard Schultz and Max Knight. V8 S33.95 6CYLS29.95 4 CYL S27.95 HTTIN'EST WORK BOOTS with FOOTPRINT" FIT Ground cork under msole shapes itself to your foot Water repellent leather uppers for comfort and long wear Non-slip Neoprene cord SOle SIZES WING SHOE REPAIR SPRINGVILLE E It H I r 13 6'-; U 1 13 J |