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Show SOCIAL NEWS January 2, l!Kr - The Springville Herald l'nu I hive L V" ii n t 1 1 r''lMririiiOTtiffliifliiraKnwiira Julie Sheffield marries Provo man Julie Sheffield, Timothy Thurman Julie Sheffield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Naylor and the late Erwin L. Sheffield of Springville, is engaged to marry Timothy R. Thurman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Thurman of Provo. A reception will honor the couple on January 4, 1985, at the Springville Stake Center, 698 East Kolob Circle, from 7 to 9 p.m. Julie is a 1981 graduate of Springville High School and LDS Seminary. She attended Ricks College and Stevens Henager College. She is currently employed by Central Bank and Trust Co. in Provo. The groom is a 1981 graduate of Provo High School and LDS Seminary. He served a mission to the Boston, Massachusetts area. He is currently attending BYU and is employed by Central Bank and Trust Co. in Provo Showers were Chnstensen, an aunt and Kaylene Guff, friends of the bride, and Linda Livingston, Sherry Lyman, Glenys Perrero and Ann Paxton, sisters of the bride. The newlyweds will make their home in Springville. Couple engaged to be married Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. Dean Miller of Springville of the engagement of their daughter, Teresa, to Mr. Emmanuel Gonzales, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elpidio Gonzales of Springville. The bride-to-be is formally from Moline, Illinois. She is employed at K-Mart in Spanish Fork and is attending Utah Technical College to become a C.P.A. She has resided in Springville for two years. The prospective groom is formerly from the Phillipines. He is employed at Talley Incorporated in Spanish Fork as a draftsman. He is attending U.T.C. to become a Mechanical Engineer and has resided in Springville for three years since coming to the United States. The newlyweds will make their home in Springville. :: J '; ' tr fm,, - J Y y A'w- j lwwitiimifttli-(im(WWIliMllilIWIillt iirvrliiii ) wr.,ifciiiiiiiim J Emmanuel Gonzales, Teresa Miller BYU faculty Ural Bank and Trust Co. in Provo. . I given for the bride by Carolynn ("Iff QnOW int of the groom, Kristi Chnstensen 11 JIIUVV Former Springville girl to marry Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson and Ms. Judy Rae Topham of Springville, of the engagement of their daughter, Cheri Robertson of Madison, Wisconsin, to Dr. Gregory J. Litton, also of Madison, and son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon T. Litton of Spokane, Washington. The couple plan to be married January 7, 1985 in Salt Lake City, Utah at The Heather. A wedding supper will be held January 5, at The Heather. A reception will be held January 7, 1985, at The Heather 2832 East 6200 South Salt Lake City. No invitations in-vitations will be sent. All friends and relatives are invited in-vited to attend. The Bride-to-be attended schools in Springville and graduated from East High in Salt Lake. She attended the University of Utah. She is currently attending Edgewood School of Nursing in Madison, Wisconsin. The Prospective groom graduated from Shadle Park High School in Spokane, Washington. He graduated from Washington State University in Pullman, and received his Medical Degree from University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, Washington. He currently is finishing a Residency in Internal Medicine at University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin. A shower was given by Lisa Wells for the bride in Madison. The bridal attendents are: Maid of Honor, Joni Corker, Bridesmaids, Sue Egulf, Mary Franz and Petrine Griffin. The Grooms Best Man will be Ron Weingarten. The newlyweds will make their home in Madison, Wisconsin. Home Culture Club Christmas party Cheri Robertson, Dr. Gregory Litton "If a man could have half his wishes he would double his troubles." Ben Franklin A potpourri of artistic styles will be on view in January, at Brigham Young Universtity when art department faculty display their recent works for the annual Faculty Art Show. Both Gallery 303 and the B.F. Larsen Gallery in the Harris Fine Arts Center will exhibit faculty art from Jan. 4-30. Admission is free. A reception for the artists is scheduled for Jan. 8 (Tuesday) from 7-9 p.m. Gallery 303 is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday and the B.F. Larsen Gallery daily from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Among the full-time faculty exhibiting will be Wulf Barsch, symbolic religious painter and printmaker; Jim Christensen, fantasy artist; Brent Gehring, sculptor; Hagen Haltern, graphite artist; Franz M. Johansen, sculptor and artist. Sherron Hill, chairman of the department, will show abstract acrylics. Others contributing include new faculty printmaker Wayne Kimball; oil painter Frank Magleby; Robert Marshall, Springville, oil painter and watercolorist; Peter Myer, pastels artist; Bruce Smith, Springville, oil painter; Fred Takaski, oil painter and watercolorist; water-colorist; Von Allen, ceramics; and Clyff Allen, sculptor. Among the work of part-time faculty will be Marilee Campbell's oils; Royden Card's and Jenni Christensen's prints; Alfonso Flores' oils; Kent Goodliffe's prismacolors on acrylics; Sharron Gray's serigraphs; Ed Ham's ceramics; and Maggie Harrison's fiber art. For additional information contact con-tact Gallery 303, 378-2881. The Home Culture Club met at the home of Grace Alleman for the club's annual Christmas party. A lovely luncheon was served and gifts were exchanged among club members. Mary Bird entertained her fellow club ladies by playing many of her favorite Christmas songs while the members sang along. Reva Lynn presented the program which was put on by her grandchildren and their cousins. P.D.Q. Bach to bring musical madness to Y Margaret Conover was hostess. the co- cm Friday and Saturday Night Feast! (SERVED FROM 5:30 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.) An extraordinary buffet the likes of which you haven't seen in this area. There will be such things as steamship round of choice beef, hickory-smoked ham, chicken California and an array of seafood. There will be tempting dishes, such as zuc-cini zuc-cini Grecco, vegetables parmesan, etc. The desserts will be especially appealing to the eye and to the taste. All you care to eat for only $1095 Sg85 S595 Senior citizens pay only Children from three to twelve Children under three eat free. We're heated at the intersection of 1-15 and Highway 75 North Springville Exit 489-3625 The concert pianist who several years ago surprised his Brigham Young University audience by reaching the stage via a rope dangling from the balcony will return for two performances of musical madness. Peter Schickele, whose P.D.Q. Bach musical extravanganzas have fractured music throughout the United States, will offer his unique brand of "music pathology" Jan. 15 and 16 (Tuesday and Wednesday) at 8 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall of the Harris Fine Arts Center. Tickets are available through the music ticket office, 378-7444. Reviewers have applauded Schickele's offbeat approach to entertainment. "Prof. Schickele is a funny, clever man." worte a reviewer in the New York Times. "He can keep a capacity audience entertained and often convulsed for a couple of hours." From the San Francisco Chronicle comes the adjectives "outrageous, excessive, and more than slightly barmy Shickele and P.D.Q. do indeed turn the world of music upside down." Shickele was educated at Juilliard in New York City but prefers to bill , himself as a "performer and apologist" who plays the music of his discovery, P.D.Q. Bach a character listed in his program notes with the unlikely birth and death dates of 1807-1742. "The most controversial aspect of P.D.Q. Bach's life, aside from his existence, is the time of its existence, that is, his dates," the notes say. Schickele will begin the concert with Desecretion of the House Overture and quickly move to the Hindenburg Concerto. His only concession to another composer will come with Andante Cantabile, from Opus 3, No. 5 by F.J. Haydn. Also on the program is Canine Cantata: Wachet Arf! or Sleeping Dogs Awake! The performance will continue with Ecno Sonata for Two Unfriendly Un-friendly Groups of Instruments and conclude with Concerto for Bassoon vs. Orchestra with movements called "break allegro", "not so fast" and "rondo alia turkey lurkey." The P.D.Q. Bach virus may spread beyond the United States, says Schickele. In the 1984 season, Schickele traveled to London, where a "large and lively" crowd indicated approval of P.D.Q. Bach's works. The works he performed, explains Schickele are the ones that "catapulted him (P.D.Q.) into obscurity." The Star Spangled Banner, our National Anthem, was originally known as "The Defense of Fort McHenry" and printed on an 1814 handbill without the name of Francis Scott Key. "Vision is the art of seeing things invisible." Jonathan Swift ii TWO SIRLOIN STEAK PLATTERS fTV 1 SINGLE ft I I PURCHASE JL WELCOME FULL COURSE DINNER AT S4.SO INCLUDES ? Sirloin Steaks Choice o baked potato trench tries or mashed potatoes & gravy Choice ot soup or dinner salad Large sue 1 6-oz drink Sundowners cheese toast I Z(; 3; Camp Kolob meets at Taylor home The December meeting of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Camp Kolob was held at the home of Alta Taylor. Venetta Kelsey conducted con-ducted the meeting. Songs were sung and a poem, "The Festival of Trees" was read. Adele Nielson gave a lesson "The First Latter Day Saint Apostles". In 1835 Joseph Smith announced that twelve brethern were to be chosen as apostles. The three who had been witnesess to the Book of Mormon were to choose the twelve men. New findings on microwaves and pork The debate has gone on for years whether it was safe to cook pork in Microwave ovens. It might seem an insignificant issue, but more people are cooking more food in more microwave ovens every year. Some newer apartments and con-dominums con-dominums have eliminated the installation of conventional ovens altogether. According to Kris Saunders, Extension nutrition specialist at Utah State Universtiy, the most resent research says you can cook pork in your microwave oven if you use the proper procedures. She says one of these procedures is to use a microwave cooking bag. The bag ensures more even cooking because it holds heat and moisture in. Without the bag, she says, evaporation occuring during the cooking process actually cools the pork to a less safe cooking temperature. tem-perature. "Another precaution, if you intend to cock a pork roast, is to select one that is no more than four inches in diameter. A thicker cut does not allow the microwaves to penetrate to the center of the pork roast," Saunders says. She says the research also indicates in-dicates thaUt is best to cook at a low temperature setting (about 30 percent of maximum). This would make your cooking time about 22 minutes per pound. The other guideline for doneness is cook the pork until its internal temperature reaches 170 degrees. "After you take the pork out of the microwave oven, wrap the entire cooking bag and roast in foil and let stand for 10 minutes to complete the cooking process," Saunders says. She adds that new research also indicates that pork that has been frozen at zero degrees for more than 20 days is safer to cook. "Trichenella spiralis," the dangerous micro organism usually associated with undercooked pork, is destroyed by being in the freezer for that long. Those chosen were, Thomas B. Marsh. David W. Patten. Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, Orson Hyde, William E. McClellin, Parley P. Pratt, Luke Johnson, William Smith, Orson Pratt, John F. Boyington and Lyman E. Johnson. It was announced that there will be no county meeting until February. Christmas gifts were exchanged and refreshments were served to 14 members by hostesses Alta Taylor and Allean Lopez. Little Tiffany Ann Branagan celebrated her first birthday. She is the daughter of Ronnie and Shirley Branagan of Spanish Fork. Her grandparents are Ronald and Shirley Branagan also of Spanish Fork and Mrs. and Mrs. Clarence Lunceford, Springville. For health insurance, check with State Farm. Call: DEAN BRIAN S3 WEST 200 SO. 449-9444 St.ite F.itrrt MjIuhi Automotvie insrjrjri(p c We at Allen Cleaners want to wish you a Happy New Year. In 1985, as in the past we will offer high quality and dependable service on: -General Drycleaning -Draperies -Alterations & Repairs ALLEN CLEANERS In By 10 a.m. Out By 4 p.m. 373 S. Main 489-6441 Springville OFFER GOOD EVERY DAY ;X I I 14 EH DURING THIS MONTHigX H? DURING THIS MONTH |