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Show V iri vi r : kv : v; MffVfew.vV, v., 4 rtf- . a ! SivM f yisr.-.. - ."'D At-:- vjAfif: i -- r-'v ;t ih; J . '; '';, ."- 'A , 4 -'S'M-'t1 - K JJ fl ff i - i - i - 4 , l-f 1. 1 I .s! 4 . ! I i i - ,t- . v fi ' I : 1: , f I "" Rf i '-- : Tf ' " ft. - 1 - 'Cv K i i- fj pj-i- J Boy scouts from the Springville-Mapleton scout district get l . ; 'T?l i , ' i' Volume Ninety-Six The Springville Police Department De-partment has added local elementary ele-mentary schools to their beats in an effort to combat drug abuse through the nationally acclaimed DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program. pro-gram. Officer Chuck Senn has been going into fifth grade classrooms, and will continue doing so until the seventeen-week seventeen-week core curriculum is complete. com-plete. The curriculum will teach the students the skills they need to refuse drugs. The program is a cooperative venture ven-ture between the Nebo , School , District and the Springville Police Department. Since the program's inception incep-tion in 1983, DARE has become be-come the largest and most successful suc-cessful drug education program Gtfy mm fl sseto Neil Strong, auditor for the city, reported a "total asset gain of $3.5 million" in a report to ; the city council in their regular meeting last Tuesday evening. Strong also made several recommendations to the council coun-cil to better account for its' various operations. He also commended Mayor Bertelsen, Richard Manning, Velda Widdison and Brenda Wall and their staffs for their dedication, and cooperation during the audit. He noted that the city is headed in the right direction. In other business, Harry Clark of the Springville Floral appeared to seek the city's help This beautiful oil painting by artist William Whitaker, was donated to the Springville Museum of Art by Ray Johnson of the Overland Over-land Trail Gallery. It is titled, "Young Woman," Wom-an," and was painted in 1976. It Is one of 65 new works added to the permanent collection Boy scouts from the Springville-Mapleton scout district get ready for their annual winter games at Camp Jermiali T Johnson in Hobble Creek Canyon. Over 200 boys and leaders attended this year's annual event. 1N8iISd8 him in the U.S. In 1990-1991, the DARE program will be taught to more than six million students stu-dents in the U.S., the Department Depart-ment ' of Defense Dependent Schools overseas, American Samoa, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. DARE lessons focus on four major areas; providing accurate information about drugs, teaching students decisionmaking decision-making skills, showing them how to resist peer-pressure and giving them ideas for alternatives alterna-tives to drug use. The DARE program is designed de-signed to be taught by streetwise street-wise police officersveterans who have seen how drugs can destroy lives, and who can answer students' questions based on their training and experience. in controlling street parking at his business. His problem arises from employees of the Fullmer Dental Clinic parking for long periods of time in front of his business. Councilman Creer moved that 30-minute parking signs be placed on the streets around the business and the motion passed. City Engineer, Robert Gun-nell, Gun-nell, reported on the new well that has been drilled behind the swimming pool, the water in the well is reported to be softer than other water sources in the city, pure and without iron problems. Central Bank requested that 4iv'4 - ) 4 -V - It , 4 1 -" SPRINGVILLE, UTAH 84663 In preparing to teach DARE in Springville, Officers Dave Caron and Chuck Senn completed com-pleted 80 hours of specialized training. The officers were instructed in teaching techniques, tech-niques, elementary school operations, op-erations, the use of visual aids, officer-school relationships, communication skills, child development and classroom management. Chief Bowers expressed his commitment to the DARE program and is expecting to keep the program permanently. Currently, the program has. been partially funded by donations dona-tions made from local businesses. Anyone wishing to help fund this important drug program pro-gram can do so by contacting the Springville Police Department. Depart-ment. the Sage Creek Market property proper-ty which the bank has acquired through a bankruptcy, be kept as a non-conforming commercial commer-cial use in that area of town. The council voted to keep the use of the property for a year. Councilman Packard did not vote on the matter because of his connections with the bank. Judd Harward requested that the road leading to his property in the west fields not be used as a landing strip for model airplanes. The council voted to turn the matter over to the police and asked that all signs about model airplanes be taken down in that area. at the museum during 1990. The new aqui-sitions aqui-sitions are on exhibit for the public to view the artwork that was acquired by the museum last year. The show includes a large variety of styles. their - January 23, 1991 . , f; H ' - : - I I Zr-tl. .ti, A A -' If - g t I "I s,Hp,sTys,!f 1 J t ' 4 4 I w ... i .4 1 j -, 4 t I.-, . . . ' - , - ' I s . ' - . . ... ' v , t , 1 Springville Police Officer Chuck Senn is shown above talking to fifth grade students at the Brookside School last week. He and Officer Dave Caron have been trained and are going to all the elementary schools presenting BYU Professor to speak at Historical Society Dr. Thomas G. Alexander, professor of history at Brigham Young University and director of the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at the Provo school, will be the featured speaker at the January lecture sponsored by the Springville Historical Society. He will center his remarks on Wilford Woodruff and the Manifesto of 4 890: The Odyssey of a Mormon Mor-mon Prophet. Scheduled for Wed., Jan. 23, the meeting will be the first in the 1991 lecture series, and will be held at the Civic Center, Cen-ter, 50 South Main, beginning at 7 p.m. The public is cordially invited in-vited and there is no charge, according to the society's president, pres-ident, D. LaRell Johnson. Dr. Alexander is widely recognized for his lectures and writings on western history and specializes in United States History, late 19th and early 20th Centuries; Public land and Resource Policy, Utah History and Mormon History. A native of Logan, Dr. Alexander Al-exander graduated from Weber State University in mechanical engineering, from Utah State University in history and political po-litical science, and received his doctorate from the University of California, Berkeley, also in history. He is affiliated with numerous numer-ous historical associations including in-cluding the Utah State Historical Histori-cal Society, Western History Association, Organization of American Historians, Mormon History Association, Utah Academy of Arts, Sciences and w i.i.",,m jxx Price 50t Letters, and Association of Utah Historians, having served as president in all but one. His publications include many on the multiple use management man-agement in the Intcrmountain West of Region 4, U.S. Forest Service, a number on water resources of the Provo River Project, and a number on Mormon Mor-mon history subjects and national na-tional leaders. Among his prestigious awards are best history article award for "Dialogue: Journal of Mormon Thought, 1985." He is the three-time winner of the Mormon History Association Award for the best article, (1968, 1976, 1981) and winner of the best book award in 1987 for "Mormonism in Transition"; Award of Merit of the American Ameri-can Association for State and Local History, 1990; Morris Rosenblatt Award of the Utah Historical Quarterly (1969); National Historical Publications Publica-tions and Record Commission Fellow, 1970-71; KarlG. Mae- Over seven million worth of building in 1990 Building permit fees totaled almost $47,000 in Springville last year according to a report submitted to the city council by Richard Manning, city recorder. re-corder. Total valuation of all building build-ing in the city during 1990 was almost $7.25 million. Building fees, water and sewer fees, JL..m .8. . fiVXJg-Z...J.l,'l 11 -'" n Number Four the nationally acclaimed DARE (Drug Abuse Resistance Education) program. DARE is the largest and most successful drug education program in the United States. si. -J - if i I'S I it i Dr. Thomas G. Alexander ser Research Award, 1976; Fellow of the Utah State Historical His-torical Society, and Honorary Alumnus, U.S. Forest Service. He is married to the former Marilyn Johns and they are the parents of five children. plan check fees, electrical fees and other fees equaled almost $149,000 for the year. New residential construction construc-tion topped the construction list with almost $3.7 million. Next was new commercial building at $1.2 million and addition-alteration was third at $683,000. |