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Show JL CHURCH NEWS Community Church news On Sunday, Dec. 7, Rev. Janet Riley will preach at the Springville Community Church. Her sermon title, based on Luke 3:16, will be "A Voice Crying in the Wilderness." All are welcome. wel-come. Sunday School begins at 9:15 a.m., Worship at 10:30 a.m. and Fellowship at 11:30 a.m. The church is located at 245 S. 200 East, Springville. For more information, infor-mation, call the church office at 489-4390. LA YouUg womh3 RecSg- nition Award nn Nnv 1 2003 in the Kolob 10th Ward. She is the daughter of Eric and Lesa Hyer. Her projects included tutoring children, serving on the Springville Youth City Council, helping plant, care and harvest a garden, cleaning clea-ning and organize her room, cooking, and participating partici-pating in an exercise program. pro-gram. Jamie Davics received her Young Womaiihood Recognition Recog-nition Award in the Kolob Third Ward. Her projects consisted of serving on the youth council, making two different types of quilts and planning and presenting a Young Women in Excellence Excel-lence Meeting. Fact do not cease to exist because they are ignored. tew -'1- wi . - .......,,. ..... .,.. i... ia..,aiw I WE SEE YOUR NEED FOR LIFE INSURANCE GROWING EVERY DAY. WE LIVE WHERE YOU LIVE. , fnCi . I LIKE A GOOD NEIGHBOR itattfam.om Halt Farm Li) Inuuana Ompwy (Sat Iktnu d in SX Sunt Farm life and AtuUnt Asturamt Company Ikanti in wr (W Howe Officts: Bloomngtat, ttlmoit Operation: Christmas Cheer for servicemen The Saints at War Project at Brigham Young University in Provo is pleased to announce an-nounce a special program to support those serving in the armed services overseas in the middle-east this Christmas Christ-mas Season. Operation: Christmas Cheer has been organized to remember our guys and gals in uniform over the holiday season. The purpose of Operation: Christmas Christ-mas Cheer is to replace the feelings of loneliness that so many will experience during the Christmas season with feelings of appreciation knowing that they haven't been forgotten by those back home. The goal of the project is to insure that none of our service men and women will experience Christmas this year without a gift or other thoughtful expression from the folks back home. To participate one may contact the offices of the Saints at War Project at BYU. This can be done by calling 422-2484 or by e-mailing e-mailing our offices at saintsa- Sub-for-Santa needs helpers The United Way of Utah County is currently looking for Sub-for-Santa sponsors for more than 500 Utah County families. Seventeen of those families still needing sponsors live in Springville. Those numbers are expected ex-pected to double between now and the program's applicant appli-cant cut off on Dec. 6, according ac-cording to Sub-for-Santa Program director, Christina Aguilar. "The program's success is dependant on the response of the community. We need sponsors now. We also need sponsors willing to take families last minute because sometimes families who need it the most have last-minute emergency situations," Aguilar Agu-ilar said. ' One Springville family applied for assistance after a marriage didn't work out and a parent was left with unexpected unex-pected bills, including medical medi-cal bills. Interested volunteers can sign up to be a sponsor through Dec. 24 and should call 356-6300. Sub-for-Santa, a temporary tempo-rary Christmas assistance program designed to help low-income families provides Christmas gifts for their children. It also encourages self-sufficiency as applicants receive information on money mon-ey management skills and no-cost no-cost Christmas traditions. As your family grows, so does your need for protection. And nobody ran help you provide that protection like rac. your State Farm agent. See me today. Deana Hill 1220 N Main Suite 1 1 Springville, UT 801-489-9444 www.deanahill.com SIATI IM IMSUtAMC! STATE twarbyu.edu. The name of one or more individuals will be provided along with a means of making contact with them. Families of servicemen ser-vicemen back home may also be the recipients of the thou-ghtfulness thou-ghtfulness of others at the holiday season. In the event someone is aware of another member of the armed services servic-es they would like to add to the list of those to be remembered, remem-bered, the project would welcome that information as well. Suggested gifts include small non-perishable food items, dvd's, music and hygiene items just to name a few ideas. There is some urgency as the Christmas Season is approaching rapidly. rapid-ly. In truth, these service personnel would welcome such contact anytime, but it is especially important at Christmas. Please join in thanking those who are making such a sacrifice this year by making their Christmas a little brighter. npfenQPfP BWl VllwlUV driving The Utah Safety Council is now offering four-hour driving courses for individuals individu-als in the ProvoOrem area. Courses are held throughout each month, at the Utah Valley State College (Orem Campus). Also Spanish defensive driving will now be held once a month at the Murray location. The four-hour course consists of classroom instruction instruc-tion and focuses on accident prevention, driving confidence, confi-dence, awareness of hazards and improving driving skills. Drivers may complete the course for a 50-point reduction reduc-tion from their Utah driving record, once every three years. Individuals 55 years of age and older, may qualify for insurance discounts after completing the course. Registration is $35 per person, or $10 for those age 55 and over that are only seeking a reduction in their insurance rate. For additional information or to register, please contact the Utah Safety Safe-ty Council at 1-800-933-5943 or visit www.utahsafetycoun-cil.org. www.utahsafetycoun-cil.org. We are like Scheherazade's Schehera-zade's husband, in that we want to know what happens next. E.M. Forster FARM IS THERE.' or WD SY anJ Wl) College credits or scholarships? Man high school students are willing to work hard for scholarship money to go to college in order to earn college credit. Other students are rinding that, with about the same effort, they can earn the college credits AND the scholarship money at the same time. Possibly the best example would be winning the New Century Scholarship that pays 75 of the tuition for the remaining two years in college to earn a BA or BS degree. Amendments from the State Board of Regents (SB-R), (SB-R), for this lucrative, demanding, de-manding, non-competitive, academic, high school scholarship schol-arship extends the use of the scholarship money to "...an institution not within the state system of higher education..." educa-tion..." and has clarifying information concerning residency resi-dency and Associate Degree requirements. Interested students should review the amendments at http:www.c-ode-co.comutahadmin200-lr765604.htm and http:uta-hsbr.edupolicyr604.htm. http:uta-hsbr.edupolicyr604.htm. An Internet search, using Smoke-free magazines Time is out for tobacco. Not just Time, but Newsweek News-week and U.S. News and World Report are also saying say-ing so long to cigarette ads in student editions of the news magazines. Attorney General Mark Shurtleff announced that four major tobacco companies have agreed to stop advertising in the three magazines distributed to classrooms. "These magazines are meant for teenagers. It is ridiculous for tobacco companies com-panies to advertise to someone some-one who cannot legally buy their product," says Shurtleff. Shurt-leff. The magazines called Time Classroom, Newsweek Education Program and U.S. News Classroom Extension Ex-tension Program are distributed distrib-uted to thousands of middle and high schools in the United Unit-ed States. For example, Newsweek sends about 300,-000 300,-000 copies to classrooms and each copy is red by an average aver-age of 3.5 students-which means nearly one million students saw the cigarette ads in Newsweek alone. The four tobacco companies compa-nies placed approximately, 120 cigarette and smokeless tobacco ads in these three magazines from January 2002 through June 2003. Seize opportunity by the beard, for it is bald behind. now available at The Springville Herald 161 South Main, Springville Packages in by 4 p.m. weekdays delivered to the MTC the same day. No balloon bouquets. Flowers must be boxed up; No perishable foods. No special packaging required. No Saturday delivery! December 4, 2003 - The "New Century Scholarship" Utah, will also provide even more insights and encouraging encourag-ing SBR contacts to this rewarding opportunity. This scholarship is offered by the SBR, not the colleges and universities. Hundreds of Utah high school students have earned this scholarship. Students who start planning plan-ning early may earn some of the 60 required credits while "A Snowmen's Holiday" is the theme of this Christmas tree that was designed, decorated and donated to the Festival of Trees by Gayle Gammell and Diane Butter-field Butter-field of Mapleton. As with this tree, most of the donated trees come with lots of other things. This one has smaller trees, snowmen and a village under the main tree. The festival of Trees is being held at the South Town Exposition Exposi-tion Center in Salt Lake through Sat. 145 It". S 5 S The Sons of the Utah Pioneers, Palmyra Chapter, for their November meeting had speakers Tom and Roberta James from Mapleton. They told about their experiences at Nauvoo. Roberta taught two semesters of church history there and also took her students on field trips of church history and American heritage sites. Tom, on his own, took people on tours to Carthage, Hamilton, Keokuk, Montrose, Fort Madison and more. Shown are Program Chairman Keith Davis and Roberta and Tom James. Photo by Marva Davis 409 -SCSI Packages - $1.50 Letters - $1.00 Large Packages -$2.00 Springville Herald - Page Nine in junior high school through Independent Study, Concurrent Concur-rent Enrollment andor the Advanced Placement (AP) program. Outdated samples of the 39 AP-exams are on file with the Reference Library Li-brary in the Springville City Library. Interested parents are encouraged to help not only their children but their children's peer group with college prep efforts 1& jtiSjnOi'..a(iUi:.:..:: ri. A 0 4 V , m. m. . m - x. x. - |