OCR Text |
Show Page Six - The Springville Herald - February 12, 2004 Eagle Ssoui UQQOCjmmn CHURCH NEWS If you are a young man and earned your Eagle Scout Award in 2003, you and your parents are invited to the annual Eagle Scout Recognition Rec-ognition Banquet on Saturday, Satur-day, Feb. 28, at 7 p.m. at 1230 S. 500 East, Springville. Spring-ville. Dinner will be served, with a guest speaker to follow fol-low and individual recognition recogni-tion of the Eagle Scouts. Tickets are $9 in advance for parents, family and friends. The Eagle Scouts will receive dinner free if reserved in advance. Tickets may be purchased at the door for $10 for parents, family and friends and $3 for 2003 Eagles. Please contact Darrell Simonsen, 489-8330; Dan Cunningham, 491-0927; Steve Chandler, 489-6281; or Brian Mills, 491-3282. 1 ; ! if' - ' p ' ' t i - , r - I ji . y , ' '," I ( ' ';i v- ' ' I i V rfA I PS- fl Xs I 1 p 1 . j li; .1 i... Brett Allen Munson, son of Jon and Stephanie Anderson Ander-son of Springville and Kay and Karla Munson of Elk Ridge, has been called to serve a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ in San Salvador, El Salvador, East Mission. He will speak in church on Sunday, Feb. 9, 2004 at 9:30 a.m. in the Kolob Fourth Ward, 840 S. 400 East, Springville. He will enter the MTC Feb. 18. Brian Jones, son of Rick and Cathy Jones of Maple-ton, Maple-ton, has been called to serve a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ in Brussels, Belgium. He will speak in church on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2004 at 11 a.m. in the Mapleton White Church. He will enter the MTC Feb. 18. f - Kirsten Harmon, daughter of Thayne and Anita Harmon, Har-mon, has earned her Young Womanhood Recognition Award. One of her projects was learning how to become a lawyer. Brittny Christensen. dauch- ter of Kip and Kim Christensen, Chris-tensen, has received her Young Womanhood Recognition Recog-nition Award. She is the granddaughter of Wade and Zoe Christensen and sister of Preston, Quinten, Chelsey and Hilary Christensen. Chris-tensen. Major goals accomplished accom-plished in the process included in-cluded serving many hours as an aid to a kindergarten class, writing in her journal daily for a year and sewing . : ' If ; I lit'-, I 5 - ' I"' f A - " ' Nathaniel LeGrande Barker, Bark-er, son of Randall and Carol Barker of Springville, Spring-ville, has returned home after serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ in Angeles, Philippines. He will speak in church at 11 a.m. in the Spring Creek Seventh Ward, 35 N. 400 East, Springville, on Sunday, Sun-day, Feb. 15, 2004. Friends and family are welcome at the service and home. Ron Snow, son of Jay and Karen Snow of Springville, has returned home after serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ in Tampico, Mexico. He will speak in church on Sunday, Feb. 15, 2004 at 11 a.m. in the Springville Eighth Ward, 245 S. 600 East, Springville. CERT training is fun and educational by Martin Palmer When I saw the red, blue, yellow and green ribbons, gauze pads and triangle bandages all strewn in festive array on the class room tables, I knew our instructor for the night was a woman. It had that look of months of preparation, artistic flair and detail that men, no matter how hard they try, cannot match. It made the atmosphere seem just like a party. A party led by Marsha Rasmus-sen, Rasmus-sen, a woman. Actually, an EMT-1, CPR instructor, ambulance crew, second grade teacher type of woman. wom-an. When our party got going, go-ing, it turns out that the colored ribbons are used by rescuers to tag disaster victims vic-tims to show what type of medical attention they need. Marsha told us that "triage" means "to sort" in French, so the ribbons make . a lot of sense. Cases needing imme-' diate care get a red ribbon, delayed care cases get yellow, yel-low, those needing no care get green ribbons and those needing no care because they are dead get the dreaded blue ribbons. I'm not sure if we can blame the French for making getting a blue ribbon into a bad thing, but since they are taking a lot of flak these days SOUTH COUNTY'S ONLY SECURE ALZHEIMER UNIT Home Assisted Living Allison Arnold returns Friday, Feb. 13, 2004 from serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ in Charlotte, North Carolina, Spanish speaking. She will speak in church on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 9 a.m. in the Hobble Creek Fifth Ward, 1440 E. 900 South, Springville. Spring-ville. Her parents, Richard and Chris Arnold, welcome all family and friends to come by and visit. Church news On Sunday, Feb. 15, Rev. Janet Riley will be preaching. Her sermon title is "Coming Full Circle" scripture from Luke 6:17-20. Sunday School begins at 9: 15 a.m., Worship at 10:30 a.m. and Fellowship at 11:30 a.m. A Spaghetti Dinner fundraiser fund-raiser after church is sponsored spon-sored by the youth for their Spring Mission Trip. All are welcome. The church is located at 245 S. 200 East, Springville. For more information, infor-mation, call the church office at 489-4390. Seeing much, suffering much and studying much, are the three pillars of learning. Disraeli I would not exchange my leisure hours for all the wealth in the world. Mirabeau we might as well do it. Our next assignment was a "hands on" experience where we got to try triage on our fellow classmates, who had to act out different kinds of injuries. But alas, before doing triage, we had to don latex gloves (because in a real disaster, with real blood we would need them) and so the "hands on" became a "gloves on" experience. Working with latex gloves on isn't that hard, but getting them on in the first place is. That is if you happen to be a man. The women in the class seemed to have no problems. So at this point I realized that I was breaking new ground for myself, learning things I hadn't ever known before, having fun and becoming a more rounded human being. Am I getting to you? Are you starting-to picture yourself your-self down here at the CERT training, learning valuable skills and having fun? I hope so. Let me finish with a true story. Karrie Beardall, sector leader for Sector Three, walked out of a CERT training train-ing a few years back, having learned how to clear an airway, went home and saved her son's life the following week. Pretty neat, huh. Next week, more medical training with Marsha, so stay tuned. Come home to Hearthstone ' 7 ! . Utah supports E3oy Scouts' right to see!c donations A Boy Scout is supposed to be trustworthy, loyal and helpful and now Utah is joining a legal battle to make sure a Boy Scout is also worthy of charity. Attorney General Mark Shurtleff has signed a friend of the court brief that challenges Connecticut's Connec-ticut's decision to eliminate the Boy Scouts of America from a list of charitable organizations used by state employees for payroll deductions. deduc-tions. "The state of Connecticut has ignored all of the positive ideals of Scouting and decided decid-ed to punish the organization because of its leadership policies," says Shurtleff. Connecticut decided the Boy. Scouts of America must be excluded from the list because the organization does not allow gay adult leaders. The brief argues that a government gov-ernment cannot exclude an organization because it disagrees dis-agrees with their view on a single issue. "The Roman Catholic Church might be told to ordain women priests or lose its tax exemption for church property. A political party might be told to stop criticizing criticiz-ing a Governor's proposal to raise taxes or lose the right to hold its conventions in a publicly owned arena," the brief states. The Second Circuit Court has upheld Connecticut's decision but most courts have ruled against any government effort to regulate First Amendment Amen-dment rights. Here are some examples': - The Eighth Circuit Court held that Missouri cannot keep a private organization organi-zation like the Ku Klux Klan from participating in an "adopt a highway" litter clean up program. - The Eleventh Circuit Court ruled that universities cannot refuse to fund gay and lesbian student clubs. - The U.S. Supreme Court ordered a private parade organization to include in-clude an entry from the Irish-American Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston. "We do not believe that the First Amendment gives the government such censor 161 No . 1 k A , A , h , i I ; IMaAkMaMaNAw ship power. Inclusion in the State Employees Charitable Fund should not depend on whether a government bureaucrat bu-reaucrat agrees or disagrees with that group's ideas," says Utah Solicitor General An-nina An-nina Mitchell. Utah alley PAF users to meet The next regular, second-Saturday-of-the-month meeting meet-ing of the Utah Valley PAF (Personal Ancestral File) Users Group will be on Saturday, Feb. 14, from 9 a.m. until noon in the LDS "RedThapel at 4000 N. Timpview Drive (650 East), Provo. The main presentation will be by Paul D. Starkey on THE INTERNET IGI. Paul Starkey is Product Manager for the Internet International Genealogical Index in the LDS Church's Family History Department in Salt Lake City and will have lots of helpful information informa-tion to tell us. In particular, he will show us how to be more effective in searching for our ancestors to help reduce duplication. Following the main presentation pre-sentation there will be several sever-al classes at all levels of family history and computing. comput-ing. The tentative list of classes and teachers scheduled sched-uled for this meeting are: (1) Q&A: The Internet IGI by Paul Starkey; (2) PAF5 Basics by Gayle Tippets; (3) What's On This Disk by Duane Dudley; (4) Digital Photo Basics by Mario Schu-ldt; Schu-ldt; (5) The New and Im Leading financial institution approving small business, mortgage and vehicle loans. Immediate response. Give us a call at: 1-866-219-7661. MTC BeUvevy Available at The Springville Herald South Main, Springville Packages - $1.50 Letters - $1.00 Large Packages -$2 - $3 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. Saturday Hplivprvl i The friend of the court brief was authored by the Attorney General of Virginia and includes signatures of the Attorneys General of Utah, Idaho, South Dakota and Alabama. proved Ancestry.com by Beau Sharbrough; (6) Individual Indi-vidual Mentoring (in the FHC) .by Claudia Benson and Rae Lee Steinacker; (7) Video from last month's presentation on Family History Histo-ry Library Missionaries by Don and Vivian Ostler; and (8) RootsMagic by Bruce Buzbee. All meetings of the Users Group are open to the public whether members of the group or not. The Users Group has the goal of helping help-ing individuals use technology technolo-gy to further their family history. For further information informa-tion about the group or its activities contact Gerhard Ruf, President, at pres-uv-pafug.org and 225-6106, Don Snow at snowdmath.byu.e-du, snowdmath.byu.e-du, or Brian Cooper at vp2-u vp2-u vpafug.org. He can compress the most words into the smallest idea of any man I know. Lincoln Some people stay longer in an hour than others can in a week. Howells 798-1500 Take a 3-D Tour of our facility at: www.hearthstone.manor.com a quilt. Her only flair is in her nnsfrik LmiiaH.mmffliifflMMtuTOiiiffl I |