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Show Orem-Geneva Times January 31, 1974 r'-i V i - J BOY SCOUTS who participated in a search and rescue mission Saturday in the Provo River bottoms are (seated from left): Mark Robbin, Mike Crowther and Mike Sears. Left to right: Scoutmaster Richard Hanks. Committeeman Richard Heaps, Steve Sears, Mike Hanks, Monty Willhite, David Heaps, John Mitchell, John Matthews (assistant Scoutmaster) Orem Police manGary Sessions and (on top) Kenny Hanks. r i Service Calls $3.50 Winegard Ant System All mokes & models GE Tubes Black & White TV's repaired ONE PRICE . $I2 00 i i Labor and Paris j I I C0'r 095 Antena Systems AV (outside) Parts and labor Colortronics TV 268 S. State Orem, Utah a 224-2833 I- Scouts Perform 'Rescue Orem 11th Ward Boy Scouts recently participated in a search and rescue mission Saturday north of Provo River. TheScouts were told by Orem City Policeman Police-man Gary Sessions that a boy had been trapped beneath a snowmobile somewhere in the river bottoms and that their help was needed in finding him. The Scouts searched until they found the "victims members of the Blazer B class in their ward who were suffering from imagined injuries such as fractured frac-tured arms and legs. TheScouts gave the Blazers first aid and made stretchers to carry out the "wounded.9 The search and rescue mission- was designed to help the Scouts fulfill requirements for a new Emergency Preparedness Badge. 13 u BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANT UNIVERSITY MALL - OREM 366 NORTH UNIVERSITY AVENUE, PROVO l?J7LATIG?J FIGHTER CCUPGH 1 BREAKFAST COUPON ORDER OF FRENCH TOAST WITH EACH ORDER PURCHASED 3 IFj Served till 11 a.m. only (With Coupon-No Coupon-No Substitutions) Void after Feb. 28, 1974 Sale Amount ... Credit Total Date & Initials. INFLATION FIGHTER COUPON 2 GOOD ANYTIME! FflGB BIG BOY HAMBURGER COMBINATION WITH EACH BIG BOY COMBINATION 0 VM PURCHASED (With Coupon-No Coupon-No Substitutions) Sale Amount ... Credit . Total Date & Initials. Void after Feb. 28, 1974 INFLATION FIGHTER COUPON 3 BUY ONE GROUND ROUND OR HAM STEAK DINNER 1 OFF WITH SECOND DINNER PURCHASED (With Coupon No Substitutions) GOOD ONLY THURSDAYS Jan. 24 -Jan. 31 Feb. 7 - Feb. 14 Feb. 21 - Feb. 28 Void after Feb. 28, 1974 Sale Amount ... Credit Total Date & Initials. J f -i St DAK.'N J OH A NS EN (left) and Harold Smoot (right) recently received their Eagle Scout awards. Darin was born at Mt. Pleasant, June 15, 1960, a son of Wesley and Joyce Johansen. The highlight of his scouting years was a 50 mile survival hike last summer. He is an eighth grader at Lincoln Jr. High where he has been named on the high honor roll since the seventh grade. He plays the saxophone in band. Harold Smoot, 13, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Smoot of 35 N. 700 E. He attends Orem Jr. High where he plays the trombone in band. He delivers papers and won the Utah State Championship in Soap Box Derby in 1972. He is president of his deacon's quorum, is senior patrol leader of his troop and achieved the Weblos rank in Cub Scouting. Orem City Library Makes 1973 Report I,,, .mi i a j mm I mi i !. ..i. IPI - -l m X 'Q"l 11 m, iwhiii.iuj u ui i,ne ' l v : a k. ; I I i iiiiiim V'IMll I II MlgMa-' . t.r fcit -- ,J RICHARD GHOSSEN, (RIGHT), Eagle Scout from Orem, accepts an Anu'i ican flag at the 18th annual Eagle Scout Recognition Banquet sponsored by the Utah National Parks Council, and held at the Wilkinson Center at Brigham Yoirne University. With Richard are from 1200 Eagle Scouts Honored At Banquet Left George R. Storrs, exalted ruler of Provo BPO Elks Lodge, which gave each Eagle Scout a flag; Robert Q. Steele, Lincoln Junior High school teacher, and Elder Marion 1). Hanks, featured speaker. "11" W alker of Pleasant Grove and Paul K. Walker of Spring -ville. Orem City Library circulated a total of 249,047 books, records, and materials this past year compared to 225,196 during 1972 or an increase of 23,851 circulations. circu-lations. This represents a gain of 10 in items loans, according to Bernice Cox, city librarian. Teenage-adult books borrowed totaled 98,856 while the Children's Child-ren's Department loaned 114,446 or a grand total of 213,302 books circulated during 1973. Approximately Approxi-mately 9,829 periodicals, 342 pamphlets, 25,429 sound recordings re-cordings and 145 flannel board stories were borrowed for a total of 35,745 materials loaned. The flannel board stories were acquired ac-quired late in the year and service in this area began just before Christmas and are a popular item. The Senior Department book holdings total 26,342 and include 15,358 fiction books and 10,984 non fiction. The Junior Department Depart-ment has 12,369 fiction books, 4,840 non-fiction for a total of 17,209 book stock. Orem Library borrowed 130 books thru Inter-Library loan or Utah State Library. The adult current borrowers number 9,353 at the close of the year with 5,336 junior patrons Girl Scout Activities Outlined Orem Girl Scout leaders have outlined activities for February. A Brownie Buzz and a Jr. Round Table will be conducted Feb. 4 to train the leaders. Girls and leaders will participate par-ticipate in song training Feb. 15. Songs the groups learned on their summer bus trip to Washington, D.C. will be reviewed. re-viewed. Feb. 22 will be "thinking day so the girls can be reminded re-minded of their international friendships. Each troop in thesurrounding area is busy with its projects. Orem Troop 354 Brownies are learning the fundamentals of cooking and sewing. American Fork Troop 178 will spend three weeks in Community centers learning how their city works. A primitive snow camping is being planned by Troop 87 Seniors for later in February. Troop 484 Brownies recently recent-ly made salt clay mushroom wall plaques. A party is being planned in Troop 22 Juniors with their parents, in connection with their hospitality badges. They are also working on their sewing sew-ing badges. Troop 5C2 is working on world friendship projects. Troop 10 Cadets are teaching other troops songs and games. They are also working on projects proj-ects involving the environment and out-of-doors and a project called "Today's World Challenge." Chal-lenge." Union Pacific Selects flew Vice President C. Barry Schaefer, 34, 402 J. E. George Blvd., has been elected a vice president of Union P acific R ailroad and itssubsidia ry companies effective January 1, 1974, it was announced today by John C. Kenefick, president. Schaefer, whohasbeenwestern general counsel for Union Pacific Pa-cific Railroad in Omaha since 1972, will continue in that position as well. Schaefer is a graduate of Princeton University and received re-ceived his law degree from Columbia Co-lumbia University. and 100 non-resident borrowers. The library is open 58 hours a week. There are seven full time staff members and 12 part time staff. The library board consists of six representative citizens, the council representative, and the city librarian. This board is responsible for library policies, program plans and budget. Special features include changing monthly art exhibits by local and state artists, displays of various types, Speed Reading Courses, a weekly Story Time, and aChildren'sSummerReading program. A Type Room is available with coin operated typewriters type-writers or one nay bring their own typewriter. A copy machine may be used for a small fee. The Mezzanine Floor has a growing Audio Visual Department Depart-ment with records, reel to reel cassette tapes, plus tape players for circulation. A listening room is available. TheProductionDe-partment TheProductionDe-partment has an Opaque Projector, Projec-tor, large paper cutter, and a dry mount press. Newly acquired are film strips and film strip projectors. Also the library hopes in the near future to circulate cir-culate framed and unframed pic-f,ires. 'Learn the rules and keep them" was a basic challenge given to more than 700 Eagle Scouts and their sponsors last week by Elder Marion D. Hanks, assistant to the Twelve of the LDS Church. About 1,400 people attended the banquet from Utah, Sanpete, Wasatch, and Millard Counties. Elder Hanks was featured speaker at the 18th annual Eagle Scout Recognition Banquet sponsored by the Utah National Parks Council at the Wilkinson Center at Brigham Young University. Uni-versity. A record number of 1,200 boys earned their Eagle Scout badge during 1973 in (lie Council, about twice as many as a normal year. Using illustrations of some outstanding people who have made an impression on his life, Elder Hanks said to the new Eagles, "You must be able to follow rules whether or not you understand all the reasons at the moment. "You'll get a chance to influence in-fluence lives of others. And, man, you've got the responsibility respon-sibility that goes with it," he said. He told some stories from World War II about heroes Dale Rex and Red Irwin who did the right thing at the right time because tliey were bound by duly and honor to do what they did for olhers--not worrying about themselves or the consequences con-sequences that faced them personally. per-sonally. Elder Hanks observed that an Eagle has twu broad challenges: chal-lenges: (1) He must be mature enough, man enough, and intelligent in-telligent enough to understand that the individual person does matter to him; (2) with the understanding that the individual indi-vidual does matter, then his example to others really means something. You can't be selfish and say, "It's my life, and nothing else matters," Elder Hanks said. He read a poem that was about 4,000 years old to illustrate the negativism that existed even then. "What the poem said and what we hear so much today that's negative is a miserable, phony false song. We CAN become something constructive and useful to our telloV men;"" ' " " ' Receiving special honors at the banquet were the Council's first two Eagle Scouts dating back to 1922-brothers Harold Bank Creates Position Ross E. Kendell has been pro-; moted from vice-president to the 1 newly created position of senior vice president and controller of Commercial Security Bank. The action appoints Mr. Kendell as the senior administrative officer of the bank as well as retaining his position as controller. He is a graduate of Utah State University where he was chosen valedictorian and scholar of the year in 19C0. He joined CommercialSecurity Bank as a management trainee in 1960. He was appointed assistant assis-tant auditor in I960, auditor ia 1963, controller in 1968 and has been vice president and controller control-ler since 1970. In addition to his position with the bank Mr. Kendell is vice president and secretary-treasurer of Commercial Com-mercial Security Bank Corpor-poration. Corpor-poration. lie graduated with honors from the University of Wisconsin School of Bank Adminstration and served as an accounting instructor instruc-tor at the Colorado School of Banking. -4utT lia II 100 Nylon CANDY STRIPE 10 i7 32i I m Continues 100 Nylon SHAG 00$ A VI V. ',VlF (wo tone cold r f P 4 1 ,riWyd- ?: i ;u' vy uxU--sT J l-lAf; ARMSTRONG UTMOST 100 nylon Shag I j 1 K 1 carpet, 2 colors- Vr W Completely installed MM 59 Vd with 916" pad 916- pad If iiU Included sq. yd installed 1 1 f Vi"Tr- r i i m 4z 5 Rolls To Choose From FIRTH Pattern Great Falls Hi-Low 100 Nylon Loop f h .- 8 '--m ' i PAINT LB LASS MANY OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM AT GREAT SAYINGS CARPETS LINOLEUM c W A ,A 4 j'v I i a 1 r 9s Installed FIRTH V0ILA 100 Nylon with hrunsmite metallic for static control Reg. $12.95 yd. 4 Free Pad & Labor 1065 S. State, Orem 225-4141 |