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Show -Wednesdav. January 25. ,1984' 4 Orem-Geneva Times- I Bog : (Sarnie FeedBng 1 Efffforits iiticDnae 1 i 4 v ' Dave Talbot of Mt. View shoots over an American Fork player during the game Friday which the Bruins won by a score of 72-47. .-....., G t The Mountain View Bruins basketball team had very little : trouble with the American Fork ' Cavemen last week, winning by a ''score of 72-47. The Bruins were led , by Matt Anderson who scored 25 ; points. Dave Talbot and Brad ''Rollins both chalked up 14 points each to help the Bruins dominate the -A.F. team. ! The Bruins rattled the Cavemen : with a full court trap that seemed to mum Gtoup Donates $10,000 j Members of the North Shore Animal Rescue League last week came to the rescue pf Utah's starving, jdeer.'The Newi,oi'k -based group; presented Division of .Wildlifaj ! Resources Director Doug Day a check for $10,000 to help meet expenses ex-penses of the emergency big game feeding program. Representatives from the humane organization flew to Salt Lake City to make the contribution contribu-tion and to assist in various feeding ? efforts. Spokeswoman Betty Rosenzweig credits League president Alex Lewyt for the rescue effort. She said Lewyt f was touched by a story he saw on national na-tional TV news. "He told all of us about Utah's starving deer and it broke out hearts, so we came to Utah to see how we could help," Rosenzweig Rosenz-weig said. The North Shore Animal Rescue League is headquartered in Port Washington on the north shore of Long Island. The League was If you live, work or go to school full-time in the city of relative of someone who does, we invite you to become a 4 n () bewilder the team from A.F. The Bruins slammed the door on A.F. in the fourth quarter when they outscored them 20-10. ,. This Friday, Jan. 27, the Bruins and the Orem Tigers will clash on the Tiger floor. This cross-town rivalry always furnishes the basketball basket-ball faithful with a great night of thrills. The Tigers' will be out to blemish the record of the high-flying Bruins. established in 1944, prompted by concern con-cern for what would happen to stray dogs and cats should, the U.S. mainland be(attacked during World War II. Iri the l9ft)s their volunteers were concerned about cruelty to. animals and later with placement of animals into good homes. League efforts ef-forts have grown rapidly since then. In 1983 they placed 32,000 dogs and cats into homes. Hummingbirds are . being electrocuted elec-trocuted in increasing numbers by mistaking red insulators on electric fences for flowers. So the manufacturer manufac-turer of the "Red Snap'r" insulators has taken action, reports National Wildlife magazine. The company has advised farmers and landowners lan-downers to' stop using its red insulators in-sulators or to paint them a color, such as black or white, that will not attract hummingbirds. 'i'iftiifilE FIND OUT MORE .CALL 225-6000 OFFICE LOCATION: 115 North 1600 West, Orem BRANCH LOCATION: 175 East 200 South, Orem Donations continue to pour into Division of Wildlife Resources officers of-ficers from all over the country this week while the emergency big game feeding program braces to counter another three months of winter and starvation conditions among northern Utah deer and elk herds. The Division has received over $100,000 in donations, dona-tions, and hopes for more funding for the feeding program through an emergency appropriation from the Utah legislature. Donations to the i Emergency Big Game Feeding Fund may be sent to the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources; Salt Ike City, . Utah, 84116. Checks should be written airecuy 10 me uivision or y.uuuie Resources. All donatioTjiiriJf tax deductible. Q Division conservation Officers along the populous Wasatch Front in northern Utah have established dozens of deer and elk feeding stations sta-tions in the foothills in an effort to lure Youngsters Tell Deer's Sad Tale Youngsters attending Aspen Elementary School have been touched by news stories of the sad plight of Utah's starving deer. While officials have responded with organized feeding programs and others have contributed food and money, these young students have attempted to capture the plight of the deer through original stories and " poems. The following are two among several which were submitted for publication. Deer Are Special One day I was driving my car down the road when I saw a special fawn come into the world. He had long legs and white spots on his sides. Oh! he was a cute little fellow. His eyes were pitch black. He got up , and came to me and rubbed up against me. Everyday I would go and play with him while the mother grazed. I ; would feed him some sugar cubes, before I left. When winter came, it snowed so much that all his food got covered and his mother died and he was Deer -i !':'. .' There once was a deer that walked very far. It started at the mountains and walked to town. It bumped its head on a bar And began to cry. He looked all around for his mother, But then he remembered the tragedy. His mother was gone and so was his dad, The only one he had was himself So he began to cry. The next thing he knew People were surrounding him by the dozens, He looked around and he saw an opening He squeezed out. Then he wished he hadn't. To the sight of his eyes laid his mother. She had a slit in her neck and was D.E.A.D. MyKel Atkins Can Join 'Your Community Credit Union" s Free Checking IRAs s Open 60 Hrs. Weekly Consolidation Loans hungry animals away from residential residen-tial areas where they've been hit by cars and chased by dogs. Volunteers from the state's Wildlife Federation are monitoring the feeding stations around the clock, keeping feeding troughs filled with donated deer feed and hay. And thousands of individuals as well as volunteers church, school and civic groups have set up their own feeding stations to help feed the starving star-ving animals. Grant Jense, big game coordinator coor-dinator for the DWR, urges Deonle not to toss out "junk food" along highways and roads. He says this only on-ly concentrates the deer in areas where they're easy target for passing cars. Already, Jense says, dozens of deer have been killed in Morgan County because of well-meaning people peo-ple who've left food along the roadways. road-ways. Jense adds that only deer pellets or hay (for elk) should be used us-ed now in established feeding stations away from roads. alone. I didn't know this when I went to see him. He was standing over his mother and I could see a form of a tear in his eye. I had pity for him and I took him home and fed him and took care of him. I gave him sugar cubes and pellets every day. He got bigger and when spring came we would go to the mountains and have fun. One day he felt lonely and so he left. He found a partner and came home for the winter. One day I went to feed him some sugar cubes as I always did and there were two little fawns...a boy and a girl. They reminded me of him when he was a little fawn. When spring came I told them they could live here as long as they wanted to and that this was their home. They didn't leave. The two grew up so fast that they would jump the fence and when I left the door open, they would go in and watch television with me. One day two dozen deer came out of the mountains and into my corral for winter. They all had fawns and so I had fifty deer that I took care of. I told them they could stay as long as they wanted. My farm of deer grew larger and more deer came out of the mountains and they had more fawns. This herd never stopped growing. It just grew and grew. Melanie Brown Orem, or are a member today. Pk s W -, i Tiger John MacKay puts in a fifteen footer. Photo by Fitness Tip Dale Nelson, Professor Utah State University If you want to be lean and mean-at mean-at least lean-increase your DAILY exercise. It helps your body burn calories better. Aerobic exercise gives your body a direct assist in burning excess calories after you eat-above and beyond what exercise exer-cise normally does. For some unknown reason many people, usually the obese, have a lower heat response (thermic effect ) than others more fortunate in this respect. A study from the University of New Hampshore's Human Nutrition Labatory showed that some people had seven times more heat response after a meal than other. For example, when one person per-son in the study increased aerobic capacity 15" percent, her heat response boomed 110 percent. The researchers caculated that the percentage per-centage of calories her body was burning as heat rose from 3 percent to 110 percent. In effect, you become a good fat burner when you engage ' in daily aerobic exercise. The researcher found that exercise exer-cise equivalent to 30 .minutes of brisk walking or slow jogging, four times a week, was the minimum needed to affect the body's thermic response. But, I hasten to add that it ought to be daily. Outside of running, I see no reason to worry about exercising after af-ter eating. UNBELIEVABLE! Deluxe Children's Parkas A (Retail $35.00) SALE SIZE 4 14" SIZES J5" SIZE 6 h . .Y.-.v. ...... ,V; . . ; m ; 51 SIZE 7 J" 9 ii .-; ' -fe- . out-runs Provo's Kam Jarman and Gary Whitehead. s Practical Application For years I have resisted the commercial gadgets available to the general public, but the rugged winter win-ter we are experiencing has changed my mind about some things. Now, I recommed a good stationary bicycle parked right in front of the television set. A rebound trampoline will serve ser-ve the same purpose, except you can't adjust the intensity of the exercise as well. Then use it periodically through the waking hours. We orginally purchased our stationary bicycle for my wife, but I have used it more this winter than I ever thought I would. I get up early, eat breakfast, turn the TV up, hop on the bike for 10 minutes, stretch for 5 , minutes; an'& than hop baci k6n the '' bike for another 5 minutes-all before going to work. Then I find time to do at least 15 minutes more sometime before going to bed. This has produced excellent results and it has been in addition to all of the other physical activities I normally do. But the main point is that it has been accomplished easily at home out of the snow and cold. With the TV on I don't get excited about the lack of changing scenery. The bicycle can also be used for interval work (tighten the tension) in addition to sustained aerpbic rides. Try it! V i jfc sum. .Q .ae, . ten -4 |