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Show Citizen, Review and Free Press (jmlJIKDRJ - 4' EKHMIS As a service to our readers and advertisers, the following space has been provided free of charge. i 1 I m P5' c I i-T - 1 P- IE c-.nr i i i i v w - i i y-i-j-i-i MM Hrs. M-Th. 11:30 a.m. -10 p.m Fri. & Sat. till 1 1:00 p.m. 519 E. State American Fork 756-5266 FREE DRINKS 1 FREE Drink with medium pizza 2 FREE Drinks with Large Pizza -A Pizza Barn Special $2 OFF our 14" Combination Pizza and one FREE litre of soft drink Expires June 17, 1981 426 E. St. - PI. Grove 3 - o II ir 1 dbddb Racquetball 2 Price This Weekend!! Fri. June 12, 5-10 p.m., Sat. June 13 8:00 a.m. - 5 p.m COUPON Call 756-5224 for court reservations Tri-City Supreme Courts - 551 E. State A.F. mssnnnmsm $1 OFF any self sufficiency book or H.P. Cookbook in stock eo en CO Bare Necessities 530 E. State Road 756-5297 Gill This coupon good for 20 off Any regularly priced merchandise Coupon expires June 20, 1981 Grandma Fayes Childrens Shop 23 East Main American Fork mWVTTTYTTJTTmm r w l i r l I i Tail Gate Protectors Reg. $19.95 with this coupon $13.95 You Save $6.00 Coupon expires June 30, 1981 SI Timp Tires 540 East State Rd. American Fork o a CO FREE BOX OF CANDY with any gift purchase of $7.00 or more Fathers' Day. Birthdays, Showers, or any other 5" special occasion. We also sell ice cream, party 5 ideas and cake decorating supplies. g p Coupon expires July 1, 1981 ? Sweet Fantasies 117 East 200 North -Alpine -756-6916 -e o Springtime Panorama Editor Randall Wright captured this spring sunset Monday from the foothills beneath Timpanogos. Professional and Youth Art Exhibit Opens A Professional and Youth Art Exhibit opened at American Fork High School Monday evening, offering of-fering an interesting and unusual collection of art works. The professional art exhibit is directed by Randy Blackburn, Lehi, with Nancy Blackburn in charge of the youth art display. The exhibits are beautifully arranged in adjoining galleries al the school and will be open nightly except Sunday, through July 10 in conjunction with the Utah Pageant of the Arts. The professional exhibit includes both paintings and sculpture works of Utah artists, including Dr. Avard Fairbanks, Lee K. Parkinson, Stanley Wanlass, Elva Malin, Bill Kirkpatrick, Kathryn Stats, Norma Fersberg, Carol Pettit Harding, Allen K. Reinhold, Florence Hansen and Mr. Blackburn. Oils, watercolors, acrylics and other mediums are included in the art works of the Utah Pageant of the Arts professional exhibit, as well as a variety of sculpture works. The Youth Art Exhibit includes works from elementary schools in Lehi, Alpine, Highland, American Fork and Pleasant Grove, as well as junior and senior high school students from this area. Included in the exhibit is a fine collection of art works by the high school students who were scholarship winners for 1981. These awards were made from exhibitors in the Young Masters competition, which draws entrants from all Utah high schools. The exhibit is co-sponsored by Utah Pageant of the Arts and the Utah Arts Council, National Endowment of the Arts, Washington, D.C. BrOWSing By Tom Griffiths In so many parts of the world our civilization seems out of joint. It appears that almost every country is unhappy over something. Here in our part of the state we are threatened with the installation of one of the greatest life destroying armaments this world has ever seen. Most of us are seeking ways to get rid of our tensions, worries and anxieties about the future. There is a mad rush to flee from our problems, to escape reality and try to find in a bottle some ammunition to help us fight the daily battle of living. Druggists are filling prescriptions each day for millions of tranquilizer tablets and other relaxing drugs. They are designed to anethetize our brains so that our troubles and worries will dissolve into thin air. At least that's what many people hope will happen. The newspapers, TV, and other methods of communications pour into our eyes and ears, a daily barrage of negative, alarming predictions about the domestic and international political situations. We are fed worrisome news about the Soviet arms build up, the sinister threat of high taxes, high interest rates and tight money. Today on the radio I heard one economist predict that by the turn of the century gasoline will cost $2.00 a gallon. Someone suggests this powerful tranquilizer. "When you come to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on." The best thing about the future is that it comes only one day at a time. All of the wise men down through the ages have stressed the importance of working hard and trying to live 'One Day at a Time.' Recently a preacher, speaking to a service club, gave a rather new slant about a sentence in the Lord's Prayer. He observed: "This prayer doesn't ask for a week, month or year's supply of the Staff of Life. It merely petitions - give us this day our daily bread. A highly important principle to keep in mind and another great tranquilzer. The basic philosophy of a happy life is well summed up in a beautiful poem written centuries ago in Sanskrit, the ancient classical language preserved in the Hindu sacred writings. It is titled "Salutation To the Dawn." "Today is the very life of life. In it's brief span lie all the realities of our existance. the bliss of Grow th, the Spendor of Beauty, The Glory of Action. Yesterday is but a Dream and Tomorrow is only a vision. But today, well lived, makes every yesteday A dream of joy, and every tomorrow a vision of Hope. Look ye well, therfore to this Day Such is the Salutation to the Dawn. No one has a perfect score as trouble seems to come alike to both the rich and the poor. The important thing is how to get rid of worry -which someone has defined as "the interest paid by those who borrow trouble." Goethe, the great German writer, aptly put it: "Talent is nurtured in solitude. Character is formed in the stormy billows of the world. It is something each one of us can build for himself out of the trials and errors of daily life." Specials torn Father who Reads CHOICES A Father's Counsel by William G. Dyer Reg. $6.95 Now $4.95 A Companion to Your Study of the Old Testament by Daniel H. Ludlow Reg. $8.95 Now $6.95 The Spirit of the Old Testament by Sidney B. Sperry Reg. $5 95 Now $2.99 Leather Scriptures Deluxe Matched Set Triple Combination & New Bibls Reg. $105.00 Indexed, Black only $55.00 Triple Combination Large Print, Style A, Indexed Reg. $32.00 $24.95 Prices Effective thru June 20, 1981 Limited to stock Watch Your Language By DON NORTON Assistant Professor of English Brigham Young University Ordinarily this column will deal with correctness in English usage. Today, however, let's start by discussing an example of "over-correctness." "over-correctness." Which pronoun is traditionally correct in these sentences? It will be up to you and ( I, me) to get the job done. The choice will be between Bob and ( I, me ) . Me is right in both instances: ". . .up to you and (up to) me" "... between (a preposition) you and me." Because teachers and parents have so frequently corrected children who say "My friend and me went . . .," both children and many adults have come to think that whenever pronouns are joined by and, the pronouns I, we, he she and they (the subject case pronouns) are correct. Not so, despite frequency of the error, even among educated people -especially businessmen and many semi-professional people I've noted. Last summer a grocery executive confessed to me on a Friday that on the previous Tuesday, he had written me off as an English teacher for using such "uneducated" English as "between you and me." If you havr a question about English usage, send H. along with a stamped self -addressed envelope to Vtatrh Your Language, care of this paper. All questions will be answered; the best m ill be published in this column. "I treat my policyholders like individuals, not numbers... each one has different insurance needs." CALL ME. I know it s important to find out what all your . special needs are . . . life, health, home and car ... so can look at your insurance program as a whole and coordinate it. Call me today. ....;,!3Wf;j- J. Ralph Binnal 120 N. 100 E. - Am. Fork 756-3518 STATE FARM fin I CiiyjBy Camaany f staff ! I I IHnawflia. mmm MSuaaKci I fit T", i t' A', e ..v:::v:v.:-v. |