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Show Thursday, 'January, 20 Page 2 i ,l. -HP-?. A M E M C A ft T .0 R 1 1 :l f f 5 I ;.j-t,,jw' tii iir NEWS AND NOTh5?0ttE.P YOU'N Bigelow Ot'ga ' Company holds open hopse Barbara Christiansen Bigdow Organ Company will have un open house from (i to H p.m. on Jim Hi, ut now. 100 South, American fork. The company will In- show ( ing M. L Higelow & Co.'s current instrument riwinng completion; Ojius 32. 'two niiiniiiils. 2H slops, which will be installed ul l irsi I'resbytermn Church, Clarksvilli:, leiin next month A tew stops will he tuned und playing for the open house. CITY NOTES I Family health fair The American f-ork Fitness Center . will have its annual family Fitness Fit-ness and Health Fair on Saturday, Satur-day, from 10 u.m. to 2 p.m. There will he free admission to the entire facility ull day long, tree lace painting and balloons bal-loons lor kids jj.. There will he booths with in- formation and door prizes. r The first 201) visitors will receive free water bottles and other gifts. , 11 I "asses for both residents and non-residents will be on sale 0t Slot) off an tinnuul family puss, during those four hours. The fitness center is at 454 N. Center Street, Americun Fork. More information is available from Kebeccu Danklef at 703-'Mm. 703-'Mm. ext 2ll(i Limitations In un effort to limit the number of "subject to" provisions in upprovnLs of developments, the Americun Fork ( ity Council und Planning Commission have decided to ,, mcreu.se the time between com- ; mission and council review of the plans That will give the de-veloper de-veloper time to work out those items before the final vote. In a joint work session of the two groups .Ian. .'i, members chose thiit option, saying ft would not nece.arilv delay the projects, " i' since they are not finalized until, the provisions have been com- pleted. I Zone amendment recommended recommend-ed The Planning and Zoning Commission on Jan. 4 voted to recommend a one change re-! : quest by Alan Anderson for ap- -proximately one acre of ground 5!) W Kirk Parkinson M Beo Vice Presidt vit h it , - kpaikinson!(hpi,inir.xtt, Marc Haddock 'M, 'mu North County ittoi nihH(Jdoct.her,ii!kixtrt. Cathy Allred 7bg 7bG!) Leht. Sciintou,) Springs, p Grove calliedtiefd!dcxtrij con; Barbara Christiansen 756-76 Anmictin Fork. AlpAe..Ce(j,ir "-j bcliiistwtspiieherltextmtomS ni : n . . '-. Oiem. VmevMt cpetersonheraldoxtia.coni Beky Beaton 756-7669 S;xjrfs btwatoi iheraldextrSicom t mi muH E 3 Lane Dubois 756-7609 Advertising Account Executive lduboistieraldextra.com NEWSSTAND PRICE: $0.50 SUBSCRIPTION RATE NorthCounty NEWSPAPERS i , ; ' - . .... . ; IvUn - American Fork .hO7-7668;fx: 750-52,' 1 yr (in Utah County) -$36 40. Sunday,.TtlufSdy and hoWayBeliverias . (which includes the wsek of Easter plus moriAlliidejNndance, Pion, Labor, Thanksgiving,'Christmas and lyaar (outside Utah County) -S45.4(T 1 year m Utah County ThuriY wtty) 1 ...,! Ut801auMSN 1U-a4SI . Or1. !KSt'l ffZL nW' li"84O0?-uw li"84O0?-uw hJttims, rti fkMmf , mf-.mnmet m H iiIi: Attn 6fn(K?m at 46 t, 100 North, American -Fork ' : ,: And&fson would use the Turk! iri udd upartments und garages for employees and additional ' tmrkmg for Anderson und Spns Mprtuarv. :, '. ' , Slit -iJ (central commeft ; , ,C&f) zonl would be extendeStf ttifcmigh th block to 150 tinttti.-"TMt; tinttti.-"TMt; City Oiuncil will consider t thTlierh at a future meeting". ' , 6utpTCBl tabled When1! " 1hey first cume to the Plunning Commission, representatives of 'WitodJjury Corporation usketi for a recommendation or deHull ofTheif plans Tor an outparcel 'inlronl of Smith's ut the Timpa-nogos Timpa-nogos Pluza. They Secificully asked that it not be tubled. T . On Jan. 4. they again ap- peered Vef ore the planners after thBir request was referred back tfilhffCommisSion by the City firjUnt.il. This tfme, however", 'they -SAked for the request to be .ttPefl; - ; 'Jnnujjtfr issuecentered.Wi. aleaiRf) tlw Shopping centfir f ldnX?(f it Xrtvie. Current)? J fl&etrtwoH-ntrances tretn iptelfie; Rut When Smith's ei' pldeml9931'tliere was a1--rqnefS that those two dnv be .jtombfnedinto ohe which would be aligned with 5K0 West, ; wHich was anticipated to beii Tail crossing. ,,$"he Woodburys said they Would agree to make the ; dkmRB, but they are not owners own-ers of the entire' center, since afoul oT the projwrty has been, 'putultased hy Smith's. In ud- llftoni'Woodbun's have an, atfement with the grocerio mainrain tlie parking lot wtth 'thl sume4iumber Of spaces. . Jntf Woodbury told the plan-, -ttme if the entrances were conl-lH8 conl-lH8 fttd the parking chuttgea, it would result in ti decrease in the numler of spaces. Since he said Smith's would not be umenuble to that pronos-al.'he pronos-al.'he asked that the city work .'Wjlh .Woodburys to seek the . : .idiitl'ge.'Or even exercise errlt4? fwit donwtn fdr the projiefty,. flf tiW'fffttrance. r' 5A.rHight have American Aj BbrK'&ndemn Smith's pror" ' Tj'TJle said. "Any control ! Ao hhve, I urn wilting to exert to solve this. We are going to have a difticult time getting Smith's t8ig the plat it there are ' . Cling-" ' "' Ik&tLV HERALD TtTBLtBHIKD CO. Vi5 2jfm 756-75 J ((: - Casey Rogers 344 2570 . ''.bmignerCopy Editor ?il6myttCki 344-2501 i l tCn 344-2! 7 5' - m - 6fa 7Bt(W4n Vf,. Nifto af'SDayl. ti ja" t 4 X t s CilJ FORMED A N ,D I U V m ffim nil tM- t A ! V mm t r 'I W ( lM Pi r I i; fi Hi ) ' X (I - 'I 4 " . I I lag A,;. ' ' 1 II) ' ':iV" rVp- i ft, mM;- rid .Hr4i ROBB COSTELBD 'Dadv'ISrald David Chamberlin, left, tests the organ w ShuneJ&ard, tight, ctttatihes More pipes tb the fyOOtOWX musical instrument Tuesday. The M6 are putting the finishing touches on an oan forkhe Flrfa Presbyterian Church of Clarksville, 3"W. TheBigBlowOrganf ofnpany wcte conlrttcted to reurbjh j and rebuild the original organ and vfiill have atMopen. house 'jar ihe piibfidito set-fad hear the Jj , finished product on Friday at tier Offices loc'&ted at 130 wJolD.South in AmerflSan Forfc. The planners emphasized the benefits of opening one access in the center of those existing, citing safety concerns when 5(0 West is opened. That has been under consideration Without resultStfor more thane decade, but ft tftay be coming closer. "We are closer to solving 5405S0 than ever before," said planner Rod Despuin. "I am willing to think the city ought to talk to the appropriate body." The issue arose when Woodbury Wood-bury Corporation asked approv Once it was news, now itslrasli nf ? t r' 7'' doing some - J " r- early spring ' ""' ' , -cleaning. 1 was'' ' compelled to i pull down a few' boxes of items tucked away years ago, put on a high shell' and left to gather dust. , . One of the boxes was nearly 20 yeurs old,-and it had gathered dust quite wefi. Trtitlandle brake when Jirted to uei--it;)'l held the bottom of the box anfl 1 pulled it down, while all of that old dust cuscuded down onto my head and shoulders. 1 carried the box carefully into my office, hoping the bottom wouldn't fall out in the process, set It on the-floof removed the lid S sum' IjvnWrtf'lfwa.n likfrdfc fl'4ttoside bWtfMndwrMde -OtrtA. Deceniter 19K5." As a surorLse, I al rejwrter's notebooks from the same time period. The notebooks were filled with shorthand a much more legible version than the shorthand I : use now. t. ,. Hie Gregg version l: learned in college has , . traflsformed over the years-into sdtndtiiiiig resenv i Mute the scravi ofmvcuTe-hufldwiUiiig. Ba ftcalfe' that meaa ff tdoniycYttjeWinotes Hit ;timiv msntrm.-j soon cawttwa read ttese notes. Flipping through the pages, I founfl notes front r; Alpine School Bixird meetings of days-past, whe the rxxird was occupied with issues of "Great ! Books," and tlie dismissal of the superintendent. That hasn't happened since the early 1980s. ThetB were photo identifications for basebuii teams And ' tlte masic teachers organization, and Stories from new businesses to old buildings. It was the accu- -mulatiOh of decades of the kind of newsihat fills ' thepuffes of a hometown.paper. , f. ' CXtrrent newspaper poficy is that w Destroy " y .ournoreswnmmoweeKsanertrletne',;, But m the early partdf ts$ career, stOlfllS0 'save all my not. I nefimder$tooiWhy , but F T ijuu luvnm iiicoc: ti TV ci jcxtui wane. A linvtr ucvet referratl to a single note Since. y They , have now been tossed intthe4dumpstetv , - - ' r 'r- .1, : -tV W'j, ,P 0 1 V ED al to construct a building northwest north-west of Smith, at the southeast corner of the State Street and PaCffic intersection., 7 -' :fS ( ... . J- I Annexation atjreenrent '' Aftprican V6A 's Manning ana-Ztfflng ana-Ztfflng Comnifesion has been studying drafts of aft annefca- ', tiof agreement for art ared at ':. 400 South and 860 East. Called the Naterra Annexation, An-nexation, the proposal is fot more than 100 acres to be in a Planned Community Zone, L , c . . n : . ... Marc Haddock TMEfEDlTOR'S aAd It; tf Sv ih HW': AU1 ':1982 alsofound seVel- imtgfe of a IM fe.rrWialirr;ake 4.. . ) V), 'It tnenw - touici still;, examoe.wtteDhot&oTatair salffo)te dnflnp thf fif '-'HA feWks, thJy'will jfi v tl nofelxwli (q the flumpstef .'Until then, if amune wants tcrhavie e look, they will be available in- Bur American - Fork office new type of zone in the community. com-munity. It includes a mixture of commercial and residential iuses, along Wtth.parRfi, schools anfl churchsV ' ' -v-f The devekfmient is being "i j. planned by JPhe Fusion Grouf), ; although thelre are a number $ of individudllland owners m . volved. It Planner I8 Despain safdine . f eft it was best to have a single agreement wliich all owners ; would sign, -instead of numfif-ous numfif-ous agreemeftts. - ' i f f The negatives all black and White are another matter.! don't know . what to do with these. ? The notes were a means to an end a necessary step in the process of writing a story, But negatives are an end in themselves, afen't they? Bladk and white photographs tell the story of the time. "J And there are lots if them, literally Ihittsands jr."- ISeoking through'tew iontact : -sheets,! found I had pliotcjgT aphed the same stories over and over again like the Christmas parades of 19li5 that could "have been taken la.1t month. (Sartta jtiafint Changed muchwerthe years.) 5 The same is true ollcourttless football basketMl gumsiph&ographltrt, '. ' . kit At k . . ; ''Si. . mvam. f? . .... v , iiHc iiuiuiwi p!saote piciuresj4waconinioiin , the Hays Mot digital phot ogJraphy toshoot oife 1 or two rolls of film for just one image. :ProfesskJnal photojournalists would use everfhior-e film looking tor the elusive "decisive moment:" .While I could never shoot dsM'ell m the fulMime photographersthere are somraomente in afl-that film-that Birobablv deserve to (rresrved -t,a1i sehfKS boy giS ciilg as hefflafies in Skhowk boW ffamf I war in Tran r. 1 . Many of these should be mofethan just prints on yellowing newspaper pagesijh a scrapbodkj t, altnoughtheyt'probably never Will b. : finding thefew gems in atftXose images tuitld 'bta neeulMw-haystaCk exercfae I hovt neither , the time nbr energy to pursue. X StUl,:lcaH bring myself to tlrowthetnaWay?, ' so the question of their future remains. In the process of all this cleaning, J also found ; some of olir readers' old photos- some from 1D5H-S0, ajtd others from more Recent years. Many .nf thFW ur AVrrni irr ht in for rmn) inompt1K nf 'vflTltons, WeiEi5rfiinmve;..iries 'And tl-are' 1 Hi W. Mam St Shelter iContinuedromPage a . OahCounty'CornniiB-, OahCounty'CornniiB-, -Bioner Jerry 'driver said the 1 -, county paid fot if he construction construc-tion of the new Shelter and ib ' 'leasing k to a apecial service" "., ' (.district iomprwed of all ' .'the communttieB north of Provo for $1 a year, And although the tihtilter Will be , mostly f undedSfey cities in the ; ' district.the county wfll also ' -"Chip .in. ; ' . "We -have a financial responsibility itp cover iunin- . corporated areas," ;Grover said.Umncorporated areas are mainly agricultural with , small populations that do not " full within city iboundaries. - tCities inthedistrict'Will be ' : churged a fee based on the " .number of anifnals sent to , y (the shelter from the previous L - Jiscul year, tutt JJameron, .- i'ice dhairmun Oi the special . fiervice District- Board", ex- " plumed. "Currently cities will be " charged $40 per animal, !but that amount coilld change de1 pending on the iieedstOf the .. shelter." The shelter will also bring an revenue by Belling small ' pet items Buchas collars and leashes, licenses can also be purchased at the shelter. - "Having a pet is a long- i :. term commitment. If It is - ' just a whim, doriit doat, said 4 Oiris Jenkins, Assistant man ager of the Oram shelter and itiew lindon shelter. She said . about 40 percent of animals -:; . brought into the'Orem shel- ; ter areibrought in by stheir ""owners. . "Weiiear ali!fcindslf j -reasons Why owners 'bring In'their pets, everything : trom 'We're meving'tto The ; :animul doesntfmatchifhe t decor.' " Jenkins said people meed to realizeithat oiily 15 'to 20 percent fiff dogs and one or two peffient of cats are adopted. Animals that 'are not claimefl by their ; owners or adopted are eu . " ithanized.(Gettlirig, however," P YiriTwc-fha nA;.fih)ltfl--fitt - '.changethe fate of many . , ' tanimals. .. v': "We-want it tb be a Win- -. "win for .the ariitflals and the -'Customers.'WWm'holdfhe ' ' .-animals for a idnger period ; ' pf time;to giveiwneCB a f chanceto claim themrlf not, ., we will assess the animals ,and get them ready for adoption. "The bigger ifacility will . allow us to spend more time r with the animdls and give ' rthem a better Chance of find- 'angahome." " The keyitopfeventmg ;'Unwan$eti animals issduca- ttion and responsibility, said ; , Jenkins . "Do your iresear ch ' ; . before you get a pet. Under- 1 i stand the breed, investigate : Ncosts involved.in caring for ;-the animal, andalways spay . r neuter your pet." ' un Continued from Pagi 1 'helping us the very things we have been teaching. We -are getting badk the very 'things we havertaught for all these years. Music is serving me and giving back what my ;soul needs." "''.,-; "''.,-; Connie Snuth agreed. "I thirik the music helps her keep a Hood attitude " she . said. j, ; Br They have tried to share inose same iaeas with their students. : "Music should be fuh," '. :Comiie said. "It shouldn't be a stressful experience.Music , -needs to-be a happy tlfciiig, A m Vmot a sttessfiliinard tttie i .They up prizf; mceftivesY -C Is. and charts tokgeD their stu; ' ,.naentsnbtivate.'. -f, Xhevtlave btMh rartumrzM nor a program that enables "beginners to piny songs ,;! rapidly and mdke that-quick - start into something they call ' hang onto as they continue to learn. . V . t ,m LontUe is tht oreatbr of i aid.'aw iRKndnr iu- r: ;avstemtn hdin. .n . make an associatinnibiltwfln'r phe strings and their fingers. 'II have tauffht.fnr 5S " . jTyears "tonnifi Smith Said. : methodr S r "; Despttethevelumeof . Work, they hatd to give it up1 when Emily's health declined. ' They announceU theinretn-e-;;ment through hitters mailed to students. ' i , . "I cried wha.x:i took' the " V ; , jty SmLrsaid.- - p TheV'thay neknowwhat v . J Hhe future may tuiid. but mu ,-'r mc.wulplay a pun. - i ix r. -. ii -it M0- , POOR C( |