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Show i Free Press - Wednesday, Sept. 2, 1987 - Page 9 Girls needed to play in soccer league The Lehi City Recreation Com- mittee has announced that it Students may pick up registration forms at the high school from Jim Howe, or from Ingrid Nuttall at the junior high. The registration forms must be turned in by Friday, Sept. 4. will sponsor a boys and girls soccer league. Girls in the eighth through 12th grades are needed and boys from ninth through 12th grades are welcome to join the soccer teams. Friends can be assigned to the same team and their will only be one game each week. Or students may bring the $14 registration fee to Howe, Room Nine, at Lehi High School no later than Friday, Sept. 4. He be available for will registration each day from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Only the first 48 girls to register will be eligible, so anyone interested is being encouraged to act promptly. "If we have the girls program we'll need lots of girls to play, so any girl who wants to play will be welcome." If enough players are interested a schedule will be set up for games with other schools in Utah and Salt Lake Valleys who have expressed an interest in playing Lehi. To gain new recruits Howe said that the teams would welcome beginners. is not Experience valuable coupon necessary. "They n learn as they go, and they'll fit into the program just line, nuwesaia. OFF any new prescription Unpleasant surprise awaits unknowing dove hunters : bag limit is reduced SnU OFF than 10 doves. In Utah, the Division of Wildlife Resources is aware of the significant decline in the dove index. The causes for the apparent decline consist of a loss of nesting habitat and agricultural call-cou- nt changes that result in reduction of food sources. Depending upon cropping practices used by farmers, dove populations are generally thought to be positively associated the amount of residual from wheat, barley, oats and corn harvests. Waste grain and weed seed associated with these crops are feed for doves. Utah's wheat production in six of the top 11 dove hunting counties has declined. Mortality factors such as disease, pesticides and overhunting on wintering areas may also be contributing to the decline. are searching for Biologists methods to measure the extent of these possible problems. The FWS states that exact causes for declining dove populations have not been identified satisfactorily, but the only immediate tool available is management control of hunting regulations. The FWS recommended a five to 10 day delay in season opening or a s reduction in bag limits and season lengths. Instead, the Migratory Upland Game Bird Technical Committee agreed to cuts in season lengths and bag limits by Vi and '3 respectively. The option approved by the FWS two-third- regulation committee is a 10 bird bag in a season or a y season with a mandatory split The Utah Wildlife Board selected the first option a 10 bird bag limit with a season. In Utah, the dove hunt opened Tuesday, Sept. 1 at 6:24 a.m. y valuable coupon) Hunt prospects appear to be good with summer conditions favorable for dove production throughout the state. There should be a small improvement in hunter success rates depending on weather conditions during the remainder of August. Local students among BYU summer grads the U.S. Court of Appeals in San Diego, told the 2,266 summer graduates - several of them local residents - of Brigham Young University Aug. 14. Judge Wallace was featured speaker and recipient of an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at the commencement exercises. Also honored were Lillian Millett of Mesa, Ariz., a old noted genealogist and researcher; and Donna Lee Turley of Cupertino, Calif., a school psychologist in Redwood City. Both were presented Presidential Citations. Cecilia Mahoney of Redlands, Calif., a University Honors graduate in Greek with a minor in German, represented the graduates on the program. The Honorable Warren E. Burger, former Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, made a to BYU presentation special President Jeffrey R. Holland on behalf of the American Inns of Court. Speaking on the importance of the Wallace constitution, Judge recounted the background of the constitution for the graduates and their families, saying as the delegates from 12 of the 13 states in met Hall, Independence "ostensibly to amend the Articles of Confederation, a movement began ' which would lay the foundation for a free people and ultimately provide leadership around the globe." The writers of the constitution "moved forward day by day as if directed and motivated by a force," he said, overcoming critical obstacles, debating imand issues making portant necessary compromises. Asking the graduates how familiar they are with the basic document of our country, Judge Wallace said a recent poll by the Hearst Corone in four poration showed Americans thought the Constitutions inwas to declare purpose 41 from only England; dependence percent correctly identified the Bill of Rights as the first 10 amendments to the Constitution; 64 percent mistakenly believe the Constitution establishes English as the national language. Forty-nin- e percent mistakenly believe the president can suspend the Constitution in times of war or ar non-earth- national emergency; less than half know who the Chief Justice is; 75 percent erroneously believe the Constitution guarantees them a free public education; 45 percent thought the Marxist declaration "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need" is found in the Constitution. Judge Wallace said perhaps now is the time to heed the admonition of Abraham Lincoln to let the constitution be taught in schools, in seminaries and in colleges, be written in primers, in spelling books and in almanacs, be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in courts of "in short, become the justice political religion of the nation." He listed three aspects of the constitution which he considers - "very important." First, he said, the Founding Fathers set the framework for a unique method of governance based of powers; upon a separation second, they authored a document which had the ability to endure; and third, "in a sense, the Founding Fathers did more than establish a unique form of government and create the basis for long life - they provided a way of life." Judge Wallace said the constitution is more than parchment and ink, "it tells how we have constituted ourselve.-- . it was a Judge Wallace said that "which we inherit can be lost. Each generation must prove itself worthy of our constitutional blessings." He asked the graduates what their contribution will be. "Nowhere in the world have people been given what you enjoy: to begin your next endeavor in a land of freedom and opporunity based upon a written Constitution." He said they did not create the constitution or its benefits and asked how they will repay the debt. In answer, he said perhaps "this bicentennial graduating class" will pioneer new ways of sustaining and supporting the constitution and enhancing the "blessing which come to us because of the way we are constituted." He told them what they do may be "important and significant" and said theirs can be a "great contribution to insure the survival of our Constitution." Haircut $3 - " constitution) was significant - "but the spirit it would breathe into the soul of a fledgling nation was even more important. There was, from the beginning, something special about this country." Although the Constitution has transcendent value, "it alone does not explain what we are and who we are. it is not the document itself that provides our priceless heritage - it is what flows from it. It is a feeling is America." Going on, he said "It is not something that can be described we feel as free Americans under our Constitution must be experienced." He gave examples of visiting Pearl Harbor and the nearly submerged battleship Arizona; seeing the United States military cemetery dotted with crosses and Starts of David in the Phillipines; standing at in monument the Lincoln Washington, D.C.; walking the halls of the United States Supreme Court building. "I feel America," he said. The Total Lcck ) II I ! 69 East Main Sculptured American Fork NailS - In his opening greeting, BYU President Jeffrey R. Holland told the graduates, one thing Brigham Young University has tried to do for them is to teach and demonstrate the "never-endin- g challenge of, as well as the unlimited possibiities which can come from, the appropriate balance of freedom on the one hand and the property restraint of such liberty on the other." coupon). (valuable the poor, the needy, the distressed, and the powerless; to strengthen our constituitional form of government; to insure that there is one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all, regardless of race, creed, sex, or circumstance," he said. help Fmires '2 repair or replacement windshield $99 & Insurance Deductible up 20 gift (If you have full coverage, receive certificate to Magleby's Restaurant) SOI VVALLEY VIEW GLASS Come try our Wolfe System FOOD STORES only. Expires 122 W. Main, American Fork VALUABLE $R (o)pp 32 oz. 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Fork, Provo, Salt Lake, Cedar City, Moab 9. 7S6-999- Special Back-To-Scho- ol 309 West Main, American Fork (Next to starts Sept. 8 and V $55 Pickup Backsliders Running Boards Preschool School 93087 FDV 'VALUABLE quality environment for learning, discovery, sharing, friends and much more. ,19M Expires Sept. 9, 1987. Specials valid with coupon only In the end, their most important contribution will be to "bring out the greatness of America to insure its freedoms; to be compassionate; to $19. HI I I M. 756-370- 7 uii & Skin Doctor's it Community n nrerm .(valuable coupon) ... new start." He said the birth (writing of the m J any refill prescription - y 4 "There is nothing right for you (that) you can't achieve by hard work, dedication and faith," Judge J. Clifford Wallace, circuit judge in r t only with this coupon. Expires 10187. By JAY ROBERSON Upland Game Coordinator Dove hunters could be unpleasantly surprised when the hunt opens this year. The bag limit has been reduced to 10. For the last five years, the bag limit was 15. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services (FWS) believes there has been a decline in dove populations in the western U.S. Citation will be written to hunters in possession of more - -- Fill $9" Lehi Barber Stylist 130 I X Expires Main, Lehi 768-881- 8 Now open Mon. 91287 mm mm W. , 9-- 1 I |