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Show Page 24-T- HE HERALD, Provo. Utah. Thursday, November 15 1979 Winter Approaches: Harbor Skate Rink Opening Announced The ice skating rink at Utah Lake State Park will be opening for the season on Dec. 1, weather permitting The rink will be open to the public Monday through Saturday from 10 to noon, 1 to 3 p.m., 4 to 6 p.m., and 7 to 9 p.m. On Friday and Saturday there will be an additional public session from 10 a.m. to midnight. Skating on Sunday will be from 1 to 5 p.m. Private reservations may be made Monday through Thursday from 10 to 12 p.m. Reservations must be made at least two weeks in advanr LEHl A Murray man and his son were injured Sunday morning when the vehicle in which they attempted to climb a hill apparently lost balance and rolled down the hill Admission for persons 12 and over is $1.50 and $1 for children 6 to 11. Skates may be rented for $1 per pair. Skate sharpening is available for $1.75 per pair. The group reservation rate is $50 per hour. Group skate rental is $20 for 25 people and under, $30 for 26 to 50, $60 for 51 to 100 and $80 for 101 to 150. Twenty-skat- cards may be e purchased for discount rates. They are $25 for persons 12 and over and $15 for persons 11 and under. If there are any questions call Utah Lake State Park. Public Employees Dinner Honors Several in Provo J. Francis Valerga and James B. Eldredge spoke at the Utah Public Employees Mountainland District fall dinner meeting at the Provo EPO Elks Lodge Tuesday. The district represents employees at Utah Technical College in Utah, Wasatch and Summit Counties. About 200 UPEA members and guests attended the dinner. Valerga, legal counsel and acting executive director, discussed the squeeze play in which public employees find themselves when taxpayers demand cuts in spending but not in programs. "Spending cutbacks without corresponding cuts in programs are unreasonable," he said. "However, the taxpayers don't perceive it that way, so the great equalizer is to reach into the pay package of the public employee, to subsidize the programs when the spending is cut." Eldredge, UPEA director of govern Phillip Hall Clark Murray Man, Son Injured in Lehi of control and rolled to bottom of the hill. He estimated the vehicle rolled five times over a distance of about 200 feet. The accident occurred about 10;45 a m. Sunday The man and boy were Gary Peacock and his apparently hunting pheason Jeff were listed in sants. Eyre said. When the vehicle rolsatisfactory and fair condition, respectively, this led, it dumped out its con- morning at American Fork Hospital. Jeff underwent emergency surgery after the mish-- p for internal damages, and Mr. Peacock was treated for lacerations on his head and right arm Deputy Robert Evre. of the Utah County Sheriff's Department, said Mr. Peacock tried to climb a steep hill in Cedar Valley west of Utah Lake in the vehicle when it went out tents, including the pants. Eyre added. 1 VV'':''' Can headaches come from your teeth? The man known as "Mr. Garo Antreasian, from the Tamardin Institute at Albuquerque, n N.M., will be honored with a show and reception the day of the opening. The reception will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. that evening in the USU Art Gallery in the Chase Fine Arts Center. Antreasian will give two lectures. The first, "Stone, Ink and Paper: Milestones of Lithography," will be given at 3:30 p.m. in room 107 of the Engineering Building. The second, "History and Progress in My Work" will be given at 8 p.m. in the same room. Antreasian will also hold an informal discussion Saturday at 10 a.m. in the printmaking lab in the Mechanical Arts Building on the campus. Also exhibited in Printmaking West this year will be the works of 34 other one-ma- and nationally printmakers, including internationally recognized Leonard Baskin, Harold Altaian, K.C. Gorman, Misch Kohn, Mauricio Lasanksy, Gabor Peterdi and Moishe Smith. Utah artists represented in the show are Jerry Fuhriman, Brent Haddock, Marion Hyde, Trevor Southy and Adrian Van Suchtelen. The exhibit, which will run through Dec. 12, is sponsored by the Logan Alliance for the Varied Arts, USU and the Utah Arts Council. The exhibit will also travel to occu- Young Attending Church Three in 10 young people between the agea of 14 and 24 told an American Council of Life Insurance study they attended religious services nearly every week, one in 5 once a month, and only one in 5 never. "Public employees are not the perpetrators of inflation but the victims," he said. Also on the dinner agenda was the presentation of two Outstanding Public Employee Awards by Scotty McNair, chairman of the UPEA Ogden City District. Selected for the awards by the di- fl Brightm Young University li organizing a letter writing campaign to Congress to support curbs on abortion. Jill Harris, vice president of the Associated Students of BYU Women's Office, said the student government hopes to flood Congress with 10,000 letters op- DOaiiitf abortion. per-ma- - clusion). If the attending dentist finds the bite out of alignment, he will perform the necessary dental care to balance it, a process known as ''bite equilibration." Additionally, in some cases, he may recommend the wearing of a "bite plate" when sleeping, to prefurther helping to cut down vent muscle spasms and stress on the TMJ. teeth-grindin- strict were Marge Magnusson, various colleges and universities throughout the Intermountain Area after its Logan opening, including College of Eastern Utah, Westminster, Ricks and Montana State. The USU Art Gallery is open weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and at other times by appointment. Groups are welcome and the public is invited to attend all Printmaking West events. Antreasian has been involved with lithography since he was 17 years old. He first began is hexperiments with the medium using an abandoned hand press he found at Arsenal Technical High School in Indianapolis. After graduation from high school Antreasian received a scholarship to the John Herron School of Art, where he studied both fine and commercial art 1 rtf ..;.g m fl Bail j xwu ym r&& I DAREDEVIL NITE GLOW Exciting play action. 6214 TtffsOFTINA DOLLnsS 03 88 Reg. 32.88 Vg X -T f- x 16.97 RADIO CONTROLLED CORVETTE With working headlights. S5 and worked evenings on 77508., 'Reg. 14.88 lithography. While still a student he won his first major award in a national exhibition. TALK-TO-M- E PLAYER AND BOOK 88 After graduating from Herron, Anterasian accepted a teaching position at that school. He left in 1960 to become technical director of the Reg. 29.88 famed Tamarind Lithography in Los Angeles. He later served as technical director of the institute in New Mexico and professor in the department of art at the University of New Mexico. Antreasian's prints are found in major galleries throughout the country, including The Smithsonian Institution. The Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum. Workshop 18 million households eligible including about 21,000 in Utah. LITE-BRI- TE -I 5445 100 fAAA Rg. 14.88 Jess STAR WARS FIGURES FAMILY FEUD GAME Choose from our large selection. 38000. 39000 4723 99 We Reg. 2.57 m Hatch said he. supports the Humphrey Amendment to the bill which would give the states flexibility to administer this program. He also urged that the program only be used for heating and not cooling. "I do not think it appropriate that it be used for cooling days, because the lack of air conditioning will almost never be a life threatening situation, as the lack of heat often is, the senator said. He said the program would probably be funded by the windfall profits tax on the oil companies if Congress enacts such a tax. Hatch closed his statement to the Senate by saying, "I am not known as one of the Senate's biggest spenders. However, this is a humanitarian need which must be addressed at the federal level so that no American citizen will be forced to have to make the untenable choice of 'heating or eating' for this or any other heating season. BYU Students Protesting Abortions Ths studentt organization at one-wa- y. 11 employed by the Utah State Training School and John T. Hicken, employed with the department of Family Services. A scholarship scholarship award was presented to Jeff Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Robinson. Jeff is attending Utah Technical College in Salt Lake studying to be a brick mason. 1982 By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL wide-rangin- 1946. Sen. urged pass bill which would provide assistance to low income families to heat their homes. Hatch made the statement Tuesday asking for certain amendments to the Home Energy Assistance Act and supporting its passage. The bill would establish a new energy assistance program beginning in fiscal year 1981 which would provide funds through formula block grants to the states. The Utah Republican said from September 1978 through September 1979, fuel oil prices increased 70 to 75 and in Utah natural gas prices Eercent 15 to 20 percent. ."Such price hikes coupled with future anticipated cost increases and an inflationary and a recessionary economy, impose an enormous burden on this nation's 18 million low income and elderly households," Hatch said. It is estimated that the poor are now spending about 25 percent of their income on home energy, he said. The bill would provide $3 billion for 1981 and $4 18-2- 0 ment relations, said his association's top priority this year is adequeate salary increases to help members deal with the worst rate of inflation since Hatch Seeks Fuel Aid For Low Income People Orrin billion for with about (LP1) Hatch has the Senate to a for the assistance WASHINGTON million sudental field believe there may be fferers, many destined to have discomforts for g symptoms camouflage years because the true cause, making absolute diagnosis difficult positive cure for all Although there is no cases, and other conditions may be contributing, if one suspects the problem exists, it would be well to discuss it with the family physician, especially if in the process of treatment for similar symptoms. If the physician agrees with the possibility, a dental examiniation may be recommended, which would or in an existing "bad bite." (malocrule out Ab- solutely: this and more! Everyone in the world has heard the term 'tired blood," with all of its advertised implications, real and imagined, but few people not affected by it have heard of the condition called "tired mouth." (Not intended as a humorous reference to those who generate too much conversation. ) The cause of the often extreme discomfort suffered by patients with "tired mouth," evolves from the condition termed TMJ syndrome: the temthe jaw hinge is thrown poromandibular joint out of proper alignment by a "bad bite." which puts undue stress and strain on it when chewing, talking, even when it is supposed to be at rest. The condition can result from improperly aligned false teeth, or the natural teeth, causing muscle spasms and initiation to the TMJ. Pain may extend down into the neck and shoulders, and up into the head, simulating migraine headaches. Clinicians in the Lithographer Will Speak At USU Lectures on Friday Lithography" will be the guest artist for the 11th annual Printmaking West to open at Utah State University Friday. Bad Teeth Can Cause Headaches, Says Dentist and NERF FOOTBALL 197 3512 on 97 1188 YOUR CHOICE Reg. 3.99 Q88 U Reg. 10.97 mm "f m 42. HOT 1W 1 WHEELS CARS U Assorted styles. ft 8" SUPERHEROS 51300 A9890 O88 m WReg- - 5.88 09 II II r I I II S I III! II M M T MM II KM I M C con- gressional addresses will be provided at a "Letters v Farmer, Bee or Zoo Keeper Says. 4832. 4831.2413 ssss She said students are being encouraged to write their congressmen expressing their personal feelings on the subject. Stamps, envelopes, vr 15 INCH BACKGAMMON for Life" booth to be set up in the Wilkinson Center next Monday. Former Location Of "WorW Of Toys", o L) University Mall, Orem |