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Show The Magna Times, Thursday, January 31,1 985 Third annual rodeo quoon clinic plannod for March Anyone who plans to compete in rodeo queen contests or to manage or judge contestants will be interested in the Third Annual Rodeo Queen. Clinic March 21,22 and 23 at Utah State University in Logan. Regan Brown, Miss Rodeo Utah' 1985, will assist in the program this year. Brown won the personality division at the Utah pageant. Sandie Meyers, Miss Rodeo America 1984, will also join the clinic staff. Meyers won the horsemanship and personality divisions at the 1984 Miss Rodeo America Pageant. She was also voted Miss Photogenic. Two of the judges for the 1983 Miss Rodeo Utah pageant will be Sue this year: instructors My grandfathers hands were too big for his arms. They hung like two hooks at the ends. They were stronger by far than gramp ever knew, and he used them to help out his friends. Dogeral bj Dale . grandfathers hands were always of great interest to me. I remember fascinated being by their size during my boyhood days in Oxford, Idaho. In many sports, in order to be successful, you must have what they call and grandpa Croshaw certainly had good hands. His good hands, humongous hands were extremely large, very strong, yet good. One day while setting on the backporch enjoying the sunshine, Grandpa took out his pocket knife and began to whittle on the prodigious calluses that covered his hands. I asked him where they all came from, and he said work put them there. My McMasters, instructor at assist makeup A in. I that if she would have been there she would have takin charge of the situation as she always did. And so my Grandpa was very strong, yet soft inside and full of love. Id call him an easy going man and not the least bit onery. Just because he could tear open a can of tomatoes with his bare hands, that doesnt make him know onery does it? At age 54 I think I have finally come to realize what great people my Grandpa and Grandma Croshaw were. I lived with .them from birth until six years of age. since my father died of sugar diabetes when I was five months old. I spent the summers on the ranch in Oxford until the Cro6haws moved to Seattle. My sisters Lenna, Sheilyn and I have much to be thankful for. Our Croshaw heritage and the great principles that were taught by our grandparents will stay with us forever Id like to sum up my feelings by quoting here in some paraphased lines from an old song: Oh my Grandad, to me he was so wonderful, Oh m y Gra ndad, to me he was so good No one could be so funny , so adoreable. Always the clown, he always understood. grand- Clinic, ADVS and Department, UMC 48, Utah State University, Logan, Utah 84322, or call lone Jasper at (801(750-214- 5 or JWayne McArthur at (801 752-125- If so, the department may certify the workers eligible to apply for assistance under the Trade Act of 1974 which may include cash trade Ladies Apgularis Chelilosls TOSTADA DELIGHT AND MEDIUM DRINX training opportunities, employment services (counseling, testing, and job placement services), job search grants, and relocation allowances. Persons interested in submitting written comments on this petition are welcome to do so by writing to Garment Workers Union on behalf of workers who manufactured womens dresses and sportswear. the Director, Adjustment Employment Labor Departments will determine investigation whether increased imports led to workers losing their jobs. The Office of Assistance, and Training Administration, US Department of Labor, 601 D. Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20213. Wolves arent so big or bad h TACOS for )G Trade PEOPLE LOVE TO READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS Whos afraid of a big bad wolf? Nobody should be, according to the Wolfman. There has not been one single case of a healthy wolf attacking a human in North America! says Dr. David Mech the Wolfman in this months edition of Ranger Rick magazine, the monthly childrens publication of the National Wildlife Federation. Dr. Mech, a scientist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, probably knows more about wolves than anybody else. Hes been studying wolves for about 25 years, and in fact, invented a radio transmitter collar to track the animals' movements in the forests. Using the radio transmitter collar Dr. Mech learned that: Wolves hunt only for food and may go as long as two weeks between meals. There are only two to eight wolves in most packs. They hunt mostly deer and moose, and the prey caught are usually the old, the very young, the sick, or the injured. N When pups grow up, they often stay with their parents as pack members. Every wolf in a pack has a rank or place, and if a wolf with low rank does not like its place, it may leave to become a lone wolf or find a mate to form a new pack. Dogs and wolves are very closely related, and pack members act very similar to dogs, according to Ranger Rick. For instance, after two pack members have been separated for a while, they rush together, lick each others faces, and wag their tails. Despite this similarity to dogs, people are still frightened of wolves, possibly, say Mech, because of fairy tales like little Red Riding Hood and Peter and the Wolf, which gave the wolf the bad guy image. The only real danger is not to people, but to the wolves survival. Although there are plenty of timber wolves in Alaska and Canada, there are only about 1,200 left in the lower 48 states, most of" them in Minnesota. Mech believes that the key to saving the 1,200 wolves in the lower 48 is to save their habitat. If wolf habitat disappears. ..if people take over the wild places wolves need to survive, you can kiss the wolf good-bysays Mech. "3 Folds or cracks of the skin radiating away and down from the corners of the mouth are seen in both young children and adults. The condition is referred to as angularis cheilosis. It is characterized symptomatically by a feeling of dryness and a burning sensation at the corners of the mouth. A upercicial yellowish crust may form around the folded tissue which when removed does not tend to bleed. The area may appear to be ulcerated. The skin layer at the comer of the mouth appears wrinkled and somewhat macerated. In time the wrinking becomes more pronounced to form one or more deep fissures or cracks. This fissuring does not affect the lips or the inside of the mouth. There is a tendency for spontaneous remission or healing although the lesions rarely completely disappear. These folds in the skin are often caused by overclosure of the mouth due to improper verticle height or severe attrition of the natural teeth. Saliva collects in the fissures contributing to the irritation of the lesions. Some researchers feel that bacterial or fungal infections also contribute to the problem . The organisms are able to be controlled but the fissures still exist. Ribofavin deficiency with a superficial fungal or bacterial infection is another cause of angularis cheilosis. A paleness of the lips is noticed for several days followed by the fissuring. A yellow crust will form which if removed does not cause bleeding. Next the lips become unusually shiny and red due to the loss of the superficial layer of tissue. Then the cheilosis or cracking spreads to the cheeks. As the fissures deepen and become infected they bleed easily and are painful. The infection may be organisms of the mouth and-o- r the skin. The lower part of the nose may also be affected. On healing these deep lesions will leave a scar. ' Treatment is by 1) Administration of vitamin B complex, 2) Adding to the dentures to increase the verticle height, and 3) Restoring the natural dentition to increase the verticle height. Should you suspect this condition, a professional evaluation will help to determine the cause. The treatment may then be initiated to correct the condition. Questions about Dental Health? Ask: Dr. Mikesell, 160 S. 1000 E. No 320, SLC. Ut., 841002. readjustment allowances, limited petition was filed with the Labor Dec. 4 by the Department International semi-comotos- e, greatest photographs contributed importantly to the loss of employment for approximately 200 workers at Mode ODay Co. in Salt Lake City, Utah. - e. SIMONS SAYS: "Grandpa Croshaw may not have been the pa of all time but he was certainly among them. for Hie U.S. Department of Labor has ' begun a Trade Adjustment Assistance Act investigation to whether determine imports They tell a story on Big Bill Croshaw that goes like this: It seems that the school house in Oxford, Idaho had a gigantic bell that hung high in the belfry and beconed reluctant scholars to the classroom. One day they had the bell down for repairs and it was sitting on the steps. A man passing through town fancied himself as being strong. With great effort ne lifted the nuge bell off the ground and challenged any of the townsfolk to duplicate his feat. Some one said, Go get Will Croshaw." Well, they found grandad a few miles outside of town working on the ranch. He came into town, ran his middle finger through the hook on the top of the bell, bounced it off the ground a few times and went back to the ranch. Every summer when it was time to put the meadow hay into the stack ... yard,, Grandpa would go to Preston and buy a new whip. It was usually long He was more and white antfne used it to handle the horses on the buck-rakthan accurate with the whip, and he cracked it over the horses ears with good results. The whip was also very effective in snapping pff sunflowers at 20 paces or in getting cousin Cleve and I to do our chores. Now dear old Grandad was a contented and easy going man, but when he told you to do some thing, you had a hunch he meant it. When he had that long snake like whip in his hand you were sure he meant it. I remember one hot July day when we had been in the hayfield for at least 10 hours, not to mention the morning and evening milking of about 12 head, and assorted and sundry other chores. Max, my mothers youngest brother, had been telling us how hard he had worked, how bad his hay fever was, how his back hurt, and how he wanted to go to sleep for a couple of days. We believed Max cause we had been right by his side all the hot day long, and we knew that Max was bv no means the only one who was tired. and Itr Max was stretched on his bed sorta 'ing to put some life back into his 225 pound frame by scratchin his back at the rate of one penny per hundred scratches. I had been scratchin a way for a good Jong time, and had visions of making as high as 20 cents, when Max's two buddies, Leon Fisher, and Reggie Dehny burst into the room and put an end to my part time job. Reggie and Leon were headed 18 miles soutn to Preston to 'tne snow'" and they dearly wanted Max to go along, but Grandpa said no because Max was "too tired from hayin, and we had to go again at sunup. Max sprang up from the bed, said he felt a lot better and allowed how he had plenty of energy to take in a double feature and haul hay again tomorrow. It was on that day that I first began to believe in the resurrection seeing the change that came mystically over Max. I also wondered about my "magical scratchin and considered changing the goin rate to two cents a hundred. I could see by the conversation and the goins on in the room that Max was determined to go and that Grandpa thought it should be the other way. Now in that particular summer Max was 20 years old, strong like an ox and built like the "proverbial Brick Cranny." Since Max was 20 and born on Grandads 50th birthday, that made Grandpa fairly old. I do not have my calculator in hand as I pencil this piece, but just doing the math in my head, I make Grandpa to be 70 Things got quiet in the room as Max made ready, and even I could see a crisis coming. Max said move dad. Im goin. Grandpa stood firm in the doorway and answered, "No your not." As for me I cowered in a far comer knowing that the decision was not up to me. Leon and Reggie stood aside with their jaws a gape and Said nothing. There were three bull like rushes by Max as he tried to storm the door, all of which were easily repulsed by Gramp. Max was back on the bed again and lie was breathin hard and looked genuinely tired. His only comment was. I guess I wont go dad." Leon said. He guessed that uncle Will was right. and that they could go to the show another time." since it would be playin for two more weeks and "hayin' season would be over. I teli you this story so you will know how strong my grandad was. I want you to know that he did all this without even having his shoes on or his teeth . and Department of Labor begins investigation for workers x but horsemanship appearance. Ted Hansen and the staff of the USU Photography Department will take photos of each . goins on, in communication. Kristy Lyle of the Merrill Norman Studio in Ogden will demonstrate One day I cut me a thick slice of grandmas home-mad- e bread, put some home made butter on it, and sought some pleasant moments on the sunny :side of the house. Granpa Croshaw came by and stopped to chat. He made me promise not to smoke, although he himself puffed on a pipe. He told me to always honor my mother. He told me how he used to play first base before the days of mitts, which probably helped to start the layers of calluses on his hands. Every since that day, I ALWAYS WANTED TO BE A FIRST BASEMAN like Grandpa. I remember a vacation we took to the northwest when I was about 10 years old. We were headed for Seattle, Washington, but had stopped off in Ellensburg to see Ernest and Ruby Croshaw who were running a ranch outside of town. I tell you this story to illustrate how strong my grandfather was. My uncle Ernest had a horse that was some what hard to handle and he was telling Grandpa about it. The horse was hard to catch, but my 65 yeaf old grandpa took a Lariat and went out in to the pasture after the wayward animal. It took him about 10 minutes to throw a rope over his head and snub him up to a post. I was so proud of my Grandfather. What a man he was. As the poet said: My Grandpas gone, but I return To Oxford town, but not the same; "Hungs transpired which made me learn The size and meaning of the game. He did much more than others did, I know thats where the change began. I started as an average kid, not know where grandma was during all these The Rodeo Queen Clinic will begin at noon March 21 and end at noon March 23. The cost is $100 for girls and $40 fin: parents, committee members and judges. Enrollment will be limited to 50 girls. To register for the clinic or obtain brochures, write to Rodeo Queen 4-- H -- I do The a modeling and finishing school in Ogden, and JWayne McArthur, horsemanship program director at USU. Scott McKendrick, assistant state specialist and queen coach, will Finishing Touch, Will Croshaw was my mothers father. A giant of a man who spent his life as a real cowboy, a rancher, a dairy farmer, and a dry farm wheat farmer. He was strong like you cant believe and pushed the scales up around 250 pounds. If old Grandad would have had the opportunity and the inclination, he may have appeared on television on Sunday afternoon. I can visualize him as a bomber at fullback, a crunching linebacker, or even an all pro tackle. He was a man who had the tools. Andendedupathinkinman. participant. After general and individual instruction in appearance, modeling and speaking, each girl will have the opportunity to model and give a short speech at die banquet, both of which will be critiqued. ' Activities on the first day include general and individual instruction in horsemanship, an area that usually requires close scrutiny, and a Rodeo Queen Fashion Show, featuring many local queens and narrated by Connie Dellalucia, Miss Rodeo America 1976. To help provide some uniformity in contests and judging, an afternoon session will be devoted to members and judges of the Queen Contest Committee. Page 4 TACO TIMS ML 230-022- 5 K ! ( , , In Utah, there are many successful people. One thing they all have in common is a good relationship with a bank. ; -- ! i ; I ' I ' Because a bank can open many doors for you. More doors than any other financial institution. Loans. Savings. If you want success, get to know your banker. Develop a relationship. "A friend at the bank", can open the doors you need to help you achieve the success you want. Retirement. Financial Planning. Checking. And the security of being FDIC Insured. A MESSAGE FROM YOUR UTAH FULL SERVICE BANKS Members FDIC e, l - |