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Show Rolling Meadows Auditions Planned For Traveling Troupe From Kearns Stakes Artist Lending Talents, Time To School -- Talent Show Is On Vista Slate TAYLORSVILLE. Students at Vista elementary will present a talent show today (Thursday) as part of Friendship Week activities. The weeks programs began with a sixth grade valentine dance held Monday, for which students filled out dance cards in advance. Teachers taught students the polka, square dances and other types of dancing in readiness for the event, according to principal Delmer Lawrence. Students from Taylorsville high brought their presentation of the play Rumpelstiltskin to Vista yesterday. All classes have participated in making friendship posters and each student has made a doll cutout of him or herself. The paper dolls will be placed on hall walls, joined together with hearts, to represent friendship throughout the school, the principal said. Students are being encouraged to write secret pal letters to anyone they observe doing something nice for other people during the week, and many will also receive a friend-o-grafrom a teacher who notices them doing something nice. As a special treat, students will also be allowed to sit with friends of their choice during lunch instead of with their classes, said Mr. WEST VALLEY VIEW Lent Observance To 966-276- Romance To Be In Air Tomorrow Season of a tremendous learning experience for me, as well as for the children, she said. I had an artist as my teacher in first grade and if I can do for just one child what she did for me, that is my goal. It is fantastic to see the way the students get into art. They enjoy it so. The whole thing started as an incentive project to get kids to enter the Reflections contest, but it has gone way beyond that. It is one of the most worthwhile things I can imagine and I do love every minute of it, she said. Teachers at the school have a positive attitude toward the program. My class and I look forward to our time each week. She is giving the children good experience and confidence in their artistic ability, remarked Ann Hardy. Kaye Greenhalgh is a sheer delight and has the ability to convince even the most skeptical of us that we can draw, said Cindi Wright. My second grade class was spellbound. The presentation was so beautifully prepared and the class followed through the lesson without and art can be any frustrations frustrating to some of us. They shared excitement in mixing their own colors, agreed Barbara Griffin. One advantage to this program is that children who have a poor including those in remedial classes, are enjoying art, and developing a better feeling about themselves, Mrs. Burns added. Another plus to the program is the principal becoming apparent, observed. By volunteering her time, energy and talent, Mrs. Greenhalgh has encouraged the staff and PTA to seek ways of expanding the volunteer program at Rolling Meadows. Currently there are some capable volunteers working with staff in many areas, such as reading, tutor- - ing on a Romance will be the theme of a Granger stake sweetheart ball tomorrow (Friday) night in the stake center. Portrait will provide music for the 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. affair. Dressy attire has been specified for the dance, which is for persons age 18 and older. The cost will be $5 per couple. Decorations will be in red, white surand pink with an rey as the center of interest. Flickering lamps and park benches will help create a park scene and the ceiling will be done in red. Intermission entertainment will include the crowning of a king and queen of hearts and their attendants. Members of the committee include Lois Foster, chairman; Jan Boyer, Pat DeWaal, Donna Oldham, Maxine Nielsen, JoAnne DeLange, Joyce Carter, Betty Peterson, Carol Christensen and Fern Thompson. Golson learn tips about oil painting from visiting artist Kaye Greenhalgh. ARTIST . . . Rolling Meadows elementary students Winona Vea (left), Trlcia Sollis and Blaine time with us. The school and community working together will benefit basis and other areas. Their time and talents are also greatly appreciated, Mr. Bateman said. We hope to find ways that will enable more adults within our school boundaries to share their skills and one-to-o- all involved, especially our students, he said. Any persons interested in volunteering time and skills may call the school, 969-986- Start Sunday KEARNS. The first Sunday in Lent will be observed this week at Trinity United Methodist church. The sacrament of the Lords supper will be offered at both 8 : 30 and 1 1 oclock services, according to Rev. Bronston M. Greenwood. The meditation for the morning will be Lenten thought. Following services each family will be invited to take a sacrificial bank in which to place the amount of one meal per week each week during the Lenten season. The banks will be returned during Holy Week, with proceeds going toward the World Hunger program, Rev. Greenwood said. An adult and youth study on Methodism and Mormonism will be held during the Sunday school period, beginning at 9:45 in fellowship hall and is open to visitors and newcomers. Dr. Greenwood will conduct the class. Trinity will host the Covenant Players from Reseda, Calif, at both services on Feb. 27. Participants presenting Worship In Drama will include Warren and Lynda Walter, Fort Worth, Texas and Ponca City, Okla.; Karen Balog, Conn, and Evonne Greenwich, Silvis, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. More information about Trinity 1 may be obtained by calling or 969-428- GRANGER. 17, 1983 1 KEARNS. Members of stakes in Kearns LDS region are being invited to audition for participation in a traveling theatrical company. Singers, dancers, instrumentalists and actors are being sought to take part in programs that will be made available to wards and stakes throughout the area, according to spokesman Ray Woolsey. Auditions will be held on Feb. 24 and 25 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Kearns 7th ward, 4270 W. 5700 South. Singers are being asked to bring their music and be prepared to perform. Dancers will be taught a routine. All ages are welcome to try out, More information may be obtained by calling Mr. Woolsey at 1 or Lindsey Powell, by Olga Milius GRANGER. Our students look forward to the art period because they are each able to have a successful experience, observed Diane Smith, teacher at Rolling Meadows elementary, discussing the art program now in effect at the school. Local artist Kaye Greenhalgh donated two days of her time to visit the school and teach art concepts in classrooms and talk about art to students in assemblies as a kickoff for the schools annual Reflections contest last month, said PTA president Darlene Burns. The program was so successful and popular with students and teachers and so enjoyable to the artist that she offered to continue donating her time and talents whenever a teacher wished a special art program. Mrs. Greenhalgh is now giving three days a week to the students, working with them on art concepts, techniques and art appreciation. It is so refreshing to see the willingness and dedication of a parent and the complete acceptance of the staff as they find time to work together for the benefit of our kids, observed principal Gale H. Bateman. A schedule was posted and teachers have filled in the space as it fits their class schedules, he explained. Mrs. Burns coordinates the program, he added. Mrs. Greenhalgh is going the extra mile, the principal remarked, by enrolling in art classes offered by Granite district so she can gain an understanding of how to work with elementary students. The artist, bom in the small central Utah town of Fountain Green, is a natural artist who showed signs of talent at a very early age, said Mrs. Bums. She has studied the wildlife of Americas west and portrays it on canvas. She has a real love affair with the western landscape, Mrs. Bums added. Mrs. Greenhalghs realistic painting includes many scenes using wildlife, waterfowl and hunting dogs as subjects, along with ranch scenes, trout fishing, landscapes and florals using authentic detail and extensive research. She has studied with artists from Oregon, California, Arizona and Utah, but her best teacher over the years has been nature, she says. She and her husband Paul live in West Valley City with their children Brad, a student at Taylorsville high, and Brian, a sixth grader at Rolling Meadows. A daughter, Chris, is married. Mrs. Greenhalgh received the best of show award at a recent juried art show sponsored by the airlines of . Salt Lake - International Airport which was held at the Bountiful Art Center. I love working at the school, it is Thursday, Feb. 968-689- 968-462- CONVENIENT PROFESSIONAL lliSs? FULL SERVICE - BANKING self-imag- e, Founders Day To Be Observed Tonight By PTSA At Valley JHS GRANGER. Founders day will be commemorated at Valley junior high during a PTSA meeting at 7 oclock tonight (Thursday) in the school auditorium. A patriotic slide presentation will be narrated by Richard Cannaday, drama teacher. The pops ensemble will sing and the concert band will play. Guest speaker for the meeting will be West Valley Ctiy Mayor Gerald Maloney. During the day, flags of different countries will be displayed and patrons are being urged to fly the flag during the day. Also during the meeting, Shauna Bank, past PTSA president, will be presented a pin and other past presidents will be honored. 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