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Show J ft SAYS SHE Its funny how your graduate level. Of course, You can go home again. Time truly does warp our perception of how things used to be. It also changes things. Of time-honore- In its own way, it was a cultural shock. My work assignments take me into the valleys high schools, so it wasnt the age of the regularly students that made me feel somewhat like the proverbial fish out of water. It was their intensit- its possi- ble that things werent really what they seemed. I believe, however, there are those things that never change, although our view of them can become altered. I had an occasion to pay a visit to the BYU campus last week, casting a hopeful eye upon expaneducation on the ding my yWe paid a quick visit to the Cougareat, the place where the pulse of the campus can most acy curately be measured on a basis. The food is much the same as I remembered it - a whole lot more expensive, but a lot less expensive than out here in day-to-da- II Suburban Arts Club Meeting Is Planned Health Fair Trip Is He wants a position in quality control in one of the Fortune 500 companies. And I think he expects it immediately. I was going to set the newspaper world on its ear a number of years ago. But at that time, they werent bashful about telling you that they really didnt want a woman on staff. I think perhaps I should have been passionately intense about that subject, but instead, I bided my time. But alls well that ends well. Perhaps it was the time of year that lent to the intensity. The term ends in a couple of weeks, and maybe thoughts are more on studies than on spring and all that it used to conjure up in our minds when school ended in June. Or maybe todays kids are more committed to their education. Certainly the cost alone should weed out those who arent seriously in pursuit of a career. 010 Include. Cut i CUT 4 Reg. t Style AND STYLE 14 $1I Prices Good Till April -- ' visual 4 Try a Green Sheet Want Ad! L,lljJlllil l" I WE TeTTvTr"-- ! i i i I es m CEDAR FENCING SALE SPECIAL js and acuity r" - I? 4x4x8 BEST 1 BEST 2x4x8 now"! 4.7, -- 1 1.79 I 1x4x6 BEST Reg. 89 RAILROAD TIES Iz ! Is Reg. 2x4 NOW n. sl FENCING CLIPS NOW 1 Jl O' jl $1 Limited to Stock on Hand !; AM&UCM LUMBER & HARDWARE 8461 W. 2700 SO. 250-444- 4 !q Iuj VISA MASTERCHARGE mbwihh 0 50 a4 h m wm mmmm !! m aHM 12, 1984 - 7 pm Wulk In. Welcome 968-340- 9 4 3540 So. 4000 HEALTH FAIR . . . W. Oral Henline shows Joe Grose where to sign to ot the Magna Senior Citizen Center. register for health fair to be held YOUR SAVINGS SOURCE WITH THIS AD Without ad 4 for 1 & W. 5415 S. KEARNS OPEN 8AM.0IORM. Date Of Senior Trip Is Changed COUPON Value la 1 Asst. Styles Black, Pink, Tan, Yellow 4W5 Lavender OFFER ENDS APRIL 11TH, 1984 MAGNA. All seats on a bus for a senior citizen trip to the Springville Art Center have been filled, but the date for the trip has had to be changed, according to Carolyn Koch, director of the Magna Senior Citizen Center. Mrs. Koch said original plans had called for the group to go on April 16, but she has received information that the center will be closed that day. The trip has been for April 25. The bus will leave at 9 a.m. and the cost of transportation will be $2 per person. Participants will also need $5 for the meal. Everyone who signed up for the trip is being asked to contact Mrs. Koch at the Magna Senior Citizen Center between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday through Friday to reaffirm their plans. The number is The menu next week at the center will be macaroni and cheese on Monday, pork chop suey on Tuesday, meat loaf with mushrooms on Wednesday, hunterS chicken and mashed potatoes on Thursday and Swedish meat balls on Friday. Entertainment that day will be provided by Sharon Dea, a country and western singer. KRaFTj) BRAND .. MARSHMWflWSSy , 535-720- mOCEGECB 4860S0UTH. RED WOOD . AYLORSVIUlfMURRAVXUTAHMn RESOUX. - MMMtt parka 1 MARGARINE ,i ST IMO I34ANU r- SMWiiTtWATe - SALAD PRESSING! (8 Ofe.Stze BARBECUE SAUCE APRIL IS THE MONTH FOR 4 . Size TARTER DIG CLOTHING BARGAINS SAUCE Tjr AT THE SALVATION ARMY THRIFT STORE 2 LOCATED IN THE GRAPE PAY AND SAVE SHOPPING CENTER ALL YELLOW TAG CLOTHING ITEMS Vi JEM TAM ALL WHITE TAG CLOTHING ITEMS A BAG aumu STRAWBEwr At 4099 West 5400 South S3 TAP FROZEN FOOTS... OFF A LARGE SELECTION OF SPRING CLOTHES Furniture, Household Goods, Knick Items. Prices Also Good At Our Other and Many Knacks, Downtown Store 427 West 200 South. We Also Have Used Hour,! 11AM THE SALVATION ARMY to 7 THRIFT STORE PM 4099 W. 5400 SO. KEARNS PAY AND SAVE SHOPPING CENTER VXP. IGo . CORN, PEAS, MIXED VEG. PKCES Fop. V Pv- APWt- - - sh W rmo ut IggfflL sunny I m . s7,s i 25' la 69 : $500 HAIR CUTS Mon. Sat. 8 am 4 IIH DEUVE test- Tue., Wed., 9 v Thun. MEN'S OR I CHILDREN'S j 4 $09788 L and liquid for four hours prior to the also noted that the blood chemistry analysis will require the participants to abstain from food glaucoma, as well as counseling and referral services. There are two programs for which there is a modest charge of $14 for both. Included will be a blood chemistry analysis which would cost $200 if done by a private physician. said Carolyn Koch, director, seniors should plan to take advantage of the service which is designed to help them maintain good health. is being enThe couraged to help speed up the process and to cut down on the length of time seniors will have to wait. HARMON BUILDING 4TH FLOOR 4 4 well-receive- d, Citizen Center for the annual Utah Health Fair. On Tuesday, at 9 a.m. a bus will leave the center for the Friendly Neighborhood Center, 1992 So. 2 East, where participants will receive free screenings that include height, weight, blood pressure, jCwcI feel so lively honest-to-goodne- at the Magna Senior anemia, 4 It was somewhat of a shock to see coeds in jeans. I had to smile as I thought of the editorials my peers and I wrote for the Daily Universe demanding to be allowed to wear pants in the bowling alley. Thats the truth. Pants in the classroom were grounds for dismissal for the day. Those editorials were not too but may have been the beginning point for change. But while there have been many changes, a great many things remain the same. For example, I was impressed MAGNA. Senior Citizens here may Grandjean will be i Even then, the shortest distance between two points was a straight line. Planned presentation STYLING SALON 5, 1984 by the overwhelming sense of peace that one felt both inside the buildings and out. I remember that was the case in the Sixties, but I didnt fully appreciate it then. The bookstore and connecting cafeteria still seem to be the busiest place on campus. The odor of turpentine and oil paint that permeates the Fine Arts Center always gave me a sense of belonging somewhere as I pursued my major and minor subjects therein. That feeling came over me again, so many years later. It was almost as though I had never been away, so familiar were the sensations. And finally, unchanged is the willingness of a professor to lend his help to give me an opportunity to reach my goals. While life has taught this potential student a great deal more than she knew then, I have a feeling that help is going to be just as welcome and just as necessary now as it was then. Maybe even more so. She on dolls, doll making and collecting will be given by Ann Pittenger, former owner of Intermountain Art Co. Lelia Gunderson and Roberta 4 4 The physical changes in the campus have been ongoing and major. They were when I was there too. Gone is the quad and the mud path we created by our unwillingness to traverse the sidewalk system. Boy, were they lofty. Were mine once? For Magna Seniors GRANGER. Members of Suburban Arts club will meet at 8 p.m. on April 12 in the home of Joyce Anderson, 1590Manzanita Dr. A the real world. But it wasnt the food that intrigued me. A few tables away, a young man was vigorously discussing the Theory of Relativity with two other students, one. of them a female. Their interest in the subject seemed to match his own. At any moment, I fully expected one of them to announce that he could d prindisprove that ciple. Could it be that I ever cared that deeply about the selnantics of my chosen field, which admittedly wasnt science? As I exposed myself to virtually every writing course the university offered, including a technical course for engineers in which I described the intricate workings of a camera, did I really become that emotionally involved with the things I was learning? Was I that articulate? Probably. At another table, a youngish-lookin- g student was explaining his future goals to a wide-eye- d coed. BYU athletic and cultural events, conferences and Homecoming affairs, but until last week, I dont recall stepping into an academic building or being in a position to observe students being students. never V Ive been to many times since my undergraduate days, attending I think thats what Thomas Wolfe was trying to say when he inscribed his always Thursday, April by Michele Bartmess changes with age. course, WEST VALLEY VIEW CITRUS DJUNlcK Vf |