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Show 4 VIEW WEST VALLEY Thursday, April 19, 1984 wouldnt be feasible for Salt Lake City, Barber said. Barber said a meeting in Colorado For Students In Cyprus Electronics Class Is Turning Algebra amateur radio individual projects of operation, many kinds are all adding interest to classes in electronics being taught at Cyprus high. Teacher Leon DeVries said his vocational classes are primarily arschool proticulated with post-hig- h grams such as those offered at Utah Technical College. One of his goals is to prepare students so they are school education ready for post-hig- h in the field. MAGNA. Robots, Students learn about digital electronics, studying direct current theory, how components work under direct current and how math is used in working with electronics. They find the algebra they learned, often wondering when they would ever use it, is now of great use, he remarked, adding that students who have not had algebra have to be taught the basics in the elect Out To Be Useful After All ronic class. Students then study theory of alternating current, learning about circuits and components and, again, use lots of math, including complex algebra and some trigonometry. and They study the dials and integrated circuits involved in the field. Friday is project day, when students may work on their individual projects, things they can make and take home. Projects include strobe lights and light shows, which may be hooked up to music sources and will present a light show four-chann- Youth Symphonies patterned quency. Projects graphic after the music fre- are made by photomethods, the teacher board is explained. A copper-cla- d cleaned and painted with material, then exposed to light, placed in a developing solution, thus giving an original of the negative, he explained. The board is then placed in a tank e which etches away of the copper not exposed to the light, leaving a series of copper trails, which become the connections for wiring the projects. photo-resista- ferric-chlorid- - Spring Concerts Are Being Planned TAYLORSVILLE. Both modern and classical music will be presented at Granite Youth Symphonys spring concert on April 27 at Taylorsville high. Varied selections also will be heard at the Junior Youth Symphony concert on April 26, at 7:30 p.m. at Granite Park junior high. The senior group will give an hour program, Cyprus high students, from left, Jeff Hutchings, Tony Taggart, Randy Hughes and Brett Helsten work on the arm of a BODYBUILDING . . . robot they're constructing for an electronics class project. HYPNOSIS WORKS!! Areas of: In Phobias Schooling Weight Loss Self Esteem Anxieties Etc. Smoking A Team of Professional Hypnotherapists is starting a Private Practice - Ten Years of Collective T raining 8, Experience For Private Consultation Please Call Mike or Becky Host Dance Tomorrow RELAXATION TAPES AVAILABLE BULKEASTER SALT LAKE. The Westside chapter of Parents Without Partners will hold a dance tomorrow (Friday). It will be held at the Eagles Hall, 1100 W. 2100 South. It will involve an Easter parade theme with prizes given for the prettiest, craziest and funniest hats. The affair is open to the public. A social hour will begin at 8 p.m., followed by dancing until 1. Additional information may be obtained by calling CANDjSPECIALS soTyoiTcan buy!any?amoun CHOCOLATE CANDIED MARSHMALLOW POPCORN BUNNIES & EGGS (Sweets) NOW ONLY Reg. (18 2.40 FLAVORS) Reg. 1 69 Expires THE 4 1.19 99 NOW ONLY LB. 74 84 BAG 1864 W. 5400 So. Taylorsville, Next to Mann Theatres 967-611- Nuts. Candy & Natural Foods Chapter Will Mn- - thru 7 sat. 10 am to i pm SPORTING GOODS COMING SOON TO TAYLORSVILLE Tuttle To Vie For House Seat MAGNA. Daniel H. Tuttle nounced this week he will seek the Democratic nomination for the District 52 seat in the Utah House of Representatives. The district, covers which Magna and a portion of Hunter, has been held the past nine terms D by . Leon Reese, a Demo- crat who has said he will not seek In his five-poun- d COG- - District 52 the Jubilee Overture by Ron Nelson, three movements from Bachs Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 and two movements of Dvoraks New World Symphony. Brad Smith will be featured as English horn soloist. Richard Chatelain, director, will be assisted by Pat Webster, James Thompson and Cindy Petty. Following the concert, service and participation awards will be given to graduating seniors in the performing group. Music at the junior concert Thursday will include the finale to Beethoven's Fifth Symphony and the Blue Tango by LeRoy Anderson. Directors are Nick Falcone, Mike Franson, Porter Dutson and Neil Fockel. An award time will follow the concert, with trophy awards given to six orchestra members. outstanding Participation certificates also will be given to a number of the musicians. Auditions for the summer junior youth symphony will be held May 9 and 10 at Granite Park from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Rehearsals will be held PWP 969-832- 9 playing through June from 7 to 9 a.m., with buses picking students up from all junior high schools. Eight concerts will be performed, including one at each Granite Park school, ZCMI Center and the State Capitol. Students are also building a robot, which will be controlled by a microprocessor. About 30 different circuit boards, plus mechanical parts, are needed for the robot, which has one arm, with a grip. Students will be able to program the unit to obey commands, such as crossing a room and moving an item from one area to another. Once programmed, the robot will repeat an operation as many times as needed. Mounted on wheels and operated the robot will by its own power-pacalso talk, using a voice synthesizer, Devries commented. Students are having fun building their own robot, he added. The department also contains a ham radio shack. Contact has been made with people in many areas of the world, including South Africa, Australia and many countries in Europe and South America. Mr. DeVries related that at one time when talking to a man in Australia, it was a Friday in spring in Salt Lake, and a fall Saturday in Australia, a differential in both the day and the season, adding interest to student knowledge of the world. DeVries is himself a ham radio operator and is interested in helping (See Page 6, Col. 1) announcing candidacy, Tuttle stated, Each individual can make a difference. Through participation, they can have an input in the decisions that govern their daily lives. I would appreciate the opportunity to represent the people in this area with that goal in mind. Tuttle describes himself as pro-- " education, with his wife in college studying for a teaching certificate, a son entering high school, another son entering junior high, a daughter at the elementary level and one in (From Page 1A, Col. 3) businesses in locating in the Sait Lake Valley. Designed to spur economic growth, the alliance would have information about all the entities in the valley centralized into one location, making it easy for businesses to obtain information about locations around the valley. Weve been making progress, Goodwin said. The computers are in the process of being set up, as is the software being purchased. In addition, an intern to work in the alliance is being selected and should be employed by the end of this week. That intern will be funded by the county. COG members also received a report on the initial investigation of hosting the Winter Olympics. Brad Barber of the State Office of Planning and Budget recommended a task force be assembled, including representatives from parties that would be affected, to study the feasibility of hosting the Winter Olympics. We need to see if this is a good idea and, if so, when to pursue it and how, Barber said. The first step is to find out what is required to receive the endorsement of the United States Olympic Committee, according to Barber. The requirements may be so stringent t that we wouldnt want to pursue it,' he- - said.' For example, the USOC may require all the facilities - bobsl-- . ed runs, ski jumps - to be completed before the group will even consider a bid. In this case, the Olympics -- between the USOC and Mayor Ted Wilson and Gov. Scott Matheson is being set up. The next step will be to hold a feasibility study to examine the cost, impact, benefits and public opinion on the proposal to host the Olympics. The USOC requires public support, Barber said. Its important to get the public's view on this before we decide. West Valley City Mayor Jerry Maloney, COG president, said support from all members of COG is important in this issue. Although Salt Lake City would be the official host city, the Winter Olympics would have an impact on all entities in the county, he said. In other COG action, members discussed a federal grant request from Planned Parenthood Assn, of Utah. Although the councils only authority in the matter is review and comment, members voted in favor of giving federal monies to public organizations for distribution. COG members stressed their preference that any federal funds coming into the state for family planning be administered through a state agency, despite recent court rulings to the contrary. A main issue in that ruling was the requirement that state family planning services inform the parents of minors who use the services. Sydney Fonnesbeck, a Salt Lake City council member, opposed giving the funds to state agencies, saying while it isnt fair to have people fund something theyre against, she finds funding something like the defense budget equally offensive. Are we not taking a stand because politically its the easist thing to do? she asked. COG members also received a copy of the property identification e guidelines report. The booklet addresses problems in the present street address systems, with the purpose of instilling more uniformity in the valley. Discussion was also held on a proposal to increase municipal computer access to county data. Burke Wells of the County Sheriffs office said his office wanted to make sure that the computer terminals being placed in municipalities would not be abused and that law enforcement would be given priority. 113-pag- p EAZ-LIF- I I I T & REESE SALES & INSTALLATION Custom Hitches Transmission Coolers I I I Welding Wiring & Brake Control Installation I I .972-332- 2 I I COIIBERT ENTERPRISES I 2036 2200 South W. - i l.JI l. The candidate feels he has an awareness of the problems this area and the state faces, adding that he cares about safety for working people, dignity and vocational training for the needy and handicapped, opportunity for business people and the needs of senior citizens. Born and raised in Magna, Tuttle graduated from Cyprus high in 1964. He and his wife, the former Marcia Wilson, are the parents of four. Tuttle is a stone mason and a journeyman pipefitter with an associate degree in applied science from Weber State and Utah Technical College. 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