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Show mpvnym If9 H-"- r pn mu yf pi llll'iW-- '1 'MH Wr 'W'"Wr'' Hi 11, 1985 Wednesdoy, September Venial ExPffiSt 1 Students recruited for community orchestra BS 1 E9 E9 CSS ESS Q Q3 IQ D D D 0 0 KBf 223 Q S3 23 into stringed Introductions struments at a school assembly and a taste of the music they can produce were the highlights of the annual recruitment drive for the Uintah Community Schools Youth THURSDAYS Stomajj 2:00 - 2:30 Time! 3 Ages: to PM 5 D Q The recruitment drive is being conducted throughout the week at Uintah District schools with orchestra director, Ora Fay Oviatt and several of the orchestra members giving the presentations. Students from each school who are currently enrolled in the program are giving the short demonstrations on the skills they have developed. Students who are interested in joining the orchestra will be invited to bring their parents to a meeting Wednesday, Sept. 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Vernal Junior High cafeteria. Parents with age children who wish to enroll them in the program may do so at this meeting. Parents or others interested in more information on the orchestra program may call Marsha Rhoda DeVed, Oleen at pre-scho- 789-432- 1, 0 or the orchestra office at The students were surprised by the descriptions of the various instruments given by Oviatt in the school assemblies. She told them the instruments are made from all natural materials; wood, catgut and horsehair, for example. Oviatt also had the orchestra students play the same series of notes from the bass, viola, cello and violin so they could hear the difference in the sound of the same key. She also explained how the size of instruments are suited to fit the individual and proved this with a comparison between the tiny violins and a regular sized one played by an older student. She also discussed the rigorous practice involved in becoming a good stringed instrument musician. The demonstrations began Monday at Davis and Naples Elementary, continued Tuesday at Central and Discovery, Wednesday at Ashley and Maeser, will be Thursday in Lapoint and will finish up Monday, Sept 16 at Vernal Middle School in the sixth grade English classes. UINTAH COUNTY LIBRARY n WE RE CUT OUT TO SERVE CLIP YOU STUDENTS AT NAPLES Elementary School listen to a sound demonstration on the bass. Ora Fay Oviatt, orchestra director at the microphone, is surrounded by orchestra members who SAVE & CHILDREN ARE INVITED to attend Story Time at the Uintah County Library. Moms are invited to clip out this little reminder for their bulletin board. A are sharing their talents and showing their instruments to the students. cow is sometime named 'Bossy' because the Latin word for cow is 'bos.' BEST SELLERS: The following is a listing of books currently on the New York Times Book Review r jr September 1, 1985. Books marked by an asterisk are available in the librarys collection. Fiction: 1. LUCKY by Jackie Collins - The heiress of a crime lord takes on the heiress of a shipping tycoon in fashionable spots all over the world. 2. SKELETON CREW by Stephen King - Twenty-twtales of horror set in contemporary America. 3. THE FOURTH DEADLY SIN by Lawrence Sanders - Which of six suspects murdered a saintly New York psychiatrist. 4. THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER by Tom Clancy - A Lithuanian submarine driver defects to the United States with the Soviet Unions most advanced nuclear secrets. 5. THE TWO MRS. GRENVILLES by Dominick Dunne - Romance, scandal and murder in New Yorks high society. 6. THE CIDER HOUSE RULES by John Irving - Life in a Main orphanage earlier in this century. 7. LAKE WOBEGON DAYS by Garrison Keillor - Recollections of a small American town. o 8. LONESOME DOVE by Larry McMurty - The Old West seen larger than life. 9. JUBAL SACKETT by Louis L Amour - In this forerunner to the Sackett saga, a restless explorer scouts the American wilderness. 10. HOLD THE DREAM by Barbara Taylor Bradford - Continuing the family s iga begun in A Woman of Substance. 11. IF TOMORROW COMES by Sidney Sheldon. A young woman destroys the crime lords who got her an undeserved prison term. 12. TOO MUCH, TOO SOON by Jacqueline Briskin - Three sisters find their destinies bound by an obsession with the same man. 13. THE LOVER by Marguerite Duras - The sexual initiation of an adolescent girl by a rich Chinese in Saigon in the 30s. 14. INSIDE, OUTSIDE by Herman Wouk - A traditionalist Jews quest for identity in glittery contemporary America. 15. FALL FROM GRACE by Larry Collins - Machinations by spies, double agents and a beautiful woman on the eve of 17th-centu- Nonfiction: 1. YEAGER, AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY by Chuck Yeager and Leo Janos The story of the first man to fly faster than sound. 2. IACOCCA: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY by Lee Iacocca with William Novak - The rise of an immigrants son to top jobs at Ford and Chrysler. 3. SMART WOMEN, FOOLISH CHOICES by Connell Cowan and Melvyn Kinder - Two clinical psychologists analyze modern womens efforts to find acceptable men. 4. A PASSION FOR EXCELLENCE by Tom Peters and Nancy Austin - Ways to achieve distinction in management. 5. THE MICK by Mickey Mantle with Herb Gluck - The autobiography of the New York Yankee baseball star. 6. THE AMATEURS by David Halberstam - Four American men seek the 1984 Olympic gold medal for single sculling. 7. MARTINA by Martina Navratilova with George Vecsey - The tennis champion. autobiography of the Czechoslovak-bor8. CONFESSIONS OF A HOOKER by Bob Hope with Dwayne Netland - Memories of more than 50 years of golfing, by the comedian. 9. NUTCRACKER by Shana Alexander - Treachery, mystery and high society in the 1978 murder of a Mormon multimillionaire. 10. HAMMER OF THE GODS: THE LED ZEPPELIN SAGA by Stephen Davis - The British heavy metal groups boisterous tours of the 1970s. 11. FUNNY MONEY by Mark Singer - The scandal surrounding the 1982 collapse of the Penn Square Bank in Oklahoma City. 12. LOVING EACH OTHER by Leo Buscaglia Suggestions for setting our priorities right in order to enjoy life to the fullest. 13. THE GRASSHOPPER TRAP by Patrick F. McManus - Amusing pieces about pursuing pleasures in the great outdoors. 14. THE BRIDGE ACROSS FOREVER by Richard Bach - How the author of Jonathan Livingston Seagull sought a true love. 15. THE DANGEROUS SUMMER by Ernest Hemingway - A chronicle of the Spanish bullfight season of 1959. - n and Miscellaneous: Advice, How-t1. DR. BERGERS IMMUNE POWER DIET by Stuart M. Berger - A health and inregimen designed to produce weight loss while improving creasing energy. 2. WEBSTERS NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY - A standard work updated in 1983. - How to find 3. WOMEN WHO LOVE TOO MUCH by Robin Norwood the right man and maintain a happy relationship with him. 4. THE FRUGAL GOURMET by Jeff Smith - Recipes for delicious dishes prepared at moderate cost. 5. FIT FOR LIFE by Harvey Diamond and Marilyn Diamond A diet for weight loss and physical fitness. o Yes and "no are the only acceptable answers to this question. "I dont know means you havent taken the time to find out and that means you could be In serious cancer can cost you your life. jeopardy. Because what you dont know about breast I rhree women contract this disease every fifteen minutes. m one of those women, I should to one be you have want too, you m a breast cancer survivor and survive and that s a terrible it doesnt who women gets jisease. One of the three waste of human life since breast cancer is 90 curable when it s discovered early and treated quickly. This kind of Mammography is the safe, painless way to evaluate breastsotissue. It would take small (using minimal doses of radiation) can detect lumps ears to discover them through physical examination. e rhe staff of the Breast Care Center wants you to live a long, cancer-fre- to life. detect So they established this Center to promote mammogram screenings s needs women about care genuinely cancer (or the absence of it) early on. They warm and t is that an create to them atmosphere and that caring ha3 prompted s woman a for with in out carried are respect privacy personal, where screenings physical and emotional make Contact the Center today for a mammogram or have your personal physician mammoa baseline the appointment. The American Cancer Society recommends women (who have no gram (your first mammogram used for later comparisons) for a followed every one to 40 mammogram 35 of by and symptoms) between the ages 50. from 49 and age 40 every year two years from ages through be the most terrible thing about this can Not knowing If you have breast cancer all this, remember, you could simply after find out disease. If youre not dying to Ha dvino. well-bein- g. r PLP Corporation of America InhUM Hospital Ashley Valley Medical Center Breast Care Center 151 West 200 North Vernal, Utah 84078 ext. 143 (801)789-3342- , I IhiOi. d 6jm4 jiifi 1ni iii A it m m A A .A lf niiii)Hi.xidfujrH.jMVj.ri 7 |