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Show f UTAH STATE PRESS ASSN P 0 BOX 1327 SALT LAKE it ... I i I More Entrants Named for Miss Manti Pageant In addition to the three entrants announced last week, four more participants in the Miss Manti Pageant, scheduled April 10 in the high school auditorium, have been named. The four new entrants are Stacey Pasmussen, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Juel Rasmus- sen; Shirley Anderson, a daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Dell Anderson; Karen Leigh Tatton, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ? Volume 90 I 4 I I J n (could be F.D.R., Johnson, Nixon or Ford), who was Governor General of therolony set up a I I which is partly Roose-veltia- n and partly Hitleresque in its tendencies. Politics are no fun without young love and this is supplied in the form of a young lad who has eaten native food and has acquired a disease which makes him unable to take orders. He and Irving (the famous author, Washington Irving) discover how to tell an American. There is also a pretty girl who loves him but must wed the d Governor who woos her with September Song. There is, in addition, a motley collection of rascally Council-me- n who have long exploited the country for their own good, but are by the even more rascally Stuyvesant. They supply plenty of comedy. The parts of Stuyvesant and Tina Tienhoven are double-cas- t and will be played by Margo peg-legge- Utah University Professor Will Address Farm Bureau I s 1 ) i 1 1 1 f 1 and other sports for girls. Her hobbies are cooking, bike riding, choreography and sewing. Shirley has been the editor of Manti High Schools literary magazine, "Write," and has had a poem published in the National High School Anthology. She has written road shows and was a 1975 Girl Stater. In addition to writing she enjoys baking, embroidery and sewing. '$A ki Anita Young Shirley Anderson Dr. Paul Lewis Harmon, provide their own dishes. Door issociate professor of manageprizes will be awarded. The Manti North Ward is will of Utah, ment, University be guest speaker at the annual preparing the dinner, with Mr. Sanpete County Farm Bureau and Mrs. Gaylen Christiansen . , banquet Wednesday night at seizing as chairmen. Dr. Harmonra native of 7:30 in the Manti Center-Nort- h Provo, graduated from Brigham Ward cultural hall. will numbers Find Talent Young University, did graduate the for music program. work at Harvard and received provide Tickets are priced at $1.50 his doctorate in business and can be purchased prior to administration from UCLA. He is the author of several the banquet from Bruce Barton and Glen Allred, Manti, and articles and each fall is a guest Reuel Christensen and Richard instructor of an engineering and management course at Nielson, Ephraim. UCLA. to asked are Banquet goers Moss, McKay Seek Funds To Negate Flood Threat Senator Frank E. Moss said today that he and Congressman Gunn McKay are seeking preliminary funding to ward off any flood threat as a result of the Manti landslide. ' Noting that markup hearings began Tuesday in the House Interior Appropriations committee, Moss said SubCon- gressman McKay is asking the subcommittee for an initial $700,000 appropriation to begin work on the slide. Moss said he is asking the Senate Interior Appropriations Subcommittee to direct the Forest Service to begin work on the slide once the house markup hearings are He said the money is to be used in the following ways: To prepare a stability analysis of the north side of the canyon opposite the slide area. To initiate emergency action to keep the channel open and debris basins clear. To prepare an environ- mental assessment review, benefit, and cost analysis and feasibility analysis. To prepare emergency surveys, plans and estimates for a diversionary structure. These actions are all to be completed by May 31, 1976 in order to determine what mitigating measures may be needed on a more permanent basis, he said. He added that if further action is needed, such as construction of a bypass pipeline to guarantee the integrity of Manti Creek, then he and Congressman McKay are committed to this solution. But before this can happen, he said, the Forest Service must compile field data on the slide area instead of relying on information which tells us nothing new about the slide. "At present we know nothing about stability of the north side or the effect of sedimentation on the agricultural economy. This data should have been compiled long before now by the Forest Service, but hasnt." Moss said he believes the joint action of his office and Congressman McKay's will force action which otherwise would not happen until some tremendous damage resulted. do not want to wait to shovel out houses. I want the Forest Service to take action now," he said. MARCH 18, 1976 Rollins, Orem, and John Martel Green, Ephraim, on Thursday and Saturday evenings. Denise Jensen and Matthew Valantine, both from Richfield, will play on Wednesday and Friday evenings. Other cast members include Dave McKay, Ogden, as Washington Irving; Marv Hig-beEphraim, as the hero, Brom; Gary Durrant, Sandy, Scott Peterson, Murray, Rees Number 37 1 of Twelve Apostles Willi Preside at Stake Conference March 20 and 21 I e, Rasmusson, Manti, Brad Beacham, Ephraim, Wally Larsen, Fairview, and Robert Glad, Sandy, as the rascally Council-meGary Tsujimoto, Taylorsville, will play Broms sidekick, Tenpin. Of course, there are Girls, Girls, Girls and Boys, Boys, Boys. McLoyd Ericksen conducts the music; Richard Haslam has n. provided the scenery; Joe Crane has provided the direction. Tickets are at the Noyes Building in Room III. Sew Show Seen Soon The USU Extension Service Sew Show a two hour workshop will be held in the Manti High School auditorium beginning at 2 p.m. on March 26. All interested persons are invited to attend, Mrs. Mary Lois Madsen, Sanpete County extension agent, said. Purpose of the show, she explained, is to e sewing methods and techniques and teach new skills to home sewers. There is no admission charge. Guest speakers this year will be Dorothy Hansen, Davis County extension home economist, and Marty Hibbard, interior designer for Eggett Interiors in Smithfield. Marty Hibbard is a USU graduate. Her topic is "Modern Approach to Combining Fabrics for Home and Apparel." In todays life style, more patterns are being used together. Its a challenge for the homemaker to put them all together, noted Ms. Hibbard. She feels an important part of decorating a home is to keep the individuality of its occupants. "Thats my speciality, she added. Karen Tatton PREPARING for upcoming presentation of Knickerbocker Holiday are Marty Green (Pieter Stuyvesant), and Marv Higbee as the hero, Brom. Sherman P. Lloyd Announces Candidacy for Senate Seat Lili Western Ontario Conservatory of Music and BYU, she has also Hinckley Music Service and Ms. Hinckleys Studio of Music been guest artist and faculty at Snow College and Church College of Hawaii. She is also in great demand as a contest and competition adjudicator. are well qualified to serve musician's needs, having dealt in the music world for 20 years throughout the United States and Canada. Krous, Weather Ephraim Serv icc. Sharon M. Hinckley Registration Open for Snow Evening Courses Registration is still open for spring quarter evening courses beginning this week at Snow College. This announcement from the Division of Community Services also urged citizens to contact their office by calling (extension 282), or by v isiting the office in Room 313 of the College Science Building. 283-461- 1 Gopher Control Workshop Set A gopher control workshop sponsored by the Utah State University extension service will be held at the Sanpete County courthouse in Manti March 23 at 7:30 p.m. Bob veteran will Manti The Manti weather data is reported each week by Leslie J. Anderson, local cooperative observer for the U. S. Department of Bureau. Oppcnheimer, Delta, government trapper, conduct the workshop. Those who wish to participate arc asked to sign up in advance at the courthouse either personally. by letter or by phone. After those attending the workshop have learned the techniques used in poisoning the gophers, they will be able to send directly' for strychnine Registration by telephone, or personal contact is possible, and information on costs or times and places of class meetings is available upon mail, request. (Readers are also referred to the advertisement in last weeks paper for a listing of courses and coupon registration form.) Special features of the spring it quarter offerings include classes and workshops in natural foods, clothing construction, tailoring, parent education, servicing common e electronic circuits, workawareness and a shop in industrial safety (OSHA requirements). Credit or option courses are offered in many areas, including: anthropology, non-cred- self-imag- no-co- st non-ered- it painting, Afro-Asia- n geography, scientific and cultural history, woodwork, electric wiring, refresher shorthand. keypunch machine operation. business machines, body for conditioning, women, sociology, and weldself-defen- ing. Mar. 9 monuments and recreational Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. areas. This experience, coupled responswith my state-wid- e ibilities as Legal representative of the Utah retail food industry, give me the type of personal under the direction of Harry A. Dean will sing at both sessions. Junior Sunday Schools w ill be conducted for both sessions on Sunday. Children between the ages of three to six are encouraged to attend Junior Sunday School services held in the South Ward Scout Room. A priesthood leadership session is planned for Saturday evening. The first segment of this gathering will begin at 6 p.m.. with the second part scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. Priesthood leaders requesud to be present at both meetings Saturday evening arc the stake presidency, high council, stake clerks and executive secretary: Mirovitch, Marjorie Trotter and others. She has been soloist with symphony orchestras, chamber groups, oratorio societies, and has performed as solo recitalist on both harpsichord and piano throughout the United States and Canada. In constant demand, Ms. Hinckley, a Ford Foundation Scholar, has been a demonstrator and lecturer throughout the U.S. regarding new teaching materials and methods. She has been a favorite of master classes and workshops. A past faculty member of Great Basin Experimental Area. Intermountain Experimental Station, U. S. Forest associated with the use of the public lands, of the proper encouragement to development of our natural resources and of the state's national parks, Elder David B. Haight of the Council of Twelve Apostles will preside at all sessions of Manti Utah Stake Conference to be held March 20 and 21. Stake President Wilbur W. Cox announced that two general sessions will be held on Sunday, March 21. One session will be from 9 a.nt. to 11 a.m. while the other will begin at 12 noon and dismiss at 2 p.m. Pres. Cox said that the two meetings would be identical. He said patrons should attend one of the two meetings whichever time they choose but they should not attend both meetings. The Manti Utah Stake Choir, The Hinckley Music Service, with Sharon M. Hinckley operating her Studio of Music, is a new business opening in Ephraim at 170 North Main Street. Although specializing in teaching and playing materials for the piano at all levels, music for organ, guitar, strings, voice, choir, and all other instruments is available. Mail order service from United States and foreign publishers is a specialty. In addition to music of all kinds, Ms. Hinckley will be available to accept both harpsichord and piano students at all levels. Sharon M. Hinckley will be remembered for her work with Summer Snow, the annual "Messiah performance in Manti, and her frequent recitals and demonstrations in this area. A certified teacher with both the Utah Music Teachers Association and the National Music Teachers. Ms. Hinckley has studied under J. Homer Wakefield, Carl Fuerstner, Vronsky and Babin, Sergei Tarnowsky, Leo Podolsky, A- The Ephraim weather data i reported each week by the Sherman P. Lloyd, former Utah Congressman from the 2nd District, officially announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for the United States Senate scat now held by Democrat Frank E. Moss at the Sanpete County Republican Lincoln Day Dinner Saturday night in Ephraim. In making his announcement. Mr. Lloyd emphasized his personal involvement with "the people, the problems and the opportunities of every county in the state of Utah. "As a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives' Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. I am most sensitive to the problems Marty Hibbard Hinckley Music Service Opens Studio in Ephraim lfred up-dat- 1 Member of Council Stacey Rasmussen New Business MANTI, UTAH 84642, THURSDAY, Snow College Theatre opens its musical season on March 24 with Knickerbocker Holiday a venture into American History but with a difference. This difference was Snow Theatres choice of KnickerMaxwell bocker Holiday Anderson and Kurt Weills sly look at modern politics in terms of a Dutch frolic set in New Amsterdam cira 1647. is none other The than Pieter Stuyvesant himself hero-villai- -- attended Girl State, was named Top Templar and is a Sterling Scholar candidate. She is a member of the National Honor Society. She plays the flute and the piano. She is an accomplished horsewoman and has trained her own barrel horse. Karen Leigh is drill mistress of Templarettes. She has had many years of dancing lessons and hopes to become a dance teacher. She participates in basketball, football, volleyball Knickerbocker Holiday Opens Musical Season I 3 Tatton, and Anita Young, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith W. Young. Anita is a Sterling Scholar candidate and a member of the National Honor Society. She has studied trumpet, voice and piano and has belonged to the high school concert band, the dance band and the Snow College stage band. She is student body secretary and a member of Templarettes. Stacey is a cheerleader, R. Lynn nhfm 1 4 CITY, UTAH 84110 high priest group leaders and assistants: elders quorum presidencies; seventies presidents and group leaders; ward bishoprics and branch presidencies and clerks and executive secretaries from each ward and branch. Elder Haight, named in January as a member of the Council of Twelve Apostles, had served as an Assistant to the Council of Twelve since April 6. vT(. A prominent California business and civic leader, he served as mayor of Palo Alto. California, was president ol the Palo Alto Chamber of Com 10 . 11 12 . 13 . 14 . Mar. 15 . merce. the Downtown Merchants Association, director of the Red Cross Peninsula Blood Bank, Stanford Area Boy Scout Council and the San Francisco Bay Area Council of Mayors. He was serving as assistant to the president of BYU at the time of his appointment to serve the Church. Elder Haight served Priesthood Missionary included executive positions withZCMl in Salt Lake City, Montgomery Ward Co. in Chicago where lie was regional manager of the midw rern area of 165 retail stores, and later president of a retail organization in Palo Alto. Com- years he was president of the Palo Alto mittee. For Stake, His business activities have as regional representative in the Sacramento and Fresno Regions of the Church. Formerly, from 1963 to 1966, he was president of the Scottish Mission. He was a member of the a 12 former bishops counselor and member of the Palo Alto Stake High Council. He was born Sept. 2, 1906 in Oakley. Idaho. He married Ruby Olsen of Salt Lake City in the Salt Lake Temple. They are the parents of two sons and a daughter. |