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Show Citizen, Review, Press, Wed., August 15, 1984 - Page 17 I pUP honors members over 80 fcf,W'i- $ the North Utah ifSnpany of Daughters of I over 80 years of age n' Snored recently by officials. i Sa Marshall, captain, said Z, .re approximately 150 ' Iters over 80 in the company, : B.eWu takes in from Lehi through Sunt Grove, and includes in- -' Kual camps in Lehi, American fi Pleasant Grove, Manila, S 2 nth Ward Church for a lun- - Sob and tribute, Mrs. Marshall ) "eL said the pointed 7th? fact that new members are 15 in the Daughters of Utah leers to help preserve and f Sve the past for the future. Members Needed She said anyone having a direct who came across the nvestor I Ins before the coming of the ailroad in 1867 and who is over 18 Lrs of age is eligible to join. Also invited to become part of the ,ocai organizations are DUP members who may have moved into Jig north Utah County area and have belonged to other camps, f Goals i' 0ur main goal is to perpetuate the memory of the pioneers, Mrs. Marshall said. She said DUP members collect history and artifacts of their I pioneer ancestry; hear lessons Honored by the North Utah County Daughters of Utah Pioneers for being over 80 years of age or a member of the DUP for over 20 years were, front row, Velma Comer, Lehi; Fern Hicks Pleasant Grove; Eva Proctor, Pleasant Grove; Cora Beasant, Pleasant Mabel Grove; McNeill, American Fork; Ruth Spicer, Arizona; Margaret Hayes, Pleasant Grove. Back row Edith Kirkham, Lehi; Belva Johnson, Lehi; Melba W. Latimer, Highland; Udine Wing, Lehi; Lurina E. Warnick, Manila; Alice Brown, Alpine; Larue Gaisford, American ork; Nan Ferguson, American Fork; Elvira Gough, Lehi; Lenore Colledge, Lehi; Pearl Allndge, American Fork; Dorothy Bennett, American Fork. pertaining to some aspect of pioneer history; and help "rejuvenate the Pioneer spirit so it isn't forgotten." The camps meet once a month and dues are set by each camp but include $4.50 which goes to the Central DUP Camp in Salt Lake City and $1 to the County Camp. A nominal charge is added to help keep each local camp with ex-penses. "We find that most of the students touring the DUP Museum here do not know about the Pioneers or the heritage of the state, and we want to help perpetuate this history and not let it be forgotten," she said. She feels new members would join the DUP if they knew about the program, and hopes they will become interested in their heritage. "About 73 percent of the members of the Utah Daughters of Pioneers are over 75 years of age. We need new young members," she said. She invited anyone interested in joining -- - or becoming active - in the DUP organization to contact her at 756-534- Jean Butler or Mariam park, all in American Fork, and officers of the North Utah County Company, or any DUP member to find out more information. jlvPRE HIGH AND DRY AT SARATOGA!! f CfUZZH I SWIM -- - $5.00 ovitrnn . per carload SI GIANT JACUZZI X ' nrrrr!n hot pool pick up your .i fJ FREE DISCOUNT TICKETS AT f j74i.im pKAMIKAZr WATLRSLIDE PARTICIPATING 7 ELEVEN JL 3 story - 350 ft. long! STORES. VcSlAyGA3 Gli 4 natural wARM SPRING SWIMMING POOLS, KIDDIE "" RIDts' MINI G0U' CAM' I1 PING, ARCADE, GO HARTS. f Just minults lionalUoHiooon sur.ir.iEQ SPECIALS For The Whole Family From xtixim luiniiiiniiinmiiilniiir; iiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiit iiiiiiim) If American Fork X and Lehi stores only Umme' HourS: 3 OO p m. 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M.m Kli.ni Utk i mum in n m, mm n ti n iiim iiiiiim niw n mm imrn mmmmmn ,m Stereo VHS Hi-- ' , Stereo Beta Hi-- Let's Hear It For The Videocassette! Let's Hear It For The Price! SjSlS Also Available On Videodisc HOMEV,DEO rVS 54 E. Main American Fork 756-826- 8 DSEASY" 155W-Mai- n Lehi 768-423- 6 fcM""",""""",,',1,"",,",,,","",,,,""""""M,,,MII,,,,,M Sounds Easy Finnchisng Corpcslion "MMHMHa Soonds Easy FC. AJl Rhtj Resrvd "AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR - VIDEO ONE VIDEO, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH" I Utah State Historical Society to meet The 32nd Annual Meeting of the ! ' Utah State Historical Society will be held August 16-1- 1984, at the Denver & Rio Grande Depot in Salt City, announced Milton C. Abrams, chairman of the Board of State History. J Open to the general public, the meeting will feature scholarly presentations, workshops, awards ceremony, banquet, and the annual president's report. An additional feature of this year's Annual Meeting will be an open house at the Society's headquarters in the renovated Denver 4 Rio Grande Depot on Friday, Aug. 17, from 5:15 to 6:45 p.m. The proceedings will open on Thursday, Aug. 16, with meetings of the National Historical Publications and Records Commission Advisory Board and the Utah Geographic Names Committee. A workshop on the care and conservation of museum collections will round out - the first day's activities. The morning of Friday, Aug. 17, will be devoted to discussions of historic preservation - particularly tax benefits, building inspections, limestone conservation, Park City's residential development, and the history of WPA buildings in Utah. The labor history session on Friday afternoon will feature lec-tures on the Castle Gate mine disaster and on the railroading community of Bridge. The women's history session will focus on Utah women in World War II war in-dustries. An open house on Friday evening will be hosted by the Board of State History. A light buffet will be served. The antiquities session, with three presentations on Clear Creek archeology and a roundtable for local historical societies will cap the evening's activities. Saturday morning, Aug. 18, the Annual Meeting will continue with the Utah Folklore Society session where presentations will deal with Mormon humor and Danish traditions in Utah. The history session will follow with papers on the prison experience of Abraham H. Cannon and on law and order in frontier Tocquerville. Following a luncheon buffet in the Grand Lobby of the D&RG Depot, Dr. Thomas G. Alexander, member of the Board of State History and professor of history at BYU, will present the main address, "Public Resource Policy and the Forest Service in the Intermountain West: The Struggle for Multiple Use." Milton C. Abrams will then deliver the president's report and preside over the presentation of awards. The 1984 Governor's Folk Art Award will be presented to Glen D. Thompson of Hunts ville. This special award, initiated in 1982 to honor individuals whose art makes a significant contribution to Utah folk tradition in craft or per-formance, is sponsored by the Utah Folklife Center in conjunction with the Utah Arts Council. Mr. Thompson was born in Ogden in 1933 and began learning saddle-makin- g from an uncle when he was 17. His work enjoys a fine reputation throughout the In-termountain area. He made the famous "beehive" saddle in 1981 for the Grand Beehive Exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution. There will be a display of Mr. Thompson's art at the Depot during the Annual Meeting. The Association of Utah Historians and the Utah Centennial Foundation will hold business meetings at the depot Saturday afternoon in conjunction with the Historical Society program. Advance registration is en-couraged for all Annual Meeting attendees. Cost is $3 per person ($1.50 for Historical Society members), which does not cover the luncheon buffet. Contact the Historical Society at 5 for additional information. |