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Show Review -- Wednesday, May 3, 1989 -- Page 9 VTZS Lions Journey For Sight May Lions will be raising funds to support the Utah Lions Eye Rank & Eye Research Laboratory or send tax deductible check to the Utah Lions Foundation. University of Utah Medical Center. 50 No. Medical Drive. S.L.C.. UT 841:52 or call 1801 (', Children's Fun h" '' Summer oV Ringing Masses Boys & Girls Ages 411 Only $10Month (plus inexpensive costumes) Classes held weekly beginning Thursday, June 1st Performances at Steel Days and concert at season end Call Charlotte ' today! f .'; ) 756-962- 3 V'tJy 15 years' experience yy 4 in children's instruction "WsA I ,,,(wLUABpQUPpNr?r j Watch for our f , Anniversary Extravaganza! I x I ,ssViss 4v n I Lighten up with - 1 Sun Glitz! 5 OFF ' I Open Mondays! I $5 OFF Perms Sx ' . priced :i(.ootn 40.00) I J l.onK hair & specialty wr;ips cxlni l! J.8!5sssas5 . I Full Set Nails '25.00 Ronna Olsen (stylist), Becky Thornton I FREE Ear Piercing (nail artist), Gloria Batchelor 5 with purchase of earrings (ownerstylist), Jan Preston (stylist) I Sffi-.-.-.-S- S Talk of the Town I . Expires Must have May coupon. i7. 1989 12 . Center, Am. Fork 756-788- 9 mm mm mm VALUABLE COUPON One Mylar Balloon PBLlCLj Offer expires Sat., May 13,1989 With Order of six YnS Li w fv $2.00 to send, $1.00 to receive " j I m?Copy RamaJ J 1 1 648 E. State (next to Fred Mfiveri. Am. Fork 758-826- 4 B J I Extended Hours: (Beginning May 6) & Sat. 9 a.m.-- p.m., Fri. 9 a.m.-- p m 5 Z 1549 N. State (by Macey's), Orem 226-073- 0 J Open 9 a.m. 6 p.m. Mori. Fri., 1(1 a.m.-- 6 p.m. Sat jj" Join the ? I Utah Golden Girls I 'M Jr. Drill Team winners of the Freedom Festival S Grand Parade, Provo Children's Parade, J American Fork Steel Days Parade and P .G . 5 S Strawberry Days Parade. g g Ages ns f M No prior experience J j M needed! f ,t(. Registration and ; p Classes include: llf instructlon begms p .Driiidown I I j Monday, May 15. Splits jbL Ci i $12Month t m 'Kicks s pHik fA --Showmanship iVVl 4 Day lns,ruc,,onal 1 eff ,Tap if Workshop May 15-1- 8 J I A '' " Tues-W- Thurs II .Marching i I .Jumps IH I S ,5 'Precision J Jf .Ballet " F Jazz - " ? v "Jor more information l XSing I l ( and registration li Help your child developL , ' A j call Colleen Bills I P discipline & I j J1 785-754- 8 p fc j 1 Go for the gold! I VALUABLE COUPON I ' (d Petunias & Pansies I I V2 count flat I 1 r?Perennials $9e ! s I Jll-SiTl i yy SY1 We nave bulk garden seed. ! I gx Specialty Mother's Day orders I 1wffJ Bonneville Nursery! I I LffiP$J ' Main' mer'can Fork " 4 I W? ( 1 block north and 5 blcks east of I " Fred Meyer) 1QAC " 1 V Expires Wed., May 10, 1989 DD-jit- D I bhmwm mm tmu mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm VALUABLE COUPON 1 (TV TT (V 4 Days only I I I LJ I ) I J Wed Sat , May 3 6 I I J jy I T Sunglasses, Reg. $10 j JAII Men's & Boys' j (SSpSti I CNIDTQ ' Lena Gean Phelps fOwner I ON I II I O 1 East Main, Am. Fork J 756-434- -- Valuable coiipon- - I Glen da Johnston t; 4S J and ic:r" ; . ! Rhonda Hone i r wWi0&&MM$! , 'lis (formerly of Beauty Encounter) f 'j 1 have moved to ; j The Perfection Place I 574 E. Main, Am. Fork I - 756-590- 9 I Mother's Day Special: Rhonda Hone J Buy one service and get any other service S (of equal or lesser value) Ask for Rhonda or Glenda r 1 For now we will still be offering: I I Every Monday -- - r I Men's & Boys' Haircuts $400 - ? Every Wednesday -- - J Perm Special - $20 I I J (Long hair and specialty wraps extra) ( Call us at The Perfection Place J V., today! 756-590- 9 Glenda Johnston m ggGBKlC3G3SG 68cS i - 1979 1989 liS:, 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL f Bedding I War'Sj ! ALSO HAVE- - lfJ! an2ng Baskets H1kJH aniums JrA ! Vegetables Si J 61 No. 100 East, Lehi 1 IT 768-862- 2 I ( an.1,11 Buris pJease ca,j fQr appointrnent j Professional Perm - including cut & style I Qny x--J s with coupon B Carolyn Burrows is her shop. Come in and f Lseewha t her 13 year haristyling can do for you ! ' .. ' ' . ... . - : it if-- - S I-- ' "i f ' ' . - - I ' " I , ' - i 1 v ; 1 Sue Fleming- - left, Director of Nursing at American Fork Hospital, is pleased to accept the quilt made by local Senior Citizens. They are Zola Booth, Hose Pulley, Ada Cherry and Mary Jensen. Seniors donate quilts to new care unit at Am. Fork Hospital jvKALYN SECRETAN Local Senior Citizens are helpi-ng to create a homey atmosphere Care Cent-er Transitional in the new soon to become a part of the American Fork Hospital. Two quilts were recently comp-leted and presented to Sue Flemi-ng, Director of Nursing at the hospital. The Senior Citizens volunteered their services and completed two beautiful quilts, a rose color and a teal green. They tied one and quilted the other. It would be hard to measure the time spent on the handmade items. One woman fig-ured she spent about 32 hours. The Care Center will be for the elderly and is more like a rest home atmosphere where people will probably stay about two to four weeks. Located near the Intensive Care United it will open when it is com-pleted, probably about the end of the month. It will be a place to recuperate and prepare to go home. Maria Rowley is finalist for Homecoming Queen of Utah Miss Maria Rowley, daughter of Dudley and Lily Rowley, Pleasant drove, has been selected finalist for Utah's ninth annual Homecoming Queen selection. She is the Pleasant Grove High School Homecoming Queen. Utah's Homecoming Queen will receive a cash scholarship plus an expense paid trip lo compete with queens from the other states for America's Homecoming Queen in .July in Honolulu. Hawaii. America's Homecoming Queen will receive a cash scholarship plus an expense paid educational rip to Europe. America's Homecoming Queen. Inc. is a t organization promoting education and educational travel for high school Homecoming Queens in all 5(1 slales. Post office tells safety tips for children near mail trucks "Letter carriers can make over 500 stops per day, and if there are little children around, it can make for a dangerous situation and for a very unnervin g day for the carrier," said Adams. "However, all the safety talks and mirrors in the world cannot control a child's actions. That's why we're asking parents to help in the safety effort. A postal vehicle can't hit a child if they're far from it." Every year, children are injured because they play too close to postal vehicles. But these accidents don't have to happen, and the Postal Service is asking for parent's help in preventing them. Children flock to letter carriers whenever they're in the neighborho-od. When they approach a letter carrier's vehicle unnoticed by the carrier, or suddenly appear from behind a parked car, the results can be tragic. Lastyear some West Valley, UT, children thought it was fun to try and grab the back bumper of a letter carrier's vehicle without at; apting the letter carrier's at ten-- : ion. When a boy oined the game he held on too long wdwasdraggedbehind the vehicle 'or 25 feet. Thankfully the child Sved. Ironically, a few days later, hesamechildren tried tohold on to le bumper of the vehicle again. Tarents can help prevent these accidents by making sure their thildren do not run or ride out to greet a letter carrier in a vehicle," said Pleasant Grove Postmaster Wally Adams. "Letter carriers become a famil- - iar sight in neighborhoods and are often welcomed as friends by adults and children alike." "But a child running out to get the mail can be very hazardous, mainly because carriers can lose sight of them or don't know they're around at all. Also, if a child must cross the street to get to a mailbox, a vehicle passing the stopped mail truck might hit your child," said Adams. ( According to Adams, if children i pick up the mail, they should do so only after the letter carrier has put the mail in the mailbox and gone on to the next house. Letter carriers receive safety talks at work to remind them to be on the lookout for children as they deliver the mail. And postal ve-hicles are equipped with mirrors on the hood to help them see anyone or anything in front of the bumper. PG Library offers videos Are you tired of trying to find something good on television? How about "checking out" the new collection of video tapes at the Pleasant Grove Public Library? The collection, which was made possible through the MacArthur Foundation, offers approximately 250 tapes, which include a wealth of PBS programming including: A Walk Through the 20th Century with Bill Moyers, American Short Story, The Constitution: That Delicate Balance, The Ascent of Man, The Brain, Civilization, Alistair Cook's America, Life on Earth, The Heart of the Dragon, Great Performances, Heritage: Civilization and the Jews, I, Claudius, American Playhouse, The Living Planet, The Story of English, Nova, Planet Earth, The Shakespeare Plays. The cataloging has been com-pleted and these outstanding tapes are ready to be used by the patrons with a current library card that is free of any outstanding fines or overdue books. A small fee of $1 per video will be assessed and the check-ou- t period is two nights. y m y m ..... """ " i 'I 1 "'--t 'hMM iiift A is mfi: m&mm --- a, "fmmAm- -. freat achievers... mon8 the outstanding students of the month at J"vecrest Elementary School are, L-- Kyan Merrill. Angus and Steven Black. |