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Show The II E L P E It (Utah) PACE SIX JOURNAL ACItriL T;:rjT::OAY, IMmMMUHH I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I m SCHOOL NEWS, FROM 1361 13, II r ? h f. HELPER JUNIOR HIGH m iff lift tlTt 't" Iiy liampagers Club '"fc'''""'"""'"''lJlM,Mw H-tH- nil If-- ,0 i r , TRACK North, South, East, West the call is for Kentucky's Best! Also Available BOTTLED IN BOND IffERFILL-MZIE- R FINE KENTUCKY BOURBON FOR OVER 150 YEARS ... owua aw toirue n wntnu iw iuiiu smuun (owur. utosrown unuaor M rioof HEED IT ,i. nm lKcij jOTni VwOJG WITH My EVES APTEf? I CAM SPOT A GOOD w U.AL. LIKE THAT'.' kJ -- - FESTIVAL by Doryl Jensen 18 Early Saturday morning German students sleepily awaited the bus that was to take them to the Festival of Foreign languages at the BYU. Upon arrival everyone explored the fieldhouse while awaiting registrjtion. At 9 3.CC0 contestants a.scim'bled there and listened to several talks. My Counrty Tis of Thee was sung in every tongue represented: Arabic, Russian Latin, German, French and Spanish. Another treat was dance sets performed by BYU dance teams. Contestants competed in vocab ulary and poetry divisions follow groups assembled again for hte viewing .foreign displays. At 3:30 presentations. In a field of over 60 in first year German, our students garnered 7 of the fist 15 high scores. Sorry to say, none from here won a purple ribbon, but we surely won many others. Those receiving first places were Beverly Giacoletto, Karla Stavar Amy Chan, Elizabeth Cobain and Connie Steele. Second place winners were Gary Newkirk, Joanne Tanigu-ch- i, Doryl Jensen, Randy Imai, Becky Pollastro, Jeannine Green er, Linda Aoyagi, Lamar Jacob-so- n and Dorothy Smith. Third place winners were Stanley Gibson and Jeannine Greener. 7 n " -- oUiii-3 - LANGUACE IP fs5?g ,.i .. i joiii 'i is k iby Johnny Mizukawa Our cinder track is really getting a running over because it's spring and that means another track season for athletes here. It moans very hard work on the boys' part to get in shape for coming meets. Since the distribu tion of track shoes several weeks ago boys of three grades have been training1 earnestly by jogging around the track at least five times a day which is a little over a mile. Now that the boys are accustomed to hard running Coach Can ningham has been timing the workouts such as the 100 yard dash, 200 yard, and 440. With I the timing cf these races he looks forward to a successful season. The smaller and younger boys will not be handicapped in the track meets because of the separation into two divisions. The general size of boys will determine their classification. The track teams are looking forward to several meets in the nar future. The first meet will ba the annual BYU Invitational Tick Meet on April 21 at BYU. The next meet will be the traditional meet among Carbon junior high schools at the Carbon Track Moot on May 6. There is a possibility of a track meet at Roos eve It, and a dual-me- et with Price sometime from now till the end of the track season. ', AMERICAN LEGION SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS by Jonna Piccioni Again as the school year is coming to a close the students are wondering who will be the two outstanding students of the school in the ninth grade. The American Legion gives an award every year to a boy and a girl who meet the following standards: outstanding scholarship extra curricular and out of school activities, personality, per severance and resourcefulness, and general worthiness an(i citizenship. Each cf these qualifications are worth 10 points totaling 50. The students are nominated and voted for by the faculty. The students with the highest ratings win the awards. As everyone knows that this award is something wrorth work ing for and that anyone receiving it will certainly be justly proud, SPEECH TOURNAMENT by Gene Schultz Saturday, April 8, was a red-lett-er day for six hard working ninth graders. Beginning at 8:30 a.m. the students spent the full day at Carbon High at the an nual Junior High speech meet. The six happy contestants were Steven Diamanti, John Mizukawa, Peggy Imai, Katherine Leo, Gene MAKE IT GOT IT IT O P NT - f rt : 1 C US-- 7Hr - Schultz and Connie Baker. Though there were over 50 other contestants from the other schools, the six contestants came home with a fist, a second, and a third place. Gene Schultz placed first in humorous reading; Connie Baker received a second place tie in humorous reading; Gene Schultz placed third in extemporaneous speaking. Other ratings were: Extemporaneous speaking Ste ven Diamanti, good;' Johnny Mizukawa, excellent; Gene Schultz, superior. Dramatic reading, Gene Schultz, excellent; Connie Baker, excellent. Humorous reading, Connie Baker and Gene Schultz, Retold Story, Peggy superior. Imai, excellent; Katherine Leo, excellent, Gene Schultz, excell. These students are to be commended for the fine work. rfi , E r A rem J Ci PY. ThB ORIENTAL TVPCAUY vy nFft 5 TfMS W tZ Aftee? nwi"; JONATHAN Gf&BLE. IT TftWSPOPT TO HSMMUDMFE. WHATALAW! OF ATHENS WERE COMPELLED $1 .m yflth n TUPFF DRESSiS Washington To Seattle Via The Moon Senator Warren G. Mag- nuson, (D), Washington at Seattle's Federal Science Pavilion Century 21 World's Fair D. E. Skinner, Vice President, Century 21, Inc. A U.S. Senator's telephone call was bounced off the moon and then radioed across the continent to signal ground-b- r eaking ceremonies for a $3.4 million Federal Science Pavil- ion at Seattle's Century 21 w orld's fair. Scant seconds after Senator observed. "We have asked that Century 21 Exposition, Warren G. Magnuson, D., Wash, only the new the different termed America's first Space spoke into a phcie in his office the challenging the promising Age world's fair, will open on Capitol Hill, his words had be shown." April 21, 19C2. Attendance durrun is spanned some 500,000 miles and He added: "Those who visit ing the fair's sent shovels biting into Puget with us in 19G2 will see new expected to reach 10 million. It a Sound soil 3,000 miles away. first international of science, of technology, will be the held in the United site world Gathered at the will truly see exposition of They living. of the $80 million Exposition in 21 ... 38 years before States since 1939. Century The phone call was superSeattle to receive the Senator's its time." vised by American Telephone message were Mayor Gordon Senator Magnuson expressed and Telegraph Company and Clinton, Craig Colgate, deputy U.S. Commissioner for Century confidence that many nations the message first traveled by land line to the Bell Laborato21, Exposition, D. E. Skinner, will accept the U.S. GovernVice President of Century 21, ment's invitation to take part ries at Holmdel, N. J., where a Inc., and other Exposition of- in the Exposition. He said five shortwave transmitter hurtled continents are already repre- it across 250,000 miles to the ficials. The group heard Senator sented in the lineup of foreign moon. Scientists at Bell LaboratoMagnuson hail the unique phone exhibitors which includes Great call as "typical of the., .spirit" Britain, Canada, Greece, and ries said the entire trip was of the Seattle fair. "We have several small nations in Africa made in about two and a half seconds. emulated no one," the legislator and the Far East. 74-ac- L SEE IT 'it's for me!" SHOW IT me r , too; To lM- :. - 4-- l ; ? f - This iron lung is now empty for a change. How long if and thousands of others remain empty depends upon how soon the entire nation is fully vaccinated against polio. JUY IT Almost half the U. S. pop ulation is unguarded against crippling polio. ! Basil O'Connor, president The National Foundation, has described the vulnerability some 85 million Americans paralytic polio as "a nationa disgrace. incre is no scarcity ot lh. Salk vaccine, he pointed out, and two inoculations now, within a month's time, would provide at lecst some measure of protection against polio out- breaks and epidemics in the summer. In thousands of cities, vil- lages and hamlets across the nation. Salk polio vaccination is available at little cost, and in some communities the pre- scribed series of at least three mine Xjr.f 1 k',.i pf rf IT means better living for you Dntc a manufacturer was looking for a better product. "I want to be sure that people Nrro rr," he said. So he asked a lot of them about IT. The answers told him how to make rr. Finally he GOT IT. But IT cost an awful lot to' make. To sell it for less, he'd have to make it by the million. Which had m be uU ty the aaillioq. too. mmat jt : So he let his advertising man SEE IT. Ads began to snow IT to millions might LIKE IT enough to BUY IT. And they did. For IT was indeed a product that they needed, at a price they could afford to pay. Then a big sign, more help wanted appeared on the factory door. Everybody was happy, for now they had FT made. Left Kep Rolling Ahead ' . 1 k-- X V tfljlTiiT7jll TT A " . - J " fV V f V- - ' HY " ' 1 J - 'V iXrif tA 'l ?W : . IK''-4ji- f-"J- f W A fourth "hnn,!. shot, i cr snot is now recommended. , T.i J s common ine maiviauai sense and will to survive should dictate immediate vac- - v ? " ?Jh7i- ,f . 3 1 - -- 1 ifv! ' . W 1 ll i IF iJ 1 V ; rT yCSgE1 V4Vi(5 iAte'- 4 ' . U JFf 4 I Vl w ' tfl JT j I VJ " t 5 ' " 1 " ' , , " , . ;. 't . J t 1V i ft fx' ".'JHTiS ' Hnation," Mr. O'Connor said. ; s -. " U"If he or she has a family, all AjW the ground for , polio The National Foundation ha3 been joined in Its nationwide appeal to the unvaccinated by th Amprir nn MAHiral AeaAMa- tion and the U.S. Public Health Muroting vaccination ifafus of the American public, chart shows almost half the pop"Mion it totally unvaccinated. Service. "jiw (.. ' ' - 'JL,' A s& 'J.' aaiSB "' . |