OCR Text |
Show Ben Lomond Beacn, March 1 3, I 980, Page 4 Ptafc yom electricity badgefc on a diet. COFFEE ICECREAM 100-WAT- T TOASTER, ZoeAnne Walker, Julie NaVarre and Patti Sjoberg bone up on their campaign. preparation for their cookie-sellin- GIRL SCOUTS product in g Girt Scout cookies go on sale made by Little Brownie Bakers of Louisville, Kentucky. The girls are selling seven different flavors at $1.50 a box. They will receive 12 cents for each box they sell. The scouts will deliver their cookies between April 19th and 28th and collect the purchase money then. Troop 441 and 541 plan to sell cookies at booths around North Ogden as an additional fundraising activity. Troop leader Pamela Walker of 3255 N. 575 E. is spearheading the cookie sale drive. She said anyone who did not have the chance to place an order with a Girl Scout could call her at if they wished to purchase Girl Scout cookies. Girl Scout Troops 441 and 541 are for taking orders door their famed Girl Scout Cookies on March 7. They will canvass their neighborhoods until March 17th, trying to obtain as many orders as possible so that they can go away to camp this summer. Why should people buy Girl Scout cookies? North Ogden Girl Scout Because they Kathy Meyer said, taste good. They are I love them. Troopmate ZoeAnne Walker said, People should buy them to help the girls future, to send them through camp, to help them learn new things. This year the cookies have been now Just count kilowatts instead of calories. Estimate your energy costs with the new UP&L publication, Your By What a way to win a war! You see, the Olympics got The booklet that helps you decide where to save! Come in or write for your free copy. me thinking. Especially that hockey game. You know the one when the American team beat the pants off the Soviets! Wasnt that great? I mean, wasnt that absolutely terrific? Sure it was. But why? Why did every American within earshot of a radio flip out?? It was, after all, just a game, wasnt it? Just a game? No way. It was war. A nice, cushy kind of war. The kind of war where nobody dies (hopefully). Nobody bleeds (much!). Nobody disregards life in any form. And, in the end, somebody wins. Victory is ! LIGHT COMPANY lose sweet. Losers gracefully, at best. - L Wm ' i t, 1 ' pS t f draperyinsta Baileys answer is as simple as ,A B. SEWING Must be right color, soft hanging & fair priced. NOW Off 118 French Tergal Sheer ON SALE JT 0V . Our excellent drapery installer will make your draperies look twice the price. Draperies Cost Less Direct from our Workroom Samples shown in i?t k- i y 621-4226- reports passionately advances on com- the days and setbacks. From his vantage point, General Jim knows all, sees all. The stakes are high in these war games, and the general has a keen eye for playing his cards right. This war has yielded up the countrys finest. If they lose, it will only be because another nation has had finer. The athletes are the cream of the proverbial boot camp, and they find it hard to accept failure. The shame, the anguish of loss. The agony of defeat. Of course, its nothing like the kind of agony felt at Pearl Harbor. Now that was defeat. Like Nagasaki, and Waterloo. But nevertheless, it is defeat, and it hurts. There is nothing like the pain of missing that last killer of a hump on the big ski jump. Oooh that smarts! . instead of on land with cannons, tanks, guns,1 and grenades? What a crazy, utopian way to win a war! Perhaps, in a way, we have just won this Olympian war Maybe, just maybe, the athletes have enlisted to fight their peaceful battles to give us folks at home something to cheer about A of sense patriotism, nationalism, and home town fever, without any of the sacrifice of a real war. So what if those young athletes know that they are pawns in the hands of their leaders hockey nations team against hockey team, country against country, as two great and powerful world leaders hold their breath in anticipation of the final score. The Olympics give the mighty powers a stab at an ego boosting victory without any of the pain Here they can win without having to pay the price for pushing the ultimate button for all-owar. And may the best man win. They certainly did, didnt they?! . Mrs. America pageant seeks contestants The state director of the Mrs. Utah-Americ- a Pageant, Stephanie Rineck of Clinton, is now accepting applications from women wishing to enter the beauty contest. ' Entrants must be married, eighteen years of age or older and a resident of Utah for the past six months. Residents ot military installations are eligible for the contest The purpose of the contest, SPECIAL ON PERMANENTS 2 Weeks Only i v m ' 2 PERMS FOR n 0.00 Only when two people come in at one time. $14.00 $14.00 FROSTS BLEACHES 1 Call Today! fice, (CdDflllege your home. Tel. covering every fiery emotion and tender time out. Even General Jim McKay, safe m his foxhole of an of- Jesses flBesmnfty Must be well tailored with great fullness, smooth seams and perfect pleats. Visit our workrooms and watch seamstresses in action. INSTALLATION: tush-twitch- er Speaking of agony . . . what about time in the penalty box?? Oh the pain of punishment! The Olympic answer to the prisoner of war camp There is no tortue like the torture of the camera, eyeing the violator as he steams on the bench See the bad man. See his shame. See his frustration See him cuss out the camera in his native tongue! Like I said, what a wonderful way to win a war. The Russian front was never like this. No, m other wars, in worse wars, in the wars of yesterday, red was color of every event. Rivers, and roads, ran red Too, too much red. Today, red flies in the sky in the flags of the nations who have come to play. The colors remind the athletes who they are . . . for whom they are fighting, lest they forget, amidst all the fun and games, that they are indeed fighting. But what a way to fight it out! On ice, instead of on seas riddled with torpedoes . in the water, instead of in the air, with bombers and blood thirsty men at the controls , . in the snow, according to Mrs Rineck, is to honor the person most discriminated against in beauty pageants, the married woman. Every contestant must have a sponsor. The sponsor may be a business, club, or relative A sponsorship fee of $200 is required to enter the contest. The pageant will be held at the Weber State College Union Building Theatre March 29th at 4 p.m The winner of the Mrs. contest will Utah-Ameri- well-traine- d C. and Susan Mauhinney Steenblik Yes, put those women on ice against the enemy, armed with only the blades on their skates and a cute, of a skirt, and another gold is in the bag! No sunken spirits in this war. Here the enlisted athletes findglamour and glitter! The draftees find excitement and adventure. Never a wistful moment never a thought of home! W'hy no homesick soldiers on this battleground?? Because home is the battleground! And what a battleground it is! Complete with orchestras sounding out national anthems . . . with crowds, cheering, and loving their heroes with such abandon . . . with hairdressers, make-u- p men, and cameras Johnnies on all sides come marching home, faculties intact. There are no graves to mark. No endless rows of white crosses stretching out over miles of wanton, wasted bodies. Bodies of oh so many young men. , Here, in our Olympic war, the young men live to tell their stories. And how their thirsty countrymen will drink in the hpady tales of battle! The members of that American ice hockey team are more than just gold medal winners. They are bonafide heroes. Heroes? The athletes are heroes?? You bet. Heroes of another color. Heroes of a lighter war. A more intelligent war. A superior war. Even the women dont mind being drafted for such a war! No fussing over those ugly army fatigues, no but dahling, olive green is not my color!!". Why even the frailest of females could come out looking like Dorothy Hamill and smelling like a dozen roses in the war! What makes perfect FABRIC: W. Virginia S. Schramn, 646 E. 2650 N., North Ogden, girl, Feb. 29. L. and Rowe Kent Shawnee Robison, 1113 E 3150 N., girl, March 1 Clawson Robert E. and Ann Kendell, 664 E. 2700 N , boy, March 2 Cowdin Douglas K. and Linda McLaughlin, 2433 N 4100 W., boy. March 2 Maylin Charles J. and Brenda Hill, 4115 W. 2550 N , Plain City, boy, March 2 Groll Kim and Kaylene Peterson, 933 E 1150 N , girl, March 3. Tucker Randy S. and Catherine Cragun, 2021 N 450 E , girl, March 3. Chatelain Timothy and Dawn Nye, 1024 E 2950 N , boy, March 3. Flint Golden F. and Jane Parry, 2524 N. 350 W., girl, March 4 Jensen Kevin H and Colette Denney, 2578 N. 2125 W., boy, March 4. Silver Ronald M and Julie Johnson, 3163 N. 100 W., boy, March 5. Curtis Alvin D. and Sandra Adamson, 824 E. 1700 N., boy, March 6. Hadley Alan S. and Shauna Hancock, 2241 N 4425 W , girl, March 5. ari off the Matter Energy Budget Guide, available free at any Utah Power and Light office. Find out how much it costs to use all your electrical appliances byjob or by the month. Skinny up your budget by cutting down on the kilowatts. & 782-744- 8 David Allan . receive an expenses-paitrip to Las Vegas, Nevada, for the Mrs April America Pageant d 18-2- 6 The pageant, to be held at the Las Vegas Hilton, will be nationally televised. Contestants will be rated by five selected judges for poise and personality (forty percent), an evening gown display (thirty percent), and a sportswear or swimsuit display (thirty percent). Those interested in entering the pageant should send a stamped envelope to: Mrs. Pageant, care Murray Real Estate, 1980 Headquarters, 707 241 h St.. Utah-Americ- a of Ogden, Utah 84401 or call for more information. Mrs. Rineck said she must receive a contestants, application by March 26th for a person to enter this year's 4 tints PHONE 621-422- ... .5.00 2 j'.www'Jrws Ty- - 1 11 SdD pageant. |