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Show Royalty So highlight Junior Prom tonight The crowning of the queen and king will highlight the annual Junior Prom to be held tonight at 8:30 in the City and County Building. ) Yesterday will be the theme of the amnual dance, being sponsored bythe Junior Class. Junior Class officers include Mike Brown, president; Rick Shum-waNancy Cannon, secretary; Kim Hanson, girls social chairman; and Rick Beckham, boys social chairman. Candidates for Junior Prom queen and king are Nancy Can y, vice-presiden- Who will be King and Queen of the Prom? This question will be answered tonight when BY's Prom will be held at the City and County Building. Candidates are (front row from left) Kris Lynette Andersen, Anne Barton, Ranae Meredith, (Nancy Cannon missing); back row Dave Cunningham, Dave Porter, Mark Ashworth, and Jeff Keith, (Rick Beckham missing). Apostol, t; wins McKay Y Scott Card, a graduating junior at BY High, was one of the 15 chosen out of the 127 who applied for the David 0. McKay scholarship at BYU. The scholarship includes a $6,000 grant given in $1,500 shares yearly for four years. If during these four years Scott decides to go on a mission, when he gets back the scholarship will still be applicable. The scholarships were not given on the basis of financial need but on grade-poiaverages. Besides grade-poin- t average, social actiThere was considered. vities were also a personal interview. Scott, new to BY this year after transferring from Mesa, Ariz., is the only recipient from this area. He is active in forensics, drama, and music. nt Joseph West wins grant Senior Joseph West has been named winner of a full tuition grant scholarship in art in an open competitive portfolio contest held at the BYU. Students from high schools in and out of the state entered the competition. Out of the 60 best portfolios, Josephs was chosen. According to Mr. James Blankenship, art teacher, Josephs win was incredible. Most of the students that 'hhd entered the contest had come from visual arts classes of around 180, compared to our twelve. j of consisted Josephs portfolio drawings, etchings, photos, and paintings. His was selected as the best after a month of evaluation. 5-- $1.50. ets. An Vol. 25, No. Brigham Young High School, Provo, Utah 18 High school chorus sings Honor roll named at Y devotional For the first time in recent history of BY Higli five students have received straight A grades forthe one quarters work. Leading the A students for third quarter is Larry Ford, a senior; followed by Mark Ashworth, Robert Riddle, and Lesley Strong, juniors; and Hali DeHart, a sophomore, according to Mrs. Idell Thurston, registrar. These students along with Jan-ee- n Acord, Nancy Cannon, Scott Card, Terri Fisher, Janine Lambert, Jackie Ovard, and Sylvia Spears were listed on the high honor roll of the senior high for the third term. BY Highs Concert Chorus pre- All of the portfolios were judged on excellence of drawings, com- position, color relation, and variety of techniques. The students were also judged grade were to they prove point average also capable in other subjects. Considering that he was competing against schools with ten times our enrollment, I feel Joseph did very well, said Mr. Blankenship. jon-the- 84601 April 19, 1968 assembly was presented yesterday by the juniors. I sented three numbers in the BYU devotional assembly Tuesday at the fieldhouse. The chorus sang Heavenly Light, by Kopylof; Your Treasures in Heaven, by Berger; and Unto Thee, Oh Lord, by Young. Speaker at the assembly was Elder John Longden, assistant to the Council of Twelve Apostles. Each year a limited number of outstanding high school choruses throughout the state are invited to participate in various BYU devotional assemblies. The BY High chorus has participated in approximately eight in the last 10 years. Upcoming events for the chorus include presentations at the University and Edgement IV wards Sacrament services; the Region IV Chorus Festival at American Fork on April 23, where "they will be rated with other choruses; and the combined band and chorus spring concert which will be May 8 at the Joseph Smith Auditorium. ir Andersen , Taylor superiors at state drama, speech meet Drama students from throughout the state participated on April 6 in the State Dramay and Inhosted terpretive Spech Festival by the BYU. Two BY seniors Natalie Taylor nd Jue Andersen both in the event of retold stories, ceived superior ratings at the meet, contrasted to one superior rating received by BY last year. Receivinig excellents at the meet were Tom Nibley in retold Dress for the dance is formal. Tuxedos are not required, however. Tickets for the dance cost Committee chairmen for the dance are Kris Apostol, decorations; Lesley Strong, programs and favors; Barbara Babb, refreshments; Laurine Black, pictures; and John Edmunds, Chris Daraisi and Ivan Hullinger, tick- Scott Card grant at non, Kris Apostol, Anne Barton, Renae Meredith, Lynette Andersen, Mark Ashworth, David Porter, Dave Cunningham, Rick Beckham, and Jeff Keith. Voting for queen and king was done this morning by all high school students. The royalty and attendants will be announced at the floorshow, after the promenade and singing of the theme. Five earn 3rd term straight hate Today Junior Prom, 8:30 p.m., City, and County Building; Track at Wasatch, 3 p.m. Tomorrow Track, at East High Invitational Monday Region FHA Banquet Tuesday Tennis, Lehi at BY, Chorus at AF, Track at Orem Thursday PTA, 8 p.m., College Hall April 30 Division Tennis May 2 Girls Day Next issue of Brigadier. For story; Lani DeHart, Sarah Willis, and Scott Card in dramatic reading; and Debra Orton in humorous reading. Sarah Willis received a good in the area of mono-actinOgden was awarded overall first place in the Class A division. BYs drama classes are now plays. The Working on three-act second period class is working on j Remember Mama and the seventh period class is doing Room for One More. n, Be all you can be. Read! is the theme of this years National Library Week to be held next week, according to Miss June Berry, librarian. The purpose of Library Week is to get people to read and use the library facilities. The national observance of Library Week has been going on for 11 years. Each year articles are printed in papers and magazines and some libraries have their own ways of designating it, states Miss Swensen, Natalie Taylor, Ann Tippetts, Rachel Wallace, Clint Williams, and Sarah Willis. Receiving high honors in the junior high were Karen Bradshaw, Richard Duerden, Jerry Reynolds, and Diane Strong. On the junior high honor roll were Kenneth Allred, Shirley Andersen, Connie Belt, Ann Christensen, Cheryl Cottrell, Ann Cox, Jolynne Davis, John Fugal, Shari xri Harmon, Greg Gardiner, Lindley, Traci Loy, Sara Riddle, Mark Sowards, Jill Thompson, and Rebecca Yarn. year the students who take library service will help me promote Library Week. We will sell paperback books that are on sale in the library at discount prices. There will also be contests. A prize will be given to the student who has used the library the most during the school year, and makes an application forJ,t, announced Miss Berry. We will also sell old text books and other old books for 5 cents each. Everyone is welcome to participate, concluded Miss Berry. This 10-2- . rigadier wins All-Americ- an ards; Kathy Library to hold special sale durina national observance three out of four years An n late Named to the honor roll were senior high students Karen Andersen, Lynette Andersen, Barbara Babb, Jolene Barlow, David' Barrus, Dean Bowen, Marianne Bowen, Kathy Call, Carilee Cox, Lani DeHart, John Edmunds, Mirreo Gleave, Gary Golightly, Laraine Grow, Linda Grow, Rosemary Haffner, Kim Hanson, and Glorianne Howard. Also Sharon Huntington, David John Keith, Annette Larsen, Maas, Mary Melville, Dale Mon-soBrent Orton, Sue Oldroyd, Veea Palmer, Robin Patton, Becky Smith, Jeryl Smith, Cindy Slover, Steve Soffe, Diane Sow- - As j All-Americ- rating has been awarded the Brigadier forvthe second consecutive semester, ih the 78th Critical Servic&orjducted by the National Scholastic PresvAssociation at the University of Minnesota The top rating represents superior accomplishment in newspapers and it is reserved for top publications, according to the NSPA at the University of Minnesota. The Brigadier received the highest scores in the departments of balanced coverage, newspaper content, feature stories, sports coverageand writing, and all forms of makeup, headlines, typography, and photography. Student newspapers competing from more than 1,000 schools across the nation were judged on the basis of content, writ an again an ing, and makeup in categories based on enrollment, frequency of publications and method printed. The Brigadier also received an rating for the second semester last year. This is the third time in the history of the school that the newspaper has received such an awrard. The staff of the' Brigadier this year includes Naney Cannon, editor Sylvia Spears, assistant editor; Kim Hanson, news editor; Margie Dixon, feature editor; Gary Golightly, sports editor; Steve Soffe and Mark Ashworth, sports reporters; Dave Clark and Larry Ford, business managers and photographers ; Nadine Vincent and n Dorothy Richan, editors; Mark Ashworth, artist; and Sandra Christensen and Robin Patton, reporters. All-.Americ- exchange-distributio- an |