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Show December 2 Page A ml no CrediT.? Drill & editorials team practices odd hours march by Noel Zabriskie Class alter school? Saturday ' too And no credit This is the situation that faces tiie 28 members ot the LA High s drill team which Flag raising sign of respect 'TWoan living in Viet Xam, patiiot-i'it- i u- ami tle slip mttms rl molt mole mraii 1 in a great American tlm home lion!. L'ptcie.yv a t u i mIiooI. we nni't l ry to gia'-- more than eer a .strong seimu of national patriot mm. Recognizing this, the Brigham Youn.tr University has, since school Began m tseptemher, sponsored, a regular camwith the playing- of the g ceremony along pus " national anthem at S a.m. and i).m. each school day. Accordingly BY 11 m h began having its own this past week. The biief t lag raising will lie accompanied cac h iiioi mng he the salute1 to the oloi's by ti limpet. a.m. each school dav trom now on. This will egin at T Students aie uiged to pav pi ope r resjiec I to tnc1 tlag upon hearing the- ti limpet, hy standing and lacing- the rising Hag. placing then- hand oer their heait, and remaining silent until the trumpet has finished. Lot us not take lightly the weight of our patriotic as Tol;i, - (.ui -- In :ld 1 ! 1 1 l - flag-raisin- flag-teie-mon- - - Prophet calls an end For a long time J.YU students have debated the modern dance issue. For years shocked students have protested the mat dances. Others have, just as qua kly. defended them. Finally controxersv reached a lexer pitch, exploding on the pages of the Daily I niverse, the campus daily. Jamie Chandler. 1Y High alumnae, wrote several letters to President Daxid (). McKav asking for clai ification of the issue. The answer finally came back, silencing the field of battle. Xo more stomp, fi ug, monkey, swim, or similiar gyrations. Dance1 committees immediately complied. The aftermath ha been rather quiet. Obscure hand letC alifor-nian- s d tered signs announce stomps! and a few sneak away to Spiingxille or to a Provo hall to participate in the forbidden fruit And those Stake dances are no more. (I ood liddance. die-har- Shave and haircut -- six bits Sometimes its haul to see the old days go. Like when could get a haircut for a buck seventy-fi- x e. Barbers in you old those days usually had an old pile of comics. Sports Illustrated, and Look magazines for the customers to head through again As of a week or two ago, our own I tah Countx- barbers voted themselxes a pay raise. It amounted to a lot les than when our Congressmen do the same thing, but it stiuck nearer to home. And with no comic book guarantees. So now a regular runs $2. Ob. and a crew cut costs $2.2r. On March 11. PUT. Duckett Barber Shop announced a similiar pay hike. To 2 Ac. Xow that was a long time ago. Dec. 7, a day of infamy for the C hnstmas vaca- tion Mtmbers include ReNon and Mellville. and Shelley Katin. Janeen Acord. Kalin Hawkins. Mnhtle Thurston. Wendy Johnson. Rubv Kimball. Jovce Garnett. Evelvn Muidock. Also Lis Christensen. Laurel ! 1 17, 1965 THE BRIGADIER makes ib basketball season debut tonight at the B U Fieldhouse Because ot difficult scheduling of other classes, a period for the drill team could not be obtained. Then therefore meet after school and sometimes on Saturdays to prepare for marches at games and parades. Miss Earlene Durrant. adviser to the emphasized the fact that the marching done by the girls has more precision than most of the marching units in Region IV This is attributed to the tact that the girls at BYH are screened, and there are only 28 girls compared to upwards of 70 girls in other units. More work can be put into the marches because there are fewer girls. Higher knees, snapped heads, and high kicks this adds to the precision of the unit, Miss Durrant added. Of the 28 girls in the group, seven girls are senior's. 13 are juniors, and eight are sophomores. ReNon Fisher and Kathy Brady, both seniors, are the drill mistresses. ReNon has held this position for two years. Kathy was appointed after the football season to assist ReNon in the marching makeup and the instruction of the marches. All of the marches have been made up by the girls with the exception of one which was created by a student teacher. The unit will march at all of the division and home basketball games. All marches are presented by invita- will make their basketball Members of the debut tonight at the Lehi game. (Photo hy Phil Thomas) rs half-tim- e Allman in Zambia scheduled to teach science to refugees Verl Allman. BY High biology teacher, is presently living in Broken Hill, Zambia, in Africa. He is waiting for the government there to finish a school where he can teach science. His students tion only. On Dec. 22 the unit will march to Sleighride during the halftime of the Pleasant Grove game. This is more or less an annual are 75 percent refugees from South Africa, and onlv a quarter Zambians Zambia is vein close to one of the most volatile political hot spots in the world. Rhodesia, which recent declared independence from Great Britain This is Ins second trip to 1 Why Pay More ON HIS WAY to Zambia this Duckett Barber Shop summer, he and his fanulv . THE NEW PRICE HAIR CUT SHAVE LADIES HAIR CUT 25c 15c 25c V , o . the (Brigadier fc?mJers Write . n 1961-6- ot ' Exchange-Distributio- n all-tim- e 1 , Adxi-e- t visit- ed Washington. I) C New York, England, Rome. Athens, and Cairo staying several davs in each place. Du.ing a short lav over in Nairobi. Kenya, thm visited a nearby game reseive "Our children were veiy excited about this Last week. 21 years ago. Pearl Harbor was bombed. ND GIRLS HAIRCUT BOY, On the morning of Sunday Dec 7, P'11, Americans had no idea that a sudden change was to take place in the life of Under 14 years of age. the nation. The newspapers gaxe little due that a cimm was at 15c hand. Recalling the mood of that morning-- Jonathan Daniels has written: The Matson Line was adxertising vacawas receiving SERVICE tion cruises to Hawaii. The upswept hair-dalin were the accidents Traffic attention. country early 4 BARBERS EVERY DAY ready up 1(5 percent above 101b. John L. Lewis was about to win a decision in his contention that miners in the captive coal mines of the steel companies must join his United Mine Workers of America. A Xew York gambling house had (Editor's Note: This cut was made from the pages of Provo's Evening . Herald, March It, 1927.) been raided. In the early afternoon. President Roosevelt, suffering from a slight cold, had just had lunch in his bedroom in the White House when he received a telephone call from Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy. A wire has jimt been received. the Secietarv said, from Hawaii. A paper published under AIR RAID OX PEARL HARBOR the authority of the Brigham Young High School Studenty Bod, 500 N. THIS IS NO DRILL Dear Editor. Soon after it leached the White House, the news of the University Ave Provo, Utah. I wish to express NSPAFirst Class winner my aprecia-tioJapanese attack on Pearl Harbor was broach est to the Second place winner Utah Journalism to the 46 other BY High Education Assn. WritAmerican people. The event was a terrific blow to the nastudents who entered the Voice ing Contest 1965 tion. School enrollment 200 of Democracy contest this year. More than two thousand Amedcaim had died. T! e backI appreciate them for going beuirisien shatteied. Associate Editor bone of the Ami.. can Pacific Fleet had Be-Dawn Thurs yond their necessary school actiNews Editor Noel Zabris The Japanese Impt.uli'ts U.d made a plunder which the Feature vities in order to express their Fditor Brent Ashwo Ron Sir Sports Editor American people ubul mt mon ten get. love of country. This expression Kris Geert Manager I feel, is It took ncailx foui veam, but from the burning hulks Business Asst Bus Mgr Larr F especially needed in our dav when national apathy has of the Ameiican Xaxx and the defeat of Pearl HaiBor Chief Photographer EditorsPhil Thor reach-an Linda Christen arose the strongest nation the world has ever seen. high. Let us Dueri Greg the good work! keep up In this s'M'er of giving ti anks, let m r.ot rorget to pay Reporters Nancj Cannon. Hanson. Mickev Ibarra. Stexe Sr homage to the memoiv f those who gave their lives at r Respect fulk-Hal Willi; Pearl Haibor and during the ensuing war. Brent Adiworth . Robinson. Terry Fisher. Marik n (two n's) Monson. Tanva Gibson, Dorcus Fowers. Valerie Yorgan-son- . Kathyrn Thurston, Annette Barton. Tafta Johnson, Manca Critt. Nikki Atkinson. Linda Lou Peterson. JcnaVee Smith. Pain Innes. Vickie Bolin. Linda Christensen, and Gail Rogers. experience, even the old man. he said in a recent letter to Principal Lowell Thomson Of Zambia he exclaims. "As T had expected, this area is a biologist's paradise. The mam varieties of orchids, legumes. lilies and other plants aie only to be outdone by the great variety of animals l urn-usua- AND OF COURSE, he is inter- "I never ested in the snakes thought the day would come. he says, when I would be afraid of a snake, but I must confess that there are one or two here that have me worried The black mamba has a reputation of being quite aggressive, coming at x on with great speed (as far as snakes are concerned) and biting at everything that crosses iU path. If bitten von have about If minutes to say goodbve to the folks. The natives in Zambia call the populous puff adder "tomorrow is a long ways off," among other things. A FEW OF the animak tha' can be found c!oe to the campus there, accotding to Mr. Mima n. are the monkey, h; boon hvena. leopard, dice tah skunk badger, mongoose, wildcat, antelope. budi baby (a primate anu catfish and tungh-but-rowm- g moi e. 11 is collecting what va.t collection mens wli le in At, ita. a sound-Ik- e ot speci- i id |