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Show I t I Seminary Announces Personnel Changes Changes in personnel and program will go into effect this fall in the Franklin and Oneida. . Stake Seminaries. Larry Jacobsen, a teacher here for the last five years, is Returning to Brigham Young University to complete his masters degree program, and will teach parttime at Orem High school. Jack Stone, who taught this past year on the West Side, will return to Canada and assume responsibilities there as a seminary principal. Jus to Frutos, who taught one year on the West Side and this past year in Preston, has taken a new assignment in South America. Mr. Frutos' assignment in South America will involve setting up and training local people in three countries for what is termed the Home Study" seminary program. Hie Frutos family will reside in Columbia. New teachers assigned to the two local seminaries are Monte Miles, former Preston High school student, who served as president of the seminary when a student. Mr. Miles was also a record holder on the track team in distance runs. Phil Simkins, a graduate from Utah State University and a former resident of Circleville, Utah, will be added to the local staff and Jack Cherrington, former principal of the Preston Seminary, will also be returning for the new school year. He has been doing Institute work with college students in northern California for the last two years. Bob Mitchell, who taught here last year, will continue in that assignment, as will Jess Wheiler, the principal of the two studied the New Testament last year. Since they received credit for both Old and New Testament in past yesrs, credit can not be given for the coming year. They will, however, receive credit for four years of seminary and will be eligible for seminary graduation. Other changes will take place in the arrangement of the Seminary Student Council, with for the council to Sns calling aid to Ward 'Youth Councils. The Seminary will not carry out activities other than a graduation program outside of the classroom. The Seminary Council will be made up of members of the Ward Youth Councils who will draw on the Seminary for various aids. Since the Seminary will not be seminaries. Program changes for the coming year include the change to four years of seminary carrying out activities outside the classroom the Seminary required to graduate; all stu- 'student fee will be reduced to dents will take the same course of study, New Testament, this $8.00 instead of $10.00. The fee next school year. The seniors covers cost of supplies, films, will take a combination Church projector lamps, books, bindHistory and New Testament ers, office supplies, outlines, course, where they will study filmstrips, records, etc. Church History part of the time, Parents should plan on sendand teach New Testament to ing the $8.00 fee with their students the first day of school juniors, sophomores, and freshmen by preparing panel discusso student supplies can be given sions, dramatisations, and out. Students can reduce the fee other presentations. by $3.00 if they bring their own Seniors for the coning year Bible to be used in class. Paul Harvey Pay Scales Converging Guaranteed NOT To Break! 270490 to. Tansle Sbwngii UNICO Red Label Baler Twine 8,720 50 ft. bale bales or more $6.45 $6.30 Intermountain Farmers Stores. By PAUL HARVEY Wendell Willkie was much too premature. He sold us the notion that it's one world" and its not. We're still outnumbered by people who eat with their fingers. But theres evidence the gap is closing. American workers demanding more money without proforced ducing more goods higher prices on homemade widgets. So American buyers started buying widgets .overseas, where workers work for less. If Japan can make and market more car for the money, Americans will buy Japanese cars. And thus Americans have been spending a lot more dollars in other countries than those countries have been spending over here. Thats how our dollar got cancer. But just when the prospects appear darkest, the imbalance has begun to correct itself. Now Japanese workers are demanding and getting higher wages. NOW'S THE TIME TO HAVE YOUR AIR CONDITIONER CHECKED AND YOU CAN SAVE MONEY DURING PALMER MOTOR'S AIR CONDITIONER TUNE-U- P In 1960 the average Japanese worked for 29 cents an hour. Last year he received $1.06 an hour. This year, $1.46. Similarly, in other competitive countries workers' wage scales are moving up. At Common Market headquarters in Brussels, a spokesman says, Our wages in Europe are not just rising; they're soaring!" Sound familiar? We've been up that road. He says, Not only will American expaters be more competitive in Europe's markets but in Third World markets also. Ten years ago many American manufacturers opened factories in Japan where they could hire nine hours of labor for the cost of one hour in the United States. Today that ratio is less than three-to-onIn Italy, the average manufacturing wage has tripled in 10 years. Now $2.28 an hour but while ours was increasing 59 percent, Italy's was increasing 300 percent. The gap is less wide. For a generation, the German Volkswagen undersold anything Detroit could produce. Today Volkwagen is in trouble, bedeviled by the same cost factors which previously befriended it. A milling machine operator in Frankfort, West Germany, earns the equivalent of $135 a week double his wage just five years ago. Today some West German cameramakers are folding up, getting out, moving to Singapore, where they can produce the same cameras for $25 less. The wage gap is closing fast. If American workers can check-rei- n their own appetites demand more only when they produce more the world balance of payments could wring back in our favor within 24 months. e. -- O- WE WILL . . . CHECK THE BELTS CHECK REFRIGERANT CHECK TEMPERATURE OUTPUT CHECK FOR LEAKS Election year reminders of our manifold problems; we shouldnt have to put up with all this extravagant government, clumsy mismanagement of social problems, diminished value of dollars and inexcusable involvements. But history says the outs and their bandages will not cure our chronic ills. Might the United States undergo a major overhaul? Might we strip down, abolish the bureaucracy altogether and start over? One man thinks we can and we must. EVACUATE AND RE-CHAR- GE ALL FOR ONLY $77 PLUS PARTS PALMER MOTOR PRESTON. IDAHO Big labor's George Meany is He warning of revolution. says governments proposed arbitration of transportation labor disputes would be a long step toward totalitarianism, would eventually lead to revolution. Industry spokesmen say if government does not avert s these national which menace the public interest, the result may be revolution, tie-up- totalitarianism." Appears we're durned if we do and durned if we dont. Now here comes a sober and member of the Establishment proposing that we not try to solve all these complex problems just wipe 'em out and start over. Dennis Gabor is a dreamer. substantial TAKING DOWN Ending their training in the National Guards 250 square mile maneuver area south of Gowen Field, these Guardsmen from Preston's Howitzer Battery remove the 50 cal. machine gun from the top of the gun. Shown (L to R) Spec. 4 Dennis Fellows, Salt Lake, PFC Mike Conlin, Preston, and Sgt. Craig Conlin, St. Anthony. The Preston unit succeeded in passing the army training test administered to them during this year's training. 148th Pub Info Det Photo two-wee- k National Guardsmen Return Home The HGth Armored Cavalry Regiment of the Idaho National Guard, of which Preston is a mcmlxT. returned Irom the desert soutn H lUuse Tuesday. ! iii !u .n luiie. AIniuI June li. at 120(1 ol the 2.000 troops summer camp spent the first week of annual training undergoing Army training tests and practice firing. The troops were administered the tests by u special unit ol the I .K. Army Reserve, the i.itlt Maneuver Area Command. Houston. Tex. A weekend pass was given for Saturday and Sunday. Maj. Gen. George Bennett. Idaho's Adjuiaui General, said the GuaiV-'- i 'i. in nletiug training tests ai Giuei. Field a high have demonstrated degree of readiness, lie said the tests themselves hove provided an excellent training vehicle and that men have received additional tramine. irom the tests. Gcnerai liei.i.iil sanl as a result of this year's tests. "We will probably concentrate more on tank gunnery next year." He explained that tank gunnery is a complicated process which requires team work by the entire tank crew. "UV waul lo give them the oppoi tunny to practice together so that they can hit a target when they get there." he said. Wednesday am! ThuTsrtay. the troops cii not'd .in . serviced their weapons, vehicles and tanks. Guns, tanks, and other armored vehicles which are stored at Gowen Field the d imisl lx- - spotless Kncli item is before turn-n-- . year-unmn- insiected : li oil tenance men accepted. it-- r hits .mil mainit is Itcline With a final awards ceremony at Gowen Field, the 2,000 men of the Idaho National Guards 116th Armored Cavalry ended their two-weannual training on Friday, June 9. On Saturday, truck convoys returned the Guardsmen to their hometowns throughout southern Idaho. In the ceremonies early morning, a regimental , Friday formation saw outstanding units and individuals receive awards fa their performance during the past training year. Top award went to Rupert's Comiyny H which received the Eisettauwer Trophy as the outstanding unit in the entire Idaho Army National Guard. Another top regimental award, the Harris Trophy, went to Boises Troop N, the regiments air .; avalry troop, tor its supe' jr record. PFo Thomas D. Abrams, a member of Prestons Howitzer Battery, 2nd Squadron, was named the regimental Soldier of the Year. He competed with all members of the regiment to receive the award. Earlier he had been named to represent the regiment's 2nd Squadron from Pocatello. Runnersup fa the award included Spec. 4 Robert E. Codr, 1st Squadron Soldier of the Year from New Plymouth and a member of But hes also a Nobel prize- Troop C; and Spec. 4 Kenneth winning physicist; inventor of R. Robbins, Bliss, a member of three - dimensional photogra- . Twin Falls headquarters re- phy. overHes not a wild-eye- d thrower. Hes a quiet, deliberate, contemplative overthrower. Dr. Gabor believes we should invent the future, instead of just letting it happen. He concedes that our free industrial civilization with all its faults is far superior to most systems of the past, both in OXFORD Mrs. Annie material success and in Hatch, Mrs. Bessie Olson, Mrs. But he says it's Afton Ralphs, Mrs. Devonna not likely to survive another Moore and Mrs. Oneida Andergeneration." son went to Logan a week ago Free people, abusing freea DUP Monday to attend ' dom, never keep it very long. convention. Our nation, for example, was Mr. and Mrs. Hairy Jensen founded by men who believed in and family were in Ogden recent Doing unto others; to attend the Porta recently generations have learned to "do family reunion. others." Mr. and Mrs. Marion. Olson Dr. Gabor says the free had their daughter and countries are about to be Mr. and Mrs. Sid Schvane-veldriven from without and from and children, and a son, within into totalitarianism. Keith Olson and wife Shannon of He says when workers weary Weston, visit with them a week of work, eventually somebody ago Sunday. will force them to work. Mrs. Cecil Fisher had 35 do He says when young people family members home for not consider abridged freedom dinner over the recent holiday worth fighting for or consumerweekend. Mr. and Mrs. Ariel ism worth working for, the end Hawkes and daughter Sally of of the dynamically growing Preston also called on her. production oriented consumer Mrs. Kendall Franzen of society is in sight. Denver was here recently fa want History says that we all two days visiting with her to be sure where we aren't. mother, Mrs. Cecil Fisher. They Workers think leisure is the went to Rexburg and stayed answer. The idle want jobs. The overnight with another daugh-te- r see that prospering young and sistor and family, Mr. money does not buy happiness, and Mrs. George Christensen. only to discover that poverty Mrs. Franzen also visited in doesnt either. Salt Lake City for a few days Dr. Gabor wants us to accept and then returned to spend this inevitable restiveness and more time with ha mother manage" the nest transition, before returning home. to give up growing" as a personal or a national objective and seek to encourage, inspire, SOCIABLE CITIZEN ek presenting the regiment's separate units. The 116th Armored Cavalry spent its final week completing training tests and practice firing weapons in the 250 square mile training area 35 miles south of Boise. The men returned to Gowen Field on Wednesday and spent the balance of the week cleaning and savicing equipment for movement to home station. - Preston Guardsmen swab the tube on a leaving the desert maneuver area and returning to Gowen Field. Shown (front to rear) are Spec. 4 Don Nrwtold, PFC Nick Crookston, Staff Sgt. Billie Itedington, PE-'- C Bruce Fisher. The men of Howitzer Battery, 2d Squadron, 1 16th Armored Cavalry, spent seven days in the Boise. desert south They returned to Preston on June 11 after complet ing their annual training. 148th Pub Info Det Photo SIMtt'flNU 155mm Howit UP zer prior to of THOTflZEM THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1972 o ' ALL AMERICADM VALUE DAYS CONTI NUE . . . . 23 great electric range features plus Tappan dependability 3 795 lust set and forget the automatic dock. II starts and slops the ovens, times die convenience outlet for you, automatically. See whats cooking In either oven. Hide N See visualite window! in both ovens. With peek switch lights. Bake or broil in two ovens so you can cook more Women for more people. Attend Continuously. Both ovens clean themselves as you bake or broil. Confab - Spillovers happen. But top lifts up and jocks auto- matically, infinite heat elements plug out and chrome spillover bowls move for easy d caning. re- C oo d Tappan Nationwide Service, service where you need It, when you want it, is included in the price of this appliance. son-in-la- dt stimulate interest in service-oriente- d occupations. This distinguished scientist' would be the last to concede that he is recommending a religious revival, yet what he's really saying is that we should return now to doing unto others . . . Mr. and Mrs. Kay Wanna and family of Ogden were Friday overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Wanner. They came to attend the Atkinson reunion held in Franklin Convenient eye-levupper oven leu you bake and broil. Includes porcelain broiler pan with chrome insert Hide 'N See window with interior Ught In upper oven Continuous cleaning upper oven dam automatically while you bake and bn4 controls for surface element! and ovens Automatic dock timer e Timed appliance outlet e Indicator lights to tell you when surface elements and ovens are on" Illuminates cooking Work surface light surface Lift 'N Lock top Plug-osurface elements Infinite heat elements let you choow die cooking heat you need teemed cook top to catch spillovers removable chrome apillover D0WH liftoff lower oven door Kgcapacity continuous cleaning lower oven broiler with porcelain pan and (home insert in both ovens Tappm Vari-bm- ll interior light Hide N See visualite window oven ia lower Tbo adjustable monble t chrome oven racks with le- glides storage drawer holds loads of pots mdpans Foe Four leveling legs colors Avocado, Coppertone, Harvest GoUsnd Whitt service where Nationwide Service need it, when you want It. 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