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Show 1968 Vw nrsKUKT SAMFUHUi Fri., Dec, 20, Dupvay Mustangs Split In Two Game Home Stand 42-3-9 44-3- 44-4- nt 48-4- Mc-ev- - Well between Specialist Five Curtis Johnson (13) of HeadWHO'S COT THE REBOUND? of U.S. Army quarters Company and Specialist Four Robert C. Culverson (in the dark shirt) Basketintramural the of shot was This all has hand. his in it Johnson Hospital Detachment, ball game between Headquarters No. 1 and the combined 85th MP and Hospital team. HHC won 90 to 57 in the fourth quarter. -- 18-1- Post Office News. IIS Drama Club To Put on Play .JL. R ....-1- W-W I- A .. - SM.rv r ' k . u.j' "! 31-2- .... un Canadien Errant, song, while Mrs. Spilsbury 's rich voice Shown are action shots of the Intramural Basketball game joined in the chorus. between Headquarters No. 1 and the 65th MP and Hospital After the French-Canaditeam which the Headquarters No. 1 team won 90-5song, the audience was asked to join in singing "Wimoweh." This time the audience was divided into three groups with each group Richard Bull and the Dugsinging a different part of the way Post Office employees exsong. Everyone seemed to enjoy themselves very much in the pressed sincere appreciation to One of the many exciting clubs song. the residents of the Duewav area who helped assure on time de-- t0 ParticiPate in is the Drama Mrs. Spilsbury and Mrs. Phillul'- livery of holiday mail bv cooper- lips sang "Rambling Boy" with Officers of this Club are: the audience ating with the post office. singing the chorus. Without the help of our President - Kristine Cooper; Vice MRS. PHILLIPS sang "Walk- Secre- customers, by mailing early and President Rtyn wiucd aie uic Bnd Treasurer - Denise tarv i11 M..1.J.1 ZIP could we code, have 11T11IK 111UIUCusing WIUIC never done as good a job as we Trapp. DUgW"y ta Members of the Drama Club did, said Mr. Bell. a singing group. February to Deni,e TraPP' Mark Houle- - We wish herjoinluck with "Walk This year, a record breakine of items were delivered nation Tonja Bailer, Alan Yerkes, Angie ing to the Corner." Neito, Sam McEvoy. Tom Hampwide and locally. The studentbody and faculty ton, Kristine Cooper, Roxanne were More than 7,700 pounds of sorry to see both singers first class letter ' size mail will Armstrong, Jesse Taylor, Sherry go at the end of the assembly. have been handled at Dugway's Smith, Chris Raychel, Kathy Everyone gave Mrs. Phillips a Debbie Barton, and Steve post office lietween Dec. 1 and Austin, standing ovation, and as an encore Barton. Mr. Halladay is the ad- she Dec. 21 predicted Mr. Bell. sang "Fare Thee Well." This comnarei with'lsict umk visor and class is held on 2nd The students and faculty of 3rd nour in Room 10total of 6,800 pounds of letter Dugway High School would like, For the months to come the Ul UlMIlaV . HIUl size mail for the same period. luimi to f Drama Club will be putting on fnr thl fiM play either at the end of Janu b ary or the beginning of Febru performance they gave us. ary. The members hope sincerely that this play will lie a big success. The Drama Chili is not only DV putting on a play Imt are sponsoring a talent show which will One way in order to raise lie held on Thursday, December for the Junior Prom, was money 20. 1968 in the High. School to have a baby contest in which auditorium. The charge for this each Uth grader had to bring a will lie ten cents for each KNIFE SHARPENER of himself. an 19-1- " Baby Contest Held jUniOrS 1 - k l&d3J ntiyvl rSSyAt W-- II mmm II hOMBaiHhwVJ WnilMWAAWMW W?JQ 1 U U II 1 II II It. II W V INCH DPILL KIT 9T A Opens any size or shape cans easilv. sharrjens knives. Mag- - rr7- - WJli I - I I I I 1: ..J1 1 & 3h I I IIT 1 L. i:jU I EH IIILCI. now only i : I I I Journalism Class 1 To Publish i Yearbook i AAA t 1 ol SnJfci :t m 8-P- tut c. jjl iW iM r M FOOTBALL al r ' $Q95 . SET awl 0 Prescul SNACK SET m f 1 m. ai 151 bf mm HllTllfili1.l1.fl m 2' Free Gift Wrap fGAMEj WryS SETS ;5pQ33l Radio Electric and Hardware 14 N. Main Your Savings Hnnr1 O1117 Vuli Question: Is it true that I can now buy Freedom Shares at my bank? ANSWER: YES. You no long- er need to be enrolled in a formal plan for the regular purchase of Savings Bonds and Freedom Shares. However, Freedom Shares still must be purchased in combination with a Series E Bond of the same or larger denomination. Question: What are the new higher interest rates on Savings Bonds and Freedom Shares? Answer: Series E Bonds now wiU "turn 4.25 per cent interest, , GnmVYWin titan uihM heU to urnif-anniiiil- m.tTrirorf'ye;; . . mrmmmm iVIUIII XttVSJ per cent also, when held to maturity of 10 years. Freedom Shares now pay 5 per cent when held to maturity of four and one-ha-lf years. tone-glori- - Latin-speaki- - - light-hearte- d - - rs dis-ligh- w - - De-tim- QUESTION: WILL my old E and H Bonds pay more interest, too? will return and.Th Bonds . . : - 8 "- comp- Y1 for the maining bme to next maturity, wm in the final interest period when Bonds are held to next maturity. "ir'' """"V""' ChrUtmas Today. carolers enjoy the music all the bening. Ancient and - 1 Christ-excelle- tone of a fine piano. These instruments, like the songs are enduring. The themselves, i Daiawin piano, iui csanipic, uses to only alerted solid spruce for its lolly' speciAU MERRY CHRISTMAS con- The annual Journalism Dance was held Novemlier 22. The main purpose of the dance was to vote for favorites. The Senior Superlatives were: Miss DHS: Linda Vance; Mr. DHS: Ted Mcintosh; Most Beautiful: Kristine Cooper; Most Handsome: Bob Johnson; Most Sociable girl: Gene Them; Most McBride; Sociable Boy: John Most Humorous Girl: Wendie Wilde; Most Humorous Boy: Bill Mullett; Most Likely to Succeed girl: Tammy Griffiths; Most Likely to Succeed Boy: Mark Hereim. The Senior Superlatives were We all like to keep on schedule but it's better to drive a little voted by grades chose favorEach class, 2 slower than to take a chance in traffic and not get there at all. ites. They were picked by their Take it easy the wheel own class. Mark favorites: advises the State Patrol. Freshmen Houle; Brenda Hooley. favorites: Rory Sophomore The use of snow tires or tire Linda Norton. will McCuUough. snow ice or chains on cut Iiinior favorites: Tuff Don- lirukinir distances. Imt reniumlwr. Carol Ritchie says the State Patrol, you still nelly, a in. tan i su,p u.iik:, s, stay Sin: Putting worst things sate distance lichiiiu the lellow Gaucher first. Joseph ahead. d . traditional or modern, mas songs play a vital role in setting the mood of the season, Tis the season For after all, . .. , SL:!::::: NamedFavorites at Dance yearUxik will lie a great success. Perfect for entertaining friends, parties. card clubs or TV snacks. 4 glass cups, 4 slass olates. SPECIAL the Class spon-serin- lit jiiiiiwi Class came in second with 79 per cent, while the Sophomores' came in third with 77 per cent. The Freshmen caine' in with fourth place with ffO per cent of their class buying vearlxmks. Next came the Eighth grade with 54 per cent, while the Faculty came up from way liehind to capture sixth place. And as you would expect the seventh grade .. rump in a flivmul . luvl n mi ' jiav. u.:k ft 40 per cent. w With the help of the students of Dugway High School, this & PUMP 1 ! I ss. yKlCKWOTK Around November The Journalism class of Dugway High is making a concerted effort to publish an outstanding yeanxxik tor lUfff). In order to meet our con tract with the Community Press, g our Publisher, the class is many money making activities. On Thursday December 12, the class sponsored a Grub Dav. Manv students Imught tic- M kets to this activity to help the m class. The class sold big Initial nnnc frtr 1 ... The vearbixik sain nf thp ft I I I 6 juice glasses, covered butter dish, cream pitcher, sugar bowl, pitcher, syrup dispenser, salt and pepper shakers. baby picture The contestants are as follows: Gary Bailer, Shelly Bush, Carol Ritchie, Tuff Donnelly, Keller, Mark Geerlings, Lee Casy Livingston, Kathy Shirts, Sherry Smith, Danny Vanderboegh, Susan Purves, Janet Western. test started; and ended Wednesday. Novemlier 27, 1968. A stuffed donkey was the prize and in order to vote you had to pay 5 cents to Shelly Bush, Carol Ritchie or Kathy Shirts. Kevin Donnely was the winner of this contest and the contestants who had their pictures up were: Gary Bailer, Shelly Bush, Lee Keller, Casey Livingston, Susan Purves, Carol Ritchie. Kathy Shirts, Sherry Smith and Janet Western. I mm oW w 3.86 and Billy Mclntyre 3.50. Freshmen - Fawn Gumenski 4.00, and Brenda Hooley 3.63. 8th GRADE Sandre Brown 3.50 and Dee Shirts 3.5a 7th Grade - Bryan Sur 3.86, Jim Ritchie 3.86, Mary Sees 3.71, Robert Sheffler 3.57 and Paf Bingham 3.57. We at Dugway High are proud to have had so many students on the Honor Roll this quarter, and we hope there will be as good a representation next quarter. French-Canadia- jy. - Kathy Gonzales Sophomores Karen Phillips and Lezlee performed Tuesday, Spilsbury December 3 at 2:00 for Dugway High School students and faculty. Mrs. Phillips' first selection was "Piney. Woods," Then she had the audience sing the choruses to "Bottle of Wine" and "Thirsty Boots." WHEN MRS. Spilsbury joined Mrs. Phillips in "Yellow is the Color of My True Love's Hair," the audience joined in sing ing the chorus. Mrs. Phillips sang n solo on a lovely ht ALL-STA- Called noels in France, le pastoral! in Italy and Weihnacht-sliede- r in Germany, carols are everywhere the welcome sound of Christmas. Groups of friends and relatives gathered around a piano tradition. as they sing Christmas carols are a twentieth-centur- y Yet few of those who hear and sing them know their surprising a tale well worth ' 'ng ear to. history When was the first carol sung? Scholars think caroling The plate -- of gre probably began in the early sound board. withstands the church when Nativity plays, ac- - cast iron continual tension oJ by songs of joy, told mendous, the story of Christ's birth. One the strings and provides the neces-o- f a the earliest choruses of praise, sary extreme rigidity for the in excelsis deo (glory to producing elements. Baldwin both old and new -God in the highest) is still sung pianos lifetime. last a can Christmas at carolers time, by When you hear your favorite worshippers Early must have shouted it forth with carols sung in church, outside a magna vox (also Latin, for your window, or on a precision phonograph, can you tell which "great voice"). MANY THOUGH people of them are ancient and which don t realize it, carols were origi- - are comparatively recent r SOME AUTHORITIES think nally connected not only with The Twelve Days of Christthat The Old dance: with but song French word carole meant a mas originally belonged not to turn ot the ring dance accompanied by song.' Christmas but to the An English carol dating from year; its roots may go far back 1350 has a refrain which refers into pagan times. Good King Wenceslaus, a British favorite, to a round dance: was borrowed from a Swedish schulle honnd we "Honnd by ous take and joye and blisse songliook of 1582. God Rest Ye schulle we make." Merry, Gentlemen, may also back to the 16th century, date didn't carol composers Early Some sav Adeste Fideles was Christmas themselves to confine a collection of Carolles composed by St. Bonaventure themes but the earliest Newly Imprinted (1550) contain- - before 1274 ed more Crucifixion than Nativity surviving manuscript is dated 1790 carols! On the other hand, quite and signed by John Francis Wade, a few carols of this time were i music dealer in France, not sacred in mood, but simply Joy to the World was taken invitations to feast- - from a hymn written in 1719 current mif-ing and toasting. The Boar's Head by Isaac Watts; its from Handel's was sic 16th hit in adapted a carol, century big England and still sung annually Messiah. John Wesley wrote Hark by the students of Queen's Col- - the Herald Angels Sing in 1737; was lege, Oxford, actually celebrates its musical accompaniment of from 1855 one in of Christmas a the course dinner, adapted works. O Little Mendelssohn's in these words: The boar's head in hand Town of Bethlehem is less than 100 years old; it was written in bear i 1868 by Phillips Brooks. roseand Bedeck'd with bays The most beloved carol of mury. has an Silent Night And I pray you masters, be all . ." teresting story behind it. Accord-Th- e custom of outdoor carol ing to information supplied by hast-yeasinging is many hundreds of Baldwin researchers, it was old. It seems to have start- - ily written in 1818 by an Aus-e- d in the Middle Ages when trian parish priest, Joseph Mohr, groups of people went from as a surprise for his parishioners, t. house to house to sing by torch- - Mohr feared they would be appointed when they learned that YET DESPITE these joyous the church organ had broken beginnings, the Christmas carol down! He took the poem to his eventually ran into some rough friend, church organist Franz weather. As the Puritan influence Gruber, who completed the carols became 'nous melody in a few hours. At strong, gloomy and grim; finally the midnight mass that evening, the Puritans made it a crime even to two of them sang the masterpiece to a guitar accompaniment. print them or sing them publicly! SOME OF the most popular After Puritanism waned in Eng- Christmas music of all times has land, carols made a comeback but in the 17th and 18th ten- - been composed in the 20th centuries were considered a rustic, tury. The greatest seller of any socially inferior form of song! phonograph record to date is By 1882,- a writer named William Irving Berlin's White Christmas; Hone was predicting that carols first recorded in 1942, it had e were dying out and in a few years' sold 40,000,000 copies as of and is still would be heard no morel cember 31st, 1963 -- Little Drummer Even as he spoke, a new up- - going strong. . , . , , Boy is another recent record best- - Folksinging Assembly Held at School Mustangs to Hoop Tournament V Make DHS Hard working students of Dugway High School have been burning the midnight oil to make the grade average needed for membership on the Honor Roll. The Honor Roll is based on a four point grading system. An A is worth four points, a B, three points, a C, two points, a D, one point, and an F, no points. TO BE ON the Honor Roll, one must have a grade average of 3.50 for the term. . Those students who make up the Honor Roll for the fall term are: Seniors - John McBride 4.00, Mark Hereim 4.00, Debi Paul 3.96, Debbie Duncan 3.75, Stan Sur 3.57, Sharon Potts 3.57, Bill Mullett 3.50. and Linda Vince 3.50. JUNIORS - Janet Western 3.87, Carol Ritchie &50, and Gary "Bailer 3.50. host : Christmas Music Through the Ages Honor Roll early in the final quarter, Two free throws by beerlings 9 then Fabrizio made it made good on a three point play Mustangs with to make it 2 three minutes left. Johnson hit two free throws for the Mustangs to make it 4642. The Tigers made one last try when they cut the Dugway 7 with two minutes lead to gym. Dennis left before the Mustangs ran NIGHT . FRIDAY Witbeck of the Longhoms was off six straight points for their too much for the Mustangs to final margin of victory. Geerlings, Johnson, McBride cope with as he hit 13 held all played the engoals and four free throws for and Mcintosh for the Mustangs who tire 30 points. game " - The one substitution Mark made only a to jumped Longhoms " 3--0 lead and were never headed Hereim coining in for Sain as Coach Waldon Gurney's as they led by 16-- 9 score at the The ' "end of the opening quarter. varsity was down to seven with to winners the held injuries to Stan Sur and Mike Mustangs illentire the Donnelly and Steve Brothers only two points during ' second quarter but were only ness. The Mustang Junior Varsity able to cut the winners lead to dropped both games as they 4 at the half. Witbeck then controlled the were downed by Altamont liy a second half for the winners as 39-5- 5 score and by Tabiona. he scored 11 points in the third Host quarter and added 12 more in minutes. ;the final eight .MARK GEERLING with 18 and Ted Mcintosh with 15 points The Dugway High School led the Mustang attack. John Mustangs will host a two-da- y McBride and Bobby Johnson each basketliall tournament Friday and 'With six points, Mike Donnelly December 27 and 28 Saturday with two and Sam McEvoy with at the post gym. Four teams will be entered jne point were the other scorers for the losers who hit on 20 in the tourney with Park City, field goals and on 8 out of 17 Tintic, and South Summit pro'attempts from the foul line. viding the opposition for the the Mustangs Mustangs. Saturday night contest won a close hard-fougTHE OPENING nights parfrom Tabiona as Geerlings tallied will find South Summit ings 30 points on 12 field goals and Tintic at 7 p.m. with meeting '6' free throws to lead the Mus- -' the Mustangs playing 'Park City tangs. 8:30 p.m. A game between ' John McBride and Ted Mc- - at 1 1 1.1 1 J.- - the Dugway JV and the Tintic iniosn eacn auueu eigiu pwuu .y fm fiy wil) 1 with Sam McEvoy getting six Jthe d lay ;ard Bobby Johnson two to com(W() plete the scoring. rf the V(mi,v galu.s ()n Fritlav TIIE MUSTANGS jumped off evening will play at 7 followed to' an early lead and held a 15- - by the championship game at 10 lead at the end of the opening 8:30 p.m. Coach Walden Gurnev jarter, but were unable to score of the Mustangs stated, that this for the first four minutes of the is the first time that Dugway second quarter and the Tigers has hosted a tournament. "We expect a real fine tourran up a 5 lead. Geerlings then hit six points nament, Gumey stated, Tintic for the Mustangs and McBride will proliably lie right in the jut two free throws to give the thick of the battle for first place 23-2- 1 lead at half in the Western division of Region Ljvjnners a ttfme. Five this year, and South SumAfter Dale Giles tied it up at mit, coached by Roy Ritchie, 23 all early in the third quarter a former Mustang mentor will lie 3 . tiie Mustanes bolted to a out to win." AN .had and then three baskets by team and for most valuable nlsver trnnhi . OerlinCS l made it 37-2- 5 .. d Miictanm VlitrPMt lead of the k qui i --vnvu im law vuuiuauiciii oaiuiuay l niiiv tat '.. ooints the rest of the third quar- - evening. Uflth DllOWaV1 ..' ICi ...kl..k L Pn'n f MIC wvca 1UI WIUIM anrlxl ...... O lUUrilUllKIU i Will . 1 i 41 ii a. v.. jn " j m IMw IMMMI a Ul fA.lJW W mi WJ IjUIIBV 1 anA VaKnvIn .1..1a. t ' T vr BV n..j a jva AJiau Ulll 1U1 iuuiu anu acvcuiv- Giles the Tigers cut the lead to five cents for students. The Dugway Mustangs played tu the Altuinont Longhorn and the Tahiona Timers the weekend of December 6 and 7 and the Mustang came away with a split as they lost to Alta-moscore on Friday liy a 59-4- 8 night and then came back to down the Tigers by a 54-4-7 count on Saturday night in the 'Post Twenty Two Allen's Food Town nt |