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Show Page 8 THE VALLEY VIEW NEWS 1965 Thursday, February 4, founders. A nominating committee will be elected. The speakers for the evening will be foreign exchange students. The 6th graders from the school have been invited to attend the meeting with their parents. They are studying foreign countries and they have prepared posters on the countries for the halls. Mr. Lund, principal, wishes to urge that the parents take this opporumty to see the library. The PTA Board has helped the librarian get the new' books that the students purchased ready for the shelves. There are over 238 new books that are ready for use. After the meeting the PTA will hold a cake sale. Please come prepared to take home your choice of the cakes on sale. The' PTA board members and room mothers donated the cakes. PTA PTA NEWS WEST KEARNS ELEMENTARY The West Kearns PTA President, Mrs. E. A. Moore Jr., announced that West Kearns Founders Day Program and Open House will be held on Wednesday, Feb. 10, 1965, at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Moore stressed the fact that the public is invited to the Open House to tour the school. She said that West Kearns Elementary is the largest elementary school west of the Rocky Mountains. When the school opened 10 years ago, there w'ere 7 classrooms, 12 teachers and 474 students. Today there are 41 classrooms, 41 teachers and 1450 students. They also have a full time kindergarten. The program for the Founders Day meeting will honor past presidents of West Kearns and also PTA Founders. It will introduce nominees for next years Sgt. Ronald Minson and Staff Sgt. Pete Connor load supplies for Korean orphans and needy in National Guard Truck from the home of Jennie Lee. The boxes were taken to the airport and stacked in Air National Guard C97 prior to its departure for Travis Air Force Base. PTA. Mr. Robert N. Narner is for use of the jcipai 0f West Kearns with A plane to fly the boxes to Cali-- Leon Tobler, assistant principal, fornia were made with Lt. Col. G. M. Caldwell of the Air Na- - JOHN C. FREEMONT ELEMENTARY tional Guard. Col. Joe E. White- sides, U.S. property and fiscal j , officer for the Utah National ! The John C. Freemont ers Day Program will be held made arrangements for trucks and men to haul and load jon Thursday, Feb. 4, at 7:30 p.m. I The program will honor our the supplies in the plane. past president o fthe PTA, and Korean Children To Receive Gifts could almost see the gratitude of thousands of cold, starving Korean children through the eyes of Mrs. Jennie Lee as she watched the loading of 267 to 10,000 boxes, amounting pounds of clothing, food, toys and miscellaneous items .into an Air National Guard plane last week. d The supplies are just of the amount that has been collected in recent months by Mrs. Lee and her aids throughout Utah and surrounding states, to send to Korean orphans and needy. Another 20,000 pounds is still stored in her home, 4510 W. 4865 South, and in the homes of two of her children, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Lee Jr., 183 Orchard Dr., No. Salt Lake; and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Otterson, 3369 So. 3600 West, Granger. The temporary aid program first began when Mr. and Mrs. Lees oldest son, James Jr., was stationed in Korea in 1957-58- , with the armed services. Their youngest son, Rex, is presently serving a mission in Korea for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints. Mrs. Lee expressed her gratitude to all who have helped in collecting and sending the supplies .explaining that most people dont begin to realize the terrible conditions these children Once they become live in. aware of the situation, they really pitch in and help, she said. They have all been just wonderful." She went on to explain that some 500 babies are abandoned eaach month, and thousands of children dre hungry and cold, many not even having a card- board box to shelter them from the cold. This first load contained as much of the warm clothing as was possible to send, along with blankets, baby clothes, food, toys and miscellaneous. The supplies were picked up from the three homes by Utah National Guard trucks, and were taken to the airport to be loaded in an Air National Guard plane. They arrived at Travis Air Force Base Thursdayf Jan. 28) night, where they were picked1 up by Mrs. Lee's brother, Frank One s 1 Found-Guard- j Classes will be available for beginning skiers up to and including advanced skiers. Instruction will come from the Alf Engen Ski School personnel. Tickets may be obtained at the Gold Miners Daughter Lodge or at the Alta Lodge. Ladies Day at Alta is a co-- l operative venture of the Salt Lake Winter Sports Association,! Engen Ski School and Elfriede Shane of the Gold Miners Daughter. Pioneer Elementary Holds PTA Meeting A PTA cold day. They were assisted by the truck of the Mountain States Telephone Co., driven by Jaycee The lights over the shopping center w'ill be taken down by the Jaycees next weekend. Assisting the propect were Jerry Kalm, Cec Otte, Mack Stocks, Ed Castillo and Chairman John George. Chairman George offers the tree at the shopping center to anyone who wishes it for firewood or other purposes. The only provision is that is must be hauled away by the taker and taken care of properly. Call CY Gene Andrews. 35-fo- ot meeting will be held at Pioneer Elementary School Jaycees Attend Bonneville in Granger on Leb. 8, 7:30 p.m. District From 7 to 7:30 p.m., classJaycees Jrry Kalm and George rooms will be open for inspec- Slack attended the meeting of tion. At 7:30 p.m. in the multi- the Bonneville iDstrict Jaycees purpose room, the regular PTA at the Ramada Inn on January meeting will be honored by 25, hosted by the Salt Lake Jayguest speaker, Mr. Ralf Riches, cees. The sheep, which has been Ski director of elementary education left at the home of each Jaycee for Granite School District. in the District until he president Due to the unfinished parking ALTA With excellent skiing space, the school requests that increases his membership, was conditions assured for at least as many as possible will please reported to be very effective especially when it reached the the next three months at Alta, pool rides with others. bachelor apartment of President northern Utah skiing housewives Len DiGiacomo of the Salt Lake are urged to sign up for Alta who went out and inJaycees Ladies Day, to be held twice KEARNS creased his clubs membership weekly for the remainder of the within 2 hours and delivered the NEWS on Wednesday and Ladies Classes Announced JAYCEE season sheep to the next president. Thursday. Down Lights The popular skiing school proKearns Jaycees took the Diplomacy is the art of letvides tw'o hours of excellent inChristmas street lights down on ting someone else have your struction and a day pass good January 31st and again picked a way.' on all lifst for only $5. one-thir- y Woodbur, 2754 In 60 years of copper production in Utah, there never was a safer year than 1964. The accident frequency rate for the year was 0.86 less than one losttime accident per million man hours worked. j i j ( man hours without a single accident that kept a man off the job. The Refinery operated for the e full year without a accident. The Bingham Canyon Mine worked 2,310,000 man hours without a disabling injury and set a new low frequency mark of 0.93. The frequency rate at the Magna and Arthur Concentrators dropped to 0.82, lost-tim- , i Broadmore, Concord, California. Mr. Woodbury took the packages to the San Francisco post office where' ' they were mailed to Korea. In establishing 1964 as the safest year ever, the entire Division worked more than 3,140,000 j while the Smelter maintained its e record which tops the entire industry. Truly, that was the .ar that was, for safety at Kennecott. How was it accomplished? all-tim- Will Leaves Gift To Foundation A bequest of $200 from the will of the late Arthur Marsh of Magna was made to the cystic fibrosis foundation last week during an installation meeting of i tie the Calanthe-Lodge No. of Pythias, and the 1, Knights Hermoine Temple No. 8. Pythian Sisters at the Odd Tellows Hall in Salt Lake City Mr. Marsh was district manager of the Magna Water and Sewer Impunement District, and was past grand chancellor and past supreme representative for the Knights of Pythias, Garfield Lodge No. 27, Magna. The cash award was presented to the foundation by a member of the late Mr. Marshs family. Through the joint efforts of emeveryone at Kennecott ployees, supervisors, unions, safety engineers and manage- ment. They set a goal for safety, and they more than reached it. They look back to the year that was with justifiable pride. At the same time they look forward to the year that is to be with determination. Their new goal an even safer 1965. Copper Corporation Utah Copper Division |