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Show 0 Sunday, November 6. 1949 SUNDAY HERALD School Activities PTA News Of Schools To Practice 'Making Democracy Work7 As Theme Of American Education Week By DOROTHY REID Students of Provo city schooli and member! of adult educational -classes will get actual practice in "Making Democracy Work," with the beginning of American Edu ction Week which starts today. This overall theme of the week will be broken down into sub themes for each day. "The Worth of the Individual" will be the topic for today; "Educational Opportunities.' Op-portunities.' for Monday; "Responsible "Re-sponsible Citizenship' Tuesday; "Health and Safety Wednesday; "Home and Community Oblige lion." Thursday; "Our Freedom and Security," Friday; and "Next Decade. In Education" for Saturday. Satur-day. Elementary and Junior high schools have planned programs for the week and have to set aside days for parents to visit the schools for purpose of becom . ing acquainted with teachers and the school's year-round programs. As one of the features of the week's events. Dr. R. C. Dal-gleish, Dal-gleish, director of Utah's Dental division from the state department depart-ment of health, will discuss dental health as it relates to nutrition, at 7:30 p. m. Monday in Room 33 of the Provo hifih school. Dr. Dalgleish's speech, which is In connection with National Education Edu-cation week, is being sponsored through the Adult Education program, pro-gram, according to Director Stel la Oaks, and au patrons ana school students have been invited to attend. ' ' Joaquin Slates Speaker During a morning program at the Joaquin elementary school Monday, Dr. T. Earl Pardoe will speak to the students on a phase f education. Also during the day sixth grade students will present ' play, under the direction of Mrs. Naomi Williams, entitled, Children of Democracy." The same play will be broadcast by the students over a local radio station. The American Legion and American Legion auxiliary have joined with the school's PTA m Jlannlng the education week, fembers of the committee for fetlvltles at the Joaquin consist ef Harry Butler, American Le- 11 e a'; Sherman Christensen, merlean Legion auxiliary; Mrs. Lawrence Sardoni, school PTA; Fred C Strata, principal; Mrs. Lucille C Jones, Naomi Williams end Deon Kltcherson. Other activities ac-tivities at the school besides the student play and address by Dr. Pardoe, include a student newspaper news-paper publication and a PTA meeting scheduled Thursday at T:10 p. m. . speakers at the PTA meet will be Mrs. Sherman Christensen Chris-tensen and Professor Mark Allen ef Brigham Young university. Parent's Day at Dixon Dixon junior high school has scheduled a parent's day for Wednesday. Principal J. r. mow er has urged that all parents of the school attend these sessions, end meet teachers of their children. chil-dren. A program has been planned plan-ned fdr the day and refreshments will be served to those in attendance attend-ance by members of the school lunch staff. Ttmpanofoe Program' At the Timpanogos school. National Na-tional Education week will be emphasized on Wednesday and Thursday with special visiting sessions for parents. Wednesday evening, parents of children six. eight and 10 years old will visit the school. On Thursday, chil dren of the five, seven and 11-year 11-year age groups will Introduce their parents to teachers. Both days are planned as a general get acquainted program for parents and teachers of the school, to bet ter relationships and id in the eniia s education. SPANISH FORK The Spanish Fork high school PTA organiza tion is planning to honor Ameri can Education week with a spec ial meeting Friday evening. No vember 11, at the high school, and guest speaker will be Blaine Winters, member of the state board of education. Another fea ture on that program will be Rey nolds Heiner of ' Provo, guest soloist, with Arvilla Tompkin of the BYU -at the piano. She .will else play several selections. - Parents of high school students i 0' KXW FIELDS OF COTTON Rupert Cox, a Corpus Christi, Tex c41 man, looks over the cotton in his fields, the first ever grown la Culberson County, Tex. Discovery last fall of a huge underground supply near van norn, crops c cofwei wnare none oad grow before. as well as the public are invited to attend this program and get acquainted with the teachers and the school; The evening wui ne under the direction of Mrs. Vera Parkinson, PTA president, and the program is being arranged by Mrs. Wannetah Guild, program chairman. OREM American Education Week, officially proclaimed for the week of Nov. 6 to 12, will be noted in Oram with a special observance ob-servance planned by the Geneva elementary school PTA, featuring a parent visiting day Wednesday, Nov. 9. School patrons are in vited to visit the school all day Wednesday, visiting classrooms and observing the children in their daily classroom procedures. Luncheon will be served in the school cafeteria at noon, with parents paying the regular 30c lunch fee as teachers participat ing in the hot school lunch plan are charged. A special program in keeping with the theme will be held in the auditorium from' 2:30 to 3:30 p. m. Speakers at the meet will be Margaret Johnson, elementary supervisor for the Alpine school district, and Principal T. C. He rertson, who will discuss student report cards. The PTA party plan will be- discused, along with other major projects of the organ ization for the coming year. A recording entitled. "Democracy Back" will also b'e a feature of the program. Musical portions of the program will be presented by students of the school. While school patrons are welcomed wel-comed to each classroom, there will be no parent-teacher inter views only after regular school hours. ; Principal Hebertson Is being assisted in planning the event by Mrs. Don Swan, president of the PTA, and Mrs. Olive Gimspie, second vice-president, - and Mrs. Donald Talboe, secretary-treas urer. Lincoln PTA Plans Membership Drive OREM An extensive membership member-ship drive will be conducted during dur-ing the coming week by the Lin coln high school PTA, according to Mrs. Murray G. Loveless, membership mem-bership chairman. School patrons will be urged to join with nearly 0,000,000 other parents through out the nation who are united through PTA organizations In promoting the welfare of chil dren and youth in the- home, school, church and community. Membership envelopes will be distributed to students of the school Monday and they are re quested to carry them home' to enable their parents to signify willingness to Join the school project pro-ject aimed at "doing something about Juvenile delinquency" by joining the local PTA unit. Parents are reminded that PTA memberships are for individuals and do not constitute a family membership. Both fathers and mothers are requested to join' the unit. It is important that if families fam-ilies have children attending more- than one school, parents snouid, whenever possible, become be-come members of each PTA organization or-ganization because each unit has special projects and purposes to accomplish. According to Mrs. Loveless. nine cents of the' 25-cent mem bership fee remains in the local unit with one cent going to the council, 10 cents to the Utah PTA congress and five cents to the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, making the membership member-ship an all-inclusive one for local organization, state and national ITS 400-DAY CLOCK PINCKNEYVILLE, 111. (U.R) Mr. and Mrs. Leo Brona Haim that the timepiece sent them from Europe by their son is 50 times as gooa as granuiainers old eisht-dav clock. Thlr mn Ber lin airlift flier, told them the ciock would run 400 days with out winding. 'Grand Coulee dam in Waahtncr- ton will irrigate 1,200,000 acres of iana. "A ' U J. - - f i its, eoaoied growers to produce. Central Utah Provost PTA To Hold Initial Group Meet Provost school PTA will hold their Initial meeting Friday, Nov. 11, at the school building for the mirnoae of the election and in stallation of officers. Four people were recently nominated nom-inated and will be voted upon during the first meeting. The four include Mrs. G. W. Hend-rickson Hend-rickson for president; Clay M. Benson, vice president; Mrs. Earl Brown, secretary and Mrs. Don Brienholt, treasurer. The nominating committee consisted con-sisted of Boyd McAff ee, principal, Mrs. Earl J. Brown and Mrs. Lee Peterson. Grandview Students Tour School Plant In collaboration with dedication dedica-tion ceremonies held this week at the Grandview elementary hrtnl atiidnnta have toured, the building to note construction and distinctive features oi me new structure. . According to LaVar Kump, principal, the purpose of the tour was to show students of the school why their building is termed term-ed "one of the finest elementary school structures in the , state," and to give them sense of responsibility re-sponsibility in keeping in that way. Franklin To Elect Student Officers Elections for student body officers of-ficers will be held at the Franklin Frank-lin school Tuesday. The three parties which are participating in the election campaign cam-paign include the Four Leaf Clovers, Busy Beer and the Super Spark-Plugs. Students on the respective,par-ties respective,par-ties for .president include Clair Rees. Lynn Cleave and Darlene Cloward; for vice president, Don na Burrows, David cook and John Zobell; for secretary, Mary Sutherland, Suth-erland, Linda Cobin and Gerald Overly and for cheer leader, Jeannine Hawke, Bob Gatenby and Mary Ellen Penrod. An assembly sponsored by the three parties will climax the campaign cam-paign activities. Joaquin Students Form Safety Council Students of the Joaquin school have formed a safety council for the nurpose of awakening safety consciousness, according to Fred C. Strate, principal. Sergeant Max Snow and Patrol man Walter Bench of the Provo police force, and Mrs. T. J. Wight of the school's PTA have met with the students to discuss safety problems. The council consists of a faculty sponsor, the safety chairman of the school's PTA, a student representative repre-sentative from each of the 16 rooms of the school and six members mem-bers of the Joaquin safety patrol. Peggy Newman, sixth grader, has been named chairman of the group. She will direct all meetings meet-ings which will be held on the first and third Thursday of each month. Central Utah Men In Armed Service Two Central Utah men, Donald L. Erickson and Ray G. Olson, USN, are serving as a crew member mem-ber of the aircraft carrier USS Valley Forge which is participating participat-ing in "Operation Miki," a large-scale large-scale amphibious exercise in the Pacific. Erickson is from Gunnison Gunni-son and Olson from Price. George W. Hamilton, Jr., USN, of Provo is also participating in the Joint Army-Navy exercise as a crew member of the submarine USS Cusk, which is one of the units under command of Vice Admiral Ad-miral Gerald F. Bogan's Western Task Force. Following the attack at-tack phase of the maneuvers, personnel per-sonnel of the Cusk will join the rest of the forces participating In "Operation Miki" for a 10-day recreation period -prior to returning re-turning to San Diego. Also included in the Pacific exercises are seamen Henson L. Hatch of .Pleasant Grove and Stanley W. Robinson of American Fork.1 These men are aboard the carrier USS Boxer. GREAT-GRANDMOTHER AT 54 OXFORD. Mass. (U.R) At the age of 54, Mrs. Ida Lowe is a great-srandmother. Her 21-vear- old granddaughter, Mrs. Barbara Jackson, has just given birth to a son. HERE IT IS The first and only nationally advertised WONDER DRUG you can buy without a prescription! This New Miracle Drug: Stops Cold Symptoms In A Single Pay! At Last - Families Everywhere Can Avoid Bad Colds and Also Their Complications By Taking At The' First Sign of a Cold! So Safe You Can Buy It Without A Prescription Provo SpringviUe V " - ' K-: v. r x 55 'BIG TIMER David Smith, 2, found time hanging heavy on his hands when he visited a clock exhibition at x Auckland, New Zealand. Davie got a lift from a grown-up and found that. Just aa he'd suspected, the watch was too big for bis pocket BYU NEWS 51 Social Units Get Approval A total of SI approved Brig- ham Young university social units have been okehed for campus recognition under the new social organization plan, and are en titled to participate in school ac tivities, according to Dr. Elvert H. Hlmes, student coordinator. Organizations were notified concerning the recognition dead line Wednesday, and those failing to qualify by that time have been disqualified from participation as units in Homecoming or other campus activities, Dr. Himes said Approved Units Listed The approved units include: As sociated Students of BYU, Associated Asso-ciated Men Students, Associated Women Students, Alpha Epsilon Rho, Alpha Kappa Psi, Alpha Phi Omega. Alta Mltra, Ama Phi. Band Social Organization (Uni versity Bands), Beta Phi. Blue Key, Bricker, Brigadier, Canadian, Cesta Tie, Delta Phi, French Club, Gamma Phi Omi cron. Gamma Taux, Hawaiian Club, Home Economics Club, I K.'s, Lamda Delta Sigma, Mon tana-Washington. Nautilus, O. S. Trovata, Phi Aloha Theta. Phi Chi Tbeta. Phi Eta Sigma, Russian Club, Spanish Club, Tausig, Templars, To Kalon, Uintah Basin Club, University Archeological Society. Val Hyrics, Valkyrie, Val Norn, Viking, Weber County Club, Dlx ie Club. "Bench and Bar" Pre- legal Club. German Club. Y Cal- cares, Studio Arts Guild, Oregon- Nevada Club, Beta Sigma, Agrt cultural Club, Prospective Mis sionaries Club, and Triton. Payson Man Heads Student Body Of Business College PAYSON Donald F Keele, Payson, was elected student body president of the LDS business college in Salt Lake City at elections elec-tions held Wednesday, a climax to student council elections held last week. Chosen from a field of 20 stu students, Donald won out to head school affair for the coming year. He enrolled at the school July 1 of this year. A son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Keele, Donald graduated from the local high school in 1044, later serving with the Merchant Marines. He returned from an LDS mission to the northwestern states last April. LOTS OF FOOTBALL PLAYER WATERTOWN, Mass. (U.R) The heaviest player in high school football in the nation this season probably is Joe Merullo. Weigh ing 310 pounds, Joe is a bulwark of Watertown high's forward wall. PATIENCE REWARDED RUSSELL, Kan. (U.R) Store-keeping Store-keeping in a small town lust taxes patience. After being in stock since 1814, a set of four-horse four-horse eveners was sold to a Russell Rus-sell farmer. There hadn't been a previous call in 35 years for the device, which enable four horses to pull a farm implement. Payson Spanish Fork .yjMemmmmmmummmmmm I BEAUTIFUL 0IIR6ME BREAKFAST SET 5 Pieces J L WJSSDOWH IS MONTH 3. 11 I i At liluirrotM, with s4MToi-rypt, strong I choirs. Ooystromits taminottd top, x- ttnclon typs, and somes in H motsh any kitchen. Quantity limited. i 1 Innorspring m J MATTUSS 1 Htra's a big, Huffy mattress, mat-tress, covered with sturdy, high-quality ticking, button-tufted button-tufted and filled with resilient re-silient springs that mean a quiet, restful night's sleep Your old mattress is worth $4.00 regardless of conditionand condi-tionand only a special ' quantity buy makes this su-per-speciol possible! crl Chest for FREE DELIVERY at the GRANITE . . Every Day of the Year! gray and red Refvler $19.10! Trad In ReflerdleM ef, Condition! Your Old Mertress for $6.00 $2L 3 so HJNDWRf Hlolldlc Aimy iOT INCLUDES y $$SSSZ MOTH INSUnAMCil NOW AVAILABLE FOR fnrnitc TQ compsnq 1134 No. 6th West, GORGEOUS! A big 54-ineh buffet with reomy drowers; large ex tension-type table; host choir All beautifully finished. Another GRANITE buy! i - r. -) FLOOR eOUEDIHG PUCQAIL 9x12 Glamorug All-wool face, full 9x12, choice of several patterns! 57x24 Glamorug Matching throw-rugs, popular size, and look at this price! Hall Carpeting Attention apartment and hotel owners!- All-wool stolr and hall corpeting, 27 inches wide, two colors In rich striped patterns. Any quontity! Provo, Utah i-j&im iasiii - i x . 0-PIECE ORIGIN ALLY FRICID AT $119.50! end five side choi :X' $-5195 Li Yerd . O NO INTEREST NO CARRYING CHARGE A aaTfttTiksiTiirffiiMiHsisrrr'n,rnTTr - wM - W95 INLT |