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Show Pagr Twelve The Spiinsrvillo Iloi;iUl Novnnho IH71 Four first-place awards won by BYU in telecommunications Four first places out of nine program categories have been awarded to Brigham Young University at the Fourth Annual Western Educational Society for Telecommunications (WEST) conference in San Francisco. Representatives from colleges and universities in 17 western states attended. Bruce Christensen, director of broadcast services at BYU and a conference delegate, reported that KBYU-RV received two awards. One was for the program "Brigham Young The Westward Prophet" and the other was for a film documentary documen-tary "The Great Dinosaur Discovery." The program on Brigham Young is a reader's theater-style television adaptation of Elder S. DEMMITE--A dozen clean-cut, clean-cut, mitered pockets lend fashion fash-ion dash and stash space to A. Smile's carpenter's jeans of comfort-keyed pure cotton denim from J. P. Stevens. ilHt fcfli 'jQ Million-Magner door 69.95 Come in and see our large selection of Refrigerators mi w Reg. $399.95 Whirlpool 20.0 o Here a a handsome . ..hi Watch for our ' yMcu M convenient 52ffjJUj i; storage capacity R5? I Super-storage door 1 , "orceiamnan-eled ..-" ' VH' -"J lJiiaA- , : interior 1" ." pJL . . lla-T. X'7" ! jjV temperature conlrol . M r -V FORSEY'S 10 North Main Street, Spanish Dilworth Young's poetry about the struggle of the LDS Church to survive in the days following the death of the Prophet Joseph Smith. Cast members for the production were drawn from Prof. Lynn McKinnley's communications com-munications class which prepares stage actors to perform per-form for the camera. Dr. Charles Metten of the Speech and Dramatic Arts Department directed the show, while John Apgar of KBYU-TV served as producer. Helping to make the production unique were 30 watercolors painted by Prof. Robert Marshall of the Art Department. Helping to make the production unique were 30 watercolors painted by Prof. Robert Marshall of the Art Department. One of the judges from UCLA said that the production was "superb in using artistic lighting and the script in the best possible way." He requested a copy to use in his class to demonstrated what can be done in a studio setting. "The Great Dinosaur Discovery" award winning documentary was directed by John Linton. The film shows some of the greatest dinosaur discoveries of the century, capturing the drama and toils in the actual discovery of the world's largest dinosaur on location in west-central Colorado by Dr. Jim Jensen. BYU's Instructional Television (ITV) received an award for its Child Develop and Family Relation 210 series on "Child Development-Perception." Development-Perception." Produced by ITV in cooperation with the CDFR Department, the series covers classes of teaching parents and prospective parents how to rear children. Content specialist was Dr. Alvin Price while the show was produced and directed by nfKSLsM! cu. ft. freezer upright freejtr that n let you ide aavaniage ot all those tood sweats And there are a lot ol conveniences you h enjoy loo. Convenient defrost dram Super -storage door Adjustable temperature control Power interruption light Key-eject loc and lots more BIG SELECTION OF FREEZERS NOW ON DISPLAY , . . COME IN TODAY! Toy Sale Soon Fork Phone 798-2333 iiiSllUariJ MawaiaHBiiiiiHaMiiaBaKsM M a. Ma6. Receiving four of the nine "Best in the West" awards at the fourth annual Western Educational Society for Telecommunications (WEST) in San Francisco were BYU program directors, left to right, front, Stephen Anderson, An-derson, Instructional Television; Dr. Charles Roger Olsen. Stephen Anderson designed the show. The fourth award for BYU went to co-producers Brian Capener and David Jensen of KBYU-FM for their one-hour documentary on the life and music of well-known Utah folk singer Marvin Payne. The show, entitled "I Never Knew a Dog Named Marvin," took about six months to produce as live concerts were recorded and BYU research team gets high honors A chemical engineering research team from Brigham Young University has received one of the Top Awards for 1974 from Industrial Research Magazine for "Megadiamond," a diamond-hard cutting tool using in heavy industrial process. Dr. Bill J. Pope, professor of chemical engineering and president of Mega-diamond, Inc., accepted the honor the IR-100 Award at ceremonies conducted in the Great Hall of the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. "We realize that Megadiamond has the potential of making a great impact on the manufacturing industry and are proud that this recognition has brought attention to the work our people are doing," he said. Megadiamond is an outgrowth of the pioneer work in diamond synthesis done more than 20 years ago by Dr. Tracy Hall, distinguished professor chemistry at BYU. It's value is found in its phenomenal strength and variable shape, alterable to many designs under laboratory presses, Dr. Pope pointed out. Megadiamond's plant, located just north of the BYU campus near the Provo River, engages nearly 50 BYU engineering technology and science students to design and operate computerized com-puterized processes in Megadiamond production. Since BYU has entered the field of high-pressure research under Dr. Hall's leadership, there have been nearly 130 scholarly papers published by BYU faculty members in professional journals and 30 doctorate degrees awarded to advanced students in the specialty. "No university in the world has the high-pressure research facilities that we have here at BYU," said Dr. Hall. In addition to numerous high-pressure presses, the university maintains main-tains the "High Pressure Data Center." a repository of technical information from researchers throughout the world supported by the National Bureau of Standards. Dr. Hall serves as chairman of the board and vice president of Megadiamond, Inc., and Dr. M. Duanc Morton, professor of chemical engineering at BYU, and Richard Stratford are vice-presidents. vice-presidents. Can you fancy the "disgust" of the housewife who surveys the spic-and-span laundry, all of which has been neatly done by machine, mostly automatic? It's important. YOUR e now' UTAH EASTER SEAL SOCIETY helps the AM handicapped Jt 365 clays Hf every year. I We nerd you year-round, too! mi HOME 1 HIGHWAY SAFETY CHICKLISTS integrated with the singer. The program showed Springville's Marvin Payne not just as a folk singer but as a man top if rti flMug mm Mettetit and John Apgar, KBYU-TV; back-Brian back-Brian Capener, KBYU-FM; and John Linton, KBYU-TV. Representatives from colleges and universities in 17 western states attended the conference, with the University of Nevada at Las Vegas winning two awards. trying to make a living by singing. It looks at his successes, joys, and frustrations of choosing this life style. Answers to your questions about your natural gas service: The best way to answer that is to ask look at the chart below: 500 Utah Wages UP 500 Cost of Living UP 240 Utah Residential and Commercial Natural Gas Rates - UP 42 I I M I 11 400 300 200 100 If our rates kept up with the cost of living they would be over three times higher today than they actually are. Although we are doing our best to keep our rates as low as possible, the prices we have to pay for natural gas are increasing, and our operating and maintenance costs are rising too. But natural gas will continue to be one of the biggest bargains in your household budget. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Utah Foundation Report Middle School reports activities Connie Davis has been a teacher in the sixth grade at Springville Middle School for the The Machine Age We hear a great deal these days about the "machine age," and the knotty economic problems the increasing use of machinery has thrust upon us. A present-day professor of mathematics said: "Machinery has made our lives hurried and uncertain. Instead of freeing us in many ways from spiritually exhausting labor, it has made men slaves of machines, who for the most part complete their monotonous work with disgust. Obviously the fault is not in the machines but in the inability of the slower-moving human mind to adapt itself to the changed conditions they have created. That machinery makes workers unhappy is an idea that could not have orginated in the brain of any manual laborer. Would a farmer cutting a field of wheat with a scythe be happier hap-pier than one operating a modern reaper-binder? How much happiness has the modern secretary lost by being obliged to type her letters on an electric typewriter instead of writing them with the goosequill pen? It is not the changes in our modern world that makes people unhappy, but their inability to adapt to them. 66TUT PERCENTAGE INCREASE SINCE MOUNTAIN providing lyou with Natural Gas Energy Is our fujL'ffiitri: Monseri'lng It Is everybody's business. past six years. She enjoys her work and derives a great deal of satisfaction from watching the progress and accomplishments of her students and former students. She finds sixth graders a challenge to teach, but says their enthusiasm and energy makes them such natural learners that it is a pleasure to work with them. Connie is originally from Spanish Fork where she graduated from Spanish Fork High School in 1964. She attended the B.Y.U. and graduated Magna cum laude in 1968. Her major is teacher education and her minor is speech and drama. She was voted the most outstanding out-standing student in the college of education for the year 1968. This, she says, was the most rewarding rewar-ding experience of her college career. Connie is active in church and civic affairs. She held many positions in the L.D.S. church, but says most of her callings have been as a teacher of young people. Her favorite things include in-clude her family, her friends, the church, her country, Utah, cooperative students, anything creative, good books, good drama, Christmas, music, pretty things, big furry animals, enough time to sleep, and almost anything that's chocolate. She has few dislikes and says she believes that the joy you take from life depends entirely upon the joy you put into it. you to take a 1939 FUEL "T1 - . 0 t o v - " J? Q. O . 0 " a Connie Davis "The Living Farm of 1876," at Stuhr, Nebraska, will have a family on the farm doing the daily chores of gathering crops and tilling the soil. It will be an authentic farm with all the scenes and sounds of frontier living. Everyone working on the farm will live like a frontier family of the 1800s, wearing garments of the period. To attain high places, make the most of the commonplace. |