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Show OREM -GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 195 NE WS of LINCOLN HIGHi First Carnival Dance At LHS Sponsored by Sapere Aude Units The first carnival dance ever held at Lincoln High School is being sponsored by the combined chapters of the boys and girls Sapere Aude. It is scheduled for' this Saturday night at 8:30 in the hign school gym. Dress for the occasion will be sport wear. Chairmen are Judy Redd and Harold Coleman. The advertising advertis-ing committee is headed by Wayne W.nterton, with Glenda Burr, Allen Thacker, and Carla Bunker. Concessions will be in charge of Merrilynn Rich, chairman, chair-man, Hal Hutchinson, Darrell Kitchen, and RaNae Howard. Decorations are under the direction direc-tion of Anna Mae Tobler, Jay Colyar, Linda Blackburn and Lynn Poulson. The girls' Sapere Aude officers offic-ers are: Sandra Pugh, RaNae Howard, Anne Egbert, and Maur-ene Maur-ene Geist. The boys' officers are Harry Olsen, Fred Kitchen, Richard Stratton and Jay Colyar. Faculty advisors are Mrs. Alice Jensen and C. M. Pyne. Tickets may be bought from any member mem-ber for $1.00. ; PLAN CARNIVAL DANCE Awaiting the irst Carnivai dance ever held at Lincoln High School are the above committeemen, left to right, Harry Olsen, Sandra Pugh, Judy Redd and Harold Coleman. Cole-man. Sponsored by the combined chapters of Sapere Aude, the dance is slated for Saturday night in the school gym. High irom LHS Debate Club Returns From Forensic Meet Debate Club of Lincoln School returned recently the annual forensic meet at We ber College in Ogden. Students left the high school early Friday morning, traveling by school bus. Debators and orators ora-tors who .were not eliminated the first day stayed over night to participate in the next day's events. , Participating were: orators Merrilynn Rich, Nancy Ivie and Carolyn Shurtz; debaters Harry Olsen,. Mike Van Quill, Harold Coleman, Lynn Poulson, Joyce Johnson, Linda Barrier, Joyclynn Ralphs, Marge Dixon, Pat Brown, Karen Croft, Glenda Burr, Maureen Maur-een Geist, Judith Jones, Patsy LHS Choir Offers Program Service Lincoln High school A Cappella choir has a complete program arranged ar-ranged for Sunday evening services ser-vices to take around to the different dif-ferent wards of the three stakes in Orem. Any ward desiring the program should make arrangements arrange-ments with E. B. Terry, director of the choir. The choir sang at the Sharon Stake Conference Sunday. They sang "Santus", "Let Us Off Speak Kind Words", and 'The Lord's Prayer." OUR STAKE IN BETTER GOVERNMENT EDITOR'S NOTE: Here are timely time-ly excerpts from the Hoover Commission Report, presented by the Orem Jaycees, which demonstrate poor efficiency and costly mismanagement by government gov-ernment agencies. Government Personnel and Civil Service - Our Federal Government, as of June 30, 1954, employed 2,345,718 civilians in almost every conceivable con-ceivable type of occupation, and !ts total annual payroll is approximately ap-proximately $9 billion. Analyzing this huge workforce work-force (85 percent of whom are covered by Civil Service), the task force found, and the Commission Com-mission agreed, that the government's govern-ment's personnel on the whole Is competent, faithful, and, in num erous specialties, distinguished. The greatest weakness, how ever, in the opinion of the Com- In order to provide a highly competent group of career administrators, ad-ministrators, it was suggested there be established a Senior Civil Service group, selected from within the service solely on the basis of demonstrated competency; competen-cy; and, that this be supplemented supplement-ed by a training and managerial .development program at lower levels. f The Commission also recommended recom-mended simplification of the classification structure; improved recruitment and examination techniques; simpler and more equ;tab!e separation procedures; and modifications to improve prestige and morale. Recommendations and sugges : tions contained in this report , are designed primarily to sim- plify and expedite federal per- sonnel management, thus con i tributing to higher employe mor ale, and raising generally the Sophomore Slide Set For Mar. 9 at LHS "Mood Indigo" will theme the annual LHS Sophomore Slide. It will be held in the girls gym Friday, Mar. S, starting at 8:30 p.m. Arrangements and plans for the affair have been made by a committee com-mittee which consists of Glade Clayton, Janice Varley, Linda Kenner and Tom Robbins. Jack Presset Is the faculty advisor. Tickets may be purchased from any sophomore for one dollar. mission is in expert managerial iPVPi nf sprvi to the neonle. direction. Top management is it is. however, believed bv the understaffed, there is no clear , Commission that the economics cash-now pay-later plan! - Get Cash Now Pay Later in amounts that fit your income. Plus! Cosh in 1 Visit. Bill Consolidation Service, Serv-ice, Nationwide Credit at no extra cost! Phone for 1-visit loan, write, or come in today! Loans $35 to $2000 Jijutnct r SVSTIM I mam. ffi'.l t.' 13 EAST CENTER STREET 2nd Fl., Knight Block FRanklin 3-5160 Prove- . Ask for the YES MANager Open evenings phono lor hours Imm m UM tt U mm., boh kv tmMd MtrM Ues bn (as elllsM brMratiML Uaa watt niHuh if at division between non-career exe- cutivesnd career administrators, and there Is a conspicuous ab sence of a senior Civil Service group. To correct this deficiency, the Commission recommends that imore competent non-career executives exe-cutives be worked Into top management man-agement to help carry the Increased In-creased political workload and itnat tney should relieve career administrators of responsibility for advocacy or defense of policies, pol-icies, thus keeping the latter out of direct participation In poli-i poli-i tical controversies. The Commission recommends a number of criteria to designate non-career positions, whicu In conjunction with rescheduling of exempted positions by the lv1 Service Commission, will result In a clearer delineation between areer and non-career posts. It is suggested that more aat. luate compensation, and a reexamination re-examination of the "conflict of interest". laws would encourage entry of -competent individuals Into public life. Ashton, Desmond Johnson, La Van Chestnut, Mary Jane Chynoweth, which will flow from Implementation Implemen-tation of these suggestions while not completely reducible to dollar measures are very substantial sub-stantial and would far offset any Increases which might accrue from such changes'. Granddaddy License Holders Must Take Eye Test by 1957 A Utah State law which became be-came effective May 10, 1955, provides pro-vides that every person licensed In Utah, whether he holds a Good-Until-Revoked license (otherwise (oth-erwise referred to as a "Grand-daddy" "Grand-daddy" license) or whether he holds a license requiring renewal, must successfully pass an eye examination ex-amination every five years. Holders of the Good-until-Re-voked or "Granddaddy" licenses must pass their first eye test be fore Jan. 1, 1957. Failure to do so automatically causes the good-until-revoked license to be cancelled can-celled and it then becames necessary neces-sary to make application for a new license and successfully pass established written, driving and and Annette Dunn. Frank B. eye tests. Newman is their faculty advisor Application for the eye test and teacher. may be made at the County Court School District Loses $3,420 Due To Absenteeism Alpine School District has lost more than $3450 since December, i 1955, because of the absence ot students from school. Part of the) money allocated to school dis tricts is based upon the daily attendance at-tendance of the students. The sum amounts to approximately one dollar per student a day. Thus, when the student is absent, the money from the state is not forth coming. Records for the district showed that 50 more students attended school daily in November than in December, and that 121 more students stu-dents were in school daily in November than in January. Parents and students are urged to cooperate with school officials In solving this problem. Children are expected to be in attendance at school every day, unless they are ill. Southern Utah's Finest Win - ft 1 fw v 'A ' 4 c a " t? -y C -S, " , r it Richfield, Utah A Trip to Southern Utah Is No Complete Without Visiting Visit-ing the States Finest and Most Modern Restaurant. Owned and Operated by Homer Bandley Former resident of Orem and Provo High School Essay Contest In Range Management Slated The second annual range man agement essay contest for high school seniors throughout Utah was announced Monday by the range management department at Utah State Agricultural College. A full year, scholarship for study in any department at Utah State awaits some high school senior who is willing to take time ' to prepare and submit an essay in this worthwhile contest, said Dr. S. A. Stoddart, head of the range management division at USAC. The scholarship will include tuition and registration fees for fall, winter and spring quarters. The contest will culminate during dur-ing the second week of April as a climax to conservation week. Since Utah is more than 90 per cent range land, the range management man-agement leaders believe these lands should be the concern of every citizen and future citizen of the state. The primary objec tive of the contest is to stimu late among the citizenry an awareness of the growing need for wise land management, said Dr. Stoddart. Any senior enrolled in a Utah high school is eligible and essays should be ligibly written and be not more than lsoo words in length. Suggested subjects have been supplied and the entries will be judged for content, originality, original-ity, appropriateness, sincerelty, accuracy and style. The entries will be judged by members of the range management manage-ment department at Utah State. Scouting's main purpose Is to train boys in character, leader ship, and unselfish service. The Boy Scout Law reaulrea each member to do at least one Good Turn for some body every day. House In Provo or direct to the examiner as he appears on regular regu-lar schedule in various cities and towns throughout the state. OPENING OF New Beauty Shop Top of Llndon Hill On Main Highway 91 Permanent Waving Hair Styling Hair Cutting and Shaping ELVA'S BEAUTY SHOP PLEASANT GROVE PHONE 2219 Two Trip Abroad Are Grand Prizes In Sewing Contest FORT WORTH A 15-year-old Colorado high school sophomore and a 19-year-old Nebraska girl are looking forward to flying trips to Europe and visits to famous fa-mous fashion centers abroad their awards as grand prize winners win-ners in the ninth annual "Make It Yourself with Wool" home sewing contest The young women have been named from & field of 30 finalists, final-ists, all of them the sewing champions of their own states, after modeling their home-created, all-wool fashions in the recent re-cent National Fashion Revue in Fort Worth. The national sewing champ Ions are Merry Jo Stewart of Ault, Colorado, in the junior division, di-vision, and Kay Rohrig of Mitchell, Mit-chell, Nebraska, in the senior division. di-vision. To Parte and Rome They will receive two-week, all-expense-paid trips to Europe, via Pan American World Airways, Air-ways, and will enjoy a visit to New York and intensive tours of Paris and Rome as guests of the Wool Bureau and Pendleton Woolen Mills. Nine other national finalists, representing the finest sewing talent in the West, also share in national awards, including travel, scholarships, U.S. Savings Bonds and coveted Singer console sewing sew-ing machines. The finalists were selected from the more than 7,000 young women between the ages of 11 and 22 who enter the 535,000 prize contest each year. A tall brunette with blue eyes, Miss Stewart hopes to attend Colorado A. & M. and enter the field of home economics. In aMitinn tn her enlovment of - J - U J sewing, she is keenly interested in cooking and home decoration. She won her title with a suit of rich brown wool tweed, heavily nubbed with gray and red. The suit jacket has a peter pan collar col-lar and eight self-covered buttons. but-tons. Bracelet - length sleeves have simply styled cuffs. The four-gore skirt is straight-hanging. A china red blouse of soft-textured worsted Jersey, with a horizontal band of matching tweed running below the neck, is worn with the suit, and a tie- around hat of matching tweed completes the costume. Slender and blue-eyed, Miss Rohrig works as a teller and bookkeeper In the First National r f - : if v- ( f ' - 1 'BEST IN THE WEST.' Wearing all-wool fashions which wen them top national awards In "Malta II Your, self with Weal" centstt are (left to right): Kay Rohrig, 19, of Mitchell, Nebraska; Mr. Carolyn Lee Wright, 19, Boone, Colorado; Merry Jo Stewart, IS, Ault, Colorado, and Julie Anne Simmons, 16, Preston, Idaho. Junior and senior tewing champions Miss Stewart and Mia Rohrig receive all-expense-paid trips to Europe. Bank in Mitchell. A student of design, she hopes to continue her studies possibly in Paris and become a fashion designer or' wardrobe coordinator for an exclusive ex-clusive shop or department store. Her award-winning costume is a dinner dress of sheer all-wool black crepe, worn with a princess-style coat of black hard-finish hard-finish worsted. The ensemble is entirely of her own design. The dress has an extremely full skirt which emphasizes its small waist. Also princess-style, it features a high bateau neckline, neck-line, with a small V-cutout to emphasize its stylo lines. The dress scoops low in back, and appears ap-pears almost backless. The coat has a middy-type collar, col-lar, starting at the waistline and reaching to points at the shoulders. shoul-ders. Sleeves are bell-type, and the coat's lining is of white slipper slip-per satin. Forsfmann, Snger are Sponsors Other national award winners announced following the National Fashion Revue in the Hotel Tex as are: First prize, junior division: Julie Anne Simmons, 16, of Pres ton, Idaho a slant-needle Singer sewing machine in spinet cabinet, presented by Singer Sewing Machine Ma-chine Company. First prize, senior division: Mrs. Carolyn Wright, 19, of Boone, Colorado a $300 scholarship, scholar-ship, presented by Forstmann Woolen Company. Second prize, junior division: Joan Stewart, 17, of Sherwood, Oregon a $300 scholarship, presented pre-sented by Pendleton Woolen Mills. Second prize, senior division: Gladys Nakabe, 21, of San Francisco, Fran-cisco, California: a straight needle need-le Singer sewing machine in console cabinet, presented by Singer Sewing Machine Company. Third prize, junior division: Darlene Whitmore, 17, of Conrad, Montano a $100 U. S. Savings Bond by I. A. Wyner & Company, Third prize, senior division: Mrs. Marilyn Dover, 22, of Lov- ell, Wyoming a $100 U. S. Sav ings Bond by S. Stroock Company. Fourth prize, junior division: Sandra Hesse, 16, of Pleasant Hill, California a $100 U. S. Savings Bond by Botany Mills, Inc. . Fourth prize, senior division Nancy Ann Fore, 20, of Estancia, New Mexico a $100 U. S. Sav- , tags Bond, presented by the Pro ducers Livestock Marketing Association As-sociation of Ogden, Utah. A special award of a $500 scholarship to the student who best combines high academic standing with outstanding sew ing ability: Elinor Van Dyke, 18, of Smithton, Missouri. The award is presented by Colorado Woman's Wom-an's College, Denver. Other national awards are presented by Chamberlin's Hand-wovens Hand-wovens of Seattle and the Hand-weaver Hand-weaver and Craftsman magazine. Wooworth Provides Travel The 30 finalists representing their states in the National Fashion Fash-ion Revue traveled to Fort Worth as guests of the F. W. Wool-worth Wool-worth Company. Their five-day stay in Texas included attendance atten-dance at special dinners and luncheons, television appearances, appear-ances, and sightseeing tours of Fort Worth and Dallas via Southwestern South-western Grayhound Lines. The annual contest Is sponsored sponsor-ed by the Women's Auxiliary of the National Wool Growers Association As-sociation and the Wool Bureau The National Fashion Revue wai presented in conjunction with th 91st annual convention of th National Wool Growers Association, Associa-tion, now in progress in Fort Worth. f ievoted to WEDDINGS INVITATIONS! When it's a question of correct form iu social stationery, we have the right answers. See our samples of invitations, invita-tions, announcements, thank yous and cocktail napkins. f 1 ENGRAVED WEDDING INVITATIONS Available on Special Order Also WEDDING NAPKINS Complete with verse and Illustration OREM -GENEVA TIMES PHONE AC5-1340 546 SOUTH STATE - OREM |