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Show ( Crtn-Ger.eva Times Thursday. March 12. 1964 The Lamb's Tale Q Q ' T-: ' i ,.;!, '...,..-: ,.v.:..- r'. .- .. .. .,, . . ,-- - ;. ,. -- -' i 1 OaS BEHIND NUMBERS - Teachers at Scera Park , school study a display showing the beginning phase of learning mathematics. From left are Principal John M. Nicol, sixth grade teacher Dorothy Thompson, kindergarten kinder-garten teacher Mary Mclnnes and sixth grade teacher LaVar Madsen. The entire faculty is studying a special class in modern mathematics. All Scera Park Teachers Going Back to School The teachers at the Scera Park have all gone back to school. They're studying one of the three R's the one called Modern Math." For two hours after school on Wednesdays the entire faculty goes to the BYU to study "New Phases of Arith metic Concepts for Element ary School level," under Dr. Richard Browne. Principal John M. Nicol said ne very unusual thing about the class Is the fact that the entire faculty is taking it at once. This special study will enable them to use the latest ideas in mathematics in introducing in-troducing the e 1 e m entary chool children to a study of arithmetic and more advanced mathematics. Some of the teachers are taking additional classes .betides .be-tides the joint study effort. KOTHER VISITED AT HOSPITAL Jesse L. Thompson, Salt Lake City, amd his family spent the afternoon with his mother, Catherine Worthen, Saturday at Central Utah Convalescent Con-valescent and Medical Center. CO-0? I - 1 SERVICE - - J Is Proud To . . r " Announce That C. Z' Jerry Jarman ' Is the New I Manager of The I Orem Station 271 No. Si, Orem T 7 Jerry Jarman Jerry Invites his many friends to come in during .the Current Highway Safety Inspection. Campaign! Free Pickup & Delivery Service Phone 225-0751 CO-0? SERVICE '.Villi!' i : j o Lcfcre you (1::6 Blztrcz3. Snlea that ycu i c:a cdvertissd (Lowers Editor Orem-Geneva Times: Our baby just, turned two years old a week before he got his leg broken in a fall on the basement steps. Now he is in the Utah Valley Hospital Hos-pital with both his little legs up in traction. He cries and puts his arms out to me to take him when it hurts. I stand there helpless. How can a mother explain to her baby she carn't hold him in her arnu to comfort him. And why her kisses don't make it quit hurting? hurt-ing? It was so hard to put his little toys away. I cried as I remembered four other little boys and now I had put their things away a long time ago. Only they didn't ever come home. The angels came and took them away so Jesus could hold them in his arms and comfort them. It wouldn't be i; fcuy.ct &ny of 9 f 000 heaven without babies, you know. This poem by Eugene Field, entitled "Little Boy Blue," expresses ex-presses how I feel: The' little toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and staunch he stands. The little toy soldier Is red with rust, And his musket molds in his hands. Time was when the little toy dog was new, And the soldier was passing fair And that was the time when our Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. "Now, don't you go till I come," he said, 'And don't you make any noise!" So toddling off to his trundle bed, He dreamt of his pretty toys; And, as he was dreaming, an angel song Awakened our Little Boy Blue OhK the years are many and the years are long, But the little toy friends . are true! Ay, faithful to Little Boy Blue they stand, Each in the same old place, Awaiting the touch of a little hand, The smile of a little' face; And they wonder, as waiting the long year through In the dust of a little chair, What has become of our Little Boy Blue Since he kissed them and put them there. Remember this tonight when you put your baby to bed and thank God for him, -Mrs. Merrill Blair 1275 S. Sandhill Road Orem, Utah Orem - G:r,:va HAROLD B. SUMNER Editor and Publisher Published every Thursday at Orem, Utah. Office and plant located at 546 South State Street. Mailing Address P. O. Box 65, Orem, Utah. Subscription price $3.50 per year. Second-class Postage paid at Orem, Utah. Sunday Visit Sunday's a great day. to call Long Distance. . Folks are at home. Rates are low all day. This Sunday, surprise a favorite relative or friend with a Long Distance call. If s the next best thing to being there. . MOUNTAIN OTATC3 TCLCPHON3 UX WHEN TEN IS REALLY SEVEN - Numbering systems sys-tems using a different base for the figure 10 are studied stud-ied by members of the Scera Park faculty. Shown are Joan Ackley, fourth grade, Mary Mclnnes, kindergarten, kindergar-ten, Darrell Jensen, fifth grade and John M. Nicol principal. The entire faculty is taking a course in Modern Mod-ern Mathematics for elementary schools at BYU. ii uth Louise At this moment, my four inch high tulips are covered with snow and more to come. So who cares? I'm well hous ed and well fed and I've done my shopping errands and last night I finally gave in and called The Eldest Moppet (my son) in West Covina California Califor-nia and The Youngest Moppet Mop-pet (my daughter) and her family arrived there alright but I was a day behind in calling and they have gone on to Sacramento. No address as yet. At least they're safe. This rash of airplane tragedies kept me in a- 'state' and finally final-ly I called. Seems a sensible thing to do, but you'd be sur prized what it takes to bring me to it. Long distance calls seems such a pampering of one's self, somehow. Got my first feeler from a nursery and sure enough, they got to me for almost five dollars for quote: "June blooming c h rysanthemouns" and unquote. If ever I'm going go-ing to throw caution and money to the winds it will be In the fauna and flora department. depart-ment. This doesn't seent pampering pam-pering at all for heaven's sake. I'll bet you bit too, Dearie. And as if June blooming chrysanthemums were not enough, the grunnions are running. Grunnion hunts are only one of the sorts of delightful de-lightful lunacy that comes to California. Some of them make you wonder but the running run-ning of the grunnions is a delight de-light I well remember my first grunnion running. Can't think who was there other than the grunnions, but I do remember remem-ber it was a ball., Someone came in all excitement and shouted at the top of their lungs that the grunnions were running. Well, I didn't know a grunnion from a bunnion and naturally took the whole thing for a big joke. I had to be told, as all outlanders do, that the grunnion was a small fish that at certain times lost their bearings and swarmed up into the shallow surf on certain beaches not only In schools, but in whole universities univer-sities and could be caught with the hands. I don't know whether this is true, or not, catching them with the hands, but I do know I've never had more fun in my life than I did floundering around In the water and TRYING. TRY-ING. Mobs of people. TRYING. TRY-ING. Ah, me. I wonder if ever I'll hunt grunnions again. I'm making serious preparations prepar-ations for a month's trip to New Jersey to be a guest at the home of my Educated Brother. He has. already men Old Glenmore Silver Label r ? V 1 I 9 HIU.-ILT O ii t i a Partridge tioned a week end at Martha's Vineyard. THINK OF IT! The U of U to have a new president. Mrs. Ray Olpin and the mother of the new prexy are sisters, as I'm sure you know. Chipman girls from American Fork. Long yeari ago when Dr. Harvey Fletcher Fletch-er and Lorena Chipman were courting and attending the BYU ... I think it was called the BYA for Academy in those days ... the Chipman sisters lived in part of our house. I've known them as long as I've known my own parents. Ah, me. What a time ago. My father was on the faculty fac-ulty at that time and was paid mostly in tithing script. Tithing Tith-ing script wasn't as universally univer-sally accepted in those days as it had been, but Reynold's store in Springville and Chip-man's Chip-man's big store in American Fork would accept it It took us all day to go over and back in a buggy. In this day and age you can't imagine what the roads were.. Deep sand mostly. Mother and father In the seat with a baby on mother's mo-ther's lap and me sitting in the back, legs hanging over and my hands under my knees to keep them from getting numb from the edge of the buggy. Couldn't sit up straight, the seat hung over. And this, was in those days, a thrill. Just to go. Bye, now. 3 Boys Sent To Juvenile Court Three youths, caught inside the Lincoln Junior High School Saturday, have been turned over to juvenile court by Orem Police. The three boys, ages 11 to 16, students of Orem High, St. Francis and Spencer, were caught inside the building by Mel Briggs, a Lincoln teacher, Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Police officers said the boys had forced open a window to enter the building. The police found five reams of paper dropped into the snow outside a window, and other items were missing. Also during the weekend, other vandals entered Orem High School, scuffed the varnished varn-ished floor in the gym and rifled a custodians desk. They also shot out windows in the north and southeast wings, causing $33 worth of damage. BROTHERS ENJOY VISIT TOGETHER C. L. Bennett, principal of Delta High School enjoyed a visit with his brother Del Bennett Saturday at Central Utah Convalescent and Medical Medic-al Center. It 1. 11 III I T1I U STEAIGHT BOURB01T WHISKEY 86 PEOOP 6 YEARS OLD lIKrUE3Cl Nina L. Jones Three bums Irom the city dump crashed a White House social function last week and Orem citizens who were aware of it enjoyed every minute of the escapade. Not only did tho President and First Lady receive re-ceive these three characters of questionable repute, but also honored one of them for capturing two international spies and recovered a stolen painting. All of this excitement was part of "Cadwallader's Capers, Cap-ers, a musical mystery comedy presented recently by Jerry Elison's sixth grade class at Orem Junior High School. To say the show was different dif-ferent than most school productions pro-ductions would be an inadequate inade-quate description. Yet, it was different in that the students stu-dents planned and created much of their own script and scenery with Mr..Elison lending lend-ing a guiding and inspiring hand. It was different in that the children projected their vokjla .magnificiently and could be heard without microphones. micro-phones. Their voices rang out with an enthusiasm and clarity that amazed and thrilled the audience. It was different because be-cause it's entertainment appealed ap-pealed to both children and adults. The musical was originally planned for presentation at the Sharon School last fall. It was a humorous satire on the well-publicized social life of the Kennedys. However, the death of President Kennedy disrupted this plan and necessitated neces-sitated postponement. Sorrow and respect for the beloved leader overshadowed t: . . I . ci s , V- Jit Wmm rmm L - ' J ' . Wayne D. Shepherd Wayne D. Shepherd Appointed To Police Department Wayne D. Shepherd, 26, is the newest officer to join Orem's Police department. Patrolman Shepherd began his duties Monday. A longtime long-time resident of Orem, the new officer has spent , 15 months as a member of the Police Auxiliary and Reserve Corps. He has also completed two police training schools, one in homicide investigation, and the other in officers training. A graduate of Lincoln High School, Patrolman Shepherd makes his home in Orem with his wife Marsha and their four sons. Appointment of the new patrolman was made after the City Council authorized hiring one additional man in the department. de-partment. 'Alliii'iailtl; : fe'JlilW'NI . Doal Let Any Event Slip by TC2kOUt the "Picture lUn" Exv ina TtTi OeotAar Ceet Aay Maee Cart AoytLias LCCZ3 OH. 8. tnun T Cctaa, the show. Before it could be staged, changes would have to be made in the script, maybe the setting and some of the characters for odly enough one of the hobos was named Oswald. Os-wald. Fate stepped in before anything definite could be done and the sixth grades were asked to move to the junior high school. By mid-January, President and Lady Bird Johnson were established in the White House, the sixth grades were situated In their new school and time had softened the November tragedy. Work on the show started again. The original scenario was cleverly revised to feature hobos invading in-vading a cultural evening hosted host-ed by a Texas President and his wife who have a valuable painting stolen. Last week the final wrinkles were ironed out and the show was on! It was wonderful! Aloyious, Herkimer and Cad-wallader Cad-wallader from Hobo Lane captivated the audience in the opening scene. Charmed by each performance and scene that followed, one felt oblivious obliv-ious of the time until the final curtain. Never have I seen such sneaky and intriguing spies .The "Pandemonium in Slow Motion" they and the cast created was unique and one of the evening's highlights. high-lights. If the show is presented again, and It certainly should be, treat your family to this enchanting presentation. It will be and is a challenge to CHECK OUR Bridal Service .. . Wedding. Announcements Bridal & Guest Books Reception Napkins Table Decorations Thank You Notes Candles - Gifts Hodcs for Hothcrs-to-bo New for Spring AND! 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You may have your copy by sena-ing sena-ing your name and address, plus 25f to cover the cost 01 handling to: Snringmaid, Dept. FB-7, 185 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10016. , the high school and opera association as-sociation to stage a production equal in family entertainment entertain-ment to "Cadwallader's Capers." Pharmacy Pilaris From Jack Salmon Here at your friendly pharmacy phar-macy we take pride in offer ing you a truly professional service. And, so that there can be no possible misunderstanding misunder-standing concerning what wt mean by "professional serv ice" let me say that we carry many items oth er than those! for which your doctors p r e -1 scription is re quired. Please - s don't hesitate to ask us about drugs and vitamins which can be of real help to you. There is no charge for this professional profes-sional service. It Is one which we are qualified and glad to give to you. Certainly, we're always glad to fill your doctor's doc-tor's prescription - in fact that is our main professional duty but we're also here to offer you friendly service in explaining anything which can be of help to you. Salmon Pharmacy at 771 N. State St., is a friendly place where your health and needs are of real importance to us. You can call us at aM-siisn for your prescription or come w. any xime because we're always glad to see you at - ) 373 - 3930 56 West Center, Provo. Utah pi: 1 1 r 1. |