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Show TEL L ME 4 The Ideal Finish for I Dcors, Trim, Cabinets L $ljZ3uGjL0 Walls and Ceilings 1 a gallon Benjamin A Moore Ps Flows to a satin smooth finish free of brush marks, sags, or runs Applies easily with brush or roller Durable and completely washable Tools and spots clean in soapy water Available in attractive decorator hues that are sure to please Nelson Paint & Glass & Floor Coverings 538 S. State, Orem 112 N. University, Provo Orem-Geneva Times Thursday, June 29, 1967 Girls and chaperones of Orem Fourth Ward depart for well-earned well-earned trip to Los Angeles area. Girls had worked all year to earn money for bus fare and expenses. itions, for although everyone was California here we come wa.s one of the slogans the Orem Fourth Ward M.LA. girls put on the trusty bus that carried all forty of them. Including their chaperones to the Los Angeles area and back again during the week of June 5-9. The girls worked work-ed all year on car washes, handing hand-ing out handbills, and various other things, to raise the money for the trip. The girls spent the nights in Commerce at the Commerce City glad to be home, they were also sorry that the trip had to come to an end. Girls participating were: Christy Adams, Heather Ad ams, Jonsne Adams, Vickie Adams, Ad-ams, Velda Allred, Irene Billings, Bill-ings, Lori Cordner, LuAnneCox, Donna Dodge, Marcia . Farley, Gladys Fries, ChristyGr en, Shei la Harvey, Susan Harward, Dee-Ann Dee-Ann Hatch, Kaylin Hatch, Deborah Kelly, Norma Kitchen, Kathlene Mitchell, Julie Peterson, Kathy Civic Center, where they slept in Pierce, Annette Rawlings, Becky their sleeping bags and cooked Kawungs, nay Keaiora, Beverly their morning and night meals, "owley, Christine Kowiey, ue- On the first day they spent the morning at Huntington Beach. That afternoon they went toMar-ineland toMar-ineland and that evening they watched three tapings for the T.V. show "The Dating Game." The next day was fun-packed with visits to Knott's Berry Farm, Disneyland, Chinatown, and 01- vera Street. Thi last day was spent at the Los Angeles Temple, where the girls were baptised for the dead. After that the girls went out to the beach again for the last time. Monday on the bus the girls held an interesting and fun M.LA. meeting. This was followed up Friday on the way home with a' tearful testimony meeting. They arrived home with mixed emo- 'iflWMMMMMlW WftHTrffr w I LUNCH MEAT ASsrted Lb 49, FRYERS LARGE LOCAL Lb. 31 No Preservatives FRANKS 49- EGGS L A R G E 'A GRADE 4 DOZ. ADE 37 T-BONES SIRLOIN STEAKS 98c LB. GRAPES Seedless Lb, 27' POTATOES NEW 10 Pounds 39 CANTALOUPE g FOR $ lOO 1 " BANANAS - 2 25 AQUANET I DUm Amo HAIR SPRAY BAND AIDS 2 fSw 98 Reg 73c -now 53c LADIES HOSE., 25Qc MEAT PIES I BREAD BANQUET LARGE LOAVES Insect Repellant Reg:. 1.19 79c WILBERGS WILIONS DEPT. STORE CASH MARKET 838 North State, Orem 798 West 400 North, Orem Anna Rowley, NancySteele,Char- lene Thurber, Chaperones were: Beth Cox, Bishop Cox, Clara podge, Millie Gren, Migmn Har vey, Margaret Mitchell, Barbara Redford, VaNae Robinson, Alene Rowley, Arden Rowley. Christian Science Focuses On Drugs The following statements are by Robert Peel, author and editorial edi-torial consultant to the Christian Science Church. They are taken from an internationally broadcast broad-cast radio dialogue on 'Students and Drugs.' Drug-taking needs to be looked at in a broader focus in terms of the basic issues it involves. What is man basically? is he really just a physico-chemical physico-chemical organism? is he a chance configuration of atoms and molecules and genes? Is he just an accidental product of a biological bio-logical process? And is successful success-ful living simply a sort of adjustment adjust-ment to a material environment a physical and chemical adjustment? adjust-ment? This is the assumption on which most drug-taking rests. But drugs deal with surface effects, with symptoms- not with causes. They don't do anything about basic troubles, which are left to fester beneath the surface. And they cannot bring the sort of peace and satisfaction that comes as we really confront our problems prob-lems and intelligently solve them. What about LSD? Some people who have taken LSD say it gave them their deepest religious experience. ex-perience. They are raising important im-portant questions that we all need to ask ourselves. Can religion be reduced to chemistry? There's a craving for unity in people. But is man's unity with the rest of the universe the unity of billions bil-lions of dancing atoms? That's the sort of experience which people have spoken of who have taken LSD--a sort of pantheistic pan-theistic absorption in the material nutia 'v6$$uth Louise Portridge by Ruth Louise Partridge The sun is shining! Think of it! But there are frost warnings out 'not too far from here. I'm writing writ-ing this on Saturday, June 24th and the news is as unsettled as the weather. Pres. Johnson and Ko-sygin Ko-sygin emerge from their get-together, smiling. SMILING! Botho them! After five hours of cautious exploration of each other's minds. Five, long hours. Then, the president presi-dent takes off for a fund raising dinner in Los Angeles. One wonders won-ders how the human body andl mind can stand it-and become a grandfather at the same time, almost. And a very happy grandfather grand-father at that and we can't but offer our heartiest congratulations. congratula-tions. I'm sure, by now, that many people are aware that his humble correspondent to ye OREM-GENEVA TIMilS recently won a one thousand dollar prize for a novel in manuscript. As soon as word was out the calls began. First, congratulations, then'Wherecan we buy a book? When the local bookstore called to ask where they could get a supply, I gave up and took off for the house of a friend and a respite from the frustration of telling over and ovei that there is no book. Just a big pile of typewritten copy. Novel writing has complications complica-tions not suffered by other forms of the writing art. The prize poems and short stories will be eagerly published. The prize play will be produced, but getting a long novel published is something else again. It is very expensive business and unless one is rich and can foot the bill, and I'm not, some eastern publisher must be persuaded to undertake the risk. It is a risk for if the book doesn't sell and no one can be sure beforehand, be-forehand, the publishing company which is in business to make money, is left with a nice deficit. One only has to read the current cur-rent outpouring of published novels nov-els to know that the trend is NOT toward American historical novels. I don't read today's fiction fic-tion because it does not interest me. It is monotonously pornagraphic and violent. Senselessly Sense-lessly violent. I have a poor enough opinion of the human race at best and will not spend my time reading things I already know and which are repeated ad nau-seum nau-seum in the public prints. What I'm saying is, I have no assurance that my book ever will be published. I can hope that winning win-ning a prize may help-certainly it will do no harm-but there it is. One of the interesting things about this prize winning are the ideas people have of what I should do with my prize. "Now you can have a new car! they say joyfully. joy-fully. Now, Dearie, where couldl buy a NEW car for one thousand dollars? Even if I wanted one, which I don't My dear old Green Darnit does very nicely and it's only 26 years old, after all. I did have a $23.50 repair bill on it this week. It isn't easy to get parts for my car and while there are people who want to buy it to their antique colectlons, my car is NOT for sale. So, what shall I buy with my prize money. New clothes? Not until the styles change, Dearie. A fur coat? Not interested. A trip? Where? How? Anyhow, I must stay around and be available avail-able in case a publisher can be interested. This is no time to take off. No, just having it, is thrill enough. Knowing that the novel I wrote, all by myself and against every sort of discouragement has won an important prize is about all the glory I can bear at the moment. 'Bye, now. He boasted that he could bend a horseshoe with his bare hands. "That's nothing," shot back a pal. "My wife can tie up ten mile of telephone wire with her chin." VJHfit 15 THE CUSTOMRRV DEFUSE ASfilUSr WALRHCH6S M1H6 BUS? -II. VAL l.iV'! "HITL 111 l "tl " 1 i -.111 I. TUP SHOOT THEM DOWN ! WHftHW snow Mraees rsach MWftcwssizf, r MORTftR SHELL OR GRENRft PIR20 Fit R SPOf 10 0RINQ OOWM -H Btf SLIDE 1 why do birds uck teeth? . . i 1 W3$ D65lSNSD FOR f LieHf.WHiCH Recuse yeHtMKSPNOBuwBNW! to USH-TCN LIVING FWIMS MRCHINES, -ng-M REQUIRE H6RN ftMS BHD MUSCLES! HOW DID TriH KiRME "TORPEDO" FOR RN UNDERWATER EXPLOSIVE CHARGE.., - no A L DTE n frj THE SflHfllHd TORPEDO '. W HOW LARGE DO BWftNR 1 I VKAKVV1MV X Ml 0 CeCTI Ol PM.K r4WiMLI ft universe. Is this what the New Testament means when it speaks of God, and says, dla Him we live, and move, and have our being?" One of the central points of Christianity is the immortality of individual identity the fact that man is not just a material organism organ-ism which crumbles into dust and merges with the universe. He derives his existence from the Mind that is God and he has a deathless reality in that Mini What about things like intelligence intelli-gence and live, or patience and courage and generosity, honesty-are honesty-are all these things merely a matter mat-ter of chemistry? Or are they qualities of mind and spirit, which must come from a different source? Atoms can't create intelligence or love out of themselves. And if we conceive of God as the divine Mind, the divine Spirit, then we see that these qualities must ultimately derive from Him. I have seen this come to people as a concrete experience with far greater force then an LSD trip. The consciousness of man's in dividual relationship with God, his individual sonship, has come with such power that it has raised them up from material circumstances circum-stances that had seemed almost crushing. The effect is to free us from slavery to material conditions not to make us dependent on materiality ma-teriality in the form of a drug. The LSD experience, however mystical, is not comparable in an way with the deep, powerful experience ex-perience of Christianity, of finding one's real unity with God in a meaningful way that affects all the details of life. 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