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Show SIDDIMITM is anexquisite movie.' REX REED, Syndicated Columnltx A NOVEL BY HERMANN HESSE A FILM BY CONRAD ROOKS ft Plus Alfred Hitchcock's 7reniy' Siddhartha 6:30-10:00 MANN THFATflf 9 JNIVMITV ACADEMV 373 KLfJ 150 M State, Orem $ f, ratbiti A fay J ' tf Y 'BULLITT' jg? tSl JRIVEHN THEATRF kVV: 4 & a & .'Win A Stereo!!! f A $1200 Marantz Model 19 4 cTuner-Amplif ierooo watts Will 36 North AAA 1971 510 Wagon Radio, Heater, Automatic Trans. Real . 400 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVENUE, 374-1751 L -H J Frenzy j U 8:00 If 4470 per channel RMS)' Be Given Away Soon!!! Ph. 3734440 University Ave. Provo I C H 5 u vCu Showtimes 225-1W)M!il i.i i i r i ai DATSUN i 1 J. ROMAN ANDRUS STANDS beside "Barbara", "Bar-bara", one of his paintings being displayed during the month of September at the Orem City Library. Work Of rrovo rainter The work of J.RomanAndrus, noted Provo painter, is now on display at the Orem City Library. Li-brary. Twenty-two of Mr. Andrus' portraits and landscape paintings will be shown during the month of September. Mr. Andrus has a vigorous style in his painting, which most people enjoy. He is professor emeritus from the Brigham Young University, Uni-versity, where he has taught for many years. Born at St. George, Utah, his art training has been varied, and includes studies at the Art Student's League, Los Angeles Art Institute, In-stitute, Columbia University, Brigham Young University, University of Colorado at Boulder, and the Colorado Springs Fine Art Center. Besides painting, Mr. Andrus An-drus is an outstanding print-maker print-maker and woodcarver. He is widely traveled, and has visited vis-ited 90 museums in Europe, the Far East, and Southeast Asia. A family man, outdoors-man, outdoors-man, and churchman, Mr. Andrus' stories are as fascinating fascin-ating as the pictures he paints. J. Roman Andrus was born in St. George, Utah, and is married to the former Irva Pratt, also from Southern Utah. There are no birds in the redwood trees of California. The trees secrete poisonous substances which are deadly to the insects upon which the birds would normally feed. Nice, Clean Car KMmMi r-uHrHiH-H i r ll f m m l l Ll 9 Jf I if,! I. Ill V M "II f- I " t-.ll litf I $400,000 Is Donated To Law School An unrestricted gift of $400,000 from Dr. and Mrs. Ray Reeves of Las Vegas has been donated to the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University. "Coming as it does during the formative period of the Law School, this gift is particularly par-ticularly significant," said Rex E. Lee, dean of the LawSchooL "It will play a material role in the fulfillment of our commitment commit-ment to make this one of the nation's great law schools. "Dr. and Mrs. Reeves made the gift to our law school because be-cause they have confidence in its purpose and mission, and they want to be instrumental in its creation," he added. The donation to the BYU Law School is one of several that the prominent couple has made to the University over the years. In October of 1968, they gave BYU 1,044 acres of land near San Clemente, Calif., valued at several million dollars. In addition, they have made other gifts to BYU involving scholarships scholar-ships and special projects. Transportation Committee To Meet The Utah Valley Transportation Transporta-tion Study's Citizens' Advisory Committee will hold its fifth monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m., September 27, in the Provo City Commission Chambers. All interested citizens are invited in-vited to attend and participate in discussing future transportation transporta-tion requirements for the Utah Valley. Study interest is not limited to streets and highways, and public transportation requirements re-quirements and possible methods meth-ods will also be discussed. The Citizens' Advisory Com-mittee Com-mittee was formed in May to provide information on area residents' desires for future transportation systems to area planners and elected officials. Suggestions and comments from the committee at large are presented pre-sented to the study's Technical and Policy committees by Mr. Dean Shimmin of Provo, the Citizens Committee chairman, and are evaluated and considered consid-ered for technical application and policy effect. Final decisions decis-ions on all recommendations are then made by the Policy Committee - with members from local elected officials of each city and town in Utah Valley. Charles Schulz Featured At Orem Library Noted cartoonist, and Charlie Brown's creator, Charles Schulz will be the featured "Author of the Month" at the Orem City Library during the month of September, according to Bernice Cox, Orem City librarian. Charles Schultz was born In Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1 922. He resides at Santa Rosa, California He sold his first cartoon to the Saturday Evening Post in 1949 and has been drawing Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy and Linus since 1950. These characters now appear in over one thousand newspapers all over the world. Various editions edi-tions of the Peanuts books have sold over four million copies Charles Schultz made" the statement at one time that "I grew up with only one real career desire in life, and that was someday to draw my own., comic strip." New Officers Are Elected By Norbest SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH At the conclusion of the forty-third forty-third Annual Meeting of Norbest Nor-best shareholders, J. W. Tall-man, Tall-man, President and General Manager of Norbest, Inc., announced ann-ounced the re-election and election el-ection of new officers. Re-elected for his second year by the Board of Directors, J. W. Tallman continues as President and General Manager. Mana-ger. Mr. Tallman, formerly National Sales Manager and Vice President of Sales and Marketing was named President in 1972. Mr. Tallman reported that this year "will go down as a most important year and one that has seen Norbest take great strides forward in meeting the demands of an ever-changing and rapidly changing turkey industry." in-dustry." Also re-elected by the Board of Directors is Paul F. Lin-denberg. Lin-denberg. Vice President of Finance Fi-nance and Treasurer. Mr. Lindberg has been withNorbest for many years. Mr. Ray Houck was, also re-elected re-elected as Vice President-Secretary, President-Secretary, a position he has held for several years. A member of the Norbest staff for several years, Mr. Houck has been given new responsibilities respons-ibilities in the area of procurement procure-ment and grower relations. Another development of the Annual Meeting was the change of the name of the Company from Norbest Turkey Growers Association to Norbest, Inc. The Board of Director of Norbest, Inc., also announced that three men had been named as Vice Presidents of Norbest. They are: George Chituras, John E. McDade and Owen W. Sumsion. All three of these men have been associated with Norbest for several years and have served in executive positions. Mr. Chituras, Vice President-Sales, joined Norbest four years ago. He is former Sales Manager for Modesto Meat Company and was associated with San Joaquin Valley Turkey Growers Association. A sports enthusiast, he is an approved track-and-field official of the Pacific Association of the American Athletic Union. During Dur-ing the past year, Mr. Chit-ura's Chit-ura's efforts have given Nor-best's Nor-best's sales program an added impetus. . As Vice President-Processing and Quality Control, John McDade will direct Nor-best's Nor-best's eleven processing facilities fac-ilities in eight states. He was associated for several years with the poultry industry indus-try and later formed his own management and consulting firm. Mr. McDade ispresently serving as Chair man of the Processing Pro-cessing Committee for the Poultry and Egg institute of America, and also serves on its Safety Committee. THE NUMBER ONE BOOK OF THE YEAH! NOW-THE SUSPENSE FILM OF THE YEAR! tt n irr n wm Ji John WsoJf Mm B UNIVERSAL RELEASE IHSB TECHNICOLOR PGJ'3JJ l' 1W1 I i w i m Hi I " WW ill ! 1 "U" Has Additional Student Aid A University of Utah official says the U "has more funds than ever for student financial aids," spiking earlier fears that President Nixon's domestic domes-tic budgetary programs would undermine federal student assistance programs. "Every student who deserves or legitimately needs financial aid will receive it this year," says Harold R. Weight, director of the Office of Financial Aids and Scholarships at the U. Consequently, an estimated 9,000 University students will jam into the financial aids and scholarships office in the Annex An-nex Building betweenSeptember 18 and 26 to collect the bulk of the $6 million available in loans, scholarships and work-study work-study funds, he says. A 20-man staff will be working full-time just to disburse the funds, he adds. The rosy funding picture is the result of Congressional alterations al-terations to the President's controversial $955 million Basic Ba-sic OpportunityGrant program, which would have superceded federal assistance programs totalling some $700 million annually, an-nually, Mr. Weight explains. Primarily, the University of Utah has three ways of assisting assist-ing students financially, says Mr. Weight, including "loaning the money to them, having them earn the money in work-study programs, or simply giving them the money in the form of scholarships or grants." The most common form of financial assistance is called "a package of aid" and combines all three, he adds Mr. Weight employs eight professional counselors to determine a student's needs. They also assist many students in budgeting their resources to avoid running out before the school year ends. "We don't want a student blowing his money in one week, so we allocate funds to him on a quarterly basis and work closely with him to insure they meet his needs," Mr. Weight explains. Show , vir'V r&iflflt 7)1 U il -i .mm- -m wmm DANAWYNTER as VALERIE A Crown Inlernatiot al Pictures. Inc. Release Also Richard Harris as "Man in the Wilderness" KEYY Radio Returning again from last year's sellout performance. Laying out more twistin' music for you, manl Jump in your LvjI and shimniy-shitnmy koko bop on down. For once we'll rock around the clock to real CREASE GLENN I FORD Tj5 I Starring in SAMITES For i.aion past information call: 375-0609 Orem-Genpva Times Buddies Depart For Naval Training James McGinn, son of John , McGinn Jr. of Orem, and Bryan Bry-an Mildenhall, son of Dixie Mildenhall also of Orem, departed de-parted for nine weeks of recruit training at the U.S. Navy Training Center in San Diego, California. During their nine weeks of I 3 U HUI OIUOL. OI1HHL, I1IUII MUUH AliD 'WILD BUNCH' HAS THERE BEEN SUCH A POWERFUL WESTERN!" "SANTEE RECALLS THE GREAT WESTERNS... RESONATES FAVORABLY WITH THOSE MASTERPIECES OF THE FORM...." Rocky Mountain Ntws, Denver LV1 GLEli'l Starring in jyfe also starring MICHAEL BURNS JAYSIIVERHEEIS HARRY TOWNES JOHN LARCH ROBERT WILKE and DANA WYNTER as VALERIE Executive Producers Presents a Vagabond Production A Crown International Pictures. Inc. Release COLrOIl TOSSS-Sg Vi inn .., 1 Open 745; Show 8:00 lAt QUU HURRY! BACK BY , POPULAR DEMAND! FANTASTIC! must end tues. ll I in il I'H-ftl tMiTfrfi iii itoiili lil'itu 11 Cwttinrg tt Ttlwtt B Aadwry mo Wll SURVIVE-IN ONE of r- A t 8 Acad QjlD DyEynJRt EVER 1L- C-iL-J GREAT ACTION CO-HIT n WHO DID IP, r HIan'shest Si Ft I:... 1 .' and The Ice House Present Mi 'A 1J4 fl fr Plus Special Features: UJGD. GGP. fxcluiiv. Ticket Outlets Sound Shoppe, 47 N. University lc. House, 264 N. IOO W. September 20, 1973 "boot camp," the new recruits will be taught the fundamentals of life in the Navy. Instruction inclines televised classroom work as well as practical training train-ing in gunnery, seamanship, firefighting, ships work and military teamwork. Jim and Bryan will return home for two weeks vacation, then report to the UJS. Naval Hospital at San Diego, Calif, for sixteen weeks of schooling in the medical field- ;j Show 7:30 & 9:30 Mat, Sat 2:00 THE FINAL FIVE MINUTES OF THIS MOVIE ARE AS UTTERLY BREATH-STOPPING IN THEIR WAY AS ANY DRAMATIC MOMENT I'VE SPENT IN ANY THEATER WATCHING ANY FORM OF STORY-TELLING." a Thm Mtnneannli K f Star - mY i FORD 1 livffmTlTTTra Awt) Wiwra technicolor IJ emy .Award nominations! the CREATEST ESCAPt. Starring JAMES GARNER tftcicniiHl G12IP mostors PG METROCOIQR A Night of Old , Fifties Rock n' Roll in Concert 1 Night Only King Crab, Pacific Cross 26 9 p.m. TICKETS: $3 in advance $4 at the door Limited number available! So hurry I COME DRESSED UP GREASYI (Use your pedal-pushers, pedal-pushers, Gals and Guys; it's black high water lime!) 1111 264 NORTH 100 WEST PFIOVO. UTAH 84601 Just East of Soan ma |