OCR Text |
Show Director Announces Cast For "Oklahoma Jerry Elison, director of trie musical play "Oklahoma! has announced that the cast has been selected and rehearsals are going forward in anticipation for the performances on June 26, 27, 28, and 29th. Mr. Elison's productions are always a highlight of the Orem Summer Festival and this year promises to bring forth another Open 8:30. Shgw 9.10 2-Great Hits $S On Some Bill! "It's hit entertainment and maybe even memorable entertainment H-PAULINE KAEL. New roiker V A ' strsisord TG&2THE1 rue 17AY HERE COlUMBl PlC'URf S m MSUR PRODUCTIONS m t W SllHH SYOWIY POLLACK ,. p(j Special Co-Hit A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE PG, u The same producer and the same proud, warm feeling that made "Sounder" last year's best-loved film i -31 s-xladnitz Mattel where the lilies bloom a Robert B.Radnitz Film introducing Julie Gholson as"Mary Call" and Harry Dean Stanton as"K.$er Pease" Screenplay by Earl Hamner, Jr. Based on the Newfcery Award-Winning Honor Book by Vera and Bill Cleaver Produced by Robert B Radnitz Music Performed byThe Earl Scruggs Revue Directed by William A. Graham Umtsd EVIUY SATURDAY JS- iVWpmgwfrf WjjM"jJimil III WWII 1I'IW 1 i f I," & hr OTra? 0Pgn 8:30 :S f 'i,. UlTiSt SHOW 9:15 . f'V .'vll50 M SUite, Orem P t O Showtimes 225-1740 '.:Jr- -DRIVE-IN THEATRE TJfc.y-,; . uG.r.:P CHAP SATURDAYS . Guyart 25' A STCRY II smash hit. Leading parts will be played by K.C. Shaw, Susan Blair, Karlene Dodge, Diann Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, David Barker, Craig Carter, Kurt Bestor; Mark Davis, Mark Harris, Mike Allen, Terry Farnsworth, Janet Allred, Fred Owens, Kelly Kel-ly Johnson, Maureen Richins, Elizabeth Laycock, Marilyn Farnsworth, WallyWilson,Teri Nicols, Linda Cameron, and David Anderson. A chorus of 30 singers and dancers will support, the leads in this delightful Rodgers and Hammerstein musical. One show each nite at7:30-Friday-Sat Mon-( family nite) The wait Is over! ou can thrill again to the happiest sound in all the world. li t f . ' A KM.IK-imi!tH-IH- J SHOW: 7:30 & 9:30 MAT SAT. 2:00 r Productions presents Artists G UWUt WM1KU a AT Till DIVE-IN 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. Sallars $2 FOR EVERY ONE WHO THINKS THEY CAN FALL IN LOVE AGAIN. JAMES CAAN 7:30 - 9:30 I If 100.-. SMINGVUll I I I WWW 4I9S40I J I I r Tl rlV I mm I X. . JHL Jl .FTn-.. . 7 n People You Should Know! Thic wooV'c roirurniMnn fnliimn calntps Week We Will pet to know Dnrnfhv P Roc This week's recognition column salutes two of Orem's Police Department employees and one of Orem library's workers. This TOBY BATH, detective in the Orem Police Department. Toby Bath has been with the Orem Police Department for ten years serving in various capacities. capa-cities. The first six years he was with the department, Mr. Bath was a patrolman. More recently he has served in the detective division for four years, and has been the vice-president vice-president of the Police Mutual Aid, Secretary of the Narcotics Network of Utah and is presently the 1st vice president of that organization. He is taking classes (part-time) at Weber State College in Police Science. He has been a narcotics agent on the Region IV Task Force for three years. Mr. Bath is married to the former Dianne S mith and he and his wife have three children, Lori Lynn, 14, Brian Toby, 10, and Julie Ann, 8. His hobbies are hunting, fishing, bowling, and golf. Charles P. Dowling Charles Patrick Dowling, 58, of Provo died in Orem Friday, Fri-day, May 27. The State Med ical Examiner's office is investigating in-vestigating the cause of death. He was born March 25, 1916 in Grand Junction, Colo., to John Patrick and Jesse Nora Seibee Dowling. He married Hilma King on Sept. 12. 1937in Vernal. Survivors include his wife, Orem; two sons and one daughter, daugh-ter, Ted King Dowling, serving serv-ing with the U.S. Army; Charles Char-les Patrick Dowling Jr., Arcadia, Ar-cadia, Calif.; Mrs. Jack (DeAnn) Peck, Orem; six grandchildren; one brother and one sister, Raymond R. Dowling, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Willare (Judy) Horrocks, The Dalles, Oregon. Vickie M. Crosgrove Vickie Monsen NielsenCros-grove, NielsenCros-grove, 44, of American Fork, was killed Sunday in an automobile auto-mobile accident near Silver Creek Junction. Mrs. Crosgrove Cros-grove was the mother of Mardi Nielsen of Orem. Mrs. Crosgrove was born Sept. 2, 1929 in Salt Lake City to A. Blake and Ethel Aiken Monsen. She married Terrell Nielsen on March 16, 1946 in Elko, Nev., and they were divorced. di-vorced. She married Louis BEST PICTy3E PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT HEDFOIW A GEORGE ROY HILL FILM ...all it takes is a little Confidence. I FOX 574 ?5 NEVER i 7:15-9:35 I I otK if MARSHA MASON week we will ( j DOROTHY RASMUSSEN, U-brarian U-brarian for Orem City. Dorothy C. Rasmussen is considered by some workers at the Orem Library as 'first assistant" to Berniece Cox. W hen Mrs. C ox , who is the Head Librarian, has other duties to attend to or has to be away from the Library, Mrs. Rasmussen Ras-mussen helps out with the bookkeeping and other administrative admin-istrative duties. Officially, Mrs. Rasmussen works with reference, classifying books, and with book ordering. Her book ordering duties include ordering all the new teenage' and adult books for the library, li-brary, both fiction and non-fiction. non-fiction. She is also in charge of the periodicals which is really a challenge considering she is the one responsible for making sure the magazines are stUl where they shouldbeandin one piece. She has been working at the library for about eight and a half years. Mrs. Rasmussen also helped get the new Audio Visual Department De-partment rolling. She 'is "dependable and an extremely pleasant person to work with. She also is the Meetinghouse Librarian for three Orem Wards. Aside from her voluminous library duties, Mrs. Rasmussen Rasmus-sen is also a very successful mother. Two of her sons have been on missions and she has one son on a mission for the LDS Church in New Zealand. Her daughter, Char main graduated grad-uated from BYU in nursing.She is now married as are two of Mrs. Rasmussen's other children, child-ren, Phillip and Dale. She has lived in Orem for the past 26 years and is certainly an asset to the library as well as to the community. Cham Course Begins June 5th A Girl's Charm Course will begin at Cherry Hill Community Commun-ity School on Wednesday, June 5th, as part of the school's summer program. Janene Howard, Miss Teenage Teen-age America of 1971, prof-ss-ional model, and teacher will instruct the girls in modeling, make up, hair care, clothes selection, dating, poise, etc. The classes will be held on Wednesday and Thursday nights for five weeks from 7 to 9 p.m. There is a $10.00 registration regis-tration fee for the class. Registration Reg-istration will be held at the Cherry Hill ElementarySchool Crosgrove in May, 1964 in Las Vegas, and they were divorced. Funeral services will be held today, May 30 at 11 a.m. in the Wing Mortuary inLehi. Friends may call at the mortuary mor-tuary prior to services. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOI o o o o o o o o o o o o o o G o o o o o o o FISHERMAN'S WIFE SPECIAL Your Choice: 14 lb. SUPER HAMBURGER DELUXE SEABURGER R) Thurs. - Fri. o 0 o o o 0 get to know Dorothy C. Ras- mussen, Toby Bath, and James Tanchak. JAMES TANCHAK, Patrolman for Orem Police Department. Originally from Albany, New York, James Tanchak has been on the police force for four years. He joined the police department after he got out of the U.S. Air Force and is currently cur-rently working as a police officer. offi-cer. Officer Tanchak's duties include in-clude enforcing Orem's traffic laws and giving traffic tickets to violators. He also helps Orem residents by answering complaints such as calls concerning con-cerning prowlers and Peeping Toms. He must adjust his schedule every two weeks since the patrolmen trade shifts every two weeks. An interesting sidelight about Officer Tanchak's family is that he is a police officer, his wife's father is a highway patrolman, pa-trolman, his wife's older sister's sis-ter's husband is a highway patrolman, and his brother-in-law is a police officer. Law Enforcement must run in their family. Snow College To Graduate 174 Students Snow College will present diplomas or certificates of competition com-petition to 174 graduating students stu-dents at commencement exercises exer-cises Saturday morning at 11 at Snow Stadium. President Spencer W. Kimball Kim-ball of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will deliver the address to the graduates at the exercises. It will be President Kimball's first speech in the area since succeeding to his high office Dec. 28. In order to accommodate the large audience which will want to attend the exercises, they have been moved to the stadium for the first time, Lee R. Thompson, acting president of the college, explained. He said that there should be ample seating and that a special sound system will be installed. The public is invited to attend with no restrictions on seating. The graduation exercises on Saturday morning will be preceded pre-ceded by Baccalaureate services ser-vices Friday night at 6 in the college auditorium. The following students from Orem have been tentatively approved for graduation: Mitzi Ann Anderson, Orem; Susan R. Crowther, Catherine Craig, and Kay Lynn Van Leu-ven. Leu-ven. on Monday, June 3 from 9 to 4 p.m.; Tuesday, June 4 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Wednesday, June 5 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Girls may also register during the first class period. each - Sat. - Sun. u DRIVE-INN g 1391 So. State g 106 No. State o OREM g 0ftjfc ?eejfjffl Coeje f Fo Graduate 405 Utah Technical College at' Provo will award associate degrees de-grees and certificates to a total of 405 graduates May 30 at 8 P.m. in the Provo Tabernacle, President Wilson W. Sorensen announced today. Graduates from Orem include Home Buying By Photograph Is Introduced A new concept in home buyinga buy-inga photographic display gallery was officially unveiled un-veiled in Utah Valley yesterday and today, May 29 and 30 at the Mountain West Gallery of Homes. The Orem-based organization, organiza-tion, located at 1542SouthState Street next to theChampDrive-in, theChampDrive-in, will be offering two full days of grand opening excitement, which included a ribbon-cutting with Miss Orem and local dignitaries digni-taries yesterday. Refreshments, Refresh-ments, registration for prizes, and tours of the new Gallery will highlight the two-day event. Capping the celebration will be a special drawing for a whole array of home prizes including a power lawn mower, Skil saw, cordless electric grass shears, garden hose and scores of other items. All Utah Valley residents 21 years or older are eligible for the drawing, so long as they register at the Mountain West Gallery of Homes onWednesday or Thursday," according to Blaine Hunter, president. Affiliated Af-filiated with a national organization organi-zation of more than 1500 offices the Mountain West Gallery features fea-tures scores of backlighted photographs of its various listings in an informal 'living-room 'living-room situation. "Customers can come in, scan our listings in just a few minutes, and then concentrate on the ones they're really interested in-terested in. Frankly, home buyers get tired of being carted all over the Valley. The gallery idea saves our customers hours of time; needless to say, we like it too," winks Huntpr TWO UTC STUDENTS GO TO NATIONAL CONTEST Two auto mechanics students stu-dents of Utah Technical College Col-lege at Provo winners of the state Plymouth Trouble Shooting Shoot-ing Contestwill travel to Dallas, Texas, to compete in the national contest June 16 through June 19, Ross Fazzio, Utah Tech auto mechanics department depart-ment chairman, announced today. They are Jay Carlson and Jeff Heinz, both of American Fork, who comprised the team which won the recent state competition held at Utah Technical Tech-nical College in Salt Lake, Mr. Fazzio said. KIDS SURPRISE TEACHER FOR HER BIRTHDAY Ethel Burler, kindergarten teacher at Cherry HillSchoolin Orem, was happily surprised Friday afternoon on her birthday when the children had a 'surprise 'sur-prise party" for her. The 32 youngsters brought a cake and sang "Happy Birthday" to their teacher. rami 5a COLOHZ Bennett's Best Colorizer Interior & Exterior PA Orem-Geneva Times John Cecil Jeppeson, Drafting and Design; Kenneth L. Evans, Jr., General Education; Shannon Brande, General Education; Sharon Downs, Medical Receptionist; Re-ceptionist; Rebecca Hall, Medical Med-ical Receptionist; Toni J. Lowder, Medical Receptionist; Nancy Easley, Medical Receptionist; Re-ceptionist; Joene L. Cluff, Secretary; Judy L. Evans, Secretary; Gerry A, Nielson, Auto Body; Reese L. Bowers, Auto Body; Don E. Brown, Auto Mechanics; Mechan-ics; Bernard Schirmacher, Diesel and Heavy Duty Mechan- Higerian Girls Vie tlechties WASHINGTON, D.C. -Tying neckties is enabling students to attend college in Nigeria. Because money was in scarce supply in Nigeria following the recent civil war, college seemed out of the question for many young people. But the wife of an American professor at Seventh-day Adventist College of West Africa solved the problem prob-lem by ripping up her husband's best tie! Mrs. A.D. Smith, whose husband hus-band teaches science at ACWA, studied the makings of a tie, then produced a few samples of her own. Next she took them to the capital city of Lagos and gave the managers of two leading stores a tie sales pitch. The first order was for twelve dozen ties. Back at ACWA Mrs. Smith gave students a crash course in tie-making. An industry was born! That was in 1970, shortly after Nigeria settled down to recover from its civil bloodbath. blood-bath. In 1973 Mrs. Smith's corps of tie-tying young ladies produced pro-duced 15,000 ties, bringing in $15,200 to help students meet college expenses. A THOUGHTFUL 1042 r J&B'S le bonnnues pLonzer r- i r -i PAINT 158 South State-Orerr Ph. 224-3731 (Next To Larson's Herb Shop and Across Frorr Hariron's Chicken) May 30, 1974 JHoir SO ics Merrill R. Bawden, Drafting and Design; Stuart R. Foster, Practical Nursing; Beverly J. Goodman, Practical Nursing; Rebecca Haynie, Practical Nursing; Flora Ann Stagg, Practical Nursing; Marilyn McCandless, Dental Assisting; Jack Durrant.Welding; Michael J. Spisak, Refrigerationand Air Conditioning; Blair N. Tucker, Refrigeration Refrigera-tion and Air Conditioning; Terry A. Verbeck Refrigeration Refriger-ation and Air Conditioning; Thomas T. Little, General Construction; Frank Leach, Jr., General Construction; Gary E. Dillenbeck, Electrical Elec-trical and Automation; Hyrum L. John, Electrical and Automation; Automa-tion; Larry G. Lee, Electrical and Automation; Clifford B. Crompton, Electronics Technology; Tech-nology; Brent Lynn Sorensen, Electronics Technology; Norma Morgareidge, Business Management; Man-agement; Teresa A.Schauer-hamer, A.Schauer-hamer, Stenographer; Elayne Sheets, Junior Accountant; Susan Su-san Condon, Practical Nursing; and Shanna L. Bishop, Practical Nursing. Jonathan E. Boyle of Lindon will graduate in the field of Refrigeration and Air Conditioning. Con-ditioning. The graduationexerciseswill feature President Dallin H. Oaks, president of Brigham Young University, as com-mencement com-mencement speaker. OREM GIRL SAVED FROM DROWNING Lee Ann Jenkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Jenkins of 85 E. 1600 N. in Orem almost drowned last week in a freak accident near her home. Lee Ann lost control of the bicycle she was riding and took a somersault into a swift-running swift-running water ditch. She managed to grab onto the bridge abutment with her arm even though her head was under water. Luckily, a neighbor, Mr. Merlin Swenson grabbed her arm and hung on. Leland Schoell, another neighbor, came to the rescue and pulled her to safety. GIFT FOR Rohbock's Sons' Floral S. State, Orem, 225-3100 nonzer ... off Gallons Only Tinting Extra r;,:. academy OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ? 44701 t 4 |