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Show Chauntennettes announce new officers The Chauntenettes Women's Chorus announces their new officers: President: Marilyn Cowley; Vice President: Karen Chugg; Sec-treary Sec-treary Treasurer: Marilyn Wursten; Historian: Louise Johnson; Librarian: Joyce Benson; Hospitality Hospitali-ty : Bonnie Western and Dress Chairman: Chair-man: Kari Ostler. Maurine Madsen, will continue as the Choir Director Arranger, and Irene Jenkins pianist, will accompany the chorus. The Chauntenettes are a service organization. They have performed for Utah Valley residents, as well as in other parts of this state for over 40 years. They all feel it is a wonderful opportunity to give service to the community and to increase their own musical talents, while making everlasting friends. The Chauntenettes Chorus is open to women of all ages with no auditions required; however, being able to read music and memorize various parts proves helpful. It is a part of the Alpine Con- M f ij ; 1 111 , ; ' :;; H 1!H MARILYN COWLEY tinuting Education and meets each Wednesday at the Suncrest Elementary Elemen-tary School in Orem from 7 to 9 p.m. The first rehearsal is on Sept. 16, promptly pro-mptly at 7 p.m. To schedule performances for the holiday, socials, church meetings, etc. call Mrs. (Douglas) Karen Chugg, Orem; or Mrs. (William H.) Marilyn Cowley, Orem. Judie Johnson to head Orem branch of AAUW Judie Johnson of Orem has been elected president of the Orem Branch of the American Association of University Women for 1987-88. She is married to Larry Johnson, a member of the faculty at the Utah Valley Community Com-munity College, she will be assisted by the following executive officers: Dr. Sally Taylor, vice president for program; Josette Pitardi, vice president presi-dent for membership; Edna Carroll, secretary and Clarine Downs, treasurer, Other appointed officers will be annonced later. The branch recently held a membership luncheon and a tour of the Utah Women Artists' Exhibition. Seventy paintings by women artists from Utah are being displayed in the Springville Art Museum until September 6. At that time, they will be hung in the Salt Palace in Salt Lake. This is biennial event that is sponsored by the Utah Division AAUW with partial funding by the Utah Arts Council. Members of the Orem Branch, headed by Jessie Brandenburg and Margaret Sullivan, arranged the reception at the Springville Museum of Art on the opening night of the exhibition. Officers and members have spent tune planning programs for the com- Giant Back-to-School promotion benefits Y students, March of Dimes BYU students will be the target of one of the biggest promotions Utah County and even the state have seen Sept. 14-17 in Provo. The team of Little Caesar's Pizza, Piz-za, Cream o'Weber and KBER-106.5 FM will combine forces in a monstrous back-to-school promotion for the benefit of the county's March of Dimes. "We want to feed the whole school (BYU) - 28,000 people," said Utah Pizza Service, Inc., Utah's Little Lit-tle Caesars franchise, Marketing Director Connie Haughn. The three-member team will sell slices of pizza for $.25 all four days from 3-8 p.m. at the Little Caesar's Riverside Plaza location at 1260 N. State Street in Provo for BYU Student Pizza Week. Little Caesars will provide slices of pepperoni pizza, V of a medium pie, Cream o'Weber will supply milk and KBER will throw in the advertis-" ing for the event. "It will be a spectacular event for all those who participate, with the proceeds going to the March of Dimes," Haughn said. Refrigerator magnets will be free with any pizza purchase and the 106th person to buy pizza each night will receive free Little Caesars pizza for a year. "It is going to be fun," said KBER Program Director Katherine Brown. "We have a lot of listeners in that area and we don't get to do as many events down there as we would like. This (promotion) gives us a chance to do something in Utah County. Coun-ty. "The fact it is for a good cause is even better." The radio station will give away T-shirts, compact discs, cassettes and tickets to different events throughout the four-day event. "The Bear never goes anywhere empty-handed," Brown said. Disc jockeys for the remote will be the morning team of Alan Bain and Steve Seaver who will try to do one braodcast together, according ac-cording to Brown. Midday JD Tricia Bear and evening even-ing man Chris Haggin will also join in the fun. "We want to welcome the students back in style and also help a good cause like the March of Dimes," Haughn said. "We are hop ing to collect at least $3,000 for the March of Dimes." Students will need to bring a coupon for the slice of pizza and drink to the store each time they come, Haughn said. The coupons will be available from the BYU student newspaper, The Daily Universe, from Aug. 28-Sept. 14. A coupon will be required re-quired for each pizza purchase, she said. No call-ins will be accepted. "This event is going to be one of the highlights of the year and the best part is we will be helping to fight birth defects and having a lot of fun at the same time," Haughn said. Ted Wilson to speak at Chamber luncheon Ted Wilson was born May 18. . 1939, in Salt Lake City, Utah. He attended at-tended schools in Salt Lake City and graduated from the University of Utah in 1964 with a B.S. Degree in Economics and Education from the University of Washington in 1969. From 1957-1963 he served in the Utah Army National Guard. Ted was also an instructor at the Leysin American School in Switzerland for one year. He taught Economics at Skyline High School in Salt Lake for seven years. During the summer months he was a mountaineering ranger in Grand Teton National Park. He was appointed Administrative Assistant to Congressman Wayne Owens in March of 1973. In 1975 he was appointed to direct the Department Depar-tment of Social Services in Salt Lake J&J New store opens... "Nothing over $6" Six Star Factory Outlet opened with a bang last week in the Albertson's Alber-tson's Mall just off Center Street-Customers Street-Customers waited anxiously outside the store before the announced hour while store officials and ProvoOrem Chamber of Commerce members held a ribbon cutting ceremony. Six Star manager Bob Haggerty was presented with his "first buck of clear profit" by the Chamber of Commerce. Also present at. the ceremony were Blaine Cutler, owner, and Miss Orem Dawn Michelle Dorr. Cutler said Six Star Factory Outlet is a franchise operation of Kolob, Inc. located in Gillroy, California. There are 135 Six Star stores located across the southern and western part of the United States. Popular theme of the store is Nothing over $6. "It's the return of the old five and dime," said one happy hap-py customers. "We change products nearly every day," said Cutler. The store features all kinds of items including toys, household goods, tools, etc. Cutler is originally from Cedar City, Utah, and now resides in Morgan Hill, California. His partner is Hal Hendrickson, originally from Richfield, Utah. TED WILSON County. Also that same year he was elected Mayor of Salt Lake City. Ted served as Mayor until 1985 when he resigned to become the current Director of the Hinckley Institute of Politics at the University of Utah. He is also an adjunct professor of political science and teaches classes at the University. " Ted Wilson serves on many local boards including the Mountain Bell Utah Board, the Intermountain Health Care Board, the Project 2000 Board, and the United Cerebral Palsy Board. He enjoys skiing, rock climbing, and back packing with his family. A favorite hobby is watching Utah's future. The luncheon will be held September Sep-tember 3rd at Maglebys Restaurant at 12 noon. Please RSVP with Joni at 224-3636. Lunch will be $6.50 per person per-son (No billings please). VISA accepted. CBCnRBD CAREERS INSTITUTE COMPUTER CAREER TRAINING CERTIFY in 3-6 months. Start at $15,000 to $50,000. Professional Job Placement. "OUR GRADUATES ARE WORKING" Computer Programming Computer Repair Computerr Data Processing Computer Word Processing Computer Accounting CERTIFIED CAREERS INSTITUTE 1056 South State No. 205 Orem 226-0336 FOR SALES & SERVICE, ALL MAKES CALL CCI COMPUTER CENTER off OREM 226-0335 or VISIT - 327 East 1200 South No. 1 , Orem - ' ' j Orem-Geneva Times Wednesday September 2, 1987 Page 10 JUDIE JOHNSON ing year, with the opening meeting to be held on September 17, 1987. The Orem Branch will study the issue "Promoting Individual Liberties" which is part of the study program of the Association. Some interesting and exciting monthly study meetings are being planned, as well as community communi-ty projects. Two members of the Orem Branch also attended a two-day workshop in St. George. They are members of the Utah Division Board of Directors. Marilyn Madsen is the division treasurer and Vera Nielsen is the chair of the Educational Foundation Foun-dation Programs in the Utah Division and was elected at the Association Convention as Director of the six states in the Rocky Mountain Region. Membership in AAUW was opened open-ed to men at the 43rd Biennial Convention Con-vention held in June in Houston, Texas. Any graduate of a college or university with a baccalaureate degree is eleigible for membership. Those individuals in the area who are interested are invited to contact any of the officers of the Orem Branch for further information on the organization. organiza-tion. The Orem Branch is the only branch of AAUW in Utah County. - Volunteer AiiTiliarv President LaRue Colvar hands Ad ministrator Laurel Kay a check for $4,000. Volunteer Auxiliary donates to OCH The Orem Community Hospital Volunteer Auxiliary recently presented presen-ted the hospital with a check in the amount of $4,000 to purchase medical equipment. The funds will be used to purchase pur-chase equipment for the labor and delivery area, nursery, and cafeteria. The nursery will receive an oxygen blender, which administers appropriate amounts of air and oxygen to premature or newborn babies. A syringe pump, to administer small amounts of medication to newborns or premature infants will also be purchased for the nursery . A microwave will be added to the cafeteria, which will allow patients, visitors, and employees to warm food. The labor and delivery area will receive specialized equipment to assist in the delivery of babies. The volunteer auxiliary raised the funds through bake sales, bazaars, and from running the hospital's gift shop. All $4,000 was earned in 1987. "All 24 members of the volunteer auxiliary are excited to be able to help out in this way," said LaRue Colyar, volunteer president. "We're happy to assist the hospital and serve the community." , SCERA Shell hosts monster concert featuring 20 Utah Valley pianists Twenty of Utah Valley's finest pianists will present a "monstrous" sound when they perform on 10 pianos for SCERA's annual Monster Concert Thursday, Sept. 3, at 8 p.m. at the SCERA Shell in Orem. The performance, sponsored by KBYU-FM radio, is traditionally one of the favorite events at the Orem amphitheater. "I've observed that audiences find these novelty concerts extremely extreme-ly entertaining," says Mack Wilberg of Orem, director of the concert and a member of Brigham Young Univer-sity's Univer-sity's music faculty. "The sound of several pianos and many hands playing play-ing at the same time yields music that is almost orchestral. And it's certainly certain-ly not common to see a stage filled with pianos." Wilberg has arranged an hour-long hour-long concert featuring a repertoire of lighter classics and several Schubert and Sousa marches. Among the selections selec-tions will be Shostakovich's "Festive Overture, "Dizzy Fingers" and "Kitten "Kit-ten on the Keys" by Zev Confrey, and "Fantasia on Greensleeves" by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Wilberg will provide additional variety by highlighting the popular BYU Piano Quartet in Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2. Pianists are Douglas Humpherys, Paul Pollei, Ronald Staheli and Wilberg. Humpherys and Jeffrey Shum-way, Shum-way, also a BYU faculty musician from Orem, will join for the duet, ' La Valtz," by Ravel. Other performers will include Mona Smith, Marlene Bachelder, Richard Anderson, David Hatch, Yvonne Egbert, Barbara Elison and several BYU music majors. Monster concert tickets will be available at the gate. , Fran QtypA16 south State IpyjiS OREM nSI Orem, Utah Just Got Serious About Fast Food J ack in the Box has come to town. With serious food you won't find at any other fast food place. Serious burgers like our Swiss & Bacon Burger on grilled rye. Serious sandwiches. Salads. Breakfasts. Dinners. And did you every try a Fajita Pita or a Pizza Pocket? Come in today and find out what serious food is all about. i COUPON SPECIAL m A Franchise ot Jumbo Jack Burger Reg. $1.59 ONLY SAVE 60' With Coupon lA lb. beef patti, lettuce, pickle, onion, tomato on a Sesame Seed Bun OGT 100 Good Thru Sept. 30. 1987 . rC0p0N MMM! $ Limit of 5 per coupon 1 J A |