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Show r T V 1 tJTTTOw.yf Tin TTTTTT TIT W Viz .... .. . . .1 ;w. 'JL. S . J.J i! ; ' -' ;i ..v P "4 I Hopptnlngs at . . . Foils By Elaine Nw Class ;:;'OfctrsUsted: 'Elections were recently held : at American Fork High for cum . officers to preside over the 1 ' activities for the comini year, f; Thou elected werei ' Seniors-Brent Martin, ' president! Jamil Robinson, ' rlci president! Glenda McDan-tet, McDan-tet, secretary! Stivi Anderson, program chairman; Jay Green-wood Green-wood and RaKell Hall, nop co-chairmen. co-chairmen. , Junior -Jay Daa Inouyi, . president! Cora Sunderland, rlci praildant; JoAnir Pinker-ton, Pinker-ton, secretary! Julie Wljht, . program chairman; Tim Lip-pold Lip-pold and Susan Howes, prom co-chairmen. j Sophomores-John Roth, president; Kent Gurney, vice .president; Diane Fox, secretary; sec-retary; Maria Ross, program chairman. Freshmen Jim mle Adam-son, Adam-son, president; Bob Cunningham, Cunning-ham, vice president; Joy Eg-gett, Eg-gett, secretary; Maria Argyle, program chairman. -.'. These students have already assumed the duties connected with their offices. Training Teachers Eight trainee teacher from " Brlgham Young University arrived ar-rived at American Fork High on Tuesday. They will spend approximately ap-proximately nine weeks teaching teach-ing regular classes under the supervision of the local teachers. teach-ers. ; The trainees and the teachers they will teach with are: Mar aha Foreman with XaVere J. Wadley; Elaine Agren under J. N. Washburn; Ronald Crawford Craw-ford with Paul Kitchen; Gall Blauer with Ardena Beck; Pat Whlttaker. under C. Paul Anderson; An-derson; Martin WeakswithWll-lard WeakswithWll-lard Devltt; Nell Harding under Roland Ollphant; and Reed Chip-man Chip-man with Leo Nelson.' Students, teachers, and trainees train-ees are all adjusting very well to the new situation. UOTE (Every Day) 1 . PROF&IAL DRY CLEAtlHIG . . , At bURFEY DRY CLEANERS 49 West Main Am. Fork - 756-3574 '. And ' VOTE NOVEMBER 3 ' ' For F.HavsDurfey AS YOUR STATE REPRESENTATIVE I am now prepared and ready to work and represent repre-sent all of you. 11 CtJFZ.n BROOM Si Cjt0mmmm1m . ue mm ' , v iiiniiiiHiii.itiiiiiiimuu Manufactured' by Boise-Cascade Corporation, , i ; Salt Lake City, Utah "s, ' ' AREA REPRESENTATIVE American Fork. Utah Call 7563754 Hansen First Play Cast Tryouti for the Thespian play, "Twelve Awry Jurors," were, recently, with over forty eager student! competing for thirteen parte, . C. Paul Anderson, drama coach, after much consideration, considera-tion, chose these people on their acting ability, characterization and projection.' Mike Durrant, Cora Sunderland,. Jim Lawrence, Lawr-ence, John Roto, Leon Boren, Cleo Carson, Ted Barrett, La-Mar La-Mar Brooks, Allen Molascon, Steve Anderson, Phyllss Johnson, John-son, Mike Terry and Dan Kiel-son. Kiel-son. Practices have 'already be gun ana the piay wui be presented pre-sented toward the end of Oc tober. ' AEA Meeting Set The Alpine Education As sociation has scheduled Us annual an-nual meeting for. September 28, next Monday. All teachers of Alpine School District are ex pected to attend the meeting at 1:00 in Orem. There, they will electsOfficers for the coming year, and discuss other school matters. Students willbedlsmlssedfor the latter half of the day, to enable en-able the teachers to attend this meeting. BUS PERMITS TO BE ISSUED Because of the overcrowded- ness of the school buses this year and last, bus students have been filling out eligibility forms in order to get bus permits. Permits will be given only to those students who live over two TICKETS HOW AT S. L Tribune 2 ?fVMa State Fair Coliseum 8:30 pjn. nightly FRIDAY. SEPT. 18th thru SUNDAY, SEPT. 27th MATINEES e B.t'gptU i Sua. Sept. 20 2:30 p.m. Wed. Sept. 23 5:00 p.m. Fit Sept. 25 5:00 p.m. Sat Sept. 26 1 A 5 pjn. Sun. Sept 27 1 Jt 5 pan. Prim tec T Fair Aim. M.TI 11.11 IX.7I ft.If FAMILY BARGAIN WtL Bp. SI Oaly 1 .m. $2.75 $2.50 $1.75 Um. AtfM. I1.TS All BImwi For Information Call 322-4814 MAIL ORDERS: MM im l not. W tUmfU, ttlltdimui Hturn nntM muk imiMa m VTAH STAtB tAIH, Bx 16006, hit Ut On, Vfk. . FOR FAMILY FUN mWM Mite 7' V 1nNLBT 1 LARSEH ., . Jn. mmmzmmmmmijLmmtf U If tlirb Jl.M It Si if JIW Ml HI IT I I Formation of the largest regional re-gional electric power development develop-ment program ever planned was announced in Salt Lake City on September 22 by E. M. Naugh-ton, Naugh-ton, president of Utah Power It Light Company. 1 Members of the organization known as WEST, a contraction of Western Energy Supply & Transmission Associates, will soend $10 billion In the next twenty years. Mr, McNaughtor adding that the money will come from the Investing public with no federal tax funds involved. The program, he explained, covert all or part of nine states, an area roughly equal to one-fifth one-fifth of the continental United States. WEST is presently composed com-posed of 10 Investor-owned utilities, util-ities, Including Utah Power & miles away from school. The house of each student who has filled out an eligibility form will be clocked separately to determine the distance from the high school. JOURNALISM CONFER. HELD Thi Saturday, J. N. Washburn, Wash-burn, journalism adviser at American Fork High School, and several hournallsm students will be attending the annual BYU Journalism Conference. In the afternoon of the daylong day-long meet, American Fork win be In charge of the offset publications pub-lications department. "Since when do you drink Bourbon? N mOf KENTUCKY STRAICH1 BOURION WHISKEY TM JAMES I. IEAM 0ISIIUIN0 CO., CIERH0N1, Today is '65 Pontiac Day. W65: OU tio ......1.-4, t I ,v I l - I Xj u ir fCK OD V"'-' idgh, operating In California. Arizona, Nevada, Utah Colorado, Color-ado, Texas, New Mexico, Wyo-mlng Wyo-mlng and Idaho. Mr. Naughton said the WEST program is an extension to a regional basis of the Interconnecting Intercon-necting and power pooling which UP&L has been carrying on with neighboring utilities for over 50 years. It calls for long-range long-range joint planning of some 36 million kilowatts of new generating capacity and an extra-h 1 g h - voltage transmission transmis-sion system Interconnecting member power suppliers. The joint approach, he said, will make possible use of latest technological advances and lowest low-est cost fuel sources be they coal, oil, natural gas or the atom and will jave several billion bil-lion dollars in construction and operating costs over the next 20 years. Mr. Naughton pointed out that because of Its geographical location lo-cation Utah Power & Light Co. actually Is the Eastern hub of the integration of power facilities facili-ties in all of the Western States. UP&L's new high voltage facility facili-ty to the Arizona line will tie the Northwest and Southwest power pools together later this year Into a single 36,000,000 kilowatt pool. t The' WESY program, Mr. Naughton declared, will be equivalent equi-valent to 18 Grand Coulee dams it m mm DISTILLED AND BOITLEO BEAM. KENTUCKY. The year of the What do we mean by "quick"? Just this: A new-all-over Pontiac Pontiac offering a new Turbo Hydra-Matlc -the silkiest, swiftest-shifting automatic transmission you ever touched a toe to; eager new Trophy V-8 power, new steering agility; a surer-footed Wide-Track ride. And a new Pontiac Tempest that's become even more of a Pontiac with new style, new length and Pontiac-qulck reflexes to match. You never knew cars could be so beautiful, and so keenly alert to your touch. This is your year to drive a Wide -Track-quick I Pnntian Pnniiar How does.the success car outdo itself for 1965? Beautifully, just beautifully. But this Pontiac has no rUllUdi, intention of getting by on looks alone, though it could. So there's new quickness, Pontiac style. A ,'V hew nimbleness. New fuel savings. A smooth, easy new ride. Drive a '65 Pontiac and see how one -. success leads to another. 'etii ,-.,a1jiimTfn iijTraaxMMaMBaiwwiiliejs . Drsniian 7Vrmpcf Tempest's even more of a Pontiac now. and what more could a car be than fAerThe '65 Tempest ruiniciL tctiifjcdi ,00k jk9 a Pontiac ns you can $M Ride8 ike a pontiac on Wide-Track. Goes like a Pontiac, too: a rl40-hp six is standard. Or you can get a quick V-8, up to 285 hp. You'll wonder how we can keep the '. . price so low on so much car " ' - . . ; SEI THI NEW BONNEVILLE. STAR CHIEF, GRAND PRIX, CATAUNA. LI MANS AND TEMPEST-AT YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER ' '" IIOUEY AUTO CO. , r - ; .-- . 295 West Main ' ' ' ' :., , : American Fort -:.. " ' " -!,,. and will be eight times the size of Russia's largest development, develop-ment, the Bratsk project In Siberia. Si-beria. The impact of WEST On the economic development of the region, he asserted, will be tremendous. tre-mendous. For example, by 1971 the program of utilities belonging belong-ing to WEST expects to be using the energy equivalent of over 10 million additional tons of coal a year; wlUcreate over 6,000 new jobs resulting In an annual Increased payroll of $40 million; mill-ion; and will generate addltonal local tax payments of $8 million. mill-ion. Members of WEST besides UP&L are Arizona Public Service Ser-vice Co., El Paso Electric Co., Nevada Power Co., Public Service Ser-vice Company of Colorado, Public Pub-lic Service Company of New Mexico, San Diego Gas L Electric Elec-tric Co., Sierra Pacific Power Co., Southern California Edison Co., and Tucson Gas & Electric Co. He that -riseth late must trot all day and shall scarce overtake over-take his business at night. I am only an average man, but, by George, I work harder at It than the average man. Even if you are on the right track you will be run over if vou sit there. "Since I tasted Jim Beam" I ..3i4... 1 1 trull 7 Missionary Writes To the Citizen Dear Citizen 8ta?j . As I approach the end of my mission, X should like to express ex-press my sincere gratitude for your tnoughtfulness In sharing the home news. It has added much to hear about home and about those I hold most dear. Each week I looked with anticipation anti-cipation for that 'sack carrying carry-ing a Citizen' and It always received my immediate attention! atten-tion! I feel .you are Indeed doing a . fine thing In sending the missionaries a copy of our hometown paper. I look forward to seeing you all again In Zlon. My mission has been a deeply rewarding, challenging, and good experience. experi-ence. The Gospel Is true I and how blessed we- are as we share It with our fellowmen. Sincerely, Marian Anderson (Cumorah Mission) 1964 CLOSE OUT 6 H. P. $299.00 Duff's Tote Gole Sales 260 East Main American Fork Quick Wide-Tracks . . i . , Harrington School " Savings Stamp Program Underway ft was announced today that the Harrington PTA in conjunction conjunc-tion with the school are getting their savings stamp program underway again this year. The school won national recognition for the success of their program pro-gram last year. ' - Every Tuesday morning the students, of the school may buy either a ten cent or twenty-five twenty-five 'cent stamp toward a savings sav-ings bond. This Is not a compulsory com-pulsory program and the children child-ren are not encouraged to bring large sums of money. It Is mainly main-ly set up to teach the children that saving small amounts of money at regular Intervals can be of great advantage to them at a future time when they may need greater amounts such as for their own college education. Mrs. Les (Lenpre) Griffith Is chairman' In charge of the Stamp Savings Program. She has a committee that is at the Telephone 756-3613 AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN; Thursday. 8ept U, 1864 ; school every Tuesday to help the children who art Interested in the stamp program or. to,, answer questions for any parents par-ents that might want to know; more about thVprogram. This. Is an excellent savings educa-' tton for the children. i: I am more or less happy when: being praised, not very uncomfortable uncom-fortable when being abused, but I have moments of uneasiness when being explained. . ' rrm" mm umnmmnm By rail andor highway, Rio Grand hat tht tquipmant, schadults and know-how to handio your goods btttor. RAIL ROAD TOTAL TRANSPORTATION Brim t lit Erandi Wisttra IiIIim' Kr-.; I:-: |