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Show i AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN THURSDAY. DEC. 2. 1976 yy 11 r S b?M. HOLIDAY Epilepsy .F & NEW BUILDING will be dedicated ot Utah State Training School on Friday, with Mark K. Allen Epilepsy Center to open on the campus. Dedication will be held in the school auditorium at 4:00 p.m. Entry to the $462,000 building is shown. New El alignment Of High Schools reposed by UHSAA A proposed realignment of Utah High Schools, that according ac-cording to local officials has a 90 percent chance of passing, has American Fork in the following fol-lowing league. AF, Pleasant Grove, Spring-ville, Spring-ville, Payson, Spanish Fork, and four new schools Dixie, Cedar City, Provo and the new Timp View of Provo. In the north all 3A schools will be South High, Weber, the brand new Woods Cross, Davis, Ben Lomond, Ogden, Box Elder, Logan and Bear River. Region Five would be as follows, Judge Memorial, Cyprus, Tooele, Murray, Uintah, Uin-tah, Union, and Carbon. The 2A schools would become a very prestigious 1 group and wquki -match up very well witrPtlie 22 schools that would remain 4A. Classifications enrollment is Class 1A student bodies up to 199; 2A 200 to 599; 3A 600 up to 1399 and 4A from 1400 on up. The addition of Dixie (St. George) and Cedar City are real long road trips to be sure but they are competitive Randy Rhodes Leads Vikings To Victory The Ricks Vikings, led by sophomore Randy Rhodes who scored 26 points, opened their 1976 season Friday in Rexburg with a victory over Western Wyoming of Rock Springs. Score was 102 to 96. Randy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen A. Rhodes of American Ameri-can Fork. Ricks went to a 55-42 half-time half-time lead and then let a pressure pres-sure defense and turnovers, plus hot outside shooting by the Spartans narrow the gap to 1 with 10 minutes left to play. Ricks led 73 to 72. The Vikings then picked up steam on the shooting of freshman Mark Gamblin who scored 22 for the night, getting 10 the first half and 12 the second. Gamblin came off the bench to spark the Vikings in the first half. , Keeping the visitors in the game the second half was Willy Wil-ly Collins who scored seven baskets from outside. Top scorer for the Spartans was Melvin Tyler with 20, followed by Jimmy Hopper who sank six baskets and five of six free throws for 17. The score was tied 21 to 21 and 23 to 23 before the Vikings began pulling away, using superior height to take over the boards at critical times. Don Birch, a freshman from Idaho Falls, came off the bench to tally 18 points for Ricks. Kim Childs, 6'8" center and co-captain with Rhodes, got 10 for the night. Dennis Victor, a junior college col-lege transfer from Arizona, started the game and picked up 9 points for Ricks. Greg Walker, freshman from Idaho Falls added 5; Matt Storrs, freshman from Colorado, 4; and four players with 2 each, Vern Benson, Gary Fink, Richard Dooley and Bill Hawkins. Haw-kins. The Vikings travel to Logan Nov. 29 to meet the Utah State Junior Varsity. schools with a great tradition. With the new Timp View and Provo schools added to Region Six, I think it becomes one of the top leagues in the State. The over-all 24 schools have great followings in all sports and among them are many state championships regardless regard-less of classification. According to UHSAA board of directors it was the fact that Utah County schools accepted the two Southern teams (Dixie-Cedar) that made the realignment possible and the board praised the local schools for welcoming those two teams. Vietnamese Catholic Priest to Visit Provo The Sacrament of Reconciliation Reconci-liation will be celebrated and Mass offered in the Vietnamese Vietna-mese language at St. Francis of Assisi Church, 172 N. 5 West, Provo, Saturday, December 4. Father Tinh, a native Vietnamese Viet-namese priest presently teaching teach-ing at St. Joseph's College, Mt. View, California, will hear confessions in the Provo church beginning at 2 p.m. At 4 p.m. Father Tinh will celebrate cele-brate Mass in Vietnamese. Traditional Vietnamese songs will be a part of the liturgy. Father John Fowlis, O.F.M., pastor of St. Francis parish, invites all area Vietnamese people to meet with Father Tinh and to share in the Eucharist. The Mark K. Allen Epilepsy Center will be dedicated at Utah State Training School on Farmers Await UFBF Convention Members of Utah's largest farm organization will gather in Salt Lake City December 8, 9 in the Utah Farm Bureau Federation's 59th annual state convention. The meetings will be held at the Salt Lake Hilton Hotel. Elmo W. Hamilton, River-ton, River-ton, president of the 13,225 member organization, announced an-nounced an impressive lineup of speakers for the meeting. They include Utah's Senator-elect Senator-elect Orrin Hatch, Governor-elect Governor-elect Scott Matheson, BYU president Dallin Oaks and John Datt, Farm Bureau's Washington, D.C., legislative specialist. Highlight of the two day convention con-vention will be the debate and final adoption of Farm Bureau policy on legislative issues to come before the Utah legislature legisla-ture and the new Congress. "Hamilton explained that county Farm Bureaus have spent the past several months holding local meetings for the organization's membership to make policy recommendations on these issues. He said this grass-roots policy-making program was a keystone of Farm Bureau. The Utah Farm Bureau leader will also report to the membership that the organization organiza-tion had grown by more than 1,000 members this year, topping top-ping 13,225 member families in 28 counties. The Thursday night, Dec. 9, annual banquet is expected to draw some 700 persons. Entertainment Enter-tainment will be provided throughout the convention by winners of the Farm Bureau Talent Find and by the Utah Boys Choir at the banquet. Friday. Dec. 3, at 4:00 p.m. The dedication services will be held in the school auditorium. The public is invited to attend. Speakers at the dedication will include Dr. Jack A. Mad-sen, Mad-sen, medical director, who has planned the seizure control facility; Dr. Mark K. Allen, consulting psychologist, for whom the building is named; and Governor Calvin L. Ramp-ton, Ramp-ton, who will give the dedicatory dedica-tory address. The dedicatory prayer will be offered by President Ezra Taft Benson, president of the Council of Twelve, of the LDS Church. Tours of the new building will conclude the dedicatory program, and refreshments will be served. The new brick building is constructed adjacent to the medical services building (Wing A). The 5.500 square foot building will cost $462,000 without furnishings and special closed circuit television televi-sion monitoring system, according ac-cording to Dr. Paul S. Sagers, superintendent. This new facility will be a total medical model, but will incorporate normal family living liv-ing settings. It will house 20 residents during observation and treatment. The building is constructed by Comtrol, Inc., of Salt Lake City, with treatment rooms, bedrooms, kitchen and living areas to be included in the facility. An enclosed patio is also included in plans for the newest building on the campus of the training school. A parking lot will be part of the building complex. Jr. High School News ,V v. ( I I f m jits .:. . " . S'lJ J"d O: - -f k V I .- '... ?i " ; t i - ' V... . - - - . - - During the past few weeks, there has been a lot of exciting things going on at American Fork Junior High. On November 12th, there was a fall carnival and a dance. Tickets were sold for the activities. The activities included the basketball throw, the football throw, golf, bingo, a movie and many others. The dance was free and a disc jockey played frecords. He also al-so gave away some free records to the students. There were refreshments sold by the PTA. On November 16th we had a best dress day. The students and teachers dressed up in their best clothes, and points were given to the homerooms. The studentbody really looked nice. The 15th through the 19th was American Education Week. There were many activities acti-vities such as decorating the door contest, best dress day and essay and poster contests. The decorating-the-door contest con-test was divided into three categories. They were beauty, humor and originality. The homerooms decorated their class doors with great imagination. imagin-ation. The winners in beauty were Mrs. Mayne, first and Mr. Brown second. The winners win-ners in humor were Miss Jen first and Mrs. Sparks second and Mrs. McDaniel third. The winners in Originality were Mr. Child, first; Miss Brown second, and Mrs. Sondrup third. There was alot of parti-cipvtion parti-cipvtion shown by the students. An essay and poster contest was held on the topic "What American Fork Means to Me." The winners of the poster contest con-test were Amy Mayne first, Ken Turner, second and Scott Fredrickson third. The winners of the essay contest were Trudy Makin, first; Pete Harris, second and Verona Nicholes third. The posters and essays were really good and there was alot of participation. Many things are happening at American Fork Jr. High. DOOR Sharon laycock, Wade Murdock, students of Mrs. Sonja Rasband at the Forbes Elementary School, look at the Thanksgiving door their class created to win the door contest held at the school under the direction of the Parent-Teachers Association. Forbes PTA Door Contest Winners Flamed Judging was hard but fourth grade students of Mrs. Sonja Rasband finally received the winning nod in the Parent-Teacher Parent-Teacher Association sponsored spon-sored Thanksgiving door decorating contest held at the Forbes Elementary School. As the winners, they will receive a ball from the PTA, said officials. Honorable mention awards were given to third grade students of Connie Sorensen; third grade students of Leah Hansen; second grade students of Tonia Banks; first grade students of Linda Erick-son, Erick-son, and to the sixth grade classes. "All of the doors were very outstanding, said judges, and "it was hard to decide on the winner." lpu, , "Papa wants me home now." lfiilii iff iimm'lw (win Kugll i00)r ItoMHS J e-UgJI n fr (F fctottttl wwdf lufl 51 LsXIE? iMSn u O , If you're not presently covered by a pension or profit sharing plan and you don't enroll in a PFS Individual Retirement Account before December 31 , 1976 you may lose a tax deduction on your 1976 income tax return of $1,500 or 15 of your earned income, whichever is. less. If you are self-employed and qualify for a PFS Keogh Retirement Plan you can deduct $7,500 or 1 5 of your earned income, whichever is less, from your 1976 income tax return if you are enrolled in a PFS Keogh Retirement Plan. Prudential Federal Savings offers two tax deferred savings plans which allow persons to establish their own retirement plan. A government govern-ment approved PFS retirement plan enables an individual to Defer taxable income until retirement, which in most instances allows the individual to be taxed at a lower rate due to reduced income and because of age-related exemption? which may reduce the amount of income tax paid. Earn the highest interest rates permitted by law on insured savinas and defer the tax on that income until retirement. Individual Retirement Account (IRA) Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA) were developed by Congress so that every American would have the opportunity to provide a secure future for himself and his family. This tax deferred retirement savings plan has been designed for those people working for companies that do not offer pension plans or for those people who have just recently been employed and do not yet qualify under the plan offered by their employer, or for the self-employed people who qualify under the Keogh Plan but prefer the IRA Plan. Under the IRA Plan available at PFS you can save for retirement up to a maximum of $1 ,500 per year, or 1 5 of your earned income, whichever which-ever is less. Your PFS Individual Retirement Account must be opened on or before December 31, 1976 to qualify for a deduction on your 1976 income tax return. For Example-Through Example-Through the IRA Plan, if you save $1,500 annually, in just 20 years you would have a retirement account of approximately $69,100 and not be required to pay any current income tax on the amount saved or the interest earned thereon. (This example is based on annual lump sum deposits of $1,500 in six-year 7,75 per annum current rate one-hundred one-hundred dollar minimum certificate accounts.) Keogh Plan for the Self-Employed A Keogh Account at PFS is a retirement plan for the self-employed. Individuals defined as self-employed, whose business is not incorporated, incorpor-ated, may include sole proprietors, partnerships, physicians, nurses, lawyers, farmers and manufacturers' representatives, to name only a few. A self-employed person is not required to have all, or a major part of his income derived from self-employment in order to qualify. Therefore a person need only have some self-employed income to be eligible to participate in a Keogh Plan. Under the Keogh Plan you may save for retirement a maximum of $7,500 per year or 15 of your earned income, whichever is less. Youi PFS Keogh Retirement Account must be opened on or before Decembei 31,1976 but the complete contribution may be made as late as April 1 5, 1977, or on or before the date your tax return is filed if you file prior to April 1 5, 1 977, to qualify for a deduction on your 1 976 income tax return. For Example Under the Keogh Plan, if you saved $7,500 annually, in just 20 years you would have a retirement account of approximately $345,402-and you would not be required to pay any current income tax on the amount saved or the interest earned thereon. (This example is bas.ed on annual deposits of $7,500 in six year 7.75 per annum current rate one-thousand one-thousand dollar minimum certificate accounts.) 'By Mr( regulation ctrlitictl tccountt $r tubjtcl to nibtMntiil mtartst ptntltms tor wHttdnwMls prior to mtturrti Why you should choose PFS to invest your IRA or KEOGH Retirement Funds. Your contributions earn at the highest interest rates permitted by law on insured savings. Your interest is compounded daily, 365 days a year. Your account earns interest from day of deposit to the day of withdrawal. with-drawal. Your account is opened and serviced with no fee or commission charged by Prudential Federal Savmys. Your savings are insured safe to $40,000 by an agency of the Federal Government. Your deposits can be made annually or periodically throughout the year in person or by mail. Your funds may be withdrawn as early as age 59'? and may be in a lump sum or by monthly checks drawn from your PFS savings account. Please visit or phone any of our conveniently located offices and ask our Savings Counselor for information concerning the IRA and Keogh Retirement Re-tirement Plans. We will assist you in determining the type of certificates and regular savings accounts that will best suit your retirement plan or send for complete information by completing and mailing the coupon cou-pon below. ferearukecf Financial Service JttsfiiSysBl svsss 30 East State Road, American Fork, Utah 84003 Phone: 756-7623 Now over $550,000,000 strong. SEND FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION Gentlemen: Please send mt more information about the tax-deferred retirement lunds. Name I Address . City State Occupation I am particularly interested in: The Keogh Plan tor the non-incorporated aen-empioyM. -Zip. .Age, The IRA Plan tor those without an employer sponsored retirement plan. Both. Mail to: Retirement Prudential Federal Savings P.O. Box 15500. Salt Lake City, Utah Ml 15 1 -t 3 . .. 4 W v: y. for |