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Show 1971 Sunday, August 13, i j I j ! i I . -.-r- ; ' l , Provo School District has time, conducted ' . f annoum d the luring of 64 new teacher. for the coming school year an. j the dates of meeting s for faculty members. The d istrict also noted that a number of teacher interns were sppro'? d slong with s ftw district t acher transfers all as part of the annual task of placing and schi Jduling teachers for the opening of school on Thursday, 1 . pre-scho- ol r !;r J r ' - ii : I U9f ' V " 5 -- :r-- r ; , MEMBERS of the Provo Lions Club look over the 40th anniversary program. They are, from left, Aura C. Hatch, CHARTER ( f. I 1 ' - Lis . ' a Aug. 24. ! ! f Seymour D, Gray and W. Frank Johnson. Mr. Hatch will present the history of the club at the anniversary program. Provo Lions Club Sets Dinner To Observe 40th Anniversary The Provo Lions Club will hold its 40th anniversary dinner on Thursday, Aug. 17, at 7:30 p.m. at the Grandview Cafe in Provo. Lady Lions will be special guests. President John L. Taylor will conduct the festivities and J. Rulon Morgan will be emcee for the program. Aura C. Hatch will give a history of the Provo Lions Club, which was chartered in 1932, and A. James Lundberg, past international director, will speak. President Taylor will present several awards. Mrs. Ruth Melville and her family will give a musical program. The Provo Lions Club has three charter members still active after 40 years: Mr. Hatch, The following from the club 'have served as district governors: J. W. Thornton, Mr. Hatch, Dr. W. Woolf, LeRoy Johnson, Marion Ealliday, Jack H. Smeath, Albert C. Grosjean, Everett E. Anderson, A. Alva group interviews. On the secondary level, 298 interviews were personal granted in the filling of 21 teaching positions. This included seen new teachers hired to work at Provo High School, nine for Dixon Junior High and five for Farrer Junior High School. In special education, 12 new teachers and six interns were assigned after interviews of 85 applicants were conducted. A total of 31 new teachers were hired to fill positions in the 10 elementary schools of the district. In addition, six interns were hired to work with the elementary pupils. Mr. anJ Mrs. Lafe Harris of Orem hosted a birthday party on Monday in honor of their grandson, Ronnie Harris, son of Ronald Harris who achieved to his seventh birthday. School friends came to enjoy games and refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. Harris also report spending a pleasant few days at their property in Dawson Flats, a mountain location near bracket. On Friday Au6. 4, Mrs. Keith Duchesne with a brother and Gordon was hostess to a birwife, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence thday dinner in honor of her Gee of Springville. mother, Mrs. Myrtle Francis of Lake Shore. Others assisting Mrs. Judy Simpson, Orem, has Mrs. Gordon included Mrs. returned after a journey to Lava Grace Wilson, Mrs. Ruth brsakfast at 7 pjn. in the Wilkinson Center Ballroom, Brigham Young University campus. The teachers are scheduled to visit individual businesses and industries from 9 ajn. on. School classes will begin the pjn. (DIE) activities are Day next day. )iaiiMjiiiiw WAT? 13 ro) One o f the Nation's all time best sel lers is being published this fall in a new edition. Effect ive Sept. 1, the over 64 million youth and adult members of: the Boy Scouts of America i will have a new handbook, ui sed by all Scouts as a manual for advancement and referenc e, according to Floyd Loveridtje, Executive Scout of the Ut ah National Parks Council. Since its first edition back in 1911, tin; Scout Handbook has sold over 16 million copi.es, which gi uarantees it a place in publishii lg history along side the Bible and other best sellers, Over 50 : million Americans have been eni rolled in Scouting since 1910. Ar idng the better known former owners of the Scout Handboo k were President John F. Ken nedy, Astronaut Neil standbys, such as hiking and camping, but greater emphasis is being placed on ecological and environmental factors. Tree, shrt'b, and animal identification in each environment are included in the new bock. A city boy will m longer be mystified by a requirement to identify rattlesnakes and condors; now he will learn about cockroaches and pigeons. First aid requirements haven't varied much in the new book, but the illustrations are more relevant. Treating snakebites is still there, but urban Scouts can zero in on a more relevant problem ... rat bites. One of the new skill awards is in the area of Community Living. Scouts are taught all about public utilities, ethnic ; com-munic- at IVAN'S lo Anderson who (A1133) are on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Da- y Sats. The Andersons are very of Total insurance on the lives Americans amounts to $1.5 bus'ly engaged in church work and Arlo is now acting as the trillion, or about $21,800 per family. branch president there. sal Special! Special! Special! Your Choice EARLY AMERICAN OR MEDITERRANEAN SOFA and LOVE SEATil! EARLY AMERICAN Full Skirt High Wing Back Scotchguard Quilted mSJMT 0iJSSi Shepord Casters MLlf Quilts Cover Dark Wood A"ent v U, W3. sE$295 MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM SET 4-P- C. OBBHT mm - - w ills s- I ; TRIPLE DRESSER 2 LARGE FRAME MIRRORS CHAIR BACK HEADBOARD REGULAR OR QUEEN SIZE If! Match Chest 89.88 Night Stand 49.88 PRICED TO CLEAR NOW PRESCRIPTION SERVICE Phone F 373-267- De 2 I CLOSEOUT ry ON -- 72 MODELS -- ALL STYLES join our BLACK & WHITE BOWUSifJpFHOTO BW -- COLOR PORTABLE 12" diagonal BW 1 PORTABLE 19" diagonal . . . 8350 1188 COLOR PORTABLE 16" diagonal TOP 31600 RATED.... 23" COLOR CONSOLE Bvmrj 7th rol! processed! F DEE minis v 1 M-M- scheduled for Wednesday, Aug. 23, beginning with Boy Scout Handbook Revised fo rSept. 1 groups, government taxes, volunteer service, and other Walter Cronkite, jng, of life in rural and urban facts Ozzie Jack Nelson, lair, Anderson, and Dr. Ralph America. The Scout Oath and Law Bundle. remain the same, but the explanations are greatly simNo Old Material The m sw edition reprints none plified. (Example: the old of the ir taterial in the old hand- handbook told Scouts that they book. It 's a complete overhaul, shouldn't "wantonly" destroy ...and how many Scouts designe d to introduce the property Stewart, Mrs. Alta Ludlow, Mrs. in Scouting that go into use the word "wantonly" in their changes Nona Kay Bishop of Los effect a n Sept. 1. For the past everyday speech!) Mrs. of the new The first Angeles, Margaret four years, individuals and 8th edition isprinting lMs million copies. Francis, Mrs. Vey Kuff. Guests national committees have been were Mrs. Lenore Measom, Mrs. to make Copies will be sold through Verda Tuckett, Mrs. Rosie plannin g changes stores, Scout more Scouting responsive to the department and local council Anderson, Mrs. Janet Youd, needs of distributors, today's youth. Surveys Mrs. Maud Bellows, Mrs. Electa and fieli i studies told the BSA service centers. Sanford of Payson, Mrs. Millie what wt is needed and the new Stewart. n was built around Mrs. Maud Francis who is prograri from boys themsurvey input recuperating from an illness in selves. get more They'll Provo, called to wish Mrs. leaders! hip training, greater Francis "Happy Birthday." voice in planning and decision Many lovely gifts were received, making , alternate routes to and a daighter, Ina Jo Pierce higher r ank, team sports, and from Burbank, Calif, gave a relaxed uniform options. special tribute to her mother Gone I from the handbook are called, "I Kememter Mama." such out dated skills as FASTEST DELIVERY tracking, stalking, , and signaling. Instead, SERVICE IN TOWN Scouts w ill have to become more in personal skilled Mr. and Mrs. John M. Ions, learn about drug derson and children Carey, Mark, and Kevin of Lake Shore, abuse, ir idoor cooking, and other more relevant personal skills. recently made a trip to ThomH ave Old Standby s pson Falls, Montana to visit still have the old Mr- - Anderson's They'll DEPENDABLE Mr. and parents days in the Denver, Colo, recently, after the arrival of her thirteenth grandchild, who was born July 16. The child, Lynn Lee, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lee Peterson. Mrs. Petersen was the former Judy Meldrum of Provo. She and her husband have one other child, James Spencer Peterson. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rhode and family from Covina, California are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Keith Gordon and family of Lake Shore. The families spent the weekend fishing and visiting in Spanish Fork Canyon. On Saturday and Monday evenings they all attended the IDS region in tournament Softball Springville. The Lake Shore LDS and JuniorM-Me- n Ward were both in the championship and orientation activities at Rotary Park, Provo Canyon. The following day, Aug. 22, all professional district personnel are to meet in the Provo High School auditorium. They will then be asked to report to their individual schools at 1:30 TT!((o News of People You Know Mr. and Mrs. Leith Johnson of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, were among relatives who came to Utah to attend a reunion of the McClellan family held in Provo recently. They also visited for a few days with their daughter, Rita, her husband, Almo B. Simmons, and their children of Provo. The McClellan family had its roots in Payson. pre-scho- ol unci Seymour D. Gray and W. Frank Fitzgerald and A. James LundJohnson. berg. Provo Rotarv Club has five In addition, Mr. Thornton members with 35 years of service or more: Douglas Peck, served on the International C.L. Ellertson, O. Blaine Larson, Board of Governors in 1935 and 1936 and Mr. Lundberg is now an Armstn LeRoy Johnson and J. Rulon international director. Frank B Morgan. Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hot Springs, Ida., where she met H. Clegg and other local family with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. members are happy to hear of W. C. Stine of Nampa, who had the return during the past come to Lava to bring their weekend of former Provoans, grandchildren, DeNese and Dr. Halvar Clegg, his wife Scott Simpson to return home The their mother. Miriam and their three children, with who have been living in youngsters had been vacationing Madison, Wis. , where Dr. Clegg with their grandparents over the was on faculty at the Univer- past month. sity of Wisconsin. He will now assume his new duties on faculty at BYU beginning this fall. The August birthdays of Gerald Taylor, 8, and Rodger Taylor, 5, were both noted A fine summer evening, a recently as their grandparents, sumptuous supper and visiting Mr. and Mrs. Claude Taylor of with members of Kalon Club and Spanish Fork and Mrs. Ethel their partners was the happy Dickey of Orem, together with experience of some 25 friends other relatives, called to greet meeting at GRA Park for the the young men and to enjoy annual summer party of the birthday cake and ice cream, group. The committee arranging by their parents, Mr. and the event included the past year Mrs. Jerry D. Taylor of Orem. club officers, Mrs. Helen Opheikens, president; Mrs. Sue Bullock, secretary and Mrs. Ann Mr. and Mrs. Lynn P. Walker Ferguson and Mrs. Deon Webb, and children Teresa, Linda and program committee, together Brent of Robinson, Dl., have with the new officers, Mrs. been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul LaVonH. Jones, president; Mrs. K. Walker for the past two Alverda Hunter, secretary and weeks. Mrs. Ann Webb and Mrs. Edna A family party in their honor Pack, program committee. The was given in the lovely garden of group was especially happy to Lynn s sister and husband, Mr. welcome back Milton and club and Mrs. Conrad Stone of Orem. member Ivy Daniel, who have Also, the family enjoyed dinner returned recently from an IDS together at the Sundance theater mission. They spoke briefly of and restaurant in Provo Canyon, their experiences. and Mr. and Mrs. John Strong entertained for family members Wildon J. Clegg will be among at Hobble Creek Inn. A few days were also spent by candidates to receive a Masters the Lynn Walkers touring the degree in special education in the coming summer com- Southern Utah canyons and mencement at BYU. Soon af- attending the Shakespearian ter ,Mr. Clegg with his wife and Festival at Cedar City with Mrs. their four children, Gabrielle, Walker's sister, Mrs. Wilber Kerri, Jonathan and new baby Wilson, formerly of Springville. Jennifer, will be moving to Salt A weekend was also spent in Salt Lake City to occupy their new Lake City with a brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Keith home there. Mr. Clegg has accepted a teaching position in the Whitney. Granite High School where he will be instructing retarded Mrs. Palmer (Delia M.) children. Warren spent an enjoyable ten volving group interviews. The first of three activities for the teachers will be an orientation for new teachers, scheduled Monday, Aug. 21. At 9 ajn. that dsy, meetings will be held in the individual schools. And at 12:30 p.m., they are to board buses at the Provo High School parking lot for lunch hiri ng the new teachers, the secondetry, elementary and education special ators reported they granted interviews to a total of 757 appl icants. In filling these posit;ons, Boyd This si lows that less than 9 per cent of those interviewed were McAffee, director of elementary hired. education, reported that 374 But it: was noted that the personal interviews were district this year, for the first granted many of them in- In 1 I 35 Utah-P- age Ptrovo School District Hires 64 Teachers j : . I - ' - J f THE HERALD, Provo, I 3!L I ' ' m mm 1 SPECIAL Buy of the Century -- $478oo GIBSON SIDE BY SID! 19 Cu. Ft. ap2M I HAND CRAFTED . ALL WOOD AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING DIAGONAL Grand Central has a fine reputation for the production of quality pictures at lew prices. We invite you tt. become a member. Each member will receive a membership card that will entitle him to have every 7th roll of fiim developed free. BOTH SECTIONS 219-l- b. FROST-CLEA- R Freezer Decorator Panels Golden Gibson 10-Y- r. Compressor Guarantee NOW ONLY Working Trade 33i00 JOHN PARAS HOME FURNISHINGS |