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Show ilicrcXilmiric Corp. 11 pitont, Avt. S"ilt City H'-L- J Li L VOLUME FORTY FOUR PAROWAN TIMES, Moss To Conduct Hearing On Land Transfer Bill PAROWAN, UT4II, JANUARY, Porowan High School Chamber Retains Again Accedited Northwest Assn. Complete Slate Of Officers At Election By Notice oc accreditation of the Parowan Hgh School by the Northwest Accrediting Senator Frank E. Moss will conduct a public hearing in Association of Secondary & Salt Lake City February 2, on a new Senate bill to amend Higher Schools was received the law governing the acquisition of federal lands for this week by Principal Max S. Dailey. state park purposes. Parowan High School has of Testimony will be taken determined by the date not been continuous! accredited states application, for the Public Lands subcom- the the Association since mittee of the Senate Com- by the date processing is com by 1941. During this period, mittee on Interior and Insu- pleted or actual transfer there have been minor things lar Affairs. Senator Moss is made. that the Association have a member of the committee Congress is working tow- asked to have corrected, but and subcommittee. ard an early adjournment, none of them have been of He said: Last session we and, if this bill is to be pass- a serious enough nature to passed a bill that increased ed this session, we will have hold up accreditation. This the number of acres of fed- to keep it moving. I am very year the accreditation was eral lands that may be trans pleased to have the oppor- made without any restraint. fered to the states for state tunity to hold the public Accreditation of a school parks from 640 to 12,800 ac. hearing this soon. I will means that graduate studper year. This new quota press for early favorable ll ents from that school may be in effect for only ion by the Interior commitaccreditattend college any three years, however, after tee. Assoociation and ed the by which it drops to 6,400 acres Persons interested in testi- receive full value for their per year. fying at the Feb. 2, hearing high school credits. Utah's first experience should inform either the Salt with the new law shows Lake or Washington office Gun and Rod Club that it takes the Department of Senator Moss as soon as of the Interior some time to possible. Location of the Members Reminded process and consider the meeting will be announced of Rabbit Hunt Sat. state applications, and it is later he said. to more clearly necessary Gun and Rod Club memdefine the method of determClaude Chad Orton was bers were reminded today of ining quotas. one of the students from the club soonsored rabbit This bill jointly sponsor- southern Utah to be listed hunt which will be held Sat. ed by Senator Bennett and on the honor roll at USU afternoon, Jan 30 for the fall quarter according myself, provides that the o a college news release. will meet at Members quota for any year shall be noon on the corner south of Pendletons shoe store and will leave from there SNOW MEASUREMENTS FOR FEB. 1, 1960 All officers of the Parowan Chamber of Commerce were reelected at the groups annual election held last Saturday night The complete slat includ-i- n gthe executive secretary were returned to office by an acclimation vote. Given as a reason for this unusual procedure was the fact that the present adminis tration had several projects underway, and it was the opinion of members present that they should be allowed are: Howard Stubbs, president. Worth L. Ann Orton, Orton, sec. treasurer, John H. Pendleton, executive sec.. with Jess Guymon, Heber Gurr and Alton Pendleton, board members. seem like an ideal pastime for women. Yet in recent years an increasing number of women ha attained k recognition as medical research scientists, many of them under grants supplied by The National Foundation with New March of Dimes funds. rr i 'i W f ,A. a& z M of Dimes. Dr. Mo- -, tains parents, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Hunt Morn gan, were both geneticists. Her father won a Nobel Prize in 1933 as the originator of the gene theory of heredity. Dr. Mountain," who is married to a prominent surgeon in New York, is included in the Polio Hall of Fame at the Georgia Warm Springs well-know- Foundation. Until recently Dr. Mountain m As Truck Overturns On Highway 91 Sissr ehi. as &? Mary Celeite Frey, M.D. j j assignments at a meeting Thursday Also named were two ory board members. wer Gale Stolks and , . Literary dub Holds These Vern Holyoak. Interesting Sessions Georgia B. Mitchell and Fae N. Benson were at the Mitchell home on Jan. 6. Ihe lesson Our Youth of Today was given by Cecil Adams and Nell Bentley. The next meeting on Jan. 20, was held at the home of Bertrude Mitchell with Alice Mitchell as night advis- ss. A discussion on the life and music of George Gershwin, American composer was enjoyed by the group. A group composed of Edna Brown, Anna Lyman, Della Marsden, Bertrude Mitchell, Fae Benson, and Ethel Bay-le- s Mail to eommuinties in sang The Man I Love; this area vas nearly four Anna Lyman sang, Summerhours late as a result of the time. A special guest, Mrs. accident. Irene Hyatt of Cedar City, gam a large enough lead to be safe, the game was play ed very closely. Both teams committed numerous fouls, and valuable players from both clubs fouled out. Jack-so- n of Delta fouled out early in the fourth quarter; and Smith of Parowan left the game on fouls late in the same quarter. Eoth teams played well, and the scoring was evenly divided. For Parowan, Smith produced 17 points, followed by Lowder with 16, and Clark with 13. These boys also played fine floor games with Brown and Bettridge working the boards. After Two league games, Smith and Clark are both among the top scorers in the region. Delta was led in scoring by Roger Davis with 19 points. Jackson, Christensen and Hegman played well for Delta and kept them in the game. Commitees and their heads include: Entertainment, Sher win Benson; Special Spear Ted Burton; Film and Fish, F. Warren Pendleton; Big Game and Roads, Eerl Bunn; Advertising, Gale Stolks ; Building and improvements, Howard Rask-e- mussen and Dick Rollins. This was the first league wn for Parowan, and the first loss for Delta. The Rams next game is with Mllard, Friday Jan. 29, on the home floor. Millard also has two losses, one being to Delta. Donald Wadsworth At the meeting it was also Las Vegas decided that the club would Appointed a wildlife again Dep. Dist. Attorney conservation contest. This is Donald Karl Wadsworth, the second year the club has of Mr. and Mrs. Jim son this unique heiped sponsor and worthwhile contest for high school students. Other sponsors include the Utah Fish and Game Dept., the U. S. Forest Service and the Parowan High School. For more details see Kay Boulters Column on one of the other pages in the Times. A. Clark Orton is confined to his bed as a result of a played portions of the Rap-M- heart attack he suffered last and Mrs. Carlyle Rol- - sody in Blue on the piano, Sunday. His condition is lins are the parents of a new The lesson was under the di- much improved we are told. baby boy born to them Jan. recti on of Anna Lyman and Mr. & Mrs. Clinton Thorn25, at the Iron County hos- - Bertrude Mithchell. and family spent last ton pital. week en din Layton and Salt Lake City. Wadsworth (Elva Bentley), was recently appointed Dep. Dist. Attorney of Las Veg as Nevada, according to clipping from a Las Vegas newspaper. Mr. Wadsworth was ad mitted to the bar in 1959. He is a graduate from Las Vegas High School in 1348. He graduated from BYU in 19J3. He served with the Army of the United States for 31 months and was seper ated from active duty with the rank of first lieutenant. He attended Law School at the University of Calif, at Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Pendleton are visitGng in Tuscon Ariz. with the Free Barbara Ann Graff visited man PedJeton family at pre here over the week end from sent. committee included Mrs. Van the BYU where she is atAusdal, Mrs. Gilbert Bar- tending school. June D. Parkinson ton and Mrs. John Dalton. Doings At Parowan High by Jean Hendrickson been collaborating with women two other research scientists at Columbia Universitys College of Physicians and Surgeons. They are Dr. Hattie Alexander and Dr. Katherine Sprunt, both notable for their work in contagious childhood diseases. The March of Dimessupported grant under which Dr. Alexander and Dr. Sprunt work calls for studies in the possible control of the hereditary factors of polioviruses. The findings of. this team have added new knowledge to the whole field of virus research. At Yale University, Dr, Dorothy Horstmann has won fame for her researches in poliovirus, in epidemiology (the science of epidemic diseases) and in the newer viruses only recently discovered. She is on the research team of Dr. John Paul under a National Foundation grant. Nun Studies Proteins At St. Louis University, Sis-tMary Celeste of the Order of the Immaculate Heart of Mary and a doctor of medicine, is involved in studying the role proteins may play in virus reproduction. Her research by Dr. Norman froject, headedone of the most advanced scientists in the virus field, is also financed by New March of Dimes funds. Another woman scientist who can be found hard at work in a laboratory Is Dr. Matilda Melnick, at Baylor University Medical School, Houston, Tex. She and her famous scientist has well-know- n ar f ' Committee for the coming year were made by the officer sof the Parowan Gun and Rod Club r. top-ran- The researches of these women have enlarged the body of new medical information and helped solve a wide variety of health problems. Not least among these was the conquest of a virus that killed and crippled its victims in wave .fler wave of epidemics polio. Pioneer in Protection Dr. Isabel Morgan Mountain is one of the most famous of these women scientists. As a member of 'he Johns Hopkins research group some years ago, she won medical recognition for demonstrating that animals could be protected against polio by a vaccine. This was a giant step toward the development of the Salk vaccine for humans, which like Dr. Mountains work was done under grants financed by the March Names New Committee Head s by Alice Barton Recent meetings for the Parowan Literary Club have been most interesting Mail Driver Injured j . Gun and Rod Club viee-presdd- j what makes it tick may not by Raymond Lowe The Parowan Rams got back to their winning ways Friday night at the expense of the Delta Rabbits. In a game that was close and ex citing, neither team could build up a substantial lead. The largest lead held by either team was the final ure for a night man became margin held by the Rams, intense, and the council ag- As neither team could Officers -, Growing a killer virus in a laboratory test tube to see Rams Again Hit Stride; Dump RabbitsAt Delta Of prime importance was the swimming pool project. This project has been underinvestigation for some time and it was felt that a change now could impair the project Garth Esplin, driver af a Wycoff Company mail truck was seriously injured Tuesday morning when his truck went outof control and over Only shotguns will be al- turned about 12 miles south lowed. Shells may be ob-- i of Beaver. tained at Parowan Mers. Fen Esplin suffered a fracture tons or Southern Utah Dairy and internal injuries. pelvis at a discount upon present- The accidert occured at ation of membership cards. about 4:15 a.m. as Esplin, traveling south, applied his breaks as he approached an-- : other truck. The mail truck went out of controll, turned -r- S'TSi over on its side and threw , i 'I if, Esplin out of the vehicle. Women Play Key Role In 'Dimes Research NUMBER EIGHT 28, 1960 to complete them. act-wi- j e husband, Dr. Joseph L. Melnick, are conducting experimental studies in the Sabin live-vir- anti-poli- o vaccine which, like the Salk vaccine, was developed under March of Dimes funds. These projects are aimed primarily against three major crippling diseases: birth defects, arthritis and polio. But every new discovery made by these women and other scientists with New March of Dimes support adds to the great body of our medical knowledge and contributes to mans health and well-bein- g. MOTHERS' DOOR COUNT TOPS MARCH OF DIMES The 1960 New March of Dime s campaign for fundi to tupport retearch, patient aid and the training of expert t in the three health area i of birth defect i, arthritis and polio is climaxed by a Mothers March of two million volunteers. The M archil. a Mothers are also conducting a nationwide door count at same 3C million homes to collect fads concerning the problems of crippling diseases in their communities. The local New March of Dimes office has also appealed to all donors who have not already done so to send in their contributions m the mailer appeal envelopes distributed at the beginning of the year. ATTENDS MEETING Theales Brown, Parowan Hgh School Vocational Ag A HONOR ROLL teacher attended the Utah Principal Max S. Dailey Vocational Assn, meeting in announces that the followSalt Lake City over the week students are on the A ing end. honor roll for the six weeks SUCCESSFUL PARENT TEACHER CONFERENCE Parowan High School reports a most successful parent teachers conferenct held last week. Out of the 200 par ents expected, 6 wre not pre sent. This is very unusual and most gratifying. The P. T. A. had a beautiful tea table set up in the hall where refreshments were served to all. Receptionists and guides during the week were Sopho more girls. The teachers would especi- lly like to thank the parents for their cooperation and at- period just ended: Bill Wright, Lyla Halter-maRaymond Lowe, Patsy lopham, Darlene Hyatt, is the 1960 Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow for the school accor ing to school officials. Mrs. Parkinson received the highest score in a 50 min ute written test on homemaking knowlege and attitud es taken by graduating senior girls. She will receive a pin, and her paper submitted for competition with that of other high school winners to determine the state wnner. Mrs. Parkinson is a daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Decker, and was recently maried to Zeldon Parkinson Scfhool n, Jo- Marie Kirkpatrick, Jerry D. Robinson, Way land Adams, Phyllis Brown. Robert Delley, Sandra Decker, Sandra Orton, Alyson Ad m3, Glade Holyoak, Evelyn Kirkpatrick, Connie Smith, Richard Van Ausdal, Vickie Worthen. Raymon Matheson Thomas Taylor, Jerry Wayne Robinson, Janet Gurr, Lina Sue Bess, Norman Robinson, Elliot Hulet, Marie Rasmussen and Penny Matheson. n, 7th GRADE BOOK CLUB BYU PROGRAM Seventh Grade Book Club On Friday Jan. 29, the B YU will present their pro- was held Wednesday nght gram to the school. This is at the home of Mr. and Mrs. always a popular program John S. Dalton. Miss Emily ar.d is looked forward to by Dalton and Mill Noreen all. Mickelson were hostesses. Eook reviews were given by LADY FACULTY PARTY Clifford Stubbs, Emily Dal enmemberst ton, and Noreen Mickelson. Lady faculty joyed their monthly party Recently the club elected which was held at the home Mac Clark president and Mrs of the Van Ausdals. Lovely Hendrickson, secretary. The next club will be held refreshments and visiting were enjoyed by all. The Feb 10. j Mrs June Decker Parkinson, senior at Parowan High an Decker Mort-ense- tendance. Named Betty Crocker Homemaker of Beaver. The state winner will receive a $1,500. scholarship and an educational trip from with her school April advisor. The runner-u- p will receive a $500. scholarship and the national winner will get a 23-2- 9 $5,000. scholarship. M, returned A c hh the Town Calendar JANUARY first of week from Phoenix Ariz. Fri. Jan 29, BB, Millard at where they have spent the Parowan; Freshman Dance Sun. Jan 31, Stake Sunday weeks, three past School Prep, meeting. the f |