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Show jpljp 6 THE NEWS, Brigham City, Utah Sunday, January 28, 1968 BOX ELDER MDT SCD Board Program Makes New To Train 20 Stenos, USU Assignments State universitys de. Utah rI rV" n.' v r , V JK. If ' .u yi Jay Bourne of Riverside and Olen Fryer of Collinston, the new members of the board of supervisors of the Northern Utah Soil Conservation district, were given executive assignments at the first official new year. meeting of the was Bourne selected chairman, with Fryer assign-eto the treasurers position. This meeting was held at the Soil Conservation office In Tremonton this week. Other officers of the board are James Nessen of Howell, r v if , - v.?. f f ' -- 7 r' v partment of business education and office administration will begin training 20 stenographers Feb 5. The Manpower d HYRUM Olsen, Utah Depart-men- t of Employment Security Office In Logan will accept for the training program until Feb. 2. The pro-gra- designed for or underemployed per. Is Earl Fuhrlman Members of the Noithem Utah ShI Conservation DisGET ASSIGNMENTS trict supervisors board received new assignments at recent meeting, left to right, Glenn Tryer, Collinston, treasurer, Jaj Janies Ncsson, Howell, boa.d metnhet, Fail Tuhriman, Thatcher, Firth, chairman; Riverside, Ray Bourne, Tremonton, secretary. of Tremonton, secretary, and Ray Firthof Thatcher, member. They discussed the problem of developing the 1968 plan of work In other business at the Initial session the board dls. cussed plans for an annual meet. the Ing, work plans. An application to enter the Goodyear conservation contest, was completed and submitted for the Utah State contest. The outstanding conservation farmer of the 1967 year In the district was selected. This is to announced at the annual meet-inof the district cooperators. TRAINEES WILL writing, shorthand, tlon, bookkeeping, office practice and r YYt'c 1 i: 1 re sk Ml f U S S v These business students at Intcrmountain S'lUDI NTS USE NEW MACHINES arc using transcribing machines. From left, Gladys John Jc in Beletso, Imela Betonni and Maggie Chee. school IS Business Students Hear Voices Computer Tells Students of Financial Aid for College A new service for Junior s and and Senior junior busl-nes- s seniors seeking financial aid to students at Intermountain school aie having an opportun- attend college Is being made available through the guidance ity to learn how to use the according to transci Ibing machine (Dicta, department, a counselChristine Richards, Secretai le). phone Dox Elder High School of or The Dlrtaphone corporation The service, offered by North of Ogden, Is letting the school use the machine and piogram American Educatlona1 Comlnce-tomaterials to see how well the puter Services, Inc. of Pr a computer employs N.J., business students perform. So far in the expeiiment, to match an Individual students the students have enjoyed using qualifications to the requireWe have found ments of over 700,000 Items of the machines, that the students have Improved scholarships and grants In the computers their spelling, pionouncing bank. memory words, increased their voca. bulary, and heightened their UNTIL THE advent of com ability to concentrate, plus, technology, the task of puter how to the operate learning mote than a small frac. said transcribing machine, t ion of the financial aid for which teachei Clark Child. All of the above Is another he was eligible was physically an individual stu. step forwaid In the business Impossible for was no central dent. There at Intermountain program source for information relat school , con-talne- d office with wage rates of $1 40 to $2 an hour, said Ted Ivarie, head of the Department of business education and office admlnlstra-tloat USU. SUP Elects 0FS Savings ( Reach Peak During 1967 Persons and organizations with savings accounts at Ogden First Federal Savings and Loan association in 1967 received a total of $1,161,000 in earnings on their savings at the associa. R.C. Duvall said Wednes. tlon, of There Is a shortage day Duvall, association presi-den- t, he In the area now, gave his repoit at the stated. annual meeting of the associa-tlo- n The department head stated in Ogden. that because of the class, the The earnings paid savers set instructor will provide Individ, an all.time record in dollar ually tailored training. volume, Duvall said NEW TYPEWRITERS, elec, HE REPORTED THAT total trie calculators, duplicators, savings in the association, with transcribers and new types of offices In Ogden and Brigham channel classroom multiple reached a record high of City, learning units will be used in $25,238,233 at the end of 1967. the course, This represents a gain of The Employment Security 7 5 percent over approximately Office will provide trainees a year earlier, the figure with guidance and counseling Duvall said. service and assist them Infind. He added that assets of the Prof. Ivarie said. association reached a record Ing Jobs, at the end of $28,591,000 Srape Picking 1967, up approximately eight Aachine percent over the total a yeai A REEDLEY. Calif lUPI) earlier. Duvall said that the lew grape harvesting machine mortgage loans on the comiemonstrated heie and produc-- d panys books at the end of 1967 by the Univeisity of Califor-il- a amounted to $25,688,000, an In. has proven feasible for the crease of 11 percent during lanesting of previously hand- 1967. Seedless r picked Thompson TOTAL RESERVES and un. irapes divided profits of the associa. An elephants brain weighs tlon at the close of 1967 a. con. 10 pounds mounted to $2,258,000, New Slate Of Officers New officers elected to lead the Box Elder chapter Sons of Utah Pioneers, for the coming year, are Eugene F. Wright, president, H. Melvin Rollins, first vice president, and Charles J. Kimber, second vice president. James Miller was retained as the club secretary. New directors elected for r terms are Lewis Wight and Charles J. Kimber, Hold, over directors are Orson Christensen, Melvin Rollins and n Taxpayers who receive or Interest income are required by law to give their tax account number to the that pay the Income, according to Roland V. Wise, district director of Internal Revenue for Utah. For lndivl-dua- l taxpayers, the tax account number Is the Social Security number. Business firms are required to report to IRS dividends or interest of $10 or more paid to anyone during a calendar year. The Information returns, Forms 1099, are compared by with Individual Incomputer come tax returns to see if Income Is reported In the full d amount. t JUSTIFICATION for this program is that within 12 months there will be a for 500 stenographers In Prof. Ivarie said. the area. This Includes 400 replacement and 100 new post-tlopositions THE Report Interest And Dividends w. 9 transcrip, machines, Persons who complete this course will be eligible for Jobs Taxpayers Must J- . f study type, n TlS'hj$U , Elected to lead the Box Elder chapter, Sons of Utah Pioneers, were, LEAD SUP from left, James Miller, secretary; Charles J. Kimber, second vice president; Eugene F. Wright, president; H. Melvin Rollins, first vice president, and Lewis Wight, director. Absent from the photo was Orson Christensen, director. long-rang- e divl-den- t, d n r- V 1 unem-ploye- sons. It will last 36 weeks and will week program. be a All participants will be trained on the USU campus by a full, time Instructor and will be glv-ea subsistence allowance. g r Development Training program, the first in Cache county, will be funded by $23,581 from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and $3,856 from USU Firms must also furnish a statement of total payments for the year to persons receiving dividends and interest amount Ing to $10 or more. ing to scholarships, and even If West German there was, it would occupy over Work Week GOO feet of bookshelves, COLOGNE, Gei many (UPI the ECS ComEmploying The average woik week li Search puterised Scholarship West Germany Is 43 8 houis pel out a service, the student fills vu y dt tailed questiunairy about week inwhich is shorter than any other of the six himself. Tins is retuhnedto that of the European Ecocountries r the seconds and tn ECS, nomic Community iEEC. rn itches Ins qualifications against the requirements for financial atd totaling over $500 The boihood home of Wyatt million from colleges, nniver. famed marshal on the sities, foundations, corpora, Eaip western frontier, has been pie-se- n and professional, civic, tions, ed and nia be ilsited in and social charitable, business, fiatunal or ganizations, I ,and Pella low a trade and labor organisations and religious and philanthropic qualifies and to which he should groups all over the United apply. ! e cost of The entire states , this service Is $15. Further Information on the THE COMPUTER tlieq Lypes out an individualized report to ECS Computerized Scholarship. the student, listing the sources Search Service is available of financial aid for which he from the guidance department. ' steno-graphe- 4 two-yea- R. C. Eugene Wright MAKES REPORT Duvall, president, made annual report to Ogden First Federal Savings and Loan association meeting. Brigham Coed siderable above the require, ments of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which supervises federally chartered associa. tions. Duvall reported Duvall and Dr. R.L. Draper were reelected directors at the annual meeting. Holdover di. Pledges Group Tami Whitaker Is listed the 24 coeds at Utah State university who have pledg. ed to join sororities during among the winter quarter rush. Tami is pledged to Delta Delta Delta. rectors include Neil R. Olm. A 1967 graduate of Box Eld. stead, Dr Reed K. Swenson, er High school, she Is a daugh. I.S. Ruth, and C.C. Eubank. ter of Mr. and Mrs. James 433 South Seventh AT THE DIRECTORS meeting Whitaker, West following the annual meeting of the association, these as, C. Sargent, treasurer and con. sociatlon officers were reelect, troller; Clifford M. Graham, ed R.C. Duvall, president and assistant vice president and manager; C. Keith Duvall, sen, manager of the Brigham City lor vice president and secre, branch, Madge S. Alvey, as. tary; William S Heitz, vice slstant secretary; and Anna J. president and loan officer; Jack Rubin, assistant secretary. corn-pute- one-tim- we were 105 years ago, weve grown steadily by to a needed and the service people providing industries of the 13 Western states we serve until today we have over 32,000 loyal, energetic employees (many of them in Utah and Idaho) and a 2 billion dollar investment in properties, equipment and other assets. . . . born hod contribute mightily to the economy of the states we serve through huge payrolls (over $248,000,000 in 1966), large tax payments (over $71,000,000 in 1966), and vast annual expenditures for everything from computers to lubricants for train locomotives (over $207,000,000 for new equipment We and improvements). pride ourselves on being good citizens and pledge our best efforts to continue to be an important factor in the growth and progress of the West. 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