OCR Text |
Show Thursday, February 8, 1968 MAGNA TIMES, Magna, Utah COMPUTERS: A New Generation of Amazing Performers Cyprus Gives Honor Rolls ReNae Hales, Montgomery, Connie Nay, Nielson, Phillip Sayer, J The following students have been given honors at Cyprus High School second term for Gillespie, their excellent grades: Witbeck. HIGH HONOR ROLL (Freshmen) Debra Contratto, Ann Ai (Seniors) Anthony Black, Michael Coe, JoAnne Coon, Richard Farnsworth, Karolyn Hickman, Marilyn Laughlin, Maxine Madsen, Kim Openshaw, Christine Swen-seLeslie Aston, Tom Turpin, Eileen Andreason, Gary Beck, Adrienne Cammans, Carol Druce, Richard Evans, Carol Nay, Lark Nielson, Calvin Parry, Joan Sadler, Nancy Smart, Judy Thornwall, Teri TimmerViki Williams, man, Kathy Worthington. son, Jeffrey Buckner, Coi Collings, Colby Conradsen, ice Dixon, Marion Hess, rj Perl Patricia Jenkinson, Diana Peterson, Karen Sul Jeanne White, Lloyd Winn, dra Benson, Duane Langen: Cynthia Snow, Ilean An, Richard Coon, Darlene Dimi Steven Gray, Kim Haight, St n, ., Citizenship Honor Roll (Seniors) Eileen Andreason, L a r Richard Farnswo Brown, JoAnne Coon, Kathleen E wood, MaryAnn Evans, De Hess, Craig Landures, Openshaw, Wayne Taylor, J Thornwall, Teri Timmern Tom Turpin, Gary Beck, thony Black, Julie Brown, R ard Evans, Marilyn Laugh Maxine Madsen, Lynn Pe Lana Peterson, Christine Sv sen, Dennis Bingham, Kent Adrienne Cammi Bryant, Carol Druce, Mark Hales, Dt Hansen, Karolyn Hickman, I lie Lewis, Shauna Malloy, Gw na Middleton, Randy Pend Joan Sadler, Joe Sparks, Gr Sudbury, Judy Thorpe, Da Anderson. (Juniors) Jacqueline Coon, Linda Grayson, Donna Peck, Boyce Syme, David Taylor, Kathleen Wardle, James Duckworth, William Dorothy Rowberry, Patricia Howell, Janeen Jones, Terri Poulton, Karren Thomas, Paul Thomas, Wendy Witbeck. Fol-let- t, . (Sophomores) Dennis Bennett, Brown, Debra Dixon, a Hampton, Jacqueline Huber, chael Nay, Luanne Slack, Cl lene Swenson, Sharon Tal Douglas Perkins. Michael Pamela Roger Johnson, Gay Ann Paulos, Don Malmborg, Peterson, Lisa Petersen, Kristine Welcker, Lora Jo Davis, Jackie Due, Chris Grisel, Deborah Tietjen, Virginia Bright, Kent Buckner, Kathy. Burnside, Luanne Driffill, Mike George, Miriam Hickman, Shirley Hunt, Karin Jenkins, Debra Walden, Judy Walk. (Freshmen) Jeffrey Dahl, David Farnsworth, Kathleen Farnsworth, Mark Hansen, Lynn E. Harding, Diane Madsen, Bruce McMillin, Sandra Thomas, Joan Welling, Debra Buckner, Douglas Fuller, Joan Gallegos, Lenora Maestas, Barbara Owen. Ertel, t 1 r , -- 1 , (Juniors) Karen Blight, Alan Bry Linda Grayson, Merril Hati Patricia Howell, Jill Rober Dorothy Rowberry, Boyce Syn Beverly Whitley, Randy Wil ford, Donald Bright, Shan Carlson, Jacqueline Coon, Dou las Edvalson, Rosalie Jackets, Janeen Jones, Rynn Jones, Craig Kuehn, James Palmieri, Eric Retford, David Robertson, Patricia Welling, Ferrell Beagley, Susan Beutler, Tim Collings, George Dean, Pamela Ellis, William Follett, Randy Gray, Betty Gourley, Pamela Hansen, Doug Hunt, Murna Mahoney, Donna Peck, Timothy Peel, Matthew Barbara Sanchez, Pettersson, Neil Sanderson, Kent Sheppick, Kathleen Wardle, Jackie Williams, Wayne Ortiz. (Sophomores) Roger Johnson, Brad Slack, Wayne Black, Peggy Doxford, Jackie Due, Ruth Marsh, Stanley Roberts, Phillip Sayer, Gary Sheppick, Kristine Welcker, Luzon Anderson, Dennis Bennett, Kathy Burnside, Benton Clark, Susan Duckworth, Jackie Due, Charles Fratto, Miriam Hickman, Vicky Miller, Gary Nielson, Rosemary Owens, Ann Paulos, Laurie Rupp, Teresa Turpin. (Freshmen) Diana Madsen, Sandra Thomas, Mark Hansen, E. Lynn Harding, Jeffrey Dahl, Kathleen Farnsworth, Danny Kofford, Ann Anderson, Sandra Benson, Jeffrey Buckner, David Farnsworth, Jacqueline Huber, Teresa Iorg, Lenora Maestas, Bruce McMillin, Barbara Owen, Douglas Perkins, Julie Tyner, Joan , , , . HONOR ROLL (Seniors) Shauna Malloy, Carol Anderson, Carol Bailey, Julie Brown, Kenneth Bryant, MaryAnn Evans, Janice Haslam, MaryAnn Danna , Montgomery, Madsen, James Solomon, Wayne Taylor, Craig Landures, Roger Ketchum, Terry Thomas, Gloria George, Trudy Hancock, Susan Hansen, DeVon Hess, Gwenna Middleton, Lynn Perry. (Juniors) John Sudbury, Patricia Welling, Donald Bright, Lawrence Catten, Doug Hunt, Jerel Jones, ' Rynn Jones, Murna Mahoney, Matthew Pettersson,' Jackie Wil-- . liams, Debra Hudspeth, Craig Kuehn, Debbie Langenfeld, Jill Roberts, Susan Beutler, Karen Blight, Alan Bryce,- Sherrie Gaffney, Randy Gray, Susan Hickman, Rosalie Jacketta, Karen Latham, Joyce McDaniel, James Palmieri, Gail Perry, Beverly Whitley, Melodie Winn, Terry Wright. (Sophomores) Vickie Davis, Noal Paulsen, Wayne Black, Brad Bradley, Garth Goates, Gerald Grochow-skColleen Hoskins, Vicky Miller, Susan Nielson, Shauna Sizemore, Peggy Sorenson, Brad Bradley, Judy Petersen, Brad Slack, Blaik White, Peggy Edith Farnsworth, Kathy i, Dox-for- , d, Building Costs Climb, Shift to Apartments? Rising construction costs as well as the credit outlook are a headache to builders. Building costs rose 2.5 per cent in the year ended Nov. 1, according to the Magna Bank of Commerce Business and Tax Digest, released Thursday. The basic reason, says the authoritative F. W. Dodge Co., which compiled the figures, is an average 6 per cent increase in hourly pay for building crafts workers in the past year. Building material costs rose 0.1 per cent in the same period, Dodge said. Land costs also are rising. The rising cost pattern for construction and land, coupled with predicted higher mortgage rates and an altered age pattern among homeseekers, means y more apartment building, relatively fewer singlefamily homes. A housing market study by Fiberglas Corp. indicates a 50 per cent rise in apartment construction in the next five years, compared with 1963-6A decrease in the population group aged 35 to 55 the homesuggests that buying years rental volume will be rising and sales volume declining comparatively for some years to come. multi-famil- Owens-Cornin- g 7. Sales Outlook but not great. Thats the story retail sales wrote for most of 1967; thats also the picture many see for the months ahead. Sales in 1967 barely broke through the $313 billion mark. While this was about 3lt per cent ahead of a year ago, the gain was more apparent than real it was mostly due to higher prices not an increase in actual units sold. As is usual in any year, some items managed to make it big. In mens fashions, the standout was turtleneck sweater-shirts- ; the most popular color white. Womens fashions saw several items score. Best sellers were fun furs, metallic dresses, feather boas, textured stockings and tights, and skinny, shiny high boots. The president of one large chain of retails sees a sales gain of 6 per cent for 1968 half in price. Others doubt actual units sold will increase even this much; see a much lower sales gain, virtually all price. One economist said: The consumer holds the key to the business outlook for 1968 only hes reluctant to use it. Good : glittery computer At bottom left, the 36030 central purchase orders, top left; the new 36050 shown NEW THINGS in CompMtations. IBM typewriter terminal new right. unit, and the graphics processor, center, and the 2314 disk storage unit. terminals for virtually automatic preparation of To layThe system use has freed large scale Bacchus processors If you want to talk the latest files are accessible to the 36050 ogy, Jim explained. able ato lines. been IBM get has characters of man, buyers and secretaries from by means of telephone language of the Computations at the rate 156,000 work. cumbersome clerical per second The scientific 36050 more into their new machines Department, its miniaturizaThe new equipment also made fantastic of use a memory has by now at Bacchus Plant. Major Driving Fault installation of an amazpossible of characters; tion. 524,000 capacity 7740 and Forget 1460, 7010, The Institute for Safer Living ing new graphics terminal unit Jim calls it, in appropriate 7744; they are a thing of the business 36050 has 262,000 on lists discourtesy as one of the a which problem diagrams more bang rocket terminology, past andwould immediately exr characters. cathode ray tube and allows major driving faults of the Amerto Department for the buck. pose you as an oldtimer. Its According has This expanded capacity contact between engineer and ican motorist. It often surpasses all modern, shiny, bright and Manager Jim Wray, the new lrck of driving skill, experience, of the storing new 360 now. computer by means of an elect- or computers are getting more made possible termjudgment as the underlying for data of volumes ronic old 1400 and done in the same amount of large The last of the pencil." of an accident." Discourcause inal functions such as preparaIn addition, the department teous acts are not so labeled on 7QOO series computers were out time and, being has the computer responsibilithe door in: September as the units, are actually able to pertraffic police blotters. There they tion of mechanized purchase Alleties for Hercules-operate- d final phase of the Computation form several different jobs con- orders. The purchase orders are show up as speeding," passing Ballistics Laboratory. A on hills and curves, running gany automaticalalmost out Departments big currently. printed ABL new lights, 36030 jumping signs," stop or code The 360s employ integrated of a Changeover. In their place doly with the use - combination of codes. into and "hogging the road." the technolcomputer . is hooked and solid ing more work, faster and betlogic circuitry ter, are IBM 360 Model 50s and Input-outp- ut three-six-ze- ro multi-purpo- se Project 360 Model 30s. input-outp- ut . Actually, the conversion to third generation 360s was started during the summer of 1965 with the changeover to 360 Model 30s to replace IBM 1460s. These new models are small machines doing the input and output for the larger processors. But the major undertaking came last year in two big steps. The scientific computer conversion was completed last January with installation of the first 360 Model 50 to replace the 7010. This involved conversion of 240 scientific programs and 115 subroutines to the new equipment. The final phase was completed in September with the business conversion and the release of the old machines, 7010 and 7040. The big effort was changing the 7010 programs to 360 programs. Approximately 250 programs and 55 sort programs were involved here. What the department has now is the latest in computer equipment that can accomplish new and fantastic feats for about the same investment as the old machines. Almost 400 million characters of information stored on disk It's happening now! GM (lle scsivnimgs on Itapoll VS'is That handsome Sport Coupe is just one of four specially equipped Impalas you can get at impressive savings during our Impala V8 Sale. The Sedan and 2- - or Station Wagon also feature savings on popular equipment packages. For extra beauty, all have whitewall tires, front fender lights and appearance guard group (door-edg- e d floor guards; mats, front and rear; front color-keye- and rear bumper guards on coupes and sedans, front ones on wagons). Package Brakes, while No. 3 has Power Steering, Power Disc Brakes and Comfortilt Steer- Power Steering and Power priced during our Impala V8 Sale. Get yours now and save! No. 1 gives you a big 275-h- p V8 and Powerglide Transmission. Package No. 2 includes ing Wheel-- all specially Greek Architecture The first giant step toward modern architecture was taken 4,000 years ago by an ingenious Greek. He invented the post-and-lint- el two columns supporting a horizontal crosspiece. Later, a clever Egyptian discovered how to take the columns away and the arch was born. The Assyrians introduced arches and gave us the dome. But the Romans found that heavy domes caved in. Solution: g the buttress, a support. The fifth step was taken in 1883 when William Jenney introduced the steelskeleton (Jen-ney- s bird cage) in Chicago making possible the modern curtain wall. Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe. Good buys now 3-- D super-stron- Quotation To Remember One loses all the time which he might employ to better purposes. Jean Jacques Rousseau rn Chevy II Nova, too! on Chevelie car offers more than ever now! Wider front and rear tread and larger tires for added stability and a far more comfortable ride, many new safety features 295-h- p and power from the spirited 140-h- p standard Six to a Turbo-Fir- e V8 you can order. 6ur e Nows a good time to save on America's favorite excitement, wide front and rear car, too. You get quick-siz- e tread, Full Coil suspension and sleek styling. Power available ride in up to 350 hp with easy handling and the smoothest its size. Test Chevelie now! mid-siz- B PAUJILOS MAGNA, UTAH smart. Be sure. Buy now at your Chevrolet dealers. Amo COMPANY Phone 297-631- 1 |