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Show 2000 High School Band, [Educator ieeeFhrma — SUNDAY HERALD 17 Advances Adult Classes Musicians Due Nov. 19 Challenges Offered in Utah County Band Day’ : | Nearly 2000 high school band the United States by spelling out musicians will bring their instru-' titles and forming into colorful ing ments to Provo on November 9/ representations ‘of the flag land for a gigantic “‘Utah) Theme for the show will) be HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCE FAIR SET FOR REGION Science teachers from the Cenat a banquet and special workshop to lay plans for the 1961 Central Utah Region Science Fair to be held at BYU April 1. Also present were special guests from the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, who sponsor the fair jointly with BYU, and. BYU faculty members who assist in the’ program. Students from 19 junior high and 24 senior high schools are invited to participate in the event which will be held in the Social Hall. Counties included are Utah, Wasatch, Summit, Daggett, Du- written for A Stenoscript class will begin this Monday at 6:30 p.m. in the shorthand room located on the pal andlifetime educator, on behalf of Alpine School District educational interests.) There are numerous challenges First and foremost is that of our exploding population. We have Cast for Otto Nicolai’s ‘‘Merry Wives of Windsor,’ based on the Shakespearean play, was ‘ an- ‘Y’ Debaters Win in Idaho Woman Wins secondary schools have enrolled 241,000 pupils this Fall. This number is 77,000 pupils over that of ten years ago—an increase of 47 per cent. Enrollments are expected to ‘Service Pin shop and this production. It is | her supervision and leadership, 14 | girls and one boy have been Curtain time for the opera will | awarded expense-paid trips to Chibe 8:15 p. m. each night in Joseph | cago and Washington, D. C. Smith Auditorium. | In the last #0 years Yvonne has With the exception of one role, Supervised in the Pleasant View the opera will be double-cast with area over a 1000 4-H club boys and the Wednesday-Friday cast list-| girls in Mrs, Weston Taylor, instructor. This class is for anyone who to reliable reports the Utah public elementary and her 4-H activities.‘ continue during the 1960’s, although the rate of growth will not be as great as during the past ten years. Projections based upon the 1957-1965 birth rate reveal that Utah will have about 291,000 chesne, Uintah and Tooele counPLEASANT VIEW — A 25-year ties, and Eureka in Juab County. 4-H service pin was awarded to pupils in the public schools by 1970. This number will represent Verl P. Allman, science teach- Mrs. Eldon Perry Thursday evean increase of 21 per cent. The er at BYU High School, is fair ning. The award was made- by bulk of this increase will occur director. Entry blanks are avail- Commissioner Rulon F. Nicholes at during the next five years. at 4-H achievement program held Beeause of this, problems of able from him at the BYU lab- in the Pleasant View Ward. The oratory School. J pin was given in recognition of the the past decade will continue. The Exhibits will be in botany,) zo- 25 years Mrs. Perry has served.as shortage of classrooms and teachology, general biology, earth ‘sci- a 4H achievement program held ers will continue in the faster ences, physics, and chemistry. Austin Tyler, home agent, of the growing sections of the state. To Junior high exhibits will be judg- Extension Service was in charge of meet these growing needs calls ed separately from those of high the award presentation. The pin is for an increase in school revenue. school students. Senior high win- a small gold four-leaf clover with To secure more money it may be necessary to seek revenue ners will present their exhibits at an emerald in the center. from a -non-property tax source, the State Science Fair at BYU Yvonne, as Mrs. Perry is comApril 14 and 15. State winners monly known, was a 4H member because of the present heavy load now carried by property, will receive an expense-paid trip from 1929 to 1938, a total of ten especially that of farm property to the. National Science Fair. in years. During the last three years in a period of declining returns. she was a member she was also a Kansas City. It may he necessary also for leader. She has been a leader from us to realign our sense of values. 1936 to 1960. She became a superWe seem to find ways and means visor of the 4-H clubs in the Pleasto secure funds for automobiles, ant View area in 1941 and has radios, televisions, household served as such continously for the items, vacation trips, boats, past 20 years along with being a hunting and fishing equipment, 4-H leader. and an endless list of items that Yvonne has led boys and girls in were not common in the days of 4-Hprojects of food, clothing, home our forebearers. These luxuries nounced Saturday by Brandt Cur- | improvement, home beautification, should be secondary to meeting tis, director the Brigpam| recreation, gardening, electricity, of Young University Opera Work-|entomology and forestry. Under } day evenings for six weeks under WINS 4-H AWARD — Mrs. Elden Perry who has been presented are to come. with a 25-year service pin for | According 25-Year 4-H | scheduled Nov. 16-19. The adult education course will meet both Monday and Thurs- the back log of the past ten years with numerous unsolved problems to earry, along with those that ‘Merry Wives of Windsor’ Set This Week, Cast Listed 4 second floor of north wing of the Provo High School. before us in the decade ahead. school bands of Utah plus the “Utah County Band Day.” Participating in the spectacle| great BYU marching band, will be made during the half-time of will ,be 141 baton twirlers and 22 the BYU-Wyoming football game. drum majors. Representative of| The massive football half-time |the great mass of musicians will formations will salute Utah Coun- | be 369 clarinet players and| 291 ty Band Day, the music. men, and cornet and trumpet players. tral Utah area met at Brigham was. T. C. Hebertson, Orem princi- University, it was announced by “School Bands: A Worthwhile jand Endeavor.’’ Special Richard E. Ballou, director o: the Educative BYU Cougar Marching Band, |music for the show has heen | written by Ralph G. Laycock, diwho is in charge of the event. The first presentation by. this | rector of the BYU Concert Band. group of band musicians, made Featured will be his original band up of the members of /31 ‘high composition appropriately entitled Young University recently article National Education Week by County f musical symbols. Band Day” at Brigham Young | Provo Area (Editor’s note: The follow- their projects. The first Hollywood Man Demonstrates, Presents Classes Nico Charisse, a Hollywood ed first and the Thursday-Satur-| year she acted as supervisor she movie choreographer and dance POCATELLO, Ida. — Brigham day cast second. Ralph Wood-| assistant professor of| Young University took home its ward, second Gem State Jamboree music will sing the role of: Sir John Falstaff at all performances. trophy in four years as’ the BYU Boyd Hancock and Roy Samnegative debate team ,copped top honors in the fourth annual invi- uelson will sing the role of |Mr. tational tournament recently. at |Ford, Richard Justis and Ken | Wilks, Mr. Page; Jim Peterson Idaho State College. Members of the winning team | and Dick Dastrup, Fenton; Rich- had 21 under her supervision. This teacher, gave classes, lectures year she had 116. The number of and dance demonstrations to balmembers under her -supervision let students and interested townsfive years ago was 72; a substan- people Saturday at the Coleen tial increase in five years. The Collins Dance Studio. ‘total number of 4-H members enMr. Charisse gave classical rolled during her 20 years as su- ballet classes and routines in pervisor was 1,020. Of these 902 modern jazz, and a brief review completed their projects. of his new book, ‘‘Ballet Today.” Mrs. Perry is the mother of five He came to America originally were Ron Walker and Don Black, ard Brimhall and John Herbst, children, all of whom are active from Paris to perform at the Slender; Peter Danzig and Brent said William N. Corbin, ISC members of 4-H clubs. Her husdirector of forensics and tourna- Shaw, Dr. Cajus; Colleen Redford band is also a 4-H leader. She is Hippodrome Theater in New York City. After several years of perand Nancy Empey, Mrs. Ford; ment manager. a daughter of Mrs. Preal Jones of forming he became a teacher and | Diane Heder and Susanne Hatris, Winners in extemporaneous Pleasant View. She is currently |Mrs. Page; and Nadine Nelson dance director in Hollywood and speaking were Ron Walker, first; | employed by the Soil Conservation trained dancers Cyd Charisse and and Lurlene Levar, Ann Pagé. ~ Lucy Melhuish, Linfield College, Service and has been working for Mitze Gaynor, plus many others. Mr. Samuelson, popular Utah McMinnville, Ore., second; and them for the past five years. Valley baritone, was the winner He was honored after SaturJohn Randlett, Pacific Univerday’s session at a dinner at the of the Utah Concerts Council sity, Forest Grove, Ore., third. PLEASANT VIEW—Numerous 4Auditions last spring. home of Colleen Collins Smith, H medals were presented to 4-Hers where friends and dance teachers of Orem, Pleasant View and Edgewere in attendance. mont on Thursday evening in the Pleasant View Ward. The program was under the direction of Mrs. of service as a 4H leader and Elden Perry, 4-H Supervisor and supervisor, Mrs. Austin Tyler of Utah County First Security saving accounts in oe cont Service. The program the amount of $5 each were prewas conducted by Deanne Ercan- sented by Richard E. Carruth of | brack. the Orem Branch to Randy Miller ; Completion awards were pres- and Diane Weenig. |ented to boys and girls from 25 clubs of this area by Commissioner Rulon F. Nicholes and Mrs. Tyler. Medals for style review went to Jeanne Merrell, Susan Roberts, Deanne Ereanbrack and Carole Roberts. An achievement medal went to Konda Perry, home beautification to Susan Roberts, canning to Cherrie Adams, clothing to Jeanne Merrfell, leadership to Lee Perry, electricity to Clyde Perry and Bill Jacobson, entomology to Konda Perry and forestry to Kenneth Adams. Achievement | pins went to David Daley for electricity and Clyde Perry for entoTAKES FALSTAFF ROLE—Ralph Woodward, right; mology as they had received a medal for these projects last year. as Falstaff in the opera “Merry Wives of Winds rs” jisi needs to take notes rapidly and will enable a person to take dictation up to 100 words per minute in the six-week period. This is the last class to be started NEPHI SENIORS REHEARSE FOR PLAY—Juab High before the Christmas holidays. School Senior Class will present the annual class play Nov. 18 in the school auditorium at 8 p. m. Directing the comedy ‘For Pete’s Sake” will be Clarence Pay, instructor. Here in a scene are, from left, Nila Mae Chris- Anyone interested should register and pay the nominal fee Mondayat thefirst class. “Reading Better and Faster” tensen, Lynn Barnes and Preston Paxman, the challenges of the sixties, say | businesses gravitate to New York, that of survival, as we compete/Qyr shipping and commerce they continue to graduate two| Movestoteconstareas, These with the Communist threat. If . - scientists, engineers, doctors and cnn need tanita. Beton of the Poeess Ore oe cee 8 ae ship in spite of our ability and profit dollar must be returned to us in the form of education if ane eae desire to maintain our present eachof us is to reach his highest point of perfection. position. Indications are that we i spend about four per cent of our} A evolution of the school plant gross national income for education in comparison to some 14 per cent by Russia. We must look to federal inter- will A also receive consideration during the next decade, but will probably not become a reality until later. Ware lecture halls will be utilized in a central location. These will be surrounded by but federal aid will come. There | small cubicals for individual vention and federal aid. This| leads to a controversial issue, is far too great a difference be- study. These cubicals will be tween the ability of state to pay | well-equipped with books, maps, for the costs of education to long and closed-circuit television, for delay. some adjustment. the better utilization of students’ The eight most wealthy states time. in our Union have a ‘Tesidual Buildings will be built tall, inaverage income of $5,984.00 per | stead of sprawling on 40 acre school child. The eight” jeast platts. Ten, 12 and more stories wealthy states. have an average | will extend into the air because income of $1,100.00. The ratio is of lack of space in metropolitan five to one. Thus the wealthy areas. Students will asrive by states can spend $5.00 with no rapid transit busses by subway greater satrifice than can the to the underground campus. Elepoorer states by expending $1.00. vators will ascend to the -classThis great injustice will not con- room floors. The age of the jalopy tinue indefinitely. If our great and the large parking areas will nation is to continue, the! benefits |be a thing of the past.. Skyof education and culture must be | tocketing costs of land and extended to all persons regardless buildings will warrant these of their place of birth. changes. will be offered as a study course by Brigham Young University’s Adult Education and Extension Services beginning Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m. in room 330 McKay Building. TO SPEAK HERE — Malcolm Muggeridge, brilliant and controversial British journalist and editor who has even dared to criticize the institution of the British crown, will speak Monday at 10 a.m. in the BYU Fieldhouse. The public is welcome. Controversial Speak at ‘Y’ Briton Will Malcolm * Muggeridge, brilliant and satirical magazine editor, The class will be held on alter- will be guest speaker at Brigham nate Mondays-through Jan. 23. It is designed to increase both reading speed and comprehension and will be conducted by Klea Worsley, BYU instructor. Registration may be completed by mail at the Extension Services offices or at the first class meeting. An Advanced I. B. M.. Key Punch Operations class is being offered beginning. Nov, 14 at 7:30 p.m. in 130 Maeser Memorial Building at Brigham Young University. The class is sponsored by the BYU Adult Education and Extension. Services and will run through Dec. 12. Registration is at the BYU-Community Education Center, 846 N. 5th East. Try Before You Buy Young University’s Forum assembly Monday at 10 a.m. in George Albert Smith Fieldhouse. Mr. Muggeridge, often seen on Edward R. Murrow’s “Small World” television program, is a British journalist and a frequent guest on TV programs both here and in England. For five years he was editor of ‘‘Punch’’, the famous British humor magazine, and .since his resignation he is again engaged in newspaper writing. The non-comformist Mr. Muggeridge was born just outside of London the son of a self-educated lawyer’s clerk who became a Labor Member of Parliament. He took an honors degree at Cambridge University at the age of 20. WURLITZER 2-IN-|_ ORGAN IT’S TWICE: AS MUCH eee . ° FUN Across From Scera Theatre, Ph. AC 5-5454 It's a complete spinet organ! It’s a “push button” chord organ! percussion on tiwvo-hetu, 44 note Key board, two 12 inch Hi Fi Our national economy is such There are great days ahead. that wealth gravitates to central- (Many of us were born 50 years ized areas, such as Our automo- too soon to experience it, but we bile dollar goes to) Detroit or | are not too old to dream and to Chicago, the profits of our chain speakers, 26 watt output. 13 note pedal board, pedal sustain. HART BROS. MUSIC™ OREM oxemuran UNITED HOPAES NOW GIVES YOU A CUSTOM QUALITY HOMEATAN.... UNBELIEVABLE LOW PRICE | HIGH 1.Q°S NEED HIGHER Junola Smith received a fourth coached in his role by Carl Fuerstner, associate dire ctor year pin. Lee Perry received a and conductor, farleft, and Brandt Curtis, who is stagcertificate as state winner in foresing and directing the presentation. The opera is scheiltry and a-pen and pencil set. Mrs. uled Wednesday ee Saturday in the Joseph.Smith Eldon Perry received a 25 year Auditorium at B 4H service pin for her 25 years COMBINATION be used aS alone, as a dryer combination. KITCHEN - DINING 13x13. AREA MASTER * BEDROOM. A LARGE LIVING ROOM AND CENTRAL HALL PLANNING. 7? ° : THE Wriishire 1800 SQ. FEET ONLY $9,989 ON YOUR LEVEL LOT Other Homes Available at Equaily Low Prices .... leaving for higher salaries in business and industry. * TION. FITS ANYWHERE A Can pends on giving talented students-a ehance to develop properly. That means they must be trained in college. ... qualified teachers are OUT - PERFORMS EVERY OTHER COMBINAWASHER WILL... Our nation’s future de- Teady overcrowded and applications are expected to . double in the next ten years OUTFEATURES ANY DRYER. 10 x 23 AND A SPACIOUS But manycolleges are al- WASHES. BETTER THAN ANY WASHER. 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