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Show Allman named best biology teacher in Utah Senior Ball next Friday in Skyroom Look of Love wll be the theme of the last Senior Ball to be held next Friday at 8:30 p.m. in the Skyroom of the Wilkinson Center. The Senior Class is sponsoring the annual dance. Heading the dance planning are the class officers which include, Paul Hintze, president; Merri Valgardson, Jacque Ovard, Janeen Acord, girls secretary; social chairman; and Ron Smith, boys social chairman. Dress for the dance will be formal. Tickets may be purchased from the senior class officers for ' vice-presiden- Mr. Verl Allman, BY High biology teacher, has been chosen as both state and regional Outstanding Biology Teacher of 1968. State and regional boards of the National Association of Biology Teachers made the selections. He received a $500 American Optical microscope for being chosen Outstanding Biology Teacher of. Utah. He received an paid trip to Anaheim, Calif., to attend a national biology, conference as a prize for being selected regional Outstanding Biology Teacher. At the convention, Mr. Allman attended many lectures biologists on a variety of subgiven by nationally-know- n jects, some of which were LSD, slime molds, teaching with the BSCS biology version, leukemia, and cancer. At the concluding banquet last week, he received the Outstanding Biology Teacher award for the intermountain states region. all-expe- t; Selected as "Outstanding Biology Teacher in Utah and the Region" is Mr. Verl Allman, BY High faculty member, reviewing certificate with Assistant Principal Wallace Allred. (Dave Clark photo) Inter-mounta- in c Eighty travel to Temple on March 9 $1.50. The seniors will present an assembly next Friday, using the same theme as the dance. Advisers for the Senior Class are Miss Donna Turley, Mr. Ross Hilton, and Mr. LaMar Hendrick- - 1 son. Vol. 25, No. BY forensics team prepares for region meet BY Brigham Young High School, Provo, Utah 14 compete in the Region Four For- ensics met at American Fork. High School on March 21, Coach Kenneth Bowthorpe reports. The Cats sport a fine forensics record from Carbon and Weber State meets, and previous bouts with other schools not in tournament contests. out-must- er I The Region contest will be the testing ground for state competitors. Competitors and their respective routes of competition at the meet are as follows: Thomas Gunn, debate, Legislative Forum; Sarah Willis, extemporaneous speaking, impromptu speaking; Brent Harmon, oratory, humorous reading. Mark Ashworth, debate, oratory; David Jacobs, oratory; Eric Beckham, debate, pantomime; Harold Ricks, debate, legislative forum; Steven Craze, debate, extemporaneous speaking; Lisa Thomson, debate, oratory; and Scott Card, debate, impromptu speaking. The Forensics team has a fine record; I just hope they can carry it through region and to state, added Mr. Bowthorpe. English majors assist teachers in BYH classes Science Symposium today Ticket holders will be excused today at 2 p.m. to jeer or cheer for their favorite team in the Womens Gym. The faculty, coached by Bother Wallace Montague, will boast' the necessary height and shootthe ing ability to stusmaller but aggressive dents. However, the underdog upperclassmen plan to spoil the faculteers hopes with hustle and a fine defense which has been worked out by Coach Brent Orton and assitant Coach Dave Porter. Highs Forensics team will Senior Larry Ford is representing BY High at the Sixth Intermountain Junior Science and Humanities Symposium at the University of Utah this week. Larry is one of 22 Utah high school students who are competing for a chance to travel to Iowa as one of six finalists who will present their research papers at the National Junior Science and Humanities Symposium. Larrys paper, entitled Characterization and Isolation of a Radiation Mortality Reducing e ComFactor From a of ponent Splenic Tissue, was submitted to the symposium judges early in January. This clinic is part of the US Army Junior Science Humanities Symposia Program. This is Larrys second year at the symposium. To drum or farm Thursday Eight to attend journalism conference Parker's at's A contract to make records f will be adviser Hal Williams. The clinic, sponsored in con- For him, dramming is a hobby. He will return to Alberta, Canada, this summer to manage his fathe ers three farms and rs junction with the Deseret News and the Salt Lake Tribune, will consist of sessions for instruction in journalistic techniques and of three contests offering scholarships of $50 to students with the best photo, best sports story, or the best general news story. The sports writers will report on the semi-finClass A High School Basketball Tournament game in the Einar Nielsen Field-housThe photographers will take pictures of the game, then mail them within a week after the game. The general news writers will cover a speech. Some of the speakers at the clinic will be Bill Meek, the Uni-- al e. Saturday State Class A tournament, BYU fieldhouse. 18 Eighty students will travel to the Manti Temple on Tuesday, March 19, according to Brother Gerald Lund, seminary teacher. Forty girls and 40 boys will board on two buses, leaving at 5 a.m. and 7 a.m. The trip is being sponsored by the Seminary Department. All third- - and fourth-yea- r Seminary students were eligible for the trip. Deadlines for getting temple recommends and the necessary $2 was Tuesday, after which all openings remaining were left to other seminary students. The excursion will consist of a baptismal session at the Manti Temple, a testimony meeting in the South Manti Ward Chapel, and a family style turkey banquet at the Manti North Ward Chapel. The seminary teachers Brothers Wallace Montague, Gerald Lund; Roger Cook, Don Jesse, and Ed Pinegar will travel with the students. -- Debate at Lehi. Friday Senior March must give way to more important things in the life of Brook Parker, BY High senior from Canada. Brooks rock and roll group, the Rapid Transit, recently signed a one-yecontract with Golden States Recording, promoter for Capitol Records. Brook, however, did not sign with them. Eight students from BY High will represent the school tomorrow at the 18th Annual Sports-writeand Photographers Clinic at the University of Utah. Gary Golightly, Steve Soffe, and Mark Ashworth will be there, as, ports writers; Larry Ford and' lave Clark as photographers; and Nancy Cannon, Kim Hanson, and Sylvia Spears as general news writers. Accompanying the group V, Today and tomorrow State Class A tournament, Salt Lake City. Ball, BULLETIN Skyroom, 8:30 p.m. big question! newly-appointe- hate Slate Cell-Fre- Approximately 70 English ma--. jors are expected to visit BY Higlr in the ensuing weeks to asist all the English teachers. Each will come for an average 4 of hours, observing and with the students. Beworking sides checking tests and papers and generally helping the teacher, the English participants will notice teaching methods and habits those which make tetter teachers and provide more help in explaining and bringing the pupils to a new awareness of the usage d and beauty of the English lanversity of Utahs football coach; Lee Grosscup, guage. and The participants are mainly sports director of KCPX-Twith Lake Salt a BYU seniors and press'conference from juniors Educational Methods, class 377. City Police ChiefJDewey J. Finis. 10-1- 7, 1968 Larry Ford attending Senior-facult- y clash1 Marth 84601 Fourth Quarter begins. March 19 Seminary Temple Trip 5 and 7 a.m. March 21 Forensics American Fork. March 22 Next Brigadier. issue meet of at The Orem was eliminated from the Class A tourney last night after Amerilosing to Granger, can Fork, winner in the first round, lost last night to the Hillcrest Huskies, g Spanish Fork tackles Viewjyiont at 4:20 today, and Provo tangles with Murray at 6:30 after losing, in the first round. 53-4- 6. hot-shooti- ng 92-6- 0. Front-runnin- ar lend-leas- lands. The Rapid Transit which specializes in hard rock, psychedelic sound and folk songs is patterned after the Jefferson Airplane. It plays weekends and weekdays as the bookings come, appearing at Groggans, the Steelworkers the Apollo Hall, and the Wilkinson Center, to name a few places. It has six members including drummer, recorder, lead guitar, rhythm, base, and fill-iBrook will not give up drumming next year. He plans to rejoin the group which he played with before coming to Provo, The ll 7th Dimension, a group, and the Combo, a dance band. ' n. rock-and-ro- Senior Brook Parker, drummer for the local dance band. The Rapid Transit, has an opportunity to sign for recording with the group. Instead, he chose ranch management in Canada. |