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Show V 2 T C w.ll C 7 I - w 4 Tha Sun Chronicle, ;i:i ! lished weekly Utoh. Secjnd-das- tage paid at pub- at Ro', s posRoy, Utah. Roy Jayceftes choose 'Girl of the Year Thursday, March 18, 1971 Roy Community School registering - Registration tor in the Roy Community School will be held on Mon9 day and Tuesday from ROY p.m. in Room 118 at Roy High -- School. classes The Roy Community School will be offering classes similar to those which have been offered in the past. We wil still make available a course for any group of ten or more people who wish to have a certain class taught that is not already being offered. 7-- for ing, bookkeeping, rz:l u L I tune Mack Taft, director, Roy School program Community anrounces the square dance' program will feature a refresher course for the club level dancer who has been inactive for some time, but wishes to get back into the activity with course. This course include all the current gures that are presently being danced in the Ogden area. a brush-u- p will The beginning date for this program was March 6 from p.m. and will continue each Saturday evening until sometime in May. Cost will be $12 per couple for th complete course. Again, Doug and Charlene Smith, callers for the Shuffles and Ruffles Square Fitness and Siorts;AlMinturn, youth services superivosr, Los class. Angeles City Schools; Dr. Lola recreation Sadlo, AAHPER chairman; George Hery, professional trampoline champion and Isreal Heaton, regional center director for Denver Community Schools. Further information about the square dance class may be obtained by calling Mr. Taft at Roy High, or Doug Smith at his home, evenings, 825-976- 6, 825-653- 7. "ii DAYTIME students study electronic calcula-addin- g tors and machines that will be used in the Roy Community School program, now registering for spring classes. Pictures are J iS iV ' j', rJ important for citys appearance; clean - up needed Note: The followwas submitted by Dennis Chugg, Roy City Councilman who coordinates the Mayors Landscape Improve- (Editors ing article ment Committee.) Take any college president and dress him up like a shabby tramp, let him go a month I ' tl i, without a bath and turn him out on the street. If you met him in this condition you would characterize him as a bum. Now take any bum off the street, clean him up, give him a shave and a hair cut, a clean shirt and a nice suit of clothes, and you would regard him as a respectable citizen. The point is, we judge a person largely by his appearance until we get to know him better. Homes and communities are judged the same way. When you are travelling, most impressions are gained from the car window as you roll along the street or highway. If the home, the farm, or the community is shabby and run down in appearance you are inclined to think that the people living under such conditions are like their surroundings. Such apathy and inattention to environment is characteristic of slum areas in large cities. Many persons living in these ghettos have little or no Roy hospital . L-- ,.tAk -- w areas need the attention of all citizens in order to help keep our city clean and concern for the appearance of their homes or the neighborhood in which they live, and the state of neglect usually indicates this fact. Most residents of Utah preto be regarded as decent, respectable people. Thpy are fer anxious to make a favorable impression upon visitors as well as on local citizens. We believe the visitors should leave our state with the opinion that we are clean and respectable people. How can he receive such an opinion if he observes repeatedly as he travels through our state, rundown buildings and fences, trash and debris scattered about the community, junk cars disgracing the approaches to our towns and scattered throughout the city; weeds on streets and in vacant lots and litter on roadsides, at eating stands, in recreation areas, in parks, in canyons and forests, where-ever humans go. Are such situations the environs of people who care or do they belong to the negligent and the indifferent? Is this contest winner winning g The film, a critique of the U.S. foreign policy that has prolonged the Vietnam war, features firsthand reports on the war which have never been presented to the American public with such force and clarity. the image the Utah people want to leave with the visitor? We are all concerned with our personal image. Were it not so, we would not bother to bathe, shave, put on clean clothes, and dress up when we go to church, to the theatre, or other places where people mingle. Lowell Thomas traces the Communist aggression in Europe and Asia. Then Wayne calls on General Wedemeyer and General Mark rlark to describe their own experiences Tremendous sums are spent to make women more beautiful and men more neat and attractive in appearance. All of this is to improve our personal image in the minds of those who see us. Why should we go to all of this expense and fuss while we stumble around in trash, junk and delapidation. Our good personal image is obliterated by the debris that surrounds us. Lets make our inhabited landscape match the beauty of our natural surroundings. Lets remove all unsightliness from the landscape so that the visitor will be impressed with our cleanliness and so that our surroundings properly reflect the kind of people we really are. in dealing with Communist duplicity after World War II and during the Korean War. The military leaders and combat veterans who appear in the film all insist they were hampered by policies designed to be less than successful. Peter Stark, a Green Beret sergeant who lost both legs while fighting in Southeast e Asia, puts it this way: is not a phony war. It was and is a very real war. It is not a limited war, because there is no such thing as limited death. General Paul Harkins calls the situation frustrating in We have made the extreme. concession after concession, says Admiral U.S. GrantSharp, which immeasurably increased the casualties that our side incurred. The heroes of No Substitute for Victory are the men who have fought in Vietnam. And John Wayne is their staunch supporter. Echoing the statements of General MacArthur, Wayne Douglas charges that, Whenever we Tight the Communists, they seem to have he'p from somebody on our side. Somebody always wants to bend over to avoid getting backwards Viet-nam- tough with them. Tickets for the Premiere Showing of No Substitute for can be obtained by Victory contacting TRAIN at Tickets are $2.00 each for adults and $1.00 each for students and Mr. Bob Elbradar 825-809- 2. recommends John Wayne . . . narrates film placing orders well in advance. Our hall will only seat 1,900 persons, he explained, and we expect all tickets to be sold very The TRAIN Chairquickly. man also revealed that income from this showing is being used to defray (he expenses for production ahd promotion of the movie, and that none of the guests appearing in the film are receiving any sends three to meetings 4'.- ROY VACANT to r.) Dennis Hooper, Becky Leishman, Ross Johnson, instructor, Debra Hewitt and Delene Wilson. A variety of classes are being offered at Roy High. (1. First 1 .1' r Award Academy film star, John Wayne hosts Lowell Thomas, Martha Raye, General Albert C. Wedemeyer, General Paul Harkins, General Mark C'ark, Admiral U.S. Grant Sharp, former Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson, and others in a special film, No Substitute for Victory, to be premiered locally March 25, 8 p.m., 2828 Harrison Blvd. at the Ogden High auditorium. hard-hittin- jTfrSSfP - V . policy scheduled t i t I- - . of Ui. foreign (AAH-PER- Dr. Reed K. Swenson, professor of physcial education at Weber State College and convention publicity director; said that delegates would participate in activities such as banquets, tours, attendance at a practice of the LDS Tabernacle Choir, Repertory Dance Theater, Pioneer Memorial Theater production, skiing and golf at Park City. Representatives will come from Arizona, California, Hawaii, New Mexico, and Utah, Dr. Swenson said. Outstanding speakers at the conference include: James Withers, state and federal director of the Presidents Council on Debbie Akisada critique ng v electronic and manual adding and calculating machines. The school is also going to operate an open gym program for men on Monday and Thursday Representatives from five states are expected to gather in Salt Lake City April 21 to 24 for the convention of the Southwest District American Assoc-- : lion of Health, Physical Edu). cation and Recreation Hard-hitti- ' j new and been named Girl of the Year by the Hoy Jaycettes. Miss Akisada is thedaugh-te- r of Ute and Elsie Akisada, 2070 W. 5400 S.. Roy. Her grade point average throughout school has been 3.90 and she is a member of the National Honor Society at Roy High. She plays the flute also in the Roy High Royal Band. March 13 she was honored at a tea in Layton at the Chateau Reception Center and she will be further honored at a joint membership meeting of the Roy Jaycees and . Special emphasis will be placed on the job skill : typ- meetings ROY -- - Debbie Akisada, 16, a junior at Roy High, has worth of the honors received in beautification efforts this past year. -- - Continuing Edu- cation is essential in todays modern hospital, states Mr. George E. Goodell, administrator of the Weber County Hospital in Roy. In the month of March, Weber County Hospital is sending three department head employes out of state to attend education programs. Mrs. Mary Ann Anderson, R.N., coordinator of educational services, will be traveling to Colorado Springs, k Colo., to complete the intensive course on Leadership Development for Nurses. This program is sponsored by the College of Nursing, University of Colorado Medical Center, Denver, Colo. C V four-wee- 1 V, X I-- ,,r I ti'' t:... m ' Mrs. Mina Widdison, manager of the hospital laundry, launwill attend a three-da- v dry managers conference in Las Vegas, Ncv. : Z " ' vju LITTER SCATTERED throughout a park area certainly does not enhance the beauty of Roy City. Your help is needed in continuing to make Roy a beautiful place in which to live. Mrs. Shirley Carr, director of occupational therapy, will be spending a week this month in Thermopolis, Wyo., atGoll-sch- e Rehabilitation Center as a student in the occupational therapy department. Weber County Hospital is proud of the fact that its employees are able to be active in the continuing education programs provided in the Western States. u y Hoy Eagles aid crippled children a $500 check, to be used for and handicapped crippled children at Weber County Hospital, is Georgia Budge, center, assistant administrator at the hospital in Roy. The check, piesented by Albert Bench, state president, was a donation from the Roy Eagles as part of a nationwide Jimmy Durante Crip ACCEPTING pled Childrens fund, sponsored by the Eagles. It was noted that over $500,000 has been donated thus far and that they have a goal of reaching more than one million dollars. Watching the presenation is a patient, Carrie Bennett, who expressed her appreciation for the help l.ojn'T 'vfforpd through the donation. |