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Show mmmmm " mw ininyiwy - , mm t ' I ',A i ' 1 Y J t Friday, All August 29, 1969 Of First Day Kindergarten (Editor's nott: It's day full of hop, fear, anxiaty and tometimas heart break. It'a the day your child let to of . Vjfi&s v.2LAl Jb !; . f-- K ' tSr'"' id Mrs. J. Fredrick Armstrong Mrs. Robert D. Corry Mrs. Oliver A. Farey By ANN HON1G Jr. Women's News Service - ? Brides Say Vows Among the bridal couples pledging marriage vows this week were Miss Sandra Lynn Stevens and John Boyden Crompton; Miss Laura Lee Hardy and John Fredrick Armstrong; Miss Barbara Willis and Robert Decker Co.ry; Miss Joyce Turner and John S. Turner; Miss Lyndll McFarlane and Oliver A. Farey Jr.; Miss Carol Lynn Thomas and Daniel Ross DeSpain; Miss Trena Ruth Way-ma- n and Roger Grant Young. ' Mrs. Maxine B. mother, Crompton, 2256 Downington Ave. The bridegroom also is a son of the late John A. Crompton. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Tally Stevens, 4278 Adonis Dr. Attending the bride at the nuptial festivities were Miss Terri Stevens, Mrs. Jeffrey Hill, Miss Connie Crompton, Mrs. Dwayne Wagstaff and Miss Cindy Anderson. Steven Gehring was best man. Stevens-Crompto- The bridegroom has attended the University of Utah. n John Boyden Crompton claimed Miss Sandra Lynn Stevens for his bride in a ceremony performed Thursday evening at L. S. Skaggs Memorial Chapel, First Baptist Daniel R. Mrs. Roger G. Young DeSpain Church. A reception followed. The bridal couple were feted at a rehearsal dinner at the Ambassador Club by his Abby, Drugs Aren't Worth The Risk By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN ABBY : I wonder if ,, DEAR the kids today ever stop and Is it worth ask themselves Im talking the gamble?' about grass, acid, and all the other illegal narcotics. Although my part with drugs was very small (I was not addicted was only an experimenter), I got busted anyway. I was one of those It can people who thought, never happen to me. Well it did. ' Most kids dont realize that being arrested on a narcotics charge is a nightmare which lasts a lifetime. It brands your parents, sisters, brothers, and even your friends. Can you imagine what its like for parents to get a call at 3 a.m. and be told that their son or daughter has been arrested for narcotics? Then you are mugged and booked and have a record with the FBI for a felony. who keeps worrying about his sons long hair should be more concerned about whats not INSIDE the boys head out! The ticks from drugs is simply not worth the gamble. I have learned the hard way, and it is hell. FBI RECORD AT 20 DEAR ABBY: The man - The modem generation So wants to be modern. what do they do?. They start wearing their hair the way men wore it 200 years ago! quantities of constructs paper and yarn and wood all to teach them about thei selves and the world around 3 them. It is a place of whimsy an furnf, charm, with kr.ee-higture and the stretch-ou- t fig; ures of tykes napping on tho s, I Mrs. John B. Crompton f NEW YORK (WNS) For millions of American ,jung-sterSeptember is a month full of anticipation; Its school time again. But for one group of youngsters the month holds a special kind of anxiety. These boys and girls, just out of babyhood, are going to school for the first time. IN AUGUST VEDDING RITES &v Ideally, there will be 20 boys and girls in a class. And in a year, they will use up 200 pounds of clay, 24 dozen sheets 3,000 of crayons, u n p r i n t e d newspaper, couple of gallons of pasts, 200 pounds of sand, and grea your hand to taka hit place in kinder, tartan. Thit it tha flrtt of four arlidat on what that day it lik, how to pra part for it, why soma ch ild ran and parantt faar it). Hardy-Armstro- Fort Douglas Country Club was the setting Friday for a wedding breakfast honoring Mr. and Mrs. newlyweds, John Fredrick Armstrong. They exchanged nuptial vows earlier in a Salt Lake Temple ceremony. Hostess for the postnuptial event was the bridegrooms mother, CONFIDENTIAL TO BUSY Yon are AND BUGGED: under no obligation to answer ANY questions (personal or otherwise) from one who is taking a telephone survey. Tell them youre busy and hang up. ng Mrs. Phyllis Armstrong, 2435 Blaine Ave. Mr. Armstrong also is a son of the late Roger Armstrong. Parents of the bride, the former Miss Laura Lee Hardy, are Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Hardy, 2435 Wilshire Dr. Friday evenirg, the bridal pair will greet reception guests at Parleys Seventh Ward. Attending the bride will be Miss Sherrie Hardy,, maid of The Spanish have an old The cloth does not saying, So why make the monk. should I worry about the way the next fellow wears his MARTIN IN NEW hair? ORLEANS - Mrs. John S. Turner honor; Miss Linda Aldous, Miss Jean Armstrong, Miss Lynette Russon, and junior bridesmaids, Miss Stephanie Goings, Miss Teresa Hardy and Miss Deborah Hardy. Flower girls are Kathleen Hardy, Christina Hardy and Michelle Davis. Steven L. Jones will be best man. The bride and her husband are graduates of the University of Utah. Entertaining for the bride were Miss Lynette Russon, Mrs. Dale Russon, Miss Linda Aldous, Miss Sherry Aldous, Mrs. Don Aldous, Mrs. Frank Jackson, Mrs. Owen Wright,. Mrs. Leon Halgren, Mrs. Charles Bastian. Others were Mrs. Don Dixon, Mrs. Kenneth Osborne,' Mrs. Calvin Lambert, Mrs. Louise Bryner, Mrs. Leonard Price, Mrs. James Cottam, Mrs. Harry Wong, Mrs. Gene Simpson and Mrs. LaMar Crocker. Willis-Corr- y Salt Lake Temple was the setting Thursday for the marriage of Miss Barbara Willis and Robert Decker Corry. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bertram T. Willis, 531 C St. . r Mr. and Mrs. J.' Elwood See WEDDINGS on Page 2 GIRLS h floor at Even the word is fanciful. ten mid-sessio- With scrubbed faces and polished shoes, they dutch mama's hand or skirt as they are introduced to that new and strange world called kindergarten. Some are filled with excitement and wonder; others with terror. kindergarj It meant childrens garden and it wa j coined 130 years ago by German teacher, Friedrich Froebel, whose school soughf to develop children via play games and songs. j However, the idea of kinderj , actually dates back to The .first day at school, garten who included a commu? Plato, entering kindergarten, is the nity in his ideal nursery rej clear-cuin t milestone a first But it wasnt until Vit public. child's life. What is it that torino de Faltre set up a kin? makes some children so eager in Mantua, Italy, iij dergarten to pass it, and others so deterthe 15th century that the corn mined to turn back? What can cept was put to use. parents do to ease this someAll this was ior tli times sudden transition from child of five. designed But what is to childhood? babyhood I Kindergarten is a place inhabited entirely by and supervised by benign giants called teachers, from whom all games and songfests flow. l It is a kind of home, a bridge between the real home and first grade where school starts in earnest. Kindergarten teaches a child how to live with others, how to express himself, how to observe and discover, how to be responsible and independent. To do this, it uses sandboxes and paintboxes. Herbariums and aquariums. Rock collections, blocks, record players. Doll houses and pianos. Puzzles and cork boards with childish works of art. . extra-mura- ... Olympus Hilis and : Here is how education aut thority Gladys Gardner Jenk? ins of the University of Iow4 and her colleagues describe on the first the day of school: A child usually goes t kindergarten eagerly, looking forward to the new experk ence. He may hold his moth ers hand tightly as h approaches the building 1hr first day, but rarely does h try to turn back. Not only does he want tP know what kindergarten isf like, but he enjoys other chii dren and wants to be with them. He is relating what ha sees to his past experience and anticipating the future. The is ld See ADJUSTING on Page naj A-l- $ Foothill Village when Henry Ford started and msss-producti- on high-volu- me SCHOOL SPECIALS. sc!:, he lowered the prices... but not the quality! ... ICDAY & SATOAY OMY! at Douglas Optica! t 4 GIRLS' BOSSES iveve been doing tbo same thing for ovor tmnty-fiv-o years! In Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14 regularly $7,00, now V check out quality! V check our service! regularly. $9.00, now ..... 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