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Show 2C DESERET NEWS, Frdoy, December 12, 1969 'Survivar For Jerry TOP TEN 'Duck' Into Plastics By (Billboard) 1. Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye Steam JULIE HAYES 2. East Correspondent Today and every day you have touched something made of plastic said instructor Mr. Donald Thiriot. This important element of society is a main topic in East High School's w orkshop ha IK The plastics class at Eat is new this year and brings in a new teacher with it. Mr. Thiriot has had years of training with plastics and is now passing on his knowledge to East High students. This class is designed for job and vocational traimng. A background in new machines and chance to work after high school in plastics are two of the many benefits students re-- . ceive, who are taking this . 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Piastisol resin duck-shape- is poured mold into ... d . . . bakes and spins in an oven at 450 degrees . . . a 8. 9. Raindrops Keep ing on My Head J. FallB. Thomi'V 10. Backfield in Motion glass plastic, used mainly by the students to make boomerangs. creepers, crash helmets and an project, a snow- Mel and Tim ' GOLLY all-o- (KNAK) mobile. Polystyrene beads are used In making floaters for fishing, and duck decoys. Hot water expands the beads causing them to fill a mold. Powder is sometimes used in a rotational oven to make footballs and Whole Lot of Love Led Zeppelin 2. Raindrops Keep FallB. ing on My Head J. Thomas 3. Someday We'll Be D ia n a Together Ross und Supremes 4. Leaving on a Jet Plane Peter, Paul 1. other small playthings. The hot metal touches the powder causing it to harden and pro-duthese footballs. ce 1 A vacuum-formachine, similar to those children play with to make tiny toy cars, can make about anything stu- and Mary 5. Down on the Corner Fortunate Son Cree-denClearwater Revival 6. Backfield in Motion ce x&- dents can form into a wooden mold. With this meld the vacuum draws out air and imprints the mold in hot plastic, Students and teacher have created some interesting and useful molds, such as a soup can dispenser. Sir. Thiriots pupils really enjoy the Hass, such as Mark Shoenfield: The class really benefits those who are not planning on going to col- - AP Newsfeatures Writer Only the Strong Survive. Rhythm n blues singer Jerry Butler wrote it with Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, and the interpretations of its title are many. One could be Butlers own career. From lead singer with toe Impressions in 1956 to a single and an LP on toe charts today, with only one million-sellin- g record in those 13 years, Jerry Butler has survived. A h of some of the Jerry Butler songs leading up to today can be very interesting. He was lead singer with the Impressions from late 1956 to late 58. Butler's hit with the group was For Your Precious Love (which he wrote) in 1958. When he left, they replaced him, and toe Impressions have survived toor they're still performing, with only that one replacement In 1962 Butler was the first Moon singer to record River." excluWe had a sive on Moon River, then needless to say everybody picked it up after feat Mostly Fm played on black radio stations. I'm played on pop stations when I get a big hit hut it has to be a proven hit before they play it Butler recorded Make t Easy on Yourself in 1363, as written and arranged by Burt Bacharach. Dionne Warwick w as the girl they used on the demo record. I said, Why dont you just put this out? They signed her as a singer and I got the song. Butler also was the first to record Kentucky Bluebird. The name was later changed, though not the song, and Miss Warwick recorded It as A Message to MichaeL He recorded Alfie" right after going to Mercury from Veejay in 1966, but didnt release it Ive been a stickler that in order to do a Bachar-ac-h song you have to do an arrangement like Bacharachs two-wee- k Various types of plastic are used such as corvette, a fiber- - ' Leaving on a Jet Plane Peter, Paul and Mary Someday We'll Be Diana Together Ross and Supremes Come Together Beatles Something Down on the Comer Foriunate Son Cree-denClearwater Re vival Take a letter Maria R. B. Greaves Yester You, Yester Me Stevie Wonder And When I Die -Blood, Sweat and Tears ce course. 1 By MARY CAMPBELL NATIONALLY l':.. - .miaim . and in 10 deco. This irtwA a i nn imiiii i - inm Jr mi.rf'4iT ini . Mel minutes Carl Heinlein and Tom Truitt of East have a new duck and other plastic products they make are hand painted. ke with its vocational value. I think all schools should give pupils the good vocational training opportuni ties East gives hers. Gills are investigating the though secretly. Maybe year Mr. Thiriot wBl be surprised when to find the vacuum form machine mak-rlas- s, lng plastic flowers or a corn-nepact case! N' DAT DISC or it just doesn't happen, and we didn't, Butler performed on a show with Otis Redding in Buffalo in 1965. After the shew we sat around doodling on guitars in a hotel room. At this time he had no hits and I had no hits. I said. This is a song I've been working with for three months and I can't finish it to save my life, arid I played him Tve Been Loving You Too Long. He said, I like It sounds great I said, You fin- it ish it and record it and Ill split toe publishing with you. I thought he was putting me on. We were sitting around, having a beer. What is he going to say, Youre writing a terrible song.? But I beard it l'ter on toe radio in Atlanta and I that song Gee, thought, sounds familiar. It was just unbelievable what he did with it. I think only the way he did it made it a hit The song was a good song, but I give him ail the credit for it And I L VALUE b Ifc ALWAYS FIRST don't know how he remembered it; we didnt have a tape recorder; we just played it three or four times. Now, it's been recorded b so man people, its one of the most valuable copyrights I have. Never Going To Give You in 1968, sold about and was toe start of Butler's working with Gamble and Fuff. He'd met them n Philadelphia in a cluo which had been a jarz room, money, into which the mo men started booking r and b acts. Now the three of them write songs together, and they produce Butlers records for Up, 800.000 lo.-ir-.g Mercury. Only the They wrote Strong Survive together and Butler recorded it for The Iceman Cometh album. (The Iceman was a nickname a disc jockey in Philadelphia gave me in 1959. basically because I'm what is known in toe idiom as cool. It me to say embarrasses that.) Butler says, It was just another song in the album to me. I played it for my wife and she said, This will be the biggest record you ever had, and she iet me $1,000 on it of MORGAN Jewelers! Bridal Set ond $89.95 A clastic design for . EssyHo enjoyment fashioned ia yew 14K white or choice of yellow gold, tiegs ia- tarfeck to promt twisting aad wear. Credit Co-Sign- er j Hi.1t - and Tim 7. Brand New Me Dusty Springfield 9. Jam up and Jelly Tight Tommy Roe 10. La La La Bobby Sheran THE RECORD PLACE xt Feliciano Concert ; Already Recorded It isnt often that one can keep hearing the same concert as often as one wants, but from the advance notices of Jose Felicianos concert in toe Salt Palace Saturday (13) this happy state of affairs will be possible. has just rec leased a album, RCA-Vict- two-dis- Alive Alive-- 0 ! ) of his concert at the Palladium in London. And toe Salt Palace program will be. reportedly, the same. The program will inc'ude: (Side 1); God save toe Queen (and one can expect that this will be given another title?). Rain, Malagueaa, El Jenite, Nobody Knows You (LSP-6021- NEW RELEASE When, and Y'oure Down and Out; (Side 2): The Comedy Bit, Guantanamera, No Dogs Allowed, Mama Don't Allow It; (SMe 3): Dont Let the Sun Catch You Crying, Day Tripper, A Day in toe Life, and medley that includes Felicia dade. Samba de Orfeu, Manha de Camaval; (Side 4): California Dream-in-', and then perhaps his most popular number: Light My Fire, and La Entrada de BUboa (Battle of Entrada). The color cover jacket comes w ith a photo of the blind Feliciano singing and on the back: he and his seeing-ey- e dog in a deep bow. hliMilMtilw My mwyrnlMtm (MiUniMHa (ofatkMMirw IhaMfilM o mJ PUTAUTTUIOVK wMmn PKStilOHT COWMY IN YOUR HtAHT JACKIE DESMANNON FEOPANTE u a TEICHER .Aril iaj 131 IN1TED IUBEHTY1 ARTISTS STBEHara V" -- nCRAFBIS&JCk Downtown Salt Lake Cottonwood Mall Open Mon. Hint Sat. till 9:33 PJl Sun. 12 to 5 P.M. DOWNTOWN SALT LAKE SUGAR HOUSE COTTONWOOD OGDEN FR0V0 MALL |