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Show Six Cedar High School Seniors To Take Pepsi Cola Scholarship Tests Six seniors from the Cedar City High School have been elected by their classmates to compete with students from other high schools throughout the United States and territories for the 119 Pepsi-Cola Four-Year College Scholarships and more than 550 fifty-dollar College Entrance Awards being offered again this year by the Pepsi-Cola Scholarship Board. The contestants chosen were: Ul-dene Ul-dene Adams, -Anne Ashcroft, Nelda Clark, Jean Marie Heywood, Avis Palmer, Blaine Tueller. According to Pratt Bethers, prln-ipal prln-ipal of the Cedar City High, It Is both a scholastic and a personal honor to be selected as a contestant contest-ant for one of these scholarships since a student so elected must be one who Is, in the opinion of classmates class-mates "most likely io mke an important im-portant contribution to human progress." pro-gress." The election, which was h:ld at a senior class meeting last week, was in itself an exercise in practical practi-cal American democracy, Mr. Bethers Beth-ers said. If one of the students from Cedar wins a Pepsi-Cola Scho'arship. he or she will have lull tuition and certain Incidental fees for four years at any accredited academic acad-emic college he wishes to attend in the United States. Its territories, cr Canada. In addition, hs will receive re-ceive an allowance of $2$ a month during the four academic years plus traveling expenses at the rate of three cents a mile for one round trip between home and college each school year. There will be five run-ners-up for every Scholarship to Dc given, and each will receive a College Col-lege Entrance Award which carries a gra.it of $50 payable If the winner win-ner enters college by the fall of 1948. Norman Leigh, student at the local high school, was one of the scholarship winners in 1946. |