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Show THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1970 PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW, PLEASANT GROVS, UTAH THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1970 Writers League to j Hear Scott Whitaker Jan. 19 j Scott Whitaker, author of j several Death Valley Days TV scripts and motion picture j story editor for BYU Motion Picture Studio will be the guest speaker at the first meeting of the year for Utah Valley Chap-- ter's League of Writers, Mon- - day, Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. in A-5- 2 JKB at BYU. According to new officers, Marilyn Miller, president; Herb McLean, vice president and Lea Lane, secretary, mem-bers and all interested people are invited to attend the event, featuring a film "Johnny Lin-go," and some discussion of what make good motion picture writing and its similarities to story writing. Mr. Whitaker is responsible for a great deal of the success BYU has made in motion pic-ture writing these past years. As both director and script wri-ter, he has helped produce many BYU films. His experi-ence in film making includes 6 years of work at Disney Stud-ios, 3 years at RKO Studios and some time with Twentieth Century Fox. For three years, his service in the U.S. Navy included work with training films and battle reports. He also serves as bishop of the BYU Sixth Ward, is mar-ried to the former Beth An-derson and they have six chil-dren. :XXVVVVVXVVVV "' ' " "" '""M' """'" ' ' ' . .... . , Give your country a hand. But don't lift a finger. ... .;''--: "? i?w s W - '"" ' " f: f ( My , " 4 m. ton "' ' f t - ,..,A , y . ? - "' ' iWniWmffl - w Mtviamim rr.i- -. ar Except to fill out this Payroll Savings Card where you work. After that, just sit back Treasury will replace them and be lazy. Each payday free if they are lost, part of your pay will be stolen, or destroyed, automatically set aside for There's a bonus, too. Each U.S. Savings Bonds. Bond you buy entitles you And that can mean big to buy a Freedom Share of money for you in the years the same denomination, to come. For a new home, Freedom Shares pay a high- - for education, or for er rate of interest than retirement. Bonds, and mature in just It means big money for four and one-hal- f years, your country, too. The kind Now doesn't it takes to put men on the that sound p moon, build highways, and like easy "A keep the nation strong. handi- - - Andthe.governmentbe- - . work? jj2& lieves in safeguarding your &Zs.?Jl investment in it. Bonds are ' --rT31' guaranteed. And the U.S. ' Ios'' 'olen; M destroyed, we replace cm Take stock in America Buy U.S. Savings Bonds & Freedom Shares ( U Ui U LN U U LN 3 LETTERPRESS AND OFFSET PRINTING 1 We invite you to come in and get an 1 ESTIMATE j I on Your Printing Requirements 1 j LOW PRICES AND OUR WORK I IS GUARANTEED BUSINESS FORMS LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES J WEDDING INVITATIONS PAMPHLETS AND BROCHURES j SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY I I U LzjLzJofcZrU J U I 11 South Main Phone 785-3- 1 1 1 rSblNTHE TRUTH IS... u-- -. -- P K xstft md g w Lyjt I "" Y AcSvertisinig .helps vow raiake , a b4te.ir DBuDBCOa We are better informed today about the newest ana most convenient ways --to live through advertising. And advertising helps you make a better choice. V Advertising is news about what's new, where it is, and JIaI; when is the best time to buy. vcXir I American business is constantly searching for new- VjL ways to make better products for you, and for less. And iBl you hear about its success through advertising. Today, i the truth is you enjoy modem, life more with the help of I advertising. '. J Carl Parrys Report On Trip to Europe Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Parry of Pleasant Grove recently re-turned from a tour of Europe. They were accompan-ied by Mrs. Parry's brother and sister-in-la- Frank and Louise Holmes of Cedar City. They flew to London, where they caught a train to Harwick, England, taking a ferry across the English Channel (staying overnight on the channel) to Rotterdam, Holland, where they continued by train to Am-sterdam. They rented a car and motored to Schweinfurt, Ger-many, picking up Sp.5 Bruce Holmes, who is stationed with the U.S. Army. Bruce spent the next 16 days with them. Places of interest visited in Europe were Numberg, Mun-ich, Heidelberg, Dachau, Ger-many; Salzberg, Austria, Ven-ice, Florence, Geneva, Pisa, and Rome Italy; Bern, Zurich, Switzerland; ; Antwerp, Bruss-Pari- s, France, turning in their car, where they spent five days before returning home. Some of the highlights of the trip included: changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace, Madam Tassaunds Wax Mus-eum, Westminster Abbey, Rijk-smuseu- m in Amsterdam, Vati-can City, Colosseum in Rome, Leaning Tower of Pisa, Eiffel Hower, Arche of Triumph, The Louvre, Notre Dame, Napol-eon's Tomb, Grand Palace in Belgium, Thames, Tiber, Seine and Rhine Rivers, Dachau con-centration camp in Germany. Farmers Assn Prexy To Speak Tuesday Devon Woodland, the Idaho State President and National Director of National Farmers Organization (NFO) will be speaking next Tuesday night. Mr. Woodland will be the guest speaker January 20, 1970 at 7:00 p.m. at the City Hall Auditorium, American Fork. All farmers and ranchers are vited to attend. HOSPITAL NEWS Among babies born at the American Fork Hospital dur-ing the past week were the fol-lowing from the Pleasant Grove area: Jan. 6, a boy to John L. and Bonnie Hardman Baxter. Jan. 8, a girl to Russell and Sherry Walker Hansen. Jan. 10, a girl to Paul E. and Carolyn Hilton Jacob. Other patients at the hos-pital from this area included Shirlee Hindley, Lorin A. Bar-rett, Ella Raye Neilson, Jan-ice L. Merlin, Wanda Thom-as, Delia Bezzant, John A. Marchbanks, Dorothy Newman. John E. Thornton, Marvon D. Holdaway, Edna Atkinson, Anna Hansen and Virginia Carlson. |