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Show ) III w IKS EDITOK MYItLE rKDERSEX Ass't Editor Arnold Matthews TEACHERS INSTITUTE Teachers Institute was held on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of last week in Salt Lake City. The teachers suffered while the students stud-ents enjoyed a rainy, one day vacation. vac-ation. The students of P. G. H. S. are very much in favor with U. E. A. ASSEMBLY Ronnie Griggs and his orchestra from the BYU have graciously of- . fered to present an assembly for Pleasant Grove High School. This college student orchestra seems to be very talented. The Seniors will pay special attention at-tention to their music for they are looking for the Senior Hop orchestra. or-chestra. I PEP RALLY What yelling you could hardly hear yourself yell last Thursday when the cheerleaders got out on the stage and really gave us a workover. There was a cute skit put on by a group of the Junior and Senior Girls. Mr. Smith gave a pep talk which gave us oodles and oodles of pep.. "Let's keep lit Up.'!" "YOUTH FACES LIFE" One Senior boy from each high school in the state will be chosen to attend a conference "Youth Faces Life." The conference is sponsored by the Salt Lake Rot- ary Club. . The boy from our school will be j chosen by a committee of teachers and students. Lyean Johnson is chairman, and the members are Miss Fenton, Betty Whitehead, ' Betty Page and Calvin Baxter. i The boys will stay at the homes of various Rotary Club members. They will attend various functions planned for their entertainment and educationr.'jr:-jfris time, in- I cludingtTrefcoii. a gie-Jr; Lver-ity Lver-ity of Utah Footba'l Yarie. Upon his return home, each boy is then eligible to enter an essay contest on the subject, "What It Means To Be An American." The wining contestant will be awarded a 4-year college scholarship scholar-ship which consists of $450 a year, or a total of $1800. This is being clone because the Rotary Club believes in boys and in helping them prepare for a distin-j distin-j guished future. Mammoth Hot Springs At Mammoth Hot Springs the hot ! water has brought to the surface quantities of white mineral deposits which build terraces of beautifully incrusted basins high up into the air, often engulfing 'trees of considerable con-siderable size. Over the edges of these carved basins pours the hot water. Microscopic plants called alj-.e grow on the edges and sides of these basins, painting the mineral min-eral matter in hues of red and pink and bluish gray. At many other points lesser hot springs occur, introducing in-troducing strange, almost uncanny, elements into wooded and otherwise quite normal landscapes. |