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Show ; I " ' c 1. t t Teresa Kabrieles Exchange Teacher In Local Schools Pleasant Grove has a .charming new visitor. She is Teresa Kabrieles, Ka-brieles, a petite black-eyed Sen-orita Sen-orita from Tampico. Mexico. Teresa has been in the United States for only five months but is already mastering the intricacies of the English language. When interviewed in-terviewed by a reporter of the Review, she said that she is very favorably impressed with the United Unit-ed States and people who live here. She is currently a guest at the home of Principal Donna O. Ash and spent the first days of this week getting- acquainted at the Grovecrest School. Senrita Kabrieles was born in Tampico, the daughter of Senora Eliza Salas de Kabrieles. She has one sister, Senora Micsaba K. de Barron. She was educated in the schools of Tampico and is a graduate of the Normal School there. Since graduatin she has taught for ten years in the Sixth Grades of the Mexican school system. Teresa came to the United States five months ago under the reciprocal recipro-cal Exchange Teacher Program, and prior to her arrival in Pleas- I ant Grove had taken orientation training at a Normral School at ' Bloomington, Illinois. Through the offices of the Utah State Department Depart-ment of Education, she was then brought to Utah -and assigned to the Elementary Schools cf Alpine District for the next five weeks. According to present arrangements, arrange-ments, she will teach Spanish in cooperatin with the Spanish teachers tea-chers in the District's Elementary Schools. |