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Show around the C 0 K ! In N SUGAR HOUSE E j With ihp Editor R I So there will be no confusion . . . we are not answering our phone in falsettos these days. As of Monday, charming Miss Susan Su-san Shentieard, late of Chicago, has been working for us in a secretarial-Girl Friday capacity. capac-ity. Miss Shepheard is on leave from Bennington College, school for girls in Vermont, where she is enrolled as a freshman. As a part of her schooling, she is re-quired re-quired to take a non-resident term, which means going out and getting a job for a couple of months. So, she will be with us until she has to report back to school on March 22. Miss Senheard's parents Mr, and Mrs. Osborne Shejpheard, recently moved here from Chicago. Chi-cago. Mr. Shepheard is associated asso-ciated with Strevell-Paterson Finance Corp. In the weeks to come Susan will be covering a reporter's beat in and around Sugar House for The Bulletin Keep your eye out for her. Last week end the State Press Association held its annual convention. con-vention. And a fine convention it was. It is too bad that the people of the state don't know their newspapermen better. These men are for the most part, courageous, long-suffering, public-spirited people and good friends of the state. The record they have set, both as individuals individu-als and as members of the press association is one of which all of us can be proud. Recognized as one of the top press associations in the country, the Utah State Press Association this year pledges continued service to all the people of the state. Three times now Herb Price of the Telegram has scooped us on the doings of our correspondent, corre-spondent, Mack Pollock who writes our American Legion reports. re-ports. We've got to agree with Herb that Mack is good copy anv dav. Latest interesting item on Mack is his fabulous collec-1 tion of mechanical pencils. His collection has now grown to well over 250 and he has run out of cigar boxes to store them in. So he's decided to frame them . . . which only means he'll want more pencils. He figures fig-ures 250 pencils will be lost in a framed collection, so he's asking ask-ing some of his friends and acquaintances ac-quaintances to come across. Mack prefers pencils with advertising ad-vertising on them. Gimicks of all sorts please him. For instance, in-stance, hes got pencils shaped like sparkplugs, baseball bats; pencils which contain oil, magnifying mag-nifying glass coal floating in water and like that. Mack says he's been at it some 20 years and when he looks the collection over he "recalls a lot of nice memories." |