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The Montana Standard from Butte, Montana • 9

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Montana Standard, Friday, June 2, 19729 VrV vwm inn i I art a 1 1 1 A mm nmhm GRADUATION Audio Sale of the Year Students listed for youth meet The Butte Business and Professional Women's Club is sponsoring six teens at the Youth Leadership Conference at the College of Great Falls in June. Students selected to go are Stephen- Sherman, Andy Toplarski, Cathy Barker, Teri Welch, Mary Harrington and Dona Riley. At a recent candlelight ceremony the club installed the following: Emma Kuecks, president; Alice GoSselin, first vice president; Mary Hannifin, second vice president; Mary Sullivan, recording secretary; Grace Sicotte, corresponding secretary; Amanda Shrader, treasurer. Scholarships awarded two At Afi May meeting the ladies auxiliary of the United Commercial Travelers, immediate past counsellor Katherine Sauter presented two $100 scholarships. One went to Diane Spillum of Butte High School, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Charles Spillum, 2817 Monroe. The other went to Timothy Murphy of Central High School, son of Mr. and Mrs. James D.

Murphy, 129 Rampart Drive. Miss Spillum will attend Montana Tech and Murphy will go to Carroll College. HITACHI 4-WAY AUTO STEREO Auto AMPEX Compare at 79'5 or more Cdfflvlf ifirtfk mike case, AC cord. ammaB RI Portable Home Ampex MICRO 9 Locks in Car, Plays on 12 Volts, AC Battery 90 39 Compare Battery AC Portable Cassette Tape PlayerRecorder MICRO 28 with AMFM Radio 90 99 59,90 $129.95 STEREO COMPONENTS Bob Scriver, western sculptor, at work A MP EX Slerto Speaker Stereo ftta Headphone locks fog Phono Input Walnut Coot nets SAVE igpj Sugg. Rotoil $229.95 Complete ampex competition at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame at Oklahoma City in 1970.

The bronze depicts a bull ride during a rodeo. The Saturday ceremony will open a display of 32 bronzes by Scriver, all depicting rodeo life. "An Honest Try," a bronze by Bob Scriver, will be unveiled Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Montana Historical Society building in Helena. Bobbi Wirth ot Wolf Creek, Miss Rodeo Montana, will officiate.

The society purchased the bronze before it won the gold medal at the Cowboy Artists Of America Sug. Retail ISVmmmmm Ampex 8400 4 -Channel M49 149 Ampex MICRO 87 Stereo Cassette Tape PlayerRecorder System Dl IIC Add BSR310X iLUj S0 Record Changer 8-Track Stereo Player, FM Stereo, FM AM Radio Expert says chess beneficial 90 '29 Wh. 8 TRACK 90 AUTO 29 STEREO Speakers install Toastmistress officers were installed by Bonnie Carter. President is Marie Flick; vice president; Ruth Haugland; secretary-treasurer, Bonnie Schriock; Club representatives, Sophie Ivey and Bonnie Carter. A past president's pin went to Sophie Ivey.

Table Topics were presented by Ruth Unger. Marion Canavan gave a programming lesson. Speakers were Bonnie Schriock and Ruth Haugland, Toastmistress was Margaret Fleming. Evaluators were Marie Flick and Juanita Sweeney. General evaluator was Eve Robinson and timer was Mae Woodward.

Recital tonight Friday night in St. John Episcopal Guild hall, Elizabeth Bretherton will present piano students in recital. The program Si two serpens, wUl begin at 7:36 and at 8:38. Relatives are welcome. Students will be presented Montana state Music Teacher Association certificates of merit.

FREE SPEAKERS While They Last ways had the idea of introducing chess to kids and felt the best place was on the kindergarten level. "I learned at that age and Bobby Fischer did and so did most of the other players I have come in contact with," he continues. "In the United States it may seem early but in the Soviet Union it's normal." Schiller, who gets a half unit credit per term for working five days a week with his young students, starts out by introducing the pieces one at a time and letting the kids become thoroughly familiar with how each moves. One 6-yearold has already played in an under-13-year-old tournament. Compare at 69.95 He also plays bridge, but thinks it involves too much luck.

"In chess there's a very small percentage of luck," hie says. "The only reason people lose in chess is because they make a mistake themselves." Schiller plans to attend the University of Chicago next year and major in Russian, a language he became interested in from reading books about chess, but which he now enjoys for its own sake. In addition to speaking Russian, he speaks Serbo-Croatian and -can read German, Portuguese, Spanish, French, Czech and Swedish, all of which he familiarized himself with through reading chess magazines. He may eventually go into the field of diplomacy, teaching or some type of te-teqsretjmg work, "But my real idea for fife is to get a job to sustain myself while playing chess," he says. By JOY STILLEY AP Newsfeatures Writer PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.

(AP) Five-year-olds are perfectly capable of learning to play chess and, in fact, that is the best age to start them out, says teen-age chess expert Eric Schiller, who serves as a volunteer teacher to kindergarten youngsters. "The earlier they learn to play chess the more beneficial the ability will be," he says. "Chess playing helps develop mare logical reasoning processes and helps them to think more clearly and evaluate decisions better." The 17-year-old senior at Schreiber High School here teaches the funilamenlalsal the game to kindergarteners at the Flower Hill Elementary School. He is a volunteer to HELP (Help Educate Little People), a program that places high school students in an assistant teacher capacity in elmentary schools. "I asked for the younger children because I feel they're easier to work with and there's more you can teach someone young," says Schiller.

"I've al parent at that age, he adds that the child who plays good chess will be good in math. Schiller recalls that from the time he was 4 or 5 he played chess with his father or guests in a casual way. In the middle of junior high he joined a group of 9th-graders who played it a little more seriously. "We entered a tournament and had a crushing defeat," he admits, "and then I started to pick up chess seriously and bought the first of many chess books. I probably buy more chess books than any other junior (under-21 player) in the country." Now chess has become a way of life for Schiller, who carries a folding chess board, zipper-cased playing pieces and basic chess books with him wherever he goes.

He was an assistant tournament director for the U.S. Chess Championship, was captain of the Eastern High School co-championship team and has won many trophies. He owns seven chess sets, including one huge "artistic" one. "I give them general principles that get them going," he explains. "They use basically the same opening all the thus, but they are beginning to get some attacking schemes down and occasionally get into some defensive things." The youth lists intelligence and a "very competitive instinct" as major prerequisites for the game.

Though an aptitude for math often is not ap SAVE tiOJJO Ann Landers 32 Sugg. Retail $129.95 Admiral RADIOS HUGE STOCK Portables AMFM' Clock Radios GUARANTEED BELOW WHOLESALE Swinger analyzed am mmm Lm iBr CHR 403 SALE PRICE PORTABLE TRACK 9Q RECORDERPLAYER $97 Complete with mikes. AC adapter and 1 2 -volt Auto Adapter Admiral COMBO Admiral CASSETTE TAPE PLAYER Fabulous Bass Response mm man is attractive and well-behaved. I am not being critical. I had lots of beaux when I was young but what I'd like to know is what in the world do these kids talk about.

Thank you, Ann. Baffled Gram DEAR GRAM: Don't you remember? DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband is a heavy drinker. He refuses to admit that he cannot handle his liquor. In the past year he as had three car accidents. The first two were minor but the last one was serious.

He nearly bled to death. My nerves are shot because I don't know what will happen to him the next time. Will you please tell me how to help this man of mine? Hell in Hanover DEAR H.H.: I know of no way to help an alcoholic who refuses to admit he has a problem, your husband is trying to kill himself. He's using a bottle instead of a gun. Write to Al-Anon and get some help for yourself.

move. Two of my children begged me to live with them but I refused. My youngest daughter, with whom I have a very good relationship, said, "If you won't come and live with us, how would you like US to come and live with YOU?" I said, "I'd love it "So they moved in eight months ago with their 15-year-old daughter. The question I am writing about may seem ridiculous but I'd like an answer. My granddaughter and her boyfriend talk on the phone three times a day.

They go to the same school and walk home together. They usuallystand in front of the house and visit for half an hour. As soon as he gets home he calls heup. They talk for about 20 minutes. Immediately after supper she telephones him.

This conversation lasts about half an hour. At 10 o'clock on the dot he calls-her "to say goodnight." conversation goes on for about 30 minutes. I am very fond of my granddaughter. The young $28M Deluxe Model PlayerRecorder 9990 AMFM Radio 8 Track Player Stereo Phono HITACHI (-TRACK HOME STEREO Tunnel Reflex AmplifierSpeakers Compare at $299.95 UNI SOUND SUGGESTIONS DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is an answer to "Swinger's Wife." Some people are totally incapable of establishing permanent relationships, because when they were growing up, everyone they became attached to betrayed them, moved awav or died. As an adult, The Swinger still needs love but he is afraid to allow himself to fall in love because he is terrified of being hurt again.

He cannot handle mature relationships, such as marriage or fatherhood, so he seeks out somone like himself, someone who will settle for a superficial, hit-and-run encounter. If, in a moment of weakness, The Swinger does decide to marry, he makes a very poor husband and an inadequate father. Innvariably he visits misery on everyone whose life he touches. The only answer is Jesus Christ. I know this is.

true because I have tried everything else and nothing worked. The day I found Him my life changed. In all the years I have been reading your column you have never once suggested Jesus Christ as the solution to a problem. Surely I am not the first person who has written to you along these lines. Even though you might not agree that Jesus is the greatest healer of all you should print a tetter which mentions Him as a possibility.

Please show the proper ecumenical spirit. A Believer DEAR BELIEVER: Never let it be said that I failed to show the proper ecumenical spirit. Here is your letter and my thanks for writing it. If Jesus provided the answer for you, I say, "Wonderful!" Help is where you find it. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Two years ago my husband died and left me well fixed.

The family home had been an important part of my life for 30 years and I decided not to 90 BIGGEST SOUND ABrtiikin 99 TAPE CASES 8-Track 1 Cassette, from STEREO HEADPHONES AicSusp. Spkrs. Sew him a shirt! It's easy! jTSffcSSw L. SHIRTING fli OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE! Excellent variety of weaves and prints, Vlrf stripes and ploids. 100 Cottons, Polyes- 'VUf aaaw ter-Cotton blends and Avril- Rayon-Cot- ton blend 45" Wide.

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Jl tBs BASS BOOST farmer, businessman, tedder in ttate MINI SIZE AUTOMATIC and national livestock organization. I will give Montanans up-to-date full and vigorous representation a17 AT -r- EASY TERMS or LAYAWAY i Jhowcafe 827 S.MONTANA 6TL.

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About The Montana Standard Archive

Pages Available:
1,049,187
Years Available:
1882-2024