-
KEL 322 William Madland and Wesley Dobbs attend a blood donation at Legion Hall. Wesley Dobbs sits off the side of a stretcher and applies pressure over a bandage on his arm. Behind the two men are some medical supplies. Both Mr. Dobbs and Mr. Madland donated at the first
American Red Cross Bloodmobile drawing ten years ago on Sept. 14, 1955. Mr. Dobbs was the
first donor on that day and Mr. Madland was the last. This was the tenth anniversary of the Bloodmobile program in Twin Falls.
-
KEL 321 From left to right, Ed Bossard, Jim McCord, and Hugh Coates prepare for a light bulb sale for the Lions International club. The sale's proceeds are to go to the Lion's Eyesight Fund and will pay for glasses for needy people in the Twin Falls area. The bags they hold read "Lions Club Eye-Sight Fund Westinghouse Lamps." Boxes are piled up behind them.
-
KEL 320 Making plans for the annual FFA and 4-H Fat Stock Show and Sale, scheduled for September 25th at the Twin Falls Livestock Commission Company, are from left to right, Cecil Brim, owner of the commission company which is donating facilities for the sale; John Lawrence, vocational agriculture instructor at Twin Falls High School, and a member of the show and sale committee; and Ed Shaff, chairman of the committee. The three men stand behind a counter and look over some documents. A clock is hanging on the wall behind them.
-
KEL 319 Frances Sande, organizer of the Interdenominational Divine Order, stands outside the I-Do building located on 519 Main Ave. W. in Twin Falls, Idaho. She is dressed in a polka dot dress, white jacket, and a white scarf wrapped around her head. The sign outside the building reads "I-Do Research Specializing, Science Banishes Mystery." Several trees and shrubs surround the building.
-
KEL 318 Frances Sande, organizer of the Interdenominational Divine Order, poses in a hallway at the I-Do building located on 519 Main Ave. W. in Twin Falls, Idaho. She is dressed in a polka dot dress, white jacket, and a white scarf wrapped around her head. A picture hangs on the wall behind her.
-
KEL 317 Dr. Leslie Dean, a plant pathologist that developed disease-resistant beans, poses in an office. Some clothing hangs against the wall to the side, and a door and light switch are behind him. He is dressed in a suit and tie.
-
KEL 316 Pat Hankins, lab technician, shows Jack Swisher, blood drive chairman for the Twin Falls chapter of the American Red Cross, a cabinet filled with bottles of blood at the Magic Valley Memorial Hospital. The cabinet has a sign at the top reading "Blood Bank." Small bottles are on the top shelves of the cabinet, while large bottles labeled "O Negative" and "A Negative" are on the bottom shelves. Several bottles have informational tags attached to them. A box labeled "Plasma Protein Fraction, (Human) Plasmanate Cutter" is also visible.
-
KEL 315 TFHS and CSI students examine differences in their textbooks. From left to right are CSI students Stormy Blake and Dave Victor, and TFHS students Terri Hanel and Kerry Griffin. The boys are dressed in white shirts and slacks. Terri Hanel is dressed in a plaid dress, and Kerry Griffin wears a lacy shirt and pleated skirt. The tiled wall of Twin Falls High School is visible behind them.
-
KEL 314 Lab technicians Art Busacker and Pat Hankins log in a shipment of blood at Magic Valley Memorial Hospital. Some bottles of blood are sitting on the counter, and the labels read "A Positive," "O," and "Citrated Whole Blood (Human)." Several diagrams and forms hang on a bulletin board above the counter, and above the bulletin board are some cupboards.
-
KEL 313 John Wolfe, the 1964 Realtor of the Year, presents James Danner, salesman for the Lynwood Realty Co., a plaque for the 1965 Realtor of the Year award. R. Gene Messersmith, president of the board, stands to the left and watches. All the men are dressed in suits and ties. The plaque reads "Twin Falls Board of Realtors Realtor of the Year Award."
-
KEL 312 Mrs. Max Dayley stands in the entrance of a fallout shelter. The shelter is dug out of the side of a hill, and lava rocks, plants, flowers, shrubs, and long grass have been used to provide landscaping. The inner shell of the shelter is made of reinforced concrete and concrete blocks, topped by four feet of dirt.
-
KEL 311 An oil painting of a pitcher, teapot, and some fruit titled "Red Still Life" by Mrs. Harley F. Hann, a member of the Art Guild of the Magic Valley, wins some awards at the Twin Falls County Fair. Two award ribbons hang from the corners of the frame. One reads "First Premium Still Life, All Media, Realistic" and the other reads "Best of Show." Tags reading "242" and "Gloria Hann" are in the bottom corners of the painting. The painting on the wall beside it has a ribbon reading "Second Premium Flowers, All Media, Realistic" and a tag in the corner reading "Henkelman."
-
KEL 310 The Star Ranch, Frances Sande's Interdenominational Divine Order complex, located between Hansen and Murtaugh, is seen surrounded by empty fields covered in manure. Several other houses are nearby. A Volkswagen Bug automobile (car) is parked in one of the driveways. A man in a cowboy hat is working in a small garden in the backyard. Fields, trees, and mountains are visible in the distance.
-
KEL 309 Three models for the Beta Sigma Phi benefit fashion show are, from left to right,
Lita Kincheloe, Michael Tegan, and Nedra Lingnaw. The women are wearing dresses, and the Mr. Tegan is wearing a suit and tie with a striped shirt. In the background, a little boy is a shirt reading "Idaho State" is sitting on a chair.
-
KEL 308 Timothy Driscoll, son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Driscoll, tries out to play the part of Winthrop in the Dilettante's production of "The Music Man." He holds a copy of the script, and the front of it reads "Meredith Willson's The Music Man, Frank Music Corp. and Rinimer Corperation."