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Show , w; " " 1 ' is .. - or "A A c i in. vl -0, ' , r- - 0 .- 'Wet, 1 "-vZlT! ' " TT' ""- 1 e bobb, V-- ! -s ' he ( H JK I YJ 1 - 1 , L ........ L . : Hinauri Tribole, left, a teacher at West Bountiful TflD TCAPUCD Elementary, was named outstanding teacher in Utah by )ft(jr- I Ul I CHUM til the Fraternal Order of Eagles. Principal Brice Howell " helps her display the plaque she received. 70 - On Jan. 31, 1976 a petite f u Vest Bountiful Elementary arst grade teacher was J warded the Teacher y ippreciation Award for the y lutstanding Teacher in the r tate of Utah 'for selflessness i a career devoted to the lolding of minds and haracter in the classroom' y Jim P. Grann, Worthy resident of the Fraternal rder of Eagles of Utah. IfllxHE SELECTION was ade from over 14,000 (High! achers within the state. cludeirhis award was given to rs. William Tribole of 1295 Madera Hills Dr., Boun- ul. y,- DTHER awards given the ft ,me night for outstanding ic service were presented f thief of Police Dewey Fillis on behalf of Salt Lake's Police Department; to Assistant Fire Chief Baker on behalf of Salt Lake's Fire Department and to former State of Utah Governor and former Mayor of Salt Lake City J. Bracken Lee as the outstanding citizen of the year. Mrs. Tribole's contribution to the teaching profession and to the world's understanding of mutual interests and problems were recognized, also, by the Utah Education Association. SHE WAS featured in an article in the Salt Lake Tribune and the Deseret News on January 10, describing her having taken a group of ethnically-mixed minority American students from Utah for an educational exchange to her homeland of New Zealand last year. THROUGH her personal contacts with political and academic leaders, she opened doors for the 25 students and chaperones whereby a new way of life and culture was experienced by the Utah high school students as they were hosted by Maori people of New Zealand while visiting schools and villages in that , part of the South Pacific. Now, as a reciprocal project, she is busily engaged in helping to bring an equal number of New Zealand high students to Utah in August of 1976 where they will share American and Utah culture. The group will include Maoris, Pacific Islanders and Pakeha (European) students from that nation. This lady is truly international interna-tional in her every day life and brings freshness and interest to her classroom and students. Young minds are molded and expanded by Mrs. Tribole's personal experiences and contacts. MARK TRIBOLE, 17, only child of Mr. and Mrs. Tribole, a former student at Bountiful High School, is currently attending at-tending his senior year at St. Peter's Maori Boys School in Auckland, New Zealand, preparatory to entering University there in 1977. |