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Show In The&ood QldSays l". : i ii -i i,:i.s !; i " 25 YEARS AGO August 25. 1!)35 An attractive new high school building, the first year of a junior high and additions to the curriculum are attractions that will help to ease the student's pain in having to leave summer jobs, vacations and other pleasant pastimes to join the back to school trek. September B. The division of Junior High and Senior High has made in necessary to have some teachers teach subjects that are not in their major field. However, teachers are placed so that they have subjects to teach in either their major field or minor field of study, said Glen Ovard. high school principal. A number of curriculum changes have been made this year. Industrial arts as a woodworking skill has been discontinued because there were not enough funds available to equip the ' shop. However, there has been added a class in crafts for grades 10-12 which will consist of varied skills and arts such as wood burning, metal turning, bookbinding, leather work, plastics, and mechanical drawing, and other crafts. Business arithmetic, creative dancing, and a class in senior science available to grades 11-12 will also bo added. :U) YEARS AGO August 21. 1!1."0 Patients totaling 881 have sought rooms at the Uintah County Hospital since it was dedicated June 1949 by lli'bcr Reunion. Jr.. Secretary of State, reports Erland Preece. hospital manager Nearing the end of its first fiscal year of operation, the hospital recorded a loss of hut $2. with 10 ix'rccnt of its dues not collected a strong indication that the hospital is coming close to paying its "own way." A few changes have taken place in the hospital staff since that memorable day in 1949. Rayola Hodgkinson has resigned as superintendent of nurses and had not been replaced, but Josephine Tnussaint has filled the vacancy. Just newly added to the hospital is laboratory analysis, a service that never before has been extended to patients and doctors of this Basin. The hospital management and those affiliated with its construction and operation are extremely pleased with the progress in one years time and will continually seek to improve its facilities and service, Mr. Preece said. |