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Show THE V s LEADER-GARLAN- TIMES, November D V 10, 1977. Page (31 Si toff & fcflf? - ; 1 J SSIU 1 m Comfy, Cal Craft, will host seven high school drill teams Saturday in competition at the school. Pictured , .BEAR RIVER above are (1 to r) Melanie Hirschi, Becky Barfuss, Dana Hill, Sherri Roberts, Kathy Cutler, Krisanne Christensen and Shauna Dalton. Drill Teams Will Compete Eight spirited drill teams from throughout northern Utah will compete Saturday evening in the Bear River High School invitational drill competition. Action gets under way at 7 p.m. in the high school gymnasium. On hand for the competition will be teams from the following high schools: - Hi-Step- Morgan, Cottonwood, Ben Lomond, Bonneville, Ogden, Box Elder, Bountiful and host Bear River. - Admission is $1.50 for adults, $1 for students, 50 cents for children. cont. from page one need not fear that the training is just a stepping stone to future employment with the FBI. The FBI has a maximum age limit for new employees of 35 and Redding is already 35. The FBI has already expended a ..considerable sum of money doinc a a background check on Redding, prerequisite to attending the course. In addition, the FBI pays travel expenses to and from the school and board and room. "They'll have an investment of approximately five times what the county would have in me in wages while I'm gone," the sheriff said. The fact that he has only one year left on his term of office doesn't seem to concern the FBI, he added. Redding said the FBI agent in charge in Utah "says, to his knowledge, this is the only government entity which has never continued the wages" of law enforcement personnel attending the training. "The fact that I have only one year left of my term is something I can do nothing about. The FBI schedules you when openings come," the sheriff added. Redding said the school "is not a convention" but, possibly, the "top course available to law enforcement in the nation." - end sovorat othor major brand j Pack-I- n Dairymen Win Jury Award ( namosto choo8ofrop.L V- - An eight-memb- er jury awarded two Tremonton dairymen the sum of $24,594.80 this week in a trial held in the First Judicial District Court recently. Dairymen E. Odell Summers, Bothwell, and Orval E. Petersen, 159 No. 1st West, Tremonton, received the favorable judgement in a law suit instigated by Gossner Cheese Company of Logan, in an interpleader action with a contest among Dairymen Associates, Inc., Berk Improvements to the culinary water - system in Honeyville were approved Friday by the State Board of Water Resources staff of similar projects at Deweyville and West Tremonton. Scheduled for Honeyville is a new 100,000-gallo- n storage tank, 320 water meters, 80 new service connections, 41 fire hydrants and 47,000 feet of transmission and distribution pipeline. The city has an excellent water supply, but most of the existing distribution system was installed in 1911 and is in poor condition. Many of the old lines are too small to meet the demand of Honeyville's increasing population. The project is expected to cost $495,000. The Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) will loan Honeyville $165,000 and make an outright grant of $160,000. The Board would purchase $165,000 in general obligation or water revenue bonds from Honeyville and the city would put $5,000 into the , project. Honeyville would be expected to retire the bonds purchased by the Board within 18 years at a rate of r, After two days of trial, the jury made its award in favor of Petersen and Summers. m material "Run, Shelly, Run", a book ich she said came from the ior high, contained a passage cribing a sexual act. he cited others, such as "Ser-im"Go Ask Alice", "Raisin in the Sun", and "Jaws", describing incest, sexual acts and perversion and raw language. "All these books have been brought to me by young people who are a little bit appalled...," she said. Mrs. Bowen said all the books are on a list "approved by UEA." UEA is the Utah Education Association. High School librarian, LaVoyle Stenquist, questioned the UEA list, noting, "I've been working for 20 years and I've never seen a UEA list." "They're certainly not promoted, because I haven't heard of it," she added. (A UEA spokesman in the Salt Lake City said he knows : " ", of no such listing.) Principal Woodbury also said he has "not heard of anything that is approved by UEA." He noted that the State Board of Education approves textbooks and that the American Library Association publishes a listing. The librarian said she is always on the lookout for objectionable books and asks her student aides to review 80 a year. The library contains about 9,000 books. "I just wonder when kids get this in books they read, how much is this contributing?" Mrs. Bowen said. "It's got to have its effect." She said, "Kids see this in school books and say to themselves," 'Well, nobody really cares." The meeting did have some heated moments. Dr. Woodbury esponded at one point that he "does object when you say it is being got here." He cited poirographic writing found in hymn books, -- put there by the users. "It's been my experience that some of the most pornographic situations are in textbooks themselves," -- the things the students themselves write in. Woodbury said the school annually has to throw some textbooks away rather than reuse them, because of the filth written in them. At one point the principal noted, "We think the teachers are trying very hard to rectify problems that a lot of gutless parents won't." That was in response to a question by Mrs. Bowen asking why the school doesn't try to "build up" morality. Boohivo Childs Vests Snowmobile Spiffs No. 1001 Reg. $12.95 No 1002 Reg. $16.95 No. 1003 Reg. $1 8.50. No. 1004 Reg. $19.98 $8 88 $1177 I I Only Only . Only O 97 $1 IO Only Reduced Another f about $9,200 a year. !' Division of Water Resources staff now will prepare procedure for the city to follow before the matter is returned to the Board for committal of funds to buy the bonds. The Deweyville project, expected to cost $270,150, would involve drilling and equipping a new well, installation of 40 meters and 28 fire hydrants and replacement of 21,600 feet of distribution lines with 6- - and pipe. A special improvement district is being formed at West Tremonton to provide a central water system to some 60 homes where most of the residents have shallow wells, many of which dried up last summer. The area is bounded by Tremonton, Garland, and Bothwell, Thatcher-Penros- e Cor-inn- All Included On This Sale! , The two dairymen were represented by attorney Dale M. Dorius, of the law firm of, Dorius and Dryden, of Brig-haCity. e. u y O : Off Our Low Prices. Sunshtno No. 707-- 2 Rg. $28.95 Sunshine No. DN-70- Rg. $48.95 . . 1 LEATHER COOTS Cost of the project is estimated at Tremonton will apply to Farmers Home Administration for a grant and a loan, in addition to the $100,000 being sought from the Board of Water Resources. w IO Coat Vry Special V Ov 9 IKCII TO? Down Vest Only $400,000. West Pornography Concern Aired cont. from page one might be revealed and then steps taken to eliminate it." Woodbury acknowledged that there "is a lot of objectionable material that is available to the school." The school library subscribes to the American Library Association which publishes an approved list of books. But, said Woodbury, "We recognize that different parts of the country have different ...morals. I think we have to be Concerned about our part of the Country." Mrs. Bowen quoted from a number of books during the discussion to indicate objectionable v; eley Bank for Cooperatives, a California banking institution, and the two dairymen. The suit concerned milk which had been delivered to Gossner Cheese Company during part of 1975. Honeyvi lie Water Project Is Approved Sheriff Confused 4 rJ included Aro: $33" V getfC Mrs. Willa Hurd, a counselor, noted at one point, "I can name you five girls who, since the first of the year, have dropped out pregnant,. ..and I can also promise you not one had ready any books." Glen Manning, Garland, acknowledged that it is impossible for the school to know from the descriptions given in the Ameri- can Library Association list, whether a book is acceptable. "Is there any way we can help?" he asked. "I'd like to suggest you offer a list of books you would approve of," Mrs. Hurd interjected. Glen Barfuss, Tremonton, noted that one of the goals of Communism is to destroy the home. "How can you destroy the family better than by stuffing a lot of trash into your children?" A female member of the dele-cited a quote by the Sjation of "Hustler" magazine that "pornography is the price we must pay tor freedom. "That attitude is one we've got to beat into the ground," she said. Woodbury noted that most of the group's comments had been directed at the high school, adding, "we really better broaden this." He said the county bookmobile has five copies of "Go Ask Alice." "I'm not sure we're not policing ourselves better than some others," he added. "We've all got a problem," Woodbury told the group. It is at home, at church and at school. FEDERAL DUCK Q PHEASANT LOAD Hiah brass ataatfe sKullo long ranae shot cud for ton nnHnrmanna nd uniform pattern.. 12, 16 20 Gauge ffrmm& dim 3 3f?Q2 |