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Show and driving Too much and to little exer-wit- h extra care to meet the me hke impair strength too The Tooele extra hazard Imposed by the mmh and too little food each AUiut the only advan'sge to winter season, urges the Utah dritroy health hbral modera-Safet- y bigger ear is that yu get Council lion m all things more fur your parsing nukel. Obey traffic law T odays School Slate Friday, November Transcript The future ran be nci'her nt4 or foreseen . so why worry about it? While theie may be no sub- for money, the dollar comes prettv i lose fore-dilut- e pen Friday Until 9 p.m. Mon. til 8 DfATMFVG r LMNIjI O Amrncan Ldutation Wtk tvcn pm in aijbody rye back in I1"), when permit Mined the girl seminary to ire How their education daughter wa progreinr.g The rule con fronting girt and their parent at one inch academy read a 15, 1563 it:tztt'" you ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY chart It i. Portnoy! follows: "NO YOUNG lady may be enrolled who cannot kindle a fire, wah potato, or repeat the multiplication, table She mut not tarry before the mirror more than three consecutive minute nor devout more than one hour per day to miscellaneous read tng novels, Shakespeare, Scon Robinion Crusoe and other imp moral work are strictly forbidden. No cosmetic, perfumeries or fancy aoap Is allowed on the premise. And every student should walk at least a mile a day unless a freshet, earthquake, Mr. Virginia Barker Clark and Mr. Ethel Hogan ilelntz, or some other calamity prevail. two well known artist from Salt Lake City, will present no student is exFinally, The Sound of Music, to all three chapters of Beta pected to have any mile acKirk Coral Room, Nos ember I9th, 7:04 the at Phi, reSigma are unless they quaintance p.m. All members are urged to bring guests. The price tired missionaries or agent of will be $2.34 per plate. some benevolent society." TIMES HUE changed as par ents visiting their children schools during American Education Week 1963 will readily Sometime they have changed so much Just since parents were in school that it' a little bewildering to take It all In. What 'does happen In school nowadays? Some school systems make a real effort to help parents see the broad canvas of education as It relates to the education of their own children. Here is one uch effort of a middle-sireIllinois school svstem, reported by the National Education Association. it pointed out the step on the ladder of learning climbed by each child as he progresses through school as follows: THE rOUNTHTlON for the child's education Is built in the elementary school. There he learns to read, to count, to make decisions, to find out what happens when a pan of ico Is placed over heat, to write, to draw and paint, to sing and play, and to care fbr others like him and different from him. When the child enters junior high school, he meets special problems of early adolescence. He changes from childhood dependence to adult independence. In an accelerated class he may cover his arithmetic in seventh grade, begin algebra in the eighth, and choose geometry In the ninth. He reads and writes. He makes music and paints. He learns crafts. NEW POLICE DISPATCHER . . . Delvld N. Roholt, 33 He learns about his country-it- s East Glenwood, is one of two new police dispatchers at geography, its history, its the Tooele City Police Station. Mr. Roholt has been in He runs. He plays government. the civilian security forces of Dugway and Tooele Army football and basketball, and he He transferred from Dugway to Tooele Army Dept. wrestles. He studies science, Depot in 1938 after serving at Dugway since 1931. He home economics, good grooming, was a guard at TAD until April of 1962. Latin, French, Spanish, and machine shop. He may learn to type. There are assemblies, stuIt has been said that an Amdent council, dances, plays. He erican is a man drinking Braquickly discovers there is so zilian coffee from an English much variety in life that he cup while sitting on a Danish must learn to choose wisely. sofa after coming home in a IN HIGH school, his simple German car, from an Italian foundation in reading and arithmovie, who picks up his Japametic becomes formalized in nese pen and writes complex departments: English, his Congressman demanding that foreign language's, social studies, something be done about all the education, home economics, in- gold thats leaving the country. dustrial arts, physical education, art, music, speech. The extrachild - and every child; to help curricular program satisfies his him grow and develop intellecinterests in debate, publications, morally and physically in tually, dramatics, athletics, electronics, his own unique pattern. teaching, science, photography, But the schools cannot do this journalism, and many others. alone. Parents need to work job a maintained he has If high with their children throughout enough average, he may take these golden years of education additional work. In many high encouraging and guiding, not schools today, a large percentand forcing. Parents pressuring age of seniors are taking colshould be listening to their chilege level courses for whjch they ldrens prattle, reading and figmay receive college credit or uring: displaying their art and Robert M. George advanced placement in the colhearing their music; listening to leges they expect to attend. their plans, their hopes, their Books, courses, and methods Airman George dreams: nurturing them and can - and do - differ from school for their needs at providing to school, even from room to every age level - and most of Assigned To room in the same school. lives based on signiall, living BUT THE modern school and Chanute AFB ficant values. the teachers in it have a basic Children need living examples Airman Robert M. George, meet to mission. They are trying of the way. son of Mrs. Marjory M. George the particular needs of your every step of 47 W. Main St., Grantsville, is being reassigned to Chanute AFB, Hi., for technical training as a United States Air Force flight training equipment specialist. 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