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Show 1 2 BOX BE ELDER NEWS, Brigham City, Utah October Sunday, 24, 1971 Winners Comment UP to Give Scholarships Foundation Reports 18 to 21 Union Pacific Railroad will celebrate the 50th anniversary of -- Year-Olds its college scholarship program this fall by giving away more money than it ever has before. In Utah it means that 32 and vocational agriculture students will each receive a $400 scholarship, double the amount given recipients in recent years, said Joe W. Jarvis, Omaha, supervisor of agriculture and livestock. The total for Utah is 4-- To Cast First Ballot cities, but the Constitution also directs that the Legislature shall by general laws provide the for incorporation, organization, and classification of cities and towns by proportion to population, which laws may be altered, amended, or repealed. Municipal elections in 1971 will give Utahs new voters their first experience at the polls, and even though no national or state offices are at stake they will be helping to mold the layer of government closest to their daily lives. A research report released this week by Utah Foundation, the private, nonprofit public service agency, discusses the of functioning population setting requirements for various By classes of cities, the Legislature in effect makes general laws apply to only one, or a very few, specific places. Salt Lake City is Utahs only "city of the first class, and there are only four cities of the second class Ogden, Provo, Logan, and Murray. Utah has 106 cities of the third class and 104 towns, a municipal government in Utah and emphasizes its importance in the daily lives of urban dwellers. Maintenance of law and or- der, fire protection, public and health sanitation, recreation, and the provision of sidewalks, streets, and gutters, total In Many Regulations municipal addition, governments regulate comresidential and mercial development within their borders by means of zoning ordinances, building codes, and licensing procedures. Utah cities and towns are not sovereign, but derive their basic powers and are given their responsibilities by law, and constitutional both statutory, the Foundation report notes. within operate They frameworks set forth, and on occasion amended, by the State Legislature. The very form of government for each class of city and town in Utah is prescribed by law, although the Constitution provides that any Utah city or town may adopt a home rule charter and select its own form of government. Only Ogden and Tooele are now operating under charter rule, although Provo adopted a charter in 1955 but abandoned it in 1962. The Constitution specifically prohibits the enactment of special laws to apply to specific Chapter Offers Towns are governed by a board of trustees, consisting of a president and four trustees, all elected at large. Town residents will be voting on two trustees in 1971, and on the board president and other two trustees in 1973. On Tuesday the 1970 winners who are attending Utah State university will receive their $400 check from Jarvis at the Union Pacifics annual scholarship banquet at Logan. Local Comments returned to Jarvis during his survey The questionaires revealed the impact the scholarship had on the winners. Russell T. Johnson, a 1937 Box Elder county winner (FFA), Box winner Elder county (FFA). His two brothers Robert and Richard Jensen and sister DeAnn Jensen all won the UP scholarship. All Vocations "Union Pacific recipients have gone into every con ceivable vocation, said Jarvis. "The future these young people have been able to mold for themselves has fulfilled our objective many times over, said John C. Kenefick, Union Pacific Railroad presideht. urban Re?E FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI) The Slate of Kentucky is giving college graduates with high marks an extra pay advantage if they take jobs in state government. Under a new plan, college graduates with a grade-poin- t average of 3.25 on a lour-poiscale will get an extra 5 per cent above the starting salary. fsi QQnttUilit!) Oftm OIS3B3? ibQiglCGiiVS3iniJli OTT:lM!r.rMi7l.bTJUHl communities EOO I OMIN 11 IV we 1 "460 sror: NG nnspoEBQ OPGCJ 9GQ33B i JOLTS Every Bcr t1 fiM vx Tr r 'C-V- u - k vvVA tV (i Vl PRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOCSR 25,26, 27, 1971 'hi n. 3t :"lV V tv are unicorporated. Two of them, East Mill Creek and Holladay, are larger than either of the two smallest second class cities. Cities of the first class effectively Salt Lake City are governed by a fiveman commission consisting of a mayor and four commissioners, all Vi $ i FrJ O' xV' Q: G CS Q' We 3 K run elected at large. The city auditor is also elected. On the 1971 ballot, and each four years thereafter, the offices of mayor and two commissioners will be contested, all for four-yea- r many subjects concerning and mental health the prevention of mental illness which include extensive material on the use and abuse of drugs. Speakers on these subjects may also be secured by contacting Nick Topik, chairman of the Education committee, or Eugie Dean, Funds now being solicited for the mental health program support these community services. GRADE TT3i terms. In Jf 1971 (and quadrennially thereafter) the other two commission posts and that of auditor will be on the ballot. Second Class City Cities of the second class are governed by a three-ma- n commission consisting of a mayor and two commissioners, elected at large. The auditor is also an elective official. The auditor and one commissioner will be elected in 1971, the mayor and the other commissioner in 1973. Ogden, under its charter, is a notable exception. Ogden has a commission consisting of a mayor and six commissioners and all terms and run at serve two-yeeach municipal election. In Ogden the auditor is an appointive and not an elective official. Cities of the third class are flPPL V m ID. PROCTORLjIGAMBLEM iJ:ft4:iCI3E0! truckTToadiofIvalvesi CHlQUirA U-S- u. VH&53 v V JOCKO UUITERU PUMPKIN or on CAUif. FL017ER nmm mow 5,,OW IVIltTt 10. WITHOUT education required. job placement assistance and transfer privileges. Free nationwide refresher courses. Student loans available. 3 0 ftlt VOID AFTER OCTOBER 27 mmm CAREER TRAINING INSTITUTE V0-- S CREf.lE ROUSE REGULAR LEMON LEMON WITH BODY REG. 1.15 tU A bTeTc OupON FLUFrO COUPON COUPON WORTH 13c GOOD ONLY AT FOOD KING STORES 12 .IJ 38 OZ. WITH 18-6- 5. First Security Beak Dldg. CRISCO OIL COUPON No high school -Free ages nationwide 621-36- MJ.1J (U RAtXIABfErcOUPQfT 33 ID. Trainees needed in hospitals, clinics, nursing homes and in doctors offices in the Ogden area. Cel! OTRAWDEDRIES No. . 20 OZ. Medical Receptionist Medical Secretary' Medical Assistant and women FLAVORLAIID PANAMAfl Male Medical Orderlies & Assistants Men 00)00000 incorporated First Class City the first class is currently one with more than 100,000 residents. To become a city of the second class, a city must have more than 60,000 and fewer than 100,000 inhabitants. Cities of the third class have populations between 800 and 60,000. Towns are incorporated places with fewer than 800 residents, and must have at least 100 inhabitants at the time of incorporation. Utah law provides that a city, once having attained a given classification, shall not be reduced in rank even though it loses population or the statutory requirement for that class of city be raised. Some peculiar situations have arisen in consequence, the Foundation reports. Bountiful and Orem, third class cities, are larger than either Logan or Murray, cities of the second class. Bingham remains a city of the third class even though it now officially has only 31 residents. Incorporation as a city or town is optional under Utah law, and three of Utahs ten largest The film Who Cops Out? was shown to the mental health chairmen of the South Box Elder PTA council Thursday evening. This is one of the available resources offered to group leaders by the local mental health chapter from the ' state division office. Others include literature on k 1973. $12,800. operators, businessmen and homemakers. A city of Film : 215 five-memb- The fust parachute wedding was performed in 1940 at the New Yo k Worlds Fair. The minister, the bride and groom, the best man, the maid of honor, and four musicians were all susp jnded in parachutes! They are college presidents, professors, teachers, doctors, lawyers, state and federal officials, farm scientists, municipalities, after making adjustments in accordance with the 1970 census. water and sewage disposal systems, and garbage collection, are among the major functions carried out primarily by municipal governments. All of them are of daily concern to dwellers in urban places. of governed by a mayor and city council, the mayor not being a regular member of the council. Offices of mayor and of two councilmen are at stake in 1971, the other three council posts being contested in The wrote, scholarship awarded to me was probably the main influence on me to attend college. While $100 doesnt sound like much today, in 1937 it meant the difference between having enough money to attend college or not. I have always been grateful to Union Pacific for giving me that opportunity. An unusual aspect of the scholarship program is the number of families that had more than one winner, with either one or both parents and as many as five children named as winners. Such is the case with Michael V. Jensen, a 1970 170-- 5 HAIR SFilAV LB. WITH COUPON WITHOUT OftA UU COUPON COUPON WORTH 11c GOOD ONLY AT FOOD KING STORES VOID AFTER OCTOBER 27 90Z. REGULAR HARD TO HOLD SUPER HOLD REG. 1.50 071 |