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Show 14 BOX ELDER JOURNAL, Brigham City, Utah UN Panel Sets Essay Thursday, October 8, 1970 Contest Local elementary and committee of judges will secondary students will make selection of the winners compete for U.S. savings from the essays, which will be bonds in the annual United coded by the chairman in order that the Identity of the writer is not known to any judge. Nations essay contest sponsored by the Brigham City United Nations Day committee during UN Week, Oct. Provide Title Page Students entering should provide a title page including their name, grade, teacher and school but should not place their name on any other page of the essay. Length of the essay is not over 400 words for the high schools, and not over 300 for the junior high school and elementary schools in which fifth and sixth graders are Invited to enter. Entry deadline is set for Friday, Oct. 23, by noon at which time entries will be picked up from the schools for judging. Chairman for the contest is Mrs. William H. termountain school, after Yates, who can be contacted 3 for further inhaving the contest officially at approved as a school activity formation. by Supt. J.C. Haws. Information Available UN Library materials have Individuals May Enter Although participation on a been placed in past years in school basis is up to the in- the local elementary and dividual principals, any secondary schools by the student in a school not of- League of Women Voters, and ficially entering the com- several films on United petition may enter on his or Nations food and hunger her own. programs are available on Top winners from the high short notice for use by school, junior high school and teachers in preparation for the Intermountain school will contest. The contest is one of several receive a $25 U.S. savings winners activities planned to combond, and the from the six elementary memorate the 25th anschools will share two savings niversary of the founding of bonds. First, second and third the United Nations, with many place certificates will be of the activities to center presented to the winners in about the schools of the each school. community. Chairman of the United Teachers may select the best entries frog) their Nations Day committee is classes, and members of the Mrs. Joseph P. Gurrister. UN committee and sub 24. 19 STUDENTS HELP Foothill school fourth and sixth grade boys assisted in a school project, planting holly bushes at the north end of the school with the proby the PTA and Spade and Hope Garden club. ject At Foothill School Pupils, PTA, Club Plant Holly Bushes Elementary students manure added teamed up with members of the Spade and Hope Garden club and PTA on Monday, Oct. 5, to plant holly bushes on the north side of the Foothill school building. to prepare the soil for planting in the bed, after which the boys prepared holes by mixing peat moss and the exisiting prepared soil. Holly bushes were planted and watered with a ground cover to be planted later. The boys worked under the area four feet wide and direction of garden club feet long was dug, rocks members Mrs. Frank Aoki, d removed and Mrs. Robert W. Coleman, An 64 well-rotte- Mrs. James Lowe and Mrs. William R. Yeates. Sixth graders assisting on the project were Gary Davis, James Elwell, Larry Gunnell, Cam Johnnie Hoesel, Peterson, Dale Quale, David Thurston, Brad Webster, Gary Allen, Douglas Cook, John Elwell, Danny Hammon and Kirk Hoth. From the fourth grade, assistance was given by Tim Anderson, Mike Bertleson, Brett Hansen, Ray McQuain, Malcolm Reeves, Ross Seelos, Ricky Peterson, Danny Eight pyracantha shrubs Richards and Leland Russell. will be planted on the south end of the building as soon as weather permits. Theme for the essay contest this year is How has the United Nations and its specialized agencies (FAO, UNICEF, etc.) worked toward solving the problems of world hunger? All local students are eligible to enter the contest, with criteria of judging set to Include a knowledge of the subject, Insight, clarity of expression and neatness. Letters announcing the contest have been sent to each elementary school principal, Box Elder Junior and Senior InHigh schools, and i f ' NEW CONTEST BEGINS Recalling how they won at their respective schools n last years UN essay contest, these girls discuss the 1970 contest in Brig- ham City. Front left, Debra Packer, Lincoln school; Eleanor Blue, Bunderson school, and Jane Bowman, Central school. all-cit- y Willard PTA Slates Drive Willard PTA will hold its annual membership drive from Oct. 12 - 16, with all parents in the school area being contacted to join the nationwide organization through their local schools. Each of the school classes will be running a contest to see which class has the largest percentage of parents joining the PTA, and a prize will be given to the winning class. Damage Windshield Vandals damaged a windshield on a 1966 station wagon owned by William R. Lane 236 West Sixth South, police reports showed Wednesday. OPEN DEMO HEADQUARTERS - On hand for ceremonies opening the new Democ-crati- c party headquarters in Brigham City at 68 South Main Tuesday were these political candidates. Left to right are William L. Packer, D. B. Green, D. -cutting ribbon- D. Billings, K. Gunn McKay, C. Henry Nielsen, David Sorenson, Warren W. Hyde, Earl K. Seegmiller and William D. Burton. McKay is seeking U.S. House seat from Utahs First district. Others are candidates for county, district and state legislative offices. BE Schools Visit-- . Museum Utah Governor and Mrs. Calvin L. Rampton will unveil a plaque on Sunday, Oct. 4, formally dedicating the Utah Museum of Natural History. The unveiling will be at 4:30 p.m., exactly one year after the museum opened its doors to the public. fh the first year of operation, the museum was visited by some 60,000 patrons, including a large number of ,Utah school children who toured the exhibit halls as part of their natural history studies. Jacob Beam sold his first barrel of Bourbon back in 1795, and began a tradition of fine Bourbon-makin- g thats lasted for six generations. Thats why we call it a 175-year-o- ld family art. Included in these groups from the Brigham City area were elementary schools from the Box Elder county school district and the Intermountain school. CrauuLccn mm Mrs. Robert J. (Frances) Minton, school liaison officer for the museum, said more than 30,000 school children toured the exhibits during the year. These groups came from all over Utah and parts of Idaho and Wyoming and included all grades of public and private schools, church and Scout groups. The museum opened with 80 completed exhibits Oct. 6, 1969. Since that time, another 20 exhibits have been commajor pleted, including on mule deer, marsh birds, Utah carnivores e and a reconstruction of three dinosaur skeletons unearthed from the Cleveland-Lloy- d Quarry in Central Utah. MAC. I First Security Bank AMOUNTS OF Oj 500 OR MORE Interest paid every 3 months on Interest paid every 6 months on Savings Certificates of Deposit Subordinated Notes for 3 months Power lbs. 6V4 dioramas 86 Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Distilled And Bottled By The Jamet B. Beam Distilling Co., Clermont, Beam, Kentucky TO unit weighs only Mestergrfp handle on top for one-han- d control safer tool Cuts an 8" log In Cuts a cord of firewood fast Cuts the cost of living on projects. Picnic tables, furniture, etc. Also see Mini Mac 6 Automatic with 14" bar and auto- matic chain oiling. Onlyl59.95 Thompson Pro Hardware life-siz- 41 S. Main For y2 fori year for IVi years for 2 years Interest starts day of investment. Fuel Sacur Bar Utah, Menu. Rate is per annum. Ask for Interest starts day of deposit. Rates are per annum. Each depositors account is insured to $20,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. fm Security offering circular NalonalAnociaMin Natron AaaooaMn Bank at Fust Security State Sana First Security Benk of ftocfc Springs Brigham City sa ws weighing lass than 7 s So 2 S""'1' Ibi grNSacurtty X B Bar Utah, m Maho National National Atuciatlon UnecNIIan i |