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Show The Salt Lake Tribune UTAH Enrollment d ) | i Enroliment ups & downs DISTRICT > IN prove costly e Continued from Cl through the X-ray machine at Salt Lake International Airport. Airport gets tough on weapons @ Continued from Cl prosecuted, but not always to the full extent of the law, Federal Security Director Earl Morris said. That will now change. The Transportation Security Admin istration can also impose acivil fine of $1,000 to $10,000, apathygrowfor ‘post-Sept. 11 se- Passengers can still bring a gun aboard a plane if they con tact airport officials to obtain a hard storage case. The gun will be locked and secured in the bottom of the plane. Airport screeners will now ask passengers if they have a firearm or anything else that may be construed as a weapon. Morris said this will be a pas senger’s last chance to tell air port officials before facing prosecution, Mullen: ‘Protecting’ Sandy's youth @ Continued from Cl and Stuff paint a more accurate picture oftheclientele. Unless you weresleeping undera slabofgranite the past few weeks, you know about Bikini Cuts, wedged into a strip mall at 10295 S. 1300 East. Newspapers, television andtalk radio shows have beenalive with stories of the peskylittle controversy dogging this business. Last week, ruffled by residents’ complaints about thesalon, the Sandy City Council curity policies. Right after the federal government took control of airport security about a year and a half ago, screeners would confiscate 400 banned items a week. They are now taking more than 400 banned itemsa day. And while he says Utah’s main airport is a safe place, Morris needs the assistance of passengersto keepit that way. “We can’t allow one single breach at this airport,” he said. mcanhamaslitrib.com that reflects and encourages a wholesome environment for children and families.” Bikini Cuts is brightly painted andsports a tropical theme dried beach grass hanging from theoperators’ work booths and piped-in Beach Boys music. And no-duh, the main attractionis the stylists by anyone’s measure,wellendowedandnot hardto look at whowear bikinis and cover themselves from the waist down with sarong wraps. That’s about it.Owner Bethany Prince, who wasn’t there the day I visited, has tapped into the oldest gimmickin free enterprise: sex sells. You couldtell this from the steady stream of Weber 3.99% 3.58% Provo 5S. Summit -0.56% 0.61% Nebo 3.56% Granite -0.76% Iron 2.80% Box Elder -1.23% Wasatch Murray 2.71% 2.30% Sevier Uintah -1.24% -1.32% 1.79% Ogden -1.35% 1.54% Piute -1.60% Cache sewne emne Gees to ee 3.57% —— Barlow said. 1.31% Salt Lake : -1.71% dent is also the curriculum di- — rector, maintenance men are , ~2V'S also bus drivers, and teachers L098" teach multiple subjects or grade Beaver — levels. N. Summit 1.29% 0.82% 0.24% 0.20% Millard Duchesne Kane N. Sanpete “1.88% “2.33% -2.83% -2.99% “If we made a cut ofateacher, you're affecting the entire San Juan Emery 0.03% -0.33% Carbon Garfield -5.36% -6.83% curriculum and the entire pro. Wayne 0.38% __Tintic -9.09% a The superinten- ane 0.10% State 0.84% central office staff and cutting districts like his. the amountof money schools get for improvements. | coping with sliding enrollment, | too. Salt Lake City School Dis- biggest difference is that we get closing schools, G by closing two restructuring the ts wae d ran alme a at training more teachers e Continued from Cl aI“ a child-appropriatestandard” for businesses and other public » institutions. Sandy now endorses “a community standard SAY AMEN! ms schools,” Covering religion is a religion for Reporter Peggy Fletcher Stack every Saturday in Body & Soul 4664994" tle overcrowding. The school has already added rooms, and district officials say neighboring schools are also at or beyond -4.02% capacity. ; West Clinton Principal Lucinda Wagner said .the overload of students is most : obvious in the hallways, computerlab, lunchroom and Davis School District-Elementary School Director some options.” has a capacity for 720 sto- Craig Poll said the school dents, but by October 1, the RON BARLOW district school had reached 851 stu- Tintic District superintendant Spokesman Jason Olsensaid. dents. The school grows 7 cuimeeas percent annually, he said. representone step in improving the academic achievement of tribe, will go back to theirhome Applications due Feb. 1 communities and teach,” said ’ American Indianleaders, including Cuch, worry that since wanting to teach other subjects _U- f U. Department of Education, Cutture are eligible to apply. & Society, 1705 E. Campus Center Drive, Indian children in Utah have lagged so far behind, there may not be enough students to meet the academic requirements to get into the teaching program. However, Brayboy is more Scholarship recipients are required to give what Brayboy Indian children. compared with 58 percent of optimistic. He is planning to Hispanics, 68 percent of blacks, 69 percent of Pacific Islanders, reach out to the five major tribes in Utah — Utes, Navajos, Brayboy, adding that even those _@ Send them to Bryan McKinley Brayboy, dian and/or Alaskan Native American populations upon graduation. If the students fail to meet the requirements or computer and a $1,000 $1,500 drop out before becoming teachers, they must repay the scholarship money, Brayboy focus primarily on studies. 81 percent of Asians and 85 per- Goshutes, Paiutes and Western Shoshones — as well as other tribes in the Intermountain says. American Indian Education Advisory Committee believe Indian teachers in Utah schools region. “The idea is that all of the students, no matter what their The scholarship — which covers tuition, books, health insurance, use of a_ laptop, She likes workingin a bikini be- clients, and also from the three different women who wandered past the store’s windows, peering inside and strainingfor a cause for once,the little stray hairs that fly about no longer stick to her clothes and jab her closerlook. skin. That same day, a 2-yeat-old boy had comein forhisfirst haircut, his parents dutifully snapping photosfor his scrapbook. As Pam snipped away at my hair, we mostly talked like any stylist and client would. We meandered into celebrity gossip and bemoaned how mouthy our kids could be. We each wondered what we would makefor dinner. Pam has cut hair for 10 years. “Thehairs stick through yoursleeves andit’s hard to get rid of them,” she said. “I don’t get near as pokeyas I used to.” Good enough. The work is steady, the tips are good and Pam is makinga living. Just an average working mom.Ina swimsuit. I left the shop feeling thatlittle lift a woman gets from a good haircut. And at that moment, Sandy’s big, ballyhooed effort to protect its vulnerable youth Exclusive Group Rates for Individuals on over 455 Cruise Sailings in 2004-5! Visit our website at www.destinationsinc.com *Certain restrictions apply. Ships’ Registry: Norway & The Bahamas. Room 307, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-9256. @ For more information on the teacher calls a “service payback” in training program for American Indians, schools that serve American In- call (801) 581-4145 or (801) 587-7811. centof whites. Cuch and members of the Call Destinations, Inc. Immediately!! aSat 4s2 will becomethefifth scheol in the district to move fo.a year-round schedule to bat- WinemiuAAd fixed costs by (801) 446-5000 or Toll Free 1-800-748-4777 ‘ Clinton Elementary School TheSalt Lake Tribune monthly stipend for livingexpenses — allows recipients ‘to MORTGAGE CORP. came to mind. A few feet from my parked car, a woman with four children 5.413 APR 30 Yr. Fixed 4.880 APR 15 Yr. Fixed {|2.980 APR was piling her brood into a Chevy Astro van. Two of them were toddlers. The vehicle had no car seats inside. She drove away. Now what was that again about a citywide “child appropriate standard?” 463-6677 hmullen@sltrib.com 1760 §. 1100 E. #4 Salt Lake City www.usamtg.com Se habla espafiol DONATE DECEMBER 3st I APDPROACHING GET YOUR TAX MOV? Donate your cars, boats, rv's. planes or land To United Cerebral Palsy of Utah Advancing Ind.jependence While Making A Better Community immediate Pick-Up—Free Towing-——24 hours a day iui adopteda resolution “promoting CLINTON —- The Davis School Board is expected to vote today on whether West “1.46% Rich “The thing that’s made the trict plugged a $1.6 million bud- _¢liminated thofe shortfall THE AssOciATED PRESS: : the playground. shrinking enrollments in rural Some urban districts are Morgan source: State OfficeofEducation for grade school 0.72% 1.68% Education finds a wayto offset the fiscal ramifications of | S. Sanpete ee age : SS FOCP BES Understanding Cisawitities Creating Oppertanitias Plowse Donate any vehicle you can today CALL 'TOLL-FREE—-800-971-GIVE (4483)) Your. weekly DESERET BOOK COUPON! Alles Casal? mcocics YOUR CAR! 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Depending on circumstances, perpetrators could face up to six months in jail for a misdemeanorfiled in state court to 10 years in jail for a federal felony for trying to get a firearm past security checkpoints. “We want to make sure we use the maximum penalties possible,” Morris said. Officials will treat a knife or other weapon purposely concealed similarly. Still, officials said they would rather have passengers keep their firearms at home. “Our goal is prevention, not prosecution,” Warnersaid. Morris said he has watched Year-round DISTRICT Alpine Juab Washington 2 Todd Hebertson, left, and Joshua Tukuafu monitor luggage rolling 2002-03. Tooele ec Ines RYAN G aLprarri/The Salt Lake Tribune Tuesday, November18, 2003 252-2166 SaltLake County 435/882-1069 CALL ANYTIME Tooele County any one ' regular-priced item! Expiration 11-24-03, Cannot be combined with any other discount or promotion. yeaa aero mies |