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Show Paiute Indians to protest Kanosh Band Paiute Indians the arc protesting filing by the State in behalf Engineer of Howard D. Bird, Orval Kimball, and Janies LaVae Smith, 0.044 to appropriate second feet of water The of Penny Probert Reporter i 9 t l . ) i. . k' ' m ' r jV- u, Mr. Wonderful candidates are (front row L. to R.) Tracy Keel, Brent Teeples, Dick Swain, Scott Robins, Robert Monsen, Tim Davies, (back row L. to R.) Rob Johnson, Brett WTiatcott, Jim Larsen, Ken Christensen, Jeff Hall, and Gordon Bennett. On Thursday, Jan. Gordon Bennett won, 138 lbs., Millard defeated dec. Kevin 43-North Sanpete Stephenson won, 145 lbs., Jeff The individual scores dec. were: 98 lbs., F'loyd Hall won, dec. Parker won, forfeit; 155 lbs., Brent Teeples 105 lbs., Dan Memmott won, pin; 167 lbs., 112 Llovd Kesler won, dec. won. dec. 185 lbs., Fcrlin Robert Tsosic lbs., dec. won, won, pin; 119 lbs., Pikvavit ; Kellv Quarnberg won, HWT, Lindon dec.' 126 lbs., Stephenson lost, dec. Calvin Tsosie lost, 132 lbs.. dee. 13-- 19-- 7-- 10-4- 2-- 0-- Teenagers need immunizations too need Teenagers immunizations too. According to Dr. Taira Fukishima, Utah of Health. Dixision of Disease Bureau Control Branch Director, there has been an increase in the number of teenagers with problems from preventable childhood diseases such as measles, rubella, tetanus and diphtheria. 5. "Tetanus-diphtheri- a (TD vaccine) boosters arc needed every 10 for children years and adults to assure continued protection against these serious If children diseases. the followed have recommended schedule HiLand mild cheese chunk 1.29 large .67 medium .59 Eggs Blue Bonnet margarine .47 Kraft Blue Label macaroni & cheese dinner 3. 89 Cucumbers .10 each Texas pink grapefruit 141.00 DelMonte fruit juice 46 oz. asst, flavors .57 oq Cabin buttered syrup 24 oz. Thrifty bacon Open 7 days a 0; 4-- The Eagles played the Juab Wasps last Friday and defeated them soundly High scorer for the was Terry Eagles 25 with Peterson who Others points. scored were: Brad B.. 12 points; Robert M., 8 points; Brent H., 19 points; Tim D., 4 points; Jim H., 9 points; Rod Q.. 3 Andrew J., points; 5 points; Scott R., 4 points; and Tracy K., 2 points. Millard will be at Hurricane this Friday to meet the Tigers. Junior Varsity games start at 5:45 and Varsity at 7:30. 91-6- 8-- 4; 19, BASKETBALL 1.17 .89 week Till 10:00 weekdays annual winter 50408 social for members of This notice was pub- the East Millard Young lished in the Millard Farmer Chapter will County Progress on be held Friday, Janthe dates of Dec. 16, uary 27, at 7:30 p.m. in 23 & 30, 1977. Millard the High The protestants are School Lunch Room. being represented A meal will be served, Echohawk & followed by an interestby 1 home, All attorneys-at-law- , ing program. in Salt Lake Young Farmers and City, according to Earl their partners are inPikvavit, Chairman of vited and encouraged the Kanosh Band of to attend. Paiute Indians. Please contact any of the following chapter The officers if you have a the about question Young Farmer organization or its activities: President Sam Utley, Flowed; Vice President (67-830- ). Lee Monroe. Scipio; Secretary Bryant Stevens, Holden; Treasurer Scott Watts, Kanosh; Reporter Vern Stewart, Meadow; Historian Jack Davies, Fillmore; or Advisor Robert A. Nielson, Fillmore. of immunizations, a tetanus-diphtheri- a would booster be needed around ages 14 15 to years, Fukishima explained. 4 1 1. Vi, 6, Central Utah Conservancy Districts Board of Directors approved a District budget of $10 approximately million for Fiscal year 1978 at its monthly The Board Meeting. majority of the funds were for approved engineering and con-o- f District atruetion are facilities which essential to implement and coordinate the delivery, storage, and use of Central Utah ProThese ject water. funds would come from the Districts Construction Fund Reserve developed by the District from tax revenues to be used to construct facilities resulting in the Board of Directors of the Central Utah Water Conservancy District felt confident in the benefits that would be derived in all twelve counties served by the District from this maximum economies to the water users within the District. 1978. Among other projects is the following of interest in this area interest in this area: The budget includes $220,000 for rehabilitation work on the Sevier The Bridge dams Dam. spillway is serious need of repair to avoid serious damage and possible should the failure This reservoir spill. reservoir provides the essential storage water for several canal companies in the Sevier River Drainage Basin. Funds wre also budgeted to initiate engineering s udics on the in ''O'. Wright course of the next the During several weeks there will appear in the Millard County Progress a scries of articles concerning the Indochinese Refugees: their customs, habits, and challenges in adapting to U.S. life. The residents of Fillmore and Millard County are particularly aware of the fact that a number of these people arc among us, and that many of them have made a diligent effort to integrate themselves into the mainstream of Utah rural life. It has been my privilege as their English teacher to observe these gracious and friendly people first hand. will share some of my own observations with the readers as well as information available from the Indochinese Clearing House of the U.S. Information Agency in Arlington, Va. The Indochinese refugees have sought asylum in the United States after fleeing their own countries, which had been overthrown by the Communists. They have faced the ominous challenge of adapting to different cultures, languages, foods, climates, and people. Most of the Fillmore refugees were also urban residents, which means they were unaccustomed to rural life in their own countries, much less in g dr i 30-yea- r 1 9.3. d 4.4, d p p d 1 An) first ro by Geor9 0f photographic film was patented Eastman m 1884-budge- LSJ&ifr s Deposit $5 000 and withdraw $10 000 SZOOOQ Deposit $1QOoO and wdhd'.t Deposit any amnunl m a State Sayings Daily f jrn.ngs Passbook Account and double yowl money m ust 14 years You ran dnub'e yr.ui money ,n only 9 yp,l'K yh,.n you let youi intpest ai Cumulate in a Utah Council on Criminal Justice Administration, 255 South 3rd East. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. 3 or in Salt Lake, Toll Free Phone, 800 533-573- 1 Department for more Information. Slate Sayings Certificate Account Ot couisp you money is always aai able yyben you need it and no matter when you withd'aw youf monpy has earned the highest legal rale allowed on 5.25 Insured Savings tor every day it is on deposit at State Savings Open your account today with Utah's tint savings and loan institution Since IftHJ Slate Savings has been helping people achieve then financial goals And wherever you live you can save by mail with State Savings paying the postage both wavs fine CIRTIMCAII ACCOUNTS PASSBOOK 5.75 PC B ANNUM SavtnQft I PipaiP open my Stale Savings account as luMcws ,n a Daily fammgs Passbook Account I State I Savings I FINANCIAL CENTER ASSETS OVER $380 MILLION ! 1 I Phone your Police or Sheriff J JJ Send lor free crime prevention booklet. Write: 662-361- I 3 Remember, the average burglar will break into a house only when the going looks easy. Here are 7 effective ways to discourage him. 1. Install deadbolt locks on all exterior doors. 2. Make certain all windows and patio and garage doors are securely locked. 3. Buy an inexpensive timer to turn on your lights and radio when you're out for an evening. 4. When you go on vacation, ask neighbors to keep an eye on things. Have deliveries stopped, mail picked up and your grass cut. The point is, make your house look occupied. 5. Keep your lawn mower and bikes locked up when theyre not in use. 6. There is no place you can think of to hide a key that a smart burglar hasnt thought of first. 7. Never leave notes to delivery men indicating that nobody is home. Make Crime More Trouble Than Its Worth. fr WATER 4d. oays DcsaasGlij-QaCa CRME CHECK the Mountain West. In Fillmore, people from Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and China have suddenly become our neighbors. Because American and Asian cultures are vastly different and because contact between the cultures has been very limited due to language and geographical barriers, there arc many stereotypes on both sides. To the peasant, laborer, teacher, and intellectual in Asia, the mere mention of America conveys the idea of an unimaginably affluent Not so many years ago, society. some Asians believed that American streets were paved with gold. Some Chinese, for example, continue to call the state of California the "golden mountain." Hollywood movies and literature of all types, official including publications, So have nurtured this concept. w as their belief in the wealth strong of America that many Asians even borrowed money to migrate here. Once in America, they have endured the hardest kinds of work because their families expected them to succeed in the land of opportunity. Next week we will examine education among these people. 28, z7 Mr. Lynn S. Ludlow, General Manager of the District, stated that a large portion of this year's budget will be spent on the Utah Water PuriValley fication Plant which muniwill provide to the water cipal type communities of Provo and North Utah CounThis plant will ty. receive approximately $6 million for continued construction during " R. 1 1 Although' automobile sales were down significantly, record Christmas buying and recent brisk retail sales have left many retail inventories sparse. New orders, increased production and expanded employment associated with new inventorv investment will stimulate ccomomic activity in early 1978. In recent months, value of the U.S. dollar in foreign exchange markets has depreciated sharply against most other major currencies. U.S. demand for imported merchandise, including oil, has sharply exceeded the growth rate in U.S. exported goods. The fundamental cause, and ultimate solution, for this imbalance rests with domestic monetary not merchandise trade policy, balance. Nations with growth typically experience trade deficits. These accelerate domestic demand for credit, raise interest rates, and consequently lower the price of financial assets, making them more attractive to foreign investors holding U.S. dollars. Expansive domestic monetary policy has held down interest rates and rekindled inflationary exDomestic and interpectations. national financial stability over the remainder of this decade requires a gradual but sustained reduction in the rate of monetary grow th. J Steven Continued from front reached $30,000 invested by the Board total appropriations will be returned to the State along $13,568,000 in 1977. As sponsoring with the Boards contribution companies buy projects financed by earlier when the Division constructthe Revolving Fund, payments are ed the project and later made recycled to the fund to help pay for extensive improvements. later conservation developments. The Board of Water Resources At the end of the last fiscal year, invested $1,563,000 from the Reinstallment payments from project volving Fund in the 21 projects sponsors reached nearly $9.4 milwhich received ASt S drought into lion. All of that money-wen- t Combined with $1,200,105 grants. financing of other projects. Some of in the dollars helped pay the bills for giant money and StOJ.COO fiom several different projects over the sponsoring irrigation companies, this provided for more than SI. 5 history of the Revolving million worth of water conservaund. tion projects. This constant recycling of RevolvTotal value of mineral producFor more than three decades the Fund money helped the fund ing tion reached $1.14 billion in 1977, take part in financing of nearly Revolving Fund has aided irrigation an increase of A total of 281 S50 million worth of water consercompanies and small mutually-ownewells were drilled in petroleum vation projects in Utah in the first water in culinary companies Utah, of which 90 were wildcat rural Utah finance water 30 years of its existence. conservawells resulting in 14 new field tion some Sponsoring companies, otherwise projects which discoveries-th- e most since 1965. made federal aided would by grants, not have been Utahs copper output last year probably initial investments totaling $25.8 built. Most were beyond the limited increased but the value of means of the million in the more than 4009 water companies. production remained unchanged. constructed units conservation The Legislature created the Consumption of refined copper Revolving Fund in 1947 with a under the program. These proincreased, but excessive stock- $1 million jects received S22.7 million from the appropriation. The pot piles lowered the average price to has been sweetened since until Revolving Fund. 594pound. Utah coal production rose 20 to 9.6 million tons and Sportsmen aid wildlife management boasted a year-enprice of $27ton--uof hunters $8 from 1976. Sportsmen can now hunts (moose, doe sample make a most important deer permits, etc.) purchasing a specific Along with significant employment and income gains in the contribution to the fu- have had two or more license is selected to in receive the questionletters second half of 1977, retail sales ture of wildlife in Utah follow-unaires. Those purchawere I3'2 higher than during the from the comfort of addition to the origitheir home. nal survey cards. The sing special permits, first six months of the year. Wildlife bird such as moose, elk or managers upland game Despite a slowdown in December, real estate sales in 1977 were up arc waiting for the harvest survey was swan, get the survey of questionsent out last week for cards attached to their 25 in number and 42 in value return the out naires at sent from 1976. sportsmen's input. permits. Housing demand of the Waterfowl who continues strong, but a slower pace conclusion Sportsmen, queswent out received these survey Big tionnaires of sales activity is anticipated in the 1977 seasons. second half of 1978. game managers have soon after the close of cards, are urged to sent out their ques- the waterfowl season fill them out as comA definite slowdown in autopletely and accurately mobile sales was evident in the tionnaires plus at least on January 1, 1978 as possible and return Most of Who one follow-up- . receives fourth quarter, 1977, and continuathe postage-paicard tion of this pattern is anticipated for the special big game questionnaires? promptly. the first half of 1978. policy. Piute Reservoir Dam for similar repairs. Mr. Ludlow said that Bv Strong employment growth is forecast: New manu facturing jobs up 5'2 (4.000 jobs); (1,200 jobs); and mining up 8 contract construction up 82 (2.800 jobs). Construction activity boomed throughout 1977 for the second consecutive year. In the first months of 1977, requests for new building permits were up while the dollar value of building construction increased permit Higher mortgage rates and slower deposit growth at mortgage-giantininstitutions may slow con truction activity moderately in the second half of 1978, however. above-averag- e The Water Indochinese culture notes 1 In Utah. 1978 economic conditions are expected to continue the strong expansion recorded in 1977. Accelerated population growth up 3.1 to .270.()()0--i- s a basic factor in Utahs expansion. Job opporrose faster than tunities in 19 population and labor force growth and by year-end- , unemployment declined to 5. Forecasts for 1978 are for payroll employment to increase 4.7 (23,000 jobs) and unemployment to remain stable at The business climate nationwide in 1978 is expected to remain generally favorable, according to the quarterly First Security Bank News Letter, said A. LcGrande Dr. Kelly K. Davies. Manager. vice Matthews, president and economist, is editor of the news letter. Measured by Real Gross National Product, ec onomic growth in 1978 should average only modbelow 1977 level. the erately Nationally, unemployment could interest rates edge down to will rise and inflation will equal or exceed the 6'2 rate experienced in 1977, according to the News Letter forecast. Consumer spending, a significant source of strength throughout this recovery, spurted in the last quarter of 1977. Consumers willingness and ability to spend have been buoyed by significant gain in real income and employment, despite uncertainty related to economic 4-- and Mr. Wonderful will be announced at the Sweetheart Ball to be held on Saturday, Feb. 4, at 8:30 p.m. The band is "Peace & Quiet. WRESTLING The candidates for Sweetheart Queen were judged last Wednesday and they are for the Seniors: Claudeen Terri Hendrickson. Jenson, Paula Coats, Linda Huntsman, and Coats. Diane Nadine Swccpe; for the Juniors: Teresa Christensen, Eloise Stevens, Crosland, Sherry Lynette Davies, Colette Hunt, and Lynda Sanderson. social favorable ft Sweetheart Queen candidates in Millard County, under application Millard County Progress, Fillmore, Utah 84631 Friday, January 27, 1978 Business climate generally f Mr. Wonderful candidates The candidates for Gordon Bennett; and Mr. Wonderful were for the Juniors: Brent judged this Tuesday Teeples. Scott Robins, and they are, for the Robert Monsen, Seniors: Jim Larsen, Tim Davies, Tracy Jeff Hall. Rob Johnson, Keel, and Dick Swain. Ken Christensen, Sweetheart Queen Brett Whatcott. and Young Farmer winter ,n, mo Atrouni lot , Celilirat vs YOUR FAMILY HOMEOFFICE: 125 South Main Street Salt Lake City, Utah 841 Number . It ..... - - '' Saving mnhtv oMa pavh'a to $ ' "" Stale I.na .in voul at muni K anuwiiimani lot luiii'a ow, Make ,.n (V e'" Du not "" " a |