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Show 0 ri7 tl ro ,n JL' &l ! Vnr) r? o "7' ft pfwi "V X hi $?', 7 VV ' oil j'f. MffiX ( r ? , i . e Wasatch Academy Honoris Gratia and Student League members are from left: front, Brian Carroll, Catherine Brown, Marta Davis, Ryan Healy, Zina Bennion, Jennifer Boeye, Rick Williams; back, Zanye Cohen and Pat Dwyer. Wasatch Academy graduation exercises will be held at 1 p.m., Sunday, May 25, with Baccalaureate at 10 a.m., both on the north lawn of the Pierce Museum. VH '"'sWvT j i - t. i & k1 V V& Ut v 4 &? 1T Volume 105 MT. PLEASANT, UTAH ? i 84647 - May 21, 1997 sB ). , 5 mMhm Number Twenty One Price 50$ Wasatch Academy graduation, May 25 MT. PLEASAN- T- Forty-seve- n seniors will graduate from Wasatch Academy during commencement exercises slated for 1 p.m., Sunday, May 25, on the north lawn ot Pierce Museum on the Wasatch Academy Campus. Dr. Keith Reemtsma, a former Wasatch Academy graduate, will be the guest speaker for Baccalaureate services which will begin at 10 a.m. Reemtsma was raised on the Navajo Indian Reservation, grad uated from Wasatch Academy in 1943, joined the Navy and served as a corpsman on the USN Hospital Ship "Repose" and the First Marine Division in Korea. In 1966 Dr. Reemtsma was appointed head of the Department of Surgery of the University of Utah College of Medicine. In 1971 he was named Professor and Chairman of the Department of surgery of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York. Dr. Reemtsma is also a member of the Wasatch Academy Board of Trustees. Academic honor students include, Zina Bennion, Spring City; Jennifer Boeye, San Antonio, TX; and Catherine Brown, Spring City. Other graduates include: Beau Babcock, Seattle, WA; Holli Baggerly, Spring City; Michael Barnes, Cedar City; Nikki Block, Seattle, WA; April Brinkerhoff, Littleton, CO; Brian Carroll, Palo Alto, CA; Alison Christensen, Mt. Pleasant; Kyle Cima, Ketchum, ID; Zayne Cohen, Ft. Worth, TX; Carrie Colbert, Tacoma, WA; David Cuch, Mt. Pleasant; Anna Datsko, Latvia; Marta Riga, Davis, Tacoma, WA; Jessica Davison, Salt Lake City; Patrick Dwyer, Orangevale, CA; Brandon Dylewski, Houston, TX; Amy Friedman, Englewood, CO; Mary Fulton, Hurricane; Michael Gorns, Victorville, CA; Erika Hart, Woodside, Ca; if ft by L. Allan FOUNTAIN GREE- N- Fountain Green City residents overwhelmingly approved the issuance and sale of $300,000 in general obligation street bonds to cover the costs of improvements and repairs to city streets, according to bond election results presented at the May 7 city council meeting. Of 450 registered Fountain Green voters, 1 14 voted for and 24 voted against the proposal during a special bond election on Mayor Dean Hansen May 6. said that Sunrise Engineering would now take bids to begin the project. Fountain Green City has been approved for a 2 percent interest, $275,000 loan from the Permanent Community Impact Board to implement the street improvement project. Payments will be approximately $21,500 per year for 15 years. The city currently has a low interest loan with the PCIB that will be paid off in about two Two found guilty in shooting of Fairview man face sentencing by Gene Nielsen MANTI-- - Two Sanpete residents charged in the March 30, 1996, shooting of a Fairview man, were found guilty of attempted murder (homicide) on May 10 before Judge Kay L. Mclff in Sixth District Court. A five-wome- n, four-me- n jury rendered the unanimous decision at 9 p.m. Saturday, May 10. The jury had been given three options on both defendants: guilty of guilty . of attempted murder; aggravated assault, or not guilty. Brian Keith Snow, 24, and Soncerae Allen, 32, were individually and equally charged for the incident which took place two miles east of Fairview on Highway 31, the Fairview Canyon Road, even though Snow was allegedly the one who fired the weapon. The shooting took place in an abandoned building where the victim, Joel Brienholt, had alleg edly been taken for a confrontation. Brienholt was reportedly shot in the face, the bullet entering his right cheek, and left for dead. Once alone, Brienholt bolted from the building and made his way to the canyon road where help was summoned. Snow and Allen were arrested the next day and held on $25,000 bond. Allen was able to post bail and was released; Snow was incarcerated in Sanpete County Jail where he has been an inmate since the arrest. Following the trial. Snow was returned to Sanpete County Jail; Allen was incarcerated in the Sevier County Jail womens facility and her bail revoked. Sentencing for both individuals was scheduled for June 25. Attempted murder is a second-degre- e felony punishable by from one to 15 years in prison. - f tisssmammmm ahe9 & an.,, 1 1 Jfeif 1 8 MT. fSJ;J!8! a&f v- - 8 & Ftn Green voters approve $300,000 obligation bonds Mi-Jun- snsaasnanssf! SC9i $ Joy Rios, Santa Ana, CA; Kaoru Satu, Chiba, Japan; Benjamin Schade, Mt. Pleasant, Matthew Schoppe, Ephraim; Do Ra Shim, South Korea; Dustin Kyongi-do- , Bum Son, Smith, Fruitland, Korea, Sungman Si, Kyungi-do- , Robert Thompson, Salt Lake City; Matthew Walker, Spring City; Richard Williams, Belmont, CA; Grant Wilson, Ephraim; Beniamin Wnghtson, Billings, g Ryan Healy, Boise, ID; Jo, Sungnam City, Kyungki-do- , Korea; Melissa Johnson, Hurricane; Timothy Leahy, Highland Lee, Carlsbad, Park, IL; CA; Young Duk Lee, Seoul, Korea; Ryan Lorenz, Seattle, WA; Michael Magid, Lafayette, CA, Brian Naguit, San Rafael, CA; Ashley Pinkard, Destin, FL. Jordan Regan, Santa Cruz, CA; Rosie Reith, San Miguel, CA; pfM: im 94 k frJ. . years. The current payment is about $15,000 per year. The monthly payment will be restructured to the repayment of the new loan when the old loan is retired. The additional $6,500 per month for the CIB loan is expected to be generated through new growth within the community. The city budget has grown from $70,000 to $300,000 in the past 10 years. Fountain Green City currently receives about $22,000 per year in state B and C road funds for road and equipment maintenance. With the new gas tax and the improvements to the roads, it is expected that the city will now receive approximately $50,000. The surfacing project will include all gravel roads and applying a double chip seal to those roads which have water, sewer and gas improvements already installed. A single chip seal will be applied to the roads that currently have asphalt. Councilman Rusty Bench presents Mrs. Sarah slated for May 17. Their slogan was "Lets Mitchells third grade dass a $10 check for the keep Fairview a Fair View", winning slogan of Fairview Citys clean-u- p day Two years ago the city required all streets disturbed by the sewer system project to be and rebuilt with four inches of road base. The roads having black top prior to the project were repaved with two inches of asphalt surface. Approximately two thirds of the streets were not Continued to page 4 Deadline MT. PLEASAN- T- Due to the Memorial Day holiday, the deadline for all news and advertising for The Pyramid and The Pyramid Shopper will be at noon, Friday, May 23. The office will be dosed Monday, May 26, in observance of this holiday. Fire on the Mountain will provide the music for a Sesquicentennial Dance at 9 p.m., Friday, (POORjCOPY May 23, at the Greenwood Student Center, Snow College. |