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Show T I f' F'ir P 'V LlAh r )T t i iCAF-- T LQTC-01- fl h SGl, I AT ION 9 3TE 100 84124-15- 01 Y(JUR;TOWN, YOUR NEIGHBORS, YOU NEWSPAPER 50 CENTS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2004 VOL lit NO. 51 NSHS' posts Sterling Scholars to Sterling woman compete for 2004-0- 5 school year chargetl with MT. PLEASAN- T- Ten stu- social Green, 5. Gadi-lauska- embezzlement at Scholars are required to based on interview and precreate a portfolio that repre- sentation of their category sents their accomplishments achievements. in these four areas of excelWinners and participants lence. are offered various scholarOn March 8, 2005, scholars ships to many of the colleges will compete against others and universities throughout in the region. Judging is the state. science; dents have been selected as Heather Garlick, daughter of the North Sanpete High Robert and Janeen Garlick, School Sterling Scholars for Fairview, mathematics; and 2004-0Eric Heywood, son of Jim Students selected are Lind- and Terri Heywood, Moroni, say Larsen, daughter of visual arts. The Sterling Scholar proChad and Tracy Larsen, Spring City, dance; Saman- gram at NSHS begins the tha Sego, daughter of Jeff search for candidates in the and Janiel Sego, Mt. Pleas- Spring. Juniors with a cumuant, foreign language; An- lative GPA of 3.5 or higher drea Peel, daughter of Dale may apply to represent the and Maren Peel, Mt. Pleas- school in one of 14 cateant, general; gories: English, visual arts, JL Olmstead, son of Brian math, foreign language, sciand Sonia Olmstead, Spring ence, social science, dance, City, computer technology; speech and drama, computer Maria Peel, daughter of Glen and information technology, and Detina Peel, Mt. Pleas- trade and technical educaant, trade and technical edu- tion, family and consumer Elizabeth science, music, business and cation; of Paul daughter marketing technology, and and Rebecca Gadilauskas, general scholarship. Scholars are selected based Moroni, speech and drama; Aaron Bench, son of Ken- on academic achievements, neth and Kaylin Bench, service to the school and Fairview, science; Amanda community, leadership and Ivory, daughter of Wes and citizenship throughout their Fountain high school years. Carey Ivory, s&pyf y it ' t A i. v, THE 4 V r J f , i'l fJ , s, ,:Sl ; SdP ' ; Elizabeth Gadilauskas Aaron Bench SCIENCE SPEECH & DRAMA W f x , ilies STtH Heather Garlick Eric MATHEMATICS and well known friends that become involved Heywood VISUAL ARTS Amanda Ivory Lindsay Larsen SOCIAL SCIENCE DANCE Christmas Eve services PLEASAN- T- First Church, under the direction of Pastor Dave Boge, will host a Communi- Christmas Eve service, MT. ,, V I ' j JL Olmstead t i k , i at jf an ? ' i Andrea Peel Maria Peel Samantha Sego GENERAL TECHNICAL EDUCATION FOREIGN LANGUAGE TECHNOLOGY Dec. 24, located at First byterian Church, 91 South 100 West, Mt. Pleasant, at 7 p.m.The community is en-t- y couraged to attend. ( V i i COMPUTER be- cause of the trust that has been given to the person involved in the theft. Norton also said that depositors in the Bank of Ephraim that had more that $100,000 have received back 82.4 of this money and that more should be forth coming in the future since Far West Bank has taken over the Bank of Ephraim operation. s' iffr PYRAM'D EPHRAIM- - Laurie Ludvigson of Sterling has been charged with bank fraud from the old Bank of Ephraim in an indictment handed down by a federal grand jury in Salt Lake City. The indictment was earlier this month in U.S. District Court and alleges that Ludvigson stole the banks money by manipulating the NSF (Not sufficient Funds) charge- back process and crediting her own personal bank accounts. Don Norton, president of Far West Bank, stated that Ludvigson had been on the transition team from the time the FDIC closed the bank until September, but after the transition was complete was not kept on at the Ephraim Branch of Far West Bank. She had been working with the old Bank of Ephraim computer system until the Far West Bank computer system was installed. Norton went on to say that during the transition period the irregularities were discovered and the information by law was turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation wliich brought the action to the grand jury in federal court. Norton indicated how disheartening this type of activity is to discover because of all of the implications on fam- r1 aV, fi Martin Conover ft $ , If A Bank ofEphraim MP Library receives early Christmas gift from Arts Council Editors note: This is part of an occasional series by the Sanpete County Travel and Heritage Council on the people, places and reservation efforts along .S. Highway 89, the Heritage Highway. MT. PLEASAN- T- The Folk Arts Program of the Utah Arts Council and the Sanpete County Travel and Heritage Council 1 " If M nhPAj nyj 'nn,vUfV"W iut ifr The project, Utahs Sanpete Heart of the Mormon West, produced a driving tour of Sanpete County. The tapes are history lessons of the Sanpete County region, complete with stories and anecdotes told by people residing in the area. The tour allows people to listen as they explore and pass through the region in their vehi- - are giving Mt. Pleasant a special gift this holiday season. They have donated 46 cassette recordings by folklorist Jens Lund to the Mt. Pleasant Library. Lund interviewed a number of local artists and historians about the traditions and lifestyle of Sanpete County residents as part of a project to document and present local culture. a T l't,9 1 If JVH if I vl u l UjjpWT Will Valley: The S V ngy HA WWW.HARKTHEHERALO.COM C E i i cles. The package also included a written guide with maps, photos, illustrations and text featuring local residents and attrac- tions. The collection of cassette recordings donated to the library include interviews with local residents Victor Rasmussen, Helen Dyreng, Senator See nine one siis on sdnid s idp to oe sure ama Knows exactly what to bring on Christmas Eve but also kept his eye on the prettyprincesses" helping Santa. m ungni-eye- u LIBRARY CHRISTMAS GIFT on Page 8 CALL 375-510- 3 TO SUBSCRIBE XC'TrT', 'JW !& W ft T . xsd |