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Show 7 THE GREEN SHEET Annual Green Sheet Award Catmull Basks In Limelight TAYLORSVILLE. An educator who will retire next month after more than four decades in his pro- fession was presented the Green Sheets Limelight award here last week. Dr. Earl Catmull accepted the award during the newspapers annual Performing Arts Award ceremony, held in the Taylorsville high auditorium. The seventh recipient of the Limelight Award, Dr. Catmull was honored during an evening in which the school where he has been principal since 1980 captured several of the top honors, including Show of the Year for best musical. Seated on stage after receiving the award, Dr. Catmull was surrounded and serenaded by his schools madrigals. The musical tribute was performed after a portrait (by the Taylorsville high art department) of Dr. Catmull was lowered into position on stage. The plaque presented to the Limelight honoree referred to Dr. Catmull whose fourdecades in the field of education have left an indelible mark on the students, faculty and members of the communities in which has has served as a teacher and administrator. It went on, A staunch advocate of d a eduction, he feels the arts are as essential to learning as reading, writing and arithmetic. Evidence of his dedication to this concept is reflected in the enrollment of nearly 1,600 students in visual and performing arts classes at Taylorsville High School, where he will conclude his career in education. . . Planning to retire at the conclusion of the present school year, Dr. Catmull is being honored as one of a dozen recipients across the nation for contributions to his schools excellence in arts programming and education. The honor is bestowed by the National Alliance for Arts in Education, headquartered at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C. Prior to becoming principal at Taylorsville high, Dr. Catmull served in a similar role at Granite high in 1974-8During the previous decade he was in the Granite School District offices, as a mathematics supervisor and as an administrative assistant. He had also been an assistant principal and a math teacher in Salt Lake City District after entering the teaching profession as a teacher at Mackay, Idaho in grades seven and eight. A World War Two veteran of the Marine Corps, Dr. Catmull received bachelors, masters and doctors degrees from the University of Utah. He had attended Albion State Normal and public schools in Acequia, Idaho, where he grew up with 13 brothers and sisters. A resident of the Millcreek area, he is married to the former Jean Marie Decker. They have two sons, Edwin Earl and William, and three daughters, Donna Jean, Linda June and Susan Marie. Thursday, May 15, 1986 Griffin, Kidd Accorded Top National Honor TAYLORSVILLE. State winners in the PBL (Phi Beta Lambda) business contests among higher education institutions included two first place winners from Utah Technical College here. Dale Griffin took first place in business law and Jan Kidd was named Ms. Future Business Executive ( first place) in the state. Additionally, Richard Wygant took an excellent rating in the Whos Who in PBL; Paul Sluga received a fourth place in marketing and Gary Carpenter a third in business communications. Utah Techs PBL faculty adviser, Dianne Smith, said, We are excited by the level and quality of participation in these contests. larger-than-life-si- HONOREE . . . Standing in front of likeness of himself, Dr. Earl holds Limelight Award prosontod to him last week as part of Graan Sheet's Performing Arts Awards program. Cat-mu- In National DEC Compet - Utah Students Log Record TAYLORSVILLE. Utah college d of students took nearly first place awards in national DEX (Delta Epsilon Chi) contests last week, competing against 2,000 competitors nationwide. DEX is the arm of the Distributive Education Clubs of America. Compiling an impressive list of one-thir- five first place awards (in 18 confive second places, two thirds and 10 finalists, the two technical community colleges and Snow, Dixie and Weber State College led the nation in numbers of awards for a tests), single state. Of the five participants from Utah Technical College at Salt Lake, 100 percent received finalist positions. Mimi Lowe and Bryce Twitchell won second place in the nation for their planned advertising campaign for the Utah Symphony. Eva Boyd and Allen Pearson took fourth place in the same contest for their proposal in behalf of Beatrice Corporation. Teresa Sundstrom was the third palce winner in sales promotion. 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