OCR Text |
Show ' 1 Salt Lake CALENDAR WEEKLY (Continued from page I) Scientific Laboratories, Physics ing; Room 302, 3:45 P.M. Monday. April 25 Build- Under South- HANSEN PLANETARIUM Stratford 7:30 P M ern Skies, Tuesday, Friday and Satur day 10:30 A.M., 2, 4, 8 P.M.; Wednesday and Thursday, 10:30 A. M. 2 and 4 P, Sunday 1, 2:30 and 4 P.M. UNIVERSITY OF UTAH THEATER by Dr. David E, Jones, director. Union Building, East Ballroom, 12:30 P.M. ROSE RAMBLER GARDEN CLUB, Garden Center, 10 A.M. r.irn p lecture Friday, April 22 Towne PYKETTE FASHION SHOW, House Athletic Club, 9 A.M. Tuesdoy. April 26 FLOWER ARRANGING COURSE, sponsored by the Utah Associated Garden Club, Utah Garden Center, 16th East, 21st South, 1:30 and 1 P.M. to May 27. COTTONWOOD CLUB Swim Fashion Show luncheon, sponsored by Cottonwood Club Ladies PACK 78 BANQUET, at Ward, 2605 South 15 East, CUB SCOUT COTTONWOOD ELKS WOMEN, Murray City Hall, 8 P.M. to form auxiliary. A GO-G-O, LADY GOLFERS ROUND-U- P at the Country Club. INTERMOUNTAIN TURF ASSOCIATION at the Garden Center, 1 P.M. BONNEVILLE KNIFE AND FORK CLUB presents Dr. John K. Morley, 1 Saw Hotel Utah, Today's Headline-Worl- d, 7:30 P.M. Auxiliary. CIRCLE K CONVENTION at Westminster College to April 24. GREAT SALT VALLEY Folk Concert, sponsored by Skyline High Senior Class at Skyline High School, 8 P.M. with Bellshannymen and Temple Squares. MODEL U. N. lor Utah High School delegates in Union Building Ballroom, 8 A.M. to 8:30 p.M. BASEBALL: University of Utah plays College of Southern Utah, Derks Field, Wednesday. April 27 FREE CHURCH sionary Conference, 1910 East South, 7:30 P.M. to April 29. EVANGELICAL UTAH STATE CHRYSANTHEMUM I P.M. GOLF: University of Utah meets B.Y.U. at Salt Lake. PAUL HORN QUINTET at Pierres to SO- CIETY at the Garden Center 1 P.M. UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CLUB, 'Chile by NicolSmith, Kingsbury Hall, 8:15 P.M. Thursday, April 28 24. WOMEN ARE April lecture DIFFERENT First Unitarian Church, 8 P.M. THOSE WHO LOVE by Irving Stone, reviewed by Mrs. Mary Traxler, East Mill Creek Branch Library, 8 P.M. LILY THE FELON'S DAUGHTER, Barbary Coast Opera House; Park City, 8 P.M. to April 23. ALL THAT GLITTERS E NOT GOLD, Silver Wheel Theatre Park City, 8 P.M. to April 23. GRANITE SCHOOL: DISTRICT SECONDARY Festi- Art and Industrial Art val, Granger High, 8:30 to 9 P.M. BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY FORUM LECTURE SERIES presents Leon A. Harris, at Temple Square Assembly Hall, 8 P.M. L.D.S. TABERNACLE CHOIR REHEARSAL, Tabernacle, 7:30 P.M., open to the public. FILMS: Salt Lake City Public Library, II A.M. and 2 and 7 P.M., no charge. projects. MOUNTAIN VIEW 4th WARD Relief Society luncheon and musical review, 1 P.M. UTAH ASSOCIATED GARDEN CLUBS STATE BOARD MEETING at the Garden - Students placed themselves on literature "tracks at the from beginning of the year. F our book reports are due 'track one students and up to ten or more from 'quest students. Some of the required books are from a list erf 'classroom classics which range in difficulty from 'Old Yeller and Incredible Journey to 'Jane Eyre" and 'Annapurna. One of their book reports is an oral 'seminar with a teacher and three or fohr other students who have read back in a double room filled You are sitting half-wa- y with desks and chairs in long rows. About 100 other seventh graders and four teachers four comprise a teaching are with you in the room team. If the folding doors were closed, you would be sitting in a regular size classroom, but today you are in the 'lecture room beginning a literature unit in seventh grade English at Bonneville Junior High School, 5330 Gurene Drive (1650 East). Four other rooms adjoin the double 'lecture room, three of which are used for discussion groups and study rooms, and one room is labeled 'test room. Mrs. Joyce Stavros, team chairman, using a microphone, greets the class, briefly explains that everyone is to read 'The Light in me Forest, a paperback novel by Conrad Richter which all seventh graders in the district are to read this year. A study guide previously supplied contains 14 questions. Mrs. Stavros explains that each student wiU be required to write 14 brief essays to answer these questions. Class sizes range from 96 to 116 and about 450 seventh graders are enrolled in toe Bonneville English classes. The class is required of ajl students, and they may enroll any period the class Is offered. 'They are as quiet as an audience during a big group presentation, Mrs. Stavros said. The teachers take turns doing major presentations, while the other teachers 'patrol the aisles. The lecture is seldom interrupted for discipline. Red tickets are handed out for misbehavior: one is a warning; two, the student meets with three of toe team members; three, the parents are summoned. The department pays every two weeks. 31 the payroll figure was $62,137 - on April 15 it was $57,349. The apparent savings is close to $5,000 but, on March 15 the payroll was $50,768. On March 31 it was $56,655. This corresponds to a reduction in force from January 31 of 262 down to 236 on March 15. The number at people and the total payment has been creeping up since March 15. If the increase is seasonal Commissioner Jensons declaration of a 'great challenge is a bit difficult to discern. A comparison of payroll figures on April 15 of 1966 with those of April 15 of 1965 is of interest in this respect. A year ago Roads and Bridges employed 219 people....the renamed department this year employs 257. They then paid $50,722 now its $57,349. The total payroll amount for the four departments under the Commissioner for the first half of April last year was This year it was $93,837.' $87,954. Last year was recognized as one of extreme flood danger and the increased flood control payroll reflected major projects in stream clearing and drainage. This year Class B Road Funds and Flood Control is down - but Sanitation and Highway funds are up. On January the same book. ed ng tion. Speaking experiences are also part of the English curriculum, and include such things as writing and presmiting plays, panel discussions and small group discussions. A new textbook and teaching method are being used this year, Mrs. Tucker said. 'The student is confronted with evidence, makes generalizations, discovers for himself about the English language, she said. This is called the inductive method. In addition to the novel assigned the class, an anthology short stories as well as a minimum of four book reports during the year are required. fflanuers rth co-ordinat- ors & & JBeautp Srijop Permanent Wave Reg. $15.00 NOW$ 10.00 Experienced to help you with any decor. Furniture & Drapes AT COST CARPETING i2?ig Spring Special Carets 5mpeRaC WIGS $ 69.00 and up BRING IN THIS AD Worth $1.00 on Clean! REMNANTS nff-oLWi- FREE PARKING IN REAR PHONE Open Monday, and Friday Evenings 2319 hyuno Drive phone- - 4B41612 1931 485-056- 3 South 11th Eut rth CPGEESECD0 0 930?'ifl(I6u' 00 HEG 032 0GS7 RAKES GEOHEB BQ3G Buy Now mm your mower would do BOOT OMEY The Best does what you wmm BEST BUY! - Buy JACOBSEN pay YOUR QMJ TilL'L'ER Black & Decker HDIM & TE0EI1B1ER 95 my mmn I N0THIMS ' DOWN LESS MG SCHWINN BICYCLE TRADE IN Black & Decker UTILITY SCOOP Nothing Down , But even ten or more book reports would not automatically give a student an A, Mr. Joyce stated. Their work on the class-assipgrammar, compositions and spelling are also considered, as well as toe quality of toe book reports themselves. The team uses a 'rotating unit method wherein two to three weeks are spent in each unit. Following the literature unit, classes go into composition, then grammar groups, and then literature again, this time involving their anthology of short stories. 'Programmed composition books are provided each notebooks in which the student. These are students proceed at their own rate, foUow directions " and take self-tes- ts as they go along. Each of the four teachers takes a portion of toe group for grammar. Class placement for these groupings were determined by language scores on sixth grade tests. Approximately five compositions each term are required, in addition to the 'programmed material. These consist mainly of clear paragraphs. A spelling test is given every Wednesday. If a student misses three or more words, he must do an exercise, toe following week. Grammar, composition and literature are taught in equal portions during toe year, according to Mrs. Estelle Tucker, district English supervisor for secondary educa- of (Continued from be. Three of four classes sit in study sne asked that the board consider rooms during gym period while toe fourth construction ol added library facilities class uses the gym. The creative dance on the north side of the school. the Center, 10 A.M. To achieve a goal of 10 books per room accommodates oily MENS SPRING ROUND-U- P students requiring its space. Country student, West needs 7,000 more books.... Club. and there must be shelves on which Gymnasium bleachers are dangerous, DISCUSSION: at First Unitarian Church, to put them and storage space for the board was told. audio-visu- al 8 P.M. instruments which now lie For toe boys gym, toe basement is PETER NERO, pianist, presented by in corners in space that should be used, with its concrete floor, narrowA.S.U.U. Artists and Speakers Commitavailable to students who need to use the ness, and bad acoustics. tee. Salt Lake Tabernacle, 8:15 P.M, library. For wrestlers, with up to 50 boys FELLOWSHIP at Anchor Baptist Church, One woman complained that the school participating, there is a wrestling room 1880 East 5600 South, 4 to 5 P.M. gymnasium is not adequate to the needs for just one pair of wrestlers. of the school. The ROTC room is rundown and paint too small is and room The is tumbling 24 peeling from the walls. There are Sunday, April too low. It contains caily a set of parallel draughty doors. Carl Childs reported that the Buildings ALL SAINTS EPISCOPAL CHURCH, bars and a trampoline,,... and students in the the caved have Grounds Committee of the board erf and dinner. trampoline using Churchmen sponsor Young heads. with with their has viewed the West High .Education UNITARIAN impacts ceiling FIRST CHURCH, Morning In the winter,-facilitie- s are so small, campus during a tour of the hazardous Service, 9:30 and 11 A.M. areas. L.D.S. TABERNACLE CHOIR, in the that the trampoline is moved into the Tabernacle, 9:30 to 10 A.M., open to corridor, which results in students ' He indicated that toe situation might crashing against student lockers, the be even worse than was indicated by the public. board was told. PTA group and urged immediate study Girls assigned to use of toe gymnasium of needs to remedy toe hazards and short- toe size it should find it oily comings of the school plant. RENT ROWER 12 REVIEW, April 21. 1966 by Bernice Neeley The first two articles in this series defined team teaching, described two new elementary team teaching schools which will open in toe fail, and explained pilot team teaching programs in the second, fourth and sixth grades in toe Granite District, page 1) one-fou- 3rd In IN SERIES EDITOR'S NOTE: , one-fou- -- If The KJds Are Bad, Teachers Give Tickets (ContinuedTrom oaee 1) wed: it had reached 257. Four general departments work out of Highway Department headquarters in Midvale: the Highway department itself, the Sanitation department. Class B roads, and Flood Control. When Commissioner Jensen made his announcement, the total payroll at the four stood at 412. On April 18 it was 405. If the 39 were reduced it isnt evident in payroll figures. At the time the Commission Chairman said We will complete our projects, but this is a great challenge. We have to trim our personnel to save money so we can accomplish these West High Saturdoy, April 23 1- TEAM TEACHING No Carrying Charge KJGKKT HID61 TZJLDC-t- N ! NOW trimmer PAY NOTHING DOWN ALL COLORS NO CARRYING CHARGE ALL SIZES ALL KINDS 450 TO CHOOSE FROM Order By Telephone 0GBQEQB QIHEMiG&DoCiiffS! V- - L 1 ) Sugarhouse IN Cottonwood Mall 6-86- PLENTY OF 77 278-048- 7 FREE PARKING |