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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1971 PfeQ Eleven ful money of the United States. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, his 19th day of April, 1971. Bill to Name On Drug Abuse DELMAR L. LARSON, Sheriff . A; total, of 212 graduates of Golden of Lake Salt International Educaton and County, State of Spike Highway Utah Technical College at Provo Utah. Senator Frank E. Moss has an-- 1 Training, Inc., announces the will receive either an associate By Sgt. Michael D. Wilkinson nounced that he will introduce I availability of an eight page degree, or certificate of profi- a bill to name Deputy portions of Inter- - teachers guide for the grade 5 Docket No. 45483 ciency and hear Raymond W. Witchcraft to Modern Alan D. Frandsen Sundquist, general to According Attorney for Plaintiff ent of Geneva Works of I THE SALT LAKE HARDWARE Date of first publication April president Corporation, as their commence a 1971. Division! IE&Ts COMPANY, Education 23, The corporation, bill would name the high-- 1 Drug ment speaker on May 28. 3 new the contains teachers guide commemoration of the President Wilson W. Sorensen way in of the Golden Spike at behavioral objectives, concepts made the announcement of the driving IIH AblL NOTICE OF SALE Summit which had discussion topics and suggested Defendant, graduation rites which will be- Promontory activities. marked the completion of the To be sold on Monday, May gin at 8 p.m. in the Provo LDS first transcontinental To be sold at Sheriffs Sale at 3, 1971 at 135 South "Witchcraft to Modern Medi-- 1 railroad in Main Temple. Courthouse in the Salt Lake City, Utah, at 12Street, bounty 1869. traves noon cine IS? of evolution the "We are extremely fortunate I to foreclose chattel The SSL route to mans efforts aI)5 Utah partially conquer pain. suggested by Sen. in. getting Mr. Sundquist as our Moss onMavlS dated March 27, 1970, mortgage and! of would It with witchdoctors consist from begins 197 at 12 oclock noon 01 said commencement speaker. He and Joachim and Sandra given by to Echo Junction; and early superstitutions and pro-- 1 day that certain piece or parcel the institution he directs are the I Omaha Muthereich mortgagors to north from 120110 Junction to the ceeds through discussions of the0f real property situate in Salt Murray First asThrift MnTtnmp' and Loan County, State of Utah, junction of Utah State Highway mandrake plant, Hippocrates, Co. as mortgagee and recorded I scribed as follows, to Oasis, chemy and the along 0 with Utah State Tax Commis4 Green Meadows. Com- - sion Lot L innffC on to modern) and the to and Nevada stone, then up f?aHpmvJf.hoT again upon which is due on this HoH at Northeasterly mencing as Insulin such and date the sum of $339.40, which Calif. peniSacramento. drugs Mead- covers Green corner Lot 4, the following described "I can think of no better way cillln. ows, South 17 degrees 55' property: 1 10 cement forever in the minds The book is part of a togPbur apprenticeshiD 49 East 149.03 ft.; South 1959 Olds Holiday multi-media11 of a the Americans on thelof story 83 degrees 30' West 61.73 program drug No. 598M41075 Serial urogram for the o foe first trans- - abuse which, according to Ryd- in a direct nlusthelthe Northerly ft.; bulldmg 21st day of April, Dated this has slant already n.n.Pwn.v. I conUnental railroad than to name 5 North to a ft. line in use over is point in 1,200 1971. berg, easterly from most Westerthe highway which generally I school districts and several MURRAY FIRST THRIFT ly corner said Lot 4, North AND LOAN CO. the same route the Gold- - eign countries. The remainder of along Delmont easterly en Spike Highway, he said . By Robert Bridge the program consists of behavio South to Drive beginning. 3 . He noted that part of the sug- ral tapes, grade level text, trails-geste17 degrees 55' 40" East 15( route, the pprtion across parencies, teachers guides, and ft.; South 83 degrees 30 Nebraska and Wyoming and a drug abuse instruction tapes. West 66.73 ft.; Northerly More than half the drowning sPrln8 ln addition, i a to once a line known direct was 0f in poin Utah,, are under the will graduate more I par Utah from victims in pools 5 ft. Northeasterly . Some Lincoln Highway. should be ten. of Children age now has. It s simply a questhl. coming falL last year 49 most Westerly corner saic acrosI was Nevada 1 watched very carefully when in .. . th to a Prtlon o formed the graduating class at Lot 4, Northeasterly along High- - tl0n of glving yictorv water. It takes only a few Delmont Drive to begin the our mair crss, u.ntrJf the fall commencement and foe known are roads the Today seconds for a child to be in over links it a name ning number is expected to increase highways route numbered w uiujr wjr to a very important and dra-- l Purchase price payable in law his head. this year. designations. total The spring not hfaSway wSh ,uestion of for would be now name which is the construction and completion who left school 1 usurPing anyuse or away common Lf taking in farHood raltae the rallway which united com-1 before dlstmction which the high- - American East with the Ameri- full any requirements. pleting their : can West and paved the way for As an example he pointed out is wilthe recent hiring by Utah Min- - I Utah Tech students in electrical I the development of a vast derness west of the Mississippi, By Joseph Cross j. ing and Construction Co. for a I automation and technology at Louisville It is now a time of warm, sunny days and job in Farmington, N.M., of six annual salaries of $9700 each. pleasantly cool nights; the dogwood and. the redbud is in bloom; the rolling bluegrass countryside is lush and green. Another spring, has come to RESULTS NEW EDUCATIONAL APPROACH "GUARANTEES Kentucky and the stage is set julep, the unofficial Derby for the renewal of the worlds drink. In a landmark move . . . one most famous sporting classic The mint julep, which has that might well usher in a the Kentucky Derby. been defined as a Tech College Sets Graduation Rites. Moss to Introduce Teachers Guide . 3-- Clar-Rydber- g, 5-1- (4-2- 4) 0 de-th- en al-La- ke to-w- it: U-7- 1-- 80 Sri ri sw tSl K-1- 2 for-follo- ws 4-3- (4-2- 0) - rrfnvu I ef . Ration : Kcciagf The Stagels Set for the97thDerby As Spring Comes to Kentucky : ... era of effective naPhiladetional education has Four District School lphias embarked on an exciting new approach to the learning experience. An approach that liter ally promises to teach its young students to read. Known as Project Read G, the program has been designed and initiated for some 15,000 of the districts students from kindergarten through seventh grade. With the exception of the kindergarten and first grad ers, these pupils almost two-thirlong-soug- ht Come Saturday, May 1, and ... -- of the district's elemenare tary school population their below presently reading grade levels . . . a statistic not unique to Philadelphia, but symptomatic of the national reading deficiencies infecting Americas children. According to Dr. Ruth W Hayre, Philadelphias pioneering District Four Superintendent, her average' fourth grade underachiever is reading a year behind established levels of proficiency. Faced with this situation and fully determined tb reverse it District Four rea nation-widcently launched ' for ' a ' be tier search system. After careful analysis of the most promising methods avail able, Dr. Hayre selected Pro ject Read G, a program devised by Behavioral Research Laboratories of Palo Alto, California and New York. The two elements that weighed most heavily in her decision were: 1) BRLs basic premise that every child can learn to read that there are no 2) that BRL e non-leamer- s; would $40-pcrtude- nl . the return annual fee for any pupil who did not advance one year in reading achievement in a scholastic years time. BRL literally offered District Four a moncyback the 97th Derby will be contested before a capacity crowd of 100,000-plu- s racing fans at Louisvilles fabled . Churchill Downs. Millions will watch the race over CBS television, radio will beam the narrative to audiences around the globe and more than 1,000 newsmen will report every detail to newspapers and magazines all over the free world. , !or wlul there are some may attract larger fields and a few that offer a larger winners purse, no horse race matches the Derby in color, romance and prestige. It is the one race every thoroughbred owner,- trainer and jockey torvin the Derby automat? cally guarantees equine immortality. The Derby likewise is the contest that has caught the imagination of people who know no more about horses d than that they are love and and who, except hay for this one day each year, could VlV less about fugitives invented in Kentucky, but, like the horse, in the state it its The true Cobb gained greatest fans. wrote, feels Kentuckian, that mint and bourbon whisky, both nurtured by Kentucky sun, soil and streams, just naturally were destined from the begin-th- at ni to be linked together in & julep. Who has not tasted in vain one hJas I ds Sng itL Henrv ct teaching concepts. the famed- - er sugar in it with not more than a spoonful of branch water. Take one tender, fresh mint leaf, no more, and crush it gently between thumb and wnrlc tracl. Some even try to pick the winning to. position hoping $25,000 in prize money for lnto the d'ssolvedsugar. Then fill the goblet to the brim with cracked ice and let it set until beads of moisture gather on the burnished exterior of the goblet. Then take a few sprigs of mint leaf and use this for decorating the goblet. After the goblet has frosted, gently add four fingers of mellow bourbon that has aged in oaken barrels for at least seven years. Sip, never drink hurriedly. It might be added that Cobb, also had his favorite julep rec- - I List Mu- ltifilter cigarettes, sponsors of a special Derby contest. The late humorist Irvin S. Cobb, himself' a Kentuckian, once described the Derby as My Old Kentucky Home be ing acted out before your eyes. . And, in truth, there is an indescribable something associated with the race that affects even the most sophisticated r&SeWM My Old Kentucky Home andthe neld begins its slow, prancing parade past the high- steepfed grandstands to the One gate. foe. He followed I 1 famous trademarks is the mint tta Wrttmon blueprint to the final step, the .t0 adding of the crushed mint and pulp, sugar At that point, he Gested, throw away, all the other stuff ar.d drink tae sug-starti- ng . of the Derby s . most long-tim- e pwi Watterson Kehtucky newSpaper editor who produced the classic recipe. Take a coin-silvgoblet, he prescribed, one that holds a pint, no more, and dissolve one lump of finely-refine- d four-legge- aroundracc Si true connoisseur follows - staff development and parent participation each student works at his own pace and receives continual reinforcement and encouragement. Evidencing the "commitment to, and the enthusiasm for Project Read G, District Fours participating teachers admit that they have never worked so hard in their lives and dont mind it since they feel they are getting results. The students also are enjoying the experience of participating in Project Read G. Dr. Hayre pointed out, We already see the side effects since many students at the end of each days reading period are upset that they cant continue, but have to go on to the next subject. It is likely that guaranteed performance contract systems, like Philadelphias .Pro-jeRead G (the largest such program in America today), will loom ever more significant on the educational horizon. And it is not improbable that they may well evolve as the very basis for all of tomorrows depth charge, with a Southern accent, wasnt I bourbon. |