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Show rips Uintah Basin Post 9275, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will meet Weds day, Nov. 19, at the Moon Electric building at 7:80 p.m. Commander Bill Ward urges all veterans to attend the meeting. It is time for payment of dues for 1981. Drawing for the bedspread will be Saturday, Nov. 15, at 1 pm. in the lot at Zlons First National Eking Auxiliary The Ladies Auxiliary of Uintah Basin Post 9275, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will also meet Wednesday, Nov. 19. Auxiliary sisters are urged to send dues for 1981. For additional information, contact Commander Bill Ward, 7224191; or Auxiliary president Georgia Bartley, in 722-808- 5. DENIM COLLECTION retail clothing store Has opened its fourth Denim Collection features fashionable clothes for the young adult. Other stores are located in Heber City, Layton and Rock Springs, Wyo. The guys in the hats are Roughriders, the Roosevelt Chamber of Commerce's official grepters. Roosevelt. The establishment is located behind Taco Time in the Safeway shopping center. Pictured left to right, Bob Sheedy, owner, Vaughn Clegg, Tom Nordstrom, manager Kyle Clegg, Kevin Ashby, and Gene Goodrich. in Protein Power Proteins provide the amino acids necessary to produce enzymes, anti- bodies and cells for growth, maintenance and repair of tissues. Enzymes to regulate body are necessary processes. Antibodies fight infection .and disease. Conference on ROOSEVELT STUDENT ALSO HONORED discipline set Nov. 19 atA BYU statewide Conference on Discipline will be held Nov. 19, st Brigham Young University. According to Dr. J. Lloyd Eldredge, conference coordinator, educational and community lead- ers will be informed of discipline problems and programs being implemented in Utah and in the nation. November has been proclaimed by Governor Discipline Month Matheson. A special film, Dive and Take," will be broadcast into all Utah schools on Nov. 25 by KUED. The conference is by the Utah State Board of Education, the State Office of Education, and the Committee on Student Self Discipline. Over 1,000 participants are expected. Community and educational profes-wil- l address the attendees. Keynote speaker will be Stephen R. Covey, nationally known author and lecturer. For more information, contact Dr. Eldredge at the Utah State Office of Education, 533-589- 1. Karl Shisler honored by USU Agriculture College Over $10,000 in scholarships to students and the Distinguished Service Award to an outstanding Utahn were highlighted Thursday evening at the College of Agriculture Awards and Honors Convocation in the Utah State University Student Center in Logan. Karl Shisler, mayor of Ballard, received the distinguished service honor presented by Dr. Doyle J. Matthews, dean of apiculture, USU. Shisler is a former form leader and member of the State Board of Education. Matthews noted that besides producing excellent quality livestock, Shisler has demonstrated outstanding leadership abilities in the following positions: president. Dry Gulch Irriga tion Company; chairman, Uintah County ASCS Committee; president, Utah-Sout- h Idaho Farmers Union; board of the National member, Farmers Union; Utah Agricultural Landowners Association; chairman, Utah Agricultural Advisory Board; chairman, Utah Energy Conservation Commission; member. National Grain Advisory Board, Washington, D.C.; member, National Agricultural Census Advisory Board, Washington, D.C.; and member, 8tate Textbook and Course Study Commission. Among student recipients of scholarship awards was Ted R. Allred. Roosevelt, who received a $250 Utah Farm Bureau Federation Leadership ' Stop in Nine Mile Canyon provided trail for scouts participating in the of the an interesting area camporee. George E. Stewart traveled with the scouts and provided Information to them about the historic trail. SMITH WELLS STAGE award. Progress in treating cancer in young people has already saved more lives than the conquest of polio. Greatest' improvements in survival rates sre for acute lymphocytic leukemia, Hodgkins disease, and a form of bone cancer, osteogenic sarcoma. In the latter, for example, four out of five patients now survive, while only half a decade ago, four out of five succumbed to the disease. PSU POPULATION AT 9.939 t Uintah Basin Students help boost enrollment Higher than average inereaaes in enrollment from Uintah and Duehesne Countiea have contributed aubetantial-l-y to a record fall quarter registration at Utah State University, President Stanford Caxfer said. USU enrollment from Uintah County is 18 percent ahead of last year, knd from Duehesne County it ia 14 percent ahead of 1979. Uintah and Duchesne rank 9th and 10th, respectively, in the state in numbers of students contrftnf ted to the U8U student body. "Autumn enrollment at USU reached 9,939 students, a total that U8U waa not expected to reach for another e decade. The university's enrollment increased by 678 students, e enrollment exceeding the increases of any other college or in the Utah system of location, Dr. Caxfer said. increase at UBU ia the largest in 15 years and the second largest full-tim- full-tim- Roosevelt Enterprises NAPA Auto Your friendly aU-ti- Parts dealer and home of the Gold Hat Pros. Or Or 10 Amp ' Battery Charger 3 6 W WnhiitfSi Lenain 60 Mo. . near-break- -, Phono nows Itomg to 721-51- 31 ' i L i w o And Up 0 TR-- 3 Resin Glaze Battery With starting Mimnv The 67 students enrolled at U8U this year from Duehesne County ia an high. Uintah'a 78 students ia alao a new record number at USU. Enrollment of freshmen from Duchesne County' Is up 25 percent over last year. From Uintah, the 20 sophomores enrolled is the moat ever, and the junior class is over latt yKs. This years record enrollment at Utah' State was totillMm .flof increased numbers of Utah students. Significantly large increases were1 posted by 24 Uteh countiea. "The pressures on the university ; are exacerbated by the feet that USU has had three years of budget cuts, Dr. Caxier noted. "We have had cute totalling more than 8 percent during this period. The 6 A percent cut thia year, coupled with burgeoning enrollment, has stretched the university's available resources to the ing point In a number of departments, students have had to be turned away because of lack of apace, ho added. Exchange Reg. $4.98 i Starting n O Fluid Reg. $1.35 $-g- 9 WMmSD Selected Floor Mats While They Last NAPA 42 Month Battery With TNanatoriou bam hind at wo a Exchange 33 Gas Line Anti-Freez- e Mannar long preparing lo makayour care THE BAD a.M-w-- a I Metrical ayalam taP tNaamlar. NowWttwHmn BATTERY GOLD HAT ROUND EM UP MAINTENANCE FREE SALEI A OFF MEETING Thursday, Oct. 9, a kick-of- f meeting for the Roosevelt District Invitational Historic Trails Camporee was held in Myton. Pictured is Bob Osborne, District Director KICK ROOSEVELT ENTERPRISES 260 East 2nd North 722-519- 6 of the Boy Scouts of America, addressing the gathering. After the meeting, the groups left for their trail experience down Nine Mile Road. Some 140 scouts participated in the camporee. i. |