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Show UINTAH BASIN STANDARD, November 27. 1986, - I II ( ?,i" ' '. :' i- ; , : ' ''''f - ,' v '."'' '", ' ..' ,, ' ' v ;- . , )T : 'v1 ', . v-- j s , i 1 . i . "1'i . Altamont High B.Y.li. rates go up 1986 ; .r .Vj Page l Student of the Month Farm Bureau, who sponsors Brigham .Young University's Board of Trustees has approved an undergraduate tuition rate of 1775 per semester for the 1966-8- 7 school year, Preaident Jeffrey R. Holland haa announced. The rate ia 635 or 4.7 percent above this years figure, the president said. Tuition for students in other categories will be ae follows: Graduate end advanced standing students, 6900 (5.9 percent increase). Law School students, 1,460 (5.8 percent). Graduate School of Management students 61,460 (8.1 percent). , A higher increase for the latter category was granted to bring tuition for BYU'e professional schoola to equivalent levels. . The above rates apply ' to students who are members of the LDS Church. Others pay one and a half times the regular rates. GOES WHERE? Tha camera, computer, motors and wire all fit into the octagonal box the two students are looking at. This, when fully assembled will go aboard the Space Shuttle on a future mission for Duchesne High School's Physical Science class. The project will germinate seeds in space, an experiment the bigger firms have given up on. Weber State College assisted the high school students with some of the engineering aspects of the project. IT Altamonts student-of-the-mon- th awards, haa chosen Rob Marshall for November. Marshall, the son of Robert ' and Susan Marshall, is a senior at Altamont High School. He is involved with athletics at the school; a member of the yearbook staff; Naitonal Honor Society member and in the Letterman's ; Club. The senior has a 3.7 GPA and , p- ion r.tinWwg college in Southern Utah. He is undecided on Me major, hut would like something with a science em-. PTA plans movies in December sgr-- Roosevelt Elementarys Parent Teacher Association will be showing children's matinee movies to echool children, pro-- . school children- and adults throughout December at Roose-vrTwin Theater. Childrens ticket prices are 75 cents, adults 61. They may be purchased every Friday in December from 12 to 1 p.m. in the elementary lunchrooms. Children may either purchase one ticket or all three tickets at the same time. Two free moviee have been planned for November 80. That Almost Christmas Want" will be playing in theater 1; 1001 Rabbit Tales wfll be shown in theater 2. December 7 wfll be Danny with the show playing from 1 to 2:40 pjn.; December 14 Road Runner" and Bugs Bunny are planned, to run from 1 to 2:85 pjn.; For Love of Beqfi" will be shown from 1 to 2:85 pjn. The PTA encourages everyone d to participate in this activity to help support the school McGruff program. Rob Marshall it . that something might - be helpfoL The students said they chose radish seeds because they grow gets expert help A handful of students from once the shuttle returns to earth. Duchesne High School are hoping Vicki Dugan, a Duchesne that disposable diapers wfll not senior, said, We want to eeo if keep their baby drier. They plants win grow in a simulated want, in fact, just the opposite. . gravity. That might help astroThe Baby is a scientific nauts when theyre far space experiment students are assemlonger so they wont have to shuttle up food. bling, with tha help of seniors in the Weber State College eleGogarty said, Wo used tha ctronic engineering department, in hopes of Bonding (diaper) because it holds water on a mid-198- 6 into space ' well. He added, The seeds wfll NASA of a launching space be held in dace on the diaper shuttle. f, ... with toilet paper. According to Shaun Gogarty, Bob Reams, a Weber State dance teacher at Duchoeno High electronics student : who was School, the disposable diaper, heavily involved in the first which. does not have the elastic Utah Satellite kg bends, will bo planted with , Northern (NUSAT) that was built at radish seeds that wfll germinate .Weber State, sold students from in space. ' Tbe project wfll bo housed in a ' the college are putting together the electronics to run the getaway special canister and wfll have a aero gravity chamber and experiment and the high school students are constructing the a chamber that simulates earths chamber for the plants. wfll The gravity. plants grofrth iye have the smaU computer be recorded with a camera and will create the gravity once ' that two wfll tha be chambers it is in space. The computer wfll compered through the photos . ' the quickest and measurable reeults week-lona- ffiaht beet. tha camera every two hours after tha first 40 hours. That wfll give tha high school raaearchers the Gogarty said, We contacted State to help us after we heard about the NU8AT If project. Weber a. 1 the' ora steaming with buyers and salloral Call Todayl 1 fun-fille- Of MartW Arts And For Mon, Woman, and Children Training in Physical Conditioning, Tost ado - Delight Gogarty said that tha prefect will cost shout $4,500 when completed and wfll hopefully result in a better understanding of how plants grow in stamlated l gravity. Christine Swenson, a sophomore at Ducheene, said, This ia not Just sitting in class listening to the teacher. This is doing m-513- . Dugan said, We tried to grow a number of seeds in an air tight, dark place-- an unplugged radiahea grew the also release water into the seeds, Reams said. A camera will also go along for tha ride and Roams said the computer will trip the shutter in opportunity to sea how seeds grew and how fast snace r will give from the CLASSIFIEDS (8-up- ). Seif- - wOnnoinCwf wwirOwiann Trainlna To Undo 29 or tha Roosevelt Academy of Arts Moll Max Wales, 9, 3rd degree Black Belt Instructor 722-42- 04 . 722-456- Monday 12 Price Night Excludes Drtnki and Taco Land Meals . . . Farm Home loans total $800,000 , .Rural Housing led the investments totaling 6494, IN. In addition, 66,630 was granted to needy senior citizens for home improve- - I i Loans' and grants approved by Fanners Home Administration office servicing Ducheene County, totaled 6921,576 from November 1, 1984 to November 1, 1985, according to Kelly Crosier, FmHA County Supervisor. Farm operating loans totaling 6405,783 wen made mainly for yearly operating expenses. ,The County Office received special recognition for . the number of formers receiving the as benefit of tha Debt part of tha Preaidants Farm. Credit Initiative Program announced September. 18.. Set-Asi- de AUTO MECHANICS BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Your Community College ProvoOrem CABINETRYMILLWORK COLLISION REPAIR f?p; a DIESEL MECHANICS DRAFTING MACHINE SHOP PROFESSIONAL DRIVING & v irc-V- CONSERVE ENERGY &CIIT TAXES Dade lam wants yau to cut your energy use to that Americsi ' i REFRIGERATIONAC S WELDING energy - resources will last longer. To encourage conservation, the U.S. govern-newill give you tax credits if you install certain energy saving equipment at your home. Under the federal home weatherizatkm tax credit program, you can nt - a - subtract 15 percent of the first 12000 you spend on energy living devices up to 1300 from your finsl tax amount. Insulation materials, storm and thermal windows and doors, cualUng and weather (tripping, end dock thermostats are some of the devices that qualify for tax credits. Under the federal renewable energy system tax credit program, you can subtract from your taxes-4percent, or (4000, from the first 110,000 or geothermal equipment. on solar, installing you vend Each program has certain conditions for eiegibUity, and they both have credit liffllti. For information, call the Internal levenue Service office nearest you. Abo, request an US booklet entitled Residential Energy wind-powere- d, Credits, V BS publication No. 903. R explains both tax credit programs in detail. MobnLdko Electric Association ! ri UTC-TRA- AN EDUCATION YOU CAN WORK WITH . ; Certificates and Degrees available o Register now for Winter Quarter- o Call 226-500- 0 for more information v 11 |