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Show Top High School Talent Noted at CSU Science Fair A record number of displays by student scientists in the junior jun-ior and senior high schools of Southern Utah highlighted the Seventh Annual Science Fair held at College of Southern Utah Friday and Saturday, April 7-8. Co-chairman Dr. Wesley Larsen and Franklin Faux stated this Fair had been "tops" so far as quality of work was concerned. The Fair judges awarded 19 of the students certificates and other prizes denoting exhibits and displays of outstanding quality. The three winners in the sen ior division of the research papers pa-pers were Cedar City students Judy Ashcroft, who wrote on the spectra; Michael Broadbent, ra-1 dio telescopes and Kay Hey- wood, nylon. In the junior division, div-ision, the top three places were awarded to Bonnie Squires, St. George, marijuana; Darlene Banks, Enterprise, ear; and Judy Bowler, Enterprise, plant life. In the senior division, exact j sciences, Philip Boynes, Cedar I City, was named first place with ;a one - cylinder displacement pump; Bill Twitchell, Beaver, second se-cond witli an exhibit of Indian artifacts; and Ned HarrK Bp?-ver, Bp?-ver, third with an electro-magnet. In the senior division biologi cal science, a twosome of Kenneth Ken-neth Button and Earl Slack, Hurricane, Hur-ricane, placed first with the development de-velopment of the chick; Robert Larsen, Cedar City, second with the circulatory system. In the biological division Edith Famsworth, Enterprise, placed first with classified flora; there was a tie for second place with Laura Ann Cuff, St. George, on dehydration, and a team of Peggy Peg-gy Campbell, and Thelma Hall, Hurricane, with dendrocronology. Joe Stubbs, St. George, placed third with plant growth pressure. |