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Show ROOSEVELT JUNIOR HIGH On December 3, the Utah State Fish and Game Department Depart-ment presented a lecture and film to the studentbody on how to preserve wildlife in Utah. We learned that duck hunting was quite a sport in father's day. when the limit was a hundred hun-dred ducks per person. They must have thought it quite interesting in-teresting to hunt mule deer, because be-cause after the raid on the herd there were only 9,000 head left. A limit has now been placed on the number of deer that you can have. This plan will gradually gradu-ally increase the number of deer in Utah. To interest the students of R J H S in the classics, the English En-glish teachers have ordered some classic films. On Dec. 1 Huckleberry Finn was shown to the student-body. This was not a complete film, but lasted about 40 minutes. P-TA was held at the Roosevelt Roose-velt Elementary School on December De-cember 3. All parents were in- vited to attend. The home-room teachers would appreciate it if the parents would learn their child's home-room teacher, so their class could win the attendance atten-dance picture. Mr. Johnson's and Mr. Shield's classes tied for attendance at-tendance at the last meeting. Vernon N. Miller of the Roosevelt Roos-evelt Junior High School, is teaching a class in shop, leather work, etc. to adults who are interested. in-terested. It is held every Thursday Thurs-day night in the Ag. Building at 7 o'clock. Alene Peterson and Glenda McClellan (Too late for last week) Observing the 34th annual celebration of National Book Week, R J H S students discovered discov-ered that "Reading is Fun." English En-glish classes visited the library and new books were introduced fn huncrrv rpnHprc Thirty new books have arrived. ar-rived. Measles! measles! measles! It seems that the filterable virus that causes measles is having a field day at the Junior High School. Every day someone breaks out with measles and must be escorted home. The bug, we found, is no re-spector re-spector of persons even attacking at-tacking our science teacher, M. Crittenden, who remained at home while his wife substituted for him. |