february 20, 2018 vol. 124 no. 76 ...tooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2-20... ·...

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BULLETIN BOARD B4 CLASSIFIEDS B6 HOMETOWN A8 OBITUARIES A6 OPEN FORUM A4 SPORTS B1 INSIDE Stallion Drama presents ‘Peter and the Starcatcher’ See A3 Rush Valley Ophir Grantsville Tooele Lake Point Bauer Stockton Pine Canyon Stansbury Park Erda 32/15 28/13 36/20 33/17 35/20 33/16 33/16 20/11 35/20 34/19 See complete forecast on A7 WEATHER Rising Voices provide Valentine’s Day concert See A8 T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE TUESDAY February 20, 2018 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 124 No. 76 $1.00 Grantsville basketball teams advance at state tourneys See B1 Serving Tooele County Since 1894 Vernon can keep its school IM GILLIE STAFF WRITER The Tooele County School Board promised Vernon resi- dents that it would continue to look for alternatives to keep the town’s two-room school- house open. The school board voted 5-0 to keep looking at construction costs, building method alterna- tives, and financing sources for a new Vernon Elementary School during the board’s Feb. 13 meeting. The board also agreed to continue to operate the school and make repairs that are essential for student and staff safety. “To all of our patrons in Vernon, I say, ‘Hold on. We will take care of you. We are work- ing on it,’” said school board member Kathy Taylor. The school board started looking at alternatives for Vernon Elementary during its December meeting. At that time, one of the alternatives under consideration was clos- ing the school and sending the students to Dugway School, a one-hour and ten-minute bus ride away, according to Google map. Vernon School was built in Tooele man dies after rollover accident Sunday STEVE HOWE STAFF WRITER A Tooele man died follow- ing a single-vehicle rollover on Sunday morning, accord- ing to the Tooele City Police Department. Tooele City police identi- fied the victim in the crash as 19-year-old Lincoln Powers. The accident occurred at the intersection of 400 North and Seventh Street around 10:05 a.m., Tooele City police said. Powers was driving his Ford Escape northbound on Seventh Street and rolled, col- liding with a utility pole on the southeast corner of the inter- section. Following the accident, there were live power lines on the ground near the SUV, according to Tooele City police. First responders and citizens who witnessed the crash were able to free Powers from the vehicle and move him away from the electrical hazard. Powers was transported by ambulance to a medical helicopter, which flew him to a Salt Lake-area hospital in extremely critical condition, Tooele City police said. He was pronounced dead from his SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO Lincoln Powers starred as an athelete at Tooele High School. Winter storm causes power outages and minor crashes FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Andrea Oseguera shovels snow from the driveway of her Stansbury home. A major snowstorm blasted the Tooele Valley on Monday. STEVE HOWE STAFF WRITER A winter storm that blew into the area at the end of President Day’s weekend caused a number of power outages and a few vehicle acci- dents in Tooele County. Rocky Mountain Power reported a power outage caused by a vehicle accident affecting the Pine Canyon sub- station at 3:53 p.m. on Sunday, which affected more than 700 customers. There was also an outage at the Stansbury sub- station, which began at 9:36 p.m. and affected 2,908 cus- tomers in Erda and Lake Point. The Stansbury outage was caused by a utility pole fire, according to Rocky Mountain Power spokesman David Ekelsen. Utility pole fires are a seasonal phenomenon, Ekelsen said. With dry weather in the MARK WATSON STAFF WRITER Tooele City almost received a month’s worth of snowfall on Sunday and Monday. Tooele received 13 inches of snow from 5 p.m Sunday through 5 p.m. Monday, according to Ned Bevan, local weather observer for the National Weather Service. Normal snowfall for the entire month of February is 14.1 inches with precipitation at 1.33 inches. Precipitation received on Monday and Tuesday measured at .86 FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS Crews work to pull a semi truck back onto the roadway on I-80 near mile marker 102 after the truck slid off the road and down a embankment yesterday while a winter storm rolled across Utah bringing much-needed snow and adverse driving conditions. Snowstorm hits Tooele Valley with good dose of wet FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Emergency crews work to clear debris from Main Street in Tooele after water from a fire hydrant pushed dirt and rocks into the roadway creating a hazard for drivers. But school board will examine replacement costs and methods SEE VERNON PAGE A7 SEE SNOWSTORM PAGE A10 SEE STORM PAGE A10 SEE ROLLOVER PAGE A7

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Page 1: February 20, 2018 Vol. 124 No. 76 ...tooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2-20... · WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Sunny to partly cloudy and cold

BULLETIN BOARD B4

CLASSIFIEDS B6

HOMETOWN A8

OBITUARIES A6

OPEN FORUM A4

SPORTS B1

INSIDEStallion Drama presents ‘Peter and the Starcatcher’ See A3

SNOWPACKSnow Water Equivalent as of 12 a.m. Monday Rocky Basin Mining Vernon Settlement Fork Creek

Source: Utah Natural Resources Conservation Services

Tooele Valley-Vernon Creek Basin

Snowcover 7.5 6.5 3.9Average 19.2 16.9 13.1Percent of average 47% 54% 46%

UV INDEX

Snowfall (in inches)

Last Month Season Week to date to date

13.0 14.5 33.5

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

Grouse Creek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Wednesday 7:15 a.m. 6:11 p.m.Thursday 7:14 a.m. 6:12 p.m.Friday 7:12 a.m. 6:14 p.m.Saturday 7:11 a.m. 6:15 p.m.Sunday 7:09 a.m. 6:16 p.m.Monday 7:08 a.m. 6:17 p.m.Tuesday 7:06 a.m. 6:18 p.m.

Wednesday 10:34 a.m. noneThursday 11:11 a.m. 12:22 a.m.Friday 11:54 a.m. 1:29 a.m.Saturday 12:43 p.m. 2:35 a.m.Sunday 1:40 p.m. 3:39 a.m.Monday 2:44 p.m. 4:39 a.m.Tuesday 3:53 p.m. 5:33 a.m.

©2018; forecasts and graphics provided by

34/17

32/15

30/17

28/12

30/13

28/13

36/20

33/17

35/20

33/16

33/16

20/11

23/11

35/2034/19

34/15

30/11

32/16

38/22

35/16

34/13

34/17

30/10

32/14

33/17

34/16

33/15

41/19

33/1241/23

34/1345/27 38/19

35/23

32/1238/19

29/15

26/11

32/11

First Full Last New

Feb 23 Mar 1 Mar 9 Mar 17

W Th F Sa Su M Tu

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Sunny to partly cloudy and cold

33 17

Considerable cloudiness and cold

35 20

Mostly cloudy and cold with snow

showers

31 13

Cold with a blend of sun and clouds

34 25

A.M. flurries; otherwise, mostly

cloudy

39

Rather cloudy and cold with flurries

36 24 25

Times of clouds and sun

41 31TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows.

High/Low past week 56/16Normal high/low past week 45/26Average temp past week 34.6Normal average temp past week 35.2

Statistics for the week ending Feb. 19.

0.87 0.44 0.93 1.13 2.02 2.54

See complete forecast on A7

WEATHERRising Voices provide Valentine’s Day concert See A8

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTTOOELE

TUESDAY February 20, 2018 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 124 No. 76 $1.00

Grantsville basketball teams advance at state tourneys

See B1

Serving Tooele County

Since 1894

Vernon can keep its school

IM GILLIESTAFF WRITER

The Tooele County School Board promised Vernon resi-dents that it would continue to look for alternatives to keep the town’s two-room school-house open.

The school board voted 5-0 to keep looking at construction costs, building method alterna-tives, and financing sources for a new Vernon Elementary School during the board’s Feb. 13 meeting.

The board also agreed to continue to operate the school and make repairs that are essential for student and staff safety.

“To all of our patrons in Vernon, I say, ‘Hold on. We will take care of you. We are work-ing on it,’” said school board member Kathy Taylor.

The school board started looking at alternatives for Vernon Elementary during its December meeting. At that time, one of the alternatives under consideration was clos-ing the school and sending the students to Dugway School, a one-hour and ten-minute bus ride away, according to Google map.

Vernon School was built in

Tooele man dies after rollover accident SundaySTEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

A Tooele man died follow-ing a single-vehicle rollover on Sunday morning, accord-ing to the Tooele City Police Department.

Tooele City police identi-fied the victim in the crash as 19-year-old Lincoln Powers.

The accident occurred at the intersection of 400 North and Seventh Street around 10:05 a.m., Tooele City police said. Powers was driving his Ford Escape northbound on Seventh Street and rolled, col-liding with a utility pole on the southeast corner of the inter-

section.Following the accident,

there were live power lines on the ground near the SUV, according to Tooele City police. First responders and citizens who witnessed the crash were able to free Powers from the vehicle and move him away from the electrical hazard.

Powers was transported by ambulance to a medical helicopter, which flew him to a Salt Lake-area hospital in extremely critical condition, Tooele City police said. He was pronounced dead from his

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Lincoln Powers starred as an athelete at Tooele High School.

Winter storm causes power outages and minor crashes

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Andrea Oseguera shovels snow from the driveway of her Stansbury home. A major snowstorm blasted the Tooele Valley on Monday.

STEVE HOWESTAFF WRITER

A winter storm that blew into the area at the end of President Day’s weekend caused a number of power outages and a few vehicle acci-dents in Tooele County.

Rocky Mountain Power reported a power outage caused by a vehicle accident affecting the Pine Canyon sub-station at 3:53 p.m. on Sunday, which affected more than 700 customers. There was also an outage at the Stansbury sub-station, which began at 9:36 p.m. and affected 2,908 cus-tomers in Erda and Lake Point.

The Stansbury outage was caused by a utility pole fire, according to Rocky Mountain Power spokesman David Ekelsen. Utility pole fires are a seasonal phenomenon, Ekelsen said.

With dry weather in the

MARK WATSONSTAFF WRITER

Tooele City almost received a month’s worth of snowfall on Sunday and Monday.

Tooele received 13 inches of snow from 5 p.m Sunday through 5 p.m. Monday, according to Ned Bevan, local weather observer for the National Weather Service.

Normal snowfall for the entire month of February is 14.1 inches with precipitation at 1.33 inches. Precipitation received on Monday and Tuesday measured at .86

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS

Crews work to pull a semi truck back onto the roadway on I-80 near mile marker 102 after the truck slid off the road and down a embankment yesterday while a winter storm rolled across Utah bringing much-needed snow and adverse driving conditions.

Snowstorm hits Tooele Valley with good dose of wet

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Emergency crews work to clear debris from Main Street in Tooele after water from a fire hydrant pushed dirt and rocks into the roadway creating a hazard for drivers.

But school board will examinereplacement costs and methods

SEE VERNON PAGE A7 �

SEE SNOWSTORM PAGE A10 �

TOOELETOOELET

Grantsville basketball teams advance at state tourneys

See B1

SEE STORM PAGE A10 �

SEE ROLLOVER PAGE A7 �

Page 2: February 20, 2018 Vol. 124 No. 76 ...tooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2-20... · WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Sunny to partly cloudy and cold

TUESDAY February 20, 2018A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

MARK WATSONSTAFF WRITER

Even with a major snow-storm on Monday, available irrigation water this year could be scarce.

Water from Grantsville Reservoir overflowed last spring and the Grantsville Irrigation Company did not read meters until three months

into the season.That will not be the case this

year.On Wednesday at its board

meeting, the company set the limit this year at 150,000 gallons per shareholder, com-pared to 250,000 gallons last year.

“Last year, we didn’t end up reading meters until July 1, so anything up to that point didn’t count towards the 250,000 gal-lons,” said Elise Mondragon, office manager for Grantsville Irrigation Company.

“This year, we’ll anticipate reading the meters as soon as we turn on, which means the 150,000 gallons is stretched from April through October,” Mondragon said.

She said the board made the decision based on snowpack being at 44 percent of normal.

“The water level is discussed at every meeting. The board feels it is better to underesti-mate than overestimate the amount of water available,” Mondragon said.

With warmer temperatures than last year, current water storage at Grantsville and Settlement Canyon reservoirs is higher than at this time last year.

A Feb. 1 reading from

the Natural Resources Conservation Service showed reservoir storage for Tooele Valley at 70 percent of capac-ity, compared to 21 percent last year.

Settlement Canyon Reservoir was at 78 percent full and Grantsville Reservoir was at 67 percent full. Grantsville Reservoir holds 2,222 acre-feet of water while Settlement holds 789 acre-feet. And acre-foot of water is an acre of water that is one-foot deep.

Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company board member Ned Bevan said there are many factors regarding any restrictions this year.

He said it would depend on the weather pattern over the next four months, stream flow and reservoir storage.

“The board will look at those things when the time comes,” Bevan said. “I’m trying to be optimistic. It is still too early.”

Grantsville Irrigation Company reported that there are 10,197.5 shares and that number will not increase or decrease.

Mondragon said currently there are no shares for lease this year by shareholders, but

that could change.SNOTEL site data in Tooele

County on Tuesday showed Rocky Basin in Settlement Canyon at 47 percent of nor-mal for this time of the year. Mining Fork in the Stansbury Mountains was at 48 percent of normal and Vernon Creek was at 54 percent of normal.

Water users hope the recent storm on Monday is an indica-tion of things to come.

Bevan, Tooele weather observer for the National Weather Service, reported that the recent storm pounded Tooele with .86 inches of pre-cipitation and 13 inches of snow. The high temperature reached 34 degrees with a low of 20 in a 24-hour period from 5 p.m. Sunday to 5 p.m. Monday.

Normal precipitation for the entire month of February in

Tooele is 1.33 inches and nor-mal snowfall for the month is 14.1 inches.

In 2017, precipitation for Tooele hit a high of 166 per-cent of normal followed by 111 percent of normal in March and 116 percent of normal in [email protected]

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Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, Tooele City, Utah 84074.

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TOOELE

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

The Grantsville High School cheer team performs at halftime during the first round of the playoffs held on Friday at Wasatch High School in Heber City.

Grantsville Irrigation will limit shareholders to 150,000 gallonsSettlement Canyon Irrigation waiting to announce any restrictions

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Grantsville Reservoir is still at a high level, but meager snowpack has forced lower amounts being apportioned to shareholders this year.

Couples, friends and neighbors filled the Old Grantsville Church Dinner Theatre in Grantsville Friday night for a “Valentine’s Date Night at Mel’s Diner.” Guests were served dinner and danced to a live band that played favorites from the ’50s and ’60s. To add to the fun, servers dressed in poodle skirts and cardigans, while Elvis stole the show and wowed the ladies. Mel’s Diner was a prominent feature in the popular TV sitcom “Happy Days.” Kathleen Hansen can’t resist meeting Elvis (Keith Averet, above left) on the dance floor. Brandon Crawford and MaKindy Chatfield (above) take a spin on the dance floor. Brendan Thorpe (far left) played his sax with the live band. Lauren Johnson (left middle) served food at the event. Gary and Mary Ann Hurst (left) take a spin on the dance floor.SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTOS

“VALENTINE’S DATE NIGHT AT MEL’S DINER”

Page 3: February 20, 2018 Vol. 124 No. 76 ...tooeleonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/2-20... · WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Sunny to partly cloudy and cold

TUESDAY February 20, 2018 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Stallion drama to present ‘Peter and the Starcatcher’MARK WATSONSTAFF WRITER

Actors and audience will all be on stage to delve into the early-life adventures of Peter Pan during Stansbury High School’s winter play “Peter and the Starcatcher.”

SHS drama director Glen Carpenter said the play upends the century-old story of how a miserable orphan comes to be The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up.

The play opens Tuesday and runs through Feb. 27.

Carpenter said the play includes marauding pirates, jun-gle tyrants, unwilling comrades and unlikely heroes. It playfully explores the depths of greed and despair, and the bonds of friendship, duty and love.

Audience members for this play will be seated on stage with the actors.

“Audiences will love this show,” Carpenter said. “We’ve

done quite a few of our winter plays onstage with the audience onstage. Last year’s winter play “Misanthrope” was with the audience onstage. We’re able to seat between 125 and 150 people. So people should buy their tickets early.

“We’ll have a smaller cast of about 24,” he added. “The show is written for 11 actors, so I’ve added an ensemble. It’s consid-ered a play with music.”

Starring as The Boy (Peter Pan) is Landon Richins, with Zack Stoker as Blackstache (Captain Hook).

“Landon is amazingly tal-ented and has been the right fit for numerous shows this year and last year,” Carpenter said. “I thought Zack was a perfect fit as well for Blackstache. He’s also playing Captain von Trapp in ‘The Sound of Music’ in May.”

Additional roles are per-formed by Bridger Roberts, Jerdyn Akeripa, Lily Kay, Garrett Merrill and Natalie Roberts.

Carpenter provided a synop-sis of the play.

He said a young orphan and his mates are shipped off from Victorian England to a distant island ruled by the evil King Zarboff. They know nothing of the mysterious trunk in the cap-tain’s cabin, which contains a precious, otherworldly cargo. At sea, the boys are discovered by a precocious young girl named

Molly, a Starcatcher-in-training, who realizes that the trunk’s precious cargo is starstuff, a celestial substance so powerful that it must never fall into the wrong hands. When the ship is taken over by pirates — led by the fearsome Black Stache, a villain determined to claim

the trunk and its treasure for his own – the journey quickly becomes a thrilling adventure.

Performances are at 7:30 p.m. with an additional matinee performance on Saturday at 2 p.m. Ticket prices at the door are $8.50 for adults, $7.50 for non-SHS students and seniors,

and $5.50 for SHS students and children under 12. Patrons are encouraged to purchase advance tickets at www.stallion-drama.org.

Stansbury High School is located at 5300 Aberdeen Lane in Stansbury [email protected]

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Alf (Garrrett Merrill) in Stansbury High Drama’s production of “Peter and the Starcatcher.” The show opens Tuesday.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Molly (Lily Kay) Mrs Bumbrake (Jerdyn Akeripa) and Captain Slank (Jackson Olmec) in Stansbury High’s production of “Peter and the Starcatcher.”

Utah County Jail culinary program develops skills and morePROVO, Utah (AP) — The

smell of fresh-baked bread fills the air of the commer-cial kitchen as an industrial dishwasher hums in the back-ground. Men in a variety of colored hairnets and maroon shirts, with Utah County Jail printed in black lettering, wipe down tables, peel vegetables, and prep meals.

The Utah County Jail Culinary Arts program uti-lizes inmates labor in the com-mercial kitchen. The kitchen produces thousands of meals a day for the Meals on Wheels program, jail staff, and for the inmates themselves. The culinary program is one of the programs that provides on the job training for inmates within the county jail.

“It is an opportunity for them to go into society, to take something with them back into society for when they reacclimatize into society,” Larry Hunter, the food service administrator of the culinary arts program, said.

In January of 2017, the Code 7 Cafe was opened in the Utah County Jail. The cafe expanded the possibilities of the culinary program and allowed for more opportunities for education and skill devel-opment for those within the program.

Because of the newness of the program, there are still only limited amounts of statis-tics available on the impact the program has had on a large-scale. However, all of those involved with the program highlight anecdotal evidence of the positive impact that has allowed for released inmates to have a savings when re-enter-ing society and to finding a job related to the work within the program.

The culinary arts program operates very similar to other commercial kitchens. The inmates start the program by washing dishes and work their

way up to baking and cooking food.

“There is a process that they can work through,” Hunter said, “If you perform and do what you are supposed to do, you will have opportunities.”

This step-by-step process allows for the civilian cooks to help evaluate the quality of work along the way and make sure that positive behavior is rewarded and negative behav-ior is mitigated.

“They’ve got to uphold their side of being deputies and us being inmates, but they do they best they can, they give us respect and treat us like were just working a normal job,” Andres Torres, a current mem-ber of the program, said.

Focusing on the behavior of the inmates has been a staple of the program since the begin-ning. Focusing on changing behavior rather than simply locking the inmates up is a key component of philosophy passed down from the top in the Sheriff’s Office.

Lt. Jeff Jones, the jail indus-tries director, highlights the fact that you can either treat people like people or like objects. “If you treat people like people, they will respond appropriately,” Jones said.

Deputy Jason Heidel, the food service manager, takes this philosophy very person-ally and in many ways. Heidel prefers to refer to the inmates as “workers” when they are in the kitchen. Also, the cloth-ing that the frontline workers wear doesn’t have the writing of Utah County Jail on the back. Heidel tells them all “if you want to act like an inmate, there is a place you can go. If you want to be a worker, there is a place for you in the kitchen.” This echoes the focus on behavior and highlights the opportunity for individual choice and progress within the kitchen for the program par-ticipants.

The benefit for the inmates that participate in the kitchen program goes beyond a skill.

“For the most part, this is the first positive interaction that a lot of these gentlemen have had with law enforce-ment,” Heidel said.

Heidel appreciates the per-sonal touch that food offers. “For both sides, this adver-sarial relationship goes away when this guy is cooking eggs for you,” he said.

Joe Byington, a worker within the culinary arts pro-gram, echoes that education and camaraderie comes with participation in the program.

“I wasn’t expecting to learn this much and be a part of a team this much,” Byington said.

He also mentions that toler-ance and learning to work with a variety of people helps build leadership skills that will trans-fer to jobs once the inmates are released from jail.

Hunter said he believes that the straightforwardness of the program is a key strength.

“The crazy part is it seems so simple. Something just like flipping pancakes or making omelets or something like that. Just by teaching them these little things, it is huge, it’s big. Some of these kids have never made a bed in their life. To take these kids and teach them a trade or skill is huge and it helps them,” he said. “If you teach them something, that gives them self-worth and it goes a long way.”

All of this education and experience comes in a short amount of time, because the average inmate within the culinary arts program is serv-ing between 90 to 120 days in jail. The length of the stay and the trust given to the inmates comes from the type of inmate that the Utah County Jail has.

Sgt. James Baldwin, of the jail industries program at the Utah County Jail, believes that

the religious and family back-ground of many of the inmates contributes to the success of the programs. He highlights that what programs may work at one jail, may not work at another.

Another key component for what makes the program possi-ble is backing from administra-tion and how they philosophi-cally look at the relationship between those in the jail and the community outside of it.

“They (inmates) are going to be my neighbor, your neighbor, our neighbor,” Chief Deputy Darin Durfey said.

Durfey sees the time these prisoners have within the jail as an opportunity to correct behavior and provide skills and hope for the inmates. This corrective behavior is aimed at helping inmates not only when they are in jail, but also when they are on the outside.

All of the corrections offi-

cers are realistic and explain that they know that not every problem will be fixed in the culinary program, but motiva-tion of the program continues to improve the jail. “It is about why we are here and when you pass that on, you get the buy in from the inmates,” Jones said. Utilizing a philosophy that pro-motes behavior change aims to benefit the inmates, the offi-cers, and the community.

Ex-wife of former White House aide says Hatch has apologized

WASHINGTON (AP) — An ex-wife of former White House staff secretary Rob Porter says she has received a letter of apology from Sen. Orrin Hatch, the Utah Republican who defended his former aide from “a vile attack” after two ex-wives accused Porter of domestic abuse.

Porter resigned Feb. 7 after the accusations from Colbie Holderness and Jennie Willoughby became public, though he denied them.

Porter had been Hatch’s chief of staff for three years. When the allegations first surfaced, Hatch defended Porter as “kind and consider-ate towards all” and referred to “a vile attack” and “character

assassins.” After details of the alleged abuse came to light, Hatch said he was “heartbro-ken,” didn’t know the details of Porter’s personal life, and called domestic violence “abhorrent.”

Holderness told The Associated Press in an email Sunday that she had received “an apology letter” from Hatch and that she appreciated it.

The Washington Post’s Erik Wemple first reported that both Holderness and Willoughby had received let-ters of apology from Hatch.

Emails and calls for com-ment from Hatch’s office and from Willoughby were not immediately returned to the AP.

President Donald Trump defended Porter after his departure from the White House and wished him well while not mentioning the ex-wives and their accusations. Trump later lamented via Twitter that “lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation,” which critics pointed to as further evidence that Trump downplayed vio-lence against women.

The Porter episode also raised questions about how long White House officials knew about the allegations against him and what role they played in Porter failing to obtain a permanent security clearance.

Tooele County Extension Auditorium • 151 N. Main • 435-277-2409

SAT, FEBRUARY 24 • 10am

Utah State University is an affi rmative action/equal opportunity institution.

Tooele Master Gardeners Spring Expo

REGISTRATION 9:30AM. $5 PER PERSON

PRESENTATIONS10am If not here, Where? If not now, When? — Dave QuistGardening in Small Spaces — DorAnn Poyner & Janet WhiteSharpen your Garden Tools (Registration needed) — Mike Caron

11am Flip Your Strip (Designing your park strip) — Rick HallFrom the Garden to the Table — Janeen PondSharpen Your Garden Tools (Registration needed) — Mike Caron

12PM Landscaping with Ginny — Virginia HooperVariety is the Spice of Life — Jay CooperSharpen your Garden Tools (Registration needed) — Mike CaronRegistration is needed for “Sharpen your Tools” by Mike Caron, USU Extension Horticulture Agent. Space is limited. Bring only one tool. You can register on line at Eventbrite.com or call the USU Extension O� ce at 435-277-2400.

1:00 P.M. Guest Speaker — Kevin ShieldsSenior Landscape Architect –LDS Church“The Rhythm and Blues of Landscape Design”

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Chicago Democrats have a saying about unwanted help who may want to wet their beaks in the

trough of public service:“We don’t want nobody nobody

sent.”And former President Bill Clinton is

now that nobody.National Democrats hugged him as

recently as the 2016 presidential cam-paign, when he was Hillary Clinton’s surrogate zero. Now they don’t want him anywhere near the 2018 congres-sional midterm elections.

How can you have Bill around while you reach for that weaponized #MeToo movement and rewrite your history? It would be so awkward.

Politicians don’t want voters to realize that those who shout the loud-est often sip their hypocrisy quietly, through a straw.

In Politico, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Rep. Ben Ray Lujan point-edly avoided the Bill issue.

Lujan is in the job Clintonista and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel once held, back when Emanuel would send dead fish to his political enemies.

“As we travel around the country ... different candidates are going to be making requests for different sur-rogates,” Lujan was quoted as telling reporters when asked about Bill and 2018.

In politics, what politicians say isn’t the story. What they don’t say is

instructive. And Lujan’s pointed avoid-ance of Clinton’s role is deafeningly loud, like the silent scream in the Edvard Munch painting.

Yet little more than a year ago, when then-Republican presiden-tial candidate Donald Trump was accused of sexual assault, or at least was caught bragging about grab-bing women by the genitals on that revealing “Access Hollywood” video, Democrats thrilled at Clinton’s approach.

Even future #MeToo leaders like Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York sang Clinton’s praises.

Now, though, you can’t very well have a former Democratic president who put his hands on women in the Oval Office, and who allegedly raped a woman as Arkansas attorney gen-eral (and told her afterward to fix her face), anywhere near 2018.

But that’s just the pimple, not the infection itself.

What Democrats don’t want to deal with is how they rationalized it all. Clinton offered what they wanted: protection of abortion rights and access to power.

And with the #MeToo movement in

their hands, they find their own histo-ry so embarrassing they must rewrite it before selling a new script to voters.

The #MeToo movement is too important to be diminished by parti-san politics, but that’s what’s happen-ing.

No woman should have to deal with sexual harassment or assault.

And no man should be allowed to make public policy after allegedly bat-tering a woman, as Rob Porter, staff secretary at the Trump White House, was allowed to do for months before recently resigning.

Still, you can see how #MeToo is being enveloped by Democrats. It is the 2018 version of the “Year of the Woman,” the feminist slogan that played so well with suburban soccer moms and leveraged Bill Clinton into the White House years ago.

Only then did Bill reach for Monica and the cigars.

Feminists and others of the left protected him, arguing that lies about sex — even under oath — was just a private matter. Now, of course, it’s all a public matter.

Yet back then, liberal writer Nina Burleigh captured the feminist left in all its glory.

“I think American women should be lining up with their presidential knee-pads on to show their gratitude for keeping the theocracy off our backs,”

Open Forum• Editorial• Guest Opinions• Letters to the Editor

David J. BernEditor

Scott C. DunnPresident and Publisher

Joel J. DunnPublisher Emeritus

OUR VIEW

It has happened in schools and churches everywhere across America. And it could happen here. Which is why we feel compelled to offer some thoughts about last week’s tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida — and the media and public firestorm that fol-lowed and continues today.

On Valentine’s Day, 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz walked into his former high school with an AR-15 assault rifle, and sprayed a swath of destruction that killed 17 students and staff, and injured over a dozen more. It was reportedly the 18th gun-related incident on U.S. school grounds since Jan. 1, 2018, and the seventh firearm attack during school hours since the first of the year.

The Parkland tragedy has replaced the 1999 Columbine High School massacre in Columbine, Colorado, as the second-most deadly school shoot-ing in U.S. history. At Columbine, 13 students and staff were killed and over 20 more injured by students Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold.

Only the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, remains the largest, with 20 students and six faculty killed by 20-year-old Adam Lanza. Of note, Harris, Klebold and Lanza reportedly suffered from mental health issues, and it has been reported that Cruz does as well.

Just like all the other shootings that have occurred this year and years past, the news of the Parkland tragedy was heart-wrenching and shocking. The senseless loss, the shattered lives and families, have caused more deep sadness, fear and anger across America. They have also further turned up the heat on the gun control debate, demands for stricter background checks, and casting a broader mental health safety net to prevent more people from “falling though the cracks” and taking it out on others in hor-rible acts of violence.

Perhaps tighter gun control, stricter background checks and improved mental health awareness and prevention would help stem the tide of mass shootings in schools, churches and other public venues across America that are supposed to be places of safety. But at the end of the day, we don’t see such shifts in policy or effort would result in significant and sustainable change. The random mass shootings and senseless killings would continue.

The reason? Many people across America feel that our democracy is in peril more than ever before. That may be so. But we would offer there is something more deeper and worrisome that is amiss in our country that needs to change — and that something is “we the people” of the United States and how much we truly are connected, and truly care about — or even love — one another. We’re not talking about loving our families; we’re talking about putting down the smartphone and reaching out to our neighbor and fellow citizens through genuine action and concern.

That may sound overly simplistic and naïve, but at its essence, it touches the very core of humanity. To say simply, the United States is renowned for being a nation of laws and democracy. Perhaps more than ever, the United States needs to become renowned for being a nation of people who go the extra mile for one another.

Perhaps only then will we see far fewer Columbines, Sandy Hooks and Parklands.

The Pentagon has confirmed that it is in the preliminary stages of planning a mili-

tary parade down Pennsylvania Avenue — one of President Donald Trump’s fondest desires.

Trump was, understandably, impressed in a visit to France last July by the pageantry of the Bastille Day parade. The parade dates back to the 1880s. Nothing the United States comes up with will match its resonance or its beloved, unifying nature.

Trump’s motivation for ordering up a parade anyway is pretty obvi-ous. He likes big, brassy displays, and he gets a kick out of being the commander in chief of the most impressive military on the planet.

Still, we don’t lack for rea-sons to honor our military. The Pentagon has already floated the idea of a parade on Veterans Day to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, an epic event by any standard. We’re also overdue to honor on a large scale the sacrifice of our troops over the past 15 years in the war on terror.

It’s not obvious when it became untoward or dangerous for the United States to hold military parades. Are we supposed to believe that the integrity of American character has depended on having no military parades since 1991, when there were big honking ones in Washington and New York to celebrate the end of the Gulf War?

The unsatisfactory outcomes of the Vietnam and Korean wars meant we didn’t have parades to mark those conflicts (we should have). But it didn’t occur to any-one that it was inappropriate or undemocratic to display military hardware.

During World War II, there were big military parades in New York City, and self-propelled howitzers drove by the New York Public Library. Dwight Eisenhower’s first inaugural showcased an 85-ton atomic cannon. They broke out

four nuclear missiles for JFK’s inauguration.

It’s true that leaders of Russia, China and North Korea exult in military parades. But it’s not military parades that make these regimes dangerous.

The parade controversy is another sign that the place of patriotism in our national life, and what that patriotism should con-sist of, is a Trump-era flashpoint.

Trump’s critics tend to think patriotism itself is atavistic, or that its locus should be only in our ideals. Trump’s patriotism is more grounded, and insists that we are a nation, not just an abstraction.

This is why a military parade once in a while is a healthy thing: We should be proud, not just of our troops, but of our military as such. We should be proud of our strength. We should be proud of our weaponry, highly proficient machines fashioned by the most technically adept society the world has ever known.

Ideally, everyone would real-ize this. Once upon a time, we did. But now the best argument against Trump’s parade is that it will become a cultural-war flash-point and “the resistance” will try its utmost to ruin the affair. Just imagine a protester in a pussy hat in a Tiananmen Square-style standoff with an M1 Abrams tank.

Meanwhile, on July 14, the Bastille Day parade will in all like-lihood come off once again with-out a hitch.

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

A military parade can be a good thing

‘We don’t want nobody nobody sent’

Trump’s tax cut is fueling stock buybacks

The extra mileWhat perhaps needs to change so fewer mass shootings take more innocent lives

GUEST OPINION

Editor David [email protected]

435-882-0050

With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin.

EDITORIAL BOARD

GUEST OPINION

GUEST OPINION

Donald Trump’s promise that corporations will use his giant new tax cut to make new

investments and raise workers’ wages is proving to be about as truthful as his promise to release his tax returns.

The results are coming in, and guess what? Almost all the extra money is going into stock buybacks. Since the tax cut became law, buy-backs have surged to $88.6 billion. That’s more than double the amount of buybacks over the same period last year, according to data provided by Birinyi Associates.

Compare this with the paltry $2.5 billion worth of employee bonuses corporations say they’ll dispense in response to the tax law, and you see the bonuses for what they are: a small fig leaf to disguise the big buybacks.

If anything, the current tumult in the stock market will fuel even more buybacks.

Stock buybacks are corporate pur-chases of their own shares of stock. Corporations do this to artificially prop up their share prices.

Buybacks are the corporate equiva-lent of steroids. They may make shareholders feel better than they would otherwise, but nothing really changes.

Money spent on buybacks isn’t reinvested in new equipment, research or factories. Buybacks don’t add jobs or raise wages. They don’t increase productivity. They don’t grow the American economy.

Yet CEOs love buybacks because most CEO pay is now in shares of stock and stock options rather than cash. So when share prices go up, executives reap a bonanza.

At the same time, the value of CEO

pay from previous years also rises in what amounts to a retroactive (and off the books) pay increase —on top of their already humongous compen-sation packages.

Big investors also love buybacks because they increase the value of their stock portfolios. Now that the richest 10 percent of Americans own 84 percent of all shares of stock (up from 77 percent at the turn of the century), this means even more wealth at the top.

Buybacks used to be illegal. The Securities and Exchange Commission considered them unlawful means of manipulating stock prices, in viola-tion of the Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934.

In those days, the typical corpora-tion put about half its profits into research and development, plant and equipment, worker retraining, additional jobs and higher wages. But under Ronald Reagan, who rhapso-dized about the “magic of the mar-ket,” the SEC legalized buybacks.

After that, buybacks took off. Just in the past decade, 94 percent of cor-porate profits have been devoted to buybacks and dividends, according to researchers at the Academic-Industry Research Network.

Last year, big American corpora-tions spent a record $780 billion buy-ing back their shares of stock. And that was before the new tax law.

Put another way, the new tax law is

giving America’s wealthy not one but two big windfalls: They stand to gain the most from the tax cuts for individ-uals, and they’re the big winners from the tax cuts for corporations.

This isn’t just unfair. It’s also bad for the economy as a whole. Corporations don’t invest because they get tax cuts. They invest because they expect that customers will buy more of their goods and services.

This brings us to the underlying problem. Companies haven’t been

LETTER CONTESTEach month, the Transcript-Bulletin will select the best letter of the month and reprint it in the first Open Forum page of the following month. The winning letter writer will receive a free one-year subscription to the newspaper. The subscription can be transferred or used to renew a present subscription.

The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to the editor from readers. Letters must be no longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and accompanied by the writer’s name, address and phone number. Longer letters may be published, based on merit and at the Editor’s discretion. All letters may be subject to editing.

Letters written to thank an individual or organization should be submitted for “Notes of Appreciation.”

Readers who are interested in writing a longer guest op-ed column on a topic of general interest should contact Editor David Bern.

Email: [email protected]: (435) 882-6123Mail: Letters to the Editor Tooele Transcript-Bulletin P.O. Box 390 Tooele, UT 84074

LETTERS POLICY

John KassGUEST COLUMNIST

Robert ReichGUEST COLUMNIST

SEE REICH PAGE A5 �

SEE KASS PAGE A5 �

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018 A5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

investing — and have been using their profits to buy back their stock instead — because they doubt their investments will pay off in additional sales.

That’s because most eco-

nomic gains have been going to the wealthy, and the wealthy spend a far smaller percent-age of their income than the middle class and the poor. When most gains go to the top, there’s not enough demand to justify a lot of new investment. Which also means that as long as public policies are tilted to the benefit of those at the top — as is Trump’s tax cut,

along with the legalization of stock buybacks under Reagan — we’re not going to see much economic growth.

We’re just going to have more buybacks and more inequality.

Robert Reich, a former U.S. Secretary of Labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley

Burleigh wrote.If Democrats were truly seri-

ous about #MeToo, you’d think they’d hold a public ceremony of exorcism, burning all those kneepads in some giant, quasi-religious bonfire.

“I think it’s pretty tough,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., was quoted as saying by Politico, on the necessary dis-tance between the Democrats and Clinton.

She is vice chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and a leader in demanding changes in Washington’s approach to sexual harassment.

Clinton being anywhere near 2018 “just brings up a lot of issues that will be very tough for Democrats,” Jayapal said. “And I think we all have to be clear about what the #MeToo movement was.”

What it is or what it was?No political party can corner

the market on hypocrisy, and the Republicans have plenty to share.

Republicans once were ada-mant that character counts in a president. Now they applaud evangelical clergymen who defend Trump, just as the Nina Burleighs of the left once defended Bill.

And Republicans were also once quite worried about that massive government debt that would be left to all those grandchildren.

But it’s all water under some bridge the president would build with his trillion-dollar infrastructure plan that America can’t afford.

At least outgoing U.S. Rep. Trey Gowdy, the South Carolina Republican and for-mer federal prosecutor, has his priorities straight.

He wants to know about the White House and Rob Porter.

He’s begun an investiga-tion by the House Oversight Committee to find out what

White House chief of staff John Kelly and White House coun-sel Don McGahn knew about Porter’s questionable security clearance.

The Trump White House has bumbled explanations as to why Porter was allowed to remain at the White House with only an “interim” security clearance, despite a protective order granted to one of Porter’s ex-wives.

“I would want to know from Don McGahn and Gen. Kelly and anyone else, what did you know, from whom did you hear it, to what extent did you hear? And what actions if any did you take?” Gowdy said on CNN. “The chronology is not favor-able for the White House.”

No, it is not.But as it proceeds, Bill

Clinton becomes the incredible shrinking man, the nobody nobody sent.

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. His Twitter handle is @john_kass.

Reichcontinued from page A4

Kasscontinued from page A4

MATTERS OF FAITH

We all can learn from the actions of children in our communityEditor’s note: “Matters of

faith” is a column that provides local religious leaders a place to write about how their respective faiths provide hope, courage and strength in these modern times.

Jesus taught, “Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall

not enter into the kingdom of heaven.”

I learned two great lessons from “children” this past week as I helped officiate at the Utah State swim champion-ships.

Both are actually teenagers, rather than children, but their actions emulate true followers of Christ.

I served as the head timer of the 6A championships. The fancy-pansy title gives me the best seat in the house with a

free entrance pass. For whatever reason, I love

the smell of chlorine and watching kids excel in their specialty after months of early morning workouts, countless repeat intervals, land exercis-es, and listening to their coach yell, “Pick up the pace!”

I especially keep my eyes on the swimmers in the outside lanes (that’s where I spent the bulk of my career) since they are the ones who seldom ven-ture to the top of the medal podium.

My first lesson came from Chase Stoddard, a backstroker out of Layton High School. I

work with his dad, so I kept my eye on him throughout the two-day meet.

I visited with one of Chase’s coaches and within 30 sec-onds, she praised Chase as an extraordinary young man, in addition to being a quality athlete.

Chase enjoyed a great state meet hitting his personal best times of the season in both the 200 individual medley and the 100 back. He improved enough to move up a few notches from his seeded spot to win a sixth-place medal and a place on the podium.

However, behind the scenes and out of the glare of public spotlight, he demonstrated true Christian action.

Chase gave up his spot on the Lancers’ 400 free relay so a teammate listed as an alternate could experience

the thrill of participating in the state championship swim meet.

I agree with Chase’s dad who told me, “I don’t know if I would have done that. I’m really proud of him.”

The second experience came from St. George and the Christ-like love of three Snow Canyon swimmers.

About two weeks ago, my daughter-in-law called me and wanted to know what I could do to change what she strongly felt was an injustice to a special needs swimmer

Amber Graves, who was born with Down syndrome, has been a dedicated member of her high school swim team.

She was unable to qualify for the state meet, but her coach and teammate wanted her to participate.

I reasoned that qualifying

for State is a difficult task and reserved for the top 24 swim-mers in each event. If they let Amber swim in an exhibition, what about all the others who just missed qualifying?

And what about the other special need swimmers? By letting Amber swim, isn’t that just treating all the others unfairly?

I explained there may be a way to do it, but it takes time to do it right. Better luck next year.

Boy, was I wrong.In the end, four young

ladies on Snow Canyon’s 200 free relay drew straws to decide who would give their spot so Amber could swim at State.

The Snow Canyon coach said, “When I told them that one of them was going to have to give up her relay spot, all

four of them, without hesita-tion, volunteered to let Amber take her place.”

For those lacking in faith about the future of commu-nity, nation, and world and negatively wondering aloud about “Kids these days,” please rest at ease. The future is in great hands with the ris-ing generation.

I agree with John who wrote, “I have no great-er joy than to hear that my children walk in truth,” and firmly believe we all can learn from the everyday actions of children in our home and community.

Amber’s story can be found by searching “Amber St. George News” on the Web.

Charlie Roberts is a former LDS bishop of the Tooele 6th Ward.

Charlie RobertsGUEST COLUMNIST

Charlie Roberts

Tribes call on Washington to respect Native sovereignty

WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal tax overhaul passed in December is “completely unac-ceptable” to Native Americans, just another example of what can happen when tribes are not included in federal decision-mak-ing, a tribal leader said Monday.

National Congress of American Indians President Jefferson Keel said in the annual State of Indian Nations address that the govern-ment-to-government relationship between tribes and Washington is even more important now, as the federal government pushes more control toward the states.

“Congress is thinking about shifting more authority and more funding to the states on the theory that states can more efficiently spend their funds — we too believe in local decision making, we’ve been doing it for thousand of years,” Keel said.

“We want to be engaged in all aspects of federal policy, and we have a right to be a huge partici-pant in these matters,” he said in his speech.

Despite ongoing problems with relations between governments, Keel said the state of Indian Country is “strong, resilient and everlasting,” pointing to benefits that tribes bring to American agri-culture and infrastructure, among other areas.

Franklin Pablo Sr., a Gila River Indian Community Council mem-ber who attended the address Monday, agreed with Keel that “overall, Indian nations are strong” but that more needs to be done.

“I hope senators and congress-men were listening, because we need that unity — to have a collaboration between tribal and federal sides,” Pablo said. The address kicks off four days

of NCAI meetings, which Pablo called “a place where we come to make things stronger, for all Indian to address some of these issues.”

The issues range from tax reform to domestic violence, from rural broadband to farm policy, Keel said.

He cited statistics that show tribal agriculture is a $3.2 bil-lion industry that supports nearly 72,000 jobs, an industry that could be “significantly damaged” should farm and infrastructure bills pass without consulting with Indian Country.

“In Arizona, Native businesses generate hundreds of millions of tax dollars and pay $1.9 billion in wages to thousands of both Native and non-Native employees,” said Keel, who identified the state as one of many whose “tribes who serve as economic engines across this country.”

“Native businesses don’t pull up stakes, even when market condi-tions change. We root our busi-nesses in our local communities — for good,” he said. “You want to ‘buy American’? Then do business with Indian Country.”

Keel said that tribal concerns were “completely absent” in the tax overhaul passed in December. As a result, the bill gave tax ben-efits and tax-exempt bonds to state and local governments that he said leave tribal government at a disadvantage.

“This inequity significantly handicaps tribal authority to provide much-needed govern-ment revenue for tribal programs and infrastructure and prevents economic growth on tribal lands,” Keel said. “Tax reform is a unique opportunity for Congress to pro-mote tribal sovereignty, self-deter-mination and self-sufficiency.”

Keel said the federal-tribal rela-tionship must “always be main-tained and respected,” arguing that state interference only limits tribal governance.

“It’s time to respect our unique political status as real nations with capable governments, as enshrined in real treaties and the Constitution of the United States,” Keel said.

Rory Wheeler, a representative for Mesa-based United National Indian Tribal Youth (UNITY), said tribes need a voice because they face many of the same problems as other Americans.

“As an emergency medical technician for my tribe, something I have noticed more and more in youth is the disastrous effects of the opioid epidemic,” said Wheeler, a member of the Seneca tribe. “While I am based in New York, the opioid crisis is a problem I have heard affects almost all tribes — even those based across the country, like Arizona.”

Wheeler said tribal sovereignty is important — and it’s important for the next generation to con-tinue the fight.

“What a lot of Indian youth need right now is motivation and a sense of identity,” he said. “When the federal government recognizes us as sovereign nations who have a legitimate voice in what happens in our lands, the youth began to feel like they can actually have a voice in those lands too.”

Keel said tribes are not asking for special treatment.

“All we want is a level playing field,” Keel said. “We have inher-ent rights. Not only were we born with them — we have earned them. The right to be recognized as equal governments. The right to be seated at the table where key decisions are made.”

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Melvin MairMelvin Mair, age 89,

beloved husband, father, grandfather, and friend, passed away peacefully on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2018, sur-rounded by family. Melvin was born on April 9, 1928, in Heber City, Utah, to Daniel and Ellen Pearl Hamilton Mair. He was the ninth of 10 chil-dren.

Melvin married the love of his life, Margaret Matson, on June 20, 1948, in Tooele, Utah, where they lived the majority of their life together. He served honorably in the Marine Corps. He then spent the majority of his working

life at Tooele Army Depot as a painter and West Elementary as a custodian.

Melvin was an active mem-ber of the LDS church and held many positions that he faithfully fulfilled. He loved fishing and spent countless hours roaming the shores of the many lakes of Utah. He also loved gardening and took

great pride in the fruits and vegetables he produced.

He is survived by his wife and five wonderful children: Deborah M. Rydalch (John), Dennis M. Mair (Sandy), Steven R. Mair (Kathy), Robert A. Mair (Maida), and Christopher J. Mair. Melvin and Margaret have 18 grand-children and 38 great-grand-children who love them very much.

Melvin was preceded in death by his parents and sib-lings.

We will celebrate Melvin’s life at a funeral service at noon, Feb. 21, 2018, at the Stockton LDS meeting house. A viewing will be held two hours prior to the service. Interment will be at Tooele City Cemetery.

We will miss you, your end-less supply of stories, and your example of hard work, dedica-tion, and commitment to life and your family. Until we are together again …

OBITUARIES

Janice Marvlen Peasnall

Janice Marvlen (Booth) Peasnall, 77, joined her best friend and eternal partner, Vern, on Sunday, Feb. 18, 2018. She passed peace-fully surrounded by family and friends in the Tooele Beehive Home. Janice was born May 30, 1940, in Tooele to James J. and Alice (Fox) Booth. She married Vern Clark Peasnall on Dec. 17, 1956, and later sol-emnized their marriage in the Salt Lake City Temple on May 27, 1975.

Janice retired from the Tooele Valley Nursing home after 40 years of outstand-ing service. She thoroughly enjoyed her 10 years of service at the Salt Lake Temple. She had a strong testimony of the gospel and served in many different church callings. Her favorite was working with the young women. Janice loved camping, fishing, crocheting, cross-stitching, sewing, making quilts and spending time with her family.

Janice is survived by son, Doug (Denise) of Tooele, Utah; son, Brent (Tess) of Tooele, Utah; daughter, Lori (Brad) Mowry of West Point, Utah; nine grandchildren and eight great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her hus-band, Vern; parents, James and Alice; and two siblings, Charles and Dennis.

The family would like to thank the Beehive home staff for their outstanding and lov-ing care during her time spent

there. They treated her like family and even called her Mom. Also, the family would like to thank Rocky Mountain Hospice for its outstanding care and service.

A memorial service will be held, Friday, Feb. 23, 2018, at 12 p.m. at the Tooele Stake Center located at 253 S. 200 East, Tooele. Friends may visit the family from 10 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. prior to the services at the church. Burial will be at Tooele City Cemetery.TRANSCRIPT

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Delivering the News in Tooele County for More Than 120 Years Mitt Romney, favored in Senate

bid, could take on outsized roleWASHINGTON (AP) — Mitt

Romney’s extensive resume has many Republicans looking to him to take on a role, if he’s elected Utah’s next senator, often filled by John McCain as an elder statesman and coun-terweight to a president many in the GOP see as divisive and undignified.

Romney, the 2012 White House nominee, is among the best-known names in U.S. politics. He’s been a successful businessman, governor of heav-ily Democratic Massachusetts, Olympics rescuer and, more recently, one of his party’s fierc-est critics of President Donald Trump.

McCain was quick to praise Romney, his rival for the 2008 nomination. In a tweet Friday shortly after Romney

announced his Senate bid, McCain said Romney “has shown the country what it means to lead with honor, integrity and civility. The people of #Utah and the nation need his strong voice, resolve and service now more than ever.”

Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., said Romney would bring the prestige of his previous roles to the Senate, if elected to succeed Sen. Orrin Hatch in strongly Republican Utah.

“I think he will be a plus-plus in the Senate,” Shelby said, calling Romney “a thoughtful man” and a leader who at 70 is senior enough to be an elder statesman.

Shelby, 83, has had his dif-ferences with Trump. He pub-licly opposed a GOP nominee

backed by Trump in Alabama’s closely watched Senate race last year, declaring before the elec-tion that “the state of Alabama deserves better” than Roy Moore, a former judge accused of sexual contact with teenage girls decades ago.

Romney has the stature to make similar declarations when — or if — they are needed, Shelby said. “I know the gover-nor and I think he would sup-port good ideas,” Shelby said.

Romney, a heavy favorite to win the Senate seat, will step in “immediately” as a leader in the Senate, said Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, who got to know Romney when both served as governors and when he co-chaired Romney’s presidential campaigns in Idaho.

“He has broad experience, he has the prestige. He’ll jump right in,” Risch said.

Those expectations are based largely on Romney’s record, rather than recent accomplish-ments. Romney has not served in elected office in more than a decade and lost bids for presi-dent in 2008 and 2012.

Trump has seized on Romney’s failed presiden-tial bids, saying in 2016 that Romney “choked like a dog.”

It’s not clear how Romney will relate to the president as a candidate or as a sena-tor, should he win. While he denounced Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign, Romney softened his stance after the election and put him-self forward as a candidate for secretary of state before Trump looked elsewhere.

Since then, Romney has spoken up from afar. He called out Trump after a deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year, and lashed out again last month when Trump used an obscenity to describe African countries during a White House meeting on immigration.

“The poverty of an aspiring immigrant’s nation of origin is as irrelevant as their race,” Romney tweeted, adding that comments attributed to the president were inconsistent with “America’s history and

antithetical to American val-ues.”

Despite those criticisms, Democrats say Romney and Trump are not all that different.

“While Mitt Romney desper-ately wants to separate himself from the extremism of the cur-rent administration, the basic policies of Trump’s GOP were his before they were Donald Trump’s,” said DNC spokes-man Vedant Patel, citing the recently enacted GOP tax cuts and efforts to repeal former President Barack Obama’s health care law.

Patel called Romney “anoth-er multimillionaire looking out for himself, his rich neighbors and the special interests.”

If he does go after Trump, Romney will find himself among a dwindling breed in Congress. McCain, who is suf-fering from brain cancer, has not appeared in the Senate since before Christmas, while fellow Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake is retiring at the end of the year. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., also has had public disputes with Trump, but has not criticized Trump in months and is report-edly reconsidering plans to retire.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, Romney’s 2012 running mate, said Romney’s “unparalleled experience, conservative lead-ership and lifetime of service” will serve him and Utah well in the Senate.

Romney “has my unwavering support, and the people of Utah will be getting an accomplished and decent man when they make him their next senator,” Ryan said.

Kirk Jowers, the former chairman and general counsel of Romney’s leadership PACs, said Romney “will always be a straight shooter” and will support the president when he takes actions that are good for America.

“If President Trump says or does something that he finds offensive or divisive, unneces-sarily divisive, then I think you will continue to hear Romney as the voice of reason and conscience in the Republican Party,” Jowers said.

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018 A7TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

1905 and remodeled in 1929. The school currently has 22 students in two classrooms, 13 in kindergarten through second grade, and nine in third through sixth grade.

A total of 14 Vernon Elementary age students attend school in Eureka 26 miles away.

According to a school district facilities report, the Vernon school building is in need of a seismic upgrade, the restrooms and playground equipment need to be made compliant with the American with Disabilities Act, the school’s lighting and coal-fired furnace need to be replaced, the exterior masonry needs repair, the attic needs insula-tion, and the irrigation system needs updating.

Vernon residents packed

both the December and February school board meet-ings. Recognizing their school is small and old, the residents opposed closing the school and busing their students.

“The options of busing small children to other schools is not a good choice because of the length and safety of the routes,” said Vernon resident Brittany Thomas. “We need a new school in Vernon.”

Since the December school board meeting, Mark Ernst, TCSD area director, said he met with the town’s former mayor, conducted a survey of Vernon parents and commu-nity members, and held a com-munity meeting in Vernon.

“If you don’t live in Vernon, I don’t think you can understand what the school means to the community out there,” Ernst said.

The survey indicated that 75 percent of the parents that send their students to a non-Tooele County School District

School said they would most likely return to Vernon if a new building was built.

Out of the 10 families with elementary students in Eureka, two said their choice of school was based on school manage-ment. Six cited the four-day school week in Eureka. Seven of the 10 families said they have a family member who works in Eureka.

The cost to rebuild Vernon Elementary School, if the work is done in 2019, is approxi-mately $2.4 million. The cost of updating and repairing the existing building would run around 50 percent more than rebuilding, according to estimators from Salt Lake City-based MHTN architects.

School board member Scott Bryan said he would like time to consider financing options along with alternative con-struction methods.

“We don’t have a standard plan for a two-room school house,” he said

In addition to the 14 ele-mentary students from Vernon who attend school in Eureka, another 22 secondary students from the Vernon area attend

school in Eureka.At its Feb. 13 meeting, the

school board voted not to proceed “at this time” with a proposal to change attendance

boundaries for Vernon and Rush Valley secondary stu-dents from Tooele High School to Dugway [email protected]

Vernoncontinued from page A1

FILE PHOTO

Vernon Elementary School was built in 1905. Tooele County School District is looking for ways to keep the two room school house open.

injuries on Monday. Rocky Mountain Power

crews responded to the scene within 15 minutes to begin repairs on the downed power lines. Traffic in the area of the

accident was affected for about three hours, fully reopening around 1 p.m.

The cause of the accident is still under investigation, according to Tooele City police.

Powers, a 2017 graduate of Tooele High School, starred for the Buffaloes on the foot-ball field. He was a First Team

All-State selection during his senior season, during which he rushed for 1,600 yards and 16 touchdowns as a running back and was also recognized as a strong defensive player. He was also a key member of Tooele’s boys basketball [email protected]

Rollovercontinued from page A1 Follow us on Facebook!

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Authorities said Friday they suspect an Islamic State group’s flag found flying outside a southern Utah high school was likely a prank and not the work of the terrorist group.

The flag was discov-ered Thursday morning at Hurricane High School, along with graffiti on a school wall that said, “ISIS is comi,” said officer Ken Thompson of the Hurricane Police Department. The small city is located north of St. George in Washington County.

The American flag had been taken off the flagpole and was found on the ground, slashed a couple of times, he

said. A black and flag with white Arabic letters was on the flagpole instead, said Thompson. Police aren’t releasing a picture of the flag because they say it is evi-dence.

The FBI analyzed an image of the Islamic State group flag police sent them and deter-mined it doesn’t believe the terrorist group was involved, Thompson said.

An investigation is ongoing. Police are reviewing surveil-lance video from the school and at nearby businesses and are asking for any information about the suspected prank, he said.

“We’re hoping that’s what it is,” Thompson said.

He said the incident was completely out of the ordinary for Hurricane, a city of about 15,000 residents where tour-ists visiting Zion National Park often lodge.

A new American flag was put up and the graf-fiti removed, and classes went on as scheduled after police determined there was no danger, said Steven Dunham, spokesman for the Washington County School District. He said a few of the parents of the 1,000 students kept their children home.

Dunham said the suspected prank “was in horribly poor taste, especially in light of the tragedy in Florida.”

Police doubt Islamic State flag at Hurricane High School was from terror group

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BULLETINBULLETINB

SNOWPACKSnow Water Equivalent as of 12 a.m. Monday Rocky Basin Mining Vernon Settlement Fork Creek

Source: Utah Natural Resources Conservation Services

Tooele Valley-Vernon Creek Basin

Snowcover 7.5 6.5 3.9Average 19.2 16.9 13.1Percent of average 47% 54% 46%

UV INDEX

Snowfall (in inches)

Last Month Season Week to date to date

13.0 14.5 33.5

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

Grouse Creek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Wednesday 7:15 a.m. 6:11 p.m.Thursday 7:14 a.m. 6:12 p.m.Friday 7:12 a.m. 6:14 p.m.Saturday 7:11 a.m. 6:15 p.m.Sunday 7:09 a.m. 6:16 p.m.Monday 7:08 a.m. 6:17 p.m.Tuesday 7:06 a.m. 6:18 p.m.

Wednesday 10:34 a.m. noneThursday 11:11 a.m. 12:22 a.m.Friday 11:54 a.m. 1:29 a.m.Saturday 12:43 p.m. 2:35 a.m.Sunday 1:40 p.m. 3:39 a.m.Monday 2:44 p.m. 4:39 a.m.Tuesday 3:53 p.m. 5:33 a.m.

©2018; forecasts and graphics provided by

34/17

32/15

30/17

28/12

30/13

28/13

36/20

33/17

35/20

33/16

33/16

20/11

23/11

35/2034/19

34/15

30/11

32/16

38/22

35/16

34/13

34/17

30/10

32/14

33/17

34/16

33/15

41/19

33/1241/23

34/1345/27 38/19

35/23

32/1238/19

29/15

26/11

32/11

First Full Last New

Feb 23 Mar 1 Mar 9 Mar 17

W Th F Sa Su M Tu

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Sunny to partly cloudy and cold

33 17

Considerable cloudiness and cold

35 20

Mostly cloudy and cold with snow

showers

31 13

Cold with a blend of sun and clouds

34 25

A.M. flurries; otherwise, mostly

cloudy

39

Rather cloudy and cold with flurries

36 24 25

Times of clouds and sun

41 31TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows.

High/Low past week 56/16Normal high/low past week 45/26Average temp past week 34.6Normal average temp past week 35.2

Statistics for the week ending Feb. 19.

0.87 0.44 0.93 1.13 2.02 2.54

KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION FOR FALL 2018

Online Kindergarten registration for the 2018-19 school year will open on Monday, February 12, 2018. To register your student go to www.tooeleschools.org, click on Families/Students and choose Registration/Enrollment then click on the link to Register Online. Please remember that registration will not be complete until all required documentation is taken to your students school. If you do not have access to the internet at home you may complete this online process at your students school February 22nd or 23rd between 9:00a.m. and 3:00 p.m. To be eligible to enter kindergarten, your child must be at least five (5) years of age on or before September 1, 2018. The following documentation will be required before a child can officially begin kindergarten for the 2018-19 school year: 1. Official State Birth Certificate - A copy of a state birth certificate for a child born

within Utah may be obtained from the Tooele County Health Department, 151 North Main, Tooele. A copy may also be obtained from the Utah State Division of Health, 554 South 300 East, Salt Lake City. Birth certificates for a child born outside of Utah should be obtained from the State Division of Health in the state the child was born.

2. Immunization Record - The following are required by Utah law for a child entering school: 5 DTaP/DTP/DT, 4 Polio (IPV), 2 MMR (Measles, Mumps, and Rubella),

3 Hepatitis B, 2 Hepatitis A and 2 Varicella (Chickenpox). 3. Vision Screening – A child under seven (7) years of age entering school for the first

time in the state of Utah must present a certificate signed by a licensed physician, optometrist, or other licensed health professional, stating that the child has received vision screening (Utah Code-Title 53A-11-203).

RECOMMENDATIONS: The following are highly recommended by the Tooele County School District before registering:

• Health Examination – make an appointment with your physician or health clinic • Dental Examination • Four doses of Haemophilus Influenzae Type B (Hib) – dosing scheduled based on student’s

current age.

Each child entering kindergarten must have a prescreening assessment. This assessment will be scheduled by your school prior to the end of this school year. It is important that you have your child registered to receive an assessment time. A kindergarten orientation will be held at local schools in August where general kindergarten information will be shared. We appreciate your cooperation and support in getting your kindergarten student registered for the 2018-2019 school year; this helps us plan around our enrollment numbers for the upcoming year. If you have further questions, contact your school principal or Jackie Gallegos at the District Office, (435)833-1900, Ext. 1104.

KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION FOR FALL 2018

Online Kindergarten registration for the 2018-19 school year will open on Monday, February 12, 2018. To register your student go to www.tooeleschools.org, click on Families/Students and choose Registration/Enrollment then click on the link to Register Online. Please remember that registration will not be complete until all required documentation is taken to your students school. If you do not have access to the internet at home you may complete this online process at your students school February 22nd or 23rd between 9:00a.m. and 3:00 p.m. To be eligible to enter kindergarten, your child must be at least five (5) years of age on or before September 1, 2018. The following documentation will be required before a child can officially begin kindergarten for the 2018-19 school year: 1. Official State Birth Certificate - A copy of a state birth certificate for a child born

within Utah may be obtained from the Tooele County Health Department, 151 North Main, Tooele. A copy may also be obtained from the Utah State Division of Health, 554 South 300 East, Salt Lake City. Birth certificates for a child born outside of Utah should be obtained from the State Division of Health in the state the child was born.

2. Immunization Record - The following are required by Utah law for a child entering school: 5 DTaP/DTP/DT, 4 Polio (IPV), 2 MMR (Measles, Mumps, and Rubella),

3 Hepatitis B, 2 Hepatitis A and 2 Varicella (Chickenpox). 3. Vision Screening – A child under seven (7) years of age entering school for the first

time in the state of Utah must present a certificate signed by a licensed physician, optometrist, or other licensed health professional, stating that the child has received vision screening (Utah Code-Title 53A-11-203).

RECOMMENDATIONS: The following are highly recommended by the Tooele County School District before registering:

• Health Examination – make an appointment with your physician or health clinic • Dental Examination • Four doses of Haemophilus Influenzae Type B (Hib) – dosing scheduled based on student’s

current age.

Each child entering kindergarten must have a prescreening assessment. This assessment will be scheduled by your school prior to the end of this school year. It is important that you have your child registered to receive an assessment time. A kindergarten orientation will be held at local schools in August where general kindergarten information will be shared. We appreciate your cooperation and support in getting your kindergarten student registered for the 2018-2019 school year; this helps us plan around our enrollment numbers for the upcoming year. If you have further questions, contact your school principal or Jackie Gallegos at the District Office, (435)833-1900, Ext. 1104.

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Hometown

STORY GWEN BRISTOLPHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

The cafeteria at Rocky Mountain Care – Willow Springs in Tooele was still full at

5:30 p.m. on Feb. 13. Many of the residents chatted around tables, and some lifted their heads to watch the wide hall in front.

Children were arriving. All were dressed in either

black pants or skirts. The boys wore white shirts with red or pink ties. Girls wore red or pink shirts in celebration of Valentine’s Day.

“They’re so cute,” one resi-dent said. “I wish I was that young again.”

By 5:40 p.m., most of the Rising Voices Children’s Choir participants clustered in the hall. Under the direction of Lake Point’s Katelynd Blake, they came to bring the gift of young voices and beautiful music to the residents.

“My heart just went out to them,” Blake said of the resi-dents in a previous interview. “I know there are all kinds of people that are at that care facility, and some may be without family on Valentine’s Day. It’s a day when you should be feeling loved by

Director Katelynd Blake leads The Rising Voice Children's Choir. Front Row: Brinley Diderickson, Natalie Dawson, Emree Trimble. Shae Trimble, Megan Allen, Amber Freitas, Cole Ringwood and Simon Cunningham. Back Row Kayli Allen, Charlize Nelson, Meeka Scott, Lucy Cunningham, Everett Cunningham, Ammon Marshall and Samuel Barson Also in the group but not pictured are Dallie Davis and Paige Roberts

STORY GWEN BRISTOLPHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTEFRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

Row Kayli Allen, Charlize Nelson, Meeka Scott, Lucy Cunningham, Everett Row Kayli Allen, Charlize Nelson, Meeka Scott, Lucy Cunningham, Everett Cunningham, Ammon Marshall and Samuel Barson Also in the group but not Cunningham, Ammon Marshall and Samuel Barson Also in the group but not Cunningham, Ammon Marshall and Samuel Barson Also in the group but not pictured are Dallie Davis and Paige Roberts pictured are Dallie Davis and Paige Roberts pictured are Dallie Davis and Paige Roberts Song HeartOF

THERising Voice Children’s Choir celebrates fi rst year withValentine’s Day performance to Willow Springs residents

Emree Trimble and Shae Trimble (left). Nine-year old Megan Allen (below) is part of the Rising Voices Choir because she loves to sing.

Kayli Allen (left) hands out candy-cane hearts after a Valentine’s performance at the Rocky Mountain Care Center. Shae Trimble (above). Brinley Diderickson (above right).

SEE SONG PAGE A9 �

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A9

people.”Blake started Rising Voices

Children’s Choir last year. This was the first time that Rising Voices performed at the care facility. Blake said the group performed a Christmas con-cert and will be presenting a spring concert, so it will sing in an outreach to the commu-nity each semester.

Like the Valentine’s Day concert.

By 5:45 p.m., the choir was warming up at the end of the hall. Residents gathered in two rows. Members of the chil-dren’s families sat on benches at the side or stood at the back of the hall.

Blake said Rising Voices is for boys and girls ages 7-14. Students audition for it, they work hard for their perfor-mances, and they enjoy a vari-ety of learning as they study music.

And Blake enjoys teaching it.

“I’m so grateful that I’ve been able to do this,” she said. “It’s something I wanted to offer in Tooele County so par-ents don’t have to go to Salt Lake. As we’re growing out here, we should have some-thing like this.”

Currently, there are 20 students in the choir, and 16 of them came to sing at the Valentine’s Day concert.

At 6 p.m., the concert began.

“We hope that it brings you a lot of cheer,” Blake said as she introduced the first song — “Loch Lomond.” Across the room, a resident lifted her chin and smiled. When the children sang “A Bushel and a Peck,” two residents sitting at the back of the hall sang along.

Blake said the choir sounds good because the children work hard.

At auditions, Blake evalu-ates students on their ability to stay on pitch and in the same key throughout the song. Then she guides them through simple vocal exercises to check their range and musical ear. She also does a quick test to see if they know about musical notation and note values.

“If they don’t, that’s OK,” she said. “We learn that in choir.”

Blake holds auditions in April. If students don’t make the auditions for the upcom-ing year, she recommends them to other voice teachers and encourages them to try again later.

“We’re working on some really difficult pieces, and I really push these kids,” she said. “They meet me where they need to be … They have to be ready and willing to work hard. We kind of jump in and work on a lot of difficult things.”

The third song the children performed was “Love Is a Song.” The children bobbed their heads and swayed a little. Their hands stayed at their sides.

“I think it’s really important for kids to be able to present themselves,” Blake said. “All kids are going to have to get up and give a presentation at some time in their life, or have an interview or a conversa-tion. Those are also skills that we work on during choir.”

Since the choir sings in two-part harmony, the students are divided into two rehearsal groups. Blake makes the class fun with musical games and lighthearted songs. After warming up with vocal breath-ing exercises and scales, she teaches musical concepts like

note values, rhythm and basic vocal harmonization.

“Then we take those skills that we learn there and trans-fer it into the music we sing,” she said.

Blake set the minimum age for Rising Voices at 7 years old.

“It’s good for them to be able to read,” she said. “I really push them, and they’re amazing. We work on really difficult music and musical literature, and so it’s really important that they can read so they can follow along and keep up.”

During the school year, rehearsals are held on Tuesdays from 5-7 p.m. at Blake’s basement studio. While the groups usually practice their parts separately, sometimes Blake holds a com-bined practice.

“Everything that we do in each rehearsal group is the same,” she said. “They work on all of the same materials, except that they’re just learn-ing a different part.”

And the children have fun. “I just love to sing,” said

9-year-old Megan Allen. “I love to sing my heart out.”

“I like, actually, learning songs that my mom knows,” said Megan’s sister, 12-year-old Kayli. “She sings in the house and I sing along with her.”

And the thing that 11-year-old Samuel Barson likes about the choir?

“Singing,” he said. “Singing and having fun.”

It’s what Blake enjoys, too. In the middle of the concert, she performed a solo of her own for the residents.

“Really, music is my life,” she said.

Blake has a bachelor of musical arts degree in vocal performance from Brigham Young University-Idaho. She also studied several languages. After graduating, she taught basic musicianship at the col-lege as well as private and group voice lessons.

“I still study voice on my own,” she said. “I study with a teacher in Salt Lake, and that helps me become a better teacher and continue working on my skills.”

Her language studies carry over into Rising Voices, too. In rehearsals, Blake teaches basic grammar and diction of songs in other languages so the stu-dents can understand what they’re singing.

“Then, when you’re com-municating that, when you’re singing, you know what you’re saying,” she said. “When you know what you’re communi-cating, you can let that come out in your performance.”

She also delves into the history of the music and uses the songs to help students learn compassion, empathy, focus, self-discipline and some aspects of math.

“That’s one of the reasons

I really love music,” she said. “Music is an avenue to learn-ing so many things. As you look at music research, kids who study music do better in all areas of study.”

After Blake’s solo at the Valentine’s Day concert, the children sang “L.O.V.E.”

The two-part harmony came out strong when the children sang “Let Me Call You Sweetheart.” More residents sang along.

“That little choir is kind of cute,” a resident said. “They do a pretty good job, too.”

Besides the choir, Blake teaches private voice lessons. Several of her private students have been Sterling Scholars, have performed well at solo and ensemble competitions, and have been leads in musi-cals at Stansbury High School. One of her students passed the auditions for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

For Blake, these kinds of experiences are normal. As a child, she studied music pri-vately and participated in a group similar to Rising Voices. During her teenage years, she started and taught a children’s performing arts group of her own.

“I loved being part of a chil-dren’s performing arts group growing up,” she said. “It was something that really inspired me to keep studying music all through high school and into college, and then doing this as a career.”

Blake said all of her broth-ers and sisters are musical. She remembers performing with them at nursing homes as a child. It became a Christmas tradition to perform there as a family.

That’s how she got the idea for the Valentine’s Day con-cert.

“I was thinking that one thing I want to do with the choir is get more involved with the community and even do service projects,” she said, “So I thought, wouldn’t it be fun to do a Valentine’s performance? I think it’s good for these kids to get out there and do this.”

The Valentine’s Day concert was enjoyable for both Blake and her students.

But even more, the resi-dents loved it.

“Those little people put their whole hearts into that,” one resident said.

Following the concert, the choir children passed out hearts made from candy canes.

Another voice rose from the crowd.

“Thank you. Thank you very much. That was beautiful.”

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Cole Ringwood sings at concert.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS

Members of the Rising Voices Children’s Choir and their teacher Katelynd Blake. The choir sang a Valentine's Day Concert at Rocky Mountain Care Center Willow Springs on Feb. 13. Katelynd Blake (below right). Simon Cunningham (below left)

Songcontinued from page A8

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018A10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

winter and freezing tempera-tures at night, localized rain storms will deposit dirt on the glass insulators on utility poles, Ekelsen said. It’s the

same storms that cause the same light coating of dirt on vehicles.

After the dirt builds up on the insulators, a rain or snowstorm can wet down the accumulated debris, which can then conduct electricity, Ekelsen said. That can lead

to arcing on the utility poles, which can spark a fire.

Despite difficult driving conditions due to the winter weather, Utah Highway Patrol only took reports on two crash-es during the storm with no significant injuries. The crash numbers in Tooele County

were significantly less than in Salt Lake and Utah counties, which experienced 217 crashes between midnight and 11 a.m. on Monday.

Three UHP patrol vehicles were also damaged in acci-dents in Summit, Utah and Salt Lake counties while assisting

motorists who had slid off the road, according to a release from the state Department of Public Safety. No troopers were hurt in the accidents, but the release cautioned drivers to slow down and move over when they see emergency vehicles on the road.

The Tooele County Sheriff’s Office responded to a larger number of accidents, however, with 18 slide-offs, 11 traffic accidents involving property damage, one traffic accident with personal injury and nine motorist assists. [email protected]

inches.Grantsville also received

plenty of snow, but not to Tooele’s levels. The NWS had not received totals for Grantsville as of press time Tuesday morning.

A winter storm watch was issued for Tooele until noon on Tuesday with a 30 per-cent chance of snow show-ers. Grantsville’s forecast for Tuesday showed a 20 percent chance of snow showers.

Tuesday night’s forecast for Grantsville and Tooele cities showed partly cloudy with mostly cloudy for Wednesday and Thursday and a slight chance of snow on Friday.

SNOTEL site data in Tooele County on Tuesday showed Rocky Basin in Settlement Canyon at 47 percent of normal snow water equivalent for this time of the year. Mining Fork in the Stansbury Mountains was at 48 percent of normal and Vernon Creek was at 54 percent of normal.

Tooele Valley’s last major storm was on Jan. 19-20. The storm slightly eclipsed

Grantsville’s normal January level and nearly matched nor-mal snowfall and precipitation for Tooele City for the entire month.

During that January storm, Tooele was hit with 10 inches of snow and .88 inches of pre-cipitation. Normal amounts for January are 12.7 inches of snow and 1.07 inches of precipitation.

On that same weekend, Grantsville received 9.1 inches of snow and .59 inches of pre-cipitation. Normal amounts for January are 10.1 inches of snow and .66 inches of [email protected]

Snowstormcontinued from page A1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Cars (above) travel slowly down 100 East in Tooele during a winter storm. Dezmend Mascarenas, age 4, (right) enjoys the fresh snow on Monday afternoon on the hill behind Sterling Elementary in Tooele.

Stormcontinued from page A1

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELESubscribe Today! 882-0050

Magazine

MONEY SAVING Coupons in Tuesday’s Paper

. ReferendumtoOverturnaChangeofZoninginGrantsvilleonStateHWY112 AttentionGrantsvilleCitizensInOctoberof2017theGrantsvilleCityCouncilchosetorezonea5acreparcelofgroundonthecurvedpartoftheroadtoTooelethatwillallow75apartmentstobebuiltinahighdensitydevelopment.WethinkthezoneactionbytheCityCouncilwasunwiseforavarietyofreasons.AmongthereasonstoopposetheCouncil’sactions:

• Thetrafficflowgeneratedbythevehiclesfrom75housingunitswillslowandsnarltrafficononeofthemainroutesintotheCity.

• Amulti-familydevelopmentatthatsitehasnosidewalksorcurbing.Therewillbenosafe

oreasyaccessforchildrengettingtoandfromschool,MainStreet,andotheramenities.

• TheCityplannotesthatmultifamilyzoningshouldbeestablishedalongMainStreet.Theactionbythecitycouncilcontradictstheestablishedplanningdocument.

• ThereislittleestablishedcommercialzoningintheCity.TheCity’sactionreducesthat

amount.

Wehavebeentoalotofhousesandgotalotofsignaturesandover90%ofthepeoplethatwehavebeenabletotalktoareopposedtobuildingtheapartments.Ifwehaven’tmadeittoyourhouseyetandyouwouldliketosignthepetitiontostop/delaytheapartmentspleaseemailatkclark942011@gmail.com.YouneedtobearesidentofGrantsvilleandaregisteredvoter.Pleaseforwardtoeveryonethatyoucanthinkofthatmaybeinterested.MainStreet

HWY 112

SunValleyDr

DurfeeStreet

Re-ZoneArea

Signingthispetitionwon’toverturntheordinance.ItwillallowthevotersofGrantsvilletomakeachoiceinanupcomingelection.

In October of 2017 the Grantsville City Council chose to rezone a 5 acre parcel of ground on the curved part of the road to Tooele that will allow 75 apartments to be built in a high density development. We think the zone action by the City Council was unwise for a variety of reasons. Among the reasons to oppose the Council’s actions:

• � e tra� c � ow generated by the vehicles from 75 housing units will slow and snarl tra� c on one of the main routes into the City.

• A multi-family development at that site has no sidewalks or curbing. � ere will be no safe or easy access for children getting to and from school, Main Street, and other amenities.

• � e City plan notes that multifamily zoning should be established along Main Street. � e action by the city council contradicts the established planning document.

• � ere is little established commercial zoning in the City. � e City’s action reduces that amount.

We have been to a lot of houses and got a lot of signatures and over 90% of the people that we have been able to talk to are opposed to building the apartments. If we haven’t made it to your house yet and you would like to sign the petition to stop/delay the apartments please email at [email protected]. You need to be a resident of Grantsville and a registered voter. Please forward to everyone that you can think of that may be interested. � e signatures need to turned in by Feb 26th.

Signing this petition won’t over turn the ordinance. It will allow the voters of Grantsville to make a choice in an up-coming election.

Referendum to Overturn a Change ofZoning in Grantsville on State HWY 112

Attention Grantsville Citizens

www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org

Chalk TalkBy Clint Spindler

Since becoming the Foundation’s new Executive Director last month, one question I have been asked is, “What is TEF and what does it do?” While it is easy to respond and share, “We are a nonprofit corporation founded in 2010, led by a board of directors who represent our diverse community, and our mission is to enrich and enhance teaching and learning in the Tooele County School District”…what does that really mean? It signifies that the Tooele Education Foundation is an extension of our community – it means, WE ARE YOU!

TEF shares many of the same values and goals for education that families, businesses, groups, and community organizations have for our public schools. Individuals, local businesses, and community organizations contribute to the success of the TEF mission in various ways by expanding

Foundation resources of time, talent, in-kind donations, and financial contributions. TEF administers these resources to support learning activities not typically funded via tax dollars, by fostering creative approaches to education through grants and programs that help improve educational opportunities.

One such business partner that has a burning passion to support students and teachers through a partnership with TEF is Cargill Salt. Cargill has been partnering with TEF for five years, and

was recently honored by the Tooele County School District as its “Business Partner of the Year.” While this partnership started out initially with Cargill donating funds for all fourth grade students to experience a tour at the Utah Museum of Natural History in Salt Lake City, it has expanded

incrementally each year to where Cargill is now a sustaining-level partner that contributed over $66,000 this past year toward many projects and programs facilitated by the Foundation.

Our partnership with Cargill is mutually-beneficial. It allows TEF to further its mission, and it helps Cargill to accomplish its passion to assist with causes such as environmental education and hunger relief. This kind of relationship is truly what creating partnerships should achieve!

TEF is always striving to create and enhance relationships. If you are an individual, community organization, business, or group in the community that is interested in developing a partnership with TEF, please call (435) 833-1900 ext. 1174 to learn more about how this can become a reality!

Tooele EducationF O U N D A T I O NS E R V I N G T O O E L E C O U N T Y S C H O O L S

Creating Partnerships

Tooele Education Foundation

@TEFbellringer

Tooele Jr High Students & Scouts offering support by volunteering at the TEF warehouse.

Cargill awarded Tooele County School District 2017-18 Business Partner of the Year.

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018 B1TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Sports

FROM THE SIDELINES

SPORTS WRAP Stansbury girls basketball at OgdenThe Stansbury girls basketball team rolled to a 63-47 win on the road against Ogden in both teams’ Region 11 finale Thursday night. Kaylee Castillo led the Stallions (16-6, 9-3 Region 11) with 17 points, while Mia Thurber and Taylor Hinds each scored 10. The Stallions clinched second place in the Region 11 standings when Tooele lost to Bonneville on Friday night, earning Stansbury a home playoff game against Spanish Fork on Friday night in the opening round of the Class 4A state tournament.

Stansbury boys basketball at OgdenDrake Schlappi had 17 points as the Stansbury boys basket-ball team erased a nine-point halftime deficit to upend Ogden 47-43 in the regular-season finale Friday night at Ogden High School. Tavita Gagnier added nine points in the vic-tory for the Stallions (11-11, 9-3 Region 11), who finished as Region 11’s No. 3 seed and will be on the road for the first round of the Class 4A state tournament Saturday night against an opponent to be determined.

Tooele boys basketball at BonnevilleWith home-court advantage hanging in the balance, the Tooele boys basketball team outscored Bonneville 27-13 in the fourth quarter to rally for a 71-65 road win over the Lakers that preserved the Buffaloes’ second-place stand-ing in Region 11. Kyler Hymas led the way with 26 points for Tooele (11-8, 9-3 Region 11), while Dawson Banks hit five 3-pointers as part of a 17-point performance and Mitchell Bunn had 15 points and six assists. Tooele will play host to a yet-to-be-determined oppo-nent in Saturday night’s open-ing round of the Class 4A state tournament.

Tooele girls basketball at BonnevilleTooele was tied with Bonneville at halftime of their Region 11 contest in Washington Terrace on Friday night, but the Lakers held the Buffaloes to just 12 second-half points to pull away for a 40-30 victory. Emily Webber and Shaylie Davis each had 10 points in the loss for the Buffs (13-8, 9-3 Region 11), who came in with a chance at the Region 11 title but will instead enter the Class 4A state tournament as the region’s No. 3 seed. Tooele will be on the road for the first round of the tournament Friday night against an opponent to be determined.

Wendover girls basketball vs. TinticAdriana Delgadillo had 16 points and 11 rebounds to lead the Wendover girls basket-ball team to a 44-25 win over Tintic in a Region 21 home game Friday night. Angelica Badillo hit three 3-pointers and scored 14 points for the Wildcats (17-4, 5-2 Region 21), who wrapped up their regular season Tuesday at West Ridge Academy in a game that was not complete at press time.

Wendover boys basketball vs. TinticFor the second time this sea-son, the Wendover boys bas-ketball team couldn’t hold off Tintic as the Miners came into the Wildcats’ home gym and handed them a 69-52 loss. Gustavo Carrillo led Wendover (18-4, 7-2 Region 21) with 21 points and Jason Shepherd had 12, while Tintic’s Braxten Petersen put up 20 points to lead four Miners in double-figures. Wendover finishes up the regular season Wednesday night at West Ridge Academy.

Dugway boys basketball vs. MilfordDugway’s boys basketball team trailed by just three points after the first quarter, but managed just 19 points the rest of the way as the Mustangs fell to Milford 65-34 in a Region 21 road game Friday night. Tyi Bear led Dugway (7-12, 1-8 Region 21) with 15 points in the loss. The Mustangs will play host to Tintic on Wednesday in their regular-season finale.

Notable HS boys basketball scoresFridayTintic 69, Wendover 52

• Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays

• Classifieds and Public Notices

Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. To place a community news item or for more information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or [email protected]. Items more than one month old will not be considered for publication.

After nearly three gruel-ing months of practices, preseason games and

region play, the real season — the one that means everything — is finally here.

And if this past weekend’s opening-round games of the Class 3A state basketball tour-nament are to serve as any sort of example, we’re in for a fun ride.

Tooele and Stansbury tip off their state tournaments for both the boys’ and girls’ teams this weekend. But on Friday and Saturday in Heber City, it was Grantsville who got the

postseason under way and gave us all a taste of what is to come.

The Grantsville girls’ 28-point blowout victory over Manti was no shock. The Cowboys were always going to win that game by a lot against an incredibly over-matched Templars squad that got into the postseason only because six of the seven teams in Region 15 got in, and the seventh, North Sanpete, didn’t win a game all season (Manti’s only two region wins were against NSHS).

What was a pleasant

surprise for the Grantsville faithful was the fact that the Cowboys didn’t take the Templars lightly. Instead, they took care of business from the opening tip and generally played like they were facing a much better opponent. That can only benefit them as they go into this weekend’s quar-

terfinal game against South Sevier in St. George. If they approach every game that way, it makes them far less prone to an upset — and the derailment of a season that seems destined for a top-three finish at worst.

The next day, I couldn’t stay away from the boys’ first round games even though I didn’t have to be there — for-mer Transcript Bulletin sports editor Tavin Stucki was set to write the Grantsville game story, but having taken a glance at the online stream of the early games, I figured I’d make the drive up and watch a

few games myself.Boy, was that a good choice.

Game after game. Almost all of them competitive. Two over-time games. And the night-cap, in which Grantsville put together its best game in a long time — potentially its best of the year? What a treat.

I’ll admit I had more than a few personal connections to the Class 3A boys bracket. San Juan’s head coach, Ryan Nielson, was my head coach when I was in high school and I still consider him a good

Playoffs mean it’s time to turn up the intensityDarren Vaughan

SPORTS EDITORDarren Vaughan

SEE WRAP PAGE B8 �SEE VAUGHAN PAGE B8 �

DARREN VAUGHANSPORTS EDITOR

The Grantsville girls bas-ketball team has state-cham-pionship aspirations, but the Cowboys couldn’t start think-ing about those until they took

care of the first step in their postseason journey Friday afternoon in Heber City.

Grantsville took care of Manti in a big way in the open-ing round of the Class 3A state tournament at Wasatch High School, racing out to a 24-3 lead on its way to a 58-30 takedown of the Templars. The win puts the Cowboys into Thursday’s state quarterfinal

round against South Sevier at Burns Arena on the campus of Dixie State University in St. George.

“We knew that we couldn’t overlook them,” Grantsville coach Megan Vera said. “We went in with confidence, but knowing that we needed to play our best game.”

From the start of the game, the Region 13 co-champion Cowboys (17-5 overall) were

Manti no match for top-seeded CowboysGrantsville routs Templars in Class 3A tournament opener

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Grantsville’s Hannah Butler (15) races toward the basket as Manti’s Kassidy Alder gives chase during the first half of their first-round Class 3A state tournament game Friday in Heber City. Grantsville won the game 58-30.

GHS GIRLS BASKETBALL

SEE COWBOYS PAGE B8 �

TAVIN STUCKIGRANTSVILLE BASKETBALL

Grantsville fourth-year head coach Bryan Detweiler is final-ly taking the Cowboys past the first round of the Class 3A state basketball tournament.

Thanks in part to a 30-point performance by senior for-ward Brady Arbon, Grantsville beat Union 68-59 in the first round on Saturday at Wasatch High School, the first time a Detweiler-led Cowboy team has pushed through to the quarterfinals of a state tourna-ment despite qualifying for the tournament every year.

“It’s huge,” Arbon said. “We finished this time. We came out and finally played four quarters.”

Grantsville built a 20-point lead with two minutes to play in the third quarter, high-lighted by an Arbon fast-break bucket to finish off a 10-2 run. But Union went on an 11-0 run immediately after to close the quarter, cutting the lead to 50-41.

Senior guards Ryan Potter and Kevin Roberts opened the fourth quarter with back-to-back three-point plays, giving Grantsville back a 15-point lead. Union never came closer than eight points the rest of the way.

“Arbon got a lot of points because we were just sharing the ball,” Potter said. “It just feels great to play team basket-ball, and that’s what happened in the first half.”

Union seemed to take con-trol of the game early, scoring on a diving layup in the first possession. The Cougars used its diamond 1-2-1-1 full-court press to force a turnover on the next play and held Grantsville off the scoreboard for the first two minutes of the game.

Arbon scored first for Grantsville, a quick layup assisted by sophomore forward Jackson Sandberg, to make

it 2-2 after 1:59 had elapsed. Potter followed that with a 3-pointer on the next pos-session, then earned a steal-turned-layup to make it 7-2. Sandberg later blocked a shot that led to an Arbon layup, which caused Union head coach Gordon Garrett to call timeout with 4:47 to go in the quarter.

“They’re just competitors,” Garrett said. “They take coach-

ing well from Bryan, he does an excellent job with them. They’ve been in our region the last couple years, and we knew

what we were going to get. We saw exactly what we expected, we just weren’t able to convert to our game plan as well as

they converted to theirs.”Union senior Jonathan

Parker had 20 points in his final game as a Cougar, and Kaiden Owen had 13 in his.

Both teams were in the bonus for the majority of the game. Potter and Detweiler said one aspect of the game plan was to send Cougar senior Ty Gillman — a 30-something

It’s on to the quarters for GHSCowboys down former league foe Cougars in 3A first round

GHS BASKETBALL

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Grantsville’s Brady Arbon (5) goes up for a shot as Union’s Jon Parker gives chase during the second half of their Class 3A first-round state tournament game Saturday at Wasatch High School in Heber City. Arbon had a career-high 30 points to lead the Cowboys to a 68-59 win over the Cougars.

“We finished this time. We came out and finally played four quarters.”

— Brady Arbon, Grantsville senior center

SEE GHS PAGE B8 �

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

DEAR PAW’S CORNER: My dog “Chip” and I were at the veterinarian recently, and she told me that Chip may have an abscess near a molar. He is now taking an antibiotic to try and heal the abscess, but if that doesn’t work he may lose a tooth. How did this happen, and how can I prevent it from happening again? — Worried Mom in Wichita

DEAR WORRIED MOM: Even healthy young dogs can

develop dental problems. There are a number of possi-bilities as to why it happens — sometimes it’s blamed on a diet rich in soft, canned dog foods, or too many doggie treats. But many owners strictly regulate their pets’ diet and yet still see signs of tooth decay and other issues like abscesses.

Regular checkups are impor-tant to catch dental problems early. You did that, and hope-fully Chip will respond to treatment without the need for surgery. Another way to prevent some dental issues, or keep them from getting worse, is to brush your dog’s teeth regularly.

Cat owners, don’t think you’re exempt, either. For both dogs and cats, brushing their gums and teeth gently about once a week takes about 10 minutes and can make a

huge difference in their dental health.

Pet supply stores and vets’ offices carry meat-flavored toothpastes designed for pets (don’t use human toothpaste). You can purchase a finger brush, or simply wrap a clean, soft cloth around your index finger. Put a little paste on the end of the brush or your finger, lift your pet’s lip out of the way, and gently swipe from the gum line down each tooth. Give your pet a little treat and some love once you’re done.

Send your questions, tips or comments to [email protected].

© 2018 King Features Synd., Inc.

1. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What is the word for “W” in the NATO phonetic alphabet?

2. LITERATURE: Who wrote the short story titled “The Monkey’s Paw”?

3. GOVERNMENT: Which one of the amendments to the U.S. Constitution for-bids double jeopardy?

4. ROYALS: Who was the daughter of Anne Boleyn and King Henry VIII of

England?5. MYTHOLOGY: What is the

Greek counterpart of the Roman goddess Minerva?

6. TELEVISION: Which member of the “Our Gang” cast was shot to death in a dispute at age 31?

7. LANGUAGE: What does the Latin phrase “prima facie” mean?

8. U.S. STATES: Which state’s official song is “Roll On, Columbia, Roll On”?

9. GEOLOGY: What kind of gemstone is actually fossil-ized tree resin?

10. GEOGRAPHY: What is the modern name of the country of “Cymru”?

➤ On March 6, 1776, Major William Malcolm is ordered to dismantle the Sandy Hook lighthouse in New Jersey to pre-vent it from helping the British to reach New York City. The British were able to put the lighthouse back into service, but the Patriots brought out can-nons to blow away the British equipment.

➤ On March 9, 1781, the Siege of Pensacola begins as Spanish naval force of more than 40 ships and 3,500 men land at Santa Rosa Island in Florida. The flotilla sur-vived a hurricane before beginning two months of constant artillery and cannon bombardment of British forts.

➤ On March 11, 1818, “Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus,” by 21-year-old Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, is published. In Shelley’s tale, a scientist animates a creature constructed from dismembered corpses.

➤ On March 10, 1927, engineer Robert Kearns is born. Kearns patented a design for a type of windshield wiper and later won multi-million dollar judgments against Chrysler and Ford for using his concept without permission.

➤ On March 7, 1950, one week after British physicist Klaus Fuchs was sentenced to 14 years in prison for his role in passing information on the atomic bomb to the Russians, the Soviet Union issues a statement denying any knowledge of him or his activities. Fuchs’ arrest and convic-tion uncovered a network of spies.

➤ On March 5, 1963, the Hula-Hoop, a hip-swiv-eling toy that became a huge fad across America, is patented by Arthur “Spud” Melin. The hoop was dubbed “Hula” after the hip-gyrating Hawaiian dance of the same name.

➤ On March 8, 1993, the Music Television Network airs the first episode of the animated series “Beavis and Butthead,” which would become MTV’s highest-rated series to that point. Creator Mike Judge later created the Emmy-winning animated series “King of the Hill.”

© 2018 King Features Synd.

The hisTory Channel

Momentsin Time

by FifiRodriguez

Mega Maze

ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW

ANSWERS

1. Whiskey2. W.W. Jacobs3. Fifth4. Queen Elizabeth I5. Athena6. Carl Dean Switzer,

who played “Alfalfa”

7. Based on the first impression

8. Washington9. Amber10. Wales

© 2018 King Features Synd., Inc.

Trivia Test Answers

Q: One of my favorite shows was “Orphan Black.” Can you tell me more about the actress who played Delphine? — Bryan F., via email

A: Evelyne Brochu is behind the breakout role of Dr. Delphine Cormier on the Canadian science-fiction thrill-er, which made its way to the States via Amazon Prime. The series ended back in August, but she still gets recognized on the street.

“It’s surprising the places where people stop me and tell me that they’ve seen it and love it,” she told me recently. “Everywhere I go, ‘Orphan’ fans are great. They are so

smart and so loving. It’s been a blessing to be a part of that group of talented people mak-ing the show.”

She’s moved on to another talented group of people: the cast and crew of CBC’s “X Company,” which you can catch here in the U.S. on Wednesday nights at 10 p.m. ET on Ovation television. Loosely based on a true story, Evelyne plays Aurora Luft, the leader of the recruits from Camp X, the real-life first-known spy agency, which worked covertly for Allied interests during World War II.

Of her character, Evelyne gushed: “I like that she’s kick-ass and coura-geous. She puts her life on the line for what she feels is right. It’s not always that you get to play these characters that have such a great, tremendous sense of self-sacrifice and justice. The team is super-young,

and they have to learn as they go and toughen up. The fact that she’s a woman makes her a great asset because she won’t

be someone to suspect. But it also puts her in the danger zone.”

• • •Q: Can you tell me

what Jamie Oliver is doing now? I’ve always enjoyed his personality, and his tough love when it comes to eating crap-py foods. — Gerry T., Mobile, Ala.

A: Jamie has his own show on Genius Kitchen, which is food-focused digital brand from Scripps Lifestyle Studios, an app that is available on mobile and connected devices. In “Jamie’s Super Food,” he travels to Greece, Costa Rica and beyond to share healthy cook-ing tips that anyone across the world can adopt and enjoy. New on-demand videos will arrive monthly via iOS and Android, as well as

Apple TV, Amazon, YouTube and Roku.

• • •Q: How is Carrie

Underwood doing? I heard she hurt herself recently. — Lydia R., via Facebook

A: The country-music super-star fell on some steps in her home, causing her to break her wrist and receive 40 to 50 stitches on her face. While people close to Carrie say they barely notice her injury, the singer told fans via her fan-club site: “When I am ready to get in front of a camera, I want you all to understand why I might look a bit different. ... I’m hoping that by then, the differences are minimal, but, again, I just don’t know how it’s all going to end up.”

Write to Cindy at King Features Weekly Service, 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, FL 32803; or e-mail her at [email protected].

© 2018 King Features Synd.Evelyne Brochu

Danish modern chairs were offered in stores in the U.S. in the early

1950s. The Scandinavian designs were inspired by earli-er furniture: the 18th-century English chair, a Chinese Ming dynasty chair, a Japanese director’s chair. Many of the modern chairs were made of hand-carved curved wooden pieces joined with dovetails to make a comfortable back, arms, seat and sides. Teak, oak, rosewood and light-colored woods were used with fabric, leather or caned seats.

Hans Wegner of Denmark created his most famous chair in 1949. It is now known as “The Chair.” It was made and sold by Hansen/Knoll com-pany for many years. “The Chairs” were chosen for John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon in the first-ever televised presidential debate in 1960. One of “The Chairs,” made in about 1969 and featuring a leather seat, the Knoll label and Hansen stamps, sold in 2016 for $610. Later ver-sions of this iconic chair are available in shops and shows today.

• • •Q: Should I loan a num-

ber of my antiques for a fun-draising event? They want me to set up my exhibit and leave it for two weeks, but I am concerned about secu-rity and other problems. What should I worry about? None of the pieces are

extremely valuable, but they are among my favorites, and some are family heirlooms.

A: There is always a risk when you exhibit your col-lection. The exhibit should be in a secure building with a 24-hour security guard or electronic system. Security usually is good during a show, but during setup and after show hours there are people who can get into the room. Before you pack, take pictures and list every item with your estimated value for insurance purposes. Never advertise the value of your collections.

Make sure there is a bar-rier between the exhibit and the public, perhaps shelves behind a large table, or a locked cabinet. Don’t exhibit posters or prints in a sunny window. Make sure the pieces are not remounted or altered. Decide before the show how the collection will be packed and returned.

A non-profit show may be run by people with no idea of the cost of old things. We loan pieces to teach the public about the past and the joys of collecting, but we had a sundrenched poster fade to unreadable, a clever advertis-ing sign stolen and a figurine come back missing a hand.

• • •For more collecting news,

tips and resources, visit www.Kovels.com

© 2018 King Features Synd., Inc.

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MONDAY’S WARM COCOA

Climbing life’s mountains together can help when obstacles overwhelm

Kim and I have a mutual friend in Crickett Raulston. She’s a

delightful woman with bright, dancing eyes and a ready smile. So, I couldn’t think of a more deserving person when Kim told me she was in a meet-ing, helping Crickett, when I called the other day.

Kim said, “She was over-whelmed with everything, so we decided to give her some help.”

I replied, “That’s great! It isn’t like she doesn’t know what to do. She’s capable and smart in her business, but she’s just like the rest of us.

Sometimes we build our own mountains to climb.”

Yes, I create my own moun-tains to climb as well. There are times when tasks, everyday life events, are pushed up and grow into monumental obsta-cles for no apparent reason at all. Do you know what I mean?

Are there times when you do as I do: Make a small thing into a huge obstacle? Here’s

an example: I have a call to make to someone and I put it off. I stew about it. I fret about it. I make up all kinds of myths about all the bad that will assuredly happen if I pick up that phone and touch the number. I can take such simple things and turn them into Mount Everest! Sometimes it gets to the point that I look at “that” small thing, and rather than see it for what it really is, I see it as if it’s something I’ve never done before and could never, ever do.

When we were talking on the phone, Kim and I both knew of Crickett’s proficiency

and experience. She knows what to do in business and she’s capable of doing it alone, because she’s done it a million times before. And, she’s always succeeded. And, during that same phone call, I knew that Kim had also discovered the “Mountain Busting Principle.”

Kim’s Mountain Busting Principle is “Climbing a moun-tain, big or small, is always easier and more enjoyable when you’re with others who want to be there with you.” When friends and family are with you during trying times, somehow the focus shifts from the worrisome to the joy of

being together. Another one of my friends gained insight into this principle, from his girlfriend, when we were in college together.

He was having a difficult time preparing for final exams because he’d been so focused on school that his apartment had become pure chaos. When he spoke of this frustrating circumstance to his girlfriend, she dropped everything and came over to help him get his home back in order. When she arrived he said, “You’re study-ing for your own exams! You shouldn’t be here cleaning my house with me! Why aren’t

you cleaning your own apart-ment?”

She replied, “Because, if I was cleaning my own place, I’d simply be cleaning. But when I’m here cleaning, I’m with you!”

“I’m with you!” Her insight-ful words came rushing back through my heart as I spoke with Kim. She was helping Crickett. And they were climb-ing one of life’s mountains with joy because they were together.

Lynn Butterfield lives in Erda and is a managing broker for a real estate company.

Lynn Butterfi eldGUEST COLUMNIST

Lynn Butterfi eld

Elayne Pearson presents natural remedies used by pioneersMUSEUM MEMORIES

Elayne Pearson wove a tale of pre-drugstore days when Utah pioneers

had to find and use natural remedies to overcome various sicknesses during the local Sons of Utah Pioneers’ meeting on Feb. 1.

Those same remedies and ingredients are still available today, and are there for the har-vesting. Pearson’s discoveries and education on natural rem-edies came of necessity when members of her family were not getting the help they needed in pill form.

Apple Cider Vinegar was one such natural remedy Pearson discussed, which has many uses both internally and externally. Also, dandelion leaves make an excellent salad and are loaded with vitamins and minerals. Yarrow is a natural blood puri-fier. Garlic can be used in many ways as a preventative as well as a healer. Milk Thistle is great

for the liver. Cayenne pepper has many uses, and peppermint tea is great for indigestion and energy.

The list goes on, but Pearson stressed that many of the things God planted on earth is for everyone’s benefit and can be used on a regular basis to main-tain health, or as a medicine to heal all kinds of health prob-lems. Pearson wondered if the day would come when rushing to the local drugstore for medi-cation won’t be available.

All of the natural remedies she reviewed were and are still available for free. Pearson invited everyone to learn as much as possible about such things. Not only did Pearson

have an exhaustive list of rem-edies, but SUP members from the audience added some of their own remedies that their grandparents used to use. Elayne Pearson is also the wife of newly elected SUP President Rod Pearson.

The Sons of Utah Pioneers Settlement Canyon Chapter meets the first Thursday of every month in the LDS Building on the corner of 200 W. 200 South, Tooele. The evening starts at 6:30 p.m. with a pot-luck dinner and then are favored with presenta-tions about pioneer histories. The hope is to keep alive the wonderful gift given to us from those who went before. On March 1, John and Carol Cluff of Tooele share tales from their own pioneer ancestors. Dinner starts at 6:30 p.m. followed by Cluff’s presentation. The public is always welcome and entrance is free.

Darrell SmithGUEST COLUMNIST

COURTESY OF DARRELL SMITH

Elayne Pearson brings back many wonderful memories of our past pioneers and even parents and grandparents as she explains about old pioneer health remedies, that are just as beneficial now as they were then.

Karlyn Bishop An open house to celebrate

Karlyn Bishop’s 80th birthday will be held on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2018, at the Stansbury Clubhouse, 1 Country Club, Stansbury Park, Utah, from 1-3 p.m. Everyone is invited to come and help the family celebrate this happy event. No gifts, please.

BIRTHDAYNEW DIRECTORS FOR THE SONS OF UTAH PIONEERS

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The newly elected board of directors for the Settlement Canyon Chapter of the Sons of Utah Pioneers are (left to right): Rod Pearson – President, Mike Hansen – President Elect, Jerry Hensen – Historian, Brent Hunt – Monuments, Robert Hansen – Treasurer, Darrell Smith – Publicity, Glen Stevens – Museum Director, Joe Brandon – Museum Docent Manager, Kay Reese – Awards, Joe McBride – Secretary, Richard Kroff – Publications, and Earl Rose – Scholarships.

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Bulletin BoardTooele

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all seniors 55 and older. New and exciting activities include bridge, pinochle, bingo, exercise program, line dancing, wood-carving, Wii games, watercolor class, mov-ies and health classes. Meals-on-Wheels available for homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For age 60 and above, sug-gested donation is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Transportation available to the store or doctor visits for residents in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For trans-portation information call 435-843-4102. For more information about the Tooele Center, call 435-843-4110.

Donate to libraryPlease remember the “Friends of the Tooele City Library” when doing your spring cleaning and donate your used books to the bookstore in the library. Money from book sales is used to sup-port programs within the library. The library is located at 128 W. Vine St. For more information, call 435-882-2182 or go online to tooelecity.org. Thank you for your support.

Books for the Whole FamilyDonated children’s books and paperbacks are for sale for 25 cents, and hardcovers are being sold for $1 from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. on Fridays, 5-8 p.m. on Mondays and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tuesdays at the Tooele City Library. All proceeds go back to the library for projects and programs.

Bingo is backSt. Marguerite Catholic Church has started its bingo games again on Fridays starting at 6:45 p.m. Come and have a good time. Food is available. Call 435-882-3860 with questions.

GrantsvilleFamily History CenterFind the Past — come find your ancestors at our center, 113 E. Cherry St. (behind the stake center). Share your past and learn more of your heritage. Whether it is your hobby or just a general interest, beginner to advanced researcher — all are welcome. Trained consultants are avail-able to assist you. Hours are Mondays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesdays noon to 4 p.m., Wednesdays 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Thursdays noon to 4 p.m. Night hours Tuesday through Thursday are 7-9 p.m. Individuals and groups are welcome. Please call 435-224-5010 to schedule a group or receive information about workshops, training, etc. Questions and comments are wel-come.

Senior CenterThe senior center is for the enjoyment of all seniors age 55 and older. For informa-tion, call 435-884-3446. Activities include Bunco, exercise programs, bingo, ceram-ics, pinochle, movies and wood- carving, etc. Meals-on-Wheels is available for the homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For age 60 and above, suggested donation is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. Transportation is available to the store or doctor visits for residents in the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For transportation information, call 435-843-4102.

Daughters of Utah PioneersThe DUP is seeking any family histories, photographs, books, stories or vintage artifacts (before 1900) to display at the DUP Grantsville Museum, located at 378 W. Clark St. (in the basement of the J. Reuben Clark Farmhouse across from the Grantsville Cemetery). For more informa-tion, call Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Coralie Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or www.exploretooele.com.

Grantsville SociableThe 134th Grantsville Sociable will be held March 17, 2018. If you live in Grantsville and you are turning 75 in 2018, or are not currently on our address list, please email you address to: [email protected] or call 801-884-9766. If you graduated from Grantsville High School in 1961, your information is already on file.

Adult Religion ClassThe Grantsville West Stake will sponsor a BYU adult religion class on New Testament Gospels on Wednesdays from Jan. 10-April 11 from 7 -8:30 p.m. at the Grantsville Seminary, 115 E. Cherry St., Grantsville. Tuition is $21. The classes will be taught by Matthew Bunkall. For more information, call Joe Peterson at 435-884-6326.

SchoolsStory and Craft Hour Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the Tooele Family Center-PIRC as we enjoy the adventures of books and make fun crafts. For more information, call 435-833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter through the south side doors.

Free Preschool HourEvery Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele Family Center-PIRC has a fun activity hour of learning, singing and creating. The class is for all children up to 5 years old. Please come and enjoy the fun. For more infor-mation, call (435) 833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter through the south side doors.

St. Marguerite Catholic SchoolThe only faith-based school in Tooele

County. Students of all faiths are wel-come from preschool through 8th grade. Featuring all-day Kindergarten, all-day preschool, junior high grades 6-8, small class sizes, and an enhanced STEM cur-riculum. Give us a call at 435-882-0081 or visit www.stmargschool.org.

EducationOnline coursesOnline courses in Network+ and Security+ IT are designed for the IT professional who seeks to upgrade his or her skills and knowledge of networking and security. Courses prepare students for the CompTIA Network+ and Security+ exams. Call Tooele Technical College at 435-248-1800 for more information or to enroll.

Get enrolledStart the New Year off right and enroll in training at Tooele Technical College. Sharpen your current skills or train for a new career. Most programs have open enrollment and you can enroll anytime of the year. Get a commercial driver’s license in as little as 4 weeks and get on-the-road to a lucrative career. Tooele Tech also offers CPR classes to its students and the public on the second Monday of every month. Become CPR certified at Tooele Tech. For more information, call 435-248-1800 or visit tooeletech.edu.

Adult EducationGet your high school diploma this year at the Tooele Community Learning Center. All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED prep-aration and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750. Adult edu-cation classes are for students 18 and over.

ESOLESOL conversational classes are held Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Tooele Community Learning Center. ESOL stu-dents may also come anytime the center is open for individualized study. Registration is $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750 for more informa-tion.

Early Head StartDo you have a child under age 3? Are you currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early Head Start is a free program for eligible families that offers quality early education for infants and toddlers in the home; parent education; comprehensive health services to women before, during and after preg-nancy; nutrition education and family support services. Call 435-841-1380 or 801-268-0056 ext. 211 to apply or for free additional information.

Free developmental evaluationDDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers a variety of services to families with infants and toddlers from birth to age 3. Individualized services are available to enhance development in communication, motor development, cognition, social/emotional development, self-help skills and health concerns. Contact us for a free developmental evaluation at 435-833-0725.

4-H YouthContest and ClassesJoin 4-H for just $5 annual dues. To par-ticipate in 4-H activities, you must register as a 4-H member online at ut.4honline.com. Many scholarships and contests are available on the 4-H website, utah4h.org and at the website, extension.usu.edu/wasatchfront/shared-contests.

Club activity kits availableMany fun activity kits are available to support 4-H clubs and camps. Check out what’s available by visiting utah4h.org/volunteers/kits and utah4h.org/discover/discoverkits.

CharityTooele Children’s Justice CenterTooele Children’s Justice Center is in need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water and snacks. We appreciate all donations. For inquiries or drop-off, call 435-843-3440. 25 S. 100 East, Tooele.

United Methodist DinnerTooele United Methodist Church offers a free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee and social hour starts at 4 p.m. and dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All are welcome.

Tooele Valley Resource CenterThe Tooele Valley Resource Center, now sharing a building with the Tooele County Food Bank at 38 N. Main Street, Tooele, is currently in need of donations. Please consider donating items such as deodor-ant, Chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula, toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner, combs and brushes. Cash is also welcomed. Those who receive services include indi-viduals or families in crisis, the homeless and families at risk of becoming homeless. For more information, call 435-566-5938 or fax 435-843-0244.

First Baptist Food PantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is offer-ing an emergency food pantry to meet the needs of our community. Hours are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. First Baptist Church is located at 580 S. Main Street. For information, call 435-882-2048.

Food BanksTooele County Food Bank, Grantsville Emergency Food Pantry, and the Tooele County Food Bank are in need of canned meats, soups, pasta and any non-perish-

able foods. We are accepting donations for Pathways Women’s and Children’s Shelter (victims of domestic abuse). They are in need of socks, underwear, blankets for twin beds, hygiene products (hair-spray, hair gel, body wash, nail polish and remover) toys. Anything will be appreci-ated. Underwear and socks must be new. Other items can be gently used. Please help us help our community. Drop boxes are located in the Intermountain Staffing Office, 7 S. Main Street #203 in Tooele.

Baby blankets neededBaby blankets are needed for the nurs-ery at Mountain West Medical Center. Blankets should be new and in good condition. Homemade blankets are also accepted if new. Donations can be turned in to the volunteer desk at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele. Call Diane at 435-843-3691 with any questions.

Community ClosetClean out your closets. The Community Closet is accepting donations for gently used clothing. Donations are accepted at your neighborhood school. Contact Christy Johnson at 435-830-4706 with any questions.

MooseMeals at the LodgeFriday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5-9 p.m. Friday night dinners change weekly or you can order from the menu. All meals are for a reasonable price. No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11 a.m. For members and their guests only.

BreakfastBreakfast will be served every Sunday meeting at 10:30 a.m. Please attend the men’s meeting at 9:30 a.m. and the women’s meeting at 12:30 p.m., and enjoy a great breakfast.

Pool tournamentA Scotch double pool tournament is scheduled for noon on Feb. 25.

Veterans dinnerA Veterans appreciation dinner will be held on Thursday, Feb. 22 at 5:30 p.m.

Cook offOn Thursday, March 1 the lodge will host a chili verde cook-off at 5:30 p.m. Please bring your favorite recipe for our members and judges to taste. There will be judges and the first and second place will win.

Jam sessionA musical jam session will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 24. Anyone inter-ested in coming and showing their musi-cal talent is welcome.

EaglesDinnerFriday dinners have been postponed until further notice.

Sunday Breakfasts Regular Sunday breakfasts will be served from 9-11:30 a.m. There will be a $5 spe-cial, $7 for adults, $3 for seniors and $3 for kids 11-years and younger. The meal includes coffee and or a glass of juice or milk. Bad Beer is available. The public is invited.

Paint NightPaint Night will be held on Feb. 24. The cost is $30 per person. Happy hour is at 6 p.m. and painting starts at 7 p.m. Participants must be at least 21. There will be a great silent auction, along with a wonderful artist. Make it a date night or girls night out. Ticket price includes snacks and water. There will be a bar and no outside beverages allowed. To register go to Venmo@ladiescommuni-tyclubofTooele. Or pay through PayPal. This is a joint fundraiser for the Eagles and the Ladies Community Club of Tooele, which are both non-profit organizations. For more information, call Rosey at 801-403-5169.

Monthly dinnerA no-host dinner will be held Wednesday, Feb. 21 at 7 p.m. at Jim’s Restaurant. All PPs are invited to attend.

Trap shootThe Eagles State Trap Shoot will start on Sunday, Feb. 18 at Pleasant Grove. It will be in Tooele on Feb. 25 and at Brigham City on March 4. Tooele needs teams for the shoot. Sign up sheets are at the lodge and competition starts at 9 a.m. each Sunday. Please come and participate in this fun activity, and show your skills and support the Tooele Eagles.

ElksMeetingsLodge meetings are held the second and fourth Tuesday of every month. House committee meetings are held every third Tuesday of the month. All members are welcome and encouraged to attend.

Friday Night DinnersFriday Night Dinners have returned and are from 6- 9 p.m. If there is something new or different you would like to see, stop by the social quarters, fill out a sur-vey and let us know your opinion.

SnacksHungry? Need a snack? Available in the social quarters, during business hours: Nachos $2.50, hot dogs $2, burgers $3.75 ($4 with cheese), chicken sandwich $3.75 ($4 with cheese) and personal pizzas $3.

Dart LeagueThe Elks will be starting a fall and winter dart league at the lodge. The league will be played on Thursday evenings and will be a 12-week season, beginning the first Thursday in October. Contact the Lodge or Jesse 435-224-7228 with any questions.

Historical SocietyHistorical booksTooele County Historical Society’s books are available to purchase at meetings. The History of Tooele County Volume II is $35, The Mining, Smelting, and Railroading in Tooele is $25, and we also have eight note cards depicting four different pioneer buildings for $4. These make great gifts for family and friends. Please call Alice Dale at 435-882-1612 if you would like to purchase these books.

Seeking Historical ItemsThe Tooele County Historical Society would like members of the community who have any family or personal histories, photographs, books, brochures, DVDs, VHS tapes or newspaper articles that you would like to donate to our organization to please call us. We are also looking for books, newspaper articles, photos, bro-chures or any history that pertains to the Tooele County area. If you would like to donate them to our organization, or if you would let us make a copy for the Tooele County Historical Society, please call 435-882-1612.

Groups and EventsEaster MessiahRehearsal for the 3rd annual Easter rendi-tion of Handel’s “Messiah” will begin at 7 p.m. on March 4 at the Tooele Stake Center, 200 S. 200 East in Tooele. The per-formance will be presented at the Tooele Stake Center on March 25. This is an inter-faith community choir and orchestra. All singers and musicians are invited to par-ticipate in this traditional event. For more information, contact Betta Nash at 435-882-5107 or Dave Young at 435-882-2094.

Lenten SeasonFirst Lutheran Church, located at 7th Street and Birch in Tooele City, invites you to join us for this Lenten season’s midweek services as we reflect on Jesus’’ seven last words on the cross. Services are Wednesdays at 7 p.m. A light supper is served before the service at 6 p.m.

Artist of the MonthThe Stansbury Art and Literary Society Artist of the Month for February is Nicole Knight. She started painting in oils and watercolors as a hobby 19 years ago. She took lessons in these mediums from Tooele artist Ferrell G. Bailey,for 15 years. While learning to paint, she began to teach young children in her neighbor-hood. From this she created her own busi-ness 14 years ago called “The Creative Arts Studio.” She now teaches over 45 students a week that come from all over Tooele County. Her artwork reflects a variety of subjects in one of her favorite mediums, which is oil. With her recent travel experi-ences, Knight has started to observe and use subjects from diverse cultures and countries as references in her paintings. The public can view her paintings through February at the Chamber Wall Gallery in the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce Building, 153 S. Main, Tooele, during the chamber’s regular business hours.

19th Annual NWTF Banquet & AuctionTooele County Strutters, the local chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation, will hold its 19th Annual Banquet and Auction on Saturday, Feb. 24 at Deseret Peak Complex. Doors open at 5 p.m. Early-bird tickets, for a chance to win a gun safe, will be available until Feb. 10. For tickets or more information, call or text Collin Smith 435-241-0188, Allison Smith 801-940-0071 or Laurie Erickson 435-830-9224. Come join us for a night of fun, food and prizes for the entire family.

Tooele Gem and Mineral Society The Tooele Gem and Mineral Society club meets the third Tuesday of the month (except June, July and Aug), 7:30-9:30 p.m. in the Pioneer Museum downstairs confer-ence room located at 47 E. Vine St. Tooele. Come learn about rocks, minerals and ways to craft them and enjoy field trips for rock collecting. Membership is $15 per year. For more information, send ques-tions to [email protected].

Local author seeks photosA local author and historian is seeking original photographs of Saltair, Black Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Point, as well as any similar turn-of-the-century attractions and resorts for an upcoming book project. Those who wish to con-tribute information or photographs of these parks should contact Emma Penrod at [email protected]. Contributions will be printed with credit in a yet-to-be released pictorial history book. There is no such thing as too many photographs as the author needs a minimum of 160 photographs, and any help is greatly appreciated.

Tooele Valley Free MasonsTooele Valley Free Masons meet the second Friday of each month for din-ner and socializing. If you are interested or have questions, please join us at the Lodge, located at the corner of Settlement Canyon Road and state Route 36, or call at 435-277-0087.

Tooele Valley Family History CenterResearch your ancestors free with trained FamilySearch volunteers at the Tooele Valley Family History Center, 751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone 435-882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 p.m. Wednesday evenings by appointment only. Special classes offered regularly. Call the center for more information.

Tooele Family Al-AnonAl-Anon meetings are held Wednesdays at 11 a.m. in the Tooele Pioneer Museum’s basement at the back of the building. For questions or more information, please call Allene at 435-830-0465 or Elizabeth at 435-884-0825 or 435-241-9200.

Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4UThis group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at the Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, 560 S. Main St., Tooele. For more information, contact Gesele at 435-224-4015 or Jo-Ann at 435-849-4180.

Alcoholics AnonymousMeetings are held daily at noon and 8 p.m. at the Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. Utah Ave. For more information, contact Lance at 435-496-3691 or Wendy at 801-694-2624.

Alzheimer’s Caregiver GroupJoin us the 3rd Monday of each month from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical Center in Tooele. The Tooele County Health Department’s Aging Services pro-gram is the sponsor for these Alzheimer’s Association Caregiver Support Groups. The groups are designed to provide emo-tional, educational and social support for caregivers. Questions call 435-277-2440.

Ways to save on RXsYou’re invited to a presentation focused on strategies for saving on prescriptions. Join us Wednesday, Feb. 28 from 10:30-11:30 a.m. at the Tooele Senior Center, 59 E. Vine St., Tooele. The Tooele County Health Department’s Aging Services program is hosting speaker Care Manager Polly Grizzell from the University of Utah Health Stansbury Health Center. Questions call 435-277-2440.

Food Addicts in Recovery AnonymousAre you having trouble controlling the way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step recov-ery program for anyone suffering from food addiction. Meetings are held every Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele. Enter at the north back entrance. For more informa-tion, call Millicent at 435-882-7094 or Denise at 435-830-1835 or visit www.foodaddicts.org. Everyone is welcome to attend.

Tooele County AgingTooele County Aging is looking for volun-teers to help us meet the needs of seniors in the community. Many seniors require assistance and need rides to doctors or other health professionals. Rides help seniors live more independent lives. Call 435-843-4114 for more information. The Grantsville and Tooele Senior Centers also are in need of volunteers. For more information about volunteering at the Grantsville Center, call Dan at 435-843-4753. For volunteering at the Tooele Center, call Debbie at 435-843-4103.

Life’s Worth Living FoundationSuicide support group meetings are held every fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele, in the classroom by the cafeteria. If you struggle with suicidal thoughts or have lost a loved one to sui-cide, please plan on attending. Please go on Facebook and like our page to keep current with our latest news and events. Contact us on that page. Visit lifesworth-livingfoundation.com or call 435-248-LIVE.

Disabled American Veterans Chapter 20The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County Chapter for the Disabled American Veterans holds monthly general member-ship meetings at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele, every third Thursday of the month at 8 p.m. Those who wish to attend the leadership meet-ing at 7 p.m. are welcome to listen to the appointed members’ meeting. All Tooele County veterans are invited to attend. Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will hold its monthly executive and general meetings on the third Thursday of every month at the Pioneer Museum (rear entrance). The executive meeting will be at 7 p.m. and the general meeting will be at 8 p.m. The DAV is looking for volunteer drivers — no DAV membership is required. Will need a VA physical. No monthly meetings are held in December. Call commander James Yale at 435-849-0521 or senior vice commander Dustee Thomas at 435-830-8487.

Health Department and Aging Services hoursThe Tooele County Health Department and Aging Services’ new hours of opera-

tion are Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday from 8 a.m. to noon. Check out our calendar on our main page for holiday hours and closures. For more information, call 435-277-2301.

Parkinson’s disease Support GroupA diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can be overwhelming for the newly diagnosed. Tooele has a support group for persons with Parkinson’s disease and their caregiv-ers. You can learn how others are coping with PD and how to live well. We meet the third Friday of each month from 1-2 p.m. at Tooele Technology College, 88 S. Tooele Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal at 435-840-3683.

Tooele Naranon “Circle of Hope to Recovery”Tooele Naranon meets Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. at 134 W. 1180 North, Ste. 4 in Tooele (Bonneville Mental Health). Open to all those affected by someone else’s addic-tion. As a 12-step program, we offer help by sharing our experience, strength and hope. For more information, please con-tact Terri at 435-313-4851.

Military Items WantedWhen you no longer want your military items, do not take them to Deseret Industries or a thrift store. Bring them — hats, helmets, dress uniforms, boots, shoes, pants, jackets, backpacks, belts, canteens, pouches, old photos, etc. — to 775 S. Coleman Street. They will be displayed with honor and respect. Call Matthew or Tina at 435-882-8688.

Children’s Choir AuditionsRising Voices Children’s Choir is an audi-tioned children’s choir for children 7-14 years of age. The talented Katelynd Blake, owner and director of Blake Music Studios, directs the choir. Blake has a degree in vocal performance and has taught at the collegiate level. If your child loves to sing and you are looking for an exceptional musical experience for them, this is it. For more information and to register for an audition, please visit blakemusicstudios.com or call 435-277-0755.

Rocky Mountain HospiceWant to have more meaning in your life. Do you want to do something that is satisfying and of great service to your community? Then become a Rocky Mountain Hospice volunteer. No experi-ence required. All training, background check and TB tests provided by Rocky Mountain. The only requirement is your desire to help someone in need. Please contact Diane Redman at Rocky Mountain Hospice at 801-397-4904.

The Next ChapterThe Next Chapter is a free social support and educational program to help widows and widowers adjust to the loss of their spouse through monthly activities. You are invited to join others who are on the same page as you, to begin a new chapter in your life story. Call Sarah with Tooele County Aging Services at 435-277-2456 for more details.

Sons of Utah PioneersAnyone interested in the history of Tooele City, Tooele County or Utah pioneers, we need you. Please come and join us for a potluck social dinner at the LDS church, 192 W. 200 South, Tooele. For more infor-mation, please contact Joe Brandon, 435-830-9783 or 435-830-9784. The local Sons of Utah Pioneers meets the first Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m.

Grandparent Networking GroupCome meet and network with others who are raising their grandchildren. For address or other information, call Trisha 435-849-2536 or email at [email protected].

TC Squares Dance ClubThe TC Squares Dance Club has begun dancing again on Mondays at the Clarke Johnson Jr. High Cafetorium, 2152 N. 400 West, Tooele, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Please bring finger food to share. For more infor-mation, contact Woody at 435-850-2441, Roberta at 801-349-5992 or visit the club’s website at tcsquares.com.

Tooele County Homemakers The new season of Tooele County Homemakers is from September to May. For December and January, the group will meet on the second Tuesday of both months from 10 a.m. -1:30 p.m. at the USU Extension Office auditorium or inside the Tooele County Health Department, 151 N. Main, Tooele. The meetings include a luncheon and often include speakers. For more information, call Cindy at 435-843-0202 or Thiel at 435-224-4807.

Tooele County QuiltersIt’s a new year and the Tooele County Quilters are ready to go. If you’re interest-ed, come join us for our first meeting of 2018 at 9:30 a.m. on Jan. 16 in the Tooele County Health Dept. auditorium. Dues are $20 per year to be paid at the first meet-ing. All meetings are held on the third Tuesday of each month. For more informa-tion, call 435-843-7649.

Bulletin Board PolicyIf you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to [email protected]. “The Bulletin Board” is for special community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertising department. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date.

You Have Fascinating Neighbors! Read Their Stories in Every Issue!

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TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE We’re Your Hometown!

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018 B5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

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All Behind You, WinstonChurchill’s Great Coalition 1940-45

Thinker, Failure, Soldier, JailerAn Anthology of Great Lives in 365 Days

The Intellectual Devotional: Modern Culture

“From the summer of my twelfth year I carry a series of images more vivid and last-ing than any others of my boyhood and indelible beyond all attempts the years make to

erase or fade them…”So begins David Hayden’s story of the cataclysmic

summer of 1948, when the charges of a young Sioux woman force Davids father, the sheriff of their small town, to confront his holder brother, a charming war hero and respected doctor. As the small town takes sides, David witnesses the unraveling of his family brought on by the revelation of a simple truth. In this tale of love and courage, David learns what it means to weigh the terrible choice between family loyalty and justice.

This over-sized colorful photographic album pays tribute to an Asia that is diverse and surprising, offering glimpses into the continent’s amazing range of cultures, languages, societies and geography. Here are grand rivers, towering mountains, and mon-soon-drenched forests, as well as vibrant cities and towns, from ultramodern metrop-olises such as Singapore and Bangkok to humble hamlets that dot the countryside.

Surviving fatherhood is one thing, surviving with your sanity is quite another! Fear not, brave reader. This book compiles the most essential tricks of the trade from some of the world’s best dads. A humorous handbook full of wisdom and wit guaranteed to help you:• Change diapers, supervise the kids, or try to get out of

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In this richly illustrated overview, author Peter Bond describes the remarkable achievements of the astronomers, scientists and engineers who helped unravel the

mysteries of the distant worlds that make up our solar system. This clearly written and compelling account includes dramatic de-scriptions of the daring and resourcefulness of planetary pioneers, clear explanations of how philosophers and observers first took the measure of the heavens paving the way for modern astronomy, and up-to-date appendices that detail the properties of the major members of our solar system.

Travel to the outer extremities of experimental sci-ence and contemplate the unhallowed arts of re-ani-mation, genetic engineering, galvanism, time travel, mind control and psychedelic drugs.

Center stage are the extreme scientists who chal-lenged everything — nature, morality, the govern-ment, the law and sometimes even their own bodies — in the pursuit of knowledge.

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A visual guide to the history of human conflict tracing the evolution of technology and tactics from the ancient world to the American Civil War. Beautiful reproductions of 19th-century engravings chart the progress of military ma-chinery and methods. An expert modern nar-rative describes the development of arms and armor, and the evolution of military tactics. Illustrated anatomies of the key technologies are accompanied by detailed annotation and comprehensive cross-references.

All Behind You, Winston tells the story of the men and women of Winston Churchill’s coalition govern-ment who steered Britain through its darkest hour, showing how they helped to win the Second World War. It explores the roles played by characters as di-verse as the mercurial newspaper magnate Lord Bea-verbrook, who supplied the planes that won the Battle of Britain; the pugnacious trade union baron Ernest Bevin, who kept the nation working; Lord Woolton, the minister for food – a man so widely loved he was dubbed ‘Uncle Fred’; and Sir John Anderson, one of the first people to contemplate the awful power of the atom bomb.

Mixing heroism, ingenuity, infamy, and the bizarre, Thinker, Failure, Soldier, Jailer collects the very best of obituaries from The Telegraph to present an endlessly absorbing compendium of human endeavor. Orga-nized day by day around the calendar year, with each life presented on the date it ended, the book features hundreds of remarkable stories. World statesmen jostle with glamorous celluloid stars, pioneering bof-fins sit alongside chart-topping rock ’n’ rollers, while artists and their muses mingle with record-breaking sportsmen. This is the perfect gift for the armchair psychologist in all of us.

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B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

CLASSIFIEDTo place your Classifi ed ad call 435-882-0050

To place your Classifi ed ad call 435-882-0050

NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product or service advertised in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit and locate any classifi ed advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company reserves the right to refuse any advertisement.

All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, religion, sex or national origin, or any intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, published every Tuesday and Thursday

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All classifi ed line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin.

TUESDAY February 20, 2018

MUSEUM COORDINATOR $13.02/Hour

Part-time; Hours Vary to Meet Seasonal and Operational Needs of the Museum

APPLY TODAY

w w w.to o e l e c i t y. o r g / j o b s

P r o u d t o b e a n d E E O / A D A E m p l o y e r !

T he Tooele Valley Museum opened in 1983 and houses artifacts relevant to the history of the Tooele Valley and the railroading, smelting, and mining days of Tooele County. The museum is open seasonally for patron enjoyment or by appointment.

We are seeking a part-time seasonal museum coordinator to work closely with the Tooele Valley Museum Advisory Board, city staff, and volunteers to ensure the successful operations of the museum. This staff member is tasked with maintains oversight of the museum including collections/archives and research, education, exhibits, in-house and outreach public programs, security, administration, volunteer coordination, facility maintenance, marketing, and publicity. Hours will likely include weekend and holiday work periods with flexibility in rotating with volunteers.

We are seeking that one special candidate who has a passion for historical preservation, broad operational skills, excellent public relations skills, and strong corroboration skills. Applicants should have a high school diploma (or equivalent) and two years’ office experience. Advanced education and some experience with railroads, history, or museums desired. Must poses and maintain a valid Utah driver license and a driving record acceptable to Tooele City’s risk management and insurability standards.

Tooele City HR Department 90 N. Main, Tooele, UT 84074 (p) 435-843-2105 | (f) 435-843-2106 | [email protected]

Are you ready to sustain our tradit ions and lead our museum in a posit ive direction for the community? If so, return a completed Tooele City Application to Tooele City HR, 90 N Main, Tooele, UT, 84074. before 5:00 p.m. on Monday, March 5, 2018.

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warranty. Visitwww.mycommutercar.com

OR CALL

801-842-1411RW Auto Sales

336 N Main,Tooele

06 Hon. Accord $5895!

08 Scion XB $5895!

12 Chev. Cruze $6895!

06 Lexus GS300 $6995!

11 Toy. Camry $7750!

04 GMC Denali XL $7995!

15 Toy. Corolla $8995!

17 Nis. Altima $13895!

SUVs

1995 EDDIE BAUERBRONCO $2000O B O C A L L435-241-2224

Trucks

1993 CHEVY S-105SP 6CL 2.8M all re-stored under hood,new tires, & batterycall 385-222-6843

2013 TOYOTA TA-COMA like new hasextended cab, ex-tended bed with liner,bed matt and cover,truck is equipped withall the goodies in aTacoma. Must seeasking $28,500 Joel435-849-0196

Apartments for Rent

Building on Broadwaypreviously was barbershop. Can be usedfor commercial infront, can also live inthe back. 2BDRMlarge kitchen andb a t h . C a l l435-830-3306

SETTLEMENT CAN-YON APARTMENTS2 & 3 bedroom apts.Prices starting at$840/mo. Call Dan-ielle (435)882-6112for info.

Homes for Rent

WHY RENT WhenYou Can Buy? Zerodown & Low In-come programs, 1sttime & Single par-en t p rog rams ,Berna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

LOOKING FOR a reli-able person to helppay for rent and utili-ties in my home. Maleor female. Must beclean and reliable. Ifinterested please callme on my cell phone435-241-9312. Askfor Doug 368 W 440S, TOOELE

WHY RENT when youcan buy? $2000 amonth & good creditcould get you a homew/Zero Down. CallBerna 435-840-5029Group 1 Real Estate.

HAVE A good idea fora story? Call theTranscript and let usknow 882-0050.

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Homes

$$SAVE MONEYSearch Bank &H U D h o m e swww.Tooele Bank-Homes.com BernaS l o a n ( 4 3 5 )840-5029 Group 1

Planning on sellingyour home, you couldbe sending your salespoints to up to340,000 householdsat once. For $163.you can place your25 word classified adto all 45 newspapersin Utah. Just call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for all thedetai ls. (Mentionucan)

SELL ING YOURHOME? Advertise itin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Water Shares

10.364 ACRE FEET inTooele City, $8,000per acre foot. Call435-830-2426

11 ACRE FEET Watershares for sale incentral Erda $9,000each obo. Cal l801-541-5458

11 ACRE FEET watershares for sale EastErda $8,000 OBO callTravis 801-201-9280

5 ACRE FEET in EastErda (East of Drou-bay Road, $9,500obo per acre foot.Call 435-830-2426

Buildings

If you build, remodel orremove buildings youcan place your classi-fied ad in 45 of Utah'snewspapers for only$163. for 25 words($5. for each addi-tional word). You willreach up to 340,000households and allyou do is call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for all thedetai ls. (MentionUCAN Classified Net-work)

Public Notices Meetings

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

N O T I C E A N DAGENDANOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THETOOELE COUNTYCOUNCIL ON AGINGWILL HOLD A MEET-ING ON TUESDAYFEBRUARY 27, 2018AT 1:30 P.M. AT THETOOELE SENIORCENTER 59 EASTV I N E S T R E E T ,TOOELE, UTAH1. Welcome2. Approve November2017 meeting minutes(Action Item)3. New Board Mem-bers (Information Item)4. Dementia LiveSimulation and Discus-sion (Information Item)5. Roundtable Discus-sion (Information Item)6. AdjournS H E R R I E A H L -STROM, Aging Serv-ices DirectorIf you desire specialaccommodation underthe Americans WithDisabilities Act, pleasecontact Tooele Coun-ty’s ADA Coordinator,Jami McCart, (435)843-3497, within threeworking days prior tothis meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20 & 22, 2018)

GRANTSVILLE CITYNOTICE OF PUBLICHEARINGSNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that theGrantsville City Coun-cil will conduct the fol-lowing public hearingsat the Grantsville CityOffices, 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville,Utah at 7:00 p.m. onWednesday, March 7,2018 to receive publicinput regarding the fol-lowing:a. Proposed minorsubdivision for Mikeand Gail Didericksenat 460 W. Clark divid-ing 3 acres of landfrom one (1) lot intothree (3) lots in theR-1-8 zone.b. Proposed minorsubdivision for TimRieffanagh at 348 W.Plum dividing .814acres of land from one(1) lot into two (2) lotsin the RM-7 zone.c. Proposed conceptplan for Blue StoneDevelopment on theCherry Grove Subdivi-sion Phase D-F at 700W. Main for the crea-tion of sixty (60) lots inthe R-1-21 zone.All interested personsare invited to attendand provide commentupon these proposals.Written comments willalso be considered ifsubmitted to the CityRecorder in advanceof the hearings.Persons with disabili-ties needing accom-modations to partici-pate in hearingsshould contact Chris-t i n e W e b b(435.884.3411) at theGrantsville City Officesat least 24 hours in ad-vance of the hearings.DATED this 14th dayof February, 2018.Christine WebbGrantsville City Re-corder(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

Public Notices Meetings

GRANTSVILLE CITYNOTICE OF PUBLICHEARINGSNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that theGrantsville City Coun-cil will conduct the fol-lowing public hearingsat the Grantsville CityOffices, 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville,Utah at 7:00 p.m. onWednesday, March 7,2018 to receive publicinput regarding the fol-lowing:a. Proposed minorsubdivision for Mikeand Gail Didericksenat 460 W. Clark divid-ing 3 acres of landfrom one (1) lot intothree (3) lots in theR-1-8 zone.b. Proposed minorsubdivision for TimRieffanagh at 348 W.Plum dividing .814acres of land from one(1) lot into two (2) lotsin the RM-7 zone.c. Proposed conceptplan for Blue StoneDevelopment on theCherry Grove Subdivi-sion Phase D-F at 700W. Main for the crea-tion of sixty (60) lots inthe R-1-21 zone.All interested personsare invited to attendand provide commentupon these proposals.Written comments willalso be considered ifsubmitted to the CityRecorder in advanceof the hearings.Persons with disabili-ties needing accom-modations to partici-pate in hearingsshould contact Chris-t i n e W e b b(435.884.3411) at theGrantsville City Officesat least 24 hours in ad-vance of the hearings.DATED this 14th dayof February, 2018.Christine WebbGrantsville City Re-corder(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onMarch 21, 2018, at1:00 p.m. of said day,for the purpose of fore-closing a trust deeddated June 8, 2007,and executed bySHELLY VARIO, ANUNMARRIE WOMAN,as Trustor, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS"), SOLELYAS NOMINEE FORSUBURBAN MORT-GAGE, INC., AN ARI-ZONA CORPORA-TION, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on June 11,2007, as Entry No.286592, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at105 South 100 East,Tooele, Utah 84074 inTooele County, Utah,and more particularlydescribed as:COMMENCING ATTHE NORTHWESTCORNER OF LOT 4,BLOCK 48, PLAT "A",TOOELE CITY SUR-VEY, TOOELE CITY;A N D R U N N I N GTHENCE EAST 7RODS; THENCESOUTH 4 RODS;THENCE WEST 7RODS; THENCENORTH 4 RODS TOTHE POINT OF BE-GINNING.� Tax ID:02-060-0-0024The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owner ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeof Default is SHELLYVARIO, AN UNMAR-RIED WOMAN.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.DATED: February 12,2018.LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Paula MaughanIts: Vice PresidentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 17-1220(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February13,20 & 27, 2018)

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETINTUESDAY February 20, 2018 B7

Public Notices Meetings

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following de-scribed property will besold at public auctionto the highest bidder,payable in lawfulmoney of the UnitedStates at the time ofsale, at the TooeleCounty Courthouse,74 South 100 East,Tooele, UT 84074, onMarch 21, 2018, at1:00 p.m. of said day,for the purpose of fore-closing a trust deeddated June 8, 2007,and executed bySHELLY VARIO, ANUNMARRIE WOMAN,as Trustor, in favor ofMORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS, INC.("MERS"), SOLELYAS NOMINEE FORSUBURBAN MORT-GAGE, INC., AN ARI-ZONA CORPORA-TION, ITS SUCCES-SORS AND ASSIGNSas Beneficiary, whichTrust Deed was re-corded on June 11,2007, as Entry No.286592, in the OfficialRecords of TooeleCounty, State of Utahcovering real propertypurportedly located at105 South 100 East,Tooele, Utah 84074 inTooele County, Utah,and more particularlydescribed as:COMMENCING ATTHE NORTHWESTCORNER OF LOT 4,BLOCK 48, PLAT "A",TOOELE CITY SUR-VEY, TOOELE CITY;A N D R U N N I N GTHENCE EAST 7RODS; THENCESOUTH 4 RODS;THENCE WEST 7RODS; THENCENORTH 4 RODS TOTHE POINT OF BE-GINNING.� Tax ID:02-060-0-0024The current Benefici-ary of the trust deed isUTAH HOUSINGCORPORATION, andthe record owner ofthe property as of therecording of the Noticeof Default is SHELLYVARIO, AN UNMAR-RIED WOMAN.Bidders must tender tot h e t r u s t e e a$20,000.00 deposit atthe sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 2:00 p.m. theday following the sale.�Both the deposit andthe balance must bepaid to Lincoln Title In-surance Agency in theform of a wire transfer,cashier's check or cer-tified funds.� Cash pay-men ts , pe rsona lchecks or trust checksare not accepted.DATED: February 12,2018.LINCOLN TITLE IN-SURANCE AGENCYBy: Paula MaughanIts: Vice PresidentTelephone: (801)476-0303web site: www.smith-knowles.comSK File No.� 17-1220(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February13,20 & 27, 2018)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is Hereby Giventhat the Tooele CityRedevelopmentAgency of Tooele City,Utah, will meet in aBusiness Meeting, onWednesday, February21, 2018 at Approxi-mately 7:40 p.m., orsoon Thereafter. TheMeeting will be Held atthe Tooele City HallLarge ConferenceRoom Located at 90North Main Street,Tooele, Utah.1. Open RDA Meeting2. Roll Call3. Close Meeting- Litigation & PropertyAcquisition4. Adjourn to LargeConference RoomMichelle Y. PittT o o e l e C i t yRecorder/RDA Secre-taryPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 or [email protected],Prior to the Meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aBusiness Meeting onWednesday, February21, 2018 at the hour of7:00 P.M. The meet-ing will be held in theTooele City Hall Coun-cil Room located at 90North Main Street,Tooele, Utah.1. Pledge of Allegiance2. Roll Call3. Mayor's Youth Rec-ognition Awards4. Public CommentPeriod5. Resolution 2018-15A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAmending the TooeleCity Fee Schedule Re-garding Water MeterCostsPresented by JimBolser6. Ordinance 2018-04An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Chapter 4-1 Re-garding the BuildingOfficial and Public Im-provementsPresented by RogerBaker7. Ordinance 2018-05An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Section 2-3-2Regarding PlanningCommission DutiesPresented by RogerBaker8. MinutesFebruary 7, 20189. Invoices10. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 or [email protected],Prior to the Meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aBusiness Meeting onWednesday, February21, 2018 at the hour of7:00 P.M. The meet-ing will be held in theTooele City Hall Coun-cil Room located at 90North Main Street,Tooele, Utah.1. Pledge of Allegiance2. Roll Call3. Mayor's Youth Rec-ognition Awards4. Public CommentPeriod5. Resolution 2018-15A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAmending the TooeleCity Fee Schedule Re-garding Water MeterCostsPresented by JimBolser6. Ordinance 2018-04An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Chapter 4-1 Re-garding the BuildingOfficial and Public Im-provementsPresented by RogerBaker7. Ordinance 2018-05An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Section 2-3-2Regarding PlanningCommission DutiesPresented by RogerBaker8. MinutesFebruary 7, 20189. Invoices10. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 or [email protected],Prior to the Meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is Hereby Giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil & Tooele CityRedevelopmentAgency will meet in aWork Session, onWednesday, February21, 2018 at the hour of5:00 p.m. The Meet-ing will be Held at theTooele City Hall LargeConference Room Lo-cated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Open City CouncilMeeting2. Roll Call3. Discussion:- Resolution 2018-15A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAmending the TooeleCity Fee Schedule Re-garding Water MeterCostsPresented by JimBolser- Discussion of CityAcceptance of aTransportation Invest-ment Generating Eco-nomic Recovery (TI-GER) Grant ThroughUTAPresented by JimBolser- Resolution 2018-17A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilApproving an Agree-ment with Ace Recy-cling and Disposal, forCollection, Transporta-tion, and Disposal ofResidential Refuseand Recyclable Materi-alsPresented by RogerBaker- Ordinance 2018-04An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Chapter 4-1 Re-garding the BuildingOfficial and Public Im-provementsPresented by RogerBaker- Ordinance 2018-05An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Section 2-3-2Regarding PlanningCommission DutiesPresented by RogerBaker 4. Close Meeting- Litigation & PropertyAcquisition5. AdjournMichelle Y. PittT o o e l e C i t yRecorder/RDA Secre-taryPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 or [email protected],Prior to the Meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is Hereby Giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil & Tooele CityRedevelopmentAgency will meet in aWork Session, onWednesday, February21, 2018 at the hour of5:00 p.m. The Meet-ing will be Held at theTooele City Hall LargeConference Room Lo-cated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Open City CouncilMeeting2. Roll Call3. Discussion:- Resolution 2018-15A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAmending the TooeleCity Fee Schedule Re-garding Water MeterCostsPresented by JimBolser- Discussion of CityAcceptance of aTransportation Invest-ment Generating Eco-nomic Recovery (TI-GER) Grant ThroughUTAPresented by JimBolser- Resolution 2018-17A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilApproving an Agree-ment with Ace Recy-cling and Disposal, forCollection, Transporta-tion, and Disposal ofResidential Refuseand Recyclable Materi-alsPresented by RogerBaker- Ordinance 2018-04An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Chapter 4-1 Re-garding the BuildingOfficial and Public Im-provementsPresented by RogerBaker- Ordinance 2018-05An Ordinance of theTooele City CouncilAmending Tooele CityCode Section 2-3-2Regarding PlanningCommission DutiesPresented by RogerBaker 4. Close Meeting- Litigation & PropertyAcquisition5. AdjournMichelle Y. PittT o o e l e C i t yRecorder/RDA Secre-taryPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals Need-ing Special Accommo-dations Should NotifyMichelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 or [email protected],Prior to the Meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

PUBLIC NOTICE:The Grantsville CityCouncil will hold itsregular meeting at7:00 p.m. on Wednes-day, February 21,2018 at 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville, UT84029. The agenda isas follows:CALL TO ORDERAND PLEDGE OF AL-LEGIANCEROLL CALLAGENDA:1. Public Comments.2. Mayor YouthAwards.3. Summary ActionItems.a. Approval of Minutesb. Approval of Bills4. Consideration toamend Ordinance2017-16 adding lan-guage to permit a newminor subdivision forFrank Wayne Durfeeat 383 W. Durfee.5. Consideration of ap-proval of engineeringof Main Street Waterand Sewer Project.6. Mayor and CouncilReports.7. Public Comments.8. Closed Session(Personnel, Real Es-tate, Imminent Litiga-tion).9. Adjourn.Christine WebbCity RecorderIn compliance with theAmericans with Dis-ability Act, GrantsvilleCity will accommodatereasonable requests toassist persons withdisabilities to partici-pate in meetings. Re-quests for assistancemay be made by call-ing City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3days in advance of ameeting.One or more CouncilMembers may partici-pate electronically.The anchor locationwill be City Hall at theabove address.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICE:The Grantsville CityCouncil will hold itsregular meeting at7:00 p.m. on Wednes-day, February 21,2018 at 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville, UT84029. The agenda isas follows:CALL TO ORDERAND PLEDGE OF AL-LEGIANCEROLL CALLAGENDA:1. Public Comments.2. Mayor YouthAwards.3. Summary ActionItems.a. Approval of Minutesb. Approval of Bills4. Consideration toamend Ordinance2017-16 adding lan-guage to permit a newminor subdivision forFrank Wayne Durfeeat 383 W. Durfee.5. Consideration of ap-proval of engineeringof Main Street Waterand Sewer Project.6. Mayor and CouncilReports.7. Public Comments.8. Closed Session(Personnel, Real Es-tate, Imminent Litiga-tion).9. Adjourn.Christine WebbCity RecorderIn compliance with theAmericans with Dis-ability Act, GrantsvilleCity will accommodatereasonable requests toassist persons withdisabilities to partici-pate in meetings. Re-quests for assistancemay be made by call-ing City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3days in advance of ameeting.One or more CouncilMembers may partici-pate electronically.The anchor locationwill be City Hall at theabove address.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

Public Notices Trustees

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Water User

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Miscellaneous

Deadline for publicnotices is 4 p.m. theday prior to publica-tion. Public noticessubmitted past thedeadline will not beaccepted.UPAXLP

WANT TO get the lat-est local news? Sub-scribe to the Tran-script Bulletin.

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF AVAIL-ABILITYThe Utah Administra-tive Code (HazardousWaste Rules) requiresthe Division of WasteManagement and Ra-diation Control tomaintain a list of all ap-proved permit modifi-cations.� Annually, theDivision is required toprovide notice that anupdated list of modifi-cations is available forpublic review duringnormal business hoursat the following loca-tion:Multi-Agency State Of-fice BuildingUtah Department ofEnvironmental QualityDivision of WasteManagement and Ra-diation Control195 North 1950 West,2nd FloorSalt Lake City, Utah�84116For further information,please contact�CarleeChristoffersen�of theDivision of WasteManagement and Ra-diation Control at (801)536-0233.��In compli-ance with the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, individuals withspecial needs (includ-ing auxiliary communi-cative aids and serv-ices) should contactLarene Wyss, Office ofHuman Resources at(801) 536-4281, TDD(801) 536-4284 or bye m a i l a [email protected](Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 2018)

NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS AND AN-NOUNCEMENT OFAPPOINTMENTNORMA O. JENSEN,Deceased.P r o b a t e N o .183300010ROBERT M. JENSENwhose address is 744Oqu i r rh Avenue,Tooele, UT 84074 hasbeen appointed Per-sonal Representativeof the estate of theabove-named decen-dent. All persons hav-ing claims against theabove estate are re-quired to present themto the undersigned orto the Clerk of theCourt on or before the8th day of May, 2018,or said claims shall beforever barred.ROBERT M. JENSEN,744 Oquirrh Avenue,Tooele, UT 84074Telephone No. (435)882-0973(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February13, 20 & 27, 2018)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS AND AN-NOUNCEMENT OFAPPOINTMENTNORMA O. JENSEN,Deceased.P r o b a t e N o .183300010ROBERT M. JENSENwhose address is 744Oqu i r rh Avenue,Tooele, UT 84074 hasbeen appointed Per-sonal Representativeof the estate of theabove-named decen-dent. All persons hav-ing claims against theabove estate are re-quired to present themto the undersigned orto the Clerk of theCourt on or before the8th day of May, 2018,or said claims shall beforever barred.ROBERT M. JENSEN,744 Oquirrh Avenue,Tooele, UT 84074Telephone No. (435)882-0973(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February13, 20 & 27, 2018)

PUBLIC NOTICECall for ProposalsT h e T O O E L ECOUNTY RECREA-TION SPECIAL SERV-ICE DISTRICT will beaccepting new propos-als for recreation pro-jects from February20, 2018 to April 3,2018. Applicationsmust follow grant sub-mittal outline availablefrom each member ofthe board or TooeleCounty Clerk Office,Mar i l yn G i l l e t te ,843-3148, TooeleCounty Court House,47 South Main, Rm318. Five copies of thegrant submittal shouldinclude: name of pro-ject, location, and writ-ten bid of estimatedcosts, type of con-struction or improve-ment and a point ofcontact (with contactsname and address andtelephone number.)Furthermore, projectswhich are acceptedmust be completed byNovember 30th, 2017)or the applicant maystand to lose theirfunding. The SpecialRecreation DistrictBoard of Officers mustapprove any deviationfrom this process.Send all proposals to:TOOELE COUNTYRECREATION SPE-CIAL SERVICE DIS-TRICT, 47 South Main,Tooele, Utah 84074.For any additional in-formation contact: KipPorter 435-830-1154;S c o t t C a m p b e l l801-821-6446; Bil lDixon 435-840-1290;Mark McKendr ick435-241-0065. Treasurer(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February20, 22 March 7, 14, 21& 28, 2018)

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TUESDAY February 20, 2018B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN

Milford 65, Dugway 34Stansbury 47, Ogden 43Tooele 71, Bonneville 65Park City 60, Ben Lomond 50Desert Hills 64, Canyon View 58Dixie 61, Cedar 46Hurricane 69, Snow Canyon 64Orem 63, Lehi 58Salem Hills 77, Payson 73, OTSpanish Fork 62, Mountain View 56Bear River 52, Logan 50Ridgeline 70, Green Canyon 65Sky View 79, Mountain Crest 49Wasatch Academy 73, Juan Diego 53 Saturday Class 3A first roundGrantsville 68, Union 59Delta 82, San Juan 68Grand 69, Carbon 56Juab 61, Summit Academy 58, OTManti 62, Providence Hall 60, OTMorgan 48, Richfield 43South Sevier 71, ALA 52South Summit 80, Emery 74 Class 2A first roundAltamont 55, Rockwell 53Beaver 66, APA West Valley 34Duchesne 65, Millard 40Enterprise 65, Draper APA 29Layton Christian 76, Gunnison 50North Summit 43, Waterford 38Parowan 72, St. Joseph 23Rowland Hall 65, North Sevier 50

Notable HS girls basketball scores ThursdayStansbury 63, Ogden 47Park City 39, Ben Lomond 38Cedar 41, Dixie 25Desert Hills 64, Canyon View 58Hurricane 49, Snow Canyon 36

Logan 55, Bear River 44Ridgeline 61, Green Canyon 50Sky View 58, Mountain Crest 44 FridayWendover 44, Tintic 25 Bonneville 40, Tooele 30Lehi 56, Orem 32Mountain View 68, Spanish Fork 46Salem Hills 60, Payson 39 Class 3A first roundGrantsville 58, Manti 30Carbon 52, Summit Academy 36Emery 86, Providence Hall 24Juab 44, Grand 22Judge Memorial 56, San Juan 39Morgan 52, Delta 39Richfield 72, ALA 22South Sevier 46, Union 40 Class 2A first roundAltamont 54, Rowland Hall 36Beaver 66, Draper APA 10Enterprise 61, Rockwell 19Kanab 43, Duchesne 39Layton Christian 47, Waterford 37Millard 61, St. Joseph 23North Summit 56, Merit Academy 24Wasatch Academy 45, North Sevier 37 Monday Class 5A first roundBox Elder 60, Skyridge 53East 49, Brighton 37Highland 51, Corner Canyon 45Skyline 59, Alta 38Springville 42, Roy 32Timpview 60, West 44Viewmont 51, Provo 41Woods Cross 40, Wasatch 30

Schedule Thursday’s gamesGrantsville boys basketball vs. Grand, 9:30 a.m. at Dixie State UniversityGrantsville girls basketball vs. South Sevier, 5:50 p.m. at Dixie State University

Wrap continued from page B1

friend. Rand Janes, Richfield’s head coach, was on the bas-ketball team at Southern Utah University when I was the sports editor for the school paper. Grantsville’s next opponent, Grand, is my high school alma mater (worry not, Grantsville fans — Tavin’s got that one covered, too), and it was nice to see some familiar faces in that crowd.

And I’ve been watching coach Bryan Detweiler and his current cast of Cowboys for the past four seasons, so I enjoyed seeing them pull off the win over Union (even at the expense of their head coach,

a fellow Grand High alum, Gordon Garrett).

And that was just a taste. The Grantsville girls and boys have a great chance of finish-ing at least in the top five, if they don’t end up winning the whole thing. The boys and girls from Tooele and Stansbury are all enjoying special seasons, and all of them have a chance of making a deep run in the state tournament.

Whatever the results end up being, I know one thing for sure — it’s going to be intense.

Darren Vaughan is a veteran sports writer from Moab, Utah. He’s looking forward to seeing how the state basketball tourna-ments pan out. Email him at [email protected].

Vaughan continued from page B1

in complete control against the overmatched Templars (3-19). Grantsville built an 11-0 lead in the first five minutes with a balanced attack, and found itself up by 21 points just over two minutes into the second quarter against the sixth-place team from Region 15.

A large part of the reason for their early success was sophomore point guard Ashlee Edwards, whose steady play at both ends of the floor had the Cowboys running like a well-oiled machine. She finished the contest with a team-high 11 points to go with seven rebounds, three assists, two steals and two blocks, show-ing she’s not afraid to take on a leadership role despite her youth.

“I’ve kind of had that men-tality not only to not let down my team, but to fill the role that my team and my coaches want me to play,” Edwards said. “I like to be on this team where I can play my role and do what I can do to get us off to a good start.”

Vera said Edwards has grown into her role as the sea-son has gone along.

“She has the ability to take over games when she chooses to,” Vera said. “I think with

Ashlee, it’s just getting her the confidence to do it consis-tently.”

After Madison Fields’ bucket put Grantsville up 24-3, the Cowboys went into a bit of a

lull, scoring just five points the rest of the first half — a stretch that included a drought of 4:21 between field goals. However, GHS came out with a renewed sense of urgency to start the second half and outscored the Templars 18-4 in the third quarter to build a commanding 47-16 advantage.

“I think we started to wear down in that second quarter,” Vera said. “We came out quick and at our tempo in that first quarter, but we wore down — (the Templars) play hard. Other than that, I thought we picked it back up in the second half and finished strong.”

With the game well in hand, Grantsville used the opportu-nity to give some of its bench players increased playing time, with one or two regulars stay-ing on the floor to help keep things under control. The Cowboys’ reserves kept Manti mostly at bay, and Grantsville was able to cruise to the vic-tory.

Freshman Maison White had nine points and four rebounds for the Cowboys, while Fields had nine points and nine rebounds. Senior Sarah Ellett had eight points, including two 3-pointers during Grantsville’s third-quarter surge, and dished out six assists. Addison Smith had seven points, six rebounds and four steals off the bench. Ellie Wilson and Hannah

Butler each scored six points and Halle Bartley added two. As a team, Grantsville had 18 assists on 24 made field goals.

“Playing as one and playing as a team — we kind of had that unity where we get up the floor, make good passes and score as one,” Edwards said.

Grantsville’s reward for beating Manti is a quarterfinal matchup with South Sevier, the No. 3 seed from Region

15. The Rams advanced by beating Union, the No. 3 seed from Region 14, 46-40 with a fourth-quarter rally in their first-round game. The winner of Thursday’s contest will face either Region 15 champion Emery or Region 14 No. 2 seed Carbon in the state semifinals Friday, with the losers meet-ing in a consolation-bracket [email protected]

Cowboyscontinued from page B1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Grantsville sophomore guard Ashlee Edwards (2) eyeballs the basket as Manti’s Kjerstin Birch defends during the first half of Friday’s Class 3A first-round state tournament game at Wasatch High School in Heber City. Edwards scored a team-high 11 points in the Cowboys’ 58-30 win.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Grantsville freshman forward Maison White puts up a free throw dur-ing the first half of Friday’s Class 3A first-round state tournament game against Manti. White had nine points and four rebounds for the Cowboys.

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percent free-throw shooter — to the foul line often. He was held without a field goal and went 3-for-16 from the free-throw line.

As a team, Grantsville shot 86 percent from the foul line.

Arbon’s 30 points eclipsed his career-high from back-to-back nights in December: the win against West on Dec. 19, and the loss to Emery the day after.

“We tried to get him some more places down low to score. I think he attacked the basket, and finished too,” Detweiler said of Arbon’s per-formance. “He looked ready to go tonight. He logged a lot of minutes and was focused, and he was there defensively for us tonight, too.”

Roberts, Potter and Sandberg combined for another 32 points, and sopho-more forward Ammon Bartley chipped in with the remaining six.

“It just feels great to get out of the first round,” Potter said. “It felt like for a long time we were in a funk. We were in a rut, just couldn’t get out of it. It was a curse, like the Chicago Cubs. But we got out

of it and we’re going down to Dixie. It just feels great to do this my senior year.”

Grantsville will next face Grand in the quarterfinals of the Class 3A boys basket-ball playoffs, a game that

is set to tip off at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday at Dixie State University.

“I wish them the best of luck down there, I think they can make a deep run into the tournament,” Garrett said.

Author’s note: Tavin Stucki has covered prep sports in Utah for more than nine years. This story was not subject to the approval of the Grantsville bas-ketball program.

GHS continued from page B1

Grantsville senior Ryan Potter (23) drives to the basket against Union’s Weston Walker during Saturday’s Class 3A first-round state tournament game at Wasatch High School in Heber City. Potter scored 12 points in the Cowboys’ 68-59 win, helping them advance to Thursday’s quar-terfinal round in St. George.FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/

TTB PHOTO

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