rainy month bolsters west nile threat

20
TUESDAY T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE June 30, 2009 SERVING TOOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 VOL. 116 NO. 9 50¢ INSIDE www.tooeletranscript.com BEST Paper Utah non-daily in Utah Press ASSOCIATION Rush Valley Ophir Grantsville Tooele Lake Point Bauer Stockton Pine Canyon Stansbury Park Erda 85/61 77/55 90/66 87/63 90/66 86/62 86/62 78/55 90/66 89/65 Demo derby a smash-up success at Deseret Peak See A10 BULLETIN BOARD A8 CLASSIFIEDS B5 HOMETOWN B1 OBITUARIES A7 OPEN FORUM A4 SPORTS A10 TV LISTINGS B2 See Complete Forecast on A9 WEATHER Local couple preserves history through words and sites See B1 School district serving up summer lunches See A2 photography / Maegan Burr Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement District employee Dennis Workman spreads out a pesticide that deters mosquito larvae from growing in some standing water in Lake Point Monday afternoon. The abatement district is encouraging residents to survey their yards for standing water, which attracts mosquitoes. photography / Maegan Burr David Osmond performs Saturday night for a crowd at the Tooele Arts Festival. Although there was no headline per formance act, Osmond drew a large crowd during the festival. SINGING OSMOND by Natalie Tripp STAFF WRITER A wet June has local mosquito abatement officials scrambling to prevent an outbreak of West Nile virus. In Utah, West Nile has already been confirmed in Box Elder, Salt Lake, Utah and Washington counties, but there are no con- firmed human cases. Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement District manager Robert Brand said it’s not a matter of if, but when, the county will see its first case of West Nile. “The number of mosquitoes known to carry the virus is unusu- ally low, and we can barely catch enough to test for West Nile,” said Brand. “I shouldn’t be complain- ing about that, but they’re going to build as the summer goes on and West Nile is just something that’s going to happen.” Due to state budget cuts, the district is no longer using senti- nel chickens to test for the virus, and is only able to test trapped mosquitoes for West Nile. Even though the tarsalis mosquitoes carrying the disease are few in number now, recent rains have made breeding conditions consid- erably more favorable, and abate- ment workers are anticipating mass hatchings at the end of July, according to Brand. Budget cuts have not reduced the amount of chemicals used by local abatement workers or curtailed spraying capabilities in any way, Brand said. He added that with drier, warmer weather, he’s been receiving lots of service requests to spray neighborhoods. “We’re getting the whammy now, and with last weekend’s rain we’ll probably get it again in about a week,” he said. “They’re just everywhere, all over.” Health departments across the state are encouraging local resi- Rainy month bolsters West Nile threat SEE THREAT PAGE A5 photography / Maegan Burr A forklift moves bails of garbage off of trucks Tuesday morning at the Tekoi Balefill on the Goshute Indian Reservation in Skull Valley. The landfill wants to change its lease agreement to allow for unbaled municipal solid waste. by Sarah Miley STAFF WRITER A landfill in Skull Valley on the Goshute Indian Reservation wants to change the form of the waste it accepts in order to ensure its future viability. The Tekoi Balefill facility, which is owned and operated by Waste Management, based in Houston, Texas, currently disposes of construc- tion and demolition waste, as well as baled municipal solid waste. The CR Group, which is a subsidiary of Waste Management of Utah, would like to amend its lease agreement with the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians to allow for unbaled municipal solid waste. A draft environmental assessment on the proposed lease amendment is now out and available for public comment. “The amendment is just changing it from a baled to a standard landfill,” said Susan Hayward, spokesperson for Waste Management of Utah. “That’s actually how everything in Utah is run anyway. There’s very few of these bale landfills in the United States. It’s just not efficient.” Currently, waste is compacted and baled into 1,500- to 2,000-pound bales using wire at a transfer facility in Salt Lake City before being taken to the 500- acre Tekoi landfill. According to the draft EA, the Wasatch Management Materials Recycling Facility is the only transfer facility in the Salt Lake area providing baled waste to Tekoi, and MRF will likely discontinue baling waste soon because of the high cost of maintain- ing its baling equipment. That change would effectively cut off Tekoi’s only permitted waste stream. The band of Goshutes receives money from Tekoi in the form of the facility lease, royalties, and water use and right- of-way payments. Royalty payments are Tekoi landfill wants ‘loose’ waste change SEE TEKOI PAGE A6 by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Tooele County School District employees will make less money on average next year as the district incorpo- rates a three-day furlough into its calendar in order to reduce payroll costs. The furlough will apply to all teachers, administra- tors and classified staff that work more than 178 days in the 2009-10 school year. The district had to trim $3.9 million from its 2009-10 budget due to state funding cuts and a forecasted enrollment drop of 450 students. The district has finished negotiating contracts with all employees. Contracts with teachers and classified staff were approved by the school board at its June 16 meeting. Contracts with administrative staff are sched- ule to be ratified in July. All groups agreed to forgo cost- of-living increases and accept the three-day furlough. “We realize the financial condition that schools are in right now and want to be a team player,” said Bryan Hansen, president of the Tooele Classified Employees Association, which represents 1,030 employees in over Schools to use furlough to trim payroll costs Measure means most district employees will make less this school year SEE PAYROLL PAGE A5 by Jamie Belnap STAFF WRITER The old phrase “nothing good hap- pens after midnight” is something local cops are holding strong to as they crack down on summer curfew violators. “Curfews are important because young kids just shouldn’t be out late at night,” said Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park, citing as an example a vandal- ism spree last weekend that left one of his department’s police vehicles and a Tooele City Police Department vehicle decorated with graffiti. “I don’t know of a nice, politically-correct way of putting it, but they shouldn’t be out in the wee hours of the morning.” Vandalism and graffiti, along with other petty crimes like underage drink- ing, drug use and theft, prompted local law enforcement agencies to set up cur- fews as early as the late 1800s. An old bell installed at Tooele City Hall in 1869 was rung by a policeman at 9 p.m. every night alerting youngsters to return home from play. Still, despite those curfews, officials say teenage crimes in the early hours remain a problem today. “Historically, it’s like any other type of crime,” said Detective Dan Chamberlain, of the Grantsville City Police Department. “You have habitual violators. We try to be more lenient if the kid is just out play- ing flashlight tag with his friends, versus someone who has a lighter or a can of spray paint in their pocket. I don’t think the problem has gotten any better or worse. It’s been pretty consistent, but historically summer is the worse time for it. Kids don’t have to get up for school so they go to sleepovers and parents have a hard time knowing where they are.” Cops cracking down on curfew violators SEE CURFEW PAGE A3

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TRANSCRIPT

TUESDAY

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTTOOELE

June 30, 2009 SERVING TOOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 VOL. 116 NO. 9 50¢

INSIDE

www.tooeletranscript.com

BESTPaperUtah

non-daily

in

Utah PressA S S O C I A T I O N

76 86 9077 79 85 91

53 57 6655

66 60 57

0.14 0.152.41 0.93

10.83 11.06

8 8 9 8 9 9 9

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday

Vernon Creekat Vernon 1.06 none

South Willow Creekat Grantsville 1.40 -0.02

at Saltair Boat Harbor 4194.89

Tu W Th F Sa Su M

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

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; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year NormalWeek 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

GrouseCreek

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 6:02 a.m. 9:04 p.m.Thursday 6:03 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Friday 6:03 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Saturday 6:04 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Sunday 6:05 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Monday 6:05 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Tuesday 6:06 a.m. 9:02 p.m.

Wednesday 4:22 p.m. 1:41 a.m.Thursday 5:26 p.m. 2:12 a.m.Friday 6:27 p.m. 2:48 a.m.Saturday 7:23 p.m. 3:30 a.m.Sunday 8:12 p.m. 4:19 a.m.Monday 8:54 p.m. 5:13 a.m.Tuesday 9:30 p.m. 6:12 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2009

90/67

85/61

94/66

88/58

84/58

77/55

90/66

87/63

90/66

86/62

86/62

78/55

82/57

90/6689/65

92/68

90/57

87/62

88/66

88/63

88/50

89/60

88/57

89/62

87/63

86/58

86/58

95/68

88/5995/68

88/56102/74 90/62

88/60

87/5894/68

92/62

86/55

88/56

Full Last New First

July 7 July 15 July 21 July 28

Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Intervals of clouds and sunshine

87 63

Mostly cloudy; thunderstorms at night

87 64

An afternoon thunderstorm possible

85 62

Sun and clouds

87 64

Mostly sunny

86

After a cloudy start, sun returns

89 61 57

Mostly sunny

86 55TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday night’s lows and Wednesday’s highs.

High/Low past week 91/53Normal high/low past week 86/58Average temp past week 71.3Normal average temp past week 72.3

Statistics for the week ending June 29.

BTOOELEOOELETOOELET

June 30 2009

Demo derby a smash-up success

at Deseret PeakSee A10

BULLETIN BOARD A8

CLASSIFIEDS B5

HOMETOWN B1

OBITUARIES A7

OPEN FORUM A4

SPORTS A10

TV LISTINGS B2

See Complete Forecast

on A9

WEATHERLocal couple

preserves history through words

and sitesSee B1

School district serving up summer lunches

See A2

photography / Maegan Burr

Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement District employee Dennis Workman spreads out a pesticide that deters mosquito larvae from growing in some standing water in Lake Point Monday afternoon. The abatement district is encouraging residents to survey their yards for standing water, which attracts mosquitoes.

photography / Maegan Burr

David Osmond performs Saturday night for a crowd at the Tooele Arts Festival. Although there was no headline performance act, Osmond drew a large crowd during the festival.

SINGING OSMOND

by Natalie TrippSTAFF WRITER

A wet June has local mosquito abatement officials scrambling to prevent an outbreak of West Nile virus.

In Utah, West Nile has already been confirmed in Box Elder, Salt Lake, Utah and Washington counties, but there are no con-firmed human cases. Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement District manager Robert Brand said it’s not a matter of if, but when, the county will see its first case of West Nile.

“The number of mosquitoes known to carry the virus is unusu-ally low, and we can barely catch enough to test for West Nile,” said Brand. “I shouldn’t be complain-ing about that, but they’re going to build as the summer goes on and West Nile is just something that’s going to happen.”

Due to state budget cuts, the district is no longer using senti-

nel chickens to test for the virus, and is only able to test trapped mosquitoes for West Nile. Even though the tarsalis mosquitoes carrying the disease are few in number now, recent rains have made breeding conditions consid-erably more favorable, and abate-ment workers are anticipating mass hatchings at the end of July, according to Brand.

Budget cuts have not reduced the amount of chemicals used by local abatement workers or curtailed spraying capabilities in any way, Brand said. He added that with drier, warmer weather, he’s been receiving lots of service requests to spray neighborhoods.

“We’re getting the whammy now, and with last weekend’s rain we’ll probably get it again in about a week,” he said. “They’re just everywhere, all over.”

Health departments across the state are encouraging local resi-

Rainy month bolsters West Nile threat

SEE THREAT PAGE A5 ➤

photography / Maegan Burr

A forklift moves bails of garbage off of trucks Tuesday morning at the Tekoi Balefill on the Goshute Indian Reservation in Skull Valley. The landfill wants to change its lease agreement to allow for unbaled municipal solid waste.

by Sarah Miley

STAFF WRITER

A landfill in Skull Valley on the Goshute Indian Reservation wants to change the form of the waste it accepts in order to ensure its future viability.

The Tekoi Balefill facility, which is owned and operated by Waste Management, based in Houston, Texas, currently disposes of construc-tion and demolition waste, as well as baled municipal solid waste. The CR Group, which is a subsidiary of Waste Management of Utah, would like to amend its lease agreement with the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians to allow for unbaled municipal solid waste.

A draft environmental assessment on the proposed lease amendment is now out and available for public comment.

“The amendment is just changing it from a baled to a standard landfill,” said Susan Hayward, spokesperson for

Waste Management of Utah. “That’s actually how everything in Utah is run anyway. There’s very few of these bale landfills in the United States. It’s just not efficient.”

Currently, waste is compacted and baled into 1,500- to 2,000-pound bales using wire at a transfer facility in Salt Lake City before being taken to the 500-acre Tekoi landfill. According to the draft EA, the Wasatch Management Materials Recycling Facility is the only transfer facility in the Salt Lake area providing baled waste to Tekoi, and MRF will likely discontinue baling waste soon because of the high cost of maintain-ing its baling equipment. That change would effectively cut off Tekoi’s only permitted waste stream.

The band of Goshutes receives money from Tekoi in the form of the facility lease, royalties, and water use and right-of-way payments. Royalty payments are

Tekoi landfill wants ‘loose’ waste change

SEE TEKOI PAGE A6 ➤

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Tooele County School District employees will make less money on average next year as the district incorpo-rates a three-day furlough into its calendar in order to reduce payroll costs.

The furlough will apply to all teachers, administra-tors and classified staff that work more than 178 days in the 2009-10 school year. The district had to trim $3.9 million from its 2009-10 budget due to state funding cuts and a forecasted enrollment drop of 450 students.

The district has finished negotiating contracts with all employees. Contracts with teachers and classified staff were approved by the school board at its June 16 meeting. Contracts with administrative staff are sched-ule to be ratified in July. All groups agreed to forgo cost-of-living increases and accept the three-day furlough.

“We realize the financial condition that schools are in right now and want to be a team player,” said Bryan Hansen, president of the Tooele Classified Employees Association, which represents 1,030 employees in over

Schools to use furlough to trim payroll costsMeasure means most district employees will make less this school year

SEE PAYROLL PAGE A5 ➤

by Jamie Belnap

STAFF WRITER

The old phrase “nothing good hap-pens after midnight” is something local cops are holding strong to as they crack down on summer curfew violators.

“Curfews are important because young kids just shouldn’t be out late at night,” said Tooele County Sheriff Frank Park, citing as an example a vandal-ism spree last weekend that left one of his department’s police vehicles and a Tooele City Police Department vehicle decorated with graffiti. “I don’t know of

a nice, politically-correct way of putting it, but they shouldn’t be out in the wee hours of the morning.”

Vandalism and graffiti, along with other petty crimes like underage drink-ing, drug use and theft, prompted local law enforcement agencies to set up cur-fews as early as the late 1800s. An old bell installed at Tooele City Hall in 1869 was rung by a policeman at 9 p.m. every night alerting youngsters to return home from play. Still, despite those curfews, officials say teenage crimes in the early hours remain a problem today.

“Historically, it’s like any other type of

crime,” said Detective Dan Chamberlain, of the Grantsville City Police Department. “You have habitual violators. We try to be more lenient if the kid is just out play-ing flashlight tag with his friends, versus someone who has a lighter or a can of spray paint in their pocket. I don’t think the problem has gotten any better or worse. It’s been pretty consistent, but historically summer is the worse time for it. Kids don’t have to get up for school so they go to sleepovers and parents have a hard time knowing where they are.”

Cops cracking down on curfew violators

SEE CURFEW PAGE A3 ➤

FRONT PAGE A1FRONT PAGE A1

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN TUESDAY June 30, 2009

by Paul FoyASSOCIATED PRESS

HELPER, Utah (AP) — Two years after a Utah mine collapsed, entombing six miners more than 2,000 feet under a mountain and also killing three members of a rescue team, the state’s coal oper-ators are backing away from rich coal reserves held deep under the ground.

Coal mines have come under intense scrutiny in every part of the country, with the Mine Safety and Health Administration tri-pling fines against all coal mines last year, to $152.7 million.

But in Utah, where easy access to coal was exhausted more than a decade ago, operators say they have been hit especially hard because of the extreme depths at which they dig for coal.

The risks are compounded by a common method of coal removal called retreat mining, which has operators sometimes flirting with disaster by deliberately inducing cave-ins.

The Crandall Canyon col-lapse in 2007 shows what can go wrong.

A bounce, a type of seismic jolt, imploded with the force of two million pounds of explosives at Crandall, said Michael McCarter, a professor of mining engineer-ing at the University of Utah.

The tremor flattened a section of the mine roughly the size of 63 football fields, leaving six min-ers entombed 2,160 feet under mountain cover. Another cave-in 10 days later killed three mem-bers of a rescue team, including a federal mining inspector.

Federal regulators, stung by criticism following mine disas-ters from West Virginia to Utah, quickly clamped down.

“We’ll never know if we make the right decision — we’ll just know when we make the wrong deci-sion,” said Kevin Stricklin, coal-mining boss for the Mine Safety and Health Administration.

But with federal inspectors on site practically every day, execu-tives for several Utah mines grumble that the inspectors are writing up citations mostly for small offenses _ a pile of coal dust there, a spill of grease here.

About 30 miles away from Crandall is the Horizon mine, operated by American West

Resources Inc.Horizon was put on a special

watch with twice the national average of safety violations.

So to appease regulators, Horizon retreated from a section of its mine that logged 26 roof falls over the previous two years.

The section contained 300,000 tons of high-quality coal and easy access to millions of tons more.

“We’re a small company, and we made a hard decision,” said Dan Baker, chief executive officer for Salt Lake City-based America West Resources Inc., a pub-lic company. “I don’t know how many millions of dollars went into developing that section.”

Other companies are follow-ing suit.

Utah’s largest coal operator, St. Louis-based Arch Coal Inc., turned away from a deep coal

seam at the Dugout mine in cen-tral Utah, leaving behind 4 mil-lion tons of coal a year ago.

McCarter and other mining experts question whether regula-tion has gone too far.

Mining authorities ordered a new method of longwall mining that effectively cuts West Ridge’s reserves in half, “and I’m not real-ly sure anybody has proven it any safer,” McCarter said.

The cave-ins are part of every-day deep mining, McCarter said. Two common methods of coal removal, longwall and retreat mining, depend on orderly, con-trolled cave-ins for safety.

But federal officials say the size of the Crandall Canyon disaster showed more scrutiny was need-ed.

“In the past, anything an oper-ator submitted — if it was a repu-

table operator — we took their word for it,” Stricklin said.

Others agree the tighter regu-lations are a welcome change, because mining companies for years got a free pass.

“It was a rubber stamp,” said Mike Dalpiaz, the mayor of Helper and a United Mine Workers of America vice president. “We had to spill blood before they started paying attention.”

Miners are paid well for the dangerous job — around $65,500 a year, double the region’s aver-age wage, according to the Utah Department of Workforce Services

About 4,000 feet inside Horizon via a honeycomb of sloping tun-nels, Dallen McFarland used a cable-connected joystick to fin-ish boring a tunnel with a 50-ton cutting machine.

He didn’t flinch when the walls — miners call them ribs — start-ed making noises like a knuckle cracking, with the weight of 800 feet of mountain cover bearing down.

“When your ribs are popping, that’s good because it means they aren’t storing energy,” McFarland said.

Deep coal mine operators in U.S. face heavy regulation

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

It’s summer and school is out, but at Harris Elementary by noon there will be a line of children and parents stretch-ing from the front door out to the parking lot. They’re waiting for the Tooele County School District’s new summer lunch

program.“We have been serving

around 450 meals a day,” said Elva Roberts, Tooele County School District food services coordinator. “We also have been serving 175 breakfasts at Harris Elementary.”

The summer food service program is funded by the fed-eral Child Nutrition program,

according to Roberts. The federal program reimburses the district for 100 percent of the costs to provide breakfast and lunch at Wendover High School and Harris Elementary throughout the summer. At Wendover, the district has been serving 40 breakfasts and 125 lunches daily.

Breakfast is served from 8

a.m. to 9 a.m., and lunch is served from noon until 1 p.m. The summer food service program started June 15 and will run until August 14. The Wendover and Tooele sites are open Monday through Friday.

Breakfast and lunch is pro-vided free to anybody under the age of 18, and adults over 18 pay $2.75 for lunch and $1.35 for breakfast, according to Roberts. Adults do not need to be accom-panied by children “We will be serving menus from our regular school lunch program, and we also have baby food available,” Roberts said.

Children and parents do not have to live within the Harris boundaries just because that is where the meals are served, according to Roberts.

“I see a lot of children that I don’t recognize,” said Leann Hammond, Harris Elementary kitchen staff. “I know my kids from Harris so we must be drawing from other schools.”

The program is designed to make sure economically dis-advantaged kids can still afford good meals when school is not in session.

“One of the requirements is that the school where the meal is served must have 50 percent of its students on free or reduced price lunch dur-ing the school year,” Roberts said. “We do not have a school in Grantsville that meets that requirement or we would open

a school in Grantsville for sum-mer food service.”

Roberts estimates lunchroom workers can handle about 500 meals at Harris.

“We are growing slightly each day,” Roberts said. “If we exceed 500, we will open Northlake Elementary for lunch.”

That 500 would really have the lunch room busting at the seams, said Cleo Riggs, princi-pal at Harris Elementary.

Riggs volunteers to hand out tickets at the front door each day.

“We brought in tables from

other schools and put them everywhere possible, including the stage,” said Riggs.

Roberts said the free lunch program helps a lot as the recession drags on.

“This gives those parents whose kids get free lunches during the school year a break on the cost of lunch during the summer,” she said. “It also pro-vides income for some of our lunch staff during the summer as well.”[email protected]

Schools free lunch program proving popular

by Jamie Belnap

STAFF WRITER

A 54-year-old Tooele man accused of threatening neigh-bors with a rifle and pistol made his first appearance in 3rd District Court Friday.

Jay Bradley was arrested June 23 after police responded to a call reporting a drunken man blatantly pointing a .23-cali-ber assault rifle and .22-cali-ber semi-automatic handgun at two neighbors who had come to the door of his trailer home in the Vorwaller Trailer Park in

Tooele inquiring after a woman who was visiting the residence, according to Lt. Paul Wimmer of the Tooele City Police Department.

Bradley, who did not want the neighbors to speak with the woman, became angry and yelled at them to leave before grabbing his weapons and cocking them while continuing to yell. The neighbors then left the residence and called police, according to Wimmer.

“When police arrived, they set up a perimeter around the trailer and they heard him cock

his gun again,” Wimmer said.Officers then called for

Bradley to emerge from his trailer with his hands up. He complied and was cuffed and taken into custody without inci-dent, Wimmer said.

Field sobriety tests were conducted on Bradley, which determined that he was indeed impaired, according to a prob-able cause statement. He was booked into the Tooele County Jail on two counts of aggravated assault — a third-degree felony — and a single count of pos-session of a dangerous weap-

on while under the influence of alcohol — a class B misde-meanor.

Wimmer said officers aren’t sure why Bradley reacted so angrily toward his neighbors, but did say that Bradley has a history of substance abuse.

During court proceedings Friday, Bradley was appointed a public defender to represent him. Bail was set at $50,000.

He will appear in court next on July [email protected]

Man charged for threatening neighbors with gun

photography / Maegan Burr

Leann Hammond places chocolate milk on a tray Monday afternoon at Harris Elementary School. The summer lunch pro-gram offers breakfast and lunch for children and their parents from anywhere in the Tooele County School District.

The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes news items from the local busi-ness community of 150 words or less. Businesses can send news of awards, promotions, internal milestones, new business ven-tures, new hires, relocations, part-nerships, major transactions and other items to Missy Thompson via e-mail at [email protected], via fax at (435) 882-6123, or via regular mail at P.O. Box 390, Tooele, UT 84074.

BUSINESS BRIEFS

Jay Bradley

photography / Maegan Burr

Cleo Riggs (left) hands out tickets Monday afternoon for Tooele County School District’s summer lunch program at Harris Elementary on June 22. The district has been serving about 450 meals per day.

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A3TUESDAY June 30, 2009

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Utah Lic. #368167-4601

by Jamie Belnap

STAFF WRITER

The Tooele County Attorney’s Office filed charges last week against a Grantsville man who allegedly molested his grand-daughter three years ago.

David Ronald Gladden, 62, was brought in for questioning at the Grantsville Police Department in January of this year after it was reported that he had rubbed the breasts of his then 10-year-old granddaughter on two separate occasions back in the spring of 2006, according to Detective Dan Chamberlain of the Grantsville City Police Department.

Both incidents took place in Tooele City. Details about the case weren’t revealed by the victim until earlier this year, which accounts for the delay in investigating and charging.

“A delay in reporting these types of crimes is common because a victim might feel embarrassed and not want to get someone they

love in trouble,” Chamberlain said. “They feel very uncertain about what will happen if they report it.”

Gladden was charged Thursday with one count of aggravated sex abuse of a child — a third-degree felony.

He will make his first appear-ance in court on July [email protected]

G-ville man charged with molesting granddaughter

David Ronald Gladden

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Tooele City Parks and Recreation decided one day isn’t enough to cele-brate Independence Day and will be sponsoring a different activity every night this week leading up to the weekend’s big Saturday blowout.

“Everybody comes home for the Fourth,” said Kathy Bell, director of Tooele City Parks and Recreation. “Traditionally Tooele has had a big hometown celebration, and if we provide enough activities we’ll have more people stay in town to cel-ebrate.”

This is the third year the city has continued its new tradition of cel-ebrating throughout the entire week. Bell said the idea came from her husband, who had been in charge of his hometown Fourth of July cel-ebrations in Idaho before moving to Tooele.

“It’s a little exhausting, but it’s so much fun to have a longer celebra-tion,” Bell said.

Last night, the 23rd Army Rock Band volunteered their services for a free concert in the Tooele City Park, and tonight at 7 p.m. the city is host-ing a karaoke contest in the park. Contestants don’t have to pay an

entry fee, and the city will be award-ing prizes for first, second, and third place.

“We’ve had such a great time and turnout in the past, and every year we get more and more participa-tion,” Bell said.

The rest of Tooele’s week long celebration includes a magic show with Magic Man Mike at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, a family outdoor movie at 9 p.m. on Thursday with popcorn provided by the city, and a car show at 6 p.m. on Friday with entertain-ment provided by local bands.

The city can’t advertise the name of the outdoor movie due to copy-right laws, but Bell said the movie has a PG rating.

“We just encourage everyone to come out to the park with their blan-kets and lawn chairs and have a good time,” said Bell.

All weekday events will be held at Swimming Pool Park, located at 200 W. Vine street next to the Pratt Aquatic Center, and are free of charge.

The Bit and Spur Rodeo will also start on Friday at 8 p.m. at the Deseret Peak Complex as a kickoff to the weekend events. Tickets to the rodeo can be purchased at the gate, or discount tickets can be pur-

chased at Macey’s Food and Drug or Zacatecas Market.

Saturday events in Tooele start at 7 a.m. with the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce breakfast and a 5K run. The parade starts at 9 a.m. with a carnival-like celebration

at the park afterward. At 8 p.m. the Bit and Spur Rodeo continues fol-lowed by a concert by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band at the Tooele High School football field with fireworks after the concert. [email protected]

Tooele celebrating Fourth all week

photography / Maegan Burr

23rd Army Rock Band’s Zach Putman plays the guitar at the Tooele City Park Monday evening kicking off a week of festivities leading up to the 4th of July. This is the third year for the week long event that includes magic and car shows, movies and concerts.

Each city in the valley abides by slightly different curfew restric-tions. In Grantsville, any youth under the age of 16 is in violation if they are out unsupervised between 10:30 p.m. and 4 a.m. That time is adjusted to midnight to 4 a.m. for 17- and 18-year-olds. In Tooele City, summer curfew code states that youth 13 and under are not allowed to be without a parent or guardian between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. Youth 14 to 17 years of age are restricted from being out between the hours of 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Finally, Tooele County code bans youth under age 13 from roaming the streets between 10:30 p.m. and 5:30 a.m., with youth aged 14 to 17 being required to be inside between

midnight and 5 a.m. Only Tooele City’s summer curfew adjusts to a slightly later start time in the summer. The curfew for Grantsville City and the county are function-ing year-round.

Park said having a curfew set up is really the only way to provide his officers with the ability to check up on adolescents walking the street at night — potentially deterring a crime before it happens.

“If a deputy is driving down the street in Stansbury and he sees a group of kids at 1 or 2 in the morn-ing, a curfew gives him the right to see what they are doing,” Park said.

It’s up to individual patrol offi-cers on how best to handle curfew violations. Sometimes just a warn-ing will be issued. Other times, especially if questionable behavior is discovered or the juvenile has

been warned previously, offenders will be written out a citation and required to visit juvenile court to resolve the situation, Park said. The typical fee for a first-time offender with no previous record is $25 and possibly some community service, according to the Tooele County Juvenile Court. After offenders are warned or appropriately cited they are escorted home by police, as the county’s new Youth Services Center is not currently staffed to handle any youth brought in after 8 p.m., according to Tooele City Police Chief Ron Kirby.

In Tooele City, curfew violators are picked up all over town, with no particular area experiencing more violations. In Tooele County, however, violations are usually lim-ited to more populated areas like Stansbury Park.

“Any place that’s got a neighbor-

hood that is accessible to kids on foot is where we see it most,” Park said.

While not all juveniles out after curfew are connected to crime, Kirby said enforcing curfew for all juveniles is the only way the city can work to curb vandalism, which more often than not is connected to teens rather than adults.

Park agreed, saying that late-night juvenile crime will only begin to decrease when more parents step up and take a proactive stance on their children’s whereabouts.

“The only combative thing we’ve got is for parents to keep a han-dle on what their kids are doing,” Park said. “If there is a preventative thing out there, it’s for parents to take a proactive role.”[email protected]

Curfew continued from page A1

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valassis-tooele transcript-bulletin_5.92x10.75_wk4.indd 1 6/23/09 8:04:54 AM

A3

Housing development questionableThe 700-plus housing development

just north of Tooele City hasn’t received much press (“Planners: Large Big Creek development needs further study,” June 18). Do Pine Canyon, Erda, and Tooele residents have the facts about this pro-posal? The developer plans to sink new wells and has already received county commission approval in special service districts to create what amounts to a mini-city. The Tooele County Planning Commission comments on the proj-ect varied, but did not address why this project should move forward with a zoning change from RR-5 to R-1-8, when for other projects they required justification. At the last meeting, when questioned about Tooele County wet-lands impact, planning commission members had no comment. When the question of water availability was posed, there were no real answers, only vague comments by the developer to “monitor” surrounding wells. Tooele City’s Web site states Tooele City’s water table is seriously low. Where does the county think new well water is coming from? Tooele City justifiably refuses to

provide police, fire or other emergency services to this area. The next closest fire station is in Stansbury. Where are services coming from? Tooele City rec-ommends against this project, and the county is still considering it. We need the same level of involvement in this issue as we’re getting with the power lines. The next planning meeting is July 1 at 7 p.m. Get involved with public comments.Anita DalrymplePine Canyon

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

Voice of Tooele County since 1894

Jeff BarrusEditor

Scott C. DunnPresident and Publisher

Joel J. DunnPublisher Emeritus

OUR VIEW

The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes let-ters 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. Priority will be given to letters that refer to a recent article in the newspaper. 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 writ-ing a longer guest op-ed column on a topic of general interest should contact Editor Jeff Barrus directly via the contact information at the top of this page.

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

LETTERS POLICY

GUEST OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editor Jeff [email protected]

(435) 882-0050

LETTER CONTEST

Each 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 pres-ent subscription.

TUESDAY June 30, 2009A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by the Transcript-Bulletin editorial board

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

Shaunti Feldhahn (commentary):I am grieved at how poorly America is

perceived around the globe. I had hoped that President Obama would use his immense foreign popularity to challenge the unjustified misconceptions that have built up over the years. But his recent overtures to other countries risk con-firming their suspicions.

It is one thing for Americans to take responsibility for ways we have failed — to say that we aren’t perfect. It is an entirely different thing to try to find equal ground by downplaying the bar-barism of terrorists and magnifying our own problems out of proportion. Obama’s June speech to the Muslim world compared the CIA’s involvement in Iran 50 years ago with that of Iran’s decades-long regime of ter-ror, saying, “Iran has played a role in acts of hostage-tak-ing and violence against U.S. troops and civilians.” As Charles Krauthammer incredulously repeated in The Washington Post: “’Played a role?!’”

Recently, I asked one of my non-American friends why America was per-ceived so poorly. He said:

“People like me grew up very aware that things weren’t equal in the world — that one country had far more wealth and power. But we all knew that America and its people were good. At least this giant power used its power well. But today, people no longer trust that America is good and will use its power well. And that leads to fear and hatred.”

The worry about whether we are “good” did not just start with our war on terror. As Nile Gardiner at the Heritage Foundation explained in a recent inter-view:

“Anti-Americanism has been around for a long time. The notion that George W. Bush created this sentiment is simply ludicrous.”

With 24-hour television, those who unreasonably hate us will always have a venue to spread lies and encourage oth-ers to do the same. It is naive to believe otherwise. So when Americans broad-cast moral ambivalence about our great country, it only makes the perception worse. Perhaps I am myself naive, but I continue to hope our popular new lead-ers will use their platform to broadcast the message we used to share proudly — that we are a good country and we do want to use our power well.

Because if our own leadership doesn’t seem to believe that, no one else will.

Shaunti ([email protected]) is a conservative Christian author and speak-er, and married mother of two children.

Andrea Sarvady (rebuttal):

When George W. Bush left office, he gave many exit interviews with the press, often showing a more reflective side of his nature. Asked by ABC news about the reasons for Obama’s win, he responded, in part, with, “I think most people voted for Barack Obama because they decided they wanted him to be in their living room for the next four years explaining policy.”

President Bush was right, and the current president’s speech in Cairo was a prime example of why so many of us picked Obama for explainer in chief. Obama’s race speech during the campaign gave us a hint of something that his Middle East speech confirmed: Controversial topics bring out his par-ticular gift for dialogue that both com-

mands respect and fosters understand-ing. In fact, Shaunti’s description of the speech was so unlike my memory of it that I read it again, to see if maybe the diplomatic yet uncompromising talk I recall was in fact a simpering apology for decades of ugly Americanism.

Well, not so much. Violent extrem-ists are pounded on Page 1, and unfair stereotypes foisted on America are expunged by Page 2. Different groups are addressed throughout the speech, but hardly with equivalency. Al-Qaida is demonized, whereas Israelis and Palestinians are simply asked to eschew violence and acknowledge each other’s right to a peaceful existence.

As Shaunti’s friend said, “people no longer trust that America is good

and will use its power well.” Countless polls bear that out, showing that although anti-American sentiment is noth-ing new, it spiked significantly since our involvement in Iraq.

Fortunately, that tone is soft-ening. A McClatchy/Ipsos poll conducted in six Arab nations

found that citizens feel Obama will have a positive impact on the Middle East, even though their opinion of the U.S. remains low. The poll’s synopsis sug-gests that “there is an opportunity for the president to literally ‘bridge the gap’ where his repository of good will lifts the good will towards America.”

Obama’s poll numbers worldwide are bound to have a positive impact. Still, I don’t think his talents in this arena will comfort all those grieving about our international reputation. For some mourners, the pain isn’t made worse by how the message is delivered, but by who gets to be the messenger.

Andrea ([email protected]) is a writer and educator specializing in counseling, and a married mother of three.

Should Americans criticize U.S. overseas?

Andrea Sarvady GUEST COLUMNIST

Shaunti Feldhahn GUEST COLUMNIST

Over the last two weeks, the Transcript-Bulletin has reported on the process by which artists and vendors gain access to the Tooele Arts Festival (“What’s art? Decision can be tough for festival jury,” June 18), the festival’s funding and spending (“Arts festival works to balance rising crowds, limited funding,” June 25) and the lack of public information available on Tooele County government’s Web site (“County one of Utah’s worst for providing info via the Web,” June 25).

The common denominator in all three of these stories is a disturbing lack of transparency on the part of officials entrusted with public money.

This year’s Tooele Arts Festival continued an upward trend of better artwork, more unique foods and some great musical entertainment. The crowds were large and folks appeared to be having a wonderful time over the course of a beautiful summer weekend. Much of the credit for that needs to be spread among co-advi-sors Susan Cummings and Dave Ayala, and many volunteers who work behind the scenes to make the festival a hit.

But, organizationally, the festival still has work to do. The anonymous jury system used to decide which artists are allowed to sell their wares at the festival and which don’t make the cut is a bad idea. Organizers contend that nobody will want to serve on the jury if their names are known and their decisions criticized. But the festival is partially funded by taxpayers, and when you accept the public’s money, you take on the condition of transparency in return. We wouldn’t let the members of city councils, planning commissions or various appointed boards — all of whom make considerably more impactful and potentially controversial decisions — hide behind anonymity, and we shouldn’t let an arts festival jury do that either. The public has a right to know who these jurors are, partially so they can examine any possible con-nections to the vendors they allow in.

The festival, which enjoys nonprofit status, also needs to be more forthcoming on how it uses public money. Cummings’ refusal to provide the newspaper — and thus the public — with exact financial information on the festival’s past revenues, expenditures and profits or losses is regrettable. The spirit of the arts is one of open-ness. The Tooele Arts Festival should take a page from the Utah Arts Festival, whose mission statement emphasizes that it is “a professionally administered, fiscally responsible organization,” by opening its books to the public — and perhaps even providing a section on finances on its own Web site.

Speaking of Web sites, a recent study of county government Web sites across the nation by the Sunshine Review found that Tooele County government had one of the poorest sites in Utah in terms of the information it made available to taxpayers. The Internet is a wonderful tool for dispersing public information, yet the county doesn’t even put its own budget on its Web site. Nor does it provide any details on contracts it enters into, or any information on tax rates or total taxes collected.

Providing this information isn’t a function of money or manpower. In fact, the only Utah counties that scored worse than Tooele County were Carbon, Garfield, Iron, Piute and Wayne.

In the end, transparency is a process, rather than a final result. These examples from the Tooele Arts Festival and Tooele County government don’t illustrate failure but rather shortcomings that can and should be improved. It was encouraging to hear Commissioner Jerry Hurst admit the county needs to do a better job of making public information available via its Web site. That’s an attitude we hope all public officials will adopt.

Arts fest, county Web site show transparency need

You’ve seen the signs of the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce’s efforts to “Come Together” in

store windows encouraging local shopping. But this business effort is just one of the three components of economic strength in a sluggish economy — government entities and citizens must also be fully committed to avoid the woes faced by other areas. It’s all about teamwork.

The recent establishment of a business resource center as part of the Tooele County Economic Development Department’s efforts has the potential to help improve the economic health and viability of Tooele. Healthy business translates into savings in everyone’s pocket and continued quality of services from city and county agencies. The business resource center investment signals leaders’ increased commitment to help this county’s businesses thrive when others are not. The resource center provides no-cost assistance to all of the county’s businesses, new and old, from home businesses to existing stores and service providers. It was mostly funded from sources outside of Tooele, and brings federal and state services, and funding, into the county.

Great football teams have three components: offense, defense and special teams. A weak link keeps teams out of Super Bowls and National Championships. There are three essential components of the Chamber of Commerce’s “Come Together” team: Businesses, government and Tooele’s residents need to come together for the economic well-being of everyone in Tooele. Tooele County’s communi-ties are just starting to recognize the potential contribution of this team but the game has just begun.

Tooele County’s businesses must adopt better ways of delivering quality products and services to successfully compete with out-of-town businesses.

Old ways may no longer be the best ways. Business owners, managers and professional service providers need to focus on improving basic business skills and becoming more effective in serving their customers. Business planning, marketing and other man-agement skills, local employee recruit-ing and training and creative financing solutions all require expertise that’s freely available through the business resource center. Businesses must be more adaptable and creative to serve their customers. Local businesses must realize that many times the com-petition is global, as they must com-pete against online businesses.

County and city governments must continue to invest in the businesses of Tooele County. The benefits of each dollar spent in Tooele outweigh any marginal tax increases on a dollar spent elsewhere. The investment sup-porting the business resource center provides assistance to successful cre-ation and expansion of business.

The people of Tooele County need to join the team, obtaining goods and services from their neighbors and other county businesses and saving money by doing so. One less night in Salt Lake and one more look in Tooele is part of the solution — especially businesses working hard to survive.

The business resource center is part of a team effort making contributions to strengthen Tooele County’s econ-omy. Business success is more than putting a sign in a window. Economic health is a team effort. Join the team.

Glen Lowry is the manager of the Tooele County Business Resource Center.

Teamwork needed to help businesses grow

Glen LowryGUEST COLUMNIST

TUESDAY June 30, 2009

22 classifications, including teacher aides, cooks, secretaries, custodians, computer techni-cians, bus drivers, administra-tive assistants and mechanics.

Under the new contract, the starting salary for classified staff will range from $9.05 per hour for a teachers aide to $17.91 for a computer technician.

While there will be no across-the-board cost-of-living increas-es, the school district is fund-ing salary schedule steps, which are upward adjustments in pay based on experience, for all employees.

For example, a first-year teach-er aide made $9.05 last year. If that person returns to work this upcoming school year, they will be on the second step of the sal-ary chart making $9.75 per hour.

However, on the classified schedule, there are gaps in the steps. They go up annually from year one to year six, but after-ward only take place every five years and stop at 16 years.

Without a cost-of-living increase, classified staff between pay steps will see a 1.7 percent drop in their pay due to the fur-lough.

The salary schedule for teach-ers, or certified staff, will go from $33,009 to $31,793 for a begin-ning teacher with a bachelor’s degree. At the top end of the cer-tified pay scale, a teacher with a master’s degree plus 45 credits of approved course work will make $57,128 this upcoming school year compared to $58,045 last year.

As with the classified staff, the certified salary schedule includes increases in pay based on experi-ence — vertical “steps” on the

salary chart — and increased based upon completing addi-tional educational requirements — horizontal “lanes” on the salary chart. The effect of the furlough on total pay depends on where a teacher is on the district’s salary schedule.

A second-year teacher who made $33,009 in their first year will make $32,908 this upcoming school year. That’s a decrease of less than 1 percent. However, a teacher with a master’s degree and nine years experience who made $45,227 last year would, with a 10th-year step increase, make $46,354 in the upcom-ing school year — a 2.5 percent increase.

Teachers with more than 14 years of experience are beyond the last step on the salary sched-ule. Those teachers will realize a 1.5 percent drop in salary this year as the result of the fur-lough because they will have no increase in salary due to a step change.

“The first two days of the fur-lough were taken to contribute to the district’s cost savings mea-

sures,” said Bob Gowans, pres-ident of the Tooele Education Association. “The money saved from the third day of the fur-lough is intended to fund the step and lane increases which will help soften the blow of no cost-of-living increase for most teachers.”

The average teacher in the district makes around $36,000 a year, according to Gowans.

“In the last few years, the dis-trict has hired a lot of new and younger teachers,” said Gowans. “Which skews our average salary towards the lower end of the pay scale.”

The district’s administrators have contracts in line with those negotiated with other employ-ees, according to Tooele County School District Superintendent Terry Linares.

“Principals and administrators have already said that they will also agree to the same no-cost-of-living increase and three-day furlough,” said Linares. “That will make it an across-the-board agreement for all employees.” [email protected]

Payroll continued from page A1

dents to survey their yards for any standing water that mosquitos could breed in via a new cam-paign called “Drain It, Replace It or Dunk It.” The campaign aims to educate people about the need to drain unnecessary standing water from places like inside old tires, for example, and turn potential rainwater collectors like wheel-barrows over so water doesn’t col-lect in them. It also encourages people to replace standing water in items like birdbaths twice a week. Replacing the water keeps mosquito eggs from hatching.

People with larger bodies of water that cannot be drained or easily replaced — such as the own-ers of tanks, ponds and swimming pools — are encouraged to put mosquito dunks in their standing water. A mosquito dunk is a three-inch ring that releases an agent that kills mosquito larvae but is harmless to people and animals.

“We’re really encouraging res-idents to go out and get those mosquito dunks,” said Bucky Whitehouse, public informa-tion officer for the Tooele County Health Department. “You can buy them in any home and garden store. They’re pretty inexpensive and harmless to pets and people.”

The mosquitoes found breed-ing in standing water in backyards are the tarsalis mosquitos, which can carry West Nile after hatching, according to Brand. These mos-quitoes don’t bite during the day,

but are particularly aggressive at dusk and dawn.

“Right now, we’re finding eggs in buckets or any kind of contain-er that’s been left out in the rain,” Brand said. “With the holiday weekend coming up and people planning picnics and barbecues outside, residents need to watch for places in their own yards where mosquitos can breed.”

Basic protection against West Nile involves using a bug spray containing DEET and wearing long sleeves and pants at dusk and dawn, when mosquitos are out in full force.

Last year, Tooele County had two individuals infected with West Nile, both in the 50-64 age group. One case was a serum conver-sion case where the individual

was infected with West Nile and didn’t know it until their blood was screened after donating to a local blood bank. The other indi-vidual was infected with a neuro-invasive form of the disease and, as of this spring, was recovering, according to Brand.

Whitehouse estimates Tooele County has averaged two human cases annually since West Nile detection has been available in the county, starting in August 2006. There have yet to be any local deaths resulting from the virus.

“We stress prevention because the elderly and young children infected by it tend to develop neu-rological issues from the virus,” Whitehouse said. “Those effects also tend to be long lasting.”[email protected]

Threat continued from page A1

A5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Emma Penrod

CORRESPONDENT

Students and staff at Tooele’s Utah State University Regional Campus have found a way to alleviate the current shortage at the food bank and have some fun at the same time.

Student representatives Rachel Anderson and Randi Gamble launched a campus-wide food drive on June 22 in response to a call for donations at the Tooele County Food Bank.

These student-run food drives are a kind of tradition at Tooele’s USU campus, but the need for donations usually comes later in the year near Thanksgiving and Christmas. This year, requests for donations began early, and despite this being their summer break, stu-dents were more than willing to help.

“There seemed to be a tremendous need, and the student’s didn’t want to wait for fall semester to start,” said academic adviser Suzanne Anderson.

Anderson said the school also encour-aged the drive.

“[Community service] is an important aspect of any student’s education,” she said. “They should take serious interest in their community and help out where they can.”

In hopes of increasing the number of donations gathered before the drive’s end

date on July 10, students were pitted against staff and faculty in a contest of generos-ity. Now a week into the competition, the two teams remain close, alternating taking the lead at different times of the day. The students were in the lead as of Monday afternoon.

“We’ve had a great response,” Anderson said. “Everybody is in a competitive spir-it and trying to outdo each other, which means more food.”

But while the competitive spirit adds to students’ enthusiasm for the drive, the goal remains donating a large amount of food to the food bank.

“There’s no prize involved, just bragging rights,” Anderson said. “The goal is to raise as much food as we possibly can.”

While the school’s contest will likely remain between students and faculty, all members of the community are welcome to participate in the food drive. Donations of items such as canned soup, crackers, oatmeal, mayonnaise, mustard, and canned tomato products are encouraged, as the food bank’s supplies of these are particularly low.

Those interested in contributing should bring their donations to the USU Tooele Regional Campus, 1021 W. Vine St. There are two boxes set up in the front lobby for food drive donations.

USU-Tooele assists food bank with student vs. faculty competition

photography / Maegan Burr

The USU-Tooele Regional Campus is sponsoring a food drive to donate to the local food bank.

photography / Maegan Burr

Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement District employee Dennis Workman drops larvae into a vial taken from standing water in a Lake Point horse trough Monday afternoon.

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Patsy Peek and Gina Meredith (center l-r) participate in a workshop with 58 other teachers at Tooele County School District office in May 2008. The school district is incorporating a three-day furlough into the 2009-10 school year for all employees.

A5

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Live in Concert

Nitty GrittyDirt Band

Saturday July 4thTooele High School Football Field

Tickets $5 for General Admission Bleacher SeatingTickets available at Tooele City Hall and Macey’s Food & Drug.

Gates will open at 7:00 p.m., concert starts at 8:00 p.m.No coolers allowed.

Fireworks after the concert!For more information contact

Tooele City Parks and Recreation at (435) 843-2143

A5

TUESDAY June 30, 2009TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINA6

REEL TALK

As a director, if your goal is to make audiences cry, doing so with a child who

is dying of cancer is the best way to go. The material itself needs little more than decent actors to pull off OK performances in order to accomplish a tearjerker film. Director Nick Cassavetes treads these waters between heartwarming and melodramatic in “My Sister’s Keeper.”

For the most part, “My Sister’s Keeper” ends up being heart-warming — and heartbreak-ing — but it didn’t reduce me to tears. That may be because every time I felt my eyes welling up, I’d write something down in my notebook. However, almost everyone else in the theater — about 75 percent female — could be heard stifling a sniffle or two.

Of course, a movie about can-cer is going to pull at the heart strings. Almost everyone knows of at least one person who has or had cancer, which is why the main message of “My Sister’s Keeper” is universal: Letting someone go who has come to terms with death is one of the

hardest things to do.I was worried “My Sister’s

Keeper,” based on the novel by Jodi Picoult, would try too hard to hit audiences over the head with its cancer message. And it does, a little bit. Cassavetes, who penned the screenplay with Jeremy Leven, however, used an interesting approach of captur-ing time.

The story jumps back and forth between when Kate Fitzgerald (Sofia Vassilieva) was diagnosed with leukemia and the present day. This jumping becomes confusing after awhile, especially when Kate’s mother Sara (Cameron Diaz) shaves her head then — in what is pre-sumed to be the next chronolog-ical scene — her blonde tresses are back. This may be an over-looked continuity error, but it is certainly distracting. The flash-

backs are necessary in divulging key plot points, but Cassavetes gets carried away.

“My Sister’s Keeper” is told through the eyes of Anna Fitzgerald (Abigail Breslin), whose older sister was diag-nosed with cancer when she was 2 years old. Neither Kate’s moth-er nor father Brian (Jason Patric) were matches for a bone marrow transplant, and neither was her brother Jesse (Evan Ellingson). A doctor suggested geneti-cally engineering a child to be a guaranteed 100 percent match, and thus Anna was born. Now, as an 11-year-old, Anna seeks assistance from lawyer Campbell Alexander (Alec Baldwin) for medical emancipation from her parents so they’ll stop relying on her body parts to keep Kate alive.

Sara will do anything to keep her oldest daughter alive. This causes strain on her relation-ship with Anna and her husband Brian. It isn’t that Anna doesn’t want to keep her sister alive, but that she was never asked to give her platelets or bone marrow or anything else Kate needed. Through flashbacks, Kate is shown in the early stages of her cancer fight before she needed chemotherapy. The one thing that kept her going from day to day was Taylor (Thomas Dekker). Taylor also had can-cer and he immediately caught Kate’s attention. Before long they cared deeply for each other even after Kate relapsed. Sadly, the cancer took over Taylor before too long.

Kate’s cancer continues to get worse, but Anna is determined to get the medical emancipa-tion. The judge in the case (Joan Cusack) wants to hear both sides of the story from Anna, Sara and Kate before making a final decision if Anna should have to succumb to yet another bone marrow transplant surgery. What Sara doesn’t understand is that

her daughter has accepted death and is in so much pain she is ready to die.

“My Sister’s Keeper” has heartwrenching and eye-rolling moments. At its best, it’s a beau-tifully told story and at its corny times it could cause audiences to snicker. But, it’s not a bad movie by any means. If you’re looking for the anti-summer blockbuster,

this might be [email protected]

‘My Sister’s Keeper’ teeters between poignancy and melodrama

FLICK AT A GLANCE

Missy ThompsonSTAFF WRITER

Miss

photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Anna (Abigail Breslin, laying) seeks medical emancipation from her parents so as not to give more bone marrow to her leukemia-stricken sister Kate (Sofia Vassilieva, sitting) in “My Sister’s Keeper.”

Grade: B-Rated: PG-13Time: 109 minutesNow playing

photography / Maegan Burr

Waste Management district manager Patrick Craig shows an empty cell at the Tekoi Balefill on the Goshute Indian Reservation Tuesday morning in Skull Valley. The landfill hopes to change its lease agreement to ensure future viability.

based on the amount of waste received. About eight people

are employed at Tekoi, which includes some members of the tribe, according to Hayward.

On May 26, the executive committee of the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians made

a resolution to approve the pro-posed amendments to the exist-ing lease to allow for the dis-posal of loose waste. Lawrence Bear, chairman of the Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians, is strongly in favor of allowing for loose waste as a means of continued economic activity.

“I’m loving it,” Bear said. “They’re going to bring in more waste.”

Margene Bullcreek, who along with Ohngo Gaudadeh Devia, led the opposition to the proposed Private Fuel Storage nuclear waste storage facility on the reservation, said she doesn’t think the amount of money the tribe receives from Tekoi is worth the waste stored there.

“We have this waste on our reservation and it just seems like it’s not ending, and all because of money,” she said. “People have got to have money to be

able to work and provide, but is all that worth it?”

She added she’s concerned about the environmental and health impacts the landfill may pose.

“The PFS would be more dan-gerous than this waste here, but it’s still waste,” Bullcreek said.

To read the draft EA, access online at ftp.hansenallen-luce.com/outgoing and select Tekoi Draft Environmental Assessment.pdf. Provide com-ments on the draft EA by con-tacting Wendell J. Bruce, BIA Environmental Protection Specialist, Uintah & Ouray Agency, P.O. Box 130, 988 South 7500 East, Fort Duchesne, Utah 84026, phone 435-722-4328, fax 435-722-2323, e-mail [email protected]. Comments must be submitted before close of business July [email protected]

Tekoi continued from page A1

Get to know Tooele County, subscribe to the

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A6

Monday – June 29 23rd Army Rock Band7:00 pm City Park, 200 W. & Vine

For more information contact Tooele City Parks & Recreation 843-2143

Tuesday June 30 Karaoke ContestCity Park, 200 W. & Vine

3:00 pm Open Microphone Karaoke

6:00 pm Karaoke ContestAll those wishing to participate should Pre-register by calling Ron Baum 843-3584

Wednesday July 1 Magic Man Mike at City Park200 W. & Vine

7:00 pm Bring your blanket or chair to enjoy afun filled magic show for all ages! Formore information call 843-2143.

Thursday – July 2 Family Movie in the Park9:00 pm City Park, 200 W. & Vine

For more information contact Tooele City parks & Recreation 843-2143

Friday – July 3 Car Show6:00 pm City Park, 200 W. & Vine

For more information on the Car Showcall Ruben or Susan Trujillo 882-5496. Car Show will also be on July 4th.

8:00 pm Tooele Bit & Spur Rodeo

Deseret Peak complex

2930 W. Highway 12Tickets will be available at the gate, or discount advance tickets can be purchased at Macey’s Food & Drug, Zacatecas Market. Mutton Bustin and Wild Cow Milking for sign-ups call 801-661-5319Sign-ups by June 29th.Rodeo contestant sign-ups – call BrokenHeart Rodeo at 801-774-9509 beginingJune 26th after 6:00 pm.

Saturday – July 4 Chamber of Commerce Breakfast7 – 8:30 am Veteran’s Memorial Park

Main & Vine StreetFor more information contact the Tooele Chamber of Commerce 882-0690.

7:00 am 5K RunRun will begin on SkylineRegistration will be at 7:00 am or visitwww.tooelecity.org for registration forms and information. For more information contact Karen Perry 830-7846.

9:00 am Fly over by Jets from Hill Air Force Base(approximately)

9:00 am ParadeFor any questions about the parade please Call Tooele City Parks & Recreation 843-2143.

After Parade- Park Activities / Entertainment / Car ShowCity Park, 200 W. & Vine StreetFor more information about park activities / Booths contact Tooele City Parks & Recreation 843-2143.For more information on entertainment contact Susan Trujillo 882-5496.City Park, 200 W. & Vine StreetFor more information on the car showcontact Ruben or Susan Trujillo 882-5496.

8:00 pm Bit & Spur RodeoDeseret Peak Complex2930 W. Highway 112

8:00 pm Nitty Gritty Dirt BandTooele High School Football Field.Tickets $5 for general admissionbleacher seating. Tickets available at Tooele City Hall and Macey’s Food& Drug. Gates will open at 7:00 pm.No coolers allowed.For more information contact TooeleCity Parks and Recreation. 843-2143

10:00 pm FireworksTooele High SchoolFootball Field – After concert

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★

Tooele City4th of July Celebration 2009

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★

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Grand Marshal: the late Phil Koslowski ★ Honorary Grand Marshal: George W. Diehl★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★

�������������������������������������

Frank

MOHLMANAttorney at Law

FREEConsultation

forWills & Trusts

493 W. 400 N. Tooele882-4800

www.schmutzmohlman.com

Todd MadsenApril 6, 1966 – June 30, 2004

Death leaves a heartache no one can heal;Love leaves amemory no

one can steal.We love and

miss youevery day.

Love-Your family

A6

TUESDAY June 30, 2009 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A7

John Brewer

On Sunday, June 28, 2009, our beloved husband, father, grand-father and friend John Brewer peacefully left this world from his home, after a long, hard-fought battle with heart disease. He was 58.

John was born on May 4, 1951 in Rifle, Colo. and later moved to San Antonio, Texas. He enlist-ed in the United States Marine Corp and fought valiantly for our country for two years in Vietnam. After his service, he came to Utah where he met his sweetheart of 38 years, Lori Brewer. They dated for five years and were married on June 15, 1976; they had just celebrated their 33rd wedding anniversary at his passing. John and Lori have three children: Ricki, Daniel and Greg, also two grandchildren, Aubrie and Riley.

John lived a fulfilling life, enjoy-ing a good debate and expressing his opinion freely. He was very personable and made friends easily. Growing up in Texas gave him an appreciation for American history and he always marveled at the wonder of the

Alamo. He also enjoyed keeping track of the U.S. space program, and you could always find him watching the NASA channel and talking about the seven original astronauts. He was proud to fight for our country in Vietnam and was an avid supporter of veter-ans and the soldiers fighting for us today in the Middle East.

John was preceded in death by his father, a brother and a niece. He is survived by his wife, Lori, and his children; Ricki (Jake) Hansen, Daniel and Greg; his mother Roberta; three brothers: Tom (Sharon), Terry (Penny) and Jess (Tina); two grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.

A celebration of his life will be held on Friday, July 3 at 11 a.m. at the LDS church located at 1000

OBITUARY A7

SMOKING JOES LA HISPANIA

MIRASTARTOP STOP CHEVRON

FLYING J INCQUALITY QUIK STOP

WALGREENSVINE STREET MARKET

SOELBERGS THRIFTWAYFREDS SUPERMARKET

ANDERSONS HANDY CORNER INCBONUS STAR MARTALBERTSON’S #368

SANDYS SMOKE SHOPGRANTSVILLE WAY STATION ASSOCIATION

Top STOP CHEVRON7-ELEVEN #19587

THOMPSONS SMOKEHOUSECLOVER CREEK

GOFER FOODS OF TOOELEPREMIUM OIL CHEVERON

JAY SERVICEHOLLIDAY OIL

MAVERIK COUNTRY STORE #234R PLACE

LAKE POINT (SHELL)TA OPERATING CORPROUND 2 INC TEXICO

MACEY’S INCTOOELE #24 (WALKER’S)HOME TOWN BAKERY

WAL-MART SUPERCENTER #1440BONUS STAR MART

DELLE AUTO TRUCK STOP INCSILVER SAGE STATION

MAVERIK (TOOELE)STOCKTON STATION

MAVERIK COUNTRY STORE (GRANTSVILLE)

Congratulations Tooele County! There were no sales of Tobacco to underage buyers during

Round Four checks of the Tooele County Tobacco Compliance Testing.

A Big Thanks To…

We couldn’t have done it without you!

HEALTH DEPARTMENT

OBITUARY A7

OBITUARIES

June Imogene Metcalf Beloved mother, grandmother,

great-grandmother and loving friend, June Imogene Metcalf has left her loving family and friends by her recent passing on June 24, 2009. She is survived by her daughters, Cheryl Burgess (hus-band Peter Burgess) Diann Lewis (husband David Lewis) and Susan Brennan (husband Thomas Brennan). She also leaves behind her grandchildren Ian, Sara, and Paige Lewis, Meredith, Craig and Noli Brennan, Benjamin Josh and Seth Hanson. June had three great-grandchildren, Hunter and Gracie Lewis and Paitynn Gederberg. June was preceded in death by her adored son, Craig, her mother and father, Seth and Erma Cole and two brothers, Seth and Wendell. June will never

be forgotten by those who loved her and will be forever missed. Graveside services will be held on Wednesday July 1, 2009 at 1 p.m. in the Tooele City Cemetery. There will be no viewing.

Dennis “Gary” Price Dennis “Gary” Price returned

to the presence of his Heavenly Father’s love after having his life ended by cancer and complica-tions related to diabetes. He died peacefully with family by his side on Friday, June 26, 2009.

Although he has suffered with many health issues, many of those who knew Gary came to know his humor and wit. He was always happy to see his family and friends and was proud of the accomplishments of his children and grandchildren.

Gary served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in England where he met his first wife, Patricia. After honorably serving his mission, he married Patricia and both were blessed with five children. Gary served his country in the National Guard. Gary drove trucks like his dad “Bish” for a few years of his life until he was injured at work. He learned a new trade as a draftsman and worked as a technical illustrator at Tooele Army Depot until he took medical retirement. In the years that followed, he remar-

ried. Gary and Sheryl shared many good years together.

Among those who were there to greet him on the other side of the veil were his parents, Grace Trease and Angus Golden “Bish” Price, his second wife, Sheryl, and his beloved son, Steven. He now walks with them unencum-bered by his physical body.

He is survived by his two brothers, Carl (Carol) of Ogden, and Ron (Donna) of Payson; four children, Corey (Amy) of Tooele, Charlotte (Shawn) of Farmington, Matt (Trista) of

Grantsville, and Hayley of Salt Lake City; and 11 grandchildren, Corbin, Kaiden, Jared, Madison, Rosie, Steven, Gracie, Connor, Breeanna, Walker and Carey.

There will be an evening viewing Tuesday, June 30 from 7-8 p.m. at the same place his funeral will be. Funeral ser-vices will be held in the LDS chapel at 415 West Apple Street in Grantsville. Another viewing will be Wednesday, July 1 from 9:30 - 10:30 a.m. with the funeral beginning at 11 a.m.

Edgar Olof “Mac” McAlister

Mac passed away June 18 at the Mason Valley Residence in Yerington, Nev. Services will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday, July 7, at St. Alban’s Episcopal Church in Yerington. He was preceded in death by his wife Betsy and sis-ters Helene McAlister and Ella Mae McAlister Stedfeldt. He is survived by four children, Ann, Stephen, Hilary, and Bruce, and nine grandchildren. In lieu of flowers, the family requests a donation to your favorite char-ity, or to ARF, the Animal Rescue Foundation, either through Wells Fargo Bank in Yerington or by mail to ARF, 1112 Berney Rd., Fallon, NV 89406-9112.

Mac was born July 28, 1915 near Horseshoe Bend, Idaho to Seth Harley and Mary Catherine (Mae) Erickson McAlister, and raised in American Falls. Following gradu-ation in 1939 from the University of Idaho with a degree in min-ing engineering, he worked in various mines around the west. During WWII, Mac joined the U.S. Navy, where he served in the South Pacific as a Frogman in Underwater Demolition Team 7. He was awarded the Silver Star for his conduct during the inva-sion of Saipan.

With his naval background in detection technology, he became chief geophysicist for

the Anaconda Company, leading a team which developed electri-cal detection methods for min-eral exploration and was credited as one of several primary devel-opers of induced polarization, a major prospecting technique. It was exciting work that brought him much personal satisfaction and many treasured friendships, throughout a 50-year career.

At the close of the war, Mac met Navy lieutenant Betsy Ann Krichbaum of Upper Montclair, N.J. They were married on March 15, 1947, enjoying near-ly 54 years together, living and raising their family in Darwin, Calif.; Yerington, Nev.; Tooele; and Tucson, Ariz. Mac and Betsy eventually moved back to Yerington.

Following Betsy’s death in 2001, Mac came to live at the

Mason Valley Residence, where he found wonderful friends, and remained involved in help-ing protect Mason Valley water rights, local wells and agricul-ture from proposed reclamation of the Walker River. He was a member of St. Alban’s Episcopal Church in Yerington.

Mac traveled widely in his career and possessed an ency-clopedic knowledge of geogra-phy, geology, and mining pro-duction. He lived an active life of physical and mental devel-opment and self-discipline, as a strong and loving father to his children, teaching them to appreciate nature, encouraging their interests, giving them good starts in life, and providing them and many others with wonderful memories over many years. He will be missed by all.

Winifred Estaline (“Winnie”) Skaates

Winnie Skaates died Staurday, June 27, at the age of 88. She was born on Aug. 26, 1920 to Milton and Abbie Skaates, at Yonkers, New York. She joined the US Army Air Corps shortly after Pearl Harbor, and remained in the service until 1946, achiev-ing the rank of First Lieutenant, and the responsibility of com-manding a squadron of 83 men and a few other WACs.

Vivacious and gregarious, wherever Winnie went she made many friends, and kept them throughout her life. She came to Tooele in 2003 after a long career in advertising with Reuben H. Donnelly, where she led the rollout of the national Yellow Pages program. She traveled throughout the country training the Donnelly sales force to sell advertising in multiple telephone

books at once.She was a member of the

Tooele United Methodist Church, and a lifetime member of the American Legion.

She was preceded in death by her parents and her sister Doris Thompson. She is survived by her sister Carolyn, of Stansbury Park, and by her nephews Mike

Taylor of Tooele and Paul Taylor of New York City, and her nieces Dawn Baxter, of Fruitland, Idaho, Alysoun Taylor of Centerville, Ohio, and Helen Taylor of Ojai, Calif.

A memorial service will be held at the Tooele United Methodist Church on Thursday, July 2, at 11 a.m.

John W. Arbon“Wes”

John Wesley Arbon passed away June 29, 2009 of complica-tions due to a stroke.

He was born in Grantsville on Aug. 15, 1933 to William Daley Arbon and Selma Jane Madsen. As a young boy, Wes learned to work hard, be dependable and get the job done. He spent many years doing custom work on farms for other people. He and his brother, Marnel, worked together building their cattle herd and raising crops.

Wes married Linda Miller on Nov. 20, 1959; sealed as a family in the Salt Lake LDS Temple on Aug. 19, 1981. He was active in the LDS Church, holding many positions throughout the years. He was a member of the Millstream Ward in Salt Lake City. Wes proudly served his country in the U.S. Army-stationed in Germany.

In the prime of his life, Wes was diagnosed with heart dis-ease that led to a heart transplant on March 8, 1990. The 19-year gift of life enabled him to enjoy his family, welcome grandchil-dren and continue to work on his farm in Grantsville. He received wonderful medical care from the Utah Cardiac Transplant Team at

Intermountain Medical Center. The family expresses a sincere thank you to the many physi-cians, nurses and other health-care providers that helped Wes over the years. A special thanks to Dale Renlund, M.D. and Sally Brush, FNP who were models of compassion.

The legacy Wes will leave for his family is integrity, loyalty, honesty, kindness and being a good friend to all.

Wes was preceded in death by his parents; and his sister, Sharma Dohner.

He is survived by his wife, Linda; his son, Todd Jay (Tami); daughter, Lisa (Lyle) Tagge; son, Wesley Mark (Chyleen); grandchildren: Kylie, Jake, Kade

and Brock Arbon; Samantha, Savannah and Spencer Tagge; Kate and Wesley Arbon; and two brothers, Marnel and Gary.

Funeral services will be held on Thursday, July 2 at 11 a.m. in the Grant Stake Center, 3153 South 900 East, Salt Lake City. A view-ing will be held at Jenkins-Soffe Mortuary, 4760 S. State Street, on Wednesday evening from 6-8 p.m. and also on Thursday prior to the services at the church from 10-10:45 a.m. Interment: Grantsville City Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, the fam-ily suggests donations to the Perpetual Education Fund.

Online condolences may be shared with the family at www.jenkins-soffe.com.

TooeleFood dropThe Utah Food Bank will be sponsoring a food drop on July 10 at Deseret Peak from 8 a.m. until the food is all distrib-uted. Sign ups begin at 7 a.m. Please remember to bring your driver’s license. If you have questions call Carrie at 843-7667.

Miss Tooele County pageantApplications are now being accepted for the Miss Tooele County Scholarship Pageant that is scheduled for July 18 at 7:30 p.m. at Deseret Peak Complex. There will be $3,500 in scholarships awarded. Candidates will be judged on private interview, talent, on stage questions, evening wear, physical fitness and over-all composite. Candidates must have a high school diploma, or equivalent and be no older than 23 and must be single and never been married. The deadline for all applications, pictures and paper-work is July 7 at noon. Young women interested in participating this pageant should contact Cheryl Adams, as soon as possible at the County Commission Office during the day by calling 843-3150 , or call her cell at 830-6989.

Little Miss PageantThe Little Miss Tooele County Pageant will be held Saturday, July 18 at 10 a.m. at the Deseret Peak Complex. Girls must be residents of Tooele County to enter. Categories: Tiny Miss for ages 3-6, Little Miss for ages 7-9 and Junior Miss for ages 10-12. If your daughter is inter-ested in being a contestant please con-tact Shauna Statham at 435-840-3111 or e-mail at [email protected]. You can go to the Tooele County Fair Web sit, www.tooelefair.com to download the registration form. The entry deadline is Wednesday, July 8.

Mercur reunionThe Mercur Employees Reunion will be held July 18 the Ophir Park. The park is reserved from noon until 11 a.m. the next morning for those that may want to camp. There will be a Dutch oven dinner catered at 6 p.m. If you want to participate in the dinner, please send $15 per person before July 1 (so food can be ordered) to: Theron Taylor, P.O. Box 11, Stockton, UT 84071. Call Theron or Carrie for questions at 435-840-3146 or e-mail to: [email protected].

SoftballNo commitment softball every Tuesday morning at 8 a.m. at Deseret Peak Complex, southeast corner. You have new teammates each week and can play on any Tuesday you can. Any questions call Mike at 602-826-9471.

Kiwanis 5K Freedom RunThe Tooele July 4 race begins at 8:30 a.m. near the LDS church at 777 East Skyline Drive. Runners are urged to sign up in advance at Macey’s, Century 21, or Prudential. A registration form is online at TooeleCity.org. Mail with check to Kiwanis, P.O. Box 1122, Tooele. Registration on July 4 at the church beginning at 7 a.m. A drawing will be held for a guaranteed entry to St. George Marathon. Contact Karen Perry at 435-830-7846 or [email protected].

Pet paradeBring your pet and join our entry in the Fourth of July parade. We will meet at the store at 7:30 a.m. on July 4 for free breakfast and decorations to dress your pets. All pets welcome. Call or visit Rockstar Pets for details, 882-6333 or 762 N. Main Street, Tooele.

THS yearbooksWe are attempting to assemble five full sets of yearbooks from the beginning of Tooele High School through 2009. If you have any yearbooks you do not want, drop them off at one of the follow-ing locations: Tooele Pioneer Museum, Tooele High School, Tooele Senior Center, Tooele City Library or Tooele Valley Railroad Museum. For any ques-tions call Mike Shuler (602) 826-9471.

Ute football signupsTooele Ute Football signups for all ages 8-14 will be held at Tooele High School on July 9 from 6-8 p.m., and July 18 from 8-11 a.m. If you are a new player to Tooele please bring a copy of your birth certificate. Cost is $180. If you have any questions or concerns please call Sherie at 435-850-8597 or 435-882-5656.

TC United fireworks fundraiserFive TC United teams that will be selling fireworks as a fundraiser to earn money for soccer camps and soccer tourna-ments in the Wal-Mart parking on the east end toward Wingers. We know you have a choice in where you purchase your pyro entertainment. However, we would like the opportunity to earn your business. Please come check it out and tell all your friends the only place in town to get their pyro fix is from the TNT tent in the Wal Mart parking lot. We will be giving away four tickets to the MSL All Star game on July 29 against

Everton FC for those who purchase fire-works from us. We are open for business from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. starting through Sunday, July 5.

GrantsvilleLittle Miss GrantsvilleLittle Miss Grantsville will be held July 3 at 2 p.m. at the GHS auditorium. Seventeen girls are participating in the event. Admission is $2.

Fourth of July festivitiesThe Grantsville 4th of July festivities will begin with the flag raising at the Grantsville Fire Department at 8 a.m. and the parade will start at 11 a.m. and the park festivities will start promptly after the parade at 12:30 p.m. If you have questions or parade entries, please direct all questions to Jason Duhon 435-830-9714.

Grantsville irrigationThe Board has issued three regular agri-cultural turns. Metered users are allot-ted 250,000 gallons per share. Please be aware, if arrangements have not been made for extra shares, a fee will be assessed based on the overage. Non-metered users follow these rules: no water more than 1.5 hours each spot, weekly usage eight hours maximum, no open hoses, no water between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Miss Grantsville pageantThe 2009 Miss Grantsville Scholarship Pageant will be held on July 3 at Grantsville High School. Doors will open at 5:30 p.m. Admission is $4 for adults or $2 for students and senior citizen. Questions, please call Grantsville City (Jolene, Kristy, or Jeri) at 884-3411 or Teri Critchlow at 830-8090. We hope to see all of you there.

Names of veterans neededThe Grantsville Business Alliance is requesting names of all past and pres-ent Grantsville veterans or serving mili-tary to honor at the 4th of July parade on our float. Request you call 435-830-4150 (Jill) or 435-249-0540 (Jill or Chris) with name, service entity (Navy, Army, Marine) and dates. We are also looking for veterans who would honor us and ride in the parade on the float.

Stansbury ParkDUP jubileeDaughters of the Utah Pioneers annual jubilee will be held at Benson Grist Mill on July 11 at 10 a.m.

Soccer club registrationStansbury Soccer Club Recreation reg-istration sign-up event will be held Saturday, July 11 from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Clubhouse library. For info or to sign up visit www.stansburysoccer.com or phone 843-7512 or 224-2174.

Cheerleading programThe new Stansbury Stallions cheerlead-ing program is holding cheerleading signups Thursday, July 9 at Stansbury Clubhouse 7-9 p.m. Ages 5-14. Program includes cheering for the Stallions, parades and competitions. We’re the previous owners of Tooele Youth Cheer and Utah All Starz. Call us at 843-0199.

TriathlonThe Stansbury Days Triathlon will take place on Aug. 15 at 7:30 a.m. Registration is open until full. For registration form and more information visit www.stans-burycommunity.org/stansburydays/tri-athlon.htm.

Community yard saleThe Stansbury Park Community Association is hosting a community yard sale for all residents on Saturday, July 11. Our volunteer firefighters will also be cooking up breakfast to raise funds for their station. Bring things to sell and money to buy! Start time is 8 a.m. but if your bringing your yard sale items I would suggest setting up between 7-8 a.m.. Location: It will be in the grassy areas and parking lots sur-rounding just off of Stansbury Parkway (by the Millpond Spa and Improvement District office). Be sure to keep the area clear so traffic can get through to the spa and the parks. Suggested parking for shoppers and for sellers once there stuff is set up would be in the spaces by the playground and skate park. Contact Matt Bell 801-201-1188 with questions.

Summer library programThe Stansbury Park Community Library is holding its Summer Reading Program “Be Creative” on Wednesdays from 4-5 p.m. at the Clubhouse. We also have a special story writing group for ages 10 and up on Tuesdays from 4-5 p.m. We will be writing our own stories in this group. Come for fun, games, treats and great books. More info is now posted on the library door or you can call Jessica (435)843-1918 or Cindy 882-6188.

Entertainment neededEntertainment is needed for Stansbury

Days held on Saturday, Aug. 15. The Stansbury Community Association is booking entertainment for the 35th Annual Stansbury Days Celebration. Please reach out to the board at [email protected] or Stacey Smith at 435-850-1044 if you or your team, group or club have any interest in performing between the hours of 12:30 and 5 p.m. or if you have any additional questions or to request further informa-tion.

ErdaErda DaysErda Days will be held July 17-18. Dinner will be Friday night at 6:30 p.m., $6 per plate, 16 and older. The parade on Saturday starts at 10 a.m. on Erda Way. The car show on Saturday is at 1 p.m. at the church parking lot. Activities will start at the ballpark at noon. A silent auction and raffle will be at 4 p.m.

OphirOphir Day vendorsOphir Day celebration will be held on Saturday, Aug. 1. Vendors are needed. If interested, contact Scott at (435) 224-4904.

Deseret PeakAquatic center anniversaryDeseret Peak’s Aquatic Center anniver-sary will be held Saturday, July 11 from noon to 8 p.m. There will be games, food and prizes. Call 843-4035 for more information.

Pool partyA pool party will be held at Deseret Peak Complex on July 3 at 8 p.m. Cost is $2 and can of food. Over 2,000 people and DJ in attendance.

Tooele County Fair VendorsVendor wanted for the Tooele County Fair. We are accepting non-food vendors selling both commercial and home-made items. Visit www.tooelefair.com for an application or call 435-843-4020 for more info. The Tooele County Fair is at the Deseret Peak Complex, July 30- Aug. 1.

Volunteers neededThe County Fair 5K race will be held Saturday, Aug. 1 at 7:30 a.m. Volunteers are needed to help on race day. Contact Darrin Cook at 849-3074 for more infor-mation.

LibraryTooele City activitiesMovies @ your Tooele City Library are scheduled on the following days: on July 1 at 3 p.m. our movie will be an animat-ed karate film. This movie is rated PG. The movie on July 7 at 4 p.m. will be a fun comedy. This movie is rated PG. And July 16 at 11 a.m. will be a sing-a-long cartoon and for preschool children. Be sure to watch the movie, and then read the book. At 11:45 a.m. on July 2 will be an instrument parade. Bring your instru-ment if you have one, if you do not have one, we will supply one for you. Don’t forget our karaoke night is rap music on July 2 at 6 p.m. The library will be closed Saturday, July 4 for Independence Day and Friday, July 24 for Pioneer Day.

Rewards for readingThe Tooele County Bookmobile Library, Grantsville, is participating in the Utah State Fair, “Read and Win Program,” open to children who are between the ages of 6-12 as of Sept. 1, 2009. All chil-dren who read 10 books and return their completed Reading Record Forms by July 23 will receive one free gate entry pass to the Fair, one ribbon bookmark, one coupon for a free regular drink, and one coupon for a free ride, both coupons redeemable at the Fair. The Reading Record Forms are available in the library (located in Grantsville City Hall) and on the Bookmobile. For addi-tional information, call 884-3703.

Summer readingThis year’s annual Summer Reading Program theme is “Be Creative at your library.” The Tooele City Library is look-ing for local artists to display their work during June. We can display some pot-tery, paintings, drawings, and photog-raphy. All artwork must follow specific guidelines. For more information con-tact the Tooele City Library, 128 West Vine Street, Tooele or call 435-882-2182 ask for Sharon or Malissa.

Weekly story timeRemember children’s story time every Wednesday at 11 a.m. and children’s crafts each Friday from 3-5 p.m. Check with the library for any special story times or other special events. For more information on these and other library programs, check our Web site tooelec-ity.org/tcl/library.html, call 435-882-2182, or visit us at 128 West Vine Street, Tooele.

SchoolsGHS class of ’79 — 30th reunionThe GHS Class of 1979 is planning a 30th reunion with our classmates. Mark your calendars for Oct. 16 and 17. This is homecoming weekend for GHS. More details will come later, but for now we’re recruiting helpers and we need you. We are in the process of gathering names and addresses of all our classmates. If you would like to help, please contact Ranae Williams Peck at 801-278-0142 or Melodi Millward Gochis at 435-882-2017.

Johnsen Jr. High SchoolClarke N. Johnsen Jr. High School’s reg-istration dates are as follows: Aug. 11 — seventh grade, Aug. 12 — eighth grade, Aug. 13 — new students. The first day of school is Aug. 24. Our summer office hours are: Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to noon.

ACT Boot CampDo you want to ace the ACT Test? Sign up for the ACT Boot Camp, taught by quali-fied Instructors. Class will be located in Tooele on Aug. 10 and 11. Includes the ACT Boot Camp and ACT practice test, all for $119. Price includes a textbook for additional personal study. For more information or to register, call Susan Taggart at 833-9585 or e-mail [email protected]. the class will be limited in size, early registration is recommended. Registration ends July 6.

THS class of ‘64 — 45th reunionOn Aug. 14 there will be a social at the Benchmark Village Condominiums Clubhouse. On Aug. 15 a golf tournament at the Links at Overlake and that evening a dinner and social at the Eagle’s Nest. Any classmates that have not received an e-mail or a letter from the commit-tee, please call Nancy at 435-882-4431 or John at 801-564-8845 or Frank at 435-840-0691 for more details.

4 & 5-year-old classes now enrollingIs your child ready for kindergarten but not old enough? We have a solution for you. We now offer a pre/k 5 year old class. The cost is $2,000 per year and will be Monday-Thursday from noon to 3 p.m. All children must be 5 by Jan. 1 and be able to pass an assessment. Space is limited, if interested please call St. Marguerite’s Catholic School at 882-0081 or stop by the school office.

TJHS summer hoursTooele Junior High School’s sum-mer hours at 8 a.m. to noon Monday through Thursday. Closed Friday. Closed Thursday, July 2 and Thursday, July 23.

Registration for 09-10Registration for 09-10 school year: Aug. 12 for seventh grade and Aug. 13 for eighth grade. Back-to-school night for Tooele Jr. High parents and students is Thursday, Aug. 20. TJHS Community Council invites all parents to join us at our next meeting on Aug. 20, dur-ing Back-to-school night. School begins Monday, Aug. 24.

Summer food service programThe Tooele County School District announces the sponsorship of the Summer Food Service Program. Free meals will be made available to all chil-dren through at 18 will run until Aug. 14, except for July 24. Breakfast will be served from 8-9 a.m. and lunch from 12-1 p.m. Locations: Harris Elementary, 251 North

1st Street, Tooele and Wendover High School, 110 Wildcat Blvd., Wendover. Meals will be available to adults also, lunch $2.75 and breakfast $1.35. Adults are not permitted to eat off children’s trays.

EducationAdults learn to driveA driver education course for adults 18 and over will begin Tuesday, July 16, 6-9 p.m., at the center. The class includes 18 hours of classroom instruc-tion and 12 hours of driving and obser-vation. Register from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The cost is $180 (current students receive a $65 discount). Pre-registration is required.

Concealed weapons permit classesConcealed weapons permit classes for $35 will be held near Stockton July 11 and Aug. 15. Also a ladies-only pistol orientation (NRA first steps). Call 435-843-7954 for details.

Adult Education Get your high school diploma this year. All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED preparation, word processing, driv-ers’ education and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $35 per semester. Located at 76 S. 1000 West. Call 833-1994. Adult Education classes are for students 18 and over.

English as a second languageESOL conversational classes are held Monday and Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. ESOL students may also come anytime the center is open for Individualized study. Registration is $35 per semester.

Summer school hoursSummer school will be held through Sept. 2 on Tuesday and Wednesday from 5-9 p.m. An ESL class will be held Tuesday and Wednesday from 7-9 p.m.

ArtsFridays on Vine: Tooele County Choral Society & Phat BoyzThe Tooele County Choral Society and the Phat Boyz will perform at Fridays on Vine concert series on Friday, July 10 at 7 p.m. at the Tooele City Park (55 N. 200 W.) The Tooele County Choral Society is a 20-member choir that has been together for four years. They per-form a wide variety of music including patriotic, inspirational, jazz, and comi-cal numbers. The Phat Boyz perform a great variety of soft rock from the ’70, ’80s and ’90s. Members include: Ed Barnett, Ralph Feanus, Tommy Derrick, John P., and Brad Bosen. Fridays on Vine are sponsored by the Tooele City Arts Council and will be offered throughout the summer. A full concert listing can be viewed at www.tooelecity.org. For more information please call the Tooele City Arts Council at 843-2142.

Arts in the ParkThe Tooele City Arts Council is sponsor-ing Arts in the Park for children 6 years and older this summer. A wide variety of art projects will be offered on Thursdays throughout the summer for only $2 a project. Art in the Park will be held at the Swimming Pool Park. Pre-registration is required. View a complete class listing

SEE BULLETIN PAGE A9 ➤

The Bulletin Board

If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact The Transcript-Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or e-mail 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. on the day prior to the desired publication date.

BULLETIN BOARD POLICY

TUESDAY June 30, 2009A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

photo courtesy of Bit and Spur

The Tooele Junior Bit & Spur Princess Contest was held May 9. Each girl was judged on their riding performance, poise, attitude and ability to give a speech. This year they did a figure-eight pattern and gave speeches comparing cowgirls of today with those of 1946. Pictured are (l-r): First Attendant Mackenzie Scott, Princess Courtney Koford, Junior Princess Shalee Condit, and Junior First Attendant Alyssa Imlay.

A8 BULLETIN BOARDA8 BULLETIN BOARD

TUESDAY June 30, 2009 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A9

at www.tooelecity.org. For more information contact Terra at 843-2142 or at [email protected].

4-H crazeTooele City Parks and Recreation and Tooele County 4-H program are offering CRAZE-Summer Adventures for kids 6 years old and older again this summer. Adventures will be held at the Swimming Pool Park on Tuesdays throughout the summer. Each week will have a new and fun theme. You can choose between morning or afternoon sessions. The cost is $10 per adventure. Pre-registration is required. View a complete class listing at www.tooelecity.org. For more infor-mation contact Terra at 843-2142 or at [email protected].

Field trip FridaysTooele City Parks and Recreation and Tooele County 4-H program are offering Field Trip Fridays for youth ages 8 years and older on Fridays throughout the summer. Groups will be exploring many new places including Antelope Island, the Clark Planetarium, and more. Field trips will begin at 9 a.m. and the youth will return at 4 p.m. The cost is $25 per field trip. Youth must provide a sack lunch, and everything else is included. Pre-registration is required, and space is limited. View a complete class listing at www.tooelecity.org. For more information contact Terra at 843-2142 or at [email protected].

ChurchesTooele Christian FellowshipWe invite you to our services where you’ll receive a warm wel-come by sincere, down-home country folks. Sunday School starts at 10 a.m. with the morn-ing service at 11 a.m. We are located at 600 North Industrial Loop Road. Take 200 North (Utah Ave.) west for 3.4 miles and turn left, first building on the left. For information call 435-224-3392. Child care available.

The LighthouseCalvary Chapel Tooele is pres-ently meeting at the Best Western Hotel on Main Street in Tooele. We meet on Sunday at 11 a.m. and extend an invitation for you to join with us as we worship in song and study of God’s Word. Child care available.

Messianic CongregationThe Brit Ammi Messianic Congregation meets every Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at 37 S. Main, in Tooele. Join us for praise, Torah (Bible) study, and fellow-ship as we study the Hebrew foundation of our Christian faith. For more information call 843-5444.

Bible Baptist ChurchPlease consider this your per-

sonal invitation to join us for ser-vices at Bible Baptist Church, 286 N. Seventh St., Tooele. Sunday school at 10 a.m., Sunday morn-ing service 11 a.m., Sunday evening service 6 p.m. and a Wednesday evening service 7 p.m. For information call 882-7182. Nursery provided and rides available.

CharityCountry store donationsRocky Mountain Care Center requests donations for our Country Store of knick-knacks, jewelry, toiletries, etc. to be used as prizes for resident games. Also, volunteers are needed for a vari-ety of activities to enhance the quality of life for our residents.

Food pantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is offering a clothing closet and emergency food pantry to meet the needs of our community. Anyone with clothing needs is welcome. Baby foods are now available. The food pantry is available for emergency needs. Hours of operation are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. We are located at 580 S. Main St. For informa-tion call 882-2048.

Donations neededThe Tooele Church of Christ is accepting donations for the Women’s Shelter. They need women’s socks and children’s clothing. Please help. 882-4642, 430 W. Utah Ave., Tooele.

Moose LodgeFour person golf scrambleMoose Lodge will be hosting a golf scramble on Sunday, July 12. The scramble will be held at Tooele Oquirrh Hills GC with an 8:30 a.m. shot-gun start. Lunch will be served after the scramble at the lodge. Come and enjoy the fun and win lots of prizes. Sign-up at the lodge.

Saturday night dinnersSaturday night rib-eye steak and salmon dinners. Members get a free dinner in their birthday month.

EaglesAuxiliary meeting changedThe Tooele Eagles Auxiliary’s first meeting in July will be on Monday, July 6 at 7:30 p.m. due to the national convention on July 13.

Friday night steaksSteaks will be served on Friday, July 3. Steak, halibut and shrimp dinners will be served from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Members and guests invited.

4th of July activitiesCome to the parade and see the Eagles float entry and go to the park and have lunch and play

bingo with the Eagles at the pavilion. Everyone is invited.

GroupsSewing guildThe Tooele neighborhood group will be holding their monthly meeting on Wednesday, July 8 in the conference room of the extension office beginning at 9:30 a.m. We will be making travel pillowcases to be donated to the Ronald McDonald House. Anyone who is interested is invit-ed to participate with us in this project. We ask that each person bring their own supplies. Those who would like to participate please call Geri Thomas at 882-3487 for a supply list. Bring any show and tell you have and invite a friend to come with you.

Cub Scout RoundtableJoin us for fun and fellowship related to the Cub Scout theme-Fun in the Sun. We have classes for each type of Cub Scout leader position. There are also oppor-tunities for sharing ideas and activities with leaders from other packs. Your CPR cards will be given out from last month’s free CPR training. We will have infor-mation on upcoming district and council activities and trainings, including Emergency 911 Cub Day in August, Outdoor Skills for Webelos Leader Training and Den Chief Training in September. Cub Scout Roundtable is Thursday, July 2, 7:30 p.m. at the Tooele Wigwam, just south of Gofer’s, turn left at the worms sing.

Diabetes support groupThe Tooele Diabetes Support Group will be taking a break until October. On July 16 at 6 p.m. there will be a free work-shop on dealing with diabetes at the Tooele County Health Department. Space is limited so call early to RSVP at 1-877-532-4545. If anyone has suggestions on things they would like to do at support group or on the time held or where to hold it please call 882-5671, 882-5577 or 843-9787. Have a good summer.

Tooele Autism Group (TAG)Please join us on Tuesday, July 7, at 7 p.m. at England Acres Park (400 E. 910 N.) for a family summer BBQ. Bring your meat of choice, drinks, plates and utensils. We will supply the BBQ and other goods. To entertain the kids, we ask that you bring Frisbees, bikes and a large bottle of bubbles.

Help for gardenersThe USU Master Gardeners are available to help with your gardening problems. The “Diagnostic Clinic” is available from 3-6 p.m. every Wednesday through September at the County Extension office, 151 N. Main St., Tooele.

Kiwanis meetingsKiwanis meets every Tuesday at noon for a luncheon at Tracks,

1641 N. Main St., Tooele. Contact Debbie Winn at 224-2046 or Sandy Critchlow at 830-6657 to become a member. Kiwanis is dedicated to help the children.

VeteransVA benefitsDino Genco from the American Legion, Salt Lake City will be in your area to assist individual veterans in understanding and applying for VA benefits. This is a free service to all veterans. Dino will be at the Department of Workforce Services center 305 N. Main Street, Wednesday, July 8 from noon to 1 p.m. Please bring the following documents so that we may better serve you: DD form 214, marriage/divorce papers, birth/adoption/death certificates and children’s social security numbers. If you are going to be in Salt Lake City and would like to meet with Dino call 801-326-2380 to set up an appointment or for questions that can not wait call 800-827-1000.

SeniorsTooele seniorsFriday night dinners will resume in September. Friday night danc-ing 6-8 p.m.: We need volunteers who are interested in ceramics, call Tony Busico at 882-2870. The center is for the enjoyment of all senior citizens 55 years and up.

Senior CircleBe part of the circle and join your senior friends! You only have to be 50 and the cost is $15 per year. Enjoy discounts, benefits, health information, and social activities. To make reservations for events, call 843-3690. Friday, July 3 — breakfast buddies 9 a.m. at Jim’s Restaurant, Dutch treat. Wednesday, July 8 — wellness supper with Dr. Strindberg dis-cussing varicose veins and new procedures, 5 p.m. at MWMC, reservations required. Thursday, July 9 — bingo, indoor ––––pic-nic potluck, bring picnic dish to share, 5 p.m. at MWMC, RSVP’s mandatory, space limited. Thursday, July 16 — day trip to American West Heritage Center/Logan, $40 includes lunch and transportation due July 10.

Grantsville seniorsHealth checks: hearing clinic on July 7 from 9 a.m. to noon.; blood pressure every Thursday from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; nutrition class July 15 at 1 p.m. in Tooele only; diabetic class July 16 at 1 p.m., you need to sign up; foot clinic July 28 at 1 :30 p.m. Call 882-2870 ext. 125 or 126 for an appoint-ment. Center board’s yard sale will be held Friday, July 10 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Bring donations after 8 a.m. the day of the sale. Wendover trip on Friday, July 17. Cost is $18 and the van leaves at 8:45 a.m. Pickup in Lake Point at 9:30 a.m.

Bulletin continued from page A8

A9

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66 60 57

0.14 0.152.41 0.93

10.83 11.06

8 8 9 8 9 9 9

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday

Vernon Creekat Vernon 1.06 none

South Willow Creekat Grantsville 1.40 -0.02

at Saltair Boat Harbor 4194.89

Tu W Th F Sa Su M

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

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; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year NormalWeek 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

GrouseCreek

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 6:02 a.m. 9:04 p.m.Thursday 6:03 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Friday 6:03 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Saturday 6:04 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Sunday 6:05 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Monday 6:05 a.m. 9:03 p.m.Tuesday 6:06 a.m. 9:02 p.m.

Wednesday 4:22 p.m. 1:41 a.m.Thursday 5:26 p.m. 2:12 a.m.Friday 6:27 p.m. 2:48 a.m.Saturday 7:23 p.m. 3:30 a.m.Sunday 8:12 p.m. 4:19 a.m.Monday 8:54 p.m. 5:13 a.m.Tuesday 9:30 p.m. 6:12 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2009

90/67

85/61

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88/58

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77/55

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90/66

86/62

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78/55

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90/6689/65

92/68

90/57

87/62

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88/63

88/50

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88/57

89/62

87/63

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Full Last New First

July 7 July 15 July 21 July 28

Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Intervals of clouds and sunshine

87 63

Mostly cloudy; thunderstorms at night

87 64

An afternoon thunderstorm possible

85 62

Sun and clouds

87 64

Mostly sunny

86

After a cloudy start, sun returns

89 61 57

Mostly sunny

86 55TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday night’s lows and Wednesday’s highs.

High/Low past week 91/53Normal high/low past week 86/58Average temp past week 71.3Normal average temp past week 72.3

Statistics for the week ending June 29.

Mark your Calendars...Rosewood Dental Associates

patient appreciation nightFriday, July 17 th • 6:00 - 9:oopm

Tooele County Complex Swimming Pool

Lots of fun!

Free t-shirts & snowconesdrawings will take place

every 15 minutes(i-pods, sonicare toothbrushes,

Wii’s, flat screen tv, etc.

All Rosewood dental associates patients are invited - watch your

mail, tickets will becoming!

All Rosewood dental associates patients are invited - watch your

mail, tickets will becoming!patients are invited - watch your

mail, tickets will becoming!patients are invited - watch your

Mark your Calendars..

A9

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

Thirteen of the 16 entries in the Deseret Peak Demolition Derby on Friday night were from Tooele County, but the top two finishers were not.

In the final heat the last two drivers still moving were Johnny Gullo of West Haven and Russ Slater from Slaterville. Both were close friends in high school in Weber County and according to Slater, he taught Gullo everything he knows.

This time, however, Gullo won the top prize of $2,000 with Slater in second to win $1,200 and Michael Evans of Tooele in third to grab $700.

The fact that somebody from Tooele County did not win did

not sit well with Zeb Hansen who was voted “most aggressive driv-er” at the event to win $1,000.

“They sandbag,” Hansen said of the Weber County rivals.

“They just don’t hit as much as the other cars and they are pretty smart drivers,” he said. “When you go to hit them they turn their cars so you face the driver’s door.” It’s illegal to hit the driver’s door.

“I wish all the Tooele guys would have teamed up on them, but the Tooele guys have their own feuds going on,” Hansen said.

Gullo and Slater did not look like the best of friends when they were the last two still mov-ing in the arena at Deseret Peak Complex.

Gullo would back up as far as

possible and run head on into Slater. The metal in the front of Slater’s car crumpled up so much that Slater could not see out his front windshield.

After about the fifth head-on collision. Slater took his flag and threw it back at Gullo to concede the derby.

“If you have to get beat it might as well be by one of your best friends and high school buddy,” Slater said. “I could hear him keep coming at me, but I couldn’t see him. I threw the flag so he would quit hitting me.”

Gullo said his car was built to win and he did learn most of his technique over the years from Slater.

Prior to the event a couple of

Weber duo outlasts local drivers at derby

SEE DERBY PAGE A11 ➤

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Sports

FROM THE SIDELINES

SPORTS WRAP

A10 TUESDAY June 30, 2009

When the first two or three options for a Saturday night don’t

work out there’s always minor league baseball.

I’m not talking about teams with players ranging in age from 8 to 11 years old — but minor league professional baseball.

Because my brother and nephew did not have anything better to do they tagged along with me as well.

The first option was the Salt Lake Bees, but checking the Bees’ Web site showed that the top farm club team for Major League Baseball’s Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim was playing in Fresno, Calif. on Saturday. If a game doesn’t pan out, the view of the Wasatch Mountains from Spring Mobile Ballpark in Salt Lake City is always spectacular.

The Ogden Raptors have been around for a long time and that was a possibility, but I’d already seen their stadium. So I checked the Orem Owlz Web site. I had

never attended a game at Brent Brown Ballpark which is also the home of the Utah Valley University baseball team and the site of several high school playoff games and state champi-onship games. The stadium has a capacity of 5,700.

The Owlz and Raptors com-pete in the Pioneer League which is a rookie league — about the fourth or fifth level down from Major League Baseball. Team nicknames can be peculiar like Owlz and Chuckars. Also in the league are the Missoula Osprey, Great Falls Voyagers and my favorite name the Casper Ghosts. One needs to know cartoon history to under-stand that one.

Saturday night was the first official game of the year at Brent Brown Ball Park after Friday’s scheduled home opener was rained out. Official attendance was 2,251 so there were plenty of good seats available for the whooping price of $4 each; programs cost $1. I think a fan could see a whole season of Owlz games for one Utah Jazz ticket and perhaps a Jazz ticket still would be the best deal.

It was a fun night though. A three-member band con-

sisting of a drummer (with bass, snare and one cymbal), guitar player and a lead singer who also played a metal garbage can which sometimes he pounded against the concrete or against his head, greeted fans as they filed through the turnstiles. This trio played extremely hard and fast and were somewhat enter-taining. I actually became a little intrigued by their style.

The Owlz have a pair of mas-cots called Holly and Hootz.

And there is another cheerlead-ing-promotion-pitch-man run-ning around the stadium in a wooden barrel. He orchestrates various types of competitions between fans for various prizes between innings. A few of the fans pay attention to the guy, but most fans try to ignore him. Kids in attendance seem to have the most fun by rolling down a grass hill all night long along the third-base line.

And then there’s the baseball, which is good, a cut above col-lege ball I suppose. Perhaps a few future Major Leaguers out there.

On Saturday, Idaho Falls led 6-0 going into the bottom of the fourth in what appeared would be a lackluster game for the Owlz. But the Owlz rallied behind a few Owl calls from the fans. Orem scored two runs in the fourth, two in the sixth, two in the seventh to trail 7-6 after seven complete innings.

The score held up until the

bottom of the ninth and excite-ment mounted as the lead-off hitter singled in the ninth. Runners advanced to second and third, but there were two outs and two strikes on Orem designated hitter Justin Bass as he stood at the plate. Bass came through with a shot to the left-center field gap. I had seen Idaho Falls fielders chase down hard hit fly balls all night, but this one was perfectly placed out of reach of the defense. The two runners sprinted home for an 8-7 Owlz victory and Orem play-ers mobbed Bass out on the field after his game-winning heroics.

Perhaps I had just witnessed one of the more exciting Owlz games of the season.

I really want to check out a couple of Bees game this year. But a rivalry game between Ogden and Orem in the Pioneer League might be just as much [email protected]

Owlz fans hoot as Orem stages victory in Pioneer League

Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

photography / Maegan Burr

Cody Wing runs from his burning car Friday night at the Deseret Peak Demolition Derby. Sixteen drivers competed in the derby.

photography / Maegan Burr

Johnny Gullo’s car No. 6 begins to smoke after colliding with Russ Slater’s No. 42 Friday night at the Deseret Peak Demolition Derby. Gullo, of West Haven, won the top prize of $2,000.

by Jake Gordon

STAFF WRITER

Even though high school bas-ketball doesn’t start up until the winter, all three Tooele Valley high schools participated in Brigham Young University’s high school basketball camp to hone their skills for the upcoming sea-son.

Grantsville, Tooele and Stansbury all took teams down to Provo starting Thursday and finished up on Saturday. During the camp the teams faced com-petition from the top teams in the state and even a handful of teams from outside the state.

Stansbury has the unenvi-able task of starting a basketball team from scratch as a new high school coming in but coach Ryan

Harris has his team entered into as many camps as possible.

In fact, the BYU camp was their fourth of the offseason as they have attended two camps in Payson and another one at the University of Utah. “We need to maximize the kids’ opportunities so that they can play the way we want them to,” Harris said.

For many of the Stansbury players it is their first chance to play in a league as organized as high school basketball and there is always something to learn. “In high school ball you have to prepare more for your oppo-nent,” Harris said. “They will also have other teams scouting them, which will be a new experience.”

During the BYU camp this weekend, tournament play start-ed on Saturday and Stansbury

opened up with a win. Playing against Sinagua High School from Flagstaff, Ariz., the Stallions won their first-round game but then fell in their next matchup against a talented Logan squad.

Stansbury has plenty of tal-ent on their team, starting with Reggie Roberts. Roberts has the ability to hit the outside jumper or 3-point bomb or can drive the lane and get to the basket quick-ly. With the outside presence of Roberts, Ty Barton is the inside presence for Stansbury.

“We are fortunate to have an experienced player like Reggie (Roberts) on our team,” Harris said. “Ty Barton had a great game against Timpview and will be a force down low and even has the ability to step outside for a jumper.”

Even though Stansbury is behind a learning curve being a new high school, coach Harris is seeing progress at every camp.

“I am happy with the off-sea-son so far,” Harris said. “The players are working out hard this summer, waking up early for workouts in the gym. They have a lot of enthusiasm for the game.”

For Grantsville and the close-knit players on the basketball team, staying and playing togeth-er at a basketball camp is noth-ing new or out of the ordinary. Most of the players already hang out together off the court and that relationship on the court is visible.

Even when the Cowboys were struggling with defensive pres-sure applied from other teams early in group play, they found

a way to bounce back. A tight loss to Bountiful as their final group-play game helped build the team’s confidence which car-ried over to tournament play on Saturday.

“We led Bountiful with 30 sec-onds remaining,” said Grantsville head coach Shane Heath. “Even though we lost that game, the confidence we earned help us win a couple games later.”

They opened up their tour-nament with a win over 1A champ Escalante and just kept on rolling over Park City and then Timpanogos. The win over Timpanogos sent the Cowboys into a semi-final matchup with 5A Syracuse.

“Timpanogos was a tall team

Prep teams hone basketball skills at BYU camp

SEE CAMP PAGE A12 ➤

Ute football signups

Tooele Ute Football signups for all ages 8-14 will be held at Tooele High School on July 9 from 6-8 p.m., and July 18 from 8-11 a.m. If you are a new player to Tooele please bring a copy of your birth certificate. Cost is $180. If you have any questions or concerns please call Sherie at 435-850-8597 or 435-882-5656.

THS softball

Tooele High softball is holding workouts for all students inter-ested in playing softball next year at THS. Workouts will be each Wednesday night from 7-9 p.m. in the THS small gym until July 22. Emphasis will be on teaching and practicing fundamental offensive and defensive skills. Call Steve Snow at 775-224-2402 or Mike Mendenhall at 435-840-3340 for more information.

Dusk to Dawn tennis

The annual Grandma Bernadine’s Dusk to Dawn tennis tourna-ment will be held on July 3 at the Grantsville High School tennis courts. Twilight Tennis for ages 13 and under will begin at 4 p.m. Dusk-to-Dawn play for ages 14 and older will begin at 7 p.m. Cost for Twilight Tennis will be $5 an cost for Dusk-to-Dawn tennis will be $10. All proceeds will be donated to the Utah Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association.

Ray Barrus 5K

Grantsville’s annual Ray Barrus Memorial 5K race will be held July 4. Runners can register at Grantsville City Hall, 429 E. Main St., the home of Brad Sutton, 282 S. Cooley St. or online at www.raybarrusmemorialrace.wordpress.com. The 12-under one-mile starts at 7:30 a.m. and the 5K run starts at 8 a.m. Bus pick up will begin 30 minutes prior to each race. Participants are encouraged to get their race numbers on Friday, July 3 at Williams Family Drug, 124 W. Main St. between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. Number pick up will also begin at 6:30 a.m. at the corner of Cherry and Quirk Streets, which is also the bus pick up for the runners. Awards presentation and prizes will follow the race. For more information or to pre-register call Brad Sutton at 884-5522.

Kiwanis 5K Freedom Run

The Tooele July 4 race begins at 8:30 a.m. near the LDS church at 777 East Skyline Drive. Runners are urged to sign up in advance at Macey’s, Century 21 or Prudential. A registration form is on TooeleCity.org Web site. Mail with check to Kiwanis, P.O. Box 1122, Tooele. Registration on July 4 at the church beginning at 7 a.m. A drawing will be held for a guaranteed entry to St. George Marathon. Contact Karen Perry at 435-830-7846 or e-mail [email protected].

Soccer fundraiser

There are five TC United Teams that will be selling fireworks as a fundraiser to earn money for soccer camps and soccer tourna-ments in the Wal-Mart parking lot located near Wingers. We know people have a choice in where they purchase their pyro entertainment. However, we would like the oppor-tunity to earn their business, said youth soccer coach Casey Walker. We want people to check it out and tell all their friends the only place in town to get their pyro fix is from the TNT tent in the Wal-Mart parking lot. Those who purchase fireworks will get a chance to win four tickets to the MSL All-Star game on July 29 against Everton FC. The booth will be open for business from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. now through July 5.

Grantsville Ute Conference

The Grantsville Ute Conference youth football signups will be held on July 11 and July 18 from 10 a.m. to noon at Grantsville High School.

Softball league

A softball league is available for players on Tuesday mornings this summer at Deseret Peak Complex. Games are held each Tuesday at 8 a.m. There are no set teams so players are on a different team each week. Players also do not need to participate every week and can play only when they want to play. For information call Mike (602) 826-9471.

THS girls basketball

A Tooele High School girls basket-ball camp will be held July 13-16 at the THS gym from 9 a.m. to noon each day. The camp is for girls entering ninth-12th grades next year. Cost is $30 per camper. Individual and team instruction will be provided and each participant will receive a camp T-shirt. For more information call coach Shirley McCloy at 833-1978.

SEE WRAP PAGE A11 ➤

A10 SPORTSA10 SPORTS

TUESDAY June 30, 2009 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Jake Gordon

STAFF WRITER

Younger players are sure mak-ing a name for themselves during the Grantsville American Legion baseball season. That point was pounded in as a couple of young players, that will be freshmen this upcoming school year, stepped up big for the team.

A solid pitching performance from Skyler Cloward on the mound and a game-winning base hit by Kelby Landon, both incom-ing freshmen, in the sixth inning showed coach Loren Anderson that they plan to contribute for years to come.

“Skyler (Cloward) battled his way through on the mound,” Anderson said. “I think his adrenaline kept him going in the game.”

Grantsville veteran players also stepped up, as Jake Campbell knocked three singles in the game to help lead the Cowboys to a 5-4 victory at home in the first game against Logan Monday afternoon.

Logan started off the scoring in the top of the first. D.J. Nelson led off the game with a single and after a balk, found his way in scoring position. On a ground out to the right side, a costly throwing error allowed Nelson to score for the early 1-0 lead.

It didn’t take Grantsville long to take the lead away from Logan. In fact, it took only one pitch for leadoff man Tyson Hutchins as he promptly powered a solo home run to center to knot the game at 1-1 after one inning.

It wasn’t a picture-perfect day

for Cloward on the mound as he did find his way into a couple of jams. In the second, two straight walks and a hit batter loaded the bases, putting Cloward’s back against the wall on the mound. With bases loaded and no outs, Cloward struck out the following batter and then coerced a dou-ble play, helped by base running blunders of Logan, to get out of the inning unscathed.

Both Cloward and Logan’s Tanner Gittins settled in nicely on the mound as both teams had trouble mounting chances to score. Logan threatened in the fifth when they had runners on the corners with clean-up hitter Brandon Peterson up. Peterson roped a would-be RBI base hit right into the diving glove of third baseman Ryley Boman to end the threat and the inning.

In the sixth however, Grantsville gave too many outs to Logan for them not to score. Three Cowboy errors in the inning helped Logan mount a rally. One throwing error to home cost Grantsville two runs for the 3-1 lead. Then Nelson roped a single down the right field line for the 4-1 lead.

Grantsville would answer in their half of the sixth with five consecutive base hits. Boman led off the inning with a single and reached second on a wild pitch, which was enough for Kort Fonger to smack a RBI single to center to cut the lead to 4-2.

Campbell followed with his third single of the game then Taylor Matthews belted a double to the center field fence, scor-ing Fonger while Campbell was

tagged out at home, keeping Logan ahead 4-3.

Lincoln Kelley followed with a double which chased Logan hurler Gittins. Grantsville even-tually loaded the bases with two outs that would be a pressure sit-uation for any player, especially an incoming freshman.

That pressure didn’t bother Landon as he fought off a cou-ple of tough pitches and finally found one to his liking and belt-ed a liner to center to bring in two runs and give the Cowboys the 5-4 lead.

With the one-run lead, Cloward induced two ground balls and a

pop out to close out the game in the seventh.

“We are trying to get good experience and get as many at bats as we can,” Anderson said. “We are working just as hard as we can.”

In the second game of a double header against Logan, Grantsville gave up too many walks and never quite got the offense going in a 6-1 loss as the Cowboys split games with the [email protected]

Young players lead Grantsville legion team to winA11

photography / Maegan Burr

Grantsville American Legion pitcher Skyler Cloward fires a pitch in the opening game of a double header Monday afternoon against Logan. Cloward picked up the win on the mound in the first game against the Grizzlies.

photo courtesy Ruth Alvarez

TC United girls, U12 brought home the bronze medal from the Utah Summer Games this year. Back (l-r): Coach Ruth Alvarez, Courtney Shiwal, Rylee Whitehouse, Kenya Russell, Mattie Pike, Macady Richardson, Jordan Asay, Daria Ottoson, Emma Garcia, coach Jeff Taylor. Front (l-r): Chelsea Simpson, Maria Isom, Alexa Golden, Megan Alvarez, Mikayla Arnold, Lexi Bolliger, Sam Taylor.

STINGRAYS 2009 BRONZE

drivers at the derby said they knew that Slater would be tough to beat.

“I’ve been in 150 derbies and won 40 to 50 of them,” Slater said.

When the derby started at about 6:40 p.m. hard rain drenched the fans and turned the arena into a mud bog.

“The mud really slowed things down, but that’s the way I like it,” Slater said. “I just love the adrenaline. I used to like running into people driving bumper cars when I was a kid and this is like

bumper cars for adults.”Although he did not win the

main event, Zeb Hansen did have a good weekend of derby driving. Along with his $1,000 as most aggressive driver, he won $100 in his preliminary heat and then on Saturday he won $500 more at a demolition derby in West Jordan.

Hansen, 19, has competed in about seven demolition derbies overall and won the “most aggres-sive driver” last August at the Tooele County Fair Demolition Derby.

“This year I actually wanted to hold back and not drive as hard and try to make it to the end so I really wasn’t trying to be all that aggressive, but they voted

me most aggressive anyway,” Hansen said.

Zeb is the son of Ed Hansen of Tooele who used to drive in demolition derbies for years, but now just helps his sons with their cars. Ed’s other sons, Jacob and Jed, also participated Friday night. Jacob competed in the Figure 8 race and Jed compet-ed in the derby. Ed’s son-in-law Lance Anderson also competed in the derby.

“I did derbies every weekend back in the 1970s and my kids have all grown up going to demo-lition derbies,” Ed said.

Leading from the start and fin-ishing first in the Figure 8 race was Matt Unrein of Tooele.

After the initial downpour it was a great night for a demolition derby last Friday. Fans, however, can hope for better weather and should see a larger number of entrants for the next demolition derby at Deseret Peak Complex on Aug. 1.

Prize money for first place at the Tooele County Fair Demolition Derby will be $2,700 with $1,700 for second and $1,000 for [email protected]

Derby continued from page A10

Food Bank tourney

The fourth annual Tooele Valley Community Cooperative Golf Tournament will be held July 18 at 8 a.m. at Oquirrh Hill Golf Course. The format is a four-person scramble. Cost is $45 person which includes cart and lunch. All proceeds go to the Tooele Valley Community Cooperative/County Food Bank to help the less fortunate families in need during the Christmas holiday. Contact Mark or Christine Sandoval at (435) 843-8247.

Wrap continued from page A10

A Touch of Home… Across the World.Across the country and across the world our friends and family serve in the military. Give them the gift of home with a subscription to the Online Edition. A computer and internet connection provides anyone, anywhere in the world with immediate access to their hometown paper.

To subscribe visit our website atwww.TooeleTranscript.com

And click on the Online Edition

A11

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Pets of the Week

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A11

TUESDAY June 30, 2009 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A12

by Natalie TrippSTAFF WRITER

The Grantsville High School ten-nis courts will be filled to the max Friday and Saturday as tennis play-ers from across the county meet together to participate in this year’s 10th annual “Grandma Bernadine’s Dusk to Dawn Tournament”, a chari-table fundraiser for the Utah chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association.

The event, which is now held in honor of deceased Grantsville resident and Alzheimer’s vic-tim, Bernadine Nelson, has offi-cially become a charity fundraiser and renamed last year in honor of Nelson.

Bernadine married her high school sweetheart and Grantsville tennis legend Johnny Nelson in 1947, raised seven children, taught pre-school until she was 74-years-old and was affectionately known as Grandma Bernadine to all the children she taught.

Last year money raised by the tournament went toward research for the mental disease and a local company matched the $2,000 earn-ings to donate to the Alzheimer’s Association last year.

This year, with the economy, the

local company isn’t able to match the funds, but that hasn’t stopped the tournament organizers in their quest to raise money.

“Last year was very successful and we were able to donate $2,000 in one night’s worth of work,” said Kenny Nelson, Grantsville resident, tournament organizer, and son of Bernadine. “I already think we’re going to come close to the $2,000 mark again. We’ve had great support and donations from local business-es and we increased the suggested donation to play in the tournament from $5 to $10.”

The tournament started 10 years ago when Beverly Shultz and Patty Halladay were asked to be over the Independence Day celebrations and wanted to have a tennis tournament, according to Nelson.

Since then the tournament has attracted tennis players that grew up studying under the thumb of the Nelson family as well as newer resi-dents who have moved into the val-ley and love the game.

Nelson estimates the tournament attracts 70-80 participants each year as well as 20-30 people who attend to watch and socialize.

“This is something for every age and skill level,” Nelson said.

“Everyone has a chance to win the tournament and over the years it’s been a great social gathering for people to enjoy.”

This year the tournament kicks off at 4 p.m. with a smaller tournament for players 13 years old and under. The Twilight Tennis tournament will go until 6 p.m. and the Dusk to Dawn tournament will start at 7 p.m.

Throughout the evening players will have a chance to enter their name in a raffle for prizes donated by local businesses and a quilt made by Bernadine’s daughter Karma, similar to quilts Bernadine used to make for her children and grandchildren.

The tournament consists of six rounds of tennis and players will be randomly paired to play doubles matches. Nelson hopes the tourna-ment will end by 2 a.m. for those that want to get up early to participate in local 5k runs, but also comments the tournament has been known to last as long as 4 a.m.

“We’ll have bingo going on and food and drinks throughout the night,” said Nelson. “I’m hoping that by starting a little earlier we’ll be able to end a little earlier.”

The cost for Twilight Tennis will be $5 and for Dusk to Dawn [email protected]

Holiday tennis fest raises money for Utah Alzheimer’s Association

and we handled them but then we lost to pretty solid Syracuse team,” Heath said.

Ben Tripp actually played the entire game against Timpanogos because of his size and he gave solid contributions on offense and defense down low. Heath also mentioned the ball-han-dling presence that point guard Damon Deavila showed. Josh Harrison and Eli Hamm also chipped in for the Cowboys.

“I just really want to thank the parents for making it possible for the kids to come play,” Heath

said. “They just have a lot of love for the game.”

Last but not least is Tooele. Participating in their fifth camp total, the Buffaloes are showing progress each week. “The camps are a good opportunity to see how the players gel on the court together,” said Tooele head coach Ray Brazier.

During their tournament play on Saturday Tooele won their first-round game against Salem Hills and then lost to Century High School, out of Pocatello, Idaho. “Our defensive pressure was right there,” Brazier said. “However, our offensive skills need to improve.”

Coach Brazier mentioned the

strong contributions of Travis Brady who handled the ball quite a bit. Brady also has the ability to get down into the paint and draw a foul. Baylan Horrocks played strong in the post and Andy Grondhal played solid on the wing on offense and defense.

This was also the first camp for Jake Holt. Holt missed games last season to an injury and Brazier is happy to have his solid natural shooting ability back this offsea-son.

“We got what we wanted out of this camp,” Brazier said. “We are progressing quite a bit and building some confidence along the way.”[email protected]

Camp continued from page A10

photography / Jake Gordon

Stansbury’s Reggie Roberts (right) looks into the post area for a scoring opportunity Friday at the BYU basketball camp. Stansbury High School is preparing this off-season for their first year of basketball.

photo courtesy of the Nelson family

The Grandma Bernadine Dusk to Dawn Tennis Tournament will be held July 3 in honor of deceased Grantsville resident and Alzheimer’s victim Bernadine Nelson, pictured here with her husband Johnny. The tournament hopes to raise $2,000 for the Alzheimer’s Association.

A12

HUGEMOVING

SALE!Everything at 995 North Main (Behind Wendy’s) 50% off this

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday only!*Closed Saturday July 4th

Come see us at our newsite next week at1500 W. Atlas Way in the Utah Industrial Depot.

(Take the East entrance into UID, followthe road to the right, turn left onto

Garnet Street, and then left onto Atlas Way)

435-882-8556

*Cannot be combined with other coupons or promos.

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Are you a candidate for VNUS?

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A12

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

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 Community News Editor Sarah Miley at 882-0050 or [email protected].

HometownB1

Picnic fare can come in a variety of forms depending on the purpose, place and

the desire to create. It ranges from simple to extravagant. It can be a matter of letting the kids carry their peanut butter sandwich and glass of punch out to the back lawn — thus sparing the kitchen cleanup from spilled Kool-Aid

and crumbs — or it can be a quick stop at the nearest grocery store to pick up ready-made treats on the

way to the park. It can be a stop on a hike or horseback ride for a repast from a brown bag, or it can be roasting hot dogs over a camp-fire or a barbecue with a charcoal or gas grill. It might even be Dutch oven cooking.

At the other extreme, it can be a gala event with tents put up and fine foods served piping hot from

pans over chafing dishes. Such picnics go with weddings and big celebrations.

In short, a picnic is a broad term for eating outdoors. Really, a picnic is whatever you make it and anything goes. Summer is pic-nic season and the Fourth of July traditionally demands outdoor eating of some kind.

Why not make a plan and choose the setting you prefer? Decide where to celebrate and your activities. You may want to take your cue from the holiday and festoon the table with red, white and blue and make a cen-terpiece of sparklers and fireworks for the evening festivities. Choose the foods that fit your style and

time constraints. Whether you barbecue, roast hot dogs, eat sandwiches or come up with a fancy feast, you can create a delightful holiday picnic.

Using make-ahead dishes can simplify the work for even a fancy dinner, leaving you time for

Put your mark on a Fourth of July picnic with these recipes

SEE PICNIC PAGE B8 ➤

his is what it used to look like,” histo-

rian Ouida Blanthorn explained, pointing to a paint-

ing of Black Rock hanging on the wall of her Stansbury Park home. The painting, an original

by Jill Quarnberg, features the iconic limestone massif rising along the southern shore of the Great Salt Lake, with an 1860’s-era ranch house in the foreground.

The ranch house disappeared long ago, but the topography and angles depicted in the painting provide a sense of its former location relative to the extant terrain.

“It would have been right there,” she deduced, “right about where the highway is now. There’s nothing left of it, though.

“It’s hard to picture it now because the lake levels were higher then,” added her husband, Boyd.

When it comes to history, Boyd and Ouida Blanthorn form a sort of super duo. The genial couple has spent the last half-century working to document Tooele County’s past. Their collective efforts to preserve history — both physically and in print — provide an invaluable glimpse into the people, places and events that made the county what it is today.

Boyd, is originally from Grouse Creek, a small, remote community in northwestern Box Elder County. He fills the duo’s hands-on preservation role. The soft-spoken 82-year-old’s handiwork is notably visible in the area of the restored Benson Grist Mill. Ouida, 79, grew up in Cache Valley. She’s

the analyst and writer. When it comes to Tooele County history, she wrote the book. Literally.

“It was my eighth-grade teacher, Mr. Rose, who sparked my interest in history,” she recalled. “That was during World War II. History was his favorite topic, and it became mine.”

Boyd and Ouida met at Utah State University and were married in 1952. Soon after, Boyd took a civilian electrical engi-neering job at Dugway Proving Ground. The young couple moved their mobile home to Rush Valley in 1953 and later built one of the first homes in Clover.

Ouida had written various pieces for the local newspaper in Dugway, but it was

SEE HISTORY PAGE B8 ➤

• Weddings

• Classifieds and Public Notices

TUESDAY June 30, 2009

photography / Maegan Burr

Boyd and Ouida Blanthorn sit on a couch at their Stansbury home Friday morning. In addition to various efforts to document Tooele County’s past, both were members of a committee appointed to preserve the Benson Grist Mill site.

Preserving history

HOMEFRONT

Diane SagersCORRESPONDENT

Stansbury couple’s work provides a look

into county’s past

story by Clint

Thomsen

B8B8

TUESDAY June 30, 2009TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB2

Tuesday

Movie: Legally Blonde7 p.m. on ` FOX

Reese Witherspoon graduated intothe league of top screen actresseswith this 2001 comedy, which suc-ceeds largely on her performance asa law-school novice. She playssorority girl Elle Woods, who isdumped by her blue-blooded beau(Matthew Davis), then follows him toHarvard, intent on winning him back.Instead, she finds a new cause whilesurprising her professors. Luke Wil-son, Selma Blair and Victor Garber(“Alias”) co-star.

The Mentalist8 p.m. on ^ CBS

When a high-school girl’s bodywashes up on the beach, CBI inves-tigator Patrick Jane (Simon Baker)sets a trap to get a group of surfersto turn on one another and revealwhat really happened in “Red Tide.”You might say they go from “hanging10” to hanging themselves.

Hitched or Ditched8 p.m. on / KUWB

El Lana and Torrino, a couple fromNorth Carolina, are invited to theirown wedding after 10 years of dat-ing in the face of resistance to theirinterracial relationship have broughtthings to a standstill. Torrino’s moth-er lashes out at El Lana with a racialslur as a storm threatens to keep ElLana’s family from the ceremony inthe new episode “The White Devil.”

P.O.V.11 p.m. on _ KUED

The family of a French gay man whowas brutally murdered by three neo-Nazi skinheads undergoes an aston-ishing personal journey as its mem-bers struggle to seek justice whilecoming to terms with their unthink-able loss in “Beyond Hatred,” film-maker Olivier Meyrou’s gripping doc-umentary that chronicles both theghastly crime itself and its aftermath.

Wednesday

Movie: Blood Diamond6 p.m. on Y USA

Leonardo DiCaprio and DjimonHounsou were Oscar-nominatedfor their work in director EdwardZwick’s (“Legends of the Fall”) excit-ing and socially conscious dramaabout two men uncomfortablyaligned in the search for a rare gemin late 1990s Africa. A smuggler(DiCaprio) and a farmer just re-leased from prison (Hounsou) havedifferent motives for the pursuit.

The New Adventures of Old Christine

7 p.m. on ^ CBSOh, what a tangled web they weave!Christine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus)cheerfully agreed to a sham same-sex union with Barb (Wanda Sykes)to keep the latter from being deport-ed, but now that may cost them theirgym: The parent company of Chris-tine and Barb’s franchise informsthem that they have broken a con-tractual clause that bars them fromany conduct that is contrary to “fami-ly values” in “Unidentified Funk.”

American Masters7 p.m. on _ KUED

This new 90-minute episode goesbehind the scenes of the radio show“A Prairie Home Companion,” creat-ed by humorist and commentatorGarrison Keillor, the man who cameup with Lake Wobegon, the fictional“hometown” for fans of the long-run-ning show. Keillor’s folksy stylemasks a shrewd ability to capture thecurrent spirit of the country at large,blended with humor and pathos.

Movie: Ocean’s Thirteen7:45 p.m. on & HBO

They’re back for another round inthis 2007 sequel. This time, DannyOcean (George Clooney) calls forthhis cronies to plot revenge against acasino owner who wronged one oftheir own. Does it never occur to thisguy that if you participate in illegalthings, bad things probably will hap-pen?

Thursday

Movie: The Dirty Dozen6 p.m. on F AMC

Lee Marvin is typically rough andgruff in this 1967 war classic as astrict U.S. Army major assigned thetask of selecting and training 12hardened criminals for a suicide mis-sion. They are offered absolution ifthey successfully fulfill a daring mis-sion into Germany. Directed byRobert Aldrich, the film also starsErnest Borgnine, Charles Bronson,Jim Brown, John Cassavetes, DonaldSutherland and singer Trini Lopez.

Movie: Troy8 p.m., 11:30 p.m. on 7 FX

The Trojan War story is retold with-out the gods and goddesses ofHomer’s original in this 2004 adven-ture. Brad Pitt stars as Achilles, thegreat Greek warrior who fights morefor his ego than for his king (BrianCox) — to the latter’s dismay. Orlan-do Bloom plays Paris, the Trojanprince whose affair with the lovelyHelen (Diane Kruger) sets the war inmotion.

The Listener9:01 p.m. on % NBC

After Toby (Craig Olejnik) saves atroubled boy from a brutal gangbeating, he stumbles upon a hiddengroup of runaways and must drawon his own devastating personal se-cret to save these youths. Ennis Es-mer, Lisa Marcos, Mylene Dinh-Ro-bic and Anthony Lemke also star inthe new episode “Lisa Says.”

Soundstage11 p.m. on _ KUED

From the program’s Grainger Studio,Sugarland — singer Jennifer Nettlesand mandolin player Kristian Bush— perform a versatile set including“Joey,” “Steve Earle,” “Genevieve”and older classics such as “BabyGirl,” moving easily from pop dittiesto soulful ballads. They also offercovers of songs by R.E.M., the bandthat shares Sugarland’s Georgiaroots.

THURSDAY EVENING JULY 2, 20096:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS News (N) (CC) Entertainment CSI: Miami Murder at a wedding. ’ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ (:01) The Mentalist “Ladies in Red” News (N) (CC) (:35) Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show(4) ABC News (N) Two/Half Men Samantha Who? In the Motherhood Grey’s Anatomy “Stairway to Heaven” (:02) Private Practice ’ (CC) News (N) (:35) Nightline (N) Access Hollywood (:36) Extra (N) ’(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) 30 Rock ’ (CC) The Office (CC) The Office “Duel” (:31) 30 Rock ’ (:01) The Listener “Lisa Says” (N) ’ News (N) (CC) Wimbledon Tonight Show-Conan O’Brien(6) HBO (4:15) “The Majestic” ››› Cont’d “Miss Congeniality” ›› (2000, Comedy) Sandra Bullock. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” ››› (2008) Jason Segel. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Hung “Pilot” ’ Transformers(7) KUED The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Make ’em Laugh: Funny Lark Rise to Candleford ’ (CC) The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes ’ As Time Goes By Summer Wine Soundstage “Sugarland” ’ (CC)(8) KPNZ Estudio 2 A Que no Puedes Alarma TV Chuperamigos Noticiero STN Secretos Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) “Twister” ››› (1996, Action) (PA) Helen Hunt, Bill Paxton. (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City (:10) “Scream” ››› (1996) (PA)(11) KBYU Little House on the Prairie (CC) The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Nature (CC) Wild! ’ (CC) Worldfocus (CC) Perry Mason (CC) My Three Sons(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) Bones “Fire in the Ice” ’ (PA) (CC) So You Think You Can Dance (CC) News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ (:35) Still Standing (:05) Family Guy King of the Hill ’(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) Dr. Phil ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Entertainment The Insider (N) ’(15) KUWB Two/Half Men According to Jim Smallville “Toxic” ’ (CC) Supernatural ’ (CC) King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond According to Jim Malcolm-Mid.(23) FX (5:00) “Kingdom of Heaven” ››› (2005) Orlando Bloom, Eva Green. Cont’d “Troy” ››› (2004, Adventure) Brad Pitt, Eric Bana, Orlando Bloom. Achilles leads Greek forces in the Trojan War. Troy ›››(25) QVC By Popular Demand Vicenza Style: Fine Italian Jewelry Ryka Fitness Black Hills Gold(26) ANPL Grizzly Man Living with grizzly bears in Alaska. ’ (CC) Grizzly Man Living with grizzly bears in Alaska. ’ (CC)(27) NICK Ned’s School SpongeBob Home Improve. Home Improve. George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ The Nanny (CC) The Nanny (CC) Family Matters ’ Family Matters ’ George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’(28) FAM “Down Periscope” ›› (1996, Comedy) Kelsey Grammer, Lauren Holly. (CC) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ The 700 Club (CC) Whose Line? Whose Line? Cel. Ab Secrets P90X: The Proof(29) TOON Chowder Misadventures Total Drama 6TEEN (N) King of the Hill ’ King of the Hill ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Hungerforce Venture Bros. Home Movies ’(31) CMTV Extreme Makeover: Home Edition ’ “Urban Cowboy” ››› (1980, Drama) John Travolta. A Texas oil worker looks for love at a popular honky-tonk. ’ “Urban Cowboy” ››› (1980, Drama) John Travolta, Debra Winger. ’(33) DISN Suite Life-Deck Suite Life-Deck Phineas and Ferb Zack & Cody Wizards-Place Hannah Montana “The Haunted Mansion” ›› (2003) Eddie Murphy. ‘PG’ Phineas and Ferb Wizards-Place Hannah Montana(36) SPIKE “Star Wars IV: A New Hope” (1977) TNA iMPACT! (N) 4th and Long “The Rivals” MANswers (CC) GameTrailers TV MANswers (CC) MANswers (CC)(38) AMC “The Dirty Dozen” ››› (1967, War) Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson. Major turns 12 GI felons into commandos. (CC) “Midway” ›› (1976, War) Charlton Heston, Henry Fonda, James Coburn. (CC)(39) TNT Wedding Day “Christina and Shawn” “The Matrix” ››› (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. (CC) “The Matrix” ››› (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. (CC)(41) CNN Campbell Brown (N) Larry King Live (N) (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)(43) CNBC Marijuana Inc.: Pot Industry Inside Video Game Industry The Oprah Effect Mad Money Fast Money Inside Video Game Industry(46) LIFE Reba “The Feud” Reba ’ (CC) “Overboard” ›› (1987, Comedy) Goldie Hawn, Kurt Russell. (CC) Will & Grace Will & Grace ’ Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) Will & Grace Will & Grace(49) FXNEWS The O’Reilly Factor (N) (CC) Hannity (N) On the Record-Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record-Van Susteren(51) FXSPN Big 12 Football: From the Archives From Oct. 13, 2007. (N) Best Damn 50 The Final Score Golden Age The Final Score Best Damn Top 50 Special The Final Score The Final Score(52) ESPN The Complete Wimbledon Day’s highlights from Wimbledon. (N) (CC) Baseball Tonight (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight NFL Live (N) SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA Burn Notice “Seek and Destroy” Burn Notice “Sins of Omission” Burn Notice “Lesser Evil” (CC) In Plain Sight “Miles to Go” (CC) Burn Notice “Seek and Destroy” Royal Pains “TB or Not TB” (CC)(71) DISC Survivorman ’ (CC) Moments of Impact ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch ’ (CC) Survivorman ’ (CC) Moments of Impact ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch ’ (CC)(518) ENC “No Country for Old Men” ››› (2007) Tommy Lee Jones. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:05) “Carrie” ››› (1976) Sissy Spacek. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:45) “Frantic” ››› (1988, Suspense) Harrison Ford, Emmanuelle Seigner. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(534)STARZ (:15) Starz Studios “Unbreakable” ›› (2000, Suspense) Bruce Willis. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:25) “Vantage Point” ›› (2008) Dennis Quaid. ‘PG-13’ “Hancock” ›› (2008) Will Smith. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:40) Penelope ’(561) MAX (5:30) “Street Kings” ›› (2008) Keanu Reeves. Cont’d (:20) “The Golden Compass” ›› (2007) Nicole Kidman. (:15) “Eye for an Eye” ›› (1996, Drama) Sally Field, Ed Harris. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Journey to the Center of the Earth”(576) SHOW Delta Farce › “Awake” › (2007) Hayden Christensen. iTV Premiere. ‘R’ Penn & Teller Penn & Teller Weeds (iTV) ’ Nurse Jackie (iTV) Body Language “Fifty Pills” (2006, Comedy) Lou Taylor Pucci. iTV. ’ ‘R’(591) TMC (5:15) “Along Came a Spider” Cont’d “Premonition” ›› (2007, Suspense) Sandra Bullock. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Stardust” ››› (2007, Fantasy) Claire Danes. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ (:15) “Rescue Dawn” ››› (2006)

CHANNEL

WEDNESDAY EVENING JULY 1, 20096:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS News (N) (CC) Entertainment Old Christine Gary Unmarried Criminal Minds “Cold Comfort” (CC) CSI: NY “Forbidden Fruit” ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) (:35) Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show(4) ABC News (N) Two/Half Men Wipeout (N) ’ (CC) I Survived a Japanese Game Show Primetime: Crime ’ (CC) News (N) (:35) Nightline (N) Access Hollywood (:36) Extra (N) ’(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) America’s Got Talent Auditions. ’ America’s Got Talent Auditions. (N) The Philanthropist “Myanmar” (N) ’ News (N) (CC) Wimbledon Tonight Show-Conan O’Brien(6) HBO (5:00) “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” Cont’d (:45) “Ocean’s Thirteen” ››› (2007, Comedy-Drama) George Clooney. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel ’ True Blood “Scratches” ’ (CC)(7) KUED The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) American Masters (N) ’ (CC) Smothered: The Censorship Struggles of the Smothers As Time Goes By Summer Wine Mythos With Joseph Campbell (CC)(8) KPNZ Estudio 2 A Que no Puedes Alarma TV Chuperamigos Noticiero STN Secretos Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS House of Payne House of Payne House of Payne House of Payne Meet the Browns Meet the Browns HawthoRNe “Yielding” (CC) House of Payne House of Payne Sex and the City Sex and the City(11) KBYU Little House on the Prairie “Plague” The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Nova (CC) Savage Seas ’ (CC) Worldfocus (CC) Perry Mason (CC) My Three Sons(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) So You Think You Can Dance Top 14 dancers perform. (N) ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ (:35) Still Standing (:05) Family Guy King of the Hill ’(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) Dr. Phil Parents abduct their children. News (N) (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Entertainment The Insider (N) ’(15) KUWB Two/Half Men According to Jim America’s Next Top Model ’ (CC) Hitched or Ditched “The White Devil” King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond According to Jim Malcolm-Mid.(23) FX That ’70s Show “X-Men: The Last Stand” ›› (2006) Hugh Jackman. A cure for mutations divides the X-Men. “Gridiron Gang” ››› (2006, Drama) The Rock, Xzibit. A counselor turns juvenile criminals into football players.(25) QVC Steel by Design Jewelry By Popular Demand Dining With David Arte d’Argento -- The Art of Silver Mark Zunino “Fashion”(26) ANPL Eaten Alive ’ (CC) Monsters Inside Me Parasites. ’ I Shouldn’t Be Alive ’ Monsters Inside Me Parasites. ’ I Shouldn’t Be Alive ’ Eaten Alive ’ (CC)(27) NICK Ned’s School SpongeBob Home Improve. Home Improve. George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ The Nanny (CC) The Nanny (CC) Family Matters ’ Family Matters ’ George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’(28) FAM “A Cinderella Story” ›› (2004) Hilary Duff, Jennifer Coolidge. (CC) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ The 700 Club (CC) Whose Line? Whose Line? Paid Program Paid Program(29) TOON The Othersiders Survive This (N) BrainRush (CC) Star Wars Clo. King of the Hill ’ King of the Hill ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Hungerforce Venture Bros. Home Movies ’(31) CMTV Extreme Makeover: Home Edition ’ “Necessary Roughness” ›› (1991, Comedy) Scott Bakula, Hector Elizondo. Premiere. ’ “Necessary Roughness” ›› (1991, Comedy) Scott Bakula, Hector Elizondo, Robert Loggia. ’(33) DISN Phineas and Ferb Phineas and Ferb Phineas and Ferb Zack & Cody Wizards-Place Hannah Montana “The Wild” ›› (2006) Voices of Kiefer Sutherland. ‘G’ Wizards-Place Wizards-Place Hannah Montana(36) SPIKE “Star Wars: Ep. III” UFC Fight for the Troops “Belly of the Beast” › (2003, Action) Steven Seagal, Don Ferguson.(38) AMC “Out for Justice” ›› (1991, Action) Steven Seagal, William Forsythe. “Blown Away” ›› (1994) Jeff Bridges. A mad Irish bomber plots revenge on his former pupil. “No Way Out” ››› (1987) Kevin Costner. (CC)(39) TNT Bones “Mummy in the Maze” (CC) Bones ’ (CC) Leverage “The Juror No. 6 Job” Law & Order “Maritime” ’ Law & Order “Terminal” ’ Cold Case “A Perfect Day” ’ (CC)(41) CNN Campbell Brown (N) Larry King Live (N) (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)(43) CNBC CNBC Reports American Greed Crime & Punishment Mad Money Fast Money American Greed(46) LIFE Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) “Break-In” (2006, Suspense) Kelly Carlson. (CC) Will & Grace ’ Will & Grace Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) Will & Grace ’ Will & Grace ’(49) FXNEWS The O’Reilly Factor (N) (CC) Hannity (N) On the Record-Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record-Van Susteren(51) FXSPN World Poker Tour: Season 7 Sport Science Golden Age The Final Score Reloaded The Final Score Best Damn Top 50 Special The Final Score The Final Score(52) ESPN MLB Baseball San Francisco Giants at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (Subject to Blackout) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight NFL Live (N) SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA “Blood Diamond” ››› (2006) Leonardo DiCaprio. Premiere. Two men join in a quest to recover a priceless gem. “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” ›› (2006, Adventure) Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom. (CC)(71) DISC Pitchmen “High Impact Item” (CC) Pitchmen “Dual Saw Shuffle” (CC) Pitchmen “Revenge of the Pitchmen” Pitchmen “High Impact Item” (CC) Pitchmen “Dual Saw Shuffle” (CC) Pitchmen “Revenge of the Pitchmen”(518) ENC “The Avengers” › (1998) Ralph Fiennes. ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:35) “Pretty Woman” ››› (1990) Richard Gere, Julia Roberts. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:40) “Air America” ›› (1990, Action) Mel Gibson, Nancy Travis. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:35) P2 › (2007)(534)STARZ Smart People ‘R’ (:25) “Dan in Real Life” ››› (2007) Steve Carell. (CC) (:05) “High School Musical 3: Senior Year” ›› (2008) Zac Efron. ‘G’ (CC) “Gone Baby Gone” ››› (2007, Mystery) Casey Affleck. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(561) MAX (5:20) “The Kingdom” ›› ‘R’ Cont’d (:15) “Young Guns” ›› (1988, Western) Emilio Estevez. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Young Guns II” ›› (1990, Western) Emilio Estevez. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Meet Dave” ›› (2008) ‘PG’ (CC)(576) SHOW (5:00) “The Color of Freedom” Cont’d Nurse Jackie (iTV) Weeds (iTV) ’ “Good Luck Chuck” › (2007) Dane Cook. iTV. ’ ‘R’ (:45) “Mr. Brooks” ›› (2007) Kevin Costner. iTV. A man has a murderous alter ego. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(591) TMC (5:55) “The 24-Hour Woman” ›› (1999) ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d “Vegas Vampires” (2003) Tommy “Tiny” Lister. ’ ‘NR’ “Who’s Your Caddy?” › (2007) Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ “I’m Through With White Girls (The Inevitable”

CHANNEL

TUESDAY EVENING JUNE 30, 20096:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS News (N) (CC) Entertainment NCIS “Caged” ’ (CC) The Mentalist “Red Tide” ’ (CC) (:01) 48 Hours Mystery “Vegas Heat” News (N) (CC) (:35) Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show(4) ABC News (N) Two/Half Men The Superstars The Sand Dash and the Water Leap. (N) Better Off Ted (N) Primetime: Family Secrets (N) (CC) News (N) (:35) Nightline (N) Access Hollywood (:36) Extra (N) ’(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) America’s Got Talent Auditions. ’ America’s Got Talent Auditions. (N) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit News (N) (CC) Wimbledon Tonight Show-Conan O’Brien(6) HBO Run Fat Boy Run Public Enemies “Mr. Woodcock” ›› (2007) Billy Bob Thornton. ‘PG-13’ Joe Buck Live ’ (CC) “Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!” ››› (2008) ‘G’ (CC) “Jumper” › (2008) ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)(7) KUED The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Nova “Musical Minds” (N) ’ Nova scienceNOW ’ (CC) (DVS) Inside “Hong Kong’s Big Bang” ’ Being Served Summer Wine P.O.V. “Beyond Hatred” ’ (CC)(8) KPNZ Estudio 2 A Que no Puedes Alarma TV Chuperamigos Noticiero STN Secretos Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) The Office (CC) The Office “Fire” Seinfeld ’ (CC) Seinfeld ’ (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City “An American Werewolf in Paris” ›(11) KBYU Little House on the Prairie (CC) The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) The Return of Sherlock Holmes (CC) Great Old Amusement Parks (CC) Worldfocus (CC) Perry Mason (CC) My Three Sons(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) “Legally Blonde” ›› (2001, Comedy) Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson. ’ News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ (:35) Still Standing (:05) Family Guy King of the Hill ’(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) Dr. Phil Overweight children. News (N) (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Entertainment The Insider (N) ’(15) KUWB Two/Half Men According to Jim 90210 “Wide Awake and Dreaming” Hitched or Ditched “The White Devil” King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond According to Jim Malcolm-Mid.(23) FX Ice Age ››› “Ice Age: The Meltdown” ›› (2006, Comedy) Voices of Ray Romano. “X-Men: The Last Stand” ›› (2006) Hugh Jackman. A cure for mutations divides the X-Men. Rescue Me “Torch” (N)(25) QVC Barbara Bixby Jewelry Portfolio Super-size Cleaning Solutions Jim Shore Heartwood Creek Summer Living Summer supplies. Organized Options Joan Rivers Classics Collection(26) ANPL Bear Feeding Frenzy ’ (CC) Grizzly Man Diaries ’ (CC) I Was Bitten ’ (CC) Bear Feeding Frenzy ’ (CC) Grizzly Man Diaries ’ (CC) I Was Bitten ’ (CC)(27) NICK Ned’s School SpongeBob Home Improve. Home Improve. George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ The Nanny (CC) The Nanny (CC) Family Matters ’ Family Matters ’ George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’(28) FAM America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ The 700 Club (CC) Make It or Break It “Where’s Marty” Paid Program Slimming Jeans(29) TOON Total Drama Total Drama Total Drama Total Drama King of the Hill ’ King of the Hill ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Hungerforce Venture Bros. Home Movies ’(31) CMTV Extreme Makeover: Home Edition ’ CMT Music Awards 2009 ’ The Singing Bee ’ The Singing Bee ’ Can You Duet ’(33) DISN Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Phineas and Ferb Jonas (CC) Wizards-Place Hannah Montana “Beethoven’s 5th” ›› (2003) John Larroquette. ‘G’ Phineas and Ferb Wizards-Place Hannah Montana(36) SPIKE “Star Wars: Episode II” World’s Scariest Police Chases 2 ’ World’s Scariest Police Chases 3 ’ Jesse James Is a Dead Man ’ “Sniper” ›› (1993, Action) Tom Berenger, Billy Zane, J.T. Walsh. ’(38) AMC “Ghostbusters” ››› (1984) Bill Murray. Ghost fighters battle ghouls in a Manhattan high-rise. “Ghostbusters II” ›› (1989, Comedy) Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver. “Stripes” ›› (1981) Bill Murray.(39) TNT Bones “The Bone That Blew” (CC) HawthoRNe “Yielding” (N) (CC) Saving Grace “Watch Siggybaby Run” HawthoRNe “Yielding” (CC) Saving Grace “Watch Siggybaby Run” Cold Case “Saving Patrick Bubley”(41) CNN Campbell Brown (N) Larry King Live (N) (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)(43) CNBC CNBC Reports The Hunt for Black Gold The Nuclear Option Mad Money Fast Money The Hunt for Black Gold(46) LIFE Reba “The Rings” Reba ’ (CC) “Unthinkable” (2007, Suspense) Michelle Forbes. (CC) Will & Grace ’ Will & Grace ’ Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) Will & Grace ’ Will & Grace ’(49) FXNEWS The O’Reilly Factor (N) (CC) Hannity (N) On the Record-Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity On the Record-Van Susteren(51) FXSPN World Poker Tour: Season 7 World Poker Tour: Season 7 Reloaded The Final Score Best Damn 50 The Final Score Best Damn Sports Show Period (Live) The Final Score The Final Score(52) ESPN 2008 World Series of Poker (CC) 2008 World Series of Poker (CC) Baseball Tonight (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Baseball Tonight NFL Live (N) SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA House “It’s a Wonderful Lie” (CC) House “You Don’t Want to Know” ’ House “Don’t Ever Change” ’ (CC) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ In Plain Sight “Miles to Go” (CC) Psych (CC)(71) DISC Deadliest Catch “Lockout” ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch (N) ’ (CC) (:01) After the Catch “Frozen Crab” Deadliest Catch “Lockout” ’ (CC) Deadliest Catch ’ (CC) After the Catch “Frozen Crab” (CC)(518) ENC “The Animal” › (2001) Rob Schneider. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “The Running Man” ›› (1987) Arnold Schwarzenegger. (:15) “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” ›› (2007) John C. Reilly. ‘R’ (CC) “Last Action Hero” ›› (1993) (CC)(534)STARZ Sgt. Bilko › \ (:20) “88 Minutes” › (2007) Al Pacino. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:15) “First Sunday” ›› (2008, Comedy) Ice Cube. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “The House Bunny” ›› (2008) Anna Faris. ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:45) Untraceable(561) MAX “Alvin and the Chipmunks” ›› \ (:15) “Hellboy II: The Golden Army” ››› (2008) Ron Perlman. ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:15) “What Happens in Vegas” › (2008) Cameron Diaz. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Babylon A.D.” › (2008) Vin Diesel.(576) SHOW (5:55) “Shooter” ›› (2007) Mark Wahlberg. iTV. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d Weeds ’ (CC) Nurse Jackie (iTV) Weeds ’ (CC) Nurse Jackie (iTV) “Feast of Love” ›› (2007) Morgan Freeman. iTV. ‘R’ Open Window ‘R’(591) TMC (5:40) “Home of the Brave” ›› (2006) ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d “I Witness” ›› (2003) Jeff Daniels. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) (:05) “Nightwatch” › (1998, Horror) Ewan McGregor, Nick Nolte. ’ ‘R’ “Carver” (2008) Kristyn Green. ‘R’

CHANNEL

WEEKDAY AFTERNOON12:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

(2) CBS News Guiding Light Bold-Beautiful Inside Edition Dr. Phil Oprah Winfrey News Evening News

(4) ABC All My Children One Life to Live General Hospital The Tyra Banks Show The Ellen DeGeneres Show News ABC Wld News

(5) NBC (10:00) Tennis Varied Programs Days of our Lives Be a Millionaire Deal or No Deal News News News NBC Nightly News

(7) KUED Cyberchase WordGirl Varied Programs Wishbone Curious George Arthur Martha Speaks WordGirl Arthur Fetch! Ruff Cyberchase Business Rpt.

(8) KPNZ José Luis Sin Censura A Que no Puedes Trancazo Musical El Show de Lagrimita y Costel Secretos Alarma TV José Luis Sin Censura

(10) TBS Just Shoot Me Just Shoot Me Yes, Dear Yes, Dear King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond Every-Raymond Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld

(11) KBYU Zula Patrol Between-Lions Sesame Street Dragon Tales Martha Speaks Arthur WordGirl Fetch! Ruff Cyberchase Curious George The Brady Bunch

(13) FOX Judge Alex Judge Alex Cristina’s Court Cristina’s Court Divorce Court Divorce Court Judge Joe Brown Judge Joe Brown Judge Judy Judge Judy FOX 13 News FOX 13 News

(14) KJZZ George Lopez My Wife and Kids Matlock The Bonnie Hunt Show The Doctors The People’s Court The Insider Frasier

(15) KUWB The Tyra Banks Show Maury The Cosby Show The Cosby Show Judge Jeanine Pirro Jamie Foxx The Wayans Bros. That ’70s Show That ’70s Show

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(25) QVC Varied Programs

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(27) NICK Varied Programs iCarly iCarly SpongeBob Back, Barnyard The Penguins SpongeBob iCarly True Jackson, VP

(28) FAM Sabrina-Witch Sabrina-Witch Full House Full House What I Like What I Like Gilmore Girls My Wife and Kids My Wife and Kids That ’70s Show That ’70s Show

(29) TOON Varied Programs League-Evil Johnny Test Varied Programs

(31) CMTV Trading Spouses: Meet-Mommy Trading Spouses: Meet-Mommy Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Trading Spouses: Meet-Mommy Trading Spouses: Meet-Mommy Extreme-Home Varied Programs

(33) DISN Hannah Montana Wizards-Place Movie Phineas and Ferb Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Varied Programs

(36) SPIKE CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs

(39) TNT Cold Case Law & Order Law & Order Bones Bones Bones

(41) CNN (11:00) Newsroom Newsroom The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer Lou Dobbs Tonight

(43) CNBC Street Signs Closing Bell Closing Bell Fast Money Mad Money Kudlow Report

(46) LIFE Wife Swap Wife Swap Reba Reba Still Standing Still Standing Less Than Perfect Less Than Perfect Reba Reba

(49) FXNEWS (11:00) The Live Desk Studio B With Shepard Smith Your World With Neil Cavuto Glenn Beck Special Report With Bret Baier The FOX Report With Shepard Smith

(51) FXSPN Varied Programs Best Damn 50 Varied Programs Best Damn Top 50 Special

(52) ESPN SportsCenter Outside the Lines Football Live NFL Live Rome-Burning Around the Horn Interruption SportsCenter Varied Programs NFL Live

(57) USA Varied Programs NCIS NCIS NCIS

(71) DISC Varied Programs Deadliest Catch Cash Cab Cash Cab Cash Cab Varied Programs

CHANNEL

WEEKDAY MORNING6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS News The Early Show The Price Is Right The Young and the Restless As the World Turns

(4) ABC (5:00) News Good Morning America Live With Regis and Kelly Good Things Utah The View

(5) NBC News Today Today Rachael Ray Varied Programs

(7) KUED Sesame Street Curious George Sid the Science Super Why! Clifford-Red Reading Rainbow Between-Lions Super Why! WordWorld Martha Speaks Fetch! Ruff

(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado El Mundo Salvaje Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Gran Cine

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(11) KBYU LDS Confer. Big Big World Bob the Builder Arthur Curious George Sid the Science Super Why! Clifford-Red WordWorld Barney & Friends BYU Devotnl LDS Confer.

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(27) NICK Max & Ruby Go, Diego, Go! Dora the Explorer Dora the Explorer SpongeBob SpongeBob iCarly iCarly SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob

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(29) TOON Pokemon-Battle Varied Programs Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s Chaotic Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs

(31) CMTV (4:00) CMT Music CMT Power Picks Varied Programs

(33) DISN Lilo & Stitch Lilo & Stitch Phineas and Ferb Tigger & Pooh Handy Manny Mickey Mouse Sp. Agent Oso Mickey Mouse Handy Manny Imag. Movers Phineas and Ferb Zack & Cody

(36) SPIKE Paid Program Paid Program CSI: Crime Scn Varied Programs CSI: NY Varied Programs CSI: Crime Scene Investigation CSI: NY CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

(39) TNT Charmed Charmed ER Varied Programs ER Varied Programs Las Vegas Varied Programs Las Vegas Varied Programs

(41) CNN (4:00) American Morning Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom

(43) CNBC (4:00) Squawk Box Squawk on the Street The Call Power Lunch Varied Programs

(46) LIFE Still Standing Still Standing Less Than Perfect Less Than Perfect Frasier Frasier Will & Grace Will & Grace Desperate Housewives Desperate Housewives

(49) FXNEWS (4:00) FOX and Friends America’s Newsroom Happening Now The Live Desk

(51) FXSPN The Final Score The Final Score Varied Programs

(52) ESPN SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter

(57) USA Varied Programs

(71) DISC Paid Program Varied Programs Cash Cab Cash Cab Cash Cab Cash Cab Varied Programs

CHANNEL

TUESDAY June 30, 2009 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Huffman/Cordova

Nicholas and Whitnee Cordova celebrated their love as they entered a union of marriage on June 13, 2009. Proud parents are Cory and Valarie Huffman and Chuck and Angela Dickinson.

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WEDDINGS

Hodges/Howsden

Kaden, Kacey and Jersey would like to announce the marriage of their parents KC Hodges and Nicole Howsden on July 4, 2009 at 4 p.m. at First Baptist Church. Reception to follow at the Dow James Building.

Nicole is the daughter of William and Lori Howsden.

KC is the son of Scott Hodges and Tricia Proctor.

KC and Nicole will be mak-

ing their home in Casper, Wyo. where KC is an auto body tech-nician for Sapp Brothers Auto.

Nicole Howsden and KC Hodges

Thurston/Speredon

Robert and Lori Thurston and the late Christine Thurston are pleased to announce the mar-riage of their son of Jordan to Casey Speredon on July 3 in the Bountiful, Utah Temple. Jordan graduated from Tooele High in 2003 and served a mission in Albuquerque, N.M. He currently lives in Provo and is the market-ing director for Revolution Snow Boards. Casey is the daughter of Joseph and Carol Speredon of West Valley City. Casey gradu-ated from Granger High School in 2007 and is attending Brigham Young University were she is a member of the volleyball team. You are invited to join us for a reception to be held in their

honor the same evening at the Hatton Residence 690 Hillside Oak Circle, North Salt Lake from 7-9 p.m.

Nicholas Cordova and Whitnee Huffman

Casey Speredon and Jordan Thurston

MILITARY NEWSCody Painter

Army Pvt. Cody B. Painter has graduated from basic com-bat training at Fort Jackson, Columbia, S.C.

During the nine weeks of training, the soldier studied the Army mission, history, tradition and core values, physical fit-ness, and received instruction and practice in basic combat skills, military weapons, chemi-cal warfare and bayonet training, drill and ceremony, marching, rifle marksmanship, armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics, military courtesy, military justice system, basic first aid, foot marches, and field training exercises.

He is the son of Clifton Painter of Grantsville and grandson of Darla Painter of Tooele.

Painter is a 2008 graduate of Grantsville High School.

photo courtesy of Cargill Salt

Jason Stevens (left), plant manager at the Cargill Salt Grantsville location, presents the Cargill Community Scholarship Program Award of $1,000 to Chase Banks (right), a Tooele High School graduate. Chase will be attend-ing Brigham Young University.

SHS new FFA officersAs the 2009-10 school year

approaches, what could be more exciting than a new high school opening? Stansbury High School is finished and ready for the halls to be rumbling with students. Along with a new school, new organizations, teams and clubs are established.

Stansbury High School is proud to announce a new chap-ter of FFA. The officers are: Colten Anderson (president), Monica Black (vice president), Taft Miller (secretary), Jamie Christensen (treasurer), Kassidee Kolb (reporter), Justin Templeton (sentinel), Jake Templeton (stu-dent development), Caitlyn Camp (chapter development), Mike Smith (community devel-opment) and Gage Jensen (assis-tant treasurer). Our advisers for this coming year are Mr. Babbit and Mr. Miller.

To make a club like FFA suc-cessful we need support. Anyone interested in joining Stansbury High School FFA can contact any officer or adviser. If you want a great opportunity to serve the community, join FFA today.

SCHOOL NEWSSCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT

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B3

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Live music, Car show,

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6:00 - 9:00 AMPancake Breakfast At the Grantsville Fire Station BY The Lariettes

7:30 AMKids 1 mile Run and Bus Pick up for 5 K Run

8:00 AM5K Memorial Run, Brad Sutton 884-5522

8:00 AMFlag Raising At the Grantsville Fire Station

10:30 AMParade Line Up At the Grantsville Cemetery

11:00 AMParade Down Main Street Ending at Cherry St Park

12:30- 10:30 PMALL Tooele County CHARITY EVENT - Park Festivities (Cherry Street Park)

12:30 - 6:00 PM8th Annual Tooele Valley Rotary Charity Car Show

1:00 - 3:00pmLive Music Performance By CJ BURTON BAND

3:00 - 5:30 PMLive Music Performance BY world Renown Blues on First

5:30 PMParade and Car show Award Ceremonies’ and Raffle

6:00-7:30 PMLive Music performance By Going Second

8:30- 9:30 PMLive Music Performance Sticks and Stones

9:30PMThe Biggest and Best Fireworks show in UTAH ever By The Grantsville FD!!!

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4th of July4th of JulyGRANTSVILLE

All proceeds goes to Tooele County charities.

B3

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB4 TUESDAY June 30, 2009

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nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. They will also run on our web-site.

Building the World’s Best Specialty Metals Company™… Providing Opportunities in your Community

Allegheny Technologies is creating the world’s leading specialty materials company. The cornerstones of our value system are based on achieving the highest ethical standards, maintaining strong customer focus and providing challenging and rewarding opportunities for our employees. Our new facility in Rowley, UT will produce titanium sponge in order to support ATI’s growth potential in world markets. Please visit our website to learn more about our Global Company at www.allegh-enytechnologies.com .

Are you ready to join the team? We are recruiting for the following positions:

Production Technician – Operates equipment and performs tasks that support operations of the various producing units.Works with material and equipment to handle, transport and process product and materials. Directs the flow of mate-rial to and from producing units. Operates various types of equipment associated with producing materials. Inspects and performs maintenance on all associated equipment. Advanced positions include operating specialized and sensitive equipment, performing intricate procedures and performing supervisory or control room duties as required. High school diploma or equivalent and 2 years relevant experience in a production environment required.

We offer a generous compensation package that includes low-cost medical, dental and vision benefits; Life and ac-cident insurance; tax-free health care and dependent care reimbursement accounts; an annual bonus plan; 401(k); tuition assistance program; eleven paid holidays per year and much more!

Submit resume to [email protected] or mail to HR PO Box 507, Rowley, UT 84029

Join the Team

Send cover letter & resume to: Mountain West Medical Center | Attn: Human Resource Dept | 2055 N. Main St | Tooele | UT 84074

Diane Johnsonphone 435.843.3750 | fax 435.843.3753 | [email protected] | www.mountainwestmc.com

Immediate Openings

To Apply

Medical Assistant - FT • 2 Positions in OBGYN Clinic • FT With Benefits • 2 Years MA Experience in

Women’s Services Pref.

O.R. Scheduler/Coordinator• FT position with Benefits• Billing / Coding Experience and

Medical Terminology a Plus• Ability to Multitask• Strong Interpersonal Skills

Ultrasound Tech • PRN Position Available • Current Utah Licensure Required

Receptionist • FT Position in OBGYN Office • Previous Medical Receptionist

Exp. Pref.

Director of Surgical Services• Current RN Licensure• 2+ yrs in OR Nursing• 1-3 yrs Management Exp. Preferred

Medical Assistant, PRN• This is an On-Call, Fill In Position• Rotates to Various Clinic As Needed• M.A. Certification Strongly

Preferred• Previous M.A. Experience Required

Services

*DRYWALL, BASE-MENTS, additions, re-pairs. Professionalsmooth wall experi-ence. Dependable.Custom textures. Ref-erences available.Free estimates. Jobsb i g & s m a l l !801-750-6248435-843-1518

HANSON & SONSHandyman Home re-pairs, finish basements,siding, roofing, plumb-ing, bobcat work, etc.Very Reasonable. LocalT o o e l e . J e f f(801)694-1568

ALTERATIONSand AWARD WINNING

TAILORINGby

KATHY JONES

882-6605

30 Years ExperienceLicensed & Insured

Lawn & Leaf801-580-7899

INSECTICIDE• Total Weed Kill Out!• Fertilizer• Aeration• Tractor Work• Sprinkler system

installation

A HANDYMAN! Homerepairs, remodeling,painting, drywall, kitch-ens, baths, cleans outs,hauling, plumbing &electrical repairs! Ga-rage Storage Systems!(435)840-5918

A QUALITY work, over30yrs experience, Newaddition or remodels,finishing basement,concrete, any flat work,footing, foundation ma-sonry. Also do rock wallCall (435)843-7444(435)882-2820 FreeEstimates.

ALAN HEAP M.D.,Psychiatrist, is ac-cepting new pa-t i e n t s . C a l l(435)882-2207 Mon-Thur 9am-5pm forappointment.

American Arborists, LLC.Professional Tree Serv-ice 10+ years exp. TreeTrimming/removal,Hedge trimming, andstump removal. FreeEstimates(801)688-8162

Services

B&B CUSTOM Paint-ing. Interior, Exterior,Minor Drywall repairs,over 20 years experi-ence. Best deals intown! Call 224-4344

CONCRETE C-K&J’sALL phases of con-crete. Specializing inflatwork, STAMPED.Best price in town.Concrete and repair.882-4399 or 840-0424.

CUSTOM CONCRETENew or tear out and re-place, stamped, patios,walk-out basements,drive ways, steps, RVpads. Competitive pric-ing. Licensed and in-s u r e d . T r o y(801)860-0539

DRYWALL: Hanging,finishing, texturing. 27years experience. Li-censed and insured.Doug 843-9983; mobile(435)830-2653

TILLING ONE free gar-den plant when I tilly o u r g a r d e n !(435)884-6476(435)830-4499

GARAGES/ DECKS cus-tom built from theground up to your sizeand specifications. Thedecks- can be redwoodor trex. Competitivepricing. Licensed andi n s u r e d . J a y(801)860-0536

G A R C I A C O N -STRUCTION.

FOUNDER: J DONGARCIA. Reason-able Remodles. Fin-ished basements,bathrooms, kitchen,wet bars etc. Outsideadditions, concrete,patios, plumbing,electrical, landscapeand design. Licensedand insured. Free es-t ima tes . Tyson435-849-3374

HANDYMAN SERVICEPLUS Remodel, re-pairs, replace, mostanything. Can do. Kevin(435)850-8390 Bro &Sis cleaning services,h o m e s . K a t h y(801)706-4428

HAULING. Sand, Gravel,Top Soil, Lime Finds,Excreta. Call (435)249-1316 or (435)224-2653

HONEY DO Pro! Li-censed, insured, base-ment remodel ing ,doors, windows, finishcarpentry, painting, til-ing, wind storm repair,roofing & Snow Re-moval. Now offering in-sulation free to half off.Call for details. For allyour household needsCall 801-706-5339.

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Services

JOSE’S YARD Mainte-nance Mow and cleanup your yard. Haulinggarbage, low rates andsenior discounts. Askfor Jose (435)843-7614or (530)321-3201

LET ME Work for you.High School Senior isexceptional word proc-essor. Excellent spell-ing and grammar skills.C o n t a c t a t(435)830-6332

LOCAL ELECTRICIAN/Handyman seekingwork. No job too small.Licensed and insured.Call Dale for Free esti-mates. (435)843-7693(801)865-1878

MIKE EMERY’S Custompainting (435)849-2563Licensed Insured, inte-rior, exterior, decks,fences, sheetrock pre-pairs, texture. No jobtoo small or too big.(435)849-2563

NEED ANY Extra Help?I’m 14yrs old looking forsummer work. Willing todo odds and ends jobs.Logan (435)850-9973

NOW ACCEPTING alimited number of musicstudents. Piano, voice,theory, composition.Scott Jefferies, Grants-ville. Bachelor of Music,Piano, Voice, Choral,Brigham Young Univer-sity. (435)884-3405 Cell(214)674-5846

PRIVATE TUTORING.Certified Teacher. Ex-perienced Tutor. AllSubjects. All Ages.Call Angela Maloy(435)882-2733 or(435)496-0590

TRACTOR SERVICE.Final grades, leveling,field plowing, gardentilling, brush, lot mow-ing. Dump trailer, limefines, yard cleanup.(435)830-1124(435)884-6868

UNSIGHTLY WEEDS?Let us remove them!Call Chris (801)560-7916

YARD CLEAN UP,Weeding and pruningWe’re back! “WellDone” Yard Care. CallTom or Susan Weldon(435)884-0175

Miscellaneous

-HONEY-Orange Blossom, somesizes available now.Bee’s wax also avail-able. Additional sizes &local honey comingsoon. (435)882-0123 orstop in. 50 S. ColemanStreet, Tooele.

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Miscellaneous

VHS to DVDNeed a great giftidea? Let us convertyour VHS home vid-eos to DVD. Worriedthat your VHS homemovies will becomeobsolete? Have themtransferred to DVDfor as little as $20.Edit scenes, addmenus and titles.Consolidate tapes -put all your Holidayvideos onto oneDVD. Preserve yourmemories today. Call843-7626

Riddles Salvage& Wrecking

• car & trucks• farm equipment• batteries• aluminum & copper

9am - 5pm • Mon - SatFREE Pick- up884- 3366

6400 Burmester Rd • Grantsville

Real cash foryour junkcar or truck.

4 STATION free stand-ing weight set $400. 15ft x 4ft swimmingpool:chemicals / filters /ladder / solar cover in-cluded $300. Truck bedtoo l box $150 .(435)882-0136

CLEAN FILL Dirt forSale!. 10 to 15 yardsper pile @ $150 a pile.You must provide yourown trailer/ truck forloading. We will loaddirt onto your vehiclefor you. Serious inquir-ies only. Cash only.C a l l C h r i s @(435)841-9286,(435)841-9287,(435)843-5942.

DIAMONDS don't payretail! Large selection,high quality. Bridal sets,wedding bands. Every-thing wholesale! RockyMtn. Diamond Co.S.L.C. 1-800-396-6948

FOOD STORAGE. Driedsoup mixes: CountryP o t a t o , B r o c c o l iCheese, #10 cans, 56one cup servings percan. $7 each or 6 for$35. Great for foodstorage. (435)882-3368

HEAT YOUR ENTIREhome, domestic waterand more with the clas-sic OUTDOOR WOODFURNACE. Dual fuelready models available.Call today! (801)725-2751. (ucan)

If you sell Insurance,promote a hospital oran ambulance service,place your classified adin all 47 of Utah's news-papers. The cost is only$163. for a 25 word ad($5. For each additionalword). You will reachup to 500,000 newspa-per readers. Just callTooele Transcript Bulle-tin at (435)882-0050 fordetails. (Ucan)

Miscellaneous

LADIES! SAVE time ap-plying make-up! Youneed permanent cos-metics. Eyebrows oreyeliner only $250 orboth for $425 call Vickitoday! (801)556-1093

NINE GAMES for PS1and PS2. Brand newmemory card. $70 obo.Call (435)849-2886

RV PARK, South end ofTooele. Spaces for rentby day, week or monthcall (435)882-4748

SELL YOUR computer inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

You may have just thething someone out oftown is looking for.Place your classified adin 45 of Utah's newspa-pers, the cost is $163.For up to 25 words.You will be reaching apotential of up to340,000 households.All you need to do iscall the Transcript Bul-letin at 882-0050 for fullde ta i l s . (Ment ionUCAN)

Furniture & Appliances

ANTIQUE armoire $300;ultra-suede sofa w/pil-lows $675; purple din-ing table $115. All athomebodies, 1 N. MainSt. Tooele, 882-0650.

KENS AFFORDABLEAppliance. We repair allmajor appliances. Frontload, top sets, StovesFridges, 3-6/mo War-ranty. Vent cleaning.Also sells Maytag Frontload W/D sets from$800 and up. Call Ken(435)241-0670

NORTH VALLEY Appli-ance. Washers/ dryersrefrigerators, freezers,stoves, dishwashers.$149-$399. Completerepair service. Satis-faction guaranteed.Parts for all brands. Giftcards w/purchases over$199 . 843 -9154 ,830-3225.

Garage, Yard Sales

HAVING A GARAGESALE? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050

TOOELE, 330 TahoeSt. Saturday, July 4,10am-5pm. MultiFamily Sale! Greatstuff! Come see!

Pets

RUSH LAKE KENNELS.

Boarding, obediencetraining. Book now!Call (435)882-5266

rushlakekennels.com

Pets

PET BOARDING

PamperedPet Resort

Pet care with a personal touch

884-3374www.pamperedpetresort.com

4 YEAR old Iguana, verysweet. Does not bite orwhip. Loves to play.Comes with her cage,lighting, substrate, foodand toys. $150 or bestoffer. (435)882-5077

AKC Purebred LabradorPuppies. 8 Weeks, 1stShots, Dewormed. AllColors. Champion/Master Hunter Blood-lines. Parents On Site.$ 4 0 0 o b o .(801)637-7458

BEAUTIFUL SIAMESEkittens, beautiful calicok i t ten .P lease ca l l(435)882-2667

BULLY PUPS, bluenose. Sire 100% RazorEdge and championed;Dam powerline. 3males, 1 female, $600.UKC Reg is te red .(801)703-8203

KITTENS. All colors.First shots. (435)882-8601

PET BOARDING andProfessional Groom-ing, 150 acres dedi-cated to your pets.C a l l L i s a(435)[email protected]

WANTED: Light blondemale Golden Retriever,AKC registered, forbreeding. Call Dennisat (435)884-5593

Livestock

COW HAY, 65lb bales,$2 .50 per ba le(435)884-6369(435)224-3117

FIRST CROP AlfalfaGrass mix hay (50-50)$135 per ton or $5 perbale. (435)884-6460

FIRST CROP Cow Hay.$ 2 a b a l e .(435)882-1469

GOOD QUALITY Hay,no weeds. Call Stu at(435)830-4196

HORSE BOARDINGSouth end of Tooele.Stable or open pasture.Call (435)882-4748

LOCKER BEEF for sale.Ranch raised grain fedall natural beef, no arti-ficial hormones $1.50/lbdressed weight, youpay processing. Call(435)839-3454

Livestock

LUSH HORSE Pastureavailable, located RushValley, fresh CloverCreek water, salt block,furnished, handling cor-ral available. $50/moper horse. Garth(435)837-2246,(435)830-2309

Need to sell that newchampion bull or youryearling calves? Placeyour classified ad into47 newspapers, findyour buyers quickly. Foronly $163. your 25word classified will beseen by up to 500,000readers. It is as simpleas calling the TooeleTranscript Bulletin at(435)882-0050 for de-tails. (Ucan)

Sporting Goods

BOWFLEX MOTIVATERwith leg extension $300(435)840-3431

SELLING YOUR moun-tain bike? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 www.tooeletranscript.com

Lost & Found

LOST: Blue Heeler,15yrs old, male, 1floppy ear. Lost June3rd on Droubay PineCanyon Road Erdaarea (435)843-1717

Personals

ADOPT. A beautiful fi-nancially secure homefilled with love music &laughter, stay homemom & doting dadyearn for baby. Ex-penses paid. Ned &Stephanie.1-877-789-1949

PREGNANT? LOVINGCOUPLE will provideyour baby with Love,Laughter, Education,Stability and Security,Large Home, GreatCommunity. Valerie/Larry 1-888-902-4453.(ucan)

Child Care

STANSBURY PARK LI-CENSED DAY CARE,24HRS, FULL TIME,CPR, FIRST AID,STATE REGULA-TIONS, BUS TOSCHOOL, REFER-ENCES NIGHTLYRATES DISCOUNTEDSPECIAL PRICE FORS U M M E R T I M E(435)849-2329

THE NEXT Best thing.Quality home childcare. We provide awarm nurturing environ-ment for your child. Funactivities.(435)849-2873

Child Care

Open Mon.-Thurs6am - 6pm

Closed Fridays

School Transportation

Call Kim, 5 yrs. exp.

830-6833References Available

Daycareenchantment

Where Minds & Spirits Grow!

CHILD CARE! You won’tfind better rates! 6openings. All ages!Drop-ins welcome. 15years exp.CPR. Jeni(801)347-4351

CHILDCARE in Stans-bury Smartypants hasopening for age 2 1/2and up. Fun activitiesfree pre-school state li-censed (435)843-1565

DAY CARE in my home,2 F/T Openings Mon-Fri6:30am-5pm Ages 2-5.Shelley (435)882-3869

GRANTSVILLE MissVeda’s Play N Care,27yrs exper ience.Peace of mind whileyou are at work! Clean,nu t r i t i ous mea ls ,snacks. Preschool ac-tivities. 4:30am-6pm,Mon-Fri. 6 childrenmaximum.(435)884-3496

Help Wanted

11 MOTHERS/ Othersto work from home withcompu te r , $500 -$3500/mo. 2bpaiddaily.com

EXPERIENCED ADULTDance Ins t ruc to rNeeded: DancersEdge, an existingdance studio in Stans-bury Park, is looking fora n a d d i t i o n a lDance/Tumbling In-structor for the upcom-ing dance season,starting September.E x p e r i e n c e i ndance/tumbling is re-quired. Please emailresume to both emailaddresses: [email protected] n d d e . d a n c [email protected]

DRIVERS/ CDL CareerTraining w/Central Re-frigerated. We train,Employ w/$0 down fi-nanc ing. Average$35-40k 1st year!800-525-9277 X6088

Help Wanted

Aggressive, Motivated,Full Time. SalespeopleStandard Opt ica l ,Utah's number one Op-tometry/Ophthalmologyproctice is seeking ap-plicants for full and parttime retail sales andcustomer service posi-tions. Duties includedefining and attainingsales expectations, op-tical dispensing, cus-tomer service, companypolicy compliance, andmuch more. Qualifiedapplicants will have re-tail sales experience, apositive attitude, and behighly motivated. Com-pany offers competitivepay, bonus and com-mission opportunities,and a great benefitspackage. If you arelooking for a challeng-ing career, StandardOptical is for you. Pro-fessional paid licensingand training available.Please email all re-sumes to our Directorof Store [email protected]

AVON: TO BUY ORSELL. Sell to anyone.For information call in-dependent sales repre-sentative Vi Knutson884-3830

BABYSITTER NEEDEDImmediatley $700/mo/week.

BUSIEST TIME! Movies,Commercials,TV, Pro-motional work. Earn to$150 hour. No experi-ence. (801)438-0067

Business owners If youneed someone fast,place your classified adin all 48 of Utah's news-papers. The person youare looking for could befrom out of town. Thecost is only $163. for a25 word ad and itreaches up to 340,000households. All you dois call the TranscriptB u l l e t i n a t(435)882-0050 for allthe details. (MentionUCAN) You can noworder online www.utah-press.com

BUSY DOCTORS officeseeking full time recep-tionist. Must be organ-ized and have excellentphone skills. Call435-841-7476

FAMILY NURSE PRAC-TITIONER Central Val-ley Medical Center inNephi, Utah seekingpart-time, FNP. Utah li-cense and family prac-tice experience re-quired. Send Resumeto: [email protected].(ucan)

FRAMER needed hardworking, dependable,good working environ-ment, pay weekly,Tooele work. CallSpencer (435)840-0412Do not call after 7/1/09

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Sell Your Stuff! Call 882-0050

Tuesday June 30, 2009 B5

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

Shane Bergen

435.840.0344

Thinking About

BUYINGSELLING A Home?

or

Lets Talk.

788 West 960 SouthTooele $187,900

•5 Bdrms•3 Baths•2718 s.f.•Vaulted Ceilings•Fully Fenced Backyard•New 30 year Architectural roof shingles

A great home in a great location.

•5 Bdrms•3 Baths•2718 s.f.•Vaulted Ceilings•Fully Fenced Backyard•New 30 year

UnderContract

1185 N. Main • Tooele Go to remax.com, enter MLS number to take a photo tour of these homes.

All offices independently owned and operated. Information deemed reliable, but not guaranteed. Buyer to verify all.

Super Price for a Great home in established neighborhood on Tooele’s East side!New

furnace, central air, humidifier,water heater, reverse osmosis.New windows,carpet,laminate

floor,paint,water softener,outside bsmt entrance,coverd patio, GREAT BACK YARD!

508Terrace Ln

Super Price for a Great home in established

ONLY$159,900

MLS #861190

Absolutely Georgeous two-story home with lots of upgrades!Large lot backs up to Overlake el-

ementary. Large master set up with Grand Master Bath. Formal living room and dining room. Nice

paint and tile. Central air. CLEAN!! A DEFI-NATE MUST SEE!

107 W 2100 N

Absolutely Georgeous two-story home with lots

ONLY$245,000

MLS #875934

REMEMBER THIS RAMBLER WHEN LOOK-ING ON TOOELE’S EAST BENCH! Clean and well taken care of. Pride of ownership is evident inside and out! Large lot is fully landscaped with auto sprinklers.Fenced.Lots of R.V. Parking and

large shed. Central air. Fresh Paint.

796Clifford Dr

REMEMBER THIS RAMBLER WHEN LOOK-

Dr ONLY$249,900

MLS #874151

CLEAN AS A WHISTLE AND OH SO NICE! Great price on a great home! 4 bedrooms,2 full bath. Two tone paint.Newer carpet. Central air.

Laminate flooring.Walk in closet.Fully landscaped with automatic sprinklers. A MUST SEE!!

557 E 700 N

CLEAN AS A WHISTLE AND OH SO NICE!

ONLY$169,900

MLS #881070

BEAUTIFUL! UNIQUE! BREATHTAKING VIEWS! Custom built home with upgrades

galore!Open and inviting for entertaining with family and friends.Landscaped very tastefully.

149Memory LN

BEAUTIFUL! UNIQUE! BREATHTAKING

LN ONLY$345,000

MLS #886437

Sandra Larsen 435.224.9186

Great neighborhood, great curb appeal. close to schools. NEW PAINT &

CARPET. CLEAN! 5 bedrooms. Nice grand master. check out tour. Will pay 3% in buyers

closing costs.

1611DURO-CHER LN

appeal. close to schools. NEW PAINT &

CHER LN CHER LN CHER LN ONLY$189,900

MLS #892110

RecognizedRespectedRecommended

Open rambler with main floor laundry. Basement almost finished. 2 car garage.

central air. Walking distance to elementary school.Property is sold “AS IS” with no

warranties expressed or implied.

655 E 180 N

Open rambler with main floor laundry.

ONLY$150,000

MLS #893811

Open rambler with main floor laundry. New Listing

Great neighborhood, great curb New Listing

CLEAN AS A WHISTLE AND OH SO NICE! Great price on a great home! 4 bedrooms,2 full

700 N

CLEAN AS A WHISTLE AND OH SO NICE!

ONLY ONLY ONLY ONLY$169,900

MLS #881070MLS #881070MLS #881070

UnderContract

The Kirk

57 West Vine • Tooele • 882-1372

Quiet, Quality apartments in a restored historic structure

The Best Places at the Best PricesCompletely Furnished

Weekly & Monthly Rates

Help Wanted

FULL TIME ophthalmictech needed for busyOphthalmology clinic,medical office experi-ence preferred, willtrain if necessary.Please fax resume to(435) 843-8334.

HELP WANTED officestaff with quickbooks,computer and customerservice experience.Yard worker/customerservice. Equipment ex-periance preferred.C a l l f o r A p t .435-840-3732

LOOMIX® FEED SUP-PLEMENTS is seekingdealers. Motivated indi-viduals with cattleknowledge and commu-nity ties. Contact Allison@ 800-870-0356/ [email protected] tofind out if there is adealership opportunityin your area. (ucan)

MEDICAL RECEPTION-IST needed Eveningsand weekends a must.Fax Resume to(435)882-3859

MR APPLIANCE is hir-ing a part time CSR.Phone communicationand computer skills area must. Fax resume to(435)884-3754 or call(435)884-3748 for moreinformation.

NOW LOOKING for Per-sonal Trainers & Per-sonal Training Manag-ers. Great career op-portunities. Positionsopen in Stansbury &Grantsville. ContactS h a w n a t(801)529-4322

SLT IMMEDIATEOPENINGS for CDLAteams, solo drivers will-ing to team. $750s i g n - o n b o n u s .$1100/wk minimumpay. Hazmat & 1yr ex-perience. Backgroundc h e c k r e q u i r e d .1-800-835-9471. (ucan)

SLT - IMMEDIATEOPENINGS for CDLAteams, solo drivers will-ing to team. $750sign-on bonus. $1100/wk minimum pay. Haz-mat & 1yr experience.Background check re-quired. 1-800-835-9471. (ucan)

Help Wanted

YOUNG BUSINESS-MAN with disabilityseeks live-in travelcompanion/ house-keeper/ personal assis-tant in California.Room, board, salary,and college tuition as-sistance. No experi-e n c e n e e d e d530-227-7526. (ucan)

Business Opportunities

A CASH COW! Soda/Snack All cash vendingbusiness - $19,440 -801.593.0084 (ucan)

ALL CASH VENDING!Do you earn $800 in aday? Your own localcandy route. Includes25 machines andcandy. All for $9995.1-888-745-3353 (ucan)

Small Business owners:Place your classified adin 45 newspapersthroughout Utah foronly $163. for 25words, and $5. perword over 25. You willreach up to 340,000households and it is aone call, one order, onebill program. Call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for furtherinfo. (ucan)

Wanted

JUNK CARS Will paycash. Will come to you.(435)830-0527

WANTED: OLD AUTOdealership parts inven-tories. Also pre-1960jukeboxes and partsand old radio stationelectronics. Call Tim,1-800-772-5158, Colo-rado. (ucan)

Recreational Vehicles

CAR TOTE w/swivelfront & 2 spare tires,great shape. $850.(435)843-0772

Autos

1993 GRAND AM excel-lent condition, newtires, runs great. Asking$ 2 3 0 0 o b o(435)840-5199

1999 CHEVY CavalierZ24, spoiler, sunroof,window tint, new bat-tery & windshield. Veryclean & dependable.Blue Book $3600. Sell-i n g $ 2 9 5 0 .(435)882-1369

GFCU is TAKING BIDS on:

Minimum bid $2,500.00

Bid closing will be 07/02/09 at 4 p.m.

Any questions call

435-884-3804

2003 DODGE RAM 1500• ½ TON V8 QUAD

CAB SLT• 104,508 MILES

(ENGINE NOT RUNNING)

2005 GRAND Caravan,baby blue, runs great!Must sell. $8500 obo.C a l l A m y a t(801)828-5055

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

SUVs

2002 DODGE DurangoSLT, charcoal, in greatcondition, loaded with4WD, air, cruise, cd,stereo. $4499. Call(435)884-0201

Trucks

1998 CHEVY Box truck,123,000 miles, excel-lent condition, $8900.(435)843-0772

GRAY LEAR shell, fits2000 Toyota Tundra.Comes with dual Ya-kima bike racks. $500OBO. Call Stephanie at849-4041

Vehicle Parts

1995 SHORT BED GMCShell $500 obo, goodc o n d i t i o n . C a l l(435)882-3863

Rooms for Rent

FURNISHED, PRIVATEKitchen, Bath, and liv-ing room. Wirless inter-net. Some utilities in-cluded. $495/mo plusdeposit. 144 West Dur-f e e , G r a n t s v i l l e .(801)651-5151

RENT A Room w/SWF$400/mo including utili-ties, satellite, sharedbathroom, full accesskitchen, single femalep r e f e r r e d . ( 4 3 5 )882-7813 9am-9pmLeave message

Apartments for Rent

Beautiful1 & 2 Bedroom

Apartments!!Completely Remodeled

fridge, stove, dishwasher, oak/maple cabinets, carpet,

Absolutely Gorgeous! The bestvalue in ALL of Tooele.

Non-Smokers Only! No Pets!

(801) 318-4997or see Mgr #6, 2pm-10pm

260 North 100 East, Tooele

2 AND 3bdrm apart-ments behind SuperWal-Mart. Swimmingpool, hot tub, exerciseroom, playground, fullclubhouse. 843-4400

2BDRM 1BTH, remod-eled, govt. subsidized.Playground, carport.$500/dep. 211 S. Hale,Grantsville. Call Chris(435)843-8247 EqualHousing Opp.

2BDRM DUPLEX, w/dhookups, carpor t ,$700/mo, $400/dep.Call (435)882-1867

2BDRM VERY Nice,Quiet, new carpet andvinyl, carport, storageshed, Washer/ dryerhookups, $600/mo CallRon (435)830-5227

3BDRM 2BTH duplex,spacious, 1200sqft,clean, No pets.$750/mo, $600 clean-ing deposit. (435)840-4528

3BDRM, No Smoking,water softner, w/dhookups, dishwasher,fenced, off streetparking. 1 indoor petnegotiable. $750/mo(801)949-8642(435)843-8383

575 S. Coleman 3bdrm,2bth 1600sqft 2 car ga-r a g e i n c l u d e d .$1025/mo. includesutilities. No smoking.Call Karen 830-0615RE/MAX Results

Apartments for Rent

LARGE 2BDRM 2bthSerious inquiries only.w/d hook ups, a/c,$550-$650/mo,$500/dep. No pets, NoSmoking. Owner/ agent(435)840- 3010

ROOMMATE WANTED.House in Tooele, smallroom w/shared bath.$ 3 2 5 / m o p l u s$325/dep, utilities in-cluded. Cal l Karl(801)458-9815

SLEEPING ROOMSavailable, $70 perweek, $10 key deposit,first and last week- total$150 to move in. 46 NBroadway. 882-7605

TOOELE, 3BDRM, 2bthbottom duplex, spa-cious bright clean, ac/heater, w/d hookups,carport, storage, petsnegotiable. No smok-ing. $775/mo. 830-6994

VALLEY MEADOWS2bdrm apartment forr e n t . $ 5 0 0 / m o ,$400/dep. Coveredparking, w/d hookups,dishwasher. Won’t lastlong! Call Carole at(435)882-7875 ext 123.

Homes for Rent

WHY RENT whenyou can buy? 0down programs,lease options withdown available andlow income pro-grams. First timebuyers, Single parentprograms. Call fordetails. Berna Sloan(435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate

1bdrm, 1bth, carport,$525/mo. 239 North 4thS t r e e t , T o o e l e .(801)597-8609www.outwestrealty.com

Golf Course home 2700 sq ft, 2 bdr, 2 full bath, mas-ter bath w/2 head shower

& jet tub. Fam room off kitchen w/fire-place,

island bar, deck, cntrl air,vaulted ceiling, ceramic

tile, 2 car garage, Gardner included. $1,050/mo

801-322-2505 • 801-450-5656801-599-1455

STANSBURY HOME 4 RENT

2006 STANSBURYPARK Rambler 4bdrm2 b t h , $ 1 6 0 0 / m o$1200/dep Call for in-fo rmat ion . Nancy(435)849-1985

2BDRM 1BTH Home$710/mo includes waterand electric. $500/depNo dogs. Owner/ Agent(435)830-1177

2BDRM, 1BTH home,big yard, garden spot,no pets, no smoking.$650/mo, $450/dep.One year lease.(435)882-1612

2BDRM, 1BTH, ac, w/dhookups, $650/mo,$600/dep, no smoking,no pets, 214 South 5thStreet. Call (801)450-8524

3BDRM 1BTH largeyard, 33 East 500North, w/d hookups.$750/mo, $600/dep.Available July 1st. Formore in fo rmat ion(435)882-1199

3BDRM 2bth, carport,$850/mo 864 West 700South Tooele (801)598-4881 wwwoutwestre-alty.com

3BDRM, 1BTH 734North 170 West,$775/mo, $700/dep. Nopets, no smoking.(435)590-4552(435)496-3794

3BDRM, 2BTH & 2bdrm,1bth, w/d hook-ups,central air, 644 E 500North $650/mo & 626 E500 North. $750/mo$ 6 0 0 / d e p P R S .(801)450-8432(801)467-6344

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

4BDRM, 3.5BTH, 3 cargarage, RV parking,golf course view.3200sqft. $1450/mo801-835-5592 www.my-hometownproperties.com

4BDRM 3BTH HUDhome! Only $317/mo!5% down, 15yrs @ 8%apr. For listings call800-586-3901 x5159

4BDRM 3BTH HUDHome! Only $317/Mo!5% dn 15yrs @ 8% aprFor List ings Cal l800-586- 3901 x 5159

5BDRM, 2BTH rambler,1/3 acre, fenced yard, 2car garage, lots of RVparking, f i replace,$1300/mo, Option tobuy. (801)835-5592myhometownproper-ties.com

STANSBURY HOMESFor rent (435)843-9883

Homes for Rent

AVAILABLE 7/5 4bdrm2bth, $950/mo includeswater, $700/dep. Formore information callMike (435)849-4182

DUPLEX 3bdrm, 1.5bth,washer dryer included.Large yard & patio.Close to Northlake Ele-mentary. All utilities in-c l uded . $900 /mo$900/dep(435)224-0472

GRANTSVILLE 3BDRM2bth 2 car garage, fullbasement, large yard,dishwasher $900/moLease option $3000 tomove in. (801)969-6697643 E Hunter Way

LAKEPOINT Trailer onlot, $600/mo, First &Last, $300/dep. Powerpaid. No smoking/ pets.Single occupancy.(801)250-1493

NEWER 3bdrm Ramblerin Stansbury Park. forRent. 2484sqft, 3bdrm,2bth, 2 family rooms,fenced yard, quietneighborhood, $1100/mo. Must See. CallKristy (435)840-5184.

NEWLY REMODELEDlarge family home forRENT. New carpet,paint, fixtures, flooring,granite countertops.Available NOW! 3 Bed-rooms, 3 bathrooms,family room, garage,deck, large back yard.NO smoking/No Pets.$1000/mo First and lastmonth’s rent requiredalong with cleaning de-posit. 71 West 400S o u t h C a l l435-830-6517

NORTH TOOELE.4bdrm, 3bth Rambler,2488sqft. Vaulted ceil-ings. Open floor plan.Fully fenced/ land-scaped. Avai lablemid-June. No smoking/pets. $1200/mo. $800/dep. Minimum 1yrlease. (801)376-1927

TOWNHOME- Overlake,$925/mo plus security,3bdrm, 1.5bth, new ap-pliances, finished base-ment. Small patio- noyard. Enclosed garage.No pets. (435)224-2674

RENT OR Seller Fi-nance, 3bdrm, 2bthhome, Vernon, Utah.New carpet, paint.$600/mo. (435)830-2063

TOOELE, 3bdrm, 2bth,fenced yard, ac, washerdryer, $800. Ask usabout furnishings &lawn care. Pet friendly.(801)842- 9631

Homes for Rent

STANSBURY 3bdrm2.5bth, Townhome,peaceful back off of wa-ter way. Family room.laundry room beautifulkitchen, 2 car garage,storage in basement,central air, appliancesincluded 1851sqft.$1100/mo Lease optionavailable $146,500.(801)835-5592www.myhometown-properties.com

STANSBURY 3BDRM2bth fenced yard, laun-dry room, 2 car garage,No smoking. $1250/mo$750/dep Available im-mediately.(801)671-7392

STANSBURY 4BDRM,3bth, fenced yard, dou-ble car garage, smalloutside pet ok, weeklylawncare, availablenow. Walk to StansburyElementary & HS. Newcarpet/ paint. $1300/mowww.guardrightprop-erty.com (801)842-9631

STOCKTON 2bdrm1bth, All appliances,large yard, carport,$650/mo First and lastand deposit required.Pets ok w/deposit. Call(435)640-0259

TOOELE, 2bdrm, 2bthGlen Eagle Townhouse

carport, central ac,hookups, $795/mo

904 North Glen Eagle Ct(580 West)

Davidson Realty(801)466-5078

TOWNHOME IN Over-lake. 3bdrm, 2bth, Ga-rage, $950/Mo 71 W.1391 N. Tooele. Pet?Maybe. Rent or Rent toOwn. Ca l l Rod(801)598-2494

WEST VALLEY, 4bdrm,2bth, spacious, eat inkitchen, garage, fencedyard. $1250/mo, Nos m o k i n g / p e t s .(801)835-5592 my-hometownproperties.com

Homes

$$$SAVE MONEYFind HUD & Bankowned homes at:www.tooelebankhomes.com or callfor a list Berna Sloan(435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate

FSBO 4BDRM 2bth,Great starter house,C a l l D a n(435)841-9829

Homes

$229,900 5BDRM allBrick Rambler, up-grades, solid oak cabi-nets, wood burner, 2gas fireplaces, formalliving and dining room(435)840-5199

AFFORDABLE HOMESt. George, $129,9001634 sq ft, 3 bedrooms,2 baths, spaciousrooms. See: 185 N.2750 E. Call: Norton435-467-5454 Possiblelease option. (ucan)

FOR SALE by owner.North East Tooele$149,900. New re-molded 3bdrm and2bth, master walk in,new w/d, fridge, stove,and microwave in-cluded. Tile and hard-wood floors, central air,RV parking. Cal l(435)830-9439

New Homes Priced ToSell!!!!!Grantsville

$185,000Great for Low to Moderate Income

Families!!!

Utah Housing Corporation is selling two new 5 bedroom/2 bath, 2680 sq/ft homes

with quality touches found only in higher

priced homes. Income limits apply.

FOR DETAILS CALL SCOTT AT

(801) 902-8235or visit our website:www.utahhousingcorp.org

HORSE PROPERTY.1.12 acres, fencedarea, home built 2006,2513sqft, priced at only$229,000. Ready tomove in. Call Mary Ann(801)557-6737

MY MANAGER HAS losthis mind! Model homesd i s c o u n t e d o v e r$10,000! Call me nowt o p r e - q u a l i f y801-773-9652 ask forDON . (ucan)

Homes

Planning on selling yourhome, you could besending your salespoints to up to 340,000households at once.For $163. you canplace your 25 wordclassified ad to all 45newspapers in Utah.Just call the TranscriptBulletin at 882-0050 forall the details. (Mentionucan)

QUIET NEIGHBOR-HOOD ON Cul-de-sac,3bdrm 2bth w/bonusroom, 2 family rooms, 3sheds, .022acre lot,$125,000 Call Melody(435)843-5313

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

THE GOV'T WILL giveYOU up to $8,000 tobuy one of MYHOMES! Big sales go-ing on. Now is the timeto BUY before thisstimulus goes away!Ask for Joe at(801)773-9653 (ucan)

New Homes Priced ToSell!!!!!

Tooele

$195,000Great for Low to Moderate Income

Families!!!

Utah Housing Corporation is selling two new 5 bedroom/2 bath, 2390 sq/ft homes

with quality touches found only in higher

priced homes. Income limits apply.

FOR DETAILS CALL SCOTT AT

(801) 902-8235or visit our website:www.utahhousingcorp.org

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

882-0050

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Your Local News Source

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

B6 Tuesday June 30, 2009

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

Mobile Homes

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

Office Space

FOR LEASE Office/Bus iness SpaceUtilities included. 56South Main. 1 monthfree. (602)826-9471

MOVE IN SPECIAL!Commercial Space inTooele, 272 N. Broad-way, approx. 200 to450sqft. Newly re-molded. High speedInternet, utilities in-cluded in rent. 1 monthfree rent. $250/mo(435)882-4949

Lots & Land

LOT IN Stockton, 1.27acres, water connectionincluded, natural as adnelectircity available, citysewer coming. $90,000.(435)882-1578 or(435)249-1143

LOTS FOR Sale. DeerHollow Estates Beauti-ful View Lots UpperEast Bench Location.30 acre to 1.5 acreavailable. "Now is thetime to buy" www.Tooe-leCountyRealty.com(435)830-2505(435)882-5337

NEW HOMES AND Fi-nancing Available for aLimited Time, SpecialGovernment ProgramAvailable. Zero DownPayment if you OwnLand or Your FamilyOwns Land. Call Johnfo r P re -app rova l801-787-3050. (ucan)

Storage

GREAT DEALS on Stor-age Units. Call DepotSelf Storage for details.(435)843-4467

Water Shares

1 ac-ft Erda water share,transferable. Motivatedseller. $6700 obo. Call(208)882-2450

5 ACRE FT undergroundwater, transferablethroughout, Erda orTooele City. Cal l(435)882-4949

SELLER MOTIVATED.One share SettlementCanyon water. $3750o b o . C a l l(435)830-0512 or(801)828-5496.

Commercial Property

FOR SALE! FitnessCenter, 12750sqft,Main Street. Handballcourts, lockers, show-ers, saunas, hot tubs,aerobic area. Unlimitedpossibilities! 882-7094,(801)860-5696

OFFICE BUILDING 54South Main. Built inthe 1960s. 10,000sqftmain floor finished,5000+ sqft basementunfinished. $799,000.(602)826-9471

RETAIL BUSINESSOr Office space forrent at 336 N MainSt. in Tooele. Ap-proximately 2800sqftlots of parking (Ap-prox imate ly . 25spaces- more if re-quired), great visibil-ity. Directly acrossfrom 7-11, 1bth butcould have 2nd in-stalled if necessary.$2500/mo No mainte-nance fees. PhoneCheckpoint One(435)882-5560

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 additionalword). You will reachup to 340,000 house-holds and all you do iscall the Transcript Bul-letin at 882-0050 for allthe details. (MentionUCAN Classified Net-work)

METAL ROOF/ WALLPanels, Pre-engineeredMetal Buildings. Millprices for sheeting coilare at a 4 year low. Youget the savings. 17 Col-ors prime material, cutto your exact length.CO Building Systems1-800-COBLDGS(ucan)

Public Notices Meetings

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

PUBLIC NOTICE Notice is hereby giventhat the Grantsville CityPlanning Commissionwill hold a regular meet-ing on Thursday, July 9,2009 in the GrantsvilleCity Hall Council Cham-bers at 429 E. MainStreet in Grantsville,Utah, which meetingshall begin promptly at7:00 P.M.PUBLIC HEARING:a. Proposed GeneralPlan amendment forGrantsvi l le Estates,L.L.C. for 200 acres ofland they own located inthe far southeast area oftown to go from “RuralResidential - 1” designa-tion to a “Low DensityResidential” for the pur-pose of a residential de-velopment.b. Proposed rezoning of120.64 acre acres ofland located in the farsoutheast area of townfor Grantsville Estates,L.L.C. to go from anRR-5 zone to a splitzone of R-1-21 and 80acres to go from anRR-5 zone to an RR-1zone for the purpose of aresidential development.AT THE CONCLUSIONOF PUBLIC HEARINGSMEETING OFFICIALLYCALLED TO ORDER BYCHAIRMAN GARYPINKHAM.1. Consideration of aGeneral Plan amend-ment for Grantsville Es-tates, L.L.C. for 200acres of land they ownlocated in the far south-east area of town to gofrom “Rural Residential -1” designation to a “LowDensity Residential” forthe purpose of a residen-tial development.2. Consideration of a re-zoning of 120.64 acreacres of land located inthe far southeast area oftown for Grantsville Es-tates, L.L.C. to go froman RR-5 zone to a splitzone of R-1-21 and 80acres to go from anRR-5 zone to an RR-1zone for the purpose of aresidential development.3. Consideration of a mi-nor design changes ofthe preliminary plat forOquirrh Estates P.U.D.4. Consideration of apreliminary plat for GeneAnderson on AndersonFarms Phase 1 contain-ing 30 lots, located atapproximately 600 S.Worthington Street.5. Reconsideration ofdevelopment agreementfor Country Village Es-tates P.U.D.6. Consideration of min-utes of the last businessmeeting.7. Report from CouncilLiaison Member ToddCastagno.8. Adjourn.DATED this 26th day ofJune, 2009.By the Order of Grants-ville City Planning Com-mission Chairman, GaryPinkhamShauna KertamusZoning AdministratorAll interested personsare invited to attend andprovide comment uponthe proposals scheduledfor public hearings. Writ-ten comments will alsobe considered if submit-ted to the Zoning Admin-istrator in advance of thehearing. The currentzoning Code and pro-posed amendments maybe reviewed at theGrantsville City Halleach weekday betweenhours of 9:00 a.m. - 4:00p.m. In accordance withthe Americans With Dis-abilities Act, GrantsvilleCity will accommodatereasonable requests toassist the disabled toparticipate in meetings.Request for assistancemay be made by callingCity Hall at 884-3411 atleast 24 hours prior tothe meeting that will beattended.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aClosed Meeting onWednesday, July 1,2009, at the hour of 6:30P.M. The meeting willbe held at the TooeleCity Hall Large Confer-ence Room located at 90North Main Street,Tooele, Utah.1. Pending LitigationSharon A. DawsonTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should NotifySharon A. Dawson,Tooele City Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting. TDD PhoneNumber 843-2108(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aClosed Meeting onWednesday, July 1,2009, at the hour of 6:30P.M. The meeting willbe held at the TooeleCity Hall Large Confer-ence Room located at 90North Main Street,Tooele, Utah.1. Pending LitigationSharon A. DawsonTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should NotifySharon A. Dawson,Tooele City Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting. TDD PhoneNumber 843-2108(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aBusiness Meeting onWednesday, July 1,2009 at the hour of 8:00P.M. The meeting willbe held at the TooeleCity Hall Council Roomlocated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Pledge of Allegiance2. Open Forum for Pub-lic Comment3. Presentation by RockyMountain Power Pre-sented by Lee Brown4. PUBLIC HEARINGRegarding the Applica-tion of Tooele City forFinancial Assistancefrom the LeRay McAl-lister Critical LandConservation Programto Acquire a Conserva-tion Easement for 105Acres of Hillside OpenSpace Presented byRoger Baker5. Resolution 2009-38 AResolution of the TooeleCity Council Authorizingthe Submittal by theMayor of an Applicationfor Financial Assistancefrom the LeRayMcAllister CriticalLand Conservat ionProgram for Acquisi-tion and Preservation of105 Acres of HillsideOpen Space Presentedby Roger Baker6. MOTION on AmendedPlat For West PointMeadows Condomini-ums to Modifythe Design of the Build-ings to be Con-structed Located at 600North 680 West Pre-sented by Rachelle Cus-ter7. Resolution 2009-36A Resolution of theTooele City Council Ap-proving an Agreementwith Lewis, Young, Rob-ertson and Burningham,Inc., for ProfessionalServices for Amend-ing the Tooele City An-nexation Plan, and Un-dertaking a FeasibilityAnalyses, Regarding theAnnexation of Propertyinto Tooele City Pre-sented by Mayor PatrickDunlavy8. Resolution 2009-37A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilRatifying a Contractwith Wind River Con-struction and Develop-ment for the Construc-tion of the 200 SouthStorm Drain ProjectPresented by Paul Han-sen9. Resolution 2009 - 35A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAccepting the Com-pleted Public Improve-ments Associated withSunset Estates Subdivi-sion Phase 4 Presentedby Paul Hansen10. Resolution 2009 -34 A Resolution of theTooele City CouncilAccepting the Com-pleted Public Improve-ments Associated withGleneagles SubdivisionPhase 3A Presented byPaul Hansen11. Minutes June 17,200912. Invoices Presentedby Mayor Patrick Dun-lavy13.AdjournSharon A. DawsonTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should NotifySharon A. Dawson,Tooele City Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting. TDD PhoneNumber 843-2108(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

PUBLIC NOTICE:The Grantsville CityCouncil will hold a regu-lar meeting on Wednes-day, July 1, 2009 at 7:00p.m. at 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville, UT84029. The agenda is asfollows:AGENDA:1. Summary Act ionItemsa.Approval of Minutesb.Approval of BusinessLicensesc.Approval of Billsd.Personnel Matters2.Consideration of Ordi-nance No. 2009-15amending the GeneralPlan for 7.46 acres lo-cated at 526 North HaleStreet from an “Indus-trial” land use categoryto a “Rural Residenital-1”land use category. (DaleErickson Application).3. Discussion of anamendment to the Gen-eral Plan Map for 8.6acres at approximately600 West Clark Street,from a Medium DensityResidential land usecategory (up to 3 dwell-ings per acre) to a Com-mercial/Higher DensityResidential land usecategory, in order to de-velop higher density resi-dential uses and com-mercial uses. (BoulderCanyon P.R.U.D.)4. Considerat ion ofResolution No. 2009-16approving an amend-ment to the agreementwith the Department ofArmy for wastewatertreatment facility im-provement project.5. Considerat ion ofawarding bid for Waste-water Treatment Plantupgrade.6.Consideration of Ordi-nance No. 2009-16amending the City’sLand Use Managementand Development Code(Section 21.2.2) to pro-vide additional time be-tween the approval of afinal development platand the recording of thefinal development plat.7. Considerat ion ofResolution 2009-12 sup-porting the U.S. 2010Census and determiningthe City’s level of partici-pation in the Census.8. Considerat ion ofResolution No. 2009-17amending Ace DisposalContract to provide cashbond in lieu of perform-ance bond.9.Council InformationUpdates.10. Adjourn.Rachel WrightCity RecorderIn compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, Grantsville City willaccommodate reason-able requests to assistpersons with disabilitiesto participate in meet-ings. Requests for as-sistance may be madeby calling City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICE:The Grantsville CityCouncil will hold a regu-lar meeting on Wednes-day, July 1, 2009 at 7:00p.m. at 429 East MainStreet, Grantsville, UT84029. The agenda is asfollows:AGENDA:1. Summary Act ionItemsa.Approval of Minutesb.Approval of BusinessLicensesc.Approval of Billsd.Personnel Matters2.Consideration of Ordi-nance No. 2009-15amending the GeneralPlan for 7.46 acres lo-cated at 526 North HaleStreet from an “Indus-trial” land use categoryto a “Rural Residenital-1”land use category. (DaleErickson Application).3. Discussion of anamendment to the Gen-eral Plan Map for 8.6acres at approximately600 West Clark Street,from a Medium DensityResidential land usecategory (up to 3 dwell-ings per acre) to a Com-mercial/Higher DensityResidential land usecategory, in order to de-velop higher density resi-dential uses and com-mercial uses. (BoulderCanyon P.R.U.D.)4. Considerat ion ofResolution No. 2009-16approving an amend-ment to the agreementwith the Department ofArmy for wastewatertreatment facility im-provement project.5. Considerat ion ofawarding bid for Waste-water Treatment Plantupgrade.6.Consideration of Ordi-nance No. 2009-16amending the City’sLand Use Managementand Development Code(Section 21.2.2) to pro-vide additional time be-tween the approval of afinal development platand the recording of thefinal development plat.7. Considerat ion ofResolution 2009-12 sup-porting the U.S. 2010Census and determiningthe City’s level of partici-pation in the Census.8. Considerat ion ofResolution No. 2009-17amending Ace DisposalContract to provide cashbond in lieu of perform-ance bond.9.Council InformationUpdates.10. Adjourn.Rachel WrightCity RecorderIn compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, Grantsville City willaccommodate reason-able requests to assistpersons with disabilitiesto participate in meet-ings. Requests for as-sistance may be madeby calling City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

Public Notices Trustees

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Miscellaneous

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

NOTICEAn emergency hazard-ous waste treatment per-mit (#UT-018-2009) hasbeen issued to theUnited States Air Force,Utah Test and TrainingRange (UTTR) located inBox Elder County andTooele County, Utah.The permit allows the AirForce to treat in place bydetonation, ordnancefound at the North andSouth Ranges duringrange clearance activi-ties, during investigativeactivities at FormerlyUsed Defense Sites(FUDS) and during re-medial action, correctiveaction or military muni-tions response programactivities. The Air Forcehas requested the permitbecause it has deter-mined that detonation ofmunitions where theyare found is more pro-tective of human healthand the environmentthan transporting the po-tentially unstable muni-tions back to the Ther-mal Treatment Unit atthe UTTR. This permit isin effect July 3, 2009through September 30,2009.Copies of the permit areavailable for public in-spection during normalbusiness hours on the4th floor of the MarthaHughes Cannon HealthBuilding, 288 North 1460West, Salt Lake City.For further information,contact Connie Rauen at(801) 538?6170. Incompliance with theAmericans with Disabili-ties Act, individuals withspecial needs (includingauxiliary communicativeAids and services)should contact BrookeBaker, Office of HumanResources at (801)536-4412 TDD (801)536-4414.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONSCivil No. 090300945IN THE THIRD JUDI-CIAL DISTRICT COURTIN AND FOR TOOELECOUNTY, STATE OFUTAHD A W N L A V E R N EHUNT aka LAVERNEHUNT aka DAUN LAV-ERNE HUNT akaD A W N L A V E R N EHUNT, Plaintiffvs.HEIRS OF JUNIORTAYLOR HUNT akaJUNIOR HUNT; JUNIEGAY ANDERSON;FLOYD BENJAMINHUNT; MAX JAYHUNT; DON GLENH U N T ; A R N O L DWAYNE HUNT; JOHNDOES 1 through 10;and all other personsunknown, claiming anyright, title, estate, lienor interest in the realproperty described inthe complaint adverseto plaintiff's owner-ship, or any cloud onplaintiff's title thereto,Defendants.THE STATE OF UTAHTO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS:You are hereby sum-moned and required tofile with the clerk of theabove entitled court, 74South 100 East, Tooele,Utah 84074, an answerin writing to the Com-plaint in the above enti-tled case, and to serveupon or mail to Schmutz& Mohlman, LLC, plain-tiff's attorneys, 493 West400 North, Tooele, Utah84074, a copy of saidanswer within thirty (30)days after service of thissummons upon you.If you fail so to do, judg-ment by default will betaken against you for therelief demanded in theComplaint which hasbeen filed with the clerkof the court.This is an action to quiettitle to the following de-scribed real property lo-cated in Tooele County,Utah, and thereby de-clare that any and all op-posing rights, titles, or in-terest held by the defen-dants be removed asclouds on plaintiff's title:Parcel No.: 1-66-3Beginning at a point 57.5feet West of the North-west Corner of Lot 4,Block 66, Grantsville CitySurvey, Grantsville City,and running thenceSouth 330 feet; thenceWest 563.64 feet; thenceNorth 330 feet; thenceEast 563.64 feet to thepoint of beginning.P a r c e l N o . :01-104-0-0015Beginning at the South-west Corner of Lot 6,Grantsville City Survey,Grantsville City, thenceNorth 20 feet; thenceEast 2.5 chains; thenceSouth 20 feet; thenceWest 2.5 chains to thepoint of beginning, con-taining .08 acre.Also in Block 30, Plat A,Grantsville City Survey,Grantsville City, begin-ning at the SouthwestCorner of Lot 3, thenceNorth 180 Feet; thenceEast 82 1/2 feet; thenceSouth 180 feet; thenceWest 82 1/2 feet to thepint of beginning, con-taining .34 acre.Dated this 5th day ofJune, 2009.Schmutz & Mohlman,LLCBy: Frank T. MohlmanAttorneys for Plaintiff493 West 400 NorthTooele, Utah 84074(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 9,16, 23 & 30, 2009)

DRAFT FINDING OFNO SIGNIFICANT IM-PACTEnvironmental Assess-ment for Increased Un-manned Aerial SystemsTesting, Training, andPersonnel at U.S. ArmyDugway Proving GroundOn February 10 and 11,2009, U.S. Army Dug-way Proving Ground(DPG) held public scop-ing meetings at SaltLake City, Utah, andTooele, Utah on the pro-posal to increase Un-manned Aerial Systems(UAS) testing, training,and personnel at Dug-way. The public wasgiven the opportunity toreceive briefings, askquestions, and makesuggestions about thescope of the announcedintent to write a draft en-vironmental assessment(EA). These sugges-tions are addressed inthe draft EA.Pursuant to the NationalEnvironmental Policy Act(NEPA) of 1969 and theCode of Federal Regula-tions (CFR) 32 Part 651Environmental Analysisof Army Actions imple-menting the proceduralprovisions of NEPA, theU.S. Army gives noticethat a draft EA has beenprepared for increasingUAS testing, training,and personnel at DPG,Utah. The EA is incor-porated to this documentby reference. Based onthe EA, I have deter-mined that an environ-mental impact statementis not requiredPROPOSED ACTIONAND ALTERNATIVESThe Proposed Actionconsists of increasingUAS testing, training,and presence of UASpersonnel by locating theProject Office UASRapid Integration Accep-tance Center (RIAC) atDPG and hosting anyother UAS customer thatis willing to test or trainat DPG. The UAS con-sidered in the proposedaction include both con-ventional offensive anddefensive capabilities.Dugway is consideringthree other alternatives.First, the No Action Al-ternative was evaluatedin the EA. The No ActionAlternative would con-tinue with the currentlevel of UAS testing.Second, Dugway is con-sidering adding onlyRIAC defensive (surveil-lance, reconnaissanceand target acquisition)testing and training.Third, Dugway is consid-ering recommending thatRIAC testing be central-ized at another installa-tion such as WhiteSands Missile Range,New Mexico; FortHuachuca, Arizona; orYuma Proving Ground,Arizona. These alterna-tives to the proposal toincrease UAS testing,training, and personnelat Dugway are beingconsidered and may beeliminated from furtheranalysis.DRAFT FINDINGSThe Proposed Action isnot expected to result insignificant environmentalimpacts to geology, to-pography, climate, soils,water, vegetation, wild-life, archaeological andhistorical sites, socio-economic conditions,land use, recreation, airquality, and noise atDPG or surrounding ar-eas.CONCLUSIONBased on the EA, I con-clude that the environ-mental effects of theProposed Action to in-crease UAS testing,training, and personnelare not expected to besignificant and thepreparation of an envi-ronmental impact state-ment will not be war-ranted.PERIOD FOR PUBLICCOMMENT - ADDRESSFOR COMMENTSDugway invites com-ments from any sourceand especially fromtribal, federal, state,county and local govern-ment officials and agen-cies, citizen Advisoryboards, the RestorationAdvisory Board and anyother groups or partieswho have an interest inenvironmental effects ofthe proposed action.The environmental as-sessment is on file andmay be reviewed by in-terested parties at thePublic Affairs Office,U.S. Army Dugway Prov-i n g G r o u n d(435/831-3409). Com-ments will be receivedduring the 30-day periodfollowing the first publi-cation of the Public No-tice, and should be ad-dressed to the com-mander, U.S. Army Dug-way Proving Ground,ATTN: TEDT-DT-DP-PA, Dugway, Utah84022.Robert E. Jones, Jr.Colonel, ChemicalCorpsCommandingU.S. Army DugwayProving Ground(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 25,30 & July 2, 2009)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

DRAFT FINDING OFNO SIGNIFICANT IM-PACTEnvironmental Assess-ment for Increased Un-manned Aerial SystemsTesting, Training, andPersonnel at U.S. ArmyDugway Proving GroundOn February 10 and 11,2009, U.S. Army Dug-way Proving Ground(DPG) held public scop-ing meetings at SaltLake City, Utah, andTooele, Utah on the pro-posal to increase Un-manned Aerial Systems(UAS) testing, training,and personnel at Dug-way. The public wasgiven the opportunity toreceive briefings, askquestions, and makesuggestions about thescope of the announcedintent to write a draft en-vironmental assessment(EA). These sugges-tions are addressed inthe draft EA.Pursuant to the NationalEnvironmental Policy Act(NEPA) of 1969 and theCode of Federal Regula-tions (CFR) 32 Part 651Environmental Analysisof Army Actions imple-menting the proceduralprovisions of NEPA, theU.S. Army gives noticethat a draft EA has beenprepared for increasingUAS testing, training,and personnel at DPG,Utah. The EA is incor-porated to this documentby reference. Based onthe EA, I have deter-mined that an environ-mental impact statementis not requiredPROPOSED ACTIONAND ALTERNATIVESThe Proposed Actionconsists of increasingUAS testing, training,and presence of UASpersonnel by locating theProject Office UASRapid Integration Accep-tance Center (RIAC) atDPG and hosting anyother UAS customer thatis willing to test or trainat DPG. The UAS con-sidered in the proposedaction include both con-ventional offensive anddefensive capabilities.Dugway is consideringthree other alternatives.First, the No Action Al-ternative was evaluatedin the EA. The No ActionAlternative would con-tinue with the currentlevel of UAS testing.Second, Dugway is con-sidering adding onlyRIAC defensive (surveil-lance, reconnaissanceand target acquisition)testing and training.Third, Dugway is consid-ering recommending thatRIAC testing be central-ized at another installa-tion such as WhiteSands Missile Range,New Mexico; FortHuachuca, Arizona; orYuma Proving Ground,Arizona. These alterna-tives to the proposal toincrease UAS testing,training, and personnelat Dugway are beingconsidered and may beeliminated from furtheranalysis.DRAFT FINDINGSThe Proposed Action isnot expected to result insignificant environmentalimpacts to geology, to-pography, climate, soils,water, vegetation, wild-life, archaeological andhistorical sites, socio-economic conditions,land use, recreation, airquality, and noise atDPG or surrounding ar-eas.CONCLUSIONBased on the EA, I con-clude that the environ-mental effects of theProposed Action to in-crease UAS testing,training, and personnelare not expected to besignificant and thepreparation of an envi-ronmental impact state-ment will not be war-ranted.PERIOD FOR PUBLICCOMMENT - ADDRESSFOR COMMENTSDugway invites com-ments from any sourceand especially fromtribal, federal, state,county and local govern-ment officials and agen-cies, citizen Advisoryboards, the RestorationAdvisory Board and anyother groups or partieswho have an interest inenvironmental effects ofthe proposed action.The environmental as-sessment is on file andmay be reviewed by in-terested parties at thePublic Affairs Office,U.S. Army Dugway Prov-i n g G r o u n d(435/831-3409). Com-ments will be receivedduring the 30-day periodfollowing the first publi-cation of the Public No-tice, and should be ad-dressed to the com-mander, U.S. Army Dug-way Proving Ground,ATTN: TEDT-DT-DP-PA, Dugway, Utah84022.Robert E. Jones, Jr.Colonel, ChemicalCorpsCommandingU.S. Army DugwayProving Ground(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 25,30 & July 2, 2009)

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING AND BONDSTO BE ISSUED ANDTO RECEIVE PUBLICINPUTNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN pursuant to theprovisions of the LocalGovernment BondingAct, Title 11, Chapter 14,Utah Code Annotated1953, as amended, thaton April 12, 2009, theTown Council (the“Council”) of StocktonTown, Utah (the “Is-suer”), adopted a resolu-tion (the “Resolution”) inwhich it authorized theissuance of the Issuer'sTaxable Sewer RevenueBonds, Series 2009 (the“Series 2009 Bonds”)and the calling of a pub-lic hearing to receive in-put from the public withrespect to (a) the issu-ance of the Series 2009Bonds and (b) any po-tential economic impactthat the improvements tobe financed with the pro-ceeds of the Series 2009Bonds may have on theprivate sector.TIME, PLACE, AND LO-CATION OF PUBLICHEARINGThe Issuer shall hold apublic hearing on July16, 2009, at the hour of7:00 p.m. at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah. Thepurpose of the hearing isto receive input from thepublic with respect to (a)the issuance of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds and (b)any potential economicimpact that the improve-ments to be financedwith the proceeds of theSeries 2009 Bonds mayhave on the private sec-tor. All members of thepublic are invited to at-tend and participate.PURPOSE FOR ISSU-ING THE SERIES 2009BONDSThe Series 2009 Bondswill be issued for the pur-pose of financing theconstruction of a newwastewater collectionand treatment facilitiesand related improve-ments (collectively, the“Project”).PARAMETERS OF THESERIES 2009 BONDSThe Issuer intends to is-sue bonds in one ormore series, from time totime, in the aggregateprincipal amount of notmore than Ten MillionS e v e n H u n d r e dSixty-four Thousand Dol-lars ($10,764,000)($8,787,000 of the totalprincipal will be forgivenby the purchaser, suchthat the Issuer will be ob-ligated to repay only$1,977,000 of the princi-pal amount) to bear nointerest, to mature in notmore than thirty-five (35)years from their date ordates, and to be sold ata price not less thanninety-nine percent(99%) of the total princi-pal amount thereof.The Series 2009 Bondsare to be issued andsold by the Issuer pursu-ant to the Resolution, in-cluding as part of saidResolution the draft of aFinal Bond Resolutionwhich was before theCouncil and attached tothe Resolution in sub-stantially final form at thetime of the adoption ofthe Resolution and saidFinal Bond Resolution isto be adopted by theCouncil in such form andwith such changesthereto as shall be ap-proved by the Councilupon the adoptionthereof; provided that theprincipal amount, inter-est rate or rates, matur-ity, and discount of theSeries 2009 Bonds willnot exceed the maxi-mums set forth above.A copy of the Resolutionand the Final BondResolution are on file inthe office of the TownClerk of Stockton Townlocated at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah, wherethey may be examinedduring regular businesshours of the Town Clerkfrom 9:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m., Monday throughFriday, for a period of atleast thirty (30) daysfrom and after the dateof publication of this no-tice.NOTICE IS FURTHERGIVEN that a period ofthirty (30) days from andafter the date of the pub-lication of this notice isprovided by law duringwhich any person in in-terest shall have theright to contest the legal-ity of the Resolution, theFinal Bond Resolution,or the Series 2009Bonds, or any provisionmade for the securityand payment of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds, andthat after such time, noone shall have anycause of action to con-test the regularity, for-mality, or legality thereoffor any cause whatso-ever.DATED this June 18,2009./s/Cherrie StaleyTown Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 23 &30, 2009)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING AND BONDSTO BE ISSUED ANDTO RECEIVE PUBLICINPUTNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN pursuant to theprovisions of the LocalGovernment BondingAct, Title 11, Chapter 14,Utah Code Annotated1953, as amended, thaton April 12, 2009, theTown Council (the“Council”) of StocktonTown, Utah (the “Is-suer”), adopted a resolu-tion (the “Resolution”) inwhich it authorized theissuance of the Issuer'sTaxable Sewer RevenueBonds, Series 2009 (the“Series 2009 Bonds”)and the calling of a pub-lic hearing to receive in-put from the public withrespect to (a) the issu-ance of the Series 2009Bonds and (b) any po-tential economic impactthat the improvements tobe financed with the pro-ceeds of the Series 2009Bonds may have on theprivate sector.TIME, PLACE, AND LO-CATION OF PUBLICHEARINGThe Issuer shall hold apublic hearing on July16, 2009, at the hour of7:00 p.m. at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah. Thepurpose of the hearing isto receive input from thepublic with respect to (a)the issuance of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds and (b)any potential economicimpact that the improve-ments to be financedwith the proceeds of theSeries 2009 Bonds mayhave on the private sec-tor. All members of thepublic are invited to at-tend and participate.PURPOSE FOR ISSU-ING THE SERIES 2009BONDSThe Series 2009 Bondswill be issued for the pur-pose of financing theconstruction of a newwastewater collectionand treatment facilitiesand related improve-ments (collectively, the“Project”).PARAMETERS OF THESERIES 2009 BONDSThe Issuer intends to is-sue bonds in one ormore series, from time totime, in the aggregateprincipal amount of notmore than Ten MillionS e v e n H u n d r e dSixty-four Thousand Dol-lars ($10,764,000)($8,787,000 of the totalprincipal will be forgivenby the purchaser, suchthat the Issuer will be ob-ligated to repay only$1,977,000 of the princi-pal amount) to bear nointerest, to mature in notmore than thirty-five (35)years from their date ordates, and to be sold ata price not less thanninety-nine percent(99%) of the total princi-pal amount thereof.The Series 2009 Bondsare to be issued andsold by the Issuer pursu-ant to the Resolution, in-cluding as part of saidResolution the draft of aFinal Bond Resolutionwhich was before theCouncil and attached tothe Resolution in sub-stantially final form at thetime of the adoption ofthe Resolution and saidFinal Bond Resolution isto be adopted by theCouncil in such form andwith such changesthereto as shall be ap-proved by the Councilupon the adoptionthereof; provided that theprincipal amount, inter-est rate or rates, matur-ity, and discount of theSeries 2009 Bonds willnot exceed the maxi-mums set forth above.A copy of the Resolutionand the Final BondResolution are on file inthe office of the TownClerk of Stockton Townlocated at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah, wherethey may be examinedduring regular businesshours of the Town Clerkfrom 9:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m., Monday throughFriday, for a period of atleast thirty (30) daysfrom and after the dateof publication of this no-tice.NOTICE IS FURTHERGIVEN that a period ofthirty (30) days from andafter the date of the pub-lication of this notice isprovided by law duringwhich any person in in-terest shall have theright to contest the legal-ity of the Resolution, theFinal Bond Resolution,or the Series 2009Bonds, or any provisionmade for the securityand payment of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds, andthat after such time, noone shall have anycause of action to con-test the regularity, for-mality, or legality thereoffor any cause whatso-ever.DATED this June 18,2009./s/Cherrie StaleyTown Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 23 &30, 2009)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARING AND BONDSTO BE ISSUED ANDTO RECEIVE PUBLICINPUTNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN pursuant to theprovisions of the LocalGovernment BondingAct, Title 11, Chapter 14,Utah Code Annotated1953, as amended, thaton April 12, 2009, theTown Council (the“Council”) of StocktonTown, Utah (the “Is-suer”), adopted a resolu-tion (the “Resolution”) inwhich it authorized theissuance of the Issuer'sTaxable Sewer RevenueBonds, Series 2009 (the“Series 2009 Bonds”)and the calling of a pub-lic hearing to receive in-put from the public withrespect to (a) the issu-ance of the Series 2009Bonds and (b) any po-tential economic impactthat the improvements tobe financed with the pro-ceeds of the Series 2009Bonds may have on theprivate sector.TIME, PLACE, AND LO-CATION OF PUBLICHEARINGThe Issuer shall hold apublic hearing on July16, 2009, at the hour of7:00 p.m. at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah. Thepurpose of the hearing isto receive input from thepublic with respect to (a)the issuance of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds and (b)any potential economicimpact that the improve-ments to be financedwith the proceeds of theSeries 2009 Bonds mayhave on the private sec-tor. All members of thepublic are invited to at-tend and participate.PURPOSE FOR ISSU-ING THE SERIES 2009BONDSThe Series 2009 Bondswill be issued for the pur-pose of financing theconstruction of a newwastewater collectionand treatment facilitiesand related improve-ments (collectively, the“Project”).PARAMETERS OF THESERIES 2009 BONDSThe Issuer intends to is-sue bonds in one ormore series, from time totime, in the aggregateprincipal amount of notmore than Ten MillionS e v e n H u n d r e dSixty-four Thousand Dol-lars ($10,764,000)($8,787,000 of the totalprincipal will be forgivenby the purchaser, suchthat the Issuer will be ob-ligated to repay only$1,977,000 of the princi-pal amount) to bear nointerest, to mature in notmore than thirty-five (35)years from their date ordates, and to be sold ata price not less thanninety-nine percent(99%) of the total princi-pal amount thereof.The Series 2009 Bondsare to be issued andsold by the Issuer pursu-ant to the Resolution, in-cluding as part of saidResolution the draft of aFinal Bond Resolutionwhich was before theCouncil and attached tothe Resolution in sub-stantially final form at thetime of the adoption ofthe Resolution and saidFinal Bond Resolution isto be adopted by theCouncil in such form andwith such changesthereto as shall be ap-proved by the Councilupon the adoptionthereof; provided that theprincipal amount, inter-est rate or rates, matur-ity, and discount of theSeries 2009 Bonds willnot exceed the maxi-mums set forth above.A copy of the Resolutionand the Final BondResolution are on file inthe office of the TownClerk of Stockton Townlocated at 18 NorthJohnson Street, Stock-ton Town, Utah, wherethey may be examinedduring regular businesshours of the Town Clerkfrom 9:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m., Monday throughFriday, for a period of atleast thirty (30) daysfrom and after the dateof publication of this no-tice.NOTICE IS FURTHERGIVEN that a period ofthirty (30) days from andafter the date of the pub-lication of this notice isprovided by law duringwhich any person in in-terest shall have theright to contest the legal-ity of the Resolution, theFinal Bond Resolution,or the Series 2009Bonds, or any provisionmade for the securityand payment of the Se-ries 2009 Bonds, andthat after such time, noone shall have anycause of action to con-test the regularity, for-mality, or legality thereoffor any cause whatso-ever.DATED this June 18,2009./s/Cherrie StaleyTown Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 23 &30, 2009)

NOTICE OF SUITNotice of Suit in theDistrict Court to Leav-enworth County Kan-sas sitting in Leaven-worth, Kansas (filedpursuant to ksa chap-ter 60-1610(b)(1))In the matter of themarriage of Kim J.Henderson and Ken-neth D. Henderson IIcase #2009-DM000606Notice of Suit State ofKansas to Kenneth DHenderson IIYou are hereby notifiedthat a petition for divorcehas been filed in theLeavenworth CountyDistrict Court sitting inLeavenworth, KS by KimJ Henderson praying fora decree of absolute di-vorce seeking propertyowned by party prior toand acquired duringmarriage including realestate owned by the pe-titioner at the time ofmarriage and requestingan allocation of the par-ties indebtednessYou are hereby requiredto answer or otherwisepleas to the petition onor before Aug. 20, 2009in the LeavenworthCounty District Court lo-cated at 601 S 3rd St,Leavenwor th , KS66048.If you fail to plead the al-legations of this petitionwill be taken as true andjudgment and decree willbe entered in due courseupon this petition.Dated the 22nd of June,2009.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 23.30& July 7, 2009)

NOTICEThe Executive Secretaryof the Utah Solid andHazardous Waste Con-trol Board proposes toapprove a Class III Per-mit Modification (draftmodification) to ModuleV, Dugway ThermalTreatment Fac i l i t y(DTTF), of the DugwayProving Ground Part BPermit (Permit). TheModification to the Per-mit clarifies conditions ofoperation and increasesthe quantities of wastethat can be treated. TheDivision of Solid andHazardous Was te(DSHW) is seeking pub-lic comment on the draftmodification.The public comment pe-riod for this draft modifi-cation begins June 30,2009 and ends at 6:00p.m. on August 17,2009. A public hearingto collect public com-ments on the proposedlanguage will be heldJuly 29, 2009 at 6:00p.m. at the TooeleCounty AdministrativeBuilding South Audito-rium, 47 South Main,Tooele, Utah. Interestedpersons may commentduring the hearing ormay submit comments inwriting before 6:00 PMon August 17, 2009 tothe following address:Dennis R. Downs, Ex-ecutive SecretaryUtah Solid and Hazard-ous Waste ControlBoardP.O. Box 144880, SLC,UT 84114-4880Copies of the draft modi-fication and Fact Sheetare available for publicreview during regularbusiness hours at thefollowing location:Division of Solid andHazardous Waste Of-fices, 4th floor, 288North 1460 West, SaltLake City, UT. or onlineat http://deq.state.ut.us/EQSHW/CDSContact Mr. Doug Taylorof the DSHW at801-538-6170 if youhave any questionsabout this draft modifica-tion. The DPG compli-ance history is availablefrom Mr. Doug Taylor ofthe DSHW at (801)538-6170.In compliance with theAmericans with Disabili-ties Act, individuals withspecial needs (includingauxiliary communicativeaids and services)should contact BrookeBaker, Office of HumanResources at 801-536-4413 (TDD 536-4414) atleast five working daysprior to the scheduledmeeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICEThe Executive Secretaryof the Utah Solid andHazardous Waste Con-trol Board proposes toapprove a Class III Per-mit Modification (draftmodification) to ModuleV, Dugway ThermalTreatment Fac i l i t y(DTTF), of the DugwayProving Ground Part BPermit (Permit). TheModification to the Per-mit clarifies conditions ofoperation and increasesthe quantities of wastethat can be treated. TheDivision of Solid andHazardous Was te(DSHW) is seeking pub-lic comment on the draftmodification.The public comment pe-riod for this draft modifi-cation begins June 30,2009 and ends at 6:00p.m. on August 17,2009. A public hearingto collect public com-ments on the proposedlanguage will be heldJuly 29, 2009 at 6:00p.m. at the TooeleCounty AdministrativeBuilding South Audito-rium, 47 South Main,Tooele, Utah. Interestedpersons may commentduring the hearing ormay submit comments inwriting before 6:00 PMon August 17, 2009 tothe following address:Dennis R. Downs, Ex-ecutive SecretaryUtah Solid and Hazard-ous Waste ControlBoardP.O. Box 144880, SLC,UT 84114-4880Copies of the draft modi-fication and Fact Sheetare available for publicreview during regularbusiness hours at thefollowing location:Division of Solid andHazardous Waste Of-fices, 4th floor, 288North 1460 West, SaltLake City, UT. or onlineat http://deq.state.ut.us/EQSHW/CDSContact Mr. Doug Taylorof the DSHW at801-538-6170 if youhave any questionsabout this draft modifica-tion. The DPG compli-ance history is availablefrom Mr. Doug Taylor ofthe DSHW at (801)538-6170.In compliance with theAmericans with Disabili-ties Act, individuals withspecial needs (includingauxiliary communicativeaids and services)should contact BrookeBaker, Office of HumanResources at 801-536-4413 (TDD 536-4414) atleast five working daysprior to the scheduledmeeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Deseret Chemi-cal Depot (DCD), StateEPA ID NumberU5210090002, has sub-mitted a request to theUtah Division of Solidand Hazardous Wastefor the following modifi-cation to the DCD RCRAPart B Permit:A Class 2 Modification toadd agent monitoringand quality control re-quirements for DCD stor-age area & perimetermonitors. These require-ments are currently con-tained in the CAMDSpermit and DCD is re-questing to transfer themto the DCD RCRA per-mit.A 60 day public com-ment period for thismodification request willbegin on June 30, 2009and end on August 31,2009. All commentsmust be submitted inwriting to Mr. DennisDowns, Executive Sec-retary, Division of Solidand Hazardous Waste,Utah Department of En-vironmental Quality,Cannon Health Building,288 North 1460 West,Salt Lake City, Utah,84116.DCD will conduct a pub-lic information meetingconcerning this modifica-tion request on Wednes-day, July 22, 2009 at6:00 PM at the TooeleChemical Stockpile Pub-lic Outreach Office, 54South Main Street,Tooele, Utah.Questions may be di-rected to DCD by con-tacting Mr. D. Troy John-son at (435)833-4198; orthe Utah Department ofEnvironmental Quality,Division of Solid andHazardous Waste, bycontacting Mr. JohnW a l d r i p a t(801)538-6170. The Per-mittee's (DCD) compli-ance history is alsoavailable from Mr. Wald-rip.A copy of this modifica-tion request is availablefor review by the generalpublic at the Utah De-partment of Environmen-tal Quality, Division ofSolid and HazardousWaste, Cannon HealthBuilding, 288 North 1460West, Salt Lake City,Utah; and at the TooeleChemical Stockpile Out-reach Office, 54 SouthMain Street, Tooele, UT.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin June 30,2009)

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB8 TUESDAY June 30, 2009

their time in Clover that kindled an insatiable desire to chronicle the region’s history.

“The house was kind of on a hill. I remember looking across the val-ley where Ophir and Mercur were and thinking about all the history there,” she said.

Ouida began writing articles to submit to the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Her first piece was on the mining history of Ophir. She reminisced about her work for the newspaper with a grin.

“They started me at 10 cents per inch, so I tried to make the articles

as long as I could.”“I’m kidding about that,” she

qualified. “I actually didn’t write for the money. I wrote because I wanted to.”

Ouida continued to pen the Transcript-Bulletin’s his-tory column through the 1960s. She enrolled at Brigham Young University, graduating in 1970 with a bachelor’s degree in history and an English minor.

“It was quite a commute from Clover to Provo,” she remem-bered.

The Blanthorns relocated to Stansbury Park in 1972. That’s when the dilapidated old mill along SR-138 caught their eyes. Built in 1854 by LDS apostle Ezra

Taft Benson, the mill was once the bustling focal point of E.T. City, a sprawling collection of settle-ments that spanned from the mill north to Black Rock.

The Benson Grist Mill produced wheat and corn by the ton, becom-ing a major contributor to the county’s economy and earning the temporary designation of Tooele County seat. After nearly a century of production, the mill was shut down in the 1940s. The structure stood abandoned and deteriorat-ing, the victim of time and vandal-ism. According to Ouida, one man in Salt Lake claimed to have built his entire house out of its lumber.

In 1983, a group of concerned volunteers formed a committee and began to preserve the site. Boyd and Ouida were appointed to the committee in 1984. Boyd played a major role in the physical restoration of the building. Ouida was the committee’s first histo-rian.

“The building was in very poor condition,” Boyd recalled of his

first walk-through. “Half of the sid-ing was off and the windows were gone. It was dangerous just to walk in there.”

Boyd’s team worked to stabilize the structure. Some of the original equipment remained intact, but some was imported from the Echo Mill in Summit County. “Finding replacement windows was the hardest task,” he said.

Ouida sought out and inter-viewed a man who had actu-ally operated the mill. Her eyes gleamed as she spoke about the interview — the way a historian’s eyes do at the rare opportunity of meeting an eyewitness.

“He was very old then, but we did get to talk to him,” she said.

The restored Benson Grist Mill is considered to be the most signif-

icant historical building between Salt Lake City and Reno. Both Boyd and Ouida downplay their roles in its preservation, modestly defer-ring to their fellow committee members.

Because of her work in chroni-cling the mill’s history, Ouida was appointed by the Tooele County Commission to compile a history of Tooele County in the early-1990s. The tome, “A History of Tooele County,” was published in 1998 as part of the Utah State Historical Society’s Centennial County his-tory series. The work is detailed, yet concise and accessible. Each county produced a similar work. The Blanthorns proudly display their copies of most of the vol-umes in the collection, alongside

numerous other historic works.The Blanthorns continue to

make contributions to historic research and preservation. Ouida has written numerous catalogued essays, and recently donated a number of historically significant publications to the Tooele City Library.

Boyd helped place rail post markers marking points along the Hastings Cutoff of the Oregon Trail in 2005. One of the posts stands at the west end of the Millpond in Stansbury Park. He continues to serve as a maintenance opera-tor at the Benson Grist Mill. The Blanthorns occasionally travel back to Boyd’s family ranch in Grouse Creek to participate in the ranching operation and visit one of their sons who lives there.

The Blanthorns current home in Stansbury Park sits less than a half mile away from the Benson Grist Mill site. They revel in the views of Stansbury and Antelope islands from their back window.

“See that painting?” Ouida pointed toward another original work on their wall. “That’s the same view we’ve got out this win-dow.”

She lamented the fact that few people know the county’s histo-ry. “And organizations these days are just full of old people. It’s too bad.” She hopes younger genera-tions will get hooked on history the same way she did when she was young.

“It’s important,” she said. “It’s true what they say: If you don’t learn from history, you’re bound to repeat it.”

History continued from page B1

the parade and time at the park before the picnic begins.

Seven-Layer Vegetable Salad1 medium head lettuce 2 teaspoons sugar1/3 cup sliced green onions 1 teaspoon seasoned salt1 cup sliced celery and carrots 1/4 t garlic powder1 package frozen peas

(uncooked)3 chopped boiled eggs6 ounces shredded cheddar

cheese 1/2 pound fried bacon1 1/2 to 2 cups mayonnaiseIn large bowl — preferably clear

glass for visual effect — layer let-tuce, green onions, celery, carrots, peas, cheese and end with a layer of lettuce. Spread mayo on top. Sprinkle with sugar, parmesan cheese, seasoned salt and garlic powder. Cover and refrigerate overnight. When ready to serve, top with chopped eggs and crum-bled bacon.

Stir just before eating or let guests dig deep for all the layers.

Spinach SaladServes 4-61 pound fresh spinach 1/2 cup salad oil1 clove garlic (slivered) 1/4 cup vinegar1/4 cup lemon juice 1/2 teaspoon salt6 slices crisp bacon crumbledWash spinach, then dry thor-

oughly and discard stems. Tear in pieces into salad bowl. Chill. Combine salad oil and garlic and refrigerate one hour. Discard gar-lic. Heat oil with vinegar, lemon juice, salt and dash of pepper. Toss spinach with dressing. Garnish with bacon. Serve immediately.

Citrus Chicken2/3 cup orange juice3 tablespoons lemon juice3 tablespoons lime juice 1 tablespoon honey1/4 cup oil 1 tablespoon Mrs. Dash

(optional)Pinch of garlic powderPierce skin of boneless chicken

breasts and soak in marinade 2 hours or overnight. Grill chicken about 1/2 hour or bake until done. Throw away the marinade after you soak the chicken. Do not use it again or pour on cooked chick-en. Serve straight from the grill or put it on buns for a tasty chicken sandwich.

Cold Tuna Noodle Salad1 package elbow noodles or

shells1 can peasCheddar cheese cut into small

cubes1 can tunaMayonnaise and mustardCook the noodles and then

cool them in refrigerator until cool. Drain the tuna and add mayo until it tastes right. Then add the peas and cheddar cubes. Refrigerate at least one hour or overnight until ready to serve. Add a little more mayonnaise to moisten if it has become dry.

Cream Puffs

1 cup water 1/2 cup butterReduce heat and add all at one

time:1/2 teaspoon salt1 cup flour1/2 teaspoon nutmegPut butter in water and heat

until water boils and butter is melted. While heating, mix together salt, flour and nutmeg. Reduce heat and add dry ingre-dients all at once. Stir vigorously until mixture leaves sides of pan and forms a ball. Remove from heat. Cool slightly and add 4 eggs one at a time, beating well with each addition.

Drop onto ungreased cookie sheet. (Make the size appropriate for your use. For miniatures, drop by half-teaspoonfuls). Bake about 30 minutes at 400 degrees until light and dry. Make these ahead if you wish and freeze them. Cut off tops and fill with sandwich fill-ing for a main course or use fruit, pudding or whipping cream for a dessert treat.

Chocolate Chip Applesauce Cake1/2 cup oil 1 1/2 cups sugar2 eggs beaten 2 cups flour1/2 teaspoon cinnamon1/2 teaspoon salt 2 cups applesauce1 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 3 tablespoons cocoa 2 tablespoons sugar1 cup chocolate pieces or chipsMix oil and 1 1/2 cup sugar,

beat in eggs. Stir in flour, cin-namon, salt, applesauce, baking soda and cocoa. Pour mixture into a greased and floured 13x9x2 pan. Sprinkle with 2 tablespoons sugar and chocolate pieces. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 to 40 minutes. Cover with foil if top becomes too brown.

Picnic continued from page B1

photography / Maegan Burr

A painting by Jill Quarnberg that depicts how Black Rock looked in the 1860s is displayed in Boyd and Ouida Blanthorn’s Stansbury home.

photography / Maegan Burr

Boyd Blanthorn sits in his Stansbury home Friday morning and talks about the state the Benson Grist Mill was in before a committee was formed to renovate the site.

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