catalytic converter theft on the rise - Tooele Transcript Bulletin

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T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE February 21, 2008 SERVING TOOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 VOL. 114 NO. 80 50¢ WEATHER Rain mixed with snow is predict- ed Friday and Sunday. Highs will be in the upper 30s. Complete Forecast: A2 OPEN FORUM A6 OBITUARIES A7 TV LISTINGS A8 CROSSWORD A8 SPORTS A9 HOMETOWN B1 BULLETIN BOARD B2 CLASSIFIEDS B5 INSIDE Dugway boys beat Wendover to record 20 wins this season See A12 www.tooeletranscript.com THURSDAY photography / Troy Boman Transmission lines disappear into haze and fog along SR-112 Thursday morning. Wet, fast- moving storms have kept air quality generally good across the state this winter, but with warmer air moving in, air quality may deteriorate in the near term. DAYS OF GRAY by Jamie Belnap STAFF WRITER Chances are most drivers don’t even know where a catalytic converter is on their vehicle. But crooks do. It turns out the emissions-control device contains metals — platinum, palladium and rhodium — that are becoming increasingly valuable for resale. And that’s led to a rash of thefts locally in recent months, according to the Tooele City Police Department. “Since November, we’ve had eight reports of catalytic converter theft,” said Lt. Paul Wimmer. “And that’s only the cases reported.” Wimmer said many people probably don’t report vehicle parts theft because it’s seen as something too small to make a fuss over. However, stealing several catalytic convert- ers can add up to a significant enticement for thieves. Platinum alone is worth over $2,000 per troy ounce, according to Mark Lewon, chief of operations for Utah Metals Works in Salt Lake City. “The prices of these metals are just skyrock- eting,” Lewon added. Detachment of a catalytic converter requires a special saw, such as a battery-powered Sawzall with a five- to six-inch blade. “It’s a quick couple cuts with a saw and it’s out,” said Wimmer. Thus far the targeted vehicles are Toyota trucks and SUVs. Converters were stolen from these types of vehicles in six of the eight reported crimes since November. Wimmer said he and his colleagues haven’t been able to nail down how many perpetrators are involved in the thefts. On Nov. 22, one man was caught red-handed at 154 W. Utah Ave. Drivers beware: catalytic converter theft on the rise SEE THEFT PAGE A10 by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Robert H. “Bob” Swan, 71, a former Tooele City mayor and prominent businessman, passed away early Tuesday morning as a result of com- plications from a stroke he suffered a few days earlier. Swan had a long and var- ied political career. He served on the Tooele City Council and completed one term as mayor from 1970-74. Beverly White was vice- chair of the Tooele County Democratic Party when Swan served as mayor. White recalls recruiting Swan to run for the post. “He was young, in his early 30s and still a bachelor — not the typical kind of guy to run for mayor in Tooele,” White said. “When we went to recruit Bob to run, I told him not to make any promises he couldn’t keep. He said he would make only one prom- ise. His mother had said the Tooele cemetery was a mess and she didn’t want to be buried there. His only prom- ise was to make sure Tooele had the most beautiful cem- etery in the state.” White said Swan kept his promise, cleaning up the dilapidated cemetery and Former Tooele City Mayor Bob Swan dies SEE SWAN PAGE A8 by Sarah Miley STAFF WRITER A 6.0 magnitude earth- quake centered in north- eastern Nevada shook Tooele County along with much of the Great Basin early this morning. The quake hit at 7:16 Mountain Standard Time, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The epicenter was 11 miles southeast of Wells, Nev., but tremors could be felt strongly in Wendover — 43 miles away. Tammy Wadsworth, secretary at Wendover High School, said she felt the quake. “It knocked pictures off the walls and it was shaking good,” she said. “I didn’t think a minute could last that long.” Wadsworth said while she doesn’t know of any damage in Wendover, her office was checking the school to see if there was Earthquake rattles county residents from Wendover to Tooele SEE QUAKE PAGE A10 photography / Troy Boman Lt. Paul Wimmer of the Tooele City Police Department, stands under a vehicle with its exhaust system exposed at Clar’s Auto Wednesday. Catalytic converters, an emissions-control device, have been targeted by thieves for the precious metals they contain. by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER Friday will be day 33 of the 45- day legislative session, and with new revenue projections forecasting a decrease in state income, legislators are suddenly running out of both time and money. That was the mes- sage Tooele County leaders heard Wednesday from their elected repre- sentatives at a monthly county cau- cus meeting at the state capital. Rep. Ronda Menlove, R- Garland, said some of her education bills, such as House Bill 67 that would pay special education teachers for up to 10 extra days per year, have been put on hold for financial concerns due to the new lower revenue projections. HB 67 passed unanimously in both the House and on second reading in the Senate, but now has been tabled while waiting for a third and final reading in the Senate. Rep Jim Gowans, D-Tooele, explained why bills take so long to get completely through the legisla- tive process: three readings in the house and the senate, and at least two committee hearings, one in the house and one in the senate. With only two and a half weeks left in the session, bills that do not get at least a committee hearing in the next few days may run out of time as the ses- sion comes to a close on March 5. Gowans also reported that Tooele public schools have been removed from the merger of Salt Lake Time, money running short on Capitol Hill County legislators say some bills with local impact may be lost in the final rush SEE CAPITOL PAGE A9 THS cheer coach retires after almost 20 years See B1

Transcript of catalytic converter theft on the rise - Tooele Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

February 21, 2008 SERVING TOOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 VOL. 114 NO. 80 50¢

WEATHERRain mixed with snow is predict-ed Friday and Sunday. Highs will

be in the upper 30s.Complete Forecast: A2

OPEN FORUM A6

OBITUARIES A7

TV LISTINGS A8

CROSSWORD A8

SPORTS A9

HOMETOWN B1

BULLETIN BOARD B2

CLASSIFIEDS B5

INSIDEDugway boys beat Wendover to

record 20 wins this seasonSee A12

www.tooeletranscript.com THURSDAY

photography / Troy Boman

Transmission lines disappear into haze and fog along SR-112 Thursday morning. Wet, fast-moving storms have kept air quality generally good across the state this winter, but with warmer air moving in, air quality may deteriorate in the near term.

DAYS OF GRAY

by Jamie Belnap

STAFF WRITER

Chances are most drivers don’t even know where a catalytic converter is on their vehicle. But crooks do.

It turns out the emissions-control device contains metals — platinum, palladium and rhodium — that are becoming increasingly valuable for resale. And that’s led to a rash of thefts locally in recent months, according to the Tooele City Police Department.

“Since November, we’ve had eight reports of catalytic converter theft,” said Lt. Paul Wimmer. “And that’s only the cases reported.”

Wimmer said many people probably don’t report vehicle parts theft because it’s seen as something too small to make a fuss over. However, stealing several catalytic convert-ers can add up to a significant enticement for thieves.

Platinum alone is worth over $2,000 per troy ounce, according to Mark Lewon, chief of operations for Utah Metals Works in Salt Lake City.

“The prices of these metals are just skyrock-eting,” Lewon added.

Detachment of a catalytic converter requires a special saw, such as a battery-powered Sawzall with a five- to six-inch blade.

“It’s a quick couple cuts with a saw and it’s out,” said Wimmer.

Thus far the targeted vehicles are Toyota trucks and SUVs. Converters were stolen from these types of vehicles in six of the eight reported crimes since November.

Wimmer said he and his colleagues haven’t been able to nail down how many perpetrators are involved in the thefts. On Nov. 22, one man was caught red-handed at 154 W. Utah Ave.

Drivers beware: catalytic converter theft on the rise

SEE THEFT PAGE A10 ➤

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Robert H. “Bob” Swan, 71, a former Tooele City mayor and prominent businessman, passed away early Tuesday morning as a result of com-plications from a stroke he suffered a few days earlier.

Swan had a long and var-ied political career. He served on the Tooele City Council and completed one term as mayor from 1970-74.

Beverly White was vice-chair of the Tooele County Democratic Party when Swan served as mayor. White recalls recruiting Swan to run for the post.

“He was young, in his early 30s and still a bachelor — not the typical kind of guy to run for mayor in Tooele,” White said. “When we went to recruit Bob to run, I told him not to make any promises he couldn’t keep. He said he would make only one prom-ise. His mother had said the Tooele cemetery was a mess and she didn’t want to be buried there. His only prom-ise was to make sure Tooele had the most beautiful cem-etery in the state.”

White said Swan kept his promise, cleaning up the dilapidated cemetery and

Former Tooele City Mayor Bob Swan dies

SEE SWAN PAGE A8 ➤

by Sarah MileySTAFF WRITER

A 6.0 magnitude earth-quake centered in north-eastern Nevada shook Tooele County along with much of the Great Basin early this morning.

The quake hit at 7:16 Mountain Standard Time, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The epicenter was 11 miles southeast of Wells, Nev., but tremors could be felt strongly in Wendover —

43 miles away.Tammy Wadsworth,

secretary at Wendover High School, said she felt the quake.

“It knocked pictures off the walls and it was shaking good,” she said. “I didn’t think a minute could last that long.”

Wadsworth said while she doesn’t know of any damage in Wendover, her office was checking the school to see if there was

Earthquake rattles county residents from Wendover to Tooele

SEE QUAKE PAGE A10 ➤

photography / Troy Boman

Lt. Paul Wimmer of the Tooele City Police Department, stands under a vehicle with its exhaust system exposed at Clar’s Auto Wednesday. Catalytic converters, an emissions-control device, have been targeted by thieves for the precious metals they contain.

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

Friday will be day 33 of the 45-day legislative session, and with new revenue projections forecasting a decrease in state income, legislators are suddenly running out of both time and money. That was the mes-sage Tooele County leaders heard Wednesday from their elected repre-sentatives at a monthly county cau-cus meeting at the state capital.

Rep. Ronda Menlove, R- Garland, said some of her education bills, such as House Bill 67 that would pay special education teachers for up to 10 extra days per year, have been put on hold for financial concerns due to the new lower revenue projections. HB 67 passed unanimously in both the House and on second reading in the Senate, but now has been tabled while waiting for a third and final reading in the Senate.

Rep Jim Gowans, D-Tooele, explained why bills take so long to get completely through the legisla-tive process: three readings in the house and the senate, and at least two committee hearings, one in the house and one in the senate. With only two and a half weeks left in the session, bills that do not get at least a committee hearing in the next few days may run out of time as the ses-sion comes to a close on March 5.

Gowans also reported that Tooele public schools have been removed from the merger of Salt Lake

Time, money running short on Capitol HillCounty legislators say some bills with local impact may be lost in the final rush

SEE CAPITOL PAGE A9 ➤

THS cheer coach retires after almost

20 yearsSee B1

FRONT PAGE A1FRONT PAGE A1

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Local WeatherThu2/21 38/28

Mainly cloudy. High 38F. Windslight and variable.

Fri2/22 40/33

Rain and snow. Highs in the low40s and lows in the low 30s.

Sat2/23 39/28

More clouds than sun. Highs in theupper 30s and lows in the upper20s.

Sun2/24 37/26

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Mon2/25 39/24

Snow showers at times. Highs inthe upper 30s and lows in the mid20s.

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Utah & The West

If you haven’t received your newspaper by 6:30 p.m., please call 882-0050 and our customer representative will assist you. Customer service hours on Tuesday and Thursday nights are 6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m.

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN THURSDAY February 21, 2008

by Ivan Moreno

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER (AP) — The cat-tle industry and animal rights groups bickered over the treat-ment of beef destined for U.S. dinner plates a day after secret video triggered the nation’s larg-est meat recall.

Undercover video taken at the Westland/Hallmark Meat Co. of Chino, Calif., shows workers shocking, kicking and shoving debilitated cattle with forklifts, prompting the government to pull 143 million pounds of the company’s beef.

Bo Reagan, vice president of research for the Colorado-based National Cattleman’s Beef Association, said the videotaped incident was not indicative of how most slaughterhouses oper-ate.

“The welfare of our animals — that’s the heart and soul of our operations,” Reagan said.

U.S. Department of Agriculture guidelines mandate that an inspector must review sick or injured animals, called “downer” cattle, before they can be slaugh-tered, and that the 1958 Humane Slaughter Act sets strict rules for the humane treatment of ani-mals.

“What happened in this case was that there were some ani-mals that were harvested out of compliance,” he said.

Federal regulations call for keeping downed cattle out of the food supply because they may pose a higher risk of contamina-tion from E. coli, salmonella or mad cow disease since they typi-cally wallow in feces and their immune systems are often weak.

Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States, which video-taped the alleged abuse, said his organization chose to investigate the Westland/Hallmark plant at random, and said he was skepti-cal of the cattle industry’s prac-tices.

“I think this is the typical rhe-torical and typical false assuranc-es that we hear from the industry after glaring problems have been

exposed,” he said.Pacelle said it was impossible

to say whether the treatment depicted on the video is isolated, but stopped short of calling it widespread.

“I think we can’t say for sure one way or another, but it’s cer-tainly a bad sign for the indus-try and the USDA to have been exposed for their failures in this single, random investigation,” he said.

Agriculture officials estimate that about 37 million pounds of the recalled beef went to school programs, but they believe most

of the meat probably has already been eaten.

“We don’t know how much product is out there right now. We don’t think there is a health haz-ard, but we do have to take this action,” said Dr. Dick Raymond, USDA undersecretary for food safety.

Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, chair-woman of the House Agriculture, Food and Drug Administration Appropriations Subcommittee, called the video inhumane and said she was concerned it “dem-onstrates just how far our food safety system has collapsed.”

DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, has also called for an independent investigation into the government’s ability to secure the safety of meat in the nation’s schools.

Recalled meat is piling up at six Michigan school districts. Grand Rapids Public Schools must throw out 10 tons of hamburg-er, while the Ann Arbor Public Schools has about 200 pounds of quarantined beef.

Some of the hamburger being recalled already was served to students in Portage Public Schools. “It was in our taco sauce and our spaghetti sauce,” Portage district food service manager Lance Gerry told the Kalamazoo Gazette. “We’ve been serving those products for a while.”

USDA spokesman Keith Williams said his department has evidence that Westland did not routinely contact its veterinarian when cattle became non-ambu-latory after passing inspection, violating health regulations.

Williams said the recall was done primarily to revoke the USDA’s seal of inspection for the meat — not because of the risk of illness.

“Everybody’s going, ‘Oh, a recall, that means death, that means sickness.’ That’s a differ-ent kind of issue,” Williams said. “This is a lower severity, where there would be a remote prob-ability of sickness.”

DeLauro also asked what the USDA is doing to address staff shortages among slaughterhouse inspectors — an issue also raised by other food safety experts and watchdog groups Monday.

Washington, D.C.-based Food and Water Watch said the USDA has left up to 21 percent of inspector positions vacant in some areas. Williams, of the USDA, said there is no shortage of inspectors.

Two former Westland/Hallmark employees were charged Friday. Five felony counts of animal cruelty and three misdemeanors were filed against a pen manager. Three misdemeanor counts — illegal movement of a non-ambulatory

animal — were filed against an employee who worked under that manager. Both were fired.

No charges have been filed against the company, but an investigation by federal authori-ties continues.

Beef industry and animal rights groups duel over video as calls for investigation increase

(AP Photo/ Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, Therese Tran/file)

A security guard closes a side gate at Hallmark Meat Packing Co., Wednesday, Jan. 30, in Chino, Calif., in this file photo. The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Sunday, Feb. 17, ordered the recall of 143 million pounds of beef from Westland/Hallmark Meat Co., which is the subject of an animal-abuse investigation.

CORTEZ, Colo. (AP) — A Utah hunting guide has pleaded guilty to a poaching-related charge in southwestern Colorado.

Prosecutors say Eric Butt Junior of Tooele encouraged cli-ents to shoot deer and bear with-out a license.

Butt pleaded guilty to a federal charge of conspiring to sell ille-gally killed wildlife across state lines. The 34-year-old faces up to five years in prison when he is sentenced May 27.

Prosecutors dropped seven other charges in exchange for the guilty plea.

Cortez, Colo., taxidermist Paul Ray Weyland faces charges of illegally labeling wildlife and selling it across state lines in the same case. He has pleaded not guilty.

Tooele hunting guide pleads guilty in Colo.

DENVER (AP) — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has named a new regional director to over-see eight Western states, including Utah.

Steve Guertin was named the acting regional director last fall. He was the agency’s budget officer for eight years in Washington, D.C., before his interim appointment.

Guertin has a bachelor’s degree from Norwich University in Vermont and a master’s degree of public and international affairs from the University of Pittsburgh.

In addition to Utah, the regional Fish and Wildlife office oversees Montana, Wyoming, Colorado North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas.

New federal wildlife chief named

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Born in Salt Lake live in Stansbury Park

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Three years with my beautiful girlfriend Talescha and her 4 year old son, Anthony.

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A2

THURSDAY February 21, 2008 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Hollie Smith CORRESPONDENT

The Tooele County Council of Governments has allo-cated $275,482 in federal Community Development Block Grants to Grantsville City, Tooele City and Tooele County for infrastructure projects designed to benefit low- to moderate-income residents.

The grants go to govern-ment applicants based upon a system of rating and rank-ing projects according to their potential long-term community impact.

Grantsville City was awarded $62,198 for con-tinued sidewalk improve-ments on Willow Street. The money paid off the balance of a multi-year award total-ing $152,220. Grantsville City also received funds from the CDBG for the same project last year.

Grantsville City Recorder Jeremy Walker said the proj-ect, in which the city will be installing a sidewalk along the east side of Willow Street, is set to be finished this spring. The city will also be relocat-ing fencing, fire hydrants and mailboxes, as well as plant-ing 18 trees along the new sidewalk.

Tooele City was given $150,000 in grant money for the Broadway Hotel rede-velopment project, which is designed to bring more affordable rental housing to Tooele.

Michelle Pitt, administra-tive assistant to Tooele City Mayor Patrick Dunlavy, said the grant money would be used for off-site improve-ments associated with the Broadway project such as curbs, gutters, sidewalks and street lights.

“We feel like this will be a big improvement to the

Broadway area,” Pitt said. “Broadway could be consid-ered a blighted area, and it needs some new life in there, so we feel like this was a very worthwhile project.”

Pitt said the street side improvements to the proj-ect will begin this summer and finish by the summer of 2009.

The Council of

Governments allocated the remainder of the grant money, $63,284, to Tooele County as part of a multi-year award of $200,000 for a project involving property acquisition for transitional housing facilities.

Karen Kuipers, Tooele County Relief Services coordinator, said the grant money is essential to the

local Homeless Coordinating Council’s 10-year plan to end homelessness in Tooele County. It will be spent to set up transitional housing or an emergency shelter, she said.

“Our goal is to get people into permanent housing,” she said. “But meanwhile, we’ve got a lot of people who are liv-ing in cars or non-cost-effec-tive hotels. This will enable

us to stabilize these families or individuals until they can get back on their feet.”

Kuipers estimated purchas-ing land for the project and building structures would cost about $800,000. She said the Homeless Coordinating Council would now start looking for other grants and funds to get the project mov-ing.

To o e l e C o u n t y Commissioner Jerry Hurst was recently appointed to the State of Utah Community Development Block Grant board of directors for a two-year term. The board over-sees how grant money gets allocated from the state level to the regional and county levels.

Community development grants split among housing, sidewalk

photography / Troy Boman

Grantsville resident Autumn Riding runs down a sidewalk-free Durfee Street Wednesday. The Tooele County Council of Governments has approved the allocation of funding received from the Federal Community Development Block Grant to help build sidewalks in Grantsville and fund other projects within the county.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Sarah MileySTAFF WRITER

A state energy program is making a renewed push to enlist property owners in test-ing the viability of wind ener-gy development.

The Utah Geological Survey, through its State Energy Program, is loaning free wind-measuring devices to property owners. The pro-gram helps farmers, ranch-ers, businesses, developers and homeowners determine if it is economically feasible to invest in a wind turbine.

The loaned anemome-ter towers will be either 20 meters or 50 meters high, and will measure wind speeds and directions in 10-minute inter-vals.

Participants selected will need to mail a data plug each month to the State Energy Program. The participants will then receive a monthly data analysis report back.

“At the end of 12 months, we’ll take the tower down and do a full data analysis and economical resource assess-ment of the site for poten-tial development,” said Jason Berry, renewable energy coor-dinator for the State Energy Program.

There is no cost for the installation of the 20-meter towers, but installation costs between $4,000 and $5,000 for the 50-meter towers, which are the responsibility of the applicant.

According to the program’s Web site, factors that sug-gest a quality wind location include being higher than sur-rounding areas, being clear of obstructions that could dis-rupt the wind flow, and prox-imity to mountains, valleys or canyons that may speed up wind flow.

A clear, flat space of about 100 feet by 100 feet is required to erect a 20-meter anemom-eter.

“You definitely need a large area,” Berry said. “Urban areas probably aren’t the best. The wind resource in Tooele or Grantsville is not as sig-nificant as maybe areas out toward Rush Lake and other remote areas.”

There are currently three anemometers operating in Tooele County through the program, and several others have operated in the past, according to Berry.

Two 20-meter towers have been measuring wind since June 15, 2006, on the Tooele Army Depot. The average wind speeds for those two sites are close to 13 miles per hour.

“The Army depot is plan-ning on installing a couple of wind turbines to offset further energy consumption,” Berry said.

Kathy Anderson, public affairs officer with the depot, said she expects to have two 500 kW wind turbines installed soon. The power generated will be used at the depot.

The other tower currently in operation is in the Simpson

Springs area, near the Tooele and Juab county line. It is located on state trust lands.

“I don’t know if that will be a good site or not,” Berry said. “It’s pretty far away from transmission, but we’ll know more by May when we have a full year’s worth of data.”

Berry said typically it takes a minimum of a year to know if a site is good or not.

Several towers in various areas of the county have also been active in the past.

From December 2006 to May 2007, two towers loaned to a private developer oper-ated near the Stockton Bar — a wind hot spot. According to the program’s Web site, the preliminary average wind speed recorded there was 15.4 miles per hour.

Winds of 8 miles per hour are sufficient for water pump-ing and other low-energy uses; 9 miles per hour are best for small-scale residential appli-cations; and 12 miles per hour is sufficient for larger-scale applications, according to the program’s Web site.

Winds at the Stockton Bar site were high enough that Lehi-based Tasco Engineering decided to move forward with plans to develop a wind farm there. According to the company’s president, Gary Tassainer, they hope to break ground for the 70-megawatt wind farm this fall.

“The better wind is definite-ly right there at the Stockton Bar,” Berry said. “It’s very localized. Once you head too far north or farther south, the winds die down quite a bit.”

Applications for the ane-mometers are due by March 1. Visit http://geology.utah.gov/sep/wind and click on the Anemometer Loan Program button for more [email protected]

Program lets property owners measure wind energy potential Several sites in Tooele Valley have already proven viable for wind turbines

photography / Troy Boman

Jay Weyland, an electrical engineer for the Tooele Army Depot, checks the data collection box on a 60-foot wind monitoring station at the depot Wednesday. The depot is planning on installing a couple wind turbines to off set further energy consumption.

photography / Troy Boman

A “data plug” center records the wind speed for one month before being sent to the Utah Department of Natural Resources. This monitoring station is part of a state energy program that allows residents to borrow wind measuring devices for free.

photography / Troy Boman

Bruce Grim stands in the Peace Wiggins Refractor House at the Stansbury Park Observatory Wednesday night. He and other astronomers experienced a lunar letdown due to overcast skies that prevented anyone from seeing a rare full lunar eclipse. It will be three years before the next eclipse.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 A5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Jamie BelnapSTAFF WRITER

Stansbury Park’s skate park is open again after being closed for two months because of persistent vandal-ism, according to Stansbury Park Service Agency Chairman John O’Donnell.

“A few of the local kids approached Chris Rieter, the park manager, and asked what they could do to get the park back,” O’Donnell said. “He said that someone would need to accept responsibility for keeping the park in good shape.”

A few days later, a group of skateboarders were spot-ted sweeping and tidying up the ramps, which prompted O’Donnell to initiate a re-opening.

“These kids were motivat-ed by someone or something to step up,” O’Donnell said, adding he doesn’t believe these kids are the ones who originally sprayed profanities across the concrete.

In September of last year,

as a result of the first appear-ance of vandalism, the skate park was closed at dusk — a move trustees hoped would end the problem. However, in November, spray paint again appeared, causing trustees to close the park during day-light hours as well.

“There is a parallel between the whole skateboard men-tality and graffiti,” O’Donnell said. “They almost go hand in hand.”

Still, O’Donnell said any-one caught graffiting will be asked to come and clean it up.

In the end, officials believe the good will outweigh the bad and the park will con-tinue to remain a graffiti-free site.

“I think that most often crimes are prevented by the number of eyes around,” O’Donnell said. “I hope these kids will report the people who are doing the damage because they want to con-tinue using it.”[email protected]

Stansbury skate park reopens following graffiti shutdown

OUT & ABOUT

I don’t know why my turn for this column always comes near a holiday.

This time it is Presidents Day, a holiday so mysteri-ous and confusing I have no choice but to write about it.

Let’s start at the beginning. Back when I was in grade school, holidays weren’t always conveniently on Mondays. Instead they came on the day they were meant to be on, and there was no Presidents Day.

We celebrated George Washington’s birthday, which is where the con-fusion starts. President George Washington had two birthdays. He was born prior to the adoption of the Gregorian calendar — that’s the one we use now — on February 11. However, after the adoption of the Gregorian calendar by the

British in 1752, his birthday moved to February 22.

I wasn’t around for the first Washington b-day celebration in 1796, but I understand some people celebrated it on February 11 and some on February 22. If I was around, I would have celebrated both.

It wasn’t until some 15 presidents later that we had another president revered enough to earn a holiday: Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln was also a February baby, born on February 12.

That gave us two presi-dents to celebrate in one month.

We lived comfortably with this duality for about a century. Then in 1971, a year wisdom was appar-ently running high, the Uniform Monday Holiday Act took effect. That’s when somebody decided a holi-day should always equal a three-day weekend. It was really a sneaky move to make us work more. When I was in grade school, if a holiday came on Tuesday or Thursday we got a four-day weekend, so the new mea-sure was more of a Uniform Holiday Ripoff Act.

The third Monday in February was designated,

and is still designated, by statute as Washington’s birthday. Poor George, all he needed was a third birthday. I do not recall any mention of Lincoln’s birthday, but President Richard Nixon, not want-ing anybody to be left out, signed a proclamation nam-ing the day as “Presidents Day.” Presumably we now celebrate all the presidents — even useless twits like Buchanan, Harding and Nixon himself — on one day.

That’s where the next mys-tery comes in: How many presidents do we celebrate on Presidents Day? Just

Washington, or Washington and Lincoln, or all 42 or 43? You see, George W. Bush is our 43rd president, but he is only the 42nd person to be president. Grover Cleveland was elected to two non-con-secutive terms, so he holds two places, according to his-torians.

How did we celebrate Presidents Day? It appeared that most citizens who were not working on that day — myself not among them — were supposed to buy new cars and furniture as a way of paying our respects to these great men. That’s a little different from the early

celebrations of Washington’s birthday that were marked by founder’s day balls, assemblies with long speech-es and revelry in taverns.

I liked how they did holi-days when I was in Scotland. In the middle of the month they had a “bank holiday,” meaning banks and most businesses were closed for no other reason than it was a holiday. At least they were honest — no reason to fab-ricate a reason for a day off work. Ach well, I worked bank holidays when I was in Scotland [email protected]

Now that we’ve celebrated Presidents Day, who was it for?Tim GillieSTAFF WRITER

photography / Troy Boman

Stansbury Park adolescents skateboard at a recently re-opened community skate park Wednesday. The park had been closed for two months because of excessive vandalism.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

OBITUARIES

John Alfred Hebert

1927 -20080ur loving husband, father,

grandfather and brother passed away peacefully on Feb. 17, 2008, after many years of bat-tling Parkinson’s disease.

John was born on Nov. 9, 1927, to Eva Jacques and Adonis Hebert in Lafayette, La. He was raised by his mother and step-father, Paul Theriot. He attend-ed school until the l0th grade at which time he quit to work. He later obtained his GED and even attended some college classes. In 1946, John entered the Army and was stationed in Japan. He was with the 11th Airborne Division until he sus-tained a back injury. In July 1947, John was discharged as part of the demobilization plan but reenlisted later that year. He served several tours of duty in various locations includ-ing Okinawa, Japan; Dugway;

Edgewood, Md.; Anchorage, Alaska; and Fort McCellen, Ala. John was proud to have hon-orably served his country for 20 years. John retired honor-ably from the Army in 1966. At that time he moved with his family to Salt Lake City where he attended barber school and successfully obtained his license. After barbering in vari-ous locations he finally ended up at Dugway Proving Ground. While at Dugway he later start-ed a career with Civil Service for which he worked several positions until his retirement

in 1988. Even during his Civil Service career John continued to barber and would give fel-low workers and friends hair-cuts. John loved to box when he was younger and to the end was a fighter. In the service he was an expert marksman and he never lost those skills. John was an avid hunter and fish-erman always looking for the next trip. Even in his later years he always looked forward to the next fishing trip and would go on fishing outings with various groups. He was always willing to share his skills and knowledge with others. John was a friend to all. He loved to cook and was well known for many of his dishes, but he truly loved seeing others enjoy his food. After his retirement from Civil Service, John owned and operated a concession trailer along with Hebert’s Pizzas. He catered for several years and was well known at the Rush Valley Rodeo for his large and tasty selection of food.

John is survived by Leola Hebert, his wife of 55 years; son, John (Sue) Hebert of Elko, Nev.;

daughter, Jana (Steve) Powell of Park City; grandchildren, Jason Hebert, Shilo Hebert, Bryce Powell and Kevin Powell; great-grandchildren, Hesten Staples and Paytin Staples; sis-ters, Louise Fruge of Houston, Texas, Yvette Leger (Merlin) of Lafayette, La., Margrite Cavalli (Louis) of Houston, Texas; brothers, JP Theriot (Rachelle) of Ville Plate, La., and Raymond Theriot of Lafayette, La. John was preceded in death by his beloved mother, Eva Theriot; father, Adonis Hebert; step-father, Paul Theriot; and son, Michael Hebert.

The family would like to thank the staff of the Utah State Veteran Nursing home for their kind and professional care of John for the last two years, especially Stacy and Jarad.

Funeral services will be held Saturday, Feb. 23, at 11 a.m., at Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main St., Tooele. Friends may call for viewing on Friday, Feb. 22, from 6 to 8 p.m., and Saturday, Feb. 23, at 10 a.m. until time of service. Interment to follow at Tooele City Cemetery.

Stan Kelley

1943-2008Stan was born on Aug. 16,

1943, to William Kelley and Jessie Kelley Fisher in Ely, Nev. He passed away Feb. 19, 2008.

Stan graduated from Tooele High School in 1961. Stan was a lifetime friend to Shirley Symonds and they married May 5, 1971. They had three boys, Eddie, Darryl and Bill.

Stan worked in construction as a heavy equipment mechan-ic most of his life. He medically retired from Laidlaw in 2001.

Stan enjoyed the outdoors. He loved hunting, fishing, ATV

riding and camping with his family and in-laws. He enjoyed

spending all the time he could in Ibapah.

Stan loved spending time with his grandkids. He told them stories about when he was a kid and about their dads growing up. He loved to tease the grandkids and watch them grow.

He is survived by his lov-ing wife of 38 years, Shirley; sons, Eddie Dirst of Rush Valley, Darryl ( Jennifer) Kelley and Bill (Erin) Kelley, both of Grantsville; grand-kids, Cheyenne Dirst, Tim, Dusty, Cody, Chris, Stepheny

and David Kelley; and beloved sister, Pat (Dwaine) Russell of Oregon. He is preceded in death by his parents.

Stan was a very loving per-son. That love for his family is what got him through all his years of pain and suffering.

A viewing will held be Sunday, Feb. 24, from 6 to 8 p.m., at Tate Mortuary. Funeral services will be held Monday, Feb. 25, at noon, at the LDS church in Ibapah, with a viewing one hour prior to the service. Burial will be in the Ibapah Cemetery.

NOTE OF APPRECIATION

To the people of Grantsville: Did you know that in this town lives the “Little Engine that Could?” When Jamie first called about a benefit for his lifelong friend and our loved one it seemed like a dream. With only about three weeks to get it all together and going, it did not seem possible. But Jamie never one time doubted his hometown and the people who live here. Not one time did he worry about the volunteers that would show up and work for hours with no more than a truly huge thank you or the businesses and individuals that would give. The love and sup-

port to Neil, Kim, their children and their extended family will never be forgotten. The words of support, hugs, well wishes, and even the tears meant more than words can describe. Not knowing what the future may hold is a truly terrifying thing. But, to know that there are so many people that care and are there to offer hope, love and prayers is one of the best medi-cines you can have. Thank you Jamie and Debbie Corless and thank you to a community you don’t find everywhere.

Neil and Kim McBride and extended family

Millie Fullmer Roth

Millie Fullmer Roth, 76, died Feb. 20, 2008. She was born in Abraham, Utah, on Oct. 5, 1931, to William and Leona Fullmer. Attended elementa-ry school in Hinckley, Utah, and high school in Tooele. She Married David Samuel Roth on May 22, 1950. Their mar-riage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple. He pre-ceded her in death Sept. 29, 1988.

Millie had a strong work ethic and retired with 26 years of civil service at Tooele Army Depot, Fort McClellan, Alabama and the Bureau of

Land Management in Fillmore, Utah.

She was an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ

of Latter-day Saints and held many positions throughout her life. She especially loved serving in the St. George Temple.

Her greatest source of enjoyment was her children and grandchildren. Together they formed an eternal bond of friendship and respect for each other.

Survivors include her chil-dren, Scott (Annette) Roth of Rupert, Idaho, Tami (Kent) Harman of Rupert, Idaho, Kristie (Ken) Krause of Spanish Fork, Cindy (Kevin) Harris of Las Vegas, Nev.; 19 grand-children and six great-grand-children; four sisters, Shirley

Spivey of Magna, Barbara Gardner of Bonita, Calif., Donna Hamilton of Tooele, and Phyllis McElhaney of Torrance, Calif.; three broth-ers, Don Fullmer of Fillmore, Robert Fullmer of Chula Vista, Calif., and David Fullmer of Tooele. She was preceded in death by her parents and three sisters, Margie, Ruby and Sara.

Funeral services will be held Feb. 23, at 1 p.m., at the Kanosh Ward chapel, 25 S. Main St., Kanosh, Utah. Family will greet friends from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the church. Interment will be in the Kanosh Cemetery, under care of Rasmussen Mortuary.

William L. EasterlyOur loving husband, father

and grandfather passed away on Feb. 19, 2008, after a long battle with cancer.

He is survived by his wife June R. Easterly; his only son, Paul J. Easterly; his grandchildren, Joshua, Zachary and Meagan Easterly; and his sister, Robbie Morrison.

Family and Friends will gather for a memorial service only on Saturday, Feb. 23, from 3 to 4:30 p.m., at the First Baptist Church of Tooele, 580 S. Main St.

Robert H. Swan

1935 ~ 2008Credit union official pass-

es Feb. 19, 2008, a victim of a severe stroke days earlier.

He was born July 19, 1935, in Tooele, the son of Clifford LeRoy and Cynthia Speirs Swan. His early life was con-nected to their grocery busi-ness and high school sports. He owned and operated Swan’s AG Market in Tooele during the

1970s. He enjoyed basketball, playing for the University of Utah and in rec leagues and M. Men competitions. A great passion in his life was golf. His Swan Invitational, which began on his 50th birthday, was held at Oquirrh Hills Golf Course annually for 10 years. He was known by golfers throughout the United States. A member of the National Credit Union Association from 1990 to 1996, Bob served credit union interests in Washington, D.C., and around the nation. He was appointed to that board

as a Democratic member by President George H.W. Bush following a recommendation by Sen. Jake Garn. Earlier he managed the Tooele Federal Credit Union from 1983-1990. He was an accounting gradu-ate from the U of U and served in the U.S. Army Audit Agency. Long active in politics and com-munity affairs, Bob served on the Tooele City Council and as Mayor of Tooele City, elected in 1969. He was also a member of the Utah Governor’s Advisory Council on Community Affairs and sat as a director with the

Utah League of Cities and Towns.

On Friday, Aug. 13, 1982, he married Jan Thomas. Their marriage was performed by Gov. Scott Matheson, a good friend. Later he was appointed associated director of finance in the Matheson administra-tion. At the time of his death he was the president of Swan Resources and Consulting Services, 1996 to the present time. He was also employed as a lobbyist for Tooele County and the Utah Credit Unions.

Bob is survived by his lov-

ing wife, Jan; his daughter, Stephanie Thomas-Stokes; son, Steve Ryan Thomas; grand-children; great-grandchildren; brothers, Allen (Verla) Swan, Karl (Kay) Swan; and nephews and nieces.

Funeral services will be held on Saturday, Feb. 23, at 2 p.m., at the Tooele Stake Center, 253 S. 200 East. Friends may call on Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. at Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main St., and Saturday one hour prior to the service at the church. Interment in the Tooele City Cemetery.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 A7TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

FROM OUR ARCHIVES

Editor’s Note: This is part of a series of columns reprinted verbatim from past issues of the Transcript-Bulletin. The series is intended to provide historical snapshots of the life and times of the county.

How much money does the average Tooele County family spend in bringing up of a child?

Under present conditions, what does it cost to have and to rear that little bundle of joy from infancy to age 18?

Those questions come to the fore at this time because of a report recently released by the Commission of Population and the American Future, showing what it averages — on a national basis.

In the local area, as well as elsewhere, the cost is vastly greater today than it was when father and mother were chil-dren.

In those days, according to a study titled “The Money Value of a Man,” a typical family spent $7,425 to raise a child to age 18. That covered the cost of child-birth, housing, food, clothing, transportation, education and medical expenses.

Nowadays, by the way of com-parison, that outlay would reach only about one-fourth of the way. The food bill alone, for the average youngster, runs to about $8,500 in the 18 years, accord-

ing to the Health Insurance Institute.

In Tooele County, and every-where else, the amount that a family spends in the process of bringing up its children is closely governed by its income. Those who have a lot spend a lot.

In general, it is found, that outlay ranges from nearly 2.9 times a family’s one year earn-ings, after taxes to over 3.6 times earnings.

In the case of Tooele County, with it’s average net income of $8,000 to $9,000 per household, according to the latest figures, the 18-year expenditure is esti-mate at bout $28,900 per child.

A detailing of the outlays shows that, except for the first year, when close to $3,000 may be spent for medical and hos-pital bills, furniture, clothing, medicines and the like, the greatest expenditure is between 13 and 18, when youngsters eat more, require more expensive clothes and more money for rec-reation.

Based upon current costs, the total expenditure by Tooele County parents for the 330 or so girls and boys in the area who reach 18 each year comes to approximately $9,537,000 to that point.

Compiled by Jamie Belnap.

Raising Children: The Cost in Tooele County

Friday, Feb. 11, 1972

photography / Troy Boman

Scott Bird, manager of operations for the Kennecott Smelter, stands on stainless steel plates, which are placed in an acidic solution and charged with electricity for 11 days to extract copper, inside the tankhouse at the refinery in this Nov. 16, 2007, file photo. Record production combined with higher precious metals prices enabled Kennecott to mark 2007 as one of its highest-earning years.

by Doug RadunichSTAFF WRITER

Record production com-bined with higher pre-cious metals prices enabled Kennecott Utah Copper to haul in $1.6 billion in net earnings for 2007, one of the highest-earning years for the business, according to com-pany officials.

Kennecott, which produc-es 13 percent of the nation’s copper, was also the highest-earning mine in the global Rio Tinto conglomerate for the second year in a row. The Rio Tinto group, which has headquarters in London and Melbourne, Australia, is one of the world’s largest mining companies.

The production of refined copper at Kennecott rose to 292,800 tons, up 22 percent from 2006’s level of 240,200 tons. Gold reached 523,000 ounces in 2007, surpassing the previous record level of 488,000 ounces set in 2002 — an increase of 7 percent — and silver reached 4,364,700

ounces in 2007, surpass-ing the previous record of 4,151,700 ounces set in 2006 — an increase of 5 percent.

Kyle Bennett, communi-cations and media relations specialist for Kennecott, said 2007 was a good year because of strong market demand for copper, high metal prices and improving technology.

“It wasn’t our best year ever, but 2007 was a solid year for us because of these different things combined,” said Bennett.

He also said Kennecott was able to increase production through its bulk flotation process, which allows copper, gold, silver and molybdenum to be released from ore and made into concentrate. The company had invested $82 million on an improvement project in 2004 to expand and modernize the bulk flo-tation process at Kennecott’s Copperton concentrator.

“The bulk flotation mod-ernization will be completed during the second quarter of 2008,” Bennett said. “By

improving concentrate qual-ity and enhancing the pro-duction process, Kennecott is able to bring forward refined copper production planned for 2010 into 2008 and 2009. Additionally, this technology will improve copper, molyb-denum, silver and gold recov-ery.”

Kennecott Utah Copper, which employs 1,800 people and hundreds of contractors, is the second-largest cop-per producer in the United States. Rio Tinto purchased Kennecott in 1989 and has invested about $2 billion in the modernization of the company’s operations. [email protected]

Kennecott Utah Copper tallies earnings of $1.6 billion for 2007

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making sure the city main-tained it from then on.

“Bob was the second mayor that I worked for,” said Patrick Dunlavy, current mayor of Tooele. “I have a lot of respect for Bob, he was a good friend and I learned a lot from him.”

In 1977, Swan was appoint-ed deputy director for finance for the state of Utah by Gov. Scott Matheson. He was responsible for the state workmen’s compensation fund, state agency budgets, and accounting.

Swan, who earned an MBA from the University of Utah and served as an auditor for the U.S. Army in California, was also a prominent busi-ness leader. He took over his

family grocery store, Swan’s Market, on the corner of 100 South and Main Street in Tooele from 1963 through 1976. From 1983 to 1990, he served as president and CEO of Tooele Federal Credit Union.

During his tenure at the credit union, assets increased from $30 million to $80 mil-lion.

In 1990, Swan was appoint-ed to a six-year term on the board of the National Credit Union Administration by President George Herbert Walker Bush. The National Credit Union Administration is the federal agency that oversees credit unions. Swan was the first credit union CEO to serve on the three-member national regulatory board.

Swan was also at the center of a brief controversy when he sued President Bill Clifton in 1996 for improperly replac-ing him on the national cred-

it union board. Swan’s term had expired, but according to U.S. code he was to con-tinue to serve until his suc-cessor was “qualified.” In April 1996, President Clinton replaced Swan with a recess appointment who had not been approved by congress. Swan lost his suit in both the district and appellate court in the District of Columbia.

After leaving the national credit union regulatory board, Swan formed his own lobby-ing and consulting firm.

In 2003, in the Credit Union Times, Swan commented on concerns about modern credit unions: “One trend I've noticed that really dis-turbs me is the inaccessibil-ity and aloofness of manage-ment to members. With some credit unions, you have to go through a telephone treadmill to get to a real person. That impression makes us look like banks, and we should revive

the spirit of direct communi-cation with the member.”

At time of his death, Swan was working as a lobbyist for Tooele County and Utah credit unions.

“I knew Bob my whole life,” said state Rep. Jim Gowans. “I thought he did an outstand-ing job as mayor. The com-munity will miss Bob.”[email protected]

Swan continued from page A1

Bob Swan

by Doug RadunichSTAFF WRITER

The recently opened Tooele County Health Department’s Healthy Smiles Dental Clinic has been struggling to stay open because it hasn’t sched-uled enough dentists to meet the needs of the low-income patients it was designed to serve.

“We have a waiting list of patients that is about four pages long and has about 115 names, most of which are adults,” said clinic manager Cindy Searle. “We get a good number of peo-ple who come into the clinic to sign on to the waiting list, but we’re not able to see walk-ins right away. Once we get going we’ll probably be able to.”

Several private dental prac-tices in Tooele reported send-ing patients to the new county clinic only to have them put on a waiting list.

“Out of the several people we’ve had to refer over there, one of them who happened to be in a lot of pain even called us back distressed that there was such a long waiting list

at the county clinic,” said Lori Smith, office manager for Dr. Hans Smith’s dental practice. “I really hope this clinic works out because there are a ton of peo-ple I know out there who need it. It’s obviously a big need, and I know they have sunk a lot of money into it as well.”

Searle, who spends 32 hours a week at the county clinic, said the lack of dentists working there is primarily due to trou-ble coordinating schedules, as opposed to lack of interest from dentists. The clinic, which cur-rently has no set schedule or hours, only has one volunteer dentist signed on at present: Dr. Mike Wells. Searle said the clinic is trying to work out the schedules of local dentists who have shown interest in volun-teering.

“We’ve talked to about eight dentists from within the county who have expressed interest in volunteering, and most of them have said they can work half-days once or twice a month,” she said. “It’s not like we can have someone all day. Overall, it’s all just a matter of coor-dinating schedules, but most

patients who have wanted to schedule an appointment with us have been really under-standing and patient through all this.”

Local Tooele dentist Dr. Clair Vernon agreed that there is a definite need for dental treat-ment for low-income indi-viduals countywide, and he thought Healthy Smiles could sufficiently serve patients once enough local dentists volun-teered some of their time.

“There are only around 10 dentists in Tooele, but if they each took a half-day a week to it could staff the place well enough,” he said. “However, a lot of dentists aren’t willing to sacrifice a half-day a week. One idea is that maybe the county or whoever’s doing the hiring should hire a full-time dentist to work there.”

Because there are some days when a dentist is not available at all, Searle said that right now patients can only call in or drop by to get their name on the clinic’s waiting list. She then calls down the list and sets up appointments for people according to when dentists are

able to come in. Searle said she appreciates

those local dentists in the area who are willing to volunteer.

“A lot of these dentists, most of whom have to work five days a week themselves, have to move their own work sched-ules and patient appointments around to volunteer here,” she said. “So it’s nice of them to take time out of their busy schedules and help assist us. There are over 5,000 residents countywide who are without dental insurance, and many people here have been waiting for something like this to come along for years.”

The dental clinic opened more than a year behind sched-ule after construction delays on the new county health build-ing that houses it, followed by delays in obtaining specialized dental equipment. The clinic finally opened last month.

To get on the waiting list at Healthy Smiles, call Cindy Searle at 277-2430 or stop by the clinic Monday through [email protected]

County dental clinic struggling to open wideAfter construction and equipment delays, patients are ready but dentists aren’t lined up

file photo

Mayor Robert Swan (right) makes an adjustment on the control unit for a battery of sprinkler heads at the city cemetery in this March 3, 1970, file photo. Pictured are (l-r): Terry Anderson, manufacturer representative, Glen Hamilton, contractor, Dale Winchester, assistant city engineer, and Mayor Swan.

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINTHURSDAY February 21, 2008 A9

REEL TALK

I t is an extreme annoyance when a movie’s trailer makes the film out to be a

wonderful piece of cinematic beauty, then after sitting in the theater for an hour and a half, you realize the trailer was completely misleading.

This was the case with the new thriller “Vantage Point.” On the surface, the film seems intriguing. It tells the story of the assassination of the United States president through five different perspectives. After the third flashback, however, this plot becomes convoluted and contrived.

Director Pete Travis is mak-ing his feature film debut after directing television movies and mini-series. Travis took on a huge project for his first film with an all-star cast. However, the problem with “Vantage Point” comes from the writing, by newcomer Barry Levy, as well as the directing. The act-ing by the cast is not that bad, but unfortunately, they cannot help a horrendous script.

That all being said, “Vantage Point” does have its strengths. It plays up to mass audiences who will be engrossed by the distinct filming style and by putting the pieces of the story together. This could have been a good movie if Travis had backed away from the awful flashbacks and puzzling plot-line.

“Vantage Point” tells the story of the attempted assas-sination of President Ashton (William Hurt) during an anti-terrorist summit in Spain. The first point of view comes from the perspective of tele-vision news producer Rex

Brooks (Sigourney Weaver) and field reporter Angie Jones (Zoe Saldana). They witness the president being shot just after taking the stage in front of a large crowd, and then two explosions.

In the second flashback, body guard/agent Thomas Barnes (Dennis Quaid) is back on duty after taking a bullet to protect the president’s life six months earlier. After the president is shot, he tackles a man whom he believes is the shooter. Then, after the second bomb explodes, he runs toward the TV news van where Rex is stationed and requests to see their tapes — the outcome of which is a great shock.

The third, fourth and fifth perspectives are told by Howard Lewis (Forest Whitaker), an American tour-ist who videotapes the event, Javier (Edgar Rodriguez), a

local who gets sucked into the plot scheme, and Enrique (Eduardo Noriega) a local police officer whose job is to protect the mayor. Eventually the flashbacks stop and the rest of the storyline begins to unravel.

It is not until after the dif-ferent perspective situations end that “Vantage Point” really starts to pick up. With car chases and violence, the rest of the film clips right along. This movie feels a lot like “Crash” from 2005. The same event happens to everyone in some fashion, and then by the end of the film they all end up back in the same place. However, “Crash” did it better.

“Vantage Point” is at least fast-paced and there are enough action-packed sequences to keep audiences entertained. But this does not make the film any bet-ter. The overwhelmingly bad

script sucks all the life out of “Vantage Point.”[email protected]

‘Vantage Point’ a bad case of deja vuMissy Thompson

STAFF WRITER

Grade: C-Rated: PG-13Time: 90 minutesOpens Friday

FLICK AT A GLANCE

photo courtesy of Columbia Pictures

Forest Whitaker plays Howard Lewis, an American tourist in Spain who witnesses the assassination of a U.S. presi-dent, in “Vantage Point.”

Community College and the Salt Lake-Tooele Applied Technology College. The Tooele County School District will now be allowed to part-ner with the Davis Applied Technology College to offer classes for high school stu-dents in Tooele. Gowans also expressed hope that in the near future, once funding can be secured, Tooele will get its own facility and have a stand-alone Tooele Applied Technology College.

Funding for a Tooele juve-nile receiving center for youths who have committed minor offenses received a setback. Going into the ses-sion, funding for the center was included in the gover-nor’s budget. In fact, it was the second priority for new funding for the state Division of Juvenile Justice Services, according to division direc-tor Dan Maldonado. After a hearing in the appropriations committee, however, it was ranked No. 48 in priority.

The receiving center is a place for juveniles that do not require incarcera-tion to spend the day under supervision while continu-ing to receive an education and counseling. Receiving centers are an early inter-vention method, prevent-ing more serious problems down the road, according to Doug Thomas, Tooele Unit Manager for Valley Mental Health. Currently, juveniles

must be transported to Salt Lake City for services. Tooele County is the most populous county in the state without its own juvenile receiving cen-ter.

Sen. Mark Madsen, R-Lehi, updated the caucus on water legislation. Senate Bill 85 to create a state water board has been approved by the com-mittee and should be heard by the full senate soon. Sen. Dennis Stowell, R-Parowan, sponsor of the bill, has indi-cated that he may offer an amendment to his bill giv-ing small water users the opportunity to appeal deci-sions of the state engineer to an administrative law judge. Senate Bill 269, also spon-sored by Stowell, would give water users access to the state private property ombudsman for help with appeals of water rights issues. SB 269 is sched-uled for a committee hearing in the Senate this Friday.

Another bill dealing with water rights, House Bill 51, sponsored by Rep. Pat Painter, R-Nephi, protects water rights of municipalities and gives everybody an additional two years to use water before for-feiture may take place. The bill has passed the House and was given a favorable recom-mendation by a Senate com-mittee, and now is waiting for approval by the full Senate.

Menlove’s bill to designate magnesium as the state metal may be a victim of time, she said. The bill was passed out of a House committee with a favorable recommenda-tion, and is on the calendar

for consideration by the full House. However, with time running short, the house may not be able to consider the bill before House leadership starts the process of “sifting” the agenda, Menlove said. “Sifting” is the process used towards the end of the ses-sion to prioritize bills still on the [email protected]

Capitol continued from page A1

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God, the Bible &You

Next week, Lord willing, God’s response to our sinfulness.

Send lessons or comments to:

Tooele Church of Christ • Box 426 • 430 W. Utah Ave.Tooele, UT 84074 • 435.882-4642

Rv 21:8 “But as for the cowardly, the faithless, the polluted, as for murderers, fornicators, sorcerers, idolaters, and all liars, their lot shall be in the lake that burns with fire and sulphur, which is the second death.”

DIRECTIONS: Circle the correct answer only after reading each Scripture carefully. Lesson 3, The Problem of Man.

1. 1 John 1:8-10 (Romans 3:10-19)“If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. 9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 10 If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.”

Yes - No Does the Bible teach that we all have sinned?Yes - No Do we make Christ a liar if we say we have not sinned?

2. 1 John 3:4 (James 4:17)“Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law.”

Yes - No Is sin “transgression” (violation) of God’s law?Yes - No Would ANY violation of God’s law be sin?

3. James 2:10 (1 John 5:17)“For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all.”

Yes - No Is one able to violate certain points in God’s law and not be a sinner?

4. 1 John 2:3-4“And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep his com-mandments. 4 He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his com-mandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.”

Yes - No If we say we KNOW Christ and fail to keep His com mandments, are we liars?Yes - No Is it a sin to be a liar?

5. 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9 (Matthew 13:36-43)“And to you who are troubled rest with us, when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, 8 In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: 9 Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power;”

Yes - No Will Jesus take vengeance in flaming fire on those who do not obey Him?Yes - No Will this punishment be “everlasting” if we fail to “obey” Christ?

6. Romans 6:23 (James 5:19-20)“For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”

Yes - No Is it your understanding that sin will bring (spiritual) death.Yes - No If man does not find someway to be cured from sin, will he be able to live spiritually?

7. Isaiah 59:1-2 (Rom 5:6)“Behold, the LORD’s hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither his ear heavy, that it cannot hear: 2 But your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and your sins have hid his face from you, that he will not hear.”

Yes - No Is it your sins and not Adam’s sins that has separated man from God?Yes - No Sin prevents God from hearing sinners, will it do any good to cry for forgiveness?

THURSDAY February 21, 2008A10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

OUTDOOR ADVENTURE

T here’s nothing quite like the sound of a moun-tain stream. Whether

it’s a spring brook in the high Uintas or a frigid creek in the snowy Oquirrhs, the vibrant white-noise gush of pure water is like nature’s iPod. The only thing better than listening to a stream with your friends or your kids is listening to a stream with your sweetheart.

Last week’s white-out capped off a grueling winter ruled by freak snow storms that seemed to always blow in right in time for my com-mute. I hoped to take my wife on a Valentine’s hike, but find-ing a passable back road in the county has been difficult. Luckily, Settlement Canyon Road was plowed for a mile, and we drove up to watch the sunset.

We drove up to the closed gate where the snow plows turn around and a snow-packed road continues deep into the quiet Oquirrhs. The sun was setting over the dis-tant Stansbury Mountains, framed by One O’Clock Peak to the south and Little Mountain to the north. The thermometer in our dash read 29 degrees. We turned the heater on and rolled the windows down to listen to Settlement Creek course into the mostly frozen reservoir below. We talked about the kids and how we hoped they hadn’t burned my mother’s house down yet. We talked about the things we needed to buy at Wal-Mart the next morning. We reminisced about the night we first met at a gathering of friends in Skull Valley — how she broke the

ice by offering me fruit punch — how we sat by the campfire talking until the sun came up, and how almost a decade later we still can’t get enough of the wilderness.

The conversation eventu-ally turned to the disaster that was our first date. We laugh about it now, but at the time it couldn’t have been more embarrassing. I’m amazed I ever saw her again after that night. Maybe some things are just meant to be — no matter how hard you try to screw them up. Till the day I die, being in the mountains at night with her will always remind me of that ill-fated night.

Having moved here from the utterly flat state of Texas the day before we met, she had never hiked a mountain trail or watched the Milky Way from an alpine meadow.

“I’ll take her hiking,” I thought. “One breath of crisp mountain air, one look at the city from a canyon overlook and she’ll be mine.”

Initially things went well — a nice drive up Big Cottonwood Canyon and a romantic couple-mile hike along the Broad’s Fork Twin Peaks trail.

Of course that was before we walked back to the car and I couldn’t find my keys. Before we hiked all the way back up and spent an hour looking for them. Before we got back

down again and I realized I must have locked my keys in my trunk.

“We’re not too far away from the city, are we?” she asked. “Nah,” I reassured her with a faux confidence that could not have hidden my acute aware-ness that it was now midnight and we were exactly 4.5 miles from the mouth of the canyon.

Plan A: Somehow break into my Dodge Spirit without shat-tering the windows before she starts getting cold.

No dice.Plan B: Start walking. Stay

upbeat. Avoid mountain lions and “helpful” serial-killer-looking guys offering us rides. Pick up the pieces of my shat-tered pride at the bottom: “Hey, at least it’s downhill.”

We joked about our misfor-tune, but our guarded laughter dwindled as we rounded curve after curve of quiet road. We walked at least a mile before a normal-looking couple in a pickup offered to drive us to a pay phone (my cell phone was with my keys in the trunk). The awkward chitchat made the ride seem much longer than it was, but I was glad to be out of the mountains.

“So what are you going to do now?” the guy driving asked with all the compassion he could muster and still keep a straight face.

“Probably call a friend,” I said as we climbed out of his cab at a grocery store, knowing that calling a friend would be even more tragic than locking my keys in my car 4.5 miles up a canyon on a first date. The only thing worse than scaring a girl off is seeing her the next week at Leatherby’s, sharing a

Rob’s Banana Split with your friend that so nobly rescued her from her nightmare first date with you.

No, friends were definitely not an option. I picked up the pay phone and dialed the only person who could look past my idiocy and get me out of this mess. My mother arrived in short order, and we were soon driving back up the can-yon with my backup key.

When we retrieved my keys and pulled out of the trailhead parking lot, I looked at the girl I was certain I’d never see again.

“I’m at a loss,” I blabbered, feeling about an inch tall. “I just don’t know what to say. I’m sorry.”

“It’s okay,” she assured me, obviously glad the ordeal was finally over. The uneasiness had worn off and her playful sense of humor had resur-faced. “It was a great hike … and this will definitely go down as the most hilarious first date story ever.”

Nine years and four kids later, we sat at the mouth of Settlement Canyon, laughing about that night and searching the sky for constellations. We got out and hiked past the gate and down to the Dark Trail trailhead. When it was time to walk back, I took my glove off and felt my right front pocket. Oh, good — the keys were there.

Clint Thomsen is a Stansbury Park resident who grew up climbing mountains, wander-ing desert paths and exploring Utah’s wilds. He may be con-tacted via his Web site at www.bonnevillemariner.com.

First date leads to shared love of outdoorsClint ThomsenGUEST COLUMNIST

in Tooele beneath a vehicle detaching a converter from a Ford F150 with a saw, according to Wimmer. He was charged with theft and booked into the county jail, but has since been released.

“They (thieves) seem to target foreign vehicles, like Toyota, because there are more precious metals in them,” said Scott Brown, a mechanic for Clar’s Auto in Tooele who specializes in exhaust sys-tems. Brown said he has replaced five or six stolen catalytic converters in the past three months — an unusually high number.

Wimmer agreed, saying that Toyotas typically sit up higher and seem to have a little more room around the converter, making it easier to remove.

One aspect that hasn’t been consistent, however, is the location of the thefts, Wimmer added.

“They can happen anywhere — in a driveway, in public parking lots,” Wimmer

said. “It’s a tough crime because you can’t lock a catalytic converter. Really, all we can do is ask people to be aware of the problem and watch for people working underneath cars suspiciously.”

Police believe most thefts are happen-ing during the night.

Brown said a vehicle will still run with-out a catalytic converter, although it will be noisy and fuel mileage will significant-ly decrease. A new, aftermarket converter can be purchased for between $100 to $180. Dealer parts can run up to $700.

Police and car repairmen both say the

theft of catalytic converters is probably increasing not because of the amount of money made selling the part, but because it’s an easy buck.

Police recommend drivers park in a secure, open place where a stranger with a saw would be conspicuous. And, when

possible, park vehicles in a garage instead of the driveway.

“All you can do is hope that someone sees it happening,” Wimmer said. “It’s really a case that we have to watch out for each other.”[email protected]

Theft continued from page A1

“It’s a tough crime because you can’t lock a cat-alytic converter. Really, all we can do is ask peo-ple to be aware of the problem and watch for people working underneath cars suspiciously.”

Lt. Paul WimmerTooele City Police Department

any structural damage. WHS also planned an earthquake safety presentation with stu-dents today.

“You always hear of it hap-pening somewhere else, but not in your own place,” she said.

Brenda Loveless, admin-istrative assistant at the Grantsville City Police Department, said as she was

sitting at her desk this morn-ing, she felt a wave back and forth.

“There was myself and one other officer, and I said, ‘Jim, there’s an earthquake,’” Loveless said, adding that she felt motion sick at the time. “And he said, ‘No, I think it’s just a big truck going down the road.’ And I said, ‘No, it’s an earthquake.’”

The Tooele County Sheriff’s Office said no damage in Wendover had been reported to their office.

People from Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, Arizona,

Oregon and California also reported feeling the quake to the USGS.

Mark Hale, an earth-quake information specialist with the University of Utah Seismograph Stations, said it is normal for an earthquake of this magnitude to be felt hun-dreds of miles away.

“In Tooele, you’re actually a lot closer geographically than the people in Salt Lake,” he said. “In Salt Lake, people reported creaking. People in Tooele reported actual shak-ing.”

Wade Matthews, public

information officer for Tooele County Emergency, said he has not received any reports of damage or injuries.

Rocky Gonzales, undersher-iff for Elko County in Nevada, said numerous homes and businesses in Wells, near the Utah-Nevada state line, were damaged. He said the major-ity of the damage seems to be to historical buildings on Front Street.

Gonzales added there was also a propane leak at the Flying J truck stop in Wells that forced the closure of I-80. [email protected]

Quake continued from page A1

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A11THURSDAY February 21, 2008

THURSDAY February 21, 2008A12 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

SportsSPORTS WRAP

Tooele basketball

The Tooele boys basketball team dropped its final game of the season Wednesday at Mountain View 62-42. The victory for the Bruins earned them a trip to the 4A state tournament next week in Ogden at the Dee Events Center. Mountain View finished fourth in Region 7 to receive the final state tourney berth. The Buffs trailed by one point after one quarter, but Mountain View outscored them 36-15 during the second and third quarters. Tooele’s sharp-shooting point guard Tanner Stuart scored 13 while power forward Jordan Clemente added 10. Matt Wihongi, Nathan Hyde and Stuart all hit three-point field goals. Ten Tooele players scored in the game while 12 players scored from Mountain View. The Buffs were unable to win a game in their new 4A Region 7 and finished the year with a 3-18 overall record. The three victories came against 3A foes Ben Lomond, Ogden and Juan Diego.

Youth wrestling

Practices for freestyle and Greco wres-tling will begin Monday at 7 p.m. at the Tooele High School wrestling room. Ages second grade and up are invited to participate.

Grantsville baseball

Youth can sign up to play in Grantsville Youth Baseball leagues on Saturday at Junior Jazz games in Grantsville. The Grantsville Youth Baseball committee has decided to remain with the Western Boys Baseball Association (WBBA) for the upcoming year because the association provides a favorable All-Star tournament. Youth can also sign up to play baseball at Soelberg’s next Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. Fees are $45 for tee ball, $45 for machine pitch and $65 for major and minor leagues. Grantsville will also join the Pony League this year which is for youth ages 13 and 14. Athletes from Lake Point, Stansbury Park an Dugway are invited to join. Fees for playing in the Pony League are yet to be deter-mined. For information about any of the leagues contact Tony Cloward, 241-0306 or Grantsville Youth Baseball president Bryan DeLaney, 830-2142.

Baseball certification required

Tooele County Babe Ruth / Cal Ripken Baseball League officials want to remind all coaches from the 2007 sea-son, parents and those who might be interested in being assistant coaches that they must complete the Coaching Certification Program before they can be considered for a coaching or assist-ing position. The Coaching Certification Program was developed by Babe Ruth, Inc. in conjunction with Cal Ripken and the American Sport Education Program. During the online training, coaches are given tips on various skill improvement drills, proper player-coach relationships and leadership. To take the online coaching certification program log on to www.baberuthleague.org and go to the Coaching Certification Program.

County youth baseball

Registration for Tooele County Babe Ruth Baseball League will be at Tooele City Hall tonight from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. and on Saturday, Feb. 24 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Local youth ages 5 through 15 are eligible to register for the local baseball program. Birth certificates are required for all players. Playing age is based on the player’s age as of April 30, 2008. Boundaries for the Tooele County Babe Ruth Baseball League for ages 5 through 12 includes the incorporated and unicor-porated areas of Tooele City, Lincoln, Pine Canyon, Erda, Stockton, Rush Valley, Clover, St. John, Ophir, Vernon, Dugway and all areas east of Sheep Lane road in Erda. Players living west of Sheep Lane or in the Grantsville City boundary should play in the Grantsville league. Boundaries for the 12, 14-15-year-old leagues are the Tooele County boundary lines, excluding Grantsville City and areas west of Sheep Lane. The reg-istration fee for players ages 5 through 8 is $40. The fee for ages 9 through 12 is $75 and for players ages 13 through 15 is $90. Due to limited playing facilities, registration will be on a first-come basis. Late registration applicants will be put on a waiting list and will be assessed a $20 late fee.

Stansbury Park Cal Ripken

Sign-ups for the Stansbury Park Cal Ripken baseball league will be held on Saturday, Feb. 23, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Stansbury Park Clubhouse. Players can also register at a self-serve box inside the TFCU branch in Stansbury Park until Feb. 23.

Deseret Peak softball

Deseret Peak softball fields will be open March 22 and March 29, from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. to all mens and coed softball players for hitting and fielding practice. Anyone interested in joining a team is welcome to participate in these practice sessions. There is no charge to practice and the concession stand will be open. Deseret Peak softball leagues will be holding a coaches meeting for all mens and coed leagues March 19 and March 26, at 7 p.m., at the Utah State Firefighters Museum at Deseret Peak Complex. A member from each team should be in attendance at one of these meetings. April 4 is the deadline to sign up a team and league fees must be paid by that day in order for teams to be pt on the schedule.

photography / Troy Boman

Alex Zamora has over 17 years of experience playing soccer competi-tively. Zamora will coach the Tooele High School boys this year after spending one year as an assistant at Grantsville.

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

Dugway scored the final eight points of the game to avoid an upset-minded Wendover team Wednesday night and record its 20th victory of the season with a 48-37 tri-umph.

It’s been several years since the Wendover boys basket-ball team has defeated region bully Dugway, but a rare Wildcat victory was within reach mid-way through the fourth quarter Wednesday night at Dugway.

Down by eight points early in the final quarter, Wendover’s leading scorer Victor DeSantiago started to heat up. He scored five-straight points on two inside bas-kets thanks to good feeds from his teammates and also added a foul shot. Then, to end a 7-0 run, the Wildcats found Devin Murphy all alone inside to cut Dugway’s lead to 33-32 with 5:45 left in the game.

The visitors still trailed by only two points with 4:45 remaining when Dugway’s sharp-shooting junior guard Morgan Kartchner decided to take matters into his own hands.

“He hasn’t been wanting to shoot lately and I don’t know why. He’s been lacking some confidence,” said Dugway coach George Bruce. “He’s a great shooter. I kept yelling at him to shoot the ball.”

Kartchner got the message and hit three three-pointers in a three-minute time span to close out the game and dash any Wendover hopes of pulling off an upset.

Kartchner ended up scoring his season average of 18 points on Wednesday, with half of them coming during that critical three-minute span.

“He really doesn’t need a lot of room to be able to get his shot off,” his coach said.

With a hand in his face and standing one foot behind the three-point arc at the top of the key, the small guard hit nothing but net to give the Mustangs a five-point lead.

Wendover’s DeSantiago wasn’t finished, however, and he drained another basket inside to make it 40-37 with 2:51 left in the game.

Kartcher responded on the next trip down the floor with another three-point basket. Then after he deflected a Wendover pass to create a turnover, the junior sank his fourth three-point basket of the night and Dugway was able to run out the clock.

“They (Wendover) really outworked us and outplayed us,” Bruce said. “Wendover’s a team that gives it all they’ve got. First place wasn’t on the line tonight. It was all for pride and Wendover showed they have a lot of pride with the way they played,” the Dugway coach said.

The pesky Wendover crew battle hard all night on both ends of the floor.

“We’re not very good, but we play hard,’’ said Wendover coach Mike Henderson.

Both Tooele County 1A teams had already earned the top

Dugway saves best for last to sink Wendover

SEE DUGWAY PAGE A13 ➤

photography/ Maegan Burr

Dugway junior guard Morgan Kartchner attempts to drive to the basket while being guarded by Wendover’s Landon Mikesell during the final regular season game for both teams Wednesday night at Dugway. Kartchner sank three three-pointers in the final four minutes to help Dugway secure the victory.

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

Alex Zamora will jump from assistant boys soccer coach at Grantsville High School to the head position in boys soccer at Tooele High School.

The 25-year-old Provo resident was hired by Tooele High School in the fall of last year after he spent one year as a field coach at Grantsville High with former GHS head coach Casey Walker. Walker will now assist Zamora at Tooele while Chris Holley will begin his first year as head coach of the boys soccer team in Grantsville.

“We wanted to hire him last fall so he would have some time to familiarize himself with the players and plan for this spring,” said THS athletic director Richard Valdez. “We’re impressed with his enthusiasm and hope things go well this season.”

Regardless of where he’s coaching in the Tooele County School District, Zamora wants to work with junior soccer programs to help develop the overall soccer talent in Tooele Valley.

“The TC United program is a good pro-gram that is stating to blossom in Tooele County,” Zamora said.

“It’s great to be hired as a head coach at such a young age. There really is a lot of tal-ent here at Tooele; they just need some work on conditioning and the technical aspects,” he said Monday afternoon prior to running his players through three hours of condition-ing drills.

Zamora said conditioning is the most important aspect if teams want to succeed in soccer.

“If you’re in great shape you always have a chance to win even if you are not as techni-cally sound as you could be. You have to run and stay in shape during the off-season,” he said.

Zamora learned the value of conditioning throughout his 17 years of playing competi-tive soccer. He is second in career points at Watertown High School in Massachusetts where he lettered for four years. He went on to play at Massasoit Community College in Brockton, Mass., where his 2001 team was ranked eighth in the nation among junior colleges.

Zamora attended a private school during his elementary years and would play soccer every Saturday.

New THS soccer coach lit up scoreboard in high school

SEE THS PAGE A13 ➤

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

April and May are the months for turkey hunting in Tooele County, but the TC Strutters will get ready for the hunts by holding their annual banquet on Saturday at 5 p.m. at the Deseret Peak Complex arena.

In addition to the din-ner, the Strutters will hold a free turkey calling semi-nar Saturday at 1 p.m. at the arena for those who would like to find out more about calling turkeys.

The TC Strutters are the

largest group of turkey hunters in the state of Utah and each year they host a dinner to raise money through ticket sales, silent auctions, live auctions and raffles. The money is combined with donations from corporate sponsors and individuals concerned about wildlife conserva-tion. Some of the money is used to help transplant turkeys to Tooele County.

Turkey hunting is becoming more popular in the county and through-out the state, accord-ing to Ty Anderson of TC Strutters. He said turkey

hunting permits in Utah will increase this year from 3,020 to 7,701. Up to 15 percent of turkey permits will be reserved for youth ages 18 and under.

Turkey hunters in North America have been able to coordinate their resourc-es and become experts in preserving the wild birds by joining together and creating the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF). When it was founded in 1973, there were only 1.3 million wild turkeys throughout North America.

TC Strutters will show how they talk turkey this Saturday

SEE TURKEY PAGE A13 ➤

photography/John Ford - National Wild Turkey Federation

Turkey hunting is becoming increasing popular in Tooele County and throughout the state. This year the number of turkey hunting permits will jump from 3,020 to 7,701.

A12 SPORTSA12 SPORTS

THURSDAY February 21, 2008 A13TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

two seeds from Region 18 prior to the game and will play next Wednesday in the first round of the 1A state boys basket-ball tournament in Richfield. Wendover will play at 2:30 p.m. and Dugway at 5:30 p.m. at the Sevier Valley Center in the 16-team tournament.

The game was tied at 11 after the first quarter and stayed close until Dugway started to force some Wendover turn-overs with a trapping half-court defense. With the scored tied at 14 Dugway’s Jackson Jones made a pair of steals followed by lay-ups and then Zach James closed the half with a basket to put the Mustangs up 21-16 at intermission.

Dugway expanded its lead to

nine points midway through the third period. Later, Wendover cut that lead to three, when Rogello Martinez sank a three-pointer. Dugway’s Dakota Woolett hit a shot at the buzzer to give Dugway a 30-25 lead heading into the final period.

DeSantiago ended up scor-ing a game-high 23 points for the visitors.

Rogello Martinez added 5, Landon Mikesell 4, Jose Rosales 3 and Murphy 2.

James scored 8 for Dugway with Woolett adding 7, Preston Edwards 7, Jones 6 and James Dettle 2.

Dugway finished the regu-lar season with a 20-1 overall record and 8-0 in the region. Wendover finished at 8-12 and 5-3 in [email protected]

Dugway continued from page A12

He moved to Provo three years ago after converting to the LDS Church. He played soccer for one semester at Utah Valley State College.

Tooele High won the 4A state soccer championship back in 1997 and Zamora would like to build the pro-gram so another champion-ship is within reach.

“This year our goal is to reach the playoffs,” he said. “Right now Tooele has a repu-tation as a dirty team and not

very disciplined. Our goal is to be disciplined and respect-ful of our opponents. We want to win with class and lose with class.”

Tooele recorded a 5-11 record last year and lost to Grantsville for the first time ever. The Buffs, however, return several experienced players this season, losing only four seniors from last year’s squad.

Tryouts for the team will be held Feb. 25-26, at 2:30 p.m. at the Tooele High School soccer field, with a meeting for par-ents at 6:30 p.m. on Feb. 26 in the high school [email protected]

THS continued from page A12

Since then, the number of wild turkeys has increased to more than 7 million birds thanks to the efforts of state and federal wildlife agencies and the NWTF.

Anderson mentioned that the TC Strutters will also hold a JAKES Day in May. JAKES

stands for juniors acquiring knowledge, ethics and sports-manship. The program is for youth 17 years and younger. It is dedicated to inform-ing, educating and involving youth in wildlife conserva-tion and the wise steward-ship of natural resources.

Juniors are able to learn turkey hunting skills at these [email protected]

Turkey continued from page A12

photography / Maegan Burr

Wendover’s Victor DeSantiago shoots over Dugway’s Preston Edwards Wednesday night in a game at Dugway. DeSantiago’s 23 points kept Wendover close during the heated battle.

A13

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Every Thursday in Your Transcript-Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINA14 THURSDAY February 21, 2008

Here’s another reason not to drive 35 minutes to Salt Lake for

emergency care.

And it’s a big one.Your child is seriously ill with a fever and cough you can’t get under control. You

know that prompt, professional emergency medical care is needed—and the last

thing you want to do is drive 35 minutes to Salt Lake. Because of Mountain West

Medical Center, you don’t have to make that anxious drive. Our ER is only minutes

away for most Tooele Valley residents. And its physicians and surgeons, dedicated

nurses and technicians, and diagnostic equipment, stand ready to serve you and your

loved ones 24/7. With ER services so close to home, you’ll save more than time—

and avoid the long drive on wintry roads. For quality and compassionate ER care,

go to Mountain West Medical Center.

435.843.3600www.mountainwestmc.comFor all medical emergencies, call 911

SEE CHEER PAGE B11 ➤

hen Susan Trujillo first began coaching cheer at Tooele High

School, she had no idea she’d end up teaching for nearly two

decades. And now, hundreds of bus rides, games and assemblies

later, she has decided it is time to retire, just one year shy of that 20-year mark at the end of this school year.

“It’s time for me to be a grandma and to just enjoy my family,” Trujillo said, adding she’s expect-ing another grandchild soon.

Trujillo has taught dance, including cheer and tumbling, for 28 years and currently teaches at local dance studio Jazz In It.

When the cheer coaching job opened up at Tooele High School 19 years ago, Trujillo said peo-ple approached her asking if she would put in her resume for the job. So she did. She knew her two daughters would be in the cheerleading program at the high school and thought it would be fun to be involved in it with them.

When her youngest daughter, who is now going to be 28, graduated from high school, Trujillo was going to quit, but she loved having a relationship with all the girls so much that she stuck with it.

“The girls throughout the years have been just like my daughters,” she said.

And that relationship she has with the girls, as well as with other coaches, is going to be the thing she’s going to miss the most, she said.

“I have just met a lot of them who have become like daughters and they’ve told me they think of me as a mother,” she said.

Trujillo said she’s also going to miss the sports, but especially wrestling.

“That’s my favorite sport and I just absolutely love it in every way,” she said.

But being the cheer coach is a very time-con-suming job.

“It’s tough to be the cheer coach because it’s year-round, not three or four months,” she said.

Cheer

A h, geraniums. We all know about gerani-ums.

They are those plants with the pretty, round, multiple flowered heads and fluted leaves aren’t they? We grow them in our gardens and they die each fall unless we take them indoors.

Well, actually, no. Those aren’t geraniums. They are actually pelargoniums, a plant that originates in the northern hemisphere and has been nicknamed gerani-ums.

Botanists know the true geranium as an evergreen,

shrubby plant that can be annual or perennial. Many of them originated in South Africa.

However, they are also common in the mountains in our area. We generally refer to them as cranesbill. They do very well in our val-ley gardens and bloom over a long period in summer and fall.

The flowers are not usually as showy as the geranium flowers and they bloom sin-gly or in clusters of two or three.

They have five overlap-ping petals that look alike and form a round blossom. The colors generally come in rose, blue, purple and some are pink or white. Leaves are roundish or perhaps kidney shaped and deeply lobed or cut.

They are not particularly tall plants. In fact some are trailing. They make great additions to rock gardens and borders.

The name cranesbill comes from the form of the seed heads which have a small rounded end and a long protruding end that resembles the bill of a crane.

This year, the Perennial Plant Association has selected a geranium as the Perennial Plant of the Year. Geranium ‘Rozanne’ is a hardy geranium that Donald and Rozanne Waterer dis-covered in 1989 in their Somerset, England garden.

While many geraniums have flowers of about an inch in diameter, this one has 2-1/2-inch, iridescent

violet-blue flowers with pur-ple-violet veins and radiant white centers.

Perennials as a group are often short-term flow-ers. They bloom for a short period and are finished for the year.

Part of the appeal of Geranium Rozanne is that it produces its saucer-shaped blooms from late spring to mid fall, longer than most hardy geraniums.

While many hardy gerani-ums will withstand the very cold winters in our Utah mountains, this variety lives in USDA hardiness zones

from 5 to 8. This means it may do well

some winters, but not live through very cold winters in our area without added pro-tection. However, you may consider it worth the risk to enjoy its long season of bloom.

It grows 20 to 24 inches tall and about 24 to 28 inches wide growing best in full sun to partial shade.

Given our very hot sum-mers, you should ideally plant it in well-drained soil where it can be kept moist

Association selects geranium as Perennial Plant of the Year

SEE GERANIUM PAGE B11 ➤

Spreading

THURSDAY February 21, 2008B1 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

• Bulletin Board

• Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays

• Classifieds and Public Notices

Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. To place a community news item or for more information contact Community News Editor Sarah Miley at 882-0050 or [email protected].

Hometown

THS cheer coach to retire after nearly 20 years

a little

photography / Troy Boman

Tooele High School cheerleading coach Susan Trujillo receives flowers from former cheerleaders during halftime at a basketball game last week. Trujillo will be retiring at the end of the school year after 19 years with the school. Trujillo (top) and Whitney Griffith sort roses Trujillo received.

by Sarah Miley

GARDEN SPOT

Diane SagersCORRESPONDENT

“The girls throughout the years have been

just like my daughters.” — Susan Trujillo THS cheer coach

HOMETOWN B1HOMETOWN B1

THURSDAY February 21, 2008B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

photo courtesy of Aletha Wrathall

Aletha Wrathall (center) holds great-great-grandaughter Cyatel Campbell, surrounded by (clockwise) great-grandmother Carrie Anderson, mom Morgan Campbell and grandmother Leslie Baird.

FIVE GENERATIONS

by Morris and James CareyASSOCIATED PRESS

When we asked our 22-year-old nephew Chris about living conditions in Chile, he complained about the show-er.

The daily ceremony in the house where he’s staying involves lighting the pilot on the water heater, waiting for the tank contents to heat up and then completing a show-er quickly enough so as not to be drenched with ice cold water from the tiny tank.

It might be uncomfortable, but Chris is getting an educa-tion in conservation.

Growing up, Chris never had to worry about a limit to his hot water — like other Americans, he’s used to a nice long, hot shower at any time. Fortunately, mom and pop America are wising up to the high cost and waste associ-ated with heating a gigantic reservoir of stored water.

The stored water cools and then must be reheated all day and night. Home or not, showering or not, a tank type water heater cycles on and off all day long. A 40-gallon, gas-fired, tank-type heater uses 40,000 BTUs of energy every time it automatically ignites.

How often the unit fires up depends on your climate and the ground water tempera-ture. But calcium deposits in the base or on the heating ele-ment can inhibit the burner’s effectiveness, requiring it to work longer to get the same results.

Thankfully, two alternatives offer improved solutions:Tankless

A tankless water heater heats water without the aid of an energy-wasting water storage tank. A heating ele-ment (gas or electric) warms water flowing inside a coil of copper tubing.

When water is turned on anywhere in the home, the tankless unit senses the resul-tant water flow and causes the unit to fire up. Instantly, the tankless unit begins to warm the cold water resting in the copper coils. Although the process is not instanta-neous the water is heated in only a few moments and as soon as the hot water faucet is turned off, the tankless unit immediately shuts down.

Water on, burners on water off, burners off. It’s a simple money saver for a conserva-tion-wise family.

Of course, as with any mechanical device, there are problems. Tankless water heaters can only heat water so quickly. As more water is needed _ say, with two shower heads instead of one — water flow diminishes. (Water flow is restricted so that the unit can properly heat the water.) And stay away from “electric” units. To heat water quickly, a good electric unit requires a 200 amp circuit. The main circuit panel for an entire home uses about half that.Hybrid

A hybrid water heater uses both tank and tankless tech-nologies, and by so doing solves dozens of problems associated with either of the other types. For example,

although the hybrid has a water storage tank it contains only a few gallons of water.

Having only a few gallons to keep heated, the hybrid uses minimal energy to keep the stored liquid up to tem-perature. It offers several advantages:

— Hot water is always avail-able. No waiting for water in coils to heat up.

— The variable intensity burner system is comput-er controlled to provide as much heat as is needed based on the demand. One shower head low heat, two shower heads more heat — and no loss of water pressure.

— It allows for a water recirculating system, unlike tankless heaters.

— It has stainless entrails, not copper — so where a tan-kless water heater warranty tops out at 10 years the new hybrid unit goes for 20. That’s a far cry from the 3 year war-ranty associated with a tank type water heater.The catch

There are two drawbacks to these options: unit cost and installation cost.

Hybrids and tankless heaters are more expensive because they are complex. They have computerized control systems and they are more expensive to manufac-ture.

And even though they use less fuel overall, they do burn more each time they fire. This will probably mean that you will have to install a larger gas line from your meter to the unit. Keep in mind that this is one of those pay now or pay later decisions.

Tankless units must be wall hung, and care has to be taken installing the plastic lined metal flue because its exhaust gasses get pretty hot.

The hybrid sits on the floor so installation is a little quick-er and easier, and the exhaust gasses are cooler and safer. However, the hybrid takes a bit more room than the tank-less.

How do we know so much about these alternatives? We have both. A tankless unit is perfect for our storage build-ing and small apartment, where the water rarely gets turned on. Absolutely no energy is used unless a fau-cet is used.

In the house, we have a hybrid. No problem getting hot water quickly, no cold spots in the water, no pres-sure drop, our recirculating system (on a timer) works superbly and we are saving big time energy and dollars.

Energy-wise water heaters

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 B3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

MISSIONARIES

Harold and Colleen Oliver

Harold and Colleen Oliver will be leaving for the Mexico, Monterrey west mission on Feb. 25, 2008, where they will be serving for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. They will be speaking on Sunday, Feb. 24, at 9 a.m., in the Grantsville 12th Ward, 428 S. Hale St., Grantsville.

Elder Fred Benson

Elder Fred Benson recently returned home after success-fully completing a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He served in the Ukraine, Donetsk mis-sion. Elder Benson will speak Sunday, Feb. 24, at 12:45 p.m., in the Stansbury Ward, Stansbury Stake Center, 417 E. Benson Road. Elder Benson is the son of Fred and Myrl Benson.

Joanna Johnson

Joanna Johnson has been called to serve as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Illinois, Chicago north mission. She will enter the Missionary Training Center on Feb. 27, 2008. Sister Johnson will speak on Feb. 24, at 2:45 p.m., in the Grantsville 10th Ward sacrament meeting, Grantsville Stake Center, 550 E. Durfee St. Sister Johnson is the daughter of Ron and Joan Johnson.

WEDDING

Redmond / Russo

Roger and Marene Redmond are ecstatic to announce the marriage of their daughter, Melinda (Mert) Redmond to Daniel T. Russo, son of Gerald and Kay Russo. The couple will be married Feb. 23, 2008. A reception in their honor will be held that evening from 6 to 8 p.m. at the LDS church on 196 Pinehurst Ave.

BOOKWORM

by Terri SchlichenmeyerGUEST WRITER

L egend has it — and everyone claims — that you can never go home

again.Oh, sure. You can haul

belongings from the dorm to the bedroom you’ve shared with your sister since you were 5. You can heal wounds beneath your ancient 4-H rib-bons in the aftermath of adult heartbreak. You can hide out in mom and dad’s house for a myriad of reasons, but it’s never the same. The home you knew before leaving is never the home you return to.

In the new novel “The Monsters of Templeton” by Lauren Groff, Wilhelmina Sunshine Upton arrives at her family’s cottage, disheveled and distraught. But the com-fort she longs for in Templeton isn’t what she finds — or needs.

On the morning that the dead monster broke the sur-face of Lake Glimmerglass near Templeton, N.Y., Willie Upton returned to the town where eight generations of her family had lived. Just months before, Primus Dwyer, her former teacher, chose Willie to work alongside him in a graduate program. He had chosen her to sleep beside him, too. But now Dwyer has reconciled with his witchy wife and Willie is carrying his child. Pregnant and red-faced from crying, Willie retreated to the womb of home, fleeing what had become of her life.

Not long before Willie was born, her mother, Vivienne, had had her own homecom-ing to Templeton. Because her

parents had mysteriously died, commune-living Vivienne was suddenly an heiress. And because Viv was never sure who had gotten her pregnant, Willie was always told that she had three fathers.

But now Viv dropped a bombshell. Willie’s father was no hippie. He lives in Templeton, and he, too, descends from the Temple family. As the town becomes a growing focus of the scien-tific community, The Lump grows within Willie and her curiosity grows, too. Which Templetonian is her father? Were the closets of the aris-tocratic scions of Templeton filled with skeletons?

While I really, really loved this audiobook, there are a few things you need to know when listening to “The Monsters of Templeton”: first, this story is going to ask you to suspend disbelief now and then. You’ve been warned.

Secondly, there are errant

characters that pop up often in the audiobook, and that can be discombobulating unless you understand that they’re musings from Willie’s forebears and their servants. Printing out the family tree on the “enhanced” audio disc will help a lot. If you choose to skip that, just be aware why the shift of voice.

Lastly, if you keep this audiobook in your car, make sure you have plenty of gas. Partly because of Nicole

Roberts’ performance and partly because of author Lauren Groff’s writing, this story will have you sitting in a parking lot, idling, listening, unwilling to shut the car off and go about your business.

“The Monsters of Templeton” is a great choice for a book group, vacation, or nice, quiet weekend tucked on the sofa, awaiting spring. Look for it at your library or book-store. It’s a novel you’ll defi-nitely want to take home.

Readers will love book about going home

“The Monsters of Templeton”

by Lauren Groffc.2008,

Hyperion Audiobooks13 hours / 11 CDs

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POETRY

P oet Ruth L. Schwartz writes of the glimpse of possibility, of some-

thing sweeter than we already have that comes to us, grows in us. The unrealizable part of it causes bitterness; the other opens outward, the cycle complete. This is both a poem about a tangerine and about more than that.

Tangerine

It was a flower once, it was one of a billion flowers

whose perfume broke through closed car windows,

forced a blessing on their drivers.

Then what stayed behind grew swollen, as we do; grew juice instead of tears,

and small hard sour seeds,

each one bitter, as we are, and filled with possibility. Now a hole opens up in its

skin, where it was torn from the branch; ripeness can’t stop

itself, breathes out; we can’t stop it either. We

breathe in.

From “Dear Good Naked Morning,” © 2007 by Ruth L. Schwartz. Reprinted by permis-sion of the author and Autumn House Press. First printed in “Crab Orchard Review,” Vol. 8, No. 2.

Poem not just about a fruitTed Kooser

U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006

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and strength of spirit into realms of reality and knowledge. Read these poems in solitude, let Elaine’s grace and wisdom carry you into past times tangled with hauntings, dreams, and fond memories.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

MATTERS OF FAITH

L ent is a time for Christian repentance. What might that

mean?For many, “Christian” is a

term that includes the idea of “living an aware life.” Being “Christian” is being ratio-nal, reasonable and awake. Then Christian repentance is wanting to get back to a bal-anced, sane life after becom-ing aware of how we make irrational, unreasonable and difficult to justify decisions, abandoning consideration of what is wise, good, realistic and God’s will.

Throughout Christian his-tory, those who understood and participated in Christian repentance were rational, aware and awake individu-als. For one, John Wesley, the originator of the Methodist Church, was very rational and methodical, disciplin-ing himself through hours of prayer to stay humble and focused, writing a lot and consciously compelling himself to do what he under-stood to be God’s will.

Martin Luther was anoth-er rational person, using his intelligence to teach seminary and challenge his church into a major debate. As a reasonable and faith-ful Catholic priest, Martin put his debate into “The 95 Theses,” which he purport-edly nailed to a church door and asked church authori-ties to discuss. That debate resulted in what we now call the Reformation, but it started as a reasonable act wrought by a reasonable per-

son.For another, Paul of Tarsus,

an apostle of Jesus Christ and author of seven or so let-ters in our New Testament, used his training and edu-cation as a Pharisee to instruct fledgling Christians on their need to use reason and level-headed sensibil-ity in their worship and lifestyles. It appears, then, that Christianity and rea-sonability have often gone together. And so, Christianity will always be a pilgrim-age, steering us away from chronically living in the caves of 10,000 years ago, and routing us toward that narrow door to the Kingdom of God, where using one’s God-given gift of common sense and sensibility rules. Accordingly, the question is, “If ‘Christianity’ involves rationality, what might it mean to commit sin and be in need of repentance?”

In this context, committing sin is living a lifestyle created by irrational, unreasonable, and difficult to justify deci-sions that generate markedly chaotic and miserable lives. That chaos and misery float like flotsam and jetsam in some dreary, polluted cosmic river, always endeavoring to overflow its river banks made of logic and com-mon sense. It’s a life that

forces the flooding and ero-sion of what might be wiser and more realistic ground. Sinfulness spawns an unre-flective, almost unconscious life devoid of any desire to step back to consider what’s happening in the world and to weigh options. And this rather dismal life of a “sin-ner” originates in a couple of ways.

On one hand, the “sin-ner” sins unintentionally. They live an unconscious and unreflective life that reli-giously carries out behaviors without concern for conse-quences, especially conse-quences involving others. Such a person does not con-sciously choose to exclude humanity, reality and all the rest of the existence when making decisions, but, for whatever reason, reality simply never becomes part of the equation. It’s just the way life is for them, and Christianity or any other awareness-raising agenda seems unnecessary.

On the other hand, com-mitting sin for others can be a conscious intent to live with disregard for anything or anyone, including reality, itself. And as long as these intentional “sinners” get what they want when they want it, they could care less about the rest of the world. In either case, committing sin is living in such a way that is difficult to justify in light of how it affects oth-ers and our world. It’s living a life that appears to lack reason; and, it’s a life fraught

with making decisions that seem ultimately irrational, because they exclude every-one and everything, includ-ing reality itself.

Christian Lent, then, becomes a time when we can repent. We get to regroup. It’s a time when we can step back, take a meaningful, attentive look at how we stray from reason, aware-ness, sensibility and interest in God’s will, so that by the time Easter arrives — which is March 23 this year — we might have found our way back to the path that makes sense and feels more com-fortably balanced. It’s a time to check ourselves into “God’s wellness clinic” and to get a “progress report.” If our “progress report” tells us that we’re a bit too far astray from equilibrium, by repenting, regrouping and choosing again to use our sensibilities, we might find our way to recovery. Through repentance, we are able to cognitively reset our goals for healthy living and use our awareness and insights to re-instruct us on what is good, wise and sound.

Lent, then, is a great time to celebrate God’s word that purposefully guides us back to reason. It’s a season when God’s will intentionally strives to enlighten us. And with God’s compassionate and forgiving nature, we’ll be able to travel unobstructed on our Lenten pilgrim-age, leading us again to our senses.

Think about it, Tom

Lent: time to regroup at ‘God’s wellness clinic’

Tom TownsGUEST COLUMNIST

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by Linda LombardiASSOCIATED PRESS

Easter rabbits: Chocolate, or furry?

If you’re tempted by the furry ones, especially for chil-dren, better do your research first.

“People buy them think-ing they’re great low mainte-nance starter pets,” says Mary Cotter, the vice-president and education/outreach director of the House Rabbit Society. But that’s a misconception, she says: “They’re closer to

dogs and cats than they are to the so-called pocket pets.”

Cotter, of Bronxville, New York, has a dog as well as rab-bits, and says that she thinks that rabbits are actually the more time-consuming of the two. They have cages that need to be cleaned, like other small animals, but they need social interaction like a dog does, at least a couple of hours out of their cage each day.

And your home needs to be carefully rabbit-proofed against chewing. The many electrical cords required by modern living are a particu-lar hazard.

Because people often don’t understand what they’re get-ting into when they buy a rab-bit, her rescue organization gets at least 30 phone calls a month from people want-ing to give them up, many of which were bought as gifts for children at Easter.

That problem is why the Columbus House Rabbit Society started their “Make Mine Chocolate!” cam-paign, says chapter manager Karalee Curry. The campaign encourages a better under-standing of rabbits by distrib-uting educational literature, and raises awareness of the Easter issue by selling rabbit pins that resemble chocolate bunnies.

Chocolate rabbits are less trouble in many ways, start-ing with the fact that they don’t last as long. Curry says people gasp when she tells them a rabbit can live 10 to 12 years. And there are other surprises as well.

“People say, ‘the pet store told me they did great with small kids and didn’t need vet care,’ “ she says.

Although rabbits can be affectionate, they don’t like to be picked up, which is frus-trating for children, and can result in injury to the rab-bit when it tries to get away. (This is such an issue that Cotter recommends the larg-est rabbit possible for fami-lies with kids, so they’re not even tempted to try to pick it up.)

Contrary to the claim that rabbits don’t need vet care, spaying and neutering is crit-ical. Otherwise, behavioral problems start at puberty, including territorial aggres-sion and smelly spraying.

In addition, health prob-lems need prompt attention from a specialist veterinarian who’s experienced with rab-bits. “If a dog doesn’t eat for a day, you can watch for a day or two, often no treatment is needed. When a rabbit is not eating, that’s a medical emer-gency,” Cotter says, as it can rapidly lead to a cascade of

serious problems.So you might want to stick

with the chocolate bunny you can buy to benefit the campaign at the “Make Mine Chocolate!” Web site.

For those who under-stand rabbits’ needs, Cotter is enthusiastic about them as excellent pets for working adults. Although they require a fair amount of attention, they can adjust to your schedule. “If you’re gone 12 hours a day, you can have a rabbit,” says Cotter. “As long as you can let it out a couple of hours a day, it doesn’t mat-ter when it is, it can be at midnight.”

And she says they’re fasci-nating, social animals, more complex than other small caged pets.

“A lot of people say they’re like a cross between a dog and a cat,” she says. “Like a cat, a rabbit has no special desire to please a human — that’s part of their charm.”

Domesticated rabbits are the same species that lives wild in Europe, Cotter says.

“There’s still a part of them that’s similar to wild ani-mals,” and that makes it all the more special when you know you’ve earned their trust and affection. She says, “They’re wonderful to live with for the right people."

Think twice before buying an Easter bunny

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 B5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

ACROSS

1 Buddy

4 Verne hero

8 Cantata composer

12 Goo

17 “- corny as

Kansas ...”

19 Orenburg’s river

20 Literary pseudonym

21 Like Schoenberg’s music

22 Like Felix Unger?

25 Act like Holmes

26 “- Card” (‘90 film)

27 Comic Orson

28 Bungle

30 Sweater letter

31 On the nose

34 Skinny novelist?

39 Get on

40 Rocker Tom

41 Curly coif

42 “Saving Private Ryan” extras

45 Moffo or Magnani

47 Reggae’s Peter

49 Offer an apple?

52 Pinnacle

54 Dawns, to Donne

56 Coarse flour

58 “- on My Pillow”

(‘58 song)

60 Stiller’s partner

62 Tread the boards

63 Man from Munich

65 Ponderosa, for one

68 Mrs. Zeus

71 Mineral suffix

72 Sgt., e.g.

73 Gamble

75 Extremely encouraging

individual?

79 Kitten’s comment

80 Sharpton and Yankovic

81 Hockey great

82 A sweeping success?

83 Calliope’s sister

85 ‘66 Tommy Roe tune

88 Merino male

90 Shiva worshiper

93 Throw forcefully

94 “The Ramayana” heroine

97 Actress Samantha

100 Jury member

101 Economize

103 Calligraphy supply

105 Land in the sea

106 Longing

107 Jets, Mets, or Nets

109 Release

111 Hideaway

114 Dishonest anchorman?

118 New Jersey’s Pine -

121 Port: abbr.

122 Director Lupino

123 “Dies -”

125 Be of use

127 Bring to light

130 Corrupt college official?

135 Acid’s opposite

136 Bronte heroine

137 Ice-cream thickener

138 Writer Hunter

139 June birthstone

140 Paper quantity

141 Stink

142 Prior to, to Prior

DOWN

1 BB-gun sound

2 “That’s -” (‘53 tune)

3 Paint ingredient

4 Lots of laughs

5 Part of NATO

6 Hayes of westerns

7 Crafter’s need

8 Publisher Cerf

9 Ginger -

10 Security grp.

11 Couldn’t stand

12 Canonized Mlle.

13 King’s “Salem’s -”

14 Motionless

15 “- Man” (‘78 song)

16 Singer John

18 Farm sight

21 Directionless

23 Native Peruvian

24 Yarn

29 Singer Chris

32 Soho streetcar

33 Carson’s successor

35 Particle

36 AMEX rival

37 Scacchi of

“The Player”

38 Seascape painter

40 Cisco’s chum

42 Pin

43 The - Capades

44 Einstein’s chair?

46 New Deal agcy.

48 Convent wear

50 Dentist’s fee?

51 Vestige

53 Geologic division

55 Cook veggies

57 Make chair legs

59 Chilly powder?

61 Social worker?

64 Swerve

66 Word with pork

or karate

67 Toast start

69 Dietary abbr.

70 TV’s “Hearts -”

73 Big party

74 Cary of “The Princess Bride”

76 Bit of a beach?

77 Leisurely, to Leoncavallo

78 Team scream

84 Palm oil?

86 Lloyd Webber musical

87 Principle

89 Booker T.’s group

91 Billy - Williams

92 Fancy planter

95 Slope

96 Cain’s victim

98 - breve

99 Bring up

102 Gauguin setting

104 Feminist Gloria

108 Pie ingredient?

110 Greek sandwich

112 Neighbor of Turkey

113 Variety show

114 Tight

115 Actress Berry

116 Slezak or Alexander

117 Consumer advocate

Ralph

118 Stocking shade

119 Credulous

120 Indian instrument

124 Way over yonder

126 Director Adrian

128 Roller-coaster unit

129 Under the weather

131 Hook’s mate

132 Southern constellation

133 Scottish refusal

134 Annoy

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Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Utah MedAdvantage is a PPO with a Medicare contract. Anyone who resides in the plan’sservice area (Box Elder, Cache, Davis, Iron, Morgan, Rich, Salt Lake, Summit, Tooele, Utah, Wasatch, Washington and Webercounties) and who has Medicare Part A and B and who does not have end-stage renal disease is eligible to enroll. Membersmust continue to pay Part B premiums. A sales representative will be present with Enrollment Forms. For additionalinformation or to set up a meeting with a sales representative, call 1-888-REGENCE (1-888-734-3623). TTY users should call1-800-833-6384. For other special needs and accommodations, call 1-888-REGENCE (1-888-734-3623), 48 hours in advance.CMS EASIEROEP Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Utah

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www.ut.regence.com/needCoverage/medicareCurrent Medicare recipients and those

newly eligible are encouraged to attend.

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UT10_ropcno_ttb_01:Regence_Canoe_ROP 1/16/08 8:39 AM Page 1

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Tooele

Big FixThe Big Fix Discount Mobile Spay/Neuter Clinic will be in your area on Feb. 25, at Wal-Mart and on Feb. 26, at Westgate Mortgage in Grantsville. Online reservations only. Go to www.utahpets.org to buy reserva-tions. For more information call 1-866-PETS FIX or visit www.utah-pets.org.

Looking for yearbooksThe Tooele Pioneer Museum is look-ing for THS and GHS yearbooks. If you or a member of your family have an old yearbook please loan it to the museum. Please call Jim Bevan at 882-1092 or George McKellar at 882-2511 about loaning.

Essay contestThe Tooele County Chapter of the Daughter of the Utah Pioneers is sponsoring an essay contest for all fourth-grade students who attend any of the seven Tooele City ele-mentaries or Vernon Elementary. The students have been asked to write an essay on any of the follow-ing subjects: A pioneer ancestor; a historic Tooele County place; a his-toric Tooele County event; a historic Tooele County individual. Essays are due at their respective schools no later than March 15. For addi-tional information and guidelines, please contact your of the fourth-grade teacher.

Tooele County Constitution PartyThe Constitution party will be meeting Feb. 21, at 7 p.m., at 7240 N. Adobe Lane (1400 East) in Lake Point. We will be kicking off the upcoming election year. Please come and get involved, we wel-come anyone new as well. For more info please contact Kirk Pearson at (801)856-1471.

Money HabitudesMoney Habitudes Lunch and Learn will be held on Friday, Feb. 22, at noon, at 151 N. Main St. Lunch will be free. Come play a fun game to find out what kind of financial personality you have. Each person will receive a free workbook. RSVP by Feb. 21, to USU Extension at 277-2400.

Tourism Tax GrantsOrganizations in Tooele County wishing to be considered for a 2008 Tooele County Tourism Tax Grant should pick up an application form from the Tooele County Commission Office at the County Courthouse, 47 S. Main St., room 208. Applications must be returned to the commis-sion office by March 7, before 5 p.m. The Tooele County Tourism Tax Grant program distributes revenues generated for taxes levied on the restaurant and hotel/motel sales in Tooele County.

SL Community ActionLooking for a chance to be involved in your community? Join the Salt Lake Community Action Program Board of Directors. Openings are now available for low-income rep-resentation. Petitions for member-ship can be picked up at the Tooele office, 38 S. Main St. A community forum and election will be held on Tuesday, March 18, at 7 p.m., at the Head Start building at 22 N. Coleman St., Tooele. The election will be held from 6 to 9 p.m.

Stansbury Park

SoccerSpring registration for the Stansbury Soccer Club is now open. The cost is $40 for spring, which includes eight to 10 games, full uniform, team photo and award. Jerseys are revers-ible so that you can use them from year to year. If your child played for the 2007 fall season only and wishes to continue in the spring the cost will only be $28. If you already paid for the full season you will not need to register and pay again for 2008 spring season. All games are held on Saturdays. For more information on age groups, etc., visit www.stans-buryassoc.org or call 843-7512.

Baseball sign-upsStansbury Park Cal Ripken base-ball sign-ups ages 5 to 12 will be held at the Stansbury Clubhouse on Saturday, Feb. 23, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Self-serve box is located at TFCU Stansbury Branch from Feb. 9 to 23. www.spyba.net.

Grantsville

Youth baseballSign-ups are to be held at a Junior Jazz game on Feb. 23, and then again on Feb. 26 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Soelberg’s. Sign-up fees are $40 tee ball, $45 machine pitch, $65 for major and minor leagues, cost for Pony League to be announced. We will have a league for 13 and 14 year olds. Athletes from Lake Point, Stansbury Park and Dugway will be invited to join. For more informa-tion please contact Bryan DeLaney at 830-2142. Grantsville baseball will begin April 19.

Girls softball sign-upsGrantsville girls softball league sign-ups will be held on Feb. 23, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., during Jr. Jazz games at GHS or GJHS, and on March 1, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., at the schools or Grantsville City Hall. For more information contact Mike Hammond at 884-6832 or Mandy Angelo at 840-4506.

Old Folk SociableGrantsville Old Folks Sociable will be held Saturday, March 29, at Grantsville High School. Tickets are $15 in advance or $17 at the door. The car show will be from 11 a.m.

to 4 p.m., honored guest reception at noon, honored guest dinner at 1 p.m., program at 2, 4, or 6 p.m., dancing from 4 to 11:30 p.m., and a 5K run at 10 a.m. Tickets will be pre-sold at Casa del Rey, Grantsville City Hall, Handy Corner, Soelberg’s, Way Station, Williams Family Video, the Transcript-Bulletin and Walgreens. For additional information, please contact Denise Fawson at 884-3316, or David Jefferies at 840-8849.

Photos neededThe Sociable Committee needs pic-tures (in uniform) of Grantsville residents who have ever served in the military. Please include name, branch and where to return the picture. Send it to: Janice Marriott 697 E. Clearwater Drive Layton, UT 84041.

Decorating helpThe Grantsville Old Folks Sociable Decorating Committee is requesting help from the community in finding antiques to be used in the decorat-ing for the Sociable this year. We’re looking for items that may have been used from the following his-torical, or not so historical locations in and around Grantsville: Opera House, schools, Drug Store, Saltair, stores, post office, Clark Farm, gas stations, motels, Blue Bird, City Hall, banks, Skyline, and the Fire Station. If you have or are aware of any items, please contact Debra Allred at 850-2781, or [email protected].

Pine Canyon

Shareholders meetingThe annual meeting for Lincoln

Culinary Water share holders is scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 21, 2008, at 7 p.m., at the Pine Canyon Fire Station.

Schools

Kindergarten registrationKindergarten registration for fall 2008 will be held at all elementary schools on Feb. 21 and 22. To be eligible for kindergarten your child must be 5 years old before Sept. 2, 2008. If you have questions regard-ing the enrollment process, contact your school principal or the director of elementary education at the dis-trict office, 833-1900 Ext. 1104.

School enrollmentThe Tooele County School District will be accepting applications from elementary and secondary students who are interested in enrolling in a school outside of his/her resi-dent school boundary for the 2008-2009 school year. Applications will be accepted through March 30 and are available at all schools or at the district office.

St. Marguerite’s registrationSt. Marguerite’s Catholic School is accepting registration for pre-K through sixth grade for the 2008-2009 school year. Please call Ms. Janet, Mrs. Burden or Ms. Ann at the school office at 882-0081, Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., for more information. Space is limited.

TJH Community CouncilThe Tooele Jr. High Community Council will meet Thursday, Feb. 21, at 6:30 p.m., in the school library. All interested parents and community members are invited to attend.

GHS parent/teacher conferencesParent/teacher conferences will be held at Grantsville High School for third term on Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 25 and 26, from 4 to 7 p.m., in the commons. Mark your calendars and plan to attend.

Copper Canyon CouncilCopper Canyon Elementary School will be holding its community coun-cil meeting on Feb. 26, at 6:30 p.m., in the library. All parents are invited to attend.

Cultural arts programGrantsville High School PTO will present an awards program to honor all entrants and winners in this year’s VISIONS cultural arts program in the school auditorium on Saturday, March 1, at 6 p.m. There will be displays and a program that is free of charge. The public is encour-aged to support this annual event

in recognition of arts programs at our school. This year’s theme was “If you could have any wish granted, what would it be and why?”

TJH mid-term reportsMid-term reports will be sent home with TJH students on Thursday, Feb. 21. Parents, please sign the bottom portion of the mid-term and send it back to school with your child.

TJH parent/teacher conferencesTJH parent/teacher conferences will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 26, from 4 to 7 p.m. All parents are encouraged to attend.

THS parent/teacher conferencesThird term parent/teacher confer-ences for Tooele High School are scheduled for Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 25 and 26, from 4 to 7 p.m., in the commons. Mid term reports will be handed out in the front hall to parents who come to the confer-ence. Counselors and administra-tors will also be available during the conference time for parents who may need to visit with them.

Tooele Library

Story timeRemember children’s story time every Wednesday at 11 a.m. and children’s crafts each Friday from 3 to 5 p.m. Check with the library for any special story times or other spe-cial events that come up. For more information on these and other library programs, visit our Web site tooelecity.org/tcl/library.html, call 882-2182 or visit us at 128 W. Vine St., Tooele.

Special story timeOn Friday, Feb. 22, at 1 p.m., we will have a very special story time fea-turing Arthur. Listen to some very funny stories about Arthur and his friends, read by Angie Wager from the Barnes and Noble in Jordan Landing.

Financial seminarAdults, attend our free, personal financial seminar of on tracking itemized deductions, presented by H&R Block on March 6, at 6 p.m., in the community room at the Tooele City Library. Sign-up and get your ticket today. Tickets will be avail-able at the check-out desk of the Tooele City Library at no charge. If you don’t have a ticket, show up any way.

Reverse mortgage classA free reverse mortgage class will be held on Thursday, Feb. 28, at 4:30 p.m., at the Tooele City Library. Call

SEE BULLETIN PAGE B7 ➤

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

THURSDAY February 21, 2008B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

photo courtesy of Ellen Parker

These are winners of the East Elementary Science Fair held Feb. 13. They will go on to compete in the School District Science Fair on Feb. 28 and 29 at Clarke N. Johnsen Jr. High. Pictured are (l-r, back): Alisa Moore (2nd place, biological/earth sciences), Mirae Parker (1st place, biological/earth sciences), Paige Varley (3rd place, physical science), Whitney Toununi (3rd place, physical science), (front) Mauri Martinez (participant), Alisha Rhoads (2nd place, biological/earth sciences),0 Dallin Taggart (3rd place, physical science), Robert Adair (1st place, physical science), Karl Wegener (1st place, physical science), and Gabe Romney (2nd place, physical science).

photo courtesy of Ellen Parker

These are winners of the East Elementary Science Fair held on Feb. 13. Pictured are (l-r): Josh Armstrong (1st place, biological/earth sci-ences), Collin Lawrence (3rd place, physical science), Siearrah Anderson (2nd place, physical science), (front) Ryan Mick (2nd place, biologi-cal/ earth sciences), and Blaine Russell (1st place, physical science). Not pictured is Logan Perkins (1st place, biological/earth sciences).

B6 BULLETIN BOARDB6 BULLETIN BOARD

THURSDAY February 21, 2008 B7TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

882-0355 with questions. Free books will be provided for all attendees.

Education

Adult Education Get your high school diploma this year! All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED preparation, word process-ing, driver’s education and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $35 per semester. The center is locat-ed at 76 S. 1000 West, and can be reached at 833-1994. Adult education classes are for stu-dents 18 and over.

ESOLESOL conversational class-es are held Monday and Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. ESOL students may come anytime, the Tooele Adult Education Center is open for individualized study with our software programs and text-books. Registration is $35 per semester.

Landscape design classUtah State University Extension has scheduled a four week basic landscape design class. The cost is $35, and will include a work-book, CD and field trip to the gardens at Temple Square. The class will be held on Wednesday evenings starting Feb. 27, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. This class will be limited to the first 50 people who register and pay. Please stop in our office, or send your check to USU Extension Office, 151 N. Main St., Tooele.

Churches

Stansbury Ward open houseHappy 30th birthday to the original Stansbury Ward. All current and former members of the Stansbury Ward are invit-ed to attend an open house on Saturday, Feb. 23, from 7 to 9 p.m. (program will begin at 8 p.m.), at the Stansbury Stake building, 417 E. Benson Road. If you have any old pictures that you could share, please e-mail them to [email protected] or contact Amber at 843-7879.

Worship and Sunday SchoolMountain of Faith Lutheran Church welcomes everyone to join us for Sunday School at 10 a.m. for junior high and high school students, and at 9:45 a.m. for adults. Please join us for worship service led by Pastor David Kiel this Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Located at the St. Barnabas Center, 1784 N. Aaron Dr. in Overlake. Call 882-7291 for more information.

Prayers Around the CrossMountain of Faith Lutheran Church is sponsoring a Taize Prayer service every Sunday evening of Lent, at the St. Barnabas Center, 1784 N. Aaron Dr. in Overlake. Service will be at 6 p.m. preceded by a soup dinner at 5 p.m. Call 882-7291 for more information.

Fish frySt. Marguerite’s Knights of Columbus is having a fish fry this Friday, Feb. 22, at 6 p.m., in the downstairs social hall. Two pieces of fish for $5 or three pieces for $7, dinner includes coleslaw and fries.

Charity

Food pantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is offering a clothing closet and emergency food pantry to help meet the needs of our community. Anyone with clothing needs — adults and children — are welcome. 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., Tooele. For more info call 882-2048.

Sportsmen for Fish & WildlifeThe Tooele Chapter of the Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife will have a fund-raiser March 8,

at the Deseret Peak Complex. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., din-ner at 6:30, and an auction at 8. Come join us for a fun casino night, with blackjack, craps and roulette. There will be kids bingo as well. For more infor-mation, contact Jeff Coon at (801)330-1675, Mike Holmes at 830-2268, or Pat Warr at (801)712-8650.

Eagles “Hypno Hick”The Eagles Lodge welcomes hypnotist Shaun Dee, “Hypno Hick,” at the fund-raiser for Primary Children’s Medical Center on Saturday, Feb. 23, at the lodge, 50 S. First St. Stuffed pork chops will be served at 6 p.m., with the show to start at 7:30 p.m. The cost is $30 per couple for the dinner and show. The public is invited.

Arts

Pioneer Valley ChoralePioneer Valley Chorale is hold-ing auditions in preparation for our May 2008 concert, Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess” on Thursdays at 7 p.m., at Clarke B. Johnsen Jr. High School. Please contact Pamela Dale, chorus master, at (801)250-6602 or Peggy Critchlow at (435)578-1238 for more information.

Community art classesThe Tooele City Arts Council is currently enrolling students in community art classes. Classes for February and March include: soap making, wood-working, oil painting, child/parent drawing, adult drawing, ceramics and pottery. To view a current class listing please stop by Tooele City Hall or visit our Web site at www.tooelec-ity.org. For more information please contact the Tooele City Arts Council at 843-2142 or at [email protected].

Groups

Kiwanis meetingsKiwanis meets every Tuesday at noon at Leatherby’s Family Creamery, 61 E. 1280 North, Tooele. Contact John Brown at 843-0711.

NAMI Support GroupDepression, mood disorders, anxiety or panic attacks, bipo-lar, OCD, schizophrenia, per-sonality disorders or forms of mental illness. Are you or someone you know living with one of these issues? Please join us every Wednesday at 7 p.m. at New Reflections House, 565 W. 900 S. Contact Jan at 843-4347 with any questions.

Tooele Gun ClubThe 2008 Round Robin begins on March 2 so come to the club and get your applica-tion in. Teams are computer drawn. Participants will shoot three rounds on each of the three Sundays and makeups and shoot-aheads are allowed. Shotgun shooters of all skill levels are needed. Deadline for applications is Friday, Feb. 29. More information call John Miller at 882-2429.

Elks Crab CrackThe Tooele Elks Lodge will be hosting a Fresh Dungeness Crab Crack on Friday, Feb. 29, at 7 p.m. The cost is $23 a per-son, prime rib is also available.

Please sign up in the social quarters before Feb. 22.

Marine Corps LeagueThe Sgt. Rodney M. Davis Marine Corps League Detachment 1251 will meet Thursday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m., at the Tooele County Search and Rescue building, 245 W. 900 South. For information call Hal McConnell at 882-1179.

Back Country HorsemenThe February meeting of the West Desert Back Country Horsemen will be held on Feb. 25, at 7 p.m., at the Tooele County Courthouse. We will discuss plans for the 2008 rides and service projects. Don’t for-get the Stockton Elk ride on Feb. 22, at 10 a.m. If you have questions, please contact Linda Bean at (801)244-1359, or Carol Nudell at 833-9085.

Tooele HomemakersThe Tooele Homemakers will have their St. Patrick’s Day/Easter meeting Monday, March 3, at 10 a.m., in the auditorium of the newly remodeled Tooele Extension Building, 151 N. Main St. A representative from H&R Block Tax Service will be speaking to us about the tax rebate, organizing finances and general tax issues. We will have an “anything green” luncheon with members bringing what they signed up for. Call Joann Krauss at 843-1266 with any questions.

Seniors

Tooele Senior CenterWe are still looking for volun-teers to drive the shuttle service to and from the senior center, if interested please contact the center.AARP tax preparation — AARP will begin preparing taxes for senior citizens on Thursdays through April 10, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come in or call 882-2870 for appointment.Check Your Health Services — Wednesday, Feb. 27, from 11 to 1 p.m.Friday Night Entertainment begins at 5:30 p.m.Friday Night Dancing runs for 6 to 8 p.m.

Grantsville Senior CenterHealth clinics — Blood pressure: Every Thursday at 11:30 a.m. Foot: Tuesday, Feb. 26, from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Appointments are necessary.Leap year’s birthday cele-bration — Feb. 29, at 4 p.m. Entertainment will be a sing-along with Eunice Stuckman.

Senior CircleSenior Circle is for anyone over the age of 50 and costs only $15 per year. Call 843-3690 or stop by the hospital volunteer desk to sign up. All activities require an RSVP except for exercise.Breast Cancer Support Group — Thursday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m., at MWMC. Heber Creeper/Park City Day Trip — Friday, Feb. 22. Leave Cal Ranch at 8:45 a.m., return by 4 p.m. Lunch on your own on the train. Brief city tour of Park City on the way home. Cost $30. Birthday Bingo — Tuesday, Feb. 26, at 5 p.m. Food, cake, bingo and prizes. Spaces fill up fast. Must RSVP!

Recovery

Kick drug habitsLDS Family Services addiction recovery meetings are Tuesdays from 7:30 to 9 p.m. at 1030 S. 900 West, room 118, Tooele. Enter on the north side of the chapel. The Erda meeting has been discontinued.

Castaways AACastaways Alcoholics Anonymous meets daily at noon and 8 p.m. at 1120 W. Utah Ave. For more informa-tion call 882-7358.

Al-Anon meetingAn evening Al-Anon meeting will be held every Tuesday at 10 a.m. and Wednesdays from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at St. Barnabas Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive. Join us and you’ll never have to feel alone again. For more information call 840-0445, 882-4721, (801)599-2649.

Overeaters AnonymousOvereaters Anonymous meet-ings are held every Tuesday at 11 a.m. at St. Barnabas Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive. For more information call 840-0445, 882-4721, or (801)599-2649.

Take Off Pounds SensiblyNeed help to lose those extra

pounds? We can help. TOPS is a weight loss support group open to men, women teens and pre-teens. Meetings are held every Tuesday at 5 p.m. at the Tooele Senior Center, 59 E. Vine St. Call Mary Lou at 830-1150 or Connie at 884-5010 or see www.tops.org for more information.

Bulletin continued from page B6

photo courtesy of George McKellar

Jim Bevan (l-r) Russ Hammond and John Bryan reminisce over their 1951 and 1952 Tooele High School yearbooks at the Tooele Pioneer Museum. The Tooele Pioneer Museum is looking for Tooele and Grantsville high school yearbooks. If you or a member of your family have an old high school yearbook please loan it to the museum. Call Jim Bevan (882-1092) or George McKellar (882-2511) about loanings.

B7

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

T here’s a brand-new show on PBS KIDS GO! targeted to the 6- to 9-

year-olds in your home. While you might recognize its title from the popular picture book “ANIMALIA,” the TV series is a lively breed of its own. After viewing the first few episodes, I couldn’t help but wonder what went on behind the scenes when the producers trans-formed a richly illustrated ABC book into a TV series filled with magical adventures and stories where creatures rule.

I did a little sleuthing on my own and learned from Bruce Johnson, CEO of PorchLight Entertainment and one of the series’ executive producers, that they took the funniest, most whimsical-looking char-acters from the book and gave them names, personalities and “voices” to match -- from Allegra Alligator to zebras Zed and Zee.

After inventing a world of talking animals with their own foods and jobs, they needed to develop a reason for two kids to travel to Animalia. So, they created a large orb called “The Core,” which enables ani-mals to speak, write, listen and think. The Core was placed in the middle of Animalia’s library, but when the kids arrive to this fantasy world, they find that it

is faltering. With Animalia itself in jeopardy, the stage is set for the adventures to begin.

Like the creators of the TV series, imagine a new twist to a favorite picture book or story your family enjoys, then “pro-duce” it in a new medium, low-tech style with finger puppets! Enjoy your own “thumbs up” puppet production as charac-ters and scenery carry an origi-nal plot across your tabletop stage.

For a set of 10 finger pup-pets, you’ll need:

— 1 pair of plain-colored cotton garden gloves

— Fabric paints in squeeze bottles

— Glue and scissors— Craft foam pieces— Odds and ends, such as

feathers, tiny buttons, googly eyes, etc.

Cut off the 10 glove fingers to use each one as a separate puppet. Each one should be about 2 to 3 inches in length to fit your fingers. Tuck under the cut edges a quarter inch, and glue.

Make a face or symbol, such as sunshine or a tree, at the top of each finger puppet using paint and glued-on craft sup-plies.

Let dry.Let the show begin! Visit www.pbskidsgo.org/

animalia for an Activity Guide tied to Animalia’s underlying lessons about language com-munication skills.

***Donna Erickson’s award-win-ning television series “Donna’s Day” airs on public television nationwide. Visit www.donnas-day.com to find out when it airs on your local PBS station and to sign up for Donna’s e-news-letter.

Thumbs up for “Animalia”!

WHERE IS IT?

Correctly identify the specific location in Tooele County where this photo was taken and be eligi-ble for a drawing to receive a $20 gift certificate to American Burger in Tooele. Email answers to [email protected] or deliver to the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin, 58 N. Main Street, Tooele, Utah 84074. Entries must be received by Noon Wednesday, Feb. 27. The winner will be notified on Thursday, Feb. 28. Joy Gerton won last week’s drawing as one of six who correctly identified 50 West near Vine Street.

photography / Troy Boman

• Games • Kids’ Corner • Fun Features • Trivia

THURSDAY February 21, 2008 B9TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by J.M. HirschASSOCIATED PRESS

If ever the rotisserie chick-en cookers of America went on strike, our nation would be doomed.

Without these utilitar-ian birds — which now come barbecued and organic in additional to the traditional roasted version — how would busy families get dinner to the table?

These chickens are most valuable as ingredients that can easily be transformed into meals that would take hours to prepare without the

aid of the rotisserie.For example, toss the

meat from a still-hot bird with jarred pesto, then toss that with whole-wheat pasta and a bit of steamed broc-coli. Shave a bit of parmesan over it for a complete meal in about 20 minutes.

Or for a Middle Eastern approach, arrange the meat from the bird on a serving platter. Provide each diner with a bowl of hummus, some roasted or steamed veg-etables and a few flatbreads, then let them make their own wraps.

This recipe uses the meat

from a 2-pound rotisserie roasted chicken. Tossed with a few ingredients and served over a bed of quick-cooking couscous, this produces a luscious chicken curry.

Be sure to use fresh curry powder when making reci-pes such as this. If it’s been in your cabinet for a year or more, toss it out and get a fresh bottle.Quick Chicken Curry

Start to finish: 30 minutesServings: 4 to 61 cup water1 cup couscous2 tablespoons olive oil1 medium yellow onion,

diced3 cloves garlic, minced2 large carrots, cut into

matchsticks1 cup golden raisins1 tablespoon curry powderMeat from a 2-pound rotis-

serie roasted chicken1 cup coconut milkSalt and freshly ground

black pepper, to taste3 scallions, thinly slicedIn a small saucepan, bring

the water to a boil. Turn off

the heat. Add the couscous, stir once, then cover and let sit until the rest of the recipe is complete.

In a large skillet, heat the oil over medium-high. Add the onion, garlic, carrots and raisins and sauté until the onions are just tender, about 5 minutes.

Add the curry powder and cook, stirring often, for 3 minutes. Add the chicken and coconut milk and bring

to a simmer, stirring often. Season with salt and pepper.

Transfer the couscous to a large serving bowl and fluff with a fork. Add the scallions and toss to combine. Spoon the chicken curry over the center of the couscous.

Nutrition information per serving: 442 calories; 16 g fat (9 g saturated); 53 mg cho-lesterol; 51 g carbohydrate; 26 g protein; 5 g fiber; 67 mg sodium.

Turn rotisserie chicken into luscious curry in a hurry

by Jim Romanoff

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Chinese have got it right when it comes to includ-ing meat in a healthy diet. Their secret: more vegetables, less meat.

But to learn from this cui-sine, don’t go by what you see on most American Chinese restaurant menus. Meat-heavy dishes such as sweet-and-sour pork and General Tso’s chicken are Western cre-ations.

The typical Chinese diet consists mostly of complex carbohydrates such as veg-etables and rice, plus proteins from soy products such as tofu. Meats are used in small amounts, usually for flavor-ing, and are likely to be the main course only for special occasions.

Western diets, however, tend to be meat-centered, an approach that can contribute to chronic diseases such as diabetes and hypertension.

The Chinese approach to using meat in cooking is a great way to enjoy meats that are flavorful but fatty or high in sodium. For example, bacon

makes an excellent seasoning because of its intense salti-ness and deep smokey flavor.

This recipe for sweet-and-sour cabbage with corned beef borrows many of the ele-ments of the traditional St. Patrick’s Day meal and makes them into a healthy side dish.

Thin strips of deli sliced corned beef, which are lean but quite salty, are used to flavor nutrient- and fiber-rich shredded cabbage and car-rots. Cider vinegar, coarse Dijon mustard and a bit of brown sugar create a sweet and tangy contrast to the salt-iness of the corned beef.

The dish is easy to prepare, but to save even more time you can use pre-shredded cabbage (coleslaw mix) and pre-shredded or matchstick carrots, which can be found in the produce section of most grocers.

—Sweet-and-Sour Cabbage

with Corned Beef Start to finish: 30 minutes

(10 minutes active)Servings: 61 teaspoon canola oil4 ounces deli sliced corned

beef, cut into thin strips

3/4 cup water1/4 cup cider vinegar2 tablespoons coarse Dijon

mustard1 tablespoon brown sugar6 cups shredded green cab-

bage (about 1 pound)2 cups shredded carrotsSalt and freshly ground

black pepper, to tasteIn a large nonstick skillet

with a lid, heat oil over medi-um-high.

Add the corned beef and saute, stirring often, until lightly browned, about 2 min-utes. Add the water, vinegar, mustard and brown sugar. Stir to combine.

Add the cabbage and car-rots and reduce heat to medi-um-low. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are very tender, 15 to 20 minutes. Check the veg-etables midway through and add more water if necessary.

Season with salt and pep-per before serving.

Nutrition information per serving: 109 calories; 4 g fat (1 g saturated); 16 mg cho-lesterol; 11 g carbohydrate; 7 g protein; 3 g fiber; 532 mg sodium.

Recipe for healthy Chinese food

AP — Television chef Martin Yan uses dried tanger-ine peel to give this chicken dish added flavor. If you can’t find any, the recipe still tastes great without it.

—Tangerine Peel ChickenStart to finish: 20 minutesServings: 42-inch piece dried tanger-

ine peel (available at Asian markets)

2 fresh tangerines1 tablespoon cornstarch2 teaspoons soy sauce1 teaspoon rice wine or dry

sherry12 ounces boneless, skin-

less chicken breast, cut into thin strips

For the sauce:1/4 cup orange juice1 tablespoon soy sauce1 teaspoon rice wine or dry

sherry1 teaspoon rice vinegar1 teaspoon sesame oil4 teaspoons sugar1/4 teaspoon salt1/4 teaspoon ground white

pepperFor the stir-fry:1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1/2 small yellow onion, thinly sliced

8 small dried red chilies1-inch piece fresh ginger,

peeled and julienned2 scallions, cut into 2-inch

pieces1 teaspoon cornstarch dis-

solved in 2 teaspoons waterIn a small bowl, soak the

dried tangerine peel in warm water until softened, about 20 minutes. Drain, cut into narrow strips and set aside.

Slice off the ends of the tan-gerines. Hold the fruit with one cut side on the cutting board and use a paring knife to remove the peel in strips, working your way around the fruit. Cut deeply enough to remove the white pith.

Slice fruit into segments, cutting the flesh away from the membranes. Place the flesh in a small bowl.

Discard half of the tanger-ine peels. Cut away and dis-card the white pith from the remaining half, then cut the peels into long narrow strips. Place peel in a small bowl and set aside.

In a medium bowl, combine

the cornstarch, soy sauce and wine. Add the chicken and stir to coat evenly. Let stand for 10 minutes.

Meanwhile, make the sauce. In a small bowl, com-bine all ingredients, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Set aside.

Heat a large skillet or wok over high. Add the oil and swirl to coat the sides of the pan.

Add the onion, chilies and ginger, then stir-fry until fra-grant, about 30 seconds. Add the chicken and stir-fry until no longer pink at the center.

Add the scallions and the dried and fresh tangerine peels; stir-fry until the green onions soften, about 1 min-ute. Add the sauce and bring to a boil.

Add the tangerine seg-ments and stir to coat with the sauce. Add the cornstarch mixture and cook, stirring, until the sauce boils and thickens, about 30 seconds.

(Recipe adapted from Martin Yan’s “Martin Yan’s China,” Chronicle Books, 2008)

Recipe for tangerine peel chicken

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008B10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

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by Dean FosdickASSOCIATED PRESS

Americans finding soaring food prices hard to stomach are battling back by growing their own food.

Home vegetable gardens appear to be booming as a result of the twin movements to eat local and pinch pennies. Although the 2008 planting season is still largely in the planning stages, it appears vegetable seed sales will be up significantly from year-ago figures, said Barb Melera, president of D. Landreth Seed Co., in New Freedom, Pa.

“I just came back from the Southeastern Flower Show in Atlanta and we sold three- to four times the amount of seed packets we did the previous year,” Melera said. “This is the first time I’ve ever heard people say ‘I can grow this more cheaply than I can buy it in the supermarket.’ That’s a 180-degree turn from the norm.”

Roger Doiron, a gardener and fresh food advocate from Scarborough, Maine, said he turned $85 worth of seeds into more than six months of vegetables for his family of five.

“We’re closing in on mid-February and we still have several quarts of tomato sauce, bags of mixed vege-tables and ice-cube trays of pesto in the freezer; 20 heads of garlic, a five-gallon crock of sauerkraut, more home-grown hot pepper sauce than

one family could comfortably eat in a year and three sorts of squash, which we make into soups, stews and bread,” he said.

As founding direc-tor of Kitchen Gardeners International, a nonprofit group promoting home gar-dening and healthier food, Doiron pays close attention to pocketbook issues. Food prices, gasoline prices and oil prices are all up sharply com-pared to a year ago, making it more challenging to put a meal on the table, Doiron said.

“I see home gardens as a way of broadening and democratizing the local foods revolution which until now has been more of an upper-class phenomenon,” he said by e-mail. “Home gardening allows people to have their fresh, organic salad greens and pay for them, too.”

At $3.80 a gallon, whole milk cost more through November of last year than the $2.99 average for unlead-ed gas, according to figures from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and AAA.

Egg prices were 19.5 per-cent higher in June of 2007 than they were the previous June, the U.S. Department of Labor said. Over that same period, the cost of whole milk rose 13.3 percent, fresh chicken was up 10 percent, apples 11.7 percent, dried beans 11.5 percent and white bread 9.6 percent.

And the worst may be yet

to come. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization said retail prices would continue to climb as more agricul-tural crops, primarily corn, are processed into biofuels. Greater demand from India and China also are contribut-ing to what likely will be long-term food cost increases, the agency said.

Those conditions are ripe for an increase in gardening, said Rose Hayden-Smith, a garden educator and histo-rian with the University of California-Davis.

“You always see an uptick in gardening activity in keep-ing with economic conditions — consumer-driven waves that emulate recession and inflation-driven economies,” Hayden-Smith said.

Hayden-Smith compares the current period of market uncertainty with that of the early- to mid-20th Century when the concept of “victory gardens” became popular in the U.S, Canada and Europe.

“A lot of companies during the world wars and the Great Depression era encouraged vegetable gardening as a way of addressing layoffs, reduced wages and such,” she said in a telephone interview. “Some companies, like U.S. Steel, made gardens available at the workplace. Railroads pro-vided easements they’d rent to employees and others for gardening.”

During World War II, gar-dens were pitched as an important part of the war

effort _ by war’s end, the vic-tory gardens were turning out 40 percent of the nation’s produce, freeing up big farms to supply the troops. And they were important at home in a time of rising food prices and rationing, the Kitchen Gardeners’ Doiron said.

“Home gardens made the difference between people being well fed and going to bed hungry,” he said, adding that the gardens increased consumption of fruits and vegetables to historic highs.

Now, as then, gardeners are getting serious about what they’re planting; the garden-ers who Melera met at the recent trade show were not just interested in flowers or hobby plants.

“They came to me with things like, ‘How can I maxi-mize what I put into a small plot?”’ she said. “They’re beginning to think in the old-fashioned way about vegeta-ble gardening not just being there for entertainment pur-poses. They need it to yield stuff.”

Jim Gerritsen, co-owner of WoodPrairie Farm, a certified organic, family-run operation near Bridgewater, Maine, said his sales are up.

“This year, we’re get-ting more questions tied into self-reliance,” he said. “We’re hearing new gardens are being prepared for the first time, former gardeners are coming back to the gar-den and existing gardens are being enlarged.”

Consumers are beginning to fight higher retail food costs by growing their own

by Angie WagnerASSOCIATED PRESS

If I didn’t notice it before, I get it now: There is a huge difference between my girl-friends who have kids and those who do not.

The latest proof came when my 2-year-old recently took down a Starbucks with my childless friend as a witness.

Here’s what happened: I recently called a friend to see if she wanted to meet for a quick coffee because I was going to be on her side of town. She told me she was already meeting someone there, but I should come by and say hello.

My 4-year-old was in pre-school, so I just had one beast — I mean child — with me that morning. I had to stop by a baby store first, but a quick errand turned into 45 minutes because the owner kept talking. The delay meant that Aubrey was already start-ing to lose her patience, and she began pulling out stuffed animals and hats and walking around the store with them.

I was on borrowed time. But

for some stupid reason, I still decided to meet my friend.

The place was packed. I got Aubrey a cookie and sat her down, hoping the cookie would keep her busy.

Nope. She thought we were playing musical chairs. My friend and her coffee pal, who I could already tell does not have children, were confused at this game.

Her friend asked me some-thing about being on a sab-batical.

“Yes,” I said. “I took a break to be a stay-at-home mom.”

She gave a slight smile as Aubrey started dismantling the Valentine’s Day display by removing boxes of chocolate hearts and putting them on the table.

She had every intention of eating them.

While I tended to that, my friend said: “Is that your Mommy uniform?”

I looked down at my attire for the day. Heck, I didn’t think it was that bad.

“Remember you said when you stopped working, you wouldn’t have a Mommy uni-form?” my friend continued.

Did I say that?I have on corduroy jeans

and what I thought was a decent sweater. OK, so I have

these corduroy jeans in every color from the same store — cream, chocolate brown, khaki and gray. I also bought solid-colored long-sleeved shirts in every color — just like Easter eggs now that I think about it.

So does this mean this is my uniform? Ugh. Maybe it is.

I realized I had no makeup on. I think I washed my hair. Can’t remember. But I know I took a shower.

I was slightly offended at her question.

But I didn’t have time to be. Aubrey was emptying my diaper bag onto the floor. It was then that I noticed my friend’s Coach tennis shoes. I didn’t even know they made those. She was in slacks and a nice dress shirt and looked so relaxed sipping her coffee.

Her friend gave me an awk-ward smile as I picked up Aubrey’s latest mess.

Then it happened. Aubrey threw herself onto her stom-ach and started a tantrum. She was actually lying flat on the floor screaming.

My friend’s eyes grew wider and she struggled for words. Silence was all she could muster. Then Aubrey took off and started circling

Starbucks. I ran after her as fast as I could.

Yes, I wanted to say, my child is crazy and I have no control over her. And yes, I am wearing a Mommy uni-form. And yes, I am differ-ent from you. But I am trying here!

I slung Aubrey under my arm, grabbed my drink and we were gone. I don’t think I said goodbye.

Later, I imagined the dinner conversation at my friend’s home that night.

“So you know my friend Angie? Well, she took a sab-batical from her job to be with her kids more, and now she can’t even do that right! Her child is out of control!”

That night, I thought about the outing and how wrong it went. I know another moth-er would understand it’s just what happens to all moms sometimes.

But I am a bit envious of my friend’s free time, her tan-trum-free life. Maybe even of her Coach tennis shoes. I hope she doesn’t think my daughter behaves like that every day.

If she does I’m just going to have to count on my friend to empathize a little — even if she doesn’t have kids.

As a parent, having friends who aren’t can be hard

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 B11TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

photo courtesy of Steven Still/Perennial Plant Association

Geranium ‘Rozanne’ is a variety that was discovered in a garden in England. It has been selected as the Perennial Plant of the Year by the Perennial Plant Association.

(not wet) and where it will get afternoon shade.

Rozanne will make a beau-tiful ground cover, or you can use it as a specimen in plantings.

Consider the contrast it would make with Shasta dai-sies, or plant it with hostas, speedwell, and perennial salvia or consider mixing it among short ornamental grasses.

It will make a lovely addi-tion to patio containers, window boxes and hanging baskets, as well.

As a Perennial Plant of the year, this plant has had to pass the following require-ments.

A committee votes on the one plant that they consider adequate for their yearly award using the following criteria.

The plant must be suit-able for a wide range of cli-matic conditions, requires little maintenance and be

pest- and disease-resistant. It must provide a multiple season of ornamental inter-est — none of the short-lived get-it-while-you-can peren-nials will make the grade. It also has to be easy to propa-gate using asexual reproduc-tion or propagated by seed.

It must also be readily available for sale the year it is released.

Geranium continued from page B1

Landscape Class

Lindon Greenhalgh and Larry Sagers of the Tooele County

Extension Service will teach a basic landscape design class from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Feb.

27, March 12, March 19, and April 9, with a field trip scheduled after. For

registration and more information, contact

Patty Wheeler at 277-2400.

Assemblies and games are the biggest part of cheerleading, she said.

“There are lots of early mornings for prac-tices and competitions and lots of late nights with lots of games,” she said.

Competitions, which Trujillo said they started participating in her third year into it, also take up time. And while other sports, like basketball and football, at the school may have taken center stage with accom-plishments over the years, the cheerleading program has grown into an award-winning squad with Trujillo’s help.

“Tooele never really competed and one of the things that I’ve been really proud of is we put Tooele on the map when the girls started competing.”

She has been responsible for helping the team garner 10 or 11 first-place titles in the state, and they have gone to nationals seven or eight times.

The group also participates in community events like the Fourth of July. She said the support of the community is key to the suc-cess of the program.

“The girls, parents, administration and community have supported me 100 percent,” she said.

During a basketball game last week, Trujillo was honored by cheerleaders she has coached over the years.

“They called a whole bunch of the girls that I had taught in the last 19 years — and there were a lot of them — and each one brought a rose for me.”

She said she counted the roses up as she was putting them away in containers and she had 62 roses.

“That is unreal,” she said. “Each person came through and gave me a great big hug and honored me. I didn’t think I’d cry, but I cried through the whole thing.”

A retirement party is going to be held for Trujillo on May [email protected]

Cheer continued from page B1

SCHOOL LUNCH

Breakfast — all schoolsMonday, Feb. 25French toast sticks or cere-

al or yogurt, toast, fruit, milkTuesday, Feb. 26Egg, sausage and cheese

muffin or cereal or yogurt, toast, fruit, milk

Wednesday, Feb. 27Pop-tart or cereal or yogurt,

biscuits, fruit, orange juice, milk

Thursday, Feb. 28Cinnamon rolls or cereal or

yogurt, toast, fruit, milkFriday, Feb. 29Waffle sticks or cereal or

yogurt, toast, fruit, apple juice, milk

Elementary schoolsMonday, Feb. 25Corn dog, rolls or PB and

jelly sandwich, potato wedge, mixed vegetables, applesauce with Jell-O, milk

Tuesday, Feb. 26Chicken wrap, rolls, salad

or stacked ham sandwich, potato chips, peas, banana, Jell-O cake, milk

Wednesday, Feb. 27Pizza: Copper CanyonNacho supreme, rolls or

stacked turkey sub, potato chips, corn, apple, Jell-O, milk

Thursday, Feb. 28Pizza: Stansbury ParkSalisbury steak, wheat

rolls, potatoes and gravy or bologna hoagie, potato chips, mixed vegetables, fruit cock-tail, milk

Friday, Feb. 29Pizza: EastOriental salad, rolls or tuna

sandwich, French fries, veg-gie with dip, oranges, lemon bar, milk

Junior high schoolsMonday, Feb. 25Pizza — TJHSSoft shell taco, salad,

Mexican rice, rolls, mixed vegetables, peach cup, milk

Tuesday, Feb. 26Pizza — CJJH and GJHSSoft shell taco, salad,

Mexican rice, rolls, corn, banana, Jell-O, milk

Wednesday, Feb. 27Italian dunkers, peas and

carrots, kiwi, no bake cookie, milk

Thursday, Feb. 28Chicken fried steak, pota-

toes and gravy, wheat rolls, green beans, fruit cup, milk

Friday, Feb. 29Chicken noodle soup,

salad, rolls, applesauce with Jell-O, lemon bar, milk

High schoolsMonday, Feb. 25Chili dog, potato chips,

corn, cottage cheese, straw-berry cup, milk

Tuesday, Feb. 26Soft shell taco, rolls,

Mexican rice, apple cups, Jell-O, milk

Wednesday, Feb. 27Chicken chow mein, rice,

egg roll, broccoli, kiwi, pump-kin chocolate chip cookie, milk

Thursday, Feb. 28Salisbury steak, potatoes

and gravy, wheat rolls, peas and carrots, applesauce with Jell-O, milk

Friday, Feb. 29Shrimp poppers, cheese

potatoes, rolls, cucumbers with dip, fruit cup, ginger-bread, milk

WITH A STROKE,

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B11

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Social Work

Coming to a USU campus near you in Fall 2008

Apply online at msw.usu.edu

or for more information contactDerrik Tollefson435-722-1752

[email protected]

Applications for admission are being accepted now and will be reviewed

beginning February 1, 2008.Work on your degr

ee

part time!

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TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINB12 THURSDAY February 21, 2008

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008 C1TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Family Features — Theodor “Dr. Seuss” Geisel knew what he was talking about. Reading is the key to unlock-ing untold worlds for your child, from scholastic and professional success to per-sonal enrichment. The chal-lenge is figuring out ways to create a thirst for reading that will serve your children throughout their lives. At a time when some 30 million U.S. adults function at the “below basic” level of literacy skill, according to ProLiteracy Worldwide, the importance of concentrating on reading at an early age cannot be over emphasized.

“The family that reads together has the right idea,” said Steve Mogck, executive vice president and brand leader for Country Inns & Suites By Carlson (and father of three). “We hear from our guests – families, educators and business travelers – that reading is a vital part of their everyday life which is why we developed the Read It & Return Lending Library for our hotels.” Enticing kids to

read at a young age is the first step to creating a lifelong reader. Here are 10 ways to help make this happen:

• Lead by example. If your child sees you reading, he or she will get the idea that reading is fun. Make it a point to talk about books at the dinner table – maybe even start a family book club.

• Leverage every read-ing opportunity. The next time you plan a road trip, look for hotels that provide books for guests to enjoy and offer specials that enable you to broaden your family book collection. For exam-ple, if you plan to stay two or more consecutive nights at a Country Inns & Suites, ask for the “Get a Gift Card” promotion, effective Oct. 15, 2007 -March 15, 2008, and you will receive a $15 Borders gift card.

• Encourage family reading time. Even if it’s just once a week, consistency counts.

• Get to know your library. The community library is at the heart of a

good reading program. When traveling, introduce your child to the Read It & Return Lending Library at more than 400 Country Inns & Suites hotels around the country. Your child can take out a book, and return it the next

time you stay.• Steer your child to

television programming that promotes reading. One good example is the Emmy award-

winning PBS children’s series, “Reading Rainbow,” a show designed to encourage a love of books among children ages 4-8.

• It doesn’t have to be a classic. If your child enjoys nature, then a subscription to

National Geo Kids or Ranger Rick magazine will be some-thing he looks forward to every month. Graphic novels are a terrific way to appeal to

‘tween and teen readers.• Read out loud. The

practice of reading aloud at bedtime is the earliest posi-tive imprint a parent can con-vey that reading equates to comfort, safety and dreamy pleasure. Even older kids will enjoy the ritual, especially if they’re hooked on a story line or a serial book and can also take turns reading pages.

• Treat books with respect. Teach your children that books should have a des-ignated place in their room, and they should be treated with care. Give the child a bookmark of their own, to prevent pages from getting dog-eared.

• Keep an open mind. As your child gets older, he or

she might make book choices you wouldn’t have expected. As long as the material is age appropriate, support the choice and be interested in the content.

• Movie ties-ins can inspire. If a movie – like the Harry Potter series, gets kids excited about books, that’s just great. Make a list of books that have been made into film, from Little Women to Black Beauty and The Adventures of Pippi Longstocking, and read the book, then see the movie. Everybody can weigh in on what they like, or dis-like, about each medium.

For more information about Country Inns & Suites literacy initiatives, visit www.countryinns.com

Read On! 10 Ways to Encourage Your Kids to Read

“The more you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you’ll go.”

- Dr. Seuss, “I Can Read With My Eyes Shut!”

The Alchemist This story, dazzling in its powerful simplicity and inspiring wisdom, is about an Andalusian shepherd boy named Santiago who travels from his homeland in Spain to the Egyptian desert in search of a treasure buried in the Pyramids. Along the way he meets a Gypsy woman, a man who calls himself king, and an alchemist, all of whom point Santiago in the direction of his quest. No one knows what the treasure is, or if Santiago will be able to surmount the obstacles along the way. But what starts out as a journey to find worldly goods turns into a discovery of the treasure found within. Lush, evocative, and deeply humane, the story of Santiago is an eternal testament to the transforming power of our dreams and the importance of listening to our hearts.

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THURSDAY February 21, 2008C2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Friday

Grey’s Anatomy7 p.m. on $ ABC

It’s all about the chemistry — or lackthereof. George and Izzie (T.R.Knight, Katherine Heigl) try to recap-ture the magic of their first sexualencounter, with disastrous results.The chemistry also isn’t great be-tween Hahn (Brooke Smith) andCristina (Sandra Oh), who’s personanon grata in Hahn’s OR. A patient’shusband (Rockmond Dunbar), whohas yet to bond with their adoptedchild, breaks a few hearts in “Physi-cal Attraction, Chemical Reaction.”

Bones7 p.m. on ` FOX

An unappetizing discovery is madein a refrigerator: the decomposedbody of a girl. As Brennan (EmilyDeschanel) works to identify the vic-tim and find the killer, she finds her-self at odds with a former mentor,with whom she had more than a pro-fessional relationship. David Bore-anaz, Michaela Conlin and Eric Mil-legan also star in “The Girl in theFridge.”

Ghost Whisperer8 p.m. on ^ CBS

Liar, liar, pants on fire! Melinda (Jen-nifer Love Hewitt) hears about ayoung woman’s kidnapping and dis-covers the family is in contact with apsychic in search of information. Butshe suspects that this so-called seeris a fake and does her own investi-gation, with surprising and sad re-sults.

Amne$ia8 p.m. on % NBC

How well do you remember yourchildhood, your teen years, your firstdate, your first job? If your memoryis good, you could win big bucks. Inthis new game show, contestantsare quizzed about their own lives.Correct answers are worth money,while incorrect ones may bring ablast from the poorly rememberedpast.

NUMB3RS9 p.m. on ^ CBS

Witness protection, indeed. Will yoube taking that guilt trip by train orplane, Don? A woman in the WitnessProtection Program is shot in herown home, and the FBI’s investiga-tion reveals a secret that Don (RobMorrow) had been keeping. So natu-rally, he thinks her death is at leastindirectly his fault. David Krumholtzand Alimi Ballard also star in “In Se-curity.”

Saturday

Movie: Thirteen5 p.m. on N LIFE

Young Nikki Reed became a movie-world sensation as co-writer (with di-rector Catherine Hardwicke) and co-star of this 2003 drama about thelink between two vastly differentteenagers. The difficult home life ofa studious young woman (EvanRachel Wood, “Once and Again”)makes her easy prey for a trouble-some peer (Reed). Holly Hunter wasOscar-nominated as Wood’s de-spairing mother; Jeremy Sisto (“SixFeet Under”) co-stars.

Movie: Firehouse Dog5:30 p.m. on & HBO

A movie-star canine is rerouted by astunt gone awry, landing him at afirehouse that adopts him, in thisfamily-oriented 2007 comedy-drama.Josh Hutcherson (“Bridge to Ter-abithia”) plays a fireman’s son whobecomes the animal’s new bestfriend, setting the stage for the boyto reach a new understanding withhis dad (Bruce Greenwood). StevenCulp (“Desperate Housewives”) alsois in the human cast of the film.

Shark7 p.m. on ^ CBS

Ever heard the expression “Don’tmake a federal case out of it”?That’s what’s happening in “TheWrath of Khan.” Stark and Jessica(James Woods, Jeri Ryan) are tryingto put away an arms broker who’ssupplying local gangs with explo-sives. But the FBI wants him, too.The local authorities rush their stingin an effort to beat the feds.

Movie: Forrest Gump7 p.m. on $ ABC

Everyone has a favorite momentfrom this delightful tale of the slow-witted Southerner who consistentlylands on his feet — and smack-dabin the middle of history — thanks todumb luck and lots of heart. TomHanks took home something morevaluable than a box of chocolates forplaying Forrest: a best actor Oscarfor the second year in a row. The1994 drama also stars Sally Field,Mykelti Williamson, Robin Wrightand Gary Sinise.

College Basketball7 p.m. on T ESPN

A heated cross-state rivalry spicedup with charges of a lack of respect.That’s the intriguing backdrop totonight’s clash between No. 1 Mem-phis and top-10 ranked Tennessee.The Tigers, 19-0 at this writing, fea-ture a surefire lottery pick in DerrickRose and another future pro, ChrisDouglas-Roberts, as their backcourt,and better yet, they take pride inplaying defense. The Vols counterwith guard Chris Lofton, the SEC’sleading career 3-point shooter.

Jeri Ryan stars in “Shark”Saturday on CBS.

SATURDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 23, 20086:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS Entertainment Tonight Celebrity news. Shark “The Wrath of Khan” ’ (CC) 48 Hours Mystery ’ (CC) 48 Hours Mystery ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) Talkin’ Sports Roughin’ It’ CSI: Miami (CC)(4) ABC Access Hollywood (N) (CC) “Forrest Gump” ››› (1994) Tom Hanks. A slow-witted Southerner experiences 30 years of history. ’ (CC) (DVS) News (N) (CC) Sports Zone Extra (N) ’ (CC)(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) My Dad Is Better Than Your Dad ’ “Knight Rider” (2008, Action) Justin Bruening, Deanna Russo. ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) Sports Beat Sun. Beat Goes On Reel Talk(6) HBO (5:30) “Firehouse Dog” ›› (2007) ‘PG’ (CC) Cont’d Boxing Sultan Ibragimov vs. Wladimir Klitschko. ’ (Live) (CC) Joe Louis: America’s Hero ... Betrayed The boxer’s life. Def Comedy Jam(7) KUED Antiques Roadshow (CC) American Masters ’ (CC) Called-Kathy Ruth Rendell Mysteries (CC) Red Green Red Dwarf (CC) (:01) Doctor Who “World War Three”(8) KPNZ El Show de Don Cheto Alarma TV Top 10 Teatro de la Risa Lo Mejor de Estudio 2 José Luis Sin Censura Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS “Dumb & Dumber” ›› (1994, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Jeff Daniels. (CC) “Zoolander” ›› (2001, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Will Ferrell. (CC) “Beetlejuice” ››› (1988, Comedy) Michael Keaton, Alec Baldwin. (CC)(11) KBYU Nature ’ (CC) (DVS) The Lawrence Welk Show Andy Griffith (:23) I Love Lucy (:13) Perry Mason (CC) College Basketball Teams TBA.(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) Cops (N) (CC) Cops (N) (CC) America’s Most Wanted-Fights Back News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ (:35) Mad TV ’ (CC) Spike Feresten(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) “G.I. Jane” ››› (1997) Demi Moore. A female Navy SEALs recruit completes rigorous training. News (N) Talkin’ Sports Dead Like Me George gets a pet. ’ The Dead Zone “Deja Voodoo” (CC)(15) KUWB Two/Half Men Two/Half Men “The Thomas Crown Affair” ››› (1999) Pierce Brosnan, Rene Russo. King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Saturday Night Live Tina Fey. (N) ’ (CC)(23) FX “Crash” ››› (2004) Sandra Bullock. Racial tensions collide among Los Angeles residents. “The Punisher” ›› (2004, Action) Thomas Jane, John Travolta, Will Patton. An FBI agent seeks revenge for the murder of his family.(25) QVC Kathy Van Zeeland Accessories Dell Computer Workshop Epiphany: Platinum-Clad Silver & Diamonique Jewelry Diamonique 100 Facet Collection Suze Orman Financial Freedom(26) ANPL Dog Show “AKC/Eukanuba National Championship 2008” More than 3,000 dogs compete. (CC) Dog Show “AKC/Eukanuba National Championship 2008” More than 3,000 dogs compete. (CC)(27) NICK iCarly (N) (CC) Naked Brothers Drake & Josh ’ Ned’s School George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve.(28) FAM “Teenage Mutant Ninja II” “Godzilla” › (1998) Matthew Broderick. Premiere. A giant mutated lizard wreaks havoc in New York. (CC) “Spring Break Shark Attack” › (2005) Shannon Lucio, Riley Smith. (CC)(29) TOON Goosebumps ’ Goosebumps ’ Naruto (N) Naruto (N) One Piece (N) ’ Dragon Ball Z Harvey Birdmn Venture Bros. Frisky Dingo Death Note “Ally” Bleach Blood Plus (N)(31) CMTV “Silverado” ››› (1985) Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn. The paths of four cowboys converge en route to a showdown. ’ (:15) CMT Music Redneck Wed Redneck Wed Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos(33) DISN Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Hannah Montana Hannah Montana Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Cory in the House (:15) “The Even Stevens Movie” ›› (2003, Comedy) Shia LaBeouf. ’ (CC)(36) SPIKE Pros vs. Joes “Catch Rocket Ismail” Pros vs. Joes ’ Pros vs. Joes ’ TNA iMPACT! ’ “Road House” ›› (1989, Action) ’(38) AMC (5:00) “The Matrix” ››› (1999, Science Fiction) Keanu Reeves. (CC) Cont’d Film Independent Spirit Awards (N) (CC) “The Matrix” ››› (1999) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. (CC)(39) TNT “Four Brothers” ›› (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. (CC) “Walking Tall” ›› (2004, Action) The Rock. (CC) “Torque” ›› (2004) Martin Henderson, Ice Cube. (CC) “On Deadly Ground” ›› (1994) (CC)(41) CNN CNN: Special Investigations Unit (N) Larry King Live Newsroom CNN: Special Investigations Unit Larry King Live CNN Saturday Night(43) CNBC The Celebrity Apprentice ’ (CC) The Suze Orman Show (N) (CC) Deal or No Deal ’ (CC) The Celebrity Apprentice ’ (CC) The Suze Orman Show (CC) Deal or No Deal ’ (CC)(46) LIFE (5:00) “Thirteen” ››› (CC) Cont’d “Miss Congeniality” ›› (2000) Sandra Bullock, Michael Caine. (CC) Grey’s Anatomy ’ (CC) Desperate Housewives “Liaisons” ’ The Golden Girls The Golden Girls(49) FXNEWS Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Special Programming Red Eye Jrnl Edit. Rpt The Beltway Boys Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) The Line-Up(51) FXSPN Celebrity Sports Invitational Americans ‘51 Dons: Pride College Basketball Arizona at Washington State. (Live) Toughest Cowboy (N) Final Score Final Score(52) ESPN College GameDay (Live) (CC) College Basketball Tennessee at Memphis. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Midnight Madness NBA Fastbreak SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ House “House vs. God” ’ (CC) “The Saint” ›› (1997, Suspense) Val Kilmer, Elisabeth Shue. (CC)(71) DISC Some Assembly Required MythBusters “MacGyver.” (CC) Smash Lab Insulation. Some Assembly Required (CC) Some Assembly Required MythBusters “MacGyver.” (CC)(518) ENC “Rain Man” ›››› (1988, Comedy-Drama) Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:20) “Platoon” ›››› (1986, War) Tom Berenger. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:20) “Mad Max” ››› (1979) Mel Gibson. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(534)STARZ Catch-Release (:40) “Vacancy” ›› (2007) Luke Wilson. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:15) “RV” ›› (2006, Comedy) Robin Williams, Jeff Daniels. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) “Perfect Stranger” ›› (2007, Suspense) Halle Berry. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(561) MAX “Lethal Weapon 4” ›› (1998, Action) Mel Gibson, Joe Pesci. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:15) “Gladiator” ››› (2000) Russell Crowe. A fugitive general becomes a gladiator in ancient Rome. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Fracture” ››› (2007) ‘R’(576) SHOW (5:45) “Failure to Launch” ›› (2006) ‘PG-13’ Cont’d “Employee of the Month” ›› (2006) Dane Cook. iTV. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) The L Word (iTV) Oil wrestling. (CC) “National Lampoon’s Barely Legal” › (2005) ‘R’ (CC)(591) TMC (:15) “The Great New Wonderful” ›› (2005) ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:45) “Mission: Impossible III” ››› (2006, Action) Tom Cruise, Ving Rhames. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “See No Evil” › (2006) Kane. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Masters of Horror

CHANNEL

SATURDAY AFTERNOON FEBRUARY 23, 200812:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

(2) CBS College Basketball Arkansas at Kentucky. (Live) (CC) College Basketball Kansas at Oklahoma State. (Live) (CC) Screen Addicts CBS News News (N) (CC)(4) ABC At Your Leisure Homes Today Madness College Basketball Regional Coverage -- Oklahoma at Texas or Oregon at UCLA. (Live) (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Wrld News Sat News (N)(5) NBC PGA Tour Golf WGC Accenture Match Play Championship -- Semifinals. From the Gallery at Dove Mountain in Tucson, Ariz. ’ (Live) (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program NBC Nightly News(6) HBO “Firewall” ›› (2006, Suspense) Harrison Ford. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Bernard and Doris” (2008) Susan Sarandon. ‘NR’ (CC) (:45) “The Last Mimzy” ›› (2007, Fantasy) Joely Richardson. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) Firehouse Dog(7) KUED Chefs A’Field Martin Yan Made in Spain Gourmet Test Kitchen Everyday Food ’ Baking-Food Yankee Shop Hometime (N) The This Old House Hour (N) (CC) Equitrekking ’(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Cine Estelar El Show de Don Cheto Secretos Houston Secretos Houston Secretos LA Secretos LA(10) TBS Bewitched ›› (:45) “Jungle 2 Jungle” ›› (1997) Tim Allen. Tribal boy visits his father in New York City. (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City Seinfeld ’ (CC) Seinfeld ’ (CC) King of Queens King of Queens(11) KBYU Steves Europe Travels-Edge Smart Travels This Old House Hometime Yankee Shop Wild Things ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow (CC) Nova “Secrets of the Parthenon” ’(13) FOX Stargate SG-1 “Bad Guys” ’ (CC) NASCAR Racing Craftsman Truck Series -- San Bernardino County 200. American Idol Rewind “Top 10 to 9” TMZ (N) ’ (CC) News Family Guy (CC)(14) KJZZ Paid Program Paid Program “Barbershop” ›› (2002, Comedy) Ice Cube, Anthony Anderson. Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program My Wife and Kids(15) KUWB Red Zone “Glory” ›››› (1989, Historical Drama) Matthew Broderick, Denzel Washington. Amer. Latino LatiNation (N) ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ According to Jim That ’70s Show(23) FX “The Aviator” ››› (2004, Biography) Leonardo DiCaprio. Howard Hughes produces movies and flies airplanes. “Ray” ››› (2004) Jamie Foxx, Kerry Washington. Ray Charles overcomes hardships to become a legend.(25) QVC Kathy Van Zeeland Accessories: 3rd Anniversary Dell Computer Workshop Suze Orman Financial Freedom QVC Sampler Saturday Night Beauty(26) ANPL The Heart of a Lioness (CC) The Hippo: Africa’s King of the River Killer Elephants (CC) Animal Precinct “Hospital Special 2” Animal Precinct (CC) Animal Precinct “Lost and Found”(27) NICK iCarly ’ (CC) iCarly ’ (CC) Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ SpongeBob SpongeBob Ned’s School Ned’s School Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’(28) FAM (11:00) “Hocus Pocus” ›› Cont’d “Casper” ››› (1995, Fantasy) Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman. (CC) “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” ›› (1990) Judith Hoag, Elias Koteas. (CC) “Teenage Mutant Ninja II”(29) TOON Cartoon Cartoon’s Greatest Hits New Scooby-Doo Movies Jerry Reed. “Kangaroo Jack: G’Day U.S.A.!” (2004, Adventure) Grim Adventures Ed, Edd n Eddy Squirrel Boy Scooby-Doo Courage-Dog(31) CMTV Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Redneck Wed “Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build a Bridge” ›› (1995) Kathleen York. Based on the lives of mother-daughter singers the Judds. ’ Trick My Truck(33) DISN Bunnytown (N) ’ Charlie & Lola ’ “Max Keeble’s Big Move” ›› (2001) Alex D. Linz. ‘PG’ That’s So Raven That’s So Raven Life With Derek Phil of the Future Cory in the House Hannah Montana Wizards-Place(36) SPIKE When Animals Attack III ’ (CC) When Animals Attack IV ’ (CC) When Good Pets Go Bad ’ (CC) When Good Pets Go Bad 2 ’ (CC) Pros vs. Joes ’ Pros vs. Joes ’(38) AMC (11:30) “Die Hard” ››› (1988) Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman. (CC) Cont’d “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” ››› (1991, Science Fiction) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton. (CC) “The Matrix” ››› (1999) (CC)(39) TNT “Above the Law” ›› (1988, Action) Steven Seagal, Pam Grier. (CC) “On Deadly Ground” ›› (1994, Action) Steven Seagal, Michael Caine. (CC) “Under Siege” ››› (1992, Action) Steven Seagal, Tommy Lee Jones. (CC)(41) CNN Newsroom CNN: Special Investigations Unit Newsroom Newsroom Lou Dobbs This Week This Week at War(43) CNBC Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Build Wealth Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Get Ripped Deal or No Deal ’ (CC)(46) LIFE Thelma & Louise “Afterglow” ››› (1997) Julie Christie, Nick Nolte. Two unhappy couples cross paths. (CC) “Dying to Belong” › (1997, Drama) Hilary Swank, Mark-Paul Gosselaar. (CC) “Thirteen” ››› (2003, Drama) (CC)(49) FXNEWS The Beltway Boys Fox News Watch Weekend Live Fox News Live (CC) Fox Report(51) FXSPN Women’s College Basketball Oklahoma State at Oklahoma. (Live) Women’s College Basketball Stanford at California. (Live) College Basketball Arizona State at Washington. (Live)(52) ESPN College Basketball Iowa at Michigan State. (Live) (CC) Golf Wendy’s Champions Skins Game -- Day One. From Maui, Hawaii. SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA (11:30) “Gangs of New York” ››› (2002) Leonardo DiCaprio, Daniel Day-Lewis. (CC) Cont’d “Training Day” ››› (2001, Crime Drama) Denzel Washington, Ethan Hawke, Scott Glenn. (CC) Monk (Part 2 of 2) (CC)(71) DISC Mega-Excavators: Reshape the World The Ice Hotel (CC) Extreme Engineering (CC) Some Assembly Required (CC) Some Assembly Required (CC) Some Assembly Required (CC)(518) ENC (11:45) “The Deer Hunter” ›››› (1978) Robert De Niro. Steelworker friends face horrors in Vietnam. ‘R’ Cont’d (2:50) “Dances With Wolves” ›››› (1990) Kevin Costner. A Union officer befriends the Lakota. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)(534)STARZ (10:35) RV Cont’d (:20) “Glory Road” ››› (2006, Drama) Josh Lucas. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) “Eight Below” ››› (2006, Adventure) Paul Walker. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:40) “Catch and Release” ›› (2007) Jennifer Garner.(561) MAX Ex-Girlfriend (:45) “Hard to Kill” ›› (1990, Action) Steven Seagal, Bill Sadler. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Stay” ›› (2005, Mystery) Ewan McGregor. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:10) “The Devil Wears Prada” ››› (2006) Meryl Streep. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)(576) SHOW Employee-Mnth (:45) “The Number One Girl” (2005) Tony Schiena. ‘R’ (:15) “Akeelah and the Bee” ››› (2006) Laurence Fishburne. ‘PG’ (CC) (:15) “Puccini for Beginners” ›› (2006) iTV. ‘NR’ Failure to Launch(591) TMC (11:45) “Captain Ron” ›› (1992) Kurt Russell. Cont’d “Sophie’s Choice” ››› (1982, Drama) Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Peter MacNicol. ‘R’ (:15) “The Official Story” ›››› (1985, Drama) Norma Aleandro. ‘NR’

CHANNEL

SATURDAY MORNING FEBRUARY 23, 20086:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS (5:00) The Early Show (CC) Cont’d News (N) (CC) Care Bears Strawberry Cake “Trump-It” Horseland (N) Sushi Pack (N) Dino Squad (N) Skiing Jeep King of the Mountain.(4) ABC Good Morning America (N) (CC) Emperor New Replacements That’s So Raven That’s So Raven Hannah Montana Zack & Cody Power Rangers Power Rangers Paid Program Paid Program(5) NBC (5:00) Today Fashion trends. Cont’d Jacob Two Two Dragon ’ (EI) My Friend Rabbit 3-2-1 Penguins VeggieTales (EI) Jane-Dragon Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(6) HBO (5:30) “The Grey Zone” ››› (2001) ’ ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d (:25) “Revenge of the Nerds III: The Next Generation” “Cheaper by the Dozen 2” ›› (2005) Steve Martin. ‘PG’ (:45) Little Rock Central: 50 Years Later ’ (CC)(7) KUED Bob the Builder Franny’s Feet (N) Mama-Movies Zoboomafoo This Old House (:27) Hometime (N) Yankee Shop Woodwright Victory Garden Garden Home Simply Ming ’ Scandinavian(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado El Mundo Salvaje Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS (5:55) “The Goonies” ›› (1985) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin. (CC) Cont’d (:10) “Rat Race” ›› (2001, Comedy) Rowan Atkinson, John Cleese, Whoopi Goldberg. (CC) “Bewitched” ›› (2005) Nicole Kidman, Will Ferrell. (CC)(11) KBYU Body Workout Cultivating Life ’ Victory Garden Garden Home Smart Gardening Test Kitchen How to Cook Everyday Food ’ Health Bites Baking-Food Katie Brown Real Simple ’(13) FOX Paid Program Paid Program Viva Pinata (CC) Viva Pinata (CC) Chaotic (N) (CC) Chaotic (N) (CC) Mutant Turtles Dinosaur King (N) Yu-Gi-Oh! G/X (N) Adrenaline Proj Saved by the Bell Paid Program(14) KJZZ U.S. Farm Report (N) (CC) Horseland (CC) Horseland (CC) Sabrina’s Scrt Sabrina’s Scrt Sabrina’s Scrt Sabrina’s Scrt Paid Program Paid Program This Old House Paid Program(15) KUWB Paid Program Paid Program Will & Dewitt (N) Magi-Nation (N) Shaggy-Scooby Tom and Jerry Skunk Fu! (N) ’ Johnny Test (N) Teen Titans (CC) Eon Kid (N) (CC) Super Heroes The Batman ’(23) FX Paid Program Paid Program eBay Money Paid Program Buffy the Vampire Slayer (CC) “Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World” ››› (2003, Adventure) Russell Crowe, Paul Bettany.(25) QVC AM Style Dell Computer Workshop Gourmet Holiday: Prepare Now Suze Orman Financial Freedom By Popular Demand(26) ANPL Dog Show: AKC/Eukanuba Champ. Good Dog U. Breed All About It Pet Star (CC) Born Different Animal breeding. (CC) Africa’s Outsiders Unusual animals. Orangutan Island (CC)(27) NICK Fairly OddParents Fairly OddParents SpongeBob SpongeBob Back, Barnyard Tak and Power SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Fairly OddParents Fairly OddParents(28) FAM Sister, Sister ’ Sister, Sister ’ Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Sabrina-Witch Sabrina-Witch “102 Dalmatians” ›› (2000) Glenn Close, Ioan Gruffudd. Premiere. (CC) “Hocus Pocus” ›› (1993) (CC)(29) TOON Cartoon’s-Hits George-Jungle Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Ben 10 Transformers Teen Titans Totally Spies Cartoon Cartoons Tom & Jerry(31) CMTV (4:00) CMT Music ’ Cont’d Crossroads ’ Top 20 Countdown ’ CMT Insider (N) Gone Country ’(33) DISN Lilo & Stitch ’ Lilo & Stitch ’ Doodlebops ’ Higglytown The Wiggles ’ Johnny-Sprites Tigger & Pooh Tigger & Pooh Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse Little Einsteins Handy Manny ’(36) SPIKE Paid Program ’ Get Ripped “A Soldier’s Story” ››› (1984, Mystery) Howard E. Rollins Jr., Adolph Caesar. ’ Trucks! ’ (CC) Horsepower TV MuscleCar (N) ’ Trucks! ’ (CC) Xtreme 4x4 (N) ’(38) AMC (4:45) “Young Guns II” ›› Cont’d “Blazing Saddles” ››› (1974, Comedy) Cleavon Little, Gene Wilder. “Planet of the Apes” ›››› (1968, Science Fiction) Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall. Die Hard ›››(39) TNT Mimic ›› \ “Land of the Dead” ›› (2005) Simon Baker. (CC) (:15) “The Amityville Horror” ›› (2005, Horror) Ryan Reynolds. (CC) “Fire Down Below” ›› (1997) Steven Seagal, Marg Helgenberger. (CC)(41) CNN Saturday Morn. House Call Saturday Morn. Open House Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom In the Money (CC)(43) CNBC Get Ripped Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Build Wealth Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(46) LIFE Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Get Thin Paid Program Paid Program Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) “Thelma & Louise” ››› (1991) Susan Sarandon, Geena Davis. (CC)(49) FXNEWS (5:00) Fox and Friends Saturday Cont’d Bulls and Bears On Business Forbes (CC) Cashin’ In (CC) Weekend Live(51) FXSPN Best Damn 50 Runnin’-PAC Big 12 Showcase Weekly Update Beyond the Glory (CC) PRIDE Fighting Championships Women’s College Basketball Baylor at Iowa State. (Live)(52) ESPN SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) College GameDay (Live) (CC) College Basketball Connecticut at Villanova. (Live) (CC)(57) USA Build Wealth Get Thin “October Sky” ››› (1999) Jake Gyllenhaal, Chris Cooper, Laura Dern. (CC) “The Saint” ›› (1997) Val Kilmer. A master of disguise finds romance and danger in England. Gangs of NY(71) DISC Get Ripped Paid Program Man vs. Wild “Patagonia” (CC) Bone Detectives MythBusters Deadly bullets. (CC) Dirty Jobs “Tight Spaces” (CC) Fight Quest “Israel”(518) ENC “In the Heat of the Night” ›››› (1967) Sidney Poitier. ‘NR’ (CC) “Annie Hall” ›››› (1977) Woody Allen. ‘PG’ (CC) (:35) “The Sting” ›››› (1973, Comedy-Drama) Paul Newman. ‘PG’ (CC) The Deer Hunter(534)STARZ American Pie ‘R’ (:35) “Vacancy” ›› (2007) Luke Wilson. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:10) “Catch and Release” ›› (2007) Jennifer Garner. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:10) On the Set (:35) “RV” ›› (2006) Robin Williams. ’ ‘PG’ (CC)(561) MAX Last Days ›› “Under Pressure” ›› (1997) Charlie Sheen. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Coneheads” ›› (1993) Dan Aykroyd. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) “A History of Violence” ››› (2005) Viggo Mortensen. (:10) “My Super Ex-Girlfriend” ››(576) SHOW “Herbie Hancock: Possibilities” ››› (2006) ‘NR’ (CC) “Failure to Launch” ›› (2006) Matthew McConaughey. (:15) “Duane Hopwood” ›› (2005) David Schwimmer. (:45) “Employee of the Month” ›› (2006) Dane Cook.(591) TMC (:10) “Dick” ››› (1999) Kirsten Dunst. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:45) “Metropolitan” ››› (1990, Comedy-Drama) Carolyn Farina. ‘PG-13’ “Mission: Impossible III” ››› (2006, Action) Tom Cruise. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:45) Captain Ron

CHANNEL

FRIDAY LATE NIGHT FEBRUARY 22, 200812:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

(2) CBS Late Late Show (:37) Oprah Winfrey (CC) (:37) Paid Program (:07) Paid Program (Off Air) The Early Show ’ (CC)(4) ABC (12:06) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) (CC) (:06) Paid Program Crosswords (:06) Paid Program (:36) Paid Program (Off Air) Wall Street Jrnl(5) NBC Late Night Last Call-Daly (:05) Paid Program (:35) Paid Program (:05) The Martha Stewart Show (N) The Tonight Show With Jay Leno ’ (Off Air) Today Fashion trends. (N) ’ (CC)(6) HBO Real Time With Bill Maher ’ (CC) Def Comedy Jam “Code Name: The Cleaner” › (2007) ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:05) “Beerfest” ›› (2006, Comedy) Jay Chandrasekhar. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Flt.-Conchords The Grey Zone ‘R’(7) KUED (11:00) Viewers’ Choice Cont’d Charlie Rose (N) ’ (CC) Antiques Roadshow (CC) The This Old House Hour ’ (CC) Sesame Street ’ (EI) (CC) (DVS) Thomas & Friends Bob the Builder(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS (12:10) “The Goonies” ›› (1985, Adventure) Sean Astin, Josh Brolin, Jeff Cohen. (CC) Steve Harvey (:05) Dawson’s Creek “Catch-22” ’ (:05) “Snow Day” ›› (2000, Comedy) Chris Elliott, Mark Webber. (CC)(11) KBYU Steves Europe Smart Travels Savage Seas “Rescue” ’ The Windsors: A Royal Dynasty ’ Little Killers ’ (CC) The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Piano Guy ’ Body Workout(13) FOX Still Standing ’ (:35) Cops (CC) (:05) News (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Cristina’s Court Divorce Court ’ TMZ ’ (CC) Paid Program Paid Program(14) KJZZ NBA Basketball Utah Jazz at Los Angeles Clippers. (Same-day Tape) “Hendrix” ›› (2000, Docudrama) Wood Harris, Vivica A. Fox, Billy Zane. Entertainment The Insider (N) ’ U.S. Farm Report (N) (CC)(15) KUWB Paid Program Paid Program Malcolm-Mid. Blind Date (CC) Comics Un. Ent. Studios Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(23) FX Nip/Tuck “Candy Richards” (:03) “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” ›› (2001, Comedy) Ben Affleck. (:01) Paid Program Paid Program Build Wealth Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(25) QVC Diamonique Jewelry NutriSystem Nourish Weight Electronics Clearance Around the House Kathy Van Zeeland Accessories Electronics Today(26) ANPL Eaten Alive (CC) Lemur Kingdom Lemur Kingdom Chimp Eden Clinically Wild Animal Precinct “A Better Future” Dog Show “AKC/Eukanuba National Championship 2008”(27) NICK Home Improve. Home Improve. The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show The Cosby Show As Told by Ginger Danny Phantom Jimmy Neutron Jimmy Neutron(28) FAM Paid Program Paid Program The 700 Club (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Family Matters ’ Family Matters ’(29) TOON Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Full-Alchemist Ghost in the Shell Eureka 7 Inuyasha Astro Boy (CC) Mr. Men Show Cartoon Cartoons Cartoon’s-Hits(31) CMTV CMT Music ’ Paid Program Paid Program Get Ripped Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program CMT Music ’(33) DISN Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Replacements Kim Possible ’ Emperor New American Drgn Buzz Lightyear Timon & Pumbaa The Proud Family Mr. Whiskers Buzz-Maggie Little Mermaid(36) SPIKE Bullrun ’ Bullrun ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ Build Wealth(38) AMC (11:30) “The Poseidon Adventure” ›› (1972) Gene Hackman. (CC) Cont’d “The Grapes of Wrath” ›››› (1940, Drama) Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Carradine. (:45) “Young Guns II” ›› (1990) Emilio Estevez. (CC)(39) TNT (12:15) “The Amityville Horror” ›› (2005, Horror) Ryan Reynolds. (CC) “The Mothman Prophecies” ›› (2002, Suspense) Richard Gere, Laura Linney, Will Patton. (CC) “Mimic” ›› (1997) Mira Sorvino, Jeremy Northam. (CC)(41) CNN Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Randy Jackson. Lou Dobbs Tonight Larry King Live Randy Jackson. CNN: Special Investigations Unit CNN Saturday Morning(43) CNBC Paid Program Paid Program Build Wealth Paid Program Mad Money The Suze Orman Show (CC) High Net Worth Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(46) LIFE The Nanny (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program(49) FXNEWS Special Report Red Eye The O’Reilly Factor Special Report Special Report Fox and Friends Saturday(51) FXSPN Final Score Final Score Big 12 Showcase Runnin’-PAC Beyond the Glory (CC) International Fight League Final Score Sport Science Best Damn 50(52) ESPN SportsCenter (Live) (CC) NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Phoenix Suns. (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC)(57) USA (11:00) “Training Day” ››› (2001) (CC) Cont’d “Submerged” (2005, Action) Steven Seagal, Christine Adams. (CC) Becker ’ (CC) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Paid Program Paid Program(71) DISC Fight Quest “Israel” Paid Program Bosley Hair Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Get Ripped Build Wealth Paid Program Paid Program(518) ENC (11:10) “Find Me Guilty” ››› (2006) Vin Diesel. Cont’d (:20) “Dawn of the Dead” ››› (2004) Sarah Polley. ‘R’ Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson “Marty” ›››› (1955) Ernest Borgnine. ‘NR’ (CC)(534)STARZ (11:35) “Tombstone” ››› (1993, Western) Kurt Russell. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d (1:50) “RV” ›› (2006) Robin Williams. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:40) Head Case ’ (CC) Hollywd Res. (4:50) “American Pie” ››› (1999)(561) MAX “X-Men: The Last Stand” ›› \ Sin City Diaries “Girl From B.I.K.I.N.I.” (2007, Adult) ’ ‘NR’ (CC) “The Omen” ›› (2006, Horror) Liev Schreiber, Julia Stiles. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (4:50) “Last Days” ›› (2005) ’ ‘R’(576) SHOW (11:00) “Beautiful Girls” ›› Cont’d “Trainspotting” ››› (1996) Ewan McGregor. ‘R’ (CC) (:35) “Nacho Libre” ›› (2006) Jack Black. ‘PG’ (CC) (:15) “3 Ninjas: High Noon at Mega Mountain” ›› (1998) Hulk Hogan. ‘PG’(591) TMC Shameless › \ (:45) “.45” (2006, Suspense) Milla Jovovich, Angus Macfadyen. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Last Holiday” ›› (2006, Comedy) Queen Latifah. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Asylum” ›› (2005) Natasha Richardson. ’ ‘R’ (CC)

CHANNEL

FRIDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 22, 20086:00 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 Price Is Right Spectacular Ghost Whisperer “Unhappy Medium” NUMB3RS “In Security” ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) (:35) Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show(4) ABC News Access Hollywood Grey’s Anatomy ’ (CC) 20/20 (N) (CC) 20/20: What Would You Do? (N) News (N) (CC) (:35) Nightline (N) Access Hollywood (:36) Extra (N) ’(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) 1 vs. 100 (Season Finale) (N) (CC) Amne$ia (Series Premiere) (N) (CC) Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N) Late Night(6) HBO “Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith” ››› “Date Movie” › (2006) Alyson Hannigan. ‘PG-13’ (CC) The Wire “Took” ’ (CC) In Treatment ’ In Treatment (N) Entourage (CC) Entourage (CC)(7) KUED The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Washington Week Foreign Exchange NOW on PBS (N) Utah Now Bill Moyers Journal (N) ’ (CC) Open All Hours Waiting for God Viewers’ Choice(8) KPNZ Estudio 2 A Que no Puedes El Show de Lagrimita y Costel Secretos STN Noticiero Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS Every-Raymond Every-Raymond “Bewitched” ›› (2005, Romance-Comedy) Nicole Kidman, Will Ferrell. (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City (:10) “Jungle 2 Jungle” ›› (1997, Comedy) Tim Allen, Martin Short. (CC)(11) KBYU Little House on the Prairie College Volleyball Stanford at BYU. (Live) “Red River” ›››› (1948, Western) John Wayne, Montgomery Clift, Walter Brennan. (CC) True Blue (CC)(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) Bones “The Girl in the Fridge” (CC) House “Forever” ’ (PA) (CC) News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ The Simpsons ’ (:05) Family Guy (:35) Still Standing(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) Utah Jazz Tonight NBA Basketball Utah Jazz at Los Angeles Clippers. From Staples Center in Los Angeles. (Live) Utah Jazz Tonight Scrubs ’ (CC)(15) KUWB Two/Half Men Two/Half Men WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) ’ (CC) King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond According to Jim That ’70s Show(23) FX That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show “Are We There Yet?” ›› (2005, Comedy) Ice Cube, Nia Long, Jay Mohr. “Are We There Yet?” ›› (2005, Comedy) Ice Cube, Nia Long, Jay Mohr.(25) QVC Royal Palace Handmade Rugs Suze Orman Financial Freedom Diamonique Jewelry Dell Computer Workshop Diamonique Jewelry(26) ANPL Lemur Kingdom Lemur Kingdom Chimp Eden Clinically Wild Animal Precinct “A Better Future” Lemur Kingdom Lemur Kingdom Chimp Eden Clinically Wild Animal Precinct “A Better Future”(27) NICK The Fairly OddParents ’ (CC) Back, Barnyard Back, Barnyard George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ Home Improve. Home Improve. Fresh Prince Fresh Prince George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’(28) FAM “Nutty Professor II: The Klumps” ›› (2000, Comedy) Eddie Murphy. (CC) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ The 700 Club (CC) Whose Line? Whose Line? Paid Program Paid Program(29) TOON Jimmy’s Head Foster’s Home Camp Lazlo George-Jungle Chowder Jimmy’s Head Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Full-Alchemist Ghost in the Shell Eureka 7(31) CMTV Gone Country (N) Home Videos Redneck Wed Trick My Truck Gone Country Original country song. Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Trick My Truck Trick My Truck ’(33) DISN Hannah Montana Hannah Montana Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Zack & Cody (:15) “Max Keeble’s Big Move” ›› (2001) Alex D. Linz. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) That’s So Raven Life With Derek(36) SPIKE CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CC) When Animals Attack IV ’ (CC) World’s Most Amazing Videos (N) ’ Disorderly Conduct: Video on Patrol MXC ’ MXC ’ GameTrailers TV GameTrailers TV(38) AMC “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” ››› (1991, Science Fiction) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton. (CC) “Planet of the Apes” ›››› (1968, Science Fiction) Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall. Poseidon Adv.(39) TNT “Blade: Trinity” ›› (2004) Wesley Snipes. Blade and a pair of vampire slayers battle Dracula. “Blade II” ›› (2002, Horror) Wesley Snipes, Kris Kristofferson. (CC) “Land of the Dead” ›› (2005) Simon Baker. (CC)(41) CNN CNN Election Center Larry King Live Randy Jackson. (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Randy Jackson. Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)(43) CNBC Fast Money High Net Worth The Suze Orman Show Student loans. The Big Idea With Donny Deutsch Mad Money The Suze Orman Show Student loans. The Big Idea With Donny Deutsch(46) LIFE Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) “Jersey Girl” ›› (2004, Romance-Comedy) Ben Affleck, Liv Tyler. (CC) Will & Grace ’ Will & Grace ’ Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) The Golden Girls The Golden Girls(49) FXNEWS The O’Reilly Factor (CC) Hannity & Colmes (CC) On the Record-Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity & Colmes On the Record-Van Susteren(51) FXSPN Sport Science Best Damn Hooters Dream Girl II Best Damn 50 Final Score Best Damn Hooters Dream Girl II Final Score Best Damn Hooters Dream Girl II Best Damn 50(52) ESPN NBA Basketball Washington Wizards at Cleveland Cavaliers. (Live) (CC) NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Phoenix Suns. From US Airways Center in Phoenix. (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Monk (Season Finale) (N) (CC) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ House “Don’t Ever Change” ’ (CC) Monk (Part 2 of 2) (CC) “Training Day” ››› (2001) (CC)(71) DISC Survivorman (CC) Man vs. Wild “Patagonia” (CC) Fight Quest “Israel” (N) Fight Quest “Brazil” (CC) Survivorman (CC) Man vs. Wild “Patagonia” (CC)(518) ENC “Uncle Buck” ›› (1989) John Candy. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:45) “Scream” ››› (1996, Horror) Neve Campbell. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:45) “Army of Darkness” ›› (1992) Bruce Campbell. (:10) “Find Me Guilty” ››› (2006)(534)STARZ (4:45) “Glory Road” ››› ’ Cont’d (6:50) “Stay Alive” ›› (2006) Frankie Muniz. ’ ‘PG-13’ (:20) “Fun With Dick & Jane” ›› (2005) Jim Carrey. ’ “Vacancy” ›› (2007) Luke Wilson. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:35) Tombstone(561) MAX (5:00) “Idlewild” ››› (2006) Cont’d (:05) “Final Destination 3” ›› (2006, Horror) ’ ‘R’ (CC) Editor’s Room “Happy Feet” ››› (2006, Adventure) Voices of Elijah Wood. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) “X-Men: The Last Stand” ›› (2006)(576) SHOW Nacho Libre ›› “Crank” ›› (2006) Jason Statham. iTV. ’ ‘R’ (CC) The L Word (iTV) Oil wrestling. (CC) “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle” ››› (1992) Annabella Sciorra. ‘R’ (CC) “Beautiful Girls” ›› (1996) iTV. ‘R’(591) TMC (5:35) “One Last Thing ...” ‘R’ Cont’d (:15) “The Weather Man” ›› (2005) Nicolas Cage, Hope Davis. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “I Love Your Work” ›› (2003, Drama) Giovanni Ribisi. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “Shameless” › (1995) ’ ‘R’

CHANNEL

THURSDAY February 21, 2008 C3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Boxing7:30 p.m. on & HBO

Two champions seek to be “theman” in the heavyweight divisionwhen Wladimir Klitschko faces Sul-tan Ibragimov tonight from NewYork’s Madison Square Garden. Inthe weight class’s first unificationbout since 1999, Klitschko (49-3, 44KOs), from Kiev, Ukraine, enterswith more than double the pro expe-rience of Russia’s Ibragimov.

America’s Most Wanted: AmericaFights Back

8 p.m. on ` FOXHost John Walsh takes the show toNew Orleans to team up with the or-ganization Cops Helping Cops,which builds houses for police offi-cers left homeless by Hurricane Kat-rina. But just because he’s in the BigEasy doesn’t mean he’s letting anybad guys off easy.

Sunday

NASCAR Racing1:30 p.m. on ` FOX

Will three be the charm for MattKenseth? He’ll find out today, alongwith the rest of NASCAR’S SprintCup drivers, in the Auto Club 500 atCalifornia Speedway in Fontana.Kenseth has made a nice home forhimself at the 2-mile oval, winningthe past two Auto Clubs, including ayear ago when he held off a latecharge by Kevin Harvick and three-time California Speedway winnerJeff Gordon. Kenseth also won theBusch race a day before the AutoClub last year.

Barbara Walters Oscar Special5 p.m. on $ ABC

Baseball and hot dogs, Mom andapple pie, Oscar night and BarbaraWalters. The queen of questionersassumes her usual time slot beforethe Academy Awards for a round offriendly chats in keeping with theevening’s showbiz theme. At thiswriting, the names of the intervie-wees hadn’t been announced, buttraditionally at least one of them hasbeen someone in the running at thebig show. Stay tuned.The 80th Annual Academy Awards

6:30 p.m. on $ ABCSometimes you feel like a block-buster; sometimes you don’t. TheAcademy is in the latter camp thisyear, with a roster of best-picturecandidates that were, for the mostpart, critical favorites but not big withmoviegoers. The dramedy “Juno” isthe one relatively lighthearted film ona list of nominees for the big prizethat includes “There Will Be Blood,”“Michael Clayton,” “No Country forOld Men” and “Atonement.” JonStewart hosts the ceremonies.

The Simpsons7:30 p.m. on ` FOX

Say what you will about this showgetting long in the tooth, but the an-nual “Treehouse of Horror” alwaysbrings the laughs. This one is no ex-ception. The first story, “Mr. & Mrs.Simpson,” is a movie spoof Brangeli-na fans will recognize. In “E.T. GoHome,” Bart and Lisa try to helpKodo the alien contact his homeplanet. And in “Heck House,” Flan-ders turns the church into a Hal-loween house of horrors. No, really.

Monday

Movie: A Raisin in the Sun7 p.m. on $ ABC

Diddy did it! Sean Combs is star andco-producer of this new film adapta-tion of Lorraine Hansberry’s play,which reunites the cast of the Tony-winning Broadway revival. PhyliciaRashad plays Lena, matriarch of astruggling black family in 1950sChicago. A life insurance payoutfrom her late husband’s estate holdsthe key to making the family’sdreams come true, but it won’t beeasy. Audra McDonald and SanaaLathan also star.

Welcome to the Captain7:30 p.m. on ^ CBS

As they used to sing on “Friends,”when your “love life’s D.O.A.,” ithelps to have, well, friends. In thisnew episode, Josh (Fran Kranz)spends a night on the town withMarty, Jesus and Uncle Saul (ChrisKlein, Al Madrigal, Jeffrey Tambor) inan attempt to get over Hope (JoannaGarcia). She, meanwhile, looks forfriendship among the other womenin the building in “The WreckingCrew.”

The New Adventures of Old Christine

8:31 p.m. on ^ CBSDude. She has a kid. Stuff happens.Christine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) haspromised her beau, Mr. Harris (BlairUnderwood), that she’ll be his datefor a big event. Unfortunately, whenthe time comes, she’s stranded atRitchie’s (Trevor Gagnon) soccergame, which has run long, leavingHarris hanging in the new episode“Traffic.”

CSI: Miami9 p.m. on ^ CBS

And you thought weird stuff onlyhappened during a full moon. Hora-tio (David Caruso) and company aretrying to catch whoever committed aseries of murders during a total solareclipse. As they investigate, strangethings start happening to them. Emi-ly Procter, Adam Rodriguez, KhandiAlexander and Jonathan Togo star in“Sunblock.”

Jon Stewart hosts the 80thAnnual Academy Awards, airing Sunday on ABC.

SUNDAY AFTERNOON FEBRUARY 24, 200812:00 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

(2) CBS College Basketball Syracuse at Notre Dame. (Live) (CC) College Basketball Wisconsin at Ohio State. (Live) (CC) Screen Addicts Evening News News (N) (CC)(4) ABC NBA Count NBA Basketball Detroit Pistons at Phoenix Suns. From US Airways Center in Phoenix. (CC) Paid Program Academy Awards Profiles in Caring Homes Today The Barbara Walters Special (N) ’(5) NBC PGA Tour Golf WGC Accenture Match Play Championship -- Final. From the Gallery at Dove Mountain in Tucson, Ariz. ’ (Live) (CC) Faithful Friends News (N) (CC) NBC Nightly News News (N)(6) HBO Boxing: Ibragimov vs. Klitschko Joe Louis: America’s Hero (:15) Real Time With Bill Maher (CC) Swt Blackberry (:45) “Night at the Museum” ›› (2006, Fantasy) Ben Stiller. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:45) Blue Streak(7) KUED Foreign Exchange McLaughlin Group Antiques Roadshow (N) (CC) Nova “Ape Genius” (N) (CC) (DVS) Wild Things “Lost Whales” ’ (CC) In Search of Myths and Heroes ’ Life (Part 2) ’ Utah Conversa(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Cine Estelar Cine del Domingo El Show de Lagrimita y Costel(10) TBS “Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me” ››› (1999) Mike Myers. “Austin Powers in Goldmember” ›› (2002, Comedy) Mike Myers. (CC) “Zoolander” ›› (2001, Comedy) Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Will Ferrell. (CC)(11) KBYU The Lawrence Welk Show I Believe (CC) McLaughlin Group McLaughlin’s One BYU Weekly ’ Animalia ’ Design Squad ’ Spoken Word Little House on the Prairie Little House(13) FOX (11:00) “Twister” ››› (1996) Helen Hunt. Cont’d NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup -- Auto Club 500. From California Speedway in Fontana, Calif. ’ (Live) (CC)(14) KJZZ Paid Program Talking Pictures “Barbershop 2: Back in Business” ››› (2004, Comedy) Ice Cube. Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Will & Grace ’ George Lopez ’(15) KUWB “The Addams Family” ›› (1991, Comedy) Anjelica Huston, Raul Julia. Star Trek “Operation -- Annihilate!” Ultimate Combat Experience Girlfriends (CC) The Game (CC) One Tree Hill ’ (CC)(23) FX (9:30) Ray Cont’d “Crash” ››› (2004) Sandra Bullock. Racial tensions collide among Los Angeles residents. “I, Robot” ›› (2004) Will Smith. A homicide detective tracks a dangerous robot in 2035. The Punisher(25) QVC NutriSystem Nourish Weight Diamonique Jewelry Problem Solvers Oreck. NutriSystem Nourish Weight(26) ANPL Wild Kingdom The diminutive meerkat. Killer Bees: Taming the Swarm (CC) Bug Brother House. Blue Planet: Seas of Life (CC) Blue Planet: Seas of Life (CC) Wild Kingdom Great white shark.(27) NICK Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ Drake & Josh ’ iCarly ’ (CC) iCarly ’ (CC) Ned’s School Ned’s School Ned’s School Naked Brothers Drake & Josh ’ iCarly ’ (CC)(28) FAM (11:00) “Casper” ››› (CC) Cont’d “Casper Meets Wendy” ›› (1998, Fantasy) Shelley Duvall, Hilary Duff. (CC) “Matilda” ››› (1996, Comedy) Mara Wilson, Danny DeVito. (CC) “Sisterhood of Traveling Pants”(29) TOON Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. Pokemon-Diam. “Pokémon: The Rise of Darkrai”(31) CMTV Home Videos Home Videos “Silverado” ››› (1985) Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn. The paths of four cowboys converge en route to a showdown. ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ (:45) CMT Music(33) DISN Bunnytown (CC) Charlie & Lola “The Even Stevens Movie” ›› (2003, Comedy) Shia LaBeouf. ’ (CC) That’s So Raven Life With Derek Phil of the Future Cory in the House Hannah Montana Wizards-Place(36) SPIKE (11:00) “Cliffhanger” ››› Cont’d CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’(38) AMC (11:30) “The Godfather” ›››› (1972) Marlon Brando, Al Pacino. A mafia patriarch tries to hold his empire together. (CC) Cont’d “The Godfather, Part II” ›››› (1974, Drama) Al Pacino, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton. (CC)(39) TNT (11:45) “The Chronicles of Riddick” ›› (2004) Vin Diesel. (CC) Cont’d “Blade: Trinity” ›› (2004) Wesley Snipes. Blade and a pair of vampire slayers battle Dracula. “Walking Tall” ›› (2004, Action) The Rock. (CC)(41) CNN CNN: Special Investigations Unit In the Money (CC) Newsroom Newsroom Lou Dobbs This Week Newsroom(43) CNBC Paid Program Select Comfort Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Paid Program Joel Osteen Diabetes Life Wall Street Jrnl(46) LIFE (11:00) “A Cooler Climate” Cont’d “Losing Isaiah” ››› (1995, Drama) Jessica Lange, Halle Berry. (CC) “White Oleander” ›› (2002) Alison Lohman, Robin Wright Penn. (CC) “Miss Congeniality” ›› (2000) (CC)(49) FXNEWS Fox Online War Stories With Oliver North Fox News Live (CC) Fox News Sunday With Chris Wallace Fox Report(51) FXSPN Runnin’-PAC Women’s College Basketball Washington at Arizona State. (Live) College Basketball North Carolina State at Virginia. (Live) College Basketball Wake Forest at North Carolina. (Live)(52) ESPN Say It Loud (N) Golf Wendy’s Champions Skins Game -- Day Two. From Maui, Hawaii. SportsCenter (Live) (CC) NBA Shootaround(57) USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’(71) DISC Dirty Jobs “Coal Miner” Coal mining. Dirty Jobs “Skull Cleaner” (CC) Dirty Jobs “Vexcon” (CC) Dirty Jobs “Billboard Installer” (CC) Dirty Jobs Viewers’ questions. (CC) Dirty Jobs Texas snake farm. (CC)(518) ENC (11:10) “The Guardian” ›› (2006) Kevin Costner. Cont’d (:35) “Hudson Hawk” › (1991, Comedy) Bruce Willis. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:20) “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest” ›› (2006) Johnny Depp. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC)(534)STARZ (10:50) “Perfect Stranger” ‘R’ Cont’d (12:50) “Wild Hogs” › (2007) Tim Allen. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:35) “Ghost Rider” ›› (2007, Action) Nicolas Cage. ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:40) “Life” ›› (1999) Eddie Murphy. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(561) MAX (11:30) “My Cousin Vinny” ››› (1992) ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d “Happy Feet” ››› (2006, Adventure) Voices of Elijah Wood. ’ ‘PG’ (CC) (:20) “Chinatown” ›››› (1974, Crime Drama) Jack Nicholson. ‘R’ (CC) Gladiator ›››(576) SHOW (:15) “Elizabethtown” ›› (2005, Comedy-Drama) Orlando Bloom. iTV. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:20) “Home for the Holidays” ›› (1995) Holly Hunter. (:05) “Pride” ›› (2007, Drama) Terrence Howard, Bernie Mac. iTV. ‘PG’(591) TMC (11:15) “Checking Out” ›› Cont’d (12:50) “Before and After” ›› (1996) Meryl Streep. (:40) “Rx” (2005, Drama) Eric Balfour. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:10) “Crash Landing” (2005) Antonio Sabato Jr. ’ ‘NR’ (:40) The Keeper

CHANNEL

MONDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 25, 20086:00 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 How I Met Welcome-Capt Two/Half Men Old Christine CSI: Miami “Sunblock” ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) (:35) Late Show With David Letterman Late Late Show(4) ABC News Access Hollywood “A Raisin in the Sun” (2008) Sean Combs. Premiere. A black family differs on how to spend insurance money. ’ News (N) (CC) (:35) Nightline (N) Access Hollywood (:36) Extra (N) ’(5) NBC News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) Deal or No Deal (iTV) (N) ’ (CC) My Dad Is Better Than Your Dad (N) Medium (N) ’ (CC) News (N) (CC) The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N) Late Night(6) HBO The Family Stone (:45) “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee” ››› (2007, Docudrama) Aidan Quinn. ’ ‘NR’ (CC) Real Time With Bill Maher ’ (CC) In Treatment ’ In Treatment (N) “Little Children” ››› (2006) ’ ‘R’(7) KUED The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Antiques Roadshow (N) (CC) American Experience “Buffalo Bill” American Experience “Annie Oakley” Open All Hours Waiting for God Antiques Roadshow (N) (CC)(8) KPNZ Estudio 2 A Que no Puedes El Show de Lagrimita y Costel Secretos STN Noticiero Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC) Sex and the City Sex and the City “Shanghai Noon” ››› (2000) (PA) Jackie Chan, Owen Wilson. (CC)(11) KBYU Little House on the Prairie The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (N) Olga: The Last Grand Duchess ’ Little Killers ’ (CC) BBC World News Perry Mason (CC) My Three Sons(13) FOX The Simpsons ’ Seinfeld ’ (CC) The Moment of Truth (N) ’ (CC) Sarah Connor Chronicles News (N) (CC) (:05) Seinfeld ’ The Simpsons ’ (:05) Family Guy (:35) Still Standing(14) KJZZ Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) Dr. Phil ’ (CC) News (N) Power House Scrubs ’ (CC) Scrubs ’ (CC) Entertainment The Insider (N) ’(15) KUWB Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Gossip Girl “Dare Devil” ’ (CC) Pussycat Dolls Present: Girlicious (N) King of Queens King of Queens Every-Raymond Every-Raymond According to Jim That ’70s Show(23) FX That ’70s Show That ’70s Show “The Transporter 2” ›› (2005, Action) Jason Statham, Amber Valletta. “The Rundown” ››› (2003) The Rock. A bounty hunter must find his boss’ son in the Amazon. Undisputed II(25) QVC (4:00) Spring Fashion Designer Gallery: All New Cont’d Judith Ripka Sterling Collection Sleep Number by Select Comfort(26) ANPL Escape to Chimp Eden Animal Planet Heroes Phoenix (CC) Animal Planet Heroes Phoenix (CC) Escape to Chimp Eden Animal Planet Heroes Phoenix (CC) Animal Planet Heroes Phoenix (CC)(27) NICK SpongeBob Drake & Josh ’ Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve. Home Improve.(28) FAM Kyle XY “Primary Colors” (N) (CC) Wildfire “Friendship/Passion” (N) America’s Funniest Home Videos ’ The 700 Club (CC) Kyle XY “Primary Colors” (CC) Paid Program Paid Program(29) TOON Gym Partner Johnny Test ’ Grim Adventures Courage-Dog Ed, Edd n Eddy Naruto Hungerforce The Boondocks The Boondocks Death Note “Ally” Bleach Fooly Cooly(31) CMTV Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos 20 Greatest Redneck Moments ’ “Stroker Ace” › (1983, Comedy) Burt Reynolds, Ned Beatty. ’(33) DISN Wizards-Place Wizards-Place Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Zack & Cody (:15) “The Country Bears” ›› (2002) Christopher Walken. ’ ‘G’ (CC) That’s So Raven Life With Derek(36) SPIKE CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CC) “Cliffhanger” ››› (1993, Action) Sylvester Stallone, John Lithgow. UFC 82 Countdown CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (CC) Star Trek: Voyager “Unity” ’ (CC)(38) AMC “Hope Floats” › (1998, Romance) Sandra Bullock, Harry Connick Jr. (CC) “Father of the Bride Part II” ›› (1995) Steve Martin, Diane Keaton. (CC) “The Godfather, Part III” ››› (1990) Al Pacino, Diane Keaton. (CC)(39) TNT Law & Order “Flaw” (CC) (DVS) Law & Order ’ (CC) (DVS) Law & Order “Talking Points” ’ The Closer Sniper-style murders. Without a Trace “Doppelganger” ’ Without a Trace “Shadows” ’ (CC)(41) CNN CNN Election Center Larry King Live (CC) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Larry King Live Anderson Cooper 360 (CC)(43) CNBC Fast Money Conversations With Michael Eisner The Big Idea With Donny Deutsch Mad Money Conversations With Michael Eisner The Big Idea With Donny Deutsch(46) LIFE Reba ’ (CC) Reba ’ (CC) “I Do (But I Don’t)” ›› (2004) Denise Richards, Dean Cain. (CC) Will & Grace Will & Grace Frasier ’ (CC) Frasier ’ (CC) The Golden Girls The Golden Girls(49) FXNEWS The O’Reilly Factor (CC) Hannity & Colmes (CC) On the Record-Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity & Colmes On the Record-Van Susteren(51) FXSPN Toughest Cowboy Best Damn Poker Challenge (N) Best Damn 50 Final Score Best Damn Poker Challenge (N) Final Score Best Damn Poker Challenge (N) Best Damn 50(52) ESPN College Basketball College Basketball Texas at Kansas State. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) NFL Live (N) Gamenight SportsCenter (Live) (CC)(57) USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ WWE Monday Night Raw ’ (Live) (CC) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ (:07) Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ (:07) Monk (Part 2 of 2) (CC)(71) DISC Dive to Bermuda Triangle (CC) America’s Loch Ness Best Evidence “Bigfoot” MythBusters “Superhero Special” Dive to Bermuda Triangle (CC) America’s Loch Ness(518) ENC “Stick It” ›› (2006) Jeff Bridges. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:45) “The Postman” › (1997, Drama) Kevin Costner. A man inspires survivors of an apocalypse. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:45) “Undisputed” ›› (2002) Wesley Snipes. ‘R’ (CC)(534)STARZ (5:50) “The Shaggy Dog” ›› (2006) Tim Allen. Cont’d Head Case (CC) Hollywd Res. “Stay Alive” ›› (2006) Frankie Muniz. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Rush Hour” ››› (1998) Jackie Chan. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:45) Primeval ›(561) MAX (5:30) “Catch a Fire” ››› Cont’d (:15) “Practical Magic” ›› (1998) Sandra Bullock. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Stripes” ›› (1981, Comedy) Bill Murray, Harold Ramis. ‘R’ (CC) “Fracture” ››› (2007) ‘R’(576) SHOW (:15) “G” ›› (2002, Drama) Richard T. Jones, Blair Underwood. iTV. ‘R’ The L Word “Lay Down the Law” ’ “Lucky Number Slevin” ›› (2006) Josh Hartnett. iTV. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “10th and Wolf” › (2006) ‘R’ (CC)(591) TMC (5:45) “Where the Money Is” ›› (2000) ‘PG-13’ Cont’d (:25) “American Gun” ›› (2005) Donald Sutherland. ‘R’ “Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple II” › (1998) ‘PG-13’ (:45) “The Out-of-Towners” ›› (1999) Steve Martin. ’

CHANNEL

SUNDAY EVENING FEBRUARY 24, 20086:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS 60 Minutes ’ (CC) Big Brother: ’Til Death Do You Part Cold Case “A Dollar, a Dream” (CC) Dexter Murderer contacts Dexter. ’ News (N) (CC) (:35) Talkin’ Sports (:35) CSI: Miami(4) ABC Oscar’s Red The 80th Annual Academy Awards Honors for achievements in film; Jon Stewart hosts. ’ (Live) (CC) News (N) (CC) News (N) (CC) Red Zone At Your Leisure Homes Today(5) NBC Law & Order: Criminal Intent (CC) Law & Order: Criminal Intent “Seeds” (:03) Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ (:05) Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ (:08) News (N) Sports Beat Sun. Beat Goes On NASCAR Angels(6) HBO (5:45) “Blue Streak” › (1999) Martin Lawrence. Cont’d In Treatment ’ In Treatment ’ In Treatment ’ In Treatment ’ In Treatment ’ The Wire Bunk returns a favor. (N) ’ Def Comedy Jam The Wire (CC)(7) KUED Living With Dinosaurs Nature “Raptor Force” (CC) (DVS) Masterpiece “Pride and Prejudice” (N) ’ (CC) (DVS) Monarch of the Glen ’ (CC) Ruth Rendell Mysteries (CC)(8) KPNZ Película Cine Super Accion Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS “Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo” › (2005) (CC) (:45) “Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo” › (2005) Rob Schneider. (CC) “Major League” ›› (1989, Comedy) Tom Berenger, Charlie Sheen. (CC) Lost & Found ›(11) KBYU Andy Griffith My Three Sons Perry Mason (CC) The Windsors: A Royal Dynasty ’ George VI: The Reluctant King ’ Humpback Whale ’ (CC) Tim Janis: Coastal America ’ (CC)(13) FOX Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? The Simpsons ’ The Simpsons ’ Family Guy (CC) American Dad ’ News (N) (CC) The Sports Page The Simpsons ’ (:05) Family Guy King of the Hill ’(14) KJZZ Frasier (CC) Wheel of Fortune “Blast From the Past” ›› (1999) Brendan Fraser, Alicia Silverstone. News (N) Talkin’ Sports Scrubs ’ (CC) The Insider (N) ’ Hot Homes George Lopez ’(15) KUWB CW Now (CC) Hates Chris Hates Chris Aliens in America Girlfriends (CC) The Game (CC) Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ “Absolute Power” ›› (1997, Suspense) Clint Eastwood, Gene Hackman.(23) FX (5:30) “The Punisher” ›› (2004) Thomas Jane. An FBI agent seeks revenge for the murder of his family. Cont’d “The Transporter 2” ›› (2005, Action) Jason Statham, Amber Valletta. Nip/Tuck “Candy Richards”(25) QVC Discover Diamonique Spring Fashion Designer Gallery: All New(26) ANPL Up Close and Dangerous Wildlife filmmakers’ most hair-raising encounters. Ocean’s Deadliest (CC) Up Close and Dangerous Wildlife filmmakers’ most hair-raising encounters. Ocean’s Deadliest (CC)(27) NICK Zoey 101 (N) ’ Just Jordan (N) Nick News (CC) Home Improve. George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ Fresh Prince Fresh Prince Home Improve. Home Improve. Roseanne (CC) Roseanne (CC)(28) FAM (5:00) “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” Cont’d “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” ››› (2005) Amber Tamblyn, Alexis Bledel. (CC) Joel Osteen Feed the Children Zola Levitt Pr. Paid Program(29) TOON “Pokémon: The Rise of Darkrai” Bakugan (CC) Bakugan (CC) Family Guy (CC) American Dad ’ Family Guy (CC) Robot Chicken Squidbillies (N) Xavier-Angel Darkplace Family Guy (CC)(31) CMTV Redneck Wed Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Gone Country ’ Bon Jovi Unplugged on CMT Acoustic performance. ’ CMT Insider ’(33) DISN Cory in the House Cory in the House Zack & Cody Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Zack & Cody Hannah Montana Wizards-Place (:15) “Cow Belles” (2006, Comedy) Alyson Michalka. ’ ‘NR’ (CC)(36) SPIKE CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ’ “Urban Justice” (2007) Steven Seagal, Eddie Griffin. Premiere. ’ “Urban Justice” (2007) Steven Seagal, Eddie Griffin, Kirk B.R. Woller. ’ “Cliffhanger” ››› (1993) ’(38) AMC (3:30) “The Godfather, Part II” ›››› (1974, Drama) Al Pacino. (CC) Cont’d Breaking Bad “Gray Matter” (N) Breaking Bad “Gray Matter” (CC) Mad Men “Babylon” Office romance. Breaking Bad “Gray Matter” (CC)(39) TNT “Four Brothers” ›› (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. (CC) “Four Brothers” ›› (2005) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson. (CC) “The Chronicles of Riddick” ›› (2004) Vin Diesel, Colm Feore. (CC)(41) CNN CNN: Special Investigations Unit Larry King Live Newsroom CNN: Special Investigations Unit Larry King Live Newsroom(43) CNBC The Big Idea High Net Worth To Be Announced Swoosh! Inside Nike American Greed To Be Announced To Be Announced(46) LIFE (5:00) “Miss Congeniality” Cont’d “Misery” ››› (1990, Horror) James Caan, Kathy Bates. Premiere. (CC) Medium “To Have and To Hold” ’ “Misery” ››› (1990, Horror) James Caan, Kathy Bates. (CC)(49) FXNEWS Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Hannity’s America The Line-Up Geraldo at Large ’ (CC) Hannity’s America The Line-Up(51) FXSPN College Basketball College Basketball California at Stanford. (Live) Final Score Mind, Body Sport Science Final Score Final Score(52) ESPN NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Houston Rockets. From Toyota Center in Houston. (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (Live) (CC) Gamenight NBA Fastbreak SportsCenter (CC)(57) USA Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ’(71) DISC Dirty Jobs “Cave Biologist” Dirty Jobs “Buoy Cleaner” (CC) Dirty Jobs Cave biologist. (CC) Dirty Jobs Iowa pig farmer. (CC) Dirty Jobs “Cave Biologist” (CC) Dirty Jobs “Buoy Cleaner” (CC)(518) ENC “The Mummy” ››› (1999, Adventure) Brendan Fraser. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) (:05) “The Guardian” ›› (2006, Drama) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “Wolf” ›› (1994, Horror) Jack Nicholson. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(534)STARZ (4:40) Life Cont’d “Perfect Stranger” ›› (2007, Suspense) Halle Berry. ’ ‘R’ (CC) (:20) “Wild Hogs” › (2007) Tim Allen. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “The Rock” ››› (1996, Action) Sean Connery, Nicolas Cage. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(561) MAX (5:30) “Gladiator” ››› (2000) Russell Crowe. ’ ‘R’ (CC) Cont’d Editor’s Room “The Departed” ››› (2006, Crime Drama) Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon. ’ ‘R’ (CC) “There’s Something About Mary” ‘R’(576) SHOW The Tudors “Episode 5” (iTV) (CC) The L Word “Lay Down the Law” ’ The L Word “Lay Down the Law” ’ The L Word “Lay Down the Law” ’ “Saw III” ›› (2006, Horror) Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith. iTV. ’ ‘R’ (CC)(591) TMC (5:40) “The Keeper” › (2004) Dennis Hopper. ‘R’ Cont’d (:20) “An Inconvenient Truth” ››› (2006) ’ ‘PG’ (CC) “Deep Impact” ›› (1998, Drama) Robert Duvall, Tea Leoni. ’ ‘PG-13’ (CC) “The Blair Witch Project” ›› (1999)

CHANNEL

SUNDAY MORNING FEBRUARY 24, 20086:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

(2) CBS Hometime (CC) Hispanics Today News (N) (CC) CBS News Sunday Morning (N) ’ (CC) Face the Nation Motorcycle Racing: AMA Supercross Snowboarding: King-Mntn(4) ABC Good Morning America (N) (CC) Paid Program Paid Program Today’s Home Homes Today At Your Leisure UTAH 2002 This Week-George Stephanopoulos Paid Program Paid Program(5) NBC Animal Advent. Chris Matthews Today Dishwashers; Susan Blech. (N) Meet the Press (N) (CC) Hot Homes Spoken Word Bride Access Paid Program Laureus World Sports Awards (N) ’(6) HBO (5:50) “Notes on a Scandal” ››› (2006) ’ ‘R’ Cont’d Pandemic-AIDS “Hot Shots!” ››› (1991) Charlie Sheen. ‘PG-13’ (CC) REAL Sports With Bryant Gumbel ’ Boxing Sultan Ibragimov vs. Wladimir Klitschko. ’ (CC)(7) KUED Tony Brown Religion-Ethics George Shrinks Thomas & Friends Jakers!-Winks Animalia ’ Arthur ’ (EI) WordGirl (N) Wishbone ’ Washington Week NOW on PBS (N) Utah Now (CC)(8) KPNZ Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Comunidad Latina Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado Programa Pagado(10) TBS (5:50) “Rat Race” ›› (2001) Rowan Atkinson, John Cleese. (CC) Cont’d (7:50) “Crocodile Dundee II” ›› (1988, Comedy) (PA) Paul Hogan. (CC) “Major League” ›› (1989, Comedy) Tom Berenger, Charlie Sheen. (CC)(11) KBYU BYU Devotional Timothy B. Smith. ’ Sperry Symposium Daniel Belnap. 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Pokemon-Diam.(31) CMTV (4:00) CMT Music ’ Cont’d Pure Country ’ CMT Music ’ CMT Insider ’ Top 20 Countdown ’ Home Videos(33) DISN Lilo & Stitch ’ Lilo & Stitch ’ Doodlebops Higglytown The Wiggles Johnny-Sprites Tigger & Pooh Tigger & Pooh Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse Little Einsteins Handy Manny ’(36) SPIKE Paid Program ’ Paid Program ’ “Road House” ›› (1989, Action) Patrick Swayze, Kelly Lynch. ’ Horsepower TV MuscleCar ’ Trucks! ’ (CC) Xtreme 4x4 ’ “Cliffhanger” ››› (1993, Action)(38) AMC (5:00) “The Longest Day” ››› (1962) John Wayne. Allied forces invade WWII Normandy on D-Day. (CC) Cont’d Shootout (CC) “Sahara” ››› (1943, War) Humphrey Bogart, Bruce Bennett. (CC) The Godfather(39) TNT “Above the Law” ›› (1988, Action) Steven Seagal, Pam Grier. (CC) “Under Siege” ››› (1992, Action) Steven Seagal, Tommy Lee Jones. (CC) “Torque” ›› (2004) Martin Henderson, Ice Cube. (CC) Chronicles-Ridd(41) CNN Sunday Morn. 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A Horse Can’t Buck in SandAccounts of Western Country Life in the Early 20th Century

A generation now gone tells us in their own, often poetic, words the fascinating stories of country life in the early 20th century. They were homesteaders, cowboys, loggers, storekeepers, railroad workers and prospectors. For most, their formal education ended with the eighth grade, yet they possessed a wealth of knowledge about survival in harsh environments. Their stories relate hardship, unrelieved work, and frequent tragedy. At the same time they show humor, joy in living, and the satisfaction that come with meeting and surviving life’s challenges.

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(Family Features) Every year, the cold and flu season arrives along with plenty of advice for staying healthy. How do you sort out the truth from fic-tion? RevolutionHealth.com’s Senior Medical Director and expert Integrative Medicine and Internist, Dr. Brad Jacobs offers these practical tips based on his medical and alternative therapy knowledge.

An Ounce of Prevention:• Step-up hygiene. Keep

virus-free by staying clean. For example, wash your hands with plain soap or waterless alcohol gel for 1-2 minutes.

• Sleep. Deprive yourself of sleep and you’ll be more sus-ceptible to viruses.

• Chill out. Manage stress can improve immune function. Try meditating, exer-cising, doing your favorite hobby, or acupuncture (it’ll relax you).

• Eat right. Good nutri-tion will help fight viruses.

• Vitamin C. Although many swear by it, recent research suggests it not a cold preventive.

• Zinc. Lozenges taken every few hours at the onset of cold symptoms actually decrease the likelihood that a virus can adhere to your body.

• Echinacea: Worried that you have been exposed to a cold virus? Consider taking Echinacea, it has been shown to reduce the chances of get-ting a cold by 58%. Take 2 to 3 ccs (liquid) or 300 milligrams (pill) every 2 to 3 hours for up to a week. Don’t take it indefi-nitely as a preventive but limit your intake to one week.

• But Echinacea isn’t for everyone. Allergic to ragweed? Beware, as the two are in the same botanical family. If you’re immune-compromised or on immunosuppressant drugs, don’t take it, as Echinacea stim-ulates the immune system.

• Flu shot. Elderly and adults who have frequent con-tact with children can avoid the

flu by getting a flu shot.

Aaaah-choo! Phooey. Despite your best efforts,

you’ve got a cold. What can help you get better faster?

• Andrographic panicu-lata. This herbal treatment may help alleviate cold symptoms.

• Chicken Soup. Although yet to be proven by human studies, laboratory studies and Grandma’s wisdom suggest this comfort food, and potentially any vegetable soup, may alleviate cold symptoms like head and sinus conges-tion. Why? Eating chicken soup apparently has anti-inflamma-tory effects.

• Echinacea. Here are the basics about this potential cold-buster:

• Got a cold? Taken within 24-48 hours of cold symptoms can to decrease the duration of a cold by up to 1.4 days. 2 to 3 ccs (liquid) or 300 milligrams (pill) every 2 to 3 hours for 2 to 3 days or until your cold is gone.

• But make sure to read the warning above on who shouldn’t take Echinacea.

• Feed a cold? Do what feels right; if you’re hungry, eat; if not, don’t. Be sure to get plen-ty of fluids to avoid dehydra-tion.

• Sleep it off. Yes, lots of rest will help you recover; use a humidifier in your bedroom to decrease symptoms and help you feel better.

In addition to many more cold and flu prevention and treatment tips, Revolution-Health.com offers free content from internationally-recog-nized medical sources includ-ing Mayo and Cleveland Clinic; 120+ free health assessment tools; community features (where you can talk with oth-ers on health issues and their treatment suggestions); find and rate local hospitals, doc-tors and dentists; and compare health insurance plans.

A to Z on stifling the sneezes during cold and flu seasonTHURSDAY February 21, 2008 C5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

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SERVICE DIRECTORY C5

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TONY BARKERLicensed & Insured

T.B. Construction

840-0214 (work) • 840-4338 (home)

CONTRACTORS

SPEAKMAN’S CONCRETE SERVICES

Neal Speakman 435-830-0374

•CustomConcrete•RetainingWalls•Hauling•YardCleanUp

•Overlays•DirtWork•DecorativeRock•DemolitionWork

“Helping You Get the Job Done!”

•StampedConcreteWork

SpringSpecials

Available!

Licensed & Insured26 yrs. experience

• Hanging• Taping

• Spray Textures• Hand Textures

DT Drywall435.843.9983435.830.2653cell

• New Construction• Basements• Remodels

CONTRACTORS

PurlinsPlate & Sheet

AngleTubing PipeBar

Grating

85 South 1350 East • Lehi, UT

Don’t break the bank,Just to reach your clients.

Call your local newspaper to advertise statewide.

THIS SIZE AD to200,000 subscribersin 40 Utah Newspapersfor1 insertion= $315.00

SERVICE DIRECTORY C5

ClassifiedTooele TranscripT-BulleTin

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

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

Visit www.tooeletranscript.com

to place your Classified ad!Or call 882-0050

Visit www.tooeletranscript.com

to place your Classified ad!Or call 882-0050

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

TwENTy wORDS OR LESS

$650* After 20 Words30¢ per word/issue

Bold Type 5¢ per word/issueBoxed ads 50¢ per issue

*Includes the Tooele Valley “Extra” and Transcript Bulletin web-site

Classified ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for Thursday edition

MONTHLy RATE

$25**

An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues

(20 words or less)

$2.00 per word over 20 wordsBold/boxed ads extra

**No credit for stopped ads. Includes4 runs in the Tooele Valley “Extra”

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

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

The Kids Park of OverlakeChildcare ages 2-12, 5:30 am to 6:30 pm

882-7125Now Enrolling for After School Programs

Active Minds, Active Bodies

Gym Activities ❊ Arts & Crafts ❊ Homework

Detroit Diesel Remanufacturing – West (DDRW), a Daimler Chrysler Company, located in Tooele, UT, is seeking an experienced professional in Quality Engineering. DDRW is the factory remanufacturer of Detroit Diesel two and four-cycle engines and components and is ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 certified.

Qualified candidates will possess:• Bachelors degree in a technical field• Quality experience in a manufacturing

environment• Excellent oral and written

communication skills • Understanding of GD&T • Ability to work with a team and

independently• CMM programming • Six Sigma green belt• Solving complex gauge related problems• SPC implementation, • Pulling and interpreting blueprints • Issue and verify corrective actions• Lead continuous improvement projects

This position offers a competitive salary and excellent benefits package.

If you are a team player who is interested in a career opportunity with the market leader in the remanufacturing industry,

e-mail your resume and salary history to:

E-mail: [email protected] submit an application at the

Tooele County Department of Workforce Services

“Equal Opportunity Employer – M,F,D,V”

Join the Team

Send cover letter & resume to: Mountain West Medical Center | Attn: Human Resource Dept

2055 N. Main Street | Tooele | UT 84074

James Gladephone 435.843.3745 | fax 435.843.3753

[email protected] | www.mountainwestmc.com

Immediate Openings

To Apply

RespiratoryTherapist• PRN Position Available • Current Licensure Required

Home Health RN/Case Manager• FT Position with Benefits • Current RN Lincensure Required• Previous Home Health Exp. Pref.

Medical Assistant • FT Position with Benefits • 1-3 years Clinic Experience

Preferred

Admitting Clerk,PRN• 20+ hours per week • Varying Shifts • Previous Clerical Experience Req.

Med Surg RN • PRN Positions Available • Current RN Licensure Required • 1-3 years experience Required

Medical Biller • 24 Hours per week • 1-3 years Medical Billing Pref. • Eligible for Benefits • CNA Experience a Plus

Now Accepting Resumes For

ACCOUNTANT or

SENIOR BOOKKEEPER(with minimum 2 year acctg degree)

Please mail resume to: Syracuse Castings West, P.O. Box 488,

Tooele, UT 84074-0488

Making A Difference In the Lives Of Our Employees

Grantsville City Corporation

janitorial-maintenance services.

Closing date for the written proposals is:February 22, 2008

at 5:00 p.m.

Grantsville City Corporation is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

A detailed list of work to be performed and a sample contract may be picked up at Grantsville

City Hall429 E. Main Street

Grantsville, UT 84029from Jeremy Walker, the City Recorder.

is now accepting written proposals for

* TFCU reserves the right to refuse all bids if it determines those offers are unacceptable.All vehicles sold as is.Time will be given to arrange financing.

562 North Main • Tooele

For more information please call

435-833-7250Bidding ends on Weds, Feb. 27, 3pm

1998 Ford Mustang

or visit www.tfcu.net

The Information Technology Department has an exciting opportunity working as a Computer Specialist II for Tooele County. This position documents all trouble calls, identifies and diagno-ses hardware and/or software problems.

Education and ExperienceA. Associate degree in computer science or a related field; ANDB. Two (2) years of full-time paid technical em-ployment in micro or network environment; plus, A+ Certification ORC. High school, plus two (2) years of advanced training in personal computer technology and ap-plications provided through college, trade school or professionally sponsored programs; and three (3) years of technical computer experience; and A+ Certification

Job Title: Micro Computer Specialist IIStarting Salary: $18.00 per hourStatus: Full-Time Position w/ BenefitsClosing Date: Feb. 27, 2008 at 5:00 p.m.

Complete job description is available at theTooele County Human Resource Office

47 South Main Street Tooeleor visit our website at

www.co.tooele.ut.us EEO Employer

Submit resume to [email protected] by 2/26/08 or mail to HR-PM,

PO Box 460, Albany, OR 97321. We are an AA/EEO employer.

Quality EngineerRowley, Utah

Responsible for writing processing instructions to manufacture products in

accordance with customer requirements., interfacing with and providing technical assistance to customers, and developing new manufacturing processes to reduce costs, improve quality, and reduce cycle

time. Requires BS in Metallurgical, Mechanical, or Chemical Engineering.Must have a strong aptitude for apply-ing engineering and quality principles in solving manufacturing issues. Abil-ity to obtain a DOE Security Clearance is required. Technical background in

heavy industrial engineering, familiarity with fundamental titanium metalworking processes or experience in a manufactur-ing environment is preferred. Benefits

include pension, 401k plans and compre-hensive medical plan.

Services

PAINTING

Quality services is myjob, your satisfaction

is my goal.

882-2896

“Best Bet” in Town,Guaranteed

Call your local painter,John

InteriorExterior

Lets Get It Done NowAt Your Best Rates!

ANDERSON CUSTOMPainting. Interior andExterior. 17yrs experi-ence, licensed and in-sured. Free estimates.(435)882-0804 LeaveMessage

Services

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

BASEMENT REMODEL-ING SPECIALISTS,also kitchens, bath-rooms, additions, tiling,drywall. 30yrs experi-ence in Tooele. Freeestimates. Please leavemessages. 882-6141

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

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Services

CONTRACTOR, 25yrsexperience. Basement,additions, remodeledbathrooms, kitchens,repairs Call Jeff McNeill(801)381-8710

DEMOLITION CLEAN-ING of yards, jobsights, tree removal,and insulation work.Phone 435-882-3106435-849-2043

DRYWALL, BASE-MENTS, additions, re-pairs 25yrs professionalsmooth wall experiencefast and dependablecustom textures refer-ences available free es-timates 801-750-6248435-843-1518

ELIMINATE OLD DebtRefinance, consolida-tion, life insuranceand business oppor-tunities. Free, no obli-gation financial analy-sis and consultation.C a l l A r n o(435)224-4420

Services

ELECTRONIC TAX Fil-ing. Tax Refund Prepa-ration - Have your State& Federal tax refunds inas little as two weeks.1040EZ - $50.00 &1040 - $60.00 (Pricesinclude e-file fees) Freeprice quotes on yourother filing needs. CallDwayne at (801)520-1800 or (435)843-1943

FAST CASH! Tax re-fund loans! 1929North Aaron Drive,Suite L, Tooele.Across from MountainWest Medical Center.(325)518-4727

GOT MONEY coming infrom your tax returns?Let us frame yourhome, basement, ga-rage, and more! Li-censed/ insured. Forf r e e e s t i m a t e :(435)830-1480

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

Services

HANDYMAN & CLEAN-ING. Exper iencedBrother & Sister. REMODEL, REPAIR, roughit, we do it all.435-882-4311801-706-4428 KevinKathy

HANDYMAN HOME re-pairs and remodeling,painting and drywall,kitchen and baths,cleanouts and haulingtoo. Free estimatesHoward (435)884-3531

HANSON & SONSHandyman home re-pairs, anything, finishbasements, siding,roofing, etc., reason-able, local, StansburyPark. Cal l Jeff(801)694-1568.

HOME IMPROVE-MENTS? AffordableRates, Specializing inhome remodeling, newconstruction, all tile andnatural stone installa-tions Call Wastach De-sign (435)849-3990

HONEY DO Profes-sional! Call 801-706-5339. Licensed, in-sured, basement re-modeling, doors, win-dows, finish carpentry,wind storm repair &roofing.

KITCHEN / Bath Re-model. Use your tax re-fund to remodel yourkitchen or bath. Simpleupdate, new cabinets,countertops, or com-plete remodels contactus for a free estimate.Licensed and Insured.Ca l l Marcus a t(801)891-7194 or(801)269-1530.

LJ HOME maintenanceand repair. Specializingin all aspects home re-pair, make readys forrental properties andreal estate sales.435-849-0989

NEED HOUSEKEEPINGServices for newly builtand existing homes? 20years experience. In-cluding Salt Lake area.Call (435)849-1928

PRIVATE TUTORINGCertified Teacher Ex-perienced Tutor AllSubjects All Ages Dis-counts Available An-gela Maloy 882-2733or 496-0590

RONI’S SIGNS on 32West Vine has FullColor Vinyl DigitalPrinting nowfor ban-ners, decals, labels,logos, photos, vehi-cle, windows, etc.E:MAIL [email protected] or ronissigns @wireless-beehive.com(435)833- 9330 or(801)860- 6070. Rea-sonable & Expertise!

TAX PREPARATIONYour home or ours.Prices start at $25 for1040EZ and $35 for1040. Cal l of f ice882-8597 Bi l l a t882-7673 or Arlyce at224-2320

Services

THREE J’S Roofing andRepairs, free estimates,expert wind damage re-pairs, 25 years experi-ence, great prices, sen-ior discount. 882-4289

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

100 BAILS of ALS. hay.$6/ bail. 60ft of chain-link fence good for dogrun, $100. Scott435-830-7346

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.

25 GALLON aquariumw/stand and pump;large propane bottle;functional dishwasher;double bathroom sinkw/cabinet. Prices ne-gotiable. (435)882-7114

ALLERGY AND Asthmasufferers get relief. Airpurification that cansave you and your kids!Send $10 plus a 9X12self addressed $2.50stamped envelope toSilverstar Products POBOX 562 Tooele, Ut84074

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

EAT ALL Day and meltaway. Incredible pro-gram! Send $10 plus9X12 Self addressed$2.50 stamped manillaenvelope to SilverstarProducts PO BOX 562Tooele, Ut 84074.

PALM ONE Life DriveMobile Manager, neverused, $250. Cal l(435)843-0838

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

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Furniture & Appliances

1950s modern diningroom set made of wal-nut. Includes table, 5chairs, china cabinetand separate buffet;$1,495 for everything.Truly stunning. Home-bodies, 1 N. Main St.,882-0650.

SAUDER Brown babydresser / changercombo, $325; Largesolid oak entertainmentcenter, holds 45” TV,originally $1000, asking$400. (435)840-2063

Furniture & Appliances

NORTH VALLEY Appli-ance. Washers/ dryers$99-$199. Completerepair service. Satis-faction guaranteed.Parts for all majorbrands. Walmart giftcards w/purchases over$100 . 843 -9154 ,830-3225.

SOLID OAK Entertain-ment center. 58’’ high57’’ wide. Fits 36’’screen TV, like new,$ 3 0 0 C a l l(435)884-6205

Garage, Yard Sales

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

MISCELLANEOUSFURNITURE,Knick-knacks from UseMe Again Store at Bee-hive Storage Unit 448for five days from10am-2pm

STANSBURY PARK,810 Country Club, Sat-urday, 9am-1pm Inside

THuRSDAy February 21, 2008C6

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

Community Nursing ServicesHome Health & Hospice

601 N. Main • Tooele • 882-3913882-6209 fax

Equal Opportunity Employer

JOIN OUR GROWING PROFESSIONAL

HOME HEALTH TEAM!“SIGN ON BONUS”

RNImmediate openings for a full time RN Case

Manager to provide home health care to clients in the Tooele Area. Mileage reimburse-ment. Previous Home Health experience help-

ful, but willing to train the right candidate.

CNAWe are looking for an energetic Certified Nursing Assistant to join our home health

team. Applicants must be able to speak, read, write and understand instructions in English,

be CNA certified and have dependable reliable transportation.

Apply at our office, or fax a resume to:

is accepting applications for:

Please call 435-843-7561or fax resume to 435-843-7565

915 N. Main • Tooele

• Equipment Operators

• Serving the Mining/Oil & Gas/ Industrial/Construction Industries

• Miners

• Welders

• Machinists

• Millwrights

• Electricians

• Mechanics

• Truck Drivers

• Carpenters

• Supervisors

• Laborers

Quick LubeTechnicianQuick Lube

Service WriterGreat Customer Service,

Pay & Benefits

882-7000 • 1141 N. MainCall Kimm Anderson

HELP WANTED

Tooele County School DistrictJOB OPPORTUNITIESJOB OPPORTUNITIES

TOOELE HIGH SCHOOL - Cheerleader Advisor:

Must be at least 21 years of age and have experience in cheerleading or dance.

For more information pleae contact Principal Topham, 833-1978 or Human

Resources, 833-1900 X 1103. CLOSING DATE: Open until filled

TOOELE HIGH SCHOOL - Head Girls Soccer Coach: Seeking

experienced applicant with soccer background either as a player and/or coach.

For more information please contact Principal Kendall Topham, 833-1978 or

Human Resources, 833-1900 X1103. CLOSING DATE: Open until filled

SUBSTITUTE CUSTODIAL POOL:Applicant will be called upon to work as needed to fill in for an absent custodian

in Tooele, Grantsville or Stansbury Park. For more information please contact

Human Resources, 833-1900 X1103. CLOSING DATE: Open until filled

Tooele High School - Vice Principal (two positions open):

Must haveUtah administrator/supervisory certificate. Please contact Human

Resources for complete application requirements, 833-1900. CLOSING DATE:

Fri, February 29, 2008 4:00 p.m.

TCSD IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERThe district provides reasonable accommodations to the known disabilities of applicants in

compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Individuals needing special accommodations should notify Terry Christensen, at TCSD, 92 Lodestone Way Tooele, Utah or call 833-1900.

Applicants must have a high school diploma or equivalent.Applications, Job description & information may be picked up at the District Office

- 92 Lodestone Way, Tooele or downloaded at web site: tooelesd.org

The Kids Park of Overlake

882-7125

Learn ❊ Play ❊ Exercise

Play Groups starting in March at

Ages 4-5: M W F from 9-11 Ages 2-3: T Th from 9-11

Wackenhut Corporation hiring

Security Officer in Tooele

High school diploma, or GED required. No criminal history and pass drug screen. Must be able to use Microsoft/Out Look computer programs. Training

provide for Security Officer license. Must be avail-able for any shift. Uniforms provided at no cost.

All qualified applicants considered.

$10.71 per hour

Apply at 2712 S. 3600 W. Suite F, West Valley City,

between 9:00 A.M. & 3:00 P.M., Interviews given at time of application. (801) 966-7130

For a complete listing of the basic qualifications for this position visit www.wackenhut.com

E.O.E. M/F/D/V

Fantastic subdivision convenient to all amenities!Visit us at our decorated model located at

2017 North 170 West, Tooele

*Hallmarks preferred lender must be used to qualify.

Seana Westerman 435.840.4517 • Amy Millward 435.840.8511

$14,000*discounts/incentives

in

Base prices starting as low as $181,900 (using discount)

www.tooelehomes4sale.com

Berna Sloan840-5029

Chris Sloan840-5031

Jamie Kerr841-9144 Real Estate

Searching for a Home?

Horse Property!Beautiful home on 1.39 acres in

Erda w/36 x 28 shop/barn plus 2 car garage, 4 bdrms, 2.5 baths, Call for

Private Showing.

It’s just a click away at

Want to �nd out whatyour home is worth?

$199,5004 bedroom, immaculate, beauti-ful neighborhood, fully fenced and landscaped, RV parking,

priced to sell!

www.tooelehomes4sale.comSeller

Motivated

UPCOMING SEMINARS (call for more details)Real Estate 101 - Moving from Renting to Owning - March 5

1st Time Buyers • Not Perfect Credit Tax Benefits of Home Ownership

• Down Payment Assistance

Veterans Seminar - Owning the American Dream - March 6Whats new in VA loans??

Baby Boomers Seminar - March 192nd Home, Retirement Homes,

Reverse Mortgages

A Fresh Start Seminar - March 20Buying Real Estate after Divorce

or Bankruptcy

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

is offering

Office Space FOR RENT915 North Main, Tooele$650-$800 per month each unit

with deposit negotiable.

Please call 843-7561

Pets

ADORABLE MINIA-TURE Schnauzers forsale $250 only malesleft, going fast! Dewclaws, shots and tailsdone. Call Danielle(435)241-8051

ADORABLE PLAYFULpuppies, seven weeks.Mo the r pu reb redchocolate lab. Fathervery sneaky. Five fe-males, one male, allb l a c k . $ 5 0 .(435)840-2826

BOXER AKC registered,5mo old, beautiful,flashy black brindlemale. $600. Cal l(435)882-1547

KITTENS, litter boxtrained, 1 black, 2white. (435)849-0007

PLEASE ADOPT US!Free to good home,Cute & Sweet Cats.1 male, 3 females.

Please call 241-0052

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Pets

SHIHTZU PUPPIES.Pure-bred, beautifulmarkings, 1st shots.$450 Call LaFawn435-884-0712

TOY POMERANIAN 10weeks old, female, or-ange coat, is papered,has first shots, sweet,playful, $400. Call435-884-3328

VALENTINES DAY GiftPuppy Yorkshire AKCregistered, 7 weeks old,female $1100 obo(435)843-7614(530)321-3201. Youneed a breeder I havethe male.

YORKIE TERRIER forstud, your house ormine, has had all shots,very loveable. For pupor cash. Jim or Re-becca (435)843-1718

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com or e-mail your adto [email protected]

Livestock

RIDING LESSONS. Be-ginning to advanced, in-door arena. Your horseor ours. Western orEnglish. (435)830-7365for info. In Grantsville.

HORSE BOARDING. 61acres of riding area with2 round exercising pensand a 100ft by 200ft rid-i ng a rena Ca l l(435)830-0062

Sporting Goods

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

Lost & Found

FOUND: Dog and collarat Albertsons. Call todescribe. (435)228-8850

LOST DOG: small redmale, part pomeranian,left yard Sunday night189 South 2nd Street.Reward. Call Brittany(435)830-4663 or Glo-ria (435)830-1902

Personals

ADOPT A Happy home(Radio & Fashion pro-fessionals), hugs &kisses, fabulous vaca-tions await your baby.Ear l & Kr i s t ina1-800-990-7667 Ex-penses paid.

ALCOHOLIC ANONY-MOUS meets daily atnoon and 8pm at 1120W Utah Ave. Call882-7358.

Child Care

CHILD CARE in myhome, from the hours of5pm to 5am. Pleasecall (435)830-2139 formore info.

DAY CARE opening inTooele, all ages wel-come. 3-4 openings.Meals and snacks.Transportation avail-ab le . Ca l l Bree(801)750-6227(435)843- 7162

GET PIECE of mind.Quality home care InStansbury Park. Kidtested, mother ap-proved! Licensed. Ages3 -up . FT on l y .(435)843-1565

GRANDMA in West Erdahas much to offer yourchild. Lots of patience,love, genuine care.Clean home. Muchmore! Try me, you’ll bepleased. 0-2yrs old. Fulltime. (435)884-0622

GROWING YEARS Day-care, State licensed, 25years, transportation toand from schools.Hours 4:30am-5:30pm.Call 882-5055 or830-7381

LINDY'S Little Learners.Child care full and partt i m e o p e n i n g s6am-6pm. Daily activi-ties for ages 2 And up.Meals included 9yrs Ex-perience. Sorry notransportation available.Lindy 224-2493

NANNY FOR HIREStansbury area Fulltime, M-F, Experi-enced, First aid &CPR Certified, new-borns- 4yrs, Salarynegotiable(435)224-3742

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Child Care

STANSBURY PARK LI-CENSED DAY CARE,24HRS, FULL TIME,CPR, FIRST AID,STATE REGULA-TIONS, BUS TOSCHOOL, REFER-ENCES NIGHTLYRATES DISCOUNTED435-849-2329

Help Wanted

1 0 0 W O R K E R SNEEDED! Assemblecrafts, wood items. Ma-terials provided. To$480+ per week. Freeinformation package.24 hours (801)264-5665.

DIESEL MECHANICFull-time diesel mechanic. Po-sition includes semi-truck and trailer maintenance. Must have understanding and knowledge of hydraulic and electrical sys-tems. Includes some welding

and fabrication. Organiza-tional & record keeping skills required. Must have own tools

& CDL. Pay DOE. EOE.Apply in person:

MP EnvironmentalServices, Inc.

1043 N. Industrial Park Circle, Grantsville UT 84029.

435-884-0808

DRIVERSClass A truck driver positions available.

Local and OTR, Haz Mat & tank endorsements

required. Current DMV printout required.

Competitive pay & ben-efits. Apply in person.

MP EnvironmentalServices, Inc.

1043 N. Industrial Park Circle, Grantsville UT 84029. 435-884-0808

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

Help Wanted

Part-time

ApartmentManager

for 21 unit HUD subsidized senior

housing community.Daytime hours, flex-ible schedule. Must

be very computer literate, great cus-

tomer service skills, basic accounting,

and ability to com-municate/work with diverse population.Must have experi-

ence in all aspects of management.

Fax resume to Lila

801-561-3956

We are currentlyaccepting applications

for the following position

CNAAll interested candidates complete an application

available in theHuman Resource Office

140 E. 200 S., Tooele

Rocky Mountain Care Tooeleis a Drug Free Employer.Must be able to clear a

background check.Equal Opportunity Employer

Must be certified

PAINTERS WANTED!!.Industrial Contractor inbusiness 60+ years islooking for skilled Paint-ers & Painter Helpersfor a large long-termproject. Competitivewages & benefits pkg.For more info call(800)362-1943. EOE.Drug Free Business.

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Help Wanted

Lube Tech/MechanicPerform maintenance and

repair on heavy equip-ment and trucks perform services on equipment-oil

changes, samples etc. Haveknowledge of commonly

used concepts, practices and procedures within this field. Must have 3 or more years experience, class a CDL w/Hazmat endorsement. Must be reliable, highly motivatedand experienced and able to perform the functions of this

job. Great benefits. 401k, health and vacation.

Apply in person at

1830 W. Hwy 112, TooelePay dependent on

experience.

WE ROCK

23 PEOPLE Needed tolose 5-100 lbs! All natu-r a l . C a l l1-888-246-5124

www.enjoynrgnow.com

BECOME AN Avon Rep.Buy your own productsat a discount! Call Ind.Sales Rep. Tammy Ru-flin 833-0668

BUILDING BLOCKS ForLife now hiring Teacherposition Call Tawni(435)882-4038

COLLECTIONS ANDbilling manager, com-puter, math & phoneskills required. Emailresume to [email protected]

CONCRETE FINISHER2 y r s e x p e r i e n c e$15-$22/hr Must havetransportation and tools801-712-2230

COPY EDITORThe Tooele TranscriptBul let in, a 113-year-old, twice-weeklynewspaper in one ofUtah's fastest-growingareas, seeks a copyeditor. Duties includeediting stories forstyle, punctuation,and grammar; writingheadlines, captionsand subheads; serv-ing as liason betweenthe editorial and de-sign departments;compiling a section ofcommuni ty newsbriefs; and occasionaltyping of handwrittensubmissions. Appli-cants must have aworking knowledge ofAssociated Pressstyle, solid newsjudgement and theability to meet dead-lines consistently.This position requiressome evening hours.Exper ience wi thNewsEdit and In-Design a plus, thoughnot required. Prefer-ence will be given toapplicants with localjournalism experi-ence. Send resumeand cover letter de-tailing salary require-ments to Editor JeffBarrus at [email protected].

FRATERNAL SEEKSPart-time bartender,short order cook, Mon-day through Thursday.S o m e w e e k e n d s6:00p.m. to close. Ap-ply in person Mondaythrough Friday. 1100East Vine.

HOME DATA Entry key-ing medical claims.Must key 60 WPM and10,000KPH. Knowl-edge of basic computerprograms. M-F. Emailr e s u m e t [email protected] or call(801)747-5800

Help Wanted

CUSTOMER SERVICELiddiard Home Furnish-ing is currently hiringfull time customer serv-ice associates. We areseeking individuals whocan offer the highestquality service to ourcustomers. Applicantsmust be able to handleservice issues with in-tegrity, skill and cour-tesy. We offer a greatbenefit package includ-ing Health & Dental in-surance, profit sharing,and an attractive em-ployee purchase pro-gram. Join our team &enjoy a fun, positiveworking environment.For questions call J.R.at 882-0964. Apply at:2502 N. 400 E. Tooele.Emai l resume [email protected]. Fax:882-0968. EOE

ENTREPRENEURSneeded to work fromhome or office. Ownyour own schedule!Own your own income!Design your own life!Ca l l immedia te ly !(801)461-3390

ENTRY LEVEL DentalAssisting position, highschool graduate, payDOE. Must enjoy chil-dren. Computer skillshelpful. Fax resume to(435)882-2680

EXPERIENCED CNAsNeeded. Apply at Cot-tage Glen 1892 AaronDrive, Tooele.

EXPERIENCED ELEC-TRICIAN needed, payDOE. Dugway area.Call (435)831-4381

HELP WANTED GoferFoods Graveyard shiftApply in person 522 SMain (435)882-0530

HIGHEST PAID Cooksin the area Apply inperson Track Brewingcompany 1641 N Main.

MASSAGE THERAPISTfor Professional office.Preferably familiar withchiropractic. Please faxr e s u m e t o(435)833-9223 or call(435)833-9200 ask forDana.

SELL YOUR computerin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Help Wanted

IFCO SYSTEMS has op-portunit ies in theTooele area for PalletRepair and GeneralProduction laborers,Physically demandingpositions. Good payand benefits. All newlyhired individuals arepromptly screenedthrough the E-Verfiyelectronic employmentauthorization programrun by the US Citizen-ship an immigrationServices. Apply in per-son at: 1820 West GAvenue Tooele, Ut8 4 0 7 4 P h :(435)843-4280 EOE/Drug free workplace.

MEDICAL RECEPTION-IST needed in a profes-sional office. Mon-FriFax resume to(435)833-9223 or Callfor more informationA s k f o r D a n a(435)833-9200

SELL YOUR car in theTranscript Bulletin Clas-sified section.

Help Wanted

NEW Spring Talent Pro-jects! Actors, Extras,Models. Earn $82-$875 daily. Free Train-ing. Call 801-438-0067or apply online atwww.crazeagency.com

POSTAL JOBS $17.08to $28.27/hr, now hir-ing. For applicationand free goverment jobinformation, call Ameri-can Association of La-bor 1-913-599-8042, 24hrs. emp. serv.

Wanted

WANTED: I will pay cashfor your junk cars andtrucks. Call Scott(435)830-6189

WANT TO get the latestlocal news? Subscribeto the Transcript Bulle-tin.

C7THuRSDAy February 21, 2008

Place Your Ad Herewww.tooeletranscript.com

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

Sat.,

Feb.

23rd

, 1

2pm to

2pm

Stacey Brown(Associate Broker)

435-830-7396

Kolleen Logan435-849-0603

Jennifer Jones(Broker)

435-830-2088

Cathy Maxfield435-840-3804

Carol Autry801-520-6680

Sherri Nelson435-840-5167

Spencer Smith435-840-8425

Melissa Cedar435-840-4295

Amanda Harris435-830-4581

Carley Jones435-849-4006

Justin Korstad801-661-2585

Nicky Casey 801-910-0222

Miranda Brodston435-830-3319

Don Jones435-840-4462

Angie Terry435-849-2570

Patti Dunn435-224-4694

Bonnie Johnson435-850-9107

928 Bates Canyon Rd. DRASTICALLY REDUCED! SELLERS MOTIVATED.Two homes on 5 acres, 3 acre feet

of water. Huge Barn $580,000Call Stacey 830-7396

5 ACRES

5619 N Crenshaw Cir.4 bed, 2 .5 bth. Very open and spacious, Huge yard

$269,000. Call Sherri 435-840-5167.

406 Brook Ave This home is in

excellent condition! 2 bed 2 bath. $154,000.

Call Miranda 830-3319.

109 North 3rd StNew plumbing, electical,

carpet, paint, vinyl & appli-ances. Remodeled bath, new roof, $139,000. Call Jennifer

435-830-2088.

1466 Pine Canyon RdMobile home on .96

acres. Recently remod-eled. 3 bed, 1 bath.

$145,000, Call Jennifer 435-830-2088.

415 Lourdes Lane, Stansbury Very nice home in a great loca-

tion. 4 bed, 2 bath$244,900. Call Cathy

435-840-3804

4184 Whipoorwhil St West Valley City. Beauti-ful Home! 4 bd, 1.5 bth $214,000. Call Cathy

435-840-3804

3090 S. 8900 W., MagnaWell kept, newly painted, fully finished bsmnt. 4 bd,

2 bath $155,000. CallAngie (435)849-2570

1232 Brandy Lane Hurry and pick your

colors! New home for Christmas. 3 bed 2 bath. Custom home. $365,000.

Call Cathy 830-3804.

New

Construction

1229 Brandy Ln.Beautiful custom home- S.E. Bench. 4 bd, 3 bth. $399,900. Call Cathy

840-3804.

373 Meadow Dr.Upgrades throughout.

4 bed, 3 bath. Huge bonus room. $394,000. Call Cathy 435- 840-3804.

7171 W. Schuler, West Valley- Cute

home! 3 bdrm, 1 bath. Call Carley 435-849-

4006 or Amanda 435-830-4581.

41 Park AveDarling remodeled home with a loft. 2

bdrms, 2 bath. $158,000. Call Amanda

at 435-830-4581

1508 E 850 N.Build to your liking. 3 bedrooms 2 1/2 bath. $260,000. Call Cathy

435-840-3804.

5326 Cambridge Wy, Stansbury

Beautiful 2 Bed, 2 Bath home. $304,900. Call Nicky 801-910-0222.

872 N 1250 EAwesome home on East side. 5 Bed, 31/2 Bath.$229,900. Call Carol

801-520-6680

393 TahoeNice family home 100%

finished. 3bed, 2bath. $179,000. Call Sherri

435-840-5167

331 Davenport Grantsville Affordable

horse property. 3bed, 2 bath. $245,000. Call Sherri 435-840-5167

Spring Canyon Estates Now taking reservations

Beautiful CountryLiving! 5 acre lots

starting at $199,000Corner of Pine Canyon

& Droubay Road.

Call Amanda 435.830.4581 or Carley 435.849.4006

411 E 1480 NBeautiful quality

Rambler. 5 bed, 3 bath. $249,900. Call Kolleen

435-849-0603.

157 N 690 ECustom home located in quiet neighborhood. 3 bed,2 bath $225,000Owner/agent, Call

Miranda 435-830-3319.

5565 Hampton Way Stansbury

Just like new but much nicer. 3 bed, 2 bath

$310,000. Call Jennifer 435-830-2088.

1244 N. MainSte. 101, Gateway Prof. Plaza843-TEAM (8326)

Exit REalty HomE tEam

We can show you aNy listingnot just our own. CALL US!

UnderContract

Price Reduced Price Reduced

DID YOU KNOW...

Sat.,

Feb.

23rd

,

1pm -

4pm

open House open House

UnderContract

Somerset Gardens ONE BEDROOM APARTMENTS

For persons 62 or older,

handicapped or disabled*

*Regardless of age Laundry facilities, recreation room on site.

Patios & storage room

143 North 400 West, Tooele Office Hours: Tues-Fri., 9am-2pm

435-882-7076 TTY 1-775-778-0889

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY HOUSING

261 East Durfee St. G-ville

CharmingCharming 3 bedroom 1 bath cottage. 1310 sq ft on a 0.35 acre lot with orchard! Updated bath-room and new furnace & central air. $140,000

265 East Durfee St. G-ville

1832 N. Aaron Drive Tooele

Forbes Profes-sional PlazaNew professional office building to be built near Mountain West Medical Center. These will be the nicest offices in Tooele Valley! Call for details.

For Sale/Lease

HORSE PROPERTY!Brick rambler w/lifetime roof! 2,450 sq ft w/ 4 bdrm, 2 baths, and room to grow. New floor-ing, water heater, & central a/c. 0.40 acre. $185,000

898 North 620 East Tooele

Priced Right4 bdrm, 2 bath multi-level close to everything! New laminate flooring, RV parking, fenced yard with com-pleted landscape! $199,900

932 South 970 West Tooele

Roomy6 bdrm, 2 bath rambler, main floor laundry. Across from new elementary. Lg. Master bdrm., family rm w/ surround sound! $222,500

New Listing

New Listing

Andrea Cahoon435 850.8167435.882.8868 ext. 197

Visit my web site at

TooeleValleyHomeSales.comfor more info. &

Enter to Win $1000!

Recreational Vehicles

25FT PROWLER, ac,slide out, new tires,new hitch, electric jack,extras. Very good con-dition. Ask about gen-erator. (435)840-3032

Motorcycles & ATVs

1984 HONDA TRX200fourwheeler with plow$200 435-884-0601 af-ter 4pm needs over-haul, use for parts.

Autos

1986 PORSCHE 944turbo leather, CDplayer, 17in wheels,only 66,000 miles, Awe-some condition! $8000firm (435)830-0019

Autos

$0 DOWN! Cars From$29/mo! Police Im-pounds for Sale! 36Months @ 8.5% apr.For l is t ings Cal l800-586-3805 x 8329

1991 BUICK Park Ave-nue new tires, runsgood $1000 obo(435)882-7121

1996 MITSUBISHI Mi-rage. Runs good. $900. (435)882-3241 after5pm.

2000 CHEVY Astro Van,153,000 miles, AWD,brand new transmis-sion. Runs great. $4000obo. Call 882-4439 or840-2040

2003 CHEVY Cavalier,92,000 miles, 4 door,auto, ac, $5300.(435)884-3347

Autos

2000 VOLKSWAGONJetta, take over pay-ments, black, new tires,exce l l en t shape ,882-8048 or 840-3765

HONDAS FROM $500!Police Impounds ForSale! Many Makes andModels, For ListingsCall 800-586-3805 X9436

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

SLEEK 2005 Mazda 6,black w/tan interior, 4door, automatic, 23,000miles, Bose sound,am/fm, cd player,power everything, sun-roof, excellent condi-tion. $14,500 obo. Call(435)228-8002 or(435)884-6803

TRANSMISSION RE-PAIR, rebuild. Low costto Tooele residents.Will buy vehicles 1990and up that needstransmission work,cash paid. Shop(801)972-5810 Home(435)843-8181

SELLING YOUR moun-tain bike? www.tooeletranscript.com

SUVs

2004 DODGE Durango,Limited Edition, 5.7 Li-ter, Hemi Magnum,38,500 miles. Greatcondition, silver withgrey leather interior.Fully loaded, powereverything, sunroof,DVD player, 6 disc CDplayer, MP3, SateliteTV, and extra third rowseating. Tow package,and roof rack included.R u n s f a n t a s t i c !$18,500.00 OBO Call435-840-8399.

2004 FORD Explorer4x4 Champaign colorLoaded – third rowseating CD player - To-tally Powered (seats,windows Doors) lowmileage 20,000 GreatCondition must see.$18,500 OBO Call841-9726 830-0626

Trucks

$500! TRUCKS/ SUVsfrom $500! Chevys,Jeeps, Fords and More!Police Impounds ForSale, For Listings Call800-586-3805 x 9973

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Trucks

1975 CHEVY 1/2 tontruck, 4x4 frame & en-gine, good tires & greatengine (350). Goodtrans. New Edlebrockcarb. New Edlebrock in-take & manifold. $1300obo. (435)840-8790

2001 DODGE Ram 2500Quadcab Diesel. Cum-mins 5.9L Diesel SLTquadcab, edge 3-stagechip, boost/ fuel pres-sure gauges, 4x4, SLT,Rhino liner, lift, ac, cdstereo, tilt power win-dows/ locks, 5th wheelhitch. Great truck.179,000 miles, $15,500or offer. (435)830-2470

Apartments for Rent

Beautiful2 BedroomApartments!!Completely Remodeled

NEW fridge, stove, dishwasher,cabinets, carpet, AbsolutelyGorgeous! The best value in

ALL of Tooele.

Non-Smokers Only! No Pets!

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

260 North 100 East, Tooele

Apartments for Rent

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

2BDRM 1BTH Duplex,w/d hook up, new paint,812 Uintah Ave$550/mo $500/dep(435)830-6342

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

2BDRM 1BTH, w/dhook-ups, great loca-tion, 595 West Vine. Nosmoking. $600/mo Jim(435)850-2374

2BDRM, 2BTH condo,fireplace, walk-in clos-ets, covered balcony,lo ts o f s torage.(435)882-6034,(435)830-6200

HOUSEMATE, PRI-VATE bedroom, refrig-erator, microwave,shared kitchen/ bath,u/p, w/d, cable TV. Nop e t s . $ 3 7 5 / m o$200/dep435-882-6141 Willneed references.

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Apartments for Rent

LARGE 2BDRM 1bthSerious inquiries only.w/d hook ups, a/c,$500/dep, $625/mo. Nopets, No Smoking.Owner/ agent (435)840-3010

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

SPACIOUS Basementapt, 3bdrm, 1bth,washer/ dryer & utilitiesincluded. Very clean.Ca l l DP Rea l ty(435)830-2233

STUDIO APT For Rent.365 E. Vine St., Tooele,corner of Broadway.$400/mo. plus $250 de-posit. (435)882-2682 or(801)638-2447.

V A L L E Y V I E WMotel. Call(435)882-3235. or(435)882-7008. Nice,quiet 1bdrm, 2bdrm,kitchenette available.Monthly, weekly & dailyspecials. HBO, cable.Open 24hrs. 585 Can-yon Rd, Tooele.

SELL YOUR computerin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Homes for Rent

$$WHY RENT whenyou can buy? 0down programs, notperfect credit. Firsttime buyers, Singleparent programs.Call for details. BernaSloan (435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate

$1100/Mo 3bdrm fullyfenced, 2 car garage,fireplace, garden spot,$700/dep Call for ap-pointment. Option tobuy. (435)840-5199

1BDRM HOUSE, big liv-ing room, cute yard,379 North 100 West,$550/mo, $300/dep. Nos m o k i n g / p e t s .(435)843-0785

2BDRM 2BTH condo,$900/mo. Totally re-modeled. (435)840-8199

2BDRM DUPLEX, bigkitchen, w/d hookups,dishwasher, $675/mo.Discount if you helpf ix -up the yard.(801)918-6271

3BDRM 2BTH w/dhook-ups, central air,yard, 626 E 500 N$730/mo $600/dep(801)467-6344

Homes for Rent

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

4BDRM, 2.5BTH house.$1050/mo, $500 de-posit, includes water,s e w e r , g a r b a g e .Christy: 272 W DanielD r ( 7 4 0 N )(435)843-5154.

6BDRM 3.5BTH, Horseproperty, 6/mo lease,Secu r i t y Depos i t$ 1 6 0 0 / m o C a l l(435)843-4265 or(801)381-88710

CLEAN 2750SQFT Multilevel located NE, 4bdrm2bth, grand master bathfireplace, lots of spaceC a l l G r e g(801)842-3434

FEMALE ROOMMATEwanted. LDS, $550/mohalf utilities for 2bdrm2bth townhome. Nopets. 801-433-7771

GRANTSVILLE home,3bdrm, 1bth, 2 familyrooms, double garage,large lot. 647 EastM a i n . $ 8 7 5 / m o .$400/dep, No smoking/pets. (435)241-0233

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

THuRSDAy February 21, 2008C8

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

768 N. Main • 843-1200

Real Estate for Your World

1913 Stoney Mtn., Lake Point

$290,000 Beautiful Country Living! Large open floor plan. Cozy gas fireplace, main

floor laundry. 1 acre horse property with nice garden spot! Don’t miss out on this one.

Call Margene 830-2521. #742893

290 W. 1430 N., Overlake

$192,900 3 bdrm, 3.5 baths, large family room, outstanding fully

fenced backyard w/patio & shed. Priced to sell! Call Jeannine Johnson

830-6369. #747685

866 No. 1340 East

$192,000 Great multi-level two story home. Upstairs laundry. 3 bdrms,

master bdrm has 3/4 bath. Half bath and mud room by garage door.

Call Karen 830-7846.

345 Belaire Circle, G-ville

$159,900 3 bdrm Rambler in established neighborhood. Beautiful Landscaping, w/wa-

terfall & fun Patio in Backyard. Full, unfinished basement for future expansion.

Call Jeannine Butler 830-2950. #738848

$299,000 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, large 3 car garage, open living floor plan,

loaded with upgrades, great location. Call Craig 496-0721.

404 S. Brockway, G-ville

733 Cedar View

$199,000 Lovely 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. Close to schools & church. Fully landscaped, partly fenced, with view of

the lake. Come and see! Call Margene 830-2521. #727402

$150,000 Great Starter Home! 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. Vaulted ceilings, Fire-place, Built-in Humidifier and much more! Must see! Call Nicole 435-224-3970 #772172

Lots & Lots & Lots of Lots• Starter Home Lots• Prime East Bench Lots• 1/2, 1 & 5 Acre Lots• Grantsville & Tooele Area

$44,900Starting at

Call Craig 496-0721.

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Price Reduced

$137,500 Nice & clean two bedroom ranch. Must see. Large familyroom w/pel-let stove. Oversized one car garage. Cov-ered patio. Call Karen 830-7846 #713236

249 Griffith Street

168 East Main, Grantsville

$189,900 Looking for your OWN BUSINESS? Grantsville Main Street Working Salon w/ 6 sta-tions, Nail Chair, Tanning Bed & Reception area. Handicap Access & Restroom. New roof, floors, carpet & furnace. Call Cheryl 840-4466. #744762

Price Reduced

1868 N. 170 West

$211,000 Great Overlake 3 bd, home. Lg. master bdrm w/walkin closet & 3/4 bth. Full basement framed in w/roughed

in bth. Call Margene 830-2521. #717947

803 West 660 South

New Listing

Price Reduced

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

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

779 E.890 N.

SUPER NICE RAMBLER- culd-de-sac. Beautifully landscaped .23 lot/ extra large deck/ electric awning, full vinyl fence, auto sprinklers, R.V. parking. Central air, laminate and tile flooring. Plantations shutters in

all the windows, vaulted ceiling. MUST SEE!

ONLY$189,900

MLS #734072

1962Clemens Wy

WAAAY BETTER THAN NEW! Freshly painted and new carpet. Lg. (.32) beautifully landscaped yard, classy rock work, concrete stamped patio. 2nd garage (drive thru door) is 26x30, heated, shower, sink,toilet,

it’s own water heater, Lots of light, lots of storage!

ONLY$265,000

MLS #738307

585 S. 525 W.

Large house in quiet neighborhood(easy walk to school). Enjoy evenings with cozy fireplace. Also a woodburning stove in bsmt. Central air.Large unfinished bsmt to finish as you desire. Huge(.41) lot. Lots of room inside and out!

ONLY$249,900

MLS #739459

This is a well kept all brick home in a nice area of town! Mature landscaping, fenced backyard,

LARGE covered deck w/shed built underneath.Walk out basement. Lg. master with walk in closet.Vaulted ceilings. 2 Fireplaces. Price below appraisal price.

489SleepyHollow Dr. ONLY$210,000

MLS #749188

Price Reduced

Sandra LarsenFull Time Agent, Life Time Friend 435.224.9186

288Griffith

Darling multi on quiet street. Open and spa-cious with family room off kitchen.Large yard

with mature trees and full auto sprinklers. Large closets. Room in bsmt almost finished

for bedroom or family room.

ONLY$169,900

MLS #754257

407 E 740 N

Super nice home, inside and out. vaulted ceilings, two tone paint, nice flooring, central air, 4 bed 2 bath, large kitchen.

SELLERS MOTIVATED!!

ONLY$199,000

MLS #755759

4125PalmerRD

on 5 acres in West Erda! Well and water rights included.

Come check it out!

ONLY$380,000

MLS #756792Nice Rambler

1867 N.170 W.

GREAT DEAL IN OVERLAKE! Seller is high-ly motivated, bring all offers!! Close to elemen-tary and jr. high school. Easy access to highway

for easy commute.LARGE YARD! Family room in bsmt is wired for surround sound and

keyed for fireplace just needs sheetrock.

ONLY$236,000

MLS #762641

931 N 650 E

Nice rambler in desirable neighborhood, short walk to school, easy commute to SLC, Central air, 3 TONE PAINT, main floor laundry, large cement patio stubbed for gas,RV parking, tiled

bathrooms, laundry and entry. CLEAN! A MUST SEE! PRICED RIGHT!

ONLY$199,900

MLS #766265

538 Oak Court

LOCATION! Deer Hollow is your destina-tion! Quiet & Serene. Beautiful condo is

former model home. So many extras- wired for surround sound, granite, tile, humidifier.

ONLY$219,000

MLS #766263

Invest Your Tax Returninto a New Home

318 N. 200 W.Looking for a huge lot in Tooele City? The search

is over! Great fixer upper, lots of potential. Close to schools and downtown.

90 N. Center St.Recently remodeled, new paint,

new carpet,new tile, new sink, new appliances, All brick rambler on

LARGE (.32) lot. 24X30 detached garage is insulated & sheetrocked

with seperate power, wood burning stove, and 8 ft. door.

New Listing ONLY$128,000

MLS #769328

ONLY$209,000

MLS #768512

New Listing

UnderContract

PRICE REDUCED

Homes for Rent

GRANTSVILLE, 3bdrm2bth rambler, 2 cargarage, $1095/mo

92 North Aspen WayDavidson Realty

(801)466-5078

GRANTSVILLE, 4bdrm1.5bth, family room newpaint. Nice & clean!$1100/mo, $1000cleaning & deposit. Nosmoking/ pets. Refer-ences. (435)512-7873

GRANTSVILLE, CLEAN2bdrm 1bth duplex,$625/mo $500/dep.Carport, w/d hookups,credit & referenceschecked. Call for ap-pointment. (435)224-3724

HORSE PROPERTY3bdrm, 2bth Beautiful2,000sqft manufacturedhome on 20acres w/wa-ter in Rush Valley. Cor-ral, fencing, 3 stall barn,and huge shop/ garage.1yr lease. $1600/mo.$1000/dep.(801)699-7679

HAVING A yard sale?Advertise in the Tran-script

Homes for Rent

STANSBURY PARK andTooele, 3bdrm, 2bthhomes, excellent condi-tion, fenced property,$1200/mo, 1mo de-posit. (801)916-0101

STANSBURY, Rent/Lease option: Rambler,2/ 3bdrm, 2bth, 2 cargarage. Nice neighbor-hood. $1100/mo plusdeposit. Call (801)870-8701

TOOELE, 2BDRM 1bth,$750/mo, $750/dep.135 North 3rd Street.Available March 1st.Linda (801)598-4881Owner/ Agent

TOOELE, 3bdrm, 2bth,East side, double cargarage, sprinklers.Available March 10th.$975/mo (801)842-9631

TOOELE, historic 3bdrm1bth, 2 story house,

hookups, garage, $895.247 South 100 West

Davidson Realty(801)466-4848

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Homes for Rent

TWO HOMES For rent inTooele 3bdrm 1bth$950/mo; 4/5bdrm 3bthwasher/ dryer included,$1250/mo No smoking,Lease option availableon both. Call (801)835-5592 www.myhome-townproperties.com

Lease

SMALL 3BDRM House,Large family room, sin-gle car garage, fencedback yard and RV park-ing. Not suitable forlarge family. Creditc h e c k r e q u i r e d .$750/mo Deposit re-quired Cal l Glen(435)882-0088

Homes

HOME FOR Sale.3bdrm, 1bth, GreatNeighborhood. Picturesa v a i l a b l e o nresbow.com. $164,900.5454 Heather Way,S t a n s b u r y P a r k .(801)828-7426.

Homes

$$$SAVE MONEYFind HUD & Bankowned homes at:www.tooeleban-kowned homes.com orcall for a list BernaSloan (435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate

BRAND NEW. Two storyhome. Silver Fox Es-tates 889 North SilverFox Drive, Grantsville.4bdrm, 3bth, .59 acreview lot, 3 car garage,alder cabinets with solidsurface counter tops inLarge kitchen with is-land bar. Huge greatroom. Master suite hasgarden tub, separateshower, walk-in closestand a sitting room.3600sqft $339,000. Callfor showing. Demetri GPolitis. Owner/ AgentS e c u r e R e a l t y(801)558-5061.

COZY 3BDRM 1bthhome remode ledkitchen and bathroom,1 car garage, RV park-ing, $139,900 For morei n f o r m a t i o n c a l l(801)824-7164

Homes

CHARMING TRI-LEVELTooele Utah. Open feel,High vaulted ceilings,Gourmet kitchen, stepdown into family room.3bdrm, 2.5bth. Niceclean lines. Fenced inback yard. $205,999.Please call for a show-ing now. The Real Es-tate connection. 1(435)640-6447

FSBO 5BDRM, 3bthrambler, 1 year old, fin-ished basementw/kitchenette, land-scaping complete.Many extras! Ready to-d a y ! $ 2 9 9 , 5 0 0 .(801)860-5696,(435)882-7094

GRANTSVILLE- HorseProperty- New Lux-ury Executive Home.ZERO DOWN! Huge5bdrm, 3bth Home ona .75 acre lot. FreeRecorded Message:1-877-744-3427, ext70. Prudential R.E.

GRANTSVILLE- ZERODOWN- 695 JuniperCt. Lovely 4000S.F.Executive Home.3bdrm, 2.5bth Ram-bler w/3rd car garageon .36 acres. NewConstruction. Priced$30,000 under ap-praised value. Freerecorded Message:1-877-744-3427, ext.60. Prudential R.E.

GRANTSVILLE-Beau-tiful Rambler- 755 Ju-niper Ct. ZERODOWN on this lovely3bdrm, 2bth, 3 car ga-rage, luxury home ona .34 acre lot. Quietcul-de-sac. New con-struction. Free Re-corded Message:1-877-744-3427, ext.64. Prudential R.E.

MAKE YOUR FriendsJealous! Beautiful 4bdrm, 2.5bth, StampedConcrete Drive RVParking w/Extra Ga-rage. Gorgeous RockedMaster Bdrm, Fire-place, and Shower. 195N 690 E, Tooele.$199,900 (801)891-6245

NEW CUSTOM Town-homes from $119,000.The Maples of Tooele,beh ind Wa lmar t .(801)472-1102

NEW HOME- Seller Fi-nance, no bank qualify.Immediate OccupancyTax benefits 4bdrm,2.5bth, 3583sqft 3 cargarage, 1/2acre lot.Knotty alder kit w/co-rian, hardwood, fire-place and more.$346,750 (801)942-1428, 243-8044 or520-7638

New Year, New Home!Overpass Point hashomes available ingreat locations withinestablished, Tooelecommunity. Let us helpyou use your tax returnto move into yourdream home. Easy Fi-n a n c i n g a n dLease-to-Purchase op-tions! Credit score of550+ or 0 accepted!Quick Closings! Be inyour NEW home in lessthan a week. Call now!Chad at 435-843-5306o r Veron i ca a t801-641-7327. HablaEspanol.

ONE OF THE TOP 3Nicest Estates inTooele County on 5acres. Theater, everyupgrade imaginable!Asking $830,000 obo.Must sell! Also haveBrand New Customhome: come pick col-ors, cabinets, paint,etc. On 5 acres.Please call (435)224-4344

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

STANSBURY PARKRambler. Near elemen-tary, 2557sqft, 4+bdrm,2bth. New paint, carpet,tile throughout, mustsee, $242,000. Call(435)882-7840 or(435)224-3792

TOOELE, 6BDRM 3bthnewer home, quiet,large rooms, 2 car ga-rage, clean, $1400/mo,plus deposit. John(801)916-0101

TOOELE- LovelyHomes for Sale. ZeroDown Payment. FreeRecorded Message:1-877-744-3427, ext.26 Prudential R.E.

Mobile Homes

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

Office Space

FOR LEASE Office/Bus iness SpaceUtilities included. 46 &48 South Main. 1month free. (602)826-9471(480)585-5380

Lots & Land

*MUST SELL* Total 6Improved Pads for 2-Triplexes in CountryHavenGrantsville for$215K obo, call Mike atColdwell Banker 801-860-1500

280 ACRES land inTooele County for sale,May sell in 40 acre par-tials owner financingp o s s i b l e C a l l(435)843-0180(435)830-0062

BUILDING LOTS. ATTN:Investors, Builders, orsomeone who wants anopportunity. 577 WestClark Street. 1/3 ArceBuilding Lot Ready2Go.Worth 80k will sell for60k. Serious Inquiries.(801)668-0290

PRICE REDUCED!HORSE PROPERTY5 acres in Erda. Nic-est estates in TooeleCoun ty . Ask ing$224,900 obo. Mustsell. (435)224-4344

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com or e-mail your adto [email protected]

Lots & Land

RUSH VALLEY- 6.5acres of horse prop-erty. Well, irrigationshare, power, flat ter-rain. Low Down Fi-nancing. Free Re-corded Message:1-877-744-3427, ext.14 Prudential R.E.

Water Shares

ERDA Water Rights ForSale. 10+ AF Erda Wa-ter Rights for sale @$10,000 each - or sellindividually. Call Nancy(435)882-5530

WANTED: WATERrights or irrigationshares in Tooele Val-ley. Call Ross at801-642-0119

WATER RIGHTS Forsale Contact Lee BrownRealty (801)768-2507

Commercial Property

FITNESS CENTER12750sqft, Main Street.Handball courts, lock-ers, showers, saunas,hot tubs, mirrored aero-bic/ dance area. Unlim-i ted poss ib i l i t ies !882-7094,(801)860-5696

WANT TO get the latestlocal news? Subscribeto the Transcript Bulle-tin.

Buildings

STEEL BUILDINGS20x20 to 100x100Quality for big discount.Up to 50% off. Canerect. www.scg-grp.com. Source #0UL.(801)562-8995

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

LEPC AGENDAAgenda for the LEPCmeeting to be heldWednesday, Feb. 27th,2008 at 1:30 p.m. at theTooele County HealthDept., 151 N. Main St.,Tooele.1. Welcome - Chairman,LEPC2. Approve January2008 minutes3. Haz Mat reports,Harry Shinton4. Review upcomingtraining5. Randy L. Cooper,Emergency Services6. New Business7. Next meeting-March26th, 20088. AdjournHarry ShintonLEPC Chairman(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21 & 26, 2008)

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SCRIBER. 882-0050

Public Notices Meetings

NOTICE OF CANCEL-LATION OF THETOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION MEET-INGNOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT THETOOELE COUNTYBOARD OF COUNTYCOMMISSIONERSHAVE CANCELEDTHEIR REGULARSCHEDULED COMMIS-SION MEETING FORFEBRUARY 26, 2008AT 3:00 P.M.DATED THIS 20TH DAYOF FEBRUARY, 2008MARILYN K. GILLETTETOOELE COUNTYCLERK(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Central RegionCouncil on WorkforceServices will hold its nextmonthly Meeting on Feb-ruary 28, 2008 at 12:30pm at the Department ofWorkforce Services - Rm157, 1385 South State,SLC, UT. (Published inthe Transcript BulletinFebruary 21, 2008)

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com or e-mail your adto [email protected]

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

C9THuRSDAy February 21, 2008

Tooele TranscripT-BulleTin

Call Laramie Dunn for ALL your Real Estate needs

435-224-4000

Call Laramie Dunn for ALL your Real Estate needs

4 Beautiful5 to 9 Acre

Lots In Erda!Starting at $225,000

6 bdrms, 3 bathrooms, 3 family rooms, brick & stucco Rambler on 5 acres. Price Reduced $478,000

1604 Country Ln • ErdaPrice Reduced $489,900

1470 W. Hwy 199, Rush Valley

6 bdrms, 1 full bath, 23/4 baths, cozy dining room and kitchen. Over 2600 sq. ft. fi nished, beautiful 1 acre lot, fantastically landscaped, over 100 mature trees. $259,900

4064 Palmer Rd, Erda

3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg., beautiful home with so many extras. Spectacular master suite. On over 1/3 acre lot. Wow $289,900

73 Iron Rod Rd, Tooele

3 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 car grg. Very cute rambler in very nice area. Corner lot, walk-in closets, master bath, great mountain views.$219,900

1388 N. 650 E. • TooelePRICED REDUCED

Lots Canyon Rim EstatesSoutheast Tooele • Starting at $79,000

2866 W. Rim Rock Dr. • Benches at South Rim Phase IIStockton • $391,900

• 1.5 Acres• Granite countertops• 4 bedrooms

• Bonus Room• Choose your colors• Rock/Stucco Exterior

PRICE REDUCED3030 Deer Run Drive • Benches at South Rim Phase II

Stockton • $389,900• 2 Acres• Granite countertops• 4 bedrooms• Open beautiful fl oor plan

• Bonus Room• Large garage• Basement entrance in garage

PRICE REDUCED

PRICE REDUCED

UnderContract

Over 2900 sq feet on each fl oor. With a 300 sq. foot bonus room. Open beautiful fl oor plan. Living room, dining room and den. Large and beautiful master bedroom and bathroom. Spacious kitchen, family room with the covered patio. 4 bed rooms on the main fl oor and 3 in the basement. An amazing theater room with tiered seating a must see!1 All of this and 5 acres too.

1464 Country Lane, Erda $799,900

You’ll Love these Horse Properties!

Tooele, Utah

NO-MONEY-DOWNPROGRAMS STILL AVAILABLE!

Melanie Murray435-840-3073

Laurie Nunley801-898-7873

COME SEE WHY WE ARE THE BEST

1244 N Main St, Suite 203 ß Tooele UT

Roxanne Shields435-841-9753

Call oneof our LoanSpecialists

Office

435-843-5340

Rates are at anALL TIME LOW!We offer all loan types

Lana McKean435-833-0233cell 801-518-8670

7 South Main St #305 Executive Plaza Tooele, Utah

Anybody with fair, but not perfect credit, I have lease to owns.

Call for details.

MichelleAnderson

435-840-8898

Pat Stevens435-840-8224

11 S 400 E • MEADOW$245,000 • MOTIVATED SELLER4.37 acres, great home w/ country

feel. Historic log cabin in bkyd.

217 N 5TH STREET • TOOELE$168,000 1558 sq ft, 3 bd, 1 bth bungalo in the

process of being updated. Brand new beautiful kitchen.

1150 S KIMBALL DRGRANTSVILLE • $245,000GREAT OPPORTUNITY!

Almost 1 ac of Horse Property

DRAMATICALLY REDUCED! WOW!

CALL TODAY!833-0233

GET YOUR HOMELISTED HERE.

REDUCED!

5694 N LANYARD LNSTANSBURY

$278,900Totally finished, theater rm, beautiful w/ solid

surface, clean

VERY MOTIVATED! MUST SEE!MEDIA ROOM!

68 N MEADOWLARK CIR.GRANTSVILLE • $267,000

3 bdrm, 2 bath, .50 acre lot. 3400 sq ft. Call Michell

Anderson 840-8898

2935 RAE STREETWVC • $255,000

Beautiful, clean home on Ray Street in West Valley City.

New everything.

494 E 670 N • TOOELE$265,000

Big Beautiful3000 sq ft home.

239 BOX ELDER • $229,999 Vacant, ready to move in. Almost 3100 sq ft home in South Willow Estates.

Ramber/Ranch on .34 acs.

1129 S 970 W • TOOELE$194,500 • ALMOST NEW!Neutral colors, fenced yd,

rv parking, great floor plan.

FULLY FENCED

244 E. BOX ELDERGRANTSVILLE • $314,999

BIG 1 ac horse property in South Willow Estates. Over

3100 sq ft with 8/12 pitch roof.

NEW LISTING

222 E DONNERGRANTSVILLE • $252,000Beautiful home, almost brand new, neut colors, great neighborhood,

walking trails, horse trails.

POSSIBLE SHORT SALE

MUST SEE

Ask me how you can buy thesehomes today for $1.00.

60 S 100 W, Tooele MLS 763914

• Approx. 2,502 sq. ft.• .57 acres

• 4 bdrms• 3 bths

BEAUTIFUL ONE OF A KIND HOME IN A GREAT AREA!!Has a 6 car garage! Heated w/water, gas & electric. Office, large family room, wonderful formal living room. Extra large lot, too many updates and extras to list! A MUST SEE!

$264,900

Call for an appointment to view!

cell [email protected]

office 435.882.4111 - fax 435.843.5364 • www.PureUtah.com • 205 N. Main, Tooele, UT 84074Independently Owned & Operated

255 Nautical Dr, StansburyMLS 729095

• Approx. 2,976 sq. ft.•.28 acres

• 3 bdrms• 2 bths

Almost new rambler in Stansbury, close to pool, golf, tennis, swimming, new schools and shopping area. 20 min commute to SL. Home shows pride in ownership,large master suite w/garden tub. $264,500Just Reduced $30,000

for Quick Sale

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Town of Rush Val-ley Town Council willhold a regular monthlymeeting on WednesdayFebruary 27, 2008.7:00 pm at the Rush Val-ley Town Hall52 S Park StAgenda is as follows:1.Roll Call2.Minutes of prior meet-ingDiscussion of all con-tracts over $1000.00 peryear :A.Discussion of bids forLandscape maintenanceof the City property in-cluding mowing and wa-tering of all parks andplaygrounds and weedcontrol of all existing cityproperties.B.Discussion of bids forJanitorial maintenance ofthe Town Hall includingrestrooms, meeting halland kitchen area.C.Discussion of bids forthe Janitorial mainte-nance of the Fire Stationincluding the meetingroom, restrooms andShower area.D.Discussion of contractfor Attorney.E.Discussion of contractfor Town Drivers of anyequipment.3.Discussion of propertyat Arthur Ranches, 5.24acres. Lease, rent,maintenance4.Budget Amendment,requests from each de-partment.5. Council Reports6.Fire Chief report7.Payment of Bills8.AdjournJoyce McAteeRecorderTown of Rush Valley(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

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SCRIBER. 882-0050

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICETooele County SchoolDistrict Board of Edu-cationBoard Meeting will beheld March 4, 2008 –6:30 pm at the DistrictOffice. Tooele CountySchool District, Board ofEducation will be consid-ering boundaries for thefo l low ing schoo ls :Clarke N. Johnsen Jr.High, Grantsville Jr.High, Tooele Jr. High,Grantsville High, Stans-bury High and TooeleHigh. Proposedboundaries will go intoeffect for the 2009-10school year.Patrons are welcome toattend and offer input.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February12, 14, 19, 21, 26 & 28,2008)

PUBLIC NOTICE OFM E E T I N G A N DAGENDAErda Township Plan-ning CommissionThe Erda TownshipPlanning Commissionwill hold a Public Meet-ing on February 27,2008 at 7:00 p.m. in theauditorium of the TooeleCounty Courthouse, 47South Main Street,Tooele Utah.PUBLIC MEETING:1. Roll Call2. Approval of meetingminutes from January23, 20083. CUP # 08-00100003UNEV Pipeline4. SUB # 07-01500001Autumn Cove - Prelimi-nary Plat5. SUB # 06-01200001Dream Hills Estates - Fi-nal Plat6. Public Hearing(a) Amendment to Chap-ter 13 of the TooeleCounty General Plan toinclude a trails map forthe Tooele Valley area.(b) Amendment to theTooele County Land UseO r d i n a n c e T a b l e17-5-3.9 - StorageUnits, allow for onsitetwenty four hour man-ager7. Amendment to Chap-ter 13 of the TooeleCounty General Plan toinclude a trails map forthe Tooele Valley area.8. Amendment to theTooele County Land UseO r d i n a n c e T a b l e17-5-3.9 - Storage Units,allow for onsite twentyfour hour manager9. Other Business &Public Concerns10. AdjournmentFor questions call (435)843-3160 and ask tospeak to one of the plan-ning staff.Dated this 20th day ofFebruary, 2008MARY DIXON, Secre-taryErda Township Plan-ning Commission(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICE OFM E E T I N G A N DAGENDAErda Township Plan-ning CommissionThe Erda TownshipPlanning Commissionwill hold a Public Meet-ing on February 27,2008 at 7:00 p.m. in theauditorium of the TooeleCounty Courthouse, 47South Main Street,Tooele Utah.PUBLIC MEETING:1. Roll Call2. Approval of meetingminutes from January23, 20083. CUP # 08-00100003UNEV Pipeline4. SUB # 07-01500001Autumn Cove - Prelimi-nary Plat5. SUB # 06-01200001Dream Hills Estates - Fi-nal Plat6. Public Hearing(a) Amendment to Chap-ter 13 of the TooeleCounty General Plan toinclude a trails map forthe Tooele Valley area.(b) Amendment to theTooele County Land UseO r d i n a n c e T a b l e17-5-3.9 - StorageUnits, allow for onsitetwenty four hour man-ager7. Amendment to Chap-ter 13 of the TooeleCounty General Plan toinclude a trails map forthe Tooele Valley area.8. Amendment to theTooele County Land UseO r d i n a n c e T a b l e17-5-3.9 - Storage Units,allow for onsite twentyfour hour manager9. Other Business &Public Concerns10. AdjournmentFor questions call (435)843-3160 and ask tospeak to one of the plan-ning staff.Dated this 20th day ofFebruary, 2008MARY DIXON, Secre-taryErda Township Plan-ning Commission(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

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

SELL YOUR computerin the classifieds. Call882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder at thetime of sale at the Northfront entrance of theTooele County Court-house, 74 South 100East, Tooele, Utah, onMarch 3, 2008 at, 8:30a..m.; foreclosing a TrustDeed recorded Decem-ber 14, 1995 executedby Rick J. Nelson andRenee R. Nelson, in fa-vor of TMS MortgageInc., covering real prop-erty purportedly locatedin Tooele County at 482North First East, Tooele,Utah 84074, and de-scribed as follows:ALL OF LOT 10, BLOCK1, VALLEY VIEW SUB-DIVISION, ACCORDINGTO THE OFFICIALPLAT THEREOF, ONFILE AND OF RECORDIN THE TOOELECOUNTY RECORDER'SOFFICE.The current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed is Citi-bank N.A. as Trusteeand, as of the recordingof the Notice of Default,the property was owned,according to record, byRick J. Nelson andRenee R. Nelson. Thesale is without any war-ranty and is voidable bythe Trustee, without anyliability, for any circum-stance unknown to theTrustee affecting the va-lidity of the sale. Thesuccessful bidder mustprovide certified funds tothe Trustee within 24hours of the sale.Dated February 6, 2008/s/ David B. BoyceSuccessor Trustee(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February7, 14 & 21, 2008)

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE’S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States at the timeof the sale, “The MainEntrance of the GordanR. Hall Tooele CountyCourthouse, 74 South100 East, Tooele, UT”, on March 4, 2008, at1:00 PM, of said day, forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a trust deed datedJune 26, 2006 and exe-cuted by ERIC V BUR-HART, A MARRIEDMAN, as Trustor(s) in fa-vor of MORTGAE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS INC. asBeneficiary, covering thefollowing real propertylocated in TooeleCounty:LOT 4, BROOKFIELDESTATES PHASE 1,ACCORDING TO THEO F F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF ON FILEAND OF RECORD INTHE TOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OFFICE.Together with all the im-provements now or here-after erected on theproperty, and all ease-ments, appurtenances,and fixtures now or here-after a part of the prop-erty.Tax Parce l No . :15-025-0-0004The address of the prop-erty is purported to be1031 EAST TANGLE-W O O D R O A D ,TOOELE, UT 84074.The undersigned dis-claims liability for any er-ror in the address. Thecurrent Beneficiary of thetrust deed is MORTGAEELECTRONIC REGIS-TRATION SYSTEMSINC., and the recordowners of the propertyas of the recording of thenotice of default is re-ported to be ERIC VBURHART, A MARRIEDMAN.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender to thetrustee, RECONTRUSTCOMPANY, $5,000.00at the sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 12:00 noon theday following the saleand deliverable to:Matheson, Mortensen, etal., 648 East First South,Salt Lake City, UT84102. Both paymentsmust be in the form of acashier’s check ormoney order and madepayable to RECON-TRUST COMPANY,cash and Bank “OfficialChecks” are not accept-able. A trustee’s deedwill be made available tothe successful bidderwithin three businessdays following receipt ofthe bid amount. Thesale is made without anywarranty whatsoever, in-cluding but not limited toany warranty as to title,liens, possession, taxes,encumbrances, or condi-tion of the property. Thesale is subject to a work-out reinstatement, pay-off, sale cancellation orpostponement, incorrectbidding instructions,bankruptcy, or any othercircumstance of whichthe trustee is unaware.In the event any of theforegoing apply, the salewill be void and the suc-cessful bidder’s fundswill be returned withoutany liability to the trusteeor beneficiary for interestor any other damages.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT RECON-TRUST COMPANY ISATTEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT ANDANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE, AND THAT THEDEBT MAY BE DIS-PUTED.Dated: February 6, 2008By:LaRoyce Walker, As-sistant SecretaryRECONTRUST COM-PANY2380 Performance Dr,RGV-D7-450Richardson, TX 75082(800) 281-8219 x4539Regular BusinessHours: Monday – Fri-day, 8:00a.m. to5:00p.m., Central TimeTS#: 07 -52261(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February7, 14 & 21, 2008)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE’S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States at the timeof the sale, “The MainEntrance of the GordanR. Hall Tooele CountyCourthouse, 74 South100 East, Tooele, UT”, on March 4, 2008, at1:00 PM, of said day, forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a trust deed datedJune 26, 2006 and exe-cuted by ERIC V BUR-HART, A MARRIEDMAN, as Trustor(s) in fa-vor of MORTGAE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRA-TION SYSTEMS INC. asBeneficiary, covering thefollowing real propertylocated in TooeleCounty:LOT 4, BROOKFIELDESTATES PHASE 1,ACCORDING TO THEO F F I C I A L P L A TTHEREOF ON FILEAND OF RECORD INTHE TOOELE COUNTYRECORDER'S OFFICE.Together with all the im-provements now or here-after erected on theproperty, and all ease-ments, appurtenances,and fixtures now or here-after a part of the prop-erty.Tax Parce l No . :15-025-0-0004The address of the prop-erty is purported to be1031 EAST TANGLE-W O O D R O A D ,TOOELE, UT 84074.The undersigned dis-claims liability for any er-ror in the address. Thecurrent Beneficiary of thetrust deed is MORTGAEELECTRONIC REGIS-TRATION SYSTEMSINC., and the recordowners of the propertyas of the recording of thenotice of default is re-ported to be ERIC VBURHART, A MARRIEDMAN.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender to thetrustee, RECONTRUSTCOMPANY, $5,000.00at the sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 12:00 noon theday following the saleand deliverable to:Matheson, Mortensen, etal., 648 East First South,Salt Lake City, UT84102. Both paymentsmust be in the form of acashier’s check ormoney order and madepayable to RECON-TRUST COMPANY,cash and Bank “OfficialChecks” are not accept-able. A trustee’s deedwill be made available tothe successful bidderwithin three businessdays following receipt ofthe bid amount. Thesale is made without anywarranty whatsoever, in-cluding but not limited toany warranty as to title,liens, possession, taxes,encumbrances, or condi-tion of the property. Thesale is subject to a work-out reinstatement, pay-off, sale cancellation orpostponement, incorrectbidding instructions,bankruptcy, or any othercircumstance of whichthe trustee is unaware.In the event any of theforegoing apply, the salewill be void and the suc-cessful bidder’s fundswill be returned withoutany liability to the trusteeor beneficiary for interestor any other damages.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT RECON-TRUST COMPANY ISATTEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT ANDANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE, AND THAT THEDEBT MAY BE DIS-PUTED.Dated: February 6, 2008By:LaRoyce Walker, As-sistant SecretaryRECONTRUST COM-PANY2380 Performance Dr,RGV-D7-450Richardson, TX 75082(800) 281-8219 x4539Regular BusinessHours: Monday – Fri-day, 8:00a.m. to5:00p.m., Central TimeTS#: 07 -52261(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February7, 14 & 21, 2008)

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE’S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States at the timeof the sale, “The MainEntrance of the GordanR. Hall Tooele CountyCourthouse, 74 South100 East, Tooele, UT”,on March 11, 2008, at1:00 PM, of said day, forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a trust deed datedJune 28, 2002 and exe-cuted by ROBERT J.DOERR, AND CAROL L.DOERR, HUSBANDAND WIFE AS JOINTTENANTS, as Trustor(s)in favor of AMERICA'SWHOLESALE LENDERas Beneficiary, coveringthe following real prop-erty located in TooeleCounty:LOT 210, MIDDLE CAN-YON ESTATES PLAT"B", ACCORDING TOTHE OFFICIAL PLATTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER, COUNTY OFTOOELE, STATE OFUTAH.Together with all the im-provements now or here-after erected on theproperty, and all ease-ments, appurtenances,and fixtures now or here-after a part of the prop-erty.Tax Parce l No . :11-044-0-0210The address of the prop-erty is purported to be873 EAST LEFT HANDFORK DRIVE, TOOELE,UT 84074. The under-signed disclaims liabilityfor any error in the ad-dress. The current Bene-ficiary of the trust deed isCWABS 2002-E, BANKOF NEW YORK ASSUCCESSOR IN IN-TEREST TO JPMOR-GAN CHASE BANK,N.A. AS TRUSTEE, andthe record owners of theproperty as of the re-cording of the notice ofdefault is reported to beROBERT J. DOERR,AND CAROL L. DOERR,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender to thetrustee, RECONTRUSTCOMPANY, $5,000.00at the sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 12:00 noon theday following the saleand deliverable to:Matheson, Mortensen, etal., 648 East First South,Salt Lake City, UT84102. Both paymentsmust be in the form of acashier’s check ormoney order and madepayable to RECON-TRUST COMPANY,cash and Bank “OfficialChecks” are not accept-able. A trustee’s deedwill be made available tothe successful bidderwithin three businessdays following receipt ofthe bid amount. Thesale is made without anywarranty whatsoever, in-cluding but not limited toany warranty as to title,liens, possession, taxes,encumbrances, or condi-tion of the property. Thesale is subject to a work-out reinstatement, pay-off, sale cancellation orpostponement, incorrectbidding instructions,bankruptcy, or any othercircumstance of whichthe trustee is unaware.In the event any of theforegoing apply, the salewill be void and the suc-cessful bidder’s fundswill be returned withoutany liability to the trusteeor beneficiary for interestor any other damages.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT RECON-TRUST COMPANY ISATTEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT ANDANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE, AND THAT THEDEBT MAY BE DIS-PUTED.Dated: February 11,2008By: LaRoyce Walker,Assistant SecretaryRECONTRUST COM-PANY2380 Performance Dr,RGV-D7-450Richardson, TX 75082(800) 281-8219 x4539Regular BusinessHours: Monday – Fri-day, 8:00a.m. to5:00p.m., Central TimeTS#: 07 -53802(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21 & 28, 2008)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE’S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States at the timeof the sale, “The MainEntrance of the GordanR. Hall Tooele CountyCourthouse, 74 South100 East, Tooele, UT”,on March 11, 2008, at1:00 PM, of said day, forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a trust deed datedJune 28, 2002 and exe-cuted by ROBERT J.DOERR, AND CAROL L.DOERR, HUSBANDAND WIFE AS JOINTTENANTS, as Trustor(s)in favor of AMERICA'SWHOLESALE LENDERas Beneficiary, coveringthe following real prop-erty located in TooeleCounty:LOT 210, MIDDLE CAN-YON ESTATES PLAT"B", ACCORDING TOTHE OFFICIAL PLATTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER, COUNTY OFTOOELE, STATE OFUTAH.Together with all the im-provements now or here-after erected on theproperty, and all ease-ments, appurtenances,and fixtures now or here-after a part of the prop-erty.Tax Parce l No . :11-044-0-0210The address of the prop-erty is purported to be873 EAST LEFT HANDFORK DRIVE, TOOELE,UT 84074. The under-signed disclaims liabilityfor any error in the ad-dress. The current Bene-ficiary of the trust deed isCWABS 2002-E, BANKOF NEW YORK ASSUCCESSOR IN IN-TEREST TO JPMOR-GAN CHASE BANK,N.A. AS TRUSTEE, andthe record owners of theproperty as of the re-cording of the notice ofdefault is reported to beROBERT J. DOERR,AND CAROL L. DOERR,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender to thetrustee, RECONTRUSTCOMPANY, $5,000.00at the sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 12:00 noon theday following the saleand deliverable to:Matheson, Mortensen, etal., 648 East First South,Salt Lake City, UT84102. Both paymentsmust be in the form of acashier’s check ormoney order and madepayable to RECON-TRUST COMPANY,cash and Bank “OfficialChecks” are not accept-able. A trustee’s deedwill be made available tothe successful bidderwithin three businessdays following receipt ofthe bid amount. Thesale is made without anywarranty whatsoever, in-cluding but not limited toany warranty as to title,liens, possession, taxes,encumbrances, or condi-tion of the property. Thesale is subject to a work-out reinstatement, pay-off, sale cancellation orpostponement, incorrectbidding instructions,bankruptcy, or any othercircumstance of whichthe trustee is unaware.In the event any of theforegoing apply, the salewill be void and the suc-cessful bidder’s fundswill be returned withoutany liability to the trusteeor beneficiary for interestor any other damages.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT RECON-TRUST COMPANY ISATTEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT ANDANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE, AND THAT THEDEBT MAY BE DIS-PUTED.Dated: February 11,2008By: LaRoyce Walker,Assistant SecretaryRECONTRUST COM-PANY2380 Performance Dr,RGV-D7-450Richardson, TX 75082(800) 281-8219 x4539Regular BusinessHours: Monday – Fri-day, 8:00a.m. to5:00p.m., Central TimeTS#: 07 -53802(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21 & 28, 2008)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE’S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States at the timeof the sale, “The MainEntrance of the GordanR. Hall Tooele CountyCourthouse, 74 South100 East, Tooele, UT”,on March 11, 2008, at1:00 PM, of said day, forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a trust deed datedJune 28, 2002 and exe-cuted by ROBERT J.DOERR, AND CAROL L.DOERR, HUSBANDAND WIFE AS JOINTTENANTS, as Trustor(s)in favor of AMERICA'SWHOLESALE LENDERas Beneficiary, coveringthe following real prop-erty located in TooeleCounty:LOT 210, MIDDLE CAN-YON ESTATES PLAT"B", ACCORDING TOTHE OFFICIAL PLATTHEREOF, RECORDEDIN THE OFFICE OFTHE COUNTY RE-CORDER, COUNTY OFTOOELE, STATE OFUTAH.Together with all the im-provements now or here-after erected on theproperty, and all ease-ments, appurtenances,and fixtures now or here-after a part of the prop-erty.Tax Parce l No . :11-044-0-0210The address of the prop-erty is purported to be873 EAST LEFT HANDFORK DRIVE, TOOELE,UT 84074. The under-signed disclaims liabilityfor any error in the ad-dress. The current Bene-ficiary of the trust deed isCWABS 2002-E, BANKOF NEW YORK ASSUCCESSOR IN IN-TEREST TO JPMOR-GAN CHASE BANK,N.A. AS TRUSTEE, andthe record owners of theproperty as of the re-cording of the notice ofdefault is reported to beROBERT J. DOERR,AND CAROL L. DOERR,HUSBAND AND WIFEAS JOINT TENANTS.Bidders must be pre-pared to tender to thetrustee, RECONTRUSTCOMPANY, $5,000.00at the sale and the bal-ance of the purchaseprice by 12:00 noon theday following the saleand deliverable to:Matheson, Mortensen, etal., 648 East First South,Salt Lake City, UT84102. Both paymentsmust be in the form of acashier’s check ormoney order and madepayable to RECON-TRUST COMPANY,cash and Bank “OfficialChecks” are not accept-able. A trustee’s deedwill be made available tothe successful bidderwithin three businessdays following receipt ofthe bid amount. Thesale is made without anywarranty whatsoever, in-cluding but not limited toany warranty as to title,liens, possession, taxes,encumbrances, or condi-tion of the property. Thesale is subject to a work-out reinstatement, pay-off, sale cancellation orpostponement, incorrectbidding instructions,bankruptcy, or any othercircumstance of whichthe trustee is unaware.In the event any of theforegoing apply, the salewill be void and the suc-cessful bidder’s fundswill be returned withoutany liability to the trusteeor beneficiary for interestor any other damages.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN THAT RECON-TRUST COMPANY ISATTEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT ANDANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE, AND THAT THEDEBT MAY BE DIS-PUTED.Dated: February 11,2008By: LaRoyce Walker,Assistant SecretaryRECONTRUST COM-PANY2380 Performance Dr,RGV-D7-450Richardson, TX 75082(800) 281-8219 x4539Regular BusinessHours: Monday – Fri-day, 8:00a.m. to5:00p.m., Central TimeTS#: 07 -53802(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21 & 28, 2008)

Public Notices Water User

NOTICE TO WATERUSERSThe State Engineer re-ceived the following Ap-plication(s) in TooeleCounty (Locations inSLB&M).For more information orto receive a copy of fil-ings, visit http://water-rights.utah.gov or call1-866-882-4426.Persons objecting to anapplication must file aCLEARLY READABLEprotest stating FILINGNUMBER, REASONSFOR OBJECTION,PROTESTANTS` NAMEAND RETURN AD-DRESS, and any re-quest for a hearing. Pro-test must be filed withthe State Engineer, Box146300, Salt Lake City,UT 84114-6300 on orbefore MARCH 19,2008. These are informalproceedings as per RuleR655-6-2 of the Divisionof Water Rights.(The Period of Use isgenerally year-round ex-cept irrigation which isgenerally from Apr 1 toOct 31 each year.)CHANGE APPLICA-TION(S)15-4917(a33897): AllenPatch, Stansbury Im-provement District, Wa-ter Investors, LLC pro-pose(s) using 41.6 ac-ft.f r om groundwa te r(Stansbury ServiceArea) for MUNICIPAL: InStansbury Park Improve-ment District.15-4925(a33992): Wal-ters Ranch LLC pro-pose(s) using 36.0 ac-ft.from groundwater (SE ofErda) for IRRIGATION.Jerry D. Olds, P.E.STATE ENGINEER(Published in TooeleTranscript Bulletin Feb-ruary 21 & 28, 2008)

Public Notices Water User

NOTICE TO WATERUSERSThe State Engineer re-ceived the following Ap-plication(s) in TooeleCounty (Locations inSLB&M).For more information orto receive a copy of fil-ings, visit http://water-rights.utah.gov or call1-866-882-4426.Persons objecting to anapplication must file aCLEARLY READABLEprotest stating FILINGNUMBER, REASONSFOR OBJECTION,PROTESTANTS` NAMEAND RETURN AD-DRESS, and any re-quest for a hearing. Pro-test must be filed withthe State Engineer, Box146300, Salt Lake City,UT 84114-6300 on orbefore MARCH 19,2008. These are informalproceedings as per RuleR655-6-2 of the Divisionof Water Rights.(The Period of Use isgenerally year-round ex-cept irrigation which isgenerally from Apr 1 toOct 31 each year.)CHANGE APPLICA-TION(S)15-4917(a33897): AllenPatch, Stansbury Im-provement District, Wa-ter Investors, LLC pro-pose(s) using 41.6 ac-ft.f r om groundwa te r(Stansbury ServiceArea) for MUNICIPAL: InStansbury Park Improve-ment District.15-4925(a33992): Wal-ters Ranch LLC pro-pose(s) using 36.0 ac-ft.from groundwater (SE ofErda) for IRRIGATION.Jerry D. Olds, P.E.STATE ENGINEER(Published in TooeleTranscript Bulletin Feb-ruary 21 & 28, 2008)

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

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF AUCTIONWILDCAT STORAGE427 East CimmarronWay Erda, UT 84074Date of Sale: March 8,2008. Time: 11:00am.This notice of dispositionis being given pursuantto 38-8-1 et. Al, UtahCode Annotated.UNIT #129 Dustin P.Bush, 411 Country Club,Stansbury Park, UT84074. Misc. furniture,boxes.UNIT #237 Rex Barney,9094 HWY 40, Lake-point , UT 84074.Washer/ Dryer, TV,Misc. household, misc.boxes.UNIT #301 Dan West,208 Regatta Lane,Stansbury Park, UT84074. Wagon, car jack,misc. items.UNIT #427 Haley J. Pe-teresen, P.O. Box 211,Wellington, UT 84542.Furniture, toys, misc.Purchases are cashonly. Sold as is, and allmust be removed at thetime of sale. Sales sub-ject to cancellation in theevent of settlement be-tween owner and the ob-ligated party. Owner hasthe right to bid or ceasesale.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21 & 26, 2008)

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

ANNOUNCEMENT OFAPPOINTMENT ANDNOTICE TO CREDI-TORSEstate of Byron LeeMillward, deceased,P r o b a t e N o .083300015.Carrie Lyn LaBonty,whose address is 8747South 2240 West, WestJordan, Utah 84088, hasbeen appointed Per-sonal Representative ofthe above-entitled es-tate. Creditors of the es-tate are hereby notifiedto (1) deliver or mail theirwritten claims to the per-sonal representative atthe address above; (2)deliver or mail their writ-ten claims to the per-sonal representative'sattorney of record, Jo-seph C. Rust, atKESLER & RUST, 68South Main Street, Sec-ond Floor, Salt LakeCity, Utah 84101; or (3)file their written claimswith the Clerk of the Dis-trict Court in Tooele at74 South 100 East, Suite14, Tooele, Utah, 84074,or otherwise presenttheir claims as requiredby Utah law within threemonths after the date ofthe first publication ofthis notice or be foreverbarred.Date of first publication:February 7, 2008.JOSEPH C RUSTKESLER & RUSTMcIntyre Building, 2ndFloor68 South Main StreetSalt Lake City, UTah84101Telephone (801)532-8000Attorneys for PersonalRepresentative(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February7, 14 & 21, 2008)

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF PRO-POSED TUITION IN-CREASEThe Salt Lake - TooeleApplied Technology Col-lege is proposing to in-crease tuition rates. Thiswould be an increasefrom 3.8% to 7.7%,which is an increase of5¢-10¢ per hour for afull-time resident stu-dent. All concerned stu-dents and citizens are in-vited to a public hearingon the proposed in-crease to be held at theSalt Lake - Tooele Ap-plied Technology Col-lege, 1655 E. 3300 S.,room 1, on February 29,2007, at 1:30 p.m.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February19 & 21, 2008)

NOTICE OF PUBLICAUCTIONNotice is hereby given ofa public auction to beheld at Grantsville SelfStorage at 655 E. MainSt., Grantsville, UT84029 on, Saturday,February 23, 2008 at10:00 a.m. to settle de-linquent accounts in ac-cordance with Sec.38-8-3 of the Utah Code.The goods will be soldfor cash to the highestbidder.Goods to be sold arelisted under unit number,tenant's name, last-known address, andcontents.A3 Linda B. Lloyd, 342W 440 S, Tooele UT840741 5 drawer dresser, 1 8drawer dresser, televi-sion stand, microwave,toys, misc. boxes andtubs, twin bed boxspring, 1 kitchen stand,misc. furniture.A14 Samual J .Hechtle, 637 E MainStreet, Grantsville UT84029Furniture, microwave,household items.B9 Scott Davis, 286 EOrchard Circle, Grants-ville UT 840292 Speakers, Yard tools,cabinets, cabinet build-ing materials, large pro-pane tank, small animalcages, Ryobl tool box,stereo, wire rack, largevacuum system, misc.boxes.B37 Bruce Preston, 286W Plume #47, Grants-ville UT 84029Tool Chest, boom boxstereo, camping gear:stove, lantern, tablechairs; large stereospeaker, end table withbuilt-in lamp, 2 lampshades, file cabinet, liv-ing room tables, boxes.C41 Carma Jackson,114 S Sage Hill Circle,Grantsville UT 84029Daybed, couch, micro-wave, sewing machinetable, cabinet, misc. fur-niture.D50 Lisa Custer, 41 WChurch Road, Erda, UT84074Luggage, Duracraftheater, portable stereo,work books, boardgames, clothes, tubs,misc. black bags.D30 Mackenzie Smith,158 Eastmoor Drive,Grantsville UT 847029OR 914 E 78th Ave, Apt7, Anchorage, AK99516Couch, hope chest, vac-uum, folding chair, misc.boxes and tubs, com-puter and computerscreen.Purchases are cashonly. Sold as is, whereis, and ALL must be re-moved at the time ofsale. Sales subject tocancellation in the eventof settlement betweenowner & the obligatedparty. Seller reservesthe right to set price re-serve.Dated Tuesday the 19thday of February 2008and Thursday the 21stday of February 2008.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February19 & 21, 2008)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

NOTICE OF PUBLICAUCTIONNotice is hereby given ofa public auction to beheld at Grantsville SelfStorage at 655 E. MainSt., Grantsville, UT84029 on, Saturday,February 23, 2008 at10:00 a.m. to settle de-linquent accounts in ac-cordance with Sec.38-8-3 of the Utah Code.The goods will be soldfor cash to the highestbidder.Goods to be sold arelisted under unit number,tenant's name, last-known address, andcontents.A3 Linda B. Lloyd, 342W 440 S, Tooele UT840741 5 drawer dresser, 1 8drawer dresser, televi-sion stand, microwave,toys, misc. boxes andtubs, twin bed boxspring, 1 kitchen stand,misc. furniture.A14 Samual J .Hechtle, 637 E MainStreet, Grantsville UT84029Furniture, microwave,household items.B9 Scott Davis, 286 EOrchard Circle, Grants-ville UT 840292 Speakers, Yard tools,cabinets, cabinet build-ing materials, large pro-pane tank, small animalcages, Ryobl tool box,stereo, wire rack, largevacuum system, misc.boxes.B37 Bruce Preston, 286W Plume #47, Grants-ville UT 84029Tool Chest, boom boxstereo, camping gear:stove, lantern, tablechairs; large stereospeaker, end table withbuilt-in lamp, 2 lampshades, file cabinet, liv-ing room tables, boxes.C41 Carma Jackson,114 S Sage Hill Circle,Grantsville UT 84029Daybed, couch, micro-wave, sewing machinetable, cabinet, misc. fur-niture.D50 Lisa Custer, 41 WChurch Road, Erda, UT84074Luggage, Duracraftheater, portable stereo,work books, boardgames, clothes, tubs,misc. black bags.D30 Mackenzie Smith,158 Eastmoor Drive,Grantsville UT 847029OR 914 E 78th Ave, Apt7, Anchorage, AK99516Couch, hope chest, vac-uum, folding chair, misc.boxes and tubs, com-puter and computerscreen.Purchases are cashonly. Sold as is, whereis, and ALL must be re-moved at the time ofsale. Sales subject tocancellation in the eventof settlement betweenowner & the obligatedparty. Seller reservesthe right to set price re-serve.Dated Tuesday the 19thday of February 2008and Thursday the 21stday of February 2008.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February19 & 21, 2008)

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICECall For ProposalsThe TOOELE COUNTYRECREATION SPE-CIAL SERVICE DIS-TRICT will be acceptingnew proposals for rec-reation projects fromFebruary 14, 2008 toApril 3, 2008. Applica-tions must follow grantsubmittal outline avail-able from each memberof the board or TooeleCounty Commission Of-fice, Cheryl Adams,843-2354 , Tooe leCounty Courthouse, 47South Main. Five copiesof the grant submittalshould include: name ofproject, location, andwritten bid of estimatedcosts, type of construc-tion or improvement anda point of contact. Fur-thermore, projects whichare accepted must becompleted by December1st 2008 or the applicantmay stand to lose theirfunding. The SpecialRecreation District Boardof Officers must approveany deviation from thisprocess.Send all proposals to:TOOELE COUNTYRECREATION SPECIALSERVICE DISTRICT, 47South Main Tooele, Utah84074.For any additional infor-mation contact KentBaker 882-1420, RussellSteadman 830-5658,Walt Shubert 882-0603,Lois McArthur 882-1179,T rav i s McCluskey884-5023.Russell SteadmanSecretary(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 19, 21, 28, March 4,6, 11, 13, 18, 20, 25 &27, 2008)

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Public Notices Miscellaneous

TOOELE COUNTYT O U R I S M T A XGRANTSCONTACT: Cheryl Ad-ams, AdministrativeAssistantTooele County Commis-sion (435)843-3150Organizations in TooeleCounty wishing to beconsidered for a 2008Tooele County TourismTax Grant should pick upan application form fromthe Tooele County Com-mission Office at theCounty Courthouse, 47South Main Street, inRoom 208. Applicationsmust be returned to theCommission Office byMarch 7, 2008 before5:00 p.m.The application form in-cludes a letter detailingwhat kinds of projectsand organizations areeligible to apply, instruc-tions for how to submitan application and de-scription of the criteriaand the process the Ad-visory Committee uses.The Tooele CountyTourism Tax Grant pro-gram distributes reve-nues generated for taxeslevied on the restaurantand hotel/motel sales inTooele County. It is thetask of this committee tomake recommendationsas to the distribution ofthis money to the CountyCommission. Since itsinception, the programhas benefitted the com-munities of TooeleCounty and the tourismindustry, which is thestatutory beneficiary ofthe tax.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February19, 21, 26, 28, March 4& 6, 2008)

PUBLIC NOTICEThis public notice satis-fies requirements of theResource Conservationand Recovery Act andthe Utah HazardousWaste ManagementRules (Utah Administra-t ive Code R315).TOCDF has submitted aClass 2 permit modifica-tion request to theTOCDF RCRA permit.This permit modificationrequest pertains to onewaste stream identifiedin WAP Paragraph2.2.2.21, DPE Suits.This waste stream is de-scribed as Demilitariza-tion Protective Ensem-bles (DPE), which arethe protective suits wornby TOCDF workers, mis-cellaneous plastics, andother Toxic Area Protec-tive (TAP) gear wornduring the course of rou-tine operations. TOCDFis proposing to expandthe air monitoring deter-mination analytical pa-rameter to include DPEwaste bags which havean agent concentrationresult between the cur-rent 0.2 VSL and an up-per limit of 1.0 VSL foroff-site shipment anddisposal under theP999/F999 waste code.This Permit modificationrequest is identified bythe alphanumeric desig-nation TOCDF-WAP-02-0989. A public infor-mation meeting on thispermit modification re-quest will be held at 6:00p.m. on Wednesday,March 26, 2008, at theTooele Chemical Stock-pile Outreach Office, 54South Main Street,Tooele, Utah, 84074. Acopy of this permit modi-fication request is avail-able for review by thegeneral public duringregular business hoursat:Tooele ChemicalStockpile Outreach Of-fice, 54 South Main St.,Tooele, UT 84074,Tooele City Library, 128W. Vine Street, Tooele,UT 84074, and Utah Di-vision of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste Offices(DSHW, Dept. of Envi-ronmental Quality), 288North 1460 West, SaltLake City, UT 84116.The TOCDF point ofcontact is Mr. TraceSalmon at (435)833-7428. The Permit-tees’ (U.S. Army Chemi-c a l M a t e r i a l sAgency/EG&G DefenseMaterials) compliancehistory during the life ofthe permit being modi-fied is available from theState of Utah (contactMr. Tom Ball of the UtahDivision of Solid andHazardous Waste at(801) 538-6170). Thepublic comment periodfor this permit modifica-tion request lasts a mini-mum of 60 days and be-gins Thursday, February21, 2008, and will endMonday, April 21, 2008.Written comments re-garding this permit modi-fication request can besubmitted to Mr. DennisDowns, Director, Divi-sion of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste, Utah De-partment of Environmen-tal Quality, 288 North1460 West, P.O. Box144880, Salt Lake City,UT, 84114-4880, andmust be received nolater than 5:00 pm, Mon-day, April 21, 2008.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICEThis public notice satis-fies requirements of theResource Conservationand Recovery Act andthe Utah HazardousWaste ManagementRules (Utah Administra-t ive Code R315).TOCDF has submitted aClass 2 permit modifica-tion request to theTOCDF RCRA permit.This permit modificationrequest pertains to onewaste stream identifiedin WAP Paragraph2.2.2.21, DPE Suits.This waste stream is de-scribed as Demilitariza-tion Protective Ensem-bles (DPE), which arethe protective suits wornby TOCDF workers, mis-cellaneous plastics, andother Toxic Area Protec-tive (TAP) gear wornduring the course of rou-tine operations. TOCDFis proposing to expandthe air monitoring deter-mination analytical pa-rameter to include DPEwaste bags which havean agent concentrationresult between the cur-rent 0.2 VSL and an up-per limit of 1.0 VSL foroff-site shipment anddisposal under theP999/F999 waste code.This Permit modificationrequest is identified bythe alphanumeric desig-nation TOCDF-WAP-02-0989. A public infor-mation meeting on thispermit modification re-quest will be held at 6:00p.m. on Wednesday,March 26, 2008, at theTooele Chemical Stock-pile Outreach Office, 54South Main Street,Tooele, Utah, 84074. Acopy of this permit modi-fication request is avail-able for review by thegeneral public duringregular business hoursat:Tooele ChemicalStockpile Outreach Of-fice, 54 South Main St.,Tooele, UT 84074,Tooele City Library, 128W. Vine Street, Tooele,UT 84074, and Utah Di-vision of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste Offices(DSHW, Dept. of Envi-ronmental Quality), 288North 1460 West, SaltLake City, UT 84116.The TOCDF point ofcontact is Mr. TraceSalmon at (435)833-7428. The Permit-tees’ (U.S. Army Chemi-c a l M a t e r i a l sAgency/EG&G DefenseMaterials) compliancehistory during the life ofthe permit being modi-fied is available from theState of Utah (contactMr. Tom Ball of the UtahDivision of Solid andHazardous Waste at(801) 538-6170). Thepublic comment periodfor this permit modifica-tion request lasts a mini-mum of 60 days and be-gins Thursday, February21, 2008, and will endMonday, April 21, 2008.Written comments re-garding this permit modi-fication request can besubmitted to Mr. DennisDowns, Director, Divi-sion of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste, Utah De-partment of Environmen-tal Quality, 288 North1460 West, P.O. Box144880, Salt Lake City,UT, 84114-4880, andmust be received nolater than 5:00 pm, Mon-day, April 21, 2008.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

PUBLIC NOTICEThis public notice satis-fies requirements of theResource Conservationand Recovery Act andthe Utah HazardousWaste ManagementRules (Utah Administra-t ive Code R315).TOCDF has submitted aClass 2 permit modifica-tion request to theTOCDF RCRA permit.This permit modificationrequest pertains to onewaste stream identifiedin WAP Paragraph2.2.2.21, DPE Suits.This waste stream is de-scribed as Demilitariza-tion Protective Ensem-bles (DPE), which arethe protective suits wornby TOCDF workers, mis-cellaneous plastics, andother Toxic Area Protec-tive (TAP) gear wornduring the course of rou-tine operations. TOCDFis proposing to expandthe air monitoring deter-mination analytical pa-rameter to include DPEwaste bags which havean agent concentrationresult between the cur-rent 0.2 VSL and an up-per limit of 1.0 VSL foroff-site shipment anddisposal under theP999/F999 waste code.This Permit modificationrequest is identified bythe alphanumeric desig-nation TOCDF-WAP-02-0989. A public infor-mation meeting on thispermit modification re-quest will be held at 6:00p.m. on Wednesday,March 26, 2008, at theTooele Chemical Stock-pile Outreach Office, 54South Main Street,Tooele, Utah, 84074. Acopy of this permit modi-fication request is avail-able for review by thegeneral public duringregular business hoursat:Tooele ChemicalStockpile Outreach Of-fice, 54 South Main St.,Tooele, UT 84074,Tooele City Library, 128W. Vine Street, Tooele,UT 84074, and Utah Di-vision of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste Offices(DSHW, Dept. of Envi-ronmental Quality), 288North 1460 West, SaltLake City, UT 84116.The TOCDF point ofcontact is Mr. TraceSalmon at (435)833-7428. The Permit-tees’ (U.S. Army Chemi-c a l M a t e r i a l sAgency/EG&G DefenseMaterials) compliancehistory during the life ofthe permit being modi-fied is available from theState of Utah (contactMr. Tom Ball of the UtahDivision of Solid andHazardous Waste at(801) 538-6170). Thepublic comment periodfor this permit modifica-tion request lasts a mini-mum of 60 days and be-gins Thursday, February21, 2008, and will endMonday, April 21, 2008.Written comments re-garding this permit modi-fication request can besubmitted to Mr. DennisDowns, Director, Divi-sion of Solid and Haz-ardous Waste, Utah De-partment of Environmen-tal Quality, 288 North1460 West, P.O. Box144880, Salt Lake City,UT, 84114-4880, andmust be received nolater than 5:00 pm, Mon-day, April 21, 2008.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February21, 2008)

SUMMONSThe State of Utah to: Allpersons unknown claim-ing any interest in thereal property located inTooele County, de-scribed beginning at theNorthwest corner of theMichael Anderson Sub-division, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section lineand 330.218 feet Eastfrom the unmarked loca-tion established by theTooele County depend-ent resurvey for theWest quarter corner ofSection 33, Township 2South, Range 5 West,Salt Lake Base and Me-ridian (said unmarkedWest quarter corner liesNorth 0°05'22" East254.06 feet from aTooele County depend-ent resurvey witnessmonument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies South 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid section 33); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along an ancientfence line the followingfive (5) courses: (1)North 1°00'00" West74.00 feet; (2) North 0°18'00" East 300.00 Feet;(3) North 0°10'00" West400.00 feet; (4) North 0°07'00" East 250.00 Feet;(5) North 0°10'00" West255.40 feet to a fencecorner; thence North 0°10'00" West 40.62 feet;thence South 89°57'55"East 179.70 feet; thenceSouth 0°07'00" East1320.00 feet to intersectthe North line of said Mi-chael Anderson subdivi-sion; thence along saidNorth line North 89°57'55" West 181.15 feetto the point of beginningParcel 01-059-0-0004,and beginning at theNortheast corner of theMichael Anderson subdi-vision, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as Entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section line,330.218 feet East and329.65 feet South 89°57'55" East from the un-marked location estab-lished by the TooeleCounty dependent resur-vey for the West quartercorner of Section 33,Township 2 South,Range 5 West, Salt LakeBase and Meridian (saidunmarked West quartercorner lies North 0°05'22" East 254.06 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurvey wit-ness monument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies south 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid Section 33.); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along the North lineof said Michael Ander-son subdivision, North89°57'55" West 148.50feet; thence North 0°07'00" West 1320.00feet; thence South 89°57'55" East 148.50 feetto a point in an old, wellestablished fence line;thence along that linedescribed in that certainboundary line agreementfound as Entry No.261735 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder , South 0°07'00"East 1320.00 feet to thepoint of beginning. Youare hereby notified that acomplaint to quiet titlethe subject property hasbeen filed against eachof you in the Third Dis-tr ict Court, TooeleCounty, Utah. You arehereby summoned andrequired to file an an-swer in writing to theComplaint which hasbeen filed with the Clerkof the above-entitledcourt, 74 South 100East, Tooele, Utah,84074, and to serveupon, or mail to, GaryBuhler, Plaintiff's Attor-ney, PO Box 229,Grantsville, UT 84029-0229, a copy of said an-swer within 20 days afterservice of this summonsupon you. If you fail soto do, judgment by de-fault will be takenagainst you for the reliefdemanded in said Com-plaint.Dated this February 13,2008./S/ Gary Buhler(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21, 28 & March 6,2008)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONSThe State of Utah to: Allpersons unknown claim-ing any interest in thereal property located inTooele County, de-scribed beginning at theNorthwest corner of theMichael Anderson Sub-division, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section lineand 330.218 feet Eastfrom the unmarked loca-tion established by theTooele County depend-ent resurvey for theWest quarter corner ofSection 33, Township 2South, Range 5 West,Salt Lake Base and Me-ridian (said unmarkedWest quarter corner liesNorth 0°05'22" East254.06 feet from aTooele County depend-ent resurvey witnessmonument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies South 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid section 33); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along an ancientfence line the followingfive (5) courses: (1)North 1°00'00" West74.00 feet; (2) North 0°18'00" East 300.00 Feet;(3) North 0°10'00" West400.00 feet; (4) North 0°07'00" East 250.00 Feet;(5) North 0°10'00" West255.40 feet to a fencecorner; thence North 0°10'00" West 40.62 feet;thence South 89°57'55"East 179.70 feet; thenceSouth 0°07'00" East1320.00 feet to intersectthe North line of said Mi-chael Anderson subdivi-sion; thence along saidNorth line North 89°57'55" West 181.15 feetto the point of beginningParcel 01-059-0-0004,and beginning at theNortheast corner of theMichael Anderson subdi-vision, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as Entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section line,330.218 feet East and329.65 feet South 89°57'55" East from the un-marked location estab-lished by the TooeleCounty dependent resur-vey for the West quartercorner of Section 33,Township 2 South,Range 5 West, Salt LakeBase and Meridian (saidunmarked West quartercorner lies North 0°05'22" East 254.06 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurvey wit-ness monument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies south 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid Section 33.); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along the North lineof said Michael Ander-son subdivision, North89°57'55" West 148.50feet; thence North 0°07'00" West 1320.00feet; thence South 89°57'55" East 148.50 feetto a point in an old, wellestablished fence line;thence along that linedescribed in that certainboundary line agreementfound as Entry No.261735 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder , South 0°07'00"East 1320.00 feet to thepoint of beginning. Youare hereby notified that acomplaint to quiet titlethe subject property hasbeen filed against eachof you in the Third Dis-tr ict Court, TooeleCounty, Utah. You arehereby summoned andrequired to file an an-swer in writing to theComplaint which hasbeen filed with the Clerkof the above-entitledcourt, 74 South 100East, Tooele, Utah,84074, and to serveupon, or mail to, GaryBuhler, Plaintiff's Attor-ney, PO Box 229,Grantsville, UT 84029-0229, a copy of said an-swer within 20 days afterservice of this summonsupon you. If you fail soto do, judgment by de-fault will be takenagainst you for the reliefdemanded in said Com-plaint.Dated this February 13,2008./S/ Gary Buhler(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21, 28 & March 6,2008)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONSThe State of Utah to: Allpersons unknown claim-ing any interest in thereal property located inTooele County, de-scribed beginning at theNorthwest corner of theMichael Anderson Sub-division, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section lineand 330.218 feet Eastfrom the unmarked loca-tion established by theTooele County depend-ent resurvey for theWest quarter corner ofSection 33, Township 2South, Range 5 West,Salt Lake Base and Me-ridian (said unmarkedWest quarter corner liesNorth 0°05'22" East254.06 feet from aTooele County depend-ent resurvey witnessmonument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies South 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid section 33); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along an ancientfence line the followingfive (5) courses: (1)North 1°00'00" West74.00 feet; (2) North 0°18'00" East 300.00 Feet;(3) North 0°10'00" West400.00 feet; (4) North 0°07'00" East 250.00 Feet;(5) North 0°10'00" West255.40 feet to a fencecorner; thence North 0°10'00" West 40.62 feet;thence South 89°57'55"East 179.70 feet; thenceSouth 0°07'00" East1320.00 feet to intersectthe North line of said Mi-chael Anderson subdivi-sion; thence along saidNorth line North 89°57'55" West 181.15 feetto the point of beginningParcel 01-059-0-0004,and beginning at theNortheast corner of theMichael Anderson subdi-vision, according to theofficial plat thereof,found as Entry No.86741 in book 429 atpage 162 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder, said point lies24.754 feet North 0°12'10" West along theTooele County depend-ent resurvey section line,330.218 feet East and329.65 feet South 89°57'55" East from the un-marked location estab-lished by the TooeleCounty dependent resur-vey for the West quartercorner of Section 33,Township 2 South,Range 5 West, Salt LakeBase and Meridian (saidunmarked West quartercorner lies North 0°05'22" East 254.06 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurvey wit-ness monument in MainStreet, said witnessmonument lies North 0°05'22" East 2402.51 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Southwest corner ofsaid Section 33; said un-marked West quartercorner also lies south 0°12'10" East 2657.70 feetfrom a Tooele Countydependent resurveymonument representingthe Northwest corner ofsaid Section 33.); thencefrom said point of begin-ning, along the North lineof said Michael Ander-son subdivision, North89°57'55" West 148.50feet; thence North 0°07'00" West 1320.00feet; thence South 89°57'55" East 148.50 feetto a point in an old, wellestablished fence line;thence along that linedescribed in that certainboundary line agreementfound as Entry No.261735 in the office ofthe Tooele County Re-corder , South 0°07'00"East 1320.00 feet to thepoint of beginning. Youare hereby notified that acomplaint to quiet titlethe subject property hasbeen filed against eachof you in the Third Dis-tr ict Court, TooeleCounty, Utah. You arehereby summoned andrequired to file an an-swer in writing to theComplaint which hasbeen filed with the Clerkof the above-entitledcourt, 74 South 100East, Tooele, Utah,84074, and to serveupon, or mail to, GaryBuhler, Plaintiff's Attor-ney, PO Box 229,Grantsville, UT 84029-0229, a copy of said an-swer within 20 days afterservice of this summonsupon you. If you fail soto do, judgment by de-fault will be takenagainst you for the reliefdemanded in said Com-plaint.Dated this February 13,2008./S/ Gary Buhler(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin February14, 21, 28 & March 6,2008)

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A m e r i c A n s F o r T h e A r T s . o r g

Sell Your Stuff! run An Ad in the ClASSifiedS! 882-0050

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINC12 THURSDAY February 21, 2008

1231 N. 490 E., Tooele $214,9005 bdrm, 2.75 bath, grand, fully finished home on .18 ac, new hrdwd laminate flrs/carpet, plantation shutters thru out, extend-ed mst bth, fm rm, new dishwasher, newer 6 man hot tub, pool, patio, cvrd deck, fncd, w/d/fridge stay. Move In! Live it up! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #769669

1096 Paulos Blvd., Tooele $214,900Drop Dead Gorgeous Home! 4 bdrm (5th bd poss, needs closet), 3 bath, 100% fin, new hrdwd fl, tile, scrumptious silestone countertops, open living/kit/dining area, mature yd, spotless, invit-ing. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #757206

LARGE BEDROOMS!

PRICE REDUCED

328 Candellaria Dr., Tooele $192,0003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg. Beautiful two story home in Overlake. Main floor family room. Close to park/schools. Call Debbie Millward 435-830-4716. #762551

1388 N 650 E., Tooele $219,9003 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 car grg. Very cute rambler in very nice area. Corner lot, walk-in closets, master bath, great mountain views. Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #725313

135 Heritage Hill Dr., Tooele $259,9002 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 car grg. Stunning country home with mountain backdrop. Exceptional landscaping. Immaculate in-terior with upgrades throughout. Lovely, quiet neighborhood. Call Ron and Cindy Wood 435-840-4959. #720535

FULL BASEMENT

CBCOLDWELL BANKER

For more information visit our website: www.utahhomes.comReal Estate & Mortgage Information: 1-877-771-3196

777 North Main Street • Tooele, Utah 84074 • (435) 882-2100

Jack Walters435-840-3010

Ron Wood801-842-2194

Christina Vowles 435-496-3820

Rob Riegel435-830-6406

Vicki Powell-Onederra435-830-6010

Laney Riegel, GRI, ABR435-830-7583

Debbie Millward435-830-4716

BROKER Brad Sutton435-830-0370

Kathy Whitehouse435-830-4441

Cindy Wood435-840-4959

Peggy Van Dam435-850-8888

Bryton Lawrence435-224-4221

Pam Mallet435-850-0105

Heather Miller435-841-7202

Jim Busico435-840-1494

Tana DuBose801-301-1275

Margie Gonzales435-830-1177

Laramie Dunn435-224-4000

Camie Jefferies435-840-0727

Guy Keisel435-496-3739

Jay Kirk435-830-2091

3030 Deer Run Dr., Stockton $389,9004 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3 car grg. Beau-tiful rambler under construction in The Benches at South Rim. Come out and take a look! Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #694398

Rhett Beecher801-718-5483

Robin Stewart435-224-2212

7742 Mtn View Dr., Lake Point $324,0003 bdrm, 1.5 bath, 2 carport. Horse property, 2 acres, very nice home, 1.73 acre ft water included. Beautiful views, lots of possibilities. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #736078

Mark Martinez435-830-0655

233 Country Club, Stansbury $219,9005 bdrm, 1 full, two 3/4, one 1/2 bath, extra lrg 2 car grg. Open main flr w/ lrg dining rm. Laundry on main, supurb stor-age, closet organizers, lrg mstr bed, great deck off dining, beautiful kitchen, 4 big bdrms downstairs, 2 could be mstr bed, wood burning stove, storage shed. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #734872

FRESH PAINT, NEW VINYL & CARPET

46 Barbed Wire Circle, Grantsville $196,0003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg. Beautiful, upgraded, well-kept home w/ main flr master & laundry. Must sell fast! Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #716724

MAKE AN OFFER!

478 E. Manchester Ln., Stansbury $339,900Better than new! 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, spotless 2005 modern plan, rambler, over 3600 sq ft on .18 ac w/rv prkg. Upgraded lighting, hardware, carpet, tile, stain-less steel appl (fridge inc), water softener, W/D incl, ld-scp done. Amazing granite countertops, walk-in clos-ets in all bdrms. Sep jetted tub/shower in mst. Walking distance to elementary and high school. More More More! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #723584

PRICE REDUCED

1246 N. Cedarwood Rd., Tooele $189,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Clean, one owner, large family room, rv parking, fully landscaped/fenced. Call Kathy Whitehouse 435-830-4441. #746903

117 Box Elder Dr., Grantsville $265,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. A new cus-tom home. Ready to move in. Call Mark Martinez 435-830-0655. #748218

722 Country Club, Stansbury Park $219,9005 bdrm, 2.75 bath, 2 car grg. RV parking, lg fncd yd. New carpet/pad, new furnace, dishwasher, new hardwood flrs, new mas-sive timber tech deck leading from new french doors to great mature yd. Classy! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #709480

AVAILABLE AGAIN!MASTER BATH ISOOO LA LA!

88 W. 1970 N., Tooele $138,5003 bdrm, 1.5 bath, super chic end unit condo. 1 car grg, newer carpet, clean, space saver micro, smooth top range, tray ceilings, ceiling fans, lots of light. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #745884

POSH!

35 Aparicio, Tooele $199,9004 bdrm, 3 bath, 2 car grg. This former model home comes w/ tons of upgrades. New paint/carpet, tile, hardwood flr, fully fncd bkyd, breath taking views. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #745711

465 W. 670 N., Tooele $182,5003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Approx 1800 sq ft, master suite has his/hers closets, large kitchen, full landscaping, super clean. Call Camie Jefferies 435-840-0727. #754209

998 S. 970 W., Tooele $170,0004 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Beautiful, clean rambler. Lots of tile, recessed lights, 2 tone paint, skylights. Fridge included. Bkyd is kids paradise w/ nice swing set, playhouse. Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #751908

676 N. 170 W., Tooele $179,5003 bdrm, 1.5 bath, 2 car grg. Over 1800 sq ft! Applicances stay, main floor laundry, corner lot, no bkyd neighbors, large deck, cute house. Call Camie Jef-feries 435-840-0727. #754872

286 Bevan Way, Tooele $199,9005 bdrm, 3 bath, 2 car grg. Great home in very nice neighborhood, completely re-modeled, new cabinets, paint, carpet, ap-pliances, fireplaces, bar in family room, all new tile. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010 or Christina Vowles 435-496-3820. #743393

285 Alfred Dr., Tooele $130,0003 bdrm, 1 bath, 1 car grg. Very nice, ready to move in. New paint, carpet. Cute neighborhood. Great starter home. Call Jack Walters 435-840-3010. #708884

2866 W. Rim Rock Dr., Stockton $391,9004 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3 car grg. Beautiful new home built on 1.5 acres in South Rim. Large open rooms, bonus room, great views. You must see this home. Choose your colors! Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #725052

908 S. 710 W., Tooele $154,9004 bdrm, 1.5 bath, carport. Affordable rambler on corner lot, great floor plan, applicances stay. Make an offer! Call Jack Walters 435-840-3010. #756107

WILL PAY CLOSINGSOFFER 156K!

168 E. Aparicio, Tooele $177,9003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg. Brand new home, fully landscaped, ready to move in, lots of upgrades. Don’t miss! Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010 or Christina Vowles 435-496-3820. #748593

MAINTENANCEFREE

95 N. 270 W., Tooele $115,000Investor wanted! Home on 1.04 ac. NEED CASH TO PURCHASE! Home needs fur-nace, however all utilities are there, pos-sibilities are many. Call for more info! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #756004

736 Arrow St., Tooele $239,9004 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Beautiful home, very close to elementary school, circular driveway w/ rv parking, front yd zeroscaped, fully fenced. Call Bryton Lawrence 435-224-4221. #749085

SOLD

266 Alfred Dr., Tooele $139,5003 bdrm, 1.75 bath, twin home w/ rv park-ing, fncd yd w/ no bkyd neighbors! Very clean, spacious, over 1700 sq ft, 95% fin-ished bsmt w/ plumbing for another bath. This is a sweet place to call home. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #756530

357 E. 840 N., Tooele $179,9004 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg. Great multi on corner lot. Great price! Just down the st from park, close to school, church, shopping. Central air, rv parking, home warranty. Call Pam Mallet 435-850-0105. #763691

SOLD

LOTS & ACREAGE

Lot #2 Rocky Top Sub, Erda $345,000 5 ACRES IN ERDA Horse property. Build your dream home. Enjoy the beautiful views. Close to BLM Land. 8 acre ft water to be approved. Call Pam Mallet 435-850-0105. #682033

1200 South Main, Lot #1, Tooele $270,000 3.2 acre zoned neighborhood commercial. This is a glaringly great price for this kind of opportu-nity. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #614661

1200 South Main St., Lot #2, Tooele $370,000 WOW! 4.27 acres zoned neigh-borhood commercial. Runs from Coleman to Three O’Clock Drive along highway. This is an unbelievable deal for this size lot. Call Laney Riegel NOW 435-830-7583. #712368

30 W. 100 S., Tooele $750,000COMMERCIAL LOT - 2 bath, 8 car carport. COMMERCIAL – Dave Drug Building, 30 W. 1st S. 9,000 sq ft. Some fixtures stay. Can be purchased separately. Call Jay Kirk 435-830-2091. #708755

286 E. Cimmaron Way, Erda $350,0005 acre lot in newly established neighbor-hood. Build your dream home. Call Bryton Lawrence 435-224-4221. #726449

2858 W. Ruiz Dr. Lot 44, Stockton $105,500Great views from this elevated 2 acre lot in South Rim in Stockton. Build your dream home here. Animals permitted. Call Brad Sutton 435-830-0370. #742276

Land in Milford, UT Starting at $18,3891 to 5 ac building lots in Milford with water. Quiet living in the country. Call for more pric-es! Call Ron and Cindy Wood 801-842-2194.

400 Worthington St., Grantsville $305,0008.04 ac of prime residential development op-portunities. Zoned R21 (meaning 1/2 ac lots). Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #672368

Stockton Residential Lot adjacent to Plaza St. $39,900 Rare, affordable, .39 ac, build your new home or lot is approved for manufactured home. Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #665361

Canyon Rim Estates 3, Tooele$79,000-$124,900 Beautiful lots at a great price! Use our builder or bring your own. Very private, very nice. Call soon for best selection! Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000.

607 S. Quail Circle, Tooele $89,900Gorgeous 1/3 acre lot, nestled in SE mountain. Stubbed for all utilities, Amazing views. Call Christina Vowles 435-496-3820. #746938

6700 W. 1425 N., Cedar City UT $85,000Beautiful .68 acre building lot in Cedar City, UT. Surrounded by only custom built homes. Call Ron and Cindy Wood 801-842-2194. #766229

278 S. 800 E., Grantsville $329,0004 bdrm, 4 bath, 2 car grg. Upgraded rambler, flawless landscaping on .5 acres. This home is stunning inside and out. Call Jack Walters 435-840-3010. #762877

ED

1891 Stoney Mtn Dr., Lake Point $399,9005 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 car grg. Stunning is an understatement! Immaculate ram-bler in country setting. Outstanding yard includes impressive botanical gar-den! Lrg great room. Call Ron & Cindy Wood 435-840-4959. #760660

HORSE PROPERTY

AWESOME!

1604 E. Country Ln., Erda $478,0006 bdrms, 2 3/4 baths. Horsemans dream! Beautiful home on 5 acres with a large outdoor riding area! If you like to ride take a look at this! Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #751695

SPECTACULAR!

630Crestview Dr., Tooele $295,0005 bdrm, 2.75 bath, 2 car grg. Update kitchen, mstr bath, walk in closet. Full ldscg, heated indoor pool. Call Jay Kirk 435-830-2091. #678224

385 N. First St., Tooele $275,0002.75 acres zoned R17 in beautiful developed area, close to elementary school. Explore the possiblities. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #723659

1200 Silver Ave., Stockton $185,000 2.85 ac, 1.74 ac ft H2O fully fncd, 2 stall barn, out buildings, beautiful views, su-purb bldg site on north side of Silver. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #769305

1200 Silver Ave., Stockton $865,000 33 ac of prime dev opportunity, zoned R5, could have subdivision, contact agent for plat, water info., south side of Silver Ave. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #769311

8289 S. Indian Mtn. Rd., Rush Valley $875,000Standby generator, 2 wells w/ 12 acre ft of water and free flowing stream. 6 bdrm, 3.75 bath, 3 family rooms, 2 gas/log fireplace, 1 pellet stove, 2 dens, weight room, game room, wet bar. Custom 2 story over 5200 sq ft stucco home w/ attchd 3 car grg, detached 5 bay, 3800 sq ft grg w/drive thru RV bay. Placed on 43.11 fenced acres of horse property. Stunning views all around and so much more Call me — Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #766477

SELF SUFFICIENT OASIS! 43.11 acres

885 W. 1220 S., Tooele $174,9003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg on .55 ac, horses permitted, central air, 2700 sq ft, private yd, well kept. Call Jack Wal-ters 435-840-3010. #766649

162 Aparicio Dr., Tooele $187,9004 bdrm, 2.5 bath. Brand new home, mainte-nance free living! Lots of upgrades, seller will pay up to $3500 in closing if use preferred lender. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010 or Christina Vowels 435-496-3820. #766869

668 Easton Ct., Grantsville $183,9003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Open flr plan, mtn views, quiet cul-de-sac, mstr has walk-in, private bath, custom paint, clean, one owner, fully lndscpd w/ sprinklers. Call Ron & Cindy Wood 435-840-4959. #767313

UNDERCONTRACT

583 N. 640 W., Tooele $185,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Brand new construction, hurry to pick your colors, stucco, rock exterior, tile, central air, 2 car grg. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #768025

SOLD

241 Lakeside Dr., Stansbury $229,9003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Clean ram-bler w/ oversized grg/rv parking, beau-tiful cherry wood floors, new paint, living room, family room. Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #764456

BEAUTIFUL!

162 Harvest Ln., Grantsville $349,9003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg. Big, Big Beautiful Rambler! Over 5200 sq ft on .49 acres. Mstr ste w/ grd mstr bath, closet to die for, formal dining w/ custom kitchen, 9 ft main ceilings, custom 16x31 deck, the list goes on and on. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #738558

BIGGEST SQ FT LISTED IN GRANTSVILLE

UNDERCONTRACT

626 Broadway St., Tooele $169,9005 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Totally re-modeled, newer kitchen, carpet, flrg, huge grg w/awesome deck/bkyd. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #767252

1464 Country Ln., Erda $799,9007 bdrm, 3 full bath, (2) 1/2 bath, 3 car grg. Amazing home w/ all the extras! Over 6300 sq ft, incredible theatre rm, bonus rm, gran-ite countertops, wood trim throughout, 5 ac lot, beautiful mtn views. Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #766884

388 E. 950 N., Tooele $219,9004 bdrm, 1.75 bath, 2 car grg. Looks brand new! The bsmt area has been made into a mst ste, it’s lovely! Won’t last long at this price! Call Laramie Dunn 435-224-4000. #768396

767 N. 310 E., Tooele $184,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Wonder-ful location, beautiful inside/out, lrge trees, fully fncd, auto sprinklers, stor-age shed, office. Call Robin Stewart 435-224-2122. #769038

648 E. 670 N., Tooele $169,9003 bdrm, 2 bath, 1 car grg. Great starter home, completely finished, big deck, great yd. Owner/agent. Call Vicki Pow-ell 435-830-6010. #768649

33 Strasbourg Ln., Stansbury $227,0004 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Excellent condition, Stansbury Park home, won’t last long. Call Mark Martinez 435-830-0655. #768776

UNDERCONTRACT

469 Country Club, Stansbury $315,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 car grg. Picturesque views, golf course lot seems enormous w/ no bk neighbors. Huge kitchen, boast new appli-ances/countertops, 2 pantries, skylight, real hardwood flrs. Beautiful rambler, over 3500 sq ft w/ main fl laundry. Owner/Agent. Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #760189

LOTS OF UPGRADES!

1035 Paulos Blvd., Tooele $229,9004 bdrm, 3 bath, 2 car grg. This ram-bler won’t last long. Clean as a whistle. Call Mark Martinez 435-830-0655. #768341

UNDERCONTRACT

418 E. Utah Ave., Tooele $125,5003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 lots for the price of one. Build new home on one lot and use the other for rental income. Call Peggy Van Dam 435-850-8888. #769867

931 Southwest Dr., Tooele $154,9005 bdrm, 1.5 bath. Don’t miss this one! Beautiful yd w/ auto sprinkler system, cen-tral air, lrg fm rm w/ fireplace. Call Kathy Whitehouse 435-830-4441. #717744

PRICE REDUCED

112 S. Coleman, Tooele $269,9004 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Horse property, new tile, slate, carpet. Almost an acre, 1312 sq ft heated shop, new windows. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #758093

HORSE PROPERTY

956 N. Fox Run Dr., Tooele $299,9003 bdrm, 2.5 bath. Brand new construction. 3 car garage, stucco & brick, upgraded cabinets, hardwood floors. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #711661

DEDUCED PRICE

708 W. Juniper Dr., Grantsville $352,0003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3 car grg, 4000 sq ft on .36 acres. Stucco, stone, custom rambler w/ exquisite mstr ste, massive kitchen, luxurious great rm w/ fireplace. Absolutely gorgeous, meticulously crafted by Greenpointe Builders. Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #761972

78 W. 1620 N., Tooele $204,9003 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2 car grg w/ rv park-ing - beautiful. Open home w/ loft, laun-dry rm upstairs, fabulous great rm, huge pantry, fresh paint, new lighting. Fridge, micro stay. There’s more, come look! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #756369

SWEET HOME!

127 W. Vine St., Tooele $135,0003 bdrm, 1.75 bath, oversized heated detach grg. New H2O htr, newer roof & furnace, 1 share irrigation water, kitchenette set up in bsmt. SWEET! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #754212

UNDERCONTRACT

SOLD

PRICE REDUCED

SOLD

UNDERCONTRACT

UNDERCONTRACT

UNDERCONTRACT

SALE FAILED

843 Lake St., Salt Lake City $194,0003 bdrm, 1 bath. Investment or han-dy man special. This home is a fixer upper. Call Jack Walters 435-840-3010. #772274

CASH BUYERS ONLY!65 W. 400 S., Tooele $90,0003 bdrm, 1 bath bsmt home with 1 car oversized grg (workshop area) on .24 acre. Approx 1270 sq ft, great home, big living room, updated kitchen, re-ally a neat property. Come look! Call Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. #684953

782 Buzianis Way, Tooele $239,9005 bdrm, 3 bath, 2 car grg, carport. Clean, updated, completely fnshd rambler. Beau-tiful fncd yd w/ deck/sunken hot tub, cov-ered rv parking, oversized grg. Call Tana DuBose 801-301-1275. #771608

926 Fox Run Dr., Tooele $299,9004 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 3 car grg. Gorgeous home, full stucco/rock, granite countertops, oversize fm rm, full ldscp, vinyl fnc, grd mst bath, full bsmt, the list goes on and on. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #772061

752 Juniper Dr., Grantsville $334,900Over 3200 sq ft, 5 bdrm, 3 bath, laundry on main, loft area upstairs, jazzy flr plan on .39 ac, gorgeous cabinetry, kitchen, desk area, so much more, call for more info. Laney Riegel 435-830-7583. 770444

NEW LISTING

396 Antelope Ave., Tooele $148,5004 bdrm, 11/2 bath. Cozy all brick multi-level newer roof, fridge, range, washer & dryer, hardwood floors, fenced backyard, carport & storage shed , a great house for the money. Call Jim Busico 435-840-1494. #772402

NEW LISTING

30 S. Rogers St. Stockton $87,0001 bdrm, 1 bath, Cute canyon entrance bungalow remodeled, new siding & roof. Two lots included. Call Jack Walters 435-840-3010. #773641

NEW LISTING

590 Blueridge, Tooele $164,9003 bdrm, 1.5 bath, 2 car grg. Adorable starter home, new paint, carpet, huge deck, newer central air, lrg fncd bkyd, available right away. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #770744

UNDERCONTRACT

UNDERCONTRACT

1273 N. 490 E., Tooele $169,0003 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Great house, great price, great neighborhood! Over 2,000 sq ft., .21 acres, new paint & carpet, central air, master bath, walkin closet, main floor laundry. Call Camie Jefferies 435-840-0727. #773817

259 W. Settlers Ct., Tooele $329,9003 bdrm, 3 bath, Beautiful custom, new construction. 9ft ceilings, grd mst ste, workout rm or nursery off mst bdrm, huge 4 car grg. lrg lot, custom paint, all tile flrs. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010. #757665

737 White Pine Dr., Tooele $164,9004 bdrm, 2 bath, 2 car grg. Great starter home, completely finished, great neigh-borhood, new cabinets/tops, new paint/carpet. Call Vicki Powell 435-830-6010 or Christina Vowles 435-496-3820. #743471

CLOSING COSTS PAID

NEW LISTING

To list your home here contact one

of our agents.

UNDERCONTRACT