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Today's word on journalism

May 12, 2009

The Last WORD


The Fat Lady Sings, Off-Key, Drools

At about this time every year, like the swallows to Capistrano or the buzzards to Hinckley, Ohio, the WORD migrates to its summer musing grounds at the sanitarium —St. Mumbles Home for the Terminally Verbose.

The reason is clear, and never moreso than as this season —the WORD's 13th —peters out.

It's been a fraught year of high palaver and eye-popping transition, both good and not-so-much. An interminable presidential campaign saga finally did end, and in extraordinary and historic fashion. Meanwhile, the bottom and everything that's below the bottom fell out of the economy, with families, homes, entire industries and —of particular interest to WORDsters and the civic-minded —dozens of daily newspapers ("I don't so much mind that newspapers are dying--it's watching them commit suicide that pisses me off." --Molly Ivins). . . all evaporating. What replaces them, from the individual to the institutional to the societal? Are we looking at a future of in-depth Tweeting?

As any newsperson or firehorse knows, it's hard to turn your back on day-to-day catastrophe --we just have to look at the car wreck. But even the most deranged and driven need a rest. As philosopher Lilly Tomlin once observed, "No matter how cynical you become, it's never enough to keep up."

So this morning, as a near-frost hovered over northern Utah, the unmarked van pulled into the driveway and the gentle, soft-spoken men in the white coats rolled the WORD out of bed and into a straitjacket for the usual summer trip to St. Mumbles, where the blathering one will be assigned a hammock and fed soothing, healthy foods --like tapioca, dog biscuits and salmon --while recharging the essential muscles of cynicism, outrage, sarcasm, social engagement and high-mindedness, in preparation for the next edition.
Summer well, friends.

Speak up! Comment on the WORD at

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Feedback and suggestions--printable and otherwise--always welcome. "There are no false opinions."

Making the grade to become a cop

By Aaron Mecham

May 5, 2009 | CACHE COUNTY, Utah -- Nick Nessen didn't want to be a cop as a kid. He didn't even have a close family friend that was a police officer and influenced him so deeply he wanted to be just like that friend. So what made him want to become a peace officer?

"I enjoy adrenaline rushes," Nessen said.

Nessen didn't decide he wanted to become a police officer until he was 20. He said before that he wanted to be a pharmacist.

On his journey to becoming a member of the Tremonton Police Department, Nessen said he had to pass background checks and drug tests to even get into the police academy. Then he said he attended five days a week for 10 months to graduate. He said that any felonies or domestic violence charges against him could have eliminated him from becoming a police officer.

Duren Montgomery recently applied for an open position for a deputy at the Cache County Sheriff's Office. Montgomery said he hadn't been to police academy, but decided to take a chance anyway. He said he had to take two tests, a video test and a physical test. He said the video test involved multiple choice questions regarding how he would respond in certain situations. Montgomery said he failed that one, but passed the physical test which involved running one and a half miles in around 15 minutes, 18 push-ups, 26 sit-ups and have a vertical jump of 16 inches.

"The combination of them both was like an eight on a difficulty scale of one to 10," Montgomery said.

Montgomery said the video test was more than just basic knowledge and common sense.

Being hired on with a police department or sheriff's office isn't the end of testing. Chief Deputy Dave Bennett of the Cache County Sheriff's Office said to become a sergeant, deputies need to be with the sheriff's office for five years to be allowed to test. Tests are administered every 18 to 24 months.

Bennett said sergeants need to hold that rank for another five years and test again to become a lieutenant.

There are four video academies in Utah, Bennett said. If someone wants to be hired as a deputy they have no requirement for them to attend before applying and the sheriff's office has hired civilians before.

"When we do testing, anyone can test," Bennett said.

But they don't hire those that haven't attended police academy very often.

"There are just so many guys with certification we typically hire those that have been through academy," Bennett said.

Even though Nessen hasn't wanted to be a police officer his entire life, he said he plans on sticking with it for a while. He said he is planning on working for the drug task force as he advances.

When asked what the best part of being a police officer was, Nessen replied simply, "Driving fast."

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