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Show Letter to the Editor Editor: WHaT'S dto a serious ?D8 V SB0UT THIS Ptmem school 3 sour no, pap! you can ser sll at Your is As Jake Gams seatmate in the United States Senate, Ive watched with great admiration the tremendous job he did on the ERA matter. Rarely, if ever, has any Senator contacted as many individual Senators to express his views as Jake did. Had it not been for his personal efforts the vote level he attained would not have been possible. Hell probably be distressed with me for writing this note, but I felt strongly that this singular performance by a remarkably dedicated Senator should not go unrecognized at home. this true 3 you warn. iD)(0 Sincerely, Paul Laxalt U.S. Senator, Nevada Clearfield The OCTOBER 2. 1978 An attempted theft from Max Factor is being investigated and several juveniles were questionned. $95 worth of items were recovered. Smith Food King reported having a shoplifter in custoday. A juvenile citation was issued when a person attempted to leave with some cigarettes. Barlow Furniture, 225 Main, reported boys on bicycles were causing damage to carpeting outside the store. A telephone harrassment incident is being investigated. Auto Salvage, 17 N. Main, reported the loss of a fender and carbuerator, valued at $85. A juvenile was referred to his parents after posibly attempting to take two beers from Smith Food King. A female runaway turned herself into the police and the Division of Family Services. Oliver Keith Horrocks, 1064 Leon Dr., Layton, 26, was taken to Davis County Sheriffs Office on a charge of public intoxication. Ron J. Kelly was charged with possession of a controlled substance and taken to the sheriffs office. Gail Jepson, 25, 843 E. 200 S., was charged with driving under the influence and taken to the Davis County Sheriffs Office. . Cupboard by Janie - Hubbard in-la- OCTOBER 3, 1978 Adrians reported three pair of pants missing, valued at $78. Kevin Leonard Walker, 18, Oakland, Calif., was taken to the Davis County Sheriffs Office following his arrest on the IMsiisMMi charge. Sprous Reitz reported a shoplifter had taken $16.88 worth of items. Charged in the case was Lanece Ann Demille, 20, 550 N. Ann. Gus Kallas reported another gun missing in a previous burglary report. Also missing is a 38 Special, valued at $150. David Fowler reported damage to his vehicle in an apparent hit and run accident while his car was parked. A girl was issued a juvenile citation for illegal possession of tobacco at Clearfield High. OCTOBER 4, 1978 Don Penteress, 163 E. 350 S., reported $118 worth of tools missing. A disorderly person report at the Brunswick Bar was investigated by officers. The man agreed to leave. Harrassing phone calls were reported by a woman who wanted a formal complaint signed. Officers checked a prowler report from Jeff Mass, 127 Center, with negative results. Officers assisted at 1 in getting five boys to leave that had been playing the pin ball machine for some time. The store employee had asked them to leave when he had some work to do in the backroom . Ruben Morrison, 442 S. State, reported finding five checks in his bank statement that he had not written. Officers are investigating the fraudulent checks. Myma Martinez, 24, was held at the Clearfield Police Department until the Box Elder Sheriffs Office could pick her upon an outstanding warrant. OCTOBER A 14 5, 1978 runaway girl was located and placed into Moweda on the recommendation of the Division of Family Services. Eddie Clifton Foy, 36, 3374 Porter, plead guilty to a Class C theft charge and was sentenced deferred, pending a presentence report. t An ungovernable juvenile was reported. A meeting was set up with the mother, the child and Dr. Fillman at the Davis Medical Center. A plaque found on was taken to the police department. June Wallin, 50, 5774 S. 2150 W., Roy, was arrested on a driving under the influence charge and taken to the Davis County Sheriffs Office. year-ol- d OCTOBER 6, 1978 Mark Chacon plead guilty to an assault charged and levied a $65 fine. The from 810 25th St., Ogden, was involved in a fight at Clearfield High. llM NATIONAL HEALTH PLAN: BAD MEDICINE By Edwin Feulner With Senator Edward Kennedy in the midst of a national campaign to promote further government involvement in the financing and delivery of health care to the American people, there comes a sobering warning from other sources that what the Senator has in mind is bad medicine. Of course, the Senator is not alone in his slavish devotion to socialized medicine. Joseph Califano, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) has argued that health care in America today (is) a vast, sprawling, highly expensive, and virtually industry a unique system of economic relationships that are commanding, and controlling, an ever larger share of our nations resources. His and Senator Kennedys solution: "National Health Insurance to protect all Americans from the crushing burden of medical expenses . . . Former Secretary of the Treasury William Simon sees it otherwise. There is little competition in the health care industry, Califano charges. Therefore nationalize it. But this is like saying that the way to solve the problem of the Imperial Presidency is to establish a Monarchy, Simon says. True, Simon notes, there is a cost problem. In 1976, the national health care bill came to about $140 billion. But even the Presidents own Council on Wage and Price Stability has admitted that with current reimbursement programs and the ubiquitous and often conflicting morass of regulations, the Federal government instead of being part of the is part of the problem of rising health care solution costs. One recent HEW study, moreover, has estimated that if ... ... r? WAYME1!T Caros About Pooplo the U.S. were to attempt to duplicate Britains e health care system (a concept embraced by Senator Kennedy), it would add another hundred billion dollars a year to the cost of medicine. And, says Dr. Stuart M. Butler of Londons Adam Smith Institute, in a study written for The Heritage Foundation, Americans shouldnt be in any hurry to copy the British National Health Service program. The British experience tells the tale. Great Britains National Health Service (NHS), which is free to the consumer, pays for medical and dental care, hospital care, ambulance services, laboratory fees, and surgery. In theory, this sounds ideal. In practice, it has led to the intrusion of political considerations irtto what should be strictly medical matters, a bureaucratic proliferation which has led to a ratio of almost two administrators to every practicing doctor, and trade union activity which militates against both the system and the patient. The statistics tell only part of the story. In 1965, for example, there were 470,000 hospital beds in England, with 517.000 patients on waiting lists. By 1976, there were only 412.000 hospital beds, and a waiting list of 644,000. Long waiting lists, he notes, are matched by failing standards within the hospital system, shortages of trained doctors and nurses (who have been leaving the country in record numbers), and other serious problems. In other words, what the British have is bad medicine:-expensivand lacking in quality. This is something Americans can do without. (Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Washington-base- d public policy research organization.) cradle-to-grav- Sen. Washington, D.C. Orrin G. Hatch has (R-Uta- introduced legislation emergency to continue tax exemptions for educational institutions. Those exemptions are non-prof- it eliminate tax exemptions for and private parochial schools based on an ar- bitrary determination of descrimination. This really shows the lack of interest and study by the IRS on this subject. By their very definition, parochial, private non-prof- it schools EXCLUSIVELY PAID BY COMM. FOR SHERM WAYMENT - (DONA WAYMENT Corner News from Heritage Center e At. October - what a beautiful month to prepare your hobby for the Christmas bazaar. It will be held at Heritage Center, Dec. 1. If you have already called the center and had your table reserved, have you told your friends about it? Already the center is buzzing with excitement. Some of you seniors had such delightful items entered in the county fair. Had you thought about selling them at the bazaar? We will be having flu shots available also in the near future Nov. 6. Just call and leave your name and phone number. If you have not been to Heritage Center, choose one of these lovely autumn days to come over and see all that is here for you to enjoy. Plan to attend the candidates meeting, Oct. 25. Both state and federal candidates will be here. This is a special opportunity to find out for yourself what the candidate will do for your particular needs. 773-706- - have formal schools involved, to the students that attend the schools, and to the parents who pay to keep these schools open," Hatch said in a speech on the Senate floor. NOV. 7th STAFF STAFF The Sun Chronic l and Claarflold Courier or published weekly at Roy, Utah, S3SS S. 1900 W. Mailing addroic, P.O. Box 207, Roy, Utah 84067. or Salt Lake 399-21Telephone S2S-16-6 All nowt and photograph, lor Thuridoy, paper mu,t bo In tho now! office Mfor Monday at S pm. Picture, may ba Included without charge, either taken in our office or tubmltled by you. J. Howard Stable M.OIon Ad ami Mr. Bennie Stable Janet Smalloy Rat Sutter lias Fullmer Boggy Jo Adams Traci Adams Ownor-Puhllsh- Ant. Publisher Advertising Mgr. Chronicle Idltor Courier Idltor Sports Idltor staff staff Correspondents: Roy IDS Church and Roy News, Vlriginlo Wurstoo, Sunset LDS Church and Sunset News, Denisa Hammon, Washington Terrace News, Fran Taylor, Riverdale News, Helen Norton, 829-664- mzw. Sid Roy, Riverdale, Hooper, Clearfield, Sunset, So. Weber ' Citizens hearings and approval by Congress before they go into effect. Obviously, what we are dealing with here is very important to the 3,500 Shcrm visits Senior Citizens Senior r Congress does not act to stop this attack before October 22nd, private institutions of learning will be required to show policies in hiring, admissions and teaching policy. Educational institutions, operated in Utah by the Catholic and LDS churches, could be particularly hurt by the IRS regulations and could easily lose their tax exempt status. For some of the Utah schools this would probably mean the end of their service. The Hatch bill simply requires that the IRS regulations Retail Price on Organs - and are discriminatory because they cater to a specific segment of the population. If OFF 25 ELECT Shorm A. Wayment ... Hatch introduces emergency legislation on tax exemptions scheduled to end within 30 days under new regulations ordered by the Internal Revenue Service. the IRS is atWhat tempting to do here is UTAH STATE SENATOR Ive been thinking about going on a diet for the past ten years. I really want to diet, bid feel I should wait for the opportune moment ... a time when success is relatively sure. You know, the opportune moment when you have enough money, not an abundance, just enough. Perhaps twenty dollars in your checking account with no bills, no kids needing clothes, nothing pressing. Its extremely hazardous to your health if you suffer both hunger pangs and money worries. You cant diet when its raining. You need the sun shining, flowers in bloom, and a warm breeze on your soon to be sagging skin. to love Marge, my friend, waited years for her her. Why diet when nobody loves and appreciates you? She settled, after twenty two years and sixty pounds, for acceptance. I was going to begin a 900 calorie diet last Monday, but the children quarreled. I began a diet last July, but the teenagers across the street drove me out of my gourd revving their cars all day and well into the night. Everyone has heard the sage advice, If you start anything new, any project, with dirty windows, messy drawers, a sour, stinking refrigerator or mending waiting, YOU WILL FAIL." I have believed this for twenty years and that is one of the reasons I still wear my hair in its high school style and why I have a body of flab. Holidays play a major role in ones dieting plans. One has to schedule a diet around special occasions. Our social welfare, interactions with others, is of prime importance. I cant see any sense in starting a diet this week when my sons birthday is only eight days away, I absolutely must bake him a cake, and It wouldbejenot to eat the cake with him. Then, in less than three weeka we have Halloween, following Halloween will be Thanksgiving, and then the Christmas holidays my list never ends. Perhaps, you too, have been waiting ten to forty years for that opportune moment. The golden moment that never arrives. The time when the signs are right, youre going to start LIVING, exercising, budgeting, go on a vacation or lose weight Dont wait. There is no opportune moment. CHAIRMAN) OMNIOte . 773-533- 0 . oy, Sen. S.I. Hayakawa one of the leading Senate educators, 825-947- f.) joined with Sen. Hatch in the introduction of the bill. 393-627- 1 c |