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Show WEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL. MAY 31. 1979 ....if Mai Group Class Set ning June 12 and will be conducted at the mental health centers Layton office at 2250 North 1700 West. The fee will be $3 per couple per session LAYTON Davis County Family & Community Mental Health Center is offering a marital couples group which is problem oriented and which will stress com- or munication and marital $30 per couple for the complete ten weeks. enrichment. COUPLES WILL meet Tuesdays from 5:30 to 7 p.m. to discuss topics such as: how to handle crisis, awareness of DR. RICHARD R. Weber and Dorothy Carol Bloss, M.A., will be the Enrollment will feelings, sexuality, problem solving, communication and other relevant issues as determined by group members. Meetings will be held for ten consecutive weeks, begin tal Health office during business hours from Joanne Barnes at be limited to seven couples. is Further information available at the Layton Men773-706- (Graduates session to graduate from the academy. Graduating were Jerry J. Several Davis County police officers graduated in special NEW CRESTWOOD STAKE Vocational Center Components Davis Geared To Success, Jobs AFTER THAT, an individual By TOM BUSSF.LBERG KAYSVILLE - Whether a person is a student at the Davis Vocational Center for a few months or two years, the centers staff and program are geared to find them a job in the end. WHILE THE essential goal is teaching students a marketable skill, six components make up the full program, says Center Director Jack Shell. These include an outtrainreach, ing, the actual training, preemployment, placement and followup. Since the center is only a year old at its present location, many people have yet to learn of its existence and programs. Outreach is primarily concerned with contacting all eligible people including the unemployed, underemployed and those who want skill training for job placement. It also is concerned with the disadvantaged, Mr. Shell says. A MAJOR center goal in the coming year will include contacting those who should attend day or night classes, Mr. Shell continues. Other agencies aiding in locating potential students include the State Division of Family Services, School Davis District, especially high schools, from which many students are drawn, State Job Service, educational drawn up outlining length of training, Mr. Shell says. Then the actual training begins, ranging from two months to a maximum of two It years, he continues. varies, but we recommend at least nine months in most programs. THOSE PROGRAMS range from auto body and auto painting to electrical house wiring trades, homemaking, motherhood, office occupations and plastering trades. Even after a student learns all he can in his specialty, he isnt let loose. churches, employers, juvenile court and the Federal Comprehensive Employment Training Act. Part of outreach includes determining what potential students need and want from the center, he says. A survey showed a great need for welders and that resulted in formulation of a taining a job, including writing of resumes and and stresses ability to work with others. A SUCCESSFUL job inter- means view generally placement in a vocation and the center has a 94 percent placement rate, Mr. Shell says. We are planning a placement center where each student can register and be put on a list available to employers when theyve finished their training. We will also help them locate another job, if need be. Job Service will aid in this , program. While the center is voung. A curriculum based on the have been elected to Davis High School studentbody officers for next year. President of studentbody is Burton Perkins; first vice president, Liz Barlow; second vice president, Sue Costley. needs of the employer so the students are more ready. We will contact plumbers, for example, and see what they require on the job for the first year. The center is located east of 4-- ponsibilities, civic clubs, jobs, housework and so many other things occupy our waking hours and even some of the hours we should be sleeping. Prison for each of the five shooting and kidnapping spree throughout Weber and Davis counties has pleaded guilty to four felony charges. STEVEN SCOTT Pannell, Surveys will be done pinpointing how many students are working three, six and nine months after leaving the Judge Hyde immediately sentenced Pannell to serve concurrent terms of from five years to life in Utah State are averaging on the joo. 28 of Mark Green Killed In Front-En- d - MARK GREEN, of 1463 North Emerald Drive, East Layton, was crushed beneath a front-en- d loader at approximately 664 South on East Oaks Drive. . . Sgt. Dale E. Bone of the Davis County Sheriffs Department said the accident happened while the victim was changing an air filter on f the loader. THE investigating officer explained that Mr. Green was h pinned in a space two-inc- PANNELL HAS been held in Davis County Jail, Farmington, waiting the hearing until Sunday night, that is, when he and a fellow inmate escaped by breaking out a window in an annex area of the jail which is under construction. The two were ' arrested about nine hours later near 600 East and 5600 South, Murray,, by Murray police. As a result, additional felony charges have been filed against Pannell and his companion, Edward Dale Hardy, 27, of 155 South 200 East, Farmington. Hardy is waiting trial in Second District Court, Farmington, on a charge of first degree murder. PANNELL WAS charged gine. MR. PATTERSON, who was changing a seat on the machine, then accidently bumped a lever . which releases the bucket and the bucket and arm slammed down, striking Mr. Green across the waist and pinning him against the engine. The victim was dead on arrival at Davis North Medical Center in Layton. ATTEMPTED THE homicide charge against Pannell stems from an alleged incident during the foot chase in which Pannell reportedly fired a sawed-of- f shot gun at Murray Police Officer (and former Bountiful police officer) Randy K. Richins as the officer attempted an arrest. However, the gun was unloaded, according to police reports. The theft charges apparently stem from an alleged burglary in the Murray area at which the escapees armed themselves with weapons, ammunitions, drugs and other supplies. handcuffs, Pannell told Judge Hyde that I am guilty as charged. But Pannell quickly added: I am accused were all in a series of one act and that I acted out of fear of being killed. It was something that got started and I just couldnt get out of it. - -- YOUR CHOICE OF HAIR STYLES TO SUIT YOU Men Women Defense Attorney Darrell Renstrom, of Ogden, told the judge that despite the guilty pleas by the defendant, he (Renstrom) is asking for concurrent sentences. Children ot THERE IS only so much you can do to an individual, said Attorney Renstrom. Eds Barber & Style Shoppe 5645 South 19C0 West in Roy Phone:773-085- men of course our speciality hairpieces forMONDAY THRU SATURDAY OPEN Prior to the sentencing, Pannell talked to reporters and told them that he had no intentions of staying in Utah after his escape. 3 COMING J HERE in the first place was an accident, a he said big mistake, seriously. 295. JUNIOR CLASS president is Mike McGill; Dean Dawson, first vice president; Shia Kotos, second vice president. Senior class president, Hal Tippetts; Laura Petty, first vice president; and Jessica - 1 - A only ll2 hours not a guilty verdict of a Clearfield woman accused of shooting her husband at their Clearfield mobile home last nprpmhpf field, had been charged with second degree murder of her husband, George, whose body was found on the front steps of their mobile home. An unknown assailant apparently fired four shots from weapon from My-Hon- or" award. Davids : and hobbies interests are football, basket- ball and baseball, horseback riding, water and snow skiing, camping and fishing, np Schedule At Layton Community Church LAYTON Community resumed The Layton - Church has its summer; Worship service a.m. There will not be any Sunday School classes, in Roy. LITTLE FOLKS Church ' will be held during regular ' services. The children wilT' participate in stories, songs,-- ' games and crafts. On Saturday morning, June 2, will be clean up day of the church grounds. Everyone is urged to participate. lipstick-staine- at Y J. Judge Duffy Palmer, grb latch-ke- American Baptist Churches will be held in Car- - ' bondale, 111. on June Mrs. Kenneth Edwards will ' leave June 1 to attend the na- - tional board meetings of American Baptist Women as .president of the Utah American Baptist Women. East Layton 3 Bedroom with finished basement on $69,500. Better Hurry on this one. who leave to go to school from an empty house and return from school to an empty house. Our area has a much less serious problem with latch-key- " children than the nation as a whole, but we still have a problem. Call Bill Williams Call Jerry Elliott 766-199- 8 $144,950 This marvelous two story Tudor is just too magnificent describe. to adequately 0AKRIDGE COUNTRY CLUB SETTING Still under construction - but available now for your personal inspection. CHOOSE YOUR CARPETS 4-- in Kaysvilles HOB Hill. this Brick and Cedar Main Two FULL Floor Utility are some Kitchen and Baths Family Large of the High Lights of this home for only $79,900 and WE TAKE TRADES. and move lacking with through interaction their peers and with an adult who really cares about the in to Tri-Lev- el Call Ron well being. programs are excellent means of helping disadvantaged youngsters feel good. If you look, you can probably see a need for something to strengthen Davis County and your neighborhood. IF YOU know of children who need or if you would like to volunteer to be a leader, please contact Beth K. Thorson or Lloyd Smith at the USU Extension Services Of 766-09- 86 this 5 Bedroom home and have the largest garden in the neighborhood. Price REDUCED $1400.00 to JUST $52,500 for fast sale. THE DAVIS County area for the children to needs feel accomplishment, to take pride in their projects and to learn some of the basic social childs acre at only Buy mission to colleges. skills they are Vi STILL TIME TO PLANT DR. URIE Bronfenbrenner, professor of human development and family studies at Cornell University, finds that the children of today are lacking in many of the skills needed for normal existence. You may already be familiar with the steady decrease in the scores made by American children on the Scholastic Aptitude Test, the test used to determine ad- Pearson 376-163- 6 4-- BILL BROWN REALTY 348 N. Main, Kaysville Authorized Deal or tor 4-- () Boise Cascade Homes 766-243- 5 : ' THE REVEREND Kenneth Edwards will leave June 5 to attend the meetings. They will return late June 10. Mrs.' Don Karadeema, Jr. will bring the message in Reverend Edwards absence. BEAUTIFUL KIMBERLY MEADOWS children--thos- e y : THE BIENNIAL meeting of the to the THE TWO-DAtrial was held in Second District Court 10 j cigarette d butts, not belonging victims wife. before schedule. Broken children could be defined as those children who are not happy. They might have problems in school or their parents might not give them the help they need. They could especially be defined as those children who dont feel that they are of any value. We could also talk about ::i But, she told the jury, she left the mobile home with her son and they stayed at her mothers home the shooting. Attorneys offered as evidence some womens underclothes and had been drinking heavily and they had argued earlier quorum president. has received his "On He unknown woman was with the victim and apparently did MRS. RACKHAM took the stand for about 2 2 hours in her own defense last Wednesday afternoon. She told the jury that she did not shoot her husband and did not know who did. She said that her husband , Deacon THE DEFENDANT then .admitted driving back to their home about 3 a.m. to get some school clothes for her son, but that she was there only a few minutes. Witnesses who said they heard four shots placed the time of the shooting at about 4:30 a.m. Also, Defense Attorney Maurice Richards and John Caine speculated that an SANDRA RACKHAM, 32, of 1204 West 550 North, Clear- , having in the evening. five-ma- n, close range across the front porch. ? IN HIS church he is active. in his Priesthood quorum held the position of president, kj jury s He-ha- vice second Turner, ' served in his scouting program under scou,master Alan Jorgenson in the posi-- , tions of patrol leader, sr. patrol leader and scout scribe He is a student at Kaysville Jr. High School. Clearfield Woman Innocent Of Murder a The middle income family is changing its face to resemble that of the low income family of the early 1960s in terms of working mothers, the number of adults in the home, single-parefamilies and broken children. neign-borhood- escape. THE CRIMES for which Many of the areas kids are very involved in school and church but there are others whose homes are lacking in many respects. These children dont get the encouragement and help that other children get from their ARE THERE any broken children' in your UNDER HEAVY security Mon. thru Sot. president. ext. 294 or 773-780- before returning life. with attempted criminal homicide, burglary and three, counts of theft in a complaint signed before 5th Circuit Court Judge Robert C. Gib- fice in Farmington 295-239- 4, deliberated falling apart and that the children of these families are the ones who are losing out on their fair share of the joys of and wearing shackles and MOW! Sophomore class president will be Stan Soper; Keith Fernn, first vice president; and Tricia Stein, second vice 4-- H three-wome- n MANY psychologists feel that the American family is The complaint charges Hardy with three counts of theft. Both await charge of between the engine and the arm holding the bucket. He said the accident apparently happened when the operator of the machine, James Patterson of 2044 West 2300 North, Clinton, raised the bucket on the loader to allow Mr. Green access to the en- the new studentbody advisor. secretary; Scott Anderson, publicity manager; Jamie Arbuckle, school artist; Blake Hawkes, school photographer; and Sue Welling, school historian. Daniel DHulst, teacher, will become FARMINGTON homes. son. Loader Accident A FRUIT HEIGHTS young construction worker from East Layton was killed last Thursday morning in an accident at a construction site in Fruit Heights. WHY, THEN, should we in Davis County? have Isnt there enough for the kids to do? felony convictions. - A KanFARMINGTON sas City man accused of participating in a W. Max- department. Davis High School. Wany people think that is just another thing to do. This thinking is justified in some ways when church res- By GARY R. BLODGETT DAVID IS a member of Troop No. 359 of the Fruit Heights 4th LDS Ward. C. Iver- SMnMv Officers Kids Need followup will grow in importance as officials attempt to determine how long students student has evaluate their interests, aptitudes, skills and achievement and condud coordination and aptitude tests. After that, we sit down with the psychologist and help them (students) decide what area they want. If we dont offer it, well refer them to other centers that have what they want. Financial aid may be available for those needing to travel elsewhere for training, he says. A big part of training includes hands-o- n where experience they can spend a week working with a plumber or mechanic, for instance, to obtain exposure. -- Kansas City, Mo., appeared before Second District Court Judge Ronald O. Hyde in Ogden where he pleaded guilty to the four counts two counts of attempted murder, one count of aggravated robbery and one count of being an habitual criminal. welding decided to attend the center, he enters the program, Mr. Shell says. We center up to three and five years. WE WILL also check on the relevancy of the training program, Mr. Shell adds, to see if we are teaching the correct skills. We are also our trying to write well, Davis County Sheriffs Office and Clarence I. Montgomery, Woods Cross police department; Victor son, Centerville department; John APPOINTED officers are Karen Dyches, corresponding Eagle Award police Clearfield police Gianchetta, LAMAR SHERIFF Guymon, Emery County Shenff's office, addressed the graduates. This is the 80th c;: David B. Taylor, 14, son of Blaine and Annette Taylor, 1075 East Green Road, Fruit Heights is the latest recipient of an Eagle Scout award. Blankman, Farmington police department; Scott D. Lake City. There are a number of Farmington students who training includes instruction in ob- program. AFTER is program ceremonies from the Utah Law Enforcement Academy on Friday, May 25. Commencement exercises were held at noon in Walker Hall at Westminster College in Salt Kaysville Utah and Kaysville Utah Crestwood Stake. New presidency sustained on Sunday, May 13, after division of the Kaysville Utah Stake. L to r, Roy W. Simmons, new Patriarch of Kaysville Utah Crestwood Stake, Ned B. Roueche, David E. Bean John M. R Covey (regional representative), Bruce R. McConkie (member of the quorum of the Twelve Apostles), Wm. Howard Hawkes, W. Eldean Holliday, Kenneth R. Young, L. Gary Telford. DAVID B. TAYLOR -- |