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Show i WEEKLY REFLEX James DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, MARCH 6, 1980 NORTH DAVIS LEADER, MARCH 6, Hansen Will Announce Candidacy V. IN ADDITION to serving as House Speaker, Rep. Hansen also serves on the executive and management committees of the House, State Constitutional Revision Commission and previously led an interim joint Business, Labor and Economic Development Committee, and served as a legislative appointee to the Executive Branch of the Federal Research Committee. This will be a new and chal- FARMINGTON Utah House Speaker James V. Hansen will announce his candidacy Thursday for U.S. Congress, representing First Congressional District of Utah. He is a Republican. REP. HANSEN who has served in the State Legislature eight years, the last two as the will Speaker of the House make a bid to unseat Democrat Congressman Gunn McKay. Congressman McKay has served five terms and announced last week he will be seeking Hansen will officially announce his candidacy for the GOP nomination Thursday at 10 a.m. in the lounge of the Utah House of Representa- tives at the State Capitol Building. THE 47 year old insurance executive will seek a seat in Congressional District One which encompasses Davis County and all counties along the Wasatch Front except Salt Lake County. He is expected to face competition from Jed J. Richardson, of Provo, who lenging experience (running for Congress), said Rep. Hansen. But I feel that I am well qualified and ready to meet the opportunity. Im really looking forward to the challenge. THE FARMINGTON native, who is considered a moderate on such issues as taxation and government spending, said he feels Congressman McKay has been in office long enough. I dont think he votes the feelings of his constituents and gives too much emphasis to the Carter Administration and eastern establishment, said Rep. Hansen. I like Gunn as a person, hes a real gentleman, but I believe his ancestry-nam- e has carried him as far as its going to. REP. HANSEN also criticized Congressman McKays voting record as being to inconsistent. Change is very healthy and I believe its time that a Republican be elected to represent District One, Hansen. 1980 Events Set (Men Spike Empire was a candidate in 1978. A veteran legislator. Rep. Hansen has served in the Utah Legislature since 1973. Before that, he was a Farmington city councilman for three terms. JAMES V. HANSEN 4 said Rep. HE NOTED that his grass roots service as a city councilman for 10 years and state legilator for eight years provides a strong backbone for the congressional seat. grb The following activities are sponsored by the Golden Spike Empire for the month of April 1980. ART: Brigham City Museum Gallery, 24 N. 300 W., Brigham City. School Art artwork by students from local schools. Tel Beer Sheba Exhibit, permanent display of pioneer artifacts in the form of Victorian rooms. Open Monday through Saturday 1 1 a.m. to 7 p.m. free. Bountiful-Davi- s Art Center, 2175 South Main, Bountiful. Watercolor by George Dibble, open Tuesday through Saturday, 10a.m. to6p.m. and Sunday 5 p.m. free. 2-- ECCLES Community Art Center, 2580 Jefferson Ave., Ogden. Allan Gibby and Mark Haines Photography and Bill Richans oil paintings. Open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and April Saturday 5 p.m. free. Ogden Union Station Gallery, 2501 Wall Ave., Ogden. 2-- Watercolor West open noon to 6 p.m. free (tentative call ). APRIL 5 Weber State Art Department, 3750 Harri14-2- son Blvd., Ogden. Ninth Annual Statewide College dent Traveling Exhibit Stu626-676- 2. Music: Utah Symphony, Val A. Browning Center, ber State College. Conductor to be announced. Utah Chorale Cohleen Bischoff, soWe- contralto to be announced; Frederic De prano; Marseille, tenor; Clayne Robison, baritone. 8 p.m. APRIL 21: Ardean Watts, conducting and Horacio Gutierrez, pianist 8 p.m. Ogden Symphony Assoc., 2580 Jefferson Ave., Ogden 84401 for tickets. April 29: Swing Era Concert WSC Browning Center Austad Auditorium, 8 p.m. 626-642- THEATRE: Heritage Theatre, 2505 S. Hwy 89, Perry. Yourre a Good Man, Charlie Brown, directed by Bill Curtis. Performed each Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. childrens Cinderella theatre call for reservations 3 or Weber State April 723-871- 4. 21-2- 6: Theatre, Ogden. The Man in the Glass Booth by Robert Shaw. Arthur Goldman is a wealthy and powerful Jewish builder in New York City who lives in constant fear of being found out. Finally his fear materializes as he is abducted by Israeli agents who track him down and whisk him off to Israel to stand trial for atrocities against his own people. In striking similarity to a recent actual trial, Goldman is tried while seated in a bullet proof glass booth, with a shocker of Sunday at noon. Utah Sailing Assoc. Spree St. Josephs School auction and dinner held in the OTHER Entertainment: April 20, Puppets in Poetry, Weber County Library, Ogden. April 16, Ogden Union Station. Dinner on the 26th. Call April 26, International Student 486-347- 399-851- The Choral, Poetry and Antique Festival, LDS Meeting House, 1050 21st St., Ogden, 5:30 p.m. antique displays 8 p.m. choral and oriopen ginal poetry presented. No anyone invited! Call charge 393-594- 6; April 25-2- 6, M.S. Browning Theatre, Brownings displaced in well-light- cases grouped according to gun type. Hours are Monday through Saturday noon to 6 p.m. Free. 394-177- Banquet featuring foreign foods, dances, displays. WSC Union Bldg. Ballroom, call GOLDEN SPIKE National Historic Site, Promontory Summit. The visitors 626-636- Museums and Visitor Centers: Browning Firearms and Railroaders Museums, Ogden Union Station houses many of the guns invented by the center features impressive interpretive displays as well as a 30 minute audio visual program. The site is now the home of exact working replicas of the two engines that met there Bear River Bird Refuge, 15 miles west of Brigham City. Massive refuge is a nesting ground for over 200 different bird species and visited by millions of ducks, geese, and swans during autumn migrations. Display of birds, animals, eggs, etc. to help identify habitational wildlife. Hours 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, free. an ending you will never forget! Call anytime! 626-661- 6 DANCE: Ballet West, per7 in the Val formed April A. Browning Center, Weber State College in Ogden at 8 p.m. Contact college for further information. The Grand Ball, Weber State College Union Ballroom, April 24 at 8:30 p.m. Period music costume or Soft by the dance band Touch. Donation at the door. - Sponsored by the LDS Church SpeSingle Adults cial Interest Council of Weber, Morgan and north Davis counS ties. Both LDS and are welcome teenagers, married couples and single ). adults 16-1- semi-form- al Tri-Vall- non-LD- (393-5946- SPORTS AND Outdoor Fun: Lagoon amusement and Pioneer Village, Farmington opens April 5 for weekends only! Utah Ski Sail, Snowbird and Willard Bay, April Combines two ski races and three sailing races. Only event in the U.S. with this format. Snowbird races Saturday at 10 a.m. and Willard Bay races 12-1- xhibif in Las Vegas, Nev., and in several locations in Utah. His work is now on David Merrills paintings are currently being shown in the Barnes Banking Co. in California, display continually at his own art gallery in Farmington at 192 North 100 East. Dave and Leola have a team working relationship supporting each other as they pursue their creative talents. Kaysville. i - MR. MERRILL has his own studio and art gallery in Farm-- . ington where he resides." He formerly lived in Kaysville prior to moving to Farmington. After graduating from BYU with a masters degree in art education he was art instructor at Davis High School for several years. Having been the owner of the two art galleries, Dave and his wife Leola have had the opportunity of visiting the studios of many of Americas finest landscape artists. DURING THE month of March, Mr. Merrills recent canvasses will be on display during banking hours at the Barnes Bank in Kaysville. This exhibit is sponsored by the Kaysville Civic Associa- tion. Mrs. Lucille Strong, chairman, and committee members Louise Gailey and lone Grange. The public is in- Layton High drama students are continuing presentation of "Carnival" tonight, Friday and Monday in the schools little theater. Tickets are $2.50 for adults and $2 for students and children. Trying their hand at roles in the production are Bart BanderDoes, left, Tammy Randall and Terry Long. The production is under the direction of Ronald Petersen. ITS CARNIVAL vited. Courage He who fears to venture as far as his heart urges and his reason permits is a coward. Grit -- TWO YEARS ago he spent two weeks studying with Emil Gruppe in Rocky Neck, Mass. Mr. Gruppe is author of three art books and is considered by n many as the greatest artist. At the age of Holland-America- 81 Mr. Gruppe passed away in 1979. In his earlier years, Mr. Merrill studied with LeConte Stewart, Utah's dean of landscape painting. During recent years he has gone on painting holidays studying with other notable artists in America. MR. MERRILLS work is for those who like realism in their oil painting. He likes to work on location whenever possible. He preserves the flavor of rural life through a kaleidoscopic array of color on his canvasses. A genius with the paint brush Mr. Merrill unleashes his creativity by painting the rural American scene. cause he enjoys farm ings, he spends much of his time depicting scenes in his Davis County, local area Cache Valley, Summit County and other rural areas in the Eagle western part of the United States. John C. Hyde, 17, has earned his Eagle Scout award. He is the son of Ed and Carole Hyde, 994 Thornfield Rd., Kaysville. He is a member of Troop 348 of the Kaysville 12th Ward. HIS scoutmasters were Ed VenHyde and David Rosser; Neil Anderson; leader, ture Explorer leader, Ed Hyde. John attends Davis High where he is a member of the football team and a member of the track team. He has been on the student council. HIS ACTIVITIES in scouting include responsibilities as senior patrol leader to his Deacon Quorum; secretary scribe to his Venture group and he has recently served as senior patrol leader of the Explorers. Church positions and responsibilities include secretary, second counselor, president of his Deacons Quorum; first assistant to the bishop for the Priests Quorum; and a member of the basketball team of the ward. Be- build- MR. MERRILL said. . My dream was to spend my last years painting." He has pur- sued this ambition painting seriously for the last eight years. Many of his paintingsjare done by commission. Since he works from nature on location, often a neighbor of the person who has commissioned him, will see him painting and commission him to do a painting for them. ONE OF his biggest challenges was when he was commissioned by the Ogden Bicentennial Commission to paint the beginnings of the Utah Construction Co. He conducted six week of research on the company before he began work on the painting which now hangs at Weber College. So that his painting style will not become stale, he works on two or three canvasses at a time. HE HAS exhibited in Rancho, Calif., in the bay area of CILYD DAVID ,1 LEAP YEAR BABY A new tradition" was begun Friday, Feb. 29, 1980 at the Davis North Medical Center when Jennifer Lyn Call became the first "Leap Year baby bom in this Layton hospital. The 7 lbs. 6 oz. girl arrived at 11:16 a.m. She is the daughter of Bruce and Karon Tate Cali of 448 N. Fairfield, Layton. LAYTON AND Clearfield merchants donated $60 in gift certificates to the baby. The hospital volunteer organization presented the baby with a nightgown. Flowers and a case of powdered baby formula was donated to the Calls by the hospital. A medical supply firm gave the child a Busy Gym to hang on the crib. Layton residents, Lee and Mariam Call and Boyd and Thelma Tate are the babys grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cargeeg of North Salt Lake are the babys A SECOND leap year baby arrived at 9:02 p.m. The boy, who weighed 5 lbs. 5 oz., is the son of Steven and Deborah Shelley of 172 West 2300 North, Sunset. The baby will be named Gordan Hayle. His grandparents are Otis and Colleen Shelley of Bick-nel- l, Utah, and Mrs. Mary Alumbaugh of Suitland, Md. dmg Eagle Among the latest recipients of the Eagle Scout award is Fred Cooper, son of Mrs. Janeal Cooper, 931 North Highway 89, Kaysville. Fred received his award during an Eagle Scout ceremony in his ward. He is a member of the Kaysville 12th LDS 'Ward which sponsors the scouting program. HIS SCOUTING positions include patrol leader, assistant patrol leader. Blazer B leader, and merit badge counselor. He has been active in drama at Davis High and has served as deacon and teacher quorum president and second counselor in his priest quorum. He has resided in Kaysville the past five years, np in Congratulations go to the following north Davis County including Mindy Lynn Schrauth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn K. Schrauth of 2746 N. 1450 E. in Layton, whose birthday was Feb. 8; Eric Mark Teasmeyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark V. Tensmeyer of 1086 W. 4650 S., RiverdaJe, formerly of Clearfield; Jared Manning, son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil Manning of 960 S. Flint in Layton, whose birthday was March 5; Keith Daniel Stephenson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Brent Stephenson of 681 S. 2400 N. in Layton, whose birthday was Feb. 27; Chad David Hales, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Dean Hales of 2563 N. 2600 E. in Layton, whose birthday was Feb. 28. UTAH STATE PRISON Davis County sheriff deputy has received a prolonged parole date for February 1987. THE UNUSUAL parole date set seven years into the future is for Ronald A. May, 30 of Sacramento, Calif., who was convicted of killing former deputy sheriff Donald P. Jensen or Farmington, shortly after a service station robbery in Ogden in 1971. In setting the distant parole date, Thomas R. Harrison, chairman of the Utah State Board of Pardons, explained that the date is in compliance with the intent of the Utah State Legislature when it passed a law that persons incare cerated for must serve at least first-degre- 13 murder years. PRISON RECORDS show that Deputy Jensen was shot six times by May and his part ner. Daniel Raye Weddle, of Atascadero, Calif., after the pair was stopped by the deputy as they fled from Ogden. The killing occurred near Tippetts Lane on U.S. Highway They then lied to Wyoming where they were captured in Kemmerer and extradited to Utah to stand trial in Second 89-9- District Court, Farmington, only a few miles from the scene of the alleged shooting. WEDDLE WILL not have his next parole hearing until MINDY LYNN SClIRAllTIl I Prolonged Parole Date Set A California man convicted of the May 14, 1971 shooting of a ERIC MARK TENSMEYER JARED MANNING Happy Birthday FRED COOPER A new tradition has been started at Davis North Medical Center with the hospitals first ever Leap Year babies bom Saturday including Jennefer Lynn Call, held by mother Karon, of Layton. IIALES 1988. During the parole hearing last week. May asked for a definite parole date rather than another hearing, explaining that he has already served eight years for the crime. In Fashion An attractive outfit being shown for spring is a sleeveless shirt waist dress w ith jacket in cool, white shantung. Promoted Marine Maj. Russell D. Pilcher. son of Woodrow W. and Nellie G. Pilcher of 128 S. Second E., Kaysville. has been promoted to his present rank while serving at Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, Calif. A 1965 graduate of Davis graduHigh School and a ate of Utah State University with a bachelor of science degree, he joined the Marine Corps in August 1969. in Hours: 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily, free. 1869. l9 STEPHENSON |