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Show '.l I KLY Pf ru X PAVI5 NEVSS JOURNAL AUGUST 7,1 S80 NORTH pa V15 it apt n. AUG 3 f 7, 1 985 Young Adult Aclivilies Set Ljv.Ki.o AJ Ju g itviiMUct t w THE Ml I iLfue oflAtjg ! f.r Sibtf L owRg I the jrr Riirs ga to T. REGION m nw fl tiesliiiifnu. Alt taft) l! i Jags, root beer, 1J S!4, A RILftiN lueside MdonAug I Hi mriiias will be trig pt!-r- (W.h Chap I I M e b ltf I fU'1 1 p m PP at 1 M be lUitJG 24 Moesinger Horseshoe Tournament Results daft. mg lit part) M M HHlaJtf wit CfrsiaeaJ hiti)l ( t.ajv With RJ ktofl v la. h m. lyJr f,r oil to mret i l Make IV w4 b fufHjsLed W CsvAout Wp m fe Aug lb results of the Pr, Moestager Memorial tkwsofcoe tournament played at I ester park, Aug, 2 w Jra are as Ml. ; I I ASS A, frs place, (Tr fn,e tiilrs.Kisenon; second Henry Jienn, OgJen, (i pi, U, lt phis tournament is an annual event M iHcH.it.d of ife Ui t tui !grt Marstttgrr Anyone tf ja playing in tti sla' stum inifii4 as pionf.ijs shouldto register be toon ehg'big. s (sossiNf ft s pUC. Pen"' Ohms. CrJaf City; second Hid t rofikiue. Holier Class C. frl place. MalSIP pUe, SiUe, P. t oiWr. Vtcsi Poni ; second place. Kea Gary. Granger, t Us P, first place. Bruce Leudoro. Salt Lake City: second pUiC. Rudy Lobato. y,!t Me lav i LAsx I, fis place. Bruce Crane. Vkcst Jordan; second jdace. Ron Peterson. Ogden. rtlm!iy lagan lo think it wouW ttt r thi-ihave to do w tj-now, to U'W the new the Holt at Elementary Sthool ite at mfprogtf'wjng utiip V. 3m) N. The Mw l eitrrior white colored hou ehmild ha lu) Many CVarfw U HOLT SCHOOL TAKING SHAPE haj-n- , hut sll mudi-n- t tlu-- y ready for ntudrnuhy a , KIUSTY WALTON place. Ronnie Gardner. r n Nov-mhr- Class F. fust place. W.lbur Cotwh. Salt lake Ciyt; second Jutmt report. ppoL-ajwixi-n iJen, Attend Special Will Camp Syracuse Births - KAYSVILLE Kristy Walton, a nme year olJ Kav vdle girl will attend a special camp for cisiic fibrosis Aug. The outing will take 10-1- place at Camp Kissel, located adjacent to Causey Kesmoir. THE CAMP, maJe possible by the volunteer efloris of doc-tot-s, pharmacists and occupational therspists will offer a program of self treatment, a special olypics. and will be concluded by an aw ards dinner and variety show. Kristy will perform a dance routine as part of the entertainment. Parents will not attend the camp until Aug. 13 giving the children a chance for independence and self achievement. P.M. Magazine Utah and representatives from the popular television show Real People are scheduled to attend. DONATIONS may be made to the Cistic Fibrosis Foundation at the University of Utah Medical Center. Kristy is a dance student of the J.&J. School of Dance, at 355 North 600 West, Kaysville, where she is a member of the Main Event, drill team. She has been attending here for the past six months, vsb The BOUNTIFUL THE MACHINES, called Wireless Auditory Training Systems and manufactured in Salt Lake City by Com-TeInc., 375 W. Lemel Circle, costing $500 each. Each system consists of a transmitter, which is to be worn by the deaf students teacher and a receiver unit worn by the student which picks up the teachers voice from as far away as 200 feet and retransmits the sound to the students hearing aid worn in his ear. k. 1, a WINN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 1 Gerald Winn, Bountiful, was at Bountiful School recently during a presentation ceremony in which Lions Club President Clifford J. Lawrence and Rosie Meservy, president of the Bountiful Lady Lions, gave the three units to Thais Williams, hearing resource teacher for the Davis County School District. is a sixth grad- , Melissa, who er at Bountiful Elementary School, pinned the receiving unit to her shirt and tucked a battery power unit in her pocket. MRS. WILLIAMS spoke to Milissa from across the room, out into the hall and around a corner and in each instance Milissa was able to hear Mrs. Williams well. Melissa, who has been partially deaf since birth, has been enrolled in regular school classes since second grade and can read lips. Her mother said Melissa, who is classified as severly deaf, can hear very e nt-tl- without a hearing aid. She can hear only faint sounds, but nd speech at all, Mrs. Winn said.- - WITH A hearing aid she can hear speech, but not nearly as loudly as others do and she must rely to a great degree on reading lips, WITHOUT THE trainer aparatus, and using only her The national economic recession is expected to continue into the fourth quarter according to Craig B. Day, assistant vice president, quoting from the First Security Newslatter. The quarterly report, which will be published this week, is edited by Dr. Kelly Matthews, vice president and chief eco- hearing aid. Melissa must be within 5 feet of her teacher to hear her and must augment 10-1- her hearing aid with lip nomist for First Security Corp., regional bank holding company. Report Police responded to a call Saturday morning, Aug. 2 at 2:30 a.m. when a woman reported a man who had pre- viously assaulted her, had his car parked in her driveway, When officers arrived at the home, located at 151 Ronald Avenue, Layton, they disco- vered the suspect was inside the house. OFFICER JIM Andrews entered the home and the suspect struck him twice with a butcher knife in the side and abdomen. Officer Andrews was not injured because he was wearing a protective vest. David B. Hansen, 32, of 172 S. 2nd East, Kaysville was arraigned Monday morning, Aug. 4 in the Layton Circuit Court for attempted criminal homicide and burglary. WINDOWS VALUED at over $200 were broken out of the Vae View Elementary School during the period of Aug. 1 to Aug. 3, Layton city police report. The police found Pc-ru- k. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Russell Streepcr of Ogden and Mr. and Mrs. Wins-loF. Rhoades of Sy racuse. It was a baby girl (hat arrived to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Tsushima of 2440 South 1000 West. Syracuse, weighing in at 7 lbs. 6 oz. at the McKay Hospital and is the couples first child. She will be Nichole. The grandparents are Mrs. Jane Tsushima of Brigham Cit-- w y: Mrs. Dorothy Butters. Kaysville; and Nuble Tsushima. also of Brigham City. Layion Clubs The Beta Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will hold a banana split ice cream party for rushces on Sunday, Aug. 10. The event will take place at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marta Black. VAKLEY New Deputy Commander At Hill AFB HILL APB Col. franklin C. Varley has replaced Col. Jjmcs A. Bassett as deputy commanJer of the 284'hh Air Base Group here. COL. VARLEY comes to Ai B from his position as commander of the Air Force Hill Reserve Officer Training Corps detachment al Norman. Okla. He is a 1958 graduate of the University of Utah. hoIJmg a bachelor of arts degree in psychology. He was commissioned through ROTC at the university in 1958. The colonel also has a masters degree in finance from George Washington University, Washington. D.- C. ; COL. VARLEY is a Utahn who graduated from Olympus High School in Salt Lake City. His mother lives in Centerville. National Recession Expected To Continue Melissas mother added. With the use of the Wireless Auditory Trainer, Melissa can set anywhere in her classroom and hear her teacher without having to lip read. reading, The three auditory trainers, two donated by the Lions Club and the other by the Lady Lions, will be used throughout the countys school system tq aid the more than 50 deaf stu dents in the district, Mrs. Jiams said, July 10 at the McKay Hospital in Ogden. He weighed in al 7 lbs. 1 3 oz. and has been named t Jed Russell. He was welcomed at home by two brothers and a sister, Jennifer, Tige and COL FRANKLIN C. Winn, 11, deaf student who will use one of the auditory training systems; L Glen Tonge, principal Bountiful Elementary School, where Melissa is a student; Thais Williams, hearing resource teacher Davis County Schools; and Clifford J. Lawrence, president Bountiful Lions Club. HEARING ASSISTANCE Bountiful Lions Club and the Bountiful Lady Lions have donated three machines to the Davis County School District to help deaf students in class. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rhoades arc announcing the anna) of a new baby boy. that armed lo them on ThursJay. some bolts and washers with nuts on the end that were probably used as a wrist rocket to do the window damage. Extra police patrol units have been assigned to the Vae View area. AN ACCIDENT involving two cars and resulting in nearly $1,000 damage to the vehicles occurred on Aug. 2 at the intersection of State Road 232 and Antelope Drive. Mrs. Beth O. Winward of Ogden was driving southbound on SR 232 when a car, driven by Paul B. Thompson of Layton pulled out in front of her car. Mr. Thompson was cited for failure to yield the right of way. ON AUG. 2, Hi Floyd Gibson of Layton was driving along Golden Ave. traveling east when a car driven by a 17 year old Layton girl backed out of a driveway. The damage to the two cars was estimated at $1,800. The teenage driver was cited for improper backing. dmg . FOLLOWING the imposition of credit controls by the Federal Reserve in March, consumer attitudes were sharply altered, reflected in an abrupt reduction in spending and credit demands. i The degree of weakness in the economy is, however, anticipated to moderate relative to the free-faexperienced during the second quarter. ll ACCORDING to the Newsletter, there is little chance that the national economy will reestablish a growth trend prior to 1981. Consumers are rebuilding savings and reducing debt burdens and are unlikely to increase borrowing and buying prior to achieving some gains in real income. Economic weakness in the second half of 1980 will be most evident in falling production schedules and rising unemployment. Also, inflation at was probably in the range of ten percent which indicates that there is little chance inflation will drop below eight percent during the second half of 1980. mid-ye- THE VOLATILITY in financial markets during the past six months was histoically unprecendented, the publication states. Short-terinterest rates, after rising to percent, experienced a decline, while Treasury Bills and Certificates of Deposit were in the l'h to 8 Vi percent range by up modestly from the lows established in May. Mortgage rates near 12 percent. Leading Indicator Indexes for Utah dropped sharply in the second quarter and slower economic growth in Utah is ex- pected in the third quarter. Although Utahs economy is influenced by a continuing national recession it has, in general, not been impacted by the recession to the extent experienced in other parts of the nation. DURING THE second quaractivity in Utah spread from the construction and automobile industries to other manufacturing and retail ments of the economy. seg- The rate of unemployment in Utah is expected to edge toward six percent in the third quarter from the 5.3 percent which prevailed at mid year. MINING production in Utah during the first half of 1980 was levels in most below year-ag- o major minerals. Coal production cumulative through June was nearly 11 percent below last year. Additionally, copper production, down 2.5 percent through April, will be sharply lowered tf the current strike is protracted, forecasted the Newsletter. m 18-2- 0 two-mon- mid-yea- th r, gradually edged downward and are presently in a range , f ter, reduced rates of business RESIDENTIAL construction in Utah is expected to re- main very sluggish in the third quarter with building permits for new dwelling units currently down 52 percent below 1979 and total construction value cumulative through May 1980, down 44 percent below last year. CHIROPRACTOR MOVES CLEARFIELD A longtime north Davis chiropractor has relocated to spacious facilities in south Clearfield. DR. JOHN E. Clikeman has reopened his practice at 760 S. State, complete with two adjustment rooms and facilities. Office hours will be 9 a.m. 5:30 p.m., -- Monday-Frida- y. He graduated from Logan chiropractic College in St. Louis in 1965 and practiced continually in Clearfield from then until 1977, when he spent a year in his native Montana. I WILL be able to more effectively treat my patients, he says of the new facilities. Speaking of why he entered the chiropractic field Dr. Clikeman says, I was injured as a young man. For about two Dr. J. E. Clikeman, a longtime North Davis chiropractor, has moved to spacious facilities at 760 S. State in Clearfield. weeks I went to MDs to try to get some relief for my back condition. I went to a chiropractor and in about two hours was well. With a continual interest in the healing arts, Dr. Clikeman remembered his past experience and after a four year stint as an enlisted man in the Navy who saw duty in Japan, he obtained his associate degree from Northern Montana College and then pursued chiropractic studies. CHIROPRACTIC is making inroads into the healing field like never before. Were more accepted, he says, noting education is comparable to a medical doctors. It has to be utilized to be appreciated. Theres not enough public relations. Noting a good working relationship with medical doc tors he adds Chiropractic utilizes physical therapy and virtigo manipulation and (often) gets the job done. There has to be an alternative to hospitalization or drugs. People should consider chir- opractors first instead of second. NOTING membership on a peer committee, unique to the healing arts, Dr. Clikeman said he has also been active in chiropractic-related activities. He served as president of the state association 1975-7- 6 and was secretary for three years. He is married to the former Ingrid Roksvaeg, a native of Norway, and they are parents of a son, John 14, and daughter Jennifer, 12. FURTHER information is available by calling 825-733- 8. |