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Show r 7 Standard-Examin- er s, - Y INSIDE Crime ups and downs , .X X, - Farmington releases report on last three years.2 ey LIFESTYLE Fun with food ,zx f School serves up dishes with an international flair.5 X A VX v y DAVIS COUNTYS COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER April 4, 1998 VOL. 17, NO 26650 CENTS Just one Council to vote on Monday Layton baseball Fire station Centerville mayor opening delayed doesnt want games to El Nino is to blame for the delay of the grand opening and dedication for Laytons new fire conflict with UDS activities The Associated station. Fire officials had expected to open the new building at 530 N. 2200 West by mid April. However, rainy weather made the ground too muddy to pour concrete or asphalt and pushed back the move-i- date to sometime between May 1 and 15, said Fire Chief Allan Press CENTERVILLE - The city council is expected to resolve a dispute over Monday night baseball in public parks at its meeting Tuesday. Mayor Frank Ilirschi wants to curtail baseball and other sports n at public parks on Monday nights to facilitate compliance Peek. with Mormon doctrine on family activities. As Latter-da- y Saints, probably all of us would follow the admonition of our prophets declaration that Monday evenings should be kept free for family home evenings, the new mayor wrote last month to a baseball league official. The city council is scheduled to approve facilities use agreements with the Centerville Baseball Association and other sports leagues at its Tuesday meeting. I dont foresee any problem, said Richard Hunt, chairman of the citys Parks and Recreation Committee. I'm sure there will be Monday games for now. Building construction was on schedule, though, Peek said. Once open, the department's headquarters will move to the new facility from current headquarters at fire station 1 on Fort Lane. Peek said the need for the west Layton station has become even more apparent in the past few months. Calls taking firefighters across the tracks to the west side of town have increased by at least five a week, Peek non-Morm- estimated. SOUTH WEBER Hirschi, retired from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints education system and a former Idaho legislator, got involved in the issue after requests from local leaders of the church. Dan Barber, the letters recipient and head of the private nonprofit Centerville Baseball Association, told the city council that the organization is not affiliated with any religion. Barber protested the city's attempt to restrict Monday night ball games as not a city issue, but rather an ecclesiastical preference, according to minutes of the March 3 meeting. (Barber) staled that it is the Baseball Associations job to provide a quality experience to all its members regardless of religious affiliation, the record states. But the minutes add - and Hirschi now insists - that the mayors letter, which was on city letterhead, was not meant to represent city mandated policy. It was only a personal opinion, the mayor said. Monday night baseball will continue in Centerville - at least this year - but at a scaled-bac- k level. The mayor has lifted a 2 See BALL3 Parents, City sets hearing for rezone request AMY NCWMAN, WAITING: Rachel Ornelas, 1 5, has been waiting for a kidney transplant for nine months. Her mother, Peggy, takes Rachel twice a week for dialysis treatments in Salt Lake City. Davis teen, like many others, waits for kidney transplant An artu le about Rachel Ornelas ran on April 22, 1997, in the Lakeside Review. She still waits for a kidney transplant - like 38,796 kidney patients throughout the country. By LORETTA PARK Standard Examiner correspondent - Rachel Ornelas, wearing Wtnnie the Pooh in the chair in the living room. A grand piano beckons to her to play, while a new camping trailer outside sends a message of hope. Hope that she may be able to go camping this summer. 1 lope that someday she, her parents, Dave and Peggy Ornelas, and her sisters and brothers will be able to travel without planning trips around dialyses and hospitals. The 1 Syracuse girl hoped last year would be the final year she would travel to the University of Utahs pediatrics dialysis room. Rachel knows April is the National Organ and Tissue Donor Awareness SYRACUSE month. She just hoped this year her name would be oil' the list - the list that adds another name every 16 minutes. As of March, she is just one of 38,796 patients in the United States waiting for a kidney transplant, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. The petite brunette girl was bom with nyphrotic syndrome, where the kidneys filtering system works improperly. Instead of holding back the proteins the body needs to grow, the proteins flow through the kidney, said Peggy Ornelas. Rachel was diagnosed with this rare condition when she was 6 weeks old. Rachels kidneys were removed when she was 3 years old. The Ornelases were told it was not a genetic defect, so they had more children. Another daughter, Brittany, and twin to Brett, was bom with the same condition. She lived for 16 months, Peggy said. Rachels hope almost paid off on the twins seventh birthday Nov. I. By RUTH MALAN Standard Examiner correspondent correspondent LAYTON - It is not the parents job to raise responsible, kids. As soon as we say thats our job, it puts the kid in control, Foster Cline, M D., told an auditorium full of parents and educators last week at the Ninth Annual Conference on Families. As a means of educating parents, the Davis County Council on Infants, Children, Youth and I amilies brought the internationally acclaimed adult and child psychiatrist, author, consultant and speaker to the conference at Northridgc High School. God threw in the uncertainty l, said Cline. principle of Just because a kid does something wrong, it does not mean you are not good parents. Gine said it is not the parents job to raise responsible children, but the job of the parents is to provide the environment where people can become the best they can, become motivated and responsible should they want to. Doing this, a great burden is lifted from our shoulders." He compared the United LAYTON - There are two kinds of rescuers, guardian angels and milk of human kindness high-achievi- free-wil- o See K1DNCY3 Need to rescue someone? Theres a right way to do it By RUTH MALAN r Rachel, her sisters and mother were in a store parking lot when they spotted her father and her cousin, Carlos Ornelas. Rachel will remember her fathers words forever. Raehie Ann, you want to go to the hospital? he said. We just started screaming and hugging each other. We knew what it meant, Peggy said. A potential donor had been found. They had a hundred questions, but no one was able to answer them until the hospilal called back at 9 that night. I Ier brothers birthday celebrations continued, but Rachel refused to eat any ice cream or cake. She was preparing for surgery. Then the clock slowed down. It said nine oclock. And we wailed for the call. Then it was 9:10, but the phone was still silent," Peggy said. At 9:20, they knew it was not to be. The doctors called and confirmed that this donor dont let your children take control Expert offers advice on providing environment to raise responsible kids Standard-Examine- Standard Examiner rescuers, said a speaker at a recent conference on families. F oster Cline, M D., spoke to several hundred educators and parents at a Davis County Council on Infants, Children, Youth and Linda Reed, one of the speakers who took part in the Davis County Council on Infants, Children, Youth and Families' Ninth Annual Conference on Families last week, talks to parents and educators about 'The Five Love Languages. AT FAMILY CONFERENCE: States government with the running of a family. The United States was set out to give each person the right to pursue life, liberty and happiness and is here to provide the environment. Love and logic rules work for parents, in the classroom at school, and for CL Os, Cline said The idea is the same. love and logic have pretty simple principles. Hundreds of thousands of parents train America one kid at a time, Cline said. The Rant, Rave and Rescue" system works pretty well for small children, Cline said. The See FAMILV4 I amilies conference at Northridgc High School. During the conference he talked about rescuing children. The guardian angel is one who must rescue right now because life or limb is in immediate danger, he said. There is a need. 1 his rescuer is more behind the scenes. le is one no one depends on and is unreliable. The milk of human kindness rescuer helps people because every time we help another person, our soul grows. This rescuer has the urge to help people out, and nothing gels him or her into more trouble than that. Milk of human kindness rescues can never successfully go more than halfway for a person who causes themselves a chronic problem 1 ' As an example, Cline told a son, story about his Andy. When the family was living in Colorado, he told his dad he was going to ride to Denver with a Inend during a blizzard. Although Cline didn't want his son to go, he thought to himself, two or three people in the area w ill be killed out of 700,000 people. He won't be killed. The best thing that can happen is that he will have a terrible time. About 11:30 that night when Cline was in tied, his son called him and told him the car was in a ditch. Andy asked him if he would come and pull the car out Cline knew the boys were at a restaurant so they wouldn't fieezc to death if he didn't go after them. He would have to leave a warm bed and wile and go out in the snow. Was that going more than hallway? But, Cline said, Andy was a good kid and he didn't demand a rescue. "No matter what the problem, never rescue someone who expects and demands it," Cline ad-- v A public hearing is planned for 6.15 p.m. April 14 before the city council to consider a rezoning request for approximately 13 acres at 2350 E. 7800 South. The applicant, Jane Poll, wishes to change the zoning designation from residential suburban and agriculture to A copy of the residential application is on file at city hall. (R-1- ). Syracuse Council considers 69-acr- e rezone The city council is scheduled to hold a public hearing at 7.30 p.m. April 14 to consider a request to rezone 69 acres near Bluff Road from agriculture to low density residential. The property is located between 3000 West and Bluff Road at approximately 2200 South. For more information call 825-147- 7. FARMINGTON Erosion a concern with subdivision The Shepard Heights subdivision development agreement was approved by the Farmington City Council on Wednesday. The subdivision is on 95 of 1400 North. Hillside erosion is a major concern of both the city and the developers. The development has the potential to cause serious hillside erosion acres east problems. The agreement contains a number of conditions which must be met by developers prior to the recording of the final subdivision plat for the property. Conditions include the development of an erosion control plan, and to ensure that plan is complied with the developer will post bonds for various requirements, and work will be completed by May 31. COMING TUESDAY Legacy pick Centerville has submitted its preferred route for the Legacy Highway to the state Read about it in the next Lakeside Review iscd Cline took his Jeep to the rcs- See RESCUC4 A V |