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Show For Youth Ranch - Road West Valley City, UT. Boy Radio Auction Raises $6,100 COTTONWOOD. The president of KSOP radio station, Henry Hilton, will be honored at a Kiwanis awards banquet tomorrow (Friday) evening, after helping raise Summer Ranch. The donated money was raised through a radio auction aired by KSOP on June 22. It was the first auction via radio broadcast in the valley, although a Price station has aired one annually for 14 kids, TOURING. Walter and Oliver Maes of the French Pony Express Team tour Murray streets. Group consists of French scouts following old Pony Express trail on mopeds. . . Eric k: In Adventure Quest - Youths Cycling West (From Page3C, Col. 5) ganizations president in Sacramento, Calif. didnt want to carry too many messages, we thought we We get into trouble with the government, said Walter. Choosing mopeds for the trip was natural for them because they used would a MMTRflrJ5M155IDH the part-bicycl- vehicles daily to travel to school in Paris. The five mopeds members of the troop use average about 120 miles per gallon of a mixture of oil and gasoline. Maes travels in a van taking pictures of the others and keeping a log book and tape recordings of their experiences. They plan to sell them for television or magazines in France, or to possibly publish a book. Expert servicing Includes: Replace fluid Replace pan gasket Adjust bands and linkage motor Inspect hoses, mounts, and modulator Comprehensive road test 4420 So. State Street Murray ts, 268-672- 1 Midvale 7470 So. State Street 566-32- 51 The scouts have had life a little easier than the first Pony Express riders. They have been staying mainly in motels, although they planned to sleep under the stars in the desert. They havent had to worry about water or refreshment because it is always nearby in their van. But the experience of seeing new country, culture and people is fulfilling their expectations of adventure. For quick, effective results at low cost, use the Want Ad columns of the Green Sheet! from attic insulation to spa memberships, and anything and everything in between, commented Sandy Kiwanis member Cleve Hales. An average of 10 to 15 items were placed on the KSOP auction block every half hour, and announced on the air with retail value and donors name. The items were sold to the highest telephoned bidder. The $6,100 raised by the auction will be donated to the Tabiona Summer Ranch, located on the south slope of Tabiona Mountain near Duchesne, Utah. The old 40,000-acr- e sheep ranch was purchased by the Division Wildlife Resources, which in turn leased 10 acres to the Cottonwood Kiwanis club to be developed as a ranch for delinquent youth. Tabiona began as a weekend recreational facility for adolescents on probation with the Second District Juvenile Court. The ranch has gradually been developined into a short-tertensive treatment program, with emphasis on community-base- treat- d ment instead of institutionalization. Successive groups of 10 to 12 deliquent adolescents between 12 and 18 years are taken k to the ranch for sessions of ranch work and professional counseling. These are kids that dont have anything else going for them in the said Carlon summer, Cook, chief of probation at the Second District Juvenile Court. They are probationers who have not succeeded in the community. The adolescents learn to live without modern two-wee- 6551 Sandstrom, South David Hausknecht, So 2200 6282 W 4600 hardcore delinquent years. Local businesses donated merchandise w Steven Black, West Rocky conveniences such as electricity or plumbing. They build fences, help to develop the ranch and attend overnight camping and survival trips. It is amazing what they have done with commented Don McAffee, 1850 West $6,100 for the Tabiona six-ho- ?v Larry Hansen, 3183 So Watt Valley Vlaw Thurs., Aug. 21, 1980 7C 4000 3824 So 2554 W West Stephen Workman, South 6300 Scott Wells, 5332 Queenswood Dr Kelvin Mathis, 5072 Cher ryview Dr L L Hardenbrook, 3180 So. 4500 West Richard Doty, 595 W 3765 South Ross South Dr. president Paskctt, 4521 5015 W Veloy Butterfield, 4876 Coi ony Dr Gary Jackson, 4441 W 4865 South Stan HarVey, 5129 Wildrose Dr, John Randall, 2534 So Red wood Road Jeffrey Davis, 1921 W 3100 South Kevin Jessop, 4495 So 1175 West Keith Marchant, 1452 Mur phys Lane Randy Smith, 3820 So 1700 West Richard Leonard, 5263 W Dewflower Cir. Richard Woodard, 6093 Don Quixote Dr William R Cluny, 3633 Quail Vista Lane 4493 So Rick Armstrong West Kim Taylor, 4072 Zodiac Dr Kimball Howell, 3790 Ash 3290 Or Michael Gilmore, 5746 Mirkwood Lane Kyle Cir Platts, 3266 Bitterroot David Brown, 2640 So 9080 Glen Johnson, 4042 So. State Rich Parkcrest Kelly Nielson, 2531 Brewer, 1855 Dr Sycamore Lane David Liggett, 4077 So. 282C West 5465 Lawrence Rowley, Rockford St 1431 W Monte Broadhead, Biuemont Dr. Jeff Affleck, 2899 W. 3675 South Larry Soldan, 4057 Ralph West St Sterling Tholen, 3715 So 200 East William P LeGare, 2774 Sable Ave Keith Wirtz, 5463 Planada Norman Johnson, 5012 Cherrywood Lane Jack Dtnnmg, 4328 So 1100 West Ted Ave Puzey, 7262 W Park Way Russell B tysburg Dr George Doutt, 7424 Get Bancroft, 2786 Adams St of the Cottonwood Kiwanis club. The rehabilitative process at the ranch incorporates work and recreational therapy with intensive individual and group counseling. The work program develops vocational skills and a sense of earning ones keep. The re- UTAHS LOWEST FOOD PRICES ! 2783 So. State, 4750 So Redwood Rd 7355 So 9th East. 81 77 West 3500 So 40 West 2nd North, Bountiful creation program tffto Til P AA focuses on leisure skills and allows individual abilities and strengths to surface. The kids enjoy a sense FOOD BARGAIN ANNEX A VCrOtf satisfaction of they gain from real comphysical work, mented Cook. He explained that the close, contact personal Stium es- tablished from living with the counselors has helped to open up some of the youth who previously would not talk. The individual counseling sessions are aimed at helping the youth LINK and set, monitor, fntuLj achieve personal goals. The group counseling will focus on developing interpersonal skills and resolving conflicts with others. In the fall, kids with truancy problems will spend time at the ranch, which is expanding from a strictly summer facility. The funds raised by the Cottonwood, Sandy and Crossroads Kiwanis clubs will be used for facility improvements and group food and traveling expenses. Camping M - Fee Change Noted LAKE. SALT A change in the camping fee structure for all state parks has been approved by the Utah Board of Parks and Recreation. According to Glenn Stephens, chief of administration for the State Division of Parks and Recreation, the modification was prompted by an inequity in the d originally-approve- schedule for the 1980-8period. Recognizing the problem, division officials requested that fees for camping in overflow 1 Its easy when you shop at VALLEY FAIR MALL areas with only facilities be primitive set at $3 per night for all state parks, rather than the higher fee which had been in effect at parks with more extensive camping amenities. Overnight camping MAJOR STORES fees in state parks are $3 for sites with pit or vault toilets; $4 for sites with flush toilets; $5 for those with flush toilets and hot showers and $6 for for sites with flush toilets, hot showers and full utility hookups. Campers wishing to use state park facilities may contact the park at which they plan to camp for reservations or to determine if space is available on a first-comfirst-serve- d basis. The divisions rent-a-cam- p program has SPECIALTY SHOPS been set up on an experimental basis at Bear Lake, Deer Creek, Rockport and Utah Lake state parks. Campers may, by reservation, rent a camp site for $10, which includes a tent, camp cookstove, ice Jsjc Hovve RSHRSff chest, battery-powerelantern and d picnic table. The $10 fee is in addition to the regular overnight camping fee. BIRTHS BAOTH VADGQ OS DA! Bring the family to see him and Chewbakka Saturday 2 to 6 p.m. Instant Color Pictures available TO:IIIWII n 3601 South 2700 West rVV (From Page 2C, Col. 8) Westshire Dr. Tavake Naufahu, 3989 W. 3100 South Dan Davis, 4727 So. 1175 West John DeHart, Magna Mark Reeves, 5572 Trident Ave. Vardell Taylor, 4049 Castleview Dr. Robert Paulsen, 6014 Borax Dr. Peter Anderson, 4401 Twilight Dr. Allen Sargent, 3222 W. 4960 South Michael Jensen, 3581 So. 6580 West Mark Higley, 4625 Sunstone ws m oflutofon 'y&mmim- - |