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Show Wednesdoy, Morch 28, 1984 Vflmfll Expfm 9 let's an to the movies! c or enabling thereto. DOROTHY LUCK Uintah County Clerk Published in the Vernal Express March 28, April 4 and 11, 1984. NOTICE OF JOB OPENING Position: District Maintenance. Date of appointment: Immediately. Technical skills required: 1. Air conditioning. 2. Cooling refrigeration. 3. Heatingventilation. 4. Basic understanding of electricity and electric motors. 5. Energy auditing and management. Deadline for applying: April 6, 1984. Submit applications to Ted Taylor, Supportive Services, Uintah School District, 635 West 200 South, Vernal, UT 84078. Telephone: 789-6124. Uintah School District is an equal opportunity employer. Published in the Vernal Express March 28, 30, and April 4, 1984. NOTICE TION TO ANNEX TO AND EXTEND THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BALLARD WATER IM-PROVEMENT IM-PROVEMENT DISTRICT OF UINTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH PUBIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS that the Board of County Commissioners Com-missioners of the County of Uintah, in the State of Utah, by resolution duly passed and adopted on the 26th day of March, 1984, declared that the public health, convenience conve-nience and necessity require re-quire the annexation of adjacent tracts of land to the Ballard Water Im-provment Im-provment District, which resolution is now on file at the office of the Clerk of said County in the County Building in Vernal, Ver-nal, Utah, and is available for public inspection, in-spection, said resolution states in part: Section 1. That the public health, safety, convenience, and necessity required the extension of the boundaries boun-daries of the BALLARD WATER IMPROVEMENT IMPROVE-MENT DISTRICT and the annexation of the following described areas to the said District, to-wit: Township 2 South, Range 1 West, Uintah Special Meridian, Sec- i: in. Dpi T7l XTTj1!. PUBLIC NOTICE The Board of Adjustment Adjust-ment of Uintah County, Utah, will hold a public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 4, 1984 in the Commissioners' room in the Courthouse at which time public consideration con-sideration will be given the following item: 1) Larry E. Peterson seeks to obtain a variance to place a residence on a legal sized siz-ed lot which does not have frontage on the county road at approximately approx-imately 787 -W, ,,2500 South. Details of the above are on file in the Zoning Administrator's office, 220 S. 500 East, Vernal, Utah, and may be examined ex-amined during normal working days. JESS M. MILLER Uintah County Zoning Administrator . Published in the Vernal Express March 28, 1984. Township 2 South, Range 1 West, Uintah Special Meridian, Section Sec-tion 1: EVzSE'i, EV2NEV4, NW14NEV4, NEV4NWy4 Township 1 South, Range 1 West, Uintah Special Meridian, Section Sec-tion 36: SEViSWVi, SV2SEV4 Township 2 South, Range 1 West, Uintah Special Meridian, Section Sec-tion 6: WV2NWV4, Nwy4sw74 Section 2. The area and the residents thereof, when and if annexed to the Ballard Water Improvement Im-provement District shall be entitled to and subject to the same privileges, obligations and restrictions restric-tions as the area and the residents of the area now embraced within the said District which had heretofore been created by this honorable body. The residents of the area and the area sought to be annexed to and included within the District shall be governed by the Board of Trustees of the Ballard Water Improvement Improve-ment District to the same extent as the residents and the area of the District as it now exists ex-ists are governed. Section 3. The Board of County Commissioners of Uintah County, State of Utah, will meet in official of-ficial meeting at the Uintah Uin-tah County Building on Monday, April 23, 1984, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock p.m., such time being not more than forty (40) nor less than twenty-one (21) days after the first publication of the Board's notice of its intention in-tention to annex areas into in-to the Ballard Water Improvement Im-provement District, at which time all interested parties may appear before the Board of County Commissioners and be heard either in support or in opposition to the said annexation. Any taxpayer within the District or the proposed area to be annexed to the District may, on or before said date of hearing hear-ing above mentioned submit a written protest against the proposed annexation an-nexation to the District, signed by the taxpayer, which protest shall be filed fil-ed with the County Clerk of Uintah County. Any such written protest may indicate the reason for the protest, whatever it may be. Written protests shall be filed in the manner man-ner provided for by Section Sec-tion 17-6-3, Utah Code Annotated, An-notated, 1953 as amended and all laws pertaining PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE All persons residing within the area served by the City of Naples are hereby notified that the Naples City Council will hold a public hearing at the Naples City Council meeting on the 5th day of April 1984. The meeting will begin at 7:30 P.M. and will be held in the Naples City Office located at 1601 East 1900 South, Naples, Uintah County, Utah. The purpose of the public hearing: To discuss and make application appli-cation for a Community Development Block Grant. Agenda: 1. Fire Hy rants Phase II 2. Sidwalks East side of Hwy 40 1500 East 3. Master Drainage Plan 4. Other MARLENE STIDHAM City Recorder Published in the Vernal Express March 28, 30 and April 4, 1984. CJARfr : CVDS Vernal City WirMESS Program Vhiterocks Virginia Ferguson Phone 353-4584 S. Christensen undergoes surgery Sherrie Christensen underwent surgery in the Roosevelt hospital last week. She was released from hospital care on Sunday and is now recuperating at home. Sherry Kay Rasmussen spent last weekend with her family. John Dickey drove to Spanish Fork last week to sell a horse then he went on to Cedar City and St. George on business, returning home on Monday. Alan, LeeAnn, Katie and Conrad drove to Salt Lake City last week for a day's outing. Zella and Darla Pike and Betty and Owen Cloward attended the wedding reception of their niece, Lael Moosman, in Vernal last week. The bridegroom is Roy Phillips. That lady you have seen limping around town lately is Zella Pike she dropped a stick of firewood on her toe, and you guessed it, broke her toe. Rhoda Poowegup and Ginger Ridley and families went to Salt Lake City to attend the Jazz session at the Salt Palace. Deanna Poowegup took a load of children to the Jazz session, also. Nancy Poowegup, Tallula Callaway and Angle Lucero went to Fort Hall, Idaho to play basketball. Fred Lucero drove son, Frederick, to Price to catch the bus for Towaoc, Calif. Young Frederick will be there for a week, visiting friends and relatives. Cinematic Sentiments By Dr. Allen Hasson 'Racing with the Moon' Standard rites-of-passage tale of two lads, Sean Penn ("Fast Times," "Bad Boys") and Nicolas Cage ("Valley Girl") who romance their girlfriends in 1942 coastal northern California, raise money for an abortion, and go off to war. A snorer for some, but good performances perfor-mances and 40's atmosphere. A well-meaning well-meaning effort by "My Favorite Year" director Richard Benjamin. PG, appealed from R: 5 sex, profanity pro-fanity (including The Word), nudity. 'Stephen King's Children of the Corn1 () (WW-l Ch-1 OC-1 Sk-3) One little boy asked another, "Do you believe in Santa Claus?" "Naw," came the replay. "It's just like the devil. It's really your old man." We've come a long way, baby. Beginning perhaps with "The Exorcist" Exor-cist" (1973), old Scratch has become a big-name entertainer. Deviltry is big bucks at the box office. What kind of movie is "Children of the Corn?" It's the kind of movie that the young-at-heart and faint-of-brain will sit through, then brag to one another that they did indeed sit through it. Stephen King is the novelist who loves to scare us, and who we love to be scared by. He wrote "Carrie" (a movie in 1976) and "The Shining" ( 1980 movie) . Now in quick succession, five of his stories come to the screen: "Cujo" (1983) "Dead Zone" (1983), "Christine" (1983), "Children of the Corn" (1984) and "Firestarter" (later this year). (We liked "Cujo" and "Dead Zone.") "Corn" is a New World production; Time your transplants to local growing season Whether you grow your own transplants or buy them, time is important, im-portant, says Duane Hatch, extension horticulturist, Utah State University. Hatch advises choosing transplants five to eight inches tall. He says research has indicated that stocky, dark green transplants of this size are just as productive as taller, older ones. Even older tomato transplants that have blossoms show no production advantage ad-vantage over the vigorous young tomato plants. Gardeners who grow their own transplants must plan ahead to have them at the right stage when it becomes time to transplant them in the garden. Those who plan on buying transplants when their garden is ready will want to select healthy transplants of a size that will begin growing well. Hatch says both should look at their own individual conditions for length of growing season and select varieties that have a good chance of maturing. He cautions gardeners against accepting ac-cepting all information given in City Ogden Brigham City Farmington Provo Spanish Fork Vernal Richfield Beaver Moab St. George Panguitch Green River Last Frost May 6 May 4 May 4 May 23 May 5 May 29 May 28 June 4 April 21 April 1 June 19 May 1 The friends and relatives of Cynthia Bagley came to her farewell, March 25 to give her a good send-off. She will enter the Mission Training Center April 12 for three weeks and then will depart for Johannesburg, South Africa. Her special visitors were Earl and Alice Bagley, grandparents from Salt Lake City, Jim and Carlene Macintosh with family, Salt Lake City and Lor-na Lor-na Sielhorst and family from Salt Lake City. Also attending were many other friends from Vernal, Roosevelt and surrounding areas. J" i: these are the people who brought you "Wavelength," "Cross Country" and "Angel." No, children of the corn are not necessarily the paying customers who munch popcorn at slasher movies. Or are they? "Corn," the least satisfying film of a King story, tells of a young couple who stumble onto a ghost town in Nebraska, ruled by a wacky pubescent who teaches all the other children and youth (who have killed their parents) to be spiritual followers of "He who walks behind the rows" (of corn) . It's devil worship pure and simple. The cult is finally destroyed when their gasahol supply is blown up and the corn is burned, tenacious leaves and all. "Corn" is scary. But it's scary because cheap tricks are used (things jumping out, worshipful choir music, etc.). Real theatrical involvement, for the audience, requires a "suspension of disbelief." No way here. Children (nor adults) can't act this evil. The acting is amateurish anyway, but worse yet, no child at all can act evil. It's not in him. By the way, good old "R.G." is here you know. R.G. Armstrong (as a garage owner). His presence in little-out-of-the-way-places-filled-with-demons-movies is almost a trademark. ' There is more splattering of blood and graphic slashing than you can shake a scythe at, and the plot has more holes in it than my thermal underwear. There's not a kernal of believability in this cornball demonflick, but shucks, who cares? We came to be scared, right? Repulsed, Repuls-ed, right? This sick flick is an insult to any theatre that shows it, to children everywhere, and to the state of Nebraska. It's even an insult to corn. But then, demoniac children never were our favorite story topic. "Children of the Corn" should be plowed under. Rated R, should be X; more offensive offen-sive than, say, "Scarface." Graphic slashing, profanity, religious blasphemy. So far this year, the feel-good movie is "Footloose," and the feel-bad picture pic-ture is "Children of the Corn." garden books and other sources. He says some may not apply well to your own area. Even weather information from a station in your locality might not apply really well. This is because of considerable variance often seen within a very short distance. As an example of this variance in microclimates, Hatch notes that May 3 is given as the average date for the last frost in the spring at the Salt Lake City Airport, and Oct. 11 as average for the first fall frost (a 161-day frost-free frost-free growing season). At the University Univer-sity of Utah, those dates are April 25 and Oct. 25 (a 185-day growing season). That's three weeks difference in a few miles. In Logan, the situation is even more extreme. At Utah State University, the average frost-free season runs from May 18 to Oct. 13 ( 159 growing days), while one mile away at the radio station, the growing season is a full month shorter. For general guidelines on growing season, Hatch suggests referring to the following chart of figures provided provid-ed by former State Climatologist Arlo Richardson at USU. First Frost Oct. 10 Oct. 11 Oct. 11 Oct. 20 Oct. 9 Sept. 15 Sept. 18 Sept. 14 Oct. 21 Oct. 11 Sept. 3 Oct. 10 Season Length 158 days 161 days 161 days 120 days 158 days 110 days 113 days 102 days 183 days 224 days 76 days 163 days f V f ry rj ry rj rj rj For current recorded road conditions Dial 789-8491 Courtesy Utah Highway Patrol ?A f $A ftf ry ej rj rj cy e -,.7..,.,i,.a A.frt1t(ji f jyf Michael Pope Jared Don Allred Jamiel Thomas Corinne Khwaja Gardner Kandice Ann Stewart 9 r iT" & 5 X ; f - m" i ) Blake Aubray . Wilkins Naples Ado Openshaw Phone 789-3145 Jim Richardsons return from trip to Wisconsin Jim and Christine Richardson returned home Thursday from a vacation vaca-tion trip to Wisconsin where they . visited with Christine's parents and other relatives. Angela Pack and family left Saturday Satur-day morning for California where they will make their home. Wade Olsen and Evan and Holly Baker spent four days in Ogden last week where they attended a library convention. They returned home Saturday night. Wesley and Eunice Bowden spent last week in Salt Lake City with their daughters, LaRetta Ryan and Leah Westwood and their families. They returned home Friday night. John and Janel Kay and daughter, Shaylah, returned home last Monday evening after spending two weeks in Salt Lake City where John underwent back surgery. John is still bedfast, but recovering. The Fran Peterson family of Jensen, including Tim and Christine Webster of Meeker and Stan Peterson of Rangely, and Reva and Larry Ruppe of Naples, celebrated Gladys Peterson's Peter-son's birthday Friday night with a family dinner. Mrs. Peterson (Gladys) is Reva Ruppe's daughter. Fern Everett and Shelly Howells and baby of Fruita, Colorado came Wednesday to spend a couple of days with Fern's mother, Nellie Richens. They returned to their homes Friday. Norman, Janna and Brad Haslem went to Provo Friday where they visited their daughter and son-in-law, Caryl Ann and Ken Seastrand. They returned home Saturday night. Kay Baker went to Logan for the Vernal Express And Vernal Area Advertiser 789-3511 Classified Ad Deadline 11 A.M. Tues. Complete Advertising Coverage of the Uintah Bin Area VERNAL UTAH 84078 Home Remodeling & Painting Call Clark for your New Garage or to finish your basement or redo your kitchen. ..or paint a wall... free estimates. Call Clark Construction 789-7690 789-0846 100 Financing 30 . ON Derek John Lindsay Allred Patterson Maria Ann Craig Thomas Allred Mackin Jeffery Shawn Wilcken CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations this week go to these babies for passing their first milestone: Maria Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glade C. Allred, March 23; Corinne, Cor-inne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rick Gardner, March 30; Lindsay, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Patterson, Patter-son, March 29; Kandice Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Stewart, March 24; Derek John, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Allred, March 22; Jared Don, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don D. Allred, March 29; Jamiel Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Zia Khwaga, March 26; Craig Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Mackin, March 30; Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Pope, March 27; Jeffery Shawn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Wilcken, March 28 and Blake Aubray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Brett Wilkins, March 29. Pictures of one year old babies will be taken free of charge at Aspen Photo, Thome Studio and Evan Hall and printed in the Vernal Express. Pictures should be taken one week prior to baby's birthday. weekend where she visited with friends. She also visited her sister, Arlyn, in Ogden while she was in that area. Annette Evans of San Jose, Calif., and a student at BYU was a guest at the home of her grandparents, Glenn and Ada Openshaw, Saturday and Sunday. The family of Charles Olsen honored him with a birthday dinner on Sunday at the Dan Olsen home. Besides Charles and Hazel Olsen, those attending atten-ding were Dan and Brenda Olsen and family, Wade and Ronda Olsen and family, and Rick and Doris Salazar and daughter. Elouise Turner and Ada Openshaw made a trip to Salt Lake City Friday on business. Ray and Vergie Gee spent Saturday in Provo with their daughter and son-in-law and son, Charlie and Leri Dawn Smith, and Adam. answer JACK WESTON years i , ' f -' 'LJm bju l t-niiAippp THn e a aIr E C UK iff SE A N re S T " Rj" E R l 7 IJN Y l m Tl A E R 0 elS I A OIL Tn B I E I A R JhI N I I N a |