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Show I I Legislators to review local handicap programs Submitted by Summit Co. D.D.I. Handicapped Awareness Day will be observed in Summit and Wasatch Counties Coun-ties on Dec. 17 with tours and a luncheon. Honored guests for the day will be Senator Glade Sowards, Representative Representa-tive Glen Brown and Representative Repre-sentative Alarik Myrin. Keynote Key-note speaker following the luncheon will be E. William Hanley, PhD, Chairman Utah Council for Handicapped Handi-capped and Disabled Persons. Per-sons. Creator and chairman of the event is Shay Clegg, Park City parent of a handicapped child. The day will begin for the legislators at Marsac School with a continental breakfast and an overview of the agencies and programs available, for persons in Summit and Wasatch Counties Coun-ties with problems ranging from very mild impairments to severe multiple handicaps. handi-caps. This will be presented by Tom Burchette, Special Murder try nets probation A Park City woman who pleaded guilty in November to attempted manslaughter was placed on probation for three months during sentencing senten-cing procedures before Third District Court Judge Bryant Croft in Coalville Monday. Darla Jean Moore, 22, admitted ad-mitted in early November that she was guilty of firing a rifle at her husband, Kelly, outside of their Holiday Village apartment on the night of Aug. 28. According to police officers who investigated in-vestigated the incident, up to six shots may have been fired from the rifle, at least one of which hit the 25-year-old man. Kelly Moore was found by neighbors in the courtyard of the apartments off Monitor Drive with a wound in his arm and side. He was taken to Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City, where he was treated and released. Moore refused to press charges against his wife, but the Park City Police Department Depart-ment and the Summit County Coun-ty Attorney's office charged the woman with attempted Students given free ski time The theory is, if you give kids an inch, they'll take a mile. But by the same token, if you give them an afternoon after-noon of skiing once in a while, maybe they'll keep their noses in the books. At least that's Park City High School Principal Jack Dozier's theory. The Park City Board of Education recently approved four Friday afternoons off this winter for the high school students to go skiing. "That's if all is going well at the high school, in my discretion," said Dozier. With the help of Amanda Peterson at the Chamber of Commerce, Dozier said all three area ski resorts have offered a free afternoon of skiing to high school students. stu-dents. The first legal afternoon after-noon of hooky will be at Deer Valley on Jan. 8. The Park City Ski Area will host the students twice during the winter, once during the OsmondU.S. Ski Team MEMO: an nyn 'XI dusti bcUQML rfial. JipU-i - Jl-" lb-""- A note of reason and then some . . . for buying NOW at Dave Strong SSSCHE 1045 South State Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Education Specialist for Northeastern Utah Education Educa-tion Services. While at Mar-sac Mar-sac School, the legislators will visit Summit County Developmental Disabilities Inc. a program for infants and pre-schoolers, which is funded primarily through the Utah Department of Social Services. When a disabled child becomes five years old, the school district special education educa-tion services take over, so the legislators will travel next to Coalville, where thev will observe the North Summit Sum-mit School District Severely Multiply Handicapped class taught by Mary Lanman. In Heber, the three will go to the Wasatch School District Training Center, directed by Jim Donner, where older children are prepared for life in the community. Stops at the Heber Valley Care Center, administered by Gloria Pitt, and the Wasatch Activity Center in Midway with teacher Esther Breeden, will demonstrate murder in the second degree. That charge was later reduced to attempted manslaughter, which is a third degree felony punishable by one to 15 years imprisonment and up to a $5,000 fine. On Monday, Judge Croft placed Mrs. Moore on a three-month probation. According Ac-cording to Assistant Summit County Attorney Terry Christiansen, the terms of the probation included that she would continue counseling coun-seling at the Prevention Center Cen-ter in Park City, and would receive other counseling as determined necessary by the State Adult Probation and Parole office. In addition, she is restricted from having firearms in her home or at her disposal, said Christiansen, Christian-sen, and must not commit any crimes during her probation period. At the end of three months, she will return to the 'court for review before Judge Ernest Er-nest Baldwin, who will replace Croft in January. At that time, Baldwin can rule to end or extend the probation. Celebrity Classic in March. ParkWest also will host the students once. Dozier said the school's attendance at-tendance policy is a tough one, and the ski afternoons are a compromise gesture. "With the new attendance policy, we've gotten into their lives pretty strongly," said Dozier. "I told the board that I think it's better to have tighter policies, but at the same time, let's give the students the opportunity to take advantage of the moun tains." The get-tough policy was in response to poor attendance atten-dance last winter, said Dozier. "During the term of the ski season last year, the sad fact was that 32 percent of the students were out of school 25 percent of the time," said Dozier. "That's earth-shattering when one-third of the children are gone one-quarter one-quarter of the time." 'qbtot a. .J 1 . " J V programs for adult disabled and retarded persons no longer in school. Department of Social Services again assumes responsibility for these programs. Providing information about Social Services will be Jim Wheeler, Wheel-er, Department of Social Services Field Director for Summit and Wasatch Counties. Coun-ties. A mid-afternoon luncheon at the Homestead will provide pro-vide an opportunity for the legislators, parents, professionals profes-sionals and the interested public to hear E. William Hanley discuss statewide concerns for the handicapped handi-capped and developmentally disabled. This will also be a celebration of the International Interna-tional Year of the Handicapped Handi-capped which will soon draw to a close. Persons wishing to attend the luncheon may call committee com-mittee member Barbara Dyer, coordinator, Summit County Developmental Disabilities Disa-bilities Inc. to make reservations reserva-tions by Dec. 11. Call 649-4204 mornings or 649-9881. STARTS TODAY! Call for more information: (801)272-9686 Salt Lake (801)649-6798 Park City November winner Congratulations to the lucky November birthstone winner, Carol Walker of Heber City. Carol is receiving a three-carat, marquis-cut topaz free from Family Jewels owner Mary Doughty. With ownersplitting you own an equity in your own luxurious townhouse along with 1 2 others. You get to use it four weeks a year- one week each season. And you can let friends use it or rent it. Quail Meadows townhouses are built with care and integrity by Spencer-Gamble Development. 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