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Show it BIO Thursday, May 18, 1989 Exploring by TERI ORR Record editor The guru is a grandmother who has been involved on a number of levels with community service work for years and she is still somewhat uncomfortable with her metaphysical work. But for the past 14 years Lorene Irizary has shared her abilities to help individuals in-dividuals discover information locked inside that can be benefical to self-awareness. This week the California woman is concluding her stay in the Salt Lake City area as a guest of the Y.W.C.A. an organization she has worked with for years. She has lectured at the University Universi-ty of Utah and has served as a resource at the Y because she says the organization has a mission mis-sion to see to "the impowerment of women" and this is a step in that direction. Lorene explains she discovered her gift when she joined a meditation medita-tion group 14 years ago. "I started the meditation and my body temperature changed, my facial expressions changed more rapidly that you could imagine im-agine and my friends said they actually could feel blasts of energy coming from my body. The leader told me what I was doing do-ing was not meditation and to leave. I discovered later, I had opened up as a channel and it was really rather unsettlingly." Lorene worked with a college near her home to try and understand unders-tand the world of parapsychology para-psychology and her ablity to reach a trance state, an altered level of reality. In some cases she could foresee the future and it was rather dramatic. "My children were visiting their father in Seattle and I had this warning that they would discover a child's body in a park. I had never been to Seattle but I told their father the names of the street's surrounding the park and I asked him not to let the children go there. On the last day of their visit in Seattle the children went to a park and found the body of a child who had been left there after being molested." Herself, a survivior of alcholic parents, the victim of insest and abuse, Lorene feels she is equipped equip-ped to help others learn how to be healthy individuals. She conducts Park Record the metaphysical ' WW m ' -J"W T.' ""m 1 ; r e $ ' . f i .- , f f-K ; ; ' , , ; '' L. ill Lorene Irizary "We all have psychic abilities. The key is to recognize them and use them to help undo unhealthy patterns pat-terns and improve im-prove our jobs' Lorene Irizary WY WjrM- feJH We've changed our earner We're still the same local professionals you already know and trust And we're still locally owned and operated. But now, thanks to The Prudential, we're even better. Because now we're also a part of a select network of some of the most successful real estate organizations in the entire country. The Prudential Real Estate Affiliates. And now we're even better equipped to serve all of your real estate needs. With some of the best marketing tools in the business. A computerized sales support system. A national referral network. And more. So whether you're looking to buy or to sell, look no further than the bottom of this ad , or the bottom of Main Street. And give us a call. Today. We've got what it takes to deliver rock-solid results. The Prudential. You know An Independantly Owned and Operated Member TeriOrr workshops and gives lectures but she also volunteers her time to special women's groups and psychiatric hospitals. Her fee is determined by a sliding scale. "We all have psychic abilities," she says matter-of-factly. "The key is to recognize them and use them to help improve im-prove our relationships and undo unhealthy patterns and improve our jobs." Lorene feels the time is ripe for understanding and she points the increased renewed global spirituality. "This is a healing time. There is revelation that comes from the revolution of crisis, especially in religion." From co-dependency to coexistence co-existence Lorene is ready to explore ex-plore those areas of your life you wish to explore. She will be in Salt Lake City until May 28th and she is taking appointments at the Y.W.C.A. center at 355-2804. But not who we are. Wasatch highway to be paved The Utah Department of Transportation recently opened on a project to pave the Wasatch County "A" line highway. Grading work on the new highway is currently being done under two separate contracts to prepare the highway for paving. The new highway will run along the south .side of the soon-to-be-constructed Jordanelle Dam from US-40 north of Heber to US-189 near Francis. Of the three bids submitted on the project, Gibbons and Reed of Salt Lake City had the apparent low bid of $2,378,691. The official engineer's ' estimate was $2,545,661. The contract con-tract will not be awarded, however, until the bids are reviewed to make certain no errors were made and that all requirements were met. This paving project involves placing plac-ing an eight-inch layer of untreated base course on the new highway alignment over which four inches of bituminous pavement will be laid. Also included as part of the paving process will be a "chip seal" which involves spraying liquid asphalt over the bituminous pavement then spreading and rolling aggregate or small gravel chips into it. The asphalt material seals the highway surface to help extend the life of the road and the chips provide a good, skid-resistant finish. When complete the new highway will have two 12-foot traffic lanes with six-foot shoulders and 11-foot climbing lanes in uphill areas. Grades on this highway are less than sue percent, except for one area where the grade is 7.5 percent for about one-quarter mile. The paving work will begin as soon as the grading contracts are complete com-plete which is expected to be the first part of June. The contract stipulates that the paving is to be completed on or before Sept. 30 this year except for the chip seal and the permanent pavement marking and striping which is to be done next year by Aug. 31. Completion of this highway and opening it to traffic must be coordinated coor-dinated with the completion of the new alignments for US-40 and US-189 and rerouting traffic from the ex-, isting highways to those new alignments. There will be traffic from the existing highways to those new alignments. There will be traffic traf-fic interference where this new highway intersects with US-40 and US-189. us. We know of The Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Tours to turn back the hands If you see a moustached and fedora-clad stranger on Main Street who looks like he stepped out of a time machine from the 1930s, you aren't seeing things. Hal Compton of the Park City Museum staff is no stranger to town and will be sharing his knowledge of Park City history while walking down Main Street. Compton has patterned pat-terned his character after James Don, a popular and handsome citizen who was a city justice in the '30s. Sponsored by the Park City Museum, the afternoon walking tour will become a regular summer feature. Thursday's inaugural tour is in celebration of International Museum Day, May 18. The tour will A disabling Vf I MHVENT A UTTCH J J can break more than a limb. Your Farm Bureau agent can help you choose a disability income policy based on your current income and your c :i.t i- r lamuy s nceus, ai a iair premium. UTAH FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH SUMMIT 801-336-2098 Coalville (tiff The Prudential Coleman Real Estate 614 Main Street Park City, Utah 84060 (801)649-7171 real estate. Inc. of time begin at the Park City Museum at 2 p.m. and will last approximately 45 minutes. The cost is $2 per person. Park City's official tour guide for many years, Bea Kummer, a familiar figure in her wide-brimmed hat and black and white striped dress, is finding her Main Street climb a bit too much these days. She has shared her expertise with the new guides. Other local residents scheduled to conduct tours in costume during the summer arc Peggy Collins, Sally Elliott, Lloyd Evans and Hal Smith. For information about other special group tours, call the Museum Office at 649-0375, or Visitor Information at 6494104. injury f::-'"' 7 E t rarm Bureau FAMILY OF FINANCIAL PLANNING SERVICES U CDk ROCKY MOUNTAIN AGENCY AGENCY MANAGER Curtis D. Arlington CAREER AGENTS: Midway: Theodore K. Labrum Morgan: Wallace D. Green Woodruff: Jeffrey D. Williams Henefer: Richard N. Butler Coalville: Vaughn B. Staples Heber City: Richard J. Boulter Provo: Darrin S. tvte - 1 wli P.O.Box 1800 |