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Show 12 Page - THE HERALD. Provo L'Uhy TUESDAY, Aueust 7. ISM Children Reqdire Record of Shots To Attend School By NANCY BRINGHURST Herald Staff Writer Parents are being reminded by health officials that proof of immunization is needed before children can be accepted into school this fall, said Marge Gardner of the Utah County Health Depart- 1 ment. "We encourage parents to bring their children in now, instead of right before school starts," said Gardner. "Lines are horrible the closer you get to the opening day of school." State law requires that all school children, whether they attend a public or private school, turn in proof of immunization. Children who will attend nursery school, home school, parochial school, or day care centers must also provide acceptable evidence that immunization is complete or is being taken care of, she said. "Acceptable evidence is a signed statement from a physician or health department official that the child has been immunized," said A Utah School Immunization Record form may be obtained from the school district or the health center, she said. Only three exemptions will be accepted by the state; parent objections based on religious beliefs, personal beliefs or if a physician statement says a vacine is detrimental to a child's health. According to state law it is the parent's responsibility to ensure the child receives immunization, said Gardner. Schools must keep a file on each child with the appropriate information. "If a parent doesn't complete the immunization form, the child can't begin school until proof is submitted that it is being taken care of, or that the child is exempt," she said. Children must receive shots for polio, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, mumps and german measles, said Gardner. Immunization clinics will be held Monday through Friday at the Utah County Health Department, 107 E. 100 S. in Provo, from p.m. The entire sequence of shots may be purchased for only $2, said Gardner. Satellite clinics will be held for the following cities: Payson Aug. 14 from p.m. at the senior citizen center, 439 W. Utah Avenue. North end of the county Aug. 14 from p.m. at the American Fork Hospital, 170 N. 1100 E. Spanish Fork Aug. 21 from p.m. at the senior citizen center, 167 W. Center. North end of the county Aug. 21 from p.m. at the American Fork Hospital, 170 N. 1100 E. Aug. 28 from Springville p.m. at the senior citizen center, 65 E. 200 S. Lehi Aug. 28 from p.m. at the senior citizen center, 165 N. 100 E. er. , , eather Report Central Utah Summary City Temp Yesterday Prtcip Alpine Fairfield Heber Orem PI Grove Provo Sp Fort Timp Cave IF NATIONAL 00 06 00 87 56 2 89-- 3 1 00 0 y. COOL tifmmairfi V ( SANRANCSCONden Ef)l S. J9 77 V- 2 82 39 20 00 05 80 4 2 31 6 2 22 1 1 3 41 198 70 95 3 77 4 04 0 91 0 97 4 01 211 280 4 38 0 77 UPI to lower 6us Logan Fair tonfit and Wednesday Fair and armer Wednesday Low torughi in the 50s High Wednesday in the mid 9Vs hh Cedar City Mostly fair tonight and toLo Wednesday warmer wetinesud night in the high 5os H.ghs Wednesday in tbe mid 9us ATLANTA 1 DALLAs y V( 70 . Lr2LS Q St Ceorge Mostly fair tonight and Wednesday Wanner Wednesday Low tonight in the mid 60s High Wednesday near 1U6. new ORLEANS Utah LEGEND j 0 JMIAMI " If '. jSNOwMS Mostly fair through Wednesday Low tonight ranging from the mid 50s in the north to the mid 60s in the extreme south High Wednesday ranging from the mid 90s in the north to near lu6 in the St. FLO WEATHER FOTOCAST George area Sational Summary tate Summary 237 21.41 32 31 - ST LOUIS V jyPvrvn 53 3 93 EST Chicago 60 f n-'M 1 AW )iJ2xkfr JfX LOWEST TEMPERATURES b-- u July August September Water Year V SEATTLE 06 06 FORECAST to 7 SERVICE T.2 DO Prove Precipiutioa (locket) 1 V,EATER 0 Frvv Yesterday Humidity Range Peak Wind 29 mph Evaporat.on: .30 1 By I ailed Prm laierucwaal Sail Lie City Ogaen ana Provo Moatiy warmer flas fair tnrougn weonesday H.ghs in tte mid 90s Los in the mid M a 00 Month October November December January February March April Regional Forecasts eather Mop Regional Temps By United Pren International A few thunderstorms lingered until after midnight in the east and north central portions of Utah, but only patches of scattered clouds remained this morning. Strong high pressure is wafting into Utah from the west, cutting off the flow of tropical moisture. Dry air has resulted. Minimum temperatures this morning ranged from the mid 50s to the mid 60s. Almanac Provo Temperaturea Hl-o Month Month 2 9 July 25 July 12 83-2 July 2S July 13 6 July 27 July 14 0 0 July 28 July 15 9 July 29 July 16 3 5 July 30 July 17 6 8644 July 31 July 18 3 4 Aug. 1 July 19 7 8 Aug. 2 July 20 9 4 Aug. 3 July 21 3 9541 Aug. 4 July 22 3 7 Aug. 5 July 23 5 6 Aug July 24 Weather information conrteiy of David Jamei, Provo weather observer. Readings are for the period ending at I p.m. yesterday. SUNNY By BRENDA W. ROTZOIX By United Press International High Low Pep 51... Boise Burlev Cedar Citv Idaho Falls 86 Lewiston Logan McCall 80 53 92 Ogden 93 Pocatello Provo Richfield Roosevelt 87 56 Salt Lake St George Twin Falls Vernal Wendover 92 66 .04 83 55 91 86 .... 60 .... 55... .... - .... 76 44 .... 64.... .... 90 60 03 93 57 .... 87 55... 101 69 .... 86 58 .... .... 96 71 United Press International Bears took bubble baths, fan sales soared and the nation s 'argest manufacturer of snowthrowers began production as steamy heat smothered the nation from the Plains to the Atlantic. The outlook is for more of the same at least for the next couple of days, with teTiwratures throughout the southern Plains and readings in the 90s into the Great Lakes, meteorologist Nolan Duke at the National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City. Mo., said today. Heavy rain extended from eastern Colorado to western Nebraska today, with thunderstorms moving across North Dakota toward northwestern Minnesota. Showers were scattered from the Rockies to the Great Lakes. Most of Kansas baked in 100-pltemperatures Monday, with readings into the 90s from the southern Plains to Minnesota and Detroit. Writer Clark Caras to Speak To Utah League About Russia ' Clark Caras, former Provo Daily Herald writer, recently returned from a trip to Russia, will speak on Russian Journalism, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at a picnic of the Utah Valley Chapter of the League of Utah Writers. The picnic will be in the middle pavilion of Kiwanis Park east of the BYU campus. While in Russia, Caras visited both Petrograd and Moscow as well as southern Russia. Visits included a school of Journalism in Moscow, Pravda, Izvestia and a TV studio. Most interesting will be his accounts of visits to dissidents in southern Russia. All local members, writers and would be writers, are invited to attend for an evening of social activity with other writers. A salad buffet will be available; also, a barbeque for those who bring their own meat. '84 FORD TEMPOS! room for five, aerodynamic Front-wheel-driv- h - e, styling and better deals than ever before in '84! Sen. Orrin Hatch To Speak At Utah Energy Conference Utah Senator Orrin Hatch and William A. Vaughan, a U.S. Energy Dept. official, are among speakers scheduled to address the Eighth Annual State Energy Conference Sept. 14 at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. The theme for this year's one-da- y conference is "Utah's for the Future: 1984 Upes date." Research presentations from the Utah Engineering Experiment Station will be emphasized at the conference, to be held in the Orson Spencer Hall auditorium. U of U President Dr. Chase N. Peterson will deliver intnxluctory remarks, followed by panel sessions involving key state energy officials, U of U researchers and selected guests involved in Utah energy activity. An afternoon session will feature discussion of the state of technology used to monitor Utah's 1983-8- 4 landslide hazards. Registration begins Monday, Sept. 10, at 8 a.m. The fee is $4, and a luncheon charge is $6. For students, registration is free and the luncheon is $3. Available at the conference will be the landmark publication, Economic Evaluation of Oil Shale and Tar Sands in the State of Utah, a final report dated July 1984. A list of speakers includes Hatch, a strong supporter of Utah and Western resource development, who will give the luncheon address; keynote speaker William A. Vaughan, assistant secretary for Fossil Energy in the U.S. Dept. of Energy; Dr. Charles R. Greene, manager of Hydrocarbons Processing of SRI International; and Dr. George R. Kill, professor of chemical engineering and fuels engineering at U of U, whose presentation will address "The Hidden Energy Crisis" and "An Economic Route to Coal Liquids." '84 FORD THUNDERBIRDS! If you've been waiting to drive home Forcl's legendary blend of form and function, this is what you've been waiting for! Births Aagust i: BORN AT MT. VIEW HOSPITAL: Jly: Boy to Charles and Leslie Leifson Fox of Provo. Boy to Michael Paul and Danette Marie of Price. Perr Dambrosio July 31: Boy to Byron and of Provo. Julie Fergerson Alkin Boy to Paul and Miranda Lou Peel Marshall of Salt Lake City. Girl to Scott and Kaye Swenson Johnson of Spanish Fork. Girl to Jim and Denise Bartholomew of Spanish Fork. August 1: Boy to Scott and Karrie Boston Wilbur of American Fork. Girl to Masanor: and Jean Halford Okada of Santaquin. Girl to Brent and Bobbie Jo Sorenson Alvey of Payson. Boy to Warren and Carol Stemeckert Branson of Spanish Fork. A agist 2: Boy to Richard Gill and Chervl Ann Hansen Levanger of Green River, Wyo. Boy to Lee and Sharon Mc.N'amara Michael of Mona. August 1: Girl to Jesse and Rosalie Jensen Chns-lense- n of Manti. Boy to Craig and Carie McMullen Lundell of Payson. Aagust 4: Girl to Kevin and Vickie Johnson Tracy of Fillmore. Boy to Dennis and Vickie Wadsworth Mooney of Provo. Boy to Johnie Owen and Deanna Murphy Wade of Eureka. Boy to Scott and Leeann Bradford Taylor of Spanish Fork Boy to Keith and Leslie Ann Magel Sorensen of Orem. Girl to Tim and Jane Ann Taylor Johnson of Santaquin. BORN AT UTAH VALLEY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER: Aagust 3: Boy to Raymond and Eva Tilson of Provo. Boy to James and Margaret Johnson Archibald of Provo Girl to Michael and Sue Anderson of Oakley. Girl to Ralph and Lisa Bonnet Wilson of Orem Boy to Juan and Clara Ocasio Ramirez of Orem Girl to Steven and Lynette Hiller of Orem. n Boy to Thomas and Leslie Clapton of Provo. Boy to Mark and Elaine Spence Smiley of Provo. Boy to Donald and Karlene Pyne of Orem. August 4: Boy to Alan and Gloria Munden of Orem. Girl to Siosiua and Michelle Johnson Maea of Provo. Boy to Charles and Kathy Meacham Vorwaller of Springville Girl to Vaughn and Sherry Stralton Johnson of Orem. Boy to Michael and Deborah Ivie Ostler of Orem. Boy to Mark and Julie Ross Hamilton of Springville. August 5: Boy to Kaye and Bruce Palmer of Orem. Boy to Gustavo and Janilee Mineer Nader of Provo. Girl to Dirk and Charlayn Vanry Oliver of Orem. Gir! to Tom and Karen Flygare Forst of Provo. '84 BRONCO ll's! Ford says "Clear 'em out" to make way for the '85s, so we nave to make gutsy deals on our gutsy trim size Bronco ll's. Clearance Days are gone when the '84s are gone: So get going to your Wasatch Front Ford Dealer Today. Westland Ford 3330 Wall Avenue 1 Ogden Ph Valley Ed Kenley Ford 1573 North Mam Street Layton Ph Ford 5500 South State Street 1 Murray Ph 776-420- 1 Rick Warner Ford & Son Ford 47 West 600 South South Main Marion Willey 1800 Bountiful Butterfield Ford 200 West 90th South Sandy Ph 566-244- 1 Ph Salt Lake City 0 Ph 292-443- 3 Ford 190 East Mam American Fork Ph 532-311- 1 Henry S. Day Ford 3899 South 1700 West West Valley City Ph 973-703- 0 Grvao Ford Sales South University Ave Provo Ph 364 3438 191 A A WASATCH FRONT FORD DEALERS |