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Show Here they are...good luck in finding Miss San Juan County 1985 Miss San Juan Pageant Friday Cori Perkins Melonie Peterson Karla Black Sheila Palmer Shelley Utley The reign of Shelley Lewis will end with the crowning Friday evening of Miss San Juan County 1985. In closed judging Friday afternoon, fifteen contestants will model swimming suits and meet with five judges for interviews. Evening gown and talent competitions are scheduled as part of the Scholarship Pageant program beginning at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June 28 at Monticello High School auditorium. Steve Lindsley, Brigham Young University quarterback, will act as master of ceremonies for the program, which includes a dance by the contestants and a performance by the Stars, a junior drill team from Roosevelt, Utah. Contestants and sponsors are: Cori Perkins, Farabee Automotive; Melonie Peterson, San Juan Record; Karla Black, LeAnn Lyman Tte Clinic at San Juan Hospital will be named Mountain View By vote of the San Juan Health Care Board the hospital based clinic in Monticello will be called Mountain View. The choice was made from 11 suggestions submitted in a c contest, with Norma Hobbs, hospital director, receiving $25 for the winning entry. Other names name-the-clini- The Blanding Chamber of Commerce will honor the Blanding Citizen of the Year during Frontier Days. Nominations for the person to be honored will be accepted through June 29. Submit your nomination on an 8V2 x 1 1 sheet of white paper to Greg Stringham at Redd Merc, or Parley Harold Lyman at Job Service. Please state why you think; your nominee is deserving of recognition as Blanding Citizen of the Year. submitted were: Blue Mountain Clinic, Abajo Clinic, San Juan Clinic, Where the Spirits Rise, Oak Ridge Clinic, Eastern Utahs Doctors Clinic, Four Comers Doctors Clinic, and Peters Point Clinic. Mountain View clinic will occupy 800 square feet in the north wing of the San Juan Hospital. Nearly completed remodeling has provided two examination rooms, a reception area, rest rooms and phy- office. Estimated openis July 15 with either date ing Dr. Sandy Nielson or Dr. Steve sicians Warren in charge. Rayburn Jack, San Juan Health Care administrator, said last week that negotiations with Dr. Nielson continue to look favorable. He said at this time it appears Dr. Nielson will practice at Mountain View and Dr. Warren will assume duties at the Blanding Clinic. Jack noted that beginning in July there will be no physicians on the county payroll. He said Frontier Days celebration begins Saturday Frontier Days, Blanding style, includes a week of activities highlighted by a 1985 jam-packe- d festival on Thurs- day, July 4. Leading up to the big day is a theatrical production Laugh America beginning Wednesday at 7 p.m at the San Juan Center outdoor amphitheater, and a racquet ball tournament ginning Saturday June 29, and Break Dance Contest at Spa Activities get underway early July 4 with a 10K race, and ladies tennis tournament, scheduled for 7 a.m. Breakfast will be served by the Blanding Lions Club beginning at 7:30 a.m. at the LDS south chapel parking lot. The Frontier Days parade begins at 10 a.m. half-maratho- n, be- America. Afternoon activities include a Little League game between Blanding and Monticello; Stan Bronson in concert with Prayer of Sidon choir at 7:30 p.m. The second performance of Laugh America begins at 6 p.m. at the San Juan Center with fireworks at the high school football field beginning at 10 p.m. The momentum continues and Friday with Thursday sidewalk sales, a 50s and 60s dance, softball tournament, and free weight lifting at Spa America. Mike Young Freeman, June 26, 1985 25 cents DMD; Karrie Franklin, Bruce Halliday, attorney; Diane Allen, Trailside General Store; Brenda Black, Continental Telephone; Christy Howell, Quality Drilling; Samantha Flower Basket; Slade, The Janice Sherman, Abajo Convenience Store; LeAnn Lyman, Halls Crossing; and Margo HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER FOR SAN JUAN COUNTY, UTAH Vol. 67 No. 19 Black Oil Company; Sheila Palmer, Parley Redd Food town; Shelley Marie Utley, John Black Insurance; Randie Stanard, Montgomery Ward; Jolene Harris, R. R. Lyman, all doctors practicing in San Juan County will either be in private practice or paid by a consortium federally-fundecomprised of San Juan Health d Care, Monument Valley Hospital and the Utah Navajo Development Council. The consortium, organized under guidelines of a government sponsored program to improve health care in med- ically deprived areas, will recruit doctors, negotiate contracts, and arrange to make the services of specialists available. In the near future, a pediatrician and gynecologist based at Monument Valley Hospital, and a physical thera- pist based at the San Juan Nursing Home, will be scheduled into county communities on a routine basis. On another happy note, Jack said San Juan Hospital operated in the black for the first four months of 1985. |