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Show .iiii'tjr'Jiuj"inpjC'iriyii y ryTv'Hi g- uj I I WEEKLY REFLEX-DAV- NEWS JOURNAL, MARCH 3, 1977 IS Births Layton KaysviUe Clubs Mrs. Roene Chappell was hostess to the Mountain View Neighborhood Club at her home Thursday evening. Mrs. Bessie Chamberlain was Mrs. Edna Smith hosted the members of the DeLite Pinochle Club at a luncheon meeting Wednesday at Kens Restaurant in Layton. Mrs. Nola Wagstaff entertained the Sandy Creek Camp of Daughter of Utah Pioneers at her home Wednesday evening. Mrs. Beverly Robison was assisting hos- Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Steve F. Lindsay, 302 E. Mutton Hollow Rd., Kaysville announce the engagement of their daughter, Teri Dawn Lindsay to Boyd Scott Moun-tee- r. HE IS the son of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd K. Mounteer, 183 South 350 East, Farmington. They have selected March 18, 1977 for their wedding. Exchange Vows Mr. and Mrs. Lane Jones of " East Center Street, Kays- ville announced the marriage Miss of their daughter, Deborah S. Jones to Stanley Slagle Packard. 445 , , :, ' THEY WERE united in marriage Feb. 4, 1977 at Elko, Nev. ., The bridesroom is a son of Mrs. Luetta Spence, 1382 .Hudson Ave., Salt Lake City and Melvin Packard of . Sacramento, Calif. THE BRIDE graduated from Davis High School and attended Weber State College. The bridegroom graduated from high school in Salt Lake City. THE BRIDES parents are planning an open house for the newlyweds, which will be announced at a later date due to the bridegroom recently undergoing major surgery, np Announce Engagement - ,, . Mr. and Mrs. Verlin Ren Galbraith, of 1973 N. 350 W announce the Sunset marriage of their daughter Michelle Rae, to Taylor Swensen Jr. Ty prospective bride- a son of Mr. and is groom .rMrs. Taylor Swenson of is attending ct Seminary. GRADUATE of the Tooele High School, Mr. Swenson is presently living in the Sunset area. He has served a LDS A mission. THE Tooele. The bride-ele- LDS .Clearfield High School and The couple has chosen March 4 for their wedding in the Salt Lake LDS Temple with a reception to follow at the Sunset Second, Third, and Seventh Ward Chapel, vw Rummage Sale For Jayeettes The Layton Jayeettes will hold a rummage sale Satur- beginning at 12 noon in the American Legion Hall, So. Main Street, Layton. MANY interesting, useful, used items will be sold at very reasonable prices. Everyone is invited to support the Jayeettes. Money collected will be used for community activities that will benefit all the citizens of Layton. FOR FURTHER information, call Bonnie Barney at dmg day, Mar. 5 376-849- 4. Engagement Mr. and Mrs. David L. Jones of Sunset, announce the engagement of their daughter Beverley Jean to Alan "C Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chariton Jacobs of Syracuse. will COUPLE THE exchange vows on March 31 in a ceremony to be solemnized in the Ogden LDS Temple. bride-elewas The ct Set May Date : : i : j , ; The engagement of Miss Pamela Wanner to Jeffery N. Bates is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kay Wanner of 238 E. 4650 S. Washington Terrace. PARENTS OF the prospec- tive bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth N. Bates of 851 N. 250 W., Sunset. The marriage will be solemnized in the Ogden LDS Temple on May 5. A reception will be held at the White House in South Ogden. was graduated from Bonneville LDS High School and Seminarv. Mr. Bates was graduated from Clearfield High and LDS Seminary. He attended Weber State College and Ricks College, in Rexburg, Ida. vw MISS WANNER Layton Kiwanis See Child Abuse Film 1 The Layton Kiwanis Club and their guests viewed the film, Fragile Handle with Care on Saturday, Feb. 20, 1977. - : . THE FILM on child abuse was produced and distributed by the International Order of Foresters. It is narrated by Bill Cosb, on concentrates and the problems of the battering actor-comedia- parent. Through reenactment of several case histories, ii dramatizes the emotional problems which make some parents unable to cope with their children and themselves without acting out their hostilities, aggressions, frustrations and fears on their dependent children. and helpless THE KEY message of the film is the need for recognition and treatment of the underlying emotional problems such parents before they result in death or serious injury to their children or in a programmed repetition of the vinous cycle of child abuse in succeeding generations of Welcome Wagon Inc. for Other interested groups in the community are encouraged by the Layton Kiwanis Club to show this film to their members and to the Hostesses and Assistants public is looking N. Davis County the area. Equal Opportunity Employer. Earn while you serve your community in Call 766-031- 0. IT CAN be obtained through local lodges of the Independent Order of Foresters, or Max Kennedy, program chairman of the Kiwanis Club of Layton, will be happy to assist in making arrangements for the film. graduated from Clearfield High School and is attending Weber State College. MR. JACOBS also was graduated from Clearfield High. He has attended Weber State College and served an LDS mission in Brazil, vw tess. The lesson was given by Mrs. Carole Hyde and Mrs. Robison read a history. Mrs. Lucy Barker entertained the ALonas Club at her home Tuesday evening. Mrs. Ivy Ottley will entertain the Phillips Camp of Daughter of Utah Pioneers at her home Monday afternoon. Mrs. Genieve Meacham will give the lesson. Members of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 82 will meet Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Nora Miller for their meeting. regular business Mrs. Winmfred Garrett was hostess to the Bay View Club Energy Sources For Layton Rotarians Clive Winters, a Layton MR. WINTERS presented a film on the Development of Energy Sources." Dr. Clyde Marx, president, presided and 24 members and guests were in attendance, np Hot Dinner Slated For Sr. Citizens A reminder for all Senior Kaysville-Far-mingto- n areas plan to tend the monthly dinner to at- meeting for the Happy K&F Citizens Senior group scheduled for Thursday, March 17 at the Davis High School. THE HOT dinner will be served at 2 p.m. and all senior citizens are cordially invited to attend. is Tolman Eugene president and along with the other club officers, encourage all senior citizens to join them for these monthly dinners, np High Time Who Wants To Eat All Alone? By FLORENCE BITTNER Occasionally see someone in a restaurant who can sit at a table alone and not look as if they are sitting on a stage in a spotlight. There is something so vulnerable about a lone diner that it takes a great deal of elan to be able to sit there at a table all by themselves without seeming to mind. MOST PEOPLE who have to eat alone look desperate. Ghengis Kahn would be welcome, and Dillinger might be acceptable; almost any warm body occupying the empty chair have learned to handle the aloneness I sit in the middle of the room at a table for two, place my coat on the empty chair and my purse by the plate and spend a good deal of time looking at the door. I 1 THE WAITRESS invariably asks if I want to wait to order till my friend arrives and I say no, I'm in a hurry so I'd better get started, but cer- tainly he will be along in a minute. You see, the trouble with dining alone is thathaveother not people are sure you one friend in the entire world, otherwise why would you be there all by yourself I USED to creep unobtrusively into a restaurant, sit in a secluded corner and try to spend the entire time I was eating hiding behind a menu Every so often everyone else in the place would stop chew- ing and begin to stare at me with open pity A solitary diner can use up a certain amount of time wiping spots from silverware Then they can closely examine the pictures on the wall, count the flowers on the carpet and try to light the candle on the table EVENTUALLY there will be some food to study, and then it is possible to occupy yourself counting up the calories in each mouthful Experienced solitary diners take newspapers or books to occupy themselves, but res- - Bountiful. Mrs. Elma Webster enter- tained the Kaysville First, Sixth and 16th Ward study group at her home Sunday evening. Members of the Athena Club will meet Wednesday evening March 2 at the home of Mrs. Dorothy Lotz. Assisting hostesses will be Mrs. Anna Bennett and Mrs. The Camella Barton. program will be under the direction of program committee Mrs. Oralie Waite and Mrs. Ramona Gailey. Mrs. Lucille Kennah will be hostess to the Lantern Club at her home Monday, March 7. Mrs. Marcia Mansell and Mrs. Salome Barnes will be assisting hostesses. The Kaysville Rotary Anns were guests of their Rotarian husbands Wednesday evening for their dinner meeting at the Davis High School Cafeteria. Mrs. Marcia Mansell hosted members of the Kaysville Art Club at her home Monday afternoon, Feb. 21. Mrs. Clover Sanders and Mrs. Mary Cundall were Elizabeth Darton slides on paintings from the Uffizi Gallery in Mrs. taurants have not yet begun to furnish their diners with braile books, and they certainly dont shed sufficient light on most tables to allow the normal reader to lose themselves in the printed page. EVENTUALLY all else will have been studied sufficiently and the single person must raise their eyes to meet the pitiless stares of all those popular comfortable couples and groups who have spent the entire time speculating about an individual who would dare to enter the world of duos and dine alone. There are advantages to the fast food places where there are counters to be sat at, where the single is elbow to elbow with other singles and therefore indistinguishable, but the most desperate of solitaries can only take so much fast food EVENTUALLY the craving must be faced for something more substantial than the ten millionth chunk of cardboard thrust into a doughv bun and smeared with mayonnaise Then comes the decision as to whether the desire for a real meal is stronger than the need to melt into the crowd The better the meal, the less apt there is to be any other solitary eater So the single is faced with the choiee of fast food counters, take home foods, cooking for one or being the only indiv idual in the entire world with the temerity to enter a good restaurant all alone, sit at a ta ble, taking up space where several paying customers might be devouring expensive calories and use the services of the staff to provide one single meal I WONDER if there might not be a gixxl business to be made out of providing dinner companions for the individual eater. I, for one, would gladly pay the fare for someone else to sit there, busily chewing and commenting on the weather and the prices And turn the spotlight on some other poor solitary soul Trent Gordon Gurr is the name Gordon and Gay Robins Gurr has selected for their new son who was bom Feb. 17 in Ogden. Nathan Posell. News of the babys birth was received by his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Posell of Layton and Mrs. Trent has an older brother named Brandt. Grandparents of the new arrival are Mr. and Mrs. Reed Robbins of Layton and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Gurr The child has four They are Mrs. Gene Posell of Layton, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Garlick of Farr West and Mrs. Chloe Poll of South Weber. Mr. and Mrs. Posells four other children are Jason 7, Dustin 6, Melinda 4, and Amy Sr. of Kaysville. Great-grandparen- are ts Mrs. Melvin Robins of Layton and Mrs. Norma Burt of Bountiful. A girl Howard Adams. Heather was bom Feb. to 15 and Karen Hatch She will be named Lynn Adams. Mr. and Mrs. E. Harris Adams of Layton and Mr. and Mrs. Roy L. Hatch of Kays-vill- e are the childs grandparents. Mrs. Ruth Adams of Layton and Leonard Smith of Colorado are great-grandparen- month old sis, Angela, is at home. Jack and Pamela Poll Posell are the parents of a baby boy who was bora Feb. 15 in Ogden. He will be named Robert Waite played two selections on his cello. Returning from a tour of Southern California and Las Vegas, Maurice Abravanel and the Utah Symphony now turn their attention to the orchestras next subscription concert on Wednesday, Mar. 9, at 8 p.m. in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. nine-conce- rt tess to a bridal grocery shower at her home Wednesday evening in honor of Miss was Minor who Renee married to Tommy Ramage. Mrs. Belva Muir as assisting hostess and 25 guests attended. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Niederhauser entertained at a family dinner Sunday at their home for 28 family members. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Garlick entertained at a family party Thursday evening at their home for all the members ot her family including her brothers and sisters and their children, in honor of their son Elder Monte Garlick who is leaving on a LDS mission to Janina Fialkowska will make her Utah Symphony debut at this CANADIAN pianist concert which will be repeated on Thursday, Mar. 10, at 8 p.m. in the Weber State College Fine Arts Center in Ogden. Maurice Abravanel, who conducted three of the orchestras tour performances during the past 10 Col. days, will be on the podium for both the March 9 and 10 concerts. Islands. HE HAS selected a very listenable program that includes Wagners Overture Hawaii. (Ret.) Kenneth Gillespie has returned from a two week vacation trip with friends to the Hawaiian visitors of Mr. and Mrs. William Packer who came to attend Mr. Packers mother Mrs. Virgil Packer Out-of-to- funeral services held at Tremonton on Wednesday, Feb. 23 were Mr. and Mrs. Michael Blood and children of Los Alamos, N.M.; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nelson, Seattle, Wash.; Mr. and Mrs. Scott Packer and family of Moab; Mr. and Mrs. Kent Cammack, Provo. Also Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bitner and family of Kaysville attended the funeral service of her grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. Emer K. Winward and children spent the weekend at Burley, Ida visiting with both of their parents Mr. and Mrs. Emer Winward, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Hatch. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin D. Kin- sey were Sunday overnight guests in Pocatello, Ida. of their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Craig Moline. Dr. Clyde Marx has returned from a four day stay at St. Louis, Mo. where he attended optometry planning meetings. Dr. Marx is a trustee of the National Optometry Board. Mrs. Gary Bingham entertained at a family birthday dinner Wednesday, Feb. 23 in honor of their daughter Vicki who was 16 years old. After school they entertained with refreshments for a number of Vickis friends in her honor also. Amy In School: Democracy? The decision of Presidentelect and Mrs. Carter to place their daughter in a public school near the White House, where she will be one of a small number of white is Caucasians, pure democracy from a Southern Farr girls Curly haired, eight pound 3 ounce Texie Blackner was bom in Ogden on Feb. 13. Her parents are Tyler Ray and Kathleen Allen Blackner. West. Tyson, the babys only : brother, is 18 months old. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Allen of Layton and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Blackner also of Layton. The new arrival will also become acquainted with several They are Mr. and Mrs. Rais Richards of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Allen of Hyrum and Ralph Harvey of Wyom- 2. Another Feb. 15 baby is Stephen Michael Besaw who is the new son of Paul and Sandra Besaw. He was born in Salt Lake City. The new baby has grandparents living in Florida and England. He also has a 6 year old brother and a four year old sister. The first child of Russell C. and Gina Inglet Maughan was bom in Ogden on Feb. 14. She will be named Brandalyn ing. South Weber residents, Vel and Nancy Evans Byram are the parents of a 7 pound 11 ounce boy. The child will be named Clint Evans Byram. He was bom Feb. 16. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Byram of South Weber and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Evans of Layton are the proud grandparents. Her grandparents are Mrs. Cheryl Inglet of Kaysville, Melvin Inglet of California and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maughan of Ogden. Mr. and Mrs. Bartley are Great-grandparen- Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. (Elmer) Evans of Layton, dmg Utah Symphony Awaits J. Fialkowska, Pianist Florence, Italy. Mrs. Bea Johnson was hos- Lola Poll of Heiner of Ogden are the Maughan. A 21 showed Ro-tari- gave the program during the dinner meeting of the Layton Rotary Club held on Wednesday at the Chateau Center in Layton. Citizens in the at her home Wednesday afternoon. The program was given by Mrs. Lois Pickett of to The Flying Dutchman, the Chopin Piano Concerto No. in E Minor, and the 1 Beethoven phony. Sym- Seventy Ja- Twenty-five-year-o- nina Fialkowska won the prize and the silver medal at the Arthur Rubinstein Master Pianists competition. OF HER, Mr. Rubsteip said, She played for me both Sonatas of Chopin, his Scher- zos, Etudes, Ballades and other works, as only a bom Chopin interpreter can play. I cannot recommend enough a young artist of such caliber and I do it only to provide my many faithful audiences in the world with the same joy hearing her as I felt myself. A native of Montreal, Miss Fialkowska studied first at the Vincent DIndy Music School and at the University of Montreal, then in Paris with Yvonne Lefebure, and at the Juilliard School with century. The style of his playing, his Paris in BEETHOVENS monumen- tal Symphony No. 7 in A major will complete the evenings works. The Seventh, together with the 1841. APPARENTLY the ending didnt satisfy Wagner and and innovative fingering pedaling were not altered until Debussy and Prokofiev. program with Wagners Overture to The Flying Dutchman. The Overture was finished and scored in 9 19 years after completion of the original version, he wrote another ending for some Paris concerts. The Overture gives, in condensed form, the essential elements of the drama. It is an effective musical painting of a stormy seascape. The Dutchman knew no calm seas, and Wagners Flying Dutchman motif is one of the truest his genius ever con- Eroica, Fifth and the Ninth Beethovens comprise monuments in this musical category. Only one composer succeeded in nearly matching the Bonn Master and that was Johannes Brahms. Others ceived. MISS FIALKOWSKA will join Maestro Abravanel and the orchestra to present the second work on the program, Chopins Concerto No. 1 in E minor for piano and orchestra. Chopin wrote two piano concertos - one in F minor known as No. 2 and the other in E minor, which is known as , , wrote successful symphonies but didnt reach the stature of Beethovens Seventh. TICKETS for the Salt Lake City performance may be obtained at the Utah Symphony, 55 West First South, weekdays, or at the box office, located outside the South gate of the Tabernacle one hour before the concert. In Ogden, tickets are available at the Bertha Eccles Art Center or at the Weber State College Fine Arts Center one hour before cert time. No. 1. The F minor was composed first, but the E minor was the first to be published in Sept. 1833, therefore, it is known as Concerto No. 1. There is a marked difference between the two Chopin Con- con- Layton Adrian Cox is in the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City where he underwent open heart surgery. Walter E. (Elmer) Evans is in the Davis North Medical Center where he is recovering from a slight stroke and heart attack. Mrs. Myrtle Layton is certos and the other piano music written by him. IN THE concertos he fore- Romanticism and to the classical concerto model. Chopin gave romantic pianism its impetus. He did it by creating the most beautiful and swears adheres closely recovering at her home following surgery. j. love SONS & J. DOUBLE Sascha Gorodnitzki. DAIRY Inventory Reduction Sale SHE HAS given recitals and concerts all over Europe and North America, as well as in Israel. Her first recording, piano music of Liszt, will soon to Up 20 Piano Recital FARMER TO YOU PRICES ON Off on $1 Milk STORAGE Powder River Livestock Gates Portable Horse Stalls Squeeze Chutes Loading Ramps Students of Mrs. Oralie Waite presented a piano recital on Wednesday evening at her home for their parents as special guests. THOSE participating original piano style of the be released in this country by RCA. Maestro Abravanel and the orchestra will open the March WHEAT 0) c Hwy 193 (0 Smith. JJ Refreshments were served the recital following numbers, np OPEN NOON TO 7 DAILY m 643 East 2625 North tZo o z Layton, Utah 0 Phone .c Dairy 205'5TIo. Tt 20) r ro W Cheese 2 to 5 lb. cut Pick up stock racks Waterers Wendy Hunter, Natalie Horne, Cindy Bates, Heidi Heath, Brett Clay, Shawnie Gall i , Marnie Cloward, Jackie Bates, Julie Densley, Curt Peay, Shelly Densley, Janalie Moss and Julianne SQ95 tot tong term storage Feeders were 4 50 lb. Bags 28 lb. Bucket 825-249- 825-131- 3 President. TO SOME it may seem a political decision, with Amy being the one conducting her parents' politics. Yet the public schools are a basic foundation stone in this republic. If the American experiment with different races, colors and creeds is to work, nothing argues better as an example than the behavior of the chief executive of the nation and his 3 !3 83 83 13 !3 !3 !5 !3 13 Fr CUSTOM SUPERIOR :3 t3 fa 1370 West Gentile St., gmmmm Layton-Pho- its ne 376-461- w 0 n specialize In your" gourmet cut. We W ir U- w family. THE MIX at Amys school could possibly be so it will neither be representaone-side- d tive of society nor advantageous. If tne Carters are willing to accept that risk, viewers with alarm should accept it as idealistic democracy in action. SUPER SPECIAL HOME STYLE CHOICE PORK SAUSAGE 13 !3 !3 i VI !3 BEEF 12 13 78e li L U LB. !3 w; !3V |