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Show The Payson Chronicle, July 23, 2003, Page 16 Payson High School Registration Payson High School registration for all students attending school during the 2003-0- 4 school year will be August 5, 2003 from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. If you want to avoid long lines, the school is encouraging mail-i- n registration. To complete this process, fill in the appropriate paperwork that you received in the registration packet and mail it back to the school. When the school receives your completed materials with applicable registration fees, they will mail back to you your class schedule, locker combination if a locker was requested, temporary I.D. card, and a parking permit if one was purchased. If you did not receive a registration packet from the school and you will have a student attending the high school this year, please contact the main office at The Nebo School District Board of Education in the June 2003 board meeting to help maintain the parking areas around the school added the parking permit fee. All vehicles parked in student parking lots will be required to have this permit displayed in a prominent location in their car or the owner will be subject to a $10.00 parking fine. To obtain a parking permit, complete the Parking Permit Application, pay the required $10.00 fee at the financial office, and bring the receipt to the main office. There will be an open house on August 19, 2003 from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. for the parents and students to come to the high school and familiarize themselves with the building. The teachers will also be available in the small gym to answer questions and make schedule changes. No schedule changes will be made prior to this date; only students with valid reasons will be allowed to make schedule changes after this date. All schedule changes after this date will be subject to a $1 0.00 fee. Fall sports are coming quickly. Girls soccer will begin on August 4, 2003 and football and volleyball will start on August 11, 2003. Other fall sports do not have official start dates so check with the school for more information regarding those sports. Any athlete that is planning to participate in high school athletics must have a physical on file with the school before they will be allowed to practice with the team. Physicals will be offered at the school cafeteria on Monday, July 28, 2003 at 3:30 p.m. for girls and 4:00 p.m. for boys. The cost is $20.00 and must be paid at the time of the physical. Some dates to remember: Gladstan Ladies Golf Invitational Golf Ladies hosted a tournament for ladies from the Reserve in Provo and Springville Hobble Creek on July 10lh. Unfortunately there were no holes in one or eagles made, like last year. But we had a very enjoyable day golfing, followed by a lovely luncheon, prepared and served by the staff at the Gladstan Grille. Then the prize money was awarded to the winners. The Nine-hol- e Winners in A Flight were Gross: 1 st: Barbara Gleave, 45 (a repeat from last year) 2nd: Kathryn Searle, 48 3rd: Carol Wright, 5 1 Net: P1: Faye Liddell, 33 Gladys Coombs, 35 3rd: Mae Timmons, 37 Closest to the hole: Barbara Gleave Longest drive: Faye Liddell Winners in B Flight were Gross 1st: Donna Schwartz, 37 2nd: Jolene Hale, 59 2nd: Betty Pawlowski, 61 Net 1st: Carm Jones, 34 2nd: LaRita Juber, 40 3rd Angie Childs, 41 Winners in C Flight were 1 Gross: Tie between Diane Cooper and Ida McKindley, 56 3rd Gross: Tie between Tam Edwards and Michelle Hames, 60 Net 1st: Tie between Cheryl Kroneberger and arge Ford, 38 3rd: Sue Faddis, 39 Closest to the hole: Michelle Harness 3rd: Longest drive: Cheryl Kroneberger Clinic Receives Central Utah Recognition From State Of Utah Multi-Special- Over 260 individuals from around Utah Co. have been the recipients of charitable care donated by Central Utah Clinics physicians since January 2003. Central Utah Clinic (CUMC) designed a charitable care program entitled Caring for Our Community at the beginning of the year in order to offer a way for qualified individuals to receive excellent healthcare. In June, Rod Bettit, executive director for the Department of Health for the State of Utah; Chad Westover, director of the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIPs) and Cleave Evans from Health Clinics of Utah recognized CUMC for their superior job in helping meet the demands of those individuals who cannot afford to pay for healthcare. We recognize that it depends on physicians in order for charitable care to be possible, said Bettit. We thank all of the many physicians from Central Utah Clinic who have been a part of this program. In conjunction with Health Clinics of Utah and Community Health Connect, pa- tients are able to receive care in any one of the 15 specialties CUMC offers as well as in diagnostic services such as lab, and imaging. Providing charitable care is our responsibility, said Dr. Tom Dickinson, president and chairman of the board for CUMC. We live and work in this valley and we want to continue to treat all of our neighbors. We are a better organization because of this responsibility. For more information about how to Multi-Special- Multi-Special- Growth Forces Nebo School District To Look At Secondary Schools Nebo School District is concerned about where to put all the elementary students when they get too old for elementary schools. The District has recently completed five new elementary schools and enlarged another. Secondary schools have been renovated and enlarged; however, no new ones have been built for quite some time. The problem is, stated Superintendent Carl Nielson, that we have tried to address elementary growth and also prepare for these students when they reach our secondary schools; but we are just running out of room. We currently have a little breathing room in our elementary schools for a year or two, but our secondary schools are bulging. In the last four years, we have built 34 secondary classrooms and moved in another 14 portable classrooms. We currently have 47 portable classrooms in our secondary schools, and we are using 2 classrooms in the Springville Armory Building. We are projected to have another 3,000 secondary students by the year 2010, and it takes a while to plan and build these schools. At the same time, we cannot ignore our elementary schools. We are projected to increase by over 7,000 elementary students by 2010. We have to look at all possible grade and school configurations with such rapid growth. The Utah State Office of Education projects that Nebo School District will double in ap proximately twenty years. ty ty ty Multi-Special- x-r- ay receive charitable healthcare, contact Health Clinics of Utah at 374-701- 1. ty |