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Show NOVEMBER 17, 1987 L, First of three winter sessions Davis County Ski School offers variety of packages for students attending Alta, Snow Basin resorts Again this year there will be three ski packages available at three different prices according to The first of three sessions of the your needs. Included in the first session, Davis County Ski School, to be will be five lessons and bus there staged again this year at Snow transportation to and from SnowBasin or Alta Ski Resorts, will bebird or Alta resorts for $60 per pergin Saturday, Nov. 28, according Ski lessons will be offered for to Russell Whitaker, ski school son. $30 per person, but you must furdirector. nish The first session will have five bus your own transportation; or transportation to and from the lessons on consecutive Saturdays resorts will be offered for $45, but 28 and beginning Nov. concluding lessons will not be included. Dec. 26. The second session will These costs do not include lift begin Saturday, Jan. 2 and conMr. Whitaker emphapasses, clude Jan. 30; and the third session sized. Davis County However, will start on Saturday, Feb. 6, and Ski School reduced prices for lifts end Saturday, March 3. at both resorts are available. Registration for the first session As a special note, Snow Basin will be held this Saturday, Nov. 21, is offering an $8 discount for only from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. at any of ski lessons for the first session Colothe following four locations: This reduces the lessons only. nial Gift and Floral, Colonial package from $60 to $52, and the Square, 566 W. 2600 S., Bountiful; lessons only offer from $30 to $22 Farmington City Offices, 130 N. for the first session only. Main, Farmington; Clearfield Lift passes at the two resorts are Swimming Pool, 934 S. 1000 E., as follows: Clearfield; and the Johnson resiSnow Basin Day passes for all dence, 5539 S. 2200 W., Roy. lifts, $16; day passes for persons 12 By GARY R. BLODGETT Sports Editor years of age and under $11; and day passes on the Little Cat Run, $9. Alta Day passes all lifts, $16; half-da-y passes, $11.75; use of Albion, Sunnyside or Cecret lifts, $11.75 for day passes and $8 for half-daand a pass for the three lifts, $15. Buses will depart several pickup points at 7:30 a.m. and return to the same locations at approximately 4:30 p.m. Pickup points for transportation are as follows: Snow Basin Bountiful Junior 10-ri- y; above-mention- High, Centerville Junior High, Farmington School District Office, Kaysville Junior High, Clearfield High, Layton High, and Smith Food King in Roy, 5600 S. 1900 W. Alta Bountiful Junior High, Bountiful High and South Davis Junior High. North Davis residents desiring to ski at Alta instead of Snow Basin must make one of the Bountiful pickup points, Mr. Whitaker noted. For further information, call after 4 p.m. or on weekends and ask for the Davis County Ski 451-52- School. Split waterfowl seasons to provide challenges The 1987 waterfowl season is fast approaching. Waterfowl hunters need to take a minute and review the new waterfowl regulations as many changes have occurred since last year. Davis, Cache, Salt Lake, and the western portion of Box Elder county have been added as steel shot only areas. This means that all waterfowl hunting in these counties must be done with steel shot. Lead shot coated with nickle or copper is still considered illegal. Hunters possessing lead shot while hunting waterfowl will be ticketed. There were and are several other counties also closed to lead shot last year and these will still remain closed. For the first time in Utah water-fohunting will be done by the split season method. Hunting will be allowed from Oct. 3 to Dec. 6 and then again between Dec. 21 and Jan. 3, 1988. This means that there will be a 15 day period in which waterfowl hunting will be prohibited. Hunters need to remember this closed season between the two open seasons. Hunters will again be required to purchase, sign, and have on person both federal and state duck stamps if they are 16 years or older. This is the second year in which a Utah duck stamp must also be purchased. The purpose is to create funding for the acquisition and maintenance of dwindling water-fow- l wetlands in Utah. Waterfowl populations are still at a 30 year low. As in past years, juveniles under of 16 are required to be supervised by a parent or legal guardian 21 years of age or older depending if the person hunting is under 14 or between 14 and 15. This adult supervision helps to guard against juvenile tendencies to shoot at protected birds and disobedience of waterfowl hunting regulations. , Bag limits are the same as last year which allow for the taking of five ducks provided that no more than four mallards or four pintails or any combination of each totaling four as long as no more than one hen mallard or one hen pintail are taken. No more than two redheads or two canvasbacks or one of each may be taken each day. The limit on Canada Geese is two a day and the age since Snow Geese are a rarity in canvasback, lesser scaup, golnorthern Utah now, hunters need deneye, and bufflehead frequent to remember that Tundra swans the Salt Lake in greater numbers will be present but that these may than puddle ducks. only be taken by holders of a swan Hunting of divers usually repermit. quires larger sets of diver duck deMarsh conditions in Davis Councoys, often from an anchored boat ty are slightly less than was avail- several hundred yards off shore. able the same time last year. The Hunting last year was excellent for Great Salt Lake came up since the hunters adapting to the Salt Lake last season and killed out addition- diver species and there were relaal marsh plants which feed water-fow- tively few hunters competing for Even though the lake has space to hunt. Puddle duck hunters dropped to a level lower than last on the other hand found out that year, there is less food plants to the small amount of huntable marretain migrating waterfowl so it is shes were quickly over hunted so expected that less ducks will be the ducks moved out fast. Hunters available for hunters. Hunters can hunting the Salt Lake are maximize their hunting of ducks in cautioned to hunt with a buddy and Davis County by changing their be very careful of changing weathtechniques from puddle ducks to er conditions as a wind storm can divers. Diver ducks like redhead, come out of nowhere on a clear day which can be treacherous. l. At South Davis Community Hospital Nurses put patients first The type of BOUNTIFUL care offered here is different than at any other nursing facility. There are new challenges every day. These comments come from a nurse at South Davis Community Hospital in Bountiful who makes the drive from Ogden each day. Theres not a facility in Ogden that does this kind of care. The type of care offered meets the unique needs of South Davis patients from toddlers to geriatric patients who require varied and sustained levels of care. No matter what the need, nurses direction at such duties as bathing, feeding, dressing and high-ski- Mrs. Biesinger says. Theres nothing more reward- ing than to work with the acutely ill, see them get well and go home where they can spend quality time with family and loved ones, Mrs. Callahan notes. That step doesnt come easily and involves working closely to instruct family members for that move back home by the el m part-tim- part-tim- slippers and other handmade items. All proceeds remain with the senior citizens selling the items. Hot scones and cider will be d sold and a king size quilt will be given away. The traditional Thanksgiving dinner will be held Tuesday, Nov. 24 at 11:30 a.m. The menu includes, of course, roast turkey with dressing, potatoes and gravy, peas and carrots, and pumpkin pie. Celebrate early. Call the Center for lunch and transportation reservations by noon of Nov. 23, hand-quilte- 773-706- 5. 7685 Comptroller of the Currency Twelfth District Thousands of dollars Statement of Resources and Liabilities ASSETS Cash and balance due from depository institutions Noninterest-bearin- g 3,204 balances and currency and coin None Interest-bearinbalances 8,425 Securities Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell in domestic offices of the bank and of its Edge and Agreement 200 subsidiaries, and in IBFs Loans and lease financing receivables: 33,607 Loans and leases, net of unearned income 443 LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses None LESS: Allocated transfer risk reserve Loans and leases, net of unearned income, 33,164 allowance, and reserve None Assets held in trading accounts ,863 Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) ' 252 Other real estate owned Investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries and associated companies None None Customers liabilr y to this bank on acceptances outstanding None Intangible assets 798 Other assets .48,906 Total assets Charter Number g 1 South Davis Community Hospital Director of Nursing lone Callahan, left, confers with Nurse Sherie Mendoza and Nursing Supervisor Carla Biesinger. Westminster Colleges nursing program operated in conjunction with St. Marks Hospital. She feel for nursgained a ing while at both the old and new facility. She worked in medical, surgical and psychological units. From her years there she went to the Duluth, Minn., Clinic, acting as assistant nursing director. That facility has a staff. She assisted in setting up that clinics chemotherapy program but wasn't above jumping in a boat and administering shots on Lake Suwell-round- 10-pl- rious physicians and also served as a nurse at the old South Davis Hospital. She then moved with her family to Texas, working as a night nursing supervisor there. She worked for the new South Davis Community Hospital when it first opened years ago as night supervisor over nursing and has seen the growth in the spectrum of health care services offered. She came back three years ago, Mrs. Callahan joining her shortly after. 10-pl- perior. nt full-tim- center. Items for sale include jewelry, needlework, toys, crafts, afghans, Consolidating domestic and foreign subsidiaries of the FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAYTON IN THE STATE OF Utah, at the close of business on September 30, 1987 published in response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161. ll care necessary and the yet small enough to be like fami- intensive-care-lev- mas shopping early with the THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Were big enough to provide ly, The Heritage Senior Citizens Center, 562 S. 1000 E., Clearfield (lower level of the North Davis Library) will hold its annual Holiday Bazaar Friday, Nov. 20 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Start your Christ- CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION transferring patients. though, Director of Nursing lone patient. Callahan follows her lifelong philoShe recalls the case of a small sophy that the patients are num- pediatric patient who came to ber one. Ive always been their South Davis in a comatose condigreatest advocate and feel an RN tion with little hope for regaining should be at the bedside of the pa- consciousness. Today, he not tient (whenever needed). only is aware of happenings around Nurses there must approach him but feeds himself and will their jobs with a different attitude probably walk on his own one than in many health care facili- day, she says. It took a lot of work and he ties, Nursing Supervisor Carla Biesinger says. They have to be probably wont ever be as well as dedicated. I have my mother here before the accident, but that paand several of the staff have family tient has made a lot of progress, members here. I wouldnt have my the nursing director continues. It takes a lot of work but when mother anywhere else, she notes. those little kiddos blossom, and Its not like acute care where you see improvement its worth says Michelle Duerden, you treat a patient for a few days or it, weeks. Here you not only treat the pediatrics hospital supervisor. All of the nurses are very conpatient but also build a relationship with the family because a patient cerned about the quality of life pamay be here for a lot longer, she tients can be helped to achieve, Mrs. Callahan says further. says. We deal with a little of everyYou really get involved with thing, Mrs. Duerden emphasizes, the families, Mrs. Callahan stres- from patients ses. They become friends, always to those on ventilators needing want to know how youre doing long-tercare. Our nurses really when they bump into you later. have to be sharp and know whats For example, the son of a former going on minute by minute for their patient still returns, occasionally, patients, she continues. to serenade patients on the guitar. For example, one nurse is The hospitals nursing staff assigned for every two ventilator-dependeforms a vital cog at South Davis pediatric patients. Hospital, says Hospital AdminisA philosophy that stresses patients needs first is coupled with a trator Gordon Bennett. high level of expertise expected e e and eight About 20 from the nursing staff. e We work together as a team, LPNs work with 10 e RNs. RNs and two Mrs. Callahan says of the entire hour coverage is nursing staff, counting herself as a Twenty-fou- r RN always on with an provided working director. We care abduty while LPNs work under their out each other. All new employees direction. In addition, nursing are given an orientation as to our assistants are currently being policies and procedures to assure trained to meet new state certificatheir skills are of. the same high tion requirements, Mrs. Callahan quality as demanded of all our continues. staff." Mrs. Callahan is a graduate of Nursing assistants work under a full-tim- All hunters are reminded to respect private property, and to carry a watch with them so they can know the exact time. Shooting begins and ends at a different time each day so hunters need to know what time it is so that a trip to the judge is avoided. Clearfield Sr. citizens hold bazaar Mrs. Callahan also worked in a d hospital in that north Minnesota city; returned to the Wasatch Front, working as a hospice nurse with Community Nursing Services for three years before being asked to join the South Davis medical staff. The assistant nursing supervisor graduated from Sioux Valley Hospital in Sioux Falls, S.D., and then worked in Rapid City in pediatrics as a head nurse. Her husbands acceptance of a job here brought Mrs. Biesinger to Utah where she has worked for va 250-be- Mrs. Duerden has worked through the ranks at South Davis, going from a graduate LPN to RN six years ago. She came to the hospital eight years ago after graduating from Weber State Colleges nursing program. Nurses combine knowledge of the latest techniques through attendance at seminars and visits to other facilities with lots of empathy for people and their losses. Compassion for the patient and family is really important along with high assessment skills, says Sheri Mendoza, staff development coordinator. LIABILITIES Deposits: In domestic offices Noninterest-bearinInterest-bearin- .42,71: 6,210 36,505 g g Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase None in domestic offices of the bank and of its Edge and None Agreement subsidiaries, andin IBFs Demand notes issued to the U.S. Treasury None Other borrowed money 9 Mortgage indebtedness and obligations under capitalized leases None Banks liability on acceptances executed and outstanding None Notes and debentures subordinated to deposits 691 Other liabilities 43,415 Total liabilities None Limited-lif- e preferred stock EQUITY CAPITAL Perpetual preferred stock Common stock Surplus Undivided profits and capital reserves Cumulative foreign currency translation adjustments. Total equity capital Total liabilities, limited-lifpreferred stock, and equity capital e None ...410 .2,300 .2,781 .None . . 3,491 48,906 bank do I, KENT DEE SMITH, Sr. V.P.Cashier ofis the best hereby declare that this Report of Condition true and correct to the of my knowledge and belief. above-name- d KENT DEE SMITH October 23, 1987 We, the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness of this statement of resources and liabilities. We declare that it has been examined bv us, and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in conformance with the instructions and is true and correct. RALPH W. FIRTH JOHN S. MORGAN RtrMnnmnK |