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Show Ben Lomond Beacon, May 25, 978, Page 2 1 mm the imiinrayiniksrftoin) ssr i Lomond Beacon is published each Thursday. Deadlines for each weeks issue Is Monday at 5 p.m. We welcome all articles from those who wish to contribute. Business office is 5388 So. 1900 W., Roy, Utah Phone 825-166- Ben iTfsportd J. Howard Stahle Mrs. Bonnie Stahle Sue Ellen S'ms Publisher Advertising Manager n Editor Carol Shaw U & Correspondent W School and Home - ' f by Dr. Daryl J. McCarty Executive Secretory Utoh Education Association If this statement isn't written on the high school locker room wall, the coach will drill it into his team verbally: Winners never quit and quitters never win. Actually, that statement applies to much more than just sports. Consider these matters: The number of divorced persons in this country increased 79 per cent since 1970. Officials in Maryland report that in many cases when divorces take place, neither parent wants the children. Some 820,000 young people dropped out of school last year 80,000 more than the previous years, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Theres a common thread that seems to run through such information. Its the idea that for some reason we seem to be surrendering more easily giving up on important matters. Quitting. In sports, few people earn the disdain of fellow players faster than quitters. In other aspects of life, though, we seem to be rather casual about this. How many conversations have you heard that go something like this: I quit my job today. How come? Aw, it was a nuthin job. It was a construction job that involved a Translation: lot of sweat, and why do something like that when I can get something easier? Parents can be great teachers of the principle of commitment. When your son or daughter asks if he or she can take a summer job, have the job seeker agree to hang onto it all summer long, ho matter how tough the work is. And go ahead, insist on a perfect lawnmowing job from your son. Dont let your daughter duck out of a tough class at school. Demand diligent, not desultory music practice. Dont let your kid quit on life. And remember, its not just something you might want to do its your duty. ' f v r . H ? a 1 WHO'S THIS person handcuffed to the flag pole at the North Ogden City Building? Could it be the City Treasurer - Barbara Thomas? Pathology and Audiology Section, Family Health Services, Division of Health, communication disorders comprise the largest group of handicaps in the U.S. and Utah. "Approximately 15 percent, or 81,000 of our children, have significant communication problems which warrant special services. There are almost 400 deaf school-ag- e children and more than 4,000 who are hard of hearing in Utah. This year alone, 20 to 25 children will be born deaf in Utah, making it the most prevalent chronic disability we have, he stressed. Mahoney noted that each year about 45 children are born with a cleft lip or palate. Right now there are more than 750 children under the age of 21 in Utah with this problem. While the incidence of other pathologic conditions affecting communications cerebral palsy, mental retardation, voice problems, articulation defects, stuttering and aphasia are smaller they are still significant," he stressed. Pointing out that May has been declared Speech and Hearing Month in Utah and the nation, he said the stress needs to be on early detection in order to put the focus on prevention, diagnosis and treatment. It is important that parents, physicians, friends and family members take speech and hearing problems seriously. The dont just disappear. Right now there are between 13,000 and 25,000 preschoolers in Utah who have communication disorders who could benefit from professional speech pathology and audiology services. The key, however is finding those youngsters, evaluating their problems and recommending solutions early, he said. While speech and hearing services are available in most schools, 12 school districts in Utah do not have any of these services. Early intervention even before school entry is the present goal. The psychological and social stigmas that come from speech and hearing problems can often be eliminated or reversed in intervention is early, Nick G. For years, millions of Americans have been buying beef in bulk from thousands of ethical freezer meat producers. Some do it to save which money they sometimes can. Some do it so they can keep a wide choice of beef on hand in the freezer. Others do it because they have a source of beef that they prefer to that of their local meat market. Truly, the home freezer has created the oDoortunitv for buying bulk quantities of good beef at attractive prices. Unfortunately, it also has provided a opportunity for slick made-to-ord- oper- ators to prey on the public with tricky, advertisements and selling tactics. Beward of these butcher sharps. They can be con men who will cut you up as well as the cow while you high-pressur- e think youre getting a in beef. What they have is a dirty deal. When the advertised bait gets you to the poace, slick salesmen may try to switch you on to much higher priced meat. If you insist on the advertised special, they might show you a side of beef that isnt just aged it's so old the meat is dark and dried out. The fat may have turned yellow. It looks so awful you wouldn't even eat it if it is tender and delicious USDA bargain We Do More With Less $$! SAVE 20 TO 30 PRICES GOOD THRU MAY 27th (We will be closed on Memorial Day) Thick , (5 LB LIMIT)1- JBACO N.$ f fc) COUPON A WITH i m - J & Tender Pork Boston Steak 09c Tender Lb & theSor-f- Juicy Rib Steaks Kibbnd Pork Chops Great for Hamburgers GROUND BEEF WITH BEEF HEARTS French Style SUPER BURGER Fresh, Young 1 25-lb- Regular Slab Pork Spare Ribs Asst. Steaks Asst. Roast Super Burger WholeCut Fryers Center Cut Pork Steaks lamb Chops Beef Ribs Pure Pork Sausage Bacon y SlicedBacon ALL ORDERS ARE WRAPPED FOR FREEZING - 90 DAYS JV9 J09 Bologna FREE! SUBS CAN BE MADE. itQ 3us$!29 Beef Liver ASSORTED MEAT 100-L- jjr9 i 59 ib.e Spare Ribs OR MORE choice. . position to know how much actual waste will be cut off and thrown away, sometimes the beef isnt the only thing that gets trimmed. , Saving money by buying beef in bulk and stocking your freezer may sound like an attractive idea, but it isnt a very good one if it must be done on credit. In many instances it would mean jt By Tom Diaz Since most Americans seem blissfully unaware of the true costs of mandated social good, I would like to suggest a way to demonstrate to America's productive citizens that the assaults made in their names by Washingtons regulators threaten the foundations of our economic prosperity. I call my wonderful device, "the Nader. The Nader would be a form of limited legal tender, about the size and shape of the dollar, but printed on elastic stock and in a distinctive color. Flamingo pink perhaps. The portrait on the face of the bill would be that of "Big hanging weight before cutting and trimming. Because theyre in no Brother Ralph Nader himself. rtf' Naders would bv decree beedme the sole I v 11) 1 orti ?t.a-9- , j,,isXfiit medium or exchange for social goods in the United States. Commerce in "economic goods, on thp other hand, would be issued by both the federal government and by regulated industry. The federal government would be required to print and use Naders for all deficit financing and debt payments. Naders could also be printed by any business enterprise in an amount equal to all expenditures or finance enormous paying incurred because of government mandate. The Comcosts charges on food bought far in mission of Federal Paperwork, for example, has estimated advance of need. that the countrys 5.5 million small businesses spend $15-$2- 0 billion, or an average of $3,000 each, to comply with Federal paperwork requirements. Accordingly, each business would be authorized to print and $3,000 spend worth of Naders. Dollars would continue to be printed by the federal government, but in no greater amount than actual revenues. On 24 April 1978 the National Institute for Occupational Until the outstanding federal debt is retired. Presidents, Safety and Health (NIOSH) was contacted by the Air Force and bureaucrats would be paid solely in NadCongressmen Hill Air Force Logistics Command and requested to visit ers. After that, they would be paid in Naders in the same Base to determine whether or not groups of workers emproportion that deficit financing bore to current revenues. ployed at the base were experiencing an unusually high inin government mandated items cident of cancer. Capital improvements such as pollution control equipment would be made only in After conducting a survey of Hill Air Force Base, NIOSH submitted a survey of their investigation to the American Naders. Business and manufacturing concerns would pay Federation of Government Employees ( the Union) at Hill Air dividends and payrolls in a mixture of dollars and Naders, Force Base. Included within their recommendations was the according to the share of both in the company's revenues. request that the Union prepare a list of present and former The beauty of the Naders is the equity of it all. Those base employees with unusual medical problems. This listing who do social good would be paid in social good. Those would be submitted by the Union to NIOSH wherein a who do economic good would be paid in economic good. detailed analysis of the medical problems would be made. Moreover, that portion of the price of consumer goods is 1592 AFGE Local requesting that all present and which is attributable to the costs of government regulation retired Hill Air Force employees who worked with toxic would be payable only in Naders. chemicals, chloroform, solvents, Acetone, Tolulene, Best of all, the countrys laboring and middle class taxDichloromethane 1,1,1 Chloride), (Methylene Trichloroethane, (TCE), Trichlorethylene payers could at any time open their wallets and. by comparTrichlorotriflureoethane (Freon), Ethyl Alcohol, Methyl ing the relative amounts of pink and green bills, tell at a Alcohol, Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK), and who have exglance their relative wealth in economic goods and social perienced respiratory problems, tumors, cancer, dizziness, goods. That multicolor array of Naders and dollars would be .unexplained headaches, nausea, sinuses; contact either by a vastly more powerful educational tool than all of the bar mail or by telephone at the Union office. The telephone charts ever dreamed up by all of the "economists" and 2 0 numbers are: (801) or and the statisticians ever employed by the federal government. mailing address is AFGE Local 1592, Bldg. 362, Hill AFB, (Guest columnist Tom Diaz is a Washington, D.C. atUtah, 84406. Individuals who use the mail to inform the office of their illnesses are to include their name, address, torney who has observed the federal government from both sides of the bureaucratic revolving door for fifteen years. telephone number, building numbers worked in if know, date and type of retirement if retired and a general description of The opinions expressed here are strictly his own, and not health problems. necessarily those of The Heritage Foundation.) 777-325- " . . 773-185- I Hill 773-185- 5 Jfc95 tsmkini - For Tn Sompl (n t olrr (In counter. We always have a live butcher to give you MORE personalized service. We freezer wrap your order at no extra charge. We have everyday low prices. We have MORE high quality meat for LESS money. t. FOOD STAMPS DIVIDING GOVERNMENTS GALL INTO 2 PARTS WE DO MORE WITH LESS$$! Wiih LESS money! WE DO MORE than your grocery store's moat SAME AS CASH ON ORDERS OVER $50 WE WELCOME 533-617- switch, these butcher sharps sometimes end up selling a lot of people large amounts of better looking beef at much higher prices often several times the advertised price that attracted them. Not only are they switched to higher priced beef, but what they pay for is Institute looks into cancer problems at - problems are provided without charge, "Parents, individuals, physicians, teachers or agencies can request a screening and diagnostic evaluation, Cozakos in explained, adding that permanent clinics are operated annual Vernal. traveling and Eighteen Ogden, Salt Lake clinics, part of Handicapped Children Services, fly into remote areas of the state to provide additional services. Special services of the Section include consultation to Handicapped Children Services and to the Maternal and Child Health programs. A special project of the Section is the Comprehensive Newborn Infant Hearing Screening and Evaluation Program which attempts to identify infants at risk for hearing loss, so early intervention can occur. In the summer, with the cooperation of Universities and local school districts, the Section operates special speech and hearing therapy clinics with individual and group treatment for children with speech, hearing or language handicaps. Hearing aids can also be purchased for children from families with limited incomes. For further information, call the Speech Pathology and or contact your local public Audiology Section at health nurse, your family physician or area speech and hearing center. Buying beef in bulk usually good idea The smart thing to do when you see that an advertised is special is just a come-o- n to turn 'right around and walk out. If everyone did that, gypsters like this would soon be out of business. Those who dont may end up spending a lot more than they ever thought possible to spend. But in spite of all the warnings about bait and SLICED Cozakos, Assistant Chief of the Speech Pathology and Audiology Section, explained. The Speech Pathology and Audiology Section of Family Health Services, he continued, can help. Evaluation of any or hearing youngster that is believed to have a speech One in 10 Utahns has serious communication problem, a Utah Department of Social Services official said. According to Dr. Thomas Mahoney, Chief, Speech 6. OPEN 9-- 7 PHONE P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS 393-054- 4 Q0S9CQ0S WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT ANY ITEM BASED ON SUPPLY AJir.m.i U UPIEL. AnUirtwU I rrs It At Tk (N Tt By Mark ltil it PopuTu 2EEG0 C?&3u037 'Vi (fiDlJcjilf. 'M- - Hit Vr Ogden Osmond Jun I, 9, 1971 t:00 p.m. WSC Main Auditorium. Tlckott availabia at Appla Arta. Stocay Squara, Brockon Bookttoro (Koyavilia) or at tha door. j |