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Show PERPETUAL STCRAC3 3322 SO. S.L.O.y U 2rj E. 1115 At Antelope Island JFfe h Good Sam Club stages cleanup The beaches at Antelope Island will be safer and cleaner when the folks from the Good Sam Club get through with them. The annual spring clean-usponsored by the Clearfield Chapter blown as Gull RVers Travelers, will be held May 16, 17 and 18. According to Allen Flint, a spokesman for the group, Good Sam members from throughout Davis County are invited to the three-da- y campout and clean-u- p event which will begin Friday die Gull evening, when many RVers will begin arriving at the State .State Park p, at Good Sam rallies and caravans scheduled throughout the year from coast to coast. The Good Sam members pledge to give aid to fellow campers keep my RV in safe condition at all times drive within the law and with consideration for others observe, and cause to be observed, all rules and regulations of outdoor recreational Good Sammers place facilities. importance on leaving a campsite in better condition than they found it. Mr. Flint reminds all members planning to attend the campout-clean-u- p event to bring a rake and a potluck dish, and be prepared for a good time. Camping will be free to all Good Sam members presenting a membership card to the ranger at the gate. of' Park. On Saturday the group will spend a couple of hours raking and cleaning the beach areas, according to Mr. Flint. Chapter activities will be conducted throughout the afternoon. Games such as lawn darts (or should it be sand darts?) and horseshoes will be available. A pot luck supper with each member bringing a favorite dish, is next on the agenda, followed by a side presentation given in the bowery by the park rangers. The culmination of the days activities will be after dark, sitting around a bonfire built from drift wood gathered from the beaches, and exchanging Good Sam stories and getting to know members from other chapters, according to Flint. BEACHES AT them. Antelope Island will be looking alot cleaner and nicer when the Good Sam club get through with spring cleanup will be scheduled for May 16, 17 and 18. The annual observe Prayer Week CCiwanis The Kiwanis Club of Clearfield will join clubs in 69 countries around the globe in observing Worldwide Prayer Week during the period of May Bishops and Ministers of the Clearfield area were honored at a breakfast meeting of the club recently. In the. United States the program will be kicked off with a Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C. to which President Carter and other dignitaries have been invited. Kiwanis officials are encouraging all Kiwanis clubs to hold similar breakfasts simultaneously so that their total membership of more than 300,000 will all ,be paying homage at the same time. The observance . is designed,, to. . 12-1- 7. dramatize the 773-490- 8; across-the-bord- pictures Carol Williams, Larsen, Dixie Fishburn, or Marge Holt, Photographs will be taken by appointment at your convenience. Selection may be made from 825-190- 0; 825-450- 8; 825-011- 3 773-824- approximately six color proofs. Additional photographs may be purchased if desired. . Satisfaction is guaranteed or money refunded. There is no sitting charge. Offer expires June 1. Volume Recently returned from an ex ipo rf u! n Perm it No , 2 5 Serving the Number 14 Clearfield-Sunse- t May 7, 1980 Area Ogdeim RDaBO sdh)iMes October opening According to the developers of the mall, it will be bigger than the one in Layton, and will have the unique distinction of being anchored by five department stores. The new downtown Ogden mall is on schedule for opening this October 4, s of the with more than mall store area committed for lease, and several stores completed. The major department stores at the mall are Weinstocks, J.C. Penney, Bon Marche and Nordstrom. A pedestrian bridge will diagonally cross Washington Boulevard, linking the ZCMI store to the center. Ernest W. Hahn, Inc., developers enclosed mall, hosted of the two-leva tour of the construction site for the media and city officials. Its boundary streets are Washington three-fourth- perform in the world famous pageant. While at Clearfield High School she served as vice president of her junior and senior classes and was a member of the National Honor Society. student was one six young scientists receiving Awards for National Exploration excellent at the National Explorer Presidents Congress held May 6 in Phoenix, Arizona. Michael Hepworth, 17, a senior at Clearfield High School, hopes to obtain his doctorate from Brigham Young University in physical and biochemistry. He is a member of Explorer Post 160, chartered to Clearfield 2nd Ward, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. He is interested in producing new forms of energy at low cost. Hepworth has built a working domestic solar water system and is now involved in designing an alcohol reactor to increase production of ethenol alcohol. A Clearfield High of Britten, Khachaturian. the Shire A Natesky, special Morning, store in February 1981. its The old store will be replaced with a building matching the mall facade. Nordstrom will follow in the Spring of store. 1982 with a two-lev- two-lev- el Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokerage Co., of Denver, is the exclusive leasing agent for Ogden City Mall. Hahn Property Management Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary, will manage the completed complex. The project architect is Millard Archuleta Associates of Los Angeles. The Hahn company was the developer and manages Fashion Place Mall in Murray, and the Ogden City Plaza across from the mall. Hahn malls are being built in nine cities nationwide, from Portland, Oregon to Memphis, Tennesse. Each of the winners received a grant for research to be performed under the direction of a top scientist. The top three winners also will share an additional $10,000 in college scholarships. The annual awards were made Monday night by the Exploring Division of the Boy Scouts of America in cooperation with TRW Inc., a Cleveland-base- d diversified manufacturing firm. Dr. Theordore H. Maiman, vice president advanced technology for TRW Electronics, and Dr. Burton Brasher, chairman of Explorings Awards and Scholarships Task Force, made the presentations of plaques and scholarships. First place winner is Scott E. Miller, 20, of Santa Barbara, California, who also won a $5,000 TRW Foundation scholarship; second place winner, James Stephen Mosher, 17, of Annandale, Virginia, who received a scholarship; and Kathleen Fletcher, sylvania, of New Castle, Pennwho received a $2,000 17, scholarship. Other winners besides Hepworth are, Gary Stuart Belkin, 17, of Merrick, New York, and David B. Rothenberg, 17, of Westport, Connecticut. Exploring is the coed division of the Boy Scouts of America. Its more than 390,000 members range in age from 14 through 20. More than 2,000 members are now in Phoenix to at- and number, written for the high school by director Kirk Beecher, will feature soloists Janet Brighton, Greg Hess and Jana Lee Wood. Violin soloists Lynette Owens and Lisa Hafer will perform Concerto in a minor by Vivaldi. The Clearfield High string orchestra recently received superior ratings at Solo and Ensemble, Region I Orchestra and State Solo and Ensemble Festivals. The public is cordially invited to attend. merchandise in the entire valley Hahn said. The tax base was moving out, so the city had to have something to keep healthy business activity in the city center. Hahn said that the mall will probably be the splash that starts a ripple of varied city improvements and new opportunities. More than 1,500 people have been employed in the course of the mall construction, and another 1,600 will work in management, maintenance, and retail positions when it opens in October. Hahn will also build a portion of the spcialty stores in this $60 million complex. J.C. Penney Realty of New York is a limited partner with Hahn Co. in the development. J.C. Penney is scheduled to open area, $1,000 $3,000 change concert with Twin Falls, Clearfield High will present musjc'by Bach, Boulevard, 22nd Street, 24th Street, and Grant Avenue. National, regional and local retail firms have been committed to lease 93 of the centers 124 boutiques, specialty shops and restaurants. There will be some familiar local names among the stores, such as Morgan Jewelers, Wheelwright Company (shoes), and Farrs Ice Cream, Hahn said. He to increase the local hopes representation. Among the national and regional stores in the mall will be Casual Corner, the Gap, Zales Jewelers and Honey Bee Hollow. Ogden City Mall characterizes a national effort to strengthen our cities. When it is completed, it will offer the most complete spectrum of Clearfield High student receives national award CHS to present final concert Venessa Ryall, director of Twin Falls Middle Schools will conduct Brandenburg Concerto No, 3 by Bach and "Short Overture by Beroer, US Posioge PAID LEARFIELD re Joyce has also been selected to be a participant in the upcoming Hill Cumorah Pageant to be held in Palmyra . New York, July 25, 26, 29, 30, 31 and Aug. 1, 2. She was selected from hundreds of applicants across the United States and Canada to Clearfield High School orchestra present their final concert of the year, Monday, May 12, at 7 p.m. Special guests will be Twin Falls Middle Schools Orchestra. Opening the program in the CHS auditorium will be the Clearfield Area Elementary Strings. They will play "Folk Dance by Beethoven, Country Dance-Countr- y Disco" by Bahms, Tomahawk," and Moviemusic by John Williams. 1 12-1- Clearfield High School graduate, Joyce Brown, was selected to serve as the secretary of the Executive Council for the LDS Student Association program at Utah State University. She was selected from a number of students interviewed for the position. Miss Brown, will be a junior next year and is a nursing major. She was honored at an installment dinner March 25 in the Skyroom at the University Center in Logan. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Brown, bishops stake presidents, and regional representatives were present at the dinner. will State park ranger Fred Helmes and Allan Flint from the Good Sam Club discuss the upcoming spring cleanup to be scheduled for the week of May 6. ANTELOPE ISLAND er New secretary chosen JOYCE BROWN maps and information showing the fastest and-o- r most scenic RV route for a member planning a trip, special insurance programs, and the opportunity for fun and fellowship long-standi- acknowledgement of the presence of a Being superior to man, himself, as a long step toward accomplishing that peace which the world needs and wants. Gov. Scott Matheson has proclaimed the week of May 7 as Worldwide Prayer Week in Utah. PTA offers family Just in time for Fathers Day, Clearfield High PTA has arranged for area families to have pictures taken at a local studio. A fund raising activity for the PTA, the family group photos taken by Bell Photographers, are a great bargain. Cost of an 11x14 color photograph is $8.95 for this special offer. In order for Clearfield High PTA to receive payment, a coupon must be purchased from one of the following: Carol Taake, Margaret detailed Kiwanis Support of Spiritual Aims program. Kiwanis fs the only large secular organization to promote such an activity annually, according to a Kiwanis spokesman, Ray Adams. In making the announcement of Worldwide Prayer Week, Ray Adams president of the Kiwanis Club of Clearfield, said that it is Kiwanis own answer to mans eternal quest for peace: The Good Sam Club is a nationwide organization with 27 chapters in Utah. The purpose of the group is to provide RV owners with valuable services and information concerning such items as parks, campgrounds, rules of the road and many more. Club membership also provides discounts for members at campgrounds, a club newspaper, especially MICHAEL HEPWORTH tend leadership workshops, elect national and regional officers and plan programs for next year. The six winners will fly to the Los Angeles area for a series of tours including TRWs Space Park at Redondo. Beach. Special for moms special movie for all Moms" the selection of Clearfields Mother of the Year will be the highlights of the Mothers Day program Saturday. Sponsored annually by the Clearfield Chamber of Commerce, the event will be held In the Clearfield . and High School auditorium at 9 a m Awards will also be given to Clearfield Mother with Most children, Oldest and Youngest Mothers, and several other categories. Last years Mother of the Year was Gladys Wasson.. |