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Show t'nnnp trryv tm I WEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, OCTOBER 11, 1979 p "y yy m wu 0r'mm,9 wrw"" & 9 l' i"p NaftmaMly Veaurs Tfoe Weefi varieties of the red beet, the leaves, like the swiss chard, By B. FRANCIS KLEIN Copley News Service Naturally yours 1 are harvested and used for salads or cooked. The beet. THE RED beet root is a succulent, attractive garnish as well as uniquely tasting TREMENDOUSLY popular and important vegetable, the dark red globular root, with the little pig tail, is a native of the old world. For generations it has been used for food, cattle fodder, and A easily digestible. Its a dieters choice because it is contains only bohydrates. Beets 10 are percent car- available throughout the year in most markets. Its always a good vegetable that is used for cooking, for salads, pickled and also even eaten raw. Its high in proteins, fats, fibers, vitamins A and B. dye. There is one variety of the beet, the sugar beet, that is a THAT MAKES it one of most close rival of cane for the production of sugar. In some versatile our kitchen friends. Like all succulents, it has a high water content and Rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is an iniquity and idolatry. 1. Who made the above statement? was he 2. To whom Tc:e;;iKMcp Sentenced sitting on a toilet. A physician A Fruit Heights mother, convicted of negligent homicide in the death of her newborn baby, has been sentenced to one year in the Weber County LAYTON teen-age- testified that the child was full term, apparently normal, d HOWEVER, FOURTH Circuit Court Judge Douglas L. Cornaby, who imposed the is city police officer scheduled for preliminary hearing tomorrow (Thursday) at 2:30 p.m. in Fourth Ellis, 18, of 637 South Blossom Drive, Fruit Heights, had served 90 days. Ms. Ellis was also fined Circuit Court in Layton. THE DEFENDANT, Thomas E. Richardson, 22, of 1738 South 200 East, Salt Lake City, was arraigned last week $1,000. JUDGE CORNABY accepted the recommendation of probation officials that the defendant be sentenced in the Weber County Jail in Ogden rather than the Davis County on a facility has more counseling services available and the Davis County Jail has only WORK ADJUSTMENT ByTOMBUSSELBERG - FARMINGTON Holding down a job and making the .boss and those you deal with happy isnt always that easy. THE MOST successful businessmen can relate to that problem. And while most people are able to cope there are some who need that extra push to get them on their way. Some of those are clients at the Davis County Development Center in Farmington. They are part of the centers work adjustment program. That is just one of several geared to aid mentally and physically handicapped Davis County residents at the Davis School District-sponsore- d facility. According to program director Dan Kline, work ad- justment is a matter of moving a person to more competitive employability. But before that takes place, the center tries to teach proper skills and habits. If there are some areas where they are having problems, we try to adjust the program so that it can be personal, he says. We work on self presentation as well as work skills and habits. We try to build a good personality overall. tasks producing items used by many people near and far. TO REACH that end services tailored to client needs include counseling, academic training, speech therapy and services. At the center, clients can work in a sheltered work experience where they dont have the threat of being fired while they learn to perform adequately in a regular work situation, Mr. Kline says. The average stay for clients in work adjustment is three-si- x months. THOUSANDS of people! utilize silverware packets put together by the clients for a flight kitchen operation at the Salt Lake City International MANY OF those in the program are former high school special education students. Others are accident victims or those who need more time to gain the skills and knowledge necessary for outside work experience, Mr. Kline says. Its a program where the client has to want that goal. If he doesnt want it, it cant be goal-orient- done. To walk into the work ad- variety of assembly lines at any number of lightmanufacturing plants. Clients are put to work at a variety of - Growth student enrollments coupled with a changing economy and the need for more timely management information have prompted the Davis County School District in northern Utah to increase its data processing power. THE DISTRICT has purchased a Burroughs B 1855 computer system to be installed in October, replacing a B 1700 system in use since 1973. Don R. Page, data processing manager, said the Davis County School District, with 37,300 students, is the third largest in the state. Student enrollments in the farming community are increasing because of the influx of families and businesses associated with the Hill AFB, Page said. accounts payable, and payroll 4,000 for approximately employees. The system will also handle inventories for the districts holdings, items in the warehouse, and shipping schedules for items going to and from the warehouse. PAGE SAID the Board of Education is considering placing remote job entry in the districts warehouse within the next capabilities year. A terminal in the warehouse, 20 miles from district offices, would assist in controlling inventory and shipping schedules. Page said the district will a number of Burroughs program products on its B 1855. These will include Network Definition be using Language (NDL), Command and Edit (CANDE) language Data Management System II Data (DMS II) and Entry System (ODESY). The county called in a consulting firm when considering the purchase of a new system, and Page said, the consultOn-Li- PAGE SAID major factors considered by the districts Board of Education in selecting the B 1855 included the computers expandability in providing increased power as the district grows, ease of, conversion from the B 1700, -- the range of program products for the computer available from Burroughs, and the fact that the B 1855 is compatible with the states computer system, with which e the B 1855 will have communications. The school districts B 1855 will handle accounting func- tions including ledger, accounts general receivable. ing firm Burroughs package considered overall software to be the best around. SIX BURROUGHS TD 830 display terminals will be online to the B 1855. Two will be used for data entry, two for data inquiry, and two for on- line programming. These terminals, as well as a TP 312 printing terminal, will be located in district offices in Farmington. contracts covering of several Clients are taught the meaning of work, how to focus their energy on a task and the gratification coming years. THE PHYSICAL end of completing a job is not all that is required of clients. They are also given academic instruction under a new academic program correlated with the school district. Academic Instructor James Irvine is given training in areas necessary to aid clients in becoming more independent, potential outside employees. Use of the , from work, he continues. AFTER a client graduates into an outside working experience, contact isnt lost. A club has been set up for former clients to keep in touch, share ideas and give support to each other, Mr. Kline explains, tb AND . Analysis of the 1978-7- 9 Advanced Placement examination results for the six high, schools in Davis County School District indicates that the AP Program has saved parents within the district approximately $312,000. OF THOSE students who took the AP examination last May, 312 scored high enough on the tests to earn 12 or more quarter hours of college credit. Current costs for 12 quarter hours of credit at Utahs and universities colleges would total approximately $1,000.00 for tuition, room and board, and books. THUS THE immediate economic value of the AP Program in Davis District can be calculated at approximately $312,000. That is the amount it would have cost students or their parents to earn equivalent credits at a public college or university here in Utah. If the amounts were computed for private universities or for universities, the total cost for equivalent credit hours would be even greater. Jeanne Layton Defense fund - KAYSVILLE Some $762 had been raised for the Jeanne Layton Defense Fund as of Monday afternoon. ACCORDING TO Marilyn Hall of Kaysville, the sole organizer and operator of the fund to aid in legal expenses for the fired Davis County librarian, $500 of that sum has been sent to Albert Colton, Miss Laytons attorney, to help cover legal expenses. The average donation has been about $20 but weve had some big and some small she said. There have been some from California but the majority from Davis County and a few from Salt ones, Lake City. SHE ADDED that most of the contributions in Davis County had come from the north end with only a couple" from Bountiful. Those interested in contributing may write: Jeanne Layton Defense Fund, Box 274, Kaysville, Utah 84037. tb Sr. Citizens Dinner Set For Oct. 1 0th Senior citizens of Kaysville tion with the group. Your and north Farmington, 60 years old and older are invited to attend the monthly dinner Thursday, Oct. 18 at Davis High School cafeteria, 2 p.m. Suggested contribution is $1.25 per plate. The program after dinner will include some young dancing Benton, Ashby, Roueche, girls. Lund, COME OUT and enjoy each others company and associa this statement be found? Answers to Bible Verse The Prophet Samuel. 2. To King Saul, and through him to the Israelites. 3. Upon the occasion of Sauls sin in not destroying Agag, the king of the Amelekite. 4. I Samuel 15, part of the 23rd verse. 1. ofinjured by a Layton police ficer after he (Richardson) fled from the Kowley Drug Store, 15 North Main, Layton, early on Sept. 21. THE DEFENDANT was shot in the neck and upper Ixxly by a shotgun blast and spent 10 days recovering in a Salt Lake City hospital. He has been released from the hospital and was termed capable of standing trial. The shooting, which occurred when the suspect stopped running and turned as though he was going to shoot, was ruled justified following an investigation by the Davis County Attorneys Office. AN ALLEGED accomplice ' in the case, Gloria Holden, 20, same address as the defendant, was arraigned two. and her weeks ago preliminary hearing will be held in conjunction with the male suspect, according to a court spokesperson, grb week of Oct. 8 through 13. EVER SINCE the famous Chicago fire, more than a century ago on Oct. 8, 1871, the danger of fires has been i stressed by fire departments and others at this time of year. In recent years the Na- tional Fire Protection Association has sponsored Fire Prevention Week, the anniversary week of the Chicago fire. This year, predicted its Americans will lose their lives in fires and over 12,000 8-- 3th 1 1,000,000 buildings will burn in the U.S. About 30 percent of the deaths from fires will be children, often unable to help themselves. THIS IS, then, the time of year to check gas lines and pipes, furnaces, chimneys, and electric wiring appliances, etc. ii Sf I Hunters Ball Set , -- Z .. J ' g h . - For 13th A deer hunters ball will be held Oct. 13 with chili being served from p.m. at the Roy Eagles No. 3335 building in Roy. Cost of the chili will be 35 cents per bowl. i ft " 1 ' 7-- A DANCE will begin at 9 p.m. The live music will be furnished by Saddlehorn. np Saves Money Davis AP justment portion of the center, you might feel as though you were seeing a Processing Power FARMINGTON long-ter- a period 3. Upon what occasion? Where may 4. baby. Testimony during the trial revealed that the defendant gave birth to the child while valid program goals in and of themselves. contract, including some speaking? full-ter- THE CONCEPT of work in practice adjustment includes personal, social, educational and community adjustment both in program goals and activities and social skill development, Mr. Kline says. Both are a crucial aspect of vocational development and are possibly local publishing house. Clients work on the projects obtained by the center under Week, which reminds us cooler weather means accidental fire and resulting death and financial loss for many, is the defendant knew that the daughter was delivering a covered in classroom work. School District To Increases Its Data jn y telephone, counting, and money use are among topics Airport. Other projects hit closer to home and include collating materials fora large Fire Prevention the maximum allowed by state law for this type of ofTHE defendant did not testrial, but tify at the two-daher mother told the jury that neither she (mother) or the - naturally Verse Fire Prevention Week Oct. limited facilities for women. Ms. Ellis was convicted Sept. 6 of the Class A misdemeanor charge. The sentence imposed by judge was w felony third-degre- e charge of burglary. Richardson was seriously Jail because the Ogden fense, it was explained. - A man who apparently fled from a Layton drug store and was shot by a LAYTON sentence, said he would review the sentence after the defendant, Charlene Francis fast-pace- it from the toilet, grb THE BEET yours! Hearing Set In Shooting Jail. Adjusting to a work situation can be a little harder for d some in todays modem, society, but the Davis County Development Center provides a means for some to productive county residents to gain the know-howork experiences such as these assembly line workers in ' Farmington. and probably would have lived had someone retrieved buy and is one of the biggest items in demand for canned goods. membership card entitles you to attend the high school activities, including ball games. To make dinner reservations call one of the following by Monday, Oct. 15: Velma 376-483- 1 376-213376-240- ; Emily Vera Minnie Farmington. KIRTLEY E. Tucker is president of the group. Utah now leads the nation in terms of the percent of high school students who choose to participate in the AP Program. Davis District, in turn, accounts for a sig- nificant proportion of the state figure. Apparently Davis Students (and their parents) are anxious to take advantage of both the educational and economic opportunities provided by the Advanced Placement Program. Haunted House At Layton S: By SUSAN IPAKTCH1AN Although the time for ghosts and goblins is not for a few weeks, Layton Highs Drama Club already has their spirit running high as they prepare for their annual haunted house. THE LOCATION for the haunted house this year will be in the old abandoned house on King Street, and will be held on Oct. 26, 27 and 1 I 29-3- from 7:30-10:3- 0 p.m. The students in the drama club have been preparing for their parts in the haunted F: Vf f- V house by making realistic costumes and practicing the latest scare tactics. They are hoping for a lot of support during their mask-eradCOST FOR the haunted house will be $1.50 per person, $2.50 per couple, $5 for groups (not more than six), and children under six years of age can get in free of charge. Temptation Taxes eat up so large a part of the rich mans estate when he dies that he is tempted to go on living just for spite. o UnilMH hlUUbLO lUUlill PIAnn Young models show off clothes made by their mothers from other clothes. They include Elyse md Ty Wardell, children of Mr. and Mrs. George Wardell and Rebecca Jacobs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Jacobs. iAn nt, nftnil . . |