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Show 3B THE GREEN SHEET Thursday, March 31, 1988 e QPUnni ivWbiW w KS7TWW1 . V v'; Kindergarten Registration Set At Valley Crest Winners Are Named In Granite District Junior High Art Contest WEST VALLEY. Kindergarten registration will be held from 2 to WEST VALLEY. Names have been announced of winners in the 4 p.m. tomorrow (Friday) at Valley Crest elementary. Children must be age five on or before Sept. 1 and will require a birth immunization certificate, records, health and dental exams and eye screening io enter school, to principal Ann according Gerson. All who children have completed registration will be tomorrow; assigned teachers others will not be assigned to a class until is registration completed. An orientation session for incoming kindergarten students will be held on May 26. A jump-a-tho- n under the direction of Sue Bailey is scheduled in late April. An Invention Convention was held Tuesday. Todd Rytting, University of Utah Research Center headed a panel of 12 judges in selecting winners from each grade level. Kindergarten students participated in a flag ceremony directed by the principal last Friday. PREPARATIONS ... Stephanie Parker, Thad Peterson and Daniel Hopes make buttons advertising Kennedy junior high's "Invitation to Excellence" program slated April 5-- Invitation To Enlightenment Offered To Kennedy Students WEST VALLEY. "Come Fly a to Invitation Kite an of a theme the is Enlightenment," of national defense and nuclear war, which weigh heavily on the minds of adolescents, she facts seminar for students and parents to be held April 5 to 8 at Kennedy junior high. event Topics for the include, Tuesday, drugs and alcohol; teenage Wednesday, depression, suicide and nuclear war; Thursday, family conflict, crime and violence and Friday, teen and disorders eating pregnancy. The opening assembly, "Come fly a kite," will be addressed by Governor Norman Bangerter and Police Chief Dennis Nordfelt. the throughout Speakers seminar will include representatives of various hospitals, law units enforcement including Juvenile Court, and speakers The schools. from various Kennedy student body officers also will and cheerleaders participate. Sessions for parents only include first period Tuesday, "Addiction in the family;" first period Wednesday, "A parents view of suicide;" third period Thursday, "How to discipline without hurt" and fifth period Friday, "Eating disorders, what to four-da- y look for." said. Thursdays focus notes that teen years are not easy for families. Students want help in dealing with family conflict and peer pressure. Also, a major crime happens in Utah once every five to seven minutes, said Dr. Mackintosh. Teens, like other segments of the population commit crimes and are victims of crimes. Problems with eating and pregnancy are common, she noted. Anorexia nervosa frequently occurs in adolescent girls, with the victim having an irrational fear of becoming fat and binging, purging and sometimes starving to death. The adolescent mother-to-bis to vulnerable of problems pregnancy directly related to physical and emotional immaturity. The topics to be discussed all apply directly or indirectly to many teens, and the focus of the seminar is to offer assistance and guidance to students and families, concluded Dr. Mackintosh. For more information those interested may call the school, e Westbrook Names Invention Winners Invention teachers to wear around their necks. Two recipe creations won honorable mention for Jenny Gudmundson and Erika Jacobson. Runners-u- p were Brittany Sharp for a "baby patta cake," a device designed to take over from mom when a baby needs patting; Leila Bills, an "ice swiper" for use in cleaning ice off car windshields and Courtney Nofsinger for a tooth brush with built-i- n dental floss. Fifth grade teachers sponsoring the event for students in fourth and fifth grade included Jackie Carol Fowler and Singleton, Johnette Fox. Clifford DeGraw is principal. in the painting Winning in the y sculpture division were Kris Ponz, Bennion, first place; Tim Diekmann, Evergreen and Jacob Barker, Hunter, tied for second; John Clemens, West Lake, third with honorable mention going to Jeff Mott, Hunter and Matt Bills, winners included Quang Pham, West Lake, best of show overall; Jared Hayer, Hunter, first place; Jamon Neilson, Bennion, second; Hung Vu, West Lake, third. Receiving honorable mention in that category were Quang Pham, West Lake; Alicia Gustafson, Nathan Gubler, Olympus; Hunter; Paul Fail, Granite Park; Becky Brady, Hunter; Brandon Johnson, Hunter; Mony Ty, West Lake; Karlie Hayden, West Lake; Kurt Hansen, Valley; Amy Fisher, Valley; Ethington, Ashley Olympus; Russell Barty, Valley; Brian Ball, Granite Park; Chris Ditton, Churchill; two entries by Brian Tatge, West Lake. Jennifer Callins, Olymus was first in the photography section with Matt Sager, Olympus, honorable mention. IMPRESSIVE ... Amy Fisher, from Valley junior high; Quang Pham, from West Lake; and Jared Hayes, from Hunter, study one of the winning entries in the Granite District art show. Reiner & Associates Tax Accounting - WHY WORRY, TAKE THE FRUSTRATION OUT OF TAX TIME. LEAVE IT TO A SPECIALISTS RETURNS ARE CHECKED AND PRINTED BY COMPUTER iiKmmc hung avaiiabu lf lOTi1 J. Thomson You Toko Every Car To Got You The Lorgoat Rotund You're 220 East 3900 So. SW 12 Salt Lake City, Utah 84107 and Your Child: Success in Boys Night Out Is Slated At Hillsdale WEST VALLEY. PTA officers at The first day will demonstrate how tobacco, chewing tobacco, Hillsdale elementary will host a alcohol and drugs are devastating Boys Night Out at 7 oclock to the adolescent body, noting tonight (Thursday) in the schools e room. g that the average their fathers are and teen continues his activities about Boys invited to the event which will one and a half to two years. theme. circus a Twenty-fiv- e percent of adoles- feature cents attempting suicide are Entertainment will include a under age 14. Four out of five juggler, balloons will be available, suicides are committed by people a drawing for prizes will be held who are severely depressed. and refreshments will be served. Tickets, priced at $1 per person, Wednesdays activities will focus on these facts and also on the will be available at the door. an Convention held last week at Westbrook elementary. Travis Taylor, son of Russell agjL Nancy Taylor won first place in 'the fifth grade with his invention of an electronically worked digital measuring device. First place in the fourth grade went to John Amundson, son of Mark and Deborah Amundson who invented a variety of useful classroom items including a magnetic pencil, an unbreakable crayon and a chalk holder for 964-764- The focus each day will be on a different area of teen concern said Dr. Shauna Mackintosh, assistant principal. in Winners category included Hung Vu, West Brandon first place; Lake, Johnson, Hunter, second; Tim Diekmann, Evergreen, third. Honorable mention was given to Justin Skidmore, Olympus and Jesse Colby, Granite Park. In the crafts division, winners included Jean Welch, Granite Park, first place; Hung Vu and Thanha Thach, West Lake; second; Brett Lyman, Bennion, third. Winners, in the ceramic category included Piper Dereus, Granite Park, first; Tina Steffey, Jefferson, second; with honorable mention going to Thaylen Leany, Jefferson, and Jeremy Pearson, Bennion. Normand, Evergreen. Honorable mention was given Thanha Thach, West Lake; Mark Smith, West Lake; Nathan Gubler, Britton, Hunter; Jeremy Brandon Johnson, Hunter; Justin Churchill: Carli Hayden, West and Richard Lake; Erix Saxey, Hunter; Eric Wilde, Bennion Russell, Valley. Allred, Hunter; Becky Clemens, Winners in drawing 1 included Eisenhower; Sandra Stewart, Steve Colbert, West Lake, first Eisenhower; Hung Vu, West place; Jared Hayer, Hunter, Lake; Troy Shaw, Eisenhower; second. A three-watie gave third Quang Pham, West Lake; Brian place to Mony Ty, West Lake; Tadgey.West Lake and Mony Ty, Morgan Lin, West Lake and Doug also West Lake. Bennion. In the color media division, KEARNS. Winners have been named Granite District annual junior high school art contest. About 400 entries were on display last week at West Lake junior high where judging took place. In drawing 11, winners included Quang Pham, West Lake, first place; Mony Ty, second; Mark Smith, third. Honorable mention was given Jared Hayer, Hunter; School by JIM CAMPBELL Utah Education Association President multi-purpos- drug-abusin- A disabling injury can break more than a limb. Your Farm Bureau agent can help you choose a disability income policy based on your current income and your familys needs, at a fair Its 16 degrees outside and the furnace is on the firtz, the kids will be late for school in five minutes, and breakfast isnt on the table yet. Situations such as this create stress on they dont need. Despite the tension, conflicts, demands and lack of communication in these hectic 1980s-stre- ss on families can be kept to a. minimum. Irene Desire Beck, writing in PTA offers these Today, suggestions for preventing family families-somethi- stress: e time with Spend each family member on a regular basis, and let it be known its okay to disagree if there are differences. -- Dont drop happy family routines such as bathtime, bedtime, Sunday breakfast or an one-on-on- early-mornin- premium. ng walk in times of g stress. -- When a problem develops, keep " attitude about resolving it. -- Encourage in your children by having them work out solutions to their problems with you. -- Build your childrens by trusting them to assume responsibilities. -- Discuss rules and roles, so a "can-do- decision-makin- z61- mob UTAH FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Farm Bureau FAMILY OF FINANCIAL PLANNING SERVICES everyone and Salt Lake Central Valley AGENCY MANAGER - Lynn J. Boulter CAREER AGENTS: Salt Lake City Edith M. Boulter Salt Lake city Willis R. Burton Salt Lake City Douglas R. 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