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Show SUN CHRONICLE N; March 10, 1979, Page 10 , 0 IM ','? will begin Monday Patti Johnson orter "V Ry iiigfe fnlL npjrteoc; at !f u; By Roy Goes p lesV vrilbbe, held . ihs .b. sponsored by the of the Voca Uona injfcst rial Clubs .of 7 AfttijCVCA iATWf.y .U i.r- - ' u, ac- - ) , - g with the most points on Wednesday will compete in the assembly Friday. On Monday, the Anything Goes Bubble Blowing contest will be held during the lunch hour. The contestants will sit on chairs, and then they will be timed to see who can unwrap, chew and then sustain a bubble first. Also on Monday, certain juniors will be taking the NAEP test. Students were selected at random to take NttFamers : iccaiprotect r' through Thursday, with approximately 10 clubs participating. On Friday, the top clubs will compete against each other in an assembly. On Monday and Tuesday, points will be accumulated with various activities, and those with the top point totals will then compete Wednesday. Then, those ftOthSJOKERS M ;xpPe wrless this national study test, out brought NotvVrttjiiA.ife insurance. Thifen.Jiilrt-S-moke- J4ow' Auto. r Farmers oilers complete in Homeowners coverage one money-savinpackage. tf no one in your lamily has smoked in ot least two years, you may quality. Our policy is saving you money. , Glade Wimmer .' KafPh. Pti. . 731-535- '2 i 825-816- 4 5 53 No. Main .JCj&rfield,Utah84015 which will be compared with other test scores all over the country. The Anything Goes Balloon-Breakin- g contest will take place on Tuesday. Each contestant will have a balloon attached to their right ankle. The object is to pop the other clubs balloons by stepping on them. After the balloon is popped, the owner of the balloon must immediately exit the contest area without harming any other balloons. The last 10 people surviving will be awarded points for their clubs. The senior class party will be held Tuesday at McGoos Disco from 7 to 10 p.m. The cost is $2.50 per person and all seniors are encouraged to attend. save energy: SMITH 1.0. 3ERVnQNISr The water heater that pays for itself in fuel cost savings! tfTpHfpiHiith the reliable one ENERGY SAVINGS PAYBACK The most efficient of major energies... saving money for everyone n PLUMBING & KEATING tS0W."2250s! SYRACUSE PHONE 773-909- 0 J On Wednesday, the Anything Goes Roped Leg Relay will take place. This relay is with three students tied together so that three students have four legs between them. It will be timed for the final elimination to the clubs participating in Fridays assembly. The Roy High Forensics team, after taking sweep-stake- s at the Cougar Classic at BYU, are going to Region meet on Thursday. The Anything Goes contest will then end Friday at the assembly, to be held in the gym at 8 a.m. During this assembly, there will be a "Blinded Tricycle Race, where two participants from each club will compete. One is blindfolded to drive the tricycle and the other rides on the back, giving instructions to get through the obstacle course. The fastest team is awarded points, with the second and third team also gaining points for their club. The wheelbarrow and egg toss will involve four people from each club. Two will ride in the wheelbarrows and then toss the eggs back and forth. Two will push the wheelbarrows and the clubs will be timed individually. The club with the fastest time and the least amount of eggs used will win 15 points towards their grant total. The wheelchair race will involve one student racing for the fastest time, to the end of the gym and back. The final contest will be the great log contest, which will have four members from each club, one at a time, crawl across the greased log while other clubs bombard them with balls. The sixth annual VICA breakfast will take place on Friday, and is open to all Roy residents. The VICA club members will be cooking the breakfast, and a variety of menu item combinations will be available. For $1.50 one can get ham, eggs, hashbrowns, milk and three large pancakes. Then, for $1.75, they will offer, ham, eggs, and all the pancakes one can eat. For those who only like pancakes, one can eat to their hearts delight for only $1. Tickets are available from VICA members, officers or at the door. This will be from 6:30 to 8 a.m. in the Roy High cafeteria. For those interested in breaking a record, there will also be a pancake eating contest. Those interested in entering should buy either a $1 or $1.75 ticket to participate. First prize for the one eating the most pancakes is a dinner for two at a local restaurant. The current Roy High record is 46 and a half pancakes. CHILDREN'S MfpLSTEftiD COUCH ($124.00 VALUE) IFUftlEIE A dinner show is being planned by the Roy High music department to raise funds for their upcoming trip to California. This will be on Friday, March 16 and March 17, from 7 to 10 p.m. The Key Club is selling for $7. The club members are also participating in cardiopulmonary resuscitat f 'Ik: tA ty';- - f Twelve students are planning to attend the Key Club convention March 30 to April 3 in Boise, Idaho. - V; .r i A X f i VIVIAN BROWN, bu-.u V f . . - , f. 'V- and distance running competitors. He said that this will place last year and they still be an exciting year for track have some of their fastest and field at the school, and he runners from last year. encouraged residents to supProbably the fastest is Keith port the track meets. Crockett. Two major meets have Last year, while an eighth grader, he beat everyone in already been scheduled, w ith the division, including the the others still being planned. ninth graders. Then, last The Division meet will be at summer Keith took first Weber High School May 11, place in the 100 and 200 yard and then the district meet will dashes in the Junior Division be at Roy High on May 18 of the Junior Olympics. As the meets between the The Junior Olympics in- schools are scheduled, they cludes from will be announced in the Sun students Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Chronicle. Weber School District plans kindergarten signup for Registration years (1979-80- ) next kin- in the Weber District wall begin dergarten School March 27. Registration will be for all children in the district who will be five years old bv April 10. Lakeview April 12, H. Guy Child April 18 April 17, Hooper and 19, Kanesville April 24, Riverdale May 1, Roy May 3 and 4. Elementary 4 Ail ' 00 PARTIAL scholarships are available for Amei icon teonaim years old, offered by Youth for Understanding. SOME 1 ' : s Oct. 21. Registration is by appointment only, and only .on specific days. A schedule is being mailed to parents. Parents who do not receive notification are asked to contact their school principal for information. Due to tight scheduling, it is recommended that parents not bring other children with them. Any child whose fifth birthday falls on or before Oct. 31 may enter kindergarten at the opening of school in September of the same year. In the event that parents desire entrance for a child whose brithdate does not meet the above criteria, they may recieve consideration by calling Pupil Counseling and Career Services at before April 1. 399-92- Registration days are as follows: March 27, West Weber March 30, Club Heights Municipal, April 1, North Park April 3, Roosevelt April April 4, Valley View 5 and 6, Washington Terrace m Butterflies and Birds will be the theme of preschool activities Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. at the Southwest Branch Library in Roy. The following stories will be told : Filling the Bill, The Little Bird, Dazzle, Cappy Cardinal, and The Butterfly. Preschoolers will sing I Can Fly and act out the motions of a butterfly. Ireland Trip Have you ever been to Ireland? No? Dr. Lavon Carroll of Weber State College recently returned from an extended visit to the land of the shamrock and the leprechaun, and shell be at the Southwest Breach Library in Roy on Wednesday evening, at 7 p.m. to show slides of the Emerald Isle and discuss the great writers and glorious literature of fair Ireland. So don your green and do yourself a favor and come and hear all about it. For further information call Evelyn Dussol at the Southwest Branch Library Consumer lecture What recourse do you have when you feel you've been involved in a mail-ordgyp? What about when you think your car repair costs are way out of line? Or your medical charges too high? Or your furniture repair costs ridiculous? Come to the Southwest Branch Library in Roy on Thursday 773-255- afternoon, at 1:30 p.m. and hear Jo Ann Man. s State University Extension Service discuss t;e responsibilities of consumers. . She will advise about all types of consumer . r agencies, Better Business Bureaus, etc. The p- og ; a and open to the public without registration. For further information call Evelyn Dus- ,t n west Branch Library in Roy Books recently received at the Library in Roy include the following titles: BIG HAWAII by Victoria Reiter. Rugged l,: J returns to his fathers Hawaiian rarvti to bn i t girl he once loved, is now betrothed to hr, o,:u, st . cousin; his father lias suffered a stroke, cm m devious plans for the fate of thur gr.-acousin discovers that her love for MJcii nocent. HOW TO (LEAN EVERY!' i!G INC The authoritative guide to cleaning end stain removal for every type of material and ; ALFRED HITCHCOCK TALES TO yCAjLE . edited by Eleanor Sullivan. Fourth anthology of masters Alfred Hitchcocks Mysterv V CONSUMER REPORTS: THE 1979 ld' VU Consumers Union of U.S., Inc A basic ran a t what the intelligent buyer wants to know based on independent test findings. FIRST FAMILY by Patrick Andeismt. 1 ho ; Presidents Mistress lays bare the her,.frailties of a President and his wife coming b r pressures of life in the White House. HOME BIRTH by Alice Gilgoff with an m; a , Gregory White, MD To experience the greatest m in childbirth, a woman must consider the nros home delivery. CLOSE YOUR EYES by Jean Marzolio A gW lullaby, accompanied by a father's ef furls In mu h N child to bed, conjures up vivid images in t ho end which Susan Jeffers depicts in s dt meii,"v 1 773-255- : fir-1-th- . : ; Award - OFFER GOOD TIL MARCH 10, 1979 given , j' v i of taking first place this year. The Scorpions took second A4 y a -- cl-i.- C fei V of an easy bok-- . o. c right, teaches Ronnie Welch on the use m Janet Hayes, teacher and Aid Association for Lutherans secretary c U, ches. The Aid Association Insurance Branch 2714 recently presented me if. 1. Education Program under the Community Action Program in Ogden v New Mexico, Utah and part of by Brad Peterson children will be learning all about circles, triangles, eyes, io Sand Ridge Reporter Texas. Keith is one of the the oven. The There are i'll Track and Field practice is fastest boys in the Western mouths through making and decorating cookies. well underway at Sand Ridge United States, Coach Yeates teachers in the Head Start Program. Junior with the team said. preparing for spring meets. There are also a lot of other The students have started good sprinters, and he said training and Coach Farrel that this will give the team a Yeates said he feels that the definite advantage in speed. Scorpions have a good chance There are also excellent field pjjrchase of any of our new living room of couch & chair 'sets, or with or couch & love seat. jiv.- V XS As" ffmrnmwfl1 Sand Ridge Reports re-upholst- I ' A ion (CPR) classes taught by the Roy Fire Department. 13 f vA ! iA C-- Y ?; A - Vdv 4. I ;'A ALFARO'S worker at Hill ; Childrens. DIABETES: THE NEW Aid bow Brothers, M D. A noted specialist U ii be research can help the diabetic manage ,er,e!v SHAKESPEARES PLANET by CldW; i J i landing on a remote p'anet, on'v one n i .v m o from his artificial sleep, a systems m H:.met ,, others. Carter Horton is alone YOU AND YOt K PRIVATE I by J m f Author explores graphological analy ; f personal pronoun I. She cnineys be- - ib handwriting analysis and igv in a .. appreciated by beginners and expert-- . ;! ; , &V1012 ni - 22nd Street, Ogden - Tel. HILL 392-602- 2 BASE r Alii FORCE Sustained Superior Performance Award has been presented at Hill AFB lo E. Blair Burdens of Roy. lie is a solid propellant missile mechanic at the base. Bur-desand his wife. Colleen, have two children. v. v4 t'-'- A ;v 'iX CHECK THESE FACTS BEFORE YOU BUY AND OTHER STOVE The Earth Stove burns Vs the fuel of many stoves Even temperatures Cook Top Burns 14 hours on one wood load FINANCING AVAILABLE Wood gases not wasted Airtight See Our Rock Display Converts to open fire instantly proudly prosur Dance - off V to hpht Musi uLh l) l:nph Starting Feb. 2. trd Econo West iritdrihsiling 782-842- 4 !s.a)gi!,.jufliaajigwt V iw Each Friday and Saturday night at 10: JO p.m. couples bon. a Hi it Ogden area high school will complete br prizes and (rophi. s m McDanr lt disco c ontest. h |