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Show Held to be Auction ,i Lakeside Review, Wednesday, June 5, 1985 4D VV ' $ V fLsShl ' kyvV 14, S$6' v Jt & 4 ssi To raise monKAYSVILLE ey for new Davis High Band uni- W !,& ? f;- 4 ,J .&, ?. - forms, an auction will be held July 4 following the city parade. The auction will begin at 3 p.m. at the Davis High cafeteria and south parking lot. Anyone wishing to donate auction items can contact Maxine Jeanne Anderson, Baur,62 or Judy Burton, 544-985- 544- 2. - 8212. There will also be a country kitchen craft and bake sale. Those who wish to contribute any homemade items, contact Jean or Marcia TipNbo, 544-262- 544-855- 7, 7. petts, Those wishing to give items in this area are asked to contact 544-36- 32. Cathy Petersen, reRod Arquette, KUTV news porter, will be the auctioneer. The band is under the direction of Paul Kapp. The executive chairman of the auction is Maxine Baur. The chairman is Jeanne Anderson. Roy Students Get District Awards Several Sand Ridge Junior High students received awards at the 1985 Weber School District Free Enterprise Fair, held on May 8, at the Ogden Hilton. They are as follows: Randon Funk, 1st place, 7th grade, marketing; Linda Sellers and Wendy Ashby, 1st place, 8th grade, research; Steve Peterson, 1st place, ROY weight around, student teams at Columbia ll game of the old fa Elementary School enjoy a THROWING THEIR i owar. The teams each weighed a total of 500 vorite, tug Student Mass Measures Metrically As the school KAYSVILLE closed out, most schools year is hold a field day, where students can enjoy various games and activities in celebration of summer. But Columbia Elementary Schools field day for fourth, fifth was a little difand ferent this year. The racing, jumping and sixth-grade- rs oughly became a game as the classes participated in the regular field day events. Each tug owar team weighed throwing were all measured in metrics. The students have been studying the metric system and were able to put their knowledge to the test as they estimated the weight, length or volume of specific objects. Learning metrics more thor 500 kilograms. A kilogram is a metric unit used to measure mass, or weight. s, winner. Others receiving awards were: Diane Browning, 2nd place, 9th grade, essay; and Sand Ridge Junior Highs 7th grade, social studies, Young Americans, 1st place group award. Summer Program team made the event fair, students said, even though some teams had more members, while other teams had light-weig- ht fewer players weighing more. But that didnt seem to matter an ounce - oops, a gram - to students participating in the One kilogram weighs 2.2 pounds. The metric divisions for each Sea-mon- North Davis Offers kilo- grams. One kilogram equals 2.2 pounds. push-and-pu- 9th grade, research; Tauna 1st place, 8th grade, essay fun-fill- event ed CLEARFIELD Students enrolled in North Davis Junior High Schools summer home economics program will study Creativity in the Home this summer. Classes will begin June 13 and continue for six weeks. Enrollment will be limited to the first 80 applicants and is available to male and female students between the ages of 11 and 15. Applications will be available at the school office through June 13. One-hacredit is available to those completing the course and the program is free. lf For more information, call 825-165- 1. Popular South Weber Principal Receives Sad Farewell JUDY BLACKNER Review Correspondent SOUTH WEBER An open house to honor South Weber Elementarys retiring principal Robert G. Larsen, presented in a This is your Life program, revealed he is loved by all who know and work with him. Fond memories were recalled as school secretary Linda Poll recited a poem in his honor he yells up and down the hall. The very next minute he yells his keys cannot be found. He takes off his suit coat and cant remember where its laid, but he can sure reg member where the games are played. He spanks all the kids on their birthdays and loves to change their last names from Westbroek to East Creek, from Wolf to Fox, Crane to Swan. Thats one of his many games. Get out of my water, he tells the kids and he loves to turn off the lights. But you can always hear him call each student by name and he always knows what to say to make them all feel bright. The kids all love Mr. Larsen and a chorus of Let me call you sweetheart is familiar to the girls as he waltzes them down the hall. Have you two met? he says as er' i r O, 4 1 if X K , S 4 is Is everybody happy? Av 9 9 7 i,1 j ? kJ'I fwr 4 A 7 ? J 4 94 4 , f , , r i1 . .v -- s. '4 7 I $ i t JZtt I ' - $ x 2, V', rk 4' " . f 7jri 4 4 - 4- - ping-pon- ; ? ft ipi'7? ? 1 V -- J. V Vi W-- He then taught P' pointed V school principal, Robert G. Larsen, talks to students at the open house recently held in he bonks two kids heads together and in the same breath yells at the boys running down the hall, Shouldnt you boys be out doing something you shouldnt be do- jng7 'v J V BEAUTY SALOIJ special S2000PERMSCUT 6haircutmen f -- 4 5haircutchildrei i e offi- Junior High 1985-86 school year are, from cers for the CENTRAL DAVIS ninth-grad- u vice-preside- nt MonFri 3:30-- B Sat. 9-4:- 30 Now thru June 29 Walk-in- s Welcome uJ left, Megyn Nimori, secretary; Terry Murphy, president; Susan Perry, Be 825-926- 5 Dr. Jerry Bullough, D.C. Bullough Chiropractic Center CLASS IS OUR SPECIALTY..MT A SIDELINE 1 M niii,ifaft(frtornV"- a Clearfield senior who has maintained a 4.0 grade point average, will be one of the aledictorians 4t the schools graduation exercises tonight. SCREENS MADE AND REPAIRED AUTO GLASS SPECIALISTS ALL OF YOUR GLASS NEEDS WE ARE EXPERTS ON INSURANCE CLAIMS PHONE 544-427- 123 CROSS STREET 1 LAYTON West 1975 N. MAIN - LAYTON "w f '' High mVIOLETS K 4 0, DEBBIE MAYER, s' w Ii tri tftMn nffiT f at principal Bountiful Elementary for the next six years and then transferred to Vae View Elementary in Layton and worked there for ten years. He then took over as the first his honor. Larsen has been employed with the Davis School . of the new South Weber principal District for the past 32 years. Elementary where he has served Kay Van Dyke recalled the first desks and chairs. One of the kids for the last nine years. He spent day of school at South Weber, brought a snake. Mr. Larsen was 32 years in the Davis School We started the year with no - looking at it as it wrapped itself t d, flrtirWiUrn "8 i CLEARFIELD The Clearfield Chapter of Future Farmers of America recently sent four judging teams to a state judging competition at Utah State Uni- versity. The horticulture team, consisting of Patrece Eames, Tammy King, Jodi Beazer, and Ryan Perez, placed first The meats team, consisting of Shawn Bair, John Winterbottom, and Mike Hansen, placed sixth. A horse judging team, ing of Dave Freestone, Sue Thur-gooKurdell Cook, and Grant Famuliner, placed fifth. The schools crops team, con. sisting of Mark Oleson, Jeff Nicolas, and Doug Stephens, placed third. elementary school from 1953 to 1959 at Whitesides and Clearfield. He was ap- r SOUTH WEBER ELEMENTARY er sen. Honors r three-teach- il r FFA Wins tfk around his arm. When one of the teachers walked over, Mr. Larsen said, Did you see what Charlie brought to school? She passed out cold and we had to carry her to the faculty lounge. Larsen was born in Pleasant View, Idaho, then moved to Vernon, Utah where he attended elementary school. He graduated from Davis High in 1941 and served in World War II in Italy. He served on a mission for the LDS church in Sweden from 1947 to 1949. He graduated from the University of Utah in 1951 and became principal at Holden Elementary from 1951 to 1954. I taught fifth to eighth grades with 28 students. It was a school, no phones, no duplicators, and one old 16 mm projector, said Lar- I , ? s " is open on Tuesdays 1:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m, Hours CALL 1 for an appointment Mon. Tues. 9-- 546-373- 6 1- -9 Weds. 9-- Thurs. Fri. Sat. 9-- 6 9-- 6 9-- 6 12 Bullough Chiropractic Center 360 S. FortILane 102 LAYTON |