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Show nr f 2A r c . t Lakeside Review, Wednesday, August 28, 1985 Coming Events & Driving Program Scheduled Utahs defensive driving course is a driver improvement program of the Utah Safety Council which seeks to reduce highway deaths. Drivers who enroll and successfully complete the course reduction receive a on their driving records, one time during any three-yeperiod. You can lessen the possibili 50-poi- nt ar w ,1 - ty of becoming a traffic victim by enrolling in the Defensive Driving classes beginning in Roy, Saturday, Sept. 21, 9 a.m., Roy City Municipal Company Promotes Burn Plant to S - A few f X v FARMINGTON The firm of Hal Gardner and' Associates has been selected to represent the Davis Solid Waste. Management Special Service Dis-- -. public-relation- s Bldg. V- For further information and enrollment, call the Utah Safety Council- The Registration Fee for the Defensive Driving Course is $20 per person. 533-594- ; f5 ?FM- 74 H. 3. 4- - tricL waste-to-ener- Weight Control Clinic Set to Begin LAYTON Tanner Me- are among the many other topmorial Clinic in Layton is ics discussed. A workbook is sponsoring A New Weigh of included with the course. k Cost of the proLife, a professional weight self-defeati- : self-conce- pt gram is $50 with a $10 refund for perfect attendance. A continuous follow-u- p program is also available at reduced cost. Registration and the first class is Wednesday, Sept. 4, at 7 p.m. at the Tanner Memorial Clinic, 2121 N. Robins Drive, Layton. ed The CLEARFIELD lent Scream, a film sponsored by North Davis Right To Life, will be presented at the North Davis Branch Library, 562 S. 1000 E., Clearfield at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 5. The Silent Scream is a Clearfield High School class of 1980 will rebe holding its five-yeunion Sept. 6 and 7. The first days activities include a dinner and program at ar 7 - 0. The items will be available CHERYL ARCHIBALD parking lot, across from the Hill South Gate. The swap meet is open to the public and spaces rent for $4 and are available from 8 a.m. For more information call Dave at FARMINGTON Free daytime training for young people is now available at the Clearfield Job Corps Center. The training, geared toward jobs seekers without means to gain acollege education, is available through a federally funded program in the county. It even pays kids to learn. But without a skill or the money to learn one, odds are they will never find the kind of high paying job they dream of. The new program, a cooperative effort between the Davis County Office of Employment Training and the Clearfield Job Corps, is in a pilot stage. Job Corps spokesman Richard Quimby and Gary Davis, program operator at Employment Training, are trying to inform Davis County and all Utah kids about the program. Its an offer that doesnt come to everyone, only those who can prove they are in need of it, they 4. of a first trimester suction abortion seen on an ultra film sound screen. It is narrated by Dr. Bernard N. Nathanson. A slide presentation will precede the film followed by questions and answers. Admission is free. the Hilton Hotel in Ogden, with a picnic and watermelon bust at Center Street Park the following day. For more information call Tracy McBride at 773-535- 9. said. In conjunction with the Davis County Adult High School, a business machines class will be offered on Tuesday evenings for 12 weeks starting Sept. 3 at 7 p.m. at Davis High School, Kays-vill- One hundred slots are available at the Job Corps Center for Utah students. Most Job Corps students are residents living at the center. So officials want to see more e. The class will offer 10-k- ey training by the touch method elecusing the most tronic calculators. up-to-d- Registration will take place at the first class Tuesday evening, Sept. 3, room 294, Davis High, 7 p.m. The public is welcome to attend. Utah students attending Job Corps on a Register for Image Workshop Now 7-- I I 'ill mtUrMm ming Downs racetrack. Hadley works at a stable in Taylor as both a jockey and trainer of racehorses. al out-of-sta- te daytime non-reside- basis. How do KAYSVILLE or the promotion you get job when you have less experience than the other person? The professional Image Workshop, taught at Davis Area Vocational Center on Thursday evenings beginning Sept. 5, from 9 p.m. will help you . Marian Hickman, a former beauty consultant for Merle '1 They were also promised free transportation and lunch. Five of the ten dropped out the first day. One said he didnt like the lunch. The other five got the opportunity to experiment for one week at the occupational experience class, where the instructor lets students dabble in as many skills as possible. A guy might come here thinking hes gonna be a hot shot welder, then he may find out hes afraid of fire, said class instructor Bill Medell. So the five young men tried their hand at striking an arc, building a wooden shelf and operating other machinery following instructions of an audio-visutape recording with Medell monitoring. Each chose a trade, and went for 17 days - actually more of a taste of learning a trade - to either the machine shop or auto-- , motive program. ' Most basic courses take at least six weeks to complete. The automotive program alone has a 100 percent placement for those who finish the course, Quimby said. It is affiliated with the United .Auto Workers of America. Instructors are rated and some are on leave from different auto manufacturing plants. If the men had been in the regular program they would have gone to six weeks of training. But the pilot students went directly to the last phase of Job Corps training, training. In a classroom they watched a video presentation of a job interview. They learned the importance of dressing properly, of good hygiene and of being on time. They learned how to fill out an application, and how to respond at a job interview. After Job Corps students finish their training they will know things that others learn the hard way or pay their own money to formally learn. And yet, two students, Kurran Review Staff County Offers Class for Adults KAYSVILLE 15 Free Training For Youths Available at Job Corps 1, Class of 1980 Prepares Reunion CLEARFIELD The pilot program pays for training of daytime students, with JTPA money administered by the county. It pays students to enter a program that if followed, will practically guarantee graduates good paying jobs. Ten students meeting U.S. Department of Labor criteria were selected for the pilot program. They had to be low income, from a home environment that prevents educational opportuni1 ty, and had to be years of age, Quimby explained. After chosen, the ten men were issued boots and two pairs of coveralls, and promised $3.35 an hour for attending Job Corps during the day. Norman Cosmetics and a professional model, will help determine your season and how to use color to your advantage in both makeup and clothing. She will also cover clothing style and business etiquette. Cost for the workshop is $25, and registration is going on now. Call the DAVC at 1 or stop by at 550 E. 300 S. in Kaysville. four-pha- 546-244- se 16-2- Battle Against Leakage New Roof on Roy 12-ye- ar ot length. Due to the inferior drainage system on the roof, water from rain and snow would drain to the center of the structure and cause excessive weight. This caused the seams to crack and leakage became a household word for the building by 1975. Because of the steadily rising maintenance cost, the city council approved $85,000 to be allotted into the 1984-8- 5 budget for the new roof. In June of 1985, the bid for installation of the roof was awarded to Redd Roofing of Ogden for $75,178 and work began on July Redd Roofing began the project by ripping off the old roof and putting down a layer of insulation. Crickets were then constructareas so ed, which are built-u- p that water will geometrically flow off the building and not flow to the middle unable to drain. The final step was to lay new single ply roofing system down a big, white piece of flexible rubber held in place by a thin layer of tar and is heat- - and solvent-welde- d to create a smooth sur-- face. The materials and processes used to install roofs are of far better quality today than what was available twelve years ago," said Mike Mansfield, supervisor of Roy City Public Buildings. This roof is guaranteed for 15 years but if it is maintained properly is should last for 20 to 30 years. 825-220- ) city by Sept. The City Council will appoint election judges on Sept. 7. Election judges will be paid $35 per - 1 day. er and Marc THEREVE BEEN SOME CHANGES MADE... NEW OFFICE HOURS The LAKESIDE REVIEW Business office will be Monday-Frida- ONEW CALL YOUR 8:00 ,m,6:00 p.m:. y classified hours Now you can place your classified ads Lakeside Heview Monday-Frida- AREA CORRESPONDENT 8:00 ,m,8:00 p.m. y FARMINGTON SUSAN TANNER HOLMES LAYTON LYNDIA GRAHAM 544-442- 3 KAYSVILLE, FRUIT HEIGHTS RUTH MALAN 544-995- 8 451-583- 1 SOUTH WEBER KATHY KELLY.!......:..' NEW DEADLINES: All news and photo should be submitted no later than 12 noon Fridays for publication the following Wednesday. ADVERTISING Information on Billing and Circulation DEADLINES: Display advertisements Thursday at 12 noon, Classified liner ids. Monday at 8:00 479-411- 9 7... .. 773-63- I;...!.. 5 7735575" SYRACUSEWEST POINT ARLENE HAMBLIN t Published weekly and distributed FREE by carrier every ' Wednesday morning from Roy through Farmington. The Lakeside Review is a subsidary of the Ogden 825-453- 1 KATHY KELLY Or G. UMAR BOTT, Advertising Director SHERI BON or DARLENE MIX, pm. JUDY BLACKNER ROY ANITA KERSEY. .. 177. ... .. ,7. ADVERTISING NEWS L KARRAS, Editor APRIL ADAMS, Assistant Editor GARY HATCH, Sports Editor MARILYN 773-557- please call the Lakeside Review 776-495- 5 1 PHONE Read The Classified For Best Results .1 !.. - Standard-Examine- 776-495- r. or 1 298-891- 6 Lakeside Review 5051 S. 1900 W. 2. tions company, Storytellers, the low bidder with $7,000 for a year. Storytellers is owned by Tom newsBusselberg, Reflex-Lead- Z3 open SUNSETCLINTONCLEARFIELDROY Needed Roy Election Judges recorder at Interested registered ROY voters of Roy City may serve as election judges. If you are interested, please call 5 the city recorders office at between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays or send a letter to the Do you have a NEWS TIP? The board deliberated over Gardner and a local public rela- part-tim- 1 1, 1985. Lake. Leland of Layton and Dung paper reporter, Mikkelson. Nzuyen, Sunset, were unsure if Tom and Mark were very fathey wanted to continue at Job miliar with the burn plant and Corp. director of the pilot pro- had written on it a lot, Davis, to them they did Palmquist said. gram, explained not have to live at the center as The overriding factor was that the other students do. They Gardner is a nationally affiliated would even be allowed to work at firm, Palmquist said. e if they wished. night They do work all over the They both had planned to attend the Davis Area Vocational country. Center in the fall, they said. They did a great deal of Davis told them they would be homework. paid only $30 a week if they The board was impressed that chose that trade school. they had talked to the opposition; The money earned by staying at and t0 engineers. They knew a lot Job Corps would be an incentive about burn plants. to stay, Leland said. Under a two year contract, the Davis said later he feels 17 days relations company will orsufpublic to may not have been enough and publicize the ground ganize benefits the of ficiently present breaking to be held sometime in the education. We just wanted to let them get the next month or two. a feel of Job Corps before we put A speakers bureau will be esthem through, he said. Wed tablished to present facts to local like to have them continue. private organizations. The Office of Job Training is Information will be sent to TV' recruiting to get another group of and radio stations and to newspayoung people in the program. We hope to, but were not per. sure. The next group will go There .are so many misconthrough the complete training, ceptions, about burn plants. Davis said. Palmquist said. Complex Finished ROY The installation of the new roof for the Roy Recreation Complex was completed on Monbattle day which ended a of water leakage and maintenance problems. The building which was constructed in 1973 had a tar and gravel roof spread over its 200-fo- Now the districts board, supervising construction of the plant and overseeing financial matters, wants to sell the controversial plant to the public. Gardner and Associates, with a bid of $19,000 for a two year period, was chosen over two local firms because it is bigger and would have more influence, said. Robert Palmquist, board chairman and mayor of North Salt i. Federally Funded Program Group to Show Film on Abortion Si- : J Staff Photos by Rodney Wright at the next NCOA swap meet Sunday at the Hillgate Market 825-199- .. STRAINING his head to eavesdrop a little better on Sid Hadleys phone conversation, this horse listens to talk of races at Wyo- - Thunderbirds to Perform on Base HILL AIR FORCE BASE The United States Air Force Thunderbirds will be performing at Hill Air Force Base on Sept. 7, and hats, and infiatables will go on sale Sept. 1, by the Officers AssoBeehive ciation, chapter from Hill AFB. 4fy .iilriirtftMiliitf- contact the instructors, Diana or Jean McGuire Weinert 451-594- :yi A 1. For further information, 546-011- v vk eight-wee- control program designed to combine weight loss with livable eating for permanent weight control. The class is conducted by registered dietitians with a specialty in weight control, and emphasizes a balanced exchange diet, moderate exercise, and extensive behavior modification. Body fat determinabehavior, tions, modification and i After three years of public de- bate and litigation, the burn plant is being con- structed east of Hill Air Force Base, for use in two years. 2146 N. Main St., Layton, Utah zz HM1 inArnwilrfiii 3E3 iy ij iait ff i v n |