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Show For and about students and young adults m Wednesday August 5, 1907 l 3 IV & ! ..... 5 W & $ y & v V W l44iiilsitSi t .S 4 . A .i , ....t $ . . i ,. it i .. .. . i vll ? $ ft a a U ii .u $ 9fi9 ? ." . 4 t. v litis it 5. .. i i $ i .1. ' . - $ Kvv V f J ' 4 " 4 r- i Ai ITmlek of the UrrusTh Ut tes" i, - i Story and photos by - FARMINGTON isnt so far away. they will have a better time. According to Manda, the two have shared many good times. But she said she doesnt feel it will be necessary to climb Mt. Ireland Project, a program that gives youth from Northern Ireland a chance to live and learn in the United States. One of the goals of the project is to bring youth of Catholic and Protestant faiths together. Manda, 15, has become good friends with Karen Miller, also 15. Both teens have similar likes. I will really miss her, said expect so I was not surprised at what I saw, said the softspoken girl. She wants to become a teacher after she finishes her education. She plays the piano and likes to dance. She has taken many years of ballet lessons. At a talent night for the Ulster project youth, she played a piano solo by an Irish composer. She has even done a little practicing while she has been here. She enjoys all kinds of music and the girls have the radio on all the time. Karen, a little misty-eyeThat is part of the program, too, said Marilyn Miller. The youth are paired up with kids here who like the same things so d. and American teen Karen Miller are finding they have much in common. from singing tour If they could change anything it would be to have more free time. We have been so busy. We worked in a soup kitchen one day. We made up a little song to help us with the work. We fixed the silverware, said Manda with a smile and then they started singing a song about forks, knives, napkins and tucking them communicating. things. Chips are french fries in Ireland and French fries are something like onion rings, she said. I ? iJ t i t e v & k 4 I & , t v a a - ? $ 4f ; & & i i t j i ft 4 i Brahms Hall in the Musikverin in Vienna. The audience kept clapping in rs week so they could become i ft rhythm between each encore, which prompted our students to perform beyond their normal capabilities, Staheli said. We had similar experiences in Hungary in ac- quainted with each other. There are 12 teens living in homes around the state. Because they are good friends, they want to do many things with each other besides the scheduled activities. Manda has been to Lagoon with her friends three times since her arrival. At first she had some difficulty with the altitude, she said, and felt faint and dizzy. One girl in the group has suffered from nose bleeds since her arrival, but that . , . $ time. I will be happy to go home to see my family. 1 have a lot of family that live near my home. My father owns a station in He sells petrol, she said. On-ag- h. She would like to come back again but not to see the sights. I will want to see all my friends again. It is going to be hard to leave. $ 1985 with a smaller audience. It was the second special invitation for the singers to perform in Austria and Hungary. While in Hungary, they worked with a television station that followed them from eastern Austria to Budapest. The station filmed them in concert, showed them sightseeing and added footage from performances in the United States as part of a planned national television special. Winters, a son of F. Burton and Joyce Winters of Kaysville, was General Sterling Scholar, high honor graduate, junior class president, student body officer and seminary president in high school. An Eagle Scout, he served for three years on the Orrin Hatch Youth Advisory Committee and on a mission to Ecudor for the LDS Church. Survey shows builds responsibility 4-- H Youth programs are designed to keep kids out of trouble, but - also to build more responsible adults. A national survey conducted by Texas A&M University is the best youth showed that program as rated by adults with 4-- H diverse youth program grounds. According to Scott back- McKen-dric- 4-- H 4 respondents indicated that programs were superior at contributing to personal development and increasing the knowledge and skills of youth. The national survey of 1,761 adults found 710 were former members and 743 were former members of some other youth oriented organizations such as scouts, Future Farmers of America or church groups. Utah currently has approximately 57,000 youth involved in programs and nearly 8,000 volunteer leaders. McKendrick says learning to work with others and developing a sense of responsibility were traits that contributed highly to the personal development of members of all youth groups. 4-- Puppies come into Utah twice a year from Guide Dogs for the KAYSVILLE Puppies in Blind, Inc., in San Rafael, Calif., jackets have when they are between the ages of been out socializing at the Davis 10 and 12 weeks. The puppies must be raised as County Fair. the that The jacket signifies indoor dogs. are responsible for guide dog in The puppy is a training. housebreaking, teaching the basic The jacket is worn before the puppy commands and acceptable harness and helps the house manners. guide-do- g dog adjust to having something They also socialize the dog in on its back and around its stom- places a blind person might go. ach and chest areas, say guide-do- g After a year the puppies go back trainers. to California where they enter inWhen the puppy is wearing his tensive guide-do- g training. jacket he must learn to be serious The Utah State Guide Dog Asand not give in to typical puppy has asked Gov. Norman sociation behavior. to proclaim the week of Bangerter Last week, a distraction class as Guide-Do- g Puppy was held for puppies in the Bom Sept. Week in Utah. to Lead and Eyes to Opportunity clubs. will During that week the clubs The puppies were taken through be radio and spots doing TV an obstacle course of distractions with demonstrations and along to help teach them to keep their their presentations promoting minds on task. special programs. At the current time, there are raisapproximately 60 guide-do- g The weeks activities will end ers throughout the state particiwith the arrival of the September pating in the accredited puppies at the Utah State Fair on green-and-whi- te 4-- H 8-- 4-- H 4-- H project Sept. 12. Anyone interested in raising a puppy needs to contact the local county extension agent right 4-- H away. Applications are due by Aug. 17. After the application has been completely filled out and returned to the agents office, a county leader will contact the prospective family for an interview. If the family still wants to have a puppy after the program has to them, been explained their application will be forwarded to the state coordinator for approval. Leadership institute for school officers A leadership development institute for high school student body officers will be held Aug. 5 at Weber Slate College. The event, sponsored by Weber State and the Utah Associ- The family is contacted approxthe arimately two weeks before told is rival of the puppy and new their sex what breed and baby 12-1- ation will be. Born to Lead is the club from the northern part of Davis County with Eyes to Opportunity the club from the central part of the county. Marilyn Koroulis is the state coordinator and the leader of the Eyes to Opportunity club. to distract Donald the puppy with a stuffed lion, is leader. The distraction is used as part Marilyn Koroulis, of a class to train the puppies to eventually become guide dogs for the blind. Courtney Curran, 11, of South Weber, is 4-program. training the puppy as part of a unique Trying 4-- H H Students parade hair styles from past, RUTH MALAN ty hair show at the Davis County Lakeside Review correspondent Fair. Television and radio announcer for the Utah Jazz, Hot Rod Hundley, was a bit out of his league in the midst of hats, bows, ribbons, french a myriad of braids and loops as he performed the hair styles duties of master of ceremonies for the Painters College of Beau- KAYSVILLE Students from both Painters College campuses located in Roy and Ogden showed off their talents as they displayed hairstyles from the past and the future. The reversed french braid, up- sweeps, hair used as part of a hat, braids forming sand dollars and even the royal crown empress style, inspired by the ancient Chinese, adorned the heads of the models as they paraded before judges and a capacity crowd at the main stage at the fair. flowers helped to enhance some of the art adorning the heads of the models. Cerie Forsberg from the Roy You can plainly see her hair," said Hundley as a model with long blonde hair wearing a short, tight, black dress walked across the stage. Beads, ribbons, netting and students of the year. Christy McAllister frm Sen. r H 4-- H Pups put through their paces RUTH MALAN Lakeside Review correspondent k, leader at assistant state Utah State University, the survey W if se us p, Even though both spoke English, many words are pronounced differently and some words mean different 4 full-hou- e mirer who writes her almost daily from Ireland. At first the girls had a difficult time four-wee- - $ They discuss clothes, make-uboys and school just like teen-ageall over the world, she said. Before the youth came to this country they met once or twice a hasn't stopped them, or even slowed them down. One day the two girls went on the bus into Salt Lake City and got lost in the process. They got on the wrong bus and thought they would have to go back to the center of town to catch another. together. One of the chaperones saw The hardest thing about going them walking and told them they home will be leaving the friends were just a couple of blocks from she has made here in the states. where they were supposed to be. I hate to leave. I dont like to I miss but my They were two hours late. Other say smile a to than that, they claim they have she with said home, made all their commitments on Karen. Manda has an ardent adgood-by- David A. Winters of Kaysville, a 1983 Davis High graduate and a junior in accounting at Brigham Young University, returned rek performcently from a ing tour of Europe with the University Singers, who received accolades in some of the most reputable halls in the world. Director Ronald Staheli said the singers performed in Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary audiand Germany to world-famothe ences, including The group had some surprises when they first ordered from a fast food restaurant. One thing all the youth seem to enjoy is the movies. Timpanogos again. Her legs are They will go to an activity still sore from the recent hike up during the day and then meet in the mountainside. the evening again and go to a She has had several friends visshow. Sometimes I have driven it America on the program and into Salt Lake four times a day, was anxious to come. said Mrs. Miller. Shopping is anI really did not know what to other of the favorite things to do. Many things are almost the says Irish teen Manda McKinley. Manda is staying with the Doug Miller family in Farmington as part of the Ulster same, briefs BYU students return Callahan Jo-in- n Youth Rowser from campus and as honor awards received Ogden Leslie future Clarence Painter, owner of the schools, the 175 members of the student body and the staff of 30 honored Dorry Clark as teacher of the year. of Student Councils, is designed to teach skills such as human relations, supportive behaviors, motivation, team building, delegation, handling conflict, problem solving, brainstorming, decision making, resource management and others. Conference participants will arrive on campus by 1:30 a.m. of the opening day and remain until 2 p.m. of the closing day. No individuals will be accepted unless they participate in the entire conference. The cost is $140 per person if their high school is a member of the Utah Association of Student Councils, and $145 for non mem1 bers. The conference features a number of motivational speakers and Two grand-priz- e trophies were includes swimming, volleyball, awarded along with trophies for basketball, bowling and a dance. For more information, or to Hatchs office accepted an first, second, third and fourth award in behalf of Hatch for his places, in the first hair show of its register contact the WSC Divikind done at a fair by Painters sion of Continuing Education at help in enhancing Or-ri- n College. education. t 626-660- 0. 'V |