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Show 0''ar II Lakeside t9Jn gb sol wre m fcntof Dm' togjjiaii, on di driving to torn to at senior center CUAMMILU fim . low at ItT. mt, Wue and tam ttiitl ton, ir.nyt N to gel Imf (Thire Wt (4 tomet, Wtfutotd ton at to center mtira to iaA film f 4t. HUn (tort i tor cmmi fie t5t!rfU.nc4 ei day caitiff to tnftth. m ra fim ism id W4 fi JVfitolfeitf, II mi fdr tom firt m CmJp& cfltV Day at center. eatJ to tldf to Itofitoe to nmfrhm ia to mdu:fu recently it toe wrrm. $to l :JJ ) ;; Landed g pni,W wa-'-- pen t mm if tl ItephOflf rials. d.rug imposed by hC be orp,men!s and other, ihe group ha endred changes rsnicutoiy aimed ai chrvn- - ts. tto topwiment or toietjf. it Tie group rfiposgs to obtain goavrestoas under eier tto stale's noi'Wdrop" laws hr C e s f- evi-ito- 'ai g award-winnin- - e fe g - reo-inten- non-memb- er Plan would combine departments rbyc (to piano Health to be one ld lien Yuill-W- i became hi cousin two weeks ago when his mother, BrenJa. married Jared's uncle Dale Wue, ton was just 4 when he asked his mother for a violin for Christmas. 110 first got interested to the violin when he was three. sard Brenda Wfe,e. "We thought that hed quit, but he didn't. He really likes it. Ben. filled with confidence, climbed on the table that was used as a stage, and told his audience he would play Minuet 1. Following the round of applause, Ben once again lifted his violin to his chin and played Allegro. He had taken his lunch hour from Doxcy Elementary School to perform at Under the approving eye of bis grandmother, Chorlyno Wise, Jcrod Wise sings for residents of Ihe Heritage Senior Center In Clearfield. the center. Flaying for the senior citizens didn't make Ben nervous, he is used to the pressure. Tve played in front of 2,000 before. I play for others every now and then. said Ben w ho has played in church, in talent contests. concerts and at camp. He showed the violin he played when he began his music career. The sire 16 looked extremely small. The young man is playing on a violin that is a size if The Associated Press first-grade- rs I 8 now. That means it is d violin. of a 18 the size full-size- When ton was through wowing the audience with his violin, Jared once again took the limelight and sang Yellow Rose of Texas." and others. I like to sing," said Jared. The last time he sang here he was taking requests from the audience," said Paula Wright, center director. have always liked working with kids and teaching them. -- Ryan Kay kids get more time. Some kids school, and now he knows teaching par- ents don't read to them every night. Boswell views student teaching as a way to get around a tightfisted Legislature that wont funnel money into reducing class sizes. Utah has the most packed classrooms in the exil nation and the lowest penditure. Beyond that, those older students interested in going into education will know just what to expect. It gives them experience in the classroom. They will know the questions to ask when they are in college, Boswell says. After doing this for a year, they will know the workings of a classroom. They will be able to see the broader picture of education. Kays experiences this year in Boswells classroom have convinced him to study elementary education at the University of Utah in 1996. He has been thinking of becoming a teacher since he was in middle Research shows that student of the lesson than their students. Their per-pup- minds become more engaged. They leant leadership strategies. And they leant whether they want to devote their lives to teaching. "It is really natural, says Kay, a senior. "I have always liked working with kids and teaching them. Dixie Boswell is always elated to see Kay walk into her classroom. she has With 28 jittery numerous tasks to throw at him: creating bulletin boards, checking papers and teaching lessons to one child or a group. "In the first grade, they need a lot of reading, says teachBoswell, a former er for Kay. "It makes it so that the one-on-o- ne pre-scho- ol super-departme- one-hut- ment more ton a decade ago. 1 iow-ev- er, the two departments, while independent. have shared one executive director to several month. Haymond said putting health and human service programs together makes sense because of overlaps between the two departments in areas like services for people w ith disabilities or the elderly. While Haymond does not expect major opposition to the plan, sever al advocates said they tear service w ill be lost in the sheer sue of to department Sue Behle, whose daughter is disabled, said she w as one of a group of parents w ho fought and died for this division because we wanted all the services focused in one agency, with accountability." Behle and others fear reorganization may mean they will have to start over and deal with numerous offices or staffers to create what they already have. educating is right for them in the future . in unison. Kay is one of 18 high school students - 1 1 boys and seven girls -who make a daily trek to Nephi Elementary School to teach children for elective credit. to ah KMT KtA san&rs Teens find out are clustered around Juab High School senior Ryan Kay. He is slowly picking up trays of mouse, cow, deer and turkey bones for a science lesson. What do you think this one is? Kay asks as he holds up a skull. "A deer, the students yell back offices would be eliminated, a would most citizen advisory panel. The director of to department - to be appointed by governor and confirmed by the Legislature -Th Assocmn Pmt Lawmakers will be asked to would he able to organize it combine the state's department of Rep. Brent I lay mend, Human Services and Health when County, one of the legislators prothe Legislature convenes in January. likposing the The request is one of several ened the way money flows from the committee proposals legislators will federal government into services at consider as they plan for block the state level to a field of silos." grams Congress is expected to give It's essentially in the form of states to provide such services. 148 mandates, each one a silo with Lawmakers received a hint of the fairly strong walls," Haymond said. proposal, which has not yet been "The ability to go from one silo or drafted as legislation, from a posiprogram to another means the pertion paper distributed to the Health son receiving the services has got to and Human Services Interim Comdo a into the system each mittee. time. My concept ... is that we do The paper called for combination away with the walls." of the two departments as a new " What he calls the apDepartment of Health and i labihta-tiv- e been has before in proach proposed Services. The Legislature would need to revise statutes to srell out different forms. what the department "is authorized Human Services and Health did and responsible to do." once operate as a single department, Existing divisions, bureaus and but the Legislature split the depart Human Services, For a recent performance, JaicJ brought Ins new cousin to teachers get even more out g seven-troope- fuL Six bd-titis- alcohol-retaie- an4 hi mother Michelle wne liny Tto tornty live to Bountr- - share ihe Mage, m propswes P per-bar- rel Mutic to toco a fart of Jared' life line to ra tom Hi Seven-year-o- 4 motor-sehic- of Leatha Snmti xa alto wrrrt her young ret Either Kent Wise YvtoJioii st-ai- atm me. His me grvK-- bl4 ?ull Bicycle lit grandmother isnt hi cmly grandma id (ah ran in ito ten- tore to rira,e- ' r,-g.- f aont to fie i'f muus wt-id a familiar fan ami to yan id i w aiin. Alitoul he tan i read. he towmi (to w4i hcn to led (to pKtufd. ter' UJli-cB- .e cuvrrad He pi ftiu-SRi- r!!rRdrfV drivers under 21. The changes Th x todude Kulo g asy Hard would eton-nattto meJ to DDI otfene wnhm a year periof fi.s4 A -d Any n od a felony punidubfe by pu accepubfe to a judge w .: be hieele 4d Monday, tmse, convictions in other admitted, such s a fhce officer commuluh Dwwrnforcepwmt stales and in lower munkipaj corns observations of slurred spee-- h or nity welcome tto changes, the would count. U,k if cowdaiafwfl. suie top police officer said, but The group's recommcndaiion Members of tto DUI working under one important cond.tom irhlude warn a stable source of fundWe need more resources," wid group er Utah's remuawble afo M ing to tougher L'tHi Commissiofief of Fubte Safelevel for timers from Oto percent su,h as diverting a ty Doug liodrero. Untd we put the to 004 percent, of surcharges bow levied on crimr-icheckbook on tto table, we're going TTiat propoial has been put forfines, if an tncrease m to continue to have our lneJ one ward the past two legislative sesidled on the highways." regitrautn fees er to sions but opposed by police and us on beer safes. In (to pact 1$ years, tto state ha averaged lut) traffic deaths annually prosecutor, who complain it would . The group ato is ea&rg to conr to which (lie dnver had been drink-in- f be too difficult to enforce. tinued funding of a State Rep. Nora Stephens. d Utah Highway Patrol squad devtn-e- d along more than said she hat not ruled out escluvivtrly to arrevtmg drunken imury accidents a year. Tto DUI working group was au- sponsoring 004 percent legislation drivers. The UI1P thorized by tto Legidature's Transteam responsible to as many as again in the Wfe session. Another change the group I.2u0 DUI citations yeatly ts portation and Public Safety Interim would be impostne manscheduled to be disbanded next Committee, giving it sway with lawmakers. Made up of datory fines, jail terms and alcohol- - March because of cuts tn federal elected officials, police, court ofil- - rehabilitation treatment in cases funding. ctoe Htmddwned toy fan Itoilt tor 1d, tot to t a tut rwnwi, aa4 fixkcJ id to yraaj-mtt- ha to J l 4? ficVic esfstinkcfitd jud f oi he ido DUI oiffiidet. wh to g M of mir-- innuies p to (toe own ufjtmeEh to give judge rto ft al t to satprad m revise dmtr Lenses, Of to tog-totoi satpea-i.- r wton Hey we or rev,v.ii--r- . ?hotiy suited pi:e Tto drivpg under tto ton, David tofto, RAvr:i Potm and pot of a I H I wotkmg group, Uid H e bJ5 come in irecium w jears 14 iwgbct in updaiiRg Dial drurdeD'dtfting Hn M wi as the sij-f- ' growth, rapid r Tto average Utoai pmm (14 evief--t of Hat problem," to to c4J wse s Ju4f tf fi CMRi$ id ar IN llnu Uswr Lett IfeXidt Im 4 M tVe r4fd CU1 sff:!CfiiPg and toiiig tif, h ttfim r? t fi wto luji pLh dfvelgn or arc m w (Wfd M tto And Do re iJy o da bongff Uton Ito Ian m A ft gometo in Jmm. itoy will gonodfr refom, fog tofshff jai) a hit $.ssrWtAHn 'mS Lawmakers target drunk driving Toddler sings out !d liw-cii- will be his gig. It's been quite a different experience for Harmonie McCoy. She alsenior who so is a college-boun- d thought she might want to be an educator. "It teaches me patience," says the 1 who now has ruled out teaching. I have learned that kids try to impress us for us to like them. This is going to help me be a better person. Sometimes I get a little irritated. n instructor Becky Sperry says experiences like Kays and McCoys are exactly what the district intended. The program has been in operation for 15 years, but the district started offering credit four years ago as a way of exposing high school students to career opportunities. Students also can apprentice with physical and occupational therapists. It's all designed to expose rural students to different kinds of job possibilities, although many schools in more populous areas have similar small districts, football reigns. Sperry says she is always touched at how the youngsters flock to the football younger ones in ways they had not before. star-stru- ck players who come early every morning. Juab High School Principal Andrew Cindrich says the older kids are able to make links with the programs. The most surprising thing about this years batch of students is the high ratio of boys involved, especially football players. In the Juab School District, like so many other It puts high school kids in a position of giving and sharing, he says. They know what it feels like to be looked up to by the younger kids. BEEHIVE ml. O Clearfield Community Church 200 S. 500 ECkarfidd, Utah Phone:825-111- Worship 830&1L30 Special-educatio- am ftOOpm Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Pastor Richard Axmann A C1nfl Church Cite Rcem AviHitf, It sjit tmwElfi &tlmm8zXEh WSSM Includes RT air from SLC, transfers and 7 nights hotel on Oahu, Oct. & Nov, departures. Maui from $399 for a week! 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