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Show 4 Tuesday. LAKESIDEYOUTH March 5, 1996 Lakeside March roaring in like lion Elementary schools in fever of activity fifth-gra- maturation program. Farmington Clearfield Antelope Elementary School No activities reported. Hill Field Elementary School will register for North Davis Junior High at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. Chapter One math tutors parent observation is March The district science fair is March 13. There will also be maturation clinics for the sixth grade from 1 to 2 p.m. and for the fifth grade from 2 to 3 p.m. ' The sixth grade will go to Capitol Theater to see Ballet West on March 14. The spring carnival is March 15. The good citizen assembly is March 21. The first grade will perform. Holt Elementary School Sixth-grade- 5. Through this week Title One reading and math will have parent observation and an open house. will register for junior high in their classrooms Thursday from 9:45 to 10:45 Sixth-grade- fair March 13. Students will attend school March 22 for snow makeup day. On March 27 the girls will attend a rs a.m. Farmington Elementary School Kindergarten registration is this month. went to Farmington Junior High for music orientation today. Reflections honors night will be held Thursday at 6:30 p.m. The snow makeup day will be March 22. School will dismiss at 1:20 p.m. Knowlton Elementary School There will be a Sky King birds of prey assembly on Friday. There will also be an ice cream party to celebrate the There will be a reading celebration on March 1 1 at 6:30 p.m. e Tracks A, C and D registration Sixth-grade- read-a-tho- sixth-grad- conferences for Farmington Junior High are March 12. Class pictures will be taken on March 13 for tracks A and C. The district science fair is that day. There will be kindergarten programs March 14. The community council will meet at 7 in the evening. classroom An introduction to the multi-ag- e will be given for parents on March 18 at 7 p.m. e Track B registration conferences for Farmington Junior High are on March 19. The state science fair is March 25. Class pictures will be taken for tracks B and D March 21. There will be a Ririe Woodbury Dance presentation on March 28 at 9:45 a.m. It is also Winning with Food Day. There will be a spirit assembly on March 29. Monte Vista Elementary School The Jazz Bear was at the school today. There is debate every Wednesday from 3:15 to 4 p.m. There will be a guide dog program at 6:30 p.m. March 18. sixth-grad- Joe Rees will present a centennial workshop March 8 on literature and poetry. The centennial program will go through April 24. There will be a PTA pioneer assembly March . 1 21. March 22 is makeup day for the day missed due to snow. School will dismiss at 1:30 p.m. SEP conferences are March South Clearfield Elementary School The Vectors drama troupe will visit Wednesday. A student recognition assembly will be Thursday at 2:15 p.m. The north area PTA will meet at Wasatch Elementary March 20 at 4 p.m. SEP conferences are March 25-2- 9. 25-2- 9. Wasatch Elementary School Individual and class pictures will be taken March 13. Project Pride family night is also that - T- evening. There will be a neighborhood watch and gang awareness program March 14 at PTA-sponsor- 6:30 p.m. The birthday table is March 15. The snow makeup day in March 22. A super citizen jump-a-tho- n assembly is March 29. Clinton Clinton Elementary School will watch an Wednesday the fourth-gradeassembly given by the Museum of Natural Historrs y- The district science fair is March 13. Class pictures will be taken March 20. Students will attend school March 22 for snow makeup. They will also take part in a pioneer living experience March 25. The event will include speakers, activities and demonstrations. Also on will walk to Sunset March 25 the Junior High School to register for next year's sixth-grade- rs classes. West Clinton Elementary School On Thursday and Friday, illustrator Tammy Hunt of the childrens book Snake Stew, will be demonstrating her illustration methods for students. Students will participate in the district science Kaysville Burton Elementary School No events reported by deadline. Columbia Elementary School This is National Nutrition Month. The school is having Orange Juice Week this week. They colored pictures yesterday and winners were announced in the orange juice coloring contest to- Layton, Northridge Kindergarten orientation for parents only is March 22 at 2 p.m. There will be parent teacher conferences for tracks B, C and D March 28. There will also be a program on healthy snacks. The birthday table from tracks B and D is March 29. Kaysville Elementary School There is a community advisory council at 5 p.m. today. PTA Davis Central Council will hold an awards meeting in the gym Wednesday. The PTA board meets at 4 p.m. Thursday. There will be a pioneer living experience on March 13. Each class will have 40 minutes to learn from a traveling museum which will take the students back to before the turn of the century. They will pan gold, wash clothes, sharpen tools, do hand spinning, make bread and make an arrow. , Track A goes off track March 15 and Track B returns March 18. DARE graduation is March 20 at 6 p.m. , Morgan Elementary School Representatives from Primary Children's Medical Center were at the school today. . PTA family night begins at 7 this evening at Fairfield Junior High with a western theme. The history fair 'is March 11. Hansen Planetarium will present a program March 12. for On March 19 the Canine Corp from HAFB will present a program for Windridge Elementary School Sixth-grad- e orientation for Farmington Junior High was today. The fourth grade will present a centennial assembly on March 14. The DARE graduation is March 21 at 7 p.m. and parents. March 22 is the .for end of the trimester. There will be a magician assembly on March 25 during the day and in the evening. The fifth grade will be going to hear the Utah Symphony and to the Hansen Planetarium and class pictures will also be taken March 26. The spring fest musical will be March 27 at 2:15 and 7 p.m. sixth-grade- debate teams tops Two Davis County schools took top honors at the Region One debate tournament in February. Layton High School placed .first and Northridge High School placed second. Davis County also had individual winners in all events offered. In student congress Sharina Florence took third place and Vicki Monday . took fourth. Both are from North- 4-- A ridge. In foreign extemporaneous speaking Northridge student Jennifer Bodine took first place, Travis Trujiullo of Layton tied with Emily Neal of Northridge for second place. Fourth place was taken by Karin Bennett of Clearfield High School. Laytons Mike Wadman took fifth place. In impromptu speaking Jenica Southwick of Northridge took first and Paul Henrickson of Layton took third. In national extemporaneous speaking, Northridge student Ron Criswell took second, Mindy Eckel sen of Layton took third and Jen Brit of Layton tied for fourth place. In oratorical speaking, Northridge students Valerie Chessar and Chris Wood took first and second. Holly Painter and Brian Conner of Layton took third and fifth. In debate, first and second place was taken by Northridge High School. The team of Stacey Sargeant and Angie Shirt took first place, and the team of Dave Saunders and Blake Bennet took second. Third through fifth places were taken by Layton High School teams. The team of Kristine Kenneth and Josh Johnson took third, Brooke Bridge and Amber Taylor took fourth, and Melisa Hawkin and Suzy Snitker took fifth. In Lincoln-Dougla- s debate, all three Davis County winners were from Layton. Dan Simpson took second, Sam Dixon third and J.R. Hawkins fifth. ARROWS OF LIGHT sixth-grader- s. sixth-grade- rs Layton Adams Elementary School Tracks A and D will have class pictures taken Wednesday. The faculty pictures will be at 8 a.m. The term ends for track A on Friday. DARE graduation is the evening of March 11. on tracks A and C will have preregistration for junior high at 10:15 a.m. March 12. There will be a DARE assembly at day. Wednesday is orange juice sticker day. The PTA board will meet at 10 a.m. There will be a program presented by Touch of Class Thursday. Kindergarten through third grade will see it from 9 to 9:30 a.m. and the fourth through sixth grades will see it from 10 to 10:45 a.m. The Humane Society will present a program for tracks C and D, first and second grades on Thursday afternoon. The first grade will see it at 2 p.m. and the second at 1 p.m. The district science fair is March 13. The birthday table for tracks A and C is the same day. The book fair to be held on the stage begins that day and runs through March 22. Parent and teacher conferences for track A will be March 14. Nutritionist Judy Kringle will be at the school to present the Five A Day program. March 1 5 is Spirit Day. Track A goes off track March 18 and B track comes back. The DARE graduation for the sixth grade is March 19 at 7 p.m. There will be an asthma awareness program given by Jonj Shippen March 2.1 Review Sixth-grade- rs 1:30 p.m. The book fair is March 13 through 20. The district science fair is March 13. Track A gqes off track March 15. Track B comes back March 18. on tracks B and D will have preregistration for junior high on March 19 at Sixth-grade- rs 10:15 a.m. Mark Eaton with the DARE assembly will be March 19. As part of the SEM program, there will be an assembly with author Dan Carlsruh on March 22 at 9 a.m. The program is for students in fourth through sixth grades. The maturation clinic for tracks B and D is March 26. It is for the fifth grade girls and the girls and boys in the sixth grade. March 29 is the end of the term for tracks B, C and D. Tracks B and C will have pictures taken. Crestview Elementary School See SCHOOLS on page 5 , Eric Anderson, son of Gary and Joyce Anderson of Layton, has earned the Arrow of Light award. A member of Pack 462, sponsored by the Heather Glen LDS Ward, he has also earned the Faith in God award and about 17 activity pins. A student at Adams Elementary School, he is a member of the student council. Anderson Wheelwright He plays soccer and baseball. Wade I. Wheelwright, a member of Pack 513, sponsored by the Lay-to- n LDS 36th Ward, has earned the Arrow of Light award. He has also earned 19 activity pins and the Faith in God award, and the panda and conservation awards. e student at Vae A View Elementary, he enjoys baseball, basketball, soccer, football, fishing, camping, reading, art and collecting football and basketball cards. fifth-grad- He is the son of Kelly and Sharon Wheelwright of Layton. Cameron Calder, son of Curt and LuAnn Calder of Layton, has earned the Arrow of Light award. He is a member of Pack 513, sponsored by the Layton LDS 36th Ward.- A student at Vae View Elementary School, he enjoys academics. He likes to play soccer, basketball, hike, camping and has rock, shell and coin collections. Benjamin Turner has earned the Arrow of Light award. He is a member of Pack 513, sponsored by the Layton LDS 36th Ward. The son of Brad and Carolyn Turner, he has also earned the Faith in God award, 19 activity pins, and the world conservation award. e He is a View Elementary. student at Vae fifth-grad- He enjoys playing street hockey and soccer and likes to draw. Jr teeto thebuUic While Chris Flynn watches, Travis Mills pours pocket change Into a bag held by Jan Roney at Syracuse Elementary for the Pennies for Pasta fund-raise- r. Mgranime Semnonair' 7 pm Thursday March 7, 1996 Pennies count for a lot at school Students go all out for fund-rais- er By GINGER MIKKELSEN Stanaard-Examine- r correspondent ' . . Joyce Rasmussen's sixth-grad- e class is going to have one expensive pasta party. The Syracuse Elementary School students did chores and searched couch cushions to raise $350 for the American Leukemia Society's Olive Pennies for Pasta Garden Restaurant donates a pasta party for the class at each participating school that raises the most money. The Syracuse school came up with $1,722.12 in all. . The competition between classes may have been heated, but Rasmussen's class was unbeatable. The sec e class raised $175.48. fund-raise- r. ond-pjae- Rasmussen's student Aaron Thurgood raised the most money. Shoveling snow and dragging in pennies collected from everywhere around the house, he brought in $33.16. Kyle Petersen came in close behind with $31.29. Ally Nielson's dad figured he as a busicould use the fund-raisso he chipped in ness tax write-of- f, $26.60. Jennie Overdiek worked as the treasurer for the class and kept careful track on how much each student contributed. Other students like Chase Meham and Megan Schuler ended up working for the money they earned. Meham shoveled snow and Schuler baby-sa- t. Rasmussen said her students had an added incentive for raising money. Two years ago, Rasmussen lost one of her students to leukemia. Becky Bair came to school until Christmas, when she became too ill to attend. She died soon after. It was really hard for everyone. The whole class ended up going to the funeral, said Rasmussen. She er . several of her current students had known Bair. The students even contributed money they had been saving for a class pizza party. They have just put everything into this. I'm very proud of them. Deborah Dau's may not have raised as much, but they gave up a lot to contribute what they did. The students raised their third place $167 in rather unorthodox ways. I told them that the older kids or do chores that could baby-si- t maybe they couldnt," said Dau. As Dau was assuring them she noticed one child fiddling with a loose tooth. She reminded her students that there was one thing could do that couldn't - lose teeth. werent bound to have any tooth fairy visits. There were four teeth out and tooth-fair- y money in, before the end of the McKay-De- e Hospital Green Auditorium . added that Jahan Imani, M.D., will be presenting important information for migraine sufferers at the seminar. Dr. Imani specializes in neurology, and his practice is located in the Neurology Clinic at McKay-De- e Hospital Center. first-grade- rs first-grade- rs sixth-grade- Sixth-grade- fund-raise- r. Dr. Imani received his medical degree at the American University of the Caribbean, School of Medicine, Montserrat, British West Indies. He completed an internship at St. Vincent Medical Center, Staten, New York, followed by a residency in neurology at the University of South Alabama Medical Center, Mobil, Alabama. Dr. Imani went on at the University of to complete a fellowship in neuromuscuIar-EMColorado Health Science Center in Denver. G For more information, please call the Neurology Clinic at Jahan Imani, M. IX Specializing in Neurology rryi IHC McKay-De- e A Hospital Center StnUt of lrmevMta Htahh Can 62S-261-5. |