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Show DAVIS COUNTY CLIPPER Burningham receives Heritage Award October 20, WEDNESDAY provides an opportunity to improve your e0adcrshiP skills in a friendly, supportive . p Everyone years of age and above is welcome to attend the Salt Lake City Library Main Branch, Wednesday, 209 E. 500 S., meeting room, 6:15-8:1- 5 p.m. For more mfomation cornet Coheen at 3 or Sandy at Qui ting for Social Change," Utah Humanities speakers bureau presentation by Judy Elsley, Kimball Art Center, 638 Park Avenue, 7 ). p.m. (Gary Sanders ,TaStmaSitCriS 1 485-852- C7 Centennial Committee also honored People, Places Plans 530-668- Tuesday, October 19, 1993 7. 649-8882- October 21, THURSDAY The Men s Grief Support Group meets p.m. at Servus Drug, 55 N. Main, Bountiful. Contact Brent Nadault, 6 for more information. 295-724- - and Kimthe BOUNTIFUL Burningham s) Bountiful Area Centennial Committee are among the honored few to receive the 1993 Heritage Award. The Utah Heritage Award is bestowed by the Utah Heritage Foundation in recognition of excellence in the field of preservation. Award recipients are chosen by a qualified jury. R. Kim Representative Burningham and Senator Ronald J. lt Lake) were the Ockey sponsors of the important Utah Mainstreet program bill and the bill creating the 20 percent Investment (R-Sa- October 22, FRIDAY "Inherit the Wind" presented by StageRight TheaterCompany, 7:30 p.m. at the Bountiful Elks Lodge 2442, 544 W. 400 N., West Bountiful. Call 3 for ticket information. Final performance. Temple Square Concert Series, 7:30 p.m. Assembly Hall. The University of Utah Wind Symphony, conducted by Barry Kopetz, will perform a varied musical program. V'n WestJ"17ight and Food Fest," 2700 S. 110 E. You'll have a frightfully good time at the U.S. West Haunted House and Carnival. Admission to the haunted house is $3 and carnival tickets are $.50. p.m. 292-519- Tax Credit for the restorationrehabilitation of historic residential buildings. These bills were passed by the Utah Legislature in its 1993 session and signed into law by Governor Mike Leavitt this past April. Both Representative Burningham and Senator Ockey skillfully guided these bills through the appropriate committees while developing the legislative support that enabled these measures to easily pass the legislature. Their championing of these bills will result in historic buildings being restored as well as a positive preservation consciousness being established throughout the state. The Bountiful Area Centennial Committee orchestrate was created the celebration to of Bountiful's centennial in 1992. The USDA distribution set Nov. 6 6-- October 23 SATURDAY The Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir with the United States Air Force Band and Singing Sergeants will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. in the Tabernacle. Jerold Ottley, director of the Choir, and Lt. Colonel Alan Bonner, commander and conductor of the Air Force Band, will direct the performance. The program will consist of religious, patriotic and popular music, including "Te Deum Laudamus" by Ron Nelson; Jubilant Song" by Norman Dello Joio, John Philip Sousa's Stars and Stripes Forever," "God Bless America" by Irving Berlin, and a medley of Cole Porter favorites. U.S. West "Fright and Food Fest," 2700 S. 10 E. Youll have a frightfully good time at the U.S. West Haunted House and Carnival. Admission to the haunted house is $3 and carnival tickets are $.50. 6-p.m. The next USDA commodities distribution will be held Saturday, Nov. 6 at the Davis County Courthouse in Farmington. Commodities will be distributed from 8 a.m. and will continue until the commodities run out. Low-incowill be combined. senior citizens and general To pick up commodities, applicants must bring picture I.D. and some form of residence verification such as a utility bill. In order to keep this program running, volunteers are needed to help with the distribution. Any help you can give, from two to eight hours, would be greatly appreciated. Volunteers need to help at least two hours. TDD To volunteer your time call low-inco- 451-323- 4, 451-322- 8. committee produced a number of commemorative programs, projects, and publications community to heighten awareness of Bountiful's past and to encourage area preservation. During the centennial year celebration, the Bountiful Area Centennial Committee developed and carried out a dozen projects, including a book on Bountiful's historic buildings built before 1900 entitled Dwellings; a tour of the historic Bountiful Cemetery which has also become a booklet; the Bountiful Centennial magazine which contained articles on Bountiful's early development, businesses and citizens; and a publication on the historic Bountiful Tabernacle. These initiatives offered by the Bountiful Area Centennial Committee have done much to promote historic preservation and community involvement through the recognition and understanding of the importance of Bountiful's historic resources. The 1993 Heritage Awards presentation ceremony took place Tuesday, Oct. 12 at the Steiner residence. KIM BURNINGHAM director, UHF, and William C. Miller, Dean, graduate school of architecture at the University of Utah. The award winners include projects, people and organizations from Bountiful, Bluff, Logan, Park City, Redmond, St. George, and Salt Lake City. Reservations for this event should be made by calling the Utah Heritage Foundation, Admission is $15 per person for $7.50 for students with valid identification. 533-058- A brief program describing the award winners was given by Michael S. Leventha, executive 5. 1 . October 24, SUNDAY South Davis Civic Chorale rehearsals for Messiah under direction of conductor Michael Huff, p.m. at South Davis Junior High School choir room, 298 West 2600 South, Bountiful. Open to all members of the South Davis Community. October 26, TUESDAY Temple Square Concert Series, 7:30 p.m., Assembly Hall. The 7-- 9 American West Symphony, directed by Joel Rosenberg, will present a two-pa- rt program. The evening will begin with Mozart's "Sinfonia Concertante for Violin, Viola and Orchestra in E Flat Major," with Meredith Campbell as violin soloist and Joel Rosenberg as violist. The symphony will conclude the evening with Dvoraks Symphony No. 9 in E Minor, "From the New World." Sandwiches Gourmet Breads Soups Free Choppers Samples October 27, WEDNESDAY Temple Square Concert Scries, 7:30 p.m., Assembly Hall. The American West Symphony will present an encore performance of Tuesday evening's concert. 6, SATURDAY USDA commodities distribution at the Davis County Courthouse, senior citizens and general Farmington, 8 a.m. Low-incowill be combined. To pick up commodities bring picture I.D. and some form of residence verification such as a utility bill. NOVEMBER MJDWICHES a and Soups! low-inco- Jhe Best Sandwiches In town are Available on Jfour Choice of Our delicious Gourmet Breads Roast Beef Egg Salad Turkey Ham Chicken Salad Pastrami Child's diet may depend on the diet of parents By DENNIS HINKAMP Consumer Information Writer Utah State University It might seem obvious, but the best way to improve children's diet is to improve parents' diets. There is a hierarchy of eating habits in most homes. Husbands tend to influence their wives and mothers tend to influence their children. Welfare programs that don't recognize this may be missing the mark. National food consumption analyzed by Carol Windham, nutritionist in the Utah State University College of Family surveys Life, confirm the child and mother diet relationship. "Nutritionists are especially interested in improving the diets of children because one to these are critical years in their physical and mental development," Windham says. They are somewhat surprised how closely the children's diets mirrored the diets of their mothers. You might have expected more variation. For instance, mothers might be fixing their kids peanut five-year-o- ld butter sandwiches but eating chicken themselves, she says. Although the study could not determine this, it is possible that children are influencing the diets of their parents, Windham says. They know that children have a tremendous influence on buying patterns. So it may be that the mothers are also eating more of the foods they bought for their children as well as the other way around. Overall, for nearly all nutrients, as the quality of the mother's diets increased, so did the nutritional quality of the childs diet, she says. The other thing they found was that education played an important role in better diets. For instance, Windham says children living in households headed by women with eight years of education or less consumed more cholesterol and than average and vitamin 2 lower vitamin A and carotene than average -- - a pattern characteristic of higher intake of animal products and lower intake of fruits and vegetables. B-1- The exact opposite trends occurred in households headed by women with more than eight years of education. In households which a male head was present, children tended to consume more cholesterol and fewer carbohydrates than average. She says this confirms the influence of the father and the stereotype of men being more frequent eaters of meat than women. The message for public health is to educate the mothers and to improve their diets if you want to improve the diets of children, Windham says. Along with your choice of condiments. . And uhen that cold Weather hits: Come in for a bowl of delicious Hot Soup! Chicken Noodle Broccoli Cheese Cheese with Ham & Bacon Vegetable Beef Cream of Potato Clam Chowder Two Different flavors to choose from each day. And don't Forget our delicious Gourmet Breads! There's No Better Tasting Bread. There's No Bread Healthier. Made from certified 100 Organic Wheat with NO fats, preservatives, cholesterol, sugar, eggs, dairy products, artificial additives or oils. Raisin Whole Wheat Honey Whole Wheat Honey Golden Whole Wheat Raisin Nut Whole Wheat Honey White Raisin Honey White 12 Grain Whole Wheat Dinner Rolls Total life & Financial Planning V I Program Includes: Binder, Organizer, Computer Analysis, and Recommendations. ESTATE CONSERVATION & PRESERVATION SI95 VALUE Provided FREE 298-007- 2 Other Specialty Breads If its raining or you're in a hurry, try our new drive thru. Just drive up to our west doors, we'll come out to serve you! MAJESTIC Free Samples Everyday! Open Monday thru Saturday 7 a.m. till 7 p.m. BRING IN THIS COUPON FOR YOUR CHOICE: 273 West 500 South Free Loaf of Bread when you purchase any loaves of equal or greater value. A Bountiful, Utah by Various Sponsors Details Mailed with RSVP ( White Sesame Honey White Dinner Rolls ) Ask for Dan Lewis 292-999- 6 2 Free Chopper with the purchase of any bowl of soup. A $1.00 Off the Purchase of Any Sandwich. 1 Coupon per person, per visit Expires on November 2, 1993 |