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Show November 8, 1963 THE EUREKA (UTAH) REPORTER Page Two to Salt Lake where they will make will iitrlta Shorter WEEKLY AT EUREKA, UTAH Printed By ART CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY PUBLISHED ij i j i Springvilie, j i j Utah ij 5 j j I I Entered as second-clas- s matter February 10, 1948, at the post office, Eureka, Utah, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription In Advance, Per Year, $4.00; Per Copy, 10c. HARRISON CONOVER Publisher WOODROW WEIGHT Editor MRS. BELLE COFFEY Correspondent j I j j j j Member: UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION NA- - j TIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION WEEKLY I NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES, INC. j IjAIKIPS MARKET Fresh Meats, Groc., Dairy Products and Produce. Frozen Foods Delivery Phone Tues.-Thurs.-S- at 433-680- 8 FOR SALE GUITARS and amplifiers, Fender, Gibson, Harmony, etc. All prices. Also ukes, banjos, and accordians. Herger Music, 158 So. 1st W., Provo. Closed Monday. D20 BYU Thousands of children in Utah cannot be taught in ordinary classrooms. Some of them cant see; others cant hear; then there are invalids who cant leave home; many are spastic or pal- sied and muscles. Nevers returned home last Wednesday evening from a ten-da- y vacation spent in California, where she was the guest of Mrs. Norma Bate and Jerry, at their home in Campbell. She was taken on some interesting tours, which included a visit to the Winchester Mystery House, the Egyptian Temple, and the drive around Carmel, and in Pacific Grove saw the famous Butterfly Trees. She also visited with the Bob Naylors and the Leonard Boynes fam3 1 re. Vola 17-mi- le ily. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Lee , spent Sunday afternoon visiting in Lehl with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Peterson, and in American Fork with Mr. Leg's relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lee. Special class offered this year at City, their Wlercilcail home, i L go cant coordinate their Often kept out of the regular school is the child who is so emotionally upset he cannot NOTICK play or work with other children. Then theres the excepI will not be responsible for any debts contracted for by tionally brilliant child who zips through his lessons in no time, anyone other than myself. becomes bored, and gets into Signed, mischief. On the other end of Jerry Montoya scale is the mentally the Published in the Eureka Rechild who cannot keep porter Nov. 1, 8, 15, 1963. up with the norm. What do you do with them? To the end of 1959, 1,817,096 How do you teach them? wells had been drilled in the US; 1,159,166 oil wells, 129, Training teachers to meet 517 gas wells, 491,452 dry holes these challenges is the task of the Special Education Program and 36,961 service wells. at Brigham Young University. A White House study comUntil this year, the program mittee said there was evidence was limited to gradauate stuthat drinking was a factor in dents, said Marguerite Wilson, up to half of the nations 40, coordinator. Now, however, un000 annual traffic fatalities. dergraduates may earn regular The President's Traffic Comelementary or secondary certimittee recommended more refication and provisional certifisearch on the causes of traffic cation in special education accidents in a report presented wthin four years. They may to President Kennedy. then begin teaching the special LEGAL NOTICE re-tar- dd Mr. and Mrs. Carl Peterson and son, Scott, arrived home Monday from Oklahoma City, where Mr. Peterson has been attending school for the past four months. They have been visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Laird, and with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Walker, Sr. After a ten-da- y vacation, they Miss Margo Spencer, a student at St. Marys of the Wasatch in Salt Lake City, was home for the weekend visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Spencer. Wilson Lee and his three sons, Glen, Rex and Max, and his Larry Regis, son-in-la- w, hunted in the Ephraim area laast Saturday, and were successful in getting their limit of pheasants. Mr. and 31 rs. Fred Dittmer of Las Vegas, left Monday af- ter spending the weekend here and in Payson. They came to pheasant hunt, and Fred reports real good luck. They visited here with hi$ mother, Mrs. Nettie Dittmer and in Payson with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Viv Montague. Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Coffey were Mr. and Mrs. Bert Fields and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Coffey of Lark. 3frs. Louise Green and Mrs. Jay Tipton and three daughters of Salt Lake City, were in town on Sunday visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bernini and Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Franks. Mr. and 3Irs Gary Bigler of classes, but they must still enroll in the graduate courses Salt Lake City spent the weekfor professional certification, end here with his parents, Mr. she said. and Mrs. Mac Bigler. The demand for special education teachers is growing Sunday guests of Mrs. Wilma Webber were her son, Ed, much faster than the supply. Byus Placement Bureau an- and his three sons, Johnny, nually receives requests for Jimmy, Eddie Jr., Orem, and about 150 persons trained to his daughter Mrs. Jean Barney teach special classes, but the of American Fork; and Miss education department is only Freda Ohlson of Provo. able to fill a small number of Mr. and 3Irs. Terry Kay and these openings, Miss Wilson said. son, Danny Paul are spending In the past ten years over the week in Riverton, Wyo300 .classes in elementary and ming, with his parents, Mr. secondary schools have been and Mrs. Charlie Kay. established for children who need special attention. The Mrs. Cleo Julge is confined Utah State Board of Education has approved a total of 553 to the Spanish Fork hospital, special education classes in the following surgery performed public schools, day care cenduring the week. ters, and for youngsters at home or hospitalized. These Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Un- statistics are from figures re leased by T. H. Bell, Utah state school superintendent. Children who are mentally retarded form the largest group of these, Miss Wilson said. They range between and trainable. Educable children can be trained for jobs and many can become Trainable children most of whom are taught in day care centers run by the State Welfare Dept., can only p learn simple skills. Trainees enrolledin the special education program at BYU have opportunities to observe and to participate in actual classes for exceptional children. Visual aids are emphasized in training both teachers and children. Let There Be Light," a movie made last year for the University program by BYUs television studio won the Rod Sterling Award, the higest award given by the American Foundation for the Blind. Many visual aids, recordings for the bliind, and other teaching tools are made by volunteers from Theta Epsilon Chi. Administered by an interdepartmental committee, the Special Education Program inedu-cab- self-sufficie- Mr. and Mrs. Jim Simmons of Las Vegas, are announcing the birth of a baby girl, bom Oct. 23. The little miss weighed 6Y2 pounds. The new arrival is the first great granddaughter for Mrs. Nettie Dittmer of Eureka. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dittmer of Las Vegas, former residents of Eureka. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Redmond of Spanish Fork, are the proud parents of a baby daughter, bom in the Payson Hospital, Oct. 16. The welcome little' daughter weighed 734 will called Deband be pounds, orah Leigh. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Gardner of Spanish Fork and paternal grandmother is Mrs. Mary Redmond of denvood who have been confined to the Neph hospital, returned home during the week. Friends are wishing them tinued improvement. To the calorie-conscio- pre-heati- OLD SUMY BROOK VIISUY 10 HOOF. DIITILIEIY KEITUCKT C0RP1IY, UUlimiE. IT, KIITICST STIIIOIT I0U1I0I VIISEET 80 PUB, SIX IEIIIU UlWI fUlOEl Uil ng vases are hard to scrub. Instead, fill them with a solution of salt and vinegar and let them stand for a few hours. Shake vigorously, then rinse with clean water. Narrow-necke- d IN DOWNTOWN PROVO le self-hel- nt us household precise is important because the way certain foods are cooked, determines their calorie count. Foods absorb too much fat when the cooking process is started at too low a temperature. nt. cludes representatives appointed from the College of Education and the departments of speech, sociology, psychology and zoology. con- AMLRICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION OF UTAH SftmH? Vtfl Dai7 ftmn |