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The Daily Spectrum from Saint George, Utah • 10

Location:
Saint George, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

10 spectrum Sunday, September 6, 1987 OHV registrations will be checked at deer season to be sure roads are open to OHV use. Hunters should also take extra care that OHVs are in working condition, equipped properly, and currently registered with the State. The' Utah Division of Parks and Recreation, in cooperation with" Wildlife Resources, will be enforcing the new OHV registration law at various checking stations during the upcoming Fall hunting season. With the opening of the annual Fall hunting season, sportsmen will head for the hills in hopes of bagging their game. Many hunters utilize off-highway vehicles (OHVs) to aid in hunting efforts.

Off-highway vehicles may be operated on public land, streets, or highways designated as open to OHV use by the controlling agency. Before entering an area, hunters should check with the administering agency if 2 I Nothing Short Of SPECTACULAR Chef Barry Albrecht invites your family to Sunday Breakfast AT THE TONAQUINT RESTAURANT AT THE HILTON INN 7 A.M. 11 A.M. A- i i it Cards fight AIDS threat SALEM, Ore. (UPI) For those who can't bring themselves to frankly tell their mate to wear a condom, a Salem mother and daughter have designed a line of greeting cards, called "Respectively Yours," to deliver the message.

The card includes a condom, instructions on how to use it and a disclaimer that they are not 100 percent guaranteed. Mary Spies, 38, and daughter Ka-rey, 19, hope to have 10,000 "condom cards" on the shelves of Oregon greeting card stores by the end of August providing they can secure a contract to purchase the devices. "What we are trying to say to people is that it's OK to tell someone that you want them to use' a condom' said Mary Spies. Karey Spies said the condom cards, selling for $1.50 each, are the result of the publicity and concern about AIDS and what they saw as a need to use a little humor to let sexual partners break the ice about-condoms. "It says 'ha but it means business," she said.

The line of 5-by-7 cards carry 15 different messages, all suggesting that the sender would like the recipient to wear a condom during intercourse. The condoms themselves will be spot glued inside of the card. One card reads: "So you think you're old enough but are you smart enough?" Another reads: "You're a loving, caring and sensitive human being, so you won't mind if I just say Wear it!" The cards illustrate their point with drawings of couples holding hands or in bed. They also have complete instructions on how to use a condom and a warning saying condoms are not 100 percent effective in preventing sexually transmitted diseases or pregnancy. "Little girls are going to grow up to be big girls who are going to say use it' because you don't sleep with one person anymore you sleep with everyone they slept with," said Mary Spies.

The Spieses founded the Executive Card Co. in June with $500 and the help of a business teacher turned consultant, who did a marketing study. Before ordering the first printing of the cards, the Spies talked with and received encouragement from private AIDS support groups. The Spieses also have agreed to turn over 4 percent of their profits to AIDS prevention and treatment. "It is difficult for people to negotiate the use of condoms," said Tom Koberstein, director of the Cascade AIDS Project in Portland, Ore.

"I can't say I was enthusiastic about the cards, but if it is a way to convince people to take the precaution, then great." "People never think it is going to happen to them," Mary Spies said. "People think that if they are not gay or intravenous drug users then it's not their problem." Mary Spies, who is divorced, said the cards are the result of discussions she had with her daughter ab- out single life in college dorms and the difficulty young and inexperienced couples have in talking to each other about sex. "It's going to be a lot easier to go out and buy a card like this than it would be to go to the drug store particularly for girls," she said. show has been aired since its debut in Oct. 1957.

The TV show, which has been viewed by three generations, will now include the fourth generation of Cleavers. (UPI) LOS ANGELES The Cleaver family and friends join together for the start of "The News Leave It To Beaver" TV series marking the 30th year including reruns, that the Ring finder at CHICAGO (UPI) A syndicated columnist wants to reward an honest Taylor, teen who turned in a valuable ring she found at the Flight 255 crash site in Detroit, but his generosity could complicate her family's welfare status. Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Greene said Sunday he was struck by the story last week and that he called the Detroit Free Press Friday to find out what happened to Denise McNeely, 14, who found the gold and diamond ring and turned it in to police. "The guy who wrote the story told me she didn't get any reward, and that no one even thanked her," Greene said. "I just thought what kind of message did she get?" Greene said he will give McNeely the purchase price of the ring, up to its appraised value, $7,500.

The ring belonged to one of the 156 people killed in the Aug. 16 crash of Northwest Flight 255 at Detroit Metropolitan Airport. Greene said he was moved when he spoke with McNeely's mother, who told him Denise would buy clothes if she had any money, since the girl has only two pairs of pants for school. "I think it's pretty impressive for a 14-year-old in the economic situation they're in to show that kind of hon1 esty," Greene said. "It just occurred to me that maybe I could make a difference in this girl's life." for a variety of reasons," he said.

Writing in the Annals of Internal Medicine, Arieff said his team discovered that study patients were most likely to develop high blood sodium levels after an operation, a finding that was "especially important because nobody had recognized the connection between surgery and hypernatremia," 'he said. Arieff reported that of the 15,187 patients 60 years old or, more admitted to an unidentified teaching hospital over a three-year period, 1 percent either had hypernatremia or developed it while in the hospital. "The important message here is that very close attention to fluid management in older patients can save lives," Arieff emphasized. "Hypernatremia can be easily prevented." wr be rewarded Dependent Children program. "But because of the circumstances, we would see if there was some way of setting up an educational trust or something else to help the family," he said.

Greene said he plans to contact a bank in the Detroit area about a trust for McNeely's education. FACTORY 425 West 200 North 628-3789 10 Dehydration linked to death Sunday Brunch 10 A.M. 4 P.M. $895 Sr. Discount Kids Half Price 1450 S.

Hilton Drive For Reservations Call 628-0463 Roast Barron Of Beef Bar-B-Que Pork Ribs Sweet and Sour Pork Chef Vegetables Bacon and Sausages Fresh Bagels Biscuits and Gravy Chocolate Mousse Cherry. Blueberry OUTLETS am to 6 pm-Monday through Saturday, crash site to McNeely, a ninth-grader at Taylor Center High School, said the news of the reward "makes me feel good because right now my mom's on ADC (Aid to Dependent Children) and trying to raise three kids." But Michigan Welfare Director Patrick Babcock said $7,500 could push McNeely's family over the income allowed to clients of the Aid to St. George isT SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) A study has found that a surprising number of elderly patients become dehydrated and develop high blood sodium levels following surgery, greatly increasing their chances of death. In a report released Thursday, researchers at the University of Cali- -fornia, San Francisco, say high blood sodium levels are so common among the hospitalized elderly that they are seven times more likely to die of their illnesses than people with similar ailments and normal blood sodium levels. Dr.

Allen Arieff, UCSF professor of medicine, said for many years the disorder, known as hypernatremia, was mistakenly associated with incapacitated nursing home patients. "But we found that it turns up in a variety of older patients hospitalized Baked Halibut Baked Chicken Mashed Potatoes wGravy Potatoes O'Brien Country Style Eggs French Toast Homemade Rolls and Muffins Vanilla Pudding and Peach Tarts VAS4" Closed Sunday PUBLIC NOTICE On August 12, 1987, an application was filed with the Federal Communications Commission by KUTV, Inc. for a construction permit for a new television broadcast station on Channel 12 in St. George, Utah. The station would operate with an effective radiated power of 148 kilowatts and an antenna height of 431 meters above average terraine.

The proposed transmitter site would be located 31.4 kilometers south of St. George, Utah. The officers and directors of KUTV, Inc. are George C. Hatch, Wilda Gene Hatch, Blaine V.

Glasmann, Gordon O. Glasmann, Patrick A. Shea, Albin J. Seethaler and Byron R. Carpenter.

Ten percent or more of the stock of KUTV, Inc. is owned by the Standard Corporation and Communications Investment Corporation. A copy of the application, amendments, if any, and any related materials are on file for public inspection at the office of Steven E. Snow, 90 East 200 North, St. George, Utah..

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About The Daily Spectrum Archive

Pages Available:
682,533
Years Available:
1973-2024