OCR Text |
Show Bn Lomond 8acon. Fabruary 14 7, 1980. Pag s'lJMl CASTLE GOLD SOUTHLAND 316x4x8 316x4x8 316x4x8 2nd grade simulated on lauan plywood. Simulated finish on backing. Simulated woodgrain on hardboard backing. har-dboa- $$99 RAIN DANCE CASTLE GOLD 1st grad 316x4x8 finish Simulated REGAL WALNUT GREEN 5 1st grad 316x4x8 on 1st grade 31 6x4x7 Vi Simulated finish on lauan backing. lau an plywood. Simulated woodgrain finish on lauan plywood. $559 HEAVY-DUT- Y WINNERS OF Weber High School's Energy Conservation Awareness Contest are left to right Karie Davies, Jennifer Cookson, Elaine FRANKLIN STOVE Winners named in economics fair ALL CAST IRON NET WT. 1356-LB- First place winners of Plain City Elementary Schools Economics Fair are presently competing in the Weber S. ICBO APPROVED Includes screen, boot, damper, grate and bean pot. School District Economics in progress. Zero clearance heat circulating built-i- n fireplace. n The purpose of the fair is to teach so was given a certificate highlighting his or her accomplishment. The children also had the opportunity to receive free skating passes from the school secretary for their work. In the third grade, Laura Bunnell DOORS 20, 24 26, 28 DISCOUNTED WE STOCK ODD & END ASBESTOS 316x4x8 316x4x4 CABINETS save.,9 x4x4 V I 4-P- DAMAGED FIREPLACE SETS DOORS BLACK AS LOW AS A Up DIMENSIONAL LUMBER & FENCING DIMENSIONS ARE APPROXIMATIONS 1 proposed construction of a solar energy house on campus, and possibly a debate between a representative of the U.S. Department of Energy and a representative of an oil company. The potential for new energy saving projects seems endless. Meanwhile, organizers of the conservation effort want students and the community to keep up their good energy habits. Mr. Wayment said, We hope they will continue to practice what they have learned for the rest of the year. If Weber High School students save energy at the same rate they did during Energy Week, the energy savings will indeed be a considerable And this year, the average annual costs are ,$5,269 for gas and oil, $2,159 for electricity. The conclusion: energy costs, previously five percent of milk selling price, have risen to 6.4 percent for the farms studied. We'll show you how to do it yourself and save money. Australia, dry and sparsely vegetated, by necessity, has the biggest cattle ranches in the world. One, the Barkly Downs, is larger than Israel, covering 5.4 million acres or 8, 460 square miles. It grazes 90,000 lightly-sprea- d cattle. GUAQANM imm PQDCE dm uitahi Whirlpool DIMENSION LUMBER AT DISCOUNT PRICES SPECIAL ON FULL UNIT LOAD ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. T Yjy.j THE WALL PANELING KINGS " rA Open 9 a.m. 972-873- 1 7 e 972-873- 555 West 3500 South (1 OPEN SUNDAYS 8 to 7 p.m. e 972-873- c1 o AMANA o FRIGIDAIRE o MAGNAVOX Horn for loss within If you ffkid 800 Wo wll rofund tho difference. 14 days ... Thayne ii pii mi Karren and Melba Fredrickson had the difficult task of coordinating the Economics Fair and projects this year. All six grades continue to work on the schools overall economic project of making and selling Pebble People families. Customers have placed well over a orders for the rock kmckknacks, which sell for $2 each Between the Pebble People project and the Economics Fair, Plain City hundred students have become more knowledgeable about stocks, investments, profits, and labor costs than the average American citizen. Parents are invited to see these accomplishments for themselves at the district Economics Fair in Bonneville High School. The fair ends at 2:30 p.m. Feb. 7. Science fair upcoming Junior and high school students from northern Utah and southern Idaho should start now on their projects for the Weber Regional Science Fair to be held April 7 through 10 at Weber State College. Dr. Richard W. Moyle, WSC professor of geology and fair director, said ap' plications must be in by March 24 He said junior high school students will exhibit their projects on April 7 and 8 and the high school contestants will show theirs April 9 and and his director, Dr. Michael Slabaugh, associate professor of chemistry, said last year more than 600 exhibits and reports were entered in the fair, and this year we expect at least that Dr. Moyle assistant - 10 This fair has been held each year for at least the last 27 years and is considered to be one of the most successful in the nation, he said. many. school high students will enter their projects under one of four Junior areas, biological science, physical science, earth science and medical-denta- l science. The 10 areas represented in the high school division include: botany, chemistry, earth and space science, environmental science, math and engineering, medical-denta- l science, microbiology, physics, social and behavioral sciences, and zoology. Winners in the regional will be sent to St. Paul, Minn May 5 through 10 for fair the International Fair Science According to Dr. Moyle, the Utah Region during the past four years has won more trophies at China is Americas ace in the hoe in the present Middle Eastern crisis, Dr. K. Harrington, Gordon Weber College professor of history, declared in a talk on the Middle East situation Thursday. Dr. Harrington returned to the WSC campus last fall after a years leave of absence traveling with his family in the Orient and the Middle East. He has specialized in the history and politics of that area. Dr. Harrington said the situation is pulling China and Japan into tighter alignment with the U.S. Japan, a heavily in- dustrialized nation which depends heavily on oil, and has almost none of its own, would see its industry grind to a halt in six weeks if its petroleum supplies were cut off. About 75 per cent of its supply comes from nations in the Persian Gulf area, he said. Dr. Harrington called the RIB STEAK DINNER special $K95 Fri. & Sot. ti) WE ARE NOW OPEN FOR BREAKFAST. HOURS: 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. Tel. the( International Fair than any other state in the country. Scholarships, trophies, ribbons and plaques will also be awarded at the Weber Regional Fair. Interested students should contact teachers formation forms. their science for more inand application China key to energy crisis Middle East an area is our w'eak point which militarily and one where we would be hard put to fight successfully. The U.S. does not have the bases and resources to fight in Afghanistan and Pakistan, he said. Russia, on the other hand, is next door and doesnt have the logistics problems the U.S. has. Russia, realizing that, might decide to move strongly there and con- solidate a Dosition which could be highly dangerous to the U.S. The next 20 years, or until some source of energy is developed which can replace Middle Eastern oil, could be a period of crisis for the U.S. and other Western nations not independent so far as oil is concerned. 773-701- 1 -- Capon RESTAURANT 9 Block East of Redwood Rd.) 1 0 a.m. to 3 p.m. ii in first, Shanna Sandall placed second, and Judy Kern placed third. Connie Rauzi won first place, Kristen Dixon and Kristen DeVries came in second, and Jenny Osmond and Keri Hogge received third prize in the fourth grade contest. Fifth grader Lesa Sharp placed first, Tami Young won second, and Suzanne Ward came in third. In the sixth grade, Ted Balderree and Scott Dalfors rode away with the top prize, while Tyler Wilson came in second and Scott Sharp w'on third place. Brandon Wilson, Laura Young, Paul Hurd, Jan Poison, Troy Hadley, Melissa Malan, Carol Call, Jodoe Knight, Stacie Larsen, and Lisa Combe received honorable mentions. Some outstanding group projects were also submitted by the lower grades, according to Mr. Charlton. one. Wm CIDCC0 Tti came Energy week continued from page VxAx8 While Stock Lasts now area children the basic ideas of the free enterprise system. Each child participating in the fair Reg. $238.95 PRE-HUN- G Fair Principal Larry Charlton said the winners were selected from a total of 63 economics projects. All were outstanding. It was very difficult for the judges to select the winning projects, Mr. Charlton said. MARCO CIRCULATOR $99 Laramee, Jenny Hale, Vince DeGarlais, Stephen Lundwall, Mark Brewer, Kim Eckstrom, Wayne Cox, and Brent Bunnell. West on Antelope Rd. (2 blocks past Freeport Center) Another banner Americ. corn harvest is anticipate this year, according Sperry New Holland. Tl U.S. corn crop alone is like to outstrip the combine Soviet harvests of whea corn, barley, oats, rye, ric millet buckwheat, miscellaneous grains. ar |