OCR Text |
Show Page Twelv Chamber Adds Three Services to Community Miss Utah for Miss USA Pageant Salt Palace Slated for 1973 Come and join the fun and excitement at the Salt Palace on May 28 for the Miss Utah for Miss U.S.A.' Pageant. The pageant is to be coordinated and managed by Intermountain Corporate Offices, the models by Orlob and Michelles all of Salt Lake City. Register as soon as possible at the local Chamber of Commerce or Junior Chamber of Commerce. Rules and regulations, the governing sponsorship and entrants can be found there. Businessmen, support your beautiful women and community by being a sponsor. There are to be three preliminary finals to be held at Churchill Jr. High May 25 at Orlobs. May 26, by Michelles and combined efforts on May 27 for all entrants outside of Salt Lake County. Cash prizes to be given to Miss Utah and her three attendants The queen will receive a cash prize, 14 karat gold watch, ward rfobe, evening gown, plane fare accommodations and $100 fun money.' Miss Utah will wear her crown all year around and participate in state events in Utah. This will be another Utah triumph for we have been well represented in the past, Charlotte Sheffield 1957 and Linda 1960. Miss Bement later became Miss Universe. Sixty six nations were represented last year in Puerto Rico. During that time 400,000,000 people watched the Miss Universe Pageant. Miss Utah, Miss Idaho and Miss Montana will be' leaving Salt Lake City May 8 together. Be-me- nt : j ! . " - THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 Three new services to the community have been introduced by the Salt Lake Area Chamber of Commerce, reports Executive Vice President Fred S. Ball. The first is the establishment of a free enterprise, community speakers bureau. Under the program, volunteer Chamber members will make radio and TV appearances, speak to civic organizations, church groups or womens clubs, high school and college classes. The other two services will make available to Salt Lake businesses separate lists of the names and addresses of 1) new residents moving here,, and 2) prospective tourists planning to visit our. community. The new resident list should be helpful to such businesses as realtors, moving and insurance companies department stores and neighborhood services. The tourist list will be helpful to businesses connected with the tourist and recreation industries, such as lodging and resort owners. The two sepaarte lists are available to subscribers only at. a cost of - Defensive Driving Course Starts May 7 If driving an auto in todays congested traffic conditions is getting you down; if you are Ending it more difficult to be tolerant of your fellow drivers, he according to the Utah Safety Council it is time to consider mrolling in a Defensive Driv-!n- g course. This eight hour course offered 5n the evening in four two hour sessions or on Saturday in two four hour sessions, aids the already licensed driver to recognize potential traffic accident ablations, to know the defense and to react in time. Utah boasts 17,000 graduates in the course, who inform the Council that driving is more enjoyable and hey have advanced from being i good driver to the status of being a better motor vehicle operator. The next evening classes to be offered in the Salt Lake area will commence Monday, May 7 )r Wednesday May 2. They will be held in the State Office auditorium. For those unable to attend in he evening a Saturday class is offered cohimencing on May 5 at ) a.m. This class will also be in the State Office Building Auditorium. While advanced registrations aer requested, those who do not .lave time to complete the necessary enrollment forms may do 30 just prior to the start of the :irst class. There is a small fee to cover the cost of materials used. reg-strati- on $25 each per year. 4 Free enterprise and the profit motive are under attack in this country, and yet this, system has provided a greater abundance to a wider range of people than any other system known to man. The Chamber executive feels that the business side of the story has not been heard amid the negativism that threatens our national productivity. He main- tains that the Chambers speakers bureau will at least begin to our local citizenry of the virtues of the free enterprise re-educ- ate system. Citrus Juice: Its But Why? Good For You Everyone knows how good citrus juices taste, and almost everyone knows that theyre . good for you. But a lot of people , still dont know why, researchers for TreeSweet Products Co. have learned. Do you know why British sailors are called Limeys? That has something to do with one of the reasons why citrus juices are good for you. Back in the middle of the 18th Century, when, sailors on long voyages suffered terribly of scurvy, a and often died British naval surgeon found that citrus juices could prevent the disease, which is caused by a lack of the Vitamin C found in fresh fruits and vegetables. The good doctor had never heard of vitamins, of course, but he found that lime which in those days juice was what they called lemon could prevent and juice too even quickly cure scurvy. From then on, British sailors . were given a regular ration of lime juice. Other sailors scornfully called them lime-juic- e sailors, or Limeys. But their scorn didnt last too long, when they found how healthy ., the Juice made these Limeys. So it is that an eight-ounc- e glass of orange Juice, for exwhether, fresh, canample, will supply ned or frozen the average adult with his daily requirement of Vitamin C. The body doesnt store up Vitamin C; you cant build up a supply in your tissues. It should be supplied to your body regularly in reasonable amounts rather than in large. Infrequent doses. The same is true of canned or frozen citrus Juice. It lasts a long time in its can, but not forever, and it. wont do to buy an enormous supply andthen use it up over a long per- Arrangements Completed for Car Trouble Shooting Contest the bugs and restore their car to normal running order. To win, however, a team must receive high marks in a written examination which is part of the contest and which contributes to the final score. The program is sponsored by the schools and Plymouth dealers in the area as a means of encouraging students to complete their education. The area schools entered are Murray High,- Brighton' High, Granite High, Highland High, Skyline High, and Utah Tech College at Salt Lake. Arrangements have been completed for the annual Plymouth Trouble Shooting Contest, often called the Olympic Games of the auto industry which will bring together the top auto mechanics students of this area May 11 at Skyline High School, Salt Lake City. The' students will be competing in one of 113 regional contests being held in all 50 states this spring under the sponsorship of Plymouth dealers and participating schools. Regional contest winners receive trips to the National Trouble Shooting Finals at Boston June 25, 26, and all-expen- - se Interpreters Theatre Alliance to be Held at Utah State University 27. In addition to the trip and a chance to visit many historic Boston landmarks, prizes and awards in the National Finals are worth more than $90,000 in college scholarships and other prizes for the contestants, and trophies, tools and automobile components for their schools. At the National Finals, each team member of each first-plac- e wins a $2,500 scholarship. A total of $37,000 worth of scholarships is offered. Each team participating in the National Finals receives a complete set of tools for its school and those placing among th' winners receive for their school? new Plymouth engines and transmissions for instructional use ir each schools auto mechanic; shop. Trouble Shooters, sometimes called Road Scholars, have tc hit the books before they can hit the road to Boston and the National Finals. They have to be outstanding in their classes to qualify for a regional contest and they must be top students and auto mechanics to win in the regional meet. Teams consist of two students who are assigned to a new car in which a series of malfunctions have been deliberately placed. Malfunctions in all cars are identical, and all are related to the electrical, starting, ignition, fuel systems and body hardware of the cars. Teams race the clock and each other to find and fix You might think a gathering three hundred people who like to read out loud would be a deafening experience but when its the interpreters Theatre Alliance getting- together, the', reading is pleasant, entertaining and at times exciting. The gathering will take place at Utah State University, May 10, 11 and 12. People from Canada and every state west of Colorado have been invited to participate. Readers theatre simply means people read prose, poetry or irama which is not written for Paging. The reader makes the written word come alive in the minds of the audience by using lis voice. Since the program is designed is a workshop, there will be two uest evaluators who will discuss each presentation. Participants and the audience will be jivolved in the discussion and evaluation. A play by Dr. Margetts about 19th century actress Julia Dean Hayne will be performed for the first time as part of the workshop. The play, The Second Daniel, will be performed using a mixture of acting and readers theatre. Additional information may be obatined from the Conference: and Institute Division, Utah State University, Logan, Utah. of two or - , . THE LONG WALK Col. Russel Farnum of New Hampshire ST. LOUIS, walked from AAO. TO ST. PETERSBURG' now Leningrad-i- n 1912-1- 3. FROM ALASKA, HE CROSSED THE FROZEN BERING STRAITS TO SIBERIA. v 000 The expressions on these youngsters1 faces shows that theyre aware of one of the best things about citrus juices: they are good for you and taste great. TreeSweet researchers say many people still do not know why citrus juice should be an important piu of the diet. lod. It should be purchased in moderate amounts and used within a reasonable time. Vitamin C isnt the only valuable nutritional content of citrus juice. Using orange juice as an example thats the juice used most by Americans an eight-ounc- e glass will 11 per cent of supply about 5 the thiamine, per cent of the carotene, 4 per cent of the niacin and 2.5 per cent of the riboflavin needed by that same average adult. Citrus Juices are excellent in- special diets, too. They contain no chemical preservatives of any kind if they are six-oun- - - In a metal can. They contain virtually no fat and only from to 1 per cent protein, and are very low in sodium. A serving has less than 100. calories, and citrus juices are natural alkallzers desbepite their acid content cause digestion leaves residual minerals that are distinctly alkaline. So no matter who you are British sailor, average adult, dieter or anyone else you can drink all the fresh, canned or frozen citrus juice you want with confidence that its good for you REALLY good for you. , low-sodiu- m ce WEALTH HAZARD! THAT'S VOU--lf YOU DON'T SALT AWAY SOME OP YOUR SALARY EACH WEEK JOIN THE payroll SAYINGS PLAN WHERE YOU A WORK, AND THEYtL SET ASIDE YOUR FROM SPECIFIED AMOUNT PAYCHECK. IF YOU CANT TRUST Justus' savings bonds! r. don't BOTHER TO COUNT... v But if vouTie ALL INTERESTED, at . THERE ARE 25, 344.000 BUBBLES CONTAINED IN A POUND OF SQAPl |