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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1973 Christmas Pageant on Temple Square Open to The Public Christmas Youth Songfest, and the Mormon Youth Symphony and chorus presented its annual Christmas concert Wednesday. Still to come, besides the Christmas pageant, are the traditional Christmas concert by the Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle Choir and two presentations of Handels Messiah by A musical Christmas pageant Some 5,000 singers from 31 high Page Five the Oratorio Society. The Tabernacle Choir concert is scheduled for Thursday, Dec. 20 at 8 p.m. and the Messiah will be presented Saturday, Dec. 15 at 7:30 p.m., and again Sun- Meanwhile, visitors to famous Temple Square in the heart of downtown Salt Lake City this Christmas season will see the always popular outdoor Nativity Scene, the Christmas scene in day, Dec. 16 at 2 p.m. All of the old log cabin and a series these performances are open to of paintings on the life of Christ, the public and there is no ad- displayed outdoors on Temple mission charge. walkway. Squares north-sout- h aimed at the famliy will be pre- school choruses blended their sented in the Tabernacle on Salt voices in Christmas song last Lake City historic Temple square week end in the sixth annual next week. A The pageant, Christmas Gift of Love, will be staged on three evenings, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, Dec. 18, 19 and 21, at 8 p.m. There is no admission charge. Here's a Fad and a Predldlon You Should Know About: Produced by the Primary Association of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, the live and both features pageant taped music, live drama and motion pictures on an extra large screen. Mrs. Dwan Young, director of the pageant, says Christmas "We have just passed through a two-yeperiod in which the Utah A Gift of Love has something for every member of the family, wage and salary jobs at the economy has generated new, non-farrate of over 20,000 per year. regardles of age. The pageant is just one of several special events on Temple Square this Christmas season. FACT ar m Oil Shale Process 'Exciting Says Moss Utah Senator Frank E. Moss said that he found a briefing on oil shale production by Occidental Petroleum very exciting and most encouraging. From this initial briefing it would appear that most of the serious technical problems that have blocked oil shale development have been largely elimi-note- d by this insitu process. This is the most encouraging news I have heard on oil shale in a long time. Dr. Don Garrett, president of a subsidiary engineering company of Occidental, brief Moss and showed a movie describing the process. Through all the technical talk on aquifiers and thermo coupls came the important message that Occidental is confident that it is almost ready to move from a demonstration project to commercial production. The process involves digging of tunnels into the shale deposit and hollowing out rooms inside. The shale above is fractured by explosives, heat is applied to the shale, and crude oil is released. It filters down into collector pipes below and is then pumped to the surface. The company has already produced thousands of barrels of oil from a small demonstration mill in western Colorado. Moss received the first Congressional briefing of Occidental because he had asked the company to attend an oil shale seminar he arranged in Vernal last September. The company declined, explaining that it was in the final processes of developing its system. COUNTY DISTRIBUTOR WANTED Must be a good farmer. Must have 20 acres good irrigated land to grow a new high volume, HIGH PROTEIN forage for feed and seed. $6,000 investment required with earning potential of $25,000 to $40,000 per year. or write: Call 257-591- 4 DR. ROY K. MORTENSON 576 North Tremont Street Tremonton, Utah 84337 PMEUCTIM annual growth factor In "It appeare...that we have left a long-ter- m which has prevailed for nearly 20 years, the neighborhood of and stepped up to an annual growth rate in the range of 3, 5. 'Source "Tho New Utah" in UWi Economic and Burinm Raviaw. University o( Utah, OaptwwbT, 1973. Utah Power & Light Company has adequate power for the present and is building for the future. Without an adequate supply of electricity, there'd be mighty few new industrial and commercial jobs. For every 20,000 new jobs created In Utah, Utah Power & Light Company has to add about 50,000 kilowatt hours of electric generating capacity to be used that year and every year thereafter. Industry and commerce use about 70 of the power we generate. That's another reason we are continuing to build new generating plants to supply electricity to the industry and commerce and homes in our service area. SoCd 5uB(psitnij ELECTRICITY - USE ALL YOU NEED. BUT NEED ALL YOU USE |