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Show Page Four FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1960 THE SALT LAKE TIMES Model UN Assembly Draws Utah Students Eight hundred students repre-senting 95 per cent of all Utah's senior high schools, with all na-tions comprising United Nations represented, will gather at the University of Utah Union April 1 to participate in the Sixth annual Model United Nations Assembly. The two-da- y meet is sponsored by the Utah Association for the United Nations and the Univer-sity of Utah Extension Division. Students will plead the causes of the countries they represent and seek remedial action in the Assembly to solve problems that plague the world. The program will get under way at 8 a.m. with registration, with the Parade of Flags and General Assembly scheduled for 9 a.m. The Model Assembly is the cul-mination of a year long program in Utah high schools. Delegations have been assigned a nation and will be prepared to represent the nation honestly and with the current point of view of the nation. Highlight of the Friday pro-gram is the annual Awards Ban-quet slated for the Hotel Utah Motor Lodge , at 6:30 p.m. Fea tured speaker will be Ben C. Limb, Ambasasdor and Chief of Korean Mission to United Na-tions since 1951. Ambassador Limb has had a distinguished career as a Korean diplomat. He was elected Gen-eral Secretary, All Korean Con-gress in America and appointed private secretary to Dr. Sygman Rhee, president of the Korean Provisional Government. With Dr. Rhee he was active in Nan king, Shanghan, Canton, Hong Kong, Soochow, and Hangchow in the furtherance of Korean In-- In its effort to be of greater help to America's estimated 350 000 blind persons and the nu-merous agencies serving them, the American Foundation for the Blind recently appointed six field representatives, each of whom will cover a designated area of the country. & sf ill I ' w vl - ,V'&r Q v 3 i 1 p J Q jw The continual introduction of modern equip- - i Jt 1 4 1 ment has kept copper production a successful oq w'-- o jC business in Utah. At Kennecott's Bingham Mine, ft o Q 9 f ly for example, huge electric shovels handle enor-- f A '"" mous quantities of ore and waste rock efficiently Cif$f II something men with picks and hand shovels I VJf couldn't possibly do. ! ly f&Bi--j) In the same tradition, accounting machines are t fm Js used by Kennecott's comptroller's department. P ikw l T ' machne accounting system supplies man- - ( j --iZtJ u agement with information vital to operations ggpjp 1 more promptly and accurately than could have j been achieved by yesterday's methods. i Working with enormous numbers of facts and fT jot: figures, machine accounting is fast, efficient and JLpgl III thorough. For example, it calculates pay rate, j I I IHf iff hours worked and any of 200 payroll deductions L0 ""Sn MMi to Produce 1,000 pay checks an hour. It keeps III: ill an up-to-da- te inventory of 46,000 supply items Ji " and makes information on them available at a I 1 U m 322, 777 J A kl S moment's notice. It provides needed metallur- - fJH1 lii gical data in less than a tenth of the time it would IwJl W have taken before machines came on the job. (SI 1 M - M 0. Even now, plans are under way to achieve ln I ' tomorrow what is impossible today. The machine IIlJ S I ( .L accounting system will be expanded to be a more UT $P valuable aid to management in the future. This , W V4776 S is another step by Kennecott to help assure con-- A v47.o : tinued copper production by improving operations, i Utah Copper'MvMqmmMps libsssseeoU Copper GoEpostsiffim I PROUD TO BE PART OP A GROWING UTAH i |