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Show PERFORMING at hali'timeduringGoldmTiger football games are the precision drill team, the Tigerettes. Here the girls do the splits fir . v n, , WELL, that's one way to bring down Orein quarterback Gary Crowton - the hip-pads! Crowton made a good gain on the play but the Tigers couldn't come up with a score. Cattlemen Propose SALT LAKE CITY - If the cattle industry is going to keep up with changes in consumer demand and production costs and methods, revisions of current cur-rent government beef grading standards are needed according accord-ing to W. Lloyd Johnson, Aurora, Aur-ora, Sevier County, Utah, President of the Utah Cattlemen's Cattle-men's Association. 'The purpose of beef grading standards are to reflect consumer con-sumer desires and differences in beef values," Mr. Johnson said. To do this job adequately, adequat-ely, the current standards need updating. He strongly supported changes in grading' standards recently proposed by the American Am-erican National Cattlemen's Association. If accepted by the Department of Agriculture, he said, the proposals would encourage en-courage production of beef containing con-taining less excess fat. They would also reduce the amount of increasingly expensive feed grain used to finish cattle for market. The A ICC A recommendations for grading changes were recently re-cently submitted toUSDAinlate July following eighteen months of intensive study. The three basic recommendations are: Conformation (carcass shape, or thinkness in relation rela-tion to length) should be transferred trans-ferred from the quality standards stand-ards and put into a separate grade category available on an optional basis. Conformation is important to parts of the cattle industry and to special markets, as the hotel and restaurant trade, but it has nothing to do with eating' eat-ing' quality of beef. With conformation con-formation removed, the quality-grades quality-grades can better reflect eating eat-ing quality, the beef characteristic charact-eristic of most importance to consumers. The quality grade system should be modified for cattle less than 30 months of age so as not to require increases in marbling with increases in age. If this change is effected, what is now the minimum marbling requirement for the youngest cattle to make a particular grade would be the minimum for all cattle up to 30 months of age. Research has shown tenderness is related primarily to the age or maturity ma-turity of cattle. The USDA quality and yield grade systems should be combined com-bined into a single grade system. sys-tem. (Quality grades measure palatability, while yield grades measure the quantity of retail cuts, or lean meat, in each carcass. Yield grades provide a means of reflecting consumer preferences for beef with a high ratio of lean to fat.) in a cross formation during Grove game. Cougar Coach Optimistic About Season Not long after the end of last football season, some of the experts ex-perts were forecasting gloom and doom for the Cougars' offensive of-fensive line. But assistant coach Dave Kragthrope and his charges won't but it. "Sure, we've lost a lot of experienced ex-perienced ball players from our line, Kragthorpe tells the questioning fans, "but it would be a mistake to underestimate some of our replacements." Kragthrope believes that despite des-pite their youth, the newcomers, along with a few returning squad members, will measure up to their assignments. "Our first line is a stable group," says Kragthorpe, who singles out the center position as one of the stronger spots. For the fourth season in a row the ball-snapping chores will be given to a player from Orem. The Bailey brothers, Mike and Joe, were starters in 1971 through 1973, and the assignment now rests with Or-rin Or-rin Ulsen. Olsen, who has played in a number of positions offensively and defensively, should rank with the best in the Western Athletic Conference this fall. What's more, Crrin (tj-2,233) is only a junior. Another junior, Tom Miller (6-2, 231) is a very capable reserve from Hemet, Calif. And behind Miller is Chuck Carlson (5-10, 220), a sophomore center from Westminister, Caw, iroin n esuuiiuMei, wiu. SIC Utah Tech Culinary Arts Course Moves The culinary arts course at Utah Technical College at Salt Lake, offered through theSkills Center, has moved to the school's sch-ool's main campus, 4000 So. Redwood Rd. John Anjewierden, culinary arts instructor at Utah Tech, says his course is designed for 15 to 20 students, specializing in cooking and baking methods. Anjewierden underscores thea-bundance thea-bundance of jobs available to course graduates too. He says the cooking and baking bak-ing course is an open -entry, open exit program, generally-running generally-running from six months to a year. Students are able to enter en-ter the program anytime and graduate when proficient. Most of the students in the program are referrals from agencies such as WIN, CETA, rehabilitation groups and the U-tah U-tah State Office of Employment Security. the Pleasant Hunters Lauded Sept. 28 Utah 's Governor Calvin L. Hampton has signed a proclamation pro-clamation designating Saturday, September 28 as Utah Hunting and Fishing Day. That date was signed earlier this year as National Hunting and Fishing Day by forme r President Richard M. Nixon. In Utah's proclamation, the Governor urged "all or our citizens to join with sportsmen-conservationists in a re-dedication re-dedication to the wise use of our natural resources and their proper management for the benefit of future generations." U tah's Hunting and Fishing Day observance will be at Sugarhause Park the afternoon and evening of Thursday, Sept. 20. Sponsored by the Utah Wildlife and Outdoor Recreation Federation and the Division of Wildlife Resources, the event will offer outdoor skills exhibits and demonstrations by the Federation Fed-eration and affiliate recreation clubs. The Division will feature wildlife and fisheries management manage-ment exhibits. The proclamation, in part, reads, "Whereas, because of the outstanding contributions that America's hunters and fishermen have made to conservation, con-servation, recreation and the economy, they are deserving of special recognition; and ". . . Since the turn of the century, hunters and anglers have been the leaders in nearly all major conservation programs. These sportsmen are responsible for the founding of state fish and game departments in all 50 states . . . they asked that they be required to buy licenses and that money collected be used to support state conservation agencies. They have provided S2.5 billion for conservation programs." It also notes that hunters and fishermen asked for establishment establish-ment of regulation of seasons and bag limits so that sportsmen sports-men could harvest the annual crop of game and fish without da mage to the basic breeding population. As a result, there are now more deer, elk, antelope ante-lope and wild turkey in the United States than there were 50 years ago. Further, sportsmen's sports-men's programs have benefited numerous nongaine fish and wildlife through habitat development. de-velopment. For more information regarding regar-ding Utah's sportsmen's plans for the observance, visit the sportsmen's booth at the Wildlife Wild-life Resources building at the Utah State Fair, which is in progress now and continues through Sunday, September 15. Inflation Hits . Land ProVQm Inflation has become a major problem in the land acquisition and rehabilitation program of the Division of Wildlife Resources. Resour-ces. Lands Development Supervisor Super-visor Don It. Christensen reports re-ports wire costs have risen over 400 percent. Seed costs have risen over 100 percent. Rental for caterpillars has gone from $3 to $10 per acre for double chaining. Aerial broadcasting broad-casting of seed has gone from 75 cents to $1.25 per acre. Land costs have soared from $ 12 per acre in 19G7 to as much as $125 per acre this year. Additionally, many supplies are difficult to come by. 'From five requests for fencing wire, we have received only 25 rolls noted Christensen. Hand gathered gath-ered seed for manual projects has also become scarce. All of these problems combined com-bined with a continual loss in habitat have taken their toll on Utah's wildlife. Ithasbeencal-culated Ithasbeencal-culated that nearly 3.600 acres were required for the support of Utah's new citizens from 1972 to 1973. Miss Indian Crovned Sat. Wight Geri Goenett, a 20-year-old Tlinget Indian from Juneau, A-laska. A-laska. who is aDoctoralCan-didate aDoctoralCan-didate at the University Uni-versity of Utah was crowned crown-ed Miss Indian Utah last Saturday Sat-urday night by actor Robert Redford. Two 21-year-old Navajogirls from Arizona --Mild red Cody from F 1 a g s t a f f and Dorothy Shepherd from Cameronwere first and second ruuners-up respectively. Both attend Bri-gham Bri-gham Young University. Miss Goenett, selected by five Indian judges from the eight contestants, received a $1,000 scholarship. She is a sociology sociol-ogy graduate from B. Y. U. and has worked with youth in her own tribe as well as with members of the Ute tribe in eastern Utah. She was crowned with a new silver sil-ver and turquoise crown furnished fur-nished by Horst Reschkeof the Indian Arts Center in Salt Lake C ity. Miss Cody, who also was named by the contestants as Miss Congeniality, is majoring in youth leadership. A popular dancer and singer with the well-known well-known Larnanite Generation from B.Y.U., Miss Cody is a junior and the daughter of Mrs. Marie Cody of Flagstaff. She received a $500 scholarship. Miss Shepherd, also a junior majoring in clothing and textiles tex-tiles at B.Y.U., toured as a dancer and singer with the Larnanite Generation across the U. S. this summer. The daughter dau-ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Hosteen Shepherd of Cameron, she also received $500 in scholarship money. She was also second runner-up in the contest last year. n Vi Printing I q Since hV 1928 1 v M i and Over 111 1 Wears Combined 1 j h. Experience 1 wa U'V To Serve M! Your 1 'S Printing Needs O Publications O Letterheads O Envelopes 0 Business Cards 0 Tickets 0 Single Copies 0 Wedding Announcements Most Jobs Given Same Day Service V - - V 1 'I. -v it. r GERI GOENETT (center) was crowned Miss Indian Utah by-Robert by-Robert Redford last Saturday night. Her attendants are Betty Crocker Scholarship Test To Come College scholarships, from $300 to $5,000, are available to all high school seniors through the Betty Crocker 11 o Job Too S oio 2 1 Or Too Large! O Booklets 0 Genealogy Work O Camera Work 0 Statements 0 Complete Web Press Facilities ' K I. Search for Leadership in Family Fam-ily Living, formerly the Betty Crocker Search for American Ameri-can Home makers of Tomorrow. A n invitation to enroll in the program will soon be mailed to all high schools across the nation. Schools new to the event are invited to write the Betty-Crocker Betty-Crocker Search, P.O. Box 1113, Minneapolis, Minn., 53440, for information. Fime That Done First P r m - v ma plant j V Hf or ctut J? eneba 546 South State -Orem Orem-Geneva Times ; ON J ' sti ,i .7 ' : V -V'' 1 -" Mildred Cody (left) and Dorothy Shepherd (far right), first and second runners-up respectively. Enrollment deadline is October Oc-tober 31. On Tuesday, Dec. 3, each participating school will administer ad-minister a 50-minute written examination. Prepared and scored by Science Research Associates, As-sociates, Inc., Chicago, this general knowledge and attitude examination is the first important im-portant step of the scholarship en You Meed M n r i Money At Trie We Have Complete Up To Date Equipment and Experience To Do Your Printing Right The First Time Announce Special Day With A ny Style Of In vi tat ion From The.., nm5nut)a ime Have Your Announcements! Beautifully The Time ana At fires Ynu '- Can Afford FT ' l cUimeg September 12, 1974 : V 1 Vt ' f jr. I i h, v program. From the examination results, re-sults, a Betty Crocker Family Leader of Tomorrow will be chosen for each participating school. School winners are acknowledged ac-knowledged with special awards and their examinations are entered en-tered in state competition. Printi ng Effort r m tj ,u tf !. til wu in s&i 7! W |