OCR Text |
Show mini 0mmmMMmmmimam&minimujimmi Scientist Believes im mm mrLi immnasmmHmtnumj.iM.mam i , Intelligent Beings Are in Outer Space VIENNA (UPI)-- An Amerisaid intel- can scientist has ligent civilizations probably have existed in outer space for billions of years and suggested they are trying to make Earth a member of the galactic community. "In aU liklihood intelligent civilization have existed in tb galaxy for four or fir; billion years," said Bernard M. Oliver of the Hewlett Packard Co., of Palo Alto, Calif. Oliver made his remarks in a paper prepared for delivery at the closing session of the 23rd International Astronautical Congress. Technology is Capr.Me "It appears from our calcula- tions that present day technology is capable of mounting a search for very effective extraterrestrial signals," Oliver said. "The question we must ask ourselves is: Is it worth about half the cost of the Apollo program ($11 billion) to attempt such a search?" Oliver said the biggest barrier to making such an expenditure was that man cannot guarantee success. Re said it was probable many of these civilizations have established interstellar contact. "If so, then communication has been taking place between and for eons civilizations beacons may well exist to help young races, such as ourselves, to Join this galactic community," Oliver said. About 1,500 Attend About 1,500 persons attended the weeklong meeting in the downtown Hofburg Congress Center. included Prof. Delegates Wernher von Braun, a key figure in the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Apollo project until he resigned last year and went into private industry. In a lecture, von Braun described the world as "a with an unknown destination. It has 3.S billion astronauts on board who are using up its resources without Wdng steps to replace them. We are approaching a global catastrophe. "We must do something for Spaceship Earth." solitary spaceship mer organizations City the following described animal: One Bay Gelding Horse Age unknown white strip down front of face, "two white stocking feet (hind). If said animal is not claimed and all amounts due thereon paid, and said animal taken away on or before the twenty-fift- h nineteen day of October, hundred and seventy two, it will be sold by the Animal Control Officer at public sale, at the city pound, in this city, at the hour of 3:00 p.m. to the highest bidder. Date of first posting October 11, 1972 City pound keeper, Orem, Utah County, Utah ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER BURNICE WARD No. 1060 Published in The Daily Herald, October 16, 1972. Notice to Creditors Probate No. 16,706 IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ETHEL FARRER BOSH ARD, Deceased. Creditors will present their claims to the undersigned at the law offices of Maxfield, Gam- mon, Ellis and McGuire, 28 North 100 East, Provo, Utah, on or before the TOth day of January, 1973; claims must be presented in accordance with the Utah provisions of title Code Annotated, 1953, as amended with proper verification as required therein. MAXINE P. FORSHEE, Administratrix GLEN J. ELLIS, Attorney 5, No. 1052, Published in The Daily Herald October 9, 16, 23, 30, 1972. n v 1 !.' , N I I v I V linemen. Applicants must have a minimum of 4 years experience and achieved the status as a journeyman. Applications can be obtained from the Spanish Fork City Of fice, 38b North Main, Spanish Fork, Utah. Applications will be received until November 1, 1972 at 4:00 P.M. at the office of the city treasurer. Clyde A. Swenson Published in The Daily Herald October 15. 16, 17, 18, 19, No. 1972. 1061 1 I o fr 1 ' $ hill-tim- Job. to Harrisburg, Pa., Tampa, Fia., tainment can be presented and evening San Francisco and Los Angeles. the afternoon sessions. Our announcers fill the audience in on what is Newest Show The newest arena show is the going on the fine points of the Philadelphia Horse Show, O.l. sport. We've broken the old This $300,000 operation at taboos, such as not announcing the 15,000-seSpectrum arena horse the rider cr by name in in its second season is a hunter the competitions." prime example of how showThe show is owned by the 350-bmanship is transforming the American horse show into a Episcopal Hospital In spectator sport instead of a Northeast Philadelphia, which event for an elite quasi-sociprovides a health center and i V 3--8. .: at K ed HER EYES GLEAMING, Caroline Kennedy, left, daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy, joins other members of the Kennedy family applauding Sen. George McGovern, and often bored audience. Democratic presidential' candidate, after his speech at a dinner. Seated beside her is Joao Kennedy, gala wife of Sen. Edward Kennedy. fund-raisin- g "Horse shows must be jazzed up if they are to attract paying spectators," said Leonard A, King of Newtown Square, Pa., in the heart of suburban Philadelphia's horse country, Lunar Landing Appears Difficult By JOSEPH L. MYLER WASHINGTON (UPI) --The moon target at which Apollo 17 astronauts will aim next December is geologically the most complex lunar binding site yet picked for visiting U. S. spacemen. It may contain in one place some of the youngest and some of the oldest rocks on the moon, a scientist of the U. S. Geological Survey reported Saturday. It may also contain answers to puzzles raised by previous lunar explorations. The Apollo 17 landers will be The booklet also details what Navy Capt. Eugene A. Ceman steps a passenger should take if and Dr. Harrison H. Schmitt, the first geologist-astronau- t. his flight has been overbooked. It cites the regulations which While Navy Cmdr. Ronald E. require the airlines to pay Evans sails the mission's passengers a "denied boarding command ship in orbit around compensation" if the airline the moon, Cernan and Schmitt was responsible for the passen- will study the Taurus-Littroregion in a mountainous area gers loss of his seat. southeast of the Sea of The booklet even includes a Serenity. definition of what consumerism Dr. William R. Muehlberger, means to the airline passenger. of the Geological Survey's Center of Astrogeology at the is booklet: "It the Says and the customer receiving what he Flagstaff, Ariz., of said Texas, University pays for, no more, no less. It is Cernan and Schmitt "will have the holder of a transportation ticket exDectine and receiving their work cut out in deciphercertain minimum standards of ing the geology of this complex service en route to his area." Site Mapped destination, and an uneventful 17 is scheduled to Apollo reunion with his baggage once leave Cape Kennedy on the he arrives there." night of Dec. 6. Muehlberger is the mission's "principal investigator". He mapped the site from photographs, planned the w Chatter On Wail Street geological traverses, and will help to interpret results. The landing point is on the floor of a deep valley, a sort of bay in the highlands. Photographs show a veneer of dark material, "some of the darkest on the moon," which appears to be "very young," the scientist said. "We're not exactly sure where this dark material came from, but we hope," Muehlberger said, "that Schmitt with his trained geologist's eye will be Same Old Price WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The Internal Revenue Service, mo- nitor for price controls, has headed off what it called a potential "embarrassment." The Government Printing Office was planning to raise the price of the IRS book on income tax preparation from 75 cents to $1. The increase would have been 33 per cent. President Nixon's price guidelines suggest increases of 2.5 per cent. Commissioner Johnnie Walters wrote a letter to the federal printer saying mat the higher price "could be a serious embarrassment to the President's economic stabilization program." GPO said the fair value of the book should be $1.50, but it will remain at its old price. IRS M. able to tell us." The possibility that the dark veneer is ash and cinders from an ancient volcano has beer, raised but appears to be discounted by the fact that no ash and cinders have ever been brought back by previous Apollo missions. Nor has any evidence of explosive eruptions, of steam or other hot gases, ever turned up in lunar rocks this far collected. Not Quite "Dead" Bright material that may represent slides from the hills above the valley conceivably could contain ancient rocks dating from the moon's origin some 4.5 billion years ago. But no rocks that bid have yet been found by Apollo astronauts. Thus far no lunar rocks younger than three billion years have been brought back. If the dark material at the Apollo 17 site turns out to be volcanic, it will mean that "the moon is not quite as dead as is commonly thought," Muehlberger said. "Volcanic rocks as young as these appear to be would indicate that the moon's 'heat engine' was still running fairly recently possibly 500 million years ago," he said. CELEBRATION U SCREENS GAS LOGS FIRESETS REGISTER FOR: GAS LOG DRAWING DISCOUNT COUPONS FREE REFRESHMENTS 154 SOUTH STATE ST. OREM m DINNER BOX i s IS Hiftrrrnl mmfrU nf Imrinp hs. Tutu r vim motr My ilh nut rti iiUr jmililrni. bj we re MMmirhcllwlnnrmilhHririm Ai)lhrs Gww in iinil lit fur imi. H r'll f unhrr xljif I its prrformanrr until it malrhn vntir if IT purrhl" vou still tirn't hfarlnf W. Thrn, if nilhin 10 d Mltfint. Mimi it to it anil xr'll rrfund vuur mnnr . ou havr nothing lo Iim. And nothing bill pmd ran con from it. Harris, Upham & Co., Inc., notes the September market was disappointing until the final sessions of the month, but "for some strange reason it has hr-- l 'IV ber fortunately have brighter records," the firm says. iinlih of in hrforr thr nainf prt on. P a LICKIN" GOOD" & THE FIXIN'S ; ib S! EBuGEJ 0 cJ Qzt'-m---0 Henng Axh FREE HEARING AID EVALUATION wvv jvw clinical oodlologist Fridays 12 noon - Drofessional a tested leientifitaltvI bvI a I 1:00 p.m. Wednesdays 9:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m. No Charge No Obligation. 1 ttl OFFER GOOD AT THE FOLLOWING KFNTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN TAKE-HOM- pa T" PROVO 505 NO. Phone 373-225- 4 1 a KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN WITH gi been disappointing in nine out of the past 13 elections years. October, November and Decem- I g t Or "FINGER a i)VI.CIUSl)KH ff. $ only 8 Zmilli mli 224-15- 42 Sale Jfp REGULAR ONLY EMBLEM 41 FIREPLACES Cr community and recognizing that the market does not usually satisfy the majority leads us to believe that the breakout, when it finally occurs, will be on the upside," it adds. MON. Thru SAT. OCT. 16th thru 2 linXLb UUULbU 1 Sooner or later, the pattern of declining peaks and ascending lows that is compressing the Dow into a progressively narrower range will be broken, suggests E. F. Hutton & Co. Inc. the rather "Viewing oervasive gloomy atmosphere currently in the financial Hospital. edk-Alo- x At A Price You Can Afford Ml Pa., benefits the Bryn Mawr m QUALITY HEARING ough home care for its uriarprivi-lege- d neighborhood. All profits to the hospital, just as the go famous outdoor show at Devon, fried Cliwhtu 3 NEW YORK (UPI)-Alththe volume continues to run at a low level, says Walston & Co. Inc., "the market tone being indicated in recent days suggests that a more interested investing public is starting to look quite seriously at some of the bargain prices now available on exchanges." term," the firm says. which boasts some of the finest fox hunting in the land. King ia chairman of the Philadelphia e Horse Show Committee, a York, whose National Horse morning so the exciting jumpShow is a $500,000 operation, ing events and special enter- and travel "Speculation is still dormant" in the stock market, according to W. E. Hutton & Co. "Barring an abrupt change for the better in news on developments Vietnam, it is probable that the stock market will continue to pursue a cautious course near II "Most horse shows depend la great degree on entry fees paid by exhibitors, making it necessary to accept more entries than are desirable to make an hunting, and show exciting, spectator appealing competition. contest I'm an exhibitor and even I've Hundreds of thousands of ardent horseman but children and young adults been bored watching 60 horses whose parents never were on a do the same thing. horse make up a new generaStar System tion of equestrians. Horse "By limiting our entries to shows are springing up all over the most qualified horses and the country particularly in the we could shorten our riders, Midwest to provide arenas events. By offering more prize where the saddle set can money ftan any other show, we display its skills. have attracted the 500 top The American Horse Show horses and riders from 23 Association lists 1,080 shows states, Canada and Mexico. We this year, with a preponderrjice are trying to develop a star in October. Many are small system in a sport that has been outdoor shows with no proper almost anonymous. facilities for spectators. The big "We have scheduled the more action is at the inside arena in the shows in such cities as New routine competitions Ji ' V ' t , i v " V SPANISH FORK CITY available as journeymen By FREDERICK M. WES' SHIP PHILADELPHIA (UPI)-- Be careful about telling an Ameri- i can, "Get a horse!" He may already have one. ' i Myi In CORPORATION will receive applications for two positions V. THE HERALD, Provo, Utah Page 192 Horses are making a big comeback nationwide. The equine population is nearing 10 million, up from 3 million in 1960. Most ait for pleasure-ridi- ng, agencies. The booklet tells airline passengers what to do when faced w'th "one of the most irritating of all" problems lost baggage, which is the single greatest complaint received by Mo. But the booklet also airlines. have a They reservation, but the airline has no seat for warns passengers not to try to cheat the airlines. them on the plane. The airline ticket they "Exceptionally large claims bought was not the cheapest which exaggerate the value of one for their flight, but they contents claiming didn't find out about the other baggageamounts of cash or large fare until after the flight was are Jewelry, for example over. checked by the airlines and Called "A Consumer Guide claims are usually For Air Travelers," the booklet phony detected," the booklet says. was issued by the Civil It also advises passengers to Aeronautics Board's Office of Consumer Affairs and will be be sure that they know the distributed to airlines, consu- - lowest cost of a ticket. "It's a good idea to check with the airline when planning a trip to see if you qualify for a special fare," the booklet says. NOTICE OF POUND KEEPER'S SALE Notice is hereby given to the owner or owners of the animal hereinafter described and to whomsoever it may concern: that there is impounded by Orem - w 16. Horse Making a Big Comeback in Nation and added: "It seems very probable that Passenger Survival Guide Is Now Available Legal Notices I j civilizations exist in outer space mmm m, s- Air WASHINGTON (UPI) --The government issued an airline passenger's survival guide today designed to aid travelers who face such problems as these: Their baggage is in Rome, Italy, and they are in St. Louis, Monday. October um LOCATIONS! E OREM UNIVERSITY AVE. 155 SOUTH STATE .MERCIAN FORK 439 E. STATE ROAD s a a m |