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Show Emery County Progress Tuesday, November Mime Presentations and Health and Safety conference to be held More panel discussions focusing on recent legal developments in mine safety and health, miners and an overview of federal mine safety and health programs will highlight the Twelfth Annual Institute of Mine Health and Safety in Golden, Colo. Nov. than 100 mine managers, supervisors, safety directors, engineers, academic and research personnel, and state and federal mine agency personnel from throughout the country will participate in the institute at the Marriott West on right-to-kno- 17-1- 1-- 70 8. beginning at 9 a.m. on both days. the U.S. by Departments Mine Safety and Health AdLabor ministration (MSHA) and the Colorado School of Mines, the institute is designed to assist mine operating personnel in obtaining a broader knowledge and understanding of the various aspects of, and methods for, controlling environmental health and safety hazards found in mining, said Wally Schell, MSHA training specialist and institute session chairman in Denver. Wesley G. Johnson, institute coordinator and CSM mining professor will open the program on Thursday, Nov. 17 at 9 a.m. Moab to host mammoth discussion The Huntington Mountain mammoth and why the Anasazi abandoned the Four Comers area will be discussed in two of four slide lectures in Moab to be sponsored by the Dan OLaurie Museum. The theme of the series is Survival Through complete mammoth skeleton from the top of Huntington Canyon. This first complete mammoth find in Utah has raised more questions than it has answered and should provide a stimulating disussion. The unusual location, date and possible explanations for the presence of the ancient elephant at this high elevation will be covered. This will be followed on Wednesday, Nov. 30 with So Hungry They Ate the Bark Off a Tree...! by Marilyn a consulting archaeologist with Goodson and Associates of Denver. Some historic Indian groups did utilize tree bark in their diets. Ms. Marturano will disclose the who, what and when of this practice and point out how we do the same thing today. On Wednesday, Dec. 7, Alan The Schroedl will present Time in Canyonlands. Funded partially by a matching grant from the Utah Endowment for the Humanities (UEH), the Canyon Legacy Lectures will reveal current findings in archaeology and paleontology. All programs will begin at 7 p.m. at the Moab Civic Center and are free of charge. We have assembled some of the foremost scholars in the West to speak on their recent Mar-turan- o, said museum Plastow. This Pete president information is not just what you can read in a book. Its new and quite extraordinary. We want to extend an invitation to all of Southeast Utah and the Western Slope to attend. Focusing on the Colorado Plateau, the series will kick off on Friday, Nov. 18 with The Huntington Mountain Mammoth: The Last Holdout? findings, Power and the Glory: Shamanistic Rock Art of the Late Archaic. Highlighting the dramatic Barrier Canyon rock art style, Schroedls slide lecture will treat its relationship to the archaeological record of the period from about 4,000 to 2,000 years ago. Since this is a topic of current debate, his views should be provocative. Schroedl, the given by David Gillette, Utah state paleontologist. Gillette will give an illustrated report on the recovery in August of a Rodeo to be held A special live telecast riding, calf roping and bull of the final championship r riding; as well as : Womens round of the National Finals Professional Rodeo Association Rodeo, from Las Vegas, Nev. barrel racing. will be sponsored locally by Over $2,000,000 is awarded at Huntington Tractor in this Super Bowl of Rodeo. Veteran pro rodeo announcers Orangeville. The live coverage will be Hadley Barrett, Randy Corley broadcast on Americas largest and Bob Tallman will provide sports network, ESPN, on Dec. play by play action and color 0 EST. 11, commentary. This exciting broadcast will Coverage of the final feature the top Professional is championship Rodeo Cowboy Association sponsored by Hesston Corathletes competing for world poration and participating Hesston Farm Equipment champion titles in bareback bronc riding, steer wrestling, dealers across the United States team roping, saddle bronc and Canada. - 4:00-6:0- go-arou-nd EMERY HIGH SCHOOL Student of the Week Shane Gagon Laurel Clements Shane Gagon and Laurel Clements, seniors at Emery High School, are the Students of the Week. The selection was made by members of the faculty. Laurel, 17, is the daughter of Bryan and Kathleen Clements of Castle Dale. She plays the trumpet and comet in Emerys band and jazz band. She is consistently on the honor roll and is in Whos Who Among American High 15, 1988 15A School Students. She likes working with wood with her father and driving her car. Her other hobbies include baseball, basketball, volleyball, camping, fishing and hunting. After high school, she plans to attend college. Shane is the son of Tom and Jeanne Ogden of Orangeville. Active in sports, Shane is a wrestler and plays on the baseball team. He is also in the National Honor Society. As a math team member, Shane placed in the state competition. He is in Whos Among American High School Students and was voted to last years Junior Prom Who royalty. hobbies Shanes include fishing and hunting. He plans to attend the University of Utah after graduation and study medicine. SPONSORED BY . TO 0OT3Jut033 acknowledged expert on the Archaic cultures of the northern Colorado Plateau, directs Associates of Salt Lake City. The final lecture, At Last! Why the Anasazi Left the Four Comers Area, will be given on Wednesday, Dec. 21 by Kenneth Peterson of Westinghouse in Richland, Laboratories Wash. Sixteen years of research led to this scholar stumbling on the solution to the perennial riddle of Anasazi research. The interested public will want to see if they agree and query Peterson on the implications of P-I- II mild-manner- his findings ed for todays Gramm-RudmanEr- a. Canyonlands Field Institute, National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service. To increase the value of the lectures, they will be videotaped and a study guide prepared for use by teachers. The text of the lectures will also be published in the new journal, Canyon Legacy, to be available next February from the museum. Complimentary copies of the journal will be sent to libraries and schools in Utah. Individual copies will also be available for sale. The journal will cover a wide variety of subjects on natural history of the West, inhabitants. This program is part of the continuing effort of the Dan OLaurie Museum to provide a community outreach program the Colorado Plateau. Potential contributors for future issues may contact editor Jean Akens. Each lecture will have a on question-and-answ- natural history topics. Joining with the museum as cosponsors are a number of other local groups with a similar interest. These include the Grand County School District, followed by a welcoming address by Dr. Miklos Salamon, head of the CSM mining department at 9 : 15 a.m. The institutes theme More Bang for Your Buck will be presented by Gary McDowell, resident manager, AMAX Coal Corp., Gillette, Wyo. at 9:30 a.m. followed by David Brown, deputy director, U.S. Bureau of Mines, Washington, D.C. on Managing in the principally er period at the end and may feature some stimulating dialogue on survival in Canyonlands in our time. Admission is free, and the public is invited. An overview of safety and health problems and programs in coal and mines will be discussed by John MSHA district DeMichiei, manager for coal mine safety and health, and Vernon Gomez, MSHA Rocky Mountain district manager for metal and mine safety and health beginning at 10 : 45 a.m. The luncheon will feature an metal-nonmet- al non-met- al address David will be devoted to a panel MSHA on Citations, Orders, Conferences, ALJs, Review Commission, Court Appearances What to Do. Wesley Johnson, institute coordinator, will wrap up the sessions with closing remarks at discussion a.m. Prior to the institute 11:30 on Wednesday, Nov. 16, MSHA will conduct an Instructor Conference and Mine Resuce Workshop at the Marriott West from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The sessions will include a live satellite demonstration program from MSHAs National Mine Health and Safety Academy in Beckley, W.V., a AIDS presentation on Awareness Training in the and Mining Community, overviews of the national surface mine rescue contest and the national industrial fire- beginning at 2 p.m., will feature presentation from: Archie M. Gillis, manager of safety, Falkirk Mining Co., Underwood, N.D. on How a Safety fighting contest. That evening, the Holmes Safety Association Northern Colorado-Souther- n Wyoming Council will host an open house dinner at the Marriott beginning at 6:30 p.m. Roy Bernard, acting deputy assistant secretary of labor for MSHA and Program president, by Colorado Association at 1 p.m. president, The afternoon Can Cole, Mining session, Maximize Returns on Your Rodney Investment; Smith, attorney, Current Legal Denver, on in Occupational Developments Safety and Health; and Linda Pon, industrial hygienist, Utah Inc., San Francisco, on Right to Know. On Friday, Nov. 18, the halfa.m. day session from International, National Homes Safety Associatioin will be the guest speaker. Registration fee for the institute is $100 which includes all sessions and the luncheon, and $10 for the MSHA conference-worksho- p. For further in- formation and assistance, contact Wally Schell at |