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Show The Tooele, Transcript Friday, April Ahoy There 17, 1964 Utah IJbrarif Have Ksr S D f btUj McAlllMer IJttle Known Gllertion Phone 8824711 tasted, others to be swallowed. Charlotte Strong and Kandi Lee were hostesses last week at a miscellaneous shower for Trudi Outzen. Twenty three guests were present at the party, which was held at the Strong home. PFC Michael Christiansen stopped overnight last Wednesday to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Meininger, and brother, Mark. He was accompanied by PFC Tom Love. The two men were enroute from Tacoma, where they are stationed, to Fort Carson, Colorado, where they were to participate in a shoot ing competition. Mr. and Mrs. Barney O'Toole and daughter Deb bie spent last weekend in Vernal, where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Toole. Mrs. Sandra Julander and children, Dirk and Jori, of Ogden, are visiting this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fay Prows, and her sister and brother-in-laMr. and Mrs. Glen Russell. Also guest of the Prowses and Russells this week is Mrs. Prows's mother, Mrs. Abbie Ranck, of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Doris Young has as houseguests this week her daughter Mrs. Ruth Bradford, and her small grandson Monte, who are here from Las Vegas for a week. w PLANTING W; Gardening Tools 9 Lawn and Garden Seed Lawn Mowers Morgro Garden Hose 9 Sprinklers 9 Scotts Turf Builder 9 HALTS, Crab Grass Preventer 9 BONUS, for control of Dandelions & Broad leaf Weeds SPECIAL! $5.00 Off Spreader when you buy a bag of Scotts Turf Builder SPECIAL! $2.00 Off Regular Price oi HALTS, Crab Grass preventer oocO's rJcaDgreem EDragg 34 South Main some few to be chewed and digested.".. TASTE swallow THFM, them, chew or digest them; whatever the choice of book, this is the week to do it as li- braries of the other colleges and universities throughout the State are joining in the obser- vance of Library Week. The University of Utah It- brary, along with the libraries of the other colleges and uni- versifies throughout the State are Joining in the observance of Library Week. According to Richard W Boss, assistant librarian at the U's George Thomas Library, visitors during the week will be given Library Week book markers as a reminder of the obervance. OF Utah's colleges and universities is proud of its library as a resource for research and education. The University of Utah has a particularly good collection of journals and each month mining companies, mis- sile plants, industrial firms and installations order military of technical ar- tides appearing in the pubh- cations. Another little known, but ex- tremely valuable research tool is the University's collection of The collection, 45,000 maps. housed in the Engineering and Physical Sciences section of includes moon the library, maps, star maps and ocean floor 'map. In lo coo- ventional land maps. THOUSANDS OF rare hooks are available to scholars in the microfilm collection. Mr. Bos. noted. The library has micro- film editions of all book known to have been printed in the Enghsh language between 1475 and 1700 and a microcard col- lection of every book known to have been published in the United States before 1901. Special collections at other schools around the state are also valuable research tools. The Weber State 'College library houses the Howell Collection containing early English and American literature books published during the nineteenth century. The 10,000 volume collection is from the personal library of the late Judge James A. Howell, Ogden attorney, civic lender and philanthropist. Utah State Universitys new $2.5 million library is now the regional depository for Utah for all United States Government documents. LOCATED IN the basement of the new library is the Man and His Bread" mueum which EACH ... Skipper You'd need forty pairs of hands to count on your fingers the number of hull shapes on the market today, and even then you'd probably run 0ut of digits. One of the rea-an- d , for this is that there is a wide variety of demands, uses, and needs depending on the skippers, and there is no single design that can meet all of them. The family boat- man has certain requirements that are as akin to the boat racer's demands as tea to corn liquor. There are some basic, gen- eral categories, though, into which most boats can be lump- L newcomer to boat- in Wight he wise to keep these in mind when he sets out to buy his ng. The most basic, dating from way back when, is the scow, Little more than a floating du- box, it performs box-likin a box like way. Flat- usually blunt at the ends, and broad as a pregnant is perfect for cow, a scow carrying heavy loads and for slow, stable transportation. As designers add refinements, the hich a scow type UM( w boat can be put grow, and you can fmd such boats doing man service as fishing boats, hunting boats, or serving as the floating platforms for ing homes or houseboats. With radical shape changes and the addition of a sail rig. the scow becomes one of the hottest sailboats around, turning in speeds of over 30 miles per e yeo-vario- hour! Probably the second moat common shape afloat, is the skiff, i1 shape,. imPle not become sharper toward the bow. Increaed sharpness of the vee forward allows it to enter the water easier as the boat rides up and down the waves. It's like hitting the water with the side of your hand instead of slapping it witn boats your palm. make much better rough water craft, as a rule, than their brothers, but generally don't have the high speed and potential pound of the type. A typical compromise be- tween these two shapes can be seen in boats having a fairly sharp prow and plenty of dead rise or vee for about the first quarter or third of the boat that flattens out as you get farther back, becoming almost flat at the stern. Such a shape gives cleaner entry into the water but will still allow the boat to climb up out of the water and plane" on its flat tail as the speed increases. Once up on a plane, though, the soft riding quality of the vee is lost and the boat reverts to type giving the chara-tie- s cteristic hand slap of (he bottomed hull, '", h boat takes less pow- ltUe ,nd ride A growth of the tompd bo.,,. the hu, rPtajnl ,omp of thp sim. pijcity of the flatty but adds a smoother ride and better di- rectional stability. The bottom has a shallow vee shape in that may or may depicts the history of agriculture. As the schools continue to grow and libraries build their more space be collections, comes necessary. USU opened new library only recently while construction is expected to start on new facilities at Weber State College sometime this year. A new library for University of Utah is also , flat-bot- cross-sectio- n ' Plastic surgeons can do al- mot anything with a nose, ex- cept keep it out of other peo- pie's business. Michigan - jack-hamme- r flat-foote- power-for-powe- flat-botto- r points from Bateman Jewelry. High for the Devils Den Patten with was Mel Van games of 207, 2 19 for a (II series. Deb Long had a 243, S7S series, and Keith Cook had a 214. 569 series. Tom Childs had a 229 game, High for Bateman Jewelry was Jim Jones with a 209. 547 series. The Tooele Bowl won two by winning three Miner Ford pojnlI from 0wf, 3 s i i i i I i i I These Cars Priced Wholesale! I I d, Realizing the importance of the deep vee in rough water, one designer, Ray Hunt, dehull a few veloped a deep-ve- e years back that took the boating buffs by storm. He incorporated steps" running the hull length of the that served to lift the boat up on a plane but kept the vee for smoother entry into the waves. The result was the now famous Moppie which cleaned up in rough-wate- r power boat racing here and abroad. This new design is becoming more and more popular with build- ers and boaters. The Moppie broke down the old barrier that stood between the two primary boat groups i i i I vee-botto- J? .".'.I1 since most build The displacement hull rides in er, wd,.curve the bottom fore the water, displacing it around and Prov,d bc"er ha.' the boat as it pushes along. 'nd the nature of a planing hull. So you pays your money and you takes your choice. If you want the speed, it's there. Me? I'd rather see some of the scenery and be able to walk away without pain. MAJOR LEAGUE W L Team Standings; 14 II Devils Den jor League boats follow Many pleasure this style and offer stability and over-al- l comfort at the sacrifice of hish speed. The planing hull is designed to climb out of the water and passskip along ing the water under its planing surfaces. On a calm day it can give you a fast and comfortable ride, but as soon as you get into some chop, when the wind has begun to pick up the waves a little, a hull's chief riding planing characteristic is a repeated pounding as it slams from wave to wave. While it may not leave the water complete-it- s y, at least the bow section will slap, slap, slap enough to jar your motors. The speed buffs love it, but for those e with softer spines and an clination toward creature forts it can feel like a don- trip in a square-wheele- d kcy cart at ,8 m',es ?nbou.; Sure, a displacement hull will Pound if the going gets really but noth,n llke stone-fashio- n i i iJ J i i 9" I X I i i i I i i 1" i.. Imnevie Motors corn-planne- d. rued' i Many more Cars $100 and Less to choose from 278 North Main IK OKHK'iOKMKHKVMVMKHK Tooele. Utah Phone )() 882-057- t 2 UMKTSKZORKJMKXMOMOMOdK c mcrcxr During Bonneville Motors m Ml 3 m uliu FABULOUS ON ALL MODELS! t i i FORD GALAX1E 500 CONVERTIBLE WALK OR DRIVE IN AND SAVE i I FORD COUNTRY SEDAN I WERE DEALIN I TO BEAT ON AH NEW AND USED CARS! t DRIVE AWAY IN A NEW THE BAND FORD I I The Surprise Car Of The Yearl i I Styling and features of expensive European Road Cars are combined with an American price, compact economy, and traditional Ford quality in the Mustang a new line of cars from Ford Division of Ford Motor Company. i mars-producti- MUSTANG WITH VINYL COVERED ROOF ENJOY EASY TERMS WHEN YOU EBaDmmevnflll DEAL KMIciDdciDrps WITH US I "rfrrTTTtr-titl i i - r : |