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Show Register Now For Scout BOX ELDER NEWS, Brigham City, Utah Sunday, April 7, 1968 Jamboree 69 Registrations are still being accepted for the seventh National Boy Scout Jamboree which will be held at Farra-gu- t State Park, In Northern Idaho in July of 1969, accor-din- g to Rodney Leslie, local scout executive. All local units have receiv. ed advance information con. cerning age and rank require, ments, costs, and methods of application for consideration to join the contingent from the local Scout Council, EACH APPLICANT to be selected must exemplify the Scout Oath and Law, be pro. ficient in campcraft, handling tentage, firebuilding, cooking, first aid, and demonstrate leadership ability and the Scout spirit. The local contingent of 185 boys from the Lake Bonne, vllle Council, and 15 leaders will travel by air to Spokane, Wash,, spend a day at Grand Coulee Dam, and visit other points of interest in the area before proceeding to the Leslie said. They also will return home by air on a charter air flight by United Airlines. jam-bore- WILL LEAD ROTARY officers of the Brigham City Rotary club are, from from left, Boyd E. Newman, secretary; Morris Glover, treasurer; Dr. J. Howard Rasmussen, president; Rev. Earl S. Fox, Newly-electe- vice president. Standing are Dr. Russell W. Fishburn, and DeLonne Anderson, directors, and Reed Hadfield, immediate past president. d 7 tA V' VU A! " I fes fi t " w 1 l-- l J si t BIRDHAVEN DISTRICT for the contingent is 24 boys, who will be selected from the applicants by in. terview. Further details may be by parents contacting Leslie or W. Mack Stoddard, Birdhaven District Jamboree committee representative. The national jamborees are four held every years, Stoddard explained. OGDEN PFRFORMANCE Soloists ssith the Utah Civic Ballet, Margaret McMillan, Sandra Allen and Carol) n Smith, left to right, are pictured above in a scene from "Coppelia, which they will perform in Ogden an Apr. 9. Sponsor will be the Ogden Ballet guild. The LItah Sjmphony orchestra will accompany the production. PUBLIC Frank E. Moss (D.Utah) has received an interim report from Argentine Ambassador Alvara Alsogaray regarding the problem Protestant misSen. sionaries had encountered in obtaining FOR NUCLEAR TEST This is a section of fiber- einforced steel casing developed by Thiokols Wa- satch division for use by the Atomic Energy commission n pipe is an outgrowth of Thiokols extensive experience in the fabrication of filament-wounrocket motor cases. Wasatch division has manufactured and successfully tested cases up to 13 feet in diameter. Stone said that successful completion of the reinforced pipe contract creates a prom, er grade, more expensive un. ising new product line. I foresee many other ap. reinforced steel would other-wis- e for be required to support plications fiberglass the massive vertical weight structures, he said. of the shaft. The fiberglass is applied by A senes ox classes in in. rotating the big sections of decoration will be held terlor and is fiberglass roving pipe, coated with a liquid epoxy in Brigham City beginning resin as it is wound onto the Thursday, April 11, at the pipe, Ten layers of fiberglass North Box Elder Stake Cenfilaments, totaling an astrono- ter. Instructor will be Mrs. Zola mical 2.4 - million miles in a former Instructor at Cook, seconto a wound are length, Brigham Young university. tion of pipe. classes will be held from THE FIBERGLASS.resin 1 The to 3 p.m. each Thurs. p.m. composite is then cured in a 11 through mammoth oven to complete day from April May 30, a series of eight. the process. Cost of the entire course The winding of reinforced has been set at $10. Baby sit. Nuclear Test AEC of aerospace Application technology to the atomic age has been achieved by Thiokol h Chemical Corporations Wa-satc- division with the fabrl-catio- n of fiberglass. relnforc. ed steel casings for the A. tomic Energy commission. James M. Stone, general manager of Wasatch division, said the casings will be used for underground nuclear test- AECs Nevada test site. The work was done under a $620,000 contract with an AEC Subcontractor, Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Co., Inc., of Las Vegas, Nev. Sections of steel pipe, each 94 Inches in diameter and 30 feet long, were reinforced with fiberglass filaments at ThiokoPs filament winding op. eratlon in Salt Lake City. The work was accomplished under the direction of Plant Manager Robert W, Jamison. THE REINFORCED PIPE IS to be used for lining the up-pportion of a shaft ex. tending deep below the surface of the earth. The bot. tom of the shaft will be the site of a nuclear explosion that will be detonated as part of the AEC nuclear testing program. Thiokol process, of The manufacturing filament.wound fiberglass structures has been trademarked Thloglas by Thiokol officials. Reinforcement of steel pipe the lightweight, high, with strength fiberglass filaments provides several advantages. The reinforced pipe is much more resistant to buckling, with a ring bending stiffness more than nine times greater than the steel pipe along. THIOGLAS material also permits the use of a much lighter weight pipe. an impor-an- t factor since the pipe is actually suspended from a structure aboveground. Cost is also reduced, since a high- - d Product To Use TCC ing at the in its underground nuclear testing program. Fiberglass-rmiles in length are glass filaments totaling wound around the larger pipe. Classes Set visas from the government. The ambassador told Sen-atMoss that one Morman missionary had been granted a visa renewal and that several .other visa renewals were in under the rules of process the earlier policy. The ambassador said he was in daily contact with his Senator foreign minister, Moss said. He said the matter was progressing favorably and that he would keep me Informed of any further developments. Senator Moss asked the information last it became known for week when that all Protestant mission, LWV To including some 200 aries, Mormon missionaries, were having difficulty obtaining and visa renewals. visas The ambassador told me The League of Women Votthen that the matter center, ers of Brigham City will em- ed in the Argentine Immlgra-tlo- n bark on its second year of office, and it appears that study on the topic of U.S. a favorable solution will be Policies towards China with worked out. Senator Moss two unit meetings scheduled said. for Tuesday, April 9. Morning meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Joseph Kelly, 763 Medoland, at 9:15 a.m. Nursery care for children will be at Gillespie hall. The evening meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Vernon Kalvestrand, 615 West Fifth North, beginning at 8 p.m. Chairman for the study item is Mrs. J.P, Gurrlster. Study China Issues o ting service will be available at a cost of 25 cents per child. Interested persons are in. vited to attend Thursday and register for the course. The Ogden Ballet guild will present the Utah Civic Bal-let- s e delightful pro. duction of Coppelia with the complete Utah Symphony or. chestra on Tuesday, Apr. 9 at 8 p.m. in the Weber State College Fine Arts Center auditorium, according to Mrs. Spencer Baggs, president. is cast In two Coppelia acts and three scenes, and Leo Delibes musical score Includes a prelude and 20 musical numbers, the last of which is in the nature of a divertissement divided into eight separate sections. One of these The Dance of the y Hours is well known to audiences the world full-scal- Ban Easing "M INVITED Ogden Ballet Guild Slates Coppelia by Utah Ballet Argentina Missionary if rv : e, TO VIETNAM Sp4 Steven J. Smith has left for duty in Vietnam. eographer to undertake a of the work. When the Civic Ballet danced Utah in the 1966 Coppelia of Utah Summer Festival, all six performances were completely sold out. n THE TICKETS FOR go on sale Monday at the Bertha Eccles Art center and will be available Monday through Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. Pre.paid mail orders will be filled until Apr. 2. Ticket prices are $2, $3 and $4, with all seats being reserved. In an effort to make the performance readily available to all students in the Ogden area, officials of the Ogden over. Ballet guild have arranged THE BALLET WAS pre. with the Utah Civic Ballet miered at the Paris Opera in for a special student matinee at 3:30 p.m. the afternoon of 1870 after three years of preparation and after three dif. the performance. All students will be admit-te- d ferent ballerinas had rehears, for $1 per ticket with no ed for the leading role of reserved seats. Adult admls. It then has Since Sqanilda. been danced by all the major sion for the matinee will be companies of the world en. $2. joying enormous popularity. William Christensen first staged Coppelia with his own choreography for the San Francisco Ballet in 1939 and was the first American chor. sym-phon- Serviceman Assigned to Vietnam Duty Sp-Steven J. Smith departed March 29 for Vietnam for the remaining seven months of his Army tour of duty. He had spent a furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus J. Smith, 29 North Second West, Brigham City, prior to his departure. Sp-Smith was inducted in-tthe Army in November 1966. He took his basic training at Fort Lewis, Wash., after which he was assigned to the 29th Military Police company at Fort Lewis. He was one of five from his group selected to attend military police train. 30-da- y 4 Eagles Slate Business Meet o ing school at the Army Train, ing Center, Fort Gordon, GA., from which he was certified April 28, 1967. He rejoined his unit at Fort Lewis where he remained un. til his new assignment to The Fraternal Order No. 2919 of will hold a Eag-le- s bust-nes- s meeting Monday evening April 8, at 8 p.m. In the aerie hall. Members are urged to be in attendance, officers said. Graduate to a flameless Electric Dryer Clothes look better, last longer! settle for less than a Ph.D. when it come todays modern permanent pres clothes? 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