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Show Utah Capitol Has DESERET NEWS 'rips Summer Road Jobs Filled By Studenfs By ARNOLD IRVINE Deseret News Staff Writer There 'are too many drips in the State Capitol. This is the Complaint of none oilier than Secy, of State Clyde L. Miller, a man not given to hurling epithets. He's talking about water, not people. The Capitol roof leaks. VVeve and put buckets drums in the attic to catch the water. The roof is in "a bad way," Mr. Miller moaned. Despite these efforts, some drips elude the buckets and infiltrate offices below. (Again, nothing personal.) OFFICE DRIPS "On rainy days, we have to put buckets in the state engineer's office," the secretary of state said. Up In his fourth floor suite, engrossed in reports of ruptured dams and other ground water problems, the state engineers staff is hoping the ceiling water will be eliminated soon. Looking up at big watermarks on the acoustical tile, one of the engineers said, Sometimes we have an inch of water on the floor in here." LEAKY DOME Thursday, September 21, 1967 copper-covere- Ej m 73 Another students were employed in maintenance as- signments. Statewide, 176 engineering students, including 42 m CTP performed engineering while 22 students functions, worked in maintenance assignHe explained that the students ments. students work on gain importantto experience careers in Engineering which may lead crews as chainmen, survey engineering fields. levelmen and instrument men. Some investigate possible They also help to carry the and borrow sources. Othheavy work load during the gravel summer months and receive ers perform tests in the soils as part of routine depay which helps them to con- laboratory of physical propertermination tinue their schooling. ties of soil types to be overlaid Top consideration for summer by new highways. employment is given to civil engineering students, particularly those who have been hired in the departments Career Training Program. ' J KM lyVM p!fy Tt $ W .' u t & Tlje Utah Higliwd) Department employed 396 students during the siitnmer construction season, Henry C. Helland, direcdisclosed tor of highways, Wednesday. ?1 , 3 i i' v- J s f- - ) 1 - i V' 5 - rod-me- Hank Stewart checks leaky Capitol roof. the Building Board has been Weve studying the problem. got to get started before the bad he added, weather comes, at a glancing apprehensively over cloud small Antelope Capitol Island. In the Salt Lake area, in the various departments and In field engineering, 82 civil engineering students. Including 17 in the CTP, were employed this year. general restoration job over the dome whole and roof Is needed," Mr. Soderberg said. SECTION "Well go as far as we can before winter. If the weather holds out, well do the entire roof. If not, we'll make emergency City, Regional repair in areas we know are Obituaries LAMS WOOL E The dome leaks, too. Mr. Soderberg has been conThe water comes into one of with roofing, the areas up in the dome just ferring sheet leaking then finish the job in the Action Ads Weather Map like a shower, said James R. metal and masonry experts and spring, he said. Soderberg, architect and physi- is now in the process of writing' cal facilities analyst with the specifications for the project State Building Board. Calling for bids will be the next The Legislature set up a step. a p p ropriation for There $355,000 are many imponderrepairs and improvements on ables in the Possithe Capitol and grounds. roof, with its numerous skybly the most convincing lobby in lights and superstructures. We a was favor of the appropriation don't know for sure whether the peisistent leak in the House of dome leak is in the copper Re.preentaties ceiling. or m the sheet metal "I've met with the building coyer below," he said. board and we've set up a priori- flashing 47 West 6th South "The tin cornices around the ty list for work to be done. The roof is number one on the list," skylights leak and the roof Mr. Miller said. He noted that drains are in bad condition. A: d ar Z28Q2KfiiD ar &X&SCLX&2 ar,QJDZADar( tWf ATCRB ... COLOUR MATCD, SHIRTS Now handsome Alan Paine lambswool sweater come with their own CotourMate Shirts . , . both made in England in original, identical colours created by Alan Paine. Shirts ar made of a fins 50 cotton50 wool fabric . . . come small, medium, 3 3 1 Sweater us fully fashlarge and extra-largioned, meticulously detailed, com in aize 38 to 46. A wide range of new and unusual colours. 4 e. 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