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Show LISA SHARP WAS ENTERED in an early journal that Brigham Young has had people march all day and dance all night. Here students perform for their parents Virginia Reel in memory of pioneers. IT and Heidi Ewert display pioneer clothing styles and animal skins. Plain City students enjoy study on art of poetry by Kris Ewert Students who pass through fourth grade at Plain City school will have much to fondly remember in years to come. Plymouth Rock Soup, field quilting, trips, Environmental Center activities, a trip to the Capitol building, and presenting a special program for parents about Utah. Fourth graders have been studying Utah history and have gained much in understanding and knowledge from Utahs beginning to present day. A special field trip was taken to the state Capitol building where students witnessed Utahs government in action. fkw GREGG CALVERT was reported upon and county boxs were artistically created by the students to similate an area within their particular county or study. As the highlight of this experience students invited parents to attend a special program in which the students shared their newly aoquired knowledge with their parents. Amid songs, reports and square dancing the tale of early Utah was vividly portrayed. After which parents were served cookies and sage brush tea. &. explain parents how the early , and Lenny Leigh Students grouped up in 3s 4s and studied every individual county throughout Utah. Information gathered or f m at an old pioneer iron, Inger Stevens discusses their trip to the State Capitol. AS STUDENTS look to Frontiersmen and trappers survived in Utahs wilds. Amateurs Forum Your Man II) I liff HartiiMifi Two weeks ago we taught you how to buy lumber to build your new house, last week we taught you how to buy paint to paint your bedrooms and hallways. This week we are going to complete the assignment and teach you everything you ever wanted to know about wallpapering and were afraid to ask, well almost everything. Wallpaper is a marvelous thing and is manufactured in a marvelous way. Thousands of little men take strips of special wallpaper and print it with special dye. Several strips are printed from a single dye batch. When the dye is used up naturally it is replaced and another strip perhaps 3 or 4 thousand feet long is printed. Sometimes this method results in color variations and because of these color variations, it is best not to hazard a guess at the amount of paper you will need. Rather than run short in the middle of a project. Buy all the paper you will need at one time. So how much paper will you need? and how much time will it take to do the job? Its easy to figure it out. To calculate the amount of paper necessary to cover your room, find the room perimeter as you did when you were pointing (see last weeks column). Multiply that figure by room height measured from the baseboard to the ceiling-o- r to a cornice, if you do not mean to paper above it - then subtract the exact area of doors, windows and other places you will not paper. The final figure will be close estimate of the wall area of the room. Wall coverings are measured in units called single rolls. Though the width of papers may range from IS to 54 inches, a single roll contains approximately 36 square feet of covering. Despite this standard unit of measurement, most papers are sold in double-lengt- h rolls called bolts and some are sold in 3 or 4 roll bolts. You must expect to wast about 6 square feet per single roll on odd shaped areas, on points where the wall ends before your pattern does and in trimming excess paper from the top and bottom of a strip. Therefore, divide your total wall or ceiling area by 30 square feet to find the number of single-ro- ll units you will need. You should request that your paper be delivered in two, three, or four roll bolts cut in continuous, long strips. Working from a bolt of this length, you can cut as many as five or six strips with ease and minimal waste. However, unless the actual number of rolls you need turns out to be an exact multiple of two or three, try to avoid paper that is sold only in bolts. If you should need to cover a small area calling for just one extra roll and you have only multiple-rol- l bolts, you could wind up wasting from one to three hill rolls. But dont if you have no choice; It might be difficult or to match your paper later. If you are hanging on pare or painted walls In good condition, allow a full day to Bias and paper a 13 by IS foot room. If the walls need substantial repairs, or if you must remove an exsisting coat of paper, double that estimate, especially if you are papering floor-Uxelli- un-dsrb- de for the first time. Kerry paper hen-to- g! In Washington By U.S. Senator Orrin G. Hatch FOURTH GRADE students display and explain their county boxes. ' Craig Miya Division of Wildlife By The By Craig Miya state's with the angler skill. Ice fishing on Willard Bay to providing fair to good special whitefish season on three Northern Utah rivers will continue through April 30 this year. However fishermen should be aware of the new regulation allowing only artificial flies to be used between March 1, and April 30. The Weber river from Wanship Dam down stream in Summit and Morgan coun- ties will be open to angling along with the Logan river below Temple Fork, and the Blacksmith Fork river down slrea, from Rock Creek. The daily bag and possession limits on the mealworms, and waxworms kept just off the bottom are having the best success. fishing for crappie and There to no limits on he bluegill. Anglers are finding crappie and bluegill on the best success in the North Willard Bay, but a current and South Marinas. fishing license to required. The ice condition at However, fish are being caught ail around the reser- Willard to presently good, 6 with the ice inches voir. Fishermen using small thick with two to four inbrightfy colored jigs, ches of slush over the ice. 12-1- ' Slow driving helps conserve gasoline Utahns can escape the effects of the Iranian od shutwtiitefish. Anglers are also off by driving the speed reminded to have their 1979 limit, according to figures fishing licenses in their released by the Utah Energy three streams is 20 Office. Some experts are predic- possession while fishing. Fishing pressure has been oil generally light on all three ting that mandatory allocation and gasoline rivers with success varying rationing may be due to the idling of Iranian oil fields but tourism and personal vacationing need not be affected if Utahns and theestof the nation conserve energy voluntarily. Reed Searle, director of the Utah Energy Office, said, "The Iranian oil curtailment has reduced. TIME TO STOP MEAT MARKET COASTER Utah's cattlemen work hard to put meat on our tables and they deserve greater protection from cheap foreign imports. I have cosponsored a bill to provide that protection. Known as 'The Meat Import Act of 1 979, my bill will also provide needed new price protection for consumers. The bill will replace the current law, passed in 1964, which allows the President too much power to impose political considerations on our beef producers and consumers alike. Under the current system, the President has the authority to raise or lower foreign meat import quotas depending upon how much our own domestic producers send to the market. As our production declines, the import quotas also decline. The results are too often inflated meat prices and production lags that cheat meat consumers and producers alike. Carter's Quota Flood During the most recent period of declining prices and production, the Carter administration used its import quota authority to flood our market with cheap foreign beef. As a result, prices and production for our producers and consumers are again on the roller coaster cycle that has characterized the cattle market for too long. My bill will bring new stability to the cattle market. Rather than allowing the President to flood the market just when it will do the most harm to Utah cattlemen, my bill orovides a new Import quota formula . that upwardly adjusts imports when domestic production slackens and tightens them when our production l increases. Such a formula" will assure producers their prime share of the market when their production is at its peak. Consumers will also be assured of meat prices that do not go skyward with every fluctuation of the cattle market. In addition to the countercyclical formula for determining meat import quotas, my bill greatly restricts the President's authority to alter import quotas and requires that he provide a 30 day notice when he believes circumstances justify a suspension or increase in import quotas. Dusk to Dawn Labor Utah's cattlemen provide more than $185 million for our state's economy. Cattle and milk production represent the two largest cash receipt commodities in Utah. Nearly counter-cyclica- half of all agricultural activity in Utah is cattle and milk related. These men and women work long hours every day of the year to assure our citizens of adequate supplies of their products. For too long, our cattle producers and meat consumers have been subject to the chaotic price and production roller coaster and the of political interests imposition calculated more for of politicians than for the health of the cattle market My Ml, 'The Meat Import Act of 1979," will provide us all with a vastly improved and stable market ! long-ter- |