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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES i FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1965 State Officials Sample Ice Cream At Dairy Council Capitol Party Utah Fish Season To Open May 29 Utahs general fishing season opens May 29 and the forecast is for more than 225,000 licensed anglers to be afield during the outdoor event which continues to November 30. Most will be afield for the week end, and the Department of Fish and Game urges anglers to get their licenses before the last minute rush. Nearly 500 license agents dispense fish and game licenses in the state. Each carries the several types of licenses and are ready to serve the public at all times. The law requires that every person 12 years of age or older must possess and visibly display University Profs Contribute to Reference Book Five University of Utah professors are article contributors to the 1965 edition of Encyclopedia Americana, it has been announced by the publisher, Grolier, Inc. Professors C. W. Mays and Robert C. Pendleton are coauthors of an article on the subject of Radioactive Fallout. Prof. Melvin A. Cooks articles on Dynamite and Guncotton Prof. William Kents article is on Galileo; and Prof. Thomas Page Nine F. ODeas articles are on the Mormons and Brigham Young. The 30 volume Encyclopedia Americana is this countrys oldest native reference work, the first edition having been published in 13 volumes in 1829. The 1965 edition features many new articles including several written by such well known persons as Sargent Shriver, who has written on Poverty; Nobel r, Pribe winner Philip with an article on Peace; and Stuart Chase, who has an article on Abundance. Characterized by its publisher as being an eye witness to Mans achievement, the 1965 Encyclopedia Americana keeps pace with the latest scientific, political, educational and international developments. It has been revised to reflect such events as President Johnsons election, overthrow of Nikita Khruschev, the Chinese atomic bomb blasts, Labours victory in Great Britain and the deaths of Herbert Hoover and Sir Winston Noel-Ba-ke- a proper license whenever in the field. Department records show many arrests are made each year for fishing without a amto true her Lynn Braun, liencse, being improperly libassadorial mission, diplomatic- censed or using another persons ally expresses the hope that lo- license. cal citizens will enter in both Again the reminder to beat at local Sweepstakes the rush by buying a license beplaces houses and at the Formica Fair fore the last minute, and then House in New York. be sure to take it with you. Churchill. Spoonful of lucious Utah ice cream is offered by Mary Lynn Clifford ,Utahs Dairy Princess, at Ice Cream Party held this week at the Utah State Capitol for state officials. A unique state capitol Ice Cream Party on Mnoday for Utah state officials kicked off the observance of Utah's 1965 Ice Cream Festival, sponsored by the American Dairy Association of Utah. Those invited to the party included Gov. Calvin L. Hampton, Attorney General Phil A. Hansen, Secretary of State Clyde L. Miller, State Auditor Sharp M. Larsen, Treasurer Linn O. Baker, members of the Utah Supreme Court and key agricultural, educational and dairy industry leaders from Utah. The highlight of the party was the serving of a number of unusual ice cream creations, especially prepared for the occasion by Dixie Lee, executive director of the Dairy Council of Utah and the home economics department of the University of Utah, said J. Quayle Ward, Salt Lake City, general chairman in charge of the Ice Cream Festival for the ADA of Utah. The frozen dairy treats were served to state officials by Mary Lynn Clifford of Davis county, Utahs Dairy Priness; and her two attendants, Jeanette Bench, Fairview, Sanpete County, and Marveda Maughan, Ogden. He noted that ice cream is now a year round delicacy in Utah. It was not many years ago when ice cream equipment remained idle for most of the winter. Now, people are enjoying ic cream not only in the summer months but in the period from December to February as well. World's Fair Ambassador Explains Sweepstakes Plans A beautiful young Worlds having first act trouble. Fair Ambassador is coming to The Worlds Fair Ambassador of Goodwill, whose tour is being Utah June 4. a New at student sponsored by the Formica Corp., Lynn Braun, a Yorks Neighborhood Playhouse subsidiary of American Cyan-amicharacterized the second for the Performing Arts, is caract to of an the Fair as a smash urgent message rying and attributes it to more enterBeehive state residents. Ambassador Brauns message tainment features such as Floriis this: Be fair to yourself and das free water and ski show, see the opce in a lifetime New scores of new exhibits and the York Worlds Fair. general publics growing realization that 85 per cent of all ambassador of Lynn, roving good will for the fair, says her exhibits are free. One of the highlights of her message is urgent because 1965 sec to visit here will be her participais Americas last chance the billion dollar Worlds Fair. tion in a meeting of local home At 10 p.m. on Oct. 17 the builders who are cooperating in gates will close for the final a Worlds Fair House Sweep-stake- s sponsored by the Formica time Lynn will warn Utahns in Corporation. during a one day stopover Local representatives of the Salt Lake City. laminate firm explain the plastics To prevent anyone missing realize that every visitor to the Worlds fair because they didnt it would end this year, Lynn is Fair House in New York, or to on a swing of two score U.S. cooperating model homes in the cities to carry the word of the Salt Lake area, will have an opwin a replica of fair, and a personal invitation, portunity to valued at $50,000, lot as the she house, to much of the country mid-Juland have it built anyincluded, can cover by This year, Lynn says, the where in the country. To enter, word about the fair is good. visitors merely drop their name and address in a box, and they Its true that there were some any one of disappointments last year, but are eligible to win in the offered all thats been changed, Lynn the 2,501 prizes declared. I guess we were just $100,000 sweepstakes. d, It is so much easier to keep your kitchen clean as a clinic with a flameless electric range. There are no'products of combustion to soil walls or curtains. Requires No Oxygen Because it is flameless, an electric range requires no oxygen. Your kitchen remains So electric cooking has to be healthier. - $5 So Safe, Too There are no dangers from open flames with an electric range. When an electric range is off, its off nothing keeps burning. Feel better. Eat better. Cook better. Cook electricl fresh-smellin- g. -- y. i? See your dealers smart new electric range models now. If its electric, its better UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. |