OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES Jobs for Youths Hard to Locate Teachers Association Awards Grant To Salt Lake Girl This year, Utahs postwar babies, born in the late 1940s, will look for summer and full-tim- e work. But now that school is over, it is questionable how many of these 68,000 young Utahns will find work. These observations were made by the employment security office in discussing the 1965 job outlook for young people between the ages of 16 and 22. President Johnson has outlined a program which could provide favorable results if communities, particularly the business and government communities, would band together in an effort to help these young folks. Already contacted by the White House are employers, governors, mayors, associations, unions, clubs, churches, colleges and federal government agencies, he said. One phase of the plan suggests that each employer of 10 or more workers hire a youth, either as a trainee or a worker. Larger firms are urged to take on a worker or trainee for each hundred workers on a payroll. Extension of summer youth employment service centers is also being considered to be manned by young people well acquainted in their neighborhoods, who would make exhaustive canvasses in order to develop jobs for their friends. The Utah department of employment security is cooperating Bar Review Course Charted at U. of U. Bar Review course will be held June 14 through August 18 at the University of Utah College of Law in cooperation with the Division of Continuing Education. The course is designed for persons making preparation for the state bar examinations which will be held in late August. Class meetings will be held in room 107 of the College of Law building, according to Dean Samuel D. Thurman who will direct the program. Members of the law faculty and practicing attorneys will lead reviews in such subjects as contracts, torts, pleading and practice, sales, property, constitutional law, taxcoration, porations, ethics, bills and notes, Conflicts, administrative law, security transactions, crimes, and evidence. The series will begin on Monday, June 14, at 7:00 p.m. After the first week it will be held on Monday and Wednesday at A agency-partnershi- p, 7:30 p.m. Registration is pres- ently taking place through the Division of Continuing Education office, Annex Building, East Wing. Comp, legal secretarial service. Notary Public. My home. Will pick up and deliver. 328-193- 8 6-1- 8) GILLETTE Foamy SHAVING CAEAM Making of Paper Once Highly Guarded Secret Miss Georgia Law, a student The invention of paper in 105 at East High, has been awarded A.D. brought honor to its cre- in President Johnsons program. (5-2- Page Five FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1965 3. a $400 scholarship by the Salt Lake City Teachers Education Association. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David A. Law, 220 Douglas Street. Georgia is a member and past president of the Future Teacher of America Club at East. Last summer she toured the Soviet Union and Europe with a student group. This is the first such award of the Salt Lake City Teachers Education Association. The purpose of this award is to attract competent high school graduates to choose teaching as a profession. Among the standards included in selecting candidates are scholarship, personality, sincerity of purpose, need, integrity. etc. The Teacher Education and Professional Standards Committee made the selection. The teachers serving on the committee are Eva Peterson, Dorothy Jonas, Charlotte McLatchy, Frances Whitworth, Boyd Bronson, and Maurine Cloke. ator and the promise of death to any foreigner who sought the secrets to its manufacture. Artisans who made it and scholars who used it alone were privy to its process, the American Paper Institute notes in its new quarterly publication PAPER people, products and progress. Its development reportedly came about when Tsai Lun, a eunuch in the court of Ho Ti, emperor of Cathay, was ordered to devise and produce a writing material that would take the place of bamboo strips that were clumsy, and silk that was expensive. He came upon a process that was simple and a product that revolutionized communications, spreading far and wide the knowledge and culture of his nation. One court official had a library of 50,000 books made of State Employees Honor Veteran Cathay (or China, today) in his search. Finally, after numerous experiments he arrived at the technique of shredding the bark of the mulberry tree, mixing it with minute fragments of linen and scraps of hemp, all saturated in water. He then beat this mixture until most of the water had been extracted, and laid the flat, smooth sheet in the sun to dry. the spotlight again. Hearings are being held in For his ingenuity he was eleon Navated to the rank of Marquis, in the House Subcommittee tional parks .on two Golden 114 A.D. bills. Their common aim: Cathay was the center of the Spike to develop the site as a major papermaking industry until the attraction in the National Parks middle of the 18th century, when in time for the Golden the Muslims, in their sweep system centennial in 1969. through Western Europe and Spike These bills, of which Congresspenetration into Asia, captured man Laurence J. Burton of the a complete papermaking factory in Samarkand in 751. The facili- First District and I are sponsors, ties were turned to producing would help the Parks Service 2,000 acres of state anc paper for the invader and, later acquire lands for development. (in 794 A.D.) a papermaking private eve of these On the plant was established in Bagh- I have firm assurances hearings, the dad; others appeared in Spain Park Service officials from that the and Sicily. the for facilities mapped By 1268 paper was being acres can be completed 2,000 well manufactured in Fabriano, Bo1969 the deadline ahead of logna by 1282, Cologne in 1320 can the green get they provided and Nuremberg, 1390. Paper, by from this Congress. 1400 had replaced, in great light for four exhibits call The plans measure, parchment. But it was on the site. to be another 290 years before The spot at which the final paper was manufactured in the State employees honored a veteran highway employee for his high degree of skill and devotion to . his work at special ceremonies conducted at the Utah State Public Employees Association's sixth annual meeting June 5 at the Terrace in Salt Lake City. Designated as recipient of the Distinguished Service Award was Woodruff L. Anderson, Chief Planning and Programming Engineer. Mr. Anderson is responsible for planning and location of highways as well as programming or scheduling of of construction expenditure funds. The State Road Commission makes the final decision on the spending of money, while the detailed proposals come from Mr. Andersons organization. A graduate paper. The precise nature and length of his labors are lost to history, but there is no doubt that he analyzed all of the existing methods and raw materials known to Civil Engineer from the University of Utah, Mr. Anderson brought honor to the department and to the state in 1950-5- 1 when he was elected the president of the Western Association of Highway Officials. He had been secretary of that organization for three years prior colonies at Wissahickon Creek to being named president. near resides Anderson with Mr. his Philadelphia, by William Rittenhouse and William wife at 1668 Yale Avenue. He has been with the highway department in various positions for 42 years. These essays are particularly refreshing coming at a time when many of the counterparts Senator Places of these award winners who in likewise enjoy the advantages Essays of American citizenship have Congress Record taken it upon themselves to Senator Wallace F. Bennett, picket the White House and to has placed in the Con-- 1 decry our policies designed to gressional Record the essays of protect the people of Southeast three Utahns who recently were Asia and generally refusing to awarded Freedom Foundation serve their country in the presawards for their writings. ervation of freedom, Senator In this day when patriotism Bennett said. and love of country are considered unsophisticated and passe by many Americans, I am heartSPARE TIME INCOME ened by recent expressions of three Utahns who were recently Refilling and collecting money selected recipients of Freedom from new type high quality disFoundation Awards, he said in pensers in this area. No selling. a Senate speech. To qualify, you must have car, The essays were Why I Love to $1440 cash, seven to America by David Van De Graff $540 spare hours weekly. o f Ogden; What It Means to Be twelve a Citizen of the United States Highly profitable way to increase monthly income. Can exof America by Raymond Swenson of Kearns, and pand. For personal interview Reflections While Standing Be- write P.O. Box 612, Aurora, fore the Lincoln Memorial by Colorado. Include phone. Robert B. Fox of Bountiful. R-Ut- ah, Ta-kas- hi SUPER-SRTURAT- YOUR IEARDI (6-1- 1) Utah has a rendezvous with listory in 1969 and the Congress is pitching in to help it ceep that date. The hammer blow that California Governor Leland Stanford struck to set the golden Spike in May, 1869, was one of the mightiest in the history of the world. It was the last link in the transcontinental rail system that eventually welded the states in the greatest industrial power the world has seen. Yet, for almost a century, this proud spot has endured a dusty, much neglected fame a humble and obscure landmark on a tiny slot of windswept desert west of Uorinne, Box Elder County. Some years ago, the National Park Service gave the spot the label of National Historical site, but action went almost no farther than the label. This week, Golden Spike is in spike was driven would be ignated by the main visitors descen- ter. Smaller exhibits would be erected to mark the location of a major trestle on the original line, the site of a camp which housed construction crews, and a rise from which the present Southern Pacific mainline is visible 25 miles away. Congress may relabel the site as a National Monument. As such, it would be Utahs ninth National Monument. Or it may chooose to keep the present label. Utah has no other National Historical Site, developed or undeveloped, and there are few in the West. The term has much greater significance to tourists in the East, where it is used to mark many events of early American history. Action on Golden Spike under scores the fact that Utah is a fast awakening giant in the tourist field. With three National Parks (Bryce, Zion and Canyonlands) Utah takes a back seat only to California which has four. No other state has more than two, and, at several Utah parks, the annual count of California visitors runs higher than the count of Utahns. With such new attractions as Canyonlands, Lake Powell and Flaming Gorge, the Parks Services annual count of visits to Utah attractions is soaring. In 1960, the count was 1,400,-60- 0. Last year it reached 2,140,-50- 0. In the year 1964, Canyonlands, Lake Powell and Flam0 ing Gorge accounted for more half the than visitors, total gain. 369,-00- It isnt how little you know that matters, but how anxious you are to learn. t Plan your tanning carefully Treat Old Man Sol with respect and hell tan you to a T7 be disrespectful and hell bum you to a crisp. Thats why, for a vibrant, coppery tan it will pay to plan your tanning carefully. Plan your protection withalotion, oil, cream or spray that makes your skin more tan-abl-e. According to Dr. Archie Black, Ph. D., Research Director of the Coppcrtone Corporation, theres a suntan product made .especially for your skin type whether youre gray, blonde, brunette or redhead. Plan the place for your best sunbathing. Your own patio is probably adaptable to prove most convenient because of easy access to your sunning accessories. Plan your time so you'll sunbathe before 11 a.m. andor after 2 p.m. because the sun's rays are the most intense during the noon hours not only on sunny days but on hazy ones as well. Plan your apparel (sun dress, playsuit, swimsuit, bikini) so you'll tan only the areas of your body you want tan. Plan the length of your sunning time with caution. Start with 5 to IS minutes the first day and gradually increase the time. Don't try to get a deep tan in a day or two. HAVE FUN IN THE SUN I That's what Elks Sommer's smile seems to say as she seeks a satiny smooth , more vibrant coppery tan. Elket selected out- standing new starExhibitor Film In- dustry Poll starring in Ross Hunter's The Art of Love." |