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Show I THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1966 Page Eleven Bureau of Reclamation Likes Master Plan Meet Tracy! Utahs master plan for future outdoor recreation development is being well received by the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation. Sen. Frank E. Moss said that BOR officials in Washington report that the Utah plan will probably be given final approval by the end of April. Once the plan is approved by the BOR and the new Department of Housing and Urban Affairs, Utah will be eligible to receive its allocation of the Land and Water Conservation Fund. Acquisition and development of new outdoor recreation facilities in Utah will be made possible through the use of the $850,000 to which the State will (D-Uta- h) be entitled. Sen. Moss said that $113,825 is available to Utah from collections made in 1965, while the balance is expected to come from Land and Water Conservation Fund money during 1966. Sen. Moss said that because Uta his being transferred to the San Francisco Region of the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, both the San Francisco and Den- Duty to God, an integral part of the Girl Scont way of life, b a commitment to be acted upon for the more than three million gills of all faiths who are members of Girl Scouts of the UJ5LA. Sunday (March 6) marks the beginning of Girl Scont Week. Highlighting the week is the Girl Scont theme, A Promise in Action the promise through which Girl Scouts reaffirm their obligations tsi God, country and other people. ver Regional offices are review- ing the Utah plan. Once they have complete this simultaneous review, the master plan is forwarded to Washington for final review and approval, he said. Professor Personifies Services of USU Senator Claims Small Business Bill Misleading Sen. Wallace F. Bennett (R-Uta- h) told the Senate that a bill which is claimed will provide additional funds for Small Business loans in reality is setting a precedent in fiscal monetary management which would permit Federal borrowing without showing the borrowings as part of the public debt. He said the legislation would conceal the cost of operating the .government by providing funds outside of the appropriation process. The legislation would authorize the Small Business Admin- istration to sell participations in pools of SB A loans directly through the Federal National - Mortgage Association (FNMA). It does not increase the authorized SBA lending ability. . It is claimed that thie bill would: provide additional money for Small Business Loans, but it is simply a means of selling assets jof the SBA through the FNMA and applying the proceeds pf the sales to reduce the total Federal Budget, he said in his Senate speech. It is to be expected that the administration would use all of the means possible to try to show as small a deficit as possible, he said. " Through this and other proposed legislation, the Johnson Administration . intends to reduce the amount shown as Federal deficit' by $3.3 billion this year and $4.7. billion in fiscal year 1967, he said. We are now taking one of the most serious steps we could take affecting our fiscal policy, . . because we. are opening a backdoor to the Treasury which can be approached at the present time and under this bill through the SBA and the FNMA and a backdoor which makes it possible to conceal the cost of operating the Government providing funds for that operation outside of the appropriations process, he said in his talk. To! me this is a test. If we establish the principle and allow the sale of participations in the Von H. Robertson, assistant professor. Industrial and Technical Education and State Coordinator of Technical Education, literally personifies Utah State Universitys claim of statewide service. Prof. Robertson is doinjg Retired Persons To Form Local AARP Chapter Members of the American Association of Retired Persons will meet on Thursday, March 31, at 2 p.m., for the purpose of forming a Wasatch County Chapter. The meeting will be held in teaching education in the Town Hall in Midway. in-serv- ice Tracy Giles is Utahs Easter Seal Youngster for 19661 At 21 months he is the husky, healthy son ol Mr. and Mrs. Burton Giles Fillmore, Utah. i . . give to your Utah Easter Seal Sodety trade and technical education The featured speaker at the and programs conducting meeting will be Clarence L. classes in 27 of the 40 Madsen of Salt Lake City, voschool districts and in all the lunteer AARP State Director. Sheep Go Loco, , The American Association of junior colleges and technical inWorryareStockmen dustries. Retired Persons is a and Sheep going loco At present he has formal nonpartisan organization of per- livestockmeri are concerned! classes operating at the Salt Lake sons age 55 or older whether Loco is causing serious weed Trade Technical Institute, Utah retired or not. It is the coopera- difficulties in sheep herds in the Trade Technical Institute, and tive enterprise of more than 0 Uintah Basin where no less than the College of Eastern Utah. In mature persons reflecting to 300 of the. poisonous addition, he has conducted work- themselves and their fellow re- weed species have .been this shops in Salt Lake City, Nephi, tirees dignity, security and pur- year. With very reported little known and Price. Others are scheduled pose. about U.S. Bureau the the weed, for Ogden and Richfield. For further information, con- of Land Management, Uintah Prof. Robertsons teacher edu- tact one of the following tempo- Woolgrowers Assn., Utah State cation assignment involves the rary officers: Squire W. Simp- University and the U.S. trade and industrial education son, President, 56 West Third ltural Research ServiceAgricuhave facilities of the junior colleges North Street; Heber City; J. Syl- joined forces to carry out variand technical institutes, the Col- van Rasband, First Vice Presi- ous facets of research. lege of Southern Utah and Weber dent, 310 West Center Street, When infestations of State College. His high school Heber City; Joseph E. Probst, loco weed heavy were first noticed on assignment takes him into the Second Vice President, 355 West the winter ranges of Uintah Basfar corners of the state, includ- First North Street, Midway; in last fall, fears of a repetition ing San Juan, Grand, Iron, Mil- Heber M, Rasband, Treasurer, of the 1957 loco weed problem lard, Box Elder and Uintah Coun 260 North Main Street, Heber prompted emergency steps to City. ties. prevent serious losses to the sheep herds. Apparently serious Captain Dale C. Holt, son of infestations of the weed are asI Mr. and Mrs. David F. Bedford sociated with years when moisWorld Book Lore of 3338 Metro Way, has been ture is abundant. awarded U. S. Air Force silver The infestation lies generally pilot wings upon graduation in a belt along the White River from flying training school at from the line to - off-camp- us non-prof- it, 900,-00- 2-4- -D trol. . Shortly after' the pastures were established it became evident that the sheep were' eating the weed and leaving the supplements virtually untouched. By the seventh week all the sheep showed signs of loco, weed poisoning. Sheep having eaten loco weed sustain loss of muscular coordination and appetite rethe White Rivers confluence sulting in starvation. In addition, with the Green River. This belt ewes abort or have weak and extends approximately six miles deformed lambs; Utah-Colora- Williams AFB, Arizona. Captain Holt is being assigned to Travis, AFB Calif., for flying duty in a unit which supports the Military Air Transport Service mission of providing global airlift of U.S. military forces and equipment. The captain, a graduate of West High, attended the University of Utah. do . , given for loans created by additional agencies now making loans, he said. The Utahn declared that this new fiscal scheme perverts the basic elements of honesty in the cost of government and imposes on the financial structures of a concealed burden SBA lqans,a bill already drafted the country debt. of . public gives .the similar privilege be to the north and 15 miles to the south of the White River. There also are some localized infestations south of Myton in Duchesne County. The only herbicide that seems to be effective against the poisonous weed is but this also kills the good browse or anything else with leaves. In one phase of the research experimental plots have been established in the Bonanza area to see if supplemental feeding will discourage sheep from eating loco weed. Four pastures were established with five sheep of various ages in each pasture. A different supplement was fed of three pastures with in each r maintained for confourth the When George Washington laid the ' cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol in 1703, he wore his regalia as a member of the Masons. The cere mony was under the auspices of the Grand Lodge of Maryland, . . . ; touacSt WosuBooK JBMCTCtiorsBiA |