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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1966 Page Four THE SALT LAKE TIMES with Tb o Salt Lab Miahr & Loyal Ntm FMbkad Boon Friday at Salt Labt Gty, Utah Combimod Vntoexl SaU ( City U daas matter Asiut 23 1923 under the act of March 8, 711 Sonth West Temple Telephone Salt Lake Gty, Utah 84101 364-846- 4 1879 GLENN BDOKNN, Ptblbher TttftUUns I Volume 45 mm ad or eoutrollod In my pmt eMOaditr tim, rlifat, fartioa Number 49 Mother (Continued from Page One) a mothers pure love. In such a home children are taught there is nothing noble in thinking oneself superior to another human being, but rather that true nobility is striving to be superior to ones past self. The line of least resistance inevitably leads one to settle on a lower spiritual level. Is there any man living who cannot say he was taught the meaning of forgiveness, love and charity at his mothers knee? Is there any man who has learned to share with another that which he has, or who has learned the majesty of the words Please and Thank you who has not learned these virtues from his mothers lips? The beauty of a promising sunrise, the pride of a nocturnal moon, the twinkling of a distant star, the Wellcome clouds of rain and snow, the eternal seasons, each in its beauty cannot match the sparkling glory of a girl who has fulfilled the promise of her creation and received the crown of motherhood. What mortal man, at the magic birth of a son or daughter, fails to hear the voices of angels singing the everlasting song of joy, or see the light of heaven sinning in a mothers eyes, or fails to give thanks, if only in secret, for the miracle placed before him? How beautiful, tender and compassionate, like none other, is the honored title Mother. It is mother whose understanding heals our wounds, who teaches harmony in peace, whose tender kisses chase away all fears and who teaches forgiveness by forgiving and reverance by being reverent. Only God could plan such a wonder. Mother. Newell Knight . . Democrat Harvard Hinton Plans Bid for Congress Nomination degree from the University, of (Continued from page 1) Utah College of Law. Council Legislative one dealing with eduHe has practiced law for the air with other and the cation past 13 years in Lehi, where he the and has served as city attorney. represented pollution state on the National Committee He is a past president of the on Suggested State Legislation, Utah County Bar Assn, and dura division of the Council of State ing World War II served in the Governments. Corps as a cryp He graduated from Brigham Army Signal in the South Pacific Young University in Political tographer science and received his law and the Philippine Islands. ' sub-committ- ees Acting Governor Proclaims 'Healthy Baby Day' in Utah (Continued from page 1) birth defects and encourage all prospective mothers to see the doctor as soon as they think they are pregnant. Healthy mothers usually have healthy babies. Too many women do not take pregnancy seriously enough to seek out good parental care. With more than 250,000 American babies being... bom every year with serious birth defects, each of us should do all possible to reduce this terrific toll," declares Mrs. Edmund P. Evans, Utah Volunteer Advisor for the National Foundation of March of Dimes. National Foundation March of New Director Explains Work of Agriculture Experiment Station Utah counties done by Dr. The-rR. Black are helping commu nities and counties plan more intelligently for the future by providing them with more accurate information on number budget of the Utah Agricultural of people of different ages and Experiment Station he has been sex they may expect. Studies by named to head as director. He the experiment station get at With recent appointive action of the Utah State University Board of Trustees, Dr. K. W. Hill takes the wheel of a $2 million research machine. That is approximately the annual succeeds Dr. W. Wynne Thorne, now USU vice president for re- search. Trees and Game are Twin Crops Everybody knows tha tif you dont harvest a grain field the crop blows down and decays. Everybody also knows that wildlife, unless bagged by hunters or removed by a predatory creature, dies of old age. Both the grain and the wildlife are harvests which must be removed or their utility will be lost to mankind. The same goes for trees, which are a crop to be harvested. A difference is that their life cycle is longer than wildlife or grain. The part that marks this cycle as being unusual is that when you fail to liarvest tree crops, you cannot harvest the wildlife which makes the forest its habitat. Virgin or unharvested forests ar virtual wildlife deserts providing scant food for much of our native wildlife. When a forest is harvested, with the necessary provisions made for regeneration, the resulting clearings provide forest openings in which food for wildlife can flourish. Provide too much food and cover and the wild life population burgeons out of proportion to the habitat; then if man doesnt harvest the crop by hunting, nature will reduce the bountiful harvest by invoking the law of supply and demand and the overpopulation will be starved out. Natures been around a long time and is a pretty clever old gal. She uses the situation she finds to keep herself in balance. Through the American Tree Farm System, man provides himself with repeated crops of trees to harvest. Nature takes this situation and provides a bountiful liarvest of wildlife. Man and nature teaming up provide an unbeatable combination: trees and game twin crops on tree farms. Dimes has been fighting birth defects since 1958, and has made considerable progress. The Federated Jr. Womens Clubs of Utah hope to accelerate the program by its Healthy Baby Day campaign. Seven of our Junior Womens Clubs sponsored and promoted an educational program in Utah on birth defects and prenatal care. Working with the National Foundation March of Dimes, special films, speakers and literature were supplied to the clubs, bringing to the public the scope and significance of such a program. Brochures and literature were distributed to doctors offices and high schools in part of the state. Nearly $1 milion comes from state funds apportioned by the Utah Legislature; over $ mil- lion comes from funds designated by federal acts; the balance is provided by grants from federal agencies, industrial groups and agricultural producer groups within die state for designated research projects aimed to search out basic knowledge and answer questions pertinent to people in the state. At research centers and farms near the USU campus and 11 research field stations in other areas of the state, some 200 research projects are being conducted by the Agricultural Experiment Station scientists. This research ranges from studies dealing with crop and livestock breeding and nutrition to human nutrition, projecting population, predicting buyers of new food products, eliminating pollution and modifying the weather. Dr. Hill explained, Current work aims to provide answers needed now and in the future. Such is the pesticide research done by Dr. Joseph C. Street. al problems that concern all people of the state. Studies headed by Dr. War ren Foote in contolling fertility in domestic animals are being eyed with interest by livestock producers who see important management value in being able to control the reproduction processes of their animals. Such findings may have significant in coping with the mushrooming human popultion problem. Students coming to Utah State University benefit by associating with the research scientists. The scientists engage in such studies in their chosen fields in many different departments. Many also teach university classes. As students progress to graduate work, they associate more closely with these men. Their own scientific studies also often be come a part of the Agriculture Salt Lake City Police Chief Dewey J. Fillis this week suggested combining Salt Lake County Sheriffs Department records with Police Department records and consolidation of the two agencies training program. He also proposed moving the police radio terminal in Liberty Park to the Salt Lake City Fire Departments shops at 7th South between West Temple and 1st West. Organization of a Salt Lake County Youth Council so teen agers can deal with teen-ageproblems" was discussed this week by students and faculty members who met at the Metropolitan Hall of Justice with Commissioner John County Preston Creer. rs Public Safety Commissioner James L. Barker this week asked the city attorney for an opinion as to Salt Lake City Health Departments powers in requiring owners to clean apparently abandoned premises. A. R. Cardwell, health department sanitarian, has pointed out that more than 50 dwellings, vacant for long periods, create health and fire hazards. City - financed construction projects will total more than $5 million during the current year. Major project will be the $1 million courts building in the Metropolitan Hall of Justice complex, said Joseph S. Fenlen, assistant city engineer. Appointment of Byron A. Trimble as promotion director of Salt Lake County Civil Auditorium and the county as a whole was approved this week by the County Commission. The appointment of Mr. Trimble, who will receive a salary of $20,000 a year, was recommended by McCowan E. Hunt, chairman of the Civic Auditorium Board. President David O. McKay of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints and his wife left this week for a short vacation in southern California. The date of their return has not yet been determined. Better instrument landing fa- cilities are still a year away for Salt Lake Municipal Airport, airport manager Joe Bergin said this week. Stations Experiment quest for Category II facilities, an innew knowledge. strument landing system permitDr. Hill served as associate ting jet airliners to land with director of the Agricultural Ex- quarter mile visibility and 100 periment Station since he came ft. ceilings, are scheduled to be to Utah State in 1963 until his installed in the airports main present appointment as director. runway during the fiscal year 1968. Army Pvt. Dale W. Ansell Jr., Airman Second Class Michael whose parents live at 2220 Lo- F. Ravarino, son of Mr. and Mrs. He is seeking ways of dealing gan Ave., completed a radio A. J. Ravarino of 379 East 3900 with the problem of residues course at Fort Ord recently. South, has been graduated at from chlorinated hydrocarbons Ansell received instruction in Keesler' AFB, Miss., from the remaining in the tissue of ani- basic radio and electrical theory training course for U. S. Air mals. He has found that other and was taught the international Force radas repairmen. chemicals, such as those in diel-dri- n Morse Code. Airman Ravarino, a graduate and aldrin, when fed to He entered the Army in No- of Judge Memorial High School, animals actually reduce amount vember, 1965 and completed his is being to Chandler reassigned of the chlorinated hydrocarbon basic training at Fort Polk, La. Air Force station, Minn!, for chemicals that stay in tissues. He graduated from Highland duty with the Air Defense Population projections of the High School in 1964. |