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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1967 Firearms Dealers Schedule Meetings Sporting firearms and ammunition dealers more than 200 will zero-ion this strong Hotel Utah next week. citys Men of purpose, they will come bearing no arms. But they will depart armed to the hilt . . . with fresh knowledge to increase their sales and profits as retailers of sporting rifles, shotguns and ammunition for the burgeoning leisure time outdoor recreation market. The purpose of their visit oh Thursday, June 1, is to attend one of the sessions of a dealer clinics program sponsored by the Winchester-Wester- n n 49-ci- ty Division of Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation. The first such project of national scope to be initiated with- in the industry, the Winchester-Wester- n Dealer Clinics program is expected to reach more than 10,000 dealers in 49 major cities across the nation by June 29. The program began on May 15 with concurrent clinics in San Antonio, Tex., Minneapolis, Minn., and Buffalo, N. Y. Three separate travelling companies have Original Writing Contest Announced For Fall Workshop A new contest for Utah writers is announced in connection with the League of Utah Writers 32nd annual Writers Roundup, which will be held in Salt Lake City, Sept. 8, 9 and 10. The convention will be hosted by the Salt Lake Chapter, League of Utah Writers, with been on the road simultaneously in order to bring the climbs to 14 cities in the West, 15 in the Midwest and 20 in the East. Produced and staged by Visualscope of New York City, the dealer clinic programs include talks by top management personnel from Winchester-Wester- n sales and other closely related departments explaining the latest aids and techniques for increasing the movement of sporting firearms and ammunition in the retail store. The Salt Lake City clinic will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., including a luncheon and a drawing for a new Winchester Model 1400 autoloading shotgun. Page Fifteen headquarters at the Newhouse Hotel. Irving Stone, top biographical novelist in America, will be key-n- ot speaker. The L. Paul Roberts Poetry Foundation Contest will be a special Roundup division for the first time this year. Mr. Roberts, a vibrant voice in Utah poetry circles, worked in many fields, having great interest in government and writing. The L. Paul Roberts Foundation was formed to honor his contribution to the writing groups he fostered in Utah, prior to his death in Salt Lake City in 1965. Originated to honor this poet who gave so freely of his talents for the good of all, the Foundation is based on contributions of fellow writers with a permanent fund of $550. Interest only will be used, with prizes to be awarded annually at the Writers Roundup and at the spring meeting of the Utah Poetry Society. A $15 cash first prize and a merchandise second prize will be offered in the Writers Roundup contest and three honorable mention winners will also be named. Cancer Workshop when you thinh Opens Today of At University The Understanding crippled children Treatment of Malignant and Disof a spe- ease will be the title cial cancer seminar held for practicing physicians May 26 and 27 at the University of Utah College of Medicine. This seminar will be the first of its kind held in the intermountain area. Dr. Maxwell M. Wintrobe, professor and head of the Colleges Department of Medicine will serve as chairman. Sponsored by the Division of Postgraduate Medical Educaevent will attion, the two-day give to fonr UTAHN EASTER SEAL. SOCIETY tract leading research investigators in the field of malignant disease from the Utah area and across the nation. Visiting faculty include four distinguished cancer specialists: Dr. Ernest J. Eichwald, director of the McLaughlin Research Institute, Great Falls, Montana; Dr. Henry S. Kaplan, professor and head, Department of Radi-- o 1o g y , Stanford University School of Medicine; Dr. James T. Grace, Jr., chief of Cancer Research, Roswell Park MemoInstitute, Buffalo, New York; and Dr. Emil Frei, III, associate director (Clinical .Research), M. D. Anderson Hos- rial pital and Tumor Institute, Texas Medical Center, Houston, Texas. Known for their excellent Letterheads Envelopes Business Cards Placard! Wedding Announcements Christmas Cards Business Forms Statements Duplicate Forms Calendars Stock Certificates Diplomas School Annuals Circulars Dodgers Handbills Checks Pamphlets Books Iff Invoices Posters Ruled Forms Campaign Cards Newspapers Leaflets Broadsides Programs Law Briefs Houses Are Distinctively Built A whole block of houses exactly alike would not even command a second look. Thus when an architect plans your home he strives for originality, distinctiveness . . . that something different, original, out-of-the-ordin- ary, a style or individuality ail its own . . . Printing should be planned the same way. and built Around your particular needs, the product you have to sell, the class of people you desire to reach, what they can afford to pay. Planned Sales Promotion pays and pays handsomely. Your printer has ideas . . . use them. work in cancer research, 14 members of the University of Utah Colege of Medicine faculty will aid in the seminar program. Among these local participants are Drs. Maxwell M. Wintrobe; Stanley Marcus, professor of Microbiology; Keith Reemtsma, professor and head of the Department of Surgery; Thomas F. Dougherty, professor and head of the Department of Anatomy, and director of the Universitys Radiobiology Laboratory; Leo T. Samuels, professor of Biochemistry; Frank H. Tyler, professor of Medicine; M. Eugene Lahey, professor and head of the Department of Pediatrics; and George E. Cartwright, professor of Medicine. The seminar is designed for discussion and dialogue between attending physicians and the participants. Subjects to be disCancer and cussed include Immunology, viruses and cancer, radioactive causes and cures of cancer, and Combination Chemotherapy in Cancer. Funds for the seminar are being partially provided by a Clinical Cancer Training Grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. The program is acceptable for 13 hours of postgraduate credit by the American Academy of General Practice. World Book Lore p The SALT IAK 711 South West Temple Salt Lake City, Utah Phone EM 4-84- 64 Scientists have developed bantam watermelons that weigh only five to 10 pounds, and giant watermelons that weigh more than 100 pounds. Sousa; World Book Ehcyookdu |