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Show Page Two U Medical School Receives Check From Medic Assn. i Dr. Homer Smith, president of the Utah State Medical Association and Mr. Hoyt Brewster, association executive secretary, presented a check for $15,000 to Dr. Kenneth B. Castleton, vice president for medical affairs, University of Utah. A check representing initial payment on a $50,000 pledge comes from the Utah State Medical Association Medical Foundation and will be used in the development of the new health sciences library, called the Spencer S. Eccles Medical Sciences Library, soon to be constructed adjacent to the University Medical Center. The money represents contributions to the Medical Foundation from the Utah physicians and citizens interested in support of medically related programs. The new library building will represent a highly efficient source of medical information for the Universitys Health Sciences Complex, the states practicing physicians, nurses, technologists, and other health related professionals. The University Health Sciences Library is the official library of the Utah State Medical Association and Salt Lake County Medical Society and offers a source of extensive medical literature and complete reference services to all Utah physicians. According to Dr. Castleton, the new structure is designed for use by faculty, students and staff of the Medical Center as well as professionals and others in the community. An easy access pickup and delivery window will be constructed so that physicians or their messengers will not have to enter the building to check out or return books or periodicals. A room will also be constructed on the upper level where physicians can use the available literature in a quiet and secluded study. They will be reached if necessary by a quiet, individual electronic page system. The library will also serve as backup for other hospital libraries in the city and state and is now connected by teletype to all colleges and universities in the state where requests from areas outside Salt Lake can be to the library and literature and books sent immediately. Dr. Kenneth Castleton, accepting the check and pledge stated, the University is grateful for the support of the Medical Association. Such cooperation is essential in guaranteeing continued first rate health care in the state of Utah. The University and Medical Center personnel are anxious to be involved with and serve the community. . JohnWilnon, a former Marine helicopter pilot and the newest member of the University of Utah's Dance Faculty, farms up for Dance '69. Performances for the lively concert are scheduled for April 17, 18, and T9 in Kingsbury Hall on the University campus. - Tickets are available from the Bex Office, at Kingsbury Hall. Mail orders can be sent to Dance 69 Revue Said Exciting And Entertaining DANCE 69, Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah, Salt Lake is City, Utah, 84120. Telephone orIf you think Laugh-Ia gas, wait until you see DANCE ders are being accepted at 69 at the University of Utah. n 322-780- 8. Presented by the Universitys Department of Modern Dance and the Associated Students of the University of Utah, DANCE 69 will feature new works by Shirley Ririe, John Wilson and Joan Woodbury. Variety will be the name of the game on April 17, 18 and 19, 8:30 p.m. in Kingsbury Hall on the University Campus. From the celebration of humanity that is John Wilsons Creatures to the hilarity of Light Show the evening races through a myriad V 1 Adults who fail to take care of their children are the ones who complain later that the young people have little respect for their elders. Its Time For... EYE CARE number of moods and images. Dr. Newton K. Wesley John Wilsons Disposables EYE ACCOMMODATION spoofs the modern convenience Eye accommodation means ffa which we all take for granted. of the eye to maintai ability A fun lo!c at our way of living, focus at various distances. Ther Disposables is a charming in- jis a focusing mechanism in th sight into the disposability of eye itself which just like a any and all items from diapers acts zoomar . to marriage partners and from conversation to love. Satire is a natural mode for contemporary dance with its facility for nuance and expression. Light Show, an excerpt from a larger work, premiered in Jancomuary by the theentire the transforms pany, atre into a fantasy world of sound and color. The work grew out of the current light show fads, and is a statement on conthe essence of temporary life contemporary dance. The piece is performed as a special treat for the many hundreds of people who could not attend the sold-operformances in January. Joan Woodburys Exados is coined from the excesses which exsuround us in our world in cesses in weight, weightlessness, in speed, in balance. It is an exploration into illusions and images. Shirley Riries Being in the Now, is a rock dance which features a live, rock band and students who really dance like that! It is an organization of this moment, in short !' ' ' v,; the now.' Ririe-Woodbu- ry ut non-dancer- s, THE SALT LAKE TjMES FRIDAY, MARCH 28, 1969 'lens. At distance, the eye ;has one focus or .power, and at a dose point, the eye accommodates or focuses at a different : Wesley power. This is 'we all tend to take it for grantedr until it is lost to us. When this action is lost, the ey .condition is called presbyopia idone so quickly and automatical; ! , for farsightedness, and we requii glasses, at least for reading, i You will notice that those wli !wear reading glasses do not hav a range. By range we mea the ability to maintain sharp foci jwhen the reading material j moved in or out. You may have seen eye doctoi check the range. They pref to have the individual able to sc closer and further away than ti reading distance. The more vr , can do this, the greater range have. The older we get, the range we enjoy. Accommodation, however, only one type of vision examm tion. There are many other tec we must take to leam the tr condition of our sight. The National Eye Resean Foundation suggests eye examin tions regularly, preferably eve 1 j Lsifc months. Crucial Southeast Asia Mapped By National Geographic Society A timely National Geographic Society map of Southeast Asia portrays in fresh detail a vast region bled by conflict and upheaval for nearly three decades. The new wall map charts an area inhabited by 358,000,000 people, more than a tenth of the worlds population. The crucial territory produces a fifth of the worlds rice, nearly half its tin, and 85 per cent of its natural rubber. World concern has focused on strife tom Viet Nam, but the backlash of that tragic war has been felt in the neighboring nations of Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand. Communist led insurgency flickers in the Philippines and parts of Malaysia along the Thai border and beyond South China Sea. Changes in Southeast Asia are so swift and numerous that the Geographic published 7 maps in the region in the last decade. Historical boundaries shifted or vanished and former colonies have become independent. New place names reveal the areass strong trend toward nationalism. In the former Dutch possession of West Irian, mountain once called Wilhelmina top in honor of the Netherlands late Queen Mother, has become Punt-jain Indonesian. In all Southeast Asia only four remnants of the colonial past survive, Hong Kong and Brunei, both administered by Great Britain, and Portuguese Timor and Macao. Thailand is the only country to have escaped colonial rule. Thai means free. Much of Southeast Asia consists of mountains or jungle, but the settled portions support some of the worlds densest populak political beliefs. The Philippines alone number more than 7,000 islands and Indonesia has 3,000. The sprawl of Indonesia across 3,000 miles is graphically demonstrated by a special inset that superimposes the outline of the contiguous U.S. Another inset offers a close up of Taiwan, the stronghold of Nationalist China. A third depicts the eastern reaches of West Irian. Much of Southeast Asia recalls romance and adventure, One of Indonesias islands gives a name to the worlds largest lizard, the Komodo dragon. The meat eating monsters reach ten feet long and weigh 300 pounds. Off western New Guinea lie the Moluccas, the Spice Islands that lured countless mariners with promise of instant wealth. South lies Timor, the island to which Captain Bligh sailed in an open boat after the mutiny about H.M.S. Bounty in 1789. - Utah is Featured In Special Article Utah is featured in a six page special article in the March issue of the National Real Estate Investor, a prominent 22,000 circulation trade publication for with apartment, civic and educational developments according to the feature, while the results of industrial developments have been encouraging for Utahns a as and new industry has set up new present bewildering tions, of and array languages, religions plants in the state. A Picture Story FLOWERS BY THE DOOR tele-type- d The most rewarding place to plant flowers U by the door for then yon see them each time you go through. Dooiyard gardens are popular with apartment dwellers; becoming more so with home owners. annual flowers are suitable to use. S.L. Motor Service Joins Association Low-growi- ng Nealley Electric Motor Service, 1010 So. State, has been elected an active member of the Electrical Apparatus Service Association, Inc. The Electrical Apparatus Service Association, Inc., (EASA) is an international organization of independent motor 'repair firms with over 1700 members . Active members of the association operate service centers for the repair, maintenance and sale of electric motors, transformers, controls and associated equip. . ment. The unemployed are not all eager to find what theyre looking for. in- vestors and realtors. Written by Salt Lake City newsman Douglas Christensen, the article cites many industrial advantages and the various development agencies which promote them. Communities along the Wasatch Front are booming Furnishing bloom far a long season are petunias, ageratum, geraniums (now you grow them from seeds), dwarf marigolds or zinnias, pinks, sweet alyasum. In shade try begonias, coleus or Impatleus. Upper garden pictured shows geraniums between yews, the lower one petunias and ageratum planted hit or miss fashion. |