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Show Page Twelve Planetarium Board Chooses Officers Golden Spike Book Is Now Available The Hansen Planetarium Advisory Board at its meeting on Friday, May 2, selected its officers for the coming year. Mr. Kenneth Ariotti, of American Paper Company, was elected Chairman; and Mr. Robert Freed, manager of Lavice-preside- nt Upland Game Bird Harvest Increases Utah upland game bird hunters enjoyed one of the best seasons on record in 1968, as increased harvests were reported for all upland game birds but one in the upland game harvest report issued by the Division of Fish and Game. Only the mourning dove harvest was below the previous season; biologists said this was largely due to the cold, wet weather experienced in August prior to the opening of the dove Senator Frank E. Moss announced that the National Park Service has just pubHistorical Handlished a book on the driving of the Golden Spike 100 years ago, when East and West were joined by completion of the transcontin62-pa- ge vice-chairma- n. Ad-visto- ry two-colo- featured. A new series of star parties where the public will be invited to view the stars through a Planetarium telescope. Safety Contest Forms Are Now Available Entry forms for the Utah Safety Councils Annual Julian Bamberger Memorial Traffic Safety Award are available for distribution, A. J. Thuli, Council President, announced today. The Bamberger Award, Thuli said, is to recognize individuals and organizations in the State of Utah who have made outstanding contributions to the cause of traffic safety. Three classifications are used in the award, he said, one for the another for the professional safety person and the third to the organization deemed to have done an outstanding job in the field. The nominees contribution to traffic safety, it was pointed out, should reflect a steady service over a period of several years, and include one or more signi ficant achievements which aided the State in solving its traffic safety problem. Entry forms, Thuli said, must be received at the Utah Safety Councils Office by August 1, 1969 so as to permit the non-profession- al, selection committee time to review and select the three winners. Winners of the Bamberger Award will be recognized and 100-Year-O- Spot Bid Sale Set How to Achieve Parent Power By GSA Can life with children be made less irritating and more rewarding, asks Dr. Haim Ginott, writing in Family Circle Magazine on How to Achieve Parent Power. Can family wars be he asks. Can tension between parents and children be diminished or eliminated? To achieve these goals, we need the ability to parent power deal effectively with daily situations, conflicts and problems. Certain skills are essential for parent power, for instance: hunt. Harvest records were set for Avoid all sarcasm in dealing chukars and forest grouse as with children. To guests we are hunters took 73,218 chukars and automatically helpful. Children deserve similar courtesy. 32,414 forest grouse in 1968. When wrong, deal Increases were due to better with the things gonot with the event, production making more birds child himself. Dont mention available and to increased huntpast offenses. Dont make future ing pressure. predictions. State what you see Over 90,000 pheasant hunters and what needs to be done at the went afield and they harvested moment. If he spills something, 297,752 birds. say Get a sponge quickly, not The sage grouse harvest more Why are you such a slob? than doubled to 11,109 and the An essential ingredient of parquail harvest was up slightly to ent power is authenticity. To his children an effective parent is 28,469. a showed human, honest and transparent. Hungarian partridge harDistinguish clearly between slight increase in the total vest to 17,089. feelings and behavior, between Mourning dove hunters re- wishes and acts. Be permissive mained at about the same num- in dealing with feelings and ber and the harvest of this bird wishes. Be strict in dealing with decreased about 56,000 doves to undesirable traits. In concluding, Dr. Haim Gina total of 207,922 for the 1968 ott remarks that in dealing with hunt. (D-Ut- ah goon and the Terrace Ballroom, ental railroad. Memwas named Senator Moss, Vice Chairman bers of the Advisory Board are: of the Golden Spike Centennial Mr. Richard Bailey, Mr. Wes Celebration Commission, said Bowen, Mrs. Lela Ence, Mr. Jack that the booklet was issued conGoodman, Mr. Don V. Hague, currently with the Golden Spike Mr. Monroe Iverson, Mrs. Wil- centennial celebration being held liam McMain, Jr., Dr. Theodore this month. The dramatic event S. Roberts, and Mr. Murray G. of 100 years ago is traced from Stowe. its origins to its significant role The Hansen Planetarium in the westward movement. citBoard is composed of Written by Robert M. Utley, izens especially interested in the National Park Service chief hisprogress and welfare of the Han- torian, and Francis A. Ketterson, sen Planetarium. Jr., historian at Golden Spike The May 2 meeting was de- National Historic Site, Utah, the voted primarily to the search for r handbook is liberally new ways in which the Plane- illustrated with reproductions of tarium could serve the public original photographs and drawand in which the Hansen Plane- ings of the opening of the West. tarium, which has already Senator Moss said the Golden achieved a national reputation, Historical Handbook, could become better known to Spike can be No. the citizens of Utah. Projects un- Catalog from129.58:40, the Superintendder development as a result of purchased ent of Documents, U. S. Gov'the meeting include: ernment Printing Office, WashA new program for Boy Scouts D.C. 20402 for 60 cents. to help them earn astronomy ington, merit badges. A special science and astronoMost of the good things that to film series free the public come to individuals in life have my to be shown in conjunction with to be paid for in some manner. Planetarium shows. Recent NASA films of spaceflight will be - THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 ed, May 18 A Spot Bid Sale will be held Wednesday, May 14, at the GSA Interagency Motor Pool, Ogden, Gerald E. McNamara, Regional Administrator of General Services Administration, said . Sixty one vehicles including pickups, carryalls, sedans, trucks and jeeps will be offered for sale at the motor pool, 183 West 30th Street, Ogden, Utah. The property is located at the GSA Interagency Motor pools in Ogden and Salt Lake City, the post office garage, Salt Lake and the GSA Interagency Motor Pool in Vernal and may be inspected immediately. Listings may be obtained from GSA, Property Management and Disposal Service, Building 41, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado 80225. Drop bids will be accepted until 3 p.m. May 13, at the GSA Motor Pools in Ogden and Salt Lake City and the Post Office Garage and until 12.01 p.m. May 13 at the GSA Motor Pool in Vernal. Refer to Sale No. childen, love and patience are not enough. Parents need the sensitivity and skill to respond effectively to everyday situations. Such knowledge is power parent power. Photos Go On Tour ld U.T.U. Celebrates Spike As Labor Triumph With a minimum of hoopla but with a certain amount of understandable boasting, American labor is planning its own celebration of the Golden Spike centennial. The program, by the United Transportation Union and the Oakland (Calif.) Museum, stresses the contribution Of working men in building the nations first transcontinental railroad. Plans center on the only photographic record ever made of the almost legendary construction project The pictures are printed off glass plate negatives shot more than 100 yean ago by the Union Pacific Rail- roads official photographer, Andrew J. Russell. The photos, in an exhibit specially constructed by San Francisco architect Gordon Ashby, will go on tour, starting this year and continuing at least into 1972. Russells camera virtually wrote file script for labors centennial event He followed the UP work crews all the way from their starting point in Omaha, Neb., to the link-uwith Central Pacific at Promontory Point Utah, on May p 10, 1869. In our own quiet way, said U.T.U. president Charles Luna, we want to take fitting notice of the men who gave In this picture by photographer Andrew Russell, celebrating workmen surround the handshaking chief engineers at Promontory Central Pacifics Sam Montague (left) and Gen. Granville Dodge of Union Pacific. The rough working faces were a little too coarse for the so CP president Leland Stanford had a painting commissioned of the event (see below). their muscle, brains and, in ic politicians were dissatisfied covered, carefully crated, in a many cases, their lives men with his photograph of the link- remote storage area of the who fought disease and hostile up celebration, showing the two American Geographical SoIndians while working under the locomotives on the ciety in New Yorks upper whips of company supervisors finished track, and workmen Manhattan. After making its way around to make possible that famous dominating the area in a state of celebration. the country, the exhibit, with ceremony at Promontory. When the union began reworking prints of Movin On, Ironically, Russell's remarks able negatives went search two years ago for its will reside permanently in the into virtual oblivion as soon as hour-lonOakland Museum. movie, Movin' On, they were made. For one thing, the whole Russell collection of large investors and sympathet glass plates, 500 in all, was dis nose-to-no- se plate-glas- g presented their plaques at the 41st Annual Utah Safety Conference Awards Banquet on September 25th at the Hotel Utah. Since the Award covers both the professional and Thuli urged individuals to feel free to submit entry nominations for either or both classinon-profession- fications. Nomination blanks can be obtained from the Council Office, 307 State Office Building, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114. CONSOLE SPINET PIANO. Will sacrifice to responsible party in this area. Cash or terms. White Credit Mgr., Tall man Piano Stores, Inc., Salem, Oregon 97308. (5-1- 6 5-2- The painting centers on Stanford, and it includes only three workmen all kneeling before the mighty Leland. Many of the dignitaries here never saw Promontory; at least two were said to have died two years before May 10, 1869. The famous Gen. Jack Casement posed proudly for Russell-holding the bullwhip that was used to exhort Union Pacific workers to lay track at backbreaking pace. |