OCR Text |
Show Page Four THE SALT LAKE TIMES Combined with The Salt Labe Mining & Legal New Published Every Friday at Salt Labe City, Utah . "Thu publication is not owned or controlled by any party, clan, clique, faction or corporation J Number Volume 51 I . . , , . 1 . 25 Years of Caring " (Continued from Page One) As Europe rebuilt, CARE moved to continents whose people suffer the effects of centuries of underdevelopment. At present,: it operates in 35 countries, from Latin America to Africa, Asia, the Middle East, wherever CARE goes the people know its represents the American people, acting voluntarily as friend to friend. Today, as in the past, each contribution affirms our belief in the importance of every human life. For those who wish to share in this anniversary, checks may be sent to CARE, 444 Market Street, San Francisco, California 94111. i i Pollution Can Kill Vital Plants e Nearly all marine life depends on a galaxy of micro- scopic plants called phytoplankton. In many places these one celled plants, linked in a radial pattern, lie dormant in winter and burgeon in the spring, turning ponds yellow.. The seas life cycle begins with the minute organisms. Using the suns life giving power, they combine water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into carbohydrates, proteins and fat, forming the oceans basic foodstuff, the National Geographic says. Billions of the tiny food factories float freely in the sea. Inside each is the same chemical, chlorophyll, found in leaves and stems of plants on land. This miraculous substance plays the key role in enabling plants to combine sunlight and chemicals into nourishment for themselves and into food for other living things in the vital process of photosynthesis. So numerous are the minute sun machines that they account for perhaps two thirds of the photosynthesis taking place on Earth. A prominent oceaographer urges stringent measures to protect the seas phytoplankton from pollution. Most life on Earth will sufficate if sea pollution continues, he warns. Just as land animals graze on earth bound plants and in turn become meals for the flesh eaters, so marine life pyramids on the one celled grasses of the sea. Zooplankton or microscopic animals feed on the phytoplankton. Herring and other fish, by the hundreds of millions feed on zooplankton. Tuna and other predators eat the smaller fish and in turn fall prey to sharks and killer whales. The minute marine life grows more prolifically where cold waters, rich in dissolved nutrients, flow from rivers and polar seas, or well upward from the ocean depths. Such waters support incredible populations of chloro- phyll bearers as many as a dozen million per cubic foot. There, too, congregate the tiny plant eaters and the Nemelka Advises Sen. Moss Submits Immediate Use Of New Utah Law Testimony to Tariff Commission Putting Space to Work A few years ago, little public note was taken of the merger of a major space firm with an automotive parts producer. The new company has let no grass grow under its feet in applying space technology to the development of a wide variety of commercial products that range from devices on heavy trucks to a new generation of executive jet planes. skid-contr- ol IEASS D GRAPEVINE tigation of the importation of certain cheeses and cheese substitutes. Senator Moss noted that actions have been taken to protect A four tens mill levy increase American dairy producers from I for the one operation of Salt Lake foreign imports, but that cost-1 cheeses Public in exists City loophole Library and Hansen ing 47 cents per pound or more. I Planetarium is being requested Such cheeses do not fall under of the Salt Lake City Commis-impor- t quotas, arid they havelsion. The Library Board, on recomcontributed heavily to the im-I American our to mendation of W. E. Browning port threat I and farmers. the Finance Committee, has dairy I for the justification Perhaps unanimously approved the setting quotas on these 47 j crease, cent cheeses was an expectation that they would only be import- ed in very small quantities. J Eight members of the Salt I However, from January 1970 to Lake County Recreation 1971, the importation I partment staff attended the 20th of these cheeses rose 125 percent. annual Utah Parks and Recrea-I- t is discouraging to me that I tion Association convention from we are not willing to offer our I Thursday through Saturday dairy farmers any more protec-- 1 Moab tion than we do. Cash receipts from dairy products in 1969. A Lake ? amounted to more than $6 bil-- c have ty commissions gon lion for the U.S. 13 per cent of I ?Pati all cash receipts from farming. In Utah cash receipts from coty and Salt Lake Clty dairying in 1969 were nearly $42 h million, almost 20 per cent of enJPoyer all cash receipts from agricul-- 1 I E Dunn and Chairman William Commissioner Phil nrni snips I Pvt. Blaine R. Withers, son of E; B1niquist said they Moss said Congress Senator R. Mrs. Rumel the commission will Mr. and Withers, two major bills to helppact I 5236 West 4100 South, recently SChedUle last year. One bill a a communication field of completed ay' firsJ amended the Agricultural Mar-- 1 crewman course at Fort Ord. rates would be wage County marAct to provide dairy He was trained to string wire keting effective 1, with July coinciding ket promotion and advertising, from the field to the communi- and schedule adopted the other was the Agricul-- 1 ? C1y salary cations center. Instruction was last week affording pay increase also given in basic electricity, of from 6 to 19.7 per cent for switchboard installation and op1,700 workers. eration and pole climbing. He is a 1970 graduate of Cyprus high Salt Lake City Commissioner school. James L. Barker, Jr. this week said he has received a letter n 1 illustration of the companys growing integru-- Erring an investigation of Salt reUonafof-mention of aerospace and commercial operations is its assign- t of a top executive, who was at one time cmei engi- - fice of the Model Cities coordi-nee- r on th eApollo spacecraft program, to make an aero-- 1 nator. tax sales now if Salt Lake County wants to save work, money and avoid conflict. The new law, which goes into effect May 11, protects the con tract buyer of property whose fee simple owner (the one who pays or doesnt pay the taxes) is not in contact with the buyer. Where this contract is lacking, the buyer could lose his equity if the property is sold for taxes anl he is not notified. Mr. Nemelka summarized the background of the amendments to the old law and said the 1971 Legislature added two phrases to the old law: Notice of sale (tax) shall also be sent to the last known recorded owner at his last known address by registered mail and the description (of the property) shall also include the name and address of the last known recorded owner of each tract and parcel of land to be sold. The question to be resolved, Nemelka said, is whether the provision of the two phrases should apply to the annual four year tax sales this May 25 or the sale in May, 1972. in-n- ot De-Janua- ' ex-pass- ry ed en con-dairym- re-A- toTever space industry style systems engineering study of theac3?latterfrmF1ydHHyde commusecretary I worldwide textile business. The study revealed the fact.(assistant nity development, Department that there has been little change in textile manufacturing I of Housing and Urban Deveiop-i- n 150 years, that a total of 15 operations still stand be- - F611 ?aid usual practices would tween cotton ball and finished cloth. The executive notes Fn vesti gaUonS under Vohn Beale! that such situations present fantastic opportunities for I coordinator for the regional of- the special capabilities of the aerospace commercial manu- - fice in Denyerfacturing concern. The U.S. Court has Tile Cynical tend to scoff at what we are pleased to I taken under Supreme advisement the suit call the private enterprise system, but it is through that of the state of Utah for title to a11 its system that men of imagination are able to build compa- - ju.eat ?alt ake and nies and develop products in response to the needs of Utahs wise fwas argued by the nation. As long as men of this caliber can see an op- - Dailin w. Jensen, special to earn a reasonable profit from a new idea. an.t attorney general. The fede- the public will continue to benefit from their vision. The I SteownerehlR vs'repraeS-technolog- y of space is now being used to produce more ed by Peter A. Strauss, assistant and better goods more efficiently here on Earth. Therein Oolxicitor general of the is nothing wrong with a system like this. - - I i.l assist-portuni- ty I The Ten Commandments monument erected on the Metropolitan Hall of Justice grounds last year was accepted this week by the Salt Lake County Commis- that prey upon them. Some forms of phytoplankton multiply prodigiously. A single diatom, for instance, can have 100 million de- scendants in a month. the Salt Lake County attorney Senator Frank E. Moss has Attorney Carl J. Nemelka this submitted written testimony re-toweek advised invoking a new the U.S. Tariff Commission Utah law relating to property garding the commissions inves- Gass Postage paid at Salt Lake Gty, Utah 711 South West Temple Telephone 364-- 8 464 Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 GLENN BJORNN, Publisher Second fish THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1971 dial sion. 860 Where thousands of listeners enjoy concert music and news every day! Erection of the marble slab resulted in a civil suit being filed in U.S. District Court for Utah against the city and the county. Dr. Obcrt C. Tanner, educa- tor and philanthropist, has been named recipient of the 1970 Brotherhood Citation award of the Utah Chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews . Dr. Tanner will be honored at a dinner May 25. |