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Show Art Kent Transfers To KCPX News Art Kent, award winning broadcast journalist of the area, joins the KCPX stations of Salt Lake City as the television news director. Harold Hack Woolley, vice president and general manager of KCPX, announced that Kent will replace Roy Gibson, who elected to pursue a teaching career at the University of Utah. The recipient of a regional Emmy, three Utah Broadcasters Association awards and Distinguished Service award from the Exchange Club, Art Kent began his career in 1955 at an English language radio station in Taipei, Formosa. On discharge from the service he was employed by radio station KVOG in Ogden, later moving to KLUB in Salt Lake City. After spending a month in Vietnam as a correspondent for NBC News, Kent returned to Utah in August of 1970 and joined KSL as news manager for both radio and television. To Kents credit arc several excellent news stories which received national exposure on both the NBC and CBS networks. His most recent coup was the negotiation of a contract with two convicetd murderers which consequently led to the NBC News Special, Thou Shalt Not Kill. Other current involvements of the new director include a term as vice president of the Utah Easter Seal Society, membership on the board of the local Red Cross and a directorship of a local Boys Club, as well as con- inter-mounta- in Pfhaps the most spectacular' of all the vitamins in the one the human diet everybody talks about because it is used for so many important health reasons is vitamin E. Publications are filled with reports of vitamin Es use in heart attacks and stroke, diabetes, sterility, sexual miscarriage, cystic fibrosis, slowing down the aging process, speeding the healing of wounds and burns, and other conditions. The Pajama Game Playing at Lagoon Polka dots and flannel fill the stage for The Pajama Game, the current musical comedy presentation of the University of Utah Theatre Players at the Opera House to Sept. 2. The plot centers around a labor dispute and slow down strike in a midwestern pajama factory. Richard Bissell, of the show and sole author of a novel called 7 Cents, used his own fathers pajama factory in Dubuque, la., as a model for both stories. The up dated Lagoon production stars Claudia Archuleta and Craig Stephenson with Lora Davis and Gene Pack. Others in the cast include Vicki Andersen, Randy Miligan, George H Rhea D. Bottomly, Chris Fletcher, Christian G. Holt, and Steven R. Groff. Performances are scheduled to Sept. 2, Tuesdays through Fridays at 8:30 and Saturdays at 7 and 3 p.m. Tickets and information are available at the Lagoon Opera Box Office, 464 So. Main, Salt Lake City, Utah 84101. The new box office telephone numLa-go- co-auth- is inten- Medical science sively checking the. value of .vitamin E in ail these conditions. As scientific studies continue, certain clear-cu- t .Del-Hoy- o, ber is 364-771- 7. tinued involvement in the National Guard where he serves as a major. Summer time means fun in the sun and water. It can also be a time of tragedy if you dont exercise the proper precaution, as drowning is the fourth leading uiuse of accidental death. What is not so well known however, is that people whe use lots of polyunsaturated vitamin are accepted today, First, vitamin E is considered by the Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council to be essential for good health. Some good sources of vitamin E in the average Americans cereal diet are whole-graisome and vegetable products oils, particularly those made of com or soybeans, and green leafy vegetables and fruit. Many physicians consider n supplemental vitamin millions E of heart from suffer who people disease and who faithfully follow diets with polyunsaturated fats to keep their blood cholesterol levels down. necessary for the Cholesterol is generally considered one of the factors : fats, found in fish or certain vegetable i vitamin E. j The Apollo astronauts used vitamin E on their moon ex- plorations to guard against fatigue, anemia and weaken-- ! ing of their cardiovascular! systems, Dr. Shute reports. Babies born prematurely infants1 and many arc often given Aquasol E, the first natural rather than synthetic vitamin E special- ly formulated to be more easily and rapidly absorbed by the body. This has greater in the development of heart disease. Indeed, the famed Dr. Wilfrid E. Shute says the lack of vitamin E in our diet is responsible for heart afr lack: caused by blood clots. j m I urgency for babies bom anemic, or those' with low vitamin E blood levels who or are on high are formula-fed polyunsaturated fatty acid diets. Even large doses of the vitamin, supplementing have been natural foods, shown to be harmless Doctors also prescribe vitamin E for many persons who are unable to absorb fat efficiently due to various intestinal diseases like liver, pancreas and biliary disorders, or due to sprue, celiac and other diarrheal diseases. Discovered in 1922, vitamin E is arousing much excitement today as a possible aid to belter health. economy has passed, Early childhood education. but significant public decisions What How will Utahs remain to be made, Secretary of schools is beit?involved? And how Labor J. D. Hodgson told the can the parent-chilPaper Workers Convention in be strengthened by relationship the school Denver last week. involvement? systems He said, I sec three questions These are some of the queswe should be asking ourselves to be asked and hopefully as we contemplate the choices tions at the Utah School Adanswered ahead: ministrators Conference to be 1. Can we avoid new taxes on held this wek end at the Cotton- Eight our incomes by controlling federal government spending? 2. Can we get a better break for the products of the American workers without slipping into protectionism and starting an international trade war? 3. Is there a rational way to clean up our environment with out sacrificing workers jobs and do it at a cost we can afford? Secretary Hodgson noted the huge deficits the government has been running to fuel the economy and cited the rewards, but, he added, we see a vast new range of proposals surfacing that could double this spending. We will be faced sooner or later with two alternatives. We will have to increase taxes to pay for all these goodies. The American workers pay more than half the personal income taxes paid in the nation today. During his first year in office President Nixon reduced workers tax burden, cutting millions of them off the roles entirely and averaging about $75 a year personal saving for most others. Yet, workers think the taxes arc too high, and the President knows it. He doesnt see past gains go down the drain under a new spending deluge. So he is trying to keep the lid on to get more out of the tax dollars you are already paying. About 100 unemployed migrant workers, including some from Utah, from 14 states will, be trained as paraprofessional Teachers and teacher aides for employment at Head Start centers, Manpower Administrator Paul J. Fascr, Jr., said this week. Fasscr said that the Labor Do-- : partment has approved $257,044 in federal funds to cover training and transportation costs, and stipend payments for trainees, most of them Spanish speaking. The project supports President Nixons program of special attention to the Spanish speaking Americans, especially those in the migrant farm labor force. , The Institute of Human Resources Development, a nonprofit educational development at Yuma, Arizona, will conduct the training. The 16 week training will include instruction in education, child development, on the job experience at the Som-erto- n Head Start Center. Trainees will be recruited by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare from fourteen slates including Utah. On completion of training, the trainees will return to the home communities and bo employed at IIEW funded Head Start centers. The training project will provide jobs for prcvoiusly unemployed migrant farm workers, who will then be teaching children of migrant families. The project strengthens the Administrations continuing effort to help migrant farm workers. pre-scho- ol Frank A. Potter, Regional - said. The conference will be focusing on how to carefully develop a relationship between the home and the school that will protect the child from the evils of institutionalization, but still provide him the advantages of what is known about early childhood development, said Rowley. One of the primary reasons for the conference is to alert school administrators to the fact that early childhood education is now with us. The question is what should be the roles of both public education and the private individual. Another side issue is how- - do you preserve the integrity of the home and protect parents prerogatives in the rearing of their children, but still provide a program in early childhood qducation. Mr. Rowley noted that the State Board of Education has received assistance from the Governors Office, the Utah State Division of Famliy Serv- Primary tions, including duty in schools, libraries, hospitals, government offices, parks and playgrounds. Hospital and other professional agencies and persons in planning the conference. Governor Calvin L. Rampton has been invited to attend the session. The Governor chaired the Education Commission of the states and has called for effort in Utah and other states in the area of early childhood education and developin-sreas- Childrens ment. JEWELRY FROM THE KITCHEN tightly closed container. Now youre ready to try a clay that hardens to a ceramic-like quality. Make a batch Crazy Daizy Pin. Roll clay to of play clay and then roll out-o- 14-inc- h thickness. Cut a mold into jewelry shapes. flower shape with a cooky Trim with fragrant herbs or cutter. Press petals down with n center, press on a spices for long lasting water Paint with colors, poster paints or felt-ti- p pens and finish with a protective coating of clear plastic spray or nail polish. To make a batch of day, mi:; 2 cups baking soda and 1 cup Argo corn starch in a saucepan. Stir in 1 14 cups cold water and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until mixture reaches a slightly moist, mashed small circle of tin foil that has potato consistency. Transfer been pierced. Around it, press immediately to a plate and silver cake decors secured cover with a damp cloth. with a drop of white glue. When mixture is cool enough When dry, paint petals and to handle, knead as 'you glue a pin clasp to back. would dough until smooth. Make a button .earring from a ball of play clay the Working on a protected suror size of a large marble. Press face, shape clay roll out to about a .flat with thumb. Moisten and thickness and cut shapes with press into center a smaller cooky cutters. Shapes will ball of clay. Decorate center harden and dry at room tem- with 'allspice glued and perature in about 36 hours. pressed into an arrangement. r Any play clay can be When dry, paint and glue on stored for liter, use in a an earring back. riay clay is a kitchen-mad- e r - pun-genc- e. free-han- d 14-inc- h left-ove- a AdDe- ministrator, said the Labor partment has recently allocated $1,407,660 to the projects, with the remainder of the cost to be provided by local sponsors. The funds are allocated for job programs from- the Manpower Development and Training Act and the Economic Opportunity Act. Disadvantaged young people between 14 and 21, who will be returning to school in the fall, are being given an opportunity to obtain summer earnings to aid them with next years school expenses, as well as gaining work experience necessary to hold a job when they leave school. Supporting services are provided, including remedial education, counseling and guidance to assist the youths in assessing their skills and aptitudes. They are also furnished information on possible careers and opportunities for post high school education and training and on attitudes necessary to retain employment. Youths are assigned to clerical, service, maintenance and recreational work in community func- Early childhoodl education and development is a field that has received little attention until the last five years, said G. Morris Rowley, administrator of the Utah State Board of Educations Division of General Education and chairman of the conference. Early childhood education holds great potential for strengthening the possibilities of future happiness and success, or just the opposite, depending on the direction it takes, Rowley the Youth with summer job experience, the U. S. Department of Labor has announced. wood high school in Salt Lake City. ices, Neighborhood Corps (NYC) projects arc providing some 3,286 youth from disadvantage families in several cities and rural areas of Utah d And Aides Trained Under Labor Dept. oils, need morel full-ter- $1 Million Allocated Early Childhood Secretary of Labor For 8 Summer Notes Economy Crisis Education Discussed The slate of acute concern At School Conference Youth Corps Projects about the Head Start Teachers j facts about this fascinating od or im-poten- j THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1972 Page Twelve ed |