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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES UTAM1 Combined with The Salt Labe Mining 6 Lagd Sows Published Entry Friday nt Sub Luka City, Utah FiARLBS Second Gass Postage paid at Sait Lake City, Utah Telephone 3644464 711 South West Temple Sait Uke Chi, Utah 64161 IMDCfINDENT NlWSPAKft GLENN BJORNN, Feblahta 'Tbst publication is not owned or controlled by any party, dam, digue, faction Number 44 Volume 52 Your Hands Tell on You i i (Continued from Pfcge 1) . i 'i . ' Urgent Appeal for Railroad Cars th-eTo Ship Emergency Cattle Feed LEASED An urgent appeal for railroad uses .to provide the emergency cars to ship emergency feed to Utah ranchers in coungrain ties which suffered a severe summer was last made drought today by Senator Wallace F. Bennett of Utah. The Utah Senator said the feed grain is available, but is sitting in Nebraska because of a shortage of railroad cars to ship it to Utah. This assistance is vital to the livestock producers in these 12 counties if they are to maintain their foundation herds in the winter," Sen. Bennett said. He said livestock producers are in almost destitute conditions in providing for their basic .. numbers and. time. Hands hold considerable meaning. During the Indian wars in our nation, women would cut off a finger at the first joint whenever they lost a loved one in battle. This was a mark of mourning aiul sacrifice for one who herds, The Senator appealed to the died, for them. Commerce CommisYou are called intelligent because of the use you Interstate sion and the Office of Emergency make of your hands, and it s correct to say that because Preparedness to assist in divertof1 a God-give- n intelligence directing them, hands are ing some hopper cars from other unquestionably a wonderful' and priceless part of the ! ! human-body.- : Philosophers of old had good reason to maintain that thetongiie is die agent of the brain and the hand the servant of the heart, to which it is united by special veins. This is' why the symbol of love, the wedding riiig, is placed on a finger of the left hand. The Roman Emperors used the balled hand with the thumb standing out and gestured by pointing up or down, to signify the granting of life or denoting death in the arena. In history, literature and art, we encounter many kinds of hands; the gracious and gentle hands of Jesus which Christ;, the tainted hands of Pontius Pilate, from dove-lik- e water could not wash away his guilt; the firm liands of artists such as Botticelli, Michaleangelo and pernicious hands of Lady da Vinci; the blood-staineMacbeth; the healing hands of surgeons and medicine men: the loving, passionate liands of Romeo; the brave and creative hands of Charles A. Lindberg, Neil Armstrong and many adventuresome men and women all through history!, Nothing so much as applause reveals the compelling power of tlie hands to convert emotion into action. In applauding to show admiration you open your arms as if to give an embrace, then bring your hands together to make a clapping sound aiid separate the hands once more to set free the invisible, sensitive bird of appreciamessenger from the heart tion, that luminous of man. Indeed, hands are among the most precious tools you possess a fact, symbolized in the first gesture of the newborn babe and the last movement of the dying. , r . d, . . lily-wing- ed . . : : Working With Nature For years, the Eastern Seaboard of the U.S. was and other seafoods. famed for its oysters on the half-slie- ll Gradually oysters grew less plentiful, and. gloomy predictions were made that they were headed for extinction. Pollution and population, it seemed, were going to wipe them out. But today the oyster industry is coming back stronger than ever before in the form of aquafarms notably in the Long Island, New York area. One of the. most successful aquafarming operations is conducted on the grounds of a large power company. The warm water from its generating plant is discharged into a 4.5 acre bay. Some 19 million oysters are always in the early stages of growth in the clear shallow water. According to one authority, The discharge guarantees that the temperature will never fall below 40 degrees, the point at which oysters stop growing. Inside the companys laboratories, the oysters are spawned, and the weak and ones are screened out. . . . Using the latest scientific growing techniques, the oyster farmers have cut the oysters natural mortality rate of 99.99 percent to virtually zero. The oyster industry is now raising larger, slow-growi- ng THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1973 Page pour assistance. He said that producers became eligible for the emergency feed grain after the Utah area was declared a disaster area because of the severe drought. Sen. Bennettt said if the producers had known of the difficulties they would encounter in getting the feed they could have made arrangements on their own but assumed that the government would make good on their promises to provide the assistance. He said the state has current orders pending for 140 hopper cars of feed grain, but has not received any shipments to date. The nine counties eligible for assistance include Beaver, Iron, Emery, Juab, Kane, Millard, Piute, Sanpete, Washington, San Juan and Garfield. Enter Miss National THIS MAY FLOOR YOU Teenager Contest Breathes' there a Utah girl who has never dreamed of being a queen? Would you like to be one for a whole year? The Miss Utah Teenag Pageant will have just such a queen. You can try to become that young lady when she is chosen at the Hamada Inn in Salt Lake City. Miss Utah Teenager 1973 will go into the National finals in Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 1 with all expenses paid, to compete for the title Miss National Teenager, 1973. Sharon McLarty of Amory, Miss., is 1972 Miss Na- tional Teenager. Just last week in sHe met President Nixon The National Teenager Pageant holds state pageants in 50 states and a winner from each state is duly chosen by a panel of competent judges with interviews and judging for each girl, with the lucky one from each state representing her own state in the national finals. Judging is based on poise, personality, appearance, civic contributions, and scholastic achievement and there is no swim suit or talent competition. Utahns are smarter this year than last. The Utah State Tax Commission, in charge of the issuance of the new license plates, reports that 92,000 more registrations have been received this year to date as compared to last year. . Salt Lake County officials and law enforcement planners call for a no loophole law that would return parole violators to prison on the premise if we could get these people off the streets we could reduce crime in the county drastically. This premise has drawn much criticism from state correction officials and citizens from throughout the county. This will be a much debated issue, and with not too much legislation being provided to back it up. Salt Lake County is toning e down its tough e which prohibits rocket testing at Hercules Bacchus works and blasting at the Kennecott anti-nois- ordi-nac- Copper mine. Commissioner William Dunn called for the revision and said that the law does not adequately provide for the necessary functions of these two very important in- dustries. ) Intended as a collectors item, Drummer Boy (Der Paukenspieler), famous Washington.1 GRRPEVIIIIE by intema-tionall- y artist Paul has been Klee, duplicated in a limited-editio- n all-wo- tapes- ol try . by Montgomery Ward. And since the 30 x 60 wall hangings will neves again be so duplicated, each has been registered for authentication. Owners receive a parchment certificate showing date of purchase, serial number and signature of store manager The executive vice president of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce has sent a request to the Utah schools requesting that poistponemen tof opening classes be made until after Labor Day. Frfed Ball stated in his letter that the average daily attend- ance is low before Labor Day and those districts beginning school after Labor Day report an increase in attendance. Rsesidents of St. George and Dixie College officials opposed a proposal before the legislature which calls for a study of the feasibility of converting the college to a high school. College officials said a number of resiMaine dents had offered to draft petitions calling on the legislature to reject the plan. in' where the tapestry was bought to preserve the value of their unique collector's find. tastier oysters that are being served on tables from to California. The interesting part of the rebirth of the oyster dustry is that it is being accomplished with a from electric generating plants warm water that has been roundly condemned by the environmentalists as thermal pollution. The comeback of the oyster is only one small chapter in the story of how man and his works can and must learn to live in harmony with the resources of our planet. by-produ- ct -- life-supporti- dial ng AH state legislators, will be honored at the Utah legislative ball Friday, this week, in the State Capitol Rotunda. The formal affair will see each Representative and State Senator being introduced. Heated debate erupted at a meeting of the Utah Advisory Council for Handicapped and Developmeritally Disabled Children held at the state capitol, as to the feasibility of the state providing. a one large recreational park to serve the states handicapped persons or attempt to build a smaller group of centers in many communities. Senator Ernest H. Where thousands of listeners enjoy concert music and news every day! Dean asked for committee support of a bill he is introducing which would direct the master planning efforts of such a move. Salt Lake County will release its $50,000 contribution to the Sugar House Park Authority, but will hold a $3,000 donation to Ballet West. |