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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1973 SOL Net Savings Cain CARE is Stepping Up Reaches $12,946,573 Aid to Vietnamese Total savings at Utahs insured savings and loan associations topped $600 million during January, reports Howard C. Bradshaw, chairman of the Utah Savings and Loan Leagues Public Information Committee. The milestone reached in savings was the result of a net savings gain in January of $12,946,-57This amount is $4.7 million more than the savings gain in the previous month and indicates that the savings and loan leaders were on the right track when they predicted 1973 would be another good year for saving. Mr. Bradshaw said that deposits in long term certificates d accounts passbook accounts 5 to 1. These certificate accounts earn from 5.25 to 6 per cent interest depending on amount and length of deposit. During January the money moves from one investment to another as investors seek the best return on their savings. The high interest paid by savings and loan associations has proven to be one of the best investments a person could make in recent years, he said. Mr. Bradshaw quoted research conducted by the United States Savings and Loan League which shows that the deposit at insured savingsa nd loan associations remained the best buy in the past swirling half decade bet, cause its capital remained suffering no erosion in redemption value. This was not the case with common stocks or marketable bonds. The savings account at an insured association actually outperformed the stock market, on the Dow Jones averages, said Mr. Bradshaw. The U.S. League report states that the asset value of your portfolio was unusually high if you stayed with the savings account and avoided the 3. out-pulle- con-san- On the heels of the cease fire announcement, CARE headquarters cabled its director in Vietnam to proceed with finalizing previously prepared preliminary proposals for vastly expanding the agencys relief and reconstruction aid for destitute refugees and other war victims. Initial plans call for extending CAREs child feeding programs which now reach 270,000 school children in the Saigon area into regions inaccessible during the fighting. Also under discussion with the Vietmamese government officers are proposals to establish medical services for the sick and injured and to help resettle displaced families in new communities or in their former villages that now lie in ruins. Such aid would include repair and construction of houses, schools, and rodas, with the people themselves helping to do the building, and the provision of work equipment for farmers, fishermen and artisians in small industries, so that they can sup-pa- rt themselves and their families. CARE has operated in South Vietnam since 1954, when it was the first outside agency to enter the country after the Geneva truce. Americans have the challenge and opportunity of helping to build the conditions in which peace can survive, according to Frank L. Goffio, CARE director. Whatever governments do, there is an urgent need for direct, people to people assistance for millions of homeless, hungry, and sick. Although our present work centers in South Vietnam CARE stands ready to send aid wherever it is needed and requested in Indochina. market. The public is learning that insured savings and loan associations do provide protection and pay a high return on savings, he said. He was like to cock who thought the sun had risen to hear him crow. George Eliot. SHINES UP BRIGHT IN MINUTES LASTS UP TO A WEEK GRIFFIN WAX SHOE POUSH A LOOK AT THE BOOK Auto Dealers Aid Cinema Workshop Offered by University Women on Wheels The Sixth Annual Cinema Workshops in Science Fiction and Literature and Film will be offered in June by the University of Utah Summer School. Designed for teachers, students and other persons interested in modern cinema, the workshops may be taken for two hours graduate or undergraduate credit. Cinema Workshop: The Science Fiction Film (English 543W Section 1), will be taught June 8 by Vivian Sobchack, associate instructor of English. The class will critically explore the thematic and cultural concerns of science fiction, with emphasis on philosophy, religion, exploration and technology, loss of individuality, and the monster as personified atomic holocaust. A teacher in the U of U General Education Film Studies Program for three years, Mrs. Sobchack has also read papers at the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association Film Symposium, and published articles in the Denver Quarterly. Cinema Workshop: Literature and Film (English 543W, Section 2), will be offered June Dr. Thomas Sobchack, associate professor of English, will lead participants in their examination of the relationship between literature and film, and discussion of the process of transformation from one medium to the other. Dr. Sobchack has headed Cinema Workshop since its inception. The director of film study programs at Utah, he has published articles on film and is currently editor of the film section of the Western Humanities Review. Registration may be completed in advance or on the first day of class. For more information contact: Dr. Thomas Sobchack, English Department, OSH 34 1C, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112. 4-- My brethren, count it all joy ing stoically whatever comes; when ye fall into divers temp- it is a matter of relaxing betations (James 1:2). In this cause of trust in God and the message to Christians Janies knowledge that God sends only admonishes them to receive with ioy the trials and testings of life the unnleasant things we would avoid if we could. Knowing that "all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose" (Romans 8:28). how else can a Christian receive them but with Joy? No matter how unpleasant a thing may be at the time, great blessing comes to the Christian who accepts it with joy. Aside from being good Scriptural admonition, this advice is good from a psychological standpoint. The man who "kicks against the pricks," who struggles against that which he cannot avoid, find the situation much more difficult than the man who relaxes and accepts it. With regard to the Christian, it is not a mere bear that which comes to bless him. Trials, to the Christian, are a revelation of God's love. "Whom the I.ord loveth. he rhasteneth (Hebrews 12:6). The purpose of chastening is to train the one who is chastened so that he may develop into a finer person. As gold is refined bv the fire, so through trial and Buffering the soul and character of the Christian are refined. Without testing, there can be no development. Without trials, there can be no growth. Without chastening, there can be no learning. If we are to come into the perfection which God desires of His children, patience must have her perfect work and " . . . the trying of your faith work-et- h patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing. Released by the Gospel Fellowship Association Bennett Makes Appeal For Predator Control A national program, called WOW, designed to aid Women On Wheels in their knowledge of cars, car trouble and repairs gets underway at Hinckleys in Salt Lake this week. The program, Women on Wheels, is implemented by the Senator Wallace F. Bennett of Utah joined with other western Senators in asking the Interior Department how it proposes to leal with an increased predator control problem brought on by the governments ban on the use of poisons on federal land. In a joint letter to Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton the Senators said the western states are having an extremely difficult time controlling predators in particular coyotes. With the recent actions that have limited the predator control methods, the loss of sheep is on the rise, and the problem has increased to the point where the calves are being lost to coyotes, national Chrysler Motors Corporation dealership network in the United States. It has been in operation for about a year. The classes have been highly acclaimed by many of the thousands of women who have become WOW graduates as well as educators, womens organizations and government groups. The WOW program will teach the women motorist how to do everything from trouble shooting a no start condition to the changing of flats, to identify the squeals and clanks and things that go bump in the night. The program has been put together with the thought of reducing one of the greatest fears and most perplexing problems of the woman driver, a break- the letter said. These ranchers definitely deserve and need more assistance than is currently being given them, and in an effort to help them out, we would appreciate knowing your intentions, the letter said. Senator Bennett said the Utah Assn, reported to Woolgrowers down. him that there had been a genThe program is open to all eral increase in sheep losses to women, it is not exclusive to coyotes since the governments Chrysler Corporation automo- ban on poisons last February. bile owners. In some cases in the mounThe first class is designed to tain states area I understand familiarize the women with the that a few have been car and how it runs. The car is forced out sheepmen of business because examined from top to bottom, their losses have been severe, parts and pieces are laid out on he said. a viewing table for the women I am anxious to have the fedstudents to examine in detail. The second session generally eral agencies work more closely concerns the electrical aspects with ranchers in an effort to deof the car. If a car wont start, velop more effective means to control predatory possible diagnostic check outs, from battery terminals to spark animals, he said. plug wires, points and coil. The third session gets into the The fourth session concerns oraking and fuel systems. How noise identification, safety and the brake system functions, how IIow to change a flat handling. adto tell when you need an to how in the sno v, tire justment or new lining. What to rain or on ice.drive to do when Wha: do when you run out of gas or driving in a iraftc jam in hot when your car is flooded. weather. What a slipping power steering or fan belt sounds like, are and people working how important it is. How to talking in a chassis or suspension planning, organizing, together Communi-Lin- k Project and conducting adult education evaluate to check the fluids, how imise, iFor Three Utah Cities and community improvement and how and why to use safety Lxlts. Three more sessions of the programs. 18-2- 2. Project Communi-Lin- k non-poison-o- us Diffu- sion Workshop have been scheduled for April in three Utah cities. The workshop, which seeks to show community leaders how to identify and plan to meet local community needs, is being jointly sponsored by the Utah State Board of Educations Division of Adult Education and the State Department of Community Af- fairs. aaaaaafeiaaaoeiMSBM&n Page Nine Dr. Brent Gubler, Adult Education Coordinator for the State Board said that although the prime reason for the workshops is to determine the adult education needs of the community, the sessions will also identify and plan for other community needs, such as health care and housing. What were doing is planting the seeds for a communitys people to make their own needs assessment and to identify what resources they already have which can be used to meet those needs, said Gubler. They will also be assisted by the workshop in planning, strategies to meet those needs. The first of the three workshops is scheduled for April 2 at the Rodeway Inn in Salt Lake City. Subsequent workshops are set for April 3 in Price, Utah, and April 4 in Vernal. The workshops are part of a multi-stat- e effort known as Project Communi-LinThat project is designed to help create a linked community; one where all in Our Time OWIflMBfuini - SPORTS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT IN ' . THE ARMY. PROM EARLY WEST POINT MILITARY ACAPEMY FOOTBALL ANP BASEBALL TEAMS. IN THE EARLY 1900'S TO PRESENT J PAY OLYMPIC PARTICIPATION, WHERE ARMY PERSONNEL WON THREE GOLPMEPALS. IT IS AN IMPORTANT ACTIVITY w. & OLYMPIC GOLP MEPAUST, SPECIALIST JOHN WILLIAMS, FORT MEYER, EXCELS IN AT MUNICH YAV ARCHERY SKILL. 'HE SHATTEREPA PREVIOUS WORLP RECORP FOR BOWSTRING MARKSMEN, !J B vh MOST ARMY POSTS OFFER WATER POLO, CROSS-COUNTTRACK, BOXING, WRESTLING WEIGHTLIFTING, SLOW PITCH RY W r (-- BASEBALL, ARCHERY ANP SWIMMING AMONG ACTIVITIES AVAILABLE TO TROOPS. k. r v |