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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1973 St. Louis Welcomes National PTA To 77th Annual Convention Delegates to the 77th annual n convention of the member National PTA are being welcomed to St. Louis with open arms as they gathered from all corners of. the nation, Alaska, Hawaii, and Europe. Dimensions of Involvement," theme of the convention this year, will be discussed by National PTA president Mrs. Elizabeth Mallory of Endicott, N.Y., in her keynote address on Monday morning. Mrs. Mallory, whose term of office ends during the convention, has been president of the PTA since her election in May, 1971. .As the National PTA is the nation's largest volunteer action group devoted solely to the welfare of children," Mrs. Mallory said, We have designed a convention program to stimulate and motivate the delegates to take immediate action on priority projects and issues when they return to their communities." In addition to Mrs. Mallorys keynote address on Monday, delegates will be welcomed to St. Louis and the state of Missouri by government and education officials. Later in the day, delegates will be involved in a . multi-millio- . ; -- New series of shirt sleeve" workshops. The afternoon idea shops will focus on educations financing dilemma, health education, th widening gap between schools and communities, shared decision making in education, and whats happening in Washington, D.C. Tuesdays schedule will include consideration by delegates of National PTA resolutions on many issues foremost in minds of Americans today. Among these are resolutions on comprehensive school health education, control of venereal disease and strengthening of family and home life, mental health programs and services, mass media programming, obscene and pornographic materials, and integrated quality education, and constitutional rights and responsibilities. That evening, Dr. Bennetta B. Washington, Associate Director for Womens Programs and Education, Job Corps, Washington, D.C., will address the delegates on Constructive Involvement for Educational Change." Newly elected national officers will also be announced Tuesday evening. Nominees are: Mrs. Lillie Herndon, Columbia, S.C., for president; Mrs. Walter G. Kimmel, Rock Island, Illinois, for first vice president; and Dudley E. Flood, Raleigh, North Carolina, for second vice president. Nominees for regional vice presidents are: Mrs. Romine Foster, Rushville, New York; Mrs. Robert E. Reynolds, Williamsport, Pa.; Mrs. Sydney R. Raike of Chicago, 111.; and Mrs. Lee Roy Schulenberg, Independence, Mo. Scheduled for Wednesday are two special interest meetings requested by numerous state PTAs at last years convention. Thomas J. Echols, president of European Congress of American Parents and Teachers, will moderate a session devoted to big city problems. Later in the morning he will head a panel discussion concerning, Youth, the Heir Ap- parent." Participants will include the youth members of the National PTA Board of Managers. The concluding session will feature Dr. Joseph Sitler, Professor Theology, University of Chicago, who will discuss, The Capacity for Wonder, and the Future of the Earth." Flavor is lost if fish touch ice in a cooler. They should also be kept out of ice water, and remember, ice in large chunks last longer than crushed ice. Paint Fights Rust Too! Non-Tox- ic Theres big news in the Usually one good heavy primer some of the toughest and paint world today. For home- - coat on fresh or thoroughlye strongest metals known. Fotr owners and industry both, cleaned bare metal will ships, submarine surface a cover remarkable and that tect the bridges, pipelines. It has Its pigment with mendous heat resistance, melt-paitoo, wins, free lead Industry a possible in with savings too. Moly paints, that fights rust, fog only at 47 5 0F, 'almost manufaeinside used 2000 degrees higher than the And its pure white! True, paints lead-freon and rust- turing plant products melting point of steel itselL there are other No there. available special traces of Moly put sing in produced today, fighting paints but none has all of the advan- - precautions are needed in han-- fertilizers for certain crops, tages offered by this new dling Moly paints, which cuts aid the human body and are important to pregnant women,1 pigment Based on a special labor costs. Most important, for mind means of this peace Moly is a critical alloy in nonmolybdate, it is made from a are workers who This frightened chemical. irritating atainless at eel bone molybdenum tongue-twiste- r is pronounced of exposure to toxic paints in and joint replacements in pro-spac- tre-mak- es nt Eivn Pofi New Handbook to Outline Rights of the Handicapped One of the primary goals of the Utah Advisory Council for Handicapped and Developmental Disabled Children this year will be to assist parents of the states handicapped children in understanding what their rights are under the 1969 Handicapped Education Act. At a day-lon- g seminar held last week the Council outlined an information plan which will include the publishing of a hand book to be distributed to parents of each handicapped child in the state. According to Dr. Leon R. Council chairman, the state by law must provide education and training for all handicapped children in the state. The proposed handbook will inform each parent as to what services his child is entitled to, and how to make sure the services are provided," he said. Among the services to which handicapped children are entitle are diagnosis, evaluation and correction in both education and health aspects of their disability. Through this program, we hope that we can make parents aware that it is a duty of the state education and health systems to develop children to their highest capacity, even when they are unable to function in a normal classroom," he said. He explained that in cases where the child is confined to his own home, the state has the responsibility to provide the services. The Council is deto meet signed requirements of 1969 state both the law and also the 1970 federal Developmental Mc-Carre- . 21-mem- y, Disabilities Act. It consists of from the State representatives of System Higher Education, the State Board of Education, the State Department of Social Services, and the State Legislature. . Other individuals, who must make up one third of the Council are members of state or national associations interested in handicapped children. In the act, the Council is assigned the task of studying the needs and recodmmending programs for handicapped children to the State Board of Education and the State Department of Social Services which includes the health and family services. ' . . Second Lt. Donald R. Brady, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Brady of 2196 ast 6450 South, participated in the recent Air Force world wide ski meet held at Snow Basin. Lt. Brady was among more than 100 of the finest skiers from 46 Air Force bases from around the world during the five day meet. He is assigned at Malmstrom AFB, Mont., as a food services officer with the Strategic Air Command. He is a graduate of Olympus High School and the University of Utah. i The development of a new product is a three step process: first, some American firm announces an invention; second, the Russians claim they made the discovery twenty years ago; third, the Japanese start exporting it. e, and familiar- - .plants. It also means new- gery. Water containing traces ly called Moly," as in a girls paints that can be applied on of molybdenum produce giant name. More about Moly later, metal surfaces where health trout. Lets talk about what surely regulations previously -prohi-wi- ll be called Moly paints." bited all toxic corrosion-resistThe technical requirements ed primers. For example, ceib for- - true rust inhibition in ins and similar surfaces of Government inspected metal coatings are complicat- - u-s-food processing plants. Also, the ed. Simply stated, paint metmust be compatible with als, meaning that it must not react ,with metaL It must ding: tightly and have extremely high resistance to moisture. The molybdate pig-axEIAkamffrhAAAAftf - ment meets these require-ments better food processing machinery, any other food storage and shipping con- water tanks, water known pig-- tainers, ments. It aim transmission lines and lines in p ing scientific advances on ery side. One, Molysulfide (R), opened the door to producing the most tenacious, defini- - the processing of beverages, ant lubricants ever jnade for tions of the UJSL The basic white tone enhances machinery, engines and of Labor in ad-- the look of sanitation; it can tomobiles. They are called ministering the Occupational also be tinted to any color, Moly Greases and are worth Safety and Health Act as a pastel or dark. Almost every- - specifying for your next lube nontoxic substance. Tests in- - where paint experts took, they job. They cost little, if any, dude acute oral and skin now can see costly taboos over ordinary greases, but sure cut down on frequency of toxicity, eye irritation and about the old inhalation. lubes for the family bus. paints being broken down. The source for molybde- Moly paints bring new bless- Molybdate s! ings to homeowners. No more num is found largely in huge ments for worries about lead poisoning ore . deposits in Colorado, Moly paints are in little tots from paint chips know produced ' chewed or swallowed from aA A one of the on metals in ZS coatings toys, worlds largest lawn furniture, playground chemical and slides, porch railings, window paint manufae-p5 c sills, cribs, radiators and the will turers like. Meantime, all such objects soon be avail-able to all paint producers for fight rust with a new paint their brand name lines, Watch , for them. Theyre a break- power which fewmeans far through. But experts at Climax er repaintings mined by Climax Molybde- - arent surprised. Theyve seen (if any) and sav-- num Co., an AMAX division, the magic of Moly crack many ings in time, worlds largest producer. As an unanswerable problem money! an alloy, Moly helps produce fore. gv-th- weir-resist-mee- an ts ent lead-containi- uA uJj 'Cby a be-wor- k, A REAL ESTATE PURCHASER in a southeastern mate wasl'HAM.CU6EP SY A NEISH OR ANP OTHERS WANTING TO CONTINUE US& OF A JZOAP ON MIS LAMP FOR purposes im clupmio PRAG RACING A COURT PATTI'S, AM INJUNCTION WAS after OgfAINEP TO KEEP OUTSIPERS OFF THE PROPERTY. ATTORNEY FEES ANP . COURT COSTS OF THE PURCHASER WERE PAIP PY HIS OWNER'S TITLE INSURANCE |