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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1973 Mountain Fqel Lists Measures to be Taken at New Well University Community Services Agency Responds to Volunteers An energetic. University of Utah community service agency is debunking any ivory tower notions of higher education by the annual corodination of some outreach" programs. The Bureau of Community Development, an arm of the campus based Center for Economic and Community Development, has loaned a U planning specialist to the Ute Indians to design recreation sites on the reservation; hosted statewide symposiums or planning workshops on such topics as land use, low cost housing and law enforcement; and directed a program in which more than 400 U students earned college credit for tutorial and volunteer jobs in a variety of community agencies. And that is not the half of it. The bureau also provides tech? nical assistance to more than 80 public and private agencies from the Salt Lake City. Board of Education to local government leaders in Kane County, Utah. Bureau Director Richard L. Lindsaly, former head of the Utah State Department of Social Services, says Community service ranks with teaching and research in an appropriate" function of higher education and believes it is necessary for health of both the institution and the community. The Universitys future is directly linked to the community welfare, therefore our necessary objective is to apply the Us resources in helping to solve some of our most pressing community problems," explains Mr. Lindsay. He describes the bureau as a Catalyst, directing people with problems to U specialists with answers or the resources to find them. The Bureau of Community Development was organized in 1959 at the request of Utahs governor to help combat the problems 100 . A relief well to be located 150 caused by the continual population decline in rural areas and concurrent rapid urbanization at the Wasatch Front. The bureau has broadened its scope. Its five staff specialists assist communities in developing more effective community service programs; improving planning and administrative skills of public administrators; providing technical assistance to city, county and state governments, to strengthen opportunities in employment, housing, etc., for Utahs minority and disadvantaged citizens. Mr. Lindsay says the bureaus current top priority projects concern land use planning along the Wasatch Front, housing, local government modernization and neighborhood organizations. Last year, it conducted zoning seminars and subdivision study, and assisted in Model Cities master planning. Although the office publishes a directory to help potential consumers of U services, 'Mr. Lindsay hoped to increase public awareness of the bureaus existence and its willingness to help. Our long range goal is to make greater use of faculty and students in order to better respond to requests and strengthen the campus community partnership. edu-caio- n, . DENTURES GET CLEANER Pag feet from the Mountain Fox No. 1 well in the Powder River Basin or northeastern Wyoming was spudded this week, according to officials of the Mountain Fuel Supply Co. operator of the well. The new well is being drilled to provide a means to kill the No. 1 well which discovered oil and natural gas last month, apparently in the Frontier formation at a depth of 12,759 feet. About 1500 feet of surface pipe is cemented in the No. 1 well and the drill pipe is parted or plugged since tools will not go below 2880 feet. Although the No. 1 well can be shut in at the surface, it is being produced to prevent migration of oil and gas. During a recent' 12 hour test, the well flowed 1445 barrels of oil and natural gas at the rate of 8 million cubic feet a day. After the test, production was cut back to nearly 50 barrels of oil per hour and 5 million cubic feet of gas daily where it will remain until the relief well can be drilled and the No. 1 brought under complete control, the Mountain Fuel officials say. The No. 1 well is located 45 miles northeast of Casper Wyo. Moutain Fuel owns 100 percent interest in neary 29,827 acres in the nearby area and has options to earn a 50 percent interest in nearly 4,241 acres. If the options are exercised Mountain Fuel will own a 100 percent interest in 33,927 acres. Fuel-Anadar- ko . Anchor Boating Fun to Safety, Utah Summer Sailors are Urged Splashing waves, misty lakes, and the cry of soaring seagulls paint a pretty summer boating picture for Utah summer sailors. But the nations 46 million old and new salts will enjoy this scene only by battening down the hatches on their watercraft safety procedures, says the Insurance Institute. Before casting off take these simple precautoins: check the vessel for physical soundness or review of rules of the road." ' In 1972 nationwide, the Coast Guaord reports, there were boating accidents accounting for 1,437 deaths, 829 injuries, and more than $7 million in the property damage. In Utah, there were 43 accidents involving 15 death, 7 injuries and more than $52,500 in property damage. Statistics show that more boating accidents occur on Saturday and Sunday during the month of July when a maximum number of boats are on' the water. Operators and their faulty handling of boats were blamed for 836 or more than 58 percent of last years fatalities nationwide. The chief faults of the operator were listed by the Coast Guard as improper loading and overloading of the boat, disregard of weathed warnings and proceeding in an unseaworthy 3,-0- 42 craft. ELECTRONICALLY In just 3 minutes the SONAp Denture Cleaning System removes the stains and deposits other cleaners leave behind. 3 minute cleaning! SONC action is with electro-soni- c all available at leading drug, discount and department stores. Full one year warranty. Suggested retail only $18.95. . Estimates place the total number of labor saving, but devices found in the modern home kitchen as high as 20. The concurrent use of four or five of the noisest could produce a sound intensify enough to be potentially hazardous to the human hearing mechanism. noise-produci- Nina Fire and explosion, resulting in $720, 000 in property damage, again were usually caused by an operators improper installation or maintenance of engine or equipment, disobedience cf safe fueling practices, and lack of operating experience. Just plain bad judgment operating in waters which exceed the limits of the craft, the operators training or experience, or without the usual mandatory lookout when towing a water skier was one of the largest contributors to death and injury on the waterways. These grim facts should be . enough to encourage boating enthusiasts to be safety conscious. Boating is fast becoming sum- mers premier past time. Some 9.5 million pleasure boats are now afloat. Because marinas, boat yards and yacht clubs have not kept up with this growth, boat jams have become common occurrences. Get proper instruction before weighing anchor. The motorboat owners may have their craft inspected for safety and review standard operating procedures with the assistance of the Coast Guard Auxiliary, a volunteer non military organization created by Congress to promote the safety in recreation boating. HOW IT ALL BEGAN . V ng STREAMLINED BEAUTY CARE FOR TODAY AND IT STARTED NEARLY SIXTY YEARS AGO! 0. (isfeg aim Some of your friends will be going on to college. Others to jobs, fi you haven't made any plans vet, consider a job with today s Army. A job that will start you at $288 a month. With free meals, ' housing, medical and dental care. And 30 days paid vacation. A job where you can learn a skill. We have 6ver 200 courses. Taught by excellent instructors, in good schools, with the finest job-traini- ng equipmentaround. A job that can become a career in the Army. Or in civilian life. A job that gives you a chance to travel. To live and work in places tourists only visit, Like Europe, Hawaii, Panama, Alaska. And with our Delayed Entry Option, you can sign up today for' the job trainirid you want and report any time within the next six months. Wouldn't you enjoy your summer more if you knew where you'd be in the fall? See your local Army Representative. contact: SFC. WALTER D. OHARA .. Solt Lake City, Utah - 524-402- 6 - 4027 Army oasis to fo3n yira. "Keep it simple ! Thats the catchword of todays speeded up life style, where the emphasis is on easy-car- e prod ucts, wash and wear clothes, streamlined beauty routines. Paradoxically, the skin cream that fits so neatly into this modern way of doing things has been around for nearly sixty years! Which wouldnt surprise its inventor one bit. It was in 1914 that a Baltimore pharmacist named George Avery Bunting first put together a combination of natural ingredients in a greaseless, vanishing - cream base and labeled it Dr. Buntings Sunburn Remedy. Right from the beginning, customers found the cream a great for all sorts of little problems. Over the years, legions of people' of both sexes have uaed Noxafema on themselves, their children, even their pets! Some wrote in to say it made an excellent shampoo. The Baltimore Zoo used it to heal a monkeys paws which irritated from finger . "do-goode- r" became painting. Men shaved with it, and still do. Many a sightseers tired and burning foot has been cooled and soothed by it. Adolescents called it a terrific blemish cream. One man even reported using it oh his h lived! dying apple All the while, millions of women were telling each other, and telling their daughters who told their daughters, what a great beauty cream it was. How it "washed" a lovely . sparkle into complexions and acted as a moisturizer, makeup base and night cream .too. Always modestly priced, the blue jar still does the work of a whole expensive battery of cosmetics. Small wonder it outsells any other skin cream in the world! While the world seems to get more complicated every year, some of the good things in life remain constant. And Noxzema is one of them-a- n old friend you can still depend on to simplify and ease your life. How very modern of the little blue jar! tree-.-whic- |