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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMEI FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1973 Land Management Fulltime Courses Announced At Utah Technical College Three new fulltime certificate or degree programs at Utah Technical College at Salt Lake are attractinf considerable attention. One program is a one year certificate or two year degree course in hotel or motel management. This course is designed to train what hotel management considers as second line management people. These are food service managers, reservations manager, convention managers and similar employees. area. Carl Boyer, manager of the Rodeway Inn of Salt Lake and a member of the baord of directors of the Utah Innkeepers Assn., says the major chain hotels usually bring their own top with management personnel them. But he adds that second line management people generally must come from the local area. These and other courses are being offered at Utah Tech this fall quarter. Registration ends Sept. 21. Classwork begins on Sept. 25. The third new program deals with transportation management Its a one year certificate course where students become familiar with motor transportation regu- i Its Wont Be Easy Hunting Elk This Year lations, organizations, safety and rates and many other aspects of the transportation business. All three of these courses have been organized to meet a growing job demand. The transportation industry, for example, employs about 0 people with an annual payroll of $369 million, says Utah Motor Transport Assn. People with a background in the motor transportation industry, such as gained from a Utah Tech course, will have a jump on job opportunities. Most of the hotel jobs, and in campgrounds, too, are the result of the expansion of lodging facilities in the Salt Lake City The current meat shortage is blamed for the record number of persons planning to participate in this falls annual open bull elk hunt. Division of Wildlife Resources offices sold about 25,000 open bull permits this year, compared to about 15,000 permits sold in 1972. The Board of Big Game Control established elk seasons last June before the meat shortage developed. The open bull elk hunt has always been a recreational hunt with low hunter success, as was pointed out on permit applications, and was not designed to supplement a meat 40,-00- need. Road Construction Costs Increase 12.7 Director of Highways Blaine J. Kay expressed concern this Pays State $2,378,258 A week because of the increasing costs of road construction. He said, road building costs during the second calendar quarter have increased 12.7 above costs during the first quarter of the year. These increases have been attributed to rising costs of pavement materials and structural concrete. The increase in structural concrete is due to rising costs of forming materials and a cement shortage. According to a construction cost index released by the Highway Department the Department has contracted almost $30 million worth of road construction since the first of the year. This includes 95 miles of highway construction and 23 structures. Hunting pressure is expected to be the greatest on the north slopes of the Uinta Mountains, where the season opens early, Sept. 22. Limited access roads and heavy timber make this area very difficult to hunt, especially for the inexperinenced nimrod. Sportsmen who like to avoid crowds are encouraged to wait until the general opening Sept. 29 when more easily accessible areas become available. Division experts also encourage hunters to choose one area, become familiar with it and stay there. Bull elk are characetristically solitary and secretive during the fall months. Most will seek the dense cover and remain there during daylight hours. It requires a hardy persisetnt hunter to force the animals into openings or stock them in defense cover. Biologists stress that the bull elk will not biologically hurt Utahs elk resource, since breeding will have previously taken place. t When your taste is young, 3 Vodka. Stay with the clean, clear taste of Fleischmanns. The vodka that takes 277 distilling steps to make your pleasure brighter. check for $2,378,528.32 has been mailed to the Utah State Treasurer from the U.S. Bureau of Land Management as the state share of federal government income in mining, grazing and land and material sales. William G. Leavell, BLM act-:n- g state director for Utah, said the amount was nearly a quarter of a million dollars more than the amount was nearly a quarter of a million dollars more than the amount paid a year ago. Of the total, $2,312,445 represented the states share of royalties, bonuses and rentals received by BLM between January 1 and June 30, 1973 under provisions of the Mineral Leasing Act. An additional $1,796 was for receipts from state lands administered by BLM during the 1973 fiscal year. As the states share of Taylor Grazing Act receipts for fiscal year 1973, the check included $61,735. The remaining $2,550 was for the states share of proceeds from sale of lands and materials during the fiscal year. The present check brings to $4,336,677 the total amount paid to the state of Utah by BLM for receipts during 1973. According to a report by Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. Morton, $29 million was distributed among 27 states. Varicose Veins And Obesity Though varicose veins may not develop as a direct result of obesity, an article in the Weight Watchers magazine notes that the condition is usually more severe, is likely to cause more PEEKSKILL, NEW YORK; PLAINFIELD, ILLINOIS. 80 AND 100 PROOF. 01973 Federal Agencies Announce Rule On Utah Wild Horses and Burros The U.S. Departments of the ricultures Forest Service, and Interior and of Agriculture have the National Resource Lands announced new amendments to the Code of Federal Regulations to implement the Wild Horses and Burros Act of 1971, according to word received by Vern Hamre, regional forester of the Forest Service's Intermountain Region, and William G. Leavell, Bureau of Land Mangemcnt, acting state director for Utah. The new rules will be of immediate interest to persons who claim ownership under the Utah estray laws to any unbranded or unauthorized horses or burros on land administered by BLM or the Forest Service. Such persons must file a written claim and acceptable proof of ownership with the appropriate land administrator before November 15. The regulations were officially published August 15 in the Federal Register and call for management of wild horses as an integral part of the natural system of federal lands. Animals are unauthorized protected from capture, branding, undue disturbance and slaughter. BLM personnel are authorized to reserve public land forage for the wild horse use and to reduce domestic livestock grazing where necessary to provide for wild horse need. The 1971 Act provides for the protection, management, and the control of wild horses and burros associated with national forests, which are administered by Ag Free-Roami- ng formerly called public lands which are administered by Interiors Bureau of Land Manage-- . ment. Agricultures regulations apply only to the National Forests and Interiors apply only, to National Resource lands. The regulations of both Departments have been jointly developed and essentially are the same. Recently a cooperative agreement was signed by BLM state director Forest Service regional forester and Joseph H. Francis, commissioner of the Utah State Department of Agriculture. The agreement recognizes the respective responsibilities of the three agencies in management of the wild horses and burros, including the claiming process Meetings will be scheduled in several Utah cities in the immediate future by BLM and the Forest Service to explain to interested persons the 1971 Wild Free Roaming Horses and Burros Act, the regulations, and claiming procedures. Information also may be obtained from National Forest supervisors and BLM district managers. ' An established State Parks and Recreation snowmobile trail near Strawberry is the North Fork of the Duchesne River. The trail is located four miles north west of Hanna on SR 35. It is seven miles long with parking at the beginning. The trail is suitable for all snowmobiles. kinds of discomfort, greater complications and be harder to treat in the obese. Varicose veins are swollen or dilated veins in the legs that have lost their elasticity. The valve in these veins, whose job it is to move the blood upward through the legs and back to the heart, no longer close as tightly to prevent a backflow. As the blood moves more slowly pressure builds and the skin eventually sags and becomes discolored in the affected area. Varicose veins usually develop because of hereditary tendencies or disease, particularly when great pressure is put on the veins and one of the causes of the increased pressure is abdominal fat. A large heavy stomach pushes the blood even harder against the veins, further weakening already weakened valves. Varicose veins should be controlled for many reasons. The condition places an extra burden on the heart, it can cause blood clots which result in embolism, and it can cause skin ulcers that can not heal because of the poor circulation. Regardless of the kinds of the problems that result from varicose veins, the article that they will invariably be increased in severity, frequently and variety for those who are obese. SPINAL CORD INJURIES Within a few tragic seconds anyone could become one of the estimated. 50,000 persons suffering from spinal cord injuries in the United States today. Any severe accident at home, work or in an automobile could result in one more of the approx imately 7,000 new spinal patient on the long, difficult road to recovery are provided by the insurer at a spinal cord injury treatment center. Each patient follows a program of individualized ther-apy- , progressing at his own pace. By the time most patients cord cases each year,. Hushing, spinal cord patients to a treatment-.centeby ambulance jet as 80011 as medically possible after an accident is part of Liberty later, they are mobile and independent. They can transfer from a wheelchair to a modified automobile without assistance. They regain a sense of pride and unique rehabilitation program. The company is not content simply to make pay monts against the average $200,000 cost of a spinal cord case. .Rehabilitation counselling and therapy, which start the Some spinal cord patients return to productive, satisfying work lives, accentuating their abilities instead of disability. Rather than feeling like a dependent drain on society, they are proud contributors id the nation's economy. r self-respe- ct. Stomach Upset by Gas and Acid? with Simethicone quickly relieves both acid and gas. Di-G- el This unique discovery breaks up and dissolves trapped gas bubbles. Your relief is more takes complete because the acid and the gas out of acid indigestion. When you eat too Tablets, well, demand l. of Product Plough, Inc. liquid. Di-G- el DISTILLED FROM GRAIN BY THE FLEISCHMANN DISTILLING CORPORATION, Page Nine Di-Ge- |