OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIME FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1974 attend Redlands and explore related values and Reflections, sponsored by Red- career opportunities in the world lands Council of Girl Scouts at of sports. At Camp Archbald, in Oklahoma City. She will explore thee heart of the Endless Mounthe rich heritage of Oklahoma tains of northeastern Pennsylby stimulating workshops and vania they will have an opporexciting tours to areas of Okla- tunity to explore synchronized homa having to do with the In- and competitve swimming and dian, the cowboy, ranching, oil diving; sharpen their lifesaving and agriculture. She will meet skills; canoe and boat on beauanud talk with some of the U. S. tiful 20 acre Lake Ely. They leading experts on Indian his- will sample or major in gym, tory and culture, learning In- horseback riding, golf or bicyNo. 372, will Area Girl Scouts Selected for National Training Programs Eight Girl Scouts from metropolitan Salt Lake City have been chosen to attend national opportunities this summer. Monica Hrabovsky, Senior Girl Scout from Troop 372, will be attending Saddle Straddle, sponsored by the Girl Scouts of the UCA at National Center West, Ten Sleep, Wyoming. Here experienced riders and novices will have the opportunity to explore Center West on horseback. The rugged unspoiled beauty of the state will, be hers to explore at the National Center West. The meadows, mesas, canyons, creeks and 15,000 acres of land await her on this sprawling natural site owned by the Girl Scouts, abutting the Big Horn National Forest at two points. Base camp is located at an altitude of about Page Nine 5800 feet and trails go up as high as 8000 feet. Katherine Fredericks, Senior Troop 372; Rhonda Hoover, and Sarah Patrick will be attending Earth n Us, Girl Scouts of Philadelphia. They will helicopter over the Atlantic coast, refining oil, seeing a total organic farm, operating an atomic power plant and creating a film and building a styrofoam house. Its an ecological experience that offers a chance to see the worlds ecology, how the ocean, land, and energy affect people, culture, the natural environment at all the places. They will find out, first hand, how we presently use the gifts, and theyll help discover how we can better use them for Earth Care. Karen Snellman, Senior Troop dian cooking and crafts, dancing at the opening of the spectacular American Indian Exposition at Anadarko. She will see Trail of Tears, a drama unfolding the story of the Cherokee Indians and make an unforgettable visit to an ancient Indian vilage. Shelly Anderson of Troop 512 and Deborah Bell of Troop 121 will attend Sportlight, Scranton Pocono Girl Scout Council, at Scranton, Pa. They will paddle a canoe, ride a horse or bicycle or a sailboat, swing a golf club, a softball bat or on parallel bars cling. Linda Withrow, Senior Girl Scout from Troop 372, has been selected to attend Dig Mankind, at USA National Center West, Ten Sleep, Wyo. Reconstructing a way of life, a past culture, a vanished people who once lived at Center West in the focus of Dig Mankind! Change of color, from brown to white, which the weasel undergoes each fall is due to a moult and not a change in the color of the existing fur. Utah Power talks about your electric power; Utah Powers ah pollution control device at the new Huntington Plant is eight stories tall. Clean air. Everyone wants it. And Utah Power & light Company wants to talk to you about what theyre doing to help keep the air dean around electric generating plants. Air pollution control is a big job, with big words, too . . . like "electrostatic predpitator. In plain English, a predpitator is designed to stop the small particles of ash that burning coal releases from going up the generating plant stack. A precipitator, however, is even more complicated than it sounds. For instance, the one being installed at Huntingtons first unit is over 200 feet long 50 feet wide . . . nearly eight stories tall, and it will keep up to 99 and a half percent of the ash from ever reaching the stack. Its cost is near $5V4 million . . . and ... every customer helps to pay for through his rate for electridty. it Utah Power installed its first predpitator in 1949 and now has one either in operation or planned for operation, at every coal burning generating plant. All pollution control measures, like these predpitators, take research, dedication and money, but Utah Power & lights job is to provide electridty with minimum impact on the environment. And, since youre a customer, you have a right to understand what Utah Power is doing to keep the air dean. Salinity Control of Colorado River Sought by Sen. Moss Written testimony from Utah Senator Frank E. Moss was submitted to the Water and Power Subcommittee of the Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee in support of a bill that would establish a salinity control facility in the Colorado River drainage in Emery county. Moss supports S. 2940, which is a bill authorizing construction of two desalinization plants in Colorado, one in Utah and one in Nevada. Unless certain salinity standards can be attained, there is a real threat to the ability of my state of Utah and the States of Colorado and Wyoming to develop their remaining compact entitlements of water. Inability to use the remaining water resources could be a catastrophe to the U.S. in extracting oil from shale resources, he noted that food production could also be adversely affected. Moss said President Nixons recent agreement with President Echeverria of Mexico is insufficient. It calls for a desalinization plant only at the Imperial Dam to clean up the Colorado before it enters Mexico. Sen. Moss says salinity control should be insituted in the Upper Colorado River Basin states and he points out that those benefits would also be felt by the users farther down stream. Salinity of the river will increase as the remaining very limited water supplies are put to use in this critically water short region of the U.S. unless a major basin wide salinity control program is started, said Senator Moss. Public Meeting on Kaiparowits Project The proposed Kaiparowits Project in southern Utah will be the topic of a public meeting on May 7 at the Salt Palace, Room 215. Utility companies participating in the project will present plans for the research needed by the Utah office of the Federal Bureau of Land Management for its environmental impact statement on the coal fired power plant. Officials from the State BLM office will attend the meeting to explain requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act as they apply to the Kaiparowits Project. The state of Utah will also be represented by other state agencies. BLM representatives will discuss its plans for completing the environmental statement. Other individuals or organizations who wish to make brief statements or ask questions at the public gathering should make written request to Edison, Rosemead, California. This meeting should not be confused with formal public hearings which will be held by the Bureau of Land Management after completion of the draft Environmental Impact Statement. South-Californ- ia DENTURES GET CLEANER ELECTRONICALLY In just 3 minutes the SONp re- Denture Cleaning System moves the stains and deposits other cleaners leave behind. 3 minute cleaning! SON 2 action is with electro-soni- c available at all leading drug, discount and department stores. Full one year warranty. Sug-- . gested retail only $18.95. . |