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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1974 Utah Division Of Family S ervices Offers New Services To Citizens WOW Program For Local Car Agency To some Paul S. Rose, Executive Director of the Department of Social Services, announced that the Division of Family Services would offer two new major statewide services this year homemaker services and special service to the mentally retarded. According to Evan E. Jones, Jr., Director, Division of Family Services, the 1974 Utah Legislature appropriated funds for purchase of service contracts in each District of the State to provide homemaker service in Utah communities. Provider of the homemaker service statewide is Visiting Home Services, Inc., of San Francisco, California, which bid for the services. This company establishes local services offices in the same communities where major DFS offices are located so that service is prompt and effec- Rose. The United Way of the Great Salt Lake helped to establish the sheltered employment service with donated funds matched by the Division for the Salt Lake, Davis, and Tooele county areas. Subsequently, the United Way of Northern Utah and the United Way of Cache County joined the effort to provide sheltered employment services for adults in Weber and Cache Counties. Three school districts, Provo, Juab and Carbon, have also donated funds for matching to provide sheltered employment services for adults in their respective areas. Local financial participation with the state and federal funding sources makes the services to the mentally retarded a truy cooperative stated Katherine M. effort, Mason, Mental Retardation Coordinator for the Division of Family Services. tive. Homemaker services is especially designed to help individuals and families remain in their homes during crisis, disability, illness, recuperation from hospitalization, and to help parents learn to manage households and to improve their parenting skills. Jay Wimmer, Program Specialist, has been developing the services with thep rovider in each District. Special services to the mentally retarded were commenced in the late Spring with the assignment of several staff to this new effort. In July, according to Mr. Jones, the services program was established with purchase of service contracts for sheltered employment for adults, self-car- e and family training for children day care, and social group service. During the intial stages, we are concentrating on the preschool and groups who have no opportunities, said Mr. Jones. Cooperation among private and public agencies has been outstanding, according to Mr. 0-- 5, post-scho- ol Comments Invited From Public On Gas Transmission Pipeline Comments have been invited from the public concerning a proposal by Exxon Corporation to install a gas transmission pipeline approximately 25 miles south of Roosevelt. According to an application y for a filed with the Department of the Interiors Bureau of Land Management, the pipeline would extend from Exxons No. 1 Wilkin Unit well to an existing Mountain Fuel Supply gas sales line approximately a mile away. right-of-wa- BLM environ- mental and other analyses to termine whether or not the C MHCww FntilfM Vm ON THE FRONTIER PIAINS, WHEN PENTfSTS WERE FEW, MISSING TEETH WAS A SIGN OF AGE OR NEGLECT... SOT TOPAY PENTURES PIT SO WELL THEY PEFY PETECTON.. . A. if PENTURES OF ANTIQUITY... " ANP UKE NATURAL TEETH THERE IS THE SAME PALYNEEP FOR CLEANfNG PENTURES... P (75O0.C.) ETRUSCAN APPLIANCE FOR SUPPORTING 3 ARTIFICIAL TEETH (CMC MUSEUM CORNETO) F : !' PLAQUE ANP OTHER PEPOSTTS SHOULP BE REMOVEP PALY 7V PREVENT CALCULUS, IRRITATING GUM PSEASE ANP MOUTH OPOR. ffloW IT IS NO LONGER NECESSARY TO SOAK PENTURES OYERNIGHT IN A CLEANING AGENT TO CLEAN THEM... AH AFFRECATEP GfFTf A NEW ME7HOP, THE SONAC PENTURE CLEANING UNIT CTS tN Ri COA ELECTRIC) CAY deap- plication should be approved. Comments may be sent before January 1 to the BLM district manager, 91 West Main Street, P.O. Box F, Vernal, Utah 84078. Ri".r.S.Ial.c)ir jjM is preparing PO IT 75,000 women, a now means more than Phillips one of the neighbors and a crescent conjures up a different image than the moon over a lake. The words describe two of the four tools Women on Wheels program graduates have come to recognize and use as easily as eyeliner and lipstick to correct stalled cars . . . corroded battery terminals and aim headlights. The program is designed to aid women motorists in their knowledge of cars, car troubles and repairs. The Women on Wheels is (WOW) program entering its fourth year at Chrysler-Ply-mout- h and Dodge dealers throughout the country. WOW was designed to uncomplicate the car for women, according to John Farley, Service Information and Planning Manager, for Chryslers U. S. Automotive Service Division. It explains the mechanical operation of an automobile, how to recognize serious car trouble, and what easy corrective measures the average woman driver can undertake herself if she has a minor problem with her car, says Farley. When a lady finishes the four WOW sessions, she should be able to administer vital first aid to her car, using the simple course tools: a flat blade screwdriver, a Phillips screwdriver, a crescent wrench and pliers. The first class is designed to familiarize the women with the car, why and how it runs. The car is examined from top to bottom on a hoist, hood up. wheels off, inside and out . . . The second session generally concerns the electrical aspects of an automobile. If a car wont start . . . possible diagnostic checkouts . . . from battery terminals to sparkplug wires, points and coil. What can be done about fuses, small light bulb replacements, minor malfunctions in turn indicator, brake and parking lights. The third session gets into braking and fuel systems. How the brake system functions, how to tell when you need an adjustment or new lining. What to do when you run out of gas, when your car is flooded . . . if its flooded. The fourth session concerns noise identification, sawety and handling. How to change a flat tire, how to drive in the snow, rain or on ice or in a traffic jam in hot weather. What a slipping power steering or fan belt sounds like, how important it is. How to evaluate a chassis or suspenion noise. The average class size is about 15 . . . but dealers will take as low as seven in sparsely populated areas. Interested women may contact either their local Dodge or Chrysler-Plymout- h dealer or the Sales Automotive Chrysler ManRelations Customer Group ager, Dick Larson . ... 371-133- 0. LOSE WEIGHT OR MONEY BACK Odrinex can help you become the slim, trim person you want to be. Because Odrinex contains the most effective reducing aid available without a prescription! One tiny Odrinex tablet a half hour before meals suppresses your appetite - you eat less - down go the calories - down goes the weight! With the Odrinex Plan, clinically tested, you wiil oat sensibly - no starving - no special exercises. Safe and elective when taken as directed. You must lose ugly fat or your s money will be refunded - no ques-tionasked. Get rid of excess fat and live longer with Odrinex. Page Five Amoco Production Co. Says Lake Drilling to Begin Summer of '75 Amoco Production Company, a subsidiary of Standard Oil Company (Indiana), said that its proposed t ploratory drilling program in Utahs Great Salt Lake will not begin until late next summer at the earliest. R. B. Giles, Amoco petroleum engineer, made the comment at a Utah Board of Oil and Gas Conservation hearing on Amocos application to drill two exploratory holes as the first stage in its effort to evaluate some of oil and gas leases underlying Great Salt Lake. Giles said that the planning and lead time required to carry out a marine venture such as the one proposed for Great Salt Lake could mean that drilling might not begin until 1976, even if the drilling permits were issued immediately. We have asked for permission to drill at these two locations at this time because wc have a chicken and egg situation, Giles said. Something must be first. With approval now of our applications we can complete our plans in detail, order specific material needs, and spend the substantial monies necessary to effectively and safely undertake this venture to secure additional energy supplies. One of the two wildcats proposed by Amoco, the Utah A No. 1, would be in the center of Section 20, Township 3 North, Range 4 West in Davis County. It is about 30 miles southwest 600,-OOacr- es of Ogden. The other proposed wildcat, Utah B No. 1, would be 35 miles west of Ogden in Section 5, Township 5 North, Range 6 West in Box Elder County. Both wildcats arc scheduled to test Tertiary rock formations at a depth of about 10,000 feet. Giles pointed out that the estimated cost of the first wildcat will be about $4 million. Part of this cost, some $2.3 million, would be for the design and construction of a drilling struc ture, and some $270,000 would be for standby pollution control equipment, Giles said. Craig Hanson, Amoco geophysicist, said the companys decision to drill two wildcats was baed on the result of a $1 million seismic program launched by the company in mid-197Our seismic data indicated the presence of these two geologic structures which appear conducive to holding hydrocarHanson said. These bons, strutures arc in separate geologic bain, which means that proper evaluation requires a test hole for each. Amoco petroleum engineer Bob Woodhall said that Amoco is continuing its studies to determine the most suitable drilling structures for the lake and has not yet made a decision as to the design. He said that it is considering floating equipment, such as an anchored barge, and several types of units which rest on or are supported by the lake bottom. In his testimony before the Board, Giles reviewed Amocos plans to conform to each of the 11 special rules and regulations governing drilling operations and procedures in Great Salt 3. Lake. Giles said that whatever structure Amoco selected for use in its drilling program would be equipped with navigational warning devices which will conform to standards set for marine operations in U. S. coastal waters. Airman Wangsgaard is a precision measuring equipment specialist at Castle AFB, Calif., with the 93rd which earned the command honor for sustained excellence in transportation, supply, procurement, logistics plans and maintenance functions. The award is named for the late Colonel Charles D. Trail, former deputy chief of SACs Logistics Plans Division. PROTECTING YOUR HEART FACTUAL ANSWERS TO HELP YOU Many people today are diet in on a modified-fa- t order to 'lower their blood cholesterol levels. This type of. diet involves reducing ones intake of cholesterol and substituting polyunsaturated fat for saturated fat wherever possible. Many as to which arise questions foods to eat and which to avoid to achieve these goals. What kind of meat is recommended for a. modified-fa- t diet? or Chicken, turkey, fish and veal are lower in saturated fat than other meats and thus are highly recommended. Lean cuts of beef, lamb, pork may be eaten but less frequently. Be sure to trim all visible fat before cooking. Avoid duck, goose, sausage, luncheon meats and organ meats. Liver is one exception since it is an excellent source of iron and vitamins; serve once a week, maximum. are nutritious, but high in fat, must they be avoided? Skim milk substitutes are the answer. They supply the same nutrition without the fat of their whole milk counterparts. Select skim milk, skim milk cheeses and yogurt. Avoid whole milk, cream, ice cream and sour low-cholester- ol What about shellfish, Ive heard they should be restricted? Yes, shellfish although low in fat are high in cholesterol. They may be eaten occasionally, but less frequently than other fish. I know dairy products' cream. Beware of artificial creamers. Many are made with coconut oil and are very high in saturated fat. To add rich flavor, but no cholesterol, to almost all foods use Flcischmanns Corn Oil Margarine in place of butter. Corn oil is unsurpassed among vegetable oils in lowering serum cholesterol levels. What kind of desserts are allowed on this diet? Fruits, gelatin, ices angel food cakes and pucic.MVj made with skim milk are ideal. |