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Show May 1970 UTAH FARM BUREAU Page 8 Hedershiji Conference Plsroned 4-l- nl Youth LeadLogan - - "Finding Yourself or Losing Yourself is theme for the 1970 at Snow College in Ephraim. The conference, inership Conference planned for June 1 k youth, will be assisted by a $2,550 grant from the volving some 175 older teen-ag- e Foundation. Max W. Chambers, manager of the Sears Store in Logan, Thursday presented a check for that amount to Glenn T. Baird, Utah State University extension youth leader, in support of the youth leadership program. Baird said the steering committee is planning to relate the conference to vital concens and critical issues facing young people today. In essence, they want to grapple with a topic such as "What's Bugging Young People Today?" They want to become better oriented to what's involved in youth getting lost through drugs or finding themselves and making a significant contribution to society. 4-- H 8-1- Sears-Roe-buc- . 4-- H The steering committee of eight was selected by delegates at the youth conference last year. They have overall planning responsibility and sill head the various action committees during the conference, they are: Catharine Jensen, Panquitch, social events; Karen Rogers, North Ogden, assemblies; Judy Walk, Murray, congerence newspaper; Marie Lemon, Ferron (Emery County), discussions; John Kennedy, Randolph (Rich son, Aktell (Sanpete County), citizenship. Stewart and Morgan are student body presidents of their high schools. The committee is organizing the conference to give all delegates an opportunity to perform in leadership roles so that they might learn leadership. He explained that the Sears -Roebuck Foundation grant will help defray costs of the conference ana transportation of the delegates that will be coming from every county in the state. This is the 11th year that the Foundation has contributed to make this learning experience possible. Representing the Foundation at the youth conference will be Mr. K. B. (Ken) Marley of Hayward, California, regional director of the Central Pacific Coast Area. County), recreation: Wally Stewart. Spanish Fork, talent; Todd Morgan, Layton, elections; and Bill Soren- 0 0 Here's More About DDT (Continued from Page 7) 1. Phase out of general DDT use in 2 year period. 2. Jeopardizes use where no Youth Leadership will be promoted in conference made possible with k Foundation. Glenn T. Baird of 52,550 grant from Utah State University Extension Services receives check from Max W. Chambers, manager, Logan Sears Store. Sears-Roebuc- alternative pesticides are 3. Encouragement for banning all pesticides. 4. Threatens withdrawal of DDT use in emerging countries stricken with diseases, where leaders recognize their rescue through its use. Propagandists continued could poison men's minds about our contry's intentions. 5. All new substances are suspect when one as remarkably safe, as DDT, is falsely devalued. Professor Jones concludes that qualified witnesses should evaluate measures as a foundation for action by secretaries Protect your family anti-polluti- on rather than allowing emotional ap- peal to develop unjustified, and socially and economically harmful, results. Science and industry stand to be paralyzed by emotional con- troversy if leadership cannot stop movement. this anti-technol- Bennett Asks For Sugar Beet Stamp Senator Wallace F. Bennett, has urged Postmaster General Winton M. Blount to issue a commemorative stamp in honor of the 100th anniversary of the beet suf&r Industry, an imto the economic contributor portant Beehive State." The citizens of Utah would be pleased to have one of their most ss indus-tir- es important on honored this significant occasion," Sen. Bennett wrote the Postmaster General. It would be a fitting tribute to the early Utah pioneers who struggled to assure that this nation would have a safe and ah, agri-busine- source of one of nature's most important food products," the Utahn added. Utah pioneers attempted construction of a beet sugar factory in the newly settled Utah territory nearly 20 years before the first commercially successful factory in the country commenced operations in 1870 at Alvarado, California. Sen. Bennett continued, Today there are three beet sugar processing plants in Utah, operating at Garland, Lewiston and West Jordan. Some two thousand Utah farms annually provide sugar beets to supply these facilities, and last last year Utah grown sugarbeets were converted into more than 170 million pounds of pure refined beet sugar. Sen. 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