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Show Pag 18, UINTAH BASIN STANDARD, March 27. 1988 : BLM , located on both sides of the ' White River, '. " Continued from page 11 . Land Swap ' The State of Utah requested five seperate ' has land r ' exchanges with1 the Vernal trict - BLM. The exchange will block-useveral isolated parcels of State and BLM land and make oil shale development feasible, something which would be un-- , economical as the land now stands. In all, about 40,000 acres are involved. The swap is based on fair market value, so actual exchange is near equal One exchange has been completed, two more are expected to District Office Specs ' More office space has been gained through the acquisition of the part of the present building formerly occupied by Deseret Generation and Transmission Dis- V. - . e" and W.R. Rosier, category serving in the "Recreation category. Newly appointed is Leo H. Jorgenson, 'serving in the TranportationRightfrof-- ay" A fourth position category. . remains to be filled. The first1 Advisory Council 1 r for 1986, will , be Meeting scheduled soon after the Document of Decision for the Book Cliffs Resource Mangement Plan is published. . p Secretary of the Interior, William Clar They are Jason Cuch, serving in the "Public-At-Larg- . . Cooperative. The Book Cliffs and Diamond Mountain Resource Area per- sonnel are ndw located- - in the south end of the building and patrons wishing to do business ' with either resource area will find ' be completed by the end of easier access by entering the March, the last two , to be southeast door. A receptionist is completed by the end of April on duty in that area and a new and May. directional sign will be posted , The five exchange areas are outside , - . ' . - TOURNAMENT WINNERS The winners of the Roosevelt Volleyball Tournament was i the team from Duchesne, Shumway's. The team is captained by Dawnette Browning, and next to her on the back row are Ruth Zaugg, JoAnn Evans and Suzanne Foy. On the front row are Nova Hanke, Lisa Lisonbee, LaConna Brady and Connie 0 Mullins. Duchesne teams took the first and second place trophies with Roosevelt tak-- . ' ' ' ing third and a Vernal team taking fourth. ,; . ' B Vernal's Body Work finished in fourth place. League tournament ends season squad The most valuable player fin1' the tournament was Lisa Los-- " onbee of the Shumway team. the Volleyball season ending last month, Roosevelt hosted a tournament for "B league teams earlier this month. Results of the tournament saw Shumway's team of Duchesne take top honors in the tourWith . All were: stars for the tournament n Nova Hanke, of Sherrie Madaon, of Hamlins; Kathy Arnold and Arlene Lamb, of Dowell; Shelly Bodily, of Body Works; Sam Mathews, of Thompson Steel; Beth Slaugh, ' of Renaes; Ivy Mulline, of nament and Hamblins Leasings team also of Duchesne take Jennings Self Service; Trudy Vicki second. The Roosevelt team of Hurley, of Big A's; and Duchesne team. Dowell took third place and Hamilton of the Shum-way- s: m New service to give personal ag information Utah fanners will soon have an agricultural weather information service thats about as good as a personal weather forecast. The new service will combine the latest weather forecasts with a variety of agricultural information, including reports on crops, insects and livestock, says Gail Bingham, Utah State located at Utah State University. The innovative Utah State Weather and Agricultural Advisory Project will be inaugurated on a trial basis this summer at three sites around the state. It should be more widely available next summer, and eventually will be as close as a formers television set. The information will be embedded in signals from television station KUED (Channel 7) in Salt Lake City. Those signals must be con voted by special decoders. Bingham says the service will be a vast improvement over current weather information that farmers often find obsolete, too general or irrelevant for daily mangement decisions. Ixxral weather advisories will include information on expected irrigation requirements, crop and orchard insect pests, disease development and livestockman-agemehelp, particularly as they relate to current weather conditions. There's a lot of information available about agriculture and weather, but it's often not available to farmers when they need it," Bingham says. "This system will gather all of this information and deliver it to farmers in time for lunch. It's like bringing the university to their living rooms. The service is a cooperative project of the USU Agricultural Experiment Station, the USU Extension Service, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant. Hanlth Inspection . 0 Good Reasons why should buy GE now! Service, USDA Soil Conservation Service and the National Weather Service Forecast Center in Salt Lake City. The planning and development phases are funded by the Utah State Department of Agriculture. The special decoders required to receive the information are engineering prototypes that now cost ' about $1,600, but prices should drop dramatically once the Evenset are tually, inexpensive decoders will probably be standard equipment, on new television sets. Bingham said there are about 14 different major agriculture areas in the state with markedly different climates. The goal is to tailor the forecasts to each area. Several other states have similar systems, but Utahs will be the first to try teletext Teletext can provide more information, including graphs and illustrations. A farmer will be able to select from about 100 screens of information to quickly find the information wanted. mass-produce- BAKE WHAT YOU LIKE-O- VEN CLEANS ITSELF Two 8", two 6" plug-i- n Calrod surface unite. Porcelain enamel finish drip pans. Automatic oven timer, clock. Black glass oven door with towel bar handle. NOW $589.95 When you buy a GE Appliance, you get more than abroduct . . . Ybu get an extra assurance of dependability with GE written warranties; the GE Factory Service Network for prompt, efficient, reliable service, the GE Answer Center information service; and the Quick-Fi- x system .for SAVE $90 .Model JBP24GH -- repairs. I GLAMOROUS GLASS SHELVES AND ENERGY EFFICIENCY 17.7 cu. ft.; 5.01 cu. ft. freezer. Sealed pan helps keep food fresh up to 15 days. Sealed snack pack. Spacemaker Textured door holds doors, won't show fingerprints. high-humid- Chamber Continued from page 11 and found Starvation Reservoir mentioned. He expected a mud flats area but was pleasantly surprized when he got hoe. After a bit more discussion in which most agreed that improving the fishing would, in the words of Gerald Wilkerson, do more for the place than a name change. A vote was called for by Chamber President Karl Wilson. The members of the Duchesne Chamber voted eight to five in favor of keeping the name remaining the same. With that vote and with the petition of 85 residents also favoring keeping the name, Wilson stated the Chamber would no longer pursue the name change but would direct ' their efforts towards constructive matters to help Duchesne. MH.H WAS For A Limited Time-- Get Big Savings on General Electric Major Appliances during NOW $799.95 , SAVE $100 this event ' - r v - V Model TBX1BZG v Coyote Control Continued from page 11 MICROWAVE OVEN WITH ' SOPHISTICATED SENSOR Sophisticated sensor makes microwave cooking easy and adds flexibility to Auto Cook function. Electronic touch controls. Dual Wave microwave system designed for good, even cooking results. : nt - . WAS the plane. Dixon often works in conjuction with Hackford on the ground during these Rights. Shooting on the fly with accuracy takes great practice. The gunner uses a 12 gauge shotgun, with heavy loads to kill the coyote. The pilot must swing the small plane within dose range of the ground, then the gunner must shoot from a small area to miss the wing, tire and prop. Shooting from the plane is more efficient than hunting on the ground, at least in the winter. There are many days when a hunter on ground wont even see a coyote, said Hackford. By combing from the air and plugging away - on the ground, Government Trappers have kept coyotes under manageable control said Hackford. He mentioned that there will always be coyotes around because they're darn clever animals. But he hasn't noticed a population explosion since he first started hunting them over 12 years ago. The Government Trappers are determined to help ranchers in any way they can. 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