—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 18, 1974 32 Water-Waste Disposal Grants To Increase Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz has announced that as a result of a Department survey $l2O million in grant funds are being added to the record $5OO million in Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) loans and grants currently available for rural water and waste disposal systems in the 1974 fiscal year (FY) endmg June 30, 1974. This action brings the total of rural water and waste disposal grants available for FY 1974 to $l5O million, an increase of $l2O million over the amount used in FY 1973. The Secretary pointed out that FmHA had made a survey of grant needs in connection with water and waste disposal projects early in this calendar year as the result of the release of some $3O million in grant funds to communities unable to OPEN HOUSE r ALASKAN CAMPERS )imSr are made Up for comfort -- Down for economy Customized from mini to maxie, tor all trucks Test drive the new Mini Alaskan on an Ed. Fisher Datsun 401 West End Avenue Manheim, Pa. 17545 Saturday May 18 —10:00 to 5 Sunday May 19 1:00 to 5:00 secure funds from other sources. The survey found that there were many financially needy communities which presently lack sewer and water systems, and are not able to proceed on a “loan only” basis because most of the families to be served by such systems lack sufficient income to pay the higher “loan only” rates. As a result, the Department arrived at the decision to make available the ad ditional $l2O million and is. preparing regulations which will target the funds toward the most needy rural com munities^ “This further demon strates our commitment to the development of rural communities,” tlTe Secretary said. “These additional rural develop ment funds will permit local leaders to push ahead with Grid System Proposed If you drilled an ex ploratory hole every twenty miles across the length and breadth of the United States you would hit every “jack pot” of mineral resources that it took more than a century to find by trial-and error methods. And you’d have a jackpot far more valuable-a com plete inventory of the total mineral resource potential of the country. Dr. John C. Griffiths ex pounded this drastic and highly controversial ap proach to mineral ex- ploration today at an energy symposium at The Penn sylvania State University. Dr. Griffiths said that traditional “wildcat” prospecting has reached a point of diminishing returns. Furthermore, it is extremely wasteful since individual prospectors--now usually large corporations-usually look for a single resource, say, oil, and either do not see other mineral possibilities or neglect them. water and waste disposal projects that will make their communities more at tractive to industry and more pleasant places in which to live. In the present fiscal year, it means that $620 million in loans and grants will have been available to rural areas to protect the health and im prove the living conditions of residents of rural America. This compares with $320 million used for this purpose in fiscal year 1973, the previous record year for such assistance.” COURTHOUSE SQUARES POLITICIANS KNOW i BETTER THAN ANYONE - Care of Non-Stick Cookware Wash cookware lined with non-stick surfaces with hot, sudsy water soon after use. This will help preserve the benefits,of the finish and prevent a build-up of grease and food. A systematic, broad spectrum approach based on a grid system, said Dr. Griffiths, is the only way to guarantee adequate resources for the future. Some 10,000 exploratory wells would be required to "cover” the U.S. if 20-mile spacing were used. Such massive drilling, Griffiths calculates, would cost about five billion dollars. There are 23 known “jack pots”-prime deposits of oil, lead, copper, etc.-in the country, each valued at a billion dollars or more. “If only five new prizes are discovered by the grid method,” he said, “the massive prospecting program would pay for it self.” More important, ac cording to Dr. Griffiths, professor of petrography, mineral prospecting would be put on a systematic basis and would yield a complete inventory of our potential. Cores from the ten thousand holes would be analyzed not for one but for all known mineral possibilities, in cluding fresh water. Grid-systems, he pointed out, are in wide use by the military, either in search for potential targets, or for missing submarines, downed aircraft, etc. A 200-mile global grid is used by meteorologists in collecting data for weather forecasting. A grid strategy would take much of the risk out of prospecting and would have important geopolitical ramifications. “Only if we know what’s in the ground,” said Dr. We think you'll like them, so plan now to see us this month. • Weekend of May and May 30-31 June 1 SPECIALISTS IN MAI MT. HOPE AT TWO LOCATIONS; LOT 1 LOT 2 Rt. 72 >/2 mile South 1 m i| e North of Pa. turnpike, Manheim of Jonestown on Rt 72 Phone 665-3528 Phone 865-6611 MON.THRU FRl.Bto9-SAT.BtoS For Mineral Discovery Griffiths, “can we have a it would provide information sound basis for national that Vvould enable smaller planning of the economy and targets to be found with a an orderly development of higher success ratio than natural resources with due now prevails, consideration for their “This information,” he conservation.” said, “would rejuvenate our Once the 20-mile grid approach to the study of the drilling was completed, said earth’s crust to the benefit of Dr. Griffiths, and it would both the theory and the take only two or three years, practice of exploration.” A GIFT TO THE GRADUATE THAT WILL LAST A LIFETIME! WHITE "LAdywciqliT Llne" Ladyweight Model 967. , Lightweight zigzag sewing machine with 24 interchange able cams providing the most • j*,*******. 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