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Show Thursday, September 1 3, 1 979 5 Page 13 of 4 X plcgc leycnj- f0 Ac US 'J. U i r I vr 1 ' " rt far ad, J -ani j ash J 0. pege a. leans fo fk. flag of He CLintilehc re.pu.pllo for &tdun d$ one ia.op UnJfLr Go I Pleap a Itegotrk io fhe flag of LU'-feof Scries erf America and fo fhe republic -for whci sfonck one nasjon urWer god tnh viable for l'ber-fv arv Jusksf- fer al- . 3 riw ) D a the r la k-L,,,;r, , r y A i i A I I 9 A 1 legon t) 10 of He an, 4 S-fate of Aarha. On J 0 4-In c repcA. b I; W ; "Tor Wh iah If SKiS one ber4-e and vks iex's r ' X pledge, a leare "fo "hhe f?U 0"f "fhe anied sa4e5 of fjfhe rinij republic o"P "fcky sfanJ one. " pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. " Like students everywhere in the United States, pupils at Park City's Marsac Elementary School start every school day with the Pledge of Allegiance to the American Flag. Even the youngest students can recite by rote all those strange, big words. But writing them down is a different matter, as 30 second and third grade Marsac students recently discovered. The Newspaper asked the students to set to paper the pledge they repeat every morning. The students completed the task admirably, but there were plenty of slips in the transition from tongue to pen. Below is the Marsac version of the Pledge of Allegiance, the most choice phrases provided by the students are rendered in parenthesis: "I (pleg a lengante, plege aleagints, plege a le gunts, plege a lejan, plgae of le gut) to the flag of the (Unidud Satsas of Aarack, unad saac of marki, Unistast of Amarica, unight state of mAcaica, United Stats of Ameraca) and to the (repulick, republik, republice, rebublike) for (wichit, witches, wiches, wich ti, wich is) stands one (nacon, nathon, nashin, nashanna-chen) nashanna-chen) under God, (induvible, in devishble, into visable) with (lifity andjustis, livbertand justes, libertie and justus, librty and justis) for all." As said before, the students did an admirable job and in a few years, writing the Pledge of Allegiance should be as easy for them as saying the a, bee, seas. Ipfegea legurjte o the flag of the urtiW sfatse of hmrica art! lb i he rep&lit r with if stands One ncithon unoer goJ ndevisitk and liter ty for justust and J' pfegeovg ihfs '"" To the f(g of untej stores of AneWca. and to rtpMk fgr wthf sfahJs "I T Da 13 aQC )tO V O U aans fo the Flxq O ()An,J unili Sots of a mica nJ i 4-u he r one hebw i i a. ft o 'e yep "P Secsr Son ft Of a fo &3 A ;f Uf ;t? fhp ocirf one Axcon S-hxrAc one nashin ander &tl "Witt -lfterfc and Jusrts For all Did You Know? U Of U Gets Cancer Study Grant The body's natural defenses against cancer growth are being studied at University of Utah and Veterans' Administration Ad-ministration medical centers through a two-year grant from the American Cancer Society. Dr. John B. Hibbs, associate as-sociate professor of internal medicine at the U of U College of Medicine, and Dr. Harold A. Chapman, assistant assis-tant professor of internal medicine at the U and chief of infectious diseases at the VA Medical Center, were awarded $125,000 to continue a study of the biology of macrophages, cells capable of destroying neoplastic (cancer) cells. VA Medical Center provides $67,000 per year to support the project. Macrophages exist in large numbers in the body, most concentrated in the liver, spleen and lymph nodes. They are important in maintaining main-taining a constant internal environment by processing old red blood cells, detoxifying detoxify-ing noxious chemicals and defending against pathogenic patho-genic microorganisms. Activated Acti-vated macrophages (those that have received the necessary ne-cessary environmental chemical stimuli) also recognize re-cognize and kill neoplastic cells. The researchers will inves tigate the process that induces in-duces macrophages to kill cancer cells; how they destroy the cells; and how their ability to kill cancer cells is enhanced or inhibited. in-hibited. "What we ultimately want to find out is: when a person gets cancer, why are the cells that ordinarily defend against cancer growth not working?," Dr. Hibbs ex: plains. "There are certain chemicals in normal blood plasma or serum that affect the macrophage's ability to kill tumor cells. We're trying to better identify these chemical factors and determine deter-mine if they have clinical significance." The average driving lifetime is 50 years, from age 16 to 66. In your lifetime you will drive an average of 10,000 miles a year or a total of about 500,000 miles. Your average driving speed will be 33 mph. On the average, you will experience 11 ac cidents or one for every 45,000 miles driven. 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