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Show i iiursuay, October 24, 4 NAB Accused box-oflic- SOUTH SALT LAKE NEWS enables him to see complete new feature films, Broadway productions and other first-ru- n entertainment fare without commercials and at a low cost for his family. The accusation was made by Joseph S. Wright, chairman of the board of Zenith Radio Corporation, who said, Nothing in this nation's business history matches the shameful and unjust treatment that the NAB and other powerful interests have so far succeeded in imposing on STV. Wright, who termed the NAB singled outrageous. campaign, out recent NAB communications as examples of the deceptions used by the NAB. In a wire to its members, the NAB charged, Pay TV would require the public to pay for popular piograms such as ball games and nunies the now receive free." Wright called the allegation untrue. I he facts are that a 1'ederal Communications Commission (bCC) proposal spe- - FCC-approv- critically forbids an SIY station from broadcasting a sports event regularly televised in the community within a preceding two-yeperiod and from running a feature film more than two years old. In a letter to the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, the NAB stated that an affluent minority could deny the less affluent majority the right to sec a program. A misleading statement, said Wright. ar Its a great team theyve got everything. Talent, and numerous specialists. And they can deliver the goods whenever the occasion calls for it. As in past years, they make KCC a heavy favorite in the Copper Bowl competition. Take Proler, Boyles or May. Theyre real pros, and they know the value of teamwork. Prospects for next season look good, too, with Linde, the rookie, developing fast. Heres the rundown on just four of the many great players on this team: Boyles, from Boyles Bros. Drilling Company, consistently has developed more holes in that open pit stadium than you can imagine. Scrappy Proler, from Proler Steel Corporation, has been carrying the heavy load. He supplies the muscle to break through the hard rock precipitate defense. Digger Castiron May, from May Foundry & Machinery Company, is great when the patterns call for crushing, grinding and reducing the opposition to pulp. Oxy Linde, from the Linde farm club of Union Carbide Corporation, is being groomed to supply the smelter gas house gang with more and faster conversions. With such talent, KCC should go far, particularly when you figure the reserves who can supply most anything at any time. Program Notes Digger" Boyles z' "Castiron" May Proler Steel Corporation supplies detinned scrap iron to the precipitation plant, which obsolution tains a copper-bearin- g from overburden dumps. The Boyles Bros. Drilling Company contracts with Kennecott to do drilling in the Bingham Canyon Mine and surrounding area, and also for Bear Creek Mining Company, Kennecotts domestic exploration scrap iron is dissolved in the solution to produce precipitate copper under a chemical reaction. V "Oxy" Linde Linde Division of Union Car- May Foundry & Machinery Company supplies the Division with castings for heavy equipment needed for crushing and grinding of ore, other concentrator equipment, and in other departments, including the smelter. , V bide Corporation Thats one version of football. Far fetched? Perhaps. But the point is that Kennecott depends heavily on teamwork from its suppliers, any number of whom could have been used in this illustration. In fact, there are more than 1500 vendors who sell supplies and services to the Utah Copper Division for many millions of dollars annually, an important factor in the over-al- l economy of the state. IKennecott Copper Corporation Utah Copper Division s i "An Equal Opportunity Employer' is con- structing an oxygen plant adjacent to the Divisions smelter. It will supply oxygen for the oxygen smelting process, which has certain advantages for the smelter converters. J v ed U.S. and Russian geneticists compare notes. Football: As viewed by the suppliers '"Scrappy" Proler Page 1 "Results from the STV test operation in Hartford, Conn., have shown that 84 percent of the viewing public have incomes of less than $10,000 and that they pay an average of $1.23 a week to watch the programs. "Although the NABs monopoly-minded campaign has succeeded so far. Wright concluded, "I cannot believe that Congress will now willingly permit it to suc- cccd any longer. of Deception In Campaign Against STV Chicago (HK) The old battle over subscription TV (STVj has flared anew. In the latest incident, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB.) was accused of conducting a campaign of misrepresentation and deception in its continuing efforts to deny the American viewing public the chance to judge STV in the free market place. The STV system allows a viewc er to watch attractions by paying for his selections. This 17-ye- ar 18 J |