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Show ppton Plugs for Four Comers &ionaI Headquarters in Utah M BY C SHARP y;,, I. IMmoton :': v:un 1U' ot 1 ,'m!' fit ;,s lv.' V.L,.'til:irUM'S IV1' "U " "Vw'1 IVvMUnnU" ...... jvaty Jr.. Moral ... is plunns hi ver-jv-:tovi. to lxx 11 ,il - ,v, ai'llWS in SOltVt- v."s;!o in tlvir luiuls vi , vv;:i iv.w to I t.ih ' v I,Vit novt wtvkoiu'. ; , ,ka A.Msory Coun- :.'.; X.ttuMul Park : '. vi'.t visit Canyon- v jiion. Pnve atiJ 'i j O.mwn National :- jr-.d C.ifii Cmwn - : j! Rvroa:ion A.va. : .j his isit Mr. ; t v has agtwd to in-' in-' tho tfuw I'tah ci-f ci-f '-;oh hivo made- a yr th? he.uliiunrtors: Mrfuvilo and B'.un- j Mmo'i Air Service - ;'3 has a bis aavan- J-Uio t,i tint It Is sorv.M hV iv;:ubr nit- line Hi-Ms, ov. K.iupton said. ''i.i'ulin;: has an fnlyan-,a- 111 'at H Is closest to the Four Comers itself u'ule Monfuvllo has ,v-' ional oft'iavs of f,HUi-al 1,'. eneies with which the commission com-mission will deal. T.ids for the site also have been made by Farm-imtton. Farm-imtton. Albuquerque, nnd S-m'a Fe, N.M.; pai0, Ar. i--ona; and Corte?. and Du-raniro. Du-raniro. Colorado, Governor R.ur.eton said. At the nuvitng at which the four governors select a regional headquarters ptvbably by the end of Octolvr. they aiv oxvted to select mi executive of-fieer. of-fieer. Gov. Rampton said. He said he is not ns much concerned with selection of personnel as he is with location of the headquar-ters headquar-ters in Utah. Love 1$ Co-Chairman Gov. John Love of Colorado Colo-rado was elected co-chairman of the commission on Sept. 12 in Farmington. At this meeting Mr. Featy said the 92 counties in four states covered by the organization "have lagged In-hind the whole nation in economic development, devel-opment, employment possibilities pos-sibilities and family income." Nothing Is more important impor-tant to industrial devlop-mer.t devlop-mer.t of tliis state than to have coed air freight connections con-nections with markets of the West." So said Milton L. Woil-enmar.n. Woil-enmar.n. executive director of the S'-ate Development Services Department Sept. 20. He proposed establishment establish-ment ef an Airport Authority Auth-ority with power to pro-r.uie pro-r.uie continuous planning and deYlopmont of a mo-ciern mo-ciern airport for the jot nse ir Salt Lake City. "Inland Seaport" Utah, he said should have an inland seaport in the sky which would relieve re-lieve congestion at coast.il airports. Establishment of a customs office in Salt I.a ke City would be needed need-ed to further facilitat3 foreign trade, he said. Mr. Weilenmann pointed out that Utah has only two major air lines serving serv-ing it and both date back to the '20s and early '30s. As a result, the state has substandard air service and little competition, he declared. "This is the result of insufficient in-sufficient representation and persuasion before the iOivil Aeronautics Hoard," Jie said. Tt Is cheaper to buy a United Air Lines ticket to Denver and then buy a oonvmutor ticket to Chl-oaso Chl-oaso over competitive Vines than it is to buy n thru ticket over UAL to Chicago, Chi-cago, he said. Obsolete Planes Service to Seattle Is largely by pmp (planes, also al-so because there is no competition between here and the northwest, he explained. ex-plained. Ihider the Salt Lake City Commission, there is a long range plan for developing de-veloping j-he municipal airport air-port but this plan is considered con-sidered deficient by federal feder-al officials, he noted. Federal Fed-eral funds for improving Salt Lake Airport No. 2 have been lost, he reported. The director of Utah's Water Resources Board has signed an agreement calling for a nine month cooperative study of feasibility feas-ibility for building of a de-salting nuclear energy plant near the shore of Great SoU Uake. Daniel F. Laurence, the director, said the agreement agree-ment has gone to Washington, Wash-ington, D.C., where it is expected to be signed in the near future. Uranium Sufficient "Supplies of uranium appear to be ample to provide pro-vide fuel for desalting and other semicommercial reactor re-actor plants now on the drawing board." This opinion was expressed expres-sed by Jack Roberts, Washington, Wa-shington, D.C. project manager ma-nager for the division of reactor development and technology. Atomic Energy Commission. Sept. 19 in Salt Uake City. Mr. Roberts explained that plutonium and thorium thor-ium breeder by-products are produced in nuclear plants and would serve as the principal fuel for the proposed desalting plant in L'tah. "If we increased the price being paid for uranium uran-ium by SI per pound, the supply of that primary fuel probably would be ample," he said. Sara Shiozawa, also of Washington. D.C., general engineer for the Office of Saline Water, Department of the Interior, said it would cost about $95 million mil-lion to build a nuclear reactor re-actor desalting plant such as one recently designed to desalt sea water for Greece. |