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Show il" ''"Wtii' "' ) m niryr myin U i y i0rtiy'iy fiiyniy i g'nfg - I Monday Morning, March 1, 1982 Page 6 Section C 73 Percent Margin UAW OKs Ford Contract That T akes Effect Today The $8 million, Holy Cross Jordan Valley Hospital will be ready for occupancy 50-be- by March the facility d I Dedication ceremonies for will be at noon on Monday. 1983. Officials Await Groundbreaking For Hospital in Jordan Valley 50-be- The spotlight now turns to GM, where negotiations fell apart Jan. 28. Fraser has said he would like to reopen talks, but only if he has a mandate from GM workers, whose opposition to concessions was cited as a reason for the breakdown in negotiations. Since bargaining broke off, GM has announced plans to close eight plants. GM Chairman Roger Smith who has predicted a return to the bargaining table within the month says further plant closings depend on the union. The Ford contract would serve as a tion time for patients. He said one operating room will be devoted for short-sta- y surgery and there will be separate recovery rooms for adult and pediatric patients. Holy Cross also will construct a heliport next to the emergency room so patients in critical condition can be flown quickly to a hospital of their choice, said Mr. Hinchey. emergency care and laboratory, radiology, respiratory therapy, cardiol- Because the new hospital will need to expand in 1986 to adequately meet the needs of its service area, officials have applied to the Utah State Health Planning Development Agency to shell in 50 additional beds during initial construction, said Mr. Hinchey. Shelling in the additional rooms during construction would save money and eliminate disturbing patients later, he added. family obstetriciansgynecologists, practitioners, pediatricians, internists. According to a master plan, the Holy Cross Jordan Valley Hospital will need to have 150 to 200 beds by 1992 to adequately care for its service area, said Mr. Hinchey. He said the hospital has been designed as a module to easily accomodate expansion. ogy and physical therapy services. There will be 46 private rooms, two operating rooms, two delivery rooms and two intensive care beds. Among the medical specialists who will be available at the hospital include Reuter News Agency WASHINGTON Former Defense Secretary Harold Brown said th Friday Western sanctions economic breakthroughs the agreement which will lead to greater security for themselves and their families. Approval of the contract will enable Ford to promptly resume supplemental unemployment benefits for laid-of-f Ford workers, the union leaders said. The companys sub fund which helps make up the difference between unemployment checks and a workers ran dry earlier this former salary month. The week of voting went smoothly with just a few locals turning it down. UAW leaders said the low turnout resulted from members who decided not to vote when they heard the pact was passing on a wide margin. Ratification now means a three-tie- r system of contracts between the UAW and the nations big three automakers. GM Under Current Pact General Motors Corp. workers will remain under the current pact approved in 1979, while Chrysler Corp. workers last year approved contract concessions in the midst of the comwith bankruptcy. panys near-brus- h U. Will Participate In Synfuel Confab The University of Utah will take part in the Consortium on Energy Impacts, a organization that will examine environmental and socioeconomic issues of synfuels development in the Intermountain West. The consortium will operate under the direction of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. It will seek funds from major oil companies and other sources as research priorities are set. Other members include Utah State University , the University of Colorado, Colorado School of Mines, Colorado State University and the University of Wyoming. The planning phase will receive funds from Amoco Minerals Corp., Exxon Company USA, Getty Oil Corp. and Mobil Oil Corp. Preliminary planning was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the schools. six-scho- ol Business Balance Sheet JaPaiiest Company Starts Project To Use Coal-O- il ru - and 6,87S feet. San Juan County Mapp Exploration, Houston, Frost 6,000 feet. Pet restates i enciuv - p nativiib uckci , Federal 5,690 feet. Wexpro Co., Rock Springs, Wyo., 6,385 feet Bugg 22, Uintah County Coseka Resources Ltd , Denver, State 6,000 feet New Intrastate Registrations Utah Securities Division Quality Markets, Delta, combination grocery and variety store, 300,000 shares, $2,10, $630,000, Wizard, Salt Lake City, natural resource development, 5 million shares, one cent, 150,000; Case Energy inc.. Salt Lake City, acquisition, exploration and development of oil and gas prospects, 5 million shares, one cent, 150.000, Hidden Valley Cove Ltd., Salt Lake City, acquisition of land at 4800 W. 800 South, $1,020,000 in 1 limited partnerships; Welco Ltd. oil, gas and minerals properties acquisition, $1 million in limited partnerships at $5,000 per unit, LeMaster Precious Metals Inc , Nephi, mining, exploration and related activities, 25 million shares, one cent, $250,000; Ozon-da- h Financial Services Inc., Ogden, factoring services, 5 million in 4 percent subordinated, unsecured notes at $1 MO to $10,000 w, t - denominations; Consolidated Land and Livestock 1962 Ltd , Salt Lake City, acquisition of real property in rural and recreation areas for resale as primary and secondary res.dence sites, $720 XX)0 in limited partnership interests, $3,000 per unit, 240 units; Area Resources Corp., Salt Lake City, acquisition of oil and gas teases in prooerties producing and nonproducing and engaging in general oil and gas operations, 10 million shares, one cent, $100,000, International industries Inc , Sait Lake City, rabbit breeomg, dressing and processing, 24 million shares, one cent. $20,000 Business Factors Inc . Orem, factoring services, $2,5004)00 in subordinated, unsecured notes, $1,000 to $10,000 per note; Kookaburra Corp , Salt Lake City, arauisition of rea! property, gemstones, horses, etc , for sale or exchange, 1,250,000 shares, 2 cents, $25,000. :WANTED- HIGH RISE OFFICE BUILDING andor APARTMENT COMPLEX TOKYO Resource-poo- r Japan, which imports 99.8 percent of its oil, has launched the worlds first project to use a coal-o- il mixture at power stations starting in 1984. Yutaka Ogawa, a spokesman for the Electric Power Development Co., says the experiment is part of an effort to drastically reduce Japans reliance on oil, which now provides 75 percent of the countrys energy. It follows several decades of research and experiment in the United States, Canada and other industrial nations. Ogawa says a ton of the COM fuel contains roughly equal amounts of oil and pulverized coal with each particle measuring smaller than 0.1 millimeter in diameter. A ton of the mixtures can generate 3,953 kilowatts of electricity an hour, compared to 3,038 kilowatts for a ton of coal and 4,790 kilowatts for a ton of oil, he says. Test burning of the fuel began early last year at Electric Powers Takehara power station in western units, preferably in affluent area, quality construction with spacious units. 110 & CLEARANCE 95 170 00 CM) Vtolen ms COMPANY FINE CLOTHING FOR MEN & WOMEN 59 W. South Temple364-185- 1 next to I O rossroads Plaza factory direct 5 H.P. on 80 gal. tank Sale Price 1,450 ph. 973-084- 5 TO ANY OTHER MONEY MARKET INVESTMENT h Highest possible interest rates a Insured by an agency of the Federal Government a Write checks against it Winter COAT a JACKET Sutter Street, San Francisco 94104 AIR COMPRESSOR fY one-tent- Please send in format ion to: DREVER.McINTOSH pulverized coal from sinking after mixing with oil. Japan consumes 7.7 million barrels of oil a year at 71 thermal power plants. The use of COM fuel by all O 1 1 oil an o.tmrili rtn uu aotimnfnJ w.i (Va wlnnla itioi ani uu Cvfuountacu nn vavmMtwu uic picuiw nvvuuJ cuv million barrels a year. Although COM fuel can save up to 41 percent of oil now used for generating electricity, users could expect only a marginal cut in cost, Ogawa says. He says a ton of COM will be supplied at an estimated cost of 45,200 yen about $198.2 at current rates. Oil now costs 52,000 yen a ton. Users will have to remodel furnaces, but the cost of that is insignificant compared to the cost of converting the furnaces to coal, Ogawa says. A thermal power plant that can produce 200,000 $2.73 kilowatts an hour can save 623 million yen million by remodeling its furnaces, antipollution equipment and other facilities to use COM fuel instead of converting to coal, he says. Ogawa says the tests success was what led Tokyo Power Co . the biggest of Japans 14 power companies, to decide to build a COM fuel plant next year capable of producing 900,000 tons a year by 1984 and 5 million tons a year in 1988. Five million tons of COM fuel would produce 19.76 billion kilowatts of electricity, enough to meet the annual need of the 5.5 million people in Hokkaido, Japans northernmost main island where winters are severe. "The main secret of our COM fuel is a special additive made from naphtha, Ogawa says. h of one percent of additive keeps About the pulverized coal mixed with oil at steady and proper intensity for about a month without having heavier coal participles sink. Some foreign researchers, he says, used as much as 40 percent of additive in experiments to keep REG. TO with 200 FBL5EHH COMPARE FIRST FEDERAL'S Japan. fls against the Soviet Union had little influence on Moscows actions but should still be used in some cases. Brown, who served under President Carter from 1976 to 1980, told a conference organized by a private foreign policy research group. If the Soviet leadership faces a decision it regards as central to the maintenance of their power, for example a loss of control by the Polish Communist Party leadership, the threat or reality of economic sanctions will not fundmen tally change the choice they will make. Mix for Power By K. P. Hong Associated Press Writer - non-unio- Sanctions Get Tew Results Worlds First Corporate lankrartcto Corporate bankruptcies filed in U S Bankruptcy Court for Utah during ftw two week period ended s tncivue. Towne & Country Racquet Club Inc.; Jay Allen Neihetsel; Susan F. Houghton; W. R. Hurst Inc.; Wavco Asphalt A Paving inc.; Joseph Blaine Thompson; Larry Brent Holbrook; Kim Dewsnup; Robert G. and Fleda N Simontan; Karl L. and Kathleen R Madsen dba Madsen Construction; Howard Hatch It Associates; Randy David and Barbara Jean Martinez; Franklin Lee and Sandra Lee Fry; James K. and Maxine G. Lavender; Ronald Lee Bushman, Junior Lorenz and Carol Jean Sweker; Steven D. and Susan A Beckstead; Gordon L. Plant; Harold C. and Pauline L Johnson, Patrick Keith Baker; Donatd and Erma W. Sootten; Raymond D. Stlcox; Orson Budd and Donna M J. Pead; David B. Jensen; Martin E. and Bessie E. Jones. Katl and Cheryl Leavitt; David L. and Laura V. Rowland, Sheila R Ragsdale dba Worldwide Stereo, Kent E. and Modi lee Adams, Hilltop Supply inc.; Midvale Group, a Utah partnership; Richard T. Perkins; William L. and Leanna H. Parsons, Steven Roy and Julia Alice Suter; John James and Caroline Edgar Phillips; Myron Alvin and Lafave Hamilton; Herman H and Phyllis J Thiessens; Jonco Construction Co Inc ; Dan Nelson Shiner; Vincent Ortega, Newav Products Inc ; James Wallace and Deanna Glover; Beniamin Fe'rell and Pamela Hill Ciuff ; Myron B Child Jr ; Michael edwin and Debra Lynn Patman; Lewis Henry DeYoung Bonding Permits resitwo single-famil- y Sandy dences. two Draper residences. one single-familRiverton residence one tingle-familWest Jordan residence New Wifdcat Filings Energy Emery County Corp , Salt Lake City, -1- ,600 feet TXO ProducGrand County 1, tion Co., Denver, basis for any talks at GM. Under the pact the automaker promises to maintain current jobs, which might be lost by future subcontracting n domestic and of work to foreign sources, and replace jobs to the best of the companys ability. Ford moratorium on the agreed to a two-yea-r closing of plants due to subcontracting. Workers with 15 years experience are guaranteed 50 percent of their pay in the event of layoffs. In return, there will be no wage increases for hourly workers for the next 31 months. We are extremely pleased at the ear, nose and throat doctors and margin of ratification, said UAW President Douglas Fraser and Ford orthopedic and general surgeons. Vice President Donald Ephlin in a Devoted to Short Stay statement. Mr. Hinchey said the hospital has It is clearly evident that our membeen designed to include an outpatient at Ford understand and support bers minimizes that department registrathe historic contained in Tuesday under the direction of Olsen Construction, a Nebraska firm with offices in the Salt Lake area. The firm has been appointed construction managers and general contractor of the hospital. Implement Team Approach Mr Hinchey said Holy Cross has implemented a construction management team approach in designing the new hospital. Hospital officials, the construction manager and the architect firm of Henningson, Durham and Richardson of Omaha, Neb., have been involved in the process from the beginning. Holmes and Perry, a Salt Lake contracting firm, has leased the ground next to the new hospital to construct a medical office building that will house as many as 23 physicians, said Mr. Hinchey. The office building will be ready for occupancy in March 1983, about four months before the hospital is completed. The hospital will provide Special to The Tribune WEST JORDAN Corporate, religious and public officials will speak at noon Monday during groundbreaking d ceremonies for the $8 million, Holy Cross Jordan Valley Hospital, 3580 W. 9000 South. Sue M. Ross, Holy Cross Hospital public relations director, said residents living in the new hospitals service area of West Jordan, South Jordan, Riverton and Copperton are invited. Bishop to Speak The program will include a welcome by Paul P. Hinchey, administrator of the new hospital, and an opening prayer by the Most Reverend William K. Weigan, bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake. Speakers will include William H. Kibbie, chairman of of the Holy Cross Hospital Board of Trustees; Norma Matheson, wife of Utah Governor Scott M Matheson and member of the hospitals board of trustees; Sister Joanne Upjohn, C.S.C., assistant to the president of Holy Cross Health System Corporation; Dr. Alfred H. Namba, president of the medical staff; and West Jordan Mayor Dennis M. Randall. Glen W. Bateman, patriarch of the South Jordan Stake of the Church of Saints, will Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y give the closing prayer. Construction of the hospital will begin By Micheline Maynard United Press International United Auto Workers DETROIT members Sunday ratified by an overwhelming margin the historic pact with Ford Motor Co., swapping wage and benefit concessions for job security, the union said. Unofficial totals from the UAW showed the pact was approved on a vote of 43,683 to 15,933 a 73 percent margin following a week of voting. About 170.000 current and laid-of- f Ford workers were eligible to vote. The agreement takes effect Monday. Formal signing ceremonies were set for 2:30 p.m. EST at Ford world headquarters in suburban Dearborn. Ten bargaining units with about 14.000 members were the last to vote on the pact, which was expected to save the automaker nearly $1 billion during its lifespan. The pact already had won mathematical approval Saturday with its approval on a 73 percent margin by 84 of 94 bargaining units. Pleased at the Margin b BR0WN-STRAUS- S Low minimum deposit a Free checking division of Azcon Corporation THE OTHERS JUST DON'T COMPARE SUPER SERVICE SUPERIOR INVENTORY FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Phone Downtown 76 in Utah Other States Office South Mam 531-78- 00 Pootww Office Bendy Office kloxj Offtco 505 test 2nd South t442 FoothiH Drive 9106 South 7th East Faehton Piece Office 6123 South State Substantial Penalty For Earty Withdrawal Fsnc Price Office 58 Watt Mam m 4-- |