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Show i THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1968 Page Four THE SALT LAKE TIMES Combined with The Salt Lake Mining & Legal Hews Published Every Friday at Salt Lane City, Utah Entered at the postoffice at Salt Lake City as second class matter August 23, 1923 under the act of March 8, 1879 711 South West Temple Telephone 3644464 Heart Research Aided By Utah Donations Valley Music Hall Signs Concert Team Ferrante & Teicher will play the Valley Music Hall Feb. 15 through 17 for three evening performances and a Saturday matinee. Show times are 8:30 and 2:30 for the Saturday after- . lie in Heart Fund research and study grants provided indirect support for the development of the surgical techniques and equipment used Publisher GLENN BJORNN, in the recent heart transplant noon performance. operations, a Utah Heart Assn, "Tbit publication it not owned or controlled by any party, dan, clique, faction Active in every area of the en- spokesman declared this week. or corporation" tertainment world Ferrante and In a letter addressed to 40 Number 35 Teicher have scored rousing suc- community Heart Fund volunVolume 47 cesses in concert halls in the teer leaders, state campaign Salt Lake City Civil Service U.S., Canada and Europe. Their chairman L. Ralph Mecham said Commission and Lynn J. Marsh, sought after appearances have that the basic scientific knowl- City personnel director, this been the cause of more SRO edge obtained through projects week reached an agreement over signs posted outside of audito- financed by the American Heart granting pay raises and promoriums than practically any other Assn, and its affiliates included tions for city employees. Last July Mr. Marsh shifted touring today. Their fans all over new information on blood cheme the country are legion and as a istry, issue types and the granting of merit raises and result their bookings generally ( Continued from Page One) activities of the body. The promotions from the employes run to two to three years in ad- heart-lunmachine, the device employment anniversary date to vance. The team plays some 125 which made open heart surgery a fiscal year schedule. At the $40 billion a year. annually covering over possible and which played an time the Civil Service CommisA food aid program providing underdeveloped na- dates air miles. At tours ends 100,000 in the transplant sion agreed but in October it tions with 4,500,000 metric tons of wheat and other grain the remainder of the year is in important role was developed some asked to have the program reoperations, States United The three next the over recordand Fund spon- verted back to the anniversary Heart years. composing, aranging annually years ago by albums United Artists. for sored researchers. dates. and the six common market nations will supply 65 per ingTheir is much a Utah The Civil Service Commission superb artistry Mecham, University of cent of the total boon for U.S. wheat farmers. in evidence in recordings. They vice president, credited the dra- had contended it was empowered Substantial liberalization of trade in fruits, vege- have sold over twenty million matic transplant surgery news to govern certifications for prorecords to date, combining their of the past weeks with helping motions and pay hikes. farm products. tables and many other non-cere- al singles and albums and reached to broaden understanding g An agreement that would protect busi- a new pinnacle in the recording of the needpublic for continued supnessmen from competitors who are trying to destroy an- field when the 15th album was port of the Heart Associations Salt Lake City Commission this week heard a report on the recently. Never before research and educational activi- six month other nations domestic industries by selling below cost. released old alcoholic treathas a two piano team achieved ties. He urged the Utah volunwere Dean Rusk results the of ment State and rehabilitation said, program Secretary such distinction. teer leaders to work for a bana fa irbalance. According to Allan Shivers, president ' In Piano Portraits of Fer- ner year for the Heart Fund. from Dr. Glen A. Christensten, Dr. Christensen said he of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, There is widespread rante and Teicher the brilliant While the transplant surgery director. felt the programs pianists will once again display may prove to be the medical success ratio is the 60 perof cent results the businessmen of American best any among approval their spectacular piano pyroof the century, such in the from country. facility of the Kennedy Round. Our economy will benefit technics, along with their Mecham told the local chairman, a to inwit, present unique many answers, much more from easier access to foreign markets. and thrilling evening of music formation, and years of hard Construction of Central City and laughter that will long re- work are still neded in the field Action Center will begin in Febmain as a high spot of the con- of heart medicine and surgery. ruary and be completed in Sepcert season. The Heart Fund drive opened tember, according to John L. Feb. 1 and continues through to Florez, neighborhood coordinathe end of the month. More than tor, Community Action ProMothers and their baby doctors generally and rightly Use Law Lloyd Says 10,000 volunteers in virtually gram. regard baby foods as one of womankinds and babydom s In Copper Strike 0 The 2 acre site for the community will take part every sounded was boons. alarm But an by recently great square foot, multi service Published reports that Presi- in the Heart Sunday1 solicita25. scheduled Feb. of York. structure tion for has been cleared after New L. Aurora, pediatrician Dudley King dent Johnson is about to appoint relocation of the 21 families and The physician points out in the New England a fact finding board to look into of the buildings in demolition copper strike drew response Recreation Board Journal of Medicine that the average mother who grabs the the property, southeast corner Wednesday from Rep. Sherman of 3rd East and 6th South. Named Official rather than selects her baby foods as she makes her way P. Lloyd, who in a telegram to around the supermarket, may not be aware that strained the White House said the proKeith C. Brown is the new not was action Paul S. Rattle, Jr., has been adequate chairman of the Salt Lake Counbananas or other food may be a mixture of tapioca, posed to deal with the emergency, ty Recreation Board. Mr. Brown, appointed secretary-manage- r of cornstarch and juice, in addition to bananas. and called again for invoking who resides at 2662 Verona Cir., the Utah Mining Association, is a member of the Granite succeeding Miles P. Romney, Sometimes these mixtures may contain substances the Taft Hartley law. The proposed appointment of School District Board of Educa- who has held the position since the doctor has been trying to keep out of a babys diet. a fact finding board is a delay tion, and for the past year has 1952. Dr. King urges mothers to read labels carefully to be without work, not a solution. served as vice chairman of the The Taft Hartley mechanics rep- recreation board. certain of what they .are getting. Salt Lake Citys three taxi cab resent law of the Named as vice chairman of the firms this week requested a rate The Food and Drug Administration pointed out land tothebeestablished used when the na- board was Briant Stringham, Jr. increase a spokesman said some months ago tliat some foods packed in containers tional safety is adversely af- The new vice chairman is a mem- would which them about on par and bearing pictures of a baby are not, in fact, baby food. fected by a prolonged labor man- ber of the Murray City School with theputaverage in the nation, agement dispute. District Board of Education and except the west coast which is They are special diet foods, containing mixtures of variout the that Rep. Lloyd pointed lives at 325 Clark St. ous foods. Taft Hartley provisions have The county recreation board higher. obvious advantages over a fact oversees all public recreation Alertness is the order of the day. Rep. Sherman P. Lloyd of finding board. activity conducted by Salt Lake Utah has asked the Interstate First and foremost, it will County, and sets policy for that Commerce Commission to rereturn .the striking workers to department. issue its order for public heartheir jobs to produce copper and in the application by Union ings our balance of payments deficit disconPacific Railroad Co. of be reduction relieved will Evidence that DDT residues are moving through by Hartley are justified and neces- tinue trains No. 5 and to 6 between of now exceedcopper sary in this situation. The nathe biological, geological and chemical cycles of the earth imports ing 60,000 tons per month, he tional safety is clearly involved. Los Angeles and Omaha. The application, which had at concentrations having far reaching and little known said. Rep. Lloyd concluded that the been previously filed, then withTaft Hartley will provide the failure by the President to ineffects on biological systems are reported in Science drawn due to a technicality, was board you report- voke Tart Hartley and appoint fact Magazine by scientists from Brookhaven National Lab- edly finding submitted now support, Mr. Lloyd a fact finding board instead, again by the U.P. on 24. The trains would be oratory and the State University of New York at Stony said. It also provides the me- which will not return workers Jan. taken out of service Feb. 26. chanics the individual Brook. to their jobs, may be interpretwhereby a In to the ICC, Rep. letter a workers may, after cooling off ed as yielding to the demands Measuring DDT residues in the soils and in various period, participate in a secret of international union leaders, Lloyd pointed out that since the Commission had ordered an inorganisms of a brackish marsh in the south shore of Long ballot on the question of whether who oppose Taft Hartley. to accept the most recent offer vestigation in the first applicaIsland, biologists George Woodwell, Charles Wurster, made tion, it is proper and desirable by management. and Peter Isaacson found a high concentration averagMan can climb to the highest that public hearings be ordered The Utahn added, the meto give those who depend ing more than 13 pounds per acre in the soil; the high- chanics of the established law- summits, but he cannot dwell again on these trains a chance to subTaftB. G. land of Shaw. the there long. provided the est concentration was 32 pounds per acre. Highest conmit their views. centrations in animals were found in scavenging and fish and birds, with birds having 10 to 100 times greater than is present in the water, .Texas Tornadoes One of dubious honors Analyses of DDT contaminate water do not give more DDT than fish. These amounts of DDT are near claimed the more is big a clear idea of the effects of the chemical on animal popu- those found in animals known to have died from DDT in many by Texas, iswhich that it tops respects, lations because natural mechanisms, operating particu- poisoning, and these scientists suggest that certain ani- all other states in the number tornadoes. During the years larly through food chains, can result in concentrations mal populations within this esuarine area are being re- of 1962-66- , Texas was hit by 487 of DDT residues in animal issues thousands of times duced due to the toxic effect of the chemical. tornadoes. Nearly $70,000,000 I EASED GRAPEVINE New Era of World Prosperity and Peace auto-immun- g anti-dumpin- break-throug- h de-ilghtf- ul Read Labels for Hidden Perils 21,-00- Concentration of a Pesticide mar-nivoro- us |