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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1971 Page Three Dr. Robert Satovick New IRMP Officer Appointment of Robert M. Satovick, M.D., as Intermountain Regional Medical Program (IR MP) Coordinator has been announced. The appointment became effective January 18, 1971. Dr. Satovick succeeds C. Hilmon Castle, M.D., who recently accepted the position of Professor and Head, Department of Community and Family Medicine, University of Utah College of Medicine. , Dr. Satovick, a native of Salt Lake City and an IRMP medical staff member, will retain his former responsibility as Executive Medical Director, IRMP Cerebrovascular Disease Project. The IRMP is an organization designed to help speed the transmission of current medical knowledge and methods to the physicians, nurses, and other health personnel of the Region. Its primary effort has been in the area of providing additional education to health care workers who have already had formal training and experience. In addition to strengthening medical manpower, however, it also conducts experimental programs which test new ideas in how the accessibility, availability, and effectiveness of health and medical care might be improved still further. All IRMP activities are carried out in cooperation with existing health organizations and agencies. Its area of operation includes all of the state of Utah and parts of Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Wyoming. Upon receiving his bachelors d at Columbia degree in prc-me- scholarCollege on a four-yeship, Dr. Satovick obtained his M.D. from the University of Utah in 1962. His internship was completed at Tufts Medical Service, Boston City Hospital, Boston, ar Massachusetts. He then completed residencies in internal medicine (University of Utah affiliated hospitals), and neurology and neuropathology (Harvard Neurological - Neuropathological Unit, Boston City Hospital and Childrens Hospital Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts). Two research fellowships were awarded Dr. Satovick by the University of Utah School of Medicine. His projects included the Study of Rejection and Take of Isografts and Homografts in Mice, and the Study of Human Peripheral Nerve Conduction Velocities Under Normal Conditions and Conditions of Increased Temperature, in 1960 and 1961 respectively. Do you know Sow much electricity youll need in 1981? Nobody really knows what the future looks like. But at Utah Power & Light, we're trying to find out.. .at least as far as electricity is concerned. In order to insure a continued surplus of power, we need to estimate how myiy people will be using electricity in, say, 1981 just 10 years from now. And we also would like to know how many new industries well have to serve and how many new commercial establishments will want to be hooked up to our lines in the years ahead. To determine this information, a lot of people spend a lot of time with computers to come up with reasonably accurate estimates of what the population and economic climate will be in 10 or 15 years. Armed with this information, we can estimate how much additional electricity will be needed to supply new houses, new appliances (some of which aren't even invented yet) and new office equipment and industrial machinery. But that's just part of the problem. Once the whole problem is defined, the real work f begins... finding the solution. From the time we find out what well need to the time the new power is available, seven to ten years, or even longer, will pass. It takes that long to plan and build a new power plant and to plan and build die transmission lines needed to deliver electricity to where it is used. We started in 1964 to provide the power you are using in 1971. That's why Utah Power f |