OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES Individuals or groups wishing to testify at any of the hearings have been asked to notify their FEA Regional Office in writing. A cmoplete record of the proceedings will be compiled and members are: made available to the public. Duke Ligon, FEA Assistant Evening sessions will be held to Administrator, Resource Devel- accommodate private citizens who may wish to be heard withopment out submitting written stateJohn C. Whitaker, Undersecretary of the Department of In- ments. These hearings will be an interior John R. Quarles, Jr., Deputy tegral part of the "Blueprint Environmental for Project Independence, a reAdministrator, Protection Agency port which will be prepared and Dudley E. Faver, FEA Denver submitted by FEA Administrator John C. Sawhill to the President Regional Administrator. Those who have already indi- by November 1, 1974, analyzing cated their intention to testify at and recommending plans to the opening day hearings in Den- achieve energy independence. ver on August 6 include: Honorable John D. Vander-hoo- f, The change of color, from a Governor of Colorado to white, which a weasel brown Honorable Stanley K. Hathaundergoes each fall is due to a way, Governor of Wyoming Michael McCloskey, President moult (shedding of hair) and not a change in the color of the exSierra Club, San Francisco, isting fur. Sawhill To Lead Nation's First Public Hearing On Energy Project Some of the Nation's top Fed- eral and State public officials, environmentalists, industrialists, and experts in the field of coal, electricity, geothermal energy, and oil shale will be in Denver August 6 when the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) holds the first public hearing on Project Independence. Project Independence, a blueprint to develop the capacity for United States energy independence by the 1980's, will evaluate dependence on foreign sources the present trend of increased of energy, and recommend positive programs to expand domestic energy supplies and initiate energy conservation methods. The hearing panel will be headed by FEA Administrator John C. Sawhill. Other panel Psg Nina FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1974 Member Awarded $80,000 Cancer Study Grant U Faculty An $80,000 grant to sponsor But the scientist has found he a study into finding out what can restore control of nuclear causes cells to become cancer- division in cancer cells by using ous and how this condition is a drug known as a protease inhi- maintained has been awarded to a University of Utah researcher. Dr. Frank J. ONeill, an assistant professor of microbiology and pathology at the U of U Mediral Center, was funded by the National Cancer Institute. Title of his research is Control of Nuclear Events in Normal and Neoplastic Cells. The U researcher is conducting his work at the Salt Lake City Veterans Administration Hospital where he is head of the clinical cytogenetics service. It appears that division of cells nuclei is controlled in normal cells but uncontrolled in cancer cells, Dr. ONeill said. Utah Power talks about your electric power: bitor with another drug, cyto-chalasin-- B. If we can find out what is wrong with cancer cells by using this approach, scientists may some day be able to develop therapy for better treatment of the disease. Dr. ONeill has also received a $1,143 award from the National Research Council to finance a trip in October to Florence, Italy, for a meeting of the 11th International Cancer Congress. He will present a paper on his work at the meeting. Evening Fall Quarter Class Enrollment Set At Utah Tech Registration for evening classes at Utah Technical College at Salt Lake starts Thurs., Aug. 1. All registration will be handled at the College's main campus, 4600 So. Redwood Rd. class registration Evening dates are Aug. 1 to Sept. 2, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays, and Sept. 3 to Sept. 23, weekdays, 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.mm., except Fridays when the registration office closes at 4:30 p.m. Utah Techs fall quarter starts Tues., Sept. 24. The school's numerous evening class offerings are in business, drafting trades, data processing, electricity and electronics, marketing, math, general education subjects, hotel-motmanagement, welding, upholstery, machine shop and others. The college also offer apprenticeship courses. A schedule of specific classes is available at the school's main campus registration office. . Utah Power has already started plaimm your 1982 power meeds. When the switch is thrown on a new power plant for the first time, its a significant event both for Utah Power and for power users. And, to appreciate what the event means fully, you have to look back eight years ...because that's the average time it takes to plan, get approvals, design and construct a plant like the new four hundred and thirty thousand kilowatt generating unit at Huntington. In fact, after a site with enough water and coal is selected, three years are needed just for the environ mental studies and regulatory approval. The next five years are spent designing and constructing the plant. So today, Utah Power engineers and planners are designing generating capacity of an additional two million kilowatts that we will need by 1982. Thats a staggering increase compared to the 1,783,000 kilowatt capacity the company has today. And since youre a customer, you have a right to know that Utah Power has very precise planning underway to meet your power needs in the years ahead. el HEW Sponsors Bill To Find Deserting Parents The Department of Health, Education and Welfare announced that it is taking the first steps to carry out a program, authorized in legislation sponsored by Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, to locate and hold responsible for child support the parents of children on welfare. Sen. Bennett backed the measure, a provision of a welfare and social security bill, to stop the rising costs of welfare payments to families in which the father is absent from the home. The number of children receiving welfare under this category has more than doubled in the last four years, and there is a serious lack of effort to hold absent fathers responsible for their children. HEW estimates that 1.3 million absent fathers are costing the taxpayers $1.5 billion annually in welfare payments by nonsupport of their families. The federal government, according to the HEW plan for implementing the measure, will pay half of both direct and indirect court and law enforcement costs which arise from efforts to find absent fathers and gain child support. Workshops conducted around the country will train welfare workers and law enforcement officers in effective means of ensuring such support. Surveys of methods employed by the states to gain support from absent fathers will be made by HEW to determine the most successful methods. Findings will be published and circulated to law enforcement and welfare staffs across the nation. |