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Show TT'Tr yTLrr-CrrV"- II - Iff - rtrtt r . -iil fr nitrem r- - a& n The secrets of LOGAN and basic the beginnings workings of life are emerging at a tantalizingly giadual pace in laboratories devoted to the study. This was the report here today of Dr. Robert V. Holley, 1968 Nobel Laureate in medicine, who addressed the opening session of the Utah Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters on the Utah State University campus. Holley, a resident fellow at the Sail; Institute, San Diego, his seven Calif., described years of research at Cornell University on the alanine transfer of RNA structure. RNA (ribonucleic acid) is a nucleic acid orgmally isolated from yeast, but later found in all living cells and believed to contain some of the secrets of life itself. The Nobel Laureate told of research that indicates how RNA is involved in making Davis Union JSuilding for their contributions to education in the proteins and enzymes in the cells, and how RNA transfers protein from cell to cell. The study will have great significance for the future, Holley said. Four Utah educators will be honored at the academy banquet at 6:30 p.m. tonight in the Walnut Room of the USU Utahn's Miss Dr. Hanfmond Dr. Cooley Mr. Shelley University of Utah archivist. Meritorious School High Teaching Awards will go to Arlo Shelley, biology, mathematics and science teacher at Ameiican Fork High School, and Miss Sue Ann Davis, home economics instructor at state. Distinguished Service Awards will be presented to Dr. Datus M. Hammond, head of the department of zoology at USU, and Dr. Everett L. Cooley, curator of the Western Americana Collection and See NOBEL on Page DESERET NEWS Rdgn SALT LAKE CITY; UTAH Friday, April 11, 1969 gf Extended Photo by Howprd Patients Kimberly Leavitt C N, . staff photographer Ice Follies comic. doesnt (Follies peim Tuesday With Somniehiiniq For AH Take more than 60 of the worlds top ice skaters, a generous amount of costuming a la Ziegfeld, season with exotic scenery and a dash of magic. It's the menu next week at the Salt Palace. The Shipstads and Johnson Ice Follies run April . Shows for the, first three nights have been sold tq the Primary Association of the Church of Jesus Christ of . Saints. The Primary, in turn, has sold tickets throughout the Church. Pro-- , y ceeds will go to the Primary Childrens Hospital. Kenneth Johnson, adminis- pital, be added. "It will provide much funds for the hospitals . help '(for the program children, said Mrs.' LaVera W. ; Pdrmley, general president of .the Primary. ' Because the arena - section of the Salt Palace is not completed, the ice show will be held in the Exhibit Hall. Ice has to be borrowed and you just dont borrow that much Ice from a neighbor. Lynn F. Olsen, director of for the' show, operations trator at the Primary Childrens Hospital, said the additional funds from the Ice Follies will be usec( to assist the patients. The funds will help further the heart surgery program and help the supplement penny fund for those children whose parents cannot afford medical care, Johnson said. There are still some $10 and $3 tickets available at the hos Utah Nurse $1 Million Describes por Transplants By STEVE HALE Deseret News Medical Writer The most gorgeous sight in surgery was described today by a Bountiful nurse who works with a Houston heart transplant team. M i s s ,K a r e n McKellar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 'Glen E. McKellar, 702 E. 1100 North, Bountiful, said she saw , that sight the first time she i worked oq a heart transplant. HOUSTON TEAM . l . .She's a member of a heart f Surgery team at Houstons Methodist Hospital a team that has hearts. mind. Mrs. Fisher, 1274 E. 37th is the current Mrs. America. She won the title last August and was to have reigned for a year. But a change in contest sponsors is bringing a change in deles. The next contest will be held in the spring of 1970, according to Ms. Marian Fletcher who handles the program in Utah, Idaho and Montana for Gold Strike Stamp Co., regional South, Dee Latter-da- Utah City Cleanup Drive Under Way The Mi's. America contest wont be held this year, but Mrs. M. Byron (Joan) Fisher Moon, and LaNae Nash appear awed by Mr. Frick, transplanted 10 need-e- Gift To L arranged to bring from Philadelphia the nations largest portable rink, measuring 60 . by 160 feet. Olsen, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints from San Francisco, was the man who got the wheels turning for the benefit performances the ice breaker. Arriving ahead of the ice rink have been many of toe Ice Follies stars. Mr. Frick, with 30 years of See ICE on Page B-- ... Marriott, 9 Washingtonian served as chairman of tlie 1969 Inaugural Committee for President Richard M. Nixon, is A 1926 graduate of tlie university. , Dr. C. James Fletcher, , of and large comsm a sponsor. 11 munities, Ive had mixed emotions. I feel kind of bad that theyre to , Earl Hawkes, publisher. not having the contest this year, Mrs. Fisher said. First to VERY ENJOYABLE Not that she isnt enjoying for- begin mally its campaign who , At additional books. Marriotts gift will be used to accelerate book acquisition, Fletcher said. The library seats 3,000, and during the last eight months, 968,000 persons have entered the building. Marriott received an honorary doctor of laws degree from the university in 1966. He started in business with a root beer franchise at Washington in 1926, and now operates restaurants and hotels throughout toe world. . one-roo- m ... "I have quite a few dates set up for the end of April and the first part of May and others to the end of August I assume Ill have some extending into next spring," she added. Mrs. Fletcher noted that the Mrs. America contest formerly was held in the spring ta coincide with Mothers Day. It was changed to August the year another Utahn, Mrs. Alice Buehner, held the title, cutting her reign to nine months. explained. Last cleanest year city U. 3-- appropriated $8,000 for the study. What caused the mayor's was the ire universitys request that the city supply information from detailed each department "My people are not going to give up their time and efforts doing what toe university is being paid to do, he said. "Anyway, the report will probably be thrown in the wastebasket after they get through with it" Catmull C 0 m m i ssioner backed the mayor, saying, "I understand that we are paying them to come down and go through our departments themselves, not that we do all the work. Commissioner James L. Barker Jr. said he thought tlie mayor was mistaken. If someone can suggest good ideas for my department, Im going to use them," he said. Commissioners It Write To The Director . ar Glen-woo- Conrad B. Harrison and E. J. Gam voted with Barker In favor of assisting with toe study. ydes Director Property Tax Division, State Tax Commission, 212 State Office Bldg, and asr for information and also give your qualifications. category. d 'Tities and communities desiring to enter the contest should make application through Dr. Arvil Stark of toe USU extension division. However, whether they join the contest or not, all communities are urged to join in toe beautification program. t Now is the time to get started on this years campaign, he said. An intensive effort now, organizational But more Important than tlie awards, clean up campaigns can make toe states communities attractive to our visitors and places in which residents can take pride and satisfaction. The campaigns can build Utah. They can tell the entire country that this is, as we all believe, toe place to live and rear our families, he added. Smithfields campaign Warranty Problem Solved In Nov. 1967 1 bought a car. Within a month we had problems. I went to a dealer in Provo even though I had bought the ear in S.L. I was told that toe area service manager (motor car company representative) would have to take care of it. I could never find him and he never contorted me. ' I talked to another S.L. dialer and they told me to contact the Denver regional office. They referred me to a Bountiful dealer. And they took care of some of the Items. Then they went ait of business and we cant get any satisfaction on the other things. This entire affair convinces me that the warranty which the company offers, Isnt worth toe time it takes to put It on paper. D.R.G., Orem. hian was informed by the company that they ", . , fully expect its dealers to make all adjustments to which our customers are entitled. We can understand (Mr. Gs.) Mr. G. has been contacted by our . . . factory representative and arrangements have been made to complete tlie warranty work at our S.L. dealship." Do-I- t frus-tratio- n, Full Cooperatioi: Requested Our back yard borders the parking lot for the stores on Simpson Avenue between Highland Drhe and 13th East. This 4 in- drive on cludes a clean-u- p every block in town, supervised by block captains, area captains and a central committee by Mrs. Ruth Gregory and Mrs. Ver-det- ta Harris. . . Several buildings will be razed, vacant lots will be cleaned, rubbish will be removed and an overall sprue- See ANNUAL on Page SECTION City, Regional Comics TV Highlights Financial Dial GXM3 , o County; Roosevelt and Murray were winners in the durwith consistent follow-u- p ing the spring and summer, can make each community a Utah winner. Study Despite the opposition of the mayor and Commissioner George B. Catmull, the city commission voted 2 to furnish data requested by LeRoy F. Harlow, director of the Local Government Modernization Study. The already city has awards went to Toquerville, Washington County; Fillmore; and Holladay, Goshen, Utah - Think .Twice About B-- 2 cate- Aksyor I red Of U. "In spite of dramatic Sometimes," she said, "we advances in teaching technolaround go preparing ogy, the campus library for remains J. Willard Marriott Sr. everybody emotionally the center and founand about we surgery, forget dation of the learning process university donor preparing ourselves." S2,e SoiJ tiidi happened to her during that .first heart ( transplant. It happened when ' th$ patient lay there on the' . ' in surgical table at the operation. Is there a place a boy could learn to ride a motorcycle? . NO HEART My son cant get a permit until he can ride better. He has "I looked Into the chest, and no place to practice. W.W.V., Granger. there wasn't a heart there, . she said. It really hjj me Only place he can ride without a permit would be on pri' emotionally." vate property . . . inaybe a pasture you could locate that t She said she had heart , would cushion some falls. Of course, get permission. trouble of her own loj a few Do-I- t Man has no rlght-tpreach, but he agrees with the seconds. National Safety Council which warns: "A motorcycle acciMiss McKellar - Explained dent is three times as likely to be fatal as an automobile that she had scrubbed on accident." Do-- Man asks that you read the copy of the artimany heart operations before, cle which Is being sent to you. It appeared recently in but shed always been able to Womans Day. A key thought that impressed Do-I- t Man was look in the chest cavity and The motorcyclist can never fully protect himself. There are see a heart there. . too many hazards to n cyclist. He is too vulnerable. The young nuise Said she experienced another kind of emotional experience later In tlie same operation. , I am a 139 per cent disabled veteran and have had a "The patients new heart background of real estate and appraisal In Nevada. I was In place and the surgeons now live in Sevier County and would like to take training removed the clamps to let d. under SB20. Could you help me get started? C.J.L., blood flow In, she related. "We thought wed have to SB20 is law passed by recent Legislature to provide for apply electric shock to start the normal heartbeat. training and certification program for property appraisers by "The heart filled with blooa conthe State Tax Commission and to permit county-stat- e It quivered, and then It began tracts for periodic reappraisals of property upon county as-- . scssors request. Its a bit premature right now as the law besting sjMtatanemudy.lt was beautiful. We all stood there doesnt go into effect until May. Bat aspects c I it are now See NURSE cn Page being implemented. Best thing is to write 0 M. H. Kerr, , the following gories: Under 800 population; 801 to 20,000, and 20,000 and over. In each category there is a $500 award for tlie most improved city and $500 for the cleanest city, Hawkes 2 ' president of the university, said the library building will be named the J. Willard Marriott Library at the Universitys summer commencement exercises. . ginning Saturday. Cooperating with toe News in the second annual contest are Utah State University Extension DivUon and toe Utah Municipal League. Any town or city may enter in five-stor- nurses mid-poi- spur efforts Library Development The largest single gift of money to the University of Utah a $1 million present from restaurateuf J. Willard Marriott Sr. Will be used for development of the new library used by more than 8,000 , persons a day streets was scheduled for this afternoon, caking attention to actual cleanup activities, be- The annual spring cleanup drive in Utah opened today, with the Deseret News again offering $3,000 in prizes to her reign Its been very was Smith-fielvery enjoyable. Ive met a lot Cache County, winner of of people, had many fine exnational a distinguished periences and have seen some achievement award in 1968. interesting places. A parade through downtown The family has really Weve adjusted beautifully. worked quite. hard to keep things normal at home, Mrs. Fisher explained. Neither her husband nor her three children are sorry that shes going to have an extended reign. Her mother, Mrs. Charles Peterson, lias moved into the Fisher home and takes care of toe children when Mrs. Fisher is away. Charging that its a "silly at toe university," Marriott Most of my traveling has waste of taxpayers money," said. been for Beeline Fashions, Mayor J. Bracken Lee said y The one of the old sponsors, today he will refuse to cooperlibrary, dediate with the University of cated last May, has a capacattending sales rallies and Utah in making an effiicenc ity of 1,500,000 books. also fashion shows. Ive University officials said the attended a lot of conventions study of city government. The university she t current collection fills only 25 and civic celebrations, ought to of 42 miles of shelving in the said. Quaker Oats Co. has have someone telling them building because state funds been the other sponsor. how to cut out waste instead have not been available for of them telling us, he added. NUMEROUS DATES U. B-- 2 Hay o pobtwnT Dhit (344-842- 6 6 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, or writ to Box 1247, Salt lake City, Utah 84119. its used for a garbage dump. People empty trash sacks and clean out cars and drop all kinds of debris there. Its like living In toe city dump. It Isnt the owners that cause the ness, but people. However, isnt it toe owners responsibility to keep it clean. Any help yon could give would L. N., Salt Lake City. be appreciated. place looks like The ow ner of this property has a contractor who has responsibility to clean and maintain this area at all times. As his of now a notice has been issued to the owrer requesting full cooperation in maintaining this lot clear of objectionable material daily. It would help, too, if thoughtless people, would have consideration for others. (Iduon Notti wrr tarry the number ot calw and Aia vatuma at mall M newer avarv nuetllen. make II Impa-.lb- ia Plena, no medical ar Weal auetliene. Den I eend tlemet ar eiivtlopet at amwar can al the hourt prater Sad, Oive year name, addrau and telephene nurn bar only ba ecven In thli column. Only ajetHone at general Intwett will bo bniwered ana telephone caltt can ba accaatad anly an Hit De-l- t Mas phone net lor publication but to help Da-- It Map help you.) B-- 2 B 8 4 5 6, 7 |