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Show Our Phorie Numbers Heat Fades -5- 24-4400 Sunny through Thursday. Daytime highs in the mid 80s. Lows tonight in the mid 50s. Details, weather map on Page -5- 24-2840 24-4445 -5- 24-4448 521-353- C-- 3. VOL. 37 2 NO. News, News Tips Home Delivery Information Sports Scores Classified Ads Only 5 Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 7 6 5 2 10c PAGES, MOUNTAIN THE WEST'S ' FIRST NEWSPAPER '' v , J- , S' ' C'. ; ' ' M V tV ' S ! L Job Health, Safety Plan s V 'S'' VI Dw mi eral health and safety standards for industries . and businesses to combat needless illness, needless injury and needless death By NORMAN KEMPSTER WASHINGTON (UPI) The Nixon Administration is worried the tax reform bill about to be passed by the House will retard efforts to control inflation because it would cost the treasury $2 billion more than it would bring in. , But a high official told UPI the administration has not yet de- resulting from occupa tional accidents and dis- ease. In a special message to the House and Senate, the Backers WASHINGTON -S(AT) upporters of the Safeguard antiballistic missile (ABM) system appeared increasingly confident today as the Senate headed towards an expected photo finish on the long and re- . The legislation would authorize the states to adopt their own health and safety regulations if they were at least as tough as the federal standards. The federal law would continue to apply in states not producing approved plans. : Few people realize . the extent of needless illness, needless injury and needless death which results from unsafe or unhealthy working Mansfield of Montana declined to predict the outcome but said the vote on the Cooper - Hart amendment would mark the high water point of the move to block the ABM. The battle will go on, but there will be a receding of the tide, Mansfield , conditions, - -- . Albert Coenen, Antwerp, Belgium, left, presents award to Genealogical ety's vice president. Elder Theodore M. Burton, for records program. y.. MIAMI (UPI) Lights on early today for All of the two million persons blacked out Tuesday night when a huge Florida Power and Light Co. Boiler exploded and ripped apart. Company officials said the failure which began at 6:12 p.m. Tuesday, stretched south Into the Florida Keys and reached as' far north as Palm -- hold- .. v By DELOS SMITH job. WORLD RECORDS CONFERENCE The tax bill, when fully ef- fective, would produce $7 billion in new revenue by closing some loopholes and reducing some preferences. But this would be more than offset by tax relief to the poor, a re- -' duced ceiling on high bracket earned income, a general reduction in income tax rates and other cuts. These provi- sions would cost the treasury f i . . NEW YORK (UPI) four " have Soviet scientists to their Western col- leagues a bold and promising experiment with that inevita-- 1 bly lethal scourge of children, ,.By DOUGLAS world.- PALMER-- ' Deseret News Staff Writer librarian", historians, genealogists and newspaper men make up an indissoluble alliance absolutely vital to the new world in Archivists, which we are living, Lord Roy H. Thomson of Fleet, owner of 'a vast communications empire, told the World Conference on. Records today; r The British press lord addressed the second general assembly of the conference, sponsored by the Genealogical Society, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y the Salt Palace. Saints, in - Sessions continue through Friday evening. Tuesday evening a' sparkling production was staged by Brigham Young University. It featured the International Folk Dancers and a variety show. This evening at 7:30 p.m. the Utah Symphony Orchestra will present its first concert in the Palace arena, and on Thursday night the Mormon Tabern&deCholr will present a concert in the Tabernacle. Both events are open to the public. Tickets are neces... sary for the symphony. This mornings general assembly, conducted by Bob R. Zabriskie, conference coordinator, also featured an by Elder Howard W. Hunter of the Council of the See MAGNATE on Page 4 -- A-- , acute leukemia The experimental subjects were. 12 children ii) the advanced stages of this blood cancer. They were paired and ' live leukemia cells taken from each member of each pair. i $9 billion. were injected into the pair-mat' ' :V , The administration likes the J.,' bill J in general including ' The idea was to stimulate' most of the tax relief-b- ut it their defensive ' chemistries thinks the battle against inflaagainst the injected cells. The tion could go either way and a hope was that enough of this defensive activfew billion dollars cpuld be decisive. ity would be left over to attack their own leukemia, COOLNG OFF cells. ' This official, one of the The risk was that defensive Presidents top economic ad- chemistries would be indiffervisers, voiced confidence that ent to the stimulation. the economy will cool noticeaIn that case the injected bly by fall despite, the fact cells would proliferate and most current economic indica- hasten death. But it seemed to tors point to further price in--, , work,- the Russians told West- ' i 1 era cancer scientists. creases. . V;. in cells of leukemia Levels He said the stock market blood dropped peripheral decline has wiped out some of from 40 to 89 per cent to from the purchasing power of inzero to 10 per cent Eight of devestors, retail sales have children have been in clined slightly, unemployment the remission from their dis- rate and real is up a bit the ease for more than six of growth of die Gross Nationmonths. al Product has slowed. In cancer science any imIf the slowdown does not provement in the leukemic ( materialize, he said, the condition is called a remisadministration will at- sion, since it is incurable. Three of the eight children tempt deep new cuts in federal spending in an effort to went into complete remisincrease die sion, meaning leukemic cells federal budget surplus. He disappeared entirely from the said stronger measures, such peripheral blood. American cancer scientists as an additional tax boost, would be avoided if possible. queried by. United Press . i . He was introduced by E. Earl Hawkes, publisher of the Deseret News'. - , i Nearly 7,u00 persons are now registered for the conference. Thomson, who arrived Sunday in Salt Lake City, is one of some 280 guest speakers and lecturers at the conference which has drawn delegates from throughout the , : The Labor Department said the bill marked the first time that efforts to prevent occupation - related illness had been given the same emphasis as campaigns against accidents. Nixon, noting that most current enforcement of health and safety regulations rests with the individual states, told PASADENA. CALIF. (AP) Congress: . Mariner 7 streaked into diThe scope and effective- stant orbit around the sun ness of state laws and state today after televising the first administration varies widely closeup of the Martian south a region loaded with and discrepancies " hr the pole, of state surprises ranging from footpriperformance craters to what appear to be nt-shaped programs : . looked like deep drifts of increasing. snow. Moveover, some states are fearful that stricter standards One scientist said of the picwill place them at a disadvantures, taken as the tage with other states. spacecraft swept within 2,000 miles of the planet: 3 TOP PROGRAMS Labor Department officials We may be looking at New said three states baby pictures of earth. This is what the. earth might have York, Pennsylvania and Calihave outstanding looked like some four billion fornia programs In this field. years ago before it developed Presumably other states an atmosphere and oceans to weather its surface and nurwould have to upgrade their activities if they hoped to ture life. avoid application of the federThe scientist was Dr. Robal law. ert Sharp, California Institute WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States, Britain and France will officially inform the Soviet Union within the next few days that they wish to open talks on improvement of the Berlin situation, the State Department said today. A department official said West Germany and the three Western powers have agreed on the contents of a note and the njatter wil go forward within the next few days. The allied move was prompted by the July 10 statement of Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko' that the Kremlin was now ready to discuss how to prevent complications on West Berlin now and in the future. ; . . : A-- INSIDE THE , d ' , geologist, one of a team of experts analyzing the photographs as they streamed across 60 million mires to monitors at Jet Propulsion Laboratory Tuesday night. One of the most striking pictues showed two irregular of Technology Todays Thought An acre of performance is worth the whole world of promise. James Howell , craters, many miles across 2 t 1 l NEWS , - Western Bloc Wants Berlin Talks Open International were impressed though mindful that remisare not sions in leukemia uncommon. They are some- -. times produced with drugs and they occur spontaneously.' remissions N e y ertheless brought about by immunologi cal means are promising and should greatly stimulate sci- entific interest in the immu-'- T nologic approach to cancer id general and leukemia in paiv ticular, these scientists said. This approach Was once See LEUKEMIA on Page 2 , ' 5 t Soci-V-- SECTION A 8. 9, 12 National, Foreign : 10, 1J Editorial Pages 11 Our Man In Washington 41 Oqr Man Jones 1-- Music 11 Womens. Pages 1315 SECTION B -- 1, City, Regional Comics 1 2 Theater 13-1- 5 SECTION .1, C City, Regional Obituaries Weather Map -- 1. 212. 3 .13 -i-- Action Ads 1 SECTION D 8 Sports 9 10, 11 TV Highlights Financial SECTION K , 8 :: - rt -1-- section s 11-- 4 Skaggs , Mariner Flashes Final Mars Photo Plunged In Darkness came Officials said they believed the failure was caused entirely by the explosion at the isolated Cutler Ridge power station in rural Dade County. Fire fighting units had the fire under control within 60 minutes and some power was restored within 90 minutes. Fred Brown, assistant plant engineer at Cutler Ridge, said the explosion may have re' sulted from an overload caused by a failure at another power plant. Officials later ienied this. The official,' who dicussed the matter with the understanding he would not be identified, said the program is beginning to produce results but that it must have a strong surplus in the federal budget to do the I Nixon said in his message., Every year in thii country seme 14,000 deaths can be attributed to work related . injuries or illnesses. "It i.; interesting' to note that in the last five years, the number of man days lost because of work related injuries has been 10 times the number lost because of strikes. SAME EMPHASIS 2 Million ' NEEDS SURPLUS n ADOPT OWN Mike pro- posed tax relief. con-sens- , search. Mrs. Smith, who has introduced an amendment barring further research, testing and procurement of the ABM and its components, remained silent on her Cooper-Har- t amendment intentions, f Senate Democratic Leader Beach County an area ing a third of the states population. All of our customers are back on and the system is operating normally, said Gene Autrey, FP&L vice president. revenue or reducing the - Nixon Under the occupational safety and health bill being prepared by the Labor De- prti imeut, the board would set forth and begin enforcing its standards on July 1, 1972. The board would be directed to look first to national standards, already established by hundreds of voluntary industry, labor and other organizations. It would be authorized to break new ground if consensus standards did not exist in an area the board deemed important. ' Violation of the standards would be subject to a civil penalty of up to $10,000. And the ' board, headed by a $40,000-a-- y e a r c h a irman, would be authorized to blacklist employers from government contracts for up to three years. used similar totals earlier, they were less positive then. Jackson also speculated t.jat Sen. Margeret Chase who cast a Smith, note of feminine mystery into the final day of the ABM debate would line up against the key amendment, by Sens. John Sherman Cooper, and Philip A. Hart,.D-Mich- r, because it would permit a said. Both Jackson, and Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr., launching the final hours of debate before the late afternoon vote, noted that the Smith amendment w'ould give opponents an opportunity to vote against the entire ABM system. Byrd said senators who agree with Mrs. Smith should oppose the Cooper - Hart amendment since it would continue ABM research. either by increasing the START IN 72 and John G. Tower, said they are sure a key amendment to block Safeguard , deployment will be defeated 51 to 49. While they of ABM cided if it will risk the political consequences of asking the Senate to bring the measure into balance stressed that the program would seek state cooperation, the plan would mark the first extensive federal action in the field of job health and safety. Although often heated controversy. Sen. Henry M. Jackson, continuotion f--- ,. President requested creation of a board to establish the standards, which would be enforced through the courts on complaints brought by federal and state inspectors. Confident pfiglhift Ilmifc&mi 4l .WASHINGTON (UFI) President Nixon asked Congress today to authorize fed- c 1969 ? Nixon Asks ' AUGUST 6, WEDNESDAY, -- y4 h 'JO 4- 1 - and barely overlappbg each other. Dr. Robert Leighton, Cal Tech astronomer, jokingly de- scribed them as a footprint the first evidence of life on Mars. The footprint was in ice or snow drifted surprisingly deep. Scientists had believed the south polar cap was a little thicker than frost but the pictures showed it piled up in vast dunes and pocked with deep steeply walled craters. Leighton said this indicated the snow was probably frozen carbon dioxide dry ice because there wasnt enough water on Mars to make that much real snow. The pictures showed the polar cap heavily pocked with craters arid much darker than the desert regions to the north, as plowed ground looks darker than surrounding ii ' s V St M' . fields. As Mariner 7 moved on over the polar cap it photographed rippling lines reminiscent of snow or flowing glaciers seen in aerial photographs. wind-drive- AB n BhM Ubjr Who's been walking around on my planet? Two oblique craters on Mars' polar cap form a "giant's footprint." i ? . - a f; v |