Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 84 Part 1.djvu/357

 84 STAT. ]

PUBLIC LAW 91-273-JUNE 2, 1970

299

Public Law 91-273 AN ACT To authorize appropriations to the Atomic Energy Coniniission in accordance with section 261 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and for other purposes.

June 2, 1970 [ ^ 3818] ^

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Atomic Energy United States of America in Congress assembled, Commission. SEC. 101. There is hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Appropriation Atomic Energy Commission in accordance with the provisions of authorization. section 261 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended: 77 stau 42 USC 2017,, (a) For "Operating expenses", $2,013,37,0, not to exceed $119,450,000 in operating costs for the High P^nergy Physics program category. (b) For "Plant and capital equipment", including construction, acquisition, or modification of facilities, including land acquisition; and acquisition and fabrication of capital equipment not related to construction, a sum of dollars equal to the total of the following: (1) SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIALS.—

Project 7 l - l - a, contaminated storm water runofi' control facilities, Savannah River, South Carolina, $900,000. Project 7 l - l - b, in-tank waste solidification systems, Richland, Washington, $6,300,000. Project 71-1-c, storage and waste transfer facilities, Richland, Washington, $1,700,000. Project 71-1-d, radioactive contamination control improvements, National Reactor Testing Station, Idaho, $1,400,000. Project 7 l - l - e, gaseous diifusion production support facilities, $14,700,000. Project 71-1-f, process equipment modifications, gaseous diffusion plants, $6,400,000. (2) ATOMIC WEAPONS.—

Project 71-2-a, weapons production, development and test installations, $10,000,000. (3) REACTORDEVEI>OPMENT.—

Project 71-3-a, modifications to reactors, $2,000,000. Project 71-3-b, research and development test plants. Project Rover, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, New Mexico, and Nevada Test Site, Nevada, $1,000,000. Project 71-3-c, modifications to E B R - II and related facilities. National Reactor Testing Station, Idaho, $2,000,000. (4) PHYSICAL RESEARCIL—

Project 71-4-a, accelerator improvements, zero gradient synchrotron, Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois, $900,000. Project 71-4-b, accelerator and reactor additions and modifications, Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, $925,000. Project 71-4-c, accelerator improvements, Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Berkeley, California, $825,000. Project 71-4-d, accelerator improvements, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, C'alifornia, $950,000. Project 7l-4-e, accelerator improvements, medium and low energy physics, $400,000. (5) BiOLO(iY AND MEDICINE.—

Project 71-5-a, addition to physics building (human radiobiology facility), Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois, $2,000,000. (6) TRAINING, EDUCATION AND INFORMATION.—

Project 71-6-a, National Nuclear Science Information Center ( A E only), Oak Ridge, Tennessee, $600,000. (7) GENERAL P L A N T PROJECTS.—$42,000,000.

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