HISTORY OF I HI COMMITTEE ON SCIEN< I WD TECHNOLOGY 



XVIII. Shootout at Clinch River— Continued p age 



Lobbying the White House 871 



Teague's angry reaction to veto 871 



Brown praises veto 872 



The CRBR get a supplemental transfusion .... 873 



To breed or not to breed 874 



Flowers calls on the President 875 



The seeds of compromise 875 



The negotiations intensify 878 



President promises to visit Oak Ridge 878 



'The President is calling " 879 



Fuqua urges compromise sso 



Congressional critics of the CRBR 881 



A fateful meeting with utility representatives . . 882 



To terminate or not to terminate *S} 



Slugging the referee 883 



Roc moves to table 885 



Mrs. Lloyd's amendment prevails ^S6 



Arranging a meeting with the President 887 



Moving off dead center 887 



The split among three camps 888 



The summit meeting on June 14 ^ s 9 



July 14 — day of decision 890 



The stories about a "deal" 892 



The 1979 fight over the CRBR 893 



The 1979 compromise fails 894 



Nuclear research and oversight 895 



Nuclear briefings s 96 



Funding nuclear programs 897 



Nuclear waste management 897 



McCormack subcommittee in 1979 899 



Effects of Three Mile Island 901 



XIX. Advanced Energy Technologies 903 



Jurisdiction 904 



Areas of emphasis 904 



Let's get moving 905 



Goldwater cautions fiscal responsibility 906 



Who has asked you to go slower? 907 



More emphasis on conservation 908 



House adds $50 million for solar energy 909 



Needed: More aggressive management 910 



ERDA too cautious and leisurely sounding . . . 911 



The initiative on electric vehicles 911 



Ottingcr joins in 912 



