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Show Monday. Maybe Tuesday Afternoon? - Reported In Boston LPI and attendance reached a Conbei some progress. (L'PI Both sides have been hoping tract talks in the teachers' strike resume tonight in an to settle the dispute before ! 30 pm. Tuesday, when Shanker atmosphere of optimism created by the union's apparent expectation that its remaining differences with city officials can be settled in an hour. A series of meetings and a vote announced Sunday night by the United Federation of Teachers tl'FT) suggested that its members might be back in the schools as early as Tuesday afternoon. kept some 16,000 students out of The UFT said in a statement By United Press International But a strike at New school. executive that its Negotiators for striking New board will meet in Madison York teachers hope their Bedford, Mass., continued and that Square Garden's Felt Forum at walkout can be settled with an the city faced the threat would join 9 p.m.. "either to ratify a hour of bargaining tonight, i see administrators which prospective agreement Of U details elsewhere on wis page I, leadiers iii the Walkout, 18.000 " some affected has teachers the strike reaffirm but striking Chicago The 55,000 teachers went on were preparing for a long students. Other strikes hampered the strike Sept. 9 in protest against standoff. education of 24,000 students in what they termed excessively Schools were closed to New Jersey. 50,600 in Rhode large classes and other unsatis- 530,000 Chicago public school Island, 15,000 in Washington action Their conditions. factory for a ninth class day state and 24,000 in California. halted schooling for the city's pupils today and no new negotiations 1.1 million public school stuwere scheduled between strikafter the fall dents only one-da-y teachers and the school ing term resumed. board. NEW YORK Other Stales, sentiment, unemployed teacher vkho as guided by said he "superrwturai forces" fought off a museum gizri Sunday An tension slackened at the start of the second week of a stepped up program to integrate public Too 1st Family schools by busing. It appeared a white boycott I'Dliee said the suspect Wilnemus Adrianus de Kijk. 38. a former mental patient arrived soon after the Amsterdam's state museum, opened for the day 'A man showed up in front of the painting who looked like any normal visitor to the guard." van Thiel said "'SudWASHINGTON tUPIi -l- denly he pulled out a big knife iberty, the First Family's and started slashing away at dog, produced nine puppies in the luwer part of the large little less than eight hours canvas " Sunday on the third floor of the lie said the suspect slashed White House. the painting again and again, , a gulden feuievtT fighting off a museum guard sent to Oregon in July for and a visitor before finally mating, had five males and being subdued by a stranfour females in a process that glehold. A witness counted 13 vertical began with the delivery of a male pup at 12 30 p m. and tears, some almost three feet ended 8:17 p m with the birth long He said a triangular piece of canvas, measuring three by ofafemale. trouble and with a noticable decrease of visible police presence at Charlestown. Officials said attendance at South Boston High School reached 603. That's up 100 from Friday, including a hike of 81 whiles, nine blacks and 10 others. The entire South Boston iii fepofitd repairs. Dog Has 9 Puppies of classes cracked somewhat as school got underway w uhuut complex Night and ripped the painting more than a dozen times ith a knife, pohcesaid Pirter van Ttuel, deputy director at the Rijksmuseum. said the paintir.g was senouy damaged but restorers could fu the slashes m about four munihs He said only experts would be able to detect the . 1 1 Clemency Program Ends Today WASHINGTON -iL'PI) After one year, the clemency program for Vietnam war resisters ends today. The man who ran it says he is pleased with the program, but many of those it most affected are not satisfied. (See related Utah story p 6). Chicago Teachers- - Union President Robert Healey said chances of a settlement look so bleak that teachers will start alternate schools and field trips for the youngsters this week. "We had been working on this idea in case we had a long strike, which we didn't anticipate," he said. "But we are now preparing for a long road." the Negotiations between Chicago Teachers Union and the school board broke off Sunday with no time set for resumption. School Supt. Joseph Hannon, in his strongest statement yet, said he will ask the board to seek a court order if the walkout doesn't end soon. The two major unresolved issues in Chicago were salaries and class size. There was one bright spot for UY WOLFE'S CHARGE MASTER CHARGE fromFriday. said de Rijk had a history of mental ..instability and had txen a patient at a nwiul hospital A museum sp.esnian said .the susp-c- t lost a teaching job fjr being medically unfit Pylice said the suspect told uffioer he fell an "irresistible urge" to attack the painting" arid had htrn forced to act by " supernatural forces I did not attack a human." the suspect as quuted as It was a painting 1 saying had to doit " sides concede the program failed to reach vast numbers of young men who found themselves in legal jeopardy because of the war. BAKXARD presidential pardon if they had convictions. Almost before the ink was dry on Ford's proclamation, most amnesty proponents said the program was "punitive" and the major exile organization abroad were calling for a boycott of the Ford program while continuing to demand universal and unconditional amnesty "We feel that we did a good job," Goodell said. "Our intentions were good and everyone who came through here got a fair shake. We did a service for these people. " It was the second attack the painting, which was ciU-tein 1642 A mentally aaiast ill- -, unemployed shoemaker scratched the work with pocket knife in litS II0f.it FUiffllSIIUlGS QUALITY zcth & rca't.v. 1X3 stuso, tuctc cr.if, o'Ktui & cnirrr, rami imrut&im xcimutt AK3 UtAttA APPLIANCES JOHIi PAIiAS FUnillTUnE 560 K3. - STATE, CiX'.T 224-15- 21 nnn U wwwVSwW FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 10 AM TO 9 PM SATURDAYS 10 AM TO 6 PM m$$M && EXPRESS 2 B 6 DAY! SEPT. 19th & 20th Chicago. City College teachers, on strike since Aug. 25, returned to classes today after their union's governing body approved a contract agreement reached Sunday. Union Norman President h Swenson was given a prison term last week because the union defied a court order to return to work. He was f reed during each day of negotiations to represent the union in talks but has had to return to jail each night. He remained in prison today. five-mont- - in 10 u door prizes DRAWINGS mu first puceH.000.00 P.M. -5 PUPPY RIFLE AMMO AT 220 SWIFT U6.S.4S 22-25REM. 0 IC.1.70 DRAWING AT 5 P.M. MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN Mass., teachers accepted a new contract and returned to their classrooms today, ending a strike that had .... MC.T.OS 10 A35 W ................... 243 WIN. ............. ..... ..... WtM. 25-2- 0 Lynn, WINCHESTER licnu'tgion. BROVfJIIlG ICEIIIIIL LABRADOR RETRIEVER 584 BOO tlC.7.4S 25-0- 6 MC.7.70 REM. MAG. HC.I1.IS busing has been lifted in Louisville. Two antibusing groups promptly called rallies for today, the start of the second full week of busing in the Louisville-JeffersoCounty school system. Last week was relatively free of demonstrations following a weekend of mass protests, but about 20,000 students boycotted classes. The continued presence of National Guardsmen helped police maintain the safety of the children. Independent Taxpayers and Parents obtained a parade I permit for a "Death of Freedom" march downtown .Another group, Concerned Pa rents, Inc.. har booked the t Freedom Hall. The Kentucky chapter of the I K'j Klux Klan staged a cross- burning and rally in Bullitt! County, just south of Louisville. Saturday night About 1,500 heard exhortations to continue court-ordere- d n REG. 127.95 0 CARBINE 99 95 Amenta s tiijst Otter iille its tas! smooth levet a; m delivers Pit's pertuimanct WrteJ lot hunting tjst. moving heaviei jaTie has micro ynovet iijnng tor bettei accuracy S'ds etertiori;. dniied and tapped in? to scope mount Genuine American Walnut stock :i 0 aicf.ts 30-0- KRAG C19 Jt OS 300 H&H 10 OS A11 264 &S7 WIM MAG. 270WIM. C 19 tIS.7.70 280 REM. E31 nci.os CI6 ..........3 WE WILL HAVE A FEW W .............................. A78 HARD TO FliiD MAGNUM M.78 O mcio.os 8MM MAUSER C 3S tte.7.o 32WIN.SPL. tIC 10 375 H&H tlC.ll.S0 45-7GOV. tic t so 30-3- 0 342o HAND GUNS FOR THE 787 GUN SHOW M 181" 207" .240 19 .357 MAG. S" .357 1 MAG. V'i" . . . ..115" 10 M 28 .357 MAC. "s mm k HOT DOGS rnrr (JDC 176' SuoWjf COKE S- SPRITE Price inciudes SiW Hunting Knives is very Limited m rWjf in (or your S4ction SHOTSKELL 10 or -- W!N. 12 W BELOW A DEALER DOCKS PHliSAHT. 20 Bl 12 GA. EXPRESS 20 GA. EXPRESS cm 12GA.3iN.MAG. .. 2flGA.3IN.MAG 17,000-sea- their fight against busing in the city and county school system. court-ordere- d I NUMBER 1290 South State, Orem 225-950- 0 SSW A17 1 A AA lSOGfLjS AND L0;;G BARRELED 9C7$ 0 CUSTOM AMMO A MOB 3C37 6 tIC. OFFER GOOD GH1Y IN OREM STORE 9C19 ......... tIC. 7 6.5 CARCANO IE6.0.7S 30-3- ... .... 308WN 30-4- $100.00 tmcwtificM ..3 30.30WSN. 300WSM.MAG. tico.os Lever-Acti- on C3I 300 SAV. tic. 0.09 (UPIl -- 7 MM MAUSER C 19 6.S JAP Ban Listed LOUISVILLE, Ky. RtM. THIRD PLACE A O tIC. 7.70 $300.00 PLACE bft ttttiuto KG.t.SS tIC. 7.70 6.5 Gathering 7MMREM. MAG tlC.t.01 9S7 UtttrWicati SE BELOW DEALER COST MC.7.M M77 &67 100 250 SAVAGE ifc.7s 247 ROBERTS tIC. Louisville wmm for DIG BUCK C0I1TES' GRAriD PRIZE A ban on peaceful demonstrations in connection with school PRE REGISTER HOW P.M.; SATURDAY officials said negotiations could resume if a "substantial" number of teachers returned to work, allowing classes to continue regularly for 14,200 students. m u ru v WILL BE HELD 12 H00N, FRIDAY Both Ford said when he announced the program Sept. 16, 1974, that its "primary purpose" was the "reconciliation ... and restoration of essential unity of Americans." The latest preliminary statistics show the Clemency Board received about 16,500 applications from an estimated potential of about 100,000. Draft dodgers and deserters, including many who went to Canada and Europe and still have not been indicted, were eligible to apply for generally public service-typ- e civilian jobs. After serving for up to two years, but usually after only a few months, they would avoid prosecution or would receive a .;'.- REPRESENTATIVES back-to-wor- completely failed in all areas," said Warren Hoover, executive director of the National Interreligious Service Board for Conscientious Objectors. "Less than 20 per cent of the people eligible applied and many of them have since dropped out." con- SHOP l, has Uijuv.y rueh reflects trasting shades of light, shows a company of guards turning out for duty under heir officers WEEKDAYS WITH FACTORY k program fei The painu.ig. Pokee said the suspect took the knife (rom a restaurant. AMERICARD nun tai if nrrr liHHI MitU IHUt back-to-wor- k 7 age Rfnibrandt's genius for YOUR WALKER AMERICAN Teachers' strikes continued states today, affecting nearly two million children. A weekend settlement was President Ford scheduled a reached in Huntington. Pa., late afternoon farewell meeting where teachers returned to work today, ending a three-weewith the Clemency strike But strikes in 24 Board, which was to present its other Pennsylvania districts final batch of recommendaaffected some 150,000 students. tions. Wilmington, Del., teachers Its chairman, Charles were warned to return to work said, "We're quite pleased today or face possible arrest with the work the board has for defiance of a court's k done." order. School board Goo-del- USI BANK Utah-P- TV painting, measuring 11 feet inches by 14 feet 4"i inches, was the largest and one of the most famous works by the 17th century Dutch master. inches, fei i to the f iuur Liut-ily- attendance increase of 151 over Friday, including 1 17 whites. Attendance at Charlestown was 475, including 355 w hites, 98 blacks and 22 others. It represented an increase of 71 w life My A WAY OR HERALD, Provo, lilKe negotiations, recessed Sunday afternoon for the Yom Kippur holiday, are to resume at I p.m. A UFT spokesman said the two sides are so close to agreement that an hour may be enough to clear up the remaining details. The UFT announced also that its delegate assembly, with chapter chairmen from the city's 950 schools, will meet in the Felt Forum at midnight tonight, after which the hall will remain open through the night until 11 a m. Tuesday to give the union's members a chance to vote. Representatives of the union and the Board of Education talked informally at the Plaza Hotel through most of the day Sunday. When the meetings recessed for the holiday shortly before 4 p.m., UFT President Albert Shunker said "there's "The as 'The masterpiece, Watch;' n, Chicago Teacher Picture Still Dim Formal AMSTERDAM, UV NetherMuseum il'PIi experts say .il will take months of delicate repair work to patch up the slashes m Rembrandt's lands BOSTON ( ) Biack white high for the school year today in South Boston and Charles-towbastions of anubusing faces a court appearance that might result in his being jailed for defying a court order to send She tf achers back to ark THE 1975', Rembrandt Masterpiece Slashed No Trouble Hope. Rise for End Of New York Strike Stptembrr'tf. IN SPORTS! COST 2" 3" 3" .5" 4" |