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Show Ktul.iv.. lur..-2- Utah-Region- al - i L'PI i A would-bhit man testified in the trial of Marc Schreuder that he duped the defendant's mother into giving him $5,000 in 1977, so he could pay his debts. Myles Manning testified Thursday in the murder trial that on their third meeting. Frances Bernice Schreuder gave him $5,000, a picture of her father, a map to his Salt Lake auto parts warehouse and instructions on how and when to kill him. The New York socialite and her 21- e e matter-of-facti- y first-degre- e son are each charged with year-olcapital homicide in the July 23. 1978 shooting death of her father. Salt Lake millionaire Franklin James Bradshaw She is lighting extradition The prosecution contends that Mrs Schreuder dispatched her son then 17 to kill his grandfather after the "hit man" she hired failed to do the job. He said the two were afraid of being cut out of the old man s will Also testifying Thursday was Mrs Schreuder's sister. Marilyn Reagan, who denied she offered the state s chief witness a free skiing trip to testifv d - h against her sister and nephew She conceded that she had uttered to pav his and told him of a Slo.uoo reward in the case Bradshaw s widow. Bernice. also testified Thursday From behind large, dark glasses. Mrs Bradshaw told the court ot the "feuding" between Marilyn and Frances Defense attorney Joseph Tesrh to Manning s testimony, claiming it does not relate to the charge against his client Manning testified that Marc was not present during any of the lour meetings with Mrs legal expires, long-tim- e Schreuder nor did she allude to anv complicity bet ween mother and son Manning said he was introduced to Mrs Schreuder by a neighborhood acquaintance. New Yorker Richard Behrenv He said she asked him if he would kill someone tor her llesaid no. but vud he knew someone who would seizing opportunity to get out of debt Manning testified he met with Mrs Schreuder tour times "So you put on your best Jimmy Cagncy act. interacted Tesch. and Jones obiected The printer ignored the remark, and said that during one ot the negotiations she asked him tor names ot some hit men. so he gave her some "made-upnames that sounded like hit men Italian names "Oh. so you gave her some parlor names and then wliat hap pened''" Tesch asked Manning said the arts patron asked him how it would he done T told her it was none ot her busmess," he said, adding that she wanted it to look like an accident or a holdup He asked her for $5 in. which is "wh.it - pia Six Lake Powell Burns Blast Boat r A BULLFROG MARINA. Utah ITI faulty gasoline vent in bilge tank of a boat lead to an explosion that burned five women and one on Lake Powell Thursday The victims, all Salt Lake City residents, were flown to the University of Utah Medical Center. Flood Cause Placed SALT LAKE CITY (L'PI) I : i ,h v.. 5 Hit Man Testifies in Schreuder Case Briefs four-inc- thkiihu; j The latest developments in I'tah and around the Intermountain West Would-B- e SALT LAKE CITY M-- A plugged-u- Center spokesman if-- x said burns Carolyn Robson. 21. hadfJMmf-degreover 13 percent ot her body. Shf w js the onlv one admitted for treatment in Intermountain Burn Unit at the medical center in Salt Lake City the other five all had burns on less than 5 out in Mir gave ow.-- u: :! : .iWh ki;. i h.vkod .l.i'. s 'id her it h.f w iteh.uise hand w.is s t .;. 'W in : "a hc s.nd ,.;.)er daughters. M.u ,l n bii:e have stopped speaking to her 'm'i .nisi' he stood nelnnd Pram es .evi hei gi ,ndso!i i i ( -- Lake Powell, said the Sands identified them as Elizabeth Covey. 20. 30. Judith Roberts. 21. David Sheffield Wendy Woods. 21 and Tamara Jackson. 22 National Park Service official George Phillips, the unit manager of the uplake district ot boaters started its eng::v All Victims Were al'l.fVd (iulfstre.cn the craft had taken foot Marina Bclltrog of .i"..! be .i w Men I t Two weeks ..iter : 'i' t be t,t! 'd t rung in lake her kid and .,.) Am;, I - ! g ,tWelfare oi.' ,: s, d ' I!u '"..in s w i.o'a also 'lie n't in the testitied ir "'. . i tair.iA !...: Ii. is ,u i ..: v, -- riic hi'! bus u'.ir. i percent of their bodies They were treated and released, the spokesman said bii.s b;r; i: Utah Medici! i. tinis 'jiir aho.ird a Hiitiah.Mit Phillips said on !'i gallons ,.t tuel at and to 'fie (enter the when c;vii'd Wis ir Lite I 111 it p drain pipe is now being blamed for Wednesday's flood in Big Cottonwood Canyon. The flood left a deep ravine about 40 feet wide near Solitude ski resort and cost Salt Lake City residents about 10 million gallons of treated water. Forest service officials will work with the owners of Solitude to restore the area. A ski run was badly damaged in the 4 p.m. flood that sent large boulders down the canyon and forced closure of the Big Cottonwood Water Treatment plant for about 10 hours. Officials discovered the drain pipe was plugged with a pole and piece of plastic. They said the small earthen Milk Pond Dam was unable to drain quickly enough, so the water came over the top and eroded the structure. Heavy snowfall this winter also contributed to the demise of the dam, officials said. The water level was much higher than usual and that, plus the plugged drain pipe, sent the water over the top. Utah Income Is Low - SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) Federal statistics income is among the show that Utah's lowest in nation. But as the old saying goes, statistics can be misleading. University of Utah economist Frank Hachman says Utah's unique population makeup indicates a low per capita income, but in reality, Utahns' salaries are on a pair with most other states. Hachman says Utah has the highest percentage of citizens under 18 in the country. The youngsters, who comprise almost 37 percent of the state's population, usually don't work, but they count in the statistics. The government issued a report last month on listing Utah near the bottom of the heap. Only Arkansas Alabama. Mississippi and South Carolina are lower. But, Hachman says, the statistics are arrived at by totaling the incomes of all the people in the state, then dividing by the state's population. per-capi- Cause of Fire Noted - DUNSMUIR. Calif. (UPI) Investigators npw think it was a careless smoker who caused the fire aboard a a sleeper car on Amtrak's southbound Coast Starlight which killed two passengers and injured 60 others. Authorities, meanwhile, identified the elderly woman burned to death in the blaze as Mary Elizabeth Feuchtinger, 87, Los Angeles. Douglas F. Moore. 73 of Idaho, died outside the burning car of smoke inhalation. Five of the injured remain hospitalized for observation after suffering smoke inhalation. A group of investigators assembled from Amtrak, Southern Pacific and several government agencies began examining four cars badly damaged in the early Wednesday fire in the Cascade foothills near Gibson. The cars were later hauled to Dunsmuir. Shasta County Fire Department spokesman Paul Bretagnia said preliminary investigation indicated that somebody smoking In bed had caused the fire. Amtrak spokeswoman Susan Dole noted that the trains do not carry smoke detectors because cigarette smoking would set off alarms. fell IP Fight to Continue - A National MOSCOW. Idaho (UPI) said Women board member for Organization Thursday the fight for women's rights will continue despite the group's admission that the Equal Rights Amendment has been defeated. Betsy Thomas, a Moscow resident who is running for the Idaho House in District 5, said her group will concentrate on electing more women to state legislatures across the nation now that the ERA will apparently not be ratified by the necessary 38 states by the June 30 deadline. And in a few years, the ERA will be Ms. and will probably pass reintroduced Thomas predicted. She said NOW would also step up its campaign to educate Americans on the need for a con- stitutional rights. amendment protecting women's "I think many people still labor under the idea that equal rights in the Constitution is a discussion, and it isn't," Ms. philosophical Thomas said. "Women, and men in some instances, are being hurt daily by the kind of sex discrimination that goes on." Senators Draw Rap - Gov. John Evans says Idaho's BOISE (UPI two Republican senators abandoned the state's best interests when they voted against providing funds in$3 billion in federal housing-subsidcluded in an appropriations bill which was vetoed Thursday by President Reagan. intended to Evans said the legislation 4 to of percent on home up provide subsidies have would loans spurred residenmortgage tial construction across the country, boosting ) r7"herni" . y 'Bras 'X9W ' .. neln protect- - oi5qingdi,ble on ,h . - Idaho's sagging timber industry. Sens. Steve Symms and James McClure voted in a bill which against the subsidies included said the The vetoed president Thursday. Reagan bill would have increased the national debt, favored one industry unfairly over others and set a bad precedent for federal involvement in the private marketplace. ratio stee" nK A1 LWV' . 11 trU -- UISMIL" ate for prison. av tnP'e'.'rr)ba HighwaV 1982 NMC-US- ,re d-- TmSUN -L- h n standard epena' NISSAN taxes. rwiuding charge- Product of NISSAN v |