Show Lr Ogden Standard-Examine- Tuesday r January 5A 1976 6 WINTER KILL SPECTER W Associated Press HEW YORKS GREAT FIRES CF 1835 AMD 1845 RUINED MOST OF THE CITY'S r--c -- ' David ' in both tires cims TOTALED LESS THAN ( V 1 V' ' '& k ' 1I f 1 Garrick 1(017-177- Sf" M) 9) ENGLISH k ACTOR AND t THEATRICAL manager Fu f WAS THE a School Superintendent beginning” meeting MAN ACER TO K STONE Ritchie said the board Pittsburgh’s teachers are Douglas 5 DISCONTINUE SHAPED of discuss would the possibility THE PRACTICE L ivOR A asking for raises of between orto court a REDUCED OF seeking injunction boot $2700 and $6000 by next year der teachers back to work FEES TO Submitted by The board has offered an PATRONS Board members would not comShane Fjzzio d raise of $1200 WHO ARRIVED Loveland ment after the private meeting next Colo January The teachers Striking teachers in Pitts- by now between $8700 and receive LEFT burgh ignored a EARLY a year order Monday and school offi- $16700 The Madison strike — the Cri to court seeking a cials went first ever there — halted contempt judgment Allegheny classes for about 30700 pupils County Judge Donald Zeigler in 47 schools About 300 of the on the Saturday granted board’s request for a tempora- district’s 1900 teachers and 75 per cent of the students crossed ry injunction against the picket lines Monday but the strike board canceled classes because INJUNCTION DEFIED there were not enough teachZeigler rather than grant the ers Inc is Madison Teachers contempt request at once orI dered four hours of talks Mon- asking that base pay be raised from $8800 to $9600 by August day night and a 9:30 am-ll:3- 0 session The board is offering $9000 for today PROVIDENCE RI (AP)—f “Whatever I’ve ask of him pm How does reputed New England he’s done it” Miss Boucher crime boss Raymond Patriarca (said “He’s completely coopera- FIRST Back Running Things? Mobster Parolee Says No Feds Assert rk five-week-o- ld (AP) — A snow J a- & 4 across-the-boar- back-to-wo- However it was considered’ purchases of grain in the West too Soviet early to predict a bad 1976 'much of it from the United shortage threatens the harvest troubles new Union with crop (States and Canada But accord- on top of its worst grain hara Pr° ' Winter kill is a to latest information ’ those vest in a decade last year lem for Soviet agriculture On ing will account for only The agriculture newspaper the average 15 to 17 per cent Purchases 30 million metric tons to Rural Life reported today that of the grain planted in the fall about help make up the protective snow mantle fails to survive from to shield conceded needed The Soviets have seedlings killing frost was lacking in directly that they harvested many parts of the country only about 137 million tons of With cold weather moving in grain last year nearly 80 milthe threat of winter kill to lion tons under the target in the five-yeplanted grain increased plan and the worst The newspaper said snow harvest since the 1211 million cover had “completely dis- metric tons harvested in 1965 appeared in Byelorussia the The harvest disaster rocked Baltic republics and almost the the economy and forced the whole Ukraine” as well as government to set lower target parts of the Russian Feder- growth rates for 1976 especialation ly for consumer goods In some of the snowless MEAT PROBLEM areas temperatures dropped also is a shortage of There the past few days to around feed grains and some large four below zero Fahrenheit scale slaughtering of beef aniPROBLEMS SHOWING mals and poultry — at a time “I think they have some when the Soviet Union says it is problems” said one Western tryin to put more meat and expert who pointed out that in meat products on its people’s MOSCOW 14-ho- ur flRE-lUSURAN- COMPANIES— YET THE The strike has closed 104 A judge has ordered Pitts- schools and left 62000 pupils burgh’s school board and strik- out of class The school board ing teachers to negotiate for 18 had said classes would resume hours — including a Monday under the injunction session today — before he will but the defiance of teachers decide whether the teachers kept the schools closed aFe in contempt of court At a rally that drew 2200 In Madison Wis meanwhile teachers Pittsburgh Federation the school board met late Mon- of Teachers president Albert day night after the first day of “This said strike is just teachers’ strike Before the Fondy : il - '4 & awse-- ' “bubbles” is SEEING La-Ver- ne job An analytical chemist he inRuhberg’s spects a crystal structure model used in research at Dow Chemical's Midland Mich laboratories ar many areas the winter grains tables got off to a poor start because The Soviet Union was forced of dry weather again last year to make big spend his time while on parole? the straight and narrow says the parolee Running the mob says the government from released Patriarca a almost year ago says prison “At my age all I want is to be left alone to live out my life” But federal crime officials Patricontend the arca still wields control of racketeering in such cities as Boston Worcester Mass Portland Maine and Providence “I have no reason to change my opinion that he is running ECnC‘eS’ shV?ld e the show” US Ally Lincota! C Almond said “He has the) Anl‘there yV dJbet-samcr ca lc had1 influence he area of here PDQ” during his incarceration” Patriarca who has a crimiLEGAL RESTRICTIONS nal record stretching back 49 But federal crime officials yeais was granted parole m citing legal restrictions on what December 1974 after servir sentence they can say declined to be four years of a to murder conspiracy specific about Patriarca’s Rudolph Marfeo in 1963 leged underworld activities Patriarca reached by teleHEALTH PROBLEMS phone Monday at his The parole board noted Patri-W- n vending machine comrmw‘arca’s 91 health as the reason w pany said he has him from the for tight supervision since his re- Adult releasing Correctional Institutions lease last Jan 9 and referred in Cranston He claims to suf-fquestions about his behavior to from diabetes and a heart his parole officer the!condition' “I’m the only person in state of Rhode Island who has! Patriarca’s parole was sharp-t- o report where they are every ly criticized by federal crime 21 hours” he said “I’ve been officials They warned that his con-o- f working hard and staying out freedom could enhance his rackof and loan itrol gambling trouble” ets off and could touch wave a Parole officer Eleanor F Boucher agreed that Patriarca °t gangland unrest has been a “model parolee” Within three months of Patriand called him the most coop- arca’s release two gangland erative and least troublesome slayings were reported in New of the 100 parolees she keeps England but no indictments have resulted from the killings tabs on t van W’alking 10-ye- O ar al-if- or Coin-O-Mat- ic er EARLY INDICATORS opefuls Flocking Fo Iowa for Early reancT Caucuses votes at the Democratic convention 36 at the Republican He said the strong showing of rank and file support in the Iowa precinct caucuses four years ago helped push Sen George McGovern of South grassroots precinct caucuses Democrats and Republicans in Dakota to the forefront Iowa meet in 2600 caucuses nationally on his way to the 1972 Jan 19 to begin picking delepresidential gates to the national political nomination conventions who will help choose Tom Stoner the Republican the parties’ nominees state chairman said it’s his As the earliest of such meet- impresison that President Ford ings they have attracted na- has the edge in Iowa right now tionwide interest and extensive over former California Gov campaigning — unusual for so Ronald Reagan even though early in a state which has no Reagan has a “home town presidential preference primary flavor” to his appeal because he Five other states— Hawaii on once was a radio sportscaster in March 9 then Arizona Con-- n Des Moines Democrats— former Louisiana and Six ecticut Delaware — will pick their Georgia Gov Jimmy Carter delegates in caucuses Twenty-eig- Arizona Rep Morris Udall states and the District of Indiana Sen Birch Bayh forSen Free Oklahoma Columbia have primaries and mer 1972 at vice Harris rest the presidentia pick delegates candidate Sargent Shriver and conventions Washington Sen Henry INDICATORS DES MOINES Iowa (API-- Six of the 10 announced candidates for the Demicratic presidential nomination have been doing extensive campaigning in Iowa site of the first of the f I - ? 4 Democratic ht FIRST Whitney Democratic state Tom Jackson — annual yield) annual yield) when you leave your funds 2 years or more £ Qf (921 effective annual yield ) at the end of 4 years After that you decide how long to save without any penalty for early withdrawal If you continue to save you receive an extra bonus Now celebrating 50 years of service in Utah 00 Effective annual yield: Original funds plus earnings left for the period stated Plus these and other valuable FREE gifts for saving: $10000 or more DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO spent Iowa’s siderable time have in Iowa so far con- chairman LESS ACTIVE his state in caucuses the said Sen interest national Lloyd Bentsen of Texas are attracting inand former North Carolina Gov because they are the first dication of grassroots support Terry Sanford both visited Iowa for the candidates Iowa has 47 once Gov George C Wallace o Alabama and Gov Milton J of Pennsylvania have Smokers Shift Image Schapp yet to visit the state Tanzania SALAAM The main thrust of those DAR ES d — The government-owneconcentrating on Iowa has been (AP) cigarette company will begin at organization necessary in producing pipe tobacco despite state in which the nationa the old image of pipe smokers delegate selection system being white imperialists Brown from the grassroots Whitney Ng’Wilulupi company general said manager said pipe smoking “McGovern was the only was practiced “by many Afri- candidate who understood that 1972” he said “Now all of can tribes long before the comunderstand it” of them the colonialists” ing of interest retroactive to the first day you saved : (793 effective You purchase one certificate and commit your savings for only 1 year and earn (712 effective r SMOKELESS BROILER-ROTISSERI- E 2651 Passbooks that pay 6 semi-annual- ly 385 South Available to Utah residents only For Individuals Corporations 1 State Street 825-165- 9 Clearfield also available Interest compounded quarterly Accounts protected up to a maximum of $10000 by Industrial Loan Guaranty Corporation of Utah a private corporation which is not an instrumentality of the State of Utah or of the Federal Government 399-449- Ogden All interest is compounded PYinds received any day in January earn a full month’s interest Minimum certificate $500 Washington Boulevard Other Utah offices in Salt Lake City Orem Provo Cedar City Member of ILGC Associations A DIRECT SUBSIDIARY OF ZIONS UTAH BANCORPORATION WITH ASSETS LN EXCESS OF $700 MILLION |