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Show aumo Warm Trend Fair through Saturday. Warm- er with daytime highs in the 40s. Lows tonight in the upper 20s. tails. weather map on Page C-- V 0 1 . 373 NO. f V i I i SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH PAGES 7 0 . y ; i?. ;?!4$" MOUNTAIN WEST'S NEWSPAPER FIRST , ' ) ftWm,-- Jf 4 V' i I t j A . r vl - I .'& iv m-rciC ;5f A WASHINGTON (UPI) Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird cautioned Congress today that the Soviet Union at its present rate of military development could downgrade the United States to a second-ratpower by the In the annual defense review presented to a joint sess sion of the Senate Armed and Appropriations Committees, Laird also predicted that thp Chinese Communists would begin deploy ' A ,v . M I? -- i . j e mid-1970- Ser-vice- ' ikV t"v.V V 2 A J L.te Ayk.J6' Jw 4 - ' r -- ' iUf v f jj ( ' ' I a chunk of ice being thrown by a protester during demonstration Washington, D.C. in -(UPI) Senate swapped massive education bills today one an appropriations bill that is nearly eight months late and the other an authorization that looks four years into the future but only after agonizing over school desegregation. The Senate received a $19.4 billion appropriations bill for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare. The House passed it 315 The House and FROM BOSTON TO LOS ANGELES Scattered Demonstrations Protest Chicago j i Press Tre-mo- 1.000 t as the demonstramarched out of the afternoon Scattered demonstrations, skirmishes with police and a jail hot have broken out around the country in reaction to the conviction in Chicago of five persons for inciting riots. In Boston's Hub Thursday, about 5,900 marched Up' Street smashing windows after a rally of 20,000 persons that began in the Common. Police clubbed about a dozen At least a demonstrators. dozen persons were arrested and four ambulances hauled away the injured, who included several policemen. ; At Michigan State University in East Lansing demon- strators smashed win- dows and fought with police, who arrested several. - Police arrested 123 persons in Washington, D.C., during several hours of skirmishes in the aftermath of a demonstration by about 300 outside the apartment where Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell lives. Police had dispersed the dem onstrators but they moved into side streets, disrupted traffic and pelted police with rocks, bottles and chunks of snow. Police said three civilians and one policeman were treated for minor injuries. The Washington protest, called a people's tour of the Watergate, began Thursday ing medium - range nuclear missiles this year. He estimated they would have from SO to 100 installed by the middle of the decade. Warning of Russian arms development, Laird said: It is clear that the Soviet Union is embarked on an ambitious program to achieve a global military capability. Die Soviets are continuing of the rapid deployment offensive major strategic weapons systems at a rate that could, by the tors - George Washington Univer- sity campus several block away where they had rallied to the high-ris- e apartment which they said symbolizes the ruling class. apartments in the building sell from $75,000 to $110,000. Two-roo- In San Jose, Calif., prison- ers in the jail rampaged after watching a television program about the Chicago case. Guards used fire hoses to quell the rioters and put out six fires which had been set. About 30 youths smashed windows in a hotel and adjacent shop in Evanston, III. Police arrested five persons among more than 500 who clashed with them near the campus of the University of California at Los Angeles. Windows were smashed in brandies of the First Western Bank and a brokerage. About 50 persons chanted power to the people outside the Baltimore courthouse. About 350 jtersons attended a rally at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and a brief fight marred a march afterward when three persons seized a Viet Cong flag being carried by march- World. The defense howev er that secretary said he intends to cut the U. S. military budget by 7 per cent this year. President Nixon's proposed budget, for the fiscal year beginning July 1 calls for $71.8 billion in defense spending compared to $77 billion for the current year, ending June 30. Laird declined to state in the part of the testimony, mid-1970- Vietnam it expects licly spending to drop below $1.5 billion a month by mid-yeaAt times in the past, it has run well over $2 billion a month. Laird's public statement spelled out Soviet and Chinese Spe RUSS on Page 4 r. A-- Wisconsin and University. 150 - ALA. (AP) Hope today i'or a missing girl who must have lmdieine to live. in God's name, someone help us gel our baby!" pleaded Dennis MeElroy in a radio and television broadcast Thursday after his wife reported Unit their daughter Shaun was taken from the family auto while her mother made a purchase in a food store. MeElroy said the infant is an epileptic subject to seizures and requires three shuts a day. The infant needed an injection witltin two hours after she was reported miss-in- medical source said the girl might survive for a few hours without shots because of a residue of the medication left in her blood. However, the source said it was unlikely the A baby could live more than a day. FBI agents joined other law enforcement agencies in the area in an intensive search for the infant. WASHINGTON WASHINGTON (UPI) -slowDespite the business down induced by the government in its attempt to halt inflation, the cost of living is and at a rate still rising swifter than last year. Officers chase A coast-to-coas- 31. a demonstrator during protest near unions, said while no (dans on striking could be made until after a court decimind the greatest sion, changer is the strike. AFL-CI- The unions have pledged not to strike before Saturday. Previous court orders halted a strike by the four unions one railroad, the against Union Pacific, and a nationwide shutdown of all other railroads that was called in retaliation by tiie industry. to y declined say whether the White House will seek special legislation to halt a nationw ide shutdown. I.-er- rail shutdown had again become . distinct possibility following a breakdown in negotiations. It was a great disappointment, Assistant Secretary of Labor W. J. Usery. the Nixon Administration's chief trouble-siioote- 'in the bargaining talks, said aim- - negotiations collapsed in Miami Beach. Fia.. Thursday night. "What wo have hero looks like an impossible impasse." William Winpisinger, chief four the for negotiator All Chi- cago riot conspiracy trial were sentenced Friday to sene five years and were fined $5,000 by Judge Julius J. Hof man. CHICAGO (UPI) Convict- ed members of the Chicago Seven" denounced U.S. District Judge Julius J. Hoffman and foresaw a coming Amer- -' ican revolution today before receiving sentences for cross- ing state lines to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic nation- ' al convention. ; - After three of the defend- ants had addressed tiie court, a recess was ordered until 3 p.m. Each of tiie five convicted defendants was entitled to 15 minutes to say his piece be- - i fore receiving punishment. ' Die maximum penalty for each of them was five years ; in jail and a $10,003 fine. FIRST TO SPEAK to do so was David T. Dellinger, 51, a self- -' described revolutionary paci- -' fist who was pictured by the prosecution as the architect of the conspiracy. Dellinger compared Hoffman to a second King George III of England trying to forestall a second American revolution. which you will not succeed in doing. But he paid the tough lit Je judge a backhanded complThere is something iment: that one spunky about . The action came in the court of District Judge Howard Corcoran. Previous restraining orders have halted a shutdown since t A Bulletin CHICAGO (AP) (ire defendants In the Living Costs Climb Despite The Brakes (AP) federal judge Friday extended for another 10 days an order unions restraining railroad from striking and the railroads from imposing a lockout. thus postponing a threatened railroad strike. Jan. Denounced bill is House appropriations still $324 million more than administration requests. It is The House, in turn, received a compromise between the a measure passed 80 to 0 by $19.7 billion President Nixon the Senate Thursday to convetoed last month and his tinue aid to grade and high request of $1.26 billion less. schools for four years beyond Republicans sought, but lost June 30, 1970, with a totai auon a 205 to 189 vote, to cut the thorization of $35 billion. level by 2V per Tiie House next week in all compromise cent and House GOP Leader likelihood will reject the SenGerald R. Ford of Michigan ate's bill, sending it to a contold Democrats this virtually ference of the two chambers. assured a second veto. Die Senate, about the same The bill is for fiscal 1970, time hopes to start working which started last July 1. The on the appropriations bill. major agencies covered Both bills would order the labor, HEW and the Office of Economic Opportunity Department of Health, Education and Welfare not to use have operated under a special forced busing to achieve resolution that continues fundDie House bill ing below levels in the bill. The resolution expires Feb. additionally would order HEW not to interfere with parents '28. freedom to chose their chitfttuld bill Senate The ldrens school. The Senate bill extend the landmark Elemenincluded a provision that tary and Secondary Education four desegregation guidelines must Act years (ESEA) Nortli be applied nationally beyond its expiration date of without distincand South June 30. 1970. The bulk of the tion between the types of authorized money in the bill is segregation involved. designed to help proverty area The $19.4 billion in the grade and high schools. Relief from rising prices lias certainly been slow in coining." Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy told Congress' Joint Economic Committee Thursday. A few hours later the Labor Dcpumient's monthly report on the consumer price index confirmed it. at Cornell - jurist ' The first UCLA Hail Strike Blocked For Infant Riot Trial to 81 Thursday over threats of a new presidential veto. ers. There were peaceful marches of 100 at the University ot Hope Fades faded made public as he went into the closed session, any estimate of the cost for the Vietnam war but it was likely that he would give a figure to the committees in secret. The Pentagon has said pub- place us in a second rate strategic position with regard to the future security of the Free campus in California. I P 0.4 PCT. OZARK, 970 1 im B3) School Money Bills Telephoto WASHINGTON By Associated 051 House, Senate Swap . Uf' An officer dodges 20, 'V vs yX s W V: vM'r , f FEBRUARY FRIDAY, ISb, . fc b THE t m m - 10c i' wJ - ir 24-4445 -5- 24-4448 . . -5-24-4400 521-353- 4 3 ;Yi News Tips Hnrne Deliver'.' -J Information Sports Scores 5 Classified Ads Only Editorial Offices 34 E. 1st South De- ' I Our Phone Numbers Today's Thought The sju-ing- genius which up from the men is ranks the genius which renews the nouth and cnerg of the people. Woodrow Wilson of unknou-- The unions The report showed prices rose by 0.4 per cent in January below the 0.6 per cent rate of December and the 0.5 per cent November rate. But prices normally decline Israel Raids Suez Posts representing machinists, electricians, boilermakers and sheet metal workers rejected in December a contract that included a wage increase. Tiie current top wage is $3.60 an hour. two-yea- Three of the unions voted but sheet metal approval, workers rejected it because of a prevision allowing of all four . unions members to cross each other's job jurisdiction lines to do a limited amount of work. All four unions had agreed all must accept any settlement or none would. Winpisinger said tiie three unions offered Thursday night to accept the agreement. But John P. Hi.tz, chief industry negotiator, turned it down on grounds that itwvould lie to no avail unless all four accepted it. President Nixon has already exhausted all provisions under the Railway Labor Act for postponing a strike or lockout. By United Press International Israel today reported one of its mo.--t intpiise air raids of the new year against Egypt's a three-hou- r Suez Canal line attack Thursday night. One of the raiders was shot down. The attack was announced following reports from diplomats at die L'nited Nations that the Soviet Union has tinned down a proposal to seek a cease-firin the Middle East. Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik was said to have rejected the plan at the latest meeting of the Big Four earlier Thursday, insisting instead that tiie big powers condemn Israel for breaking tiie truce arranged after the 1907 w a r. Spokesmen for the Israeli command said tiie warplanes began their canal raid at 6:10 p.m. against targets near tiie Fird, m Bridge and Reservoir Great Bitter Lake. d e in January, partly became of sales, so last month's data when seasonally adjusted worked out to an annual inflation rate of 7.2 per cent. This is 20 per cent faster than tiie 6 per cent rate of 19,19. There were sharp boosts in January in costs of transportation. eggs, poultry, milk and home ownership. Til. MIDYEAR Kennedy testified the dip in business activity produced by administration policy is likely to continue until midyear. that lime, lie said, By moie tangible results on the price trout should appear. But tills relief from rising prices lias certainly been slow in coming. if all goes according to our expectations," lie said, by tiie end of the year price will move toward stability." William Sen. ProNinae, the committee chairman. said he wasn't convinced. lie sain he feared the economy was in for a period of simultaneous inflation and of both the worst recession worlds. the he wanted eased on tiie tight money policy and he wanted a program to put people back to work again if unemployment readies a 4.5 per cent level. It is now at a 4 per cent level. In that event. Kennedy said, would Administration the move to stimulate employment by resinning construction projects that were abandoned to help slow down tiie He said brakes must admire however misguided and unjust you are. PROBLEM UNSOLVED Sending us to prison, punishing us, cannot solve the problem of this country. Iip said. We can be in prison but tiie movement nf which we are a small part will con- tinue." Over economy. If further steps were needed. Kennedy said, monetary policy would be reversed. sending credit flowing through the economy. A backlog of demand would put a quick stop to a recession. Labor Department's Tiie statistics showed that the pur- defense objections, Hoffman ordered the on cleared of tiie defe".l-ant- s relatives. My life was threatened by one of these mens relatives. lie told chief defense counsel She William M. Kunstlsr. told me she would dance on my grave." e chasing power of workers declined for a fourth straight mouth in January. Gross weekly earnings fell SI rank-and-fil- Are you Yes, found Holt-ma- maiket into Translated terms, the figures showed that $13.18 was required to 10 ftp juJge (Hoffman referred to ,:i incident shortly heiore t.e guilty five were Wednesday. Anita Iloftman, wife of defendant Abbie screamed as she was ejected from the courtroom. We'll dance on your gvinc, months. $10 am. sir. Kun-stl- said. cents to an .average of S116.8L real earnings" of a Die worker with three dependents have dropped for 12 straight buy vvliat more titan 1 serious?" bought a little venrs ago. Julie.") Inside The News SECTION National. Foreign S. 9. 12 L 2 ... World ot Women Editorial rages Dn-I- t . .. .. ...Is, ...12.13 ...14. financial 13 SECTION C 7 19 19 Mail Young Americans City. Regional Obiiuorie uVafl-.eMap Action A.'s SECTION - - - SECTION r B .1 3. 7. 16 ... . 1 City. Regional .... Our Man Jones Theater .....8-1- Sports Comics A Citv. Regional . TV Highlights .... -- - 6 D 1, 2, 4, 5. 0 12. 13 |