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Show ,n tsm ssgqmm m&rmtmm Founded 1S5Q when Utah territory ' t3n &$ VOLnsfk 64 PAGES SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 15 CENTS Ford's veto sets or rerun - - I1;, ,, vetoed a bilhon version of the same bill in February. The reasons be gave Tuesday were the same as then: the bill would create at most about half the number of jobs claimed, the average cost per job would be $25,000 and Fo-- d $6 v '. v,-- :' a y.j & & - 1 of jobs bi short-change- - - y ,.'' f,r . V - 4 4A 4 VV - ni hts secured under the late Ctuef Justice Earl Warren In a major victory for police, and state courts, the justices Tuesday barred federal bibunals from reviewing most state criminal convictions on j grounds of illegal seizure of evidence by police The 3 decision was also the closest the court has come to overturning a major right afforded the accused by Warren's i.?,, W34 ' Vt ' . r f'Hrw V- ;-- nr JV in 4K u INTERNATIONAL THUGS cannot be allowed to use innocent persons as "playthings," says Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, calling for an international agreement to stem terrorism. Kissinger, addressing the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations and the Club, declined to criticize Israel for its commando raid on Uganda's Entebbe Airport that freed 104 hostages last weekend. (Hollywood is already planning to film the incident. See "People" column on A HEALTH EMERGENCY was declared today in New York City, where about 40,000 workers struck 34 private, nonprofit hospitals in a contract dispute. Inadeouate care during a similar walkout In 1973 the cost 20 lives. Negotiations in another strike were "off" rubber industry walkout indefinitely today after the rubber workers' union re I ected what Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. said was its final offer. fe r 4 w . I1 . r i '''"at;;, 6 'a i- V ' '' ' XJ 'i vi .A-'v- - 4 '- V ' fc sw S ' && S? Mid-Ameri- A MORE AMERICANS are letting go of foreign cars and getting their hands on domestic ores, two-third- tC. IV two-wee- two-thir- & ''- - JfF - , a rd - y vV ; . -- i. ' , 1 - according to the latest figures from Detroit. During June, domestic new cars sold at the fastest clip in nearly three years. In the process, the U.S. auto industry lured many buyers away from foreign cars. TWO SOVIET COSMONAUTS began their first full workday in space today In their spacecraft whirling on a corrected course toward an expected rendezvous with an orbiting space station. Most Western experts believe the two cosmonauts hope to set a new space endurance record. A trio of U.S. astronauts set a record of 84 days in 1974 aboard Skylab 4. - JV'KWSA. v l .tf . UPI PNAO 70-2- 5 What is possibly the largest gold nugget in the Western Hemisphere has been shown at a San Francisco gem show. The anonymous owner found it last year in Australia. It weighs more than 1 2 pounds and is valued at more than $250,000. The Institution in Washington, Smithsonian D.C., has declared it to be the largest, finest gold nugget In private hands in the world. 12 pounds of gold in 1 chunk onthisbdL Unemployment rose from 7.3 percent in May to 7.5 percent in June. Supporters of the bill have smoothed over a jurisdictional dispute which cost them several votes in February. . equipped to review 4th Amendment claims and have a duty to follow Supreme Court restrictions (Mi searches, and if a state gives the defendant a full and fair opportunity to present his constitutional claim federal courts may not intervene When Richard Nivon named four men, including Burger and Powell, to the high court, he emphasized the hope that a new majority would overturn some of the criminal rights victories won under Warren. y Since then, tlie court has those rights, wimnm-- d Lee PENDCLUM aa 2 Powell said too often police misconduct is punished by excluding evidence and the guilty defendant receives the windfall" of freedom. The result, Powell added, may have the effect of generating disrespect for the law and administration of justice. In addition, the court ruled a defendant convicted of a state crime may not obtain federal court review of his conviction on grounds evidence used against him was obtained through unreasonable searches anil seizures" which are barred by toe 4th occa-akmaR- Amendment Powell said state judges are FOUR WOMEN PRISONERS, including an urban guerrilla whose release was demanded by hijackers last week, escaped from a West Berlin prison today by overpowering two A search female guards and scaling a was launched throughout the city and West Germany. THIRTY ENEMY PLANES reportedly were approaching Uganda today from Kenya. A Ugandan guvmument radio broadcast said the planes were believed to be Israeli or American. A military spokesmen said Ugandans were urged to ettwk such planes with any weapon at hand. The broadcast appeared to be part of a propaganda campaign by President Idi Amin in response to the Israeli commando raid Saturday night that freed more than 100 hostages from Entebbe Airport. (U.S. intelligence sources said today they doubt that Amin could have sent his MIG iet fighters in pursuit of transport planes carrying away the commandos and hostages, because Uganda lacks pitots capable of hying the Soviet-bull- ? MIGs.) U.N. council A-- Queen gets varm D.C. welcome - WASHINGTON (UPI Cheered of guests waving small Brit- ish flags. Queen Elizabeth II began her two-da- y visit to the nation's capital today by telling President Ford her country- considers the United States "our strong and trusted fnend. Amid much pomp and pageantry on the White House South Lawn, Ford told toe Queen her visit was a happy occasion to reaffirm this fnendshp, peace.democracy and welljbeing of our people." The wounds of our parting in 1775 healed long ago," he said The Queen and her royal party, including her husband. Prince Philip, arrived at the White House after a brief jet flight from Philadelphia, where she arrived Tuesday to begin her Bicentennial visit to the United States. Ford said in his remarks that after the Revolutionary War the people looked to "our British heritage lor guidance." He added that through the years (he nations had maintained a deep and abiding commitment to their mutual values He said the two countries had fought e and continued to work together for the extension of the blessings of liberty to all humanity The Queen wore a pale acquamanne '" - .) The House voted to override the February veto, but tbe Senate fell three v otes short of the necessary A vote on the pew bill cannot come before k Congress reconvenes July 19 after a recess. But there Were several indications the outcome could be different this time: Both houses passed the scaled down bill m by more than majorities, the Senate and 328 to 83 in the House. Last week, assistant Senate Republican leader Robert Gnffin, who helped lead the fight to uphold tbe February veto but whose state of Michigan has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country, switched sides and announced he would vote to override second-guessin- 6-- . - - ., w they would not be lasting jobs, and the peak impact would not come for 18 months, when it would overstimulate an already recovering economy and cause inflation Sen. Hubert Humphrey, , called Fords veto bad economic policy, callous social policy and an apparent attempt to woo conservative delegates to the Republican national convention. court, which in 1961 ruled a defendant has a constitutional nght to suppress illegally seized ev idence at his trial. Police claimed that decision handcuffed their ability to collect valuable evidence. State judges said federal courts were overturning valid convictions g and state judges on technical grounds. Justice Lewis Powell (fid not overturn the exclusionary rule, but indicated the rule should net be applied in too technical a fashion so that otherwise reliable evidence is excluded and a clearly guilty defendant is freed. W i rren Burger with its most fa i -- reaching reversal of criminal . "f " 7i Court narrows criminal riahts lYASHLNGTON The UPI) Sup reme Court wound up its sev enth term under Chief Justice --; ,' i ... r Jf.'t v' Today in the News , .' - V ferWr, , .; 5 4 9 v7vvy, i ye.-- H K WASHINGTON UPI) President Ford and the Dcj nocratic majority in Congress are engaged ui a new veto fight o er pubbe works jobs. Ford won the last battle on that issue. But the Democrats believe this time they have the edge. Each side accuses the other of playing election-yea- r pohtics over Americas seven million unemployed. The President Tuesday cast his 52nd veto, against a $3.95 billion bill which Democrats say would create or preserve up to 350,000 jobs. It would provide $2 billion for pubbe works projects ready to start within 90 days, designed to create jobs mainly in die construe tion industry. It would give $1.25 bilhon in budget aid to local governments hard hit by recession to keep thk-- from having to reduce services and lay off i mployes It would provide $700 million for water treatm ant plants in 33 states which feel they d in an earlier allocation of were antipollution money. -- '" , 7, 1976 JULY WEDNESDAY, METRO to debate Israeli rescue raid UNITED NATIONS, N Y. (AP) African and Arab delegates prepared with misgivings today for a Security Council debate on Israels daring rescue of hijacked hostages from Uganda The Israelis relished the prospect and planned to accuse Ugandan President Idi Amin of complicity with the Palestinian and German hijackers. "It's a difficult situation for the Arabs and Africans, said an African diplomat after the Organization of African Unity asked the council to take up a charge that Israel had committed aggression against Uganda. The Africans asked that the start of the debate be delayed until Thursday to give Ugandan Foreign Minister Juan Oris time to reach New York. If there is a Security Council meeting, we will participate," said Israeli spokesman Tuna Saar with evident satisfaction. He disclosed that his government was preparing testimony from hostages and other sources to support the Israeli claim that Amin acted in complicity with tbe hijackers who seized an Air France jetliner between Tel Aviv and Pans and had it flown to Uganda Israel's U.N. mission also circulated a note that said the hijacking illustrated the terrorist aspect of the Palestine Liberation Organization, which has been gaining influence at the United Nations. the PLO The note, titled Again shows its other face. ignored the PLO's condemnation of the hijacking and the hijackers claim that they were from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, an enti-PLguerrilla organization. The council debate will force representatives of other African governments to defend Amin (hough many of them openly hold him in contempt. O silk coat with matching blue beret, white gloves and earned a white hag The Queen flew to Andrews Air Force Base here from Philadelphia, where she presented Britain's Bicena bell cast in the same tennial gift foundry as the famed Liberty Roll The White House has scheduled a host of activities for the royal couple today and Thursday, including a v isit to Arlington National Cemetery, the Lin side-by-sid- coln Menional and an elaborate state dinner at the White House tonight. About 290 persons were invited to the white-ti- e dinner, including. Telly Queen Elizabeth 1 1 and President Ford Savalas. star of "Kojak," a favorite television show of the queen. The dinner listen as national will be held under white canopies in the anthems are played Rose Garden, and entertainment later w ill be pro ided by British-borcomeWhite at House. n dian Bob Hope, Ballroom. ir. the While House Eat The debate will also put the spotlight on African disunity by oinuung the door to a confrontation between I'ganda and neighboring Kenya Ainui charged ui a menage to the United Nations that the See U.N. m CHILD CARE FACILITIES should be provided bv the government tor all families regardless of report income, according to a federally-sponsoreon women. The National Commission on the Observance of International Women's Year also warned that the nation faces a crisis in child care because of a shortage of Quality centers at a time when mothers are taking fobs outside the home in record numbers. d ANOTHER 7MJM METRIC TONS of soybeans worth an estimated S17S million have been bought by the Soviet Union from this year's U.S. crop. The sale follows by only four days another Russian purchase of 800,000 tons of soybeans for an estimated $200 million. THE FIGHT against world $3 B I be directed by a single U.S. agency should hunger instead of the score of agencies which now set U S. food policies in an uncoordinated fashion. According to a Senate study, none of the agencies has final authority to supervise the nation's role in the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. A HIGH-LEVE-L FEDERAL TEAM is being sent to Alaska to investigate a welding problem that threatens to delay completion of the oil pipeline under construction there. President Ford ordered the study after reports that an auditing firm hired by the Interior Department found pipeline records so confused that it could not figure out which of 31,000 welds have been properly X rayed, as required, and which have not. LLION-A-YEA- R STOCK MARKET TODAY NEW YORK The stock (UPI) finding little in the news background to influence it szrongty in either direction, drifted slightly tower today In moderate trading on the' New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, oft more than five points at the outset, was down 135 points to 98846 shortly Lfefore 3 p m. EDT. The blue-chiaverage, which has tailed several times this year to hold above the 1,000 level, lost points Tuesday. (Complete New York, American lists on .) SS3.4S market, BH JM 3.35 p 66, 7 Business Comics Comment B2 A5 Deaths E- De-!t-Ma- A3 n -2 Living 01 B -- B8-1- 2 Sports TV Today B4 Theater A22, 23 Wht' Doing B2 A-- 8 UTAH WEATHER Christians regain N. Lebanon town Ford irked, halts HEW ban WASHINGTON (LTD orders of a "really quite - the At irritatr-d- " President Fort1, HEW Secretary David Mathews today-- suspended a ruling and mother-daughte- r banning father-soevents in public schools White House Press Secretary Ron told reporters Ford S&'9 he will ask Congress to act, if necessary, to ensure that such traditional American acliv ilies as father aud son and mother and daughter school events can conn Nt-sse- tinue," The Office of Civd Rights of &e Department of Health, Education sod Scottsdale, An? , Welfare ruled m case recently that such parent-chilevents violate sex discrimination laws the morning Wlien he read newspapers, the President was really Nessen told a news quite irritated, it m bnefihg Ford .mmediateiy telephoned Math ews and two other officials. Direr tor James T Lynn of the Office id Man igement and Budget end Director Janus Cannon erf the White House Domestic Conneil. ami ordered the According to Nessen, Ford said American institutions canmM be wiped out by some government lawyer or bureaucrat. d the The ruling w as ma ie on a request to U.S, Office of Civ 2 Rights from Scottsdale 1972 Act school officials to clarify amendments to the Civil Rights which bar sex discrimination in any educational eral funds institution receiving fed- BEIRUT. Ijebsnon l'Pl' Christian troops and mountain men fighting house to house recaptured the strategic northern town of Chekka today in a battle w ith Palestmans and Moslem leftists that left most of the town m rums, a right-winspokesman reported g HEW spokesman earlier said that the Paling might threaten federal funds tu schools which violated the ruling. But in a statement todav. Nessen said "The President advised the secretary tiiat lie cannot boheve that it was !he intent of Congress to prohitnt mother-daughte- r or father-soevents at schools. If, upon the legal review, it appeared that the wording rf Title IX See DISCRIMINATE on A n A-- 8 Nearly 3W persons were killed in heavy fighting throughout Lebanon, including 't lea- -t 100 m the mountain battle for the Chekka The leftists siormod tle Christian enclave 4o miles mirth of Beirut ui a surprise offensive Tuesday Christian siege of the Tat to avenge the weeks-lon- g Zaataf Palestinian refugee camp in southeast Beirut. But a spokesman tor Use right-win- g Phalangist Tarty said the large leftist Palestinian toice was routed by Christian militiamen and several thousand armed villagers recruited from the mountains and brought to the bultlofront by bus and car. Mostty fair and hot through Thursday with cloudy afternoons and spotty thundershower activity. Lows in upper 60s. highs upper 90s. lam t .6 (Cache I. VaMev. Wasatch Front, northwestern deserts) Far and hot wffh some awwon c(ouknea. tows near 6S 100 with Mohs wound Zones X A (Delia. V,i,uro. Ct-iCity. Sevier Valiev. Carbon County! Fair and hot Slight chance ot ram. Gusty wwvts. Lours SS m Richtiekl 0 m Oe5f. 1 in Cedar City. Htwris around W. lane I (UtilS Dime) with pm of H in Mantlet ne Fair and hot. St, Georee and ft W Moab, Hfaht IS tow TO. high 105. and 10S, rmoecttvwv. The Xem (ulmh easin' -recreation outrank eU (cr Mostly hot. sligM chance of mostly sunny . and hot ram. Lows Hums In weather with some rant the upper 0s. through Thursday Leas wilt range tram mu ts m Zones 7. t (Southeast JO an to it an. Lake Bryce FuwwU Canvoniands. Lake I Powell! Far and hot Might mid ns to ws. Nthonat ywather mao. area sammary an t-- ' |