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Show - 04410, .,v,. ... ' cm, , 4-- ;kI " I pa am a sTr WASHINGTON (UPI) Reacting to U.S. press reports unfavorable to his government, Panama's strongman, General Omar Torrijos d letter to Secret- has released a 1TZ of State Henry Kissinger. !The State Department, where publication of the ietter was the subject of day-lon- g high-levconsultations Thursday, declined comment on Panama's decision to release the diplomatic note that Torrijos had called cordideutial. .In the letter, Torrijos warned Kissinger that recent "rash accusations" by the United tough-worde- el Ot biasts 7 States may threaten the security of the Panama Canal and negotiations on a new C cables" that recent terrorist activities in the Panama Canal Zone allegedly wcre carried oet by members of Panuna's National Guard. The Panamanian leader told Kissinger that similar charges about alleged National Guard activities ill the Canal Zone were made by U.S. Ambassador William Jordan in a meeting with him Nov. 9 in Panama City. Torrijos said Jordan told him the United States had proof of that and "that any repetition of these activities would have serious consequences for our relations and for treaty. "I am writing you this letter to warn you that it Is not with threats that you will gain our support and continued vigilance, which will ensure that the ciohil coutioties to opeia',e efficiently and with the proper defense," Torrijos said. The Nov. 20 note was made public Thursday by the ParialTiarilafi embassy in Washington, after published reports had quoted Defense and State Department "secret : eef prices r ents r Apr, PEOPLE the negotiations aimed at a new Panama Canal treaty." Torrijos said a full investigation of the National Guard found "no evidence that such an accusation is "We de nct vloh to our indigzation and displeasure in the face of this rash accusation made by your government, particularly because we wish t avoid inflaming the people and, in particular, to prevent the young people of Panama from envging in angry and vigorous protests," Torrijos wrote Kissinger. DESERET NEWS, FRIDAY, I Parqnts beat odds Beef prices paid by WASHINGTON (AP) grocery shoppers rose 1.6 percent in November, the first increase in six months, but the cost of serving pork dropped sharply for the fourth straight month, according to government analysts. The Agriculture Department said that on an all-cbasis used to compare prices, beef cost shoppers an average of almost $1.36 a pound la.it month, up 2.2 cents from what they had to pay in October. In November 1975, beef was more than $1.51 Prices for beef in the grocery have declined each month since April, when the cost of beef was an average of $1.42 a poend. In that time, producers have sent a record number of cattle to slaughter plants. But now, with herds thinned out from record inventories of a year age, beef output has slackened and prices are rising. Farmers have stepped up hog production substantially the past year and plan to continue with 7 modest increases through at least, the Agriculture Deparment said. This will mean stable or lower pork prices. Pork prices averaged slightly more than $1.16 a pound last month, the lowest since April 1975, the report said. That was a 7 percent drop from nearly $1.25 a pound in October. A year earlier, pork was a d of $1.54 a pound. Department officials had predicted the beef price increase for some time. Last month, one expert estimated that the all-cbeef price in 1977 will set a new record for an entire year of around $1.49 a pound. the all-cprice in 1976 averaged about $1.39. The previous high of $1.46 a pound was set in 1975. But experts also say shoppers in 1977 probably will not see the record peaks that beef prices reached e in 1975, including an average high mark of $1.61 a pound in July of that year. Instead, the price gains will be spread out more evenly through the year, they said, partially because of the larger pork supplies. The new figures, included Thursday in a marketing report, showed cattle producers got a larger share of the shoppers' beef dollar in November; while the middleman's share declined. mid-197- $ near-recor- ut ut Ex-s- py 1,1r:- classified material it says it took from the home of a former CIA employe who is suspected of espionage. A source said Thursday that none of the documents examined so far bear a date that is later than 1973, when the arrested agent, Edwin G. Moore of Bethesda, Md., retired from the CIA. The date is cbnsidered significant, since Moore would have needed the help of someone inside the CIA to obtain documents after he retired. Meanwhile, former CIA official Vietor Marchetti questioned FBI and CIA statements that Moore's job at the agency had involved logistics, He used to come in to my office from time to time, and I don't remember him being involved in logistics," said Marchetti, who served as assistant to the deputy director in the late 1960s. But Merchetti f;Rid he was unable to 'wall what Moore's duties were. Moore, 56, believed to be the first CIA employe II Coutinued from A-- I ,1.," ::: , :;::: opfs,!-- ;t6' ::.::,,-,,,;.,- '..:?."Ct - h,f4.s:,4, -- ' ';',';':.:;-',- :', .,,...., ::''' , ' .' -- ,;-- . 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' The aristocrat died from two bullets fired into his head at point-blan- k range by a tall youth wearing a sweater and jeans who Bed into a crowd of holiday shoppers. ..,'''' .11 ;7Z'.;.?I'i', ... 6 - :' ,0:i lit ''i :- IN,: ::.:::,,ii, 1 It ' t', k::,, .',.i:I: 0: .4t1 ,' ,;, 43, 7!;,;,.;;Z:,12. :.' 2V,..., - ::::',',',..1',.1:k: ,., ..:,:::,:, .,.....'4,i':,'';:,,t':.,::,...;:,,hif '' ',21..., ..,'N, f:,,.t:;::,-:;,:- '''. :;;:r411A,;:,.:::&,7-4...2.fit.- '., , ' tax returns for the years 1971 and 1972 by understating his income by $41,000. He faces up to six years in jail and a $10,000 fine. .., :..:,,.:4,,.... ' ' A jury of eight men and four women Thursday found Ulasewicz guilty of filing false and fraudulent Century Fox, producer Aaron Spelling and actress Carol Lynley for $2.5 million Thursday, charging he may be permanently crippled by a leg cut because Miss Lynley threw a real wine glass at him in a movie scene instead of a safer trick glass. The cut "required 22 stitches and nine day's hospitalization, resulting in prolonged limping which aggravated a herniated dice: tawford's lawyer said. lie said a doctor warned "a permanent disability seems to be developing," which could damage Lawford's career. - :,. ..1 v i!:,....,''' 1, j..,,',t .: , ': ,,,.. Ll ,...0,::'' was Rep. Shirley Pettis, under treatment at Glendale Adventist Medical Center today for an intestinal ulcer. A spokesman said she entered the hospital Monday and was expected to be released in time for the convening of Congress in January. BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UN) --- An investigatory commission today blamed an air traffic controller for history's worst inflight collision, charging he forgot he gave permission to a jetliner to climb to the spot where it smashed into another jet. The commission said the controller realized his error only 46 seconds before impact and by then it was too late. All 176 persons aboard the two planes were killed. ;:t.::,":,,,,,,, ..., :. " tor bodies burial Firm-te- n Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will fly to Acapulco, Mexico, Christmas day for a week's visit with friends, a spokesman announced. ,..,,,,,,-- ,0 '.: Caused plane collision Shuttle vacationer ';f1 ., :- - Congresswoman ill ,::; F.,I, :Or..,! 1::1::: I NEW YORK (UPI) Anthony Ulasewicz began as a New York City cop, became a bagman for the Nixon administration and ended up a convicted felon fur failing to report some of his White House salary. 200 teens on outing hospitalized Peter Lawford sued Actor :lc:. , . " ' Nixon aide guilty in tax fraud Lawford sues top, Doreen Flynn, 17, was reunited late Wednesday with her threemonth-old baby, Priscill, bottom, who was found in cardboard box after being kidnaped last weekend from under an oxygen tent at a Shawinigan, Que., hospital. I long-awaite- d ,,,,,;;;;;;;;;;, An exhausted but happy mother, '',.1,,,,,'-- into a keep the industrialized world from falling recession, but higher oil prices are hampering economic stability, an authoritative report says. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and WestDevelopment, which guides the economies of and Australia North America, ern Europe, Japan, economic New Zealand. issued its outlook for 1977 Thursday in Paris. Entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis has been ordered to pay a Vicksburg, Miss., investment firm about $86,000 for an airplane bought in 1971. The ruling, delivered Thursday by U.S. District Court Judge Bailey Brown in Memphis,' assessed Lewis for a 1971 loan from Cappaert Investment Corp. The money went toward the purchase of a Convair 240 aircraft which was repossessed ard traded at a loss by Cappaert in 1973, the suit claimed. ' 1 .417!7":4::. ,:. The United States, Japan and PARIS (UPI) West Germany must boost their economies in 1977 to Owes for plane :, :.,;,L,,,,,,...4: ,, 3 countries get economic task ''"'' ' ,: ,c,7,t:' es: ...,',1"!"'',44.q,::!..,',',",-.-' ' : r':,,'": "e .,:!. - - ;". ' 1 ,', , i ., . .,,-- rf: tt,;;;:-..-..- ,, ii. ":::,;,--,,,,:- :.: ::' '.-- ,' .: :i -; '' :''' ;!"1,.V:,;41' . .:;::, ;.,,...'::2'. '.2.::,'S, :i! Z'''':''' .: r, .'".';'''', ST. MARK'S NEW YORK (UPI) The motors of cranes roared up, bystanders stared blankly, and firemen spent the day before Christmas looking for bodies in the hull of a Brooklyn building where at least four persons were killed in a raging fire. Police said they feared as many as seven more bodies were buried in the wreckage of the y department store destroyed by a stubborn three-alarblaze that began Wednesday and was not : brought under control until Thursday morning. State-designa- te 231 Fa It lot South A ALL KINDS 10;:.A) BUY AND SAVE AT I Enchnrint p ehPrelude Concert and Mminight tbrtm Nam December Robert Berg land, picked as agriculture secretary, and Brock Adams, named tn head the Department of Transportation, IC are congressmen whose views are on record. Cecil Andrus, named to Interior, is a longtime governor. well-know- Commerce Secretary-designat- e Juanita Kreps, Labor a.m. Christmas Eucharist Sermon ano Crto ad 14blanseamortowareemetsommet E. 322-176- , Since 1944 Same Family Crwmers : . , p ft t r...Alk t IN MANY ,o j 355-550- 130 Mji , 1 Anil WAED! at 1 I ill , 2nd S. Want Ads - tr' ,tistl.,41),VA:tt; DO MORE THINGS ..E. FOR MORE at LOWER COST than any other form of advertising! Also in Orem et 976 So. State :I w it:40 , ph. 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(AP) Police have urged to stay away from windows and keep , persons and injured two others. , , "We are dealing with an extremely dangerous, Old Chinese homicidal person," Police Chief Jon P. Kindice said . Cooking b Thursday. He said police have several suspects, but Fret Parking none is in custody. it, G r4 30: 4816 p.m. The latest victim was Herbert C. Bradshaw, 68, a i retired newspaper editor, who was killed Wednesday ,, a $0 ,... night. The bullet that struck him in the head went '234 So. Main through a kitchen window where he was standing, ,Ph, 7 washing dinner dishes with his wife, police said. 1110010014. . : MMty 1111340 AM. to 2 AM. "We're not panicky. but were concerned," said km 11 3 AM. Mrs. J.R. Marshall, a neighbor of Bradshaw. Her 1 SUM I I 2 AM. husband said robbery attempts and break-in- s are in new the of old nothing neighborhood large. mainly .; homes. and the family has always closed their drapes . ti.itr: :after dark. ::' - . "There's nothing more we can do," Mrs. -- . , ,Marshall said. ALUMINUM - , Kindice urged the city of 110,000 to remain calm, , , but to exercise extreme caution and report any BEVERAGE CANS . ' 113 ' , I suspicious activity. He said police think the killer , ,i''- , to rico. 4acted without motive and did not know any of his NI 11111 c TIT''' victims. c 1 li N81 la ...,', 1,' est lie "It really makes you wonder," said Symathia 1 , lb. ...h.,' , , , 1 Carr, a Durham resident from another neighborhood. 0 , , I "Peoplc are halfway scared to even be in the house." PEPPER'S ,, - 1. : I, : . Mayor Wade Cavin said the town is considering a ALLIED METAL CO. ersion of the "home guard" patrols used during 401 Woo 9th So. 'L 1 1 1. .17 World War II, with citizens assigned to watch for any ' '. 4 I Itscrtigus 9161.3 to over Sti pm. " Ffi 14 On low M. in their neighborhoods. . suspicious activity ar L,,,orr U. &SIX 'IlilniNkrel..tr141'kleirljtri 353-74- designate Ray Marshall and Bell are probably the three least familiar to tbe Senate. The only opposition so far is to Bells nomination. Senate liberak are certain to investigate deeply Bells career as a federal judge, with emphasis on his rulings in civil rights and school desegregation cases. ,aboratry 23 c rduistrutruu utratru u residents here their drapes drawn through the holiday season because of a series of sniper assaults that killed two e, custom pmLFeldive (britima CHRISTMAS DURHAM, Re hoes wh!e you wait fitted awllizes & partials by appo,ntment Guaranteed workrrarw:too Repair Euchernd m , ilLNIuNE SeRviLE December S4 M.Cbildron's elnistrnA Secretary. designate Harold Brown, HEW Secretary-designate Ca lifan and Harris. CLINICS INC. CIIRISTMAS EVE 5P Defense Blumenthal, tense Sniper roams well-know- DENTURE Viltoeopal Cuthecirel CitY number of the prospective Cabinet members served in the Kennedy-Johnso- n era and their views are Included in this group are Secretary of Cyrus Vance, Treasury Secretary-designat- e Congress convenes Jan. 4 and will have ample time for informal confirmation bearings before the-Ja20 inauguration. LUMBER 4 !'.. ";."'; ;' A Senate. WE HAVE OGDEN ,t-,- "k,:',''',' But Attorney General-designat- e Griffin Bell could spend some uncomfortable days before the Senate Judiciary Committee and HUD Secretary-designate Patricia Roberts Harris may run into stiff questioning on her expertise in the complex housing field. One suggestion is to let new senators sit in on any nomination inquiry they want to. They would, of course, have a vote when the nomination reaches the e - tr;:5...,;i::!.''': ." - Nii.;:'4;:';"-.;'- The Senate is heavily Democratic and traditionally inclined to give a new president the Cabinet he wants. Carter's Cabinet choices should have no serious problems. Proposed reorganization of Senate committees could prevent assignments of new senators before inauguration day. documents and unsigned notes asking for $200,000 in exchange for additional information. SALT LAKE '..., " ': , 4 l'..:.A:::': ,'" ,- ,&:. Thursday, but there were no details or. their talks. He also was moving toward release next week of the strict code of ethics he has mandated for anyone serving in his administration. At the same time, Carter was expected to disclose plans for divesting his own interests in the family's peanut business. The Senate hopes to confirm Car. ter's proposed Cabinet shortly after his inauguration, barring strong opposition to any of the candidates. When a new administration comes into officc, the Senate tries to complete the confirmation inquiry in advance and then take the actual vote on each Cabinet member after inauguration. Technically, Carter cannot submit the nominations to the Senate until after he is sworn in. So, Senate committees hold informal meetings to question Cabinet nominees. Once the names are formally submitted, they can be confirmed quickly. classified KETCHUMS 4 ..: Carters will take holiday to an ailing Miss Lillian The package was found - , ; ;,...;'.'..: ' "The call has been evaluated as a hoax," a Coast Guard spokesman said early today. five-stor- oyes. PRODUCTS , :.;:......:.':. BogroN (AP) The Coast Guard has called off an air and sea search for six persons supposedly adrift in a life raft, because it believes the distress call it received was a hoax. i arrested for espionage inside the United States, is being held on $150,000 bond. He was arrested Wednesday as he picked up a package that officials say they planted to make it appear that it contained payment from the Soviets for documents that officials say Moore offered to sell them. Federal agents say they were inadvertently tipped off to the case by a Soviet government employe who discovered a package he thought was a bomb outside an apartment building which houses embassy empl- to contain ...ti-- er 7 ;f: :,,,1 , Former King Constantine of Greece and his wife, Anne Marie, are in Spain to spend the Christmas holidays with the kings sister and brother-in-laQueen Sofia and King Juan Carlos of Spain. The Spanish queen welcomed the Greek royal couple when they arrived Thursday at Madrid's Barajas Airport. checked WASHINGTON (AP) The FBI is examining "several cartons" of "::'1-- ..i",; .1,),: ,,,:.,,,:,::.,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,K,,...::r,;:;,..... :, ..,:,,,,::.4 on visit Ex-ki- ng ,,',:,.,,,,,,, ...., His father's departure from the White House may help Jack Fords career. For some time now, young Ford has been saying that while his father was president it was difficult to find work in his chosen field forestry because of potential conflicts of interson est. Now the President's is job hunting. Young Ford said ThursCarter is day that after President-elec- t inaugurated he plans to visit friends in California, and he said he would seek work after that. NEW YORK (AP) It was an ill wind that propelled balloonist Ronald Di Giovanni, first into chilly New York Harbor and then to a chilly reception from the law. Di Giovanni, a unemployed draftsman, had planned to fly his red, white and blue hot-ai- r balloon from the borough of Staten Island to Battery Park at the southern tip of Manhattan. "I just wanted to give New Yorkers a chance to see a balloon in flight," he said. That he did. For 90 minutes beginning at 8 a.m., commuters in Staten Island, Manhattan, and unintentionally Queens saw Di Giovanni's contraption floating over the city. Di Giovanni aimed for a Manhattan pier, but the strong winds started to put him down just where the Hudson River empties into New York Bay. So he turned up his burner and took off again. He floated up the West Side, across Manhattan and then over the East River into Queens. There, as police officers in a helicopter tried to guide him, Di wovamu landed on the grounds of a power plant. Once he was down safely, police issued him two summonses. Police gave him one summons for making an unauthorized landing and another for interfering with air traffic at LaGuardia Airport. Police said there appeared to be a danger that the balloon would drift into landing patterns. However, a spokesman for the control tower at LaGuardia said the balloon landed well before it would have bantered with flights. The FAA said it was investigating. Distress call a hoax, Guard says A divorce has been granted to singers Robert Gou let and Carol LawrChristence. Their children, Michael, will stay opber and with Miss Lawrence until custody arrangements are worked out. The divorce decree, requested by Croulet after Miss Lawrence had filed for legal separation, was granted Wednesday by Los Angeles Superior Court Commissioner Victor J. Hayek. . Jack hunts job It kg' to N.Y. Two sidewalk dynamite station wall Thursday, fire a demolished explosions killing a suspected bomber and injuring three persons, authorities said. The injured were identified as City Attorney Paul Freitag, Fire Captain Edward Bonham and fireman Larry Dorsey. They were not seriously hurt. SPARKS, Nev. (UPI) 2A 24, 1976 DECEMBER bomber killed Singers divorce rs,,:, or all-tim- Balloon flight W''' ,.,,,,. .eff,..,,.!..,;1,:,::,,s--- . Combined wire services Beating odds of 512,000 to one, Margaret Murphy has done it again she's had her third set of fraternal twins. ''I guess my reaction was I really wasn't too surprised since it happened before. At least I wasn't as surprised as I was with the other sets," she said Thursday, one day after the twin boys were born. Mrs. Murphy, 36, said her doctor had not anticipated the third set "I guess he walked out into the hall, threw up his hands, and told Jim he'd done it again," she said. "Jim is just in seventh heaven," she said about her husband, an electrical lineman at Commonwealth Electric Co. The Murphys, who have two other children, Jim, 7, and Ann, 5, say they will probably name the newcomers Pat and Mike. Their first set of twins. Jennifer and were Theresa, who was stillborn born in 1973. On Thanksgiving Day 1974, Daniel and David were born. James Eisen, genetics professor at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said the chances of having one set of fraternal (not identical) twins is one in 80. The chances of two sets are one in 80 times 80 and for three sets it is one in 80 times 80 times 80, or one in 512,000. a pound. Blasts hurt 3, MIMMIkla0MONIEMINNIS ::. nEWS CANTLES ." 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