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Show ' '"rKt ihBWHrW ' mgwv fiif f1 'ff .''"'ff - - and La Crosse, Wis., finished first among the areas with less than 200,000, Sacramento No. 2 Sacramento, Calif., was rated No. 2 among major metropolitan areas, followed by Seattle, Wash., and San Jose, Calif. The Midwest had a total of 15 metropolitan areas in tie top iu of tnc throe metropolitan groups; the West Coast had eight; the Northeast five; the Mountain States two, and the South none. 0 In the population group. Salt Lake City ranked 13. In the under 200,000 category, Ogden rated sixth. over-500,00- 1! Vcl. 211, No. Varied Research Projects The institute, created in 1945, has conducted research projects such as surveying the attractions of a town for a new industry and g for the federal govern 10,000-populatio- smoke-samplin- Arab Money men 4 V v-- 2? ?- - y n polities, environment, end social concerns The categories contained 123 far tors, including as unemployment, pollution, crime, climate, racial and sexual equality, recreational facilities, personal income, death rate and political activity Of the 2'H arfi'-- on'y Poulard and Eugene, Ore . were rated "A" or outstanding ui all five broad categories Only Birmingham and Mobile, Ala , were rated in the survey as E or ii adujuate in all five categories The remainder of the metropolitan areas tame up with a mixed bag of grades health-educatio- , spsqr - . September - -- 5- - Dec. 31. s. AssocWWd " ' H...J Prau WtrwSoto was oa the campus to dedicate a new field house. earst Probe Continues, Yields 4 Bombs in Harris Apartment Tribune Wire Services SAN FRANCISCO Bombs found in the hideout of Patricia Hearsts terrorist comrades are identical to one used in an unsuccessful attack on a Color-Codin- ives, the Chicago Tribune has learned. The documents have raised speculation among law enforcement officials thdt, although most of the known members of the Symbionese Liberation Army died in a police shootout in Los Angeles 15 months ago, its remnants emerged under two different names to wage a campaign of bombings against police agencies. Suds Swillers In Munich Launch Fest Sources close to the investigation said the seized material couil be the first major breakthrough toward identifying persons connected with the New World Liberation Front and the Red Guerrilla Family, both of which appeared on the California terror scene e shootout. after the Search for 2 Sisters Meantime, police searched for two armed and dangerous sisters of the man charged with harboring Miss Hearst and another fugitive in a SLA-polic- i - MUNICH (AP) What Bavanans claim is the worlds biggest annual beer binge got under way Saturday when Mayor Georg Krcnawitter By Ihlmi Toros Associated Press Wrucr ROME Marriage Italian style based on male dominance and female submission lost its validity before law Saturday. A new family law, passed in May over church objections, took effect at midnight lifting women to equality with men in matrimonial matters. The Roman Catholic Church and the party t supports, the dominant Christian Democrats, had opposed the bill claiming some provisions to be too liberal and likely to undermine the ceremonially breached the first keg of Munichs 1973 Oktoberfest. In vast beer tents on the citys Theresien meadow, thousands of tourists mingled with local residents dressed in traditional dirndl and leather shorts garb. The meadow is named after Princess Therese von Hildburgshausen and vas the site of the first Oktoberfest, held in 1810 to celebrate her marriage to Bavarian Crown Prince Ludwig. Its breached Ozapfi ist the crowd yelled, as it does every year, when Kronawitter drew the first measure. Oktoberfest is exThe pected to draw five million international visitors this year. 15-d- ' traditional family unit. But legal experts and some families hailed the law, replacing Napoleonic decrees as amended by fascism, as another triumph for womens liberation. Divorce Became Ixgal Divorce became legal four years ago and was upheld m a referen ium in 1974 Women and leftists, united behind the divurce and new family laws, are now battling for legal abortions ui Italy Women in Italys upper and middle classes ere expected to take full advantage e: their new equality, but as 'Twr--- r' vJ? rf Lsy-v- apartment. d Oil Mama Mia! Deesa ou'vc reached middle age when vour weight lifting cormsts of standing ,W r at Pepperdine University, Malibu, Calif. Ford President Ford talks with Republican backer, actor John (Big Duke) Wayne, during a brunch police station last month, it was reported Saturday. The San Francisco Examiner quoted police sources as saying each of four bombs found at the apartment of Bill and Emily Harris was the same as the unexploded pipe bomb discovered under a patrol car behind the Mist .on District Station Aug. 8. Police at that time said the bomb could have blown up the whole block. These bombs were the same thing and obviously came from the same an official source told the place, Examiner, using the word identical. g Same The source said the wires were color-codeand the color codes were the same in the bombs found at the apartment and at the police station books on the CIA. The San Francisco Chronicle reCopeland admits to having been a ported that a federal source close to the consultant for the CIA in the Middle investigation said that one of the East and has been identified by many explosive devices was a pipe bomb similar to an unexploded bomb. Arab newspapers as an agency operative. FBI Agct Charles Bates said he had no knowledge of any connection beCopeland reported in detail a conversation he said he had with Robert B. tween the police station bomb and the Anderson on the settiug-u- p of Interser, explosives in the Symbionese Liberaand American businessmen in Beirut tion Army hideout. who dealt with the company say they Inspector Don Hansen, head of the had the impression Anderson was city bomb squad was seen Friday associated with it. emerging from the Harrises apartment with a cylindrical object wrapped in a Delicate Missions He refused comment. newspaper. Anderson was secretary of the Seine Documents Officials Treasury in the first Eisenhower adof documents dealing with Scores ministration. Entrusted with delicate political missions in the Middle East by groups the inner workings of two Eisenhower and later by Lyndon B. mysterious Bay Area terrorist groups Johnson, he has returned to the region were seized by police and federal frequently as a representative of agents early Saturday at a former hideout of the captured Harris fugit American companies seeking business here. He has denied that he owned Interser. By chance, Farouk Jaber says, he and Anderson are friends. Moreover, Jaber and his business part net, ail banker influential Saudi Arabia-bor- n Today's Chuckle good rat. tut "In spite of the rapid growth of par capita income in tin past and the highest .tandard of liv mg m the ui Id, the MHI study said, "dissatisfaction among American citizens grows because of social, political and environmental problems - urban cr:ir"s and ghetto slums political scandals, the See Page 2, 1 oluron I OH proposal which discourages such support, including those which w'ouid limit charitable tax deductions, disallow the full value of appreciated assets or exclude estate tax deductions, the President said. Sees Wisdom in Policies "The Firestone Field House and thousands of other facilities which grace independent college campuses across At, Cilia m concrete ways to the wisdom of these existing I approve, tax policies, Ford said support and encoaiagc the prmciple of voluntary giving to help finance higher education Beirut Posts The emerging the Arab world and McCrane, who now works for Andersons New York company. In what Jaber said was another extraordinary bit of coincidence, Shaker and McCrane recently were See Page 9, Column 7 .Qt .e-o- iy shirts to combat Beiruts oppressive summer heat. This man was a good friend, thats all, he said, adding emphasis on the last two words. Knowingly and not, Arab businessmen increasingly are meeting intellig- it vt ?o Ford said that in any case, he would bigger tax reductions than those Congress put into effect on a tempo! ary basis last whiter. The President made ine statements at a session with editors of the Los Ange'es Tnr.es before flying here from that city for a golf.ng respit.. Depends on Economy Ford told the editors he would decide on a possible tax cut extension "relatively soon and added: If we think the economy needs a shot m the arm withm the next few weeks or a month we will advocate an extension. To do nothing. Ford noted, would be the same as endorsing a tax increase. But he said he would take that course if we believe were doing well enough economically. New Yorks financial plight also was discussed and the President said, I see no role for the federal government in New York Times Service aiding the beleaguered city. Lebanon The governBEIRUT, He expressed the view that Congress ment radio announced Saturday night would not pass a New York aid bill and that a ceasefire had been agreed upon declared: "I just dont see how the by all parties in Lebanon after a federal government can open that between Foreign Minister meeting Pandoras box. Abdel Halim Khaddam of Syria and the To Defend College Gifts leader of the right-win- g Phalangist Earlier, Ford vowed to fight legisla- party, Pierre Gemayel. tion that would discourage private gifts As thick clouds of smoke floated to independent colleges, saying such over eastern Beirut, the city was institutions already are battered and quieter than it had been for several buffeted in ways that may ultimately nights. The occasional boom of mortars survival. their jeopardize and ct ash of lockets could be heard, out "I will do all that I can to encourage the street fighting that has raged for the use of pnvate funds for the public eight days appeared to have tapered Ford declared at ceremonies off good, dedicating the new, privately endowed Effectiveness Uncertain F'retone Field House at Pepperdine In the past, ceasefires arranged University in Malibu. Ford received an gangs of honorary doctor of laws degree from between Beiruts warring There Dr. William S Banowsky, president of gunmen have been short-livewas no certainty that this one would the school. not recommend short-sleev- e and sales representative named Ghascan Shaker, were clients of Interser, which was run by John M. v- Fort Smith, Ark , for example, received inadequate grades in four categories but an A for its environment Appleton, Wis had outstanding ratings in every ca.igory except the environment, where it had a C or Q1 Oil ii Presi MONTEKEY, Calif (AP) dent Ford indicated Saturday he will decide within a month w nether to recommend a one year extension of antirecession tax cuts due to expire Fourth in a Series ty g fci w emm " By Jim Hoagiand Washington Post Service BEIRUT Farouk Jaber counts among his friends a former American secretary of the Treasury, a shadowy but rub Libyan sales tycoon who was spirited out of Libya on a U.S. Air Force plane during the 1969 coup, and the former head of Central Intelligence Agency operations of Saudi Arabia. But Jaber, who acknowledges that personal relations are a key to doing business in the Arab world, stresses that he has done business with none of the above. He denies that he knew that the CIA man was anything other than the diplomat he posed as. As a businessman, you meet many diplomats and other kinds of people, said Jaber, a diminutive Lebanese consultant and sales representative who likes to wear Ameriean-styl- e high-pnon- ,V' -- Contacts well-inform- ., Price Thirty five Cents 21. 1975 IrTW'-j- f economic power of the new importance of oil and other raw materials is causing a basic change of emphasis in intelligence operations here, according to sources. Growing national and pnvate fortunes in the Middle East are financing ventures with long-terpolitical impact that agencies must assess. The specter of economic strangulation by oil embargoes and further price increases, as described by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, is a concern. ast Sums In the shadows that envelop both espionage and Middle East dealmaking, each of which involves the expenditure of vast sums of money for purposes that often remain hidden, the point at which simple inteiligence-gathenn- g ends and deep penetration of policy making begins is left fuzzy deliberately. Where he cash ends up in these unique joint ventures is also carefully cloaked. But it is clear that some Arab officials and businessmen who have dealt with the CIA or have the reputation for doing so have received a number of financial windfalls in the soaring purchases of arms, sensitive communication equipment and even military personnel by the oil producers. The gathering of economic intelligence is a growth industry in this region. It is the big new field, says Miles author of Copeland, a London-base- d iH'.il f li ji Needs gatherers. H'.tJ"KyiH(i' JI unmn hi Financing ence iim n p' Salt Lake City, Utah Sunday Morning 160 5 4P uBlity ment. It has conducted more than $12 million in research this year Lieu saui the report is not the last word on quality of urban life, but is "a He said notion of many dimensions. that each individual has his own views as to what is important to mm." The study., purpose was to describe (lie Mrengms and weannesses of the metropolitan a t - a to Uiiiu'ic ami lu aid decision makers m their efforts to do what they tan to improve the over-al- l quality of life in Americas cities " The nations urban areas were examined in five categories, economy, Ben-Ouc- $ Jlr rv Ii2 The material used in the study of 243 urban areas is five years old and the h author of the study, Dr. Lieu, concedes ihnt quality of life means different things to different people. The data is from 1970 and was used m a 973 study of the states, but Dr Lieu called it the latest and most comprehensive study of ciic a'a,l-abie- . l,iJr' V."' f 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) The quality of life in major metropolitan areas o? the West Coast seems to be far superior to any other part of the country, a study of 243 urban regions said Saturday. and smaller Among medium-size- d metropolitan areas, the Midwest was the leader, said the report by the Midwt Inct,t,!f,?t s privstc, nonprofit research organization based in Kansas City Portland, Ore., was rated No. 1 among metropolitan areas of 500,000 or more population, while Eugene, Ore., was tops in the middle category of areas with 200,000 to 500,000 population f V? ilf $ &jim. jg nm i r. '7 Inspector Jim Molinari said Kathleen Soliah, 28, and Josephine Soliah, 24, were wanted for investigation of possession of explosives and illegal weapons, conspiracy and possession of explosives in a specified area. An bulletin issued Friday night described the women as "armed and dangerous and warned officers to be very cautious when approaching. They are the sisters of Stephen house painter Soliah, a charged with harboring Miss Hearst and fellow fugitive Wendy Yoshimura ts Contains More Arms Police Inspector Gary Kem S3id the Harris apartment also contained three automatic carbines, two shotguns and two pistols plus ammunition. A search of Miss Hearsts Ceasefire In Lebanon d. Ford noted that Congress in recent years has considered a number of proposals that, if enacted, could dampen incentives for charitable contubu-tion- s to private institutions. Proponents of such measures argue they are designed to close loopholes that ailow the wealthy to escape taxation. But 1 will oppose Inside The Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page 2 A-- Page Ans Business Classified Columnists Carrier Coro. E-l-- 8 A-1- 3 B-- U ment, 24 miles away, netted two loaded sawed-of- f shotguns and six pistols with ammunition, plus a pot containing several marijuana plants, a federal source reported. Meantime, Miss Hearst, who calls herself an urban guerrilla,' spent another day in jail after a federal judg Friday revoked her bail on bank See Page 2, Column 1 Page Natl 3 Obituaries Sports Star Gazer Television Theaters Valentine Wash 2 8 H-- 4 4 Editorials C8, 11 Foreign Lifestyle AND MORE . . . Pages of Color Comics: Horae and Parade Magazines; Oldsmobile tabloid; Sears tabloid; Ernst Home Tenters tabloid. A-1- A-- 6 apart- any legislative 7 -l Sumlas Forecast Fair Salt Lake City and vicinity and warm, with highs in 70s or low t0s; light winds. Weather map is one Page hold. Khaddam arrived Friday night accompanied by the Syrian chief of staff. Maj. Gen. Hikmat al Shehabi. The two men twice before have mediated between Lebanons political and religious factions. They immediately huddled with a variety of leaders. Saturday Khaddam conferred with Gemayel, leader of the paramilitary Phalangist organization, deeply involved m the latest round ot fighting which has done severe damage to the citys commercial center. There was no di'dosure of what the two mm might have agreed upon. Camille Chamoun, the constitutive Interior Minister anc .strongman oi the cabinet, was reported to be disgusted with the failure of Premier Rarhid Kuranns attempts to negotiate a ceasefire and to be on the verge of resicmns? Favors Calling Army Chamoun favors calling the army into Beirut The resignation ot Chamoun, a former president of Lebanon and the representative of Maromtc Christian interests m the government, would bring the country to the edge of outright civil war, in the opinion of informed observers (Copyright) B 12 arriage Not for Us Itaiianos one Italian remarked, "You can hardly expect a poor peasant women in the south to raise her voice against her man. not to mention taking him to court The new law accords women the same rights and dut'es as men Property Common man, for msianee, will no lo.i :er be listed as "head of the household ' A woman no longer has to acquire the last name of her husband, but will use it only as an addition to her maiden name The husband now needs her consent before the family can move to a different location The Italian male also lost as the keeper of the family's riches, with the new law stipulating that all goods and savings acquired daring marriage are common property ami to be divided equally m cases of separation and divorce. Eaih spouse is respons'ble for the debts of the other The law also establishes the nvninum age for marriage at 18, raising it from 14 hr girls and 16 for boy b d n Before the law hok effect ' under lbs rushed lnierurnage Friday, including a 2ibyear old soldier on leave fiancee. to marry his 12 year-ol"Waiting another six years was impossible," said the soldier, Zaccana Gallo. Fourteen year-oi- d girls and boys of 10 can still marry m church, but their union will lack recogro n by the state. The law also accords legitimacy, especially m inheritance matters, to ihilihvn born out of relationships at a tune vs hen either the m m or the woman was marrieJ to sonveiie else Such g will no longer be known as enddii-of adultenra but wil cSas u.aii as "natural 4r rfft. h A "t re- iws .1 ;i 4 |