| OCR Text |
Show vHMhtjW- Ronidrr Won't Miranda rtfr Pres Writer W ASHINGTON The Supreme Court said Mondav it will decide whether states may pay unemployment benefits to striking workers hut it refused to reconsider the Miranda decision protecting the rights of mm inal suspects The justices voted to hear arguments sometime next fall in a New York Telephone Co attempt to overturn a state law allowing unemplovment pay moots in strikes lasting longei than eight weeks W & The court's eventual decision could have a major national impact on labor management relations because many states have laws similar to New York's $49 Million in Benefits ti niiK lhi M'ii.ti IS On Phone Recordings The Consumer Product Safety Commission is considering exempting some Associated Press Wilier If you want to record someone's voice on the telephone you would have to tell them so and get their permission under a new rule being considered by the Federal WASHINGTON Communications Commission Currently recording is allowed provided a reguler "beep" tone is played which serv es as a warning that the conversation is being taped The FCC proposal would eliminate this beep" tone, but would allow recording only after consent had been obtained Exceptions will be allowed lor certain activities, the FCC said The agency said it is considering the change because use of the "beep" tone requires special equipment which is costly and burdensome to those who obey the law, and those who do not are rarely detected Particular Method particular method of obtaining No No permission to record is set forth, as long as it is obtained prior to the recording The National Broadcasting Company has asked that broadcasters be exempted from the prior consent rule as long as they obtain permission for broadcasting the tape This would preserve spontaneity m the conservation, NBC argued The FCC disgreed w'lth this proposal, however, saying it does not leel that eliminating prior consent in this case would be in the public interest The proposed rule change is open for public comment before taking effect If you have something to say the deadline Write to the Federal is June 1 Communications Commission, 2(1554 Washington, - The ADVISORY JOBS OPEN Occupational Safety and Health Administration is looking for people to serve on its construction safety advisory committee. The group meets at least four times a year and assists the department in considering safety problems in the construction industry. It has 15 members and all the current terms expire June 30. Membership in the committee includes five persons from employers, five workers, two state government representatives, one from the federal government and two persons from the general public Pay is about $100 a day plus expenses and if you want to apply or nominate someone write to Ken Himt, OSHA Division of Consumer Affairs. Room U S N3fi35. Department of Labor, Washington 20210 GLASS SAFETY EXEMPTION - special decorative glass from safety standards for architectural glass The commission issued its glass safety standards Jan (i, 1977 and these rules require glass used in buildings eilher to not break when struck with a specific force, or to break in a pattern which will not iniiire people The Stained Glass Association ol America has now asked for an exemption from the rule for decorative products which, il savs. cannot meet the requirements Specifically the exemption would apply to carved glass, leaded glass and faceted glass whieh. the association says, are produced in only limited quantities Vipw on Danger The commission says its investigation shows that the potential danger from decorative glass is very small and is further limited by its visibility, which reduces the chance of someone walking into it inadvertently. So the commission is considering exempting decorative glass from the safety rules as long as the texture or color cannot be eliminated without destroying the glass, the decorativp glass is textured or colored so as to he plainly visible, the main purpose of the glass is artistic and the glass is divided into segments bv plainly visible lines FBI Li,si Adds Kansas Felon convicted bank robber Evan WASHINGTON .Andrew (UPI) Gipson, who escaped from the Kansas State Penitentiary last year, was added Monday to the FBIs list of "Irt Most Wanted Fugitives, Gipson, 41, whose arrest record dates back to 1952, was most recently convicted of takmg part in a bank robbery and in a gun battle in which a Kansas killed. state trooper Gipson escaped from the state prison last July while serving six concurrent terms of 40 to 90 years under the Kansas Habitual Criminal law. He had served about nine years of the sentence "Gipson should be considered armed and pxtremely dangerous," the FBI said Anyone with information concerning him should take no action other than to notify the nearest FBI office The FBI said he is 5 feet 7, has reddish browm hair and blue eyes, weighs 130 to 140 pounds and has numerous scars on his body and a tattoo featuring a diamond with a dot on his ring finger He has been a construction worker, dry-wafinisher and laborer and his Social Security number is the FBI said s Hoii8e to Open Park Inquiry (UPI) The House Ethics Committee said Monday it will question Tongsun Park in three days of public hearings starting next MondayEarlier this month, the panel took two weeks of secret testimony from the South Korean rice merchant on his alleged - living, wheeling and of Ethics tion Talk is scheduled as the only witness at the new round of hearings by the House committee, which said it wants to holster its secret questioning with a public record Park told the Senate Ethics Committee he paid members of his own government more than $1 million, more than he contributed to Li S. congressmen. and that the $9 2 million he earned in nee trading went for expenses and payments to legislators In both governments. Parx has said funds he pa;d to U S congressmen Hunk nt Mined It last Appeals Nmi-mlv- 4 m r illl'CI dispute-I- n 1 vear the Supreme -t a- de ided m v a i ( nun li nm e ( ijn nu Hue Mini a , The 50 a m outage began knocking television and radio stations off the air briefly, disrupting telephone service and public transit and blacking out traffic lights No serious problems were reported 1 guilt" Tallman replied "You are nol on the stand and you are not undpr oath " Pow er w as restored to all of the 69 non customers in the residential Mission. districts of the Potrero and ntv bv 1 30 p m , said Paul Guard of to let Massachusetts courts refu-e- d prosecutors introduce Tallman's tes about that conversation as timony n s still lending murevidence in der trial Bay-shor- Du-ti- PG&E In seeking Supreme Court review state Attorney General Franci- - X The Bay Area Rapid Transit system was without power for 18 minutes, and riders on the line from Oakland to San Francisco and beyond to Daly City had to get off the halted trains and be bused Bellotti argued that the rulings expand tMiranda piotec tion- - because were not made during a ' police interrogation Other Court Matters In other matters Monday the court Dustin'-c-ommen- to their destinations Parts of the system were down foi slightly more than an hour as were bus and trolley some electric-powerelines In some areas, it was impossible to dial out or receive telephone calls for a time San Francisco General Hospital had to e portable generators hecau-- e its back-ugenerating system failed but no problems were reported Girard blamed the power outage on a short circuit in a 115,0(1(1 volt switch at the utility's Potrero power plant in the city He said many more than the 80 lino affected customers probably lost powci for a second or two but nev er noticed 0 u-- Left intact a decision by Pennsyl highest court curtailing sig nificantly police power in that state In -top and detain pei sons vania's - Agreed to decide whether em plovers must sm render copies of test- - when those tests are hallengcd by labor unions c - Rejected arguments by Hawaii officials that the religious beliefs ol Chinese mencans are being infringed and left intact regulations banning all hut the smallest firecrackers. I97A . Duke OK Just Bifn 111 . days at home and nights at near his I figger with all this track, theres gotta he a TRAIN in hre someu bores!" by Hoag Memorial for "all kinds ol Ho--pit- al tests" stemming trom his bronchial infection Short of Wind l)is'a !'; (til Wood ' I Laetrile Shipment Poses Drill! Peril ot short li,' 11 rs in Another customers in the city's Financial and Marina districts were without power for about 10 minutes at tale ?, NEWPORT BF ( H. I'ahl (ITD Artor John Wayne said Monday he has been sick as a d"g since last Thanksgiving with the flu and Intel v brum hial pneumonia but declared "there is no I beat that 14 cancer veai - ego " The 7ft year eld artor who bad a lung removed 1961 as part of sur e- ful cancer surgen -- Fow er w as SAN FRANCISCO (AP cut for more than an lioin and a halt Monday to about 69, (too eusiomeis of Pacific Gas &. Electric Co after circuit at a utility power plant i March Bout Will. The Flu? nK emu e- -t a ruling that claimed greatly e p mils Miranda protections Controversial Decision In one of its most controversial dei undei the late Chief Justu e Fall Wairen the high court ruled in pii'ih that police aie required to infm m all criminal of their right- - to remain uent and to he represented hv a lawyer 1'nder the so called Muanda dim trine, rnnfe mils and othei ev idem e obtained without such police wai nine-ma- y not lie used as trial cv idem e Daniel L Du-tol Westfield Ma was arrested in 1976 m the death ol who wa- - killed m a Cailton Buti-- h Holyoke Mass tavern Police twice informed Dustin ol and he was twice told by lawyei-nto say anything to police But while in jail awaiting a court appearance Dustm made an incriminating state ment to jmltcc officer William Tallman "Not I'nder Oath' According to court records, the conversation began hv Dustin asking Tallman, It tell you something about the incident will I he admitting mv -- court niou-l- the pt It Ml 4i the high court let stand ei nnnrmi Inker-' tavoi teh plume company law y er- - had ton! tin appellate -- in er-- v kdi Bum In anutliei ease the etutned bill k a teque-- 1 ll'i'ttl M a ,u hu-e- tt -it- 1h.it it reionsidei .lulhiintie12 veai old Miranda decision In -- o doing, Strikers' Fav instate intervention ' tip- - the eale- it- k i 0 uli 4 Itutinn l' villi, W'nef - tn o.ilkei- - mi-n- t v III ikebi Hie New Yi -- one side in laboi ( '111 !!: Lawyers for (he telephone companv even' supported b attorneys fm industrial giants and the L S t h.unU'i of Commerce, had argued that so, h laws represent governmental uhsidie-tor -- e .. h iv e Pi p iv uemp O (I TvHay, J - WASHINGTON t LTD The Fond and Drug Xdmimsti ation said Monday it h.is foiuid a dangerous drug that can cause a fatal blood disease in a shipment of medicine purported to be Laetrile " The tablets, made in West Germany, were seized at Laredo, Texas, and will be destroyed The FDA said 4 500 tablets labeled as amygdahn. the chemical name for Laetrile, were actually made up entirely of dtpyrone, a fever reducer taken off the market last year because it ran cause a sometime-- , fatal blood disease called agranulocytosis Fewer White Cells The disease lessens the number of white blood cells, causing a sudden high fever and reduemg the bodys ability to fight disease. "This disease can occur immediately afler the first dose of dipvrone or any time while the drug is being taken " the agency said It said it docs not know how or why the other drug was substituted, but cancer patients who took the drug would be in particular danger because many have existing blood problems. Laetrile, which is made from apricot pits and other seeds, may he imported for personal use by terminally ill cancer patients who have affidavits from their doctor Termed Worthless That situation results from an order issued hv U S District Judge Luther Bohanon m Oklahoma City in the case of a cancer patient who was trying to obtain the drug The government has appealed his decision to a federal appeals court in Denver The FDA has termed Laetrile worthless and possibly dangerous because its manufacture is not subject to the usual safety and quality controls. OK," Wavne telephone inter lew from his home am short of wind ami coughing But there is no no sign nt cancer cancer I beat cancer 14 years ago " said feel in a 1 v Wayne, who has rol hi ked, brawled and shot his way through more than 20ft movies includaward-winnining an academy performance as Rooster Coghurn in "True Grit," said doctors told him the hospital tests probably would be completed by Thursday "They let me come out during the day, but I Slav there at night so they can check me, Wayne said "I first got sick with the flu last Thanksgiving and then I got bronchial pneumonia and finally I just had to get into bed " Checks Into Hospital He said he checked into the hospital last Friday Wayne said he was sorry he had to ranrel his scheduled appearance Monday at the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association convention. He was to have appeared in Texas with former Treasury Secretary John Conn ally and conducted a news conference with Connally later. Zooella the Elephant Loves Her Trainer GRAND RAPIDS, Mich (LTD The trouble with Zooella is that she's just wild without Harry, "Shes ready to kill, said a City Park Department official of the tantrums being thrown by the three-to- n zoo elephant who misses her trainer. M U Cl g If I Card Programmable Printing Calculator 54 VC people in there with her right nowand we shouldn't be. She tries to throw men to the floor and do headstands on them That's how elephants kill Were running seared. 5 W "Were putting Frederick A Meyer, Discount Saving ($95) Free Application pacs($35) Free User's libraries ($50) director of the Joun Ball Free Pack of 40 blank cords ($20) Most advanced Scientific Calculator model Park Zoo, is now' trying to figure out what the zoos normally temperamental star to do with who has turned downright mean since her keeper of 13 years, Harry Maxim, took ill HP-6- 7 5ave $1 65 Cad Wand Pograniatvip , HP-19- C Sove $82.50 HP-29- C Save $62.50 Ko,.r-ik- Pr WE WILL BEAT ANYONE'S PRICE!!! Substitute Nearly Killed In February, a substitute handler was almo-- t killed when the elephant butted him and then charged A helper managed to pull the enraged pachyderm away with a large hook and Stokes Brothers carry a complete line of Hewlett-Packar- d accessories - Prov.d-nQuality Service & Over Exchange Unauthorized dealers cannot provide these benefits Ask before buying elsewhere! it. Two years ago, Zooella attacked another substitute handler who needed 18 stitches after the introduction She tossed Meyer through the bars of her cage shortly after she came to the zoo in 1965 . Ralph Bemdtson. assistant zoo superintendent, helped Maxim tend Zooella for years and has taken command now that Maxim will be out of action several months Training Plans Drnpppd Plans to train new handlers were dropped after the latest attack, and Bemdtson ha become increasingly wary while perfotming such daily rituals as feeding Zoella, cleaning her cage, trimming her toenails, cleaning her face glands, oiling her skin and checking her tusk sockets for infection. EGA SHARP J DESK TOP ELECTRONIC 10 digit a imp-i- f 2 rn!or pi inter Pprrpnt key add on & divm.jnt calcu'atnn 0 Per imal r,pprtoi de- influence peddling Senior of the there- among congressmen behalf of his government The Senate without reporting testimony "a seamy story of high Park's members influence peddling committee said on Committee last week completed secret questioning of Tank who was promised immunity from hi- grand iury indictment on rnnspirary and hriherv charges in exchange for his coopera- was no evidence presented tn warrant the indictment of any senators, although one is said to have admitted accepting a payment were either campaign contributions or business dealings Sen Adlai Stevenson. who chairs the Senate panel, called aling. Bv i 4 ll Public Hearing Monday WASHINGTON Court San Francisco Suffers Power Failure1 FCC Ponders Chang es IjiLa Trihiinp, Jobless Pay Issue -- New York Telephones suit against the state grew out of a 1971 strike, in which the companys employees stayed off their jobs for seven months Some $49 million in unemployment benefits were paid to about 33,060 strikers federal trial judge strui k down the state law providing for the unemployCircuit ment checks hut the 2nd jl & 040 Th to LW By Randolph E Schmid m&km rWiion Court to Hear Striker By Richard Carelli ' rvs msm,. iaga iiitftjnSaiitfiiiiijiit'ik iffA ftr - WATER HEATERS (5) AO GAL. L LARGE SELECTION AND THE PRICE IS ALWAYS RIGHT! "SAVE AT... KETCHUMS 400 S. 800 W. f |