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Show 1 ibr s HP A X, .1 t'a kr V S" 1'A v V S'? If gfibunr Sport T Tmlax J 0 , complaining 'T""'1" doing their best these sweltering days to keep al- a problem in July and August m these parts but its a double problem these days of the energy shortage, with the office and store thermometers set at a higher level than in previous hot summers. There are certain tricks to keeping ones cool even during a hot spell. The first thing to do is think cool! Dont think hot! If you start to get warm in the office or on the streets or in the shopping centers, think about cool things. Think Tom Collins, not hot rum drinks. If youre a male, think about cool blondes instead of hot redheads. If you're a woman, think about the cool football halfback you dated back at college. Dont think about the hot head you married. I repeat: Think cool . . . think cool . . think cool. ON A HOT DAY, dress cool. Men should forget about vests, and even neckties. Wear cool socks and light pants. The women are luckier then men during these current hot days because of the new dress styles. The e womens skirts have slits up sometimes on one side of the skirt and this allows the wind to both sides circulate and cool off the interior. Men, Im sorry to say, dont have this the current male styles do not break call for slit trousers, though the day will probably come. There are so many things to watch if you want to remain cool on a hot day. To keep cool, try to avoid discussing Nixon in any way. Stay away from inflation and the price and scarcity of gasoline. These items will just heat your brain and cause your inner temperature to rise. Think cool on a hot day. Close your eyes, and think about icebergs. Never think about a tropical jungle. Dont think about income taxes. This is an item that tends to overheat. ON A HOT DAY, try your best to stay away from people who stop you on Mam Street and ask you if its hot enough for you. During your lunch hour on a hot day, walk down Main Street and look at the empty hamburger cartons and the water in the small fountains along Mam Street. Another way to keep rool on a hot day is to carry an ice cube in your pocket a trifle uncomfortable, but very cooling until the ice cube changes into hot water. On a hot day, different people fight he heat in different ways. One Salt Lake housewife beats the heat by doing her housework In the nude on a hot day. This is a good method, but it requires caution. One doesnt answer the front doorbell, and one makes sure the neighbors on both sides of the house are on vacation. One also doesn't walk in front of the picture windows in the living room when one is fighting the heat with nudity. On a hot day, one doesnt think about fur coats or the cost of coal . . One thinks rool on a hot day . . . one thinks about chilled soda pop and ice cream (sherbert) . . . And don't fan yourself on a hrt day! Many people make the mistake of fanning themselves on a hot day in the mistaken belief that the air from the slit-ski- rt new-styl- I . fan is cooling. IT ISNT. Waving a fan is hot work. It eventually causes beads of hot perspiration to break out on ones forehead. This makes the forehead hot, and when the nr waves from the fan hits the hot torehead, the air gets hot, and eventually the person doing the fanning is engulfed in waves of hot air. SAM, THE SAD CYNIC, SAYS: It's safer to be a political leader in America here, members of the cabinet Just resign. In many countries around the world, theyre shot ! Yesterday's Chuckle Said the boss to his secretary. Make etiout 20 copies of this so that we can run across one when we need it " By Hal Spencer Tribune Staff Writer The speeter of a police strike or some other job action hung over city hall Thursday as the Salt Lake City Commission. led by the mayor, defied union demands and handed police a pay raise in line with White House wage guidelines. The $476,000 settlement was met with ominous silence by angry union leaders who had told reporters earlier, You will not be told if the union takes some It will just happen. kind of action Taking the implied threat seriously. Police Chief Bud Willoughby Thursday afternoon set up a rumor center in the departments dispatch operations center, to be manned by a command officer around the clock. When things get this tense, rumors can lead to actions. Rumors can kill you, he said. ... z af . i ' f . I- A t ' r - if 1 i iiS x T. " hi i .4 i 5 , H v Ss r i VMM y Tribune claims city commission promised Ijm December. Commissioners Day id Camp- - bell. Jess Agrar, from left, and Mayor Ted Wilson, voted to raise police pay in ! The settlement rejected in the iii.inn two weeks a jo includes a 3 j wi cent pay raise retroactive to last Dec 1. and a raise next Iloeemtier of 7 portent Combined with an aveiage 4 d port ent increase last Dot ember, the total raise m 12 months time will come to 1" percent Also passed by the commission Thursday was a $i increase m the montly uniform allowance 1 December Contrat t on the December contract, the union was demanding a 9 percent pay raise, effective July 1. The raise, plus the uniform allowance and a 12 Bast-- d 1 would eiiht r not cxieed wage guidelines The jsiliie union held an angry meeting Thursday morning before the commission meeting from which the press was tiarred Asktxi later if the police planned a strike or oilier job action Mi Tliay nc dii lined loinnu-iit- . lie said any action in that recard would include steps to notify police leaders i who are not union members that something is happening, so they can be ready to protect the city " Police who packed the City Commission meeting walked out halfway-througan explanation of the compromise by Public Safety Commissioner David C. Campbell, who, along with Mr. Greener, favored giving police what they wanted Aimed at Mayor Their anger directed mainly at Mayor Ted L Wilson, whom the unions blame for the commission action. Mr. Thayne observed that the commission unofficially approved the 9.1 percent pay raise while the mayor was in China. The mayor returns and all of a sudden the commission is turned around, he bitterly complained Mr. Thayne said the money police will receive from the compromise settlement will be used to defeat that Strikes Delay NeAY School Openings remain on regular schedules Because two of Smith's four sections will be finished by Aug 27, and first-grad- e students will attend other schools including Truman, 4639 S. 3200 West, and Benn-io5775 S. Sierra Grande Dr. (2940 West). Smith School is expected to be completed within four weeks of schools start. Although Granites special education Hartvigson Secondary School facility at approximately 350 East and 3545 is also scheduled to open for South the first time this fall, it was dose enough to completion to not be affected by the strikes, Mr. Hilton said. Carl R. Child, director of buildings and grounds in Salt Lake City District, said progress on two city schools was delayed by the construction worker strikes. However, only Emerson Elementary, 1337 McClelland, (1040 East), Is supposed to open this fall, and it's still touch and go whether it will be ready Aug. 27. Salt Lake Citys Bryant Intermediate, 745 E. 1st South, w'hich is not to he completed until next fall, was most affected by the construction delays. Mr. Child said, explaining that some workers still have not resumed to the job Jordan District had not planned to open its two new elementary schools until ThankPark Lane and Oquirrh sgiving regardless of recent stnkes. However, a district spokesman said at least four (lavs of work tune were lost, which could affect plans to begin classes in November. Granites facilities director said that strikes this summer have been especially frustrating for his district. Accused Slayer Changes Pica to Guilty It ?,v; & , VKs 1 f vj. i'f i7 Photos by Van b Porter Pay Raise 7 little Hifler in the next election." Mayor Wilson is running for this fail Finance Commissioner Jennings Phillips Jr., who reversed his July 3 vote favoring the 9.1 percent raise, said he was cussed out by a plane clothes officer m the city hall elevator after the meeting. "He called me all kinds of names and said 1 was two faced If 1 find out who he is, hes in trouble." Urges Reason Mayor Wilson had little to say after the meeting, hut warned the police union, "The city will deal wilh a strike or job action in the strongest possible way. He urged the union to be reasonable and recognize that the city must be "equitable" to its other unions, who were ready to demand the same consideration if police were given raises above the wage guideline was, officials representing freighters and blue collar workers said Thursday afternoon they may ask for more money now that the police are getting 15 percent more in a year's time. As Sttt line with White House wage guidelines, Cnion says it may strike as a result. it If the police do elect to stage a job action" short of a strike, it may be difficult to detect immediately For example, the police alxuit Ihiee years ago staged a prod acted wink slowdown, who h finally showed up in a $ too, 000 decline in traffic ticket revenue In fact, i ity officials and police never did admit that a "job a tmn" had occuTed - until Chief W llmughbv made a sworn slat. nu i it to a ci ions commiUee e.u her this year The statement to the Hanson Com imtte investigating irregularities in city hall, was When I arrived in Salt Lake City, there was a real morale problem There had been a si rike you didnt know what was going on there was more or less a wolk stoppage strike, and the city traffic coffers had lost $400,000 " The chief said Thursday that he has police at his disposal, from majors to sergeants. In the event of a job actum, the men would work 85 non-unio- n shifts, and less pressing police work, such as hubcab thefts, wmuld be placed on the back burner. State law and the citys collective bargaining agreement ban stnkes and job actions The penalty is immediate dismissal, the chief said. Commissioner Greener, former Page 11-- 2, pub-Se- Column e 1 Nortlicaist of Milford Crews Fihl lo Contain Fire In Rugged Utali Mountains most areas, said Don Baxa, BLM fire information officer. He urged caution by persons in the back country this weekend and the Pioneer Day holiday Tuesday. Special to The Tribune three-daA 6,200-acrMILFORD range fire about 10 miles northeast of here in rugged terrain of the Mineral Mountains was almost contained. Thursday night. Bureau of LandJJanagement officials said the blaze, believed accidentally caused, spread southerly at the Beaver-MillarCounty line into Beaver County and is not expected to be listed as controlled until at least Friday. Fire danger is high statewide from a month of little or no precipitation in y e, Aixmt 200 firefighters were battling the blaze in marginal grazing land of grasses, brush and juniper and pinon pine Crew members include BLM personnel from Utah and Colorado, about 10 men from the d U S. - V ' w r as recorded June Sept high , ; - - ill However, tl at !'( daw conies no where lie. II the retold of 02 (iivs without ram National Weather Sen ice records show that occurred lietween , .4 Con- Ram spatters were reported through T. V from the Fire out Utah hut none was recorded at the Salt Lake City International Airimri Thursday, the l'th consecutive com pletely drv day at the airport A trace A? $ 80 Rain Spa Hers Dol Larjje Area of Utah In v J Forest Service and Boise, Idaho, Interagency trol Centci Illinois Man w 12 and as 'H "vluv l')52 The 12, tltv's Delta Bryce Canyon ioMirtcd H5 of an mill and a station near Mirror Lake recorded I), of an inch of precipitation Ira. e I of ram tell I'hursdav at 0, of all mill Pine received n Nov. 7. He appeared before Judge Tibbs obstensibly to be heard on several motions, including one to change the site of the trial. They became academic, however, when Stack changed his plea. The guilty plea was agreed upon when the state agreed not to recommend the death sentence at the penalty hearing in September, said Garfield County Attorney Russell Mayhan V , j Oetober-to-Octobe- Special to The T ribunc In a MANTI, Sanpete County surprise move, an Illinois man charged with the first degree murder of a Utah Highway Patrol trooper Thursday changed his plea to guilty. A penalty hearing to determine the sentence is scheduled for Sept. 4 and 5 before 6th District Judge Don V. Tibbs in Manti. The admitted slayer, Brian Keith Stack, Woodstock, 111., was charged with fatally shooting Trooper Ray Lynn Pierson, Panguitch, Garfield County, near the Garfield-IroCounty line last '4 ' ' - ,, 4 . i f . ;? f r x i'v; W ' & A? percent medical insurance premiums, would have met the terms of the contract, according to Dennis Thayne, president of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, Local 470 The contract called for a raise in July 1979 to equal the annual rise in the consumer price index. A Double-Cros- s The commission signed the police The union, with the vociferous agreement of Water Commissioner Glen N. contract in December on the mistaken Greener, believe the commission belief that it met the wage guidelines, double-crosse- d police by failing to only to learn that the guidelines' 7 honor a wage contract signed last percent annual wage increase is based r on an December. year, not a The commission majority thinks calender year. And the commission held the other otherwise, arguing that the union will receive the same basic settlement, three city unions to 7 percent pay raises for the yeai, piomising that police pay only in line with wage guidelines Two Granite District schools will not open as planned for the first day of school. Aug. 27, because of recent construction strikes. And completion dates on other new schools in the Salt Lake City area could be delayed by the work stoppages. Fox Hills Elementary at 3800 West and 6200 South and Calvin Smith Elementary at 2200 West and 6200 South will be finished several weeks later than planned, according to Brent Hilton, director of now facilities in Granite. Double school sessions will be used to compensate for the problem at Fox Hills. Children w'ho would have attended Fox Hills will attend South Kearns School, 4430 W. 5570 South, from 12.30 until 5:30 for four to six weeks, or until the new building is ready. South Kearns students will attend classes from 7 a m. until noon. Kindergarten children will i , 8.L. Police Furious Over HOT SPELL: Well, the heat's on People who complained aliout the chill winds a couple of months ago are now been A . S Dennis Thayne, police union president. left, failed Thursday to get pay raise Nothing Serious'8 ways ! A Page One their cool. Heat has f 0" - tv ' , 4 S- t r 4 Dan Valentines ' : P- u I . Friday Morning July 20, 1973 mm 1 R- - c Seolion II rtf Y& . 'V' x -'- -i i - V, Y tt'iii i . '; 1 , seL - I - v-'- , r" Ixal Vhs n ; i v i , Tenqierat ill es should la- a bit cooler e i tlie region Friday and Saturdav. with highs in the However, it may not feel much cooler. Skies ate expected to remain cloudy with after noon and evening thundershowers due That means the humidity will remain higher than normal Thursday's humid ov mui-HO- KfSBl SS&VKSsWW.&a Associated Press Laserphoto Theodore Bundy, on trial for the murder of two photos of sisters, examines blown-up I his teeth and bite marks found on victims. ensie odontologist said bite marks were Bundy's. For-sororit- y s ltv was 21 (MU'ceilt Florida Prosecutors Rest Case at Bundy Slay Trial By Rick Spratling Associated Press Writer With dental evidence linking Theodore R. Bundy to a bite on a murdered woman, the state rested its case Thursday in Bundy's trial on charges of murdering two sorority sisters in January 1978. The presiding judge then refused to order acquittal for the glib former law student and told Bundys defense team to begin its case Friday. "The state rests, prosecutor Simpson said at 4 37 p m. shortly after bite mark expert Lowell Irvine linked Bundy's irregular teeth to a mark on murdered Chi Omega sorority sister Lisa Levy. MIAMI Defense attorney Margaket Good asked Judge Edward D. Cowart to throw out all seven counts against two of murder, Bundy three of attempted murder, two of burglary. Ms Good belittled lute mark evidence, saying the experts can only testify in terms of probabilities." Eye Witness Certain "The state really has picnous little else to sustain a conviction in this case other than Nita Neary's profile," Ms. Good said Miss Neary has testified she saw Bundy leave the sorority house the morning ol the murders Ms Good also argued that the state first-degre- e three-secon- , had no ev uienee to place Bundy at the Tallahassee, Fla., where duplex Thomas was beaten. Chary They have only a guess, she said Prosecutor Ian McKecver rebutted briefly and the judge left all charges intact Bundy, 32, is on trial in the murders of Miss Levy, 20, and Margaret Bowman, 21, at the house m Tallahassee and the beatings of three other women All five attacks occurred on Jan 15, in 1 17K d AAAA1SAA.M After neai ly feur wet ks 'lie state lias introduced three main pieces ot evi- dent t Miss Neary, who pointed toward Bundy and said unequivocally that lie ing "like a vampire " The states final witness was Levine, a Huntington Station, N A'., dentist who compared the bite and model of was the man she saw carry a club out of the sorority house. Bite mark experts who connect Bundy's crooked teeth to a mark found on the buttocks of Miss Ievy. Two strands of brown hair in a pantyhose mask next to Miss Thomas' bed. A hair comparison expert said die hair "very likely came from Bundy Vampire Also important is what the jury did not hear. Cowart threw out testimony that a pantyhose mask was found in Bundy's car when lie was arrested m Utah in l75. The judge suppressed a conversation where police said Bundy described himself as gripped by uncontrollable fantasies and sometimes feel VAA.AAAA..1VAA Bundys teeth Levine said he was reasonably certain the bite marks were made by IL;su! '.. t. , t!,. Cat he admitted under cross examination that material used for dental impressions may not represent real life. "Obviously, you can't reproduce with pieces of plaster and wax what other me said people do to other people." Defense attorneys have said theyll show jurors at least five other tooth models that could have mlhcicd the Utt . . A A. on Miss , Low. |