Ogden Standard-Examiner (Newspaper) - January 26, 1976, Ogden, Utah Accord Reached in Pittsburgh Teacher Strike PITTSBURGH AP The city teachers union on strike for 57 days reached tentative contract agreement with the school board early today Teachers met for a ratification vote and the school board made plans to classes Tuesday Union officials said they would recommend ratification but discussion of the contract and voting by written ballot were expected to take most of the day When the tentative pact was announced the board said it hoped to school later today if the pact was ratified The two-year pact was agreed on at at an all-night bargaining session Some members are eligible to vote on ratification Details of the settlement were not immediately an- but a break in the talks apparently came after agreement was reached on how to distribute a reported million wage package over the life cf the contract Other crucial bargaining points such as class size job security discipline and reading skills were also settled WASHINGTON UPI President Ford is considering visiting the Middle East in late April to demonstrate continuing U.S determination to achieve a peace settlement there A senior official aboard Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's flight from Europe Sunday said there is a chance the President will visit Israel Egypt Saudi Arabia ana several other Middle East countries this spring Kissinger met with Ford shortly after returning from a w e e k 1 o n g mission to Copenhagen Moscow NATO headquarters in Brussels and Spain to discuss his trip and begin mapping U.S Middle East diplomacy following today's anticipated vote in the Security Council WASHINGTON UPI State Department in- say the Pentagon's military aid program cannot account for million in equipment ordered for other countries but never delivered Pentagon officials say the mistakes were not deliberate and the problem is being solved but Rep Les Aspin D- Wis who released a report by the State Department inspector general for foreign assistance called it a stinging indictment of sloppy management by the military A special accounting has been set up for weapons which are actually owned by the military ance program because they were ordered for other tries but never delivered ATHENS Greece The Balkan conference of cooperation opened in the Greek capital today with the participation of five nations from NATO the Wasaw Pact and nonaligned blocs All participants hailed the conference as the first practical application of the Helsinki spirit but their willingness to cooperate and predictions for its success varied The conference will search for possible means of joint cooperation in mutually beneficial projects such as energy waterway ex- transport and communications tourism trade and industry It is hoped that success in such areas will create a healthier political climate in the Balkans a traditionally troubled region OAKLAND Calif AP American Indian Movement leader Dennis Banks a fugitive for six months faced arraignment today along with a college instructor who is charged with harboring him Banks 38 was arrested Saturday in nearby El Cerrito at the home of Lehman Leonard Brightman a Sioux Indian and director of the native American program at Contra Costa College They were to appear before a U.S magistrate here Banks had been sought by federal authorities after he failed to appear in court for sentencing on a July 1975 conviction stemming from a 1973 melee in front of the Custer courthouse BOSTON AP Boston schools opened without in- this morning but things were a bit slow at Hyde Park High School which was reopening with increased police security Processing of pupils into Hyde Park High was slowed because they had to line up pass through metal detectors then turn out the contents of pockets and purses to make sure no weapons got into the school The school is one of several in Boston affected by a plan using busing FORECAST YEAR No 26 ASSOCIATED PRESS OGDEN UTAH UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL UPI TELEPHOTO MONDAY EVENING JANUARY 26 1976 TEMPERATURES Highs today and Tuesday lows tonight Highs both days 40s lows DAILY SUNDAY TRAIN TRAVELS BY TRUCK You can meet just about anything on todays highways including it turns out at least a portion of a train This box car was being trucked west on Highway 183 in the Ft Worth suburb of Hurst Texas when photographed through a car window U.S Economy Gaining Despite Unemployment WASHINGTON AP budget he is proposing for though unemployment remains high almost everything else in I ahead to pursue the kind tne economy is starting to good and Americans may be entitled to another major cut in 1979 President Ford said he said fiscal 1977 we continue in the years of budgetary restraint which I am recommending another major tax cut will be feasible by today The underlying fact about pur economy is that it is ily growing healthier My for 1976 are intended to keep us on that upward Ford said in his annual eco- nomic report to Congress He also said Regrettably a full recovery of the economy will take time Despite the prospect of job gains this year Ford's ic advisers said ment will almost surely remain distressingly high FULL EMPLOYMENT Even under the best the return to full employment cannot ly be accomplished this year or next Ford did not indicate how much taxes could be decreased the President of Economic and Ad- from his Council visers stressed that the worst is over for the economy It said Americans can take tion that the nation's economic system has come through in- tact I 13 Ford's economic report which Congress receives gains in reducing page 2A column 7 Defense See As Hearst Ti SAN FRANCISCO AP the scheduled start of Patricia Hearst's bank Rulings rial Wears Miss Hearst's activities the defense says was kept by a deputy sheriff at San Mateo County in 1979 but he crease would be said the on top of de- the ue uu tup ui r billion in permanent tax de- today creases he already has posed for this year and next He also tied the prospect of future tax reductions to support for his spending tions including the sought rulings today on five pretrial motions including one claiming the newspaper heiress was brainwashed and another seeking dismissal of the charges against her U.S District Court Judge ver J Carter was scheduled to consider the defense motions as well as two motions filed by the prosecution at a hearing TEST RESULTS Another defense motion seeks approval for introduction of stress evaluation test results in the form of expert mony The prosecution meanwhile is opposing the admission of lie detector test results as dence and is asking the court to reaffirm its order that Dr Defense attorneys are also seeking to bar as evidence some samples of Miss Hearst handwriting prevent testimony from her jailers and fellow in- mates and suppress a log of ry Kozol a NAMES IN THE NEWS President Ford has ordered his daughter Susan off the ski slopes and onto the campaign trail says a Ford family friend The friend who asked to re- main anonymous said Susan was to have remained at Vail Colo for skiing and team racing until Feb 24 two days before classes resume at Holyoke College Instead she will return to Washington Feb 6 because her dad wants her home Reportedly Susan's first campaign trip probably would be to New Hampshire next month Susan earlier had said the President had told family members he did not expect any of them to formally for him British actress Glenda Jackson twice an Oscar winner was divorced today by theater director Roy Hodges 48 whom she married in 1958 Jackson 39 was not in London court for the minute hearing and did not contest the action which was on the grounds of her adultery with lighting engineer Andy Phillips 40 who was named a Hodges and Miss Jackson were granted joint custody of their six-year-old son and the actress agreed to pay the costs of the action Miss Jackson won Academy Awards for Women in Love in 1970 and A Touch of Class in 1974 She is due to leave for Hollywood shortly to make a new film called The Abbess of Crewe be allowed Boston psychiatrist claims bullied her to interview the heiress in private A member of the defense team attorney Thomas May said before today's hearing that the motion for dismissal of the indictment is based on the con- tention that the prosecution withheld evidence that would have tended to show Miss Hearst's innocence We believe that if the grand jury had all the evidence able in the case they would have never indicted May said The forceful nature of her abduction the violent and dangerous character of her abductors were not brought up ALLEGIANCE Miss Hearst 21 is to go on irial Tuesday on charges she took part in the April 15 1974 of a neighborhood bank Branch with members of the Liberation Army She was abducted by the SLA nine weeks earlier and in messages after robbery she proclaimed ler allegiance to the terrorist group to End Tax Clears Senate Gives OK To Liquor Revamp By PETER GILLINS SALT LAKE CITY UPI The Utah House of Representatives today passed and sent to the governor a eliminating the sales tax on prescription drugs The measure which cleared the Senate last week was approved in the House on a vote and would reduce state tax revenue by about million annually This will effect only a small part of the population but they are the ones who need it the said Sen Donald Brooke Lake chief sponsor of the ure It is wrong to tax people because they are sick Gov Calvin L Rampton had called for repeal of the tax in his budget message The passed without amendment following an hour of debate and a can party caucus The Senate passed bills today which would revamp the State Liquor Control Commission and permit the state's medical profession to weed out incompetent tors The placing the state's lion a year liquor business under the direction of a gle director advised by a part-time sion was sent to the House on a vote Sen Dean Jeffs sponsored the which would replace the current full-time com- mission The was recommended by the Citizens Council on Liquor Control and opposed by the rent commissioners Gerald E Hulbert Ernest bano and Richard P Backman Dismantle Pentagon Intelligence Unit House Report Urges WASHINGTON AP The recommendations do not of the House for prohibitions against committee is recommending covert U.S operations but that a huge Pentagon in- agency be abolished and that stiff sanctions be im- posed against government em- ployes including members of Congress for leaking secret in- Another recommendation calls for the House to create a permanent intelligence over- sight committee and empower would require that they be proved by the entire National Security Council The staff recommends that the Pentagon's Defense In- Agency be abolished jand that its functions including the military attache program be divided between the CIA and the secretary of defense's of- fice it to publicize secrets if the Another recommendation panel voted to do so by calls for the separation of the MY HERO A young fan plants a kiss on the nose of Rin Tin Tin VII at the dorf Astoria Hotel in New York where he appeared to promote the latest TV ries woven around his The show has been syndicated ity vote National Agency from The recommendations are military agencies._ The be tacked onto a final NSA the report approved by the panel 9 agency would be made an in- dependent civilian agency witn to 4 on Friday It estimates that total U.S intelligence costs are billion a year three or four times the amount listed in the annual defense tions who stand to lose their a year jobs The senators passed the after knocking down two amendments which would have liberalized the sale of liquor and wine in restaurants Sponsored by Sen Edward T Beck one ment would have allowed waiters to serve at he table instead of forcing patrons to get their booze at package agencies located in the restaurant only three The measure got votes after Sen Warren E Pugh Lake said What you are doing in effect will give us liquor by the drink The other amendment would to have allowed restaurants open their liquor counters at noon rather than the present 4 p.m FIRST OF TWQ Earlier the senators approved the first of a package of two medical mal- practice insurance bills and Buses Roll Throu Detroit As School Integration Begun DETROIT AP Detroit of the city's schools and a one- jof U.S District Court Judge became the largest U.S city to implement a school integration plan today as buses were readied to take thousands of black and white elementary pupils to classes No demonstrations were planned but scores of picked policemen were called out to stand at two staging areas Hundreds of volunteers and paid monitors were set to guard bus stops school ways and cafeterias Monitors were also assigned to each bus PEACEFUL ACCEPTANCE The city's two antibusing groups claiming a total of called for an See page 2A column 4 indefinite yellow flu boycott day sympathy boycott in the suburbs Meanwhile city officials called for peaceful acceptance 2 SECTIONS 24 PAGES B Comics Editorial Page Markets Movies Obituaries Sports Pages 2B 3B Television Women's Page Robert order which called for busing elementary school students be- ginning today I really don't think we're going to have problems with the school Supt Ar- thur Jefferson predicted It's adults I'm worried about A total of pupils will be going to school on 250 new low buses by Tuesday when mester break ends for middle schools and high schools grades 6 through 12 Another 200 pupils have been trans- ferred to other schools but will not be bused Under the court order pre- See page 2A column 4 a mandate to emphasize the gathering of diplomatic and economic information The committee report also contains the following ADVISED AGENCY 1973 CIA memorandum says Sen Henry M Jackson D- Wash advised the agency on how to try to prevent a CIA of- from testifying at a ate hearing that was unraveling I covert CIA operations in Chile Jackson denied Sunday that he had done anything to protect the agency but said he merely gave procedural advice intelligence failed to predict the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia largely be- See page 2A column 1 SUSPECT TOLD OF RIGHTS Court Upholds Warrantless Arrest WASHINGTON UPI The Supreme Court ruled 6 to 2 today that the mere fact a person is in custody does not constitute coercion to allow a warrantless search of his property for evidence The court reversed a federal appeals court and restated its view that arrests can be made without warrants when there is clear cause for the action If the officer reads the suspect his rights then the mere fact the person is in custody does not constitute coercion to search for evidence the court ruled PICKED UP The case involved Henry Ogle Watson convicted of possessing two stolen credit cards He was arrested without a warrant in a restaurant when a government informant told federal officers Watson had the cards in his possession Watson was told his rights and was searched With his permission his automobile was searched and an officer found two credit cards under the floor mat The 9th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals reversed his conviction on grounds the prosecutors had plenty of time to get a warrant to arrest him Taking him into custody without a warrant violated his constitutional rights the appeals court ruled The lower court said because Watson's arrest was illegal his permission for the car search was invalidated The Supreme Court in a majority opinion by Justice Byron R White said previous cases have established that a police officer may arrest without warrant one believed by the officer upon reasonable cause to have been guilty of a TOOK NO PART Justices Thurgood Marshall and Justice William J Brennan dissented and Justice John Paul Stevens took no part because he did not hear arguments in the case The court had been scheduled to start its mid-term recess following today's actions but without explanation scheduled a session next Monday In brief orders today the Let stand rulings that Indian tribes in western ington state are exempt from most state regulation of salmon and trout fishing Rejected a challenge to the federal ban on import and distribution of laetrile a drug believed by some to be effective against cancer Dismissed as not posing a federal question a challenge to Tennessee's property tax laws which assess apartments at higher rates than single-family rental homes South African Forces Pulled Out of Angola LUSAKA Zambia UPI South Africa was reported today to have completed withdrawing its troops from the Angolan civil war front and pro-Western troops established a final fight to the death defense line to block an expected armored and air offensive against their capital Dr Jonas leader of the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola was quoted by reporters returning from Angola as saying the estimated South African troops on the Southern front had completed a full and orderly withdrawal Friday two days after receiving orders from their government to pull out STILL ON DEFENSE Though they had pulled back from the front itself the South Africans with their artillery and armored cars did not leave Angola completely the reporters said They retreated to the border area with South West Africa Namibia where they were still defending the vital Cunene dam just inside the Angolan border they said