—TheDail DOONESBURY [lan Thursday, April 29,1976 VEAH, I'M AWARE OF THE ich.red I butter, < THEN YOU KNOW! SHseor on..tM.. is A TTENTION BUSINESS ADM. STUDENTS Make your nominations for outstanding Teacher, Advisor, and Grad Asst in 8.A.8. or Boucke Lobby April 26-30 Frisco walkout nears >. By United Press International A San Francisco official reported yesterday an agreement has been worked out that is expected to end the 4-week-old strike of 1,700 city workers. Quentin Kopp, president of the city Board of Supervisors, said top union officials have accepted the proposal and were recommending it to the striking municipal workers. Kopp said Mayor George Moscone also endorsed the set tlement proposal, the details of which were not revealed. He said union leaders were meeting to discuss the proposal and a reply was expected within hours. 1 If strikers accept the settlement proposal, he said, the walkout would end immediately and the city’s cable cars, trolleys and buses would be rolling within hours. The break came after several days of secret negotiations and after the striking workers indirectly caused a water shortage in thousands of homes, hospitals and schools. Elsewhere in the nation’s labor picture: A court in Indiana moved to prevent violence in a nationwide strike of rubber workers. A financial report showed an 8-week-old Teamsters strike apparently has made deep inroads into beer sales of Anheuser-Busch Inc. Despite a spring rash of strikes, the Labor Department reported that strike activity during the year’s first three months was lower than in any previous first quarter during the last decade. San Francisco officials said they suspected sabotage in the rupture of a 30-inch water main in Golden Gate Park. Striking municipal workers blocked efforts to repair the main, triggering a water shortage in an area with a population of more than 70,000 persons. Officials said somebody apparently had tampered with a Accused of aiding Hearst Soliah may face charges SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) —Steven Soliah, acquitted of participating in a fatal Symbionese Liberation Army bank robbery, may face charges for aiding his underground lover, Patricia Hearst. An alibi witness at Soiiah’s federal court trial, Emily Toback, 26, also could face a perjury charge. She testified she was in San Francisco the day of the bank robbery, but state records indicate she was visiting at Folson Prison, 90 miles from San Francisco and 10 miles from the robbery scene. Soliah, 27, testified at his trial that he “felt close” to Hearst and aided her for more than a year while she, Senate WASHINGTON (UPI) The Senate* Finance Com mittee voted yesterday to weaken significantly the House-passed curbs on tax shelters in the farming and real estate industries. ; The committee actions' on shelters one of the major was sought by authorities. He shared an apartment with her before her arrest. “I lived with her, I slept with her,” he said. Arrested by FBI agents Sept. 18, less than an hour after Hearst was taken into, custody, he was charged with harboring a fugitive. That charge was dropped when he was indicted in Sacramento for allegedly participating in the Carmichael, Calif, bank hold-up. An eight-woman, four-man jury Tuesday acquitted Soliah of the April 21,1975 holdup of a Crocker National Bank branch during which a woman customer was killed. Assistant U.S. . Attorney David Bancroft said in San Francisco he is investigating rocks tax shelter reform methods used by the wealthy and harm investment. shelters in real estate and} ;,: to" delay ’or reduce'taxes Most liberal members, farming. While' ;;the com* were the first in what is ex- possibly already” assuming mittee would cut’bfck on the? pected to be a step-by-step they will have to stage their use of tax shelters' it 'would* dismantling of the massive reform battles on the Senate not do so to the extent of the*' tax reform bill passed late floor, were absent from the . House bill. V last year by,the House. two days ,of committee Tax shelters generally are£ A majority of committee drafting sessions. . - investments made by wealthy^ members, led by chairman ' By several lopsided votes, persons which produce big* Russell Long, D-La., had the committee voted tax deductions in one year! expressed dissatisfaction yesterday to substitute its while the investment does not}} with the House bill, saying it own weaker provisions for the produce taxable income until*: would create unemployment House method of curbing tax the next year. . : ; •* Bowl 3 games for just 165l 65 after midnight I°° per hour for Billiard tables Reduced Rate Bowling & Billiards 11:00 AM-6:00 PM WEEKDAYS Sundays bowl for S&H Green Stamps Win as many as 1,500 valuable S&H Green Stamps with a single strike! ARMENARA LANES 0 Across from South Halls, right behind McDonalds pressure valve. A group of men were seen nearby* Shortly before the rupture occured. When workmen for’aprivate' contractor arrived to fix the break, noisy pickets showed up J and the workers left. The strikebound Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. obtained a;h' injunction at Noblesville, Ind., against a United Rubber Workers local after picket line incidents. The URW went on strike April. 21 against alio Firestone, Goodyear, Goodrich and Uniroyal plants in thO'i United States. It has sought to make a pattern-setting sets l ' tlement with Firestone but so far there has been no indicati6n of progress in negotiations at Cleveland. ".;vj At its St. Louis headquarters, Anheuser-Busch reported a'lB’' per cent decrease in beer sales during the first quarter of’thd' year. Since a nationwide strike of teamsters began March 1 against its plants, the brewery company has been producing? neer on a limited scale by using supervisory ana salaried employes. ' v ‘ # Contract negotiations broke off yesterday between Anheuser-Busch, Inc., and striking Teamsters Bottlers Local 1187 over failure to agree on disciplinary action for strikers, allegedly involved in violence. The bargaining sessions had been separated from talks with s Busch involving the national Teamsters Union, whichhas - been on strike since March 1 at all nine of the company’s) plants across the country. About 8,000 employes, including 4,000 in St. Louis, have been idled by the strike. Any settlement that would have been reached, in the St. Louis talks would have applied only to the St. Louis local., In other labor .disputes, members of the National), Association of Broadcast Employes and Technicians con-!', tinued a strike against the National Broadcasting and 70 nurses remained away from their jobs aLWindhajri ’ Community Memorial Hospital in Williamantic, Conn.. ',, , r( the possibility of reinstating the harboring charge against Soliah. Toback, a San Francisco masseuse, testified that she spent the night before the bank robbery with Soliah at her San Francisco house but had “no specific recollection” of seeing him the next morn ing when she left for a university physics class at 11. Soliah said he was in San Francisco at the time of the robbery. It was discolosed Tuesday, however, that a woman identifying herself as Toback was at Folsom Prison visiting a prisoner named Alfred Ingram at ,9 a.m. the day of the robbery. Toback declined to com- ALL NIGHT BOWLING & BILLIARDS! ena ment on the disclosure until she consulted an attorney.' V,, ■ Phil Guthrie, a spokesman for the state. Department. pf. Corrections said: “From our, records it seems clear .she was at the prison that day.’.j!' 11 Federal prosecutors in Sacramento would f, ‘ not comment on whether they would seek a perjury in dictment against Toback: Other potential”* staYej charges against. -Soliah in-4 elude the use'.of false iden-S tification. Soliah admitted at| his trial that he used a drivers? license in the name of Silva a deceased baby, and* that he purchased a car for* Hearst and-fugitives Williams and Emily Harris under theS name John Matthews.- $ f*. •' £ •