Agat Geop Instw Iftiorr

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Agat Geop Instw Iftiorr I' , - ( g y k ^ ----------------- z z 76th ye a r, ANo. 227 Twin Falls,, IIdaho StSaturday, Auguss t 15,1981 2 5 ^ Prodti(ducer Price Index — IndoIndox for Finished I n f f ca tio in u p r o n l ;y . 4 p e r <c e n t OooOoodo: 271.3 ^ upu p 0:4% 260 — In 1) - Inflation p a re d to 6.S WASHINGTON (UPl) 6.9 p e rc e n t in J u n e a n d 4.6 fnn prices, taking some of thett steam out ducer Pric’riccs was thc lowest sinceice bccause of a further rcrebound in coal moderated In July for• ncnearly every- May. • of the Inflation we've hhad In 1980,” May 197G.3. mining following a strik•ikc. W ithout th e thing but food, the goveovcmment re- . ! same lime, ihe Federal,,1 Torda said. T h e Ind CCS 32 pcrcent Increase InIn c o a l m in in g ____i portijd Friday. Index of Producer Priccs R e s e rv e reportedre industrial produc-:• Food prices for dealers;rs went up 1.5 reached 27271.3 In Ju ly , w h ic h m e a n t itIt during thc month, indudustrlal produc- Priccs al the producericer level rose tlon, whichlch runs a close' parallel to9 percent In Juiy, a Ionong predicted would costost S27I-30 to "buy the.samme e tlon would have gone U]up only "about o n ly 0.4 p c rc c n t fo r th e mmo: o n th . g r o s s n a tiolional i product, turned aroundi surge that the Agricullillure Depart- wholesalelc goods w hich c o st $100 In 0.1 percent,” nccordlrJlng to a Fod ^ . But Commerce Secreta•etary Maicom from a deer? c r e a s c o f 0 .i p c rc c n t in J u n e: ment says will likely contn tln u e th e r e s t 1967, th c ! y<year on which the index isjs analyst. 240 ' Baldrigc warned, "this> is no time for to a slightHt Increase of 0.3 percent In1 of Ihe year. The only' iother major based. Despite the product:cllon increase, c o m p la c e n c y . th e1 aianti-inflation July category to increase shar] battle must continue.” h T h e in ddex e : Is calculated by measur-ur- economists generally’ consideri eco- j e n l o r , ; t o rlc e s , up a t a m o n ih ly 3.23.3 perccnt. --------= -^n fla tio n -^^ te -^ v as-"ln -tl Commerce Department :e c h an g e s In n e a rly 2,800300 n o m ic a c tiv ity in th e; currcnti July- _2 3 q iLTbeodore Torda said prices5 WKh '.ec^rgy costs continuingct to commodnii p e rc c n t ra n g e . Ities manufactured or pro-ro^ September quarter loI bcb nearly mo- . and produciuctlon have Influenced each1 ease. InflaVion for everyththing else rose duccd Inn agriculture, mining andnd tionless. “We’re slillII expecting a The wholesale price :e rise, afler othier. o n ly 0.1 p e rc e n t in J u ly forf( an annual public utllltllllles. The base year soonon small declinc for thc thirdth quarter,” ' ~ indoxlydox: 1067 = 100 seasonal adjustment,' repi •epresented an “You haveha basically a sluggishI r a t e o f 1.3 p e rc e n t. VW hen. J u ly ’s w ill b e chanla n g e d to 1977. because of thc slumpingng construction 22o l* j* ,l annual inflation rate.ofDf.5.5 f p e rc en t, i n d u s t r ia l- t I sector ... and lhat has} sharply increased food pricespi are not - The 0.3.3 :percent: Improvemerif in "and auto induslrrcs, said; Evelina JI *J >■A S‘o ‘n ‘o * ' j ‘ F ' m ‘ a ’ M j 'j thc i.abor Department nt said, com- contributeded to a slowing In producer‘ c o u n te d , th e o v e ra ll IncIndex of Pro- Industrialll p ro d u ctio n w a s m a intly ly Talnor, an economist.I I9180 6 0 ___________ 1081___________ l J u d <geopH'nes agatinstwiftiorr R e c o m im ends dec(certification WASHINGTON (UPl:’I) — An ad- He saidlid thet government's request 'J. m in i s tr a ti v e ju d g e recommendedre for perm‘rmancnt revocation of Friday thal the striklnIng air Iraffic bargainingIng privllegcS'was unprece- controllers’ union be decertifiedd as denied andand that it was unclear to him bargaining agent forr govemmeni just whatat actionai was being sought by controllers th e F L RvA A g e n e ra l co u n sel, > B^t the-judgc did not i ■ Earlierjr IFriday, PATCO general i should be permanentlyy barred trom Richard Leighton, pleading S representing federal wor: orkers. PATCOrcO’s life as a labor union, I The action by admininistratlve law asked FentonFen to reject the gov- judge John Fenton of)f the Federal emmentI decertificationdei move, saying Labor Relations Authorii>rity w a s on ly a lh a t woulcould be “punishment for recommendation, howevever. The final punishmentient's sake” and the public decision must bc m:made by the interest wouldwo not be enhanced by ------- three-m em ber—autIhorily-that— h such action: o v e rs e e s la b o r la w s gove vcmlngM cral h c saaid id unless the underlying w o rk e rs. anagement dispute Is settled, Transportation Seen:rclary ' Drew “neither• airali Iraffic^ safely nor effl- L e w is c a llc d th e a c llo n ““a ; responsible clency willvlll returni lo normal within a d c c ls lo n .” reasonablebic ttime. Ifevcr." A sk e d w h e th e r h e noww ci o n sid e rs th e L eig h toion n saids in his brief, “ It cannot Professional Air Trafficflc Controllers be denieded lht a t a ir tr a v e l w ould t>e Organization finished as a union, he safer If 12,00012 h ig h ly tra in e d a n d replied: “W ehavealwa>ays considered expericDCcdiced controllers were work- the strike technically to be over and ing, Irateadtcad of a lesser number of w e'are conccntrating ono rebuilding overworkedked controllers and less- th e s y s le m .” experiencediced supervisory, trainee and P h otos tak en byV VoyagerV 1 last year, le left, and Voyager 2 lastst monthi show Saturn featuresf« changed betvs t w e e n e n c o u n t e r s Bul PATCO Presidentnt Robert Poii military personnel."per saidaflcrtheaction, "WciVe'restlllallve He saidid evene if Fenton finds that and. we’re stlU well.-ThiPhe attitude of PATCO committedcon an unfair labor o u r m e m b e r s Is slill stroeng. n practice,, loslossofexclusive bargaining Sofiirfn T T K e^ b iza nreiscO \ i Poll Indicated the iunion would rights wouldould be inappropriate, noting mmoniiplace requires such action be “con- c h a lle n g e d th e d e cisio n1 bbefore the full the law requ authority and even go asa far as the sistent withvllh Ihe ^requirement of an By PATRICK YOUNG(G pass within 63,000 mileses ofi the planet's iiuze- c( composed of hundreds ol snsmall ringlets. Two of S u p re m e C ourt, effective and NewhouscNcwsServlavicc . shrouded cloud tops alI a sp e e d of m o r e th a n thlli e s e s e e m In tcrw in e d inI violationvl of Ihc basic 72,000 m p h , c o m in g 14,3C4,300 miles closer than rn u le s o f o r b ita l m e ch a n ics. Ruling the union "w'willfully and “Any san(sanction Imposed should be ’ federal law tailored lopr10 promote a setllemcnl of Ihe ' V o y a g e r 1. F ifty -fo u r minutesm ir later, the craft The brillianl B ring secseems punctuatcd by intentionally violated” . ____^'prohibiting strike,actionon bv federal labor dispute ----------------- WASHINGTON---.V-When-Galileo -turned hiss _. wm.plunge.through-Uie.pli.piane of.Satum's rings spokessr — vaguely rescmblirjlin g th o s e o n a -w a g o n ----------- putcand.th^.establisluncntjQL— t— andJsniUff.townEri a mM6 rendezvous. with.lhc ___ w: . workers. Fenton eaveI 1PATCO one an effectivelive and efficient .air traffic rccTsifinUcnjrc— controhsysteiystem;-rather-than-SMUng— - G o d w a s p la y in g tH c:iu lu io n h im . planet Uranus, b et c o m e ~ m o r e d iffu se oviover several hours." m o n th to ch a lle n g e h is diit punishment^nt for punishment's sake," Scientists monitoringin g V oyager 1 a s ii flew p a s tt T h e sp a c e c r a f t sho u ld1 r e tu r n m o re th a n 18,500 Saturn’sS : equatorial windsi reachn 1,100 miles an th e fu ll F L R A .
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