Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 20, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 20, 1972 TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 15 DEAD IN YEAR: Mob war said to end soon NEW YORK (R) -- Mafia chief- tain Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli was borne to his grave yesterday, the 15th victim in a gang war which police say may be too costly for the underworld to sustain any longer. Well-placed police sources spec- AMBASSAD RUS $8 C uAMERICAvc E 2448 Washt seeaw 4422 Shw 2em 3ers9oa9,Fia n aady'I WASHTENAW COUNTS JVE LINA3 '2807* GREMLINS __ $'1999 * HORNETS $2199* SMATADORS $2784* ] AMBASSADORS $3885* 3 *Base Price 3 American Motors Service Headquarters 2448 Washtenaw 442424 Show Room Hours 9 to 9, Friday and Saturday 'til6 ulated that an order may be out to New York's five Cosa Nostra families to cool the gunplay that began a year ago. The only mobster deemed cap- able of enforcing such an order is Carlo "Don Carlo" Gambino, described by federal authorities as high commissioner of organ- ized crime, the Mafia's "boss of bosses." Gambino is believed to have at least tacitly endorsed t h e shooting June 28, 1971, which left Mafia leader Joseph Colombo paralyzed and touched off t he current underworld slaughter. A Colombo associate has told police that he and four o t h e r henchmen of the wounded man rubbed out Joseph "Crazy Joe" Gallo last April 7 in a clam house in Manhattan's Little Italy. A rebel underling in t h e Colombo family, Gallo was su- spected of having a hand in Co- lombo's shooting. However, it was difficult to fit the slaying of the 61-year-old Eboli into the intricate pattern of internecine warfare. Eboli's was a caretaker role in organized crime. He w as made acting head of the Vito Genovese Cosa Nostra family when Genovese went to federal prison on a narcotics rap. After Genovese's death in prison in 1969, Gerardo "Jerry" Catena assumed command. But he, too, went to prison, and as his un- derboss Eboli again became the ranking family man. Eboli was shot five times about 1 a.m. Sunday on a quiet resi- dential street in Crown Heights. Brooklyn, far from his Manhat- tan haunts and his Fort Lee. N.J., residence. Meanwhile, reputed New Eng- land Mafia boss Raymond Pa- triarca told the House S e le c t Crime Committee yesterday that he had never had any dealings with Frank Sinatra and "never met the gentleman in my life." However Patriarca took t h e Fifth Amendment on most of the committee's questions concern- ing his and Sinatra's alleged fin- ancial involvement in the now- defunct Berkshire Downs race- track near Hancock, Mass. Patriarca, a short, thin man, was transported to the House hearing room from Atlanta Fed- eral Prison where he is serving a ten year sentence for murder conspiracy. While refusing to answer more important questions, Patriarca freely answered others includ- ing his opinion of "The God- father" novel and film about organized crime. "In my opinion it was a good book," he said. ". . . People like to read that." Patriarca said he had heard Sinatra was an officer at Berk- shire Downs only from reading it in the paper. He was asked if he had read of any other in- vestors in the track. "Yeh. Me," he replied. "I read I had $215,000 in Berk- shire Downs," he said. "I wish I had. I never had $215,000 in my life." s. i. . -, .-+ t . : ' ' _ SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAYS THROUGH AUGUST 12 Work bill defeated' b)v House Dems outvoted WASHINGTON (MP - The House killed a $5-billion emer- gency job-making public-works bill yesterday after crippling it with an amendment barring use of the money this year. The vote was 189 to 206. The amendment that lined up the bill for the death blow was heavily backed by Republicans and opposed by Democrats. It said the money couldn't be committed for contracts in any year in which the projected federal deficit exceeds $20 bil- lion. That figure probably will be excfeded by $10 billion for the fiscal year that started July 1. The amendment was adopted by vote of 205 to 192. The House action was a vic- tory for Republicans and a major setback for the Demo- cratic leadership. Republicans called the meas- ure unnecessary, inflationary, political and a duplication of existing programs. It was op- posed' by the Nixon administra- tion. Democrats led by speaker Carl Albert of Oklahoma claim- ed the bill was needed to quick- ly provide 500,000 construction jobs and help states and local governments build needed water and sewage plants and other public facilities. The $5-billion projected ex- penditure would have been in the form of federal grants, in many cases for the full amount of project costs. The bulk of it was expected to finance working projects within 90 days of en- actment. House Democrats claimed Tuesday that they had enough votes not only to pass the bill but to override the expected veto. The bill was rushed through the House Banking and Cur- rency Committee as an emer- gency measure to provide jobs in a hurry. The grants would have been available to all communities, with priorities for economically depressed areas and rural re- gions with rising uneploy- ment. Albert criticized the Nixon ad- ministration for having "no foreseeable job-producing initia- tive and showing no concern for the problem." GOP leader Gerald Ford of Michigan called the bill "un- necessary duplication and a waste of the taxpayers money." MCAT-DAT-GRE LSAT-ATGSB NATL. BDS. 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