The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 19, 1978--Page 5 GSA indictments expected soon To the Freshmen: It wouldn't be'the DEKE HOUSE if there weren 't some rumors about it. Just for the record, Here are some of the things we're not: TEKES QUARANTINED MORTGAGED STARVING Entirely GROSSE POINTE ARISTOCRATS In the bar 24 hours a day, and so forth. WASHINGTON (AP) - The first indictments from two grand jury investigations of fraud withing the General Services Administration (GSA) could be handed down in about eight weeks, a top Justice Department official said yesterday. But a second department official said that the most advanced cases involve "relatively low-level" persons. , MEANWHILE, a congressional "watchdog agency said fraud and related white-collar crimes against the government are not limited to the GSA and that such illegal activities cost taxpayers between $2.5 billion and $25 billion a year. But officials of that agency, the General Accounting Office, said the estimate is at best "a wild guess." "No one knows the magnitude of fraud against the government," said GAO Comptroller General Elmer Staats. "Fraud is happening without anyone knowing about it." THE TESTIMONY came as the Senate Government Affairs subcommittee, chaired by Sen. Lawton Chiles, (D-Fla.), held a hearing to learn how various government investigations of the GSA were progressing. Chiles' * subcommittee on federal spending practices and open government will hear from GSA officials Tuesday. Deputy Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti told the subcommittee the Carter administration has agreed to set .up an interagency strike force to coordinate the various investigations. .He said investigators are looking into allegations ranging over "six or seven subjects." Civiletti said investigations in Baltimore and Washington were proceeding well and predicted that "fruits of the investigation will begin to be produced'' in November. An investigation in. Boston is not so, far along, other Justice Department officials said. The Baltimore grand jury is looking into alleged fraud at GSA self-service stores and in use of government credit cards. The Washington grand jury has been investigating alleged bribery-and fraud in contracting for repairs and alterations to federal buildings in the Washington area. Civiletti gave no details of the investigation, but in response to a question by Chiles, Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Keeney indicated that the first indictments likely would involve lower-level government employees. Assistant Attorney General Philip Heymann told the subcommittee the strike force would work well. He said there was no need for the appointment of a special prosecutor to handle the investigation. Heymann also said Charles Kirbo, the friend of President Carter who has been named by the President to assist in the proceedings, will not be involved in any part of the criminal investigation. Come down and see us during Fraternity Rush Week; mysterious century old DEKE Chapel, 6111 E. William next to White's Market. at our Street, Ex-clerks picket local book store By MARTY LEVINE Three former employes of the now- closed Charing Cross Book Store- are picketing Border's book store, charging that the owners of Border's-who used to own Charing Cross-sold that store to keep them from unionizing. The pickets charge that Tom and Louis Border sold Charing Cross to that store's manager, Kevin Sheets, after employes Kathleen Beck and Marilyn Churchill began organizing an IMM (International Workers of the World) union at the store. THE PICKETERS hope to force the Charing Cross store to re-open and hire them back. But the original ownership of the store is under question. Accor- ding to the sales agreement signed Friday between theBorders and Sheets, Tom and Louis Borders had been sole owner of the store. "Tom and Louis. Borders owned Charing Cross utterly and completely," Sheets said. tom Borders claims that "up until Friday the 15th, Kevin Sheets owned no stock and had no interest" in the store. "I don't believe it,' Beck said. "When we (the employes) were in- troduced to Kevin Sheets (in late July 1978), he was introduced as principal stock holder." Churchill said he and Beck were handed a letter by Tom Borders when they arrived for work last Saturday, saying that the partnership with Sheets was dissolved and that the store had been sold, while not specifying to whom. Tom Borders denies any par- tnership with Sheets. He said the store was sold "because we lost more money this year than ever before-and because of the impending legal costs," due to the IWW's attempt at unionizing action. "We sold the store outright," Tom Borders said, and found the charges of a lockout "not true at all." Bilderback was dismissed from his, job at Charing Cross on September 5, according to Sheets, because out of the scheduled 24 work days in August Bilderback had only worked 3 complete days. On the other 19, Sheets asserts, Bilderback "Was either late, absent, or left early."- "I don't think this is even true accor- ding to the time cards he (Sheets) filed with the Michigan Employment Securities Commission and the National Labor Relations Board," Bilderback said, "He knew why I wasn't there. He is just choosing not to recognize that." On September 6, Beck and Churchill approached Sheets to discuss their wages and benefits and present a notice of unionization. Sheets called IWW negotiator Eric Glatz and found that the two employes had already signed their union cards and paid their dues. Beck and Churchill claim after this date Sheets instituted a slew of new of stricter rules at the Charing Cross Book Store, and swiftly canceled Beck's vacation which he had before approved. Both Sheets and Borders deny any rule changes during the last days of the store's existence. The charges of sex discrimination in wages are being leveled because of the hiring of Sheets' friend Kevin Lynch two weeks ago at four dollars an hour for carpentry. Beck and Churchill said Lynch often worked as a regular em- ploye, and therefore their lesser wages of $3.75 per hour constitute sex discrimination. After Bilderback was dismissed, Churchill said "Lynch had a regulartime card and was a regular employe." Benita Kaimowitz, a Border's em- ployee, said there was no sex discrimination in her store except for unconscoius chivalry, and she said her feelings representative of the store's staff. Glatz will file three unfair Labor Practice grievances against the Charing Cross Book Store with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission in Detroit today, and will represent the IWW at a hearing about the case's jurisdiction before the State Lahr Relations Board at 11 am. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON, a Michigan tradition since 1854, is back on campus. §Undergrad Poll Sid Assoc. Mfeeting§ FIND OUT ABOUT: Graduate School, Brown Bags, Political Debates, Internships. Special Guest: Prof.SAM BARNES § DEPT. CHAIRMAN 2203-Angell Tuesday-7:30p§ ALL STUDENTS WELCOME § For More Info: 763-2227, 6618 Haven Hall * ~~tk1PBRICSI COUPON ° Entire Stock ' Decorator FaIbrics I I Clip this coupon and bring it to Jo-Ann. You'll ° save 20% on our entire stock of drapery and ° slipcover fabrics, including plaids, checks, florals, sheers, casements and more! So make your own curtains and save. It's an easy way to brighten any dorm room and personalize that home away from home! 1 Reg. Price ° ° Prices good at the following locations through Sat., Sept. 23rd: Westgate Shpg. Ctr. 2165 Washtenaw Ave. 2465 West Stadium Ypsilanti Ann Arbor , SIe d Thousands killdin Iranian earthquake (Continued from Page1) clergyman praying over them. "I was sitting in front of my house by The Iranian army sent 700 soldiers,,, the pond," said a man who identified four medical teams and numerous himself as Hassan. "It was dark. Then rescue workers to help house about all of a sudden I fell to the ground and 1,000 survivors in tents along Tabas' there was a great roar and screams." dirt airport runway. Although Hassan's mud-brick home Big C-130 Hercules transport planes Scollapsed around his family, they from the Iranian 'Air Force buzzed escaped serious injury. They now sit on overhead, continuing their airlift of the sidewalk, surviving on watermelons blankets, food, water, tents and and waiting for the army to help them medical supplies. recover their valuables from the pile of Empress Farah, the wife of- Shah bricks that was once their home. Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, toured the AS SOON AS rescue workers found a area in an Army jeep, stopping body in the wreckage, grieving occasionally to console panic-struck relatives and friends went about the residents. The empress flew in from the .grim task of identification, slapping capital on a military aircraft and and striking themselves in their ritual stayed about two hours before pf grief. The workers spirited the bodies returning home. off for a hurried burial. Meanwhile, new tremors were feld Gravediggers bit into the coarse, yesterday. They lasted only a few hardsearth, scraping out shallow moments, but residents feared a second graves. As the diggers 'struggled to quake. keep up with the steady procession of An earthquake registering 6.5 on the bodies brought by truck and car, the Richter scale rocked the same area on dead lay in the sun with a Moslem Aug. 31, 1968. GAY MALE COMING OUT GROUPS For men beginning to deal with their gayness " an opportunity to give support and be supported by people in your own situa- tion " meeting once a week for three hours for about eight weekse next group begins in late September " for more infor- mation or to sign up call Tom or Giles at 995-9292. U=mo WE OFFER YOU MORE.. . " We teach only a LSAT course so we are the experts in this area. * Average class size ONLY 11 STUDENTS " Instruction by attorneys " All Classes meet on campus " Extensive copyrighted material anticipating actual exam questions AND OUR RESULTS PROVE IT. * Our student's median score is 652. The average score improve- ment our students experience is a 72 POINT INCREASE. 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