Page 10-Wednesday, September 27, 1978-The Michigan Daily Bookstore strike ends: IWW Supreme Court Justice reeognize( By MARTY LEVINE A settlement was reached Monday in the week-long labor dispute between; former employees and management of; the Charing Cross Bookstore. Kevin Sheets, former manager of Charing Cross and owner of the new State Street Book Shop on that site has agreed to recognize the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union 6601 as bargaining agent for the re-hiring of Iby fired employee negotiator Eric will be hired seniority. Addi Street Book Sho tion of joining th GLATZ SAID Store was unal ployees, or if choose other er former Charing Louis Borders 7 Asian-Americn fall Hipp DATE: Friday, September 29, 8:00 p.m. PLACE: Pendieton Room, 2nd Floor Michigan Union Featuring: - CHARLIE CHIN, singer, Paradon Label Recordin -KADIZ, Singing group -ORIENTATION, Come meet University staff an Asian-American programming, meet fellow stu - REFRESHMENTS - DANCING to Disco after program FREE, Everybody encouraged to at Sponsored by ASIAN-AMERI Charing Cross es, according to IWW them letters of recommendation. Glatz. These employees Sheets has also agreed to retract any back on the basis of statements made against the former tional employees State employees. p hired will have the op- Glatz said that the IWW has dropped he IWW. the unfair labor practice grievances if the State Street Book filed against Kevin Sheets earlier last ble to re-hire any em- week. any former employees The former Charing Cross em- mployment, Sheets and ployees, Marilyn Churchill, Kathleen Cross owners Tom and Beck, and Walter Bilderback, and their have offered to give supporters have been picketing the Charing Cross site as well as Borders Book Store for over a week, charging Charing Cross management with a lockout due to a unionizing attempt. Both Borders and Sheets have denied this. Borders Book Store is also owned by Tom and Louis Borders. "HE (SHEETS) has assured us that he will bargain in good faith when re- ig Artist hiring any employees," said Glatz. "I'm fairly pleased with it (the set- tlement)," Churchill said. "Short of d find out about getting a closed shop it's the best we dents can do. Everybody is relieved not to be picketing any more." Sheets said he felt there were no hard feelings between the employees and tend himself. "I think it was a real good set- tlement," he said, "and I'm really CAN ASSOCIATION pleased with it." This is the first IWW settlement in southeastern Michigan since 1924. grants WASHINGTON (AP) - New York Times reporter Myron Farber won a last-minute reprieve yesterday from his scheduled return to a New Jersey jail for refusing to reveal his confiden- tial files. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart ordered New Jersey authorities to allow Farber to remain free until they hear further from him or the full court. Farber was to have been returned to a Hackensack, N.J. jail cell at 4 p.m. EDT. Stewart's order was announced at 3:20 p.m. FARBER ALREADY has spent 27 days in jail and the Times has paid $130,000 in fines for refusing to surren- der confidential information to a New Jersey judge presiding over a murder case. Yesterday's order also postponed resumption of $5,000 daily fines against the Times until Stewart or the full court - the order did not specify - studies more closely the emergency request. Farber and the Times want to post- pone all penalties against them while the Supreme Court considers their for- mal appeal. THE 53-PAGE appeal also was filed yesterday but it is not likely the court will decide for at least several weeks whether to grant it full review. The emergency appeal was forwar- ded to Stewart after Justice William Brennan excused himself, without ex- atr benr planation, from considering it. Judge William Arnold ordered Far ber and the Times to hand over all files compiled in Farber's investigation of a series of patient deaths in the mid-1960s at an Oradell, .N.J. hospital. ARNOLD SAID he would survey the information and determine whether any of it was needed at trial. Farber's 1975 articles led authorities to renew their investigation of the deaths. Dr. Mario Jascalevich, iden- tified only as "Dr. X" in Farber's initial articles, is charged with murder in connection with three of the deaths. After Farber and the Times refused to comply with the judge's subpoena, they were convicted of criminal and civil contempt. UNDER THE civil 'conviction, Far- ber is to stay in jail and the Times is to pay a $5,000 daily fine until the files are handed over. In addition, the criminal conviction drew a six-month jail sentence for Far- ber, to begin after he surrenders the files, and a $100,000 fine for his newspaper. Farber was freed from a Hackensack jail cell and fines against the Times were suspended last month when the New Jersey Supreme Court agreed.to hear their appeals. THE STATE court last week upheld the contempt convictions, however, and eprieve ordered that the civil sentences resume. In appeals of both sets of convictions, the justices were told that Fraber and the Times had been denied their rights to challenge the validity of Arnold's subpoena in a hearing. "At all stages in these proceedings, petitioners sought and were denied that most basic of all due process rights: a hearing prior to being required to com- ply with subpoenas they believed violated both the clear language of the New Jersey reporters' shield law and the Constitution itself," the appeal said. LAWYERS FOR Farber and the newspaper decried the "fundamental unfairness of the proceedings from beginning to end,'' and challenged the New Jersey court's interpretation of the state shield law's relatin to Jascelevich's right to a fair trial. The appeal noted that the state court had declared the law designed to protect reporters' confidential sources from government inquiry uncon- stitutional. It added: "What we believe needs to be done is to advise New Jer- sey that its law as written and intended is constitutional." The justices were told that the ruling that a reporter's privilege must always yield to a criminal defendant's rights has endangered the lawyer-client physician-patient, priest-penitent and husband-wife privileges. --, Les McCann and 6IR CONDO Tuesday & Wednesday, Oct. 3 & 4 at the SECONDCi C Advance Tickets $5.50 $6.50 at the door Fuel tax will increase 2 cents LANSING (UPI) - Lt. Gov. James Damman cast an historic tie-breaking vote yesterday, providing the margin for approval of a gasoline tax increase of two cents. li The gas tax is a major portion of the state's proposed balanced transpor- tation package. Still awaiting Senate approval after a lengthy Senate session was an increase of about 30 per cent in vehicle weight taxes. i We won't settle for THOSE TWO bills will yield about $147 million to fund improvements in virtually all phases of transportationr, but the majority will go to roads and highways. It was believed to be only the second time Damman had cast a vote in four years of presiding over the Senate, and was the first on a major issue. It broke a 19-19 tie. Both the Democratic and Republican caucuses were badly split on the issue. THE MEASURE also hikes diesel fuel taxes by two cents, an increase that was hotly contested by truck stop owners. The Senate again rejected amen- dments to strike the diesel fuel hike, but agreed by a wide margin to provide a one-year expiration date in the tax hike to allow time to work out the concerns Dartmouth and Princeton compete in football for the "Governor's Cup," a sterling silver bowl donated by Nelson Rockefeller and Brendan Byrne. of diesel fuel vendors. The vendors had complained that the higher taxes in Michigan would induce truckers to purchase fuel in either state. THE TOTAL transportation package, already approved by the House, would provide $168 million in transportation improvements, including a transfer of $21 million from sales tax revenues. Opponents said the increase flies in the face of public sentiment against tax increases. "People in this state and around the country are not talking about in- creasing taxes, they're talking about decreasing taxes," said Sen. Robert Davis, (R-Gaylord). OPponents also charged the gas tax increase would hurt the automobile and tourist industries. CFP staff suspected breakout (Continued from Page 1) 6 to 1, and on the night of the attempted escape the ratio was 8 to 1; -A better self-defense training program for staff. Union members want the program to be mandatory for new staff and ongoing for old staff. -A system whereby patients would be legally accountable for their actions on the wards. "There have been several instances of patients robbing guards and hitting members of the staff and other patients," said the union spokesman. "We want these patients to be accountable in a court of law." -A special squad made up of ap- proximately seven guards who would automatically handle an incident like Friday night's. "Only two guards were sent out to take care of the patients at- tempting to escape and they were jum- ped," according to the spokesman. "With seven it would be a very different situation." ._:. . loo DISCOUNT CALCULATORS TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-57 Programmable .......$49.95 TI-58 Adv. programmable. . . . 94.95 TI-59 Card programmable. . . 219.95 PC-100A Printer for 58,59. . . 149.95 PROGRMR Hexadecimal .. .. 47.95 I DataChron Calc/alarm/timer. . . 39.95 Bus. Analyst Financial .......24.95 MBA Advanced financial..... 57.95 TI-25 Slim Scientific ........ 24.95 TI-30 Scientific ...........15.95 SR-40 Scientific...........21.95 p + TI-55 Statistics/Scientific . . . . 39.95 * 58/59 Modules ...........29.95 HEWLETT-PACKARD HP-19C. .$219.95 HP-31E. . $49.95 3 HP-29C. . 139.95 HP-32E. . . 65.95 - HP-67. . . 359.95 HP-33E. . . 82.95 HP-92. . . 399.95 HP-37E. . . 61.95 HP-97. . . 599.95 HP-38E. . . 98.95 S flf Rm Re a nn TI-7 67/97 Pace s. 29 .9 f4 r us fnr 32.