THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three -1 THE MICHIGAN-DAILY Page Three CISCO CRISIS: Strikers SAN FRANCISCO ()P) - Strik- ing city employees seeking high- er pay ignored a back-to-work court order yesterday and set up new picket. lines to further snarl area transit. Police held off on arrests in the hopes of avoid- ing trouble. The transportation paralysis forced commuters to drive cars, ride taxis or bikes, hitch rides or walk. ,The strike caused an economic loss estimated at S20 million a day. Beaches w e r e quarantined because shut down treatment plants poured 500 million gallons of raw sewage in- to the bay and ocean. THE SEWAGE crisis ended paralys< yesterday when pickets w i 4 h- drew and 100 nonstriking plant technicians returned to t h e i r jobs. "What we're hoping is t h a t everybody will cooperate and we won't have to arest anyone. We don't want to'complicate the sit- uation," said Police Lt. William O'Connor, explaining the lack of arrests. The effects of the strike spread as the city employes halted bus- es from Oakland, forcing ano- ther 18,000 commuters to find alternate means of transportation. Some 360,000 transit riders al- ready have been affected by the walkout, which began last Thurs- transportation day. SAN FRANCISCO General Hos- pital was closed to all but enier- gency cases and most other pa- tients were transferred. M o s t students stayed home f r o m school or shivered in unheated classrooms. Robert Cadillac, 15, walked 37 blocks to Galileo High School and found it virtually de ierted. "This is too much," he said, sit- ting glumly on a concrete step. The Teachers Union, repre- senting about half of the city's 5,000 teachers, walked out Fri- day in a separate dispute. THE CITY'S cable cars, trol- leys and buses were shut down Violence hits miners' strike as W. Va. Gov. lifts gas ruling CHARLESTON, W.Va. (M - Gunfire hit the southern West Virginia coalfields as Gov. Arch Moore Jr. acted yesterday to end a severe wildcat strike by sus- pending a controversial rule limiting gasoline purchases. Moore suspended foi- 30 days his rule that prohibited service stations from selling to anyone whose tank was more than one- quarter full. But it was not cer- tain if that suspension or a fed- eral court order would end the 17-day walkout that now idles 27,600 miners. Gunshots rang out shortly be- fore midnight Tuesday at the Keystone No. 1 mine of Eastern Associated Coal Co. in McDowell County, the. heart of, the strike area. Two pickets were injured seriously, and a woman who had stopped to chat suffered less severe injuries. "SINCE THIS HAS happened, I don't know whether lifting the quarter-tank rule will help or not," said a miner who has been active in the protest movement. Referring to the limited back-to- work order issued by a federal judge in Virginia, the miner said, "I don't think it will have any meaning now." The strike began over short supplies of gasoline, but has con- tinued despite renewed supplies in the area, which is deep in the Appalachians in the heavily unionized southern part of the state. Miners have demanded that Moore rescind the quarter- tank rule. But coal and steel company officials have charged the reasons for the strike are intraunion politics and maneuver- ing in advance of this fall's coal industry contract talks. The walkout has crippled pro- duction of mettalurgical coal, which is necessary for the pro- duction of steel. U.S. Steel has already laid off 300 workers, put others on short work schedules and said up to 30,000 workers could be, out of work by the end of the week. MOORE SAID yesterday that he never believed the gasoline issue was the cause of the strike. He said he had been told that up to 98 per cent of the men off their jobs want to go. back to work. A McDowell County deputy sheriff said the shootings of the two men and the woman occurred at a major mine where the entire work force wants to go back to work. However, as long as the pickets remain the miners will not work. Officials said five men were picketing the Keystone mine when rifle fire started from the top of a hill. When they started down a road, shots also came from the foot of the hill, catching them in a crossfire. Authorities said Jerry Jenks and Roby Castle, both in their early 30s, were admitted to a hospital in Welch, where Jenks was in criti- cal condition and Castle listed as satisfactory. 25% off prepaid Cambridge Univer- sity Book orders (few excep- tions). Deadline March 23rd. DAVID'S BOOKS 209 S. STATE 663-8441 Friday as nonstriking uninris hon- ored picket lines set up by the striking employes. The Bay Area Rapid Transit District's n e w San Francisco subway line was shut down Monday. The Service Employes lnter- national Union deployed n e w picket lines in the AC Transit system's San Francisco terminal after union negotiators rejezted a new city pay boost offer in a bargaining session ending at 5 a.m. Terms of the offer were not disclosed. Amalgamated Transit Work- ers stewards appeared in bus yards in Oakland, Richmond and Emeryville and advised AC tran- sit drivers not to run because of the pickets at ihe bridge~ end terminal. THE SERVICE union is seek- ing $16 million a year in. pay raises and a denalhealth plan. Superior Court Judge Clayton Horn signed a second and stiffer picketing ban order late Tues- day. MAYOR Joseph Alioto said he had instructed police to r e a d Horn's new order to pickets "and to enforce it." CINEMA GUILD Presents the 12th an Arbor Film Festival -TONIG HT- 7, 9, 11, (each different) $1-ARCH. AUD. info. 662-8871 Saxbe reveals wiretaps under Kennedy, Johnson WASHINGTON (A") - Atty. Gen. William Saxbe suggested yester- day that newsmen may have been the targets of government wiretaps during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. But former President Johnson's attorney general, Ramsey Clark, declared "it never happened" during his term of office from late 1966 through 1968. SAXBE TOLD REPORTERS he has reviewed a file of national security wiretaps from 1960 until 1973 and found such eavesdroppingi widespread during the previous two Democratic administrations. Justice Department spokesman John Hushen said later that Saxbe was referring to a list of wiretaps prepared by the FBI last summer at the request of then Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson. Hushen said the list does not show whether newsmen were among: those whose telephones were tapped. SAXBE SAID ALL of the taps were authorized by previous attor- ney generals. Clark said he approved no taps on newsmen, but said it is possible one such case occurred prior to his administration. Saxbe said the file is classified secret. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL said he offered the file to special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski because he thought it might have some bearing on Jaworski's investigation of Nixon administra- tion wiretaps on four newsmen and 13 National Security Council aides. But therattorney general said Jaworski replied that he already had the information. At one point, Saxbe flatly stated that newsmen were wire-tap targets during the Kennedy and Johnson years. But at another point, he said "I can't say that for certain." ST. PATRICK'S DAY DANCEI SC HWA BE N HA LL--217 S. Ashley TONIGHT at 7 & 9 p.m.! OUR MOST POPULAR FILM IS BACK AGAIN, AFTER ALLI Wild raffish comedy and a real de- light! A Scottish private in World War I releases the inmates from a mental asylum in a French town that is sitting on a time bomb left by the Germans. The sanity of insanity--or vice-versa? with Genevieve Bujold. If you likie this movie be sure to see DEVIL BY THE TAIL by the same di- rector-March 27th! French, with English subtitles. Auditorium A, Angell Hall TONIGHT on GENE'S BLUES LIVE BLUES JAM SESSION FEATURING BILL HODGSON former lead guitarist of the band DETROIT WCBN-FM 8:30-midnight U- - ALAN+t BATES- PHILIPPE DE BROCA COLOR ., OELUXE TECMNISCOPt the " 0. . . . . . COMING NEXT TUESDAY-McCABE AND MRS. MILLER NEXT WEDNESDAY-FRITZ THE CAT. Rated X. March 16, 1974 8:30 to . DANCING-FOOD-PRIZES sponsored by IRISH AMERICAN ASSOCIATION CALL 769-4511 for information SHARE THE RIDE WITH US THIS r ! DID YOU KNOW? thursday flight is... HRP open mass MEETING I AGENDA * RUBAIYAT DISCRIMINATION FOLLOW UP * RACISM AND ECONOMICS PLATFORM * ANTI-RAPE CITY COUNCIL PROPOSAL * CAMPAIGN DECISIONS 7:30 TONIGHT (Thurs.) EAST QUAD-Strauss Lounge Human Rights Party-516 E. William-761-6650 TEQUILANIGHT! Shot of TEQUILA- HALF-PRICE! Tonight -make 341 S. 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