)g}t 7 CHALLENGE TO PEACE See Editorial Page cAUE t1 CLOUDY, WINDY High-38 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVItI, No. 128 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 14, 1978 Ten Cents 14 Pages CAR TER EXPECTS GRADUAL RETURN TO WORK Miners. defy Taft-Hartleyorder By The Associated Press allowed companies to discipline those by union safety committees -,a st n~eded Iforre nnn' tep imzn All but a few of the nation's 160,0001 striking coal miners ignored a federal back-to-work order yesterday, and the handful who returned to the mines had virtually no effect on coal production. In Pennsylvania, hundreds of club- carrying pickets took to a road in a 150- car caravan to shut down non-union mines. But most other areas were quiet, with union mines remaining idle even in the absence of pickets. It was the first real test of whether the United Mine Workers rank and file will obey a Taft-Hartley court order ob- tained last Thursday by President Car- ter. BUT WITH THE'order still not in full effect in some areas, a Justice Depar- tment spokesman in Washington said there would be no hasty action to force compliance. Spokesman Mark Sheehan said the administration expects miners to gradually return to work this week. Meanwhile, bargainers for the union and coal companies took a pause in negotiations in Washington. They reported, some progress over the weekend, but said they were not on the verge of a settlement. Each side used the day to work on its own positions on specific issues. Since the strike began Dec. 6, rebellious union officers and rank and file members'had already scuttled two tentative settlements on grounds they eroded union medical benefits, did not equalize pension benefits among old and younger retired miners and 'who lead wildcat strikes. n~* -3 , _ THE STRIKE, which was in its' 98th day yesterday, has cut national coal production in half,; forced power com- panies in much of the Midwest and mid- Atlantic regions to ask for or order power conservation, ,and thus led to tens of thousands of layoffs. Last Thursday, a federal judge gran- ted the Carter administration a tem- porary back-to-work order under the Taft-Hartley Law, and by yesterday the Justice Department said the necessary papers had been served on virtually:all UMW locals in the country. Over the weekend, and on yesterday, local union leaders were performing their legal duty to pass the word on to members and to have mines inspected But while union leaders and locals can be penalized for failure to comply, there is no mechanism for forcing indi- vidual miners back to work. And at most mines that reopened yesterday, no miners showed up. Even when miners did go to worl, there were usually too few to form maintenance or mining crews, and the companies sent them home. One of the few mines where work was done yesterday was in Keystone, W. Va., where 30 members of a 150-man shift showed up at 8 a.m. First reports said there were not enough men to mine coal, but there were enough for main- tenance work. The local involved was one of the few which had voted to accept the most recent contract settlement. Daily Photo byBRAD BENJAMIN Watery obstacle course Decision due on civil rights bil P rofs vote to keep open distribution plan Rayhiond Grew countered Thornton by, By STEVE GOLD suggesting that the faculty could cause Literary College (LSA) faculty more damage if it prevented some rejected a move to ditch one of three students from implementing "a distribution systems as part of its serious, well thought out distribution reviewof distribution requirements in plan" than if it unavoidably allowed the college. "some students to slither out of The move, introduced at yesterday's distribution." faculty meeting, was a major test of "WE CAN'T say in advance -to a faculty sentiment on the distribution student: 'This is the way to achieve issue. distribution.' There are a whole variety The vote margin was large but not of ways it can be done," he said. overwhelming. Carol Rosenberg, a student member HISTORY PROFESSOR Mills Thor- of the Curricuhm Committee pointed nton who presented the motion, called out that the concept of flexible flexible distribution requirements "in- distribution plans is a relatively new tellectually reprehensible." He argued one here and that the faculty had not that Pattern B of the new distribution yet given it an adequate chance. recommendation-which proviges for The vote yesterday means only that an independent distribution plan to be Pattern B remains in the recompmen- worked out under broad guidelines dation. Final approval must come at between a student and a specially the next faculty meeting, scheduled for designated panel of counselors-be April 3. Although faculty members struck from the recommendation. were unwilling to predict the eventual In forceful analysis of his motion, outcome, this vote signals that faculty Thornton pointed' out that "there is sentiment is on the side of flexibility. enormous flexibility in the (proposed) THORNTON SAYS he plans to in- Patterns A and C." He said that the troduce a motion next month to strike only reasoy for a student to select Pat- out the proposed Pattern A which calls tern B would be to avoid distribution. for at least one course in the areas of "A vote (to keep Pattern B in the humanities, social sciences, natural recommendation) is a vote that you do sciences, mathematical and logical not believe in the intellectual validity of analysis, and creative expression. distribution." He said he does not oppose the However, 'History Professor ,See PROFS, Page 14 By KEITH RICHBUR City Council was scheduled last night to finally act on the controversial human rights ordinance which, if passed, would give Ann Arbor the most com- prehensive anti-discrimination law sin- ce the federal Civil Rights Act. Under the bill discrimination would beoutlawed on the basis of race, color, religion,' national origin, sex, age, con- dition of pregnancy, marital status, physical limitations, source of income, family responsibilities (people with children), educational association or sexual orientation. THE BILL would also prohibit discriminatory housing and em- ployment practices, and prohibit the publication or distribution of discriminatory advertising material or contracts. The bill would also demand that businesses contracted by the city set af- firmative action goals to insure that employes reflect the percentage of minoirities in the population. The contractor would have to provide periodic reports to the city during the course of the contracted work proving compliance with those goals. A minority is defined as "a person who is black, American Indian, or a MexicanAmerican." MOST MEMBERS agreed that the ordinance, or some reasonable fac- simile, would pass before the meeting was out, but by 11:15 p.m. Council had not yet begun to deal with what promised to be an extensive debate. Predicting the inevitable parisan wrangling to get the ordinance passed, Council members agreed to deal with the rest of the agenda first, but got bogged down in the mire of political speeches and charges of election year politics. In a unanimous decision, the Council overrode the mayor's veto on the ex- pansion of the John Knox Village-a housing facility for elderly citizens. Council also passed an ordinance which would direct the staff of the community development block grant (CDRG) pro- gram to continue working with Nor- thside agencies and groups to pursue options for construction or renovation of a neighborhood facilities building to serve the residents of the Northside of the city. THAT RESOLUTION deadlocked Council for over two hours during which the original bill, introduced by Mayor Albert Wheeler, was gutted by the shot- gun approach of the Republican caucus down to the condensed version that passed. "The people of the northside have been asking for a facility for a long time, now," said Wendel Allen (R-First Ward). "They don't just want some old building." Apparently looming in everyone's mind however was the April eleetion just three weeks from today, and in- dicative on the political mood at last night's meeting was the Wheeler for Mayor button on the mayor's lapel. At one point during the meeting. Councilman Allen who is up for re- election, was forced to counter charges of election-year politics. "I was elected to office. I am a politician, I will not put up any smoke screen about that," said Allen. Begin threatens errorst ro TEV AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israeli BEGIN TOLD Parliament that the Prime Minister Menachem Begin vowed Palestine Liberation Organization, yesterday "to cut off the arm" of the whose Al Fatah guerrillas said they had Palestinian guerrilla organization made the attack, was "the most responsible for the weekend massacre despicable organization . . . in human on Israel's coastal highway. Mourners annals outside of the Nazis" and that at victims' funerals called for revenge. the PLO "doesn't attack any man or In southern Lebanon, travelers said any place where there are soldiers, but villagers fearing Israeli retaliatory has resolved to harm, kill and wound, raids left their homes and trekked nor- civilians only." th, in a driving rain, away from the "We will cut off the arm of evil," Israeli border. Israeli officials say the Begin promised. "We shall in no way 11 terrrorists who carried out the and in no circumstances agree that this killings of sightseers and passersby on hand be raised over a Jewish child or a the Tel Avia-Haifa road came from Jewish woman." Lebanon by sea. In Washington, the White House an- See BEGIN, Page 9 " A local group is making plans P ierce to for a rally in Washington to sup- port the Wilmington 10. See story, Page 3. * Members of AFSCME Local 1583 will picket the Medical Cen- ter to protest policies of Service- Master, a firm subcontracted by the University to manage hospital housekeeping. See story, S e na te Page 3. t i t t t t . a t Gaullists nip Left in French elections PARIS (AP) - Confounding nearly all the experts, French voters dealt a body blow 'to Socialist-Communist hopes to take control of the French government in first-round parliamen- tary elections. However, backers of minority leftist parties are expected to give the Socialist-Communist alliance their votes in next Sunday's run-off. This could still give the left the margin of victory over the present government. The left had been expected to do sub- stantially better, with pollsters predic- ting it would take 54 per cent Sunday. But complete returns yesterday showed it got 45.1 per cent. The leftist alliance finished behind the coalition of President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, seriously, weakening leftist chances to end 20 years of center-right rule. THERE WERE signs that the shaky leftist alliance would have trouble uniting in time for next Sunday's runoff election. The center-right coalition, however, was expected to have little trouble uniting behind its strongest candidate in each race. Socialist leader Francois Mitterrand blamed the poor showing on confusion created by the Communists over the issue of how much to nationalized if the, Photos by STEVE SHAER Members of the Nazi party parade in front of their head- quarters on W. Vernor in Detroit as protest caravan passes, above. Below, Paul Boatin, chairman of the Labor- Community Interfaith Council Against The Nazis, speaks at a oress conference preceding the rally. Group stages, " " an ti airally By STEVE SHAER Anti-Nazi protestors met in Detroit Sunday to demon, strate against the operation of a Nazi bookstore and headquarters which has been a center of controversy sin- ce it opened three months ago. United Auto Workers Local 600 sponsored the rally which included the formation of an auto caravan to drive past the bookstore. PRIOR TO THE auto procession, over 400 people representing unions, political groups and community residents heard speakers warn of the danger of the Nazi presence in the area. Local 600 President Mike Rinaldi began the anti-Nazi ef- Vft.. WPIP , m