VIOLENCE BREAKS OUT IN OHIO: Coal negotiations start The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 9, 1977-page 9 Meany calls free trade 'a joke' By The Associated Press' Union and industry negotiators re- sumed talks in Washington yesterday in an effort to settle a three-day-old nationwide coal strike. Meanwhile, gunfire rang out before dawn yesterday at an Ohio coal mine in apparently isolated violence. There were no injuries in the incident and calm prevailed at other mines throughout the country. NEGOTIATORS for the United Mine Workers union and the Bitumin- ous Coal Operators Association met late yesterday afternoon with federal mediators for the first time since the strike began at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday to bargain on a new contract. UMW President Arnold Miller was present, but left the negotiating room when the opening of the session was delayed for an hour. Union sources attached no significance to Miller's absence. The strike, involving 160,000 mem- bers of the UMW, has cut the nation's coal production by more than half. BEFORE THE session began, Miller said he had asked BCOA representatives for "a complete counter proposal." His union was going into the session having asked that wages be brought to $114.36 per day over the life of a three-year contract. The top wage under the old contract was $65.36. The UMW also wants refinancing of health and retirement funds, and agreement on a limited right to strike over local grievances. MILLER SAYS such a right to strike would localize disputes and end the frequent wildcat strikes which have recently hit the coal industry. In these strikes, a dispute at one -mine is spread to others by roving pickets. The nation's soft coal production was halved when the strike began, and it has been shaved further because some non-union mines have been closed either by pickets or in sympathy with the UMW. Picketing continued yesterday, but little trou- ble was reported, except in Ohio. The shooting incident took place at a mine near Pomeroy, Ohio, but special investigator Gary Wolfe of the Meigs County sheriff's depart- ment said he did not know whether the shots came from pickets outside the mine or from non-union foremen working inside. IN MADISONVILLE, Ky., Jack Dixon, the UMW international repre- sentative from District 23, said, "Things are doing real well. People are honoring our pickets in most places."~ Robert Carter, president of Dis- trict 30 in Pikeville, Ky., said he understood some non-union miners were ignoring picket lines, "but I don't know how many. There are no problems that I know of." Scattered picketing of the few non-union mines still operating in West Virginia was reported, but Dan Fields of the West Virginia Coal Association said there was no trou- ble. "There are a few mines, very few, still running," Fields said. INTARDUCND: KIMrand HEATHER BOB and DAVID at DASCOLA STYLISTS E. Univ. at So. Univ. REDKEN-IMAGE LOS ANGELES (P) - AFL-CIO President George Meany urged Pres- ident Carter yesterday to abandon America's free trade policy, calling it "a joke and a myth" that allows foreign imports to wipe out U.S. jobs and industries. In his keynote speech to the AFL-CIO convention, Meany also called for administration backing of a bigger job-creating economic stim- ulus program and rejection of tax cuts for business. THE 83-YEAR-OLD labor chief' said Carter's commitment to full em- ployment will be a shallow promise if the President fails to back it up with programs that will generate four million new jobs each year for the next four years and strong action to protect American industry from "cutthroat and often illegal foreign competition." "A government trade policy pred- icated on old ideas of 'free trade' is worse than a joke - it is aprescrip- tion for disaster," he said. Meany called foreign trade "a guerrilla warfare of economics" and said the United States "is being ambushed." HE NOTED that imports of manj, factured goods increased by $2 billi in the first six months of 1977, mo than the rise of oilimports. "The answer is fair trade - do unto others as they do unto us - barrier for barrier, closed door for closed door," he continued. "The United States must make it clear to every other nation of the world: The use of tariff or non-tariff barriers to bar U.S. products will result in swift, retaliatory action by this government." I\ MOVED! now open at 207 S Ashley 663-3692 (across from Hertler Bros.) 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