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September 13, 1975 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-09-13

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page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, September 13, 1975

loge Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 1 3, 1975

Ones inmate dead in
Nashville prison riot

(Continued from Page 1)
chop, but it could have been
something else," said inmate
Bobby Moore, Houston, Tex.,
serving 50 years for oirder.
"We've got a lot of problems."
HE TOLD a news conference
inmates want proper food, lodg-
ing and visiting rights.
"Most of us in here realizeI
there is not going to be any
meaningful penal re-

form through violence," Moore
said,
Inmate Hastie Love of Knox-
ville, serving 119 years for
rape, murder and kidnaping,
said he was getting the inmates
calmed down when Morford
started firing.
"HE WAS, not provoked in
any way," Love said.
Morford said no extraordinary

security precautions were plan-
ned for Friday night but added
that prison officials would be in
close contact with local authori-
ties.
Ed Hardy, director of engi-
neering for the Department of
Corrections, said much of the
damage at the prison was to
the prison post office, which
was firebombed from the yard.

P
, .
.,
t
r r
Y
I i
r a r
rF f
. r
qy x.t

arklane is the

t! ur I,
"source

for
Danskin Leotards
and Tights
Danskins are for everywhere and everyone.
For partying and playing, exercising and
dancing, and for just plain wearing around.
Made of 100% easy care nylon.
Available in a rainbow of colors and
a multitude of styles
at these Parklane Stores.
BRIARWOOD MALL

- B
Liberty,
en retr
White H
ing the d
Ford for
erty is e
ter of pu
iii-

are foot and
pregnant
the President's gold-
iever, sits on the
ouse driveway watch-
departure of President
New Hampshire. Lib-
expecting her first lit-
uppies soon.

Files on
Kennedy
accident
missin
WASHINGTON{r'P-
The original police records on
the Chappaquiddick incident in-
volving Sen. Edward Kennedy
reportedly have vanished for
the second time from the Ed-
gartown, Mass., police depart-
ment files.
Two former chiefs of the po-
lice force on Martha's Vine-
yard say the documents were
returned to the department last
April, and one of them says
they were still there when he
left in June.
EDGARTOWN police s a y
they cannot find the papers.
"We've looked everywhere. We
honestly don't know where
they are," said Patricia Mc-
Leod, a special officer.
The disappearance of the
documents was reported by
Carl Gottlieb, a Hollywood
script writer, in a recently-
published book about the film-
ing of the shark epic movie,
"Jaws," at Martha's Vineyard
in the summer of 1974.
Gottlieb said he was told by
Jesse Oliver, then the Edgar-
town police chief, that the pap-
ers had unaccountability van-
ished from the files.
REPORTEDLY included were
the original police report and
a copy of Kennedy's first for-
mal statement about the July
18, 1969 mishap in which a car,
which Kennedy says he was
driving, plunged off a bridge
and killed a 28-year-old woman
passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne.'
In Essex Junction, Vt., Police
Chief Dominick Arena said he
had taken some of the records
when he quit as head of the' Ed-
gartown police department in
1973. Arena said he wanted'
them to help him answer ques-
tions.from newsmen and others
about Chappaquiddick.
He admitted being "red-fac-
ed" upon discovering that he
had taken documents without
leaving copies behind. But last
April, Arena says, he made
copies for himself and sent all
the originals back.

I
I

UM FOLKLORE SOCIETY
Get-Acquainted
Meeting
Thurs., Sept. 16th
8 p.m.
Pendleton Arts
Center
2nd Floor
MICHIGAN UNION
PUBLIC INVITED
Picking, Singing,
and Good Listening

AP Phots

The champ brootds
Muhnm ad Ali, in sweat clothes and combat bnots after p mirninig rup, Iipears to1
pensive mood sitting on a pile of logs outside h7 c -M t Door L ke. Ai is at the
trAining camp in preparation for his Sept. 30 fi °h with Joe Frazier,
rape growers vT Lg

be in a
remote

gparilan. e
HO8IERY

Read and Use
Daily Classifieds

workers union

_ r
i
S ,, .,_ . :_. v+....! i ; ,,,,y"' i 'sig. .'.. ...
"'v
...'..z.

~jc1A PtAkSctm~d SNllmpi'athS hI"Got

O L I V E R backed Arena's DELANO, Calif. ( ') - More
claim, saying he had received than 2,000 employes of the na-
the papers in April and restor-tion's largest table grape grower
ed them to the police depart- cast ballots yesterday to decide
ment files.t- which union, if any, will bargain
for them.
As to what might have caused Meanwhile, votes were to be
the records to vanish a second Menwhierotes ee to
time or why present depart- counted from Tuesday's election
ment officials can't find them, at Bnd Antle, the nation's sec-
Oliver said, "I have no idea wnd largest lettuce grower with
That's their problem." 1,700 workers.
_- -- - iA DISPUTE over whether to

Agricultural L a b o r Relbtions >or1
Board ruled it will be con'sider- Th
ed a single bargaining unit. first
The ballot battle between the Calif
United Farm W o r k e r s and Quar
Teamsters unions at Giumarra "ta
Vineyards involved more work- Th
ers than any other single-em- tally
Mlover bargaining unit in this Uit
fall's elections under Califor- total
nia's new farm labor represen- of w
tation law . to r
"Our overwhelming npreference ' T

Probably not. All things considered you do
what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one
has taken your job. And you're eating regularly.
But...
But have you ever considered what doing your
job just a little better might mean?
Money. Cold hard coin of the realm.
If each of us cared just a smidge more about
what we do for a living, we could actually turn that
inflationary spiral around. Better products, better
service and better management would mean savings
for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed
nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency.
Point two..By taking more pride in our work
we'll more than likely see America regaining its
strength in the competitive world trade arena. When
the balance of payments swings our way again we'll
all be better off economically.
So you see-the only person who can really
do what you do any better is you.

count separate Antle operations is to get labor union problems tions
TRAINING as one unit delayed the count over," said John Giumarrq Jr. ers
WORKSHOP unt yesterday when the state "One union or the other is not had
going to make much difference 2,300
on Counselina and to us." R
Group Leadership GIUMARRA HAS been a lead- ranc
* Gestalt "Hot Seat" D P ..'ner among Delano-area table maj
Work OPTOMETRIST grave growers in the decade of optic
* Peer Counseling Full Contact Lens Service strife since UFW leader Cesar tion.
Chavez began his farm union Re
RICHARD KEMPTER Visual Examinations movement here in 1965. volv
662-4826 548 CHURCH ST "Our workers worked under be
MICHAEL6ANDES7a UFW contract from 1970 until latA
662-28016 - 1973 and under a Teamsters f
contract from 1973 to the pres- w.l
-- _ ent." Giumarra said. Qrs
"They know better than we in 1
do who they want to represent inel
them."
THOSE 1970 and 1973 contracts both
were based on representations ire-
by one union or the other that A
it represented a majority of the gwi
workers. Elections were not only
held because farm workers had with
been excluded from federal la- one
1028 E. Uni
662-02020s Open 7 days a
BEER & WINE, FRESH ME.
f a tree falls in the forest DELI COUNTER, IMPORT
and there's no one there, PORTED WINES.
who are you going to drink
your Cuervo with? Sgt. Pepper brings the price
are the STUDENT MEAT
our prices.
ROUND STEAK ....
1 BEEF LIVER . . ...
GROUND ROUND STEAK ..... .
FRYING CHICKEN
BONELESS STEWING BEEF
CUBE STEAKS
PORK STEAKS .
MUENSTER CHEESE
s: ? DANNON YOGURT
FRESH MUSHROOMS (8 oz. pac
RADE A LARGE EGGS
8PACK 12 OZ. COKE (cans)

laws.
is fill's e : :tions are the
under a I:11 assed by the
fornia legislature this year
o'teeing secret bcllot union
s for field hands.
e latest Associated Press
of results showed the
ed Farm Workers ahead in
victories and the number'
vorkers it had won ,.Ae right
epresent.
IE UFW had won 21 elec-
s covering about 4,100 work-
while the rival Teamsters
13 victories covering about
0 workers.
unoffs will be needed at two
hes where there was no
ority for either union or the
on of "no voter representa-
esllt.s at three ranches in-
ing about 2,000 workers will
decided by ALRB rulings
r on challenged votes, amny
hm from UFW strikers who
kd off their jobs when grow-
Gwit-hed to the Teamsters
[93. Those undecided results
!de the ovte at E&J Gallo
ery, considered important by
unions becnase of its prom-
t brand name.
n election victory does not
rnntee a union a contract,
exclisive bargaining rights
an individual grower for
year.
iversity
week 0 9:30-1 1:00
AT AND PRODUCE,
ED CHEESES, IM-
of meat down. We
CENTER-Compare

$1 .49/lb.
2 lbs. for 98c
........ 98c/lb.
59c/lb.
$1.29 lb.
$1.39/lb.
.. . $1.29/lb.
$1.29/lb.
.3 for 98c
:k) .949c
..69c/doz.
$1.59
nc} S1.9

t

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