Saturday, July 3, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY INDUSTRIES HALTED Page Seven Strikes By The Associated Press I Demanding more money, long- tinu shoremen halted most cargo san handling yesterday in West Coast thir ports and copper miners forced I a shutdown in operations of all Can major U.S producers. der The nation's new Postal Serv- me ice was served notice that it too day may be struck. Workers in New stri York City locals object to the go, loss of work rights due to the wer change-over to a semi-private agr mail corporation. N 40 city, unionsI Detroit sanital hit shipyards;, n Detroit, the garbage con- before the midnight Wednesday ed to pile up as the strike of end of a five year contract be- itation workers entered its tween employers and the Inter- 'd day. national Longshoremen's and n the 24 U.S. ports from the Warehousemen's Union. Team- adian to the Mexican bor- sters Union workers honored the s, most of the 15,000 longshore- picket line. n were idled- for the second The longshoremen want a two by the first cioastwide dock year contract, a guaranteed 40- ke in 23 years. Military car- hour week and a $50 a month mail and passc'cger baggage pension for workers with 25 e being handled 'y 'autual years' service at age 62. Now eement. earning $4.28 an hour, they de- legotiations broke off shortly mand an 85 cents raise the first year and 75 cents the second. The employer's offer has not meet over been disclosed. Prior to the strike, shipments * * j had been stepped up and perish- lion strik e able cargo unloaded so few ef- fects were expected immediately. attendants at the principal The copper strike also was in offices. its second day and affected 35,- 000 workers, mainly in Utah, Ari- on -eeconomic issues have zona, New Mexico, Montana and a settled hut the two sides Nevada where most copper opec- reportedly still far apart on ations are located. ney. The major producers-Anaconda :eanwhile, garbage continues Co., Phelps Dodge Corp., Kenne- ile up at a rate of 4,500 tons cott Copper Corp., and American ay. The city is already more Smelting and Refining Co.- n two weeks behind in gar- banked smelting fires and closed e pickups because of three- down virtually all operations. thlong slo do oical arbai Workers were demanding $1.07 rsday. more over three years, including a 25 cent increase for cost of liv- a comhat some of the proh- ing, plus more if the cost of liv- s resulting from the strike, ing exceeds 25 cents in two years. yor Gribbs said he would ask They now earn $3.81 to $4.38 an nmon Council to lift a ban hour Ipen burning so tcat rJoseph P. Molony, a vice presi- d humn waste paper, said the firm put a 30-cent ceil- ribbs said he has union dent of the United Steelworkers eements to permit emergen- Union, said the copper industry cork at critical locations, ,uch workers seek a contract equal to the city's hospitals, nursing that won by the aluminum in- ies and dog pounds. dustry workers, copper mines * DETROIT (P) - Detroit's sani- tation workers, joined by over 150 other city employes, continued to strike yesterday while negotiators for all 43 city- employe unions met with city of- ficials in an attempt to keep the strike from spreading to 24,000, other municipal workers. Mayor Roman Gribbs directed the city's lawyers to begin pre- paring legal action against the garbage men's union and plead- ed with Detroiters to "keep their own special areas clean . . ." The city health commissioner, Dr. William Clexton, said he has set up a team to keep watch on the rising piles of uncollected garbage and determine when the situation begins to jeopardize public health. The 1,400 sanitation workers, who struck when their contract y expired at midnight Thursday, were joined later in the day by 160 city N beet are Mon m to p a df thai bag Mn Cull( Thu Tc lem May Con on o coul Gi agrs cy A as hom ann arbor film cooperative AUGMENTED SCHEDULE OF FILMS-SUMMER, 1971 SUNDAY, July 4 at 7:00 & 9:45 p.m. uproarious, rollicking, 22-hour comedy THE GREAT RACE-directed by blake edwards jack lemmon, tony curtis, natalie wood, keenan wynn TUESDAYS july 6 two by roger cormon in color THE HAUNTED PALACE* and TALES OF TERROR*00 vincent price, basil rotbbone, peter lorre *at 8:40 p.m. only **at 7:00 & 10:15 p.m. july 13 winner of two academy awards BORN FREE in color. for all animal lovers " july 20 luis hunuel's LOS OLVIDADOS (the Young and the Damned) violence and delinquency in mexico city July 27 switched-on color thriller? KALEI DOSCOPE warren beatty, susannah york august 3 fred zinneman's HIGH NOON gory cooper (academy award) and" grace kelly " august 10n joseph conrad's LORD JIM peter o'toole, james mason in color august 17 I LOVE YOU, ALICE B. TOKLAS peter sellers turns on SATURDAYS july 10 riotous color western spoof TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER alain delon, joey bishop, dean martin july 17 heart-stopping color suspense shocker WAIT UNTIL DARK audrey hepburn, alan arkin " july 31 beautiful color award-winner A MAN AND A WOMAN anouck aimee, jean-louis trintignant " august 7 mic'helangelo antinioni's stunning color BLOW UP david hemmings, vanessa redgrave august 14 guess who's up to MONKEY BUSINESS the marx brothers See a Road-Runner Cartoon at Each Show! PICKETS from the International Longshoremen's and Ware- housemen's Union sit in front of a closed pier in San Francisco during the first day of the most extensive longshoremen's strike in 23 years. news briefs By The Associated Press THE PEACE PROPOSAL made Thursday by the South Viet- namese Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG) will prob- ably be rejected by the Nixon Administration, observers say. The Communist call for a coalition regime in Saigon with PRG participation and the withdrawal of all American troops from Vietnam by Dec. 31 are the major objections the Administration have to the proposal. THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE fell to 5.6 per cent in June even though the number of jobless Americans grew by more than a million The sharp dive from May's 6.2 per cent prompted the White Rouse to call June's figure a "very significant improvement" over the high jobless rates that have prevailed this year, However, the Bureau of Labor Statistics acknowledged the June drop "may be somewhat overstated" because the survey was taken in early June, when a number of college students were still in school. THE U.S. COMMAND has disclosed that bombing strikes have been going on in the North Vietnamese half of the demilitarized zone since March 30. In the latest attacks, which occurred three days ago, American fighter bombers destroyed an antiaircraft gun and triggered several secondary explosions, a spokesman claimed. Meanwhile, B-52's continued one of the heaviest bombing raids of the war around Fire Base Fuller, which North Vietnamese forces at- tacked last night. 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