Tuesday, July 12, _1 977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Theirday, July 12, 1917 TH~MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Daily Classlieds Fall coal strike looms (Continued from Page 8) PERSONAL SHOP THE APOTHECARY Drug store and Save. Village Apothecary, 1112 S. Univ. Ave. etc J B.-It was fun talking to you on Sunday!! (Is that too personal for the classifieds and 'the immediate consumption of the world?) The ballet shoruld ire beautiful; thrat roupe is excellent. Youknow, when to get back to A2 we cn't be used to seeing each other in blue jean errt affs... we'll walk palt each other on the street and say Hmmm, ay lIe/she looks familiar.--Me. dF712 KEITH BSR. My mornings aren't the same with- out your okes. Your coverage of VA Is exellent. Especially liked two- pege spread with artwork. Very pen- fessional. No more calls from the white House lately. 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(IF) - United M i n e Workers (UMW) President Arnold Miller says he believes it may be difficult to avert a national strike by the tnion's soft coal miners when their contract expires Dec. 6. "The situation doesn't look good now, - but that can all change," Miller said. "It de- pends on the reaction from the operating industry itself" A NATIONWIDE strike by soft coal miners would virtually shut down the nation's coal industry, especially in the East, at a time when President C a r t er has urged increased relance on coal and other alternatives to oil. A UMW strike avoids only the small anthracite coal industry, which is under a separate con- tract, and scattered mines in the West and South which are either nonunion or covered by rival la- bor groups. While the UMW says it has no firm figures on the number of bituminous, or soft coal, miners, the uniona total membership is about 270,000-and most of those miners work in bituminous. HARRY'S ARMY SURPLUS Mt. Shasta and Skier SLEEPING BAGS 21/z lb. Fiberfill I with Stuff Sock REG. $32.98 SALE $27.98 All Trailblazer, AFC and Camping GAS LANTERNS and STOVES 20% OFF REG. PRICE 2-Man Ripstop Nylon BACKPACKING TENT with 12-inch Side Wall complete with poles, stakes and line REG. $38.98 SALE $30.98 SEAWAY 3000 BACKPACK and FRAME REG. $30.98 SALE $23.98 Full lines of OSHKOSH BIB OVERALLS, PAINTER PANTS, and JEANS LEVI PREFADED JEANS, JACKETS, and HATS Be Smth and Lee : IACKETS 201 E. WASHINGTON of r' rc Woshinwton 994-3'572 Open Frido aunti 8:30v.m. for vour convenience "THERE'S NOWHERE to go but up when you're talking about the 1 a b o r problems," Miller said. "We don't have any sta- bility in this union, and it's be- cause of their (the operators') reluctance to move away from the past . . and sit down and talk about their problems." Miller believes the path to union stability is through the negotiation of a limited right-to- strike clause in the 1977 contract to permit local walkouts over grievances. That has become a major issue within the UMW in recent years with miners fre- quently defying the contract and Miller by going out in wildcat strikes, which usually end in court i n j u n c ti on s and fines against the union. But industry officials-includ- ing Joseph Brennan, president Scientology: Is it only another' cult? (Continued from Page 3) The whole scheme resembles the psychoanalytic therapy of Sigmund Freud on a massive scale, with much greater hope for world improvement than the modest relief of human misery that Freud believed his psycho- logical theories could provide. Also mimicking psychoanaly- tic concepts is the Scientologist dichotomy between the "Analy- tic" and "Reactive" minds, closely paralleling Freud's con- scious and unconscious minds. The reactive mind, like the un- conscious, is the storehouse of repressed desires, mistaken per- ceptions and so on. That is what Scientologists say must be elim- inated in order to become clear. Scientology, however, pdds a twist by suggesting that the re- active mind is plagued by the horrible experiences and Sup- pressive Persons of past lives as well - this idea reminiscent of psychologist Carl Jung's more sophisticated concept of the "collective unconscious." Scientology posits a theory of communication very similar to what might be found in an in- troductory speech class. Com- plete with stick figure drawings and arrows, a communications model is presented showing a communicator or "Cause" (C) and a receiver or "Effect" (E). The effectiveness of any over- all communication is determined by the strength of different com- munication factors. Attention level (A), for example, is one such factor. There will be a much more effective communi- cation, say the Scientologists, if the communicator is m o r e aware of the receiver and if the receiver is willing to pay atten- tion. Still another pillar of Scien- tologist thought is the "Cycle of Action" concept (CA). Every human action . or project has three phases: "Starting," "Changing" (i.e., carrying through) and "Stopping." Be- cause of the enormity or com- plexity of certain tasks, many people are unable to complete a full CA. (In everyday speech, this is called "giving up.") This, they say, is the resrit of being held back by something in the reactive m i n d. Scientologists recommend that tasks be broken down into smaller, more man- ageable components. Then, one by one, each component is at- tacked, applying full concentra- tion and disregarding all other components until the first cycle of action is completed. In this way, they say, it is possible to overcrmethe reactive mind and become a more effective per- son. Scientology, s a y s instructor Krijs is "certainty"-about life an about knowledge. Commercial bitter myrrh, an aromatic gum resin, is an im- portant ingredient of mouth- washes. of the Bitriminous Col Opera- tors Association ('BCOA) - al- ready have expressed opposition to the right-to-strike approach. It is with the BCOA that the UMW must negotiate a contract for the soft coal miners. Brennan calls the proposed right-to-strike clause "a step in the wrong direction." He be- lieves wildcat strikes will not end until there is a basic change in the psychology of miners and in their attitude that they must honor any picket line, no matter what the issue. Miller's proposal would give individual union locals the right to vote a strike over local issues, but it would prevent the spreading of a strike by a few pickets, a common practice at present. 'M ! IIG A AM U ThatePh e 6-69 Theatre phone 660-6414 TONIGHT AT 8:00 ONLY TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN 7:45 OPEN 6:45 ! TA..... SECOND HIT WEEK SHOWN TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:35 OPEN 6:45 WEDS. AT i00-3:40-6:20-9:00 Court halts Kent St. gym; evicts student protestors (Continued from Page 1) against the guardsmen was have sometimes run high. But dismissed by a federal judge the stress has been on nonvio- in 1974. "ene. 231 south state STATE Theatre Phone 662.6264