The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 15; 1978-Page5 Cleveland cops back; other strikes still on CLEVELAND (AP) - Striking Cleveland police officers ended a strike yesterday moments after a state court judge had held the patrolmen in con- tempt of court for refusing a court or- der to return to their jobs. William McNea, president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen's Association, and William Callagher, president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge Eight, announced the end of the walkout after Judge Daniel Corrigan ordered the city and unions in- to arbitration over the status of 13 policemen whose firings triggered the strike. CORRIGAN ordered that the officers be returned to the payroll for at least two weeks. He said that during the 14- day period, the officers would continue to work under suspension, meaning no street duty assignments. Public employees in two other major cities were on strike yesterday. Louisville had almost no firemen on duty and Philadelphia was without the services of almost 2,000 non-uniformed workers. The Cleveland strike began Thursday night over the firing of 13 patrolmen by Mayor Dennis Kucinich: The 31-year-old mayor, who faces a recall election next month, dismissed the men for refusing an order to start one-man daytime foot patrols in high-crime housing projects. KUCINICH yesterday asked the state for National Guard troops and any other help it could provide. But Gov. James Rhodes' office in Columbus said no assistance would be offered until the city exhausted every other possibility. Some water and garbage workers honored police picket lines, raising the threat of a wider work stoppage in the city of 700,000 persons. Authorities said not one of the 1,500 patrolmen in the city's 2,000-member police department reported for work on the 11 p.m. shift. Safety Director James Barrett said some patrolmen reported for duty at 7 a.m. and there were a few patrol cars on the street, but he declined to give specifics. THIRTY-NINE of 41 supervisory of- ficers scheduled to work the overnight shift were on the job, and Barrett said they would remain on duty. He said the ' city spent a fairly quiet night. The striking patrolmen ignored a court order issued shortly after the walkout began. A further hearing was scheduled for later yesterday. The strike by Louisville's 600 union firemen began yesterday morning and centered on a wage dispute. Stephan Phelps, executive assistant to Mayor William Stansbury, said the city was seeking a restraining order, "and we have National Guard troops standing by if the firemen ignore the temporary restraining order" ANOTHER mayoral aide said about 30 management personnel were man- ning about seven of the 23 fire houses in thiscity of 400,00people. "So the city is protected." He said police were standing by at some of the fire houses. Steve Catlett, a member of the Louisville Professional Firefighters Union Local 345 executive committee accused the city of stalling wage negotiations. The firemen have not made their demands public. Louisville firemen have a starting salary of $11,085 for a 56-hour week. The city's latest offer would give a fifth- year firefighter an increase of $1,200 a Board has found the city guilty of unfair labor practices in its negotiations with the firemen. In Philadelphia, the nation's fourth- largest city, 19,600 blue-collar, clerical and professional city employees non- uniformed workers went on strike today after union negotiators refused to accept or reject a contract offer. Supervisors filled in at prisons and the city water department, but a halt was expected in such services as trash collection and street cleaning. THE ISSUES are wages and layoffs. The city was recently ordered by an ar- bitrator to give police a nine per cent wage bike, and said it might have to lay off 3,500 other workers to raise the money. In Memphis, Tenn., where firemen went on strike for three days starting July 1, city negotiators reached ten- tative agreement with firefighters early today. A few hours earlier, the city had announced a tentative set- tlement with the police union. Henry Evans, chief city ad- ministrative officer, declined to discuss details of either agreement. Mayor Wyeth Chandler said Thursday night that economic provisions tentatively agreed to with the police were in line with wage packages accepted earlier by 11 other municipal unions. The city's basic wage offer to the other unions was a six per cent raise now and seven-and- a-half per cent Oct. 1, 1979. ELEVEN sanitation workers who walked off their jobs in Cordova, Ala., on Monday remained off the job. The workers had asked for a 20 per cent salary boost and more insurance. The status of the 34-member New Bern, NC., police force remained in doubt. The men walked off the job last week following a decision by the board of aldermen to fire the police chief, who had backed the men's demand for a 10 per cent pay boost. The board agreed on Thursday to reinstate the chief, but it was not clear whether the men would return to work unless they also receive the higher wages they demanded. "If you want to get anything in this world, you have to scramble for it and that is what we did today," Cleveland police leader Gallagher said yesterday after the announcement of the end of the strike. THERE WERE scattered reports of vandalism of small businesses in some Cleveland districts while police were on strike. Vandals smashed the window fronts of a dozen stores in the usually quiet area of the city known as Old Brooklyn. Some merchants said they planned to spend last night inside their stores to protect their property. EARLIER yesterday, Kucinich, who had asked for state help in han- dling the strike, abruptly ended a news conference when he was told Gov. James Rhodes had denied helpfrom the highway patrol and National Guard. Rhodes, attending a Midwest Gover- nors Conference in Kentucky, had or- dered National Guard observers into this city of 70,000 to gather information on the effects of the walkout. Kucinich, saying he had some reports of police "acting like hoodlums" during the walkout, said he would not reinstate the 13 officers but would agree to con- tinuing two-man patrols on the housing projects rather than the one-officer beats required by the order. He said he wnuld not reinstate the 12 SOME OF PHILADELPHIA'S 22,000 striking non-uniformed municipal workers seeking more pay and job security picket city hall yesterday morning. Stay bwrm ihPolrur Polarguard is the bag you'll want this season. It dries quickly and won't clump or mat when wet. And compared to down, it can save you some cash. 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