Page 14-Friday, July 21 1978-The Michigan Daily TALKSSTALLED [ail workers' contract in doubt (Continued from PanoOne, going to be home all night," an ap- parent indication he might be more receptive to such a request at a later time. Glenn Whitaker, a Justice Depar- tment attorney representing the Postal Service, said the government was prepared to seek an injunction in the event a strike occurred. IN ANOTHER part of the city, a federal mediation team and negotiators for labor and management worked to beat the deadline for agreement on the contract covering 554,000 postal em- ployees. Chief federal mediator Wayne Hor- vitz, describing the bargaining, said, "The atmosphere upstairs is very con- structive." He said the two sides were grappling with the "crunch" issues. Although Horvitz did not identify those issues, he said he could not quarrel with news reports identifying the no-layoff clause, wages and work rules as the principal stumbling blocks. HORVITZ said the two sides remained anxious to settle by midnight. He would not rule out keeping the par- ties at the bargainging table past the deadline if they were making progress. Horvitz's assessment marked the fir- st sign of progress in several days and contrasted sharply with a bitter attack on management earlier in the day by Emmet Andrews, president of the American Postal Workers Union, the largest of the unions representing the postal employees. Andrews warned that Postmaster General William Bolger "may have doomed" efforts to avert a strike by threatening to fire workers who walk off their jobs. He referred to a letter Bolger circulated on Tuesday, warning workers of the "grave consequences of strike participation." IN THE LETTER Bolger noted that federal law prohibits postal strikes. He said striking workers would be commit- ting a felony. "They would forfeit the right to hold their postal jobs - the law says they may not hold positions in the government," he wrote. In a letter sent to Bolger yesterday, Andrews said, "We believe that unless you withdraw that memo, you may have doomed the negotiations beyond repair." Michael Ballard, a Postal Service spokesman, indicated Bolger was stan- ding by his letter. "The letter speaks for itself," he said. "ALL THE LETTER did was point out what was in the law." The federal law that forbids postal strikes calls for fines and jail terms for violators. But a number of . union leaders have threatened to defy the law and stage wildcat walkouts if negotiators remained deadlocked today. The only other postal strike occurred in 1970, when some 200,000 workers walked off the job. However, the strike participants were not penalized under an agreement that was reached to end the walkouts. The current negotiations had been stalled since Monday night over the 25- word clause in the current agreement that bars management from laying off regular workers. THE UNIONS also have been seeking pay raises of about 13 per cent a year over two years, including cost-of-living protection. A typical postal worker currently earns $15,877 a year. The Postal Service reportedly has of- fered an increase that is less than the 5.5 per cent annual raises that Carter has recommended for government workers. J Daily Phone Numbers: Billing-764-0550 Circulation-764-0558 Classifieds-764-0557 Display-764-0554 News and Happenings-764-0552 Sports-764-0562 We'll deliver.. . t'' : _ W 14 40 - W40P.- m7w A Public Service of this newspaper & The Advertising Council We're counting on you. I Ann Arbor's award-winning 6-pack to your door, Tuesday-Saturday just all 764-0558 to order vour ImbsefRihfA I Red Cross.hI The Good Neighbor.[