High court rules for Polish unions (Continued from Page1)' Last month the court, which was The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 11, 1980-Page 3 INDIGENT CRIMINAL OFFENDERS ASSISTED Council OKs legal aid funding. f ! + i f IRS offices may be moved to authorize the union charter, inser- Council approved construction of a ted a clause stating the Communist federal court to be located in the Liber- Party's supremacy, a move the ty Street Federal Building offices union leaders said would undermine currently occupied by the Internal the independence hard-won in last Revenue Service. In hopes of relocating summer's labor confrontation with the IRS office downtown, Council put the government. J off action on a resolution that would ap- The judge also ruled yesterday prove moving the IRS to a Briarwood against the lower court's area office building, The IRS claims it modification of the right to strike, cannot find 9,200 square feet of down- He accepted the proposal by town office space, but Mayor Louis Solidarity lawyer Wieslaw Chr- Belcher told Council that space may be zanowski to add an annex to the available on the second floor of the charter. A lawyer associated with Fourth Avenue Arcade currently oc- Solidarity said the final agreement cupied by the county CETA offices. coincided with proposals made "We're going to try to keep both weeks ago by the trade union facilities downtown," Belcher said. organization to the government. But,, he added, it may be difficult to THE ANNEX restates the bases of coordinate the moves and necessary the union's, creation. They include renovations by the IRS deadline of Dec. labor organization conventions af- 1. firming the right to form indepen- dent unions and portions of the Gdansk agreement that settled last November named August's crippling Baltic strikes. The Gdansk agreement Hands-On Museum Month acknowledges the party's leading role. The crowd gathered outside the In other business, Council proclaimed court on a gray, blustery day November as Ann Arbor Hands-On cheered wildly when Walesa Museum month. According to Belcher, emerged and led them in the singing the museum is undertaking an "am- of Poland's national anthem and a bitious" fund-raising effort to facilitate Roman Catholic hymn. the opening of the museum in the old "We accomplished what we set out fire station. "Council wishes them to accomplish," he said) well," Belcher said. * HAPPENINGS FILMS AAFC-Apocalypse Now, 6:30,9:30 p.m. Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild-Young Man with a Horn, 7, 9:15 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Public Health Student Assoc.-Acceptabl Risk?, 12 noon, SPH II, Thomas Francis Auditorium. Women's Studies Films-3900 Million and One, The Double Day, 7 p.m., MLB 3. SPEAKERS Academic Women's Caucus-Barbara Sloat, "Increasing the Number of Women Scientists, and Concerns of Women in Medicine," noon, 3050 Frieze. Arch. & Urban Planning-Mara Smith, "The Tradition of Sculptured Brick," noon, AAB Aud. Ann Arbor Public Schools, Joan Blos, "Children's Literature: Challenge for the Writer," 12:10p.m., Meeting Room, Main Library. Anatomy-A. Kent Christensen, "Pituitary Polysomes, or Trying to do Bochemistry with an Electron Microscope," 12:10 p.m., 5732 Med. Sci. II. Chemistry-Ben Ware, "The Study of Contractibility by Fluorescence Photobleaching Techniques, 4p.m., 1300 Chem. Bldg. Computing Ctr.-"Chalk Talk," Simple Sorting Using SORT, 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS. ECC and IC-Frank Whitmore, "Southeast Asia: Past and Present," noon, International Center. English Comp. Board-Barbara Morris, Frances Zorn, John Reiff, "Responding to Students' Writings," 4-6 p.m., 1025 Angell Hall. Geology-Lloyd Pray, "Significance of Submarine Erosion on Platform Margins," 4 p.m., 4001 CCL. Inst. for Values and Science-Victor Weiskoph, "The Double-Edged Sword of Technology?," 4 p.m., MLB 4. Mech. Engin. and Applied Mech.-Yoram Koren, "Industrial Robots," noon, 325 W. Engin. Society of Christian Engineers-Lecture by Tom Trevethan, noon, League. Spanish-Tony Esposito, "Phonic Embellishment and Thematic Reinfor- cement in the Poema Del Mio Cid,"noon, MLB 4th floor Commons. Women of 'U' Faculty-Donald Huelke, "Automobile Accidents and Related Legislation," 7:,30p.m., Vaughn SPH 3rd floor lounge. MEETINGS Biological Research Review Comm-4 p.m., 3087 SPH I. His House Christian Fellowship-7:30 p.m., League Rooms D and E. HSO-Lesbian/Gay Male Health Professions meeting, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Int'l. Relations Society-7 p.m., Union Pendleton Room. MSA-7:30 p.m., 3909 Union. PIRGIM-Energy Task Force meeting, 7:30 p.m., Union Conference Room 4. TM Program-Introductory meeting, 8 p.m., UGLI Multipurpose Room. PERFORMANCES Residential College-Reading by Writer-in-Residence Joan Blos, 8 p.m., EQ Benzinger Library. School of Music-Voice recital by Willis Patterson, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. MISCELLANEOUS CEW-Book reviews, Eliana Moya-Raggio: "Supremadre: Women in Politics" by Elisa Chaney, "Eva Peron: The Myths of the Woman" by Julie Taylor, noon, Union Pendleton Room. CMB-Susan Ernst, Sem., "RNA Pololations in Isolated Blastomeres of Early Sea Urchin Embryos," noon, 1139 Nat. Sci. International Center - Tuesday Luncheon Series, co-sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center, Church Women United, and the International Center, noon, International Center Rec. Room. International Folk Dance Club-Teaching, beginning folk dance, 7-8:15 pmBell Pool Mezz. Meekreh-Felafe Study break, 10:30 p.m., Jordal Lounge (Mojo). Rec. Sports-Clinic, "Setting up an Aerobic Program," 7:30-9 p.m., 1250 CCRB. Rec. Sports-IM Racquetball (AC-d) Tournament, 6:30 p.m., IMSB. SCO and Dean's Office-Dean's Tea with Math Dept., 3:30-5 p.m., 3212 Angell. Sigma. Theta Tau-Program, Ruth Ryan, Jacque Clinton, Elizabeth See, "Nursing: A Female Profession in a Male Society," 7:30 p.m., Campus Inn. SWE-Reception, dinner, Lec., Jill Pollock, Ford Motor Co., "Career management and Opportunities," 6p.m., Campus Inn. I TT AVW r(I Tmn..a,... Tlne '7- n~ mv Uninn Rllr1nnm. By ELAINE RIDEOUT City Council last night unanimously authorized the use of $5,000 in Federal Community Development Block Grant funds to provide legal services to low and middle income criminal offenders in designated CDBG areas. According to Mayor Louis Belcher, the allocation will subsidize services formerly provided by the Model Cities Legal Clinic, "The agency notified the (15th District) court system last week that as of last Friday they could not handle any more criminal cases in court," Belcher told Council. "This (resolution) is to provide those people in the CDBG area with legal counsel," he added. COMMUNITY Development Director Barry Tilmann said the legal clinic closed its doors Nov. 1 because of an agency audit dispute with the city. Funding of the legal service nd Model Cities Health Center was fro en Sept. 5 when the agencies refused to cooperate with a city-ordered audit of their financial records. An audit became necessary when the city learned from Internal Revenue Service reports that the health center had failed to report to the city half of its income earned over a four-year period, thereby constituting a breach of con- tract, city officials claimed. "WE DID not feel it was wise to hold up the criminal defense system while the city and the Modcl Cities Legal Clinic ironed out their differences," Belcher said. City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw ex- plained that the city is required under federal law to provide legal represen- tation to needy residents. Court- appointed lawyers will be subsidized through the general fund until the legal service allocation is made available. Belcher explained that the $5,000 allocation was taken from the $112,000 in legal service assets frozen in Sep- tember. "If the money runs out before we can come to an agreement (with the legal service), council will authorize more of the funds," he said. Barring resolution of the dispute, Tilmann said, the service could be resumed by the legal agency or taken over by someone else. TILMANN SAID the council. resolution does not say how the $5,000 is to be appropriated, but he said distribution details will be ironed out by the CDBG citizen advisory committees. According to City Administrator Terty Sprenkel, the city will take no ac- tion 'on the audit dispute until they receive a recommendation from Department of Housing and Urban Development officials. But Councilman Kenneth Latta (D- 1st Ward) said he heard from an "in- side source" that the Detroit Legal Council of HUD will make no recom- mendation until they can resolve the issue. Latta said this would entail sen- ding the problem "up through the levels in Washington. This would mean we won't be getting anything terribly soon," Latta said. CDBG Director Tilmann said that in, discussing the audit dispute with Model Cities directors, the agency has offered to comply with a full city audit "from, now on" provided they are exempted from revealing past records. TONIGWT 8 PM A READING BY ENZINGER LIBRARY EAST QUAD (East University between Hill and Willard) Read and Use Daily Classifieds I Call 764-0557 Rd 0) OPMVVEWHTE UVUIEI REVIEW TUESDAY, NOV. 11 Tickets: $3.50 in advance. $4.00 at the door, Available at Discount Records. Schoolkids'. Aura Sounde, and at Rick's. nation plidable r rtici- I U \\ " N , . . ... ... w .. ... .. C 3 ,INVOLVED PROFESSIONALS You may not think of Amoco as one of the nation's leading petroleum companies, but it's true. Amoco companies, subsidiaries of Standard oil Company of Indiana, are all growing steadily, and that means we have carper opportunities for Engineering graduates. Positions are available with the following Amoco company: Amoco Production Company Ranks fifth out of more than 3,000 companies in oil production Is among the nation's top three companies in gas production Has opportunities for Petroleum, Mechanical and Chemical Engineers as well as other engineering disciplines When you become part of Amoco, you will receive an outstanding starting salary and benefits that rank among the best in the